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Atletico Madrid receive disappointing Alex Baena injury blow
Atletico Madrid made a disappointing start to the season after a 2-1 loss at Espanyol, and they have now been dealt further bad news in the last 24 hours. Alex Baena was withdrawn midway through the second half at the RCDE Stadium, which was a decision that many Atleti supporters were not happy about. But as it turns out, it was a decision that Diego Simeone needed to make, given that the former Villarreal midfielder picked up an injury. An official medical report from Atleti have confirmed that Baena has suffered a low-grade muscle injury, following tests on Wednesday. 'Álex Baena was unable to complete Wednesday's training session after feeling some muscle discomfort. The Spanish international has undergone tests and the report offered by the club's medical services indicates that he suffers a low-grade muscle injury. 'The red-and-white '10' will carry out physiotherapy sessions and readaptation work in the gym and the evolution of his injury will determine his return to competition.' MADRID, 28/07/2025.- El presidente del Atlético de Madrid, Enrique Cerezo (d) durante la presentación de Álex Baena (i) como nuevo jugador del club, este lunes en el estadio Metropolitano de la capital. EFE/Zipi Baena expected to be out until after international break As per Marca, it is an adductor injury that Baena has suffered, and the expectation is that he will be out for two weeks. If that is the case, he will miss this weekend's first home match of the season against Elche, as well as the trip to Alaves seven days later – and it could also mean that Luis de la Fuente avoids calling him up for Spain's 2026 World Cup qualifiers against Bulgaria and Türkiye. Atleti do have cover for Baena, so it is unlikely that he is rushed back for the trip to Alaves – which he is currently touch-and-go for. The options that Simeone has to replace him include Antoine Griezmann, Alexander Sorloth and Conor Gallagher.
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
🤕Bad news for Simeone, Alex Baena picks up injury at Atlético
Álex Baena was unable to complete today's training session due to muscle discomfort. Faced with this, the midfielder underwent studies in the medical services and the results showed a low-grade muscle this reason, the number 10 of the rojiblanco team will carry out physiotherapy sessions and individual readaptation work and is ruled out to face Elche. This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here. 📸 George Wood - 2025 Getty Images
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14 minutes ago
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Botterman ready for Maher showdown as Red Roses prepare for opener
By James Toney Hannah Botterman has started the bidding for Ilona Maher's World Cup shirt – but it's not exactly generous. Prop Botterman has become a core part of John Mitchell's Red Roses side, who take on Maher's USA in the opening match of the Rugby World Cup in Sunderland on Friday. She saw the impact of the sport's most-followed social media star when she joined Bristol Bears for the conclusion of the recent PWR season. But she's not the sort to be star-struck. 'I said I'd give her a fiver for her shirt but she's probably had a higher bid, I imagine,' she joked. Mitchell's squad is unchanged from the team that swept past France 40–6 in their final warm-up match. Captain Zoe Aldcroft will lead her side out from blindside flanker, while Loughborough Lightning's Sadia Kabeya starts at openside ahead of former captain Marlie Packer, who misses out despite serving her one-match ban. Vice-captain Megan Jones is alongside established midfield partner Tatyana Heard, while Natasha Hunt and Zoe Harrison are retained as the preferred half-back pairing. Jess Breach, Abby Dow and Ellie Kildunne – who scored a combined 18 tries during England's Six Nations Grand Slam – form a lethal back three, while replacement Emily Scarratt is set to feature in her fifth World Cup. Officials from the Football Association and Rugby Football Union have worked hard to draw Lionesses fans across to the Red Roses. Leah Williamson even stopped off at Twickenham just hours after lifting the Euros trophy again in Switzerland. However, unlike Sarina Wiegman's team – who entered their Euro defence after far-from-flawless preparation – Botterman knows the Red Roses, unbeaten in 27 matches since their final defeat in 2022, carry a much heavier weight of expectation. 'You look at what they did in the Euros and what that did for women's sport, not just women's football,' she added. 'We want to have a similar effect. For women's rugby, it would be unbelievable to see a boom in participation. Hopefully we can get to the final and reproduce what the football girls did. 'We've got real confidence in the camp but we can't get too far ahead of ourselves. We need to be where our feet are. We know what we're about, we know we're a very good team, but we know we need to perform. We know we have the ability.' Bristol team-mate Abbie Ward, who only returned to action last year after giving birth to her daughter Hallie, is making her third appearance at a World Cup and knows first-hand that even the best-laid plans can go awry. For all the recent Grand Slam glory, final defeats to New Zealand in Belfast and Auckland in the last two editions still sting. England may be strong favourites on home soil, but they have lost five of the last six finals. 'I don't know a time when the Red Roses haven't been under pressure. I've been part of two World Cups when we've gone in as favourites and we haven't won,' she said. 'The day the Red Roses don't have that pressure will feel weird. I think we enjoy it, we thrive on it. It's something we can use in our favour. It's a home World Cup so that's an advantage – all that extra noise, having our friends and family there. The girls will harness it and hopefully we'll see that in the performances.' Ward remembers a time when she couldn't give away tickets for England games, but with a record 40,000-plus crowd expected at the Stadium of Light – and the Allianz Stadium final now a sell-out – those days are long gone. 'When I was coming through as a junior, I didn't know any England players, I didn't even know there was a World Cup in England back in 2010,' she added. 'We talk about 'see it to be it' – girls can aspire to be where we are, there's a genuine pathway and they can be professional rugby players. 'There's been so much growth. Regardless of results, the momentum that's been building for the last decade has been huge. I was lucky to be part of the cohort that saw the change from amateur to professional. It's unbelievable for the game and for women's sport, be it cricket, netball or football. We want to be part of that.' Ward doesn't shy away from the fact the Red Roses need to win battles both on and off the field – and Maher shows that personality and performance need not be mutually exclusive. 'I think it's important that we share stuff; women's rugby is doing it differently,' she said. 'We are showing individual characters. That's what people want to see. The beauty of a rugby team is that everyone is a different personality. What would be amazing is if, off the back of this World Cup, we've got more household names among the Red Roses. 'Ilona taught the Bristol Bears a lot about how she interacted with the fan base. She has a huge online presence, but she has earned it and it's all very genuine. I've only played alongside her, so I'm looking forward to playing against her.'