
Islam Makhachev lashes out at Ilia Topuria: ‘Just a big mouth with a nice haircut'
In February, Topuria vacated the UFC featherweight title with the aim of challenging Makhachev for the lightweight belt. However, Makhachev has now vacated his own title as he prepares to challenge Jack Della Maddalena for the welterweight strap, which 'JDM' took from Makhachev's friend Belal Muhammad this month.
Topuria will face former lightweight champion Charles Oliveira for the title vacated by Makhachev, but the Georgian-Spaniard would have rather tested himself against Makhachev; many in MMA deem the latter the pound-for-pound best fighter in the sport, with Topuria close behind.
Topuria, 28, recently called Makhachev, 33, a 'hypocrite' for giving up the 155lb belt after taking issue with 'El Matador''s decision to relinquish the 145lb gold. And now, Makhachev has hit back.
Topuria initially said: 'He is the biggest hypocrite I've ever seen. He said he didn't want to give me the opportunity because I was the little guy, and now the little guy is the one looking for the same opportunity I was looking for...
'Ali [Abdelaziz, Makachev's manager] should thank me for not beating his star. That's the fight everyone wanted to see. I put everything I could on the table, and they ran away. Why chase? If someone runs away, you don't have to bully them. I don't want to fight people who don't want to fight me either.'
Makhachev then tweeted on Thursday (15 May): 'Difference between me and you [is] that I cleaned [up the] top list in my division, moved to [the] next. But you ran away from two contenders who had consecutive 5-9 wins in FW division. You are nobody in LW division, just a big mouth from Spain with [a] nice haircut. Go get one W, and we can talk boy.'
Makhachev was referring to the fact that he achieved a record-breaking four successful title defences at lightweight, while Topuria retained his belt once before vacating the strap.
Makhachev submitted Oliveira to win the vacant 155lb title in October 2022, before recording two successful defences against Alexander Volkanovski (who held the 145lb belt at the time) in 2023, one against Dustin Poirier in 2024, and one against Renato Moicano in January. He outpointed then knocked out Volkanovski in their fights, and submitted Poirier and Moicano.
Meanwhile, Topuria knocked out Volkanovski last February to become featherweight champion, before retaining the gold with a knockout of former title holder Max Holloway in October.
Topuria is unbeaten in MMA at 16-0, while Makhachev is 16-1 in the UFC and 27-1 overall. Topuria debuted in the UFC in 2020, while Makhachev debuted in the promotion in 2015 – the same year he suffered his sole loss.
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Daily Mail
7 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
The kiss that made Alba Redondo the top star in Spanish football: Player and her wife are a sporty power couple loved by fans who will steal the show at Euros final
They say the couple that plays together stays together - and it couldn't be truer for a loved-up sporty pair, one half of which plays as a forward on the Spanish women's football team facing off the Lionesses in a highly-anticipated Euros final this Sunday. Liga F Club's Alba Redondo, 28, has made headlines with her public declarations of love for wife Cristina Monleón - with mid-game kisses, Instagram posts and a stunning wedding in their home country. They tied the knot in Albacete , the athlete's hometown, just last month, hosted at the gorgeous Finca los Prados estate. It was a beautiful ceremony in front of more than 200 guests, featuring a white steed, vintage car, and striking lace gowns from both brides, according to Hola magazine. Cristina, sports and exercise scientist at the University of Valencia - where Alba had once been a student - began dating the player three years ago. On Instagram, both women's timelines have been filled with devoted, gushing posts about one another. In 2022, Cristina dubbed her then-girlfriend a 'goodness, love, peace, tranquility, family, home and also my life saver'. 'You are a mirror in which to look at for your humility, your work, your effort, your love for your friends, your happiness, your know-how to be and be... you are true to yourself and to others,' she penned in the post. 'Your dreams and wishes, are mine too. And I will walk you through that process to them.' And Alba has been ardently reciprocal in her affections. The following year, she and Cristina were one of the sweetest moments which emerged from the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup. As Spain won 5-0 against Zambia, the footballer leaned out of the stands to give Cristina a kiss - which earned whopping delight on social media. The couple, as reported by Hola, had met because Alba messaged Cristina because she was 'interested in learning how to conduct research'. They chatted amicably over coffee, and by the autumn of 2022, they were together. In June the next year, they moved in - and around 12 months later, Alba planned a special surprise for her girlfriend. On social media, she documented her luring Cristina to the Ciutat de Valencia stadium - just to propose to her on the pitch. The couple saw their most adorable photos over the years projected on a screen before the words - 'do you want to marry me?' - suddenly came on. An emotional Cristina readily said yes - and the rest was history. They tied the knot in Albacete , the athlete's hometown, just last month, hosted at the gorgeous Finca los Prados estate Their nuptials this summer mark a new chapter for the pair, and were officiated by RTVE journalist Sara Gutiérrez, who was behind coverage of the 2023 World Cup that saw the Spanish team emerge victorious. Photos from the ceremony saw white, cream and wicker décor adorn the nature around the estate, with a whimsical vintage flair to mark the occasion. And there may be even more cause for celebration for the couple - if Spain emerge as the winner this weekend. It's set to be a historic match-up for England's squad, which earlier this week had the nation in tears with a gripping victory against Italy, secured during extra time. The Lionesses are marching into their third consecutive major tournament final and this time they have Michelle Agyemang and Chloe Kelly to thank. 