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Soccer

Ancelotti leaves Everton to make surprise Real Madrid return

Real Madrid are replacing Zinedine Zidane with a familiar face.

Carlo Ancelotti has terminated his Everton contract to rejoin the Spanish giants on a three-year deal, the La Liga club confirmed Tuesday.

“I have complete respect for everyone associated with Everton and hope they can achieve the exciting opportunities they have in front of them,” the decorated Italian said. “While I have enjoyed being at Everton, I have been presented with an unexpected opportunity which I believe is the right move for me and my family at this time.”

The 61-year-old bench boss had three years left on an Everton deal that reportedly paid him £11 million per season. Ancelotti, who joined the Toffees in 2019, oversaw a disappointing 10th-place finish this past season.

Though he recently dismissed the idea of making a sensational return to the Bernabeu, Real Madrid president Florentino Perez pushed hard for the move following Zidane’s decision to relinquish his post.

Ancelotti previously spent three years in the Spanish capital, delivering the vaunted Decima – Real Madrid’s 10th Champions League title – in 2014. He won four trophies with Los Blancos before being fired in 2015.

Upon his return, Ancelotti will inherit a squad coming off a trophyless campaign and in need of rejuvenation.

Everton, meanwhile, said they will “immediately” begin their search for a new manager. Nuno Espirito Santo and Eddie Howe are believed to be among the potential candidates.

Soccer

Aguero joins Barcelona on free transfer after 10 years at Manchester City

Prolific Argentinian striker Sergio Aguero agreed to join Barcelona on a two-year contract on Monday, officially bringing an end to a decade of service at Manchester City.

The 32-year-old will reportedly earn around €5 million per season.

His buyout clause is set at €100 million.

AGÜEROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! pic.twitter.com/iebAeYtjLp

— FC Barcelona (@FCBarcelona) May 31, 2021

Aguero heads to Barcelona as the club attempts to tie down compatriot Lionel Messi to a new contract. Club president Joan Laporta said he’s “moderately optimistic” the 33-year-old will re-sign.

Aguero’s arrival could convince Messi to stay. The two became friends during their time with Argentina’s Under-20 side and while playing together with the senior team.

City allowed Aguero to leave on a free transfer after 10 years together. He departs as a five-time Premier League winner and the club’s all-time leading scorer with 260 goals in 390 matches.

Sidelined by injury and COVID-19, Aguero made just eight starts in City’s double-winning campaign. He came off the bench in his last appearance Saturday in the Champions League final, which City narrowly lost to Chelsea.

Manager Pep Guardiola said Aguero still has plenty to offer despite the relative downturn in production.

“When he is fit and has continuity, he is like Romario in Brazil,” Guardiola said. “In a five-meter space, he is like a lion in the jungle. He is so quick and has the quality to make the goal. For as long as he plays, he will score goals.”

Barca are expected to announce more signings in the coming weeks. Memphis Depay – who’s set to leave Lyon as a free agent – is reportedly in talks with the Catalan giants over a multi-year contract. Dutch midfielder Georginio Wijnaldum is also set to join the Blaugrana on a free transfer from Liverpool.

Soccer

Report: Chelsea considering plot to reunite with Inter's Lukaku

Thomas Tuchel just hoisted the Champions League trophy, but that hasn’t stopped the German tactician from plotting ways to strengthen Chelsea for next season.

The 47-year-old manager is eager to boost his side’s chances of defending its European crown while competing in the Premier League in 2021-22 with three signings this summer, including a possible bid to bring Romelu Lukaku back to Stamford Bridge, The Guardian’s Jacob Steinberg reports.

Chelsea’s odds of resigning Lukaku could be boosted by the player’s seemingly uncertain future at Inter Milan. Steinberg reports the striker is considering a possible move away after manager Antonio Conte left the Nerazzurri by mutual consent last week.

Financial difficulties could also force Inter’s hand, which could potentially result in Chelsea reuniting with Lukaku for less than the £74 million Inter paid to sign him from Manchester United in 2019.

Lukaku plied his trade at Chelsea from 2011-14 but was shipped out on loan multiple times, enjoying successful spells at West Bromwich Albion and Everton. He was eventually sold to Everton outright before moving to Manchester United for £75 million in 2017.

A disastrous spell at United led to a move to Inter, where the 28-year-old revived his career to once again be considered one of the world’s best strikers. He scored 24 goals in 36 games last season.

Chelsea could generate the funds for Lukaku and other transfer targets through the sales of outcasts, including Tammy Abraham, Ross Barkley, Fikayo Tomori, and Ruben Loftus-Cheek.

