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Portugal 2 Spain 2 (5-3 pens): Tearful Cristiano Ronaldo, 40, wins third international trophy as Morata misses penalty

PORTUGAL tasted Nations League glory for a second time with Cristiano Ronaldo playing a starring role – and Chelsea flop Alvaro Morata the villain.

After winning the inaugural 2019 edition, Roberto Martinez’s men are champions once more in a thrilling finale in Munich, fighting back twice to draw level against reigning European champions Spain.

MUNICH, GERMANY - JUNE 08: Ruben Dias and team mates of Portugal celebrate after Ruben Neves of Portugal (not pictured) scores his sides winning penalty during the UEFA Nations League 2025 final match between Portugal and Spain at Munich Football Arena on June 08, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Lars Baron/Getty Images)
Portugal beat Spain 5-3 on penalties in the Nations League final
A man in a red jersey crying while embracing another man.
Cristiano Ronaldo broke down in tears after Ruben Neves scored the last spot-kick
MUNICH, GERMANY - JUNE 08: Diogo Costa of Portugal saves a penalty taken by Alvaro Morata of Spain during a penalty shootout during the UEFA Nations League 2025 final match between Portugal and Spain at Munich Football Arena on June 08, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)
Diogo Costa saved Alvaro Morata’s penalty

Ronaldo netted an ingenious equalising 61st minute volley to make it 2-2 for his 938th career goal and 138th for his country – but the 40-year-old watched the penalties from the bench, along with 17-year-old teenage superstar Lamine Yamal.

And Spain’s Morata missed his spot-kick for Ruben Neves to slot home the winner.

Both nations were vying to become the first to lift the Nations League twice.

A slow start was thrust into life by a Nico Williams whipped curler that just cleared the bar after 17 minutes – and four minutes later the Spaniards were ahead.

Yamal at the heart of it, his delicious cross was made a mess of by a scrambling Portugal defence, allowing soon-to-be Arsenal midfielder Martin Zubimendi to score just his second international goal.

Spain were 4-0 up after 55 minutes in their 5-4 semi thriller against France last week, but Ronaldo was not about to let that happen again as he burst in behind to spark an attack.

It ended with Mendes firing low into the bottom corner in the 26th minute, but not before a VAR check that judged Ronaldo to have timed his run to perfection.

The final say of the first half was Spain’s.

Spain's Martin Zubimendi celebrates scoring his side's opening goal during the Nations League final soccer match between Portugal and Spain at the Allianz Arena in Munich, Germany, Sunday, June 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)
Arsenal target Martin Zubimendi opened the scoring in the 21st minute
Soccer Football - Nations League - Final - Portugal v Spain - Allianz Arena, Munich, Germany - June 8, 2025 Portugal's Nuno Mendes scores their first goal REUTERS/Michaela Stache TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Nuno Mendes levelled the scores within five minutes
MUNICH, GERMANY - JUNE 8: Mikel Oyarzabal #21 of Spain scores Spains second goal against Diogo Costa of Portugal during the UEFA Nations League 2025 final match between Portugal and Spain at Munich Football Arena on June 8, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by EyesWideOpen/Getty Images)
Mikel Oyarzabal made it 2-1 on the stroke of half-time
Match stats graphic showing Portugal vs Spain; key stats include shots, possession, and passes.

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Pedri with a superb reverse pass to tee up Mikel Oyarzabal in injury time – the man who broke English hearts in the Euros final in Berlin last summer producing another big goal in Munich.

Martinez responded by bringing on Neves and Nelson Semedo at the break, and it almost had an instant impact as Bruno Fernandes had a 49th minute strike ruled out for offside.

An equaliser was coming and Ronaldo reacted first to a deflected looped cross that bamboozled Marc Cucurella for his eighth Nations League of the campaign.

He hobbled off with a muscular injury in the 88th minute, while Yamal was subbed in the 106th minute, as the game became niggly with a VAR red-check following a mass melee.

Goncalo Ramos, Vitinha, Bruno Fernandes and Nuno Mendes all slotted home their penalties before Neves became the hero.

Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates after scoring his side's second goal against Spain during the Nations League final soccer match between Portugal and Spain at the Allianz Arena in Munich, Germany, Sunday, June 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)
Ronaldo equalised in the 61st minute – his 138rd international goal
MUNICH, GERMANY - JUNE 08: Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal reacts following an injury during the UEFA Nations League 2025 final match between Portugal and Spain at Munich Football Arena on June 08, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Sebastian Widmann - UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images)
Ronaldo limped off injured in the the 87th minute

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Labour can’t preach about hard choices while spending billions on migrant hotels… tax hikes will see Reform surge higher

Illustration of a woman shaking a money tree, alongside a photo of the same woman and another man.

