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Archive May 15, 2025

‘Everyone hasn’t been good enough’ – Haaland on ‘horrific’ season

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Reaching the FA Cup final at Wembley and being in a strong position to secure Champions League qualification would be a great campaign for many teams. Not for Manchester City.

Pep Guardiola’s side have been English champions in each of the past four seasons and conquered Europe in 2023, but have fallen short in 2024-25.

They are fourth in the Premier League, 18 points behind title winners Liverpool, their hopes of winning a second Champions League in three seasons were ended at the hands of Real Madrid in the knockout play-offs, and they lost to Tottenham in the fourth round of the Carabao Cup.

But the FA Cup could still provide them with something to celebrate.

City take on Crystal Palace on Saturday, 17 May at Wembley, where they started the campaign by beating Manchester United on penalties to win the Community Shield in August.

“This season has been tough,” striker Erling Haaland told BBC Sport. “It is not nice to lose so many games, it is boring and not fun. That’s why we need to finish well and get a trophy.

“It is a good habit to reach Wembley and always important to win trophies. We have the FA Cup final to play for and in a horrific season we still managed to do this, that says it all.

“When you have won four league titles in a row, if you don’t win five it’s not going to be a successful season. Those are the standards we have set. We haven’t done good enough in the league but still hoping for Champions League qualification.

“Crystal Palace are a really difficult club to play against. At Selhurst Park we drew [2-2 in December] and they started really well at the Etihad [in City’s 5-2 win last month]. They are an amazing team with quality players.”

‘We should not search for excuses’

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Haaland joined City in a £51.2m deal from Borussia Dortmund in June 2022, with the Norwegian’s goals helping Pep Guardiola’s side to win two Premier Leagues, the Champions League, an FA Cup and a Uefa Super Cup.

On a personal level, he has won the Golden Boot for being the top scorer in the Premier League in both 2022-23 and 2023-24, when he scored 36 and 27 league goals respectively.

He started this season in similar fashion with 10 goals in his first five matches, including back-to-back hat-tricks against Ipswich Town and West Ham United.

But Haaland has only scored 11 goals in 23 league matches since then, with Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah set to finish the campaign as top scorer.

“We haven’t been stable enough this season and we haven’t won enough games, it is as simple as that,” added the 24-year-old.

“We have to perform better in the big games. We haven’t won enough consecutive games.

“Of course, we have had injuries throughout the season. But we should not search for excuses.

‘Loads of energy’ Haaland keen to make impact after injury

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Haaland has been one of those players to have suffered with injury.

An ankle problem sustained in the 2-1 FA Cup quarter-final win over Bournemouth at the end of March kept him out of action for more than a month, before he returned in City’s 0-0 draw at bottom-placed Southampton on Saturday.

To quicken his recovery, he uses red-light therapy, which is when infrared rays penetrate deep into tissues and joints to help prevent injuries.

“In England when there is not so much sun, you have to try and get your red light from somewhere else,” said Haaland.

“It is about optimising the main things: training, sleep, to eat as clean as possible and do things that affect your recovery in the best way. The club pays a lot of money and the least I can do is try and get back as quick as possible.

“It has been horrible to get injured. It is not nice to see the team play but you have to make the best out of it and try to come back as quick as possible.

City fan Haaland hopes for more Wembley success

Erling Haaland with the FA Cup trophy in 2023PA Media

The cup final against Palace will be one last Wembley appearance with City for midfielder Kevin de Bruyne, with the 33-year-old Belgium international leaving the club on a free transfer in the summer when his contract expires.

De Bruyne has won six Premier League titles, the Champions League, two FA Cups and the League Cup on five occasions while at City.

He is second in the list of most assists in the Premier League era, with 119 assists, behind only former Manchester United winger Ryan Giggs on 162.

“We would love for Kevin to finish with a trophy,” said Haaland.

“He has had an incredible time at Manchester City, it is ridiculous how many trophies he has won. Hopefully he will get one more trophy.

“He ranks right up there for me. To get the balls from him is a dream. It has been really special playing with him. Such a joy, and I am going to do everything I can to have this joy in the last few games.

“The future will be different with different players. When Kevin leaves we will need someone to replace him, although Kevin is irreplaceable in so many ways.”

Haaland helped City win the 2023 FA Cup final and the Community Shield in August, although they were not his first trips to Wembley.

Back in 2014, when he was only 13, he visited the national stadium to watch City beat Sunderland 3-1 in the League Cup final, with his father Alf Inge, a former City midfielder, sitting next to him.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Manchester City
  • FA Cup
  • Football

‘Significant step’: Russia-Ukraine talks in Turkiye – what to expect

Russia and Ukraine are poised for talks in Turkiye on Thursday, even though the prospects of President Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelenskyy meeting directly for the first time in three years were dashed by the Kremlin late on Wednesday.

