Sports
Is this the beginning of the end for LIV Golf?
Image source, Getty ImagesLIV Golf was supposed to be the breakaway tour that changed golf as we know it.
Little over four years ago, LIV threw wads of money at a host of star names and shook the sport to its core with its promise of revolution.
Now, with speculation intensifying that Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) is set to pull financial support, the future of a tour which has relied on more than $5bn (£3.7bn) from the Gulf state looks to be in severe doubt.
Named after the Roman numerals of its rebellious 54-hole concept, LIV certainly managed to disrupt the status quo.
But it didn’t produce the swift, conclusive victory – over the PGA Tour and DP World Tour – that those behind the breakaway hoped.
And while LIV chiefs have bullishly insisted it is business as usual, senior figures in European golf have told BBC Sport they believe LIV will not continue past this year.
So where does it go from here? What happens to superstar players including Jon Rahm who were lured to LIV? And is this a clear sign that Saudi Arabia, which has pumped cash into several sports, is tightening its spending?
Does LIV have the money to continue?
Discussion about LIV’s future went into overdrive on Wednesday as the tour prepared for its latest event in Mexico.
Several media outlets – across golf, sports news and finance – reported its imminent closure, before LIV chief executive Scott O’Neil insisted it was business as usual in a tubthumping email to staff.
“Our season continues exactly as planned, uninterrupted and at full throttle,” O’Neil wrote.
It was striking O’Neil only spoke about 2026 and did not address what might lie ahead.
Players were told last month that funding was in place until 2032 but well-placed figures in European golf have told BBC Sport they believe PIF is withdrawing its financial support.
One source said he fully expected 2026 to be LIV’s last season and another felt its leadership was trying to convince itself other revenue could be found.
But many – as one summarised – think it may fall apart quickly.
The LIV project, which pivoted to a more traditional 72-hole format this year, has been bankrolled by an eye-watering amount of money from PIF.
The overall investment surpassed $5bn (£3.8bn) when fresh capital of $266.7m was injected earlier this year., external
The tour’s net losses in markets outside the US increased to $462m (£340m) in 2024, meaning it had lost more than $1.1bn (£810m) since it was established in 2021.
With vast amounts of money pumped into the US arm of the operation, losses look likely to run to several billion dollars.
“If there is no PIF funding, there is a real question of whether they are viable given the losses,” one of the European sources added.
Image source, Getty ImagesO’Neil said earlier this year the tour would not be profitable for another 5-10 years.
On Thursday, a LIV source told BBC Sport that four of its 14 events would be profitable in 2026, along with 10 of its 13 teams.
It also said a revenue increase of $100m (£74m) after its first five events of the year, compared to the same period in 2025, painted a positive picture.
It remains a low return for the huge investment.
Money brought in from sponsorship deals with global brands was said to have increased 40% year on year, while revenue from ticket sales (130%), hospitality (67%), merchandise (26%) and YouTube content (303%) also improved.
The source only provided percentage figures and not amounts of revenue.
In January, LIV executive Katie O’Reilly said the organisation was continuing to lay a platform for growth through driving sponsorship revenue.
“Our goal is to build 13 billion-dollar franchises,” said O’Reilly, who is LIV’s executive vice-president of team business operations.
“That is our goal. Are we there yet? No. But right now we are building the foundation for that.”
Is there a way out for Rahm and other LIV stars?
If LIV does fold, the routes back to the PGA Tour and DP World Tour are varied.
Returning to either tour requires eating a slice of humble pie and, for some, paying a fortune to sweeten the deal.
LIV’s credibility as a major force capable of challenging the long-established tours was underpinned by signing several huge names on multi-million deals.
Persuading major champions at the peak of their powers – Brooks Koepka, Cameron Smith and Bryson DeChambeau – was complemented by the additions of European titans Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood.
In 2023, there was an even bigger statement. Rahm – then the Masters champion and fresh from helping Europe win the Ryder Cup – was lured over. A year later, Tyrrell Hatton followed suit.
In February, Rahm, Smith and DeChambeau turned down a one-time opportunity to apply for reinstatement to the PGA Tour under its ‘Returning Member Programme’, which was facilitated for those who had won a major – or The Players Championship – since 2022.