'She feels inevitable right now,' said England captain Leah Williamson of the teenage sensation. Agyemang - whose name incredibly means 'saviour of the nation' in the Akan language of her parents' native country, Ghana - wasn't even supposed to be here. Originally from South Ockendon in Essex, then attending Holy Cross School Primary and Southend High School for Girls, Agyemang was sent out on loan by Arsenal this season to 'continue her development' at Brighton, where she made just three starts for the Seagulls towards the end of their campaign. Then came the sliding doors moment – perhaps of the entire Euros campaign – just two months before Sarina Wiegman was due to name her squad for Switzerland when Alessia Russo picked up a knock midway through England's Nations League double-header with Belgium, and Agyemang was hurriedly called in to replace her. England were on the brink of a frustrating result in Leuven, the score stuck at 3-1, when Agyemang was introduced in the 80th minute. Just forty-one seconds later, Leah Williamson's looping cross from deep found her. One touch to control with her thigh, the second to blast it into the roof of the net. After a brief celebration, Agyemang retrieved the ball from the net and raced it back to the centre spot. The goal didn't spark a full comeback – the final score remained 3-2 – but it was quite the debut statement. She draws inspiration from a unique source. Agyemang listens to gospel music before every match to calm her mind. Indeed, her church background has led to one of her beloved hobbies, playing the piano, and she has even had her one transported out to Switzerland - though she hasn't treated the squad to a listen yet. When she's not playing, she's got her head in the books for a business management course at King's College London. Agyemang, a lifelong Arsenal fan, joined the Gunners' academy aged six. Born to Ghanaian parents, she has long been tipped for the limelight – although perhaps not quite this quickly. Asked that night in Belgium whether she viewed Agyemang as a back-up to Russo, Wiegman was quick to temper expectations, replying: 'That's really fast. I can't say that to you right now. She's an absolute talent and I think she's a very good number nine. 'It's too early to say now where that goes to and when the players come back and are fit then the competition up front is really high. But if it's not in the short term, then in the longer term she's an exciting player.' Scrap all that – Agyemang is a player for right now. Twice she has come to England's rescue in this Euros campaign, and twice she has delivered on Europe's biggest stage when the clock was beginning to say it was all over. 'She's unbelievable,' said Chloe Kelly – her future Arsenal teammate and fellow super sub – after the match. 'She's got the world at her feet. A young player with a bright future and I'm absolutely buzzing for her.' Only four years ago, Agyemang was a ball girl at Wembley for Wiegman's third game in charge – a World Cup qualifier against Northern Ireland in 2021 – and was left awestruck by being so close to the action. 'It was crazy, seeing the girls so close to my face,' she recently recalled. 'Beth Mead got a hat-trick that day, so to be a part of that experience was invaluable and I'll never forget it.' Now, those same players are singing the 19-year-old's praises after her late rescue act secured another historic final for this relentless team. 'She's very humble and knows her strength, and that gives her confidence,' Lucy Bronze said last night. 'She knows she's a strong girl and she knows she can finish. 'She can put the ball in the back of the net. She does it in training and she works tirelessly every single day in training against our centre-halves – pushing them and making sure that she's fresh for when she comes on as a sub. 'But what a future the kid's got ahead of her – at 19 she's helping the England team get to a Euros final. I can't imagine her or her family ever dreamed of it.' Bronze was asked if she shared some of Agyemang's fearlessness in her early career and replied: 'Yeah I think so because nobody knows anything about you, people can analyse her game but she's played a few minutes against Belgium, a few minutes in the season as well with Brighton. 'She's a little bit of the unknown and she brings something different to our other strikers and our attackers, which maybe other teams aren't used to playing against, especially in an England shirt. So I think it gives her a lot of confidence and the team give her a lot of freedom, Sarina does. 'We want her to be confident and just play good football and try and score goals, when she scored the first one, we were like, go and do it again. And you saw that in the rest of the game. She was going on by herself, she had two or three good runs in extra time where she was like, I'm going to take this team to the final. It's amazing to see and I think that gives the rest of the team confidence.