United States President Donald Trump, who had earlier indicated that he might join the negotiations, will also not attend, according to American officials.

Here’s what we know about the talks, what prompted them, who’s expected to attend, and why the negotiations matter:

Why are the talks being held?

On Sunday, Putin proposed the idea of direct negotiations between Russia and Ukraine in Turkiye, instead of the rounds of indirect talks that the US and others have tried to mediate between the neighbours at war. Putin referenced direct talks that took place in 2022 while pitching for their resumption.

“It was not Russia that broke off negotiations in 2022. It was Kyiv. Nevertheless, we are proposing that Kyiv resume direct negotiations without any preconditions,” Putin said on Sunday.

In February 2022, Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Shortly after, Russia and Ukraine held talks in the Turkish capital, Istanbul.

According to Zelenskyy, the talks fell apart because Russia demanded that Ukraine concede the Donbas region, which spans Ukraine’s Donetsk and Luhansk regions – parts of which Russia occupied during its invasion. Zelenskyy added that Russia wanted Ukraine to surrender long-range weaponry, make constitutional amendments to declare neutrality and significantly reduce its armed forces. “There were never any negotiations; it was an ultimatum from a murderer,” Zelenskyy said at the time.

While Zelenskyy had earlier held that any peace agreement would require Russia to give up Ukrainian territory it had occupied, in December last year, Zelenskyy said the “hot phase” of the war could end if NATO offered security guarantees for the part of Ukraine currently under Kyiv’s control.

He added that the return of land that Russia has occupied could be diplomatically negotiated later.

“The pressure that the US has exerted to attempt to bring an end to the fighting in Ukraine has evolved over time,” Keir Giles, a senior consulting fellow at the London-based Chatham House think tank, told Al Jazeera. “It appears that the most recent elements in that evolution, particularly in terms of European solidarity with Ukraine, have led Russia to engage in direct talks.”

Putin’s recent push for talks came a day after Ukraine’s four major European allies gave Putin an ultimatum to accept an unconditional 30-day ceasefire or face renewed sanctions. This ultimatum came after leaders of the European countries, France, the United Kingdom, Germany and Poland, visited Kyiv.

They gave Putin a deadline until May 12. On Sunday, May 11, Putin – without committing to a ceasefire – said: “We are committed to serious negotiations with Ukraine. Their purpose is to eliminate the root causes of the conflict, to establish a long-term, lasting peace for the historical perspective.”

Where are they being held?

The talks are being held in the Turkish city of Istanbul, which straddles the boundary between Asia and Europe.

What role did Trump play in this?

The four European leaders – Britain’s Keir Starmer, France’s Emmanuel Macron, Germany’s Friedrich Merz and Poland’s Donald Tusk – said that they had briefed Trump about their ultimatum to Russia over a phone call and suggested that he was on board.

But after Putin called for direct talks between Kyiv and Moscow, Trump issued a statement on his Truth Social platform asking Ukraine to meet with Russia “immediately”.

Trump ran his campaign for the 2024 election on the promise to bring a swift end to the Ukraine war. The Trump administration held multiple meetings, starting February, with Russian and Ukrainian representatives separately in Saudi Arabia in attempts to broker a deal.

Also in April, the Trump administration indicated that it was taking a step back from providing security guarantees to Ukraine. The Trump administration said it wanted Europe to take the lead in supporting Ukraine’s defence instead, noting that the US had other priorities, including border security.

In recent weeks, however, Trump and his team, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, have expressed growing frustration at the lack of meaningful progress in negotiations and have threatened to walk out of efforts to mediate peace.

Explaining his insistence that Ukraine join the May 15 Istanbul talks, Trump argued: “At least they will be able to determine whether or not a deal is possible, and if it is not, European leaders, and the US, will know where everything stands, and can proceed accordingly!”

Who will be there?

“I supported President Trump with the idea of direct talks with Putin. I have openly expressed my readiness to meet. I will be in Turkiye. I hope that the Russians will not evade the meeting,” Zelenskyy wrote in an X post on Monday.

On Tuesday, Zelenskyy announced he will be in Ankara on Thursday, where he will meet Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The talks with Russia, however, are supposed to be held in Istanbul subsequently.

Trump has said he will send Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and Special Envoy for Ukraine and Russia Keith Kellogg to attend the talks in Istanbul.

Russia on Wednesday night announced its team for the meeting. Vladimir Medinsky, a close Putin aide and former culture minister who also led previous rounds of unsuccessful talks with Ukraine in 2022, will lead Moscow’s team. With him will be Deputy Defence Minister Alexander Fomin and the director of the Main Intelligence Directorate, Igor Kostyukov.

Trump’s earlier offer to attend the talks himself had been welcomed by Kyiv. “All of us in Ukraine would appreciate it if President Trump could be there with us at this meeting in Turkiye. This is the right idea. We can change a lot,” Zelenskyy had said.