EVERY single day, every ­single penny paid in tax by enough workers to fill a city the size of Manchester goes toward just one thing.

Some 582,000 folk, including nurses, teachers, builders, ­drivers and shop workers, all striving and ­contributing their fair share for one goal . . . 

Illustration of a woman pulling a UK government cape revealing a money tree.
Labour can’t preach about hard choices while spending billions on migrant hotels… tax hikes will see Reform surge higher
Rachel Reeves giving a speech at a podium.
AFP
How can Rachel Reeves preach fiscal responsibility while chucking such vast amounts of cash out the door?[/caption]

Their entire income tax and National Insurance contributions hoovered up by the same mind-boggling government bill.

They are paying to keep migrants in hotels, often rather nice ones.

The National Audit Office puts the bill for asylum accommodation and support last year at an eye-watering £4.7billion.

And that’s before healthcare costs and the price of the thousands of ­officials processing claims are factored in.

Now, new analysis by former Office for National Statistics numbers man Jamie Jenkins reveals who is picking up the tab.

‘Deeply concerned’

The mean average salary across all UK workers was £38,224 last year, generating an estimated £8,081 in tax per head.

Divide the hotel and support bill by that and you get 582,000 workers — almost exactly the population of the City of Manchester.

Or just over the size of ­Liverpool. Or bigger than Leicester or Leeds.

Last Tuesday, Home ­Secretary Yvette Cooper told MPs she was “deeply concerned about the level of money” being spent on hotels, adding: “We need to end asylum hotels ­altogether.”

But by the end of the week, her own department quietly admitted they are diverting another £2.2billion of money earmarked for overseas development assistance cash for hotels this year.

That’s basically the same amount as last year, despite shameless ministers sent out to insist on the airwaves that hotel use is falling and this Government has got a grip.

And the numbers blow away claims from politicians of all hues that we need a period of belt-tightening, with hard ­choices to be made.

Fair-minded voters — who believe in so-called sound money, restraint, spending within our means or whatever you want to call it — have every right to look upon this aghast.

And where the public might have had some sympathy over tough choices needing to be addressed, that argument is holed below the waterline by the seemingly endless magic money tree available for new arrivals to be housed while our veterans sleep on the streets.

Why can’t we spend more on our defence sooner rather than later, when we clearly have billions to spend on this?

Harry

The screeching U-turn on slashing Winter Fuel Payments is a case in point, after Labour MPs were hammered on the doorstep while campaigning in last month’s local elections.

Voters who were sympathetic towards the two-child benefit cap a few years ago are now looking — through the prism of asylum hotels — at a state that is willing to pay such sums towards foreign arrivals, rather than on hungry British kids.

Billions to spend

And why can’t we spend more on our defence sooner rather than later, when we clearly have billions to spend on this?

Which puts a deeply unpopular and struggling Government in something of a bind.

How can Rachel Reeves preach fiscal responsibility while chucking such vast amounts of cash out the door?

As the Chancellor’s negotiations with Cabinet ministers ahead of Wednesday’s Spending Review go to the wire, it’s going to be a very hard sell that police and crime budgets need to be cut in the same department that is bleeding out cash on migrant hotels.

But the Home Office will see a reduction in their share of the pie, with Reeves playing hardball.

And while she will heavily play up this week that there will be no return to “austerity”, with some eye-catching investment announcements across the country in a bid to buy off angry voters eyeing up Reform, her fundamental problems have not changed.

Reeves’ attempts to cut the benefits bill are being met with fierce opposition from Labour MPs

Harry

The Chancellor has Labour MPs on one side demanding more cash in their areas, ­alongside furious Cabinet colleagues fighting cuts to their departments, while on the other side, the international bond markets, which keep the spending merry-go-around going, are looking at the numbers with deep suspicion.

Looking wobbly

Reeves’ attempts to cut the benefits bill are being met with fierce opposition from Labour MPs, armed with this very argument: Why should disabled constituents see their support cut while billions are handed to young men who have come here after passing through numerous safe countries?

The self-proclaimed Iron Chancellor was looking wobbly already after a series of U-turns, but if she is agreeing to billions more for the NHS and our Armed Forces, cuts are going to have to come from somewhere . . . and soon.

Her allies insist there will be some iron on Wednesday, yet until the Government fixes the hotels mess, I’m not sure they will receive much sympathy or praise from a furious public that sees the current priorities as completely bonkers.

