
Win a stunning three-bed luxury villa in Spain or £400,000 cash alternative from just £1.79 with our discount code
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The villa is situated in Benimar area of Rojales the villa features three bedroom and three elegant bathrooms.
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3 Bed Luxury Villa in Spain + £10,000 Cash
Master Bedroom with Walk Through Wardrobe and En-suite
Double Bedroom with En-suite
Third Double Bedroom with Access to Private Garden
Open Plan Kitchen/Dining and Living Room Area
Fully Integrated Kitchen
Private Swimming Pool (7M x 3M)
Rooftop Sun Deck
Motorized Gate with Video Intercom
Air Conditioning
Underfloor Heating in Bathrooms
Electric Shutters on Windows
These beautifully designed homes offer the perfect blend of style, comfort, and convenience, making them an ideal choice for both permanent living and holiday getaways.
This villa features 3 spacious bedrooms and 3 elegant bathrooms. The open-plan kitchen seamlessly connects to a bright and airy living and dining area, leading out to a generous terrace – perfect for enjoying meals or relaxing in the sun.
Built on private, independent plots, the villa will come with its own landscaped garden, a private swimming pool, and on-site parking. From your terrace or poolside, take in stunning open views of the surrounding countryside and distant mountains – a peaceful, scenic backdrop to your everyday life.
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Times
16 hours ago
- Times
How Picasso and Old Trafford nerves inspired Juan Mata's art exhibition
Juan Mata is speaking to me from Asturias in northwest Spain. It is a chat via Zoom and so to bridge the gap to London I hold up my tea, which is in a bright red and yellow Valencia CF-branded mug, and in a flash we are smiling and joking like old friends. 'Valencia was very important for me, it was the beginning of everything. So yeah, it should be also in the conversation,' Mata, who made 174 appearances for the Spanish club before joining Chelsea, with whom he won the Champions League, Europa League and FA Cup, in 2011, and then Manchester United three years later. His is an exceptional career in which he also won the World Cup and the Euros with Spain, and it is not over yet. He spent last season in Australia with Western Sydney Wanderers and has yet to decide if he will return there in August. His friends warned him, when he told them he was joining the A-League, that Australia was a cultural desert. And why should this have worried them? Because Mata, 37, loves art. He loves it so much that he has curated, for Manchester, an exhibition, Football City, Art United, where visitors can experience collaborations between 11 artists and 11 footballers. It is an intriguing idea, the most compelling of which comes from the imagination of Eric Cantona, and is about encouraging visitors to understand the pressures of fame by picking out at random a member of the public and placing them under a constant spotlight as they explore the art space. Is such a spotlight something that has been a strain for Mata over his career? 'I love to be anonymous,' he says. 'I love to be in places where you don't get so much attention. I enjoy very much the attention on the pitch. I like to be a kind of protagonist on the pitch every time I try to play football. But off the pitch I'm more comfortable not being in the spotlight and being a bit more relaxed. I had experiences in Japan [with Vissel Kobe] and in Australia where you can live a little bit more relaxed than in certain cities in Europe due to the relevance of football. But one who has been, and still is and probably will always be, in the spotlight is Eric Cantona.' As someone who knows exactly who is her favourite painter — and Mata very politely asks me to spell out Vilhelm Hammershoi so he can look him up — I naturally want to know who is his favourite, but he says it is a process that has taken him from Picasso to Pollock. 'I love to be anonymous and in places where you don't get attention' 'It's for me difficult to have one favourite thing,' he says. 'Whenever I did interviews in the past about one movie, one song, one book, I have many, so it's difficult to single one out. My journey with art started when I was living in Madrid and Reina Sofía is one of my favourite museums. So whenever I wanted to disconnect, apart from doing many other things, I used to go there. And when I saw Guernica, the Picasso painting, for the first time, it was quite striking. After that, and as I got older, I started to read more and visit more galleries and exhibitions, and when I was living in England, I used to go to Whitworth Gallery a lot, which I love. 'It's one of my favourite spaces in Manchester. And then I started to get to know people, like Hans [Ulrich Obrist, artistic director of the Serpentine Gallery and co-curator of the Football City project]. I also met people in Spain, art historians, and I started to learn about the different periods in time. And then I started to realise, oh, okay, I like abstract expressionism, for example. So I like Pollock, I like Lee Krasner, I like [Mark] Rothko. But I also like [René] Magritte, a surrealist. And I also like architecture, for example, Le Corbusier or Tadao Ando. It was very common to see buildings from him when I was living in Japan. And in Japan, I had the chance to go to Naoshima, which is this beautiful island full of art. So it's difficult to pick a single, one artist. It's just a process.' Mata switches effortlessly from discussing art to football, which is why, presumably, this new exhibition is possible. Visitors will gain entry through a tunnel devised by Edgar Davids, the former Dutch midfielder, which is supposed to help the public experience what it feels like to leave the quiet of the dressing room and then stride into a baying arena. 