Kevin De Bruyne has signed for Napoli as a free agent after being released by Manchester City, the Serie A champions’ president Aurelio De Laurentiis confirmed on Thursday.
Film mogul De Laurentiis posted a picture of himself shaking hands with De Bruyne on social media with the message “welcome Kevin!”
Belgium midfielder De Bruyne has reportedly signed a two-year deal with an option for a third at Napoli, where he will join up with international teammate Romelu Lukaku and former Manchester United midfielder Scott McTominay.
Manchester City’s Belgian midfielder Kevin De Bruyne (L) runs with the ball during the UEFA Champions League first leg quarter-final football match between Manchester City and Borussia Dortmund at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England, on April 6, 2021. (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP)
The 33-year-old left City at the end of this past season after a trophy-packed decade in Manchester, where under Pepe Guardiola he won six Premier League titles and in 2023 the Champions League.
READ ALSO: Man City Sign Midfielder Tijjani Reijnders From AC Milan
He has however suffered from a series of physical problems in recent seasons, with two hamstring injuries causing him to miss significant chunks of the last two campaigns.
(FILES) Manchester City’s Spanish manager Pep Guardiola (L) celebrates with Manchester City’s Belgian midfielder #17 Kevin De Bruyne (R) after the English FA Cup quarter-final football match between Bournemouth and Manchester City at the Vitality Stadium in Bournemouth, on the south coast of England on March 30, 2025. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP)
Napoli have brought in one of Europe’s top midfielders as the Italians try to bolster a squad which next season will defend the Scudetto while also having the extra fixture pressure of the expanded Champions League.
Antonio Conte’s Napoli beat Inter Milan to the Serie A title on the final day of the season, their second league crown in three years.
But they had no European football clogging up their calendar, unlike Inter who got to the Champions League final only to be thumped 5-0 by Paris Saint-Germain.
FILE: Manchester City’s Belgian midfielder #17 Kevin De Bruyne celebrates after scoring their second goal during the English Premier League football match between Newcastle United and Manchester City at St James’ Park in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, north east England on January 13, 2024. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)
The King welcomed the likes of former England football captain David Beckham and Oscar winners Kate Winslet and Meryl Streep to St James’ Palace today
The King has been heralded as a “pioneer and a visionary” in his crusade to protect traditional crafts and the environment at an awards ceremony for his foundation. The monarch assembled an A-list cast of supporters to celebrate those at the forefront of sustainability, traditional heritage crafts and environmental education throughout the UK.
The King welcomed former England football captain, David Beckham, soon to be knighted as part of the King’s birthday honours, as well as other ambassadors and friends of his foundation including Oscar winners Kate Winslet and Meryl Streep alongside model and presenter Penny Lancaster and French TV chef Raymond Blanc.
The King with a host of star at the King’s Foundation Awards ceremony at St James’s Palace(Image: PA)
Former Manchester United and England superstar Beckham, who became an ambassador for the foundation last year, bowed his head and greeted the King with “Your Majesty” as the monarch made his way down a line of supporters before the event at St James’s Palace today.
Charles, 76, stopped to talk to model Lancaster, married to rock star Rod Stewart, who told the King she had been keeping bees on their Scottish estate.
Winslet, described by royal aides as “a friend of the foundation” was overheard telling the King “don’t worry, I’ve got your back”. Royal sources suggested the British actor may bolster her role as a supporter of the charity in the future.
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As Royal Founding President of the charity, The King was on hand to celebrate the foundation’s 35th anniversary at the event as well as recognising the incredible talent and work of the charity’s students, graduates and partners across sustainability, traditional heritage crafts and environmental education.
He met the winners to congratulate them on their awards after competing for the prize in eight individual categories alongside hundreds of other entrants. Other celebrity supporters at the event included tv presenters Sarah Beeny, Alan Titchmarsh and Stanley Tucci.
The King with David Beckham, who is believed to be getting a knighthood in the birthday honours list (Image: AP)
The foundation today revealed it has to date trained more than 115,000 students in traditional crafts and environmental education over its 35-year tenure, welcomed more than 2.5million visitors to its UK destinations, and positively affected more than 500,000 lives through sustainable urban planning.
King’s Foundation ambassador Penny Lancaster praised the monarch for his vision for creating the awards and highlighting the needs of the planet throughout his adult life.
She said: “We all know that the King has been the forefront and sort of marching us all along for more than 50 years, he’s been an absolute pioneer and visionary in that sense.
“These awards and indeed the foundation is so important because of the role they have in not only protecting these traditional crafts and the environment but also giving the winners such an incredible platform to go and achieve great things. “The King may have been accused of hugging trees and people thinking he was mad when he started talking about the environment all that time ago, but he was at the forefront then and now has been proved right with everything he said and now we’re all just trying to play catch up.