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
England v Spain referee: Who is trailblazing Euro 2025 final official Stephanie Frappart?
Stephanie Frappart will referee the Euro 2025 final between England and Spain, in the lastest in a long line of achievements for the trailblazing French official. Frappart, 41, is one of Uefa's leading officials and has made history by taking charge of several high-profile men's fixtures in recent years. Frappart became the first woman to referee a men's World Cup match when she officated Germany's match against Costa Rica at the 2022 tournament. She also become the first woman to referee a men's Champions League match when she took charge of the fixture between Juventus and Dynamo Kyiv in 2020. In 2019, Frappart also became the first woman to referee a men's European final, overseeing Liverpool's victory over Chelsea in the Uefa Super Cup. In France, Frappart was also the first female referee to take charge of men's fixtures in Ligue 1 and Ligue 2. Frappart is also an experienced official in the women's game and officated matches at the 2023, 2019 and 2015 World Cups. At Euro 2025, Frappart took charge of the games between Germany and Poland, Switzerland and Finland, and the quarter-final between Italy and Norway. Frappart was the referee when the Lionesses defeated Brazil to win the 2023 Finalissima at Wembley, while she has also officiated the England men's team on two occasions, including last month's friendly defeat to Senegal at the City Ground. Frappart was the fourth official during the Euro 2022 final, then overseen by Ukraine's Kateryna Monzul, which was won by England when they defeated Germany in extra time at Wembley. Frappart said her appointment for the Euro 2025 final was a 'big honour and a proud moment'. Frappart is one of 13 elite female referees at Euro 2025 and Uefa has demanded high standards of the officials employed to take charge of games during the tournament. Uefa's managing director for refereeing Roberto Rosetti said all 13 referees at Euro 2025 passed the same fitness test that is conducted for the elite men's referees. The referee team for the Euro 2025 is multinational, with an Italian assistant referee in Francesca di Monte and an Italian fourth official in Maria Sole Ferrieri Caputi. Referee team for Euro 2025 final Referee: Stephanie Frappart (France) Assistants: Camille Soriano (France), Francesca di Monte (Italy) 4th official: Maria Sole Ferrieri Caputi (Italy) Reserve Assistant Referee: Susanne Küng (Switzerland) VAR Assistant: Christian Dingert (Germany)


The Independent
38 minutes ago
- The Independent
How England can solve Spain problem to seize Euro 2025 glory
The last few hours before a major final always have that strangely charged serenity. If that sounds like a contradiction, it only fits with the mood. At England 's Dolder Grand base, there's also one question left hanging in the rarefied air. Will Sarina Wiegman come up with something different for the Euro 2025 final - the team's third in a row, and her fifth? The route to Basel's St Jakob-Park has been tumultuous, with the England manager arguably getting her starting approach wrong in at least three games. There is nevertheless another crucial element. This is the sixth time that Wiegman's England have faced Spain in three years, the third in a major tournament, and the fourth since Spain evolved into this imperious team that dominates every game they play. England have lost two of those last three, but that has at least given the manager and her players a deeper understanding of how the Spanish work, the little details. So, does she do anything special? Can she surprise them? The suggestions so far are that there won't be anything radical, but that's only so far. Epiphanies can arrive in the tense final moments. That's the thing when two sides know each other as intimately as this. Such challenges come down to the intricacies, the little movements. That level of familiarity speaks to the fact that these have become the two powers in the women's game, as well as the wider game. They are intertwined in many other ways. Both are going for doubles. For Spain, it's the opportunity to become just the third side to be world and European champions at the same time, after Norway 1995-97 and Germany 2003-11. For England, it's the chance to become just the second side to retain the Euros, after Germany 1989-91 and Germany 1997 through to 2013. The latter admittedly involves a lot of successive victories, which is what many in the women's game feel Spain could now be capable of. That only accentuates the challenge for England, especially to put down a marker of their own. That touches on another area where there's empathy between the two squads. They both appreciate the social power of the other. Spain's 2023 victory ultimately forced an overhaul at their controversial federation, and the players now want a victory to stand on their own. 