There may not be too many ways in which this season is better than last for Liverpool but Arne Slot can at least point to a significant one. Liverpool have gone further in the Champions League, and this was progress in more ways than one.
A quarter-final was booked in emphatic and entertaining fashion. The boos that greeted the final whistle against Tottenham on Sunday were replaced by cheers, the lethargy with which Liverpool have played too often giving way to an energy and intensity. This was frenzied and fast, players and crowd feeding off each other. “There was a great dynamic between the players and fans,” said Slot. “Almost a perfect game.”
For him, it was a response when the scrutiny upon him had heightened. The Dutchman switched tactics, to something of a 4-4-2, and the team changed tack. This was much better. This was one of their best displays of the campaign. It was so good it was almost unrepeatable, Slot argued. “Because 5.02 xG on a Champions League night, conceding 0.18 xG, that is not going to be easy to copy,” he said.
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Mohamed Salah curled home a fine goal (Liverpool FC via Getty Images)
If it was like the Liverpool of old, what could have shaped up as further evidence of Mohamed Salah’s decline instead became a cathartic evening for him. His was a throwback performance. His was a throwback performance. At half-time, when Liverpool’s dominance was not reflected by a one-goal lead, there was the possibility Salah’s missed penalty would cost them. This threatened to be his last European game for Liverpool until he had a part in three goals in 11 minutes, capped gloriously. “He scored a trademark goal that he has scored so many times in this stadium and for this club, cutting inside, finding the corner,” said Slot, who was delighted with Salah’s response to a setback. “It says a lot about his mental strength.”
Galatasaray were overwhelmed, Liverpool’s defeat in Istanbul last week rendered irrelevant amid a blur of 32 shots, 16 of them on target. The catalyst for the turnaround, perhaps inevitably, was Dominik Szoboszlai, who added to his collection of terrific goals and who, as he often does, broke the deadlock.
If Galatasaray had a gameplan for holding on to their first-leg lead beyond timewasting, it was not visible. It got Slot more animated. “It is not something I can do anything about except running around like a lunatic,” he said afterwards. The running was not confined to his team.
They had started at pace, and got a reward. Liverpool had conceded to Galatasaray’s set-pieces twice in Istanbul this season. They scored from one on Merseyside. It was beautifully worked, Alexis Mac Allister disguising a low corner and Szoboszlai delivering a first-time, left-footed finish from 15 yards. The routine was so expertly planned in that it ended up with the man who had the technique to provide the finish. It was, remarkably, Szoboszlai’s fifth Champions League goal of the season, to add to four assists. His name echoed around Anfield; the fans he had criticised for leaving early on Sunday recognise he has become a talisman.
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Dominik Szoboszlai has become a talisman for Liverpool (Reuters)
And then Liverpool mounted a ferocious onslaught. Salah, in behind the Galatasaray defence, failed to dink the ball over Ugurcan Cakir. Florian Wirtz had a ferocious shot deflected over the goal. Mac Allister headed on to the bar from four yards. Szoboszlai had a long-range shot parried. The best chance of all went to the Egyptian. It was a wild and needless challenge from Ismail Jakobs to send Szoboszlai flying. In contrast, Salah’s penalty was too tame. Cakir saved it with his trailing foot.
If it reinforced the sense Liverpool can be a side who struggle to double a lead, they got their second, third and fourth goals in swift succession. Each revolved around Salah. First he sprang the offside trap and centred to give Hugo Ekitike a tap in. Then, after Cakir parried his half-volley, Ryan Gravenberch bobbled in the rebound. After Wilfried Singo was spared an embarrassing own goal by an offside flag, Salah scored his 50th Champions League goal in classic fashion. A curler from outside the box nestled in the net. Salah grabbed the Liver Bird on his shirt in celebration. High in the stands, Steven Gerrard joined in the applause.
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(Martin Rickett/PA Wire)
Salah should really have had a second, hitting the bar from Ekitike’s cutback. It nevertheless felt a sign he was irresistible; until, suddenly, he wasn’t. He went off, seemingly substituting himself for once, and headed down the tunnel for treatment. “He felt something,” added Slot.
Galatasaray’s attacking superstar was long gone by then. Hampered by an arm injury, Victor Osimhen did not reappear for the second half. His manager, Okan Buruk, thought Victor Osimhen’s arm injury was a psychological blow for his team. His top scorer departed at half-time, heading for hospital, where he was later joined by Noa Lang, stretchered off with a potentially serious finger problem.
