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Soccer

Champions League final: Preview, prediction for Liverpool-Real Madrid clash

It’s here. This Saturday, the globe’s attention turns to the Parisian suburbs, where Real Madrid and Liverpool meet in the Champions League final. Here’s a breakdown of the much-anticipated contest, along with a predicted outcome.

There’s a tendency to bow to the mysticism of Real Madrid. Rather than explaining their escape acts and their opponents’ collapses as part of an obvious pattern – a big team with tremendous players winning a game – some attribute their glories to intangible concepts.

Even their manager does it.

“If you have to say why,” Carlo Ancelotti said after Real Madrid downed Manchester City in dramatic fashion earlier in May, “it is the history of this club that helps us to keep going when it seems that we are gone.”

Past successes can be used for encouragement, but to claim Real Madrid’s journey to the Champions League final is thanks to an off-the-pitch force does the team and its coaching staff a disservice. There’s no fairy dust collecting on Los Blancos’ trophies – instead, their run is fueled by the excellence of three veterans awash with European experience.

Karim Benzema is the most dangerous striker on the planet. He’s already matched his former strike partner Cristiano Ronaldo for most goals (10) in a single season in the Champions League knockout rounds, and arguably no one’s ever been so clinical in front of goal in consecutive doubleheaders against foes of Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea, and Manchester City’s strength.

Antonio Villalba / Real Madrid / Getty

Benzema notched late winning goals against each of Real Madrid’s knockout rivals to further underline his remarkable stamina at 34, but Liverpool will need to do more than subdue his firepower to conquer Europe for a seventh time. The Frenchman poses a constant threat with his ability to lure players from their defensive positions when he drops deep before releasing his fellow attackers into the space he pried open. From those positions, Benzema can instantly instigate attacks with a swift flick or nonchalant back pass.

The midfield protection from Fabinho – who missed Liverpool’s last three matches – will be crucial to hampering Benzema’s buildup play.

Fabinho and his midfield colleagues will also be occupied with Luka Modric, the 36-year-old who delicately dabs at the ball when he has possession but snaps and snarls when he doesn’t. Given his slight 5-foot-8 frame, the physicality of his game is regularly overlooked, but the Croatian playmaker’s willingness to hurl himself into aerial battles and plunge into tackles helped instill belief in his teammates before they battled back from seemingly irreparable scenarios in this Champions League campaign.

But his passing will always be one of his finest features, as his stunning assist for Rodrygo against Chelsea demonstrated. The Liverpool defense simply can’t shut off when the ball is under Modric’s spell.

Soccrates Images / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Real Madrid’s third key veteran is Ancelotti. He may have succumbed to the habit of using history and wizardry to explain his side’s European pedigree, but consistency and the effectiveness of his substitutions are undoubtedly down to his management. Ancelotti, who turns 63 in June, stabilized a club that could’ve lost its way following the departures of Zinedine Zidane and Sergio Ramos within a six-week spell last summer. He became the first boss to win titles in each of Europe’s top five leagues when the team wrapped up La Liga in April.

A victory at the Stade de France would secure Ancelotti a record fourth European title as a coach. The Italian also collected the European Cup twice as a player.

On the opposite end of the scale from the whimsical descriptions of Real Madrid, there can be a habit to oversimplify Liverpool’s achievements. There were no miracles as the Reds dispatched Inter Milan, Benfica, and Villarreal – just as we’d all expected – in the knockout rounds while showcasing their relentlessness in attack and imperious defending led by Virgil van Dijk.

But what about the midfield?

The influence of Thiago Alcantara has grown exponentially this term, so it was a considerable boost when Jurgen Klopp said the Spaniard could play in this weekend’s showpiece. Thiago can take control of the midfield battle, wriggling free of the crowd before invariably making the right decision when he passes. His varied distribution is among the best in the game and helped him become a regular supplier of secondary assists at Bayern Munich. He can break lines with low, measured passes and lift balls over backlines for Liverpool’s attackers with equal quality.

Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA / Getty Images Sport / Getty

With Thiago around, the onus isn’t primarily on Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson to furnish opportunities for the frontmen.

The focus on Alisson, Van Dijk, and the Mohamed Salah-led strikeforce can also detract attention from how excellently constructed Liverpool are. Their domestic and continental rivals have vulnerabilities – Real Madrid are shallow in their full-back slots – but the Merseyside club has at least two strong candidates for each position.

