Sabalenka blasts past Paolini into Miami final

Sabalenka blasts past Paolini into Miami final
Aryna Sabalenka reacts to a point against Jasmine Paolini of Italy during the Miami Open tennis tournament, Thursday, March 27, 2025, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP)
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Sabalenka blasts past Paolini into Miami final

Sabalenka blasts past Paolini into Miami final

MIAMI GARDENS: World number one Aryna Sabalenka blasted her way into the final of the Miami Open with a convincing 6-2 6-2 demolition of Italy’s Jasmine Paolini.
Sabalenka needed just 71 minutes to wrap-up her win against the sixth seed and she will now face the winner of Thursday’s other semifinal between American Jessica Pegula and wildcard Alexandra Eala.
The win earns the Belarusian, who was beaten in the Indian Wells final earlier this month by Mirra Andreeva, a place in the Miami final for the first time in her career.
“I’m super happy with the level I played today. Of course super happy to be in my first Miami Open final,” said Sabalenka.
Sabalenka was never behind against Paolini, and the match was only tied twice — at 1-1 in each set. She served six aces and broke the Italian’s serve four times,
“I definitely would say that this was one of the best matches in the season so far. I don’t know. I was just so focused on myself, on the things I had to do today.
“It felt like everything was just, like, going smoothly my way,” she said.
Sabalenka will be keen to banish the memory of defeat in the Indian Wells final and in the Australian Open final where she lost to Madison Keys.
“The lessons (of those defeats) was I believe focus on myself, not on what’s going on the other side,” she said.
“I think in those finals I was more focusing on my opponents than on myself. I think I just have to bring the same attitude, the same mindset that I had today, I think I have to bring it in the finals,” she said.
“I really feel this time I’m going to do better than I did in the last two finals,” added the 26-year-old.
She is only the sixth woman to reach the finals of both stops on the American ‘Sunshine Swing’ in the same season.


Barca bolster Liga title bid by winning match they didn’t want to play

Barca bolster Liga title bid by winning match they didn’t want to play
Updated 38 sec ago
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Barca bolster Liga title bid by winning match they didn’t want to play

Barca bolster Liga title bid by winning match they didn’t want to play

BARCELONA: Barcelona swept to a comfortable 3-0 victory over Osasuna to move three points clear at the top of La Liga despite their discontent at having to play their match on Thursday.
The Catalans’ appeal against the rescheduling of this game was rejected but Hansi Flick’s side, unbeaten in 19 matches across all competitions, still made light work of Osasuna, 14th.
Ferran Torres and Dani Olmo netted in the first half with Robert Lewandowski on target after the break.
Barca were without key winger Raphinha as he played for Brazil on Wednesday in South America in World Cup qualifying but cruised at the Olympic stadium regardless.
Flick was happy with the victory but said an injury to Olmo meant it came at a cost.
“We have three points more but we paid a really high price with the injury of Dani,” Flick told reporters.
“We don’t know how long he will be out but if it’s two weeks, he’ll miss a lot of games and if it’s three weeks even more.”
The match was originally due to be played on March 8 but was postponed after a Barcelona club doctor died.
Some players, including France’s Jules Kounde, played 120 minutes on Sunday for their countries before returning for the game.
“It’s a lack of respect to the club to select this date,” Kounde told DAZN.
“We’re not machines and to play our game and give the fans what we want, we need rest.”
Flick put veteran striker Lewandowski on the bench, deploying Torres in his place to excellent effect.
“Every game is a final, so today’s was a final, it was important for us,” Torres told DAZN.
Barcelona controlled the game from the start, taking the lead through Torres after 11 minutes.
Frenkie de Jong led the way as Barcelona moved the ball around smartly, with Alejandro Balde receiving it on the left.
The full-back, in fine form, sent a dangerous low ball into the six-yard box where Torres darted in to stab home.
The Spaniard should have added a second when teenage star Lamine Yamal clipped a fine ball over the top for him but Sergio Herrera saved well.
The goalkeeper brought down Dani Olmo to concede a penalty for Barcelona’s second midway through the first half.
Herrera saved Olmo’s spot kick, low to his right, but a re-take was ordered after an Osasuna player encroached, and this time the playmaker made no mistake.
Olmo was taken off hurt a few minutes later, with Flick angry on the sidelines at the situation, as Barca face an intense run of nine games in 28 days across all competitions, starting with this victory.
Torres whipped a free-kick against the crossbar with Barcelona remaining dominant, as midfield maestro Pedri Gonzalez controlled the game.
The second half was a low key affair as Barcelona were content with their lead, until Lewandowski came on for Torres, hungry to get in on the action.
The veteran Polish striker nodded home from Fermin Lopez’s cross at the end of a quick break to extend Barca’s lead and his own at the top of Spain’s scoring charts with 23 league goals.
Barcelona’s win helped them put daylight between themselves and champions Real Madrid, while Atletico, third, are seven points behind.
Barca host Girona on Sunday in a Catalan derby, while Atletico visit Espanyol and Real Madrid welcome Leganes on Saturday.
Vicente Moreno’s Osasuna are without a win in their last seven games across all competitions.
“We’re not doing well, for a long time we’ve been down in the dumps,” said Osasuna’s Ruben Garcia.
“We faced a team that rolled over the top of us, we have to recognize that and try to do better.”


