Manchester United have now won all three of Europe's major competitions
Manchester United claimed their second major trophy of
the season and secured Champions League football as they overcame Ajax to win
the Europa League final in Stockholm.
On an emotional night following the attack which killed 22
people at Ariana Grande's concert at the Manchester Arena on Monday, United's
fans were allowed a measure of celebration as Jose Mourinho's side won in
comfort.
Paul Pogba's deflected shot put them ahead in the 18th
minute and HenrikhMkhitaryan's sixth Europa League goal of the campaign,
flicked in from Chris Smalling's header at a corner, confirmed they would add
to the EFL Cup won against Southampton earlier this season.
Wayne Rooney made a brief appearance as a substitute with a
minute left and the game won, being handed the captain's armband by Antonio
Valencia on what could well be his farewell appearance for United.
And as the final whistle sounded and United's celebrations
began, chants of "Manchester" rang around the Friends Arena in
tribute to those who died and were injured in the attack which cast a shadow
over this showpiece occasion.
Man Utd& Ajax pay tribute to Manchester victims
Mourinho - who has so often looked so unhappy this season -
ran on to the field to celebrate with his players and was thrown in the air by
his coaching staff and hugged by his son.
It means United are now the fifth team to claim the full
quota of European trophies, joining an illustrious list with Ajax, Chelsea, Juventus and Bayern Munich.
The Warriors rolled the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals Sunday night
RUGBY
As the announcer named the HSBC World Rugby
Sevens Series Rookie of the Year last Sunday, MatíasOsadczuk turned around and
woke his brother up from his Sunday nap. His name had come up on the
screen at the end of season awards in Twickenham while he was in
Haedo, in the west of Buenos Aires, watching through social media.
“I was very happy and woke my older brother
Santiago up to celebrate; soon after, the whole family gathered and took it
from there,” says the Pumas Sevens’ find of the season, who is recovering
from a knee injury that cut his season short after Hong Kong.
“I was tackled against Australia and didn’t
really feel it go; during the week it wasn’t painful but it was certainly
injured. Only when I returned home was I told it was cruciate ligaments,"
he said.
Discovered while training for the Buenos Aires
Sevens team ahead of the National Sevens Championship in 2015, he was selected
to play in the Chile Sevens, part of Sudamérica Rugby’s sevens circuit in
January 2016. He was spotted by the U20s selectors, joining that team in time
to make it to Manchester where Los Pumitas finished third. Although he played
very little, the rest, as they say, is history.
“It was all very quick and it took some
adapting. I come from SITAS (SociedadItaliana de Tiro al Segno) which is not in
the top division so some things I’d never practised, the speed of training and
some individual techniques I had to work hard to be on par,” he explained.
The Osadczuks are part of a clan in
SITAS. His father and uncles played at the club and his older brother and four
cousins play in the senior squad. “There were five of us the day of my senior
debut, aged 17, against DAOM, in 2015, which was great because we won!”
KPL Week 12: Gor stays top, Posta beaten as Leopards
continue to nosedive
Posted: 22 May, 19:26
By: Collins Amanga
Eleven goals on Saturday. Eight on Sunday. Two draws. Six
clean-sheets is what the Kenya Premier League match day 12 action had to offer
last weekend.
Ulinzi Stars ended Posta Rangers unbeaten
run in the league after a 1-0 win at Afraha Stadium on Sunday. The match win became Ulinzi Stars fifth win over the Mail men and
the only goal of
the match was scored by 2011 golden boot winner Stephen Waruru keeping his
dream of another golden boot alive after adding his number of goals to seven.
The Warriors rolled the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals Sunday night
, 132-113, turning a close game at the half into another
demolition, setting
an NBA record with their 14th consecutive playoff victory. Curry and Durant
combined for 35 points, 14 rebounds and nine assists in the second-half alone,
eventually combining for 65 points, 23 rebounds and 17 assists on the night.
Yes, Klay
Thompson got it going. Yes, the Warriors got other contributions. But the
overall sense, the overwhelming feeling from Game 2, was that Durant and Curry
are both so great, you honestly can't tell who the Warriors' main man is. Kyrie
Irving can go for 50 points, and you would still know LeBron James is the man.
