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UK government approves Todd Boehly consortium takeover of Chelsea

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The UK government has approved the £4.25bn takeover of Chelsea by a consortium led by LA Dodgers co-owner, Todd Boehly.

The London club was put up for sale in March before owner Roman Abramovich was sanctioned over his links to Russian president Vladimir Putin.

On Tuesday, the Premier League said the consortium had passed its owners’ and directors’ test.

Chelsea have been operating under a special government licence which expires on 31 May.

“Late last night the UK government reached a position where we could issue a licence that permits the sale of Chelsea,” a government spokesperson said in a statement on Wednesday.

The government does not want Abramovich to receive any of the proceeds from the sale, which will instead go into a frozen bank account to be donated to charity.

The statement added: “Following the sanctioning of Roman Abramovich, the government has worked hard to ensure Chelsea has been able to continue to play football. But we have always been clear that the long-term future of the club could only be secured under a new owner.

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“Following extensive work, we are now satisfied that the full proceeds of the sale will not benefit Roman Abramovich or any other sanctioned individual. We will now begin the process of ensuring the proceeds of the sale are used for humanitarian causes in Ukraine, supporting victims of the war.

“The steps today will secure the future of this important cultural asset and protect fans and the wider football community. We have been in discussions with relevant international partners for necessary licences required and we thank them for all their cooperation.”

Earlier this month, the deal had seemed close to collapse over concerns proceeds would not reach good causes as promised by Abramovich.

Abramovich denied that he had asked for his £1.5bn loan to Chelsea be repaid when the club was sold.

Several parties expressed an interest but Chelsea agreed to sell to the Boehly-led consortium earlier in May.

The consortium is led by Boehly, but Clearlake Capital – a Californian private equity firm – would own a majority of the shares in Chelsea. Other investors include US billionaire Mark Walter, also a co-owner of the LA Dodgers, and Swiss billionaire Hansjorg Wyss.

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Chelsea finished the Premier League season in third place, losing both the EFL Cup and FA Cup finals to Liverpool on penalties, and going out of the Champions League in the quarter-finals.

Former Chelsea chief executive, Peter Kenyon told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme the move would be a “complete relief” for everyone connected to the club.

“Today’s announcement will be complete relief that [Chelsea] can get on with business as usual and do what is needed to ensure the team is best prepared for next season,” said Kenyon.

“We’ve got a very short transfer window and plans will have been made before.

“They have already lost some players through not being able to re-sign them so I think everybody – the squad and the management – will be relieved they can get on with the job they’re employed to do.”

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Leverkusen win first Bundesliga title, break Bayern’s 11-year run

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Bayer Leverkusen lifted the Bundesliga title for the first time in their 120-year history on Sunday, a 5-0 victory over Werder Bremen breaking Bayern Munich’s 11-year stranglehold on the German top flight.

 

Xabi Alonso’s Leverkusen knew victory would secure the title with five games to spare, but there were no signs of nerves in a dominant performance.

A hat-trick from Florian Wirtz and goals from Victor Boniface and Granit Xhaka extended their unbeaten run to a stunning 43 games in all competitions.

 

Leverkusen’s maiden title, coming after five second-place finishes in their history, keeps their dream of a remarkable treble alive while shedding their unwanted ‘Neverkusen’ nickname for good.

 

With 10 minutes to go, the long-suffering fans began making their way to the sidelines and a few jumped the gun, storming the pitch with the match still ongoing.


Leverkusen fans celebrate after the German first division Bundesliga football match Bayer 04 Leverkusen v Werder Bremen in Leverkusen, western Germany, on April 14, 2024. Bayer Leverkusen were crowned 2023-24 Bundesliga champions for the first time on April 14, 2024. (Photo by INA FASSBENDER / AFP)

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Leverkusen’s players ushered the fans back and some obliged, albeit briefly, with the stands swiftly emptying on the 90-minute mark as tearful fans made their way onto the grass to celebrate with the players.

Leverkusen are now on 79 points — the best tally after 29 games in German league history — and are 16 clear of second-placed Bayern and third-placed Stuttgart.

The Leverkusen bus arrived at the stadium 90 minutes before kick-off, wading through a sea of fans clad in black and red on the way to the 30,000-capacity BayArena.

 

Normally known as Bismarck Street, fans had stuck temporary signs saying ‘Xabi Alonso Street’ along the main road in honour of the club’s coach.

 

Alonso looked ahead to Thursday’s Europa League trip to London to face West Ham, making seven changes to his starting XI and benching stars Wirtz, Jeremie Frimpong and Alex Grimaldo, the latter for the first time in the league this season.

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Piero Hincapie, Grimaldo’s replacement, had an early effort at goal saved but it would be the fit-again Boniface, making his first start since mid-December, who put the home side in front.

With 22 minutes gone, Jonas Hofmann was felled in the box by Bremen’s Julian Malatini, with the referee pointing to the spot after VAR urged him to view the contact again on the monitor.

 

Boniface stepped up and nervelessly slotted the penalty past a helpless Michael Zetterer to send the home fans into raptures.

 

Hofmann was almost the provider again shortly before half-time, his pass finding Amine Adli who fired against the crossbar.

 

Bremen started the second-half strongly but their hopes of spoiling the party were snuffed out on the 60-minute mark, Boniface finding Xhaka who unleashed a long-range rocket before slapping his badge in front of the ecstatic home fans.

Wirtz, who came on at half-time for Adli, replicated Xhaka’s effort eight minutes later from almost the same spot on the pitch.

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Wirtz added another with seven minutes remaining before sealing his hat-trick in the 90th minute as Leverkusen rid themselves of their nearly men tag in style.