'For me, the tunnel at Old Trafford has always been really special,' he says. 'I mean, it's that beautiful stadium, the Theatre of Dreams, and you're there every two weeks walking through that tunnel and getting to a pitch where you know there's going to be 75,000 people. 'It's quite intense, but also exciting. So it's just the moment before you have to perform and it's the moment where you actually can think about what you want to do. And you can feel the nerves of your team-mates, you can see the opposition team at the same time, lining up. I think it's a very, very important ritual that we have in the sport.' The time difference in the Antipodes meant Mata could not watch as many United games as he would have liked, but he saw enough to understand the club suffered a 'tough season'. 'I like the coach [Ruben Amorim], a young coach with a lot of positivity and energy, and hopefully he can turn things around. Of course, there has been a change in the ownership of which are trying to create financial sustainability in the club. I think they admitted that that was their priority. So hopefully from now on they can really grow on the pitch. That's what I would love. I love the club. 'I like Pollock, I like Krasner, I like Rothko. But I also like Magritte' 'I have so many friends there. I speak a lot with Bruno [Fernandes], who is a very enthusiastic player. And when things are not going well, he suffers a lot. So, I hope that this year is the year where things can be a bit more stable on the pitch and they can really build and bring United where I believe they should be, which is fighting for the biggest trophies there are.' I mention how the arrival of Amorim was widely assumed to mean Fernandes would struggle to be involved. 'I think if Bruno doesn't fit into any system, you should create a system in which he can fit because he is just so good as a player and as a person, as a leader,' Mata says. 'I think he is instrumental for Man United.' United's decline is one of football's great mysteries, as is the way Spain, at club and international level, know how to win so unerringly. When Chelsea won the Conference League in May it brought to an end a run of 27 finals involving Spanish domestic and international teams that they had won. Mata also won the Champions League and Europa League with Chelsea DARREN WALSH/GETTY IMAGES 'I don't have the 100 per cent accurate reply,' he says, before giving as close to a complete assessment as you will get, 'but I think it's a combination of things. 'I think one is the relevance and importance of football in our society and of course it is the same in England too and in other countries. But in Spain, football is like a religion. You have the big teams, you have the smaller teams, which in the smaller cities everyone follows. 'All kids play football since the age of two or three. Before more than now, I would say, and I think that's something generational. But we have, I believe, a good understanding of the game. 'We have good coaches, so we have good education coming through the academies. We have teams that normally give opportunity to the players, so we have a good system of how to get to our first team with the academy, with Segunda División and the different leagues that we have. We have, I would say, a good mentality and a good understanding of what being a professional football player means. So, like you say, competition is something that we are born with. 'I saw foxes… I don't know if that's a sign that my spirit animal is a fox' 'We always think about playing in a nice way, but also trying to win all the time. I remember when I was in the Spanish national team, under-15 and under-16, we were always competing for winning. I think that gets into your DNA. Basically, I think it's a great system, a good context, great coaches, and innate talent with the ball, which comes from so many people playing in the streets, in the parks and everywhere else.' Mata believes Spain's all-enveloping football culture has been key to their success in the sport ANTHONY DEVLIN FOR THE TIMES And then comes the most surreal moment of any interview I have conducted with an elite player as Mata asks me if he should be buying chicken for the foxes that cross his path. This is because Ella Toone's artwork is inspired by the United midfielder's spirit animal, which is a Shetland Pony — which leads me to wonder if Mata has a spirit animal. 'Lately, and this is actually very good timing for your question, I keep seeing foxes. I don't really know what that means, but over the last year, I was living in London for some time before going to Australia and I was seeing foxes more often than other people that I know, especially at night. So I don't know if that's a sign that my spirit animal is a fox.' Cue a lecture from me on how I keep an extended family of foxes going with shed loads of fresh chicken every week. 'Oh, wow. OK,' he says. 'Good idea.' And my work is done.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Sofia Vergara looks half her age while posing with lookalike niece
