Archive October 2, 2025

Why Parkinson wants to move on from ‘Hollywood derby’ talk

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Before Friday’s high-profile Championship game at the Stok Cae Ras, Wrexham manager Phil Parkinson stressed that it was crucial not to concentrate on a rumored rivalry with Birmingham City.

The game has been dubbed the “Hollywood derby” because Tom Brady, an NFL legend, owns Wrexham and Ryan Reynolds, both co-owned by the two.

Last year, both teams, the subjects of separate documentaries, were automatically promoted from League One.

We shouldn’t have made too much of reference to the rivalry from the previous year, Parkinson said.

“We played two competitive games against them last year, and the crowd was so focused on the outcome.

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At St Andrew’s last year, Birmingham won 3-1 before returning to the Stok Cae Ras, where they were previously seen, McElhenney and Brady joined former England captain David Beckham for a 1-1 victory.

Wrexham have lost just once in six league games and are 15th, while Birmingham have one win in their last five.

If we’re honest, the run has been good, Parkerson continued, “we’ve been on a good run for a while.”

“Consistenty is obviously important, and I believe our game is starting to exhibit consistency.”

Birmingham City minority owner Tom Brady with David Beckham and Romeo Beckham at last season's game against Wrexham at St Andrew'sImages courtesy of Getty
After two draws and two losses so far this season, Wrexham are still looking for their first home league win. They drew 1-1 at Leicester City on Tuesday.

Wrexham had won their first three points at home against Derby County last Saturday when Lewis O’Brien equaled it with Ben Brereton Diaz’s strike.

“We obviously won the EFL Cup against Reading and prevailed on penalties against Hull,” Parkinson said.

“Derby, the game was there for us, really, and we didn’t take advantage of it,” he said.

“But it’s just about performance level,” says the team, who played a lot of Derby, and what they need to do well.

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London to host inaugural Women’s Champions Cup

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London will host the final matches in the new Women’s Champions Cup early next year, Fifa has announced.

The competition will bring together the champions of the different continental competitions, similar to the old format of the men’s Club World Cup.

The four matches in the final phase – two semi-finals, a third-place match and the final – will be played in London between 28 January and 1 February.

The venue in London is yet to be confirmed.

Arsenal will be Europe’s representatives in the tournament after they won the Women’s Champions League last season.

Asian champions Wuhan Jiangda host Oceania representatives Auckland United in China this month. The victors face the winners of the African Champions League in December, and whoever wins that will face the Gunners.

The other semi-final will see NJ/NY Gotham, the champions of North America, take on the winners of the women’s Copa Libertadores.

Fifa have also confirmed the dates for next year’s Women’s African Cup of Nations – which will coincide with the Women’s Super League season.

Ellen White, Jen Beattie and Ben Haines

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  • Women’s Football

London to host inaugural Women’s Champions Cup

Getty Images

London will host the final matches in the new Women’s Champions Cup early next year, Fifa has announced.

The competition will bring together the champions of the different continental competitions, similar to the old format of the men’s Club World Cup.

The four matches in the final phase – two semi-finals, a third-place match and the final – will be played in London between 28 January and 1 February.

The venue in London is yet to be confirmed.

Arsenal will be Europe’s representatives in the tournament after they won the Women’s Champions League last season.

Asian champions Wuhan Jiangda host Oceania representatives Auckland United in China this month. The victors face the winners of the African Champions League in December, and whoever wins that will face the Gunners.

The other semi-final will see NJ/NY Gotham, the champions of North America, take on the winners of the women’s Copa Libertadores.

Fifa have also confirmed the dates for next year’s Women’s African Cup of Nations – which will coincide with the Women’s Super League season.

Ellen White, Jen Beattie and Ben Haines

Related topics

  • Football
  • Women’s Football

Fifa cannot solve geopolitical issues – Infantino

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As pressure mounts against Israel’s authorities, Fifa president Gianni Infantino claims that the world’s ruling body “cannot solve geopolitical problems.”

Israel’s genocide against Palestinians in Gaza was determined last month by a UN commission of inquiry.