Five-time major winner Koepka was the only player to take up the offer and smoothed his return by paying fines said to be worth about £63m.
It remains unclear if LIV’s potential demise would see that path reopened, and what terms might be issued.
Shortly after Koepka’s decision, 2018 Masters champion Patrick Reed, who did not fulfil the criteria, also decided to leave LIV.
Reed has been playing on the DP World Tour this year – winning two tournaments and leading the Race to Dubai seasonal standings – while knowing he can return to the PGA Tour in 2027 once a year has passed since his last LIV appearance.
He has, essentially, taken his medicine. Others might have to do the same.
Rahm continues to be in dispute with the DP World Tour after rejecting its terms to remain a member, meaning he would have to pay a fine and serve a suspension.
The same would apply to Westwood and Poulter, who resigned from the tour in order to avoid the fines.
Hatton would be permitted to play full-time on the tour because he was one of eight players who paid the fine imposed and agreed to a series of other conditions.
The 34-year-old Englishman, who finished tied third at the Masters last week, was joined by Laurie Canter, Thomas Detry, Tom McKibbin, Adrian Meronk, Victor Perez, David Puig and Elvis Smylie in agreeing a deal.
Is PIF tightening the purse strings?
In January, a senior source in Saudi Arabia told BBC Sport that towards the end of last year there was “a shift” in the kingdom’s attitude towards some investments, with “everything in the PIF world under serious review”.
The change in the strategy – with an emphasis on more sustainable investments – came after a major budget deficit of $73bn last year, which was driven by increased spending and lower oil revenues.
This position also appears to have been accelerated by the Iran war, which has caused severe disruption to Saudi Arabia’s oil exportation.
But the Gulf state remains committed to other expensive projects.
Plans to build Neom Super City – a futuristic, carbon-free metropolis – may have been scaled down, but the vision remains the same.
Hosting the 2034 World Cup means constructing up to 15 new stadiums, as well as a significant airport expansion to accommodate the hundreds of thousands of visitors.
There was no mention of LIV Golf – or sport specifically – when PIF announced its 2026-2030 strategy on Wednesday.
But the message was clear: there will be a more savvy approach to its spending.
“The new plan suggests PIF is no longer willing to keep pumping resources into projects that offer little prospect of profitability,” Dr Kristian Ulrichsen, who shapes policy and provides analysis on the Middle East at the Baker Institute in the US, told BBC Sport.
“The perception that resources – and ambitions – were limitless has given way to a more realistic assessment of what is feasible in a more constrained financial environment.
“That predated the war with Iran and has been under way for more than a year.”
This tone – and the discussion about LIV Golf’s future – has inevitably led to discussion about other international sports which have relied on huge sums of Saudi cash, such as boxing, F1, tennis and even teams like the Premier League football club Newcastle United.
Image source, Getty ImagesDomestically, there is further evidence of a subtle shift of strategy.
The Saudi Pro League has lured many high-profile players in recent years – most notably Cristiano Ronaldo – by offering lucrative contracts and paying substantial transfer fees.
The PIF fund has owned a 75% stake in four clubs – Al-Hilal, Al-Nassr, Al-Ahli and Al-Ittihad – since 2023.
On Thursday, PIF announced it had sold 70% of Al-Hilal’s share value, which it said is worth £275m, to publicly listed Saudi investment firm Kingdom Holding Company (KHC).
A source close to PIF said the move should not be seen as a sign of any lessening in interest in sports investments.
“This is not to say that PIF or Saudi Arabia is pulling out of sports investment but that the authorities are having to prioritise the allocation of resources more carefully,” added Dr Ulrichsen.
“It is likely that PIF and the Saudi state will prioritise the World Cup going forward, at the expense of other sports projects, including LIV Golf.”
What next for LIV?
The proof of whether it is “business as usual”, as O’Neil suggested, will be seen when the Mexico event gets under way on Thursday.
Spain’s Sergio Garcia – captain of the Fireballs team – said on Wednesday that players had been told earlier this year that the tour would run for “many years”.
