UK News
Barcelona v OL Lyonnes: Women’s Champions League final – live | Women’s Champions League
Key events
88 mins: Barca are open to completely killing the fixture off but Endler easily comes to take a cross and sends Chawinga away. She gets behind the Barca defence but can’t find a teammate.
87 mins: Gordon has been back in touch: “Things were looking good for Lyonnes at HT but their midfield has lost energy and allowed Barcelona in. The French side were also too late with their subs. Nevertheless, Lyonnes have had chances, which could have turned the game. But turning into a very disappointing evening for the French side.”
86 mins: Kika and Camara are on. Brugts and Putellas are off.
84 mins: Do Lyon have anything left to give?
The energy has gone form their play.
Pina is down and holding her hamstring but wants to carry on.
82 mins: Bonmati is very much on the pitch to slow things down. A master of keeping possession.
80 mins: Barca are taking as much sting out of the game as possible. Game management is the name of the this particular game.
Pina has a dig but Endler is equal to it and then smashes the ball upfield. Lyon look done here.
78 mins: Kári Tulinius asks: “I realize this isn’t particularly important, but is it snowing in Oslo? Which seems unlikely, considering how sunny it is.”
I assume it is some insects flying around …
Joao emails: “I must say, I’d love to see Wendy Renard get one more big title, but I can’t wait to see if Vicky Lopez comes in. It’s not just her technical ability, which is excellent, but that way of playing where she seems to have more time than anyone else can only come from an amazing brain. And still so young.
“Oops, Barcelona scores a second. Désolé Wendy.”
76 mins: Chawinga is through one-on-one and has the chance to get Lyon back in the game but Cata Coll once again comes up with the goods.
74 mins: Durmornay catches Leon with an arm, leaving the Barca defender on the deck.
72 mins: Lyonnes send on Shrader for Yohannes.
Bonmati replaces Serrajordi.
GOAL! Barcelona 2-0 Lyonnes (Pajor, 69)
Pajor is there again! Lyonnes are opened up, Pina diverts a cross towards goal, which Parralluelo sends back to Pajor to whack home.
68 mins: Putellas commits another foul on Dumornay and the referee finally finds her cards.
Bonmati is primed on the sidelines.
66 mins: Lyonnes have a corner on the right … it is taken short but Bacha makes it into the box and arrows are shot but it is blocked by a defender.
Hegerberg abd Becho off, Chawinga and Katoto on.
64 mins: The goal has certainly boosted Barca’s confidence and they are looking far more lively.
63 mins: Pina is on for Graham Hansen.
61 mins: Lyonnes produce another decent move, concluding with Becho forcing Cata Coll to tip it just wide.
The resulting corner is swiped over by Brand.
59 mins: Lyon need to settle back down …
57 mins: Lyon go up the other end and win a corner. Brand takes it shot and then gets it back but pings the ball straight out of play. What a waste.
Cata Coll is having a sit down, so everyone can take a rest. What a shambles.
GOAL! Barcelona 1-0 Lyonnes (Pajor, 55)
Against the run of play, even if Barca have improved. The Polish forward receives a pass inside the box, gets the ball out of her feet and thrashes into the corner across Endler who can do nothing.
54 mins: Barca have a corner on the right … but Leon sends it over everyone and straight out of play. The assistant does not give it quickly, allowing Barca a chance from close range before reality returns.
Lyon show some nice football as part of a fine move but the final pass lets it down.
52 mins: The referee falls over and I have no idea why but everyone enjoys it.
It feels like the aggression levels have increased since the break.
50 mins: Hegerberg is through one on one but overthinks her finish, eventually forcing Cata Coll into a decent save. The offside flag goes up but it looks tight.
49 mins: Graham Hansen receives the ball on the edge of the box but she smashes well over the bar.
47 mins: A bit of a quiet start …
Second half
Here we go again!
Saurav emails: “Is Wendie Renard the greatest defender of our generation – men’s or women’s? I certainly think she has a creditable shout.