And heaven knows how high Reform’s polling lead will be if the Chancellor decides tax hikes in the autumn to pay for this crazy spending are the right way forward.


THE row over trans people using women’s loos rumbles on after the Supreme Court ruling of the bleedin’ obvious: that there are only two sexes and women’s spaces need protecting.

That argument can be found in depth elsewhere, but more and more public places are making all their toilets gender-neutral.

Without going full Alan Partridge, that is having a major side-effect . . . queues.

Unlike the ladies, I can’t remember having to queue for the gents in a cafe, bar, club or theatre ever. Now it’s endless.


WE have all sent an angry message then regretted it the next morning – well, I certainly have.

But fair cop to Reform’s former chairman Zia Yusuf, who spectacularly stormed out of Nigel Farage’s party on Thursday night after furious backroom bust-ups.

He’s now back in a different role, having made up his differences behind the scenes.

Cue much social media mockery and crowing from Reform’s online enemies that the rag-tag bunch of surging upstarts couldn’t run a bath, let alone a country.

But I can’t help thinking there’s actually something quite grown up about throwing your hands up in the cold light of day and admitting you overcooked it and got it wrong.

I wonder if it might be more wishful thinking from Reform’s panicking opponents that any of this will really change the price of fish.

It’s hardly like either rival party – especially the Tories – have a leg to stand on when having a pop at others for squabbling.

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Wimbledon tennis finals to be shown on new TV channel after 88 years of BBC coverage 

Carlos Alcaraz holding the Wimbledon trophy.

THE Wimbledon singles finals will be shown live on a BBC rival – giving the broadcaster a unique boast.

Earlier this year, Eurosport landed a five-year deal that also includes a daily 90-minute package of tennis highlights from SW19.

Carlos Alcaraz holding the Wimbledon Gentleman's Singles Trophy.
Getty
Carlos Alcaraz, who won the French Open on Sunday, will be back at Wimbledon this year to defend the trophy, above, that he won in 2024[/caption]
Barbora Krejcikova holding the Wimbledon Ladies' Singles trophy.
Getty
Czech star Barbora Krejcikova lifted the women’s SW19 trophy last year[/caption]

But Eurosport then went off air after being bought out by TNT Sports, who have inherited the TV rights and will show the Wimbledon finals for the first time.

The Beeb will remain Wimbledon’s main domestic broadcaster – continuing its 88 years of coverage.

The arrangements BBC and TNT have are both with the All England Lawn Tennis Cub (AELTC).

Ofcom Listed Events regulations allow for “secondary broadcasters” at major sporting tournaments.

That’s the status TNT Sports is taking with the AELTC at Wimbledon.

This year’s Wimbledon runs from Monday June 30 to Sunday July 13.

Britain’s two-time SW19 king Andy Murray could return as a Beeb pundit, having ended a six-month stint coaching Novak Djokovic.

The grass-court tournament retains pride of place in the BBC’s sporting armoury.

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But it costs the Beeb around £60million a year for the privilege.

Carlos Alcaraz will be looking to make it three straight Wimbledon titles after two triumphs over Novak Djokovic in the last two years.

Djokovic, meanwhile will be hoping for an eighth title at the All-England Club, which would draw him level with Roger Federer.

And world number one Jannik Sinner will hope to bounce back from French Open final heartache to mount a strong challenge.

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I fell 9,000ft & LIVED after my paraglider wing collapsed during a flight… but I can’t wait to get back in the sky

A GRANDAD has told how his paraglider’s wing collapsed 9,000ft above the French Alps.

Retired counter-terrorism cop Steve Barnett, 57, flew into a storm cloud, saturating his glider.

A paraglider in the French Alps during a storm.
SWNS
Steve Barnett, 57, has told how his paraglider’s wing collapsed 9,000ft above the French Alps[/caption]
A paraglider falling through the air above the French Alps.
Stephen Barnett / SWNS
Steve flew into a storm cloud, saturating his glider[/caption]
A paraglider falling through trees after his wing collapsed.
Stephen Barnett / SWNS
Steve was sent falling 30ft through trees and broke his pelvis when he hit the ground at 40mph[/caption]

The wing caved under the weight of water as he tried an emergency landing — sending him falling 30ft through trees.

Steve broke his pelvis when he hit the ground at 40mph.

He called fellow paraglider Matt Roach, 47, for help.

The pal, in the air at the time, tracked him down and alerted a rescue helicopter.

Steve was airlifted from Passy, in south eastern France, to a hospital near the Italian border.

He was allowed to head home to Seaford, East Sussex, just two days later.