Players are likely to be asked questions after Thursday’s rounds.
Mexico is the sixth tournament of LIV’s 2026 season, following events in Saudi Arabia, Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong and South Africa.
The remaining nine – including two events at Donald Trump-owned courses in the United States, and one at the JCB Golf and Country Club in the UK – are set to take place over the next four months.
Beyond that, only time will tell what the future holds for LIV.
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Sports
Arsenal are judged on perception, partly because of Guardiola – Balague
Image source, BBC SportFormer colleagues. Master and apprentice. Title rivals.
Pep Guardiola and Mikel Arteta’s relationship has cut across a range of strands over the years – and evolved along with their managerial styles.
The pair go head to head at Etihad Stadium on Sunday in a match many have billed as a Premier League title decider. A win for Guardiola and second-placed Manchester City would cut the lead of Arteta’s Arsenal side to just three points, with a game in hand.
The Spaniards’ relationship started in 1997 when Arteta joined Barcelona’s academy – meeting his idol, Barca skipper and fellow midfielder Guardiola. Their time as team-mates was brief, but a friendship was forged.
Communication between the two managers cooled significantly when Arteta gave up his role as Guardiola’s assistant in Manchester back in 2019 to take charge of Arsenal.
While the City boss’ other former assistants maintained closer contact, Arteta stepped away – and that distance created silence.
Guardiola appreciates those that give and take continuously, but if that is not clearly expressed, relationships can fracture even without a clear conflict. Arteta is someone who moves forward without being dependent on past professional bonds.
Contact was eventually re-established in the last year and tensions eased. Nobody wants to say who made the first call, but they speak again.
They are now competing for the same trophies but, at the same time, recognise the strength of the friendship, and both suffer in that solitary place that is managing a football team at the very top.
Image source, Getty ImagesHow Guardiola created a new way of winning
There was a time when Spanish football on Sunday evenings became a kind of ritual for coaches across Europe when the Guardiola-led Barcelona were in action. For 90 minutes everyone tried to understand what they were watching.
Liverpool-born Andy Mangan, opposition scout for Brazil this summer, remembers it as an education.
“At first I didn’t understand what he was doing,” said Mangan. “But every week he would identify a space to attack, and every Sunday you watched those players play with joy. We were kids but it was inadvertently a vital learning period of so many coaches’ lives.”
Guardiola built a successful team, but he also created a new way of winning.
Pep Segura, former director of football at Barcelona and ex-Liverpool academy head, added: “Of the four phases of the game – attack, defence, offensive transition, defensive transition – until Pep arrived, most teams structured themselves defensively and took whatever the game gave them. They were reactive. Guardiola arrived and said, ‘no, we will think about how we play from the way we attack’.”
Football reorganised around possession, positioning and numerical superiority with the ball as the centre of everything. This triggered a response and was where Arteta’s story began.
“Teams started asking themselves how to counter this… with pressing and, above all, quick transitions,” said Segura.
The game evolved in response to Guardiola’s approach; transitions became sharper, physical demands increased, players had to think about what they were doing or had to do.
Crucially, Arteta grew up as a coach in that world.
Manchester City v Arsenal
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‘A formidable dance partner’
Those who worked closely within that period describe Arteta’s time alongside Guardiola at City not just as an apprenticeship. He was remembered as a “formidable dance partner”, immersed in the intensity of the manager’s methodology.
Guardiola valued his input highly as he helped raise standards in training, particularly in intensity, aggression and competitive detail.
Having played for both Everton and Arsenal, Arteta opened Guardiola’s eyes about the Premier League tempo, refereeing, emotional volatility of fans and physical demands.
But he was never a “fundamentalist” of Guardiola’s ideas. While aligned in principles when he was his assistant, he was already developing his own thinking. Guardiola innovated and Arteta imagined how the game would adapt.
Segura added: “Unlike Pep, who had to learn transitions which he started doing in Germany, Arteta was born and grew up with them. He played in England, he knows them.”
Guardiola’s teams, at their core, have always dominated two phases of the game; attacking organisation and defensive transition. They control matches through possession and react immediately when the ball is lost.