A Fifa council meeting on Thursday did not place Israel’s participation in football on the official agenda.

Infantino did address the issue in his opening address at Fifa’s headquarters in Zurich, though.

The 55-year-old Italian stated that Fifa was determined to “bring people together in a divided world” by “using the power of football.”

The most crucial message that football can send right now is one of peace and unity, Infantino said, “Our thoughts are with those who are suffering in the many conflicts that exist today.”

FIFA can and must use its unifying, educational, cultural, and humanitarian values to promote football around the world.

Israeli soccer team Maccabi Tel Aviv is playing in the Europa League while Israel’s national team is currently competing in the men’s world cup in Europe.

Amnesty International has urged Uefa and Fifa, which organizes European competitions, to ban the Israeli Football Association from their tournaments.

Victor Montagliani, the vice president of Fifa, stated on Wednesday that Uefa should decide.

“First and foremost, I have to deal with a member of my region for whatever reason because Israel is a member of Uefa.” He said, “They have to deal with that.”

In their qualifying group for the World Cup, Israel is six points clear of Norway’s leaders in Uefa’s organization.

The winning team in each group automatically qualifies for the tournament, with the losing team advancing to the play-offs.

The US, Mexico, and Canada will host the 2026 World Cup on a co-hosted basis.

The administration of US President Donald Trump has vowed to stop any attempts to obstruct Israel’s participation.

Since the start of the war in 2023, according to the UN report, there are logical grounds to believe that four of the five genocidal acts committed by Israel in Gaza have been committed under international law.

Following that, a panel of UN human rights experts demanded that Fifa and Uefa ban Israel’s national team from international competition, saying: “Sports must reject the perception that it is business as usual.”

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Renowned chimpanzee researcher Jane Goodall dies at 91

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Jane Goodall, a renowned British conservationist and primatologist who conducted groundbreaking chimpanzee research, passed away at the age of 91. Goodall became a global advocate for wildlife and the planet and revolutionized the study of people’s closest animal relatives.

Will Europe use Russian assets to fund Ukraine? Could Moscow hit back?

European Union leaders are considering a “reparations plan” that would use frozen Russian state assets to provide Ukraine with a $164bn loan to help fund its reconstruction after the war with Russia ends.

Leaders expressed a mixture of support and caution for the plan on Wednesday as they met in the Danish capital, Copenhagen, days after drones were spotted in Denmark’s airspace, prompting airport closures. While the drones in Denmark were not formally identified as Russian, other European countries, including Poland, Romania and Estonia, have accused Russia of drone incursions into their airspace in September.

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“I strongly support the idea,” Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said. Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson also said he was “very much in favour” of the plan. Others said there could be legal complications, however.

Here is what we know about Europe’s “reparations plan”, how it may work and what the response from Russia is likely to be.

What is Europe’s ‘reparations plan’?

The reparations plan was first outlined by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in mid-September, and backing for it has grown as United States financial support for Ukraine wanes.

During his 2024 presidential campaign, US President Donald Trump promised voters he would pull the US back from providing high levels of financial and military aid to Ukraine.

Since the beginning of his term in January, Trump has made it clear the US will take a back seat in terms of providing financial support and security guarantees to Ukraine, indicating Europe should fill the gap instead.

Europe’s plan would use Russian assets frozen in European banks as collateral for a 140-billion-euro ($164.4bn) loan to Ukraine. Repayments for the loan would be recouped via war reparations from Russia, but the loan would also be guaranteed either in the EU’s next long-term budget or by individual EU member states.

“We need a more structural solution for military support,” von der Leyen said on Tuesday. “This is why I have put forward the idea of a reparations loan that is based on the immobilised Russian assets.”

How much in frozen Russian assets does Europe hold?

About $300bn in Russian Central Bank assets have been frozen by the US and European countries since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Most of this – $246.9bn – is held in Europe, of which $217.5bn – the vast majority in cash – is held by Euroclear, a Belgium-based capital markets company.

