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PSV Wins Second Consecutive Eredivisie Title

PSV Wins Second Consecutive Eredivisie Title

PSV Eindhoven won their second successive Dutch title on Sunday, surging from a seemingly impossible position in the closing weeks of the season to pip arch-rivals Ajax.

A 3-1 win at Sparta Rotterdam was enough to hand Peter Bosz and his men the Eredivisie title, which culminated in one of the most exciting climaxes in living memory.

PSV had all but given up hope of the championship. With only five matches to play, four-time European champions Ajax were nine points clear and seemingly cruising to the title.

In what was billed as a championship decider, Ajax beat PSV 2-0 in Eindhoven on March 30, and all seemed set fair for the Dutch giants to claim their 37th Eredivisie crown.

But Ajax, hoping to bounce back from one of their worst-ever seasons last year, collapsed spectacularly, losing twice and drawing twice to hand PSV the initiative.

The penultimate match was especially painful for Ajax. With fate still in their hands, one point ahead of PSV, they conceded an equaliser in the ninth minute of extra time against Groningen.

This 2-2 draw allowed PSV, who had won six straight games since that loss to Ajax, to leapfrog their Amsterdam rivals, meaning three points on Sunday was enough for glory.

PSV fans had been frustrated by the team’s inconsistency for most of the season.

An undoubted high point was beating Premier League champions Liverpool in a 3-2 Champions League thriller at the Philips Stadion.

But PSV’s European journey ended in abject humiliation, as they were dismantled 7-1 at home by a rampant Arsenal.

Domestically, they struggled to replicate last year’s dominant form, when they lost only once.

They were beaten by Ajax in both their league games but also suffered frustrating defeats to PEC Zwolle, Go Ahead Eagles, and Heerenveen.

Nevertheless, they showed resilience when it mattered in the final weeks.

A winner deep in injury time against Feyenoord, the other member of the Eredivisie “big three”, kept them in the hunt with two games remaining.

For the second straight season, they have scored more than 100 goals, with Luuk de Jong, Noa Lang, and Ricardo Pepi all in double figures.

But off the field, Lang has been a constant source of controversy, clashing with his fans and the subject of multiple transfer rumours.

PSV’s players celebrate with the 2024/25 championship title trophy after winning the Dutch Eredivisie football match between Sparta Rotterdam and PSV Eindhoven at Sparta Stadion Het Kasteell on May 18, 2025, in Rotterdam.

PSV’s 26th Eredivisie title will be all the sweeter as it came from such an improbable position.

“After the home defeat against Ajax, we had already given up. We were nine points behind,” said De Jong.

“I have never experienced this before… There was a lot of joy because we didn’t dare to dream of this anymore. It turns out that hunting is sometimes easier.”

For Ajax and their fans, this painful capitulation is a lost opportunity to ease the agony of last season’s disastrous campaign.

The Amsterdam giants suffered their worst-ever start to a season last year, at one point propping up the Eredivisie table — immortalised by one jubilant PSV fan who tattooed the standings on his body.

Being booted out of the Dutch Cup by rank amateurs Hercules was another nadir but a leadership shake-up saw England star Jordan Henderson brought in as captain and Italian Francesco Farioli as the new coach.

Farioli had identified Champions League football as the target for this year, which he has achieved.

But this season will surely be remembered at Ajax for the “what if”, not the second place and spot in Europe.

“That hurts. A lot,” the Ajax Supporters Association wrote on its website after the points dropped at Groningen.

“Before this season, many Ajax fans would have bitten your hand off for a second place in the Eredivisie… But with Ajax almost smelling the title, a drop to second place still hurts so much.

“So near, but so far.”

Punchng.com

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Premier League

Gvardiol Named 2024/25 Etihad Player Of The Season

Gvardiol Named 2024/25 Etihad Player Of The Season

Josko Gvardiol has won your vote to be crowned the Etihad Player of the Season for 2024/25.

The Croatian beat both Kevin De Bruyne and Erling Haaland to win the award in just his second season at the Club.

Thousands of City fans had their say, but it was Gvardiol who collected almost half of the votes in the final shortlist after progressing through to the last three.

The 23-year-old played 53 games across all competitions this season – more than anyone else in Pep Guardiola’s squad.

Splitting his duties across left-back and centre-back, Gvardiol has been vital to City ever since arriving at the Club in the summer of 2023.

He found the net five times in the Premier League, including a stunning right-footed curler at Wolves that was named our Nissan Goal of the Month for October.

There was also a goal in the successful FA Cup semi-final meeting with Nottingham Forest to further his credentials as one of the most prolific defenders in world football.