Throw out any super team, and there was always a hierarchy.
But when Curry is making LeBron dance like a puppet on
strings, and Durant is catching and shooting over James with ease, when Curry
is making those Curry 3-pointers no one else has ever been able to hit with
such ease, when Durant is finishing and-ones with his athleticism and touch,
when it's every possession, over and over?
"They're more locked in than I've ever seen them in my
life," Draymond Green said of Curry and Durant. "It's personal, for
both of them."
And they're playing like it. It's a moment of redemption for
Curry after last year's crushing disappointment, and validation for Durant
after the grief he took for joining this super team. Ironically, Durant's
proving everyone right. He has tilted the NBA's competitive balance out of
whack, irrevocably; he just doesn't care, nor should he.
The Warriors are too much, everywhere, but most especially
with Durant and Curry. They have two players that at any point can take over a
game. Klay Thompson can get hot, inferno-level hot. Draymond Green is probably
the league's best defensive player. But Curry and Durant, the players who account
for the last three MVPs, aren't just talented, they're in sync and can play
together.
They've figured everything out. Those early season blips,
the way Curry would vanish at times, or Durant would struggle to adapt? They're
all gone. The Death Star is fully armed and operational and it looks more and
more like the Cavs are just another planet in its sights.
"The talent on the floor in this series is
unbelievable," said Steve Kerr, who returned to the Warriors' bench
Sunday, and who played with Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen at one point in a
series against multiple Hall-of-Famers. "It really is a series that's just
loaded with high-powered weapons all over the floor."
If it was just Durant, the Cavs would have a chance.
Thompson was great, but so was Kevin Love. Durant was awesome, but LeBron James
was incredible. But not Curry, too. You can survive one of the megastars, but
unless the entire rest of the roster falls into a pit, you're not surviving
both of the MVPs going off. There's just no way.
"A lot of the things you can't do defensively by having
K.D. on the floor," Cavs coach Ty Lue said.
Curry wasn't even that hot in the first half. He got to the
line often, mostly on 3-point fouls. But he was just 2 of 8 and the Cavs were
within range.
Second-half? Curry was 5 of 9 from the field, for 17 points,
and good night nurse.
With Durant, it's steady, rumbling. Not to twist the knife,
but it's thunder. With Curry, it's lightning. It strikes, starts a wildfire,
and spreads. Durant provided the steady beat, Curry solo'd, bringing the crowd
to a frenzy. It's too much.
"They're two of our leaders we follow," Green
said. "With them playing like that, it's 'everybody has to be locked in,'
when you got two guys locked in like that. So they continue to do that, which I
have no doubt in my mind they will, we'll continue to follow their lead."
Pretty tough to argue this isn't the best duo in the
NBA. Getty Images
You can't even look at Game 2 and say who was better between
the two. Durant finished two steals shy of a 33-point, 5-by-5 night, in a
Finals game for crying out loud, and yet it was when Curry began to draw fire
from the sky in the third quarter that the game broke open. Curry was
brilliant, electric, but there was KD, lifting and firing over James, getting
to the rim, knocking down everything. You could spend the time to figure out
which was better, but you'd first have to make the world stop spinning.
The Warriors have too many weapons, and they're all present,
all the time. If the last two years made them the league's best team (if not
the champions) based on how every player was a multi-faceted weapon, this is
like watching an all-star game, because the presence of the two of them
together just makes the game look so easy. Kyrie Irving stressed how important
it is to be unwavering in his approach. Irving was asked if the Warriors'
unending weapons make that effort difficult.
"Hell, no," Irving said, but at the same time,
Irving made it clear just how stacked this team is, with who they have on the
court at all times.
LeBron James is the best player on the planet, and he had an
incredible Game 2. He put up a line of 29-11-14 with just four turnovers,
shooting 12 of 18 from the field. And yet in this series, the Warriors have a
127 offensive rating with Curry and Durant on the floor vs. James, and those
two have shot 53 percent from the field.
The frustration with the Cavaliers was evident, the answers
short on what they can do. They fixed the turnovers, they shot better from the
field, they matched the Warriors (nearly) in fast-break points.
It didn't matter.
The Warriors have too much, and it's becoming more and more
apparent that everyone -- everyone -- knows it.
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