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France Star Admits Inter Milan ‘Sad But Not Angry' After Serie A Title Failure Vs Inter – Adds ‘Not Looking For Revenge' In Champions League Final Vs PSG

France Star Admits Inter Milan ‘Sad But Not Angry' After Serie A Title Failure Vs Inter – Adds ‘Not Looking For Revenge' In Champions League Final Vs PSG

Yahoo3 days ago

France Star Admits Inter Milan 'Sad But Not Angry' After Serie A Title Failure Vs Inter – Adds 'Not Looking For Revenge' In Champions League Final Vs PSG
Marcus Thuram says that Inter Milan are 'sad but not angry' after their failure in the Serie A title race against Napoli.
The Frenchman spoke in the UEFA Open Media day press conference ahead of the Champions League final, as reported by FCInterNews. He also said Inter are 'not look for revenge' for 2023 against PSG.
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Inter Milan are heading into the Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain next Saturday.
However, at the same time, the Nerazzurri are also left to reflect on disappointment in Serie A.
Inter lost out on the title to Napoli on the final day of the season.
Inter had several opportunities to get ahead of the Partenopei in the Serie A table. However, they failed to take advantage of them in the end.
Thuram: 'Inter Milan Sad But Not Angry' After Serie A Title Failure' Vs Napoli
MILAN, ITALY – MARCH 11: Marcus Thuram of FC Internazionale applauds the fans during the warm-up prior to the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 UEFA Champions League 2024/25 Round of 16 Second Leg match between FC Internazionale Milano and Feyenoord at Stadio San Siro on March 11, 2025 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by)
Inter Milan striker Marcus Thuram admitted that he was 'sad more than angry.'
'Because we could have won the Scudetto.'
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'But now it's all behind us,' the French international added.
Meanwhile, Thuram called the Champions League final 'a special match.'
'Even more so for me. Because I'm playing against the team I grew up with.'
'I also know some of their players,' noted the Nerazzurri striker. 'Let's hope that we win.'
Meanwhile, Thuram had words of praise for his strike partner and Inter's captain Lautaro Martinez. 'He's a leader,' said the 27-year-old.
'It's a privilege to share the pitch with him. And with all the forwards.'
Thuram insisted that Inter 'are a great group.'
Meanwhile, Thuram admitted that 'my performances haven't been as good over the second half of the season as the first.'
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'But Inter are in the final. There are ninety minutes to play to win a huge trophy.'
Then, Thuram commented that striker Marko Arnautovic 'helps every player' behind the scenes.
'He gave us a big hand on the pitch when Lauti and I were injured. He's scored important goals.'
Thuram said that Arnautovic is 'like a big brother to me.'
'He's been an important figure in my growth.'
'He knows Inter,' the Frenchman added. 'He won the Treble here.'
Then, Thuram commented that 'I don't think is going to be revenge or a rematch' for the 2023 final.
'We're not playing against City. It's a different season.'
'We don't have to think about it,' the 27-year-old added. 'We want to play our game, as we've done all season.'

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Football's capacity to make men cry: ‘I was buying milk and just burst into tears thinking about Palace'
Football's capacity to make men cry: ‘I was buying milk and just burst into tears thinking about Palace'

New York Times

time31 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Football's capacity to make men cry: ‘I was buying milk and just burst into tears thinking about Palace'