However, late on Wednesday, US officials clarified that Trump would not be attending.

The US president is currently in the Middle East, where he spent Wednesday in Qatar, after visiting Saudi Arabia a day earlier. On Thursday, Trump will be in the United Arab Emirates before returning to Washington.

What does Putin’s absence mean?

Zelenskyy had earlier said he would be present at the talks only if Putin also attended. “Putin is the one who determines everything in Russia, so he is the one who has to resolve the war. This is his war. Therefore, the negotiations should be with him,” Zelenskyy said in a post on X on Tuesday.

With Putin now no longer poised to attend, it is unclear if Zelenskyy will personally participate in the talks or whether he will leave it to his team to join the negotiations.

Yet, in many ways, Zelenskyy scored over Putin by throwing down the gauntlet and asking him to attend.

“Zelenskyy has presented a challenge to Russia to show that it has genuine interest; it is up to Russia whether it meets this challenge or not,” said Giles.

Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva had also pledged to urge Putin to attend the talks.

What’s on the table?

It is difficult to predict what might specifically be discussed in the Turkiye talks.

“It would be rash to predict whether there will be any meaningful discussion at all, since the acceptable outcomes for both are still far apart,” Giles said. “Russia wants to neutralise Ukraine as an independent sovereign state, while Ukraine wants to survive.”

At the moment, Ukraine has proposed an unconditional 30-day ceasefire, while Russia has insisted that a series of its demands be accepted before it joins such a truce. Moscow said that it wants assurances over the monitoring mechanism for a ceasefire, and that a truce won’t be used by Ukraine to rearm and mobilise more soldiers. Instead, Putin has announced brief, unilateral ceasefires in recent days that Ukraine says Moscow never actually adhered to.

“We do not rule out that, during these negotiations, it will be possible to agree on some new truces, a new ceasefire and a real truce, which would be observed not only by Russia, but also by the Ukrainian side. [It] would be the first step, I repeat, to a long-term sustainable peace, and not a prologue to the continuation of the armed conflict,” Putin said on Sunday.

How significant are these talks?

Giles said that if the talks happen, “they will be a significant step forward”.

He added: “Anything that has been referred to as peace talks [ so far] has not been anything of the sort,” describing the two parallel discussions that the US has had with Russia and Ukraine.

BBC Radio 2 suffers audience fall since Zoe Ball’s departure after six-year stint

Zoe Ball, the first female host of the Radio 1 and Radio 2 breakfast shows for the BBC, quit her role on the station last year, presenting her final programme on December 20, 2024

Zoe Ball is pictured after presenting her last breakfast show on Radio 2(Image: TIM ANDERSON)

Listeners to the Radio 2 breakfast show have fallen since Zoe Ball stood down as presenter, it has emerged.

Several stand-in DJs have covered for Ball following her departure in late December, with Scott Mills only taking over the role full-time on January 27. The breakfast show attracted an estimated weekly audience of 6.45 million across January to March of this year, down from 6.83 million in the previous three months.

But the slot continues to enjoy the largest audience on national radio at that time of the day, ahead of Radio 4’s Today programme. Research body Rajar has published the data around three-and-a-half months into Mills’ tenure, having previously presented an afternoon show on the same station.

Gaby Roslin and Mark Goodier filled in throughout January before Mills, 52, started the role. It is worth noting Rajar’s listernship figures, which includes this spell, does also show the estimated weekly audience was greater than the 6.28 million recorded in July-September 2024.

READ MORE: Scott Mills says Eurovision is ‘our World Cup’ as semi-finals edge closer

Scott Mills took over as presenter of the programme on January 27
Scott Mills took over as presenter of the programme on January 27(Image: James Watkins)
Ball has enjoyed a long career in presenting and broadcaster
Ball has enjoyed a long career in presenting and broadcaster(Image: Getty Images)
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Ball, 54, has since started presenting a Saturday lunchtime programme on BBC Radio 2. She also continues to do TV work, having hosted a segment of VE Day 80: A Celebration to Remember coverage on the BBC earlier this month.

But the mum of two was overwhelmed with emotion during her final breakfast show. Addressing her audience, the host said: “Thank you for tuning in, whether as a lone listener, as family, as a work gang on your morning jogs, dog walks, truck drives, train commutes, or hiding in bed, it’s been a real privilege to keep you company through your morning manoeuvres. You’re just there and I’m just here having a chat with a mate. It’s such a special, intimate relationship.”

In addition to Mills’ new role, BBC Radio 2 made a number of changes to its daytime lineup at the start of the year. Trevor Nelson now hosts a new afternoon show and DJ Spoony presents a late evening slot on Mondays to Thursdays.