Towards the end of the term, Gvardiol struck up an excellent partnership with Ruben Dias at the heart of the defence as we pushed towards our third-placed Premier League finish and subsequent Champions League qualification.

It is the first time he has won the Etihad Player of the Season vote, following in the footsteps of Phil Foden and Erling Haaland in the last two campaigns.

Kevin De Bruyne has previously dominated the award, winning it four times and equalling the Club record with former defender Richard Dunne.

Now, Gvardiol and the entire City squad are preparing to head to the USA for this summer’s FIFA Club World Cup.

Everyone at Manchester City would like to congratulate Josko on this award!

Enter the competition below for your chance to win a shirt signed by Gvardiol himself!

Mancity.com

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Premier League

Liverpool To Sign Wirtz For British Record Fee

Liverpool To Sign Wirtz For British Record Fee

Liverpool FC have agreed a British record transfer fee for German midfielder Florian Wirtz, with the starlet expected to join from Bayer Leverkusen in the coming days.

The German will join Liverpool for a Premier League record fee of €150m (£126m) after agreeing personal terms with the Premier League Champions weeks ago.

He will link up with former teammate Jeremie Frimpong, who also signed for the Reds just last week in a £30m swoop.

The 22-year-old is perhaps the best young forward available – an asset for Liverpool as the club gears up for the possibility of life without talisman Mohamed Salah in 2027.

Wirtz is considered one of the best attacking midfielders in world football after starring in Leverkusen’s Bundesliga title win in 2023-24, before scoring 16 goals and assisting 15 more in their most recent campaign.

The deal taking Wirtz to Liverpool is set to beat the current British record, currently held by Moises Caicedo’s £115m move to Chelsea. Liverpool have plenty of cash in the kitty after their title win, combined with very limited spending in the past three windows – only Federico Chiesa (£12m) and Giorgi Mamardashvili (£30m) joined the club since January 2024, with the latter yet to feature after spending last season on loan at Valencia. This allows Liverpool to push aggressively in the market this window.

Wirtz is reportedly on his way to Merseyside to complete his medical before an official announcement next week.

FC Bayern Munich, Real Madrid and Manchester City were all interested in Wirtz but he expressed his preference to play for Liverpool – a refreshing contrast to Scouse fullback Trent Alexander-Arnold running down his contract to sign for Madrid.

What’s next for the Premier League champions? With a deal for Bournemouth’s Hungarian left back Milos Kerkez on the verge of completion, the Reds also hope to bolster both attacking and defensive depth ahead of the new season – though will likely have to offload players to free up any more funds.

Uruguayan forward Darwin Nunez is already halfway out the door, with the 25-year-old’s inconsistency in front of goal pushing Arne Slot to find a solution elsewhere. Also linked with an exit are Colombian winger Luis Diaz and Portuguese striker Diogo Jota, who could be sold for a combined €130m according to latest reports.

FC Barcelona are keen admirers of Diaz in particular, with reports suggesting they would be willing to cough up almost €80m for his services.

Despite winning the title by a considerable margin, Liverpool look set for a new-look squad to enter the new season. Headlined by statement signing Florian Wirtz, expectations are high.

Insideworldfootball.com

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Bundesliga

Florian Wirtz: From Budding Youngster To Bundesliga Superstar

Florian Wirtz: From Budding Youngster To Bundesliga Superstar

Bayer Leverkusen’s Florian Wirtz has come good on the potential he showed as a youngster to become one of the Bundesliga’s top players and an established Germany international by the age of just 22. bundesliga.com takes a look at his rise to the top…

Origins

If you are ever arriving at Pulheim train station on the outskirts of Cologne, keep an eye out for the small sign proudly proclaiming: “Florian Wirtz’s Hometown”.

Deutsche Bahn, the state railway company, put similar symbols up all over Germany, pointing out to visitors during UEFA EURO 2024 where each of Julian Nagelsmann’s squad had grown up.

Wirtz was actually born in the family home in the Brauweiler district of Pulheim – “that’s how brave we were back then,” said his father Hans-Joachim, whose youngest of 10 children entered the world on 3 May 2003.

The age difference of over half-a-century between father and son – Wirtz’s mother, Karin, is in her mid-60s – led to one TV reporter asking Florian whether his “grandma and grandpa” had come to see him play during the 2023/24 season. Wirtz, however, only sees the upsides of having his father as his agent and confidante.

“I know that he will never want something bad for me or will focus on money,” Wirtz Jr explained of his father, who is now in his early 70s. “We have always had a good relationship. I have huge respect for my dad. I’m happy that I have an experienced man at my side who can advise me well.”