'They probably could have had more respect,' Keira Walsh said this week. 'I think the way our league jumped after we won the Euros and everything in and around it, if you compare it to Spain, it probably wasn't the same and they won the World Cup. They probably could have had more support. 'It was all about the other stuff that had gone on. As a professional, that was disappointing to see. I have a lot of friends in that team and I think they probably deserved a little bit more than what they got.' The Spanish players have meanwhile marvelled at what England's Euro 2022 win meant for the country. That significance has now gone to greater levels with this tournament's stand against the racist abuse that Jess Carter suffered. In other words, there's a greater value to either victory. England's semi-final brought ITV's highest audience this year, at a peak of 10.2m. Spain's semi-final brought 40 percent of the national audience share. Whoever loses, the women's game still wins. As regards who lifts the trophy, Spain are the clear favourites. It's not just about their status as world champions, or the fact that they have largely cruised through this tournament. The consensus in women's football is that they just play to a higher level than anyone else. Opposition sides find it exhausting, as if they're constantly fighting to stay in a game. That is down to an ideology and coaching structure that amplifies the profound technical quality of the players. You can see it in one of the main storylines going into the final. While England have been concerned about the fitness of Lauren James, the reality is Spain have about six players of James' calibre, with Aitana Bonmati then above all of them. She naturally offered the necessary brilliance to decide Spain's one testing game in the tournament so far, Wednesday's semi-final against Germany. Against that, there's yet another profound contrast in the journeys here. Where Spain have looked the best team in Switzerland, England have generally played way beneath their level. Four of their five games have required desperate rescue acts, that came from utter chaos. FA staff and players like Walsh have insisted that it is not just 'luck', and there's an obvious spirit and resolve, but it's clearly not any kind of sustainable game plan. And they now face a team where a game plan is more essential than ever. This is why Wiegman's thinking is so specifically important. Because, as the manager and her staff will be poring over in these final hours, there are a lot of obvious logical problems to solve. The key with Spain's entire ideology is that they play the game on their terms, taking the ball and playing high up the pitch. Their strongest area is in midfield, and especially the more advanced part of it. That is exactly where England have had the most problems, since every opposition side has realised an obvious blueprint is to press Walsh. The Spanish are at least susceptible to pace due to the calculated risk that their high line represents, but this is an England squad badly short of that exact quality outside Lauren Hemp. Spain are also better than in 2023. England are worse. When you break all that down, it's hard not to see a Spanish win. Or, at least, that's probably what would happen in four games out of five. This is just one game, however, which is also the biggest game you can have outside a World Cup final. It's exactly why the argument about finishing first in the group and when you play Spain was misguided. Yes, champions have to face anyone, but it's clearly better to face the notional best team in a final. Sure, if everything goes normally, Spain should win. But a final is not a normal game. If it gets to 70 minutes at 0-0 or an unexpected score, the tension from that ticking clock can have a pronounced effect on the world champions. Abnormal things can happen. England's own resolve is all the more important there, except Spain aren't exactly short on resilience themselves. As the defending European champions, England are also much better than having to rely on freak occurrences. Or, at least, they should be better. They beat Spain 1-0 as recently as February. None of the performances in Euro 2025 have yet matched that. It's why they do need to dramatically up it, why there's never been a greater need to seize the moment and step up from the first whistle, which is something many have bemoaned this tournament. They need a performance they haven't offered in months. The squad is at least filled with Arsenal players, not least tournament stars Michelle Agyemang and Chloe Kelly. They faced exactly these dynamics when beating Barcelona in the Champions League final. Arsenal won. Logic suggests Spain. Tournaments don't often work on logic. Wiegman still has to find new solutions. We know what Spain will do, after all. The question over what Wiegman does will consequently be the key determining factor in who delivers another transcendental moment. That's for their team, for their country, for the game.