Sports
Barcelona, Lyon and Chelsea reach Women’s Champions League quarters | The Express Tribune
PARIS:
Barcelona and Lyon clinched places in the quarter-finals of the Women’s Champions League on Wednesday, while Chelsea came from behind to beat Wolfsburg and qualify directly for the last eight.
Holders Arsenal must go through the play-offs along with Manchester United after missing out on a top-four finish, as Bayern Munich pinched the final automatic quarter-final berth.
Spanish champions Barcelona finished top of the league phase unbeaten after a 2-0 win away to Paris FC, with Vicky Lopez and Caroline Graham Hansen scoring in the French capital.
Three-time Champions League winners Barcelona have reached the final each of the past five years. They pipped Lyon to first place on goal difference after both clubs ended level on 16 points.
This season’s format is similar to the men’s competition, with the top four teams in the league phase qualifying for the quarter-finals and clubs placed fifth to 12th going into a play-off round.
Lyon thrashed Atletico Madrid 4-0 with a penalty from captain Wendie Renard and goals from Kadidiatou Diani and Korbin Shrader. Vilde Boe Risa’s own goal gave Lyon the lead before Atletico were reduced to 10 players.
Chelsea won 2-1 away to Wolfsburg to take third place. Alexandra Popp opened the scoring for the Germans but headers from Lucy Bronze and Sam Kerr ensured the Blues went through to the quarter-finals.
Bayern eased to a 3-0 win over Norwegians Valerenga to edge Arsenal and United to fourth place by a point.
Olivia Smith and Beth Mead struck in a 3-0 victory for Arsenal away to Belgian outfit Leuven, with Saar Janssen also turning into her own net.
Arsenal picked up their fourth straight win but it wasn’t enough to avoid the play-off round after starting the league phase with back-to-back losses.
Jess Park’s fine finish lifted United to a 1-0 win at Juventus, who had started the night in the top four. United ended level with Arsenal on 12 points.
The draw for the knockout phase takes place on Thursday.
Sports
UWCL grades for all 18 teams: Leuven get A+; Barça an A-, PSG fail
The first 18-team UEFA Women’s Champions League group stage is over! We’ve had six matchdays across a single league-phase table, as well as tons of the world’s best players on show, but now we’re down to the final 12 sides.
How did everything go for the teams involved? It’s safe to say that it didn’t go to plan for everyone, and our grades reflect that.
OH LEUVEN (A+)
They might have only finished 12th, but sealing a spot in the knockout-phase playoffs would have been beyond the Belgian minnows’ wildest dreams in their first-ever UWCL tournament. A win over FC Twente and draws with PSG, Paris FC and Roma set them up for success. They even managed to keep Barcelona and Arsenal to only three goals.
MANCHESTER UNITED (A)
A debut UWCL campaign for United, and what a debut it was. Three tight wins from their first three games against Valerenga, Atletico and PSG set up them for success, and a 1-0 win over Juventus on the final day meant that defeats to Wolfsburg and OL Lyonnes didn’t matter too much. A paper-thin squad was able to seal a favorable playoff draw by finishing sixth, and that is some achievement.
BARCELONA (A-)
They topped the table, which was entirely expected given their 7-1 thrashing of Bayern on matchday 1, and a goal difference of plus-17 from their five wins showed their superiority. But a 1-1 draw with Chelsea suggests they could be vulnerable as the tournament goes on, and they are going to have to find a way to cope without injured star midfielders Patri and Aitana Bonmati.
OL LYONNES (A-)
The star power of OL Lyonnes has shone brightly with an average of three goals per game, and five wins from six. But they did need to come back from 3-0 down at halftime to Juventus to secure a 3-3 draw, so they’ve not had everything their own way. They are certainly one of the favorites to go all the way to the final.
CHELSEA (B+)
In true Chelsea style, anything less than 100% isn’t good enough, so two draws (against FC Twente and Barcelona) have marked them down in the grades. Otherwise, they scored 16 goals against Paris FC, St. Pölten and Roma, before a 2-1 comeback win against Wolfsburg sealed their spot in the top four on the final day.