Real Madrid should be wary when Klopp starts to tinker on the sidelines. There is arguably no club in Europe whose replacements are so strong. Ibrahima Konate and Joel Matip are top-level defenders but offer different qualities for different scenarios. Harvey Elliott is one of the most exciting young talents in football and provides boundless energy and positivity as a No. 8. Roberto Firmino and Diogo Jota fit snugly into an attacking triumvirate but are vastly different to both one another and the players they’d replace.

This matchup is bound to be close, but if they resist the Spanish champions’ sorcery, Liverpool possess the depth and overall quality needed to eventually outmuscle Ancelotti’s men.

Prediction: Liverpool win after extra time

Soccer

Zlatan at career crossroads after surgery sidelines veteran for 7-8 months

Zlatan Ibrahimovic will need to overcome another lengthy spell on the sidelines if he wants to continue his career in professional football.

The striker, who turns 41 in October, will be out for about seven-to-eight months following a successful knee operation, AC Milan said Wednesday. The club added that the procedure was a “reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament, with lateral reinforcement and meniscus reparation.”

The Swede’s contract with the Rossoneri expires this summer.

Ibrahimovic started only 11 matches during Milan’s Scudetto-winning campaign as his fitness became a growing concern. He dealt with knee and Achilles injuries throughout the season, prompting Italian icon Francesco Totti, who retired at 40, to urge Zlatan to “listen to his body” before deciding to continue.

Ibrahimovic admitted in March of being fearful of stepping away when the game gave him an incredible source of adrenaline. “I will not find it anywhere else,” he said.

He added, “I will continue as long as possible and just enjoy.”

During his spell with Manchester United, Ibrahimovic famously took just seven months to return to the pitch after damaging the cruciate ligament in his knee.

Soccer

Report: Pogba considering offer to return to Juventus

History could repeat itself for Paul Pogba.

The French midfielder is considering an offer to reunite with Juventus after his Manchester United contract expires at the end of June, reports Rob Dawson of ESPN.

Pogba left United for Juventus in 2012, establishing himself as an elite midfielder during a spell in Italy that lasted until 2016. He then rejoined United for an £89.3-million fee – a world record at the time.

He’s now contemplating a return to Serie A after receiving a “concrete proposal” that puts Juventus in the lead to sign the World Cup winner, Dawson adds.

The French international has yet to make a final decision, according to Dawson.

Marco Luzzani / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Paris Saint-Germain are also reportedly in contention and could attract Pogba with an offer to play in his home country.

Manchester City were surprise contenders, but Pogba rejected an offer to join Pep Guardiola’s squad due to reported concerns about backlash from Manchester United supporters.

Pogba has struggled to consistently replicate the form that made him a star at Juventus in the six years since he returned to Old Trafford; frustrated fans booed him in his last two games against Norwich City and Liverpool.

The 29-year-old recently admitted to experiencing depression, which began during Jose Mourinho’s volatile spell as Manchester United manager.

Pogba, who has missed the last four matches with a calf problem, could be in contention to play his final match for Manchester United on Sunday after returning to training.

Soccer

Xavi: 'Lewandowski is an option' for Barcelona

Barcelona manager Xavi confirmed Saturday that outgoing Bayern Munich star Robert Lewandowski is “an option” for the Spanish side this summer.

“Yes, Lewandowski is an option,” Xavi told reporters, according to ESPN’s Sam Marsden and Moises Llorens.

“He has already said he wants to leave, there are negotiations, but he still has a contract at his club. It won’t be easy – being Bayern – but it’s an option.”

The Polish striker confirmed last week he wants to leave Bayern after eight years to pursue other opportunities when the summer transfer window opens.

After weeks of speculation, Xavi revealed Barcelona’s interest in the prolific scorer ahead of Barcelona’s La Liga finale against Villarreal.

But completing a deal for the 33-year-old hinges on Bayern accepting Barcelona’s transfer offer and finding an attacking replacement to fill the massive void Lewandowski will leave behind.

Bayern Munich were eager to keep Lewandowski, offering a contract extension to the two-time winner of The Best FIFA Men’s Player award. But they later admitted defeat after Lewandowski rejected their offer.

Lewandowski, who joined Bayern from Borussia Dortmund in 2014, ended the 2021-22 campaign with 50 goals in 46 appearances in all competitions.

He played a pivotal role in helping Bayern win the Bundesliga in each of the eight seasons he spent in Munich, and he led the German side to a Champions League triumph in 2020.

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