Arteta’s early Arsenal teams leaned heavily on control, but eventually moved on.
Former Celta Vigo assistant David Martinez explained: “I think he understood that to be competitive and aspire to win titles – offensively there are teams with more resources and talent than Arsenal. He understood he had to base his improvement on dominating everything.”
Robert Moreno, former Spain coach, argued Arteta developed his own voice into producing one of the most effective units in Europe.
Mangan also added: “What’s fascinating with Mikel is that he’s understood where the game is going very quickly – duels, set-pieces, long throws… all the things that now decide matches.”
But that process Arteta has worked on comes at a price.
The more a team relies on rehearsed mechanisms, the more it depends on precision. If execution drops, the system can struggle.
This is a key distinction from Guardiola.
Elite teams managed by him maintain an ideal combination of intelligence within structure, and he has players capable of improvising solutions when patterns break down.
At times, Arsenal are perceived as more rigid. There are moments where, instead of breaking structure to solve problems, players remain locked into roles.
‘Winning isn’t enough any more’
While Arsenal learned to compete at the highest level, Guardiola continued to evolve.
That tension – between adapting and remaining faithful to an idea – defines the 55-year-old’s career.
“He starts incorporating new concepts,” said Segura. “Above all defensive transition, that’s where he evolves enormously.
“Arteta incorporated more physical profiles than Pep. Pep seeks more technical players… Arteta looks for strength, speed, power.”
But there are still plenty of points of convergence.
“Both have looked for pieces to improve the offensive transition,” added Segura. “City with [Erling] Haaland… Arteta with [Viktor] Gyokeres.”
There is an element where the comparison becomes most revealing. In elite football, what defines coaches is how they respond to difficulty.
Arteta is in that moment now. He has built a team capable of competing with the best. But the final step – winning consistently at the very top – is where he wants to get to.
When results do not follow, the temptation is always the same; change and react to external pressure. Arteta has not abandoned those ideas. He has doubled down. He has asked more of his players, pushed harder but within the same framework.
In elite sport, losing is considered part of the process. The next step is evolving and trying again with the same effort, or more.
Guardiola has lived that cycle repeatedly. After setbacks, after criticism, he has returned to his principles and expanded them.
Former Burnley, Everton and Nottingham Forest boss Sean Dyche has witnessed that resilience up close.
“In difficult times, Pep didn’t panic,” he said. “He adjusted, but he stayed true to what he believes.
“I think it’s brilliant management from Pep, and Arteta… they have tried to win a certain way, but they have also evolved to play in ways that we knew before.”
There is another layer to the challenge Arteta faces, one created, in part, by Guardiola himself.
“The biggest shift in football now is that winning isn’t enough anymore,” added Dyche. “People ask how you win.”
Guardiola changed expectations.
So now Arsenal, despite their development, are judged on results of course, but also on perception.
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Williams still fighting after 29 years at the Crucible
Williams still fighting after 29 years at the Crucible
Three-time world champion Mark Williams says he has no intention of retiring as he returns for his 29th appearance at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield.
Williams, 51, is seeded six for the 2026 World Championships where he will face Polish qualifier Antoni Kowalski in the first round.
Read more: ‘I’d run down the M4 from London to Cardiff naked’
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‘I’d run the M4 naked’ – Williams targets snooker history
“I’d run down the M4 from London to Cardiff naked.”
That’s how desperate Mark Williams is to win a fourth world title. It’s a bold statement, even in jest.
When he last triumphed at the Crucible in 2018, Williams fulfilled a similar pre-tournament pledge to strip off in front of the world’s media.
Williams beat John Higgins 18-16 in the final, adding to previous titles in 2000 and 2003, and appeared naked, save for a towel, at his post-match press conference.
“I’d do anything to get another title, but the years go by and you’re less likely to win it,” he said prior to this year’s event.
If he does win, he might be willing to cause traffic chaos on the motorway, while it would mean he surpasses Ronnie O’Sullivan as the oldest ever world champion.
Image source, Getty ImagesThe 51-year-old from the small south Wales village of Cwm, near Ebbw Vale, came agonisingly close to achieving that milestone last year.