“I really recognise the beauty in the way he is trying to get us on board with his knowledge and if we can pass that on to the younger generation, and save some of the traditional skills like we’ve seen with these winners today, we can all be a part of making a difference.
The King shakes hands with Penny Lancaster, the wife of Sir Rod Stewart (Image: PA)
“I think the mistake is when we say, well, there’s such a huge job ahead of us that we could give up, but where’s the hope about and confidence that we can pull together to not make it such a mammoth task, there is real hope for the future.”
The Emerging Talent award, presented to an individual who has shown exceptional talent and commitment while on a King’s Foundation programme, went to Emily Hurst.
Emily has recently completed the CHANEL and King’s Foundation Métiers d’Art Fellowship in Millinery, based at Highgrove Gardens. In her final year of university, she independently learned the heritage craft of straw braiding to produce historically accurate hats, a skill that has since become central to her practice.
“In my final year at university, I discovered the craft of straw making and fell in love with it. I found out it was an endangered craft and then my tutors put me in touch with the King’s foundation.
“Working at Highgrove was absolutely the best place to be, surrounded by so much inspiration from His Majesty’s garden andlearning from some of the best milliners with country, I’m so incredibly honoured.”
The King shares a joke with Meryl Streep and Kate Winslet (Image: PA)
Winner of the Young Entrepreneur award went to Barnaby Horn for developing his own business after honing his traditional milliner skills also on the CHANEL and King’s Foundation Métiers d’Art Fellowship in Millinery, based at Highgrove Gardens.
Known for his exploration of gender through playing with familiar shapes and historic cultural references, in 2023 he launched his namesake label ‘Barnaby Horn’. Judges said Barnaby “has an experimental approach to millinery and is dedicated to developing a mastery in the traditions of the craft”.
He said: “After having lots of different jobs after university, including being a writer and working as a drag queen, I eventually went to the Royal College of Art to study millinery as a master’s.
“I realised that hats had potential to be artefacts of storytelling and I also wanted to be able to make work that was sculptural and tell stories while I was physically not in the room.
The King cuts a cake to celebrate the 35th anniversary of the King’s Foundation (Image: POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
“There’s a lot of my work that is poetry, performance or something that involves dance, so I wanted to create work that could embody characters, and obviously the head is such a sensitive place, like a location of dreams and the continuation of storytelling that I love.”
The King’s Foundation is a charity founded by King Charles III and was first formed in 1990. His Majesty is Royal Founding President of the charity.
Inspired by the vision and values of His Majesty, the Foundation builds and supports communities where people, places and the planet can coexist in harmony.
The charity offers education courses for almost 15,000 students annually, health and wellbeing programmes for nearly 2,000 people every year, and spearheads placemaking and regeneration projects in the UK and overseas to revitalise communities and historic buildings.
The King’s Foundation is headquartered at its flagship regeneration project, Dumfries House in Ayrshire, Scotland, and acts as custodian of other historic Royal sites including the Castle of Mey in Caithness, Scotland, and Highgrove Gardens in Gloucestershire.
The Foundation also carries out its work at educational and cultural hubs in London, based at The King’s Foundation School for Traditional Arts in Shoreditch, Trinity Buoy Wharf on the River Thames and the Garrison Chapel in Chelsea. In addition to its UK presence, the Foundation delivers programmes and projects in over a dozen sites worldwide.
The 21st edition of the FIFA Club World Cup is set to roll out in the United States on Saturday, June 14, as Lionel Messi-led Inter Miami host Egyptian club Al Ahly in Miami, Florida.
The tournament’s changed-up and expanded format has been subject to debate and criticism, but FIFA and its chief Gianni Infantino remain optimistic about its future as the premier club competition.
Its history, although relatively short, is littered with illustrious champions from across the world.
Here’s a look back at the 25-year history of the tournament:
2000-2006: Brazil rules the first three FIFA Club World Cups
The inaugural edition was an all-Brazilian affair as the country’s top two clubs – Corinthians and Vasco da Gama – contested the final, which was hosted at Rio de Janeiro’s historic cauldron, the Maracana Stadium, on January 14, 2000.
Corinthians emerged victorious as the game ended goalless after extra time and a dramatic penalty shootout saw them win 4-3.
Famous players including Romario (Brazil), Nicolas Anelka (France), Raul (Spain) and Dwight Yorke (Trinidad and Tobago) were part of the tournament.
The tournament was halted for five years due to FIFA’s troubles with finding marketing and broadcast partners.