That guidance started at SV Grün-Weiss Brauweiler, where his dad remains a key figure on the club’s board. His son’s first coach, Wirtz Sr immediately saw something special. “Even then, as now, Florian had abilities that were different from those of the others,” Hans-Joachim explained. “And he simply had fun with football and always had an eye for a better-positioned teammate.”

For the trained locksmith, who later studied sports at the Cologne Sports University and became a special education teacher, fun was – and remains – the key for Florian.

“It was always our desire that Florian have fun when playing football,” Hans-Joachim explained. “That should continue to be the top priority, even if you now have to consider a few other things in your career. But fundamentally all the numbers are of no interest. He should have fun and play football well, and we as a family will of course enjoy that.”

With mum Karin a handball coach and his youngest sister Juliane also a footballer, Florian was surrounded by sport as a kid. “There are very few family members who have not played football,” Wirtz explained. “There’s always football on TV. In our family, a lot goes on around football.”

About the players

That meant that when he soon had scouts from around the country hoping to swoop for him, his family helped decide the next step in the career of the then eight-year-old talent.

“The family decided that we should try a year at Cologne, but it was tough to come to that decision,” explained Hans-Joachim of the process that led to his son joining the Billy Goats’ academy in 2011. “We also looked at Bayer Leverkusen and found a good situation there, but it was a pragmatic decision to go to Geißbockheim [N.B. Cologne’s training centre] because the location was good.”

Geography dictated the move, but it would never have happened had Wirtz’s father not also been involved in pushing it through. “The transfer period was actually over on 2 July, but as the youth academy director at Grün-Weiß, I could put the correct date on the paperwork.”

Wirtz started out at Cologne before moving to Leverkusen. – EIBNER/Rene Weiss, via www.imago-images.de
The Cologne years & the breakthrough

“U-17 national team player Florian Wirtz moves from Cologne to Leverkusen with immediate effect. Representatives of both clubs agreed on it for the end of the current transfer window,” said the understated tweet that signalled Wirtz’s arrival at the BayArena in January 2020 after his contract with Cologne expired.

To say that the clubs agreed, however, does not exactly reflect the mood in Cologne.

In his nine years with the Billy Goats, Wirtz had morphed into one of Germany’s top talents. The whispers of a special player in Cologne were no longer confined to the banks of the Rhine, especially when he orchestrated his young team’s national championship win, seeing off Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund in the semi-finals and final respectively during the 2018/19 season.

The team-leading performances aside, Wirtz acknowledged he added a crucial fundamental to his natural talent in Cologne.

“The awareness [on the pitch] came when I was in the Cologne youth system. We worked on that for one or two years explicitly. My youth coach came from the Spanish school of football and put a lot of value in that,” explained Wirtz, who himself noted the fruit of that work was clear in his sensational goal in the 2-1 win over Freiburg on Matchday 9 of the 2023/24 season.

“When I looked at my goal against Freiburg again, I immediately noticed how often I turned my head. It seems to have become second nature to me.”

Wirtz was certainly backing up the hype in Cologne, and even created a “made for social media” sensation by scoring after just five seconds in a 10-0 win over Wuppertal in December 2019 as captain of Cologne’s U17 side. Bizarrely, it would prove to be his last ever appearance for the club.

“When I look back on it, it was the right decision,” Wirtz explained of his switch to Leverkusen. “At Cologne, I had never thought about the first team, that was too far away.”

Which brings us back to Cologne’s anger. You have probably never heard of Marco Quotschalla. He was a hugely promising 12-year-old when he was signed on an eight-year contract by Cologne from Leverkusen in 2001.

It provoked a gentleman’s agreement between the Rhine rivals and their neighbours Borussia Mönchengladbach that they would not poach each other’s youth academy talents. Crucially – at least for Leverkusen’s conscience in the case of Wirtz – senior squad players were not included.

“That this [deal] was ignored shows us what kind of business we are in,” said then Cologne coach Steffen Baumgart. Leverkusen chief Rüdi Völler countered. “In talks, we showed Florian a sporting pathway and of course emphasised the fact that in the past young players like Kai Havertz, Julian Brandt and Benjamin Henrichs have been given a chance very early, even in the Champions League.”

Leverkusen’s sporting director Simon Rolfes added: “I have known the player since he was 14. The possibility suddenly arose because his contract was expiring, and so we tried to get him. I knew that many clubs were interested, and so we thought that before he went anywhere else, let’s try to get him to come here and stay close to home.”

While geography may again have had an influence, Wirtz himself also played a role. “My switch to Leverkusen at U17 level was solely my decision, as I saw better prospects for myself in Leverkusen – and it worked out that way too.”

Leverkusen insisted they had brought Wirtz in to be part of their first-team squad, and after four appearances for the club’s U19 team, they were as good as their word.