(Getty)
It completed an awful night for Galatasaray. Having gone further than expected in Europe, they shrank from the challenge. Liverpool rose to it. And so in this season, unlike last, they will play European football in April. There is a similarity nonetheless. It is Paris Saint-Germain again, a rematch that offers the prospect of revenge. And for Salah, an opportunity to plot a course towards his fourth Champions League final.
Standing in Arsenal’s way of reaching successive Champions League semi-finals is a Sporting side that produced the comeback of the round to end Bodo/Glimt’s fairytale run in Europe.
Sporting overturned a 3-0 first-leg deficit to progress 5-3 on aggregate after extra time, setting up a quarter-final showdown against Arsenal and a reunion with former striker Viktor Gyokeres.
Should Arsenal get past Sporting, they will face a semi-final against either Barcelona or Atletico Madrid after they overcame Newcastle and Tottenham respectively.
Elsewhere, Liverpool will take on holders PSG in the quarter-finals in a repeat of last season’s last-16 showdown, where the French side progressed on penalties en route to claiming a first-ever Champions League title.
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The winners of that game will set up a mouth-watering semi-final against either Real Madrid or Bayern Munich in what is arguably the standout quarter-final tie.
Champions League quarter-final first-leg matches are scheduled to be held on April 7/8, with the return fixtures taking place a week later.
Champions League quarter-final draw in full
Real Madrid vs Bayern Munich
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Barcelona vs Atletico Madrid
Champions League semi-final draw
PSG or Liverpool vs Real Madrid or Bayern Munich
Barcelona or Atletico Madrid vs Sporting or Arsenal
A total of 389 businesses across sectors including retail, social care and hospitality were found to have underpaid staff – and have now been ordered to repay workers.
They have also been hit with £12.6 million in fines.
The latest enforcement action, published by the UK Government, is part of a renewed push to crack down on employers who underpay staff.
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Officials say:
Workers were paid less than they were legally entitled to
Employers must now repay wages in full
Financial penalties have also been issued
Business Secretary Peter Kyle said it was unfair for companies to gain an advantage by breaking the rules.
This is the first “naming round” since ministers pledged to publish offending employers more regularly.
It also comes just weeks before a new enforcement body – the Fair Work Agency – launches to strengthen workers’ rights.
Employment rights minister Kate Dearden said: “Nobody should finish a week’s work and find they’ve been paid less than they’ve earned.”
Rice has established himself as a key figure in Arsenal’s midfield and is on track for a successful campaign as the Gunners are still in all four competitions.
‘He’s going from strength to strength,’ Gerrard told TNT Sports.
‘I think he’s one of the best in the world. I think he has become one of the best in the world.
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‘It was a fantastic move for him. I wish we [Liverpool] signed him here, actually.
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Declan Rice is on course for a successful season with Arsenal (Getty)
‘West Ham did a great job under David Moyes, I think David Moyes has really schooled him in how to play the position tactically.
‘His confidence from playing well for England and being around that group of players, he’s just gone to the next level now at Arsenal under Mikel Arteta.
‘Fantastic coaching from him and he’s up there now in the shout to be one of the world’s best in that position and in that role.’
Former Liverpool midfielder Steve McManaman added: ‘I think when you think of his role and you look around Europe, you have Pedri who is beautiful, Vitinha is great, but he way he [Rice] plays I’d certainly say he’s the best because he’s a different type of player to them.
‘But he’s so effective, last year he was amazing and he’s stepped up again this year.’
If you’re struggling with the latest Strands puzzle, then you’ve come to the right place.
Strands is a daily word game available from the site that brought you Wordle and Connections.
Each day there’s a different theme, and the aim is to find all of the words connected to the theme contained within a grid of letters.
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The theme words cover the entire board, and none overlap. Likewise, there’s also a spangram that stretches from one side of the board to the other. The spangram describes the board’s theme. Get it early and you should have an easier time finding the words in the grid.
Keep on reading for the latest set of hints for the March 19 Strands, which is titled ‘Bring a Plate’.
And don’t worry, because we won’t reveal the answers, or give you the full list of letters from each word.
SPANGRAM HINTS
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Today’s Spangram is made up of 7 letters.
It begins with the letter ‘P’
It’s a popular saying that is believed to date back to the 16th Century.
THEME WORD HINTS
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Here are the first two letters for each theme word in the March 19 Strands puzzle.
That game is followed by an international break, with Liverpool then travelling to Manchester City in a blockbuster FA Cup quarter-final tie in early April ahead of their latest two-legged meeting with PSG, the winners of which will play either Real Madrid or Bayern Munich in the last four of the Champions League.
“It is with great sorrow that I received the painful news of the martyrdom of Mr. Dr. Ali Larijani, Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council and the Leader’s representative on that council, as well as his distinguished son and some of his colleagues,” Mojtaba said in a statement on Wednesday, March 18.
