Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain each faces a shocking early exit from the Champions League for the first time in more than a decade.
Manchester City once again coughed up a Champions League lead, losing 4-2 from 2-0 up against a rampant Paris Saint-Germain.
The Champions League’s new look league phase reaches its conclusion with big names like Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain in danger of early elimination.
American soccer fans can stream every fixture of this season's tournament via Paramount Plus, which has exclusive live English-language broadcast rights in the US for the UEFA Champions League. Paramount Plus has two main subscription plans in the US: Essential for $8 a month and Premium for $13 a month. Both offer coverage of the Champions League.
Manchester City’s Champions League play-off hopes will rest on the final matchday of the league phase after they once again threw away a two-goal lead to fall to a deserved defeat to Paris Saint-Germain at the Parc des Princes.
Paris Saint-Germain can punch their ticket to the next phase of the UEFA Champions League when they face VfB Stuttgart. After a comeback win against Manchester City, Luis Enrique and his team control
Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester City met in the UEFA Champions League at Parc des Princes on Wednesday in one of the most critical league phase games. The Ligue 1 titleholders and their English Premier League counterparts are both staring down the barrel at potential continental elimination after poor runs of form this European season.
Clubs worldwide made a record 22,779 international transfers in men’s soccer in 2024 for a total spend of $8.59 billion, world soccer’s governing body FIFA said in its Global Transfer Report published on Thursday.
After a frantic last round of action Wednesday, the inaugural 36-team league phase in Champions League history is over.
Real Madrid's 3–0 victory against Brest sent Carlo Ancelotti's side through to the Champions League knockout stage.
English clubs were once again the number one spenders, with US$1.88 billion spent on incoming transfers. Read more at straitstimes.com.