Kenya probes goalkeeper match-fixing allegation

Kenya probes goalkeeper match-fixing allegation
Updated 27 March 2025
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Kenya probes goalkeeper match-fixing allegation

Kenya probes goalkeeper match-fixing allegation
  • The Football Kenya Federation (FKF) confirmed it was aware of videos circulating online involving goalkeeper Patrick Matasi
  • “FKF upholds the integrity of football and has launched an official investigation, in collaboration with FIFA, CAF, and other relevant authorities,” the Kenya football board said

NAIROBI: Kenya opened a match-fixing investigation Thursday following allegations that a national team goalkeeper helped rig an Africa Cup of Nations qualifier.
The Football Kenya Federation (FKF) confirmed it was aware of videos circulating online involving goalkeeper Patrick Matasi which raised concern about the possibility of match manipulation.
“FKF upholds the integrity of football and has launched an official investigation, in collaboration with FIFA, CAF, and other relevant authorities,” the Kenya football board said in a statement.
“We reaffirm our zero-tolerance policy on match manipulation and are committed to safeguarding the credibility of our competition.”


The secretly filmed online amateur video seen by AFP shows an unnamed man talking to Matasi over a plan to fix a match in return for cash.
The former AFC Leopards and Tusker goalkeeper, who also had a playing stint with Ethiopian side Coffee Sports Club, played in Kenya’s 4-1 loss to former African champions Cameroon in a 2025 AFCON qualifier in Yaounde last October.
The defeat dimmed Kenya’s hopes of qualifying for the finals in Morocco, and led to the resignation of the team’s coach Engin Firat.
Matasi was dropped from the team by the new coach Benni McCarthy and did not feature in the recent 2026 World Cup qualifiers against Gambia and Gabon.
Kenyan football has been hit by the dark shadow of match-fixing malpractices in the recent past with 14 players and two coaches suspended by the FKF in January 2023 following a tip-off about cheating in the national league.
In February 2020, FIFA banned four Kenyan-based players — one for life — over an “international conspiracy” to fix league matches.
Five Kenyan referees were also later suspended over the same scandal.
The Kenya Institute of Public Policy Research and Analysis, an independent think tank, warned that match-fixing had infiltrated multiple levels of Kenyan football from grassroots competitions to the professional leagues.
“This has left a trail of disillusionment among fans and undermined the integrity of football and could lead to loss of public trust and confidence in the football industry,” the organization said in a January 2024 report.


Mbappe, Vinicius among Real Madrid stars facing UEFA conduct probe

Mbappe, Vinicius among Real Madrid stars facing UEFA conduct probe
Updated 27 March 2025
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Mbappe, Vinicius among Real Madrid stars facing UEFA conduct probe

Mbappe, Vinicius among Real Madrid stars facing UEFA conduct probe
  • “A UEFA Ethics and Disciplinary Inspector has been appointed to investigate allegations of indecent conduct by Real Madrid CF players,” UEFA said
  • Spanish media reports suggested Real Madrid players are being scrutinized

MADRID: UEFA opened an investigation into four Real Madrid stars including Kylian Mbappe and Vinicius Junior on Thursday for alleged “indecent conduct” during their Champions League last 16 win over Atletico Madrid.
Madrid’s two superstar forward, as well as defender Antonio Rudiger and midfielder Dani Ceballos, face potential punishment ahead of their quarter-final first leg clash at Arsenal on April 8.
“A UEFA Ethics and Disciplinary Inspector has been appointed to investigate allegations of indecent conduct by Real Madrid CF players,” said the European football governing body in a statement.


Spanish media reports suggested Real Madrid players are being scrutinized by UEFA for the manner of their celebrations after the win.
UEFA and Real Madrid did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.
Record 15-time champions and current holders Madrid beat their rivals on penalties at Atletico’s Metropolitano stadium on March 12 after a 2-2 aggregate draw.
The night ended in controversy after Atletico forward Julian Alvarez had a penalty controversially disallowed in the shoot-out for supposedly touching the ball twice.