Sofia Vergara looked half her age while posing for a snap with her look-alike niece. The 52-year-old actress and entrepreneur and 32-year-old Claudia Vergara showed their striking similarities while beaming for the camera on a trip to Madrid. The Modern Family star is in Spain to celebrate her Toty beauty brand expanding into Europe. She first launched her Toty - named after her childhood nickname - back in 2023. She also took to Instagram to share several snaps of her from travels, a year after the actress and her niece appeared on the Roku Channel show Celebrity Family Food Battle. Sofia's niece Claudia is an Instagram influencer with a large following, and she started hosting Latinx Now! in 2018, alongside Christian Acosta and Nastassja Bolívar. Latinx Now! is a bilingual pop culture news program with a Latinx lens, produced in English and Spanish to serve audiences across North and Latin America. The Modern Family star first shared a group snap with Claudia, Sofia's longtime business partner Luis Balaguer, hair stylist Kylee Heath, friend Alejandro Asen and others. Vergara captioned the snap, '@totyeurope work day in Madrid,' plus a red heart emoji, plus another post where she hit the red carpet in a stunning white dress. The actress also shared a snap of her with another famous Colombian - singer Karol G - while wearing a black top and wide-legged grey jeans. Vergara captioned the snap, '@totyeurope work day in Madrid,' plus a red heart emoji, plus another post where she hit the red carpet in a stunning white dress. Another post featured the actress and her niece, captioned simply, 'Madrid' and a red heart emoji. Vergara was donning the same outfit as her snap with Karol G, which her niece was donning a black top with a slightly sheer with black printed and white floral designs. The niece accessorized with a gold necklace, earrings and black strappy heels for the outing with her aunt. The post also included another photo from a massive group dinner somewhere in Madrid. Vergara also took to her Instagram story to share another snap of her and niece Claudia walking the streets of Madrid. While she has a ways to catch her aunt's 35.3 million Instagram followers, influencer Claudia boasts 323K followers herself, though she has a tragic past. Her father - Sofia's brother Rafael - was murdered in 1998 during a kidnapping attempt, when Claudia was just six years old. Sofia said in an interview, 'We come from a successful family, and he knew he was a target for kidnapping.' 'He always had bodyguards. Then one day he went out alone and was shot dead (in a kidnapping attempt). I was devastated,' she added. She ultimately moved to Los Angeles for college, graduating from Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising in 2017. Claudia joked in a 2019 interview that she and Sofia, 'share clothes all the time,' but with a caveat. 'Anything from the waist down, for sure. From the waist up, I don't have the boobs for it,' she joked. Her famous aunt is also her fashion inspiration, adding, 'She's amazing because she did everything by herself … she's a busy woman and a very empowered woman. She doesn't need anyone and I love that about her.' The actress has been rumored to be seeing F1 driver Lewis Hamilton, following her split from ex-husband Joe Manganiello. While that relationship has yet to be confirmed, she recently opened up about the things she's looking for in a man in an interview with TODAY. 'I want to say the basic stuff, like health and somebody that loves me,' she told Today hosts Jenna Bush Hager and Erin Andrews on May 14. While that relationship has yet to be confirmed, she recently opened up about the things she's looking for in a man in an interview with TODAY. She added, 'And somebody tall, handsome,' before insisting that her next partner has to have as much money as her with her net worth estimated at $180 million. 'I want somebody that has as much money as me or more, because if not, it's a nightmare,' she said. 'They end up resenting you. And I want somebody fun. I need fun in my life,' she explained. Vergara can currently be seen as a judge on NBC's America's Got Talent, which airs Tuesday nights at 8 PM.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Revealed: Diogo Jota's heartbreaking final post on social media as Liverpool star dies aged 28 in tragic car crash
Footballer Diogo Jota published his final social media post less than 24 hours before his tragic death in a car crash aged 28. The Liverpool star is believed to have been travelling in a car in northern Spain with his brother Andre, 26, who is also a footballer and feared dead. Jota's death tragically came just two weeks after he married his childhood sweetheart and mother of his three children, Rute Cardoso. His final post on Instagram, which was published just 18 hours before Mail Sport reported the news, showed a heartwarming video of he and Cardoso tying the knot. Jota also posted to social media platform X for the final time five days ago to celebrate his new marriage, posting, 'June 22, 2025. Yes, forever,' with a series of wedding photos. More to follow. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Diogo Jota (@diogoj_18) • 22 de Junho de 2025 • Sim, para sempre ♾️ — Diogo Jota (@DiogoJota18) June 28, 2025