Magdeburg win all-German handball Champions League final
SC Magdeburg won the all-German handball Champions League final against Füchse Berlin on Sunday to claim their third title in the men's competition.
The now three-time winners defeated Bundesliga champions Berlin 32-26 in Cologne.
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Coach Bennet Wiegert has been involved in all three of Magdeburg's titles — as a player in 2001-02, and as head coach in 2022-23 and now 2024-25.
Magdeburg also have two other titles from when the competition was called the European Cup. Berlin, meanwhile, have never won the trophy.
In the match for third place, HBC Nantes defeated Barça 30-25.
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7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Liverpool legend questions Bayern move for Diaz
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New York Times
2 hours ago
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Manchester United 0-0 Leeds United: A new formation, a new-look attack, goodbye Bamford?
Leeds United got their 2025 pre-season programme underway with a 0-0 draw against Manchester United in Stockholm on Saturday. There were debuts for the five new arrivals Leeds have drafted in this summer, while Patrick Bamford's absence arguably commanded the biggest headline of the day. Quality in both boxes was lacking from the two attacks, but this was always about the Leeds players banking minutes in their first outing of the summer. The majority of the squad Farke took to Sweden was given 45 minutes apiece, with a few minor exceptions. The team travels to Germany next for a week-long training camp, where two further friendlies will be played behind closed doors… Rumours of Bamford's omission began to circulate on Friday night. Saturday's teamsheet confirmed the club's No 9 of the last seven years had been left at home. After 205 appearances, 60 goals, two Championship titles and one England cap, Farke is ready to draw a line under Bamford's time as a Leeds player. 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Yahoo
4 hours ago
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Down to 10 players for over 100 minutes, Germany produced their best Euro 2025 performance
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Kett also deserves credit for a fearsome, battling performance in her own right. The centre-backs were excellent in the air. Most impressive was Giovanna Hoffmann, a surprise starter instead of regular centre-forward Lea Schuller. She brilliantly played the unenviable role of lone striker in a side down to 10 players. She ran, fought in the air, flicked the ball on and held it up. More than anything, she constantly won free kicks from the France defenders, enabling her side to relieve the pressure, have a breather and get themselves up the pitch. Indeed, France's indiscipline was such that Germany had the best chance to win in normal time from the penalty spot. Brand was going nowhere, other than running in a manner that might vaguely buy a trip from France defender Selma Bacha. The France left-back didn't read the situation. Had Nusken hammered the penalty into the net rather than straight at goalkeeper Pauline Peyraud-Magnin, few would have said it was undeserved. The most surprising thing about Germany's display was their lack of substitutions. Aside from their injury-enforced first-half switch, Wuck kept faith with the players who had started the game until the eighth minute of extra time, despite France repeatedly injecting extra speed from the bench. 'The team was performing very well,' Wuck said, when asked about the lack of changes. 'Every player was giving an immense performance, and there's absolutely no reason (to make substitutions) if the players don't ask to be substituted. Therefore, in extra time, if we needed to react to things, then we could. But in terms of technical or tactical reasons, there was no need for substitutions.' For their part, France produced a pitiful display of football, which deserved nothing less than elimination. They played over 100 minutes of football with an extra player, only scored from an early penalty and created little afterwards. This is a limited side overly reliant upon speed in wide positions. When denied space to break into, France offered no combination play or individual invention in central positions. They were hugely flattered by their 5-2 win here in Basel a week ago against the Netherlands, who deservedly led 2-1 at half-time, and were forced to keep on attacking because they needed to win by a three-goal margin. That meant France could counter-attack. In that respect, they are an exceptional side. In other ways, they are lacking. 'The German team was heroic,' Bonadei said after the game. 'They really hurt us in the duels. … They defended very well in their half; they didn't leave any space. It was really hard to find solutions between the lines. We tried to use the wings, but our passing was not good enough.' The Euro 2025 quarter-finals had late drama, with Italy squeezing past Norway, a comeback out of nowhere from England, and a farcical penalty shootout win over Sweden. They had a commendable display from hosts Switzerland, bowing out of the tournament with dignity after eventually succumbing to Spain, and now add one of the most impressive displays you will see from a side reduced to 10 players — never mind the fact that the red card came after 13 minutes and that there was extra time, too. Germany will go into their semi-final against Spain on Wednesday in Zurich as the underdogs. They have a day less of rest, they have Hendrich and Nusken suspended, they will be suffering from enormous fatigue, and they're simply not as good as world champions Spain. But this win will have given them tremendous belief and probably a neat template for how to play against a possession-focused Spain side. Who knows how effective they could be, playing with this mentality and an 11th player. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Germany, Women's Soccer, Women's Euros 2025 The Athletic Media Company