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4 hours ago
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Exclusive: Fresh twist in Milan's Morata saga as Como refuse to pay Galatasaray compensation
As reported in recent days, Como had been confidently awaiting the go-ahead by Wednesday (today) to sign Alvaro Morata. That confidence remains but Como still have no intention of paying the €3 million fee requested by Galatasaray. In fact, Milan CEO Giorgio Furlani is still handling the matter, as the Rossoneri work to free up Morata and have reassured Como in the process. There is already an agreement between the two Italian clubs for a transfer fee of around €10 million. MILAN, ITALY – NOVEMBER 30: Alvaro Morata of AC Milan celebrates scoring his team's first goal during the Serie A match between AC Milan and Empoli at Stadio Giuseppe Meazza on November 30, 2024 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by) Como continue to dream of top target Morata Last week, Como president Mirwan Suwarso confirmed that his club had an agreement with Milan over the player and that they have done all they had to do in the negotiations. Galatasaray, meanwhile, were insistent over compensation to release the player from his loan contract. epa11819103 AC Milan's Alvaro Morata celebrates after scoring the 1-0 goal during the Italian Serie A soccer match between AC Milan and Cagliari Calcio, in Milan, Italy, 11 January 2025. EPA-EFE/MATTEO BAZZI For Galatasaray in the 2024-25 season, the Spaniard scored six goals and provided one assist in the Turkish Super Lig.


San Francisco Chronicle
7 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Chelsea striker Marc Guiu joins promoted Sunderland on loan
SUNDERLAND, England (AP) — Newly promoted Sunderland signed 19-year-old striker Marc Guiu on a season-long loan from Chelsea on Wednesday ahead of the new Premier League campaign. Guiu made 16 appearances for Enzo Maresca's team last season and scored six goals — all in the UEFA Conference League campaign. Chelsea won the third-tier competition. Guiu became the second-youngest player (18 years, 350 days old) to score a hat trick for Chelsea. That feat came in a 5-1 victory over Shamrock Rovers. The Spaniard also played twice in Chelsea's run to the Club World Cup title. 'I see myself as a powerful striker, who can make a difference on and off the ball, and I pride myself on being a natural goalscorer,' he said in Sunderland's announcement. Guiu rose through Barcelona's youth academy and made seven appearances for the Catalan club before joining Chelsea in 2024. ___
Yahoo
9 hours ago
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5 storylines to follow at the 2025 Cincinnati Open tennis tournament
The Cincinnati Open returns to Mason with a new two-week format and expanded player fields beginning on Tuesday, Aug. 5 from the Lindner Family Tennis Center. There are 96 players in both the WTA and ATP singles field this year, compared to 56 in 2024. This summer's fields include 119 total players who have won a title during their career and the top 56 players from both the men's and women's tours. Here are five storylines to watch for in Mason. 1. Will Cincinnati get an Alcaraz-Sinner showdown? The last four meetings between the ATP's top 2 players, Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz, have been in a tournament final. Sinner snapped a five-match losing streak to Alcaraz with a four-set win on Sunday, July 13 to claim the Wimbledon title. So far this year, Alcaraz has wins over Sinner in Rome and Roland Garros. Will they meet up in Cincinnati? Alcaraz was involved in the last Cincinnati final featuring the World No. 1 and No. 2 when he fell to Novak Djokovic in a thriller in 2023. Sinner is trying to become the first back-to-back Cincinnati men's singles winner since Roger Federer (2014-15), who won the tournament seven times. Alcaraz followed the runner-up finish in 2023 with an upset loss in the Round of 32 to Gael Monfils last summer in Cincinnati in what the Spaniard called the "worst match that I've ever played." 2. Can WTA No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka defend Cincinnati Open title? WTA No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka enjoyed a breakthrough last summer in Cincinnati. The Belarusian did not drop a set and won 62 of 95 total games en route to winning her first hard-court title since 2020. Previously, Sabalenka suffered semifinal setbacks in Cincinnati three times (2018, 2022, 2023) and a pair of Round of 16 exits. Sabalenka is in the same boat as Sinner, trying to become the tournament's first repeat champion since a legend did it a decade ago. Serena Williams was the last to do it, going back-to-back in 2014-15. Sabalenka, one of six past Cincinnati Open champions in this year's field, has three titles this season, including a hard-court crown in Miami. 3. Will this be Novak Djokovic's final Cincinnati appearance? There have been retirement speculations surrounding 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic. Will this be his last appearance in Cincinnati? Local fans haven't seen Djokovic since the marathon win over Alcaraz in the 2023 final, which lasted a tournament-record 3 hours and 49 minutes. Last summer, Djokovic withdrew from the Cincinnati Open following the quick turnaround from his Gold Medal run at the Paris Olympics. Djokovic has reached the Cincinnati Open finals eight times and captured three titles (2018, 2020, 2023). 4. Iga Swiatek coming off Wimbledon domination This summer marks the first Cincinnati Open with a new WTA No. 1 since 2021. That year, Iga Swiatek was No. 8 and fell to Ons Jabeur in the Round of 32. Over the last three years, Swiatek has arrived in Warren County as the top-ranked WTA player but has suffered back-to-back semifinal defeats to the eventual champion (Sabalenka in 2024 and Coco Gauff in 2023). Swiatek made history in capturing her sixth Grand Slam title at Wimbledon. Her win over Amanda Anisimova marked just the second time in the Open Era that a Grand Slam winner did not drop a game (6-0, 6-0) in the final. Swiatek has reached the semifinals in two 1000-level, hard-court tournaments this year (Indian Wells, Qatar). 5. Will American tennis stars make a run at Rookwood Cup? Of the 37 nations represented in this year's Cincinnati Open, the United States has the largest contingent with 24 players. That includes a half-dozen players currently ranked in the top 10 in their respective tours. On the women's side, there have been two American winners since Williams went back-to-back: Madison Keys (2019) and Gauff (2023), both in the field this year. There's also No. 3 Jessica Pegula, the runner-up to Sabalenka in 2024 and No. 10 Emma Navarro, who has fell in the Round of 64 in Cincinnati in back-to-back years. It's been 19 years since the Cincinnati Open has seen an American win the men's singles title, when Andy Roddick claimed the 2006 crown. Last year, Frances Tiafoe was the first American to reach the Cincinnati Open men's singles final since 2013. There are two Americans in the ATP Top 10 in Taylor Fritz (No. 5) and Ben Shelton (No. 10). Shelton reached the Cincinnati quarterfinals in 2024, and Fritz is a two-time quarterfinalist (2022, 2023). This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: 5 storylines to follow at the 2025 Cincinnati Open tennis tournament