-
Rosenior defends Jorgensen after 'keeper gaffe costs Chelsea against PSG
-
US takes first steps towards new global trade penalties
-
Iran says war could destroy global economy, Trump vows to 'finish' job
-
PSG hit five to stun Chelsea in Champions League last 16
-
Real Madrid batter Man City as PSG sink Chelsea in Champions League
-
Senegal parliament doubles penalty for same-sex relations
-
PSG hit five to stun Chelsea in Champions League last 16, first leg
-
Swiatek routs Muchova to reach Indian Wells quarter-finals
-
Warriors star Curry out at least 10 more days with sore knee
-
Bodo/Glimt down Sporting to continue dream Champions League debut
-
Real Madrid run riot as Valverde treble stuns Man City
-
UN Security Council demands Iran halt attacks on Gulf states
-
Tottenham's Kinsky thanks support after Champions League 'nightmare'
-
McIlroy is 'game-time decision' for Players Championship
-
Arteta lauds goalscorer Havertz on Leverkusen return
-
Despite reputation, bonobos are aggressive, particularly toward males: study
-
Cracknell senses Wales close to ending Six Nations losing streak
-
Iranian sea mines: the West's waterborne nightmare
-
US, India still at odds with majority on WTO reform
-
Late Havertz penalty snatches Arsenal draw at Leverkusen
-
Iran warns of long war that would 'destroy' world economy
-
Lebanon village wants army protection from Israel, Hezbollah
-
Mexico considering social media restriction for minors: minister to AFP
-
New crackdown feared in Iran after police chief brands protesters 'enemies'
-
Strategic oil reserves, a crisis cushion
-
Greek appeals court hands neo-Nazi leaders 13-year sentences
-
Dortmund extend deal with in-demand Nmecha until 2030
-
All-conquering Mullins lands Champion Chase with Il Etait Temps
-
Albania TikTok ban violated free speech, court rules
-
German central bank abandons controversial overhaul
-
IEA to launch largest-ever release of oil reserves
-
Iran 'welcome to compete' in World Cup, says Trump
-
Scotland can handle Six Nations pressure, says Darge
-
Vingegaard seizes control of Paris-Nice with stage 4 win
-
North America 'heat dome' left winners and losers: study
-
Iran warns ready for long war that would 'destroy' world economy
-
Bayern trio Musiala, Davies and Urbig sidelined with injuries
-
UN urges 'exemptions' to get aid through Strait of Hormuz
-
Oil prices jump despite strategic reserve release
-
Earth's ice is melting: where and how fast?
-
Arctic sea ice among lowest on record: AFP review of US data
-
Man set himself alight in fatal Swiss bus fire: prosecutor
-
'This is me, very pretty': inside a Cambodian cyberscam site
-
Spain to deploy tool to track social media hate speech
-
Death toll from Ukrainian attack on Russia's Bryansk rises to 7: governor
-
'Legendary' Barbra Streisand to receive Honorary Palme d'Or at Cannes
-
Devine, Mooney top women's Hundred auction
-
British fintech Revolut gets full UK banking licence
-
US consumer inflation unchanged but price shocks from Iran war loom
-
Kneecap rapper scores new court victory as UK prosecutors lose appeal
Real Madrid run riot as Valverde treble stuns Man City
Federico Valverde's superb first-half hat-trick helped Real Madrid demolish Manchester City 3-0 in a surprise Champions League last 16 first leg rout on Wednesday.
Los Blancos were missing several key players including Kylian Mbappe but Uruguayan midfielder Valverde's stunning treble, netted inside a 22-minute spell, crushed Pep Guardiola's team at the Santiago Bernabeu.
Vinicius Junior missed a penalty in the second half as Madrid could have built further on their significant lead ahead of the second leg in Manchester next Tuesday.
Even though Madrid are the record 15-time winners, their sketchy form offered little reason to believe they would pull off such a dominant result in what has become a modern Champions League classic.
City, who won the competition for the first and only time in 2023, even beat Madrid in the league phase and have strengthened since then.
However the Spanish giants produced their most convincing display of the season just when it mattered most to leave the Premier League visitors stunned.
Madrid coach Alvaro Arbeloa, shorn of injured stars Mbappe, Jude Bellingham and Rodrygo Goes among several others, started 18-year-old midfielder Thiago Pitarch after some recent bright displays.
Arbeloa said he was expecting a surprise or two from former Barca coach Guardiola, and the Catalan selected a particularly attacking line-up, seeking to capitalise on the frailties Madrid have exhibited this season.
Guardiola opted for only two central midfielders and left Phil Foden and Rayan Cherki on the bench. Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi made their Champions League debuts and for an all-too-brief period City seemed to be settling in at the Bernabeu.
Trent Alexander-Arnold did well to keep Erling Haaland at bay before Semenyo drew the first save from Madrid's Thibaut Courtois.
Madrid took the lead against the run of play when Courtois thumped a long ball down the pitch in Valverde's direction.
Nico O'Reilly misjudged it and the Madrid midfielder blazed through on goal. City goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma came out to try and stop him but Valverde nipped around him and rolled home in the 20th minute.
Seven minutes later Madrid's captain struck again. Vinicius Junior fed the midfielder who coolly drilled past Donnarumma to double the hosts' lead.
After a difficult first half of the season, consigned to playing at right-back mostly under Xabi Alonso, Arbeloa's arrival in January has unleashed Valverde.
The 27-year-old snatched a last-gasp winner at Celta Vigo in La Liga on Friday and said that victory was one which had raised the team's morale.
It appeared he was grasping for optimism ahead of the City clash in which most imagined Madrid to be underdogs, but Los Blancos played like a side who had found belief again.
- Best for last -
Valverde completed a first career hat-trick before half-time with the best of his three strikes.
Valverde neatly flicked Brahim Diaz's pass over the helpless Guehi and then volleyed home with aplomb as the Bernabeu crowd roared in delight. Finally they saw a Madrid they recognised, dynamic and, above all, competitive.
Diaz nearly netted a fourth soon after half-time but Donnarumma denied him, with City continuing to struggle after the interval.
Vinicius should have, after the Italian goalkeeper brought him down in the box, but Donnarumma read the Brazilian's intentions and saved his low penalty.
Man City's top scorer Haaland was kept quiet all night by Madrid centre-backs Antonio Rudiger and Dean Huijsen, with Guardiola replacing him even while chasing a goal.
Instead City's best chance to pull one back fell to O'Reilly as Pitarch's focus waned, but Courtois made a stunning reaction save with his leg to deny him and secure a precious clean sheet.
J.Gomez--AT