Leverkusen throw down gauntlet to Bayern in title tussle

Leverkusen throw down gauntlet to Bayern in title tussle
Updated 27 March 2025
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Leverkusen throw down gauntlet to Bayern in title tussle

Leverkusen throw down gauntlet to Bayern in title tussle
  • Defending champions Leverkusen host 16th-placed Bochum on Friday
  • Bayern host a St. Pauli side who are one spot but five points above Bochum

BERLIN: With eight games remaining in the Bundesliga season, Bayer Leverkusen coach Xabi Alonso promised his side would “fight until the end” in their chase of league leaders Bayern Munich.
Defending champions Leverkusen host 16th-placed Bochum on Friday and will draw to within three points of Bayern if they win.
A day later, Bayern host a St. Pauli side who are one spot but five points above Bochum.
Normally reserved and circumspect, Alonso was bullish in his pre-match press conference on Thursday, saying the game was “super important... now the goal is clear, to fight until the end.
“We can reduce Bayern’s lead to three points tomorrow. We want to put as much pressure on them as possible.”
Leverkusen’s 4-3 win over Stuttgart two weeks ago, in which they came from 3-1 down to win with a stoppage-time goal, was reminiscent of last season’s incredible late-game heroics on their way to the Bundesliga title.
Alonso also revealed that injured midfielder Florian Wirtz, originally slated to return in April, would be back “sooner than expected,” giving Leverkusen extra incentive to keep the race alive.
“He feels better. He’s close. We don’t want to be conservative with Flo — we want to go full throttle, take risks. If he can play a little earlier, we’ll take that risk.”
While Bochum and St. Pauli may be 16th and 15th respectively, the lowly table placings of Leverkusen and Bayern’s opponents this weekend do not tell the full story.
Since Dieter Hecking took over as coach in November, Bochum have beaten Bayern and Borussia Dortmund, while fighting to draws against Leverkusen and RB Leipzig.
Bochum’s hopes will be buoyed by Hecking announcing he has extended his deal by two seasons at the club until 2027 — provided they beat the drop.
Bochum sit in the relegation play-off position with 20 points, 19 of them accrued since Hecking took over.
Promoted St. Pauli’s bid to stay in the top division is built on an outstanding defense.
St. Pauli have conceded just 30 goals this season, better than every side in the top flight bar Bayern and surprise package Mainz.
In November, Bayern needed an incredible Jamal Musiala strike from outside the box to break down their stubborn opponents in a 1-0 win.
Bayern’s task will be made harder by the long-term absences of Alphonso Davies and Dayot Upamecano, who both look set to be out for the season due to injuries picked up on international duty.
In the off-season, Stuttgart spent a combined 48 million euros ($51 million) to sign strikers Deniz Undav and Ermedin Demirovic, but their shrewdest forward acquisition — Nick Woltemade — cost nothing at all.
The 1.98-meter tall Woltemade, who arrived on a free transfer from Werder Bremen, was expected to be a clear third in the forward pecking order, but has become Stuttgart’s most reliable source of goals in recent months.
Woltemade has eight goals in his past 14 league games, but his showing on Tuesday, where he scored a hat-trick for Germany’s Under-21 side against Spain, has German media asking if he is ready for a call-up to the senior team.
Asked if he would want to play in the European Under-21 Championship or for Julian Nagelsmann’s side in June’s Nations League, Woltemade said: “I don’t think they overlap... I’ve got enough power for both.”
1 — Stuttgart have won just one of their past eight league games.
3 — Augsburg last conceded a league goal on February 1 and have only let in three in 2025 — the lowest mark in Europe’s top five leagues.
4 — Borussia Dortmund have not beaten Mainz in four games, including their infamous final-day 2-2 draw in May 2023 that handed Bayern the title.

Fixtures (1430 GMT unless stated)
Friday
Bayer Leverkusen v Bochum (1930)
Saturday
Bayern Munich v St. Pauli, Holstein Kiel v Werder Bremen, Borussia Moenchengladbach v RB Leipzig, Wolfsburg v Heidenheim, Hoffenheim v Augsburg, Eintracht Frankfurt v Stuttgart (1730)
Sunday
Freiburg v Union Berlin, Borussia Dortmund v Mainz (1630)


Four talking points from dramatic week of Asian World Cup qualifiers

Four talking points from dramatic week of Asian World Cup qualifiers
Updated 27 March 2025
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Four talking points from dramatic week of Asian World Cup qualifiers

Four talking points from dramatic week of Asian World Cup qualifiers
  • Saudi Arabia desperately need a prolific goal scorer as Palestine keep unlikely dream alive with Iraq win
  • Indonesia’s Kluivert suffers rude awakening in debut, whilst Qatar’s struggles continue 

AUSTRALIA: Remember when critics of FIFA’s decision to expand the World Cup to 48 teams claimed it would spell the end of the qualifying stages?

That the bloated tournament would make qualifying “easy”and remove any of the drama or jeopardy we normally associate with the marathon effort to reach football’s global showpiece?