“It’s always something special when you make your debut, especially when you’re just 17,” said then Leverkusen coach Peter Bosz of the first 61 minutes of Wirtz’s Bundesliga career in a 4-1 win over Werder Bremen on 18 May 2020. “All in all, it was a good performance from him, he wasn’t nervous.”

Just 19 days later there were no nerves again as Wirtz became the youngest goalscorer in Bundesliga history when he found the net in the 4-2 defeat by Bayern on Matchday 30.

“This boy learned his best lesson today. He lost the ball on each of his first three or four touches,” said an uncompromising Bosz. “But you can see he’s a huge talent. That’s why he’s been playing for us.”

“It wasn’t a good result,” Wirtz posted on Instagram. “But I’m very happy about my first Bundesliga goal.”

Watch: Wirtz becomes Bundesliga’s youngest ever goalscorer

The Bundesliga title winner

Fast forward to summer 2023. Youssoufa Moukoko has long since pushed Wirtz down the Bundesliga’s youngest goalscorer chart, Wirtz has made his senior Germany debut but missed out on the 2022 World Cup due to an ACL injury that would keep him out from mid-March 2022 to mid-January 2023.

It happened in a challenge with Cologne’s Luca Kilian before the half-hour mark of a typically no holds barred Rhine derby.

“On one side, I’m born in Cologne and made great progress there and had a great time as a kid,” explained Wirtz, whose feelings towards his first club were coloured by the painful experience. “But then I did my ACL in a game against them and wasn’t treated well.”

He returned from the first major injury of his career to feature in 17 Bundesliga matches, and though he scored just one top-flight goal, he chipped in with six assists to help his side eventually finish comfortably in the top half of the table after a troubled start to the 2022/23 campaign.

He also netted three times and assisted twice as Leverkusen reached the Europa League semi-finals, which ensured he hit the ground running as Die Werkself came into one of the most memorable seasons in football history.

“People often use the word “magic” about him,” said teammate and Germany international Jonas Hofmann. “You can scarcely believe it, but he’s so quick with the ball at his feet and so hard to knock off it. He shakes off physically stronger opponents and gets out of tricky situations. He’s absolute gold for our attacking play.”

When you are playing at a level that leaves even your teammates astounded, it says everything about just how good Wirtz has become. And boy was he good in the 2023/24 campaign.

“I’m going to remember that for a long time,” said coach Xabi Alonso of Wirtz’s outrageous goal against Freiburg, one of a career-high 11 Bundesliga strikes in the season.

“You can’t defend against Florian Wirtz,” said Freiburg boss Christian Streich with an air of resignation in the immediate aftermath of seeing his team prove him right. “What can you say? It’s incredible. Only he and Leroy Sané can do that.”

Wirtz actually outdid the Bayern man. He also provided 11 assists, and became the first Bundesliga player to register double figures for goals and assists for the season with the hat-trick in the 5-0 demolition of Bremen that secured Leverkusen’s first top-flight title in a delirious Matchday 29 encounter at the BayArena.

“It hasn’t sunk in yet,” said Wirtz following the 2-1 victory over Augsburg on Matchday 34 that meant the team lifted the Meisterschale having become the first Bundesliga team to go through a domestic season unbeaten. “I still need a little time to get my head around what we’ve achieved. You can’t imagine a season like this.”

“It was a special day,” an emotional Hans-Joachim Wirtz told German TV. “Four years ago, on 18 May, Florian made his first Bundesliga appearance. And now four years later he’s champion of Germany. It’s very impressive. It strikes a chord deep inside.”

And Wirtz Sr. even got his hands on the trophy too. “I had the trophy in my hands,” he said, beaming with paternal pride. “I was surprised by how heavy it is.”

Wirtz picked up where he left off in 2024/25, dazzling his way past Bundesliga defenders once more and matching his goal involvement tally from the previous season with ten goals and 12 assists.

The future

Do you know who Wirtz worshipped as a kid? He has been on the books of two Rhine derby clubs, but it was a Mönchengladbach prodigy that inspired him.

“My great idol was Marko Marin. I had a Werder Bremen shirt with his name on it,” explained Wirtz of Marin, who came through the Gladbach youth academy to reach the first team before joining Bremen in 2009. “I was fascinated by his dribbles and his goal threat. In that respect, I could identify with him.”

Despite going on to also play for the likes of Chelsea, Fiorentina, Anderlecht and Olympiacos, Marin never enjoyed the career his early promise suggested he would. Wirtz, who already has 31 caps for Germany – 15 more than his childhood idol – is clearly not going to go the same way.

Bundesliga.com

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