“Haven’t seen Barca Femeni be under so much pressure for a while now, I think they need to bring in Bonmati and Vicky Lopez as soon as they are able to get back control of the midfield.”
Gordon emails: “Tactically, Lyonnes have dominated, by pushing up and physically challenging Barcelona, which they are not used to. Barcelona cannot get any long spells of possession, and are being forced to untypically play the ball forward early. Barcelona’s best player has been Cata Coll – they’ve also committed far more fouls than the French side. Lyonnes know they are on top – and, once they replace the hapless Hegerberg with the much more potent Katoto, the goals will come.”
Half time: Barcelona 0-0 Lyonnes
A goalless first half dominated by the French side.
45+1 mins: Graham Hansen cuts in from the right and lets fly but her shot is deflected wide.
43 mins: Lyonnes have dominated this half. Barcelona have barely had any involvement. The Catalans will be happy to see half time, especially with the score goalless.
41 mins: Bacha eventually takes the free-kick, using plenty of power and whip, forcing Cata Coll into a flying save to her left to keep it out.
38 mins: Lawrence whips in a cross which Cata Coll punches clear.
In the next action, Pajor clatters into Dumornay just outside the box. She really should be going into the book.
36 mins: Putellas plays a sneaky pass to Pajoy on the edge of the box but she slices her shot well wide from 18 yards.
Parralluelo does well down the left and sends a low cross into the box but there is no one there to meet it.
A good couple of moments for Barca …
34 mins: Lyon have enjoyed around 60% possession. Maybe Barca are luring them into a false sense of security …
32 mins: Renard plays a superb pass through the Barca midfield for Bacha to chase. She reaches it down the left and whips in a cross but Cata Coll reads and collects.
30 mins: Lyon have another corner on the right and it creates pinball in the box but Barca scramble it clear.
28 mins: It is all Lyon at the moment, Barca need to change the dynamic.
26 mins: A Lyon corner is swung in from the right but it is greeted by a Barca head. The French side recycle it but cannot get a shot away.
24 mins: Dumoray has a chance to put in a cross but takes an extra touch, losing her the angle to find a teammate and Barcelona win the ball back.
Hegerberg looks like has the perfect chance inside she can’t get the ball under control soon enough and Putellas gets a block in.
Immediately after Brand goes through but has to shoot from a tight angle and cannot do the business.
22 mins: Leon takes ball and woman with a fierce tackle on Hegerberg but the defender comes off worse after catching a forearm in the neck.
20 mins: Lyon cause themselves problems by trying to play out from the back but Barcelona cannot make the most of it, despite a strong press.
18 mins: A simple ball over the top catches Lyonnes out; Endler thinks she can reach it but is nowhere near, allowing Pajor a chance to lob the goalkeeper but her shot goes just wide.
Now each team needs to settle back down and work things out. Lyon looking pretty calm and moving the ball quicker.
NO GOAL!
After a bizarrely long VAR review, the goal is chalked off for offside.
GOAL?! Lyon have a free-kick around 40 yards out, which is clipped into the box. Renard has a free header which the goalkeeper palms straight out and Heaps is there to nudged home from a yard or two.
12 mins: A first chance of the match. Putellas arrives in the box at the perfect time to meet a Graham Hansen cross but her shot lacks power and accuracy as it slips wide.
10 mins: Lyon are still looking the more comfortable but whenever they reach the final third their attacks seemingly break down.
8 mins: A lot of flirting so far but not much has really happened.
6 mins: Barcelona pump a free kick into the box but it is diverted well wide.
4 mins: Pajor barges into the back of Bacha to give away a free-kick.
Barcelona are yet to string two passes together.
2 mins: A third of the pitch is covered in shade but the rest is looking bright.
Lyon enjoy plenty of the ball early on as they look to calm any lingering nerves.
Kick off
Peep! Peep! Peep! Here we go!
The players are heading out into the glorious Oslo sunshine.