The oldest ever finalist, he was eventually beaten 18-12 by Zhao Xintong who himself made history as the first Chinese, and Asian, world champion.
Health issues
Williams reached the final despite his deteriorating eyesight for which he is awaiting lens replacement surgery.
“If it goes wrong, that’s the end. That’s the only thing stopping me. I spoke to [former player] Anthony Hamilton, who also had it done, and because of the glare of the TV lights, it ruined his career,” said Williams.
“Eventually I’ll get my eyes done but whether or not that’s this year, next year, I don’t know.”
As well as an unusual fear of teabags, Williams also revealed after the Tour Championship in Manchester earlier this year he had been struggling with yips – a sudden and unexplained loss of ability to execute certain skills.
“It’s a bit concerning. I’m like a paranoid mess at the minute, because I’m just thinking, I’m not going to screw it back, and I’m snatching. And yeah, it’s not great, but I need the practise to get out of it,” added Williams.
“I’m not putting in enough work. I’m going to come in now and try and play most days until the World Championship just to try and get that timing back.”
Image source, Getty ImagesWilliams’ cautiousness about going under the knife suggests he still has ambitions to continue on the baize for years to come – and who can blame him.
Last October, at the age of 50 years and 206 days, he beat the mark set back in 1982 by fellow Welshman Ray Reardon to become the oldest winner of a ranking event when he triumphed in the Xi’an Grand Prix.
Even now, having turned 51 last month, he is ranked sixth in the world going into the World Championship this weekend.
“When I was 45 I said I’d like to see where I am in the rankings when I’m 50,” Williams recalled.
“I’m not retiring, I made that decision years ago. Let’s see where I am in the rankings at 55, that’ll be interesting.”
He may have ruled out retirement but is not feeling quite so confident about his chances at the Crucible this year.
“I’m still fighting. I’m still trying and that’s all I can say,” he said.
“I try my best in every tournament and if you win, great, if you lose, that’s not the end of the world.
“I’ve been doing this since I was an eight-year-old kid. My father was going down the mines for 30 years, my grandfather for 50 years.
“I’m just travelling around the world playing the stupid game of snooker, getting paid well for it and enjoying it. You can’t put too much pressure on yourself.”
Williams has something of a love-hate relationship with the Crucible, but after three previous successes he welcomed confirmation the World Championship will remain at the Sheffield venue until at least 2045.
“It’s good. I’ve always said the Crucible is not my favourite venue, but without doubt the World Championships should stay there,” he said.
“It’s the home of snooker and there’s no atmosphere like it. It’s perfect as it is.”
The Welsh Potting Machine starts his bid for a fourth world title on the opening day of the tournament – Saturday, 18 May – against qualifier Antoni Kowalski.
Were he to make it all the way to the two-day final on 3-4 May he might need to pull on those running trainers – but nothing else.
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23 hours ago
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Sports
Spectacular European nights the new normal for Villa under Emery
They say a week is a long time in football – never mind an entire decade.
It is exactly 10 years since Aston Villa were relegated to English football’s second tier for the first time since 1987 after a 1-0 loss at Manchester United.
It was their ninth consecutive league defeat during a 13-game winless run that ended their miserable 2015-16 season, which left the 1982 European Cup winners facing a largely uncertain future under their American owner Randy Lerner.
They then spent three long seasons in the Championship before finally returning to the top flight for the 2019-20 campaign, but were still struggling for identity and direction until the arrival of Unai Emery.
Fast forward to Thursday and you could argue that Villa are now back among Europe’s elite.
A commanding 7-1 aggregate win over Bologna sealed their place in the Europa League semi-final with minimum fuss at Villa Park. And it barely registered as a momentous occasion – a marker of progress achieved under Emery, who has transformed the club and raised standards and expectations in recent seasons.
This is Villa’s second European semi-final in three seasons under the Spanish manager, following a Conference League run in 2023-24, and comes after a Champions League quarter-final appearance last season.
