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Bundesliga 2025-26 awards: our players, goal, coach and head loss of the season | Bundesliga
Team of the season
A hearty pat on the back to Hoffenheim, the unexpected and unfancied top-four gatecrashers who ultimately couldn’t quite hold on. This season has been all about Bayern, though, and not just in the normal they-always-win-it way. To call them the most beloved Bayern team in a generation would be overcooking it – the club will never be universally loved, and fair enough – but Vincent Kompany’s team were not just a behemoth but an absolute joy to watch, not only irresistible but endlessly entertaining, with Harry Kane and Michael Olise as ingenious as they were consistent. So much of the club’s change of image, as a team at least, is down to Kompany, a humble and emotionally intelligent coach who gives Bayern all the regal flow of their best teams down the years – but with added humility.
Player of the season
To some it may seem bizarre not to crown Kane the player of the year after a 61-goal season in all competitions. But stellar as he has been, this column would argue Olise has been Bayern’s brightest star. His debut season in Bavaria was excellent but this was something else – 15 goals and 21 assists in only 23 starts in the league – with another five goals and six assists in the Champions League. The numbers don’t really do Olise’s majesty justice, though. He glides past opponents and sets Bayern’s tempo, while his shooting and passing is deadly accurate from just about anywhere. That the Paris Saint-Germain manager, Luis Enrique, instructed his goalkeeper, Matvey Safonov, to boot the ball out of play for a Bayern throw-in during the Champions League semi-final second leg to crowd Olise’s flank, inhibiting the space the Frenchman could find, showed what an all-consuming threat he has become.
Young player of the season
In any other season it would be Saïd El Mala, the 19-year-old having taken the top flight by storm after Köln’s promotion. Dribbling with confidence and directness from the left, he was a goal threat too, scoring 13 and laying on another five in a struggling side. That led to a Germany call-up in the autumn – and those numbers surely would have been higher had the coach, Lukas Kwasniok, not left him on the bench fairly frequently. Props too to Leipzig’s Yan Diomande, who scored a dozen goals in a jaw-dropping first Bundesliga season. Yet our winner is a loan player, with Luka Vuskovic perhaps the biggest influence on the other promoted team, Hamburg, who sailed to mid-table safety after seven years away. Following in the footsteps of his older brother Mario, who last played for HSV in 2022 before a doping ban, representing the club clearly means everything to the 19-year-old and he led from the front, tackling tigerishly, bringing calm and even chipping in with six goals. One of the best centre-backs in the Bundesliga, the only downside is he has no chance of fulfilling his stated dream of turning out for HSV with Mario; or not yet anyway, with Tottenham, whom he joined last year, seemingly having a future captain or significant collateral on their hands, with Bayern and Dortmund also interested.
Goal of the season
This is an even tougher one, so we’ll go with a top three. Honourable mentions to both our young players, with Vuskovic scoring a memorable backheeled flick against Werder Bremen and El Mala running from halfway and through half of Bayern’s team for Köln’s consolation goal on the final day at the Allianz. Third is Martin Terrier’s scorpion kick against Köln, reaching behind himself for Arthur’s cross and looping it over Marvin Schwäbe (not dissimilar from Vuskovic’s but a bit more by design). Our runner-up is Fábio Vieira’s on-the-run lob from a tough angle against Köln, one of a number of occasions when you realised the Arsenal loanee was several moves ahead of his Hamburg teammates. The winner, though, is Luis Díaz, who had a brilliant debut season that is perhaps a bit underappreciated given Kane’s and Olise’s staggering campaigns. The Colombian’s goal at Union Berlin was a remarkable combination of graft and craft, sliding to keep Josip Stanisic’s firm pass in play, dribbling through the eye of a needle and past Janik Haberer and then smashing a shot high past Frederik Rønnow from a seemingly impossible angle.
Coach of the season
Commendations to Ole Werner – who guided RB Leipzig back into the Champions League despite last summer’s losses of Benjamin Sesko, Xavi Simons and Loïs Openda – and to Christian Ilzer at Hoffenheim, as well as Kompany. The real answer, though, is Sebastian Hoeness, who continued his titanic work at Stuttgart. Every season begins in the same way, with big-name departures (this year it was Enzo Millot and Nick Woltemade, with no time to effectively replace the latter), and every season sees progress, Stuttgart continuing to play their front-foot football. This time it was fourth place finish, a Pokal final appearance and the last 16 of the Europa League. At some point a giant will come and take Hoeness away.