Upon its resumption in 2005, the Samba Boys once again went on to win the following two editions.
Sao Paulo beat Liverpool 1-0 in the December 2005 final in Yokohama, Japan, and Internacional beat Barcelona a year later with the same scoreline at the same venue.
2007-2011: Beginning of the European reign at Club World Cup
It took the star-studded AC Milan team of the 2000s to break the Brazilian hold on the tournament as Kaka, Filippo Inzaghi, Alessandro Nesta and co beat Argentina’s Boca Juniors 4-2 in Yokohama to take the title to Italy.
The following years saw Manchester United (2008), Barcelona (2009 and 2011) and Inter Milan (2010) keep the title within Europe.
2012: A Brazilian break
Corinthians returned to the fore with their second title in a low-scoring tournament that ended with a 1-0 scoreline in the final between the Brazilian side and the then-European champions Chelsea.
2013-2023: A decade of European dominance
Spain’s two biggest clubs – Barcelona and Real Madrid – reigned supreme in the 2010s and early 2020s as they shared six of the 11 titles won by European teams during that period.
Germany’s Bayern Munich were crowned twice, in 2013 and 2020, and the rest of the three titles were won by three different English clubs.
Manchester City are the current holders of the FIFA Club World Cup, having won the title in 2023 [File: Manu Fernandez/AP]
Who has won the most FIFA Club World Cup titles?
Real Madrid has won five titles.
The Los Blancos won their first Club World Cup trophy in 2014 and then went on a treble-winning spree from 2016 to 2018.
Their most recent win came in 2022, when they beat Saudi club Al Hilal 5-3 in the final in Morocco.
Who are the past winners of the FIFA Club World Cup?
2000: Corinthians
2005: Sao Paulo
2006: Internacional
2007: AC Milan
2008: Manchester United
2009: Barcelona
2010: Inter Milan
2011: Barcelona
2012: Corinthians
2013: Bayern Munich
2014: Real Madrid
2015: Barcelona
2016: Real Madrid
2017: Real Madrid
2018: Real Madrid
2019: Liverpool
2020: Bayern Munich
2021: Chelsea
2022: Real Madrid
2023: Manchester City
Who has scored the most goals at the FIFA Club World Cup?
Cristiano Ronaldo has represented two teams – Manchester United and Real Madrid – and has scored the most goals, seven, in his eight games at the tournament.
FIFA chief Infantino tempted Ronaldo to add to his tally by switching to a Club World Cup 2025 participant team from Al Nassr, but the Portuguese superstar wouldn’t have it.
Cristiano Ronaldo has scored seven goals at the FIFA Club World Cup [File: Amr Abdallah Dalsh/Reuters]
Who is the most successful manager at the FIFA Club World Cup?
Pep Guardiola has won the trophy on four occasions with three different clubs. He was the manager of the famous “tiki-taka” Barcelona side of the late 2000s and early 2010s that won the title in 2009 and 2011.
Guardiola then took his golden touch to Germany’s Bayern Munich, with whom he won in 2013. And finally, in 2023, the Spanish manager took his Manchester City team to their first Club World Cup title.
Among the other players on the list, Messi and his Inter Miami teammate Luis Suarez have scored five goals each. Both have the chance to add to their respective tallies and surpass Ronaldo in the 2025 edition.
Which country has the most Club World Cup winners?
Spain. The two La Liga giants have won eight titles between them.
Brazil and England are second on the list with four titles each, while Germany and Italy have two apiece.
Britain’s Jake Stewart won his first World Tour race with victory on stage five of the Criterium du Dauphine after a bunch sprint.
Israel-Premier Tech’s Stewart beat stage hot favourite Jonathan Milan of Lidl-Trek by launching his effort early and getting a jump on the Italian.
Milan’s huge power was not enough to claw back Stewart, whose timing was perfect for what was a tailwind ride to the finish line in Macon after a 183km stage.
Overall race leader Remco Evenepoel of Belgium crashed in the peloton with 500m to go, ripping the material on the right shoulder of his leader’s yellow jersey, but he appeared uninjured.
Evenepoel, of Soudal-Quick Step, remains in the overall lead because of a new 5km rule introduced this season which awards all riders with the same time if there is a crash within the allocated distance.
There is also a longstanding 3km rule which is applied, usually for the flattest sprint stages.
“That feels good,” said Stewart. “It’s such a shame Pascal [Ackermann, his team-mate] crashed [earlier in the stage and abandoned] and they handed over to me.
“The team and the boys backed me and I’m so happy I could finish it off for them.”
When asked about his new prototype bike which has caused interest in the paddock for its aerodynamic front fork design, Stewart replied: “I’m not allowed to say too much about that.”