On June 30, Euroclear reported the Russian sanctioned assets on its balance sheet generated $3.2bn in interest during the first half of 2025, a drop from the $4bn in interest earned over the same period last year.

What are the challenges to this plan?

Under international law, a sovereign country’s assets cannot simply be confiscated. Hence, loaning this money to Ukraine would be an infringement of Moscow’s sovereign claim over its central bank assets.

Since most of the assets are held in Belgium, the country has asked for the plan to be fleshed out in case it is required to return the assets to Russia.

“I explained to my colleagues yesterday that I want their signature saying, ‘If we take Putin’s money, we use it, we’re all going to be responsible if it goes wrong,’” Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever told reporters in Copenhagen on Thursday.

On Wednesday, von der Leyen said: “It’s absolutely clear that Belgium cannot be the one who is the only member state that is carrying the risk. The risk has to be put on broader shoulders.”

Are any European leaders hesitant about this plan?

Yes. Besides De Wever, other European leaders have expressed hesitation or have asked their fellow leaders to work out more details of the plan before they agree to it.

Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said the proposal should be considered very carefully, given the legal and financial risks that could arise.

Others also signalled caution. “I think that’s a difficult legal question,” Luxembourg Prime Minister Luc Frieden told reporters. “You can’t just take over assets that belong to another state so easily.”

Frieden added: “There are now other proposals on the table, but these also raise a whole host of questions. I would like to have answers to these questions first. Among other things, how would such a loan be repaid? What would happen if Russia did not repay these reparations in a peace treaty?”

Is the plan likely to go ahead?

Experts said European leaders would likely have to find a way to make the plan viable as the prospects of further US aid for Ukraine dry up.

“It is going to happen because with the US walking away, Europe is left with $100bn-plus annual funding needs for Ukraine,” Timothy Ash, an associate fellow in the Russia and Eurasia programme at Chatham House, told Al Jazeera.

Ash explained that the bigger challenge for Europe would be to not go ahead with the plan if it means leaving Ukraine underfunded generally and placing it at higher risk of losing the war with Russia. “Risks to Europe would then be catastrophic,” he said, including the prospect of tens of millions of Ukrainians migrating west into Europe.

If a Ukrainian loss in the war becomes more likely, European nations would be forced to ramp up defence spending to 5 percent of their gross domestic products (GDPs) much faster than expected.

In June, members of NATO pledged to increase their defence spending to 5 percent of their GDPs by 2035.

Such an acceleration “would mean higher budget deficits, higher borrowing costs, more debt, less growth and a weaker Europe and euro”, Ash said.

How has Russia responded?

Moscow has rebuked the EU plan, calling it a “theft” of Russian money.

“We are talking about plans for the illegal seizure of Russian property. In Russia, we call that simply theft,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Wednesday.

Peskov said anyone involved in seizing Russian assets “will be prosecuted in one way or another. They will all be called to account.”

He added: “The boomerang will very seriously hit those who are the main depositories, countries that are interested in investment attractiveness.”

Ash said Russia could take legal action against European countries if the plan goes ahead. However, “it would have to lift its own sovereign immunity to be able to launch any such legal action. And a legal action by Russia would take years – decades to conclude.”

Russia is protected by sovereign immunity, which is a legal principle shielding foreign governments from being sued in courts outside their own country. If Russia wants to legally pursue this, it would need to waive this immunity, which, in turn, would mean Russia could also be sued or tried in a foreign country.

Ash added that another course of action Russia could take would be to seize Western assets under its jurisdiction, but this also does not come without challenges. “Russia has 10 times more assets in the West than vice versa,” Ash said. “It’s just more vulnerable through this channel.”

How much in Western assets does Russia hold?

Moscow said the value of all foreign assets it holds is comparable to the frozen Russian reserves held in the West. Citing data from January 2022, Russia’s state-run RIA news agency reported there were about $288bn of assets in Russia that could potentially be seized by Moscow.

However, Russian Central Bank records from 2022 show there were $289bn in “derivative and other foreign investments” in Russia. By the end of 2023, these foreign assets had dropped in value to $215bn.