Great escape of the season
For this also read ‘reluctant sacking of the season’, with Mainz pushed into parting ways with the esteemed Bo Henriksen, having lost nine of the first 13 and winning only one, for a total of six points. Enter Urs Fischer, the former Union Berlin coach who wrote the book on heartbreaking sackings and who subsequently steered Mainz to a near-miraculous point away at Bayern on his mid-December debut, before racking up six wins (and only one defeat) in a 10-game spell in the new year, lifting them clear. A great organiser, Fischer even kept the form on track when the Germany star Nadiem Amiri was out injured (through the captain returned for the joyous final games, with his team safe earlier than expected).
Dortmundy moment of the season
Dortmundy (adj.): to suggest an unexpected surge towards contention only to slip in sight of the line.
Harsh, perhaps, given that BVB were smartly governed by Niko Kovac, tough to beat in the Bundesliga and never in danger of losing second place – but having crept into a position where they could have imbued March’s edition of Der Klassiker with some title jeopardy, Dortmund performed poorly at Leipzig (despite Fábio Silva’s stoppage-time goal saving a point) and then imploded at Atalanta in the Champions League to enter the Bundesliga showpiece eight points adrift and with morale on the floor. Leverkusen challenged for this award as well, Kasper Hjulmand’s side pulling themselves back into the top four with two games to go and then capitulating at their direct rivals Stuttgart on the very next matchday to miss out.
Head loss of the season
This category should have been reserved for Jonathan Burkhardt, a calm and religious man driven to openly swearing at his Eintracht Frankfurt coach Albert Riera mid-match in Dortmund, but Wolfsburg’s Joakim Mæhle trumped him in the second leg of the relegation playoff. With his side leading at Paderborn he picked up two bookings in double-quick time inside the first 14 minutes, leaving Dieter Hecking’s team to play the remaining 106 minutes (plus stoppages) with 10 men. Wolfsburg became only the fourth Bundesliga side to lose a top-flight playoff and be relegated since it was reintroduced in 2008.
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Anyone who sees someone in an emergency in the water should call 999, stay out of the water themselves and throw them something that floats, such as a plastic water bottle or football, for them to hold onto and stay afloat while help is on the way, the RLSS added.
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Middle East crisis live: Iran’s foreign ministry says US broke ceasefire with overnight strikes | US-Israel war on Iran
Iran’s foreign ministry says US broke ceasefire with overnight strikes
Iran’s foreign ministry has said the US broke the ceasefire in the Hormozgan region close to the strait of Hormuz, Reuters reports.
The ministry said Iran will respond and will not hesitate in defending itself.
The US military carried out strikes on Monday in southern Iran against targets including boats attempting to lay mines and missile launch sites, in what it described as defensive actions.
“The United States committed a gross violation of the ceasefire in the Hormozgan region in the past 48 hours … Iran holds the US regime responsible for all the consequences resulting from these aggressive and unjustified actions,” the Iran foreign ministry statement said.
Key events
The US has launched fresh strikes on Iran despite suggestions that a peace deal could be within reach.
Donald Trump faces growing criticism from Republicans over the proposed plan to end the war, which reportedly contained major concessions from Washington. But could an agreement still be imminent?
Lucy Hough speaks to diplomatic editor Patrick Wintour…
Israel has issued an expropriation order for land in the occupied West Bank near the site of a Biblical prophet’s grave north of Jerusalem, an Israeli NGO reported on Tuesday.
The site, known as Nabi Samuel, is believed in Christian, Jewish, and Muslim tradition to include the grave of the Biblical figure of prophet Samuel, and includes a mosque owned by Palestinian religious authorities, the Waqf.
“This marks the first time that the [Israeli] Civil Administration has expropriated a holy site owned by the Muslim Waqf in the occupied West Bank”, Israeli settlement watchdog Peace Now said in a statement.
According to the Israeli order, dated 9 May but published this week, the area for expropriation will include 109.79 dunams (roughly 11 hectares), including access roads, agricultural land, and a mosque.
Israeli forces have begun operating beyond its so-called ‘Yellow Line’ in south Lebanon, which runs around 10km (six miles) deep inside Lebanese territory, a military official confirmed to AFP on Tuesday.
“The IDF is operating in a targeted manner beyond the Forward Defence Line in order to remove direct threats to the citizens of the State of Israel and IDF troops, in accordance with the directives of the political echelon,” the military official said when asked about reports that the military had begun ground operations beyond its demarcation line.
“Specific details regarding soldiers’ locations cannot be provided,” the official added.
Turkish president Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey would continue providing support for peace talks during a phone call with Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian, the Turkish presidency said on Tuesday.
Erdogan said the conflicts in the region had cast a shadow over the Muslim Eid holiday period, adding that he believed the Iranian people would overcome the challenges.
Iran’s vice-president said on Tuesday that the government has taken the first steps to restore the internet after a near-total blackout since war with the United States and Israel broke out in late February.
“The first step toward free and regulated access to cyberspace has been taken,” vice-president Mohammad Reza Aref said in a post on X, adding that the demands of Iranians “will be fulfilled.”
Israeli media reported on Tuesday that the military had expanded its ground operations in southern Lebanon beyond the ‘Yellow Line’, an Israeli-drawn demarcation line near the border, though the reports gave no further details on the extent of the advance.
Cross-border fighting has been escalating between Israel and Hezbollah, despite the declaration of a ceasefire several weeks ago.
As part of the peace deal with Iran – which could now be on the rocks – Donald Trump has made a push for Gulf states to sign up to his Abraham Accords and recognise the state of Israel. AFP has spoken to some analysts that see these demands as unrealistic.
“For most of the states named, the political cost of signing up under current conditions would be prohibitive,” HA Hellyer, senior fellow at the Royal United Services Institute and Center for American Progress said.
“Gaza is ongoing, annexation of the West Bank is accelerating, Israeli forces remain in southern Lebanon, the Golan is occupied.”
Yossi Mekelberg, a Middle East expert at London-based think-tank Chatham House, said it was “no more than a sweetener for Israel, and most likely won’t happen”.
“Why would these countries reward (Benjamin) Netanyahu after so much destruction in the region and to their interests?” he asked.
In 2023, Saudi Arabia was engaged in tentative talks on normalisation, but it abruptly pulled out as the Israel-Gaza war erupted. It later said it would not recognise Israel without an independent Palestinian state.
“For Saudia Arabia there is no incentive to join the Abraham Accords, in the current circumstances,” said Hellyer.
“If they decide about normalisation, they would like to do it on their own accord, not the Abraham Accords.”
Former US diplomat Barbara A. Leaf, assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs under Joe Biden, told AFP: “I do not expect any of the Arab/Muslim states whose leaders spoke to President Trump on May 23 to move towards normalisation with Israel right now.”
The internet monitoring group Netblocks said in a post on X on Tuesday that live data showed partial restoration of internet connectivity in Iran.
Iranian state media reported on Monday that Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian had issued an order to reopen international internet access, after a near-90-day blackout in the wake of the US-Israeli war on Iran.
Afternoon summary
Iran’s foreign ministry has accused the US of violating the ceasefire after overnight strikes by the US military on targets in the southern coastal province of Hormozgan, next to the strait of Hormuz.
Here’s a round-up of the other key events so far today:
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Iranian supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei said on his Telegram channel that Gulf powers will no longer be a shield for US bases and the US will no longer have a safe haven in the region. The post followe overnight attacks on Iran by the US, testing the ceasefire agreed in April.
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Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps said it reserved the “legitimate and definite” right to retaliate against any ceasefire violations by the US. It added that its air defence units had shot down a US MQ-9 drone and fired at a fighter jet that had entered Iranian airspace.
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Brent crude oil rose 3% on Tuesday after the news of the US strikes on Iran. The strikes added to uncertainty about whether a deal will be imminently reached to end the war and open up shipping flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
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An Israeli airstrike on a village in eastern Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley killed 12 people, AP reports, citing the country’s state-run National News Agency. Rescue workers said a dozen bodies were pulled out of the rubble following an intense wave of overnight strikes targeting swaths of southern and eastern Lebanon.
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Israel’s military has warned residents of the southern Lebanese town of Nabatieh to leave ahead of possible airstrikes, Reuters reports. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday that Israel would escalate strikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon, as a US official said the militia had ignored warnings to halt firing at Israel.
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United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said that a tanker had reported an external explosion on the vessel’s port side, 60 nautical miles off Oman’s capital Muscat. In a post on X, UKMTO said the vessel and its crew were safe, although the tanker reported that some bunker fuel was discharged into the sea. UKMTO urged vessels to transit with caution and report suspicious activity.
I’m clocking off, but my colleague Tom Ambrose will continue to bring you the latest updates from the crisis in the Middle East.
Iran’s judiciary has suspended a presidential body that had ordered the restoration of internet access, AFP reports.