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Helen Thomas, head of Radio 2, said she was “thrilled” that Radio 2 remains the UK’s most popular radio station, adding: “Congratulations to Vernon Kay who remains the most listened to show in the country with a weekly audience of 6.73 million to his mid-morning show, and to the Radio 2 breakfast show, which maintains its position as the UK’s biggest early morning programme.”

Elsewhere, the commercial network Greatest Hits saw a slight fall in listeners for the fourth quarter in a row, though its average audience of 7.14 million is still nearly two million higher than it was two years ago, when it stood at 5.12 million.

Palestine before the Nakba, in 100 photos

At the heart of any place is its people. This section gathers faces and figures of children, elders, farmers and merchants, capturing a moment in each of their lives.

Traditional dress, expressions and gestures reflect a culture rich in diversity. Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Bedouins appear side by side, revealing a land defined not by division, but by coexistence.

Individual portraits

Each face carries its own story of life, labour, joy, or longing.

Drag the slider or click on an image to see it in more detail. 

Group photos

Pubs to stay open late if England or Wales make women’s Euros semi-finals

Pubs will be allowed to stay open until 01:00 BST if England or Wales reach the final stages of the Uefa Women’s European Championships, the Home Office has said.

The usual 23:00 closing time will be pushed back if either home nation reaches the semi-finals or final of the tournament, scheduled for 2-27 July in Switzerland, to mark an event of “exceptional national significance”.

England are defending champions while Wales have qualified for the first time. Both teams have been drawn in the same group.

The two semi-finals will take place on 22 and 23 July. The final will take place in Basel on 27 July.

Wales will be the first home nation side to play when they take on the Netherlands on 5 July. The Lionesses will play against France on the same day.

Pub opening hours were also extended for the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day this month, as well as for the semi-final and final of the men’s Euros last year.

The decision is “a positive and progressive move that recognises the growing popularity of women’s football and its cultural significance across the UK,” said Michael Kill, chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association.

British Beer and Pub Association chief executive Emma McClarkin said: “The pub is the home of live sport.”

Sharon Osbourne fans express concern at new photos after her Ozempic admission

Sharon Osbourne, who came to prominence while appearing on reality show The Osbournes and was a judge on The X Factor, previously urged others to think twice about using Ozempic

Sharon Osbourne has undergone a range of procedures over the years(Image: BACKGRID)

Sharon Osbourne looked nearly unrecognisable as she stepped out in Los Angeles yesterday after her admission Ozempic has had an adverse effect on her health.

The feisty TV personality, 72, admitted she lost 42lb using the controvesial drug, which is used to treat diabetes. She opened up about her own weight loss journey last year when she appeared on Celebrity Big Brother and, also last year, told the Loose Women gang she struggled to gain weight since the use of Ozempic.

But, in the past, experts have stressed the use of Ozempic as weight-management medication should be considered “off-label” as it does designed for this purpose. Nevertheless, Sharon, a former jusge on The X Factor, had said she was initially pleased with the results after starting the medication in December 2022.

Then, the mother of three, who was born in London, feared she had taken it too far after her dramatically slimmed-down appearance sparked widespread concern.

READ MORE: Weight loss jabs like Wegovy and Mounjaro may have anti-cancer effect ‘beyond weight loss’

Sharon Osbourne
Sporting a chic ensemble in LA, the TV personality stepped out for a shopping trip (Image: BACKGRID)

Speaking on Howie Mandel’s podcast, Sharon had said: “I can’t put on weight now, and I don’t know what it’s done to my metabolism, but I just can’t seem to put any on, because I think I went too far.” Earlier, in February, the star told The Guardian she had lost “three stone [42 pounds] in four months. Too much.”

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And now, her latest outing in Hollywood seems to confirm her concerns. Fans have reacted to the latest photographs to again share their worry for the music manager, who married Ozzy in 1982.

“Severe unexplained weight loss is serious,” one social media user posted. Another stated: “Sharon, we love you. Ozzy needs you. Stay safe.” A further user wrote: “I like Sharon but dear God… It’s so sad… Hope she can turn it around before it’s too late.”

The TV host was spotted on Wednesday in a baggy white sweatshirt and cream trousers as she carried shopping bags across a tree-lined sidewalk in Los Angeles. Despite the oversized outfit, her noticeably petite frame was still apparent.

Sharon, who was in reality TV show about her family The Osbournes between 2002 and 2005, previously told Mail Online she was “frustrated” by the lingering effects of Ozempic.

“Now, I weigh just over 7st. I need to put on 10lb, but however much I eat, I stay the same weight… I’ve had enough,” the mother told the publication.

But speaking on Loose Women last year, Sharon insisted she had no regrets. The TV personality added: “I don’t regret it. Everything with weight with me was, ‘I want it now.’ The injections that I was on worked, but it just seems that now I can’t put anything on really.”

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