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Iran has been in conflict with the United States and Israel since February 28. The US and Israel carried out joint strikes on key sites in Iran and killed Iran’s former supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the father of Mojtaba, at the beginning of the conflict. Iran responded by attacking targets across the Middle East, plunging the region into war.
Mojtaba went on to describe the security official as “a learned, far-sighted, intelligent, and committed individual with diverse experiences in various political, military, security, cultural, and managerial arenas.”
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“The enemies of Islam should know that shedding this blood only makes the mighty tree of the Islamic system stronger, and of course, every drop of blood has its price, which the murderous killers of these martyrs will soon have to pay,” he added, reports the Express.
This is the second time Mojtaba has released a statement in recent days after reports surfaced that he had lost a leg and was in a coma.
He did not feature on camera on this occasion. It’s highly probable that Khamenei is concealed at an undisclosed location to avoid assassination attempts.
Mojtaba has been regarded as an even more stringent hard-liner than his father. The possibility of him becoming the next supreme leader was seen as a potential regression to Iran’s former hereditary monarchy but with a religious dimension.
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The younger Khamenei took on the position of supreme leader with his military at war but also with reserves of highly enriched uranium that could be utilised to build a nuclear weapon.
Kneecap rapper Liam Og O hAnnaidh has said that labelling the group as antisemitic means people “water that term down”.
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The group were interviewed by the Big Issue after it was ruled the rapper, who performs under the stage name Mo Chara, will not face a terror trial after being accused of displaying a flag in support of proscribed terror organisation Hezbollah at a gig.
O hAnnaidh told the magazine: “When you start labelling bands and people who speak out against Israel as antisemitic, what you do is water that term down. We are not antisemitic.”
O hAnnaidh also said it was “impossible” to remember everything that happens during a performance.
“When you’re playing a gig it’s impossible to be perfectly conscious all the time. I don’t remember all – and that’s not just from drink, that’s pure adrenaline,” he told the Big Issue.
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Band member Moglai Bap said the group is “from the north of Ireland”.
“We know about f****** religious conflicts, people using religion as a way to murder, maim and all this stuff,” he added.
“We are against any discrimination in any form.”
The alleged offence was said to have taken place at a gig at the O2 Forum in Kentish Town, north London, on November 21 2024.
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But the case was thrown out in September last year, with chief magistrate Paul Goldspring ruling the proceedings were “instituted unlawfully”.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) appealed against the decision at the High Court at a hearing in January, with the rapper opposing the challenge.
In a judgment last week, two judges at the High Court upheld the decision and dismissed the CPS appeal.
The full interview can be read in Monday’s Big Issue, on sale from street vendors and online via bigissue.com.
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Graffiti artist 10Foot has created new artwork, which will feature on the cover of the magazine.
He has also contributed an exclusive print, which will come free with each magazine sold.
It can help breakdown grease and keeps sinks looking shiny
Cleaning the kitchen sink can be an annoying chore, as it doesn’t last long until it needs a good scrub again. However, I have found a hack that costs just 70p and keeps my sink looking clean and smelling fresh.
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I like to keep on top of cleaning my sink, especially as I don’t have a dishwasher. Some products on the market can get expensive, so I decided to test how well the humble washing-up liquid could work as a sink cleaner.
To my surprise, it worked better than other disinfectant products I had used in the past. It helped bring a shine back to my sink and provided a fresh lemon scent.
I find it works best to clean the sink with washing-up liquid regularly. All you need is a bottle of washing-up liquid and a sponge.
I use Sainsbury’s own washing-up liquid, which is priced at 70p. Then, clear the sink before squirting a generous amount of washing-up liquid over the whole area.
I wet my sponge with warm water and scrub the areas I covered with washing-up liquid. It soon starts to fluff up, making the sink look shiny again.
Once I have scrubbed the whole area, including the tap, I rinse my sponge with warm water and wipe over the sink. You can leave it to air dry or use a dry cloth.
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Plus, washing-up liquid can help prevent clogs in the drain. When cleaning my sink with washing up liquid, I squirt a generous amount down the plug hole.
I let it sit for around 15 to 20 minutes before flushing with hot water, as this can help break down any grease.
I haven’t had any blocked drains since trying out the hack, as I remember to do it when cleaning the sink, so it’s become a regular task.
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If you have stubborn sink stains and want a deep clean, you can still use washing-up liquid, but add baking soda as well. This enhances the cleaning power, helping remove stains.
For limescale, you can add white vinegar or lemon juice. These can lift soap scum or limescale build-up on taps and sinks.
