The dark truth, and light, from Saturday’s Champions League final
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Good evening and welcome to this week’s Inside Sport Newsletter.
The street cleaners around Islington got to work early on Monday morning, although without a great sense of urgency. It is, after all, going to take a long, long time to clear the debris of broken bottles, crumpled cans and discarded plastic bags left behind by the jubilation of Arsenal’s Premier League trophy parade – and many more hands than the solo sweeper stoically making his way along Holloway Road.
As an estimated crowd of over one million people lined the streets around the Emirates, you had to remind yourself that Arsenal had actually lost Saturday’s Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain on penalties. Any sense of despondency was swept away as soon as Mikel Arteta and Martin Odegaard stepped onto the top deck of one of the four open-top buses and lifted the Premier League trophy to the cheers of the crowds below. A first league title in 22 years felt like enough.
And so Sunday, with its sea of red mist, became one of the great days for this corner of the capital – the sort of occasion that reinforces just how far football’s reach extends and its power to unite. In a way, it felt as though there is such an appetite for moments like these – multicultural celebrations that serve as an antidote to the direction the world can sometimes seem to be heading. In increasingly divided and isolating times, this was a celebration of community.
That was my takeaway from the weekend, anyway. Others are available, including Richard Jolly on how Arsenal’s endless attrition cost them the Champions League final and Miguel Delaney on the changes Arteta has to make to take the next step. Then there’s the bigger-picture stuff, which Miguel also tackles as he looks at the newly crowned double and Champions League winners PSG and the influence of state money. That’s the darker side of the game, after Arsenal’s homecoming brought some light.
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Thousands of Arsenal fans lined the streets of north London as the club celebrated their Premier League title triumph with a trophy parade near the Emirates Stadium
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Paris Saint-Germain are only the second European team to complete the 'double-double' of winning the European Cup/Champions League and their domestic league title in the same season, two years in a row. Who are the other two?
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Answer at the bottom of the newsletter
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Answer at the bottom of the newsletter
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Dua Lipa, DiCaprio and the ‘cool’ business behind the Champions League final
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The 2026 Champions League final is about far more than football, with Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain embodying the celebrity, fashion and soft power increasingly shaping the modern game. Also in Miguel’s latest members‑only newsletter:
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- A dispatch from Budapest
- How the Anthony Gordon deal happened
- The futures of Marcus Rashford, Ibrahima Konate and Alex Scott
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Arsenal’s Premier League win – in the words of one executive – could end up being rocket fuel. Read in full, exclusively for Inside Football members
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Serena Williams confirms stunning return to tennis
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Serena Williams has confirmed that she will make a stunning return to tennis at the age of 44, almost four years after her last competitive appearance.
The 23-time grand slam champion has received a doubles wildcard to play at the HSBC Championships at the Queen’s Club in west London, which starts on Monday 8 June, ahead of a likely return at Wimbledon later in the month. She is set to play doubles at Queen’s with Canadian teenager Victoria Mboko, who idolised Williams growing up, and may play singles at Wimbledon.
But can she be competitive at the age of 44, after such a long period away?
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Would Serena Williams really return to tennis at the age of 44, subjecting herself to daily anti-doping whereabouts checks, if she didn’t believe she would win a record-equalling 24th grand slam title? Even at this stage of her life, she will believe she can test the best players in the world if handed the opportunity to face one of the game’s new stars in Aryna Sabalenka or Coco Gauff on Centre Court. Such a match-up would be blockbuster viewing, and with Williams bringing more eyes to the sport, it can only be good for tennis, too.
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The harsh truth Liverpool must face after dramatic change of heart on Arne Slot
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Liverpool are looking to open formal talks with Andoni Iraola this week as they step up their interest in appointing the Spaniard as the successor to the sacked Arne Slot, who departed on Saturday a year after lifting the Premier League title in his first season at Anfield.
Senior Football Correspondent Richard Jolly examines the Dutchman’s demise, and what also appears to be a sudden change of heart from the Reds.
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Slot’s departure may have been welcomed by much of a fanbase that had turned against him, but came with considerable regret at Anfield. It nevertheless represented a swift and sudden change of heart. Liverpool’s support for Slot was such that they never intervened when Chelsea appointed Xabi Alonso. They had insisted he planned to reinforce his backroom staff. Slot himself was expecting to be back for a third season at Anfield – with the dramatic developments of the sacking disappointing him. He believed he had the backing of the club. Until the last couple of days, it seemed he did.
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The new goal driving Keely Hodgkinson to greatness after injury nightmare
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Keely Hodgkinson is poised to begin her quest for greatness outdoors after an indoor world record and tells Jack Rathborn about her desire to achieve world-class times across three separate events.
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Keely Hodgkinson is exuberant ahead of the summer and appears to be feeling the early effect of World Cup fever, with the Olympic champion sporting a Three Lions jacket now just days before Thomas Tuchel’s England set off to the USA. The Briton has enjoyed a smooth 2026, particularly compared to the injury hell suffered in 2025, with a series of setbacks scuppering hopes of gold at the Tokyo World Championships and a tilt at the world record. “I would love to have that happen on home soil,” Hodgkinson admits when quizzed on London being the location for a shot at the outdoor world record and bettering her current personal best of 1:54.61.
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The dark truth behind PSG’s Champions League dominance
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Just four years on from a World Cup where they took centre stage, Qatar’s sportswashing and myriad other issues have been largely forgotten, writes Miguel Delaney, even amid PSG’s European football takeover
Qatar again has the European Cup. It’s a simple assertion of reality, that warrants a lot of repetition and reflection, due its mind-bending layers.
You only have to consider one huge shift in four years. This week is now finally the point where football moves from the intensive ubiquity of the club game to the unique build-up to the World Cup. That means there’s an extra timeliness to the Champions League final being unusually close to the tournament’s start, given what happened in it.
Four years ago, there was a wall of justified fury over every issue to do with Qatar: sportswashing, a “slave labour” system based on racial discrimination, wider suppression of human rights and specific human stories like the imprisonment of whistleblower Abdullah Ibhais. And now, as their European club team retains the Champions League… there’s virtually none of that.
There’s effusive praise for Paris Saint-Germain, as well as celebration, glory and endearing little details like the sunglasses that the brilliant Khvicha Kvaratskhelia was wearing.
There is also of course an appropriate metaphor within that reflection on those shades.
Any discussion on the “morality” of anything to do with the final has only revolved Arsenal’s football. There was even the convenient leak of a Sir Alex Ferguson message to PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaifi about how the team who tried to play football won.
All of this carries an extra resonance given what PSG have achieved, and what being the European champions is intended to represent.
Retaining the trophy has long been seen as the gold-standard feat, elusive to all but the most elevated teams. Such a side are supposed to say something grander about European football.
Here, the silence actually says so much more.
Read more here.
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Qatar’s sportswashing with their backing of PSG has largely been forgotten (Getty)
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PSG are the first team to do the European 'double-double' since Ajax (1971-73) and Real Madrid (1956-58).
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