Steve recalled: “There was a big cloud and I started hearing a pitter patter on the wing.

“It came down heavier.

“Then all I could hear was this snapping, crackling and rippling.

“I bounced on the ground and rolled.

“It was like someone had kicked me really hard.”

Unfazed, he added: “I can’t wait to get back into the sky.”

Man on a cell phone in a forest after a paragliding accident.
Stephen Barnett / SWNS
Steve called fellow paraglider Matt Roach for help[/caption]
Man in hospital gown in a hospital bed.
Steve spent two days in hospital and now says ‘I can’t wait to get back into the sky’
SWNS

Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme – Sun Club.

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Bombshell report reveals Pentagon fueled UFO myths around Area 51 to hide classified weapons program

SOME wild UFO conspiracy theories were deliberately cooked up and stoked by the Pentagon itself, a bombshell report has revealed.

The U.S. Department of Defense spread claims that aliens were kept at Area 51 to cover up secret weapons programs, according to an investigation by The Wall Street Journal.

"Entering Area 51" sign behind a chain-link fence.
Getty
Some UFO conspiracy theories actually began inside the Department of Defense, the WSJ revealed[/caption]
Satellite view of Area 51 in Southern Nevada.
Getty
The purpose of the rumours was apparently to divert attention from secret weapons testing[/caption]
Illustration of a UFO behind a chain-link fence marked Area 51.
Getty
These details were quietly left out of the Department of Defense’s 2024 transparency report[/caption]

In the 1980s, a U.S. Air Force colonel visited a bar near Area 51 in Nevada and handed the owner doctored photos of flying saucers near the military base.

The photos were pinned to the walls – and before long, local legend, had it the U.S. military was secretly testing recovered alien tech.

This came to light in a shocking review of the 2024 Defense Department report published by The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) on Friday.

The now-retired officer admitted to Pentagon investigators in 2023 that he was on an official mission to hide the site’s real purpose.

What was really happening at Area 51 was the secret testing and development of weapons programs.

And ever more under wraps was the development of the world’s first stealth warplane – the F-117 Nighthawk – seen as vital to keeping ahead of the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

With conspiracy theories about Area 51 already running wild, the military figured that feeding those rumours would help hide their secret projects hidden from the Soviet Union’s watchful eye, investigators found.

But the Pentagon dismissed claims of a government UFO cover-up in their report last year.

The WSJ argues that not only did the government mislead the public but it actively fuelled UFO myths.

The report writes: “The Pentagon itself sometimes deliberately fanned the flames, in what amounted to the U.S. government targeting its own citizens with disinformation.”

It includes findings made by Sean Kirkpatrick, the first director of the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), who was tasked by the government in 2022 to investigate UFO theories.

Kirkpatrick’s office discovered several conspiracies that traced back to the Pentagon itself.

In one shocking case, his team found out that the Air Force was initiating new recruits by giving them mock briefings about a fake unit called “Yankee Blue” – which supposedly investigated alien spacecraft.

Under strict orders to keep quiet, many people never discovered that this was a prank, Kirkpatrick’s team claimed.

The strange practice continued until 2023 when the Pentagon finally issued an order across the DoD to put an end to it.

Another finding by Kirkpatrick, reported by the WSJ, was that the government deliberately misled the public about secret military projects.

For instance, Robert Salas, a former Air Force captain, claims he saw a UFO hover over a nuclear missile site in Montana in 1967.

In reality, what he saw was a test of an early electromagnetic pulse (EMP) designed to see if American silos could survive atomic radiation and retaliate if the Soviet Union struck first.

When the test failed, Salas was told to never discuss what he saw.

Kirkpatrick’s team discovered the captain was never told the truth.

DoD spokesperson Sue Gough admitted to the WSJ that the government has not shared all of AARO’s findings but promised a clearer report later this year.

Gough said: “The department is committed to releasing a second volume of its Historical Record Report, to include AARO’s findings on reports of potential pranks and inauthentic materials.”

It comes as a photo claiming to show a 1,000ft-wide silver UFO soaring over the US was released last month by a notorious Pentagon whistleblower.

The picture was allegedly snapped by an airline pilot in 2021 while flying 21,000ft above the Four Corners Monument – spanning New Mexico, Arizona, Utah and Colorado.

Luis Elizondo revealed the photo during a UAP Disclosure Fund event.

But sceptics were quick to challenge the discovery – claiming the photo merely showed irrigation circles that are common in desert climates.

Illustration of two UFOs flying in foggy sky.
Getty
Illustration of two UFOs flying in fog with light below.[/caption]

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