Your passport might look valid, but a little-known rule could still stop you boarding your flight this Easter, and it’s catching out thousands of Brits
Brits heading abroad this Easter are being urged to check their passports now, as a little-known rule could derail travel plans at the last minute. It turns out that even documents that appear valid could still see you fail a number of countries’ entry requirements.
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With Easter Sunday falling on April 5, many holidaymakers are entering the final countdown to their trips. However, experts warn passport checks are often left too late, increasing the risk of being turned away at the airport.
The issue centres around strict validity rules enforced by many countries. According to the UK Government’s official travel advice, what matters is not just the expiry date, but how much longer your passport is valid for after your trip.
Andrea Platania, travel expert at Transfeero, says many Brits misunderstand how the rules work. He explained: “A lot of travellers look at their passport, see that it expires later in the year, and assume that means everything is fine. But for many destinations, that is not how the rule works.
“Across Europe, the 29 countries in the Schengen Area, including Spain, France, Italy, Germany and Greece, all require British passports to be valid for at least three months beyond the day you leave the country. On top of that, these countries also enforce a separate rule: the passport must have been issued within the last 10 years on the date of entry, creating an additional layer of confusion for travellers.
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The UK Government confirms these rules apply across Schengen countries. Travellers who fail to meet them can be denied entry, even if their passport has not yet expired.
Beyond Schengen, similar rules apply in other popular destinations. Platania says countries such as Cyprus, Albania and Montenegro typically require around three months’ validity, while Turkey requires at least 150 days from arrival.
Further afield, requirements can be stricter still. According to the UK Government’s travel advice for Thailand, many long-haul destinations require at least six months of validity remaining.
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Data from ABTA shows millions of Brits travel abroad during peak periods like Easter each year. Experts say this surge increases the likelihood of last-minute passport issues.
Platania warns that many travellers only check documents days before departure. He says this is when people realise they fall within the three or six-month rule, leaving little time to fix the problem.
The HM Passport Office advises travellers not to book trips without a valid passport. It also notes that renewing online is typically cheaper and faster than applying by post.
Experts say the safest approach is to check your passport as soon as you book a trip. Renewing early can help avoid costly delays, stress, or even missing your holiday altogether.
The King has paid tribute to the contribution of people of Nigerian heritage as he held a state banquet for the country’s president.
President Bola Tinubu and his wife Oluremi Tinubu are in the UK for a two-day state visit.
The King said Britain was “blessed” that many people of Nigerian heritage are “at the heart of British life through excelling at the highest levels of business, technology, academia, law, science, sport, literature and the arts, and public service”.
Image: The Prince and Princess of Wales and Prince Edward were among the guests. Pic: PA
He said he had met “so many of these quiet heroes in our schools, businesses, National Health Service and universities”.
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“From Afrobeats filling our concert halls and Nollywood captivating our screens, to stars competing in our Premier League and adjudicating our highest courts, so much of Britain’s culture is, in truth, profoundly enriched by Nigeria,” said the King.
Guests at the banquet tucked into a menu that included quail egg tartlet, fillet of turbot, lobster mousse wrapped in spinach, and iced blackcurrant souffle.
A mocktail called Crimson Bloom was also served, using West African beverage Zobo and other ingredients.
Image: It’s the first visit by a Nigerian president for nearly 40 years. Pic: PA
President Tinubu is Muslim, so he did his toast with a soft drink, and the King also wished him “Ramadan Mubarak” to mark the end of the Islamic holy month.
Alcohol was available at the banquet for those who wanted it.
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The King last visited Nigeria – a country of some 230 million people – in 2018.
He told guests at tonight’s banquet that the country had “arrived” and was “transforming at a remarkable pace”.
Image: Pic: Reuters
Image: William and Kate helped welcome the Nigerian leader to the UK. Pic: PA
The Nigerian dignitaries were earlier welcomed to Windsor by the King and Queen and the Prince and Princess of Wales.
There was an impressive guard of honour and a carriage ride in the sunshine.
Image: Pic: PA
Image: It was a splendid spring day for a carriage ride and guard of honour. Pic: PA
Nigerian and Union flags also adorned the streets of the Berkshire town for what is the first state visit by a Nigerian head of state for 37 years.
The King and his visitors later viewed items from the royal collection and met organisations promoting dialogue between different faiths at an event in The Vicars’ Hall.
Representatives from the Mosaic programme, set up by The King’s Trust charity, were part of the gathering.
Image: The visitors viewed exhibits from the royal collection. Pic: Reuters
The scheme brings together Muslim men and women in positions of religious authority – from across ethnic and theological differences – for a leadership programme.
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