Davide Frattesi scores a brilliant extra-time winner to give Inter a 7-6 victory on aggregate against Barcelona in their Champions League semi-final.
WATCH MORE: Raphina puts Barcelona in front to make late comeback in semi-finals
Davide Frattesi scores a brilliant extra-time winner to give Inter a 7-6 victory on aggregate against Barcelona in their Champions League semi-final.
WATCH MORE: Raphina puts Barcelona in front to make late comeback in semi-finals
Watch highlights as Inter cruise to a thrilling 7-6 aggregate victory over Barcelona in one of the greatest Champions League semifinals ever.
Inter Milan vs. Barcelona MATCH REPORT
Watch Gianluigi Donnarumma make two fantastic saves for Paris Saint-Germain in the second leg of their Champions League semi-final against Arsenal.
WATCH MORE: Frattesi scores extra time winner to put Inter through to finals
Fabian Ruiz score for Paris Saint-Germain to put them 2-0 ahead on aggregate in the second leg of their Champions League semi-final against Arsenal.
WATCH MORE: Frattesi scores extra time winner to put Inter through to finals
Pop superstar Miley Cyrus has revealed how the home she shared with ex-husband Liam Hemsworth burning down was “the biggest blessing”. The catastrophe happened a month before the pair tied the knot in 2018.
The four-bedroom house, which the former couple bought together for $2.52million was set to be their dream home. However, Miley has since reflected on the “dark time” they faced due to the Woolsey Fire.
Speaking during a Q&A session a her Something Beautiful event on Tuesday, the 32-year-old star said: “When my house burned down, that was the biggest blessing I’ve ever had in my life, actually.”
She added: “‘Losing everything and being able to rebuild, and to be able to be purposeful and choose every piece that I’m gonna collect or also just about the people in my life. And I guess for me, when my house burned down, a lot of my relationships also burned down, and that again just led me to such magic and to have so much gratitude.”
Mayra then told the crowd: ‘I think what I would have told my younger self is to appreciate those darker times because, like I said, they are only leading you into the light.”
Miley’s marriage to Liam, 35, ended as the pair divorced in 2020. She previously opened up on the trauma she went through after the devastation of losing the property. She had been on the set of Netflix’s Black Mirror in South Africa when she was informed her home had been destroyed.
In a TikTok message in 2023, Miley told her followers: “Actually as my house was burning down I was strapped to a gurney with my hands locked in handcuffs strapped to a bed.
The had to film her pop star character Ashley O’s dance-filled On a Roll music video the next day as she shrugged: “The show must go on!”
Miley has faced tension in her family in recent years. And that tension within the family erupted as Miley’s parents, Billy Ray and Tish, split and then divorced in 2023 after 30 years of marriage.
After two previous divorce filings, the pair finally went their separate ways in April 2022, saying at the time: “We have grown up together, raised a family we can be so proud of, and it is now time to create our own paths.”
Things turned sour shortly after and a bitter war of words between the Cyrus family erupted this year following Billy Ray’s performance at President Trump’s inauguration. It’s speculated that Miley took her mum’s side in the divorce.
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Rally legend Carlos Sainz Sr is considering running for president of the FIA, motorsport’s governing body, in December’s election.
The 63-year-old two-time world champion told motorsport.com he was “in the process of figuring out how much support I will get in the community of motorsport”.
Sainz – who is also a four-time winner of the Dakar Rally, on which this year he was still competing – would be running against current FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem, whose term in office since 2021 has been beset by controversy.
Ben Sulayem has not yet formally declared his intention to run again, but is known to be planning to. No other potential candidate has yet declared interest.
Sainz said: “This possibility has been in my mind for some time now, not very deeply, but now I think it could be the right time in my career for me to take the step.
” I’m confident I can do a good job and put together an excellent team to give back to the sport part of what it has given me.
“I have accumulated a lot of experience in this sport throughout the years and I’m certain I can bring new and interesting things, to strengthen and develop the sport and the automobile world”.
Sainz is widely regarded as a man of seriousness and integrity, as well as unquestionably an all-time great in his field. Sources say he is a consequential candidate and would have widespread support from within the sport.
Sainz said there would be no conflict of interest with the fact that his son Carlos is an active F1 driver with Williams.
“I have my track record and people know me well enough to understand that this will not be an issue”, Sainz said. “Obviously, I will have to step down regarding my role with Carlos and his career but this is not an issue at all.
” He’s not a child any more, he has been in F1 for a decade now and we both know that if I go ahead with this project our relationship will change, of course.
“The FIA is a very serious entity and there will be no conflict”.
Ben Sulayem suffered a blow to his presidency with the resignation of his deputy president for sport, Robert Reid, last month.
Reid quit citing “a fundamental breakdown in governance standards” within the FIA.
On the day Reid announced his resignation, the former FIA chief executive officer Natalie Robyn broke the silence she had maintained since being forced to resign last summer after 18 months in the role.
Robyn told BBC Sport the FIA had “serious ongoing structural challenges”, adding that “professional processes are not adhered to and stakeholders are excluded from decision-making”.
Robyn’s departure came after she raised questions about the general governance of the FIA and its professional practices, including finances in the president’s office.
Her departure was followed by the firing of the head of the audit committee Bertrand Badre, a former head of the World Bank, and audit committee member Tom Purves, a former BMW executive.
In November, Ben Sulayem fired FIA compliance officer Paolo Basarri, who in March last year looked into allegations that Ben Sulayem interfered in the operations of the Saudi Arabian and Las Vegas Grands Prix in 2023. Ben Sulayem was cleared following an investigation by the FIA’s ethics committee.
The FIA is currently the subject of legal action by Susie Wolff, the boss of the F1 Academy for aspiring female drivers, after a controversial conflict of interest inquiry into her and her husband, Toto Wolff, the boss of Mercedes motorsport.
Senior FIA figures have also raised concerns about Ben Sulayem’s decision to change the statutes of the governing body last year to reduce accountability.
And at last weekend’s Miami Grand Prix, Grand Prix Drivers ‘ Association director George Russell called for action rather than words from the FIA on the controversy over censures for swearing and criticising the governing body.