Try telling that to fans of Asian football who, for the past six months, have endured one of the most hotly contested qualifying campaigns in recent memory.

There are just two matches remaining in June to determine which six sides will progress automatically, and which six will progress to the next round, where the final two automatic spots for Asia will be decided.

Remarkably, 17 of the 18 teams are still in contention heading into the final fixtures, with only Japan and Iran safely through to the finals next year.

After another frenzied week of action, this is what we learned.

Palestine keeps the fairytale alive

To say you could not script it would be a boringly inaccurate cliche, but if you were going to, you could not have scripted it any better.

One-nil down with 90 minutes on the clock approaching, Palestine’s campaign looked to be done and dusted. Failure to take a point off Iraq would have seen their campaign officially ended.

But this fairytale had another ending, a joyous one for a people so depraved of happiness for the last 18 months. Goals fron Wessam Abou Ali in the 88th minute and Ahmeed Mahajna in the 97th minute saw Palestine record one of their most famous victories.

To see the smiles and ecstasy on the faces of Palestinian players, coaches and fans alike was to witness something so unbridled it brought a tear to the eye of even the hardest of hearts.

After Oman’s win, they are still a long shot to qualify for the next round. But they kept the hope alive for another few months; a currency, sadly, in short supply in Palestine right now.

Kluivert’s baptism of fire

Welcome to Asian football, Patrick Kluivert. The Dutch legend with a patchy coaching record was a surprise choice to replace the popular Shin Tae-yong as Indonesia coach, but after seven crazy minutes in Australia it looked like a masterstroke.

Tim Garuda had knocked Australia around with a blistering start, and as Kevin Diks stood over the spot kick to give Indonesia an unexpected early lead, Kluivert must have been in dreamland.

The dream soon became a nightmare. Diks missed his spot kick, and in the blink of an eye Indonesia went from a chance to go 1-0 up to being 2-0 behind. It was 3-0 by the half-hour mark and Australia were out of sight.

It ended 5-1, and with the incredibly strong Indonesian crowd in Sydney chanting the name of Shin Tae-yong and booing Kluivert whenever he appeared on the big screen at Allianz Stadium.

It is hardly the environment you want heading into your first home game; no wonder the TV cameras caught the sweat pouring down his brow early in the first half. The pressure was well and truly on the former Barcelona striker.

Winning cures all, however, and a 1-0 win over Bahrain in front of almost 70,000 in Jakarta to cement fourth spot, which would see them progress to the fourth round, has Indonesian fans putting the pitchforks down for now.

Wanted: A Saudi goal scorer

To apply, please send your resume to the Saudi Arabian Football Federation marked “Attention: Herve Renard.”

We joke, but Saudi Arabia’s goalscoring woes will be no laughing matter for the Frenchman, with the Green Falcons scoring just one goal in their past six fixtures, coming in the 1-0 win over China last week.

Renard shook up his selection for this camp, hoping to find a spark to ignite their campaign and while four points from China at home and Japan away is a very healthy return, one goal is six is the opposite.

With Australia taking maximum points, Saudi Arabia’s destiny is out of their hands. All they can do is win both games and hope for the best. But to state the obvious, to win games first you must score, and that is where Saudi Arabia are falling down at the moment.

Firas Al-Buraikan is having a tough time at Al-Ahli this year. Saleh Al-Shehri was dropped from the latest squad, while the leading Saudi scorer this season, Al-Khaleej’s Abdullah Al-Salem made his debut off the bench against China and is untested at international level.

It leaves Salem Al-Dawsari as the man shouldering the goalscoring burden, unless Renard can conjure a little bit of magic, because it feels like Saudi Arabia are going to need something supernatural if they are to finish second and qualify automatically.

From champs to chumps

It has been a miserable old campaign for Qatar. They have lost half the games they have played, conceded the most goals and were humbled this week by a Kyrgyzstan side ranked 59 places lower in the FIFA rankings.

All this, let us not forget, and they are still the Asian champions. How is that even possible?

Qatar seem devoid of direction. It is becoming increasingly obvious that the World Cup in 2022 was an endpoint, not the beginning of a bright new future for Qatari football.

Four coaches in three years, all with different tactical ideals, will attest to that.

Last year’s Asian Cup success was seen as wiping the slate clean after their World Cup embarrassment; proof again that this team was good enough on the international stage, and that the World Cup was just an aberration.

But it is becoming increasingly obvious that their Asian Cup successes are the exception, not the norm. While winning a tournament is one measure of a good team, so is consistency of performance across a multi-year campaign, and Qatar has failed at that.

They will likely still make it through to the next round, largely on the back of the generational talent that is Akram Afif, but they have lost the benefit of the doubt when it comes to trusting them to perform when it matters. The World Cup next year looks a long way away.