Gordon’s been in touch: “I think Lyonnes will win today, as they present a physicality and a speed of movement that Barcelona rarely come up against. Bayern Munich gave Barcelona some problems in these respects in the semi-final, and Lyonnes are a considerable step-up from Bayern. Barcelona look to have recognised this, in selecting Parralluelo ahead of Pina. Lyonnes showed in the second leg of their semi against Arsenal that they can produce their best football when it really matters – and, in Dumornay, they have potentially the best woman player in the world. But, they have, to my mind, handicapped themselves by starting Hegerberg – so ineffective against Wolfsburg and Arsenal – instead of Katoto.”
Here is Tom Garry’s report from The Valley.
Charlton beat Leicester on penalties to reach WSL

Tom Garry
Sophie Whitehouse etched her name into Charlton folklore as she saved four penalties in the shootout to win her side promotion to the Women’s Super League and relegated Leicester in the process.
The Republic of Ireland goalkeeper’s heroics gave Charlton a 2-1 victory on penalties to settle the nerviest playoff tie you could imagine after a goalless 120 minutes. The result capped off a dismal season for Leicester, who have lost every match they have played in 2026, while for Charlton the joy was unbridled and it was a case of ‘second-time lucky’ after they had lost a decisive game on the regular season’s final day that had seen the miss out on automatic promotion.
Pre-match reading.
Starting lineups
Barcelona (4-3-3): Cata Coll; Batlle, Paredes, Leon, Brugts; Serrajordi, Guijarro, Putellas; Graham Hansen, Pajor, Parralluelo
Subs: G Font, T Font, Schertenleibm Torrejon, Pina, Bonmati, Nazareth, Lopez, Camara, Fenger, Ranera, Julia
Lyonnes (4-3-3): Endler; Lawrence, Renard, Engen, Bacha; Dumornay, Heaps, Yohannes; Becho, Hegerberg; Brand
Subs: Belhadj, Marchal, Schrader, Katoto, Egurrola, Fathallah, Sombath, Chawinga, Svava, Benyahia, Tarciane, Rafalski
Referee: Tess Olofsson
Preamble
It does not get much bigger than this. Neither Barcelona nor Lyonnes have made it this far through luck, they are the best two teams on the continent, boasting 11 Champions League titles between them.
Each side has won their respective domestic titles and will be looking to add a cherry in Oslo. Barcelona will look to outplay Lyon, with the slick football that has made them into the elite team they are, aided by being packed full of world class players, such as Alexia Putellas and Aitana Bonmati.
Lyonnes, led by the former Barcelona head coach Jonatan Giraldez, are more physically imposing, which helped them battle past Arsenal in the semi-final. However, they certainly do not lack skill and quality across the park, with Wendie Renard providing the foundations at the back.
Let’s hope for a cracker!
Kick-off: 5pm BST
UK News
Swapping bombs for a BMX in a different look at 1980s NI
A new exhibition focuses on peoples’ day to day lives in the 1980s in Northern Ireland.
Source link
UK News
Antonelli surges to F1 Canadian GP win after teammate Russell retires in lead | Formula One 2026
It is too early to be decisive yet but without doubt George Russell was left cursing his damnable luck as his world championship ambitions took a body blow in Montreal. The British driver was left angry and disconsolate as his Mercedes ground to halt on track at the Canadian Grand Prix and his teammate and title rival Kimi Antonelli powered to a record-breaking victory.
Russell must be wondering what he has to do to catch a break in what increasingly looks like a two-way title fight with his Italian teammate. He had claimed victory in the sprint race, then pole and then had an absolutely gripping, toe-to-toe fight with the 19-year-old for the opening 29 laps on the Île Notre-Dame.
The pair had circulated within half a second of one another, trading the lead repeatedly in what was an exemplary piece of racing. Russell had to pull some superb, resolved, defensive driving and Antonelli was as always an irrepressible force, a joy to behold. To and fro they darted against one another, neither perfect, both drivers suffered lock-ups and minor errors but neither could take a decisive advantage. It was glorious stuff with nothing to choose between them.