Forget the scoreline in the top corner of the screen. The image of the distraught Inter Milan supporter who flashed up on television screens around the world, as his team prepared to take a meaningless corner in the 76th minute, told the story of the Champions League final. Crestfallen and broken, his bottom lip was quivering and tears were streaming down his face. A fourth Paris Saint-Germain goal had not long been scored at the other end of the stadium and it was all too much for a man who looked like his world had come to an end. 'Imagine getting like that about football?' It's hard to explain to people who have no interest in the game why so many of us are so immersed and emotionally invested in this sport that it leads to the kind of behaviour — uncontrollable tears (of joy as well as despair), hugging total strangers, or even turning the air blue after something totally innocuous — that would be almost unthinkable in a public space anywhere else. 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With or without a heartbreaking personal story, football's capacity to stir the emotions is extraordinary. Carrying our hopes and fears, the game plays with our feelings in a way that few things in life can and, at the same time, provides a form of sanctuary. The video features crying. A lot of crying. It lasts for one minute and 24 seconds and was filmed at Wembley Stadium on the day of the FA Cup final. The referee's whistle had just blown after 10 minutes of stoppage time and Crystal Palace, after 164 years of waiting, had beaten Manchester City 1-0 to finally win the first major trophy in their history. Joao Castelo-Branco, ESPN Brazil's correspondent in the UK, had decided to leave his seat in the press box moments earlier to try to get some footage of the Palace supporters. To describe what follows as scenes of celebration doesn't come close. It's so much more than that. It's raw. It's magical. It's moving. It's genuinely heart-warming. It's football — that simple game that means nothing and everything — touching the soul. Advertisement 'It just captured something special,' Castelo-Branco says, smiling. So special that you find yourself watching it over and again, looking at the faces of the people — men and women, young and old — and thinking about all the stories they could tell you about how their lives became so entwined with Crystal Palace Football Club, as well as wondering why this moment means so much personally to them. 'When I was there, I was feeling, 'This is incredible, and I was just trying to hold it together',' Castelo-Branco says. 'There was so much going on that you don't know where to film. And I think sometimes then you see fans turning the camera everywhere really quickly. But I tried to hold on a bit, to rest at that couple, but then at the same time move on a bit to show that there were all these different characters that were celebrating. Everywhere I turned was a beautiful shot of emotion.' 'That couple' feature at the start of the footage, when a woman overcome with emotion falls into the arms of a man who looks like he has been following Palace for more years than he cares to remember. His eyes are filled with tears. Behind them, another supporter of a similar age stands alone with his arms aloft, totally overwhelmed by the moment. Some fans have their hands over their mouths in disbelief, almost frozen. Others are wiping away tears with their scarves. One man is hunched over, face down and sobbing. Another supporter — his father, perhaps — wraps his arms around him and the two of them end up singing together. People of all ages are crying everywhere you look — crying and smiling. 'It's beautiful,' Castelo-Branco adds. 'And a really special thing about it is that not many fans were filming (on their phones). People were really living that moment.' True raw emotion, fans really living the moment. As I joined in the stands to film this video, there were hardly any fans with their phones out. Grown men and women hugging and crying. Amazing atmosphere. #CrystalPalace beautiful ⚽️#Wembley #FACup — Joao Castelo-Branco (@j_castelobranco) May 18, 2025 Following Palace's triumph at Wembley, there were similar scenes a few days later in Bilbao, where Tottenham Hotspur beat Manchester United to win the Europa League. A couple of months earlier, it was Newcastle United's turn after they defeated Liverpool in the Carabao Cup final. But it doesn't have to be a long wait for a trophy that tips people over the edge at a football match. Gary Pickles remembers being in the away end at Brighton in 2019, when Manchester City were on the verge of winning their fourth Premier League title in eight seasons, holding up his phone, filming the fans all around him, and suddenly being stopped in his tracks. 'I noticed my son, Niall, had his hands on his head and tears were streaming down his face. 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Reading that quote again now, a couple of decades later, makes you realise how much life has changed – and in a relatively short space of time too (either that or all my mates are especially useless when it comes to knowing how to change a tyre). 'I think men have moved on hugely,' Baker, the senior therapist, says. 'I guess the old stereotype is that if men and sports were going to exhibit any emotions, it was normally anger. And there were apocryphal stories of women living in dread of their menfolk coming back if their team had lost. But men are more willing, and able, to express a fuller range of emotions than just anger. Advertisement 'I think they've changed a lot in the last 20 years. And I know that by the number of men I see. It used to be one man for every nine women I saw. And now it's much more like I'll see two men for every three women, so it's coming up to parity. There's a willingness to explore their own sense of self, what drives them and who they are.' That's not to say that men never cried at football in years gone by. When this topic of conversation came up in the office, my colleague Amy Lawrence told a story about being in the away end at Anfield in 1989, when Michael Thomas scored a dramatic late goal to clinch the league title for Arsenal against Liverpool on the final day, and how she was nowhere near her friends when she eventually came up for air amid the chaotic celebrations that followed. 'I found myself next to a guy who looked like your absolute classic 1980s football hooligan,' she said. 'He was massive. He was a skinhead. He was covered in tattoos. He looked terrifying. But he had tears rolling down his cheeks and he was blubbing like a baby. I can still see his face today. It was beautiful because he was the last type of person that you would ever expect to break down emotionally at a match.' The same can't be said for young Ricky Allman, who was only 11 years old when Leeds United were on their way to being relegated from the Premier League in 2004. With his shirt off and 'Leeds Til I Die' written across his chest, Allman was heartbroken as the television cameras homed in on him in the away end at Bolton Wanderers. Leeds were losing 4-1 and it was all too much for him. 'My bottom lip came out. A full-on, uncontrollable lip,' Allman told The Athletic in 2020. His mother, Beverley, was watching at home. 'She rang me in tears, 'Are you alright?' she said. You've been on telly. They panned on the crowd and you were crying — I haven't stopped crying since.'' Plenty of Palace fans were saying the same thing for a week or more after beating Manchester City. In Kevin Day's case, the initial sense of shock eventually gave way to tears in, of all places, his local supermarket. Advertisement 'For the first minute (after the final whistle) I couldn't speak,' the writer, comedian and lifelong Palace fan says. 'Then I looked around me and I was the only one not in tears. It was incredible. Mates of mine who I've known for so long, stoic people, who normally wouldn't cry… they were just broken. 'I've never felt elation like it. My son came round at 9am the next morning. He's 29. He threw himself into my arms like he hasn't done since he was a five-year-old. He was sobbing. 'And then, Monday morning, I was in the Co-op buying a pint of milk and I just suddenly burst into tears. I just thought to myself, 'The last time I was in here we hadn't won the FA Cup'.' Thinking about those who are no longer with us and unable to share a landmark moment can often trigger our emotions at football, as was almost certainly the case with the PSG coach Rafel Pol Cabanellas in Munich. 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Italy Player Ratings vs Norway: Disjointed Azzurri Humiliated in Oslo
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Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

Italy Player Ratings vs Norway: Disjointed Azzurri Humiliated in Oslo

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Caoimhin Kelleher ‘buzzing' as he completes £18m move to Brentford from Liverpool
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Caoimhin Kelleher ‘buzzing' as he completes £18m move to Brentford from Liverpool

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