“If someone told me we’d be fighting for the Champions League and in a semi-final of the Europa League a couple of years ago I’d have bitten their hand off,” said Ollie Watkins, who scored three goals over two legs against Bologna.
“So we are just trying to take it all in and enjoy the process,” Villa’s latest member of the 100-goal club told TNT Sports.
They are also firmly in the Premier League top-five race, sitting in fourth place with six games remaining and targeting a return to the Champions League via the league.
A European semi-final against Nottingham Forest now awaits them, and 10 years on from the despair of relegation, this feels like the new normal for Villa under Emery.
“Villa was perfect tonight, every player played their part and they are deservedly going through to the semi-final,” their former midfielder Stiliyan Petrov told TNT Sports.
“They fully deserve to enjoy this moment as they worked really hard. It is about believing and I think these players do now believe that they can make it to that final.”
‘We have learned something each year’
Image source, Getty ImagesEmery replaced Steven Gerrard as Villa manager in October 2022 with Villa hovering just above the relegation zone on goal difference.
The former Arsenal and Villarreal boss brought with him his own backroom staff, with many of the old guard departing.
Former Sevilla goalkeeper Monchi also joined as Villa’s president of football operations in June 2023 – having previously worked with Emery at Sevilla and winning three Europa League titles together.
Emery immediately made an impact, imposing structure, clarity and belief on a Villa side that was once again flirting with relegation to guide them to a top‑seven finish and European qualification in his first season.
The following campaign proved the progress was no fluke.
Turning Villa Park into a fortress, they established themselves as a top‑four contender during 2023-24 while also reaching the semi-finals of the Conference League, where they were beaten 6-2 on aggregate by Olympiakos.
“The first year we got here in the Conference League, a lot of us hadn’t played in Europe so when we got to the latter stages there was a lot of pressure,” Watkins said.
“Each year we’ve learned and taken something from it. And to trust the manager because he’s so experienced in this competition. He’s won it numerous times so we believe in what he tells us and keep going.”
A first taste of top-tier European competition since 1982-83 came last season when they reached the Champions League quarter-finals against Emery’s former side Paris St-Germain.
And on their way to the last eight, they posted memorable league-stage wins against Bayern Munich and RB Leipzig while also holding Juventus to a goalless draw.
And this season’s run on the continental stage further underlines their upward trajectory under the Spaniard.
“It’s an amazing achievement for us to progress to the semi-finals and to go one step further than last year in the Champions League,” Watkins said.
“We’re really enjoying being in this competition and this is where we want to be, in the semi-finals.”
Emery told TNT Sports: “I’m very happy. We were organised and tried to impose our ideas and style, which is not easy against Bologna.”
“We are so happy with the way we are performing in this competition. It was fantastic. We are in the semi-finals, but there is still work to do.”
‘It will be very difficult against Forest’
Image source, Getty ImagesVilla are under no illusions about the challenge ahead as they head into the semi-final against Forest as tournament favourites.
Forest earned their place in their first European semi-final since1984 with a 1-0 win against 10-man Porto in the second leg.
Despite Forest being involved in a relegation battle domestically, Villa know their opponents’ resilience first hand having been held to a 1-1 draw by Vitor Pereira’s side last weekend.
“It’s a really exciting time for me personally and the team collectively,” said Watkins, who scored his 100th goal for the club in all competitions on Thursday.
We’ve come out the sticky period and we’ve got it all to play for. But it’s going to be difficult.
“We’ve played [Forest] twice already this season and it’s not been easy. But we focus on each game and enjoy the process.”
Emery also echoed Watkins’ caution when looking ahead to the all-English last-four contest.
“Now we will play in a semi-final and it will be very difficult against Forest,” he said.
The first leg of their last-four tie against Forest will be played in Nottingham on 30 April before the return leg in Birmingham on 7 May.
Win that, and a European final in Istanbul awaits against either Portugal’s Braga face Bundesliga side Freiburg on 20 May.
And Forest will very much fancy their chances to end a 30-year trophy drought in the Turkish city and add to their 1982 European triumph, under Emery who has already won the competition four times before.
