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THE UNTOLD STORY OF HOW SADIO MANE SAVED THE AFCON FINAL FROM COLLAPSE

Sadio Mane saved the match before winning the trophy. Relive the chaos, the walk-off, and the dramatic extra-time win in Rabat.

The untold story of how Sadio Mane saved the AFCON final from collapse
Sadio Mane directs traffic as Senegal players storm off in Rabat protest

The AFCON final in Rabat between Senegal and Morocco took a wild turn in injury time. With the score still stuck at 0-0, Senegal thought they’d finally broken through—a late header, in the back of the net. Then the ref called it back. Abdoulaye Seck got flagged for a foul on Achraf Hakimi, who went down like he’d been hit by a bus.

Things only got messier from there. Moments later, Brahim Diaz went flying in the box after the slightest pull from El Hadji Malick Diouf during a corner. The ref pointed to the spot. The Senegalese players weren’t having it. Most of the team stormed off the pitch, straight into the tunnel, while everyone tried to figure out what was happening. Sadio Mané hung back, talking to the officials and some of the Moroccan players, trying to calm things down. Eventually, Senegal’s coach, Pape Thiaw, convinced his players to come back out.

Thiaw actually started the walkout after the referee checked the VAR monitor for Diouf’s penalty. At first, Mane looked ready to join his teammates, but then he stopped. He started waving them back, almost like he was directing traffic, and, eventually, they listened. With 126 caps for Senegal, people respect Mané. The match finally restarted.

Diaz tried to get cheeky with his penalty, going for a Panenka in the 24th minute of injury time. Edouard Mendy read it perfectly and made the save.

Then, just four minutes into extra time, Senegal turned the whole thing on its head. Pape Gueye fired a shot from outside the box, and it slipped past Moroccan keeper Yacine Bono. Finally, someone scored.

Mane, now 33, has earned a reputation as a true leader, not just for his play but for everything he’s done off the pitch. He’s helped build schools, handed out laptops, and even given money to the government when they needed it.

He told the BBC before the game, “I never wanted to be recognised after my career as a great football player. I just want to be recognised as a great, great human. For me, this is the more important honour.”

Back in 2022, Mane led Senegal to their first-ever AFCON title, beating his Liverpool teammate Mo Salah in the final. This latest tournament is his sixth (2015, 2017, 2019, 2022, 2024, 2025). He played three times as a Liverpool player, missing club matches so he could represent his country.

With 10 career AFCON goals, Mane sits tied for ninth all-time in the tournament’s history.

THE NAPOLI TRAP: MAPPING THE €70M PENALTY CLAUSE BLOCKING OSIMHEN’S ITALIAN RETURN

Victor Osimhen transfer update: Discover why a return to Italy is "impossible" and how Chelsea could fund his massive salary.

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Chelsea Re-Enter Victor Osimhen Race As PSG Salary Cap Blocks French Move

Victor Osimhen only joined Galatasaray last summer, but the transfer rumours just won’t let up. Chelsea have chased him for ages, and now people keep linking him with another big move.

Galatasaray didn’t just make noise last year; they shook Turkish football. They went all out in the transfer market, spending like never before and forcing bitter rivals Fenerbahçe to open their own wallets wide.

They smashed their old transfer record (which was €18 million) by paying €75 million for Osimhen alone. Then they brought in Wilfried Singo for €31 million and Ugurcan Cakir for €27.5 million. Ismaila Jakobs and Przemyslaw Frankowski joined as well, costing another €8 million and €7 million. The whole spree? €148.5 million. And that’s not even counting the huge wages for these guys and for free agents like Leroy Sane and Ilkay Gundogan. Meanwhile, Galatasaray only brought in €18 million from player sales.

So yeah, people are starting to wonder if this is sustainable. Telegrafi ran the numbers and tried to calm everyone down, suggesting the spending isn’t as reckless as it looks.

Is Galatasaray going to have to sell Osimhen? The club pulled in roughly €275 million in revenue last season and might hit €350 million this year. That’s solid for any club, even compared to Europe’s biggest.

Their Champions League run, knocking out Juventus and reaching the round of 16, already earned them about €40 million, and that’s not including TV money and other perks from the tournament.

Add it all up, and Galatasaray’s assets are worth a net €143 million. They’re also fully compliant with UEFA’s Squad Cost Ratio rule, mostly because they’re spreading out the cost of those big transfer fees.

Still, Turkish football has a rough history with money. Plenty of clubs have crashed and burned, so fans are nervous about Galatasaray spending so much so fast.

And with Osimhen, people are doubting he’ll stick around. His wages alone, €15 million a season, are a heavy load for any Turkish club. Rumour has it he’s even missed a couple of pay cheques. Honestly, that’s not unheard of. Alvaro Morata called Galatasaray out for not paying up last summer. But with Osimhen, it’s just speculation for now.

Despite all that, the chatter about Osimhen leaving is only getting louder. He’s been talking up Juventus recently, a club that tried to sign him last summer. Napoli blocked that move; they didn’t want to sell to a Serie A rival.

To stop any quick return to Italy, Napoli added a penalty clause when they sold Osimhen to Gala. According to Gazzetta dello Sport, if Galatasaray sells him back to Serie A in 2026, they owe Napoli another €70 million. In 2027, it drops to €50 million.

That clause only runs for two years, but with Serie A clubs struggling for cash, paying €100 million-plus for Osimhen (once you add his wages and the penalty) just isn’t realistic. Juventus or anyone else in Italy? Out of the question, at least for now.

So, if Galatasaray has to sell Osimhen, whether for money or other reasons, the Premier League seems like the most likely landing spot. He’s already turned down moves to Saudi Arabia. The guy wants to stay in Europe.

PSG looked at him, but their new salary cap rules make a deal tough. Same story with Chelsea in the past; they just didn’t want to cover his pay cheque. Still, Chelsea keeps coming up in the rumours, and some fans want the club to rethink their transfer plans and bring in proven winners to help guide Liam Rosenior’s young squad.

Osimhen would cost a fortune, no question. But he’s exactly the kind of player Chelsea needs.

THREE GAMES LEFT? WHY ANTOINE GRIEZMANN’S ATLéTICO CAREER COULD END ON MARCH 7TH

Griezmann to Orlando City: Discover the verbal agreement allowing a free transfer and the latest on the Tottenham UCL draw.

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Antoine Griezmann Could Join Orlando City Before The March 26 Deadline

Diego Simeone admits he really doesn't know if Antoine Griezmann will stick around at Atlético Madrid until the end of the season, as the French forward’s talks with Orlando City heat up.

Earlier this week, ESPN reported that Griezmann is deep in negotiations with the MLS club, even though his contract with Atlético runs until 2027. Sources say both sides want to get the deal