BAYERN MUNICH (B+)
A 7-1 hammering at the hands of Barcelona suggested that this would be a tough campaign, but Bayern turned things around to beat Juventus, Arsenal (with a superb comeback), PSG and Valerenga. Even a 2-2 draw against Atlético Madrid couldn’t halt their progress. They will be tough opponents for anyone.
ARSENAL (B-)
The defending champions haven’t looked great. They squeezed into the top half of the knockout-phase playoff draw by virtue of other teams’ failures, but it was a shock that they didn’t qualify automatically after lackluster defeats to OL Lyonnes and Bayern Munich. They did well to overcome Real Madrid 2-1 to avoid a worse fate, but were also lucky to play the lower-ranked OH Leuven, Benfica and FC Twente to get some much-needed points on the board.
VALARENGA (B-)
They fought for playoff qualification all the way to final matchday, which wouldn’t have been on the cards at the start. A win over Roma was the Norwegian side’s crowning glory, while they threw away a 2-0 lead over St. Pölten (ending in a 2-2 draw), and narrowly lost to Man United, Wolfsburg and Paris FC, before losing 3-0 to Bayern on the final day. But for that draw with St. Pölten, they could have gone through.
TWENTE (C+)
A shock 1-1 draw with Chelsea on matchday 1 could have set the tone, but they suffered a 2-1 loss to Leuven in the next game, and that about sums things up. Two draws (the other came against Benfica) wasn’t enough to avoid elimination before they nearly beatReal Madrid in the final game but drew 1-1.
REAL MADRID (C+)
All looked good for Madrid after a 6-2 thrashing of Roma in the first game and a 2-1 win over PSG in the second. They stuttered with a 1-1 draw to Paris FC, before losing to Arsenal, but then things turned around against with a win over Wolfsburg on matchday 5. That meant all they needed to do was beat lowly Twente to seal an automatic spot. But they drew 1-1, and now face a tough knockout draw.
JUVENTUS (C)
Juve didn’t make it out of the group stage last season behind Arsenal and Bayern, and they were too inconsistent again. They beat who they needed to beat: Benfica, St. Pölten and Atletico. And they almost did enough to beat Bayern (2-1 defeat, thanks to a stoppage-time goal), and OL Lyonnes (3-3 draw, having gone 3-0 up). But when it mattered, they lost 1-0 at home to Manchester United on the final day and failed to seal an automatic spot.
WOLFSBURG (C)
The two-time champions and four-time runners-up are looking to get back to the top of the game, but on the evidence of a 3-1 defeat to OL Lyonnes and 2-1 loss to Chelsea, they’re not there yet. Wins over PSG, Valerenga and Man United were routine, but they really messed up by losing 2-0 to Real Madrid. Having been expected to seal an automatic place after matchday four, they now have an unfavorable spot in the playoffs after finishing ninth, though nobody will want to face them.
PARIS FC (C)
They did better than their local rivals PSG, but it was a very middling performance from the Parisian club. An opening 2-2 draw at home to OH Leuven, 4-0 loss to Chelsea and 2-0 defeat to Barcelona suggests they won’t trouble too many in the playoffs, though they did hold Real Madrid to a 1-1 draw that required Caroline Weir to score a 98th-minute equalizer, in addition to beating Benfica and Valerenga.
ATLÉTICO MADRID (C)
Defeats to Juventus and Man United, as well as a 2-2 draw to Bayern, saw Atletico struggle at home. But their away form saw them beat FC Twente and St. Pölten, before losing 4-0 to OL Lyonnes, which was enough to seal a lower-half playoff draw. But they won’t be worrying too many opponents.
ST. POLTEN (C)
They finished bottom of the table, but that was pretty much expected. The Swiss minnows managed to pick up a point with a comeback draw at Valerenga, while they stopped OL Lyonnes scoring more than three goals. Sadly, the same can’t be said of the rest and they finished with a disappointing minus-25 goal difference from their six games.