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12 March
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16 August 2025

Sports
Why ‘sensational’ Palace & Conference League are good fit
Almost a year ago Crystal Palace fans experienced a day they will have felt could never be topped.
On Saturday, 17 May 2025, their side famously beat Manchester City to win the FA Cup – a first major trophy success in their 120-year history as a professional club.
It was a once-in-a-life-time moment for those connected with the Eagles – but they will now be pinching themselves once again as they find themselves just one step away from a first major European final appearance.
Making their debut in this competition, Palace booked a meeting with Shakhtar Donetsk in the Conference League semi-finals after overcoming Italians Fiorentina over two legs.
They lost the second leg on Thursday 2-1 but after winning the opener 3-0 at Selhurst Park, the fans who had travelled to Italy were determined not to let anything spoil their party.
Palace goalkeeper Dean Henderson summed up the feeling as he told TNT Sports: “This is unbelievable for this football club, sensational when you think of the FA Cup last season and then to keep going and create a new chapter in the book.
“The togetherness in the group is phenomenal and at the business end of the season, we come together.
“We’ve just got to keep pushing on and build momentum.”
Palace latest team to show why competition matters
Image source, AFP via Getty ImagesWhen the Conference League was first introduced back in 2021 there were some who questioned the value of the competition.
But it has offered many teams the chance to do something they had never done before – win a major European trophy.
There were wild scenes of celebration when Roma became the inaugural winners, while the following year West Ham claimed a dramatic last-minute success against Fiorentina to end their 43-year wait for a major trophy.
Thousands gathered in the streets of east London to welcome back the victorious Hammers, underlining how much the win meant to the club and their supporters.
Palace fans will no doubt feel the same should their side go all the way and claim yet more silverware in a memorable 12 months.
Former Crystal Palace defender James Tomkins said on TNT Sports: “The last couple of seasons have been incredible.
“They never expected to be in a European competition a couple of seasons ago but now they are going from strength to strength in this competition.
“They will feel they can go all the way.”
Sarr the star as he adds ‘less glamorous goals’ to his game
Midway through this season, though, it looked like things were derailing for Palace.
The man who had led them to their FA Cup triumph, Oliver Glasner, seemed on the verge of leaving after criticising the club’s ownership in January for “abandoning” the team.
Palace were on a poor run of form at the time which had seen them drop down the table, while they finished 10th in the Conference League group phase.
On 16 January Glasner stated he would leave at the end of the season when his contract expired – an announcement that left Palace fans concerned about the rest of the campaign.
But after that confirmation and Glasner remaining in the post, the club’s form steadily improved. After beating Zrinjski Mostar over two legs in their Conference League play-off, they have since beaten AEK Larnaca and now Fiorentina to reach the last four.
Key to their form in Europe has been striker Ismaila Starr, who scored his seventh goal in the competition in Thursday’s 2-1 loss.
Five of those seven goals have come since February, while he has scored 17 in all competitions.
“The variety of goals he scores are key,” said ex-Manchester City defender Joleon Lescott.
“He has always scored good goals but the less glamorous ones that are equally important, he has added them to his game.”
Image source, AFP via Getty ImagesCan Eagles really go all the way?
Despite being debutants, Palace were installed as favourites to win the Conference League at the start of the season.
It took a while for them to live up to that tag, with many of their performances in Europe looking somewhat turgid.
But their 3-0 win against Fiorentina – two-time finalists in the Conference League – showed what they are capable of.
Next up for Palace is a two-legged semi-final with Shakhtar, with Strasbourg facing Rayo Vallecano in the other tie.
“They made light work of them [Fiorentina] really, but from here on in they will expect some really tough games, there is some good quality in the competition,” added Tomkins.
“The question is whether they can bring the positivity from the first leg. That was the best I’ve seen them for a while, the three-week break did them the world of good and they looked like the team we saw early this season and last season.”
The season will end with Glasner’s departure, but it could also end with a European prize.
“Of course, that is what we all want,” said the Austrian.
“We want to enjoy our life together, not just the football. The more successful you are, the more you enjoy your life.
“When you play the semi-final, you want to get it all at the end and that’s what we will go for.”
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12 March
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16 August 2025

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