The Blues have been linked to Harry Kane but aren’t expected to land the English star, as Tottenham are understood to be reluctant to sell the wantaway forward to a Premier League rival.

Chelsea will reportedly also look to add depth at defense and in the midfield in the coming months.

Additionally, Steinberg reports that Chelsea are close to re-signing Tuchel, who joined the team six months ago following the dismissal of Frank Lampard, to a new contract that would keep him in London until 2023.

Chelsea are fresh off capturing their second Champions League title after beating Manchester City 1-0 in Portugal on Saturday.

Soccer

Instant success: How Tuchel's crash course in tactics made Chelsea unstoppable

Once Chelsea went up 1-0 in Saturday’s Champions League final, the game was – for all intents and purposes – over. Whenever Manchester City sought an opening, desperately at times, they found a dead end. The Blues have found the most comfort in the tightest of margins – and their opponents the most pain.

Chelsea won the Champions League doing what they’ve done almost exclusively since Thomas Tuchel took charge in January: Striking first and defending all the way through. They took the lead in 20 games and came away winning 18 of them.

Even City – with Riyad Mahrez, Kevin De Bruyne, Bernardo Silva, Phil Foden, and Raheem Sterling all buzzing around – only managed a single shot on target. Chelsea were there at every turn, defending not simply in numbers but with the positional acumen and discipline of generations past, with Reece James dispossessing De Bruyne and Foden, Antonio Rudiger blocking shots in central areas, and N’Golo Kante sweeping in at the right time, as always, to pick the pockets of his opponents. The Blues’ composure stood in stark contrast to City’s anxiousness.

By no means was Saturday’s triumph ever a given. Changing tactics midseason hardly yields titles, but Tuchel achieved just that, quickly bringing players he’d barely known up to speed. Midfielder Mateo Kovacic said the German struck an immediate bond with the squad, as if “he was here for two years already.” That basic understanding enabled Tuchel to instill principles not so easily transferable from team to team: A combination of high pressing, positional awareness, and compact defending that usually takes a full season to develop.

Tuchel could have simply leaned on Chelsea’s attacking talent to get through the campaign. But instead of putting even more pressure on Timo Werner to score and Kai Havertz to create, the manager took on the much more difficult task of teaching a new system. And he did it with a group of players his predecessors found difficult to motivate. Frank Lampard questioned the team’s desire and commitment to the basics in a scathing post-match interview that made headlines across Britain. Tuchel came in a few weeks later and turned all that around with anything but time on his side.

“I don’t know how Tuchel coaches it,” Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville said recently. “He’s been here four or five months, he has games every Wednesday and Saturday, there’s no time on the training pitch, you’re talking about recoveries most of the time. How has he coached that instantly into a team straight away?

“It’s an outstanding coaching performance, and well done to the players for taking it on board as well.”

Before Saturday’s showdown in Porto, Tuchel said he had embraced the role of simply coaching his team. Picking up the job midseason – after the January transfer window had effectively closed – forced him to focus on using the players at his disposal to the best of his ability. Tuchel essentially took Chelsea to camp, forging a strong relationship with the people around him.

“Transfer periods can be mood breakers,” Tuchel said earlier this month.

“This made it a huge simplicity here because it has been only about coaching,” he added. “No second thoughts about bringing somebody in or letting somebody go.”

There were times Chelsea couldn’t quite make it work, times when they had all the possession in the world but nowhere to go with it, times when they defended well but couldn’t score at all. Tuchel’s first game against Wolverhampton Wanderers ended with 79% possession but, more importantly, goalless. It did little to deter them. The Blues stuck with Tuchel’s teachings, and that didn’t necessarily mean defending with 11 men behind the ball and countering. The bench boss demanded much more than that.

Chelsea delivered. They dictated play for long stretches against City, keeping possession effectively and beating the press. Crowded out of central areas, City had no choice but to play horizontal passes, the ultimate death sentence for a team of such quality.

“We wanted to be the stone in (City’s) shoe,” Tuchel told BT Sport afterward.

Chelsea won free-kicks, interrupted the flow of play, and robbed City of the rhythm they needed to get back into the game. Mahrez or Foden or any one of Guardiola’s wizards couldn’t beat anyone one-on-one because Tuchel’s counterparts defended so well by committee.

Everyone bought in. Even Mason Mount, the assist-maker on Havertz’s winning goal, made his first real contribution in his own end, cutting out a pass before creating an early chance. The 22-year-old then denied a dangerous counterattack at the edge of the 18-yard box. It was clear then and there, inside those first 15 minutes, that City would end the night frustrated and that Tuchel would celebrate a victory that few managers could pull off.

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