Stewart is expected to take part in next month’s Tour de France.
The Dauphine, which takes place across the region of the same name in south-east France, is the traditional warm-up for the Tour.
Only four times in the past 10 editions has the overall winner gone on to be victorious in the Tour.
The eight-day stage race now moves into the high mountains in the French Alps, with Friday’s 126.7km race to Combloux.
Stage five results
1. Jake Stewart (GB/Israel-Premier Tech) 4hrs 3mins 46secs
2. Axel Laurance (Fra/Ineos Grenadiers) Same time
3. Soren Warenskjold (Nor/Uno-X Mobility)
4. Laurence Pithie (NZ/Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe)
5. Jonathan Milan (Ita/Lidl-Trek)
6. Paul Penhoet (Fra/Groupama-FDJ)
7. Emilien Jeanniere (Fra/TotalEnergies)
8. Fred Wright (GB/Bahrain-Victorious)
9. Mathieu van der Poel (Ned/Alpecin-Deceuninck)
10. Bastien Tronchon (Fra/Decathlon-AG2R La Mondiale)
Washington, DC – Tanks are coming to the streets of the United States capital.
Twenty-eight 61-tonne Abrams battle tanks, to be exact, as well as a fleet of 56 armoured Stryker and Bradley fighting vehicles, a flock of artillery launchers, 6,600 US troops, 34 horses – plus two mules. And a dog.
It is all part of the military celebration on Saturday that has been kicked into overdrive by the administration of US President Donald Trump in recent weeks.
June 14 marks the 250th birthday of the US Army and, conspicuously, Trump’s 79th birthday. The US president has promised a parade of “thundering tanks and breathtaking flyovers will roar through our capital city” that will be simply “unforgettable”.
The event comes nearly six months into Trump’s second term, during which he has sought to test the limits of presidential power and his legal authority to employ the military as law enforcement force within the US. That was further exemplified in this week’s deployment of the US National Guard and Marines to protests against his immigration policies in California.
So, who is the audience for Trump’s military parade? And what message will it send?
“Obviously, when so much money and resources are put towards an event like a military parade that coincides with a birthday, it must be for a reason,” Irene Gammel, a professor and historian at the Toronto Metropolitan University, told Al Jazeera.
“This will be a grandiose spectacle. It will be choreographed and it will be symbolically charged,” she said.
US Army soldiers work on an assortment of M1 Alpha a3 Abrams tanks, Stryker armoured vehicles, and M2 Bradley fighting vehicles at West Potomac Park along the Potomac River on June 11, 2025 in Washington, DC [Andrew Harnik/Getty Images via AFP]
‘America loves a parade’
Trump’s desire for a flashy military parade, with US war-fighting hardware on full display, has been well documented. It traces back to his attendance at France’s 2017 Bastille Day procession, after which, he said, “We’re going to have to try and top it.”
Various reports have since detailed the first-term pushback from defence officials, who argued such a cavalcade would constitute an uncomfortable merger of partisan politics and military might.
One official, then-Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Paul Selva, even directly warned Trump that such parades were “what dictators do”, according to a 2022 book published by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser.
To be sure, according to Barbara Perry, a presidential historian at the University of Virginia, parades are hardly a rarity in either US civilian or military culture, regularly planned to mark national holidays, local triumphs or historical events. It’s right from the “American songbook”, she added, pointing to the 1932 Harry Richman classic, I Love a Parade.
But, in addition to the two mules and dog – present as part of the Army’s cavalry division, the procession planned for Saturday stands apart for several other reasons.
While showing off military assets was more common for presidents during the Cold War, the practice has not been regularly performed for decades. Similar parades have been typically planned to mark US victories, or at the very least the end of involvement, in foreign conflicts, Perry noted, as was the case in the most recent comparison commemorating the end of the Gulf War in 1991.
Preparations continue for the US Army’s 250th Birthday Celebration and Parade in Washington, DC [Carlos Barria/Reuters]
Holding a parade on the president’s birthday, regardless of the overlapping Army anniversary, Perry said, also “tends towards the authoritarian”.
“I feel this takes us from a movement of more innocent patriotism to a show of military might that is not only for enemies abroad, but in the minds of the administration, those within,” Perry said.
“It further moves towards a cult of personality by having it fall on the president’s birthday,” she added. “I’m sure any president would have celebrated this anniversary of the founding of the US Army, but not in this way.”
‘Personal police force’
Already criticised by some observers, including top Democratic lawmakers and a handful of veterans groups, as a tribute to the “egoist-in-chief”, Trump’s decision this week to deploy the National Guard to the Los Angeles protests without the consent of the state’s governor, and his subsequent move to send the Marines to the city, has cast a long shadow over the upcoming pageantry.