 

Earlier on Sunday, a 36th-minute goal from Ritsu Doan took Freiburg to a 1-0 win at Darmstadt, pushing the last-placed hosts closer to immediate relegation.

 

Winless since October and with only two victories all year, the loss leaves Darmstadt dead last, eight points from second-last and 13 points from safety with five games remaining.

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BREAKING: Super Falcons qualify for olympics first time in 16 years

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Nigeria’s female national football team, Super Falcons have qualified for the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.

 

Nigeria beat South Africa 1-0 on aggregate to reach the Summer Olympics.

 

Rasheedat Ajibade scored from the spot in the first leg of the qualifiers in Abuja on Friday.

That goal was enough for the Super Falcons to pick one of Africa’s tickets for the women’s football event of the Paris Olympics as the second leg tie ended goaless in South Africa.

 

The last time Nigeria’s Super Falcons reached the Olympics was 16 years ago.

 

 

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Arsenal go top after 3-0 win over Brighton

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Arsenal continued to do their part in the Premier League’s three-way title race as goals in each half saw them get the better of Brighton at the Amex Stadium.

After a hard-fought opening half hour, Arsenal struck first when Bukayo Saka put away a penalty. The England international sent Bart Verbruggen the wrong way, stepping up after Gabriel Jesus bamboozled Tariq Lamptey to earn the spot-kick.

Mikel Arteta’s team chased a second after the break, with Verbruggen needing to be alert to deny Martin Odegaard, but they finally got the breakthrough just after the hour mark when Kai Havertz tapped home from close range.


Leandro Trossard came off the bench to make it three against his former club, and the result was enough to ensure Arteta’s men returned to the top of the table ahead of Sunday’s fixtures. Liverpool can reclaim top spot with three points away to Manchester United, but the pressure is very much on.

 

Arsenal almost went in front inside two minutes, with Gabriel beating Bart Verbruggen to a Martin Odegaard free-kick but heading wide. The Gunners had some issues with quick Brighton breaks, with Julio Enciso sending one chance high over the bar.

The returning Saka then went close to breaking the deadlock, cutting inside and curling just wide, and the winger later fed Gabriel Jesus for a shot which was kept away well by Verbruggen. It was those two who combined for the spot-kick which gave Arsenal the lead, though the visitors needed a big hand from David Raya to deny Julio Enciso and keep it 1-0 at the break.

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There was still a sense Arsenal might need a second, and there was no chance of a Brighton comeback after Havertz slotted home. Trossard’s goal will have been a sweet moment for the Belgian, once of Brighton, and another boost for Arsenal’s goal difference.


A comfortable away win was the perfect response after title rivals Manchester City won earlier in the day, and puts the pressure on Liverpool’s trip to Old Trafford on Sunday. Here are Mirror Football’s talking points from the Saturday evening game at the Amex Stadium.

 

While some of the changes made by Mikel Arteta were predictable, there had been doubts over the availability of Bukayo Saka. The wide man missed the midweek win over Luton after leaving the field early against Manchester City,

The England star might have been off the boil a little at the Etihad Stadium, but there were few signs of his injury issues this time around. Saka was active early on in some of Arsenal’s best attacking work, and was the coolest man on the field as he tucked away his penalty.

Arsenal only got an hour out of Saka in the end, with the winger making way in a double change shortly after the second goal went in. With some huge games on the horizon, beginning with Bayern Munich on Tuesday, they’ll want to avoid taking too many risks where possible.

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While Gabriel Jesus’ part in the penalty was the biggest one, it wouldn’t have been possible without the input of goalkeeper David Raya. The Spaniard set his team-mates downfield when he threaded the eye of the needle with a risky pass out from the back, but sometimes you need risk for reward.

 

There were questions asked of Raya early on in his time in North London, but these are the moments he was signed for. Arsenal might not have immediately scored from the attack, but it allowed them to pin their opponents back before getting Jesus one-on-one with Lamptey and able to take full advantage.

The save Raya made to deny Enciso a minute from the break is something which backup Aaron Ramsdale will feel he’s also capable of producing. The distribution is a different matter, though.

Roberto De Zerbi has made no secret of Brighton’s injury problems, and there are two ways in which those issues manifest. It’s not just being robbed of players mid-game, but also the challenge in keeping a consistent line-up throughout the season.


Julio Enciso impressed going forward, while Jakub Moder threatened for the hosts early on. Both are recently back from long-term absences, though, meaning the individual moments aren’t always matched by consistent fluidity.

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Roberto De Zerbi’s side only have two bottom-half teams to face between now and the end of the season. If they can’t rediscover their impressive early-season form before the worst of the injury crisis hit, it could be an underwhelming end to the campaign.

 

Brighton got plenty of change out of their right flank in the first half, with Oleksandr Zinchenko seemingly identified as a potential weak link. There was another shaky moment early in the second period, again unpunished, but Mikel Arteta might not have been delighted with what he saw.

Going into the game, Arsenal hadn’t conceded an away league goal since the end of January. It’s clear teams have found it tough to get at them, but Arteta – ever the perfectionist – will want to cut out even the smallest openings as far as the league’s best defence is concerned.

 

Perhaps he saw it as a trade-off, though. Yes, Zinchenko was relatively isolated by Gabriel Jesus’ high starting point on the left-flank, but Arsenal took advantage of this to get their noses in front and stayed there.

The pressure was on Arsenal after Manchester City’s lunchtime win at Selhurst Park. City trailed early on against Crystal Palace, but their response was one of a team who don’t look like drawing another blank in a hurry after their stalemate against the Gunners.

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