BENFICA (D)
The Portuguese side never really got going after they took an early lead to Juventus in the first game, and fell to four defeats from six. Yes, they had a tough run of games against Juve, Arsenal, Paris FC and Barcelona, but their only points came from draws with FC Twente and PSG.
ROMA (F)
They are top of Serie A, but Roma were very poor in Europe and seem to be missing the spark of former manager Alessandro Spugna. They were hammered by Real Madrid (6-2) and Barcelona (4-0) in their opening games and never recovered. They should have picked up valuable points against Valerenga and OH Leuven, but only managed a draw against the latter, before a 6-0 drubbing to Chelsea saw their hopes of a playoff spot extinguished. A 6-1 win over lowly St. Pölten on the final day meant nothing.
PARIS SAINT-GERMAIN (F)
What an awful campaign. Many would have tipped PSG to be pushing for an automatic qualification spot at the top of the table, but instead they lost four of their first four games (to Wolfsburg, Real Madrid, Man United and Bayern) before a 0-0 draw with minnows OH Leuven sealed their fate and they could only draw with Benfica on the final day with nothing at stake. They’ve had a lot of squad turnover, but that’s no excuse for this level of performance.
Sports
PKF summons meeting after Pakistani player represents India in kabaddi tournament
The Pakistan Kabaddi Federation (PKF) has called an emergency General Council meeting for December 27 and ordered an investigation after a local player was seen playing for the Indian team at a tournament in Bahrain, wearing its shirt and waving the Indian flag.
The player identified in the matter is Ubaidullah Rajput, who was among the 16 participants and is a Pakistan national team player.
PKF Secretary Rana Sarwar said Chairman Chaudhry Shafay Hussain had convened the meeting to take up the matter.
Sarwar said 16 Pakistani players participated in the Bahrain event, but stressed it was not Pakistan’s national team, no permission was sought for it, and no NOC was issued to the players.
The 16 included the national team and national-level players.
He said it was a self-styled team in which Pakistan’s name was used, adding that neither government permission was obtained to take part in the event nor was the federation informed.
Calling the incident “unacceptable”, Sarwar said a national player playing for India and waving its flag would be investigated and the “strictest action” would be taken.
He added that action would also be taken against self-styled promoters and that no one would be allowed to hold illegal events or, under any circumstances, defame Pakistan’s name.
Sarwar said players from several countries can play together in clubs, but described playing for a foreign team and waving its flag as regrettable.
The tournament was the 3rd GCC Kabaddi Cup, held on December 16 in Salmabad, Bahrain, at the Gulf Air Club, with participating teams Bahrain, Kuwait, Dubai and Oman.
Sports
Ward wants Titans to involve him in HC search
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — As the Tennessee Titans wrap up their unsuccessful 2025 season, their attention is beginning to turn to the search for their next coach — and quarterback Cam Ward wants to be a part of the process.
“I want to meet all of them,” Ward said of the next candidates. “Every coach who gets the opportunity to come here, I want to have conversations throughout the process with them. I’m going to be here for that whole time.”
Ward said president of football operations Chad Brinker and general manager Mike Borgonzi had spoken with him about his involvement in the search. The rookie quarterback said he’ll be all-in on the next head coach regardless of whether it’s a defensive- or offensive-minded hire.
Tennessee fired coach Brian Callahan in October after a 1-5 start to the season, citing a lack of team growth and individual progress from Ward, despite the coach’s offensive background.
Ward was very outspoken about his support for Callahan during training camp saying he wanted to play well enough to make Callahan one of the top coaches in the league.
Now the Titans are searching for Callahan’s replacement. Interim coach Mike McCoy hasn’t been able to get better results, posting a 1-8 record since taking over.
According to a team source, the Titans are looking for a candidate with strong leadership skills who will help establish an identity, something the team has lacked over the past two seasons.
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