Showing 11 - 20 of 140
AFP, Published on 09/11/2021
» BARCELONA: When Claudia Riumallo Pineda wakes up, it does not take her long to know where she is.
AFP, Published on 26/09/2021
» LAUSANNE: Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester City go head to head in the Champions League on Tuesday after a summer which underlined their status as the new superpowers of European football, and any possible restraints on their enormous spending could soon disappear along with UEFA's Financial Fair Play rules.
AFP, Published on 04/05/2021
» PARIS - As European football clubs struggle to make up for revenue lost in the pandemic, one untapped source of revenue is stadium naming rights, but exploiting them may not be straightforward.
Sports, Dave Wiggins, Published on 18/02/2021
» With the ongoing Covid-19 crisis affecting attendance and cash flow, MLB ballclubs have tightened their belts even more this off-season.
AFP, Published on 02/02/2021
» LONDON: Liverpool closed in on defensive reinforcements on Monday as the clock ticked down to the end of a quiet Premier League transfer window in which clubs have been hamstrung by the coronavirus crisis and new Brexit rules.
AFP, Published on 23/01/2021
» LONDON: Jurgen Klopp vowed not to "cry like a five-year-old" if Liverpool fail to deliver the players he wants in the January transfer window.
Sports, Chananthorn Kamjan, Published on 13/01/2021
» While several English Premier League clubs are struggling during the Covid-19 pandemic, the season should be able to finish as scheduled, according to a London-based Thai journalist.
AFP, Published on 14/10/2020
» LONDON - New proposals backed by Liverpool and Manchester United for wide-ranging reform of English football have been criticised by the UK government, Premier League and fans' groups.
AFP, Published on 11/10/2020
» LONDON: Premier League chiefs have called for unity after leading clubs discussed a "damaging" overhaul that would trigger the most radical changes to English football in decades.
AFP, Published on 10/09/2020
» LONDON: Just five months after Premier League clubs consulted their players about taking a 30 percent wage cut, the English top-flight is again blowing Europe's other top leagues out the water when it comes to splashing the cash.