Trump has, so far, not invoked the Insurrection Act of 1807, which would allow the military to take direct part in domestic law enforcement. But his actions have already sent a message of force that transforms the optics of Saturday’s parade, according to Marjorie Cohn, a professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego and former president of the US National Lawyers Guild.
Prior to sending Marines to California, Trump had already tapped the military to support his hardline immigration policies, including sending Marines to the southern border to support federal agents.
“Trump considers the US military to be his personal police force, as he seeks to use it to ‘secure’ the southern border and suppress domestic protests against his inhumane policies,” Cohn told Al Jazeera. “He has considered invoking the Insurrection Act, albeit illegally, to facilitate this agenda.”
A member of the US Army Golden Knights parachute team jumps during their performance for the Twilight Tattoo ceremony as part of the Army’s 250th Birthday Festival in Washington, DC [Nathan Howard/Reuters]
Trump’s approach to the military dovetails with his aggressive stress testing of executive power, which he has sought to use to transform both federal government and civil society, particularly when it comes to education, healthcare, state rights, immigrant civil liberties, and trade with foreign partners.
“He is speaking not just to the US, but to the world as well,” Cohn said, framing the parade as part of Trump’s wider mission to cast “himself as the most powerful person in the world”.
For his part, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth indicated the deployment of National Guard troops in California, which local officials have decried as an unnecessary escalation, could be part of a wider pivot in domestic military strategy.
“I think we’re entering another phase, especially under President Trump with his focus on the homeland, where the National Guard and Reserves become a critical component of how we secure that homeland,” Hegseth said during a congressional hearing on Tuesday.
Soon after, Trump promised a broad – and muscular – crackdown on planned constitutionally protected protests on the day of the parade.
“For those people that want to protest, they’re going to be met with very big force,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office, as he described those who planned to demonstrate as “people that hate our country”.
‘Seizing on an opportunity’
Amid the criticism, the White House has downplayed the fact that Saturday’s spectacle also falls on Trump’s birthday. The Pentagon has said there are no plans to acknowledge the personal milestone or to sing Happy Birthday to the president.
White House official Vince Haley previously said the programme “will be a fitting tribute to the service, sacrifice, and selflessness of the brave men and women who have worn the uniform and devoted their lives to defending the greatest experiment in liberty known to man”.
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Mike Lyons, a retired US Army major and military analyst, also sided with the White House’s stance that criticism of the parade has been overblown.
US Army soldiers work on military vehicles in West Potomac Park in Washington, DC [Andrew Harnik/Getty Images]
“All Trump is doing is seizing on an opportunity to mark 250 years of the Army,” Lyons said. “Whether it’s his birthday or not, that’s just a trolling issue for the people who hate him.”
Lyons noted that military equipment is regularly put on display at events “inside the wire”, using a term for military bases both in the US and abroad. He drew a distinction between the plans for Saturday and the notorious military parades held in North Korea, often used to unveil otherwise secret military advancements.
“It’s not a sign of a dictator trying to project power, because we’re not going to be a North Korea and roll out the latest armed missile, there’s no secret equipment rolling out,” Lyons said.
“It’s just a celebration that gives the normal citizen an opportunity to see what this equipment looks like up close.”
‘The message is clear enough’
Trump and his administration have also played down the price tag of the event, estimated to be between $25m and $45m, but subject to rise based on the damage the military equipment causes to the streets of the capital.
Officials have characterised the spending as in line with the administration’s ambition of cutting spending on federal civilian services, while surging military funding, including putting forward a historically high $1 trillion defence budget.
Trump has dismissed the price tag as “peanuts compared to the value of doing it”.
Toronto Metropolitan University’s Gammel also agreed that the parade could have immense value, not in a commemorative capacity, but as a particularly powerful political tool.
US President Donald Trump is seen at a tank manufacturing plant in Lima, Ohio, in 2019 [File: Carlos Barria/Reuters]
The event is fertile ground to shore up not just Trump’s domestic base, but also one-time supporters on the fence over the divisive first months of his second term, she told Al Jazeera.
Wrapped in military imagery considered sacrosanct to many segments of the US population, the event will be ready-made for an online audience to hit at a “very emotional level”, Gammel said.
Those images will help to “naturalise values not only around military dominance, but also values that conjoin Trump’s personal image with the military and with state power. That, to me, is particularly dangerous in all of this”.
“At a time when we have so many controversial elements being dismantled in the democratic system, all Trump needs to do is be present,” she added.