Iranian authorities first imposed sweeping internet restrictions during large-scale anti-government protests that peaked in early January, before shutting access down again on 28 February at the start of the war.
The judicial decision targeted the “Special Headquarters for Organising and Governing the Country’s Cyberspace”, a body formed on 12 May by president Masoud Pezeshkian.
The body had on Monday reached a decision to “restore the internet” in Iran, according to government spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani, after local media reported that Pezeshkian had decreed the measure.
In recent weeks, Iran introduced a tiered internet system known as “Pro Internet”, which, according to Iranian media, granted broader access to selected groups of professionals for higher fees.
By 5 April, internet monitor NetBlocks said the shutdown imposed after the outbreak of war was “the longest nation-scale internet shutdown on record in any country”.
United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said that a tanker had reported an external explosion on the vessel’s port side, 60 nautical miles off Oman’s capital Muscat.
In a post on X, UKMTO said the vessel and its crew were safe, although the tanker reported that some bunker fuel was discharged into the sea. UKMTO urged vessels to transit with caution and report suspicious activity.
Iran’s foreign ministry says US broke ceasefire with overnight strikes
Iran’s foreign ministry has said the US broke the ceasefire in the Hormozgan region close to the strait of Hormuz, Reuters reports.
The ministry said Iran will respond and will not hesitate in defending itself.
The US military carried out strikes on Monday in southern Iran against targets including boats attempting to lay mines and missile launch sites, in what it described as defensive actions.
“The United States committed a gross violation of the ceasefire in the Hormozgan region in the past 48 hours … Iran holds the US regime responsible for all the consequences resulting from these aggressive and unjustified actions,” the Iran foreign ministry statement said.
Photos show the aftermath of an Israeli strike on al-Hosh, near the city of Tyre in southern Lebanon.
Israel targeted southern and eastern Lebanon in a series of overnight strikes.
Pictures showed Lebanese civil defence workers searching through the rubble in the aftermath of the strikes.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday he had ordered the military to intensify its offensive in Lebanon in an effort to “crush” Hezbollah, accusing the group of targeting Israeli forces with drone attacks.
One major sticking point in the negotiations for a peace deal in the US-Israel war with Iran involves the unfreezing of Iranian funds frozen overseas.
Around $24bn (£18bn) of frozen funds must be released under a memorandum of understanding being negotiated with the US a source close to Tehran’s negotiation team said, according to report by Iran’s Tasnim news agency on Tuesday, Reuters reported.
The Iranian agency said Iran’s top negotiator, Mohammad Baqr Qalibaf, had travelled to Qatar to reach agreement on a mechanism to implement this demand.
Beijing has urged Iran and the US to observe the ceasefire in the US-Israeli war on Iran.
“We urge the parties concerned to fulfil their ceasefire commitments, resolve disputes through peaceful means … and promote the early restoration of peace,” foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning told a news briefing.
The US struck targets in Iran overnight and Iran said it shot down a US drone.
Israel’s military has warned residents of the southern Lebanese town of Nabatieh to leave ahead of possible airstrikes, Reuters reports.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday that Israel would escalate strikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon, as a US official said the militia had ignored warnings to halt firing at Israel.
Earlier today an Israeli airstrike on a village in eastern Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley killed 12 people.
Brent crude oil rose 3% on Tuesday after the US military carried out strikes in Iran, adding to uncertainty on whether a deal will be imminently reached to end the war and open up shipping flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
“While differences between the parties have narrowed, any eventual peace deal would likely lead only to a gradual reopening [of the strait of Hormuz], meaning the current tight supply outlook could take months to normalise,” Ole Hansen at Saxo Bank told Reuters.
Iran has executed a man for alleged espionage and intelligence cooperation with Israel, the semi-official Tasnim news agency said.
The agency identified the individual as Gholamreza Khani Shekarab.
According to the Iran Human Rights NGO (IHRNGO), Gholamreza was arrested on 24 September 2025 and charged with “collaboration with the Zionist regime and specifically the Mossad intelligence agency”.
At least ten people have been executed for espionage charges in 2026. Eight were accused of espionage for Israel and the US, and two Iraqi nationals were accused of espionage for an unknown Arab country. According to IHRNGO’s 2025 Annual Report on the Death Penalty in Iran, at least 13 people were executed for charges related to espionage for Israel.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps said it reserved the “legitimate and definite” right to retaliate against any ceasefire violations by the US, adding that its air defence units had shot down a US MQ-9 drone and fired at a fighter jet that had entered Iranian airspace, state media reported.
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