The prospect of it heading to the flag as such was mouthwatering, only for Russell’s world to fall apart in a scant few seconds. Out of nowhere he suddenly slowed and pulled off on lap 30 with an engine failure.
An understandably angry Russell hurled his headrest from the car and walked away from it in disgust. He was left behind the fence, staring at the marshals pushing his stricken ride away and shaking his head in disbelief and frustration as Antonelli scampered off into an unchallenged lead he held to the flag.
It was impossible not to sympathise with the British driver as the Mercedes team principal, Toto Wolff, understood when he came out to put his arm round him when he returned to the paddock. Russell had fought hard and a win or a second would have been well deserved, instead the weekend where had hoped to close on his teammate’s championship lead was left shattered.
Eighteen points behind before the race, Russell is now a full 43 back and when interviewed afterwards he admitted he could make no sense of this cruel fate in Montreal.
“I’m a bit lost for words,” he said. “I’ve got to be honest, I’m proud of my weekend: pole for the sprint race, won the sprint race, pole for the main race, I had a good battle with Kimi. From my side I don’t think there was any more I could do.
“Of course I’m pretty frustrated by what’s happened but what more could I do?”
Antonelli deserved the victory but would have enjoyed taking it to the end in a real scrap with his teammate, noting it was not the way he wanted to win. With it however the Italian has now taken four in a row after victories in China, Japan and Miami. A striking start in only second year in the sport. Indeed he is now the first driver to have scored his first four wins in the sport in succession.
He once more demonstrated great skill, although his impetuousness was on display too but as Wolff has noted he would rather try to rein-in a charger than encourage a donkey. In Montreal such was the intensity of the fight between the two teammates Mercedes were almost forced to bring them both to heel.
That the pair are going to be going at hard for the world championship this year is clear. They came together in the sprint race on Saturday, with Antonelli furious when he felt Russell has squeezed him off track. Mercedes held discussions with them afterwards with both declaring all was well between them but on Sunday they were at it again.
As part of their gripping scrap, on lap 23 Antonelli locked-up at the hairpin, Russell pounced and the pair then brushed up against each other, trading paint in the final chicane. Antonelli went off and gained the place, which he was forced to give back, aggrieved believing that his teammate had squeezed him off again. “He pushed me off. I was ahead, What’s the point?,” he said.
Mercedes promptly told their drivers to “tidy up the racing” with nerves jangling on the pit wall as the pair were warned the team would intervene if they did not. Mercedes’ rules of engagement seem clear that they are free to race but cannot hit one another, an edict that may be increasingly hard to follow if the contest between them remains as tight going into the next 17 races as it was in Montreal.
It may have come to an intervention on Sunday, only for fate to remove Russell from the equation. A long night lies ahead for the British driver then as he contemplates what might have been. Too early to be decisive yes but the scale of the task now looms large and Antonelli showed in Canada that he will contest every metre of every lap in the process. A prospect to savour on the form from Montreal.
Lewis Hamilton scored his best result for Ferrari after a superb fight with Max Verstappen to claim second from the Dutchman in the closing stages, while Verstappen was in fine form to take his first podium of 2026 for Red Bull.
UK News
RAF jet carrying defence secretary has signal jammed near Russian border
Pilots on board had to use a different navigation system while the plane’s GPS was disabled.
Source link
-
Crime & Safety4 weeks agoYoung farmers club hosts fun farm competitions in Bicester
-
Crime & Safety4 weeks agoMajor UK firm collapses in administration with nearly 700 jobs at risk
-
Oxford united FC4 weeks agoOxford United chairman statement to fans after relegation
-
Crime & Safety4 weeks agoChinese takeaway forced into 'bitter' closure after 'hatred and resentment'
-
UK News4 weeks agoWoman murdered sister and took her Rolex watch
-
Crime & Safety2 weeks agoMan arrested in connection with rape in Oxfordshire town
-
Crime & Safety4 weeks agoOxfordshire father ‘bitten’ by man who approached his daughter
-
Crime & Safety2 weeks agoBanbury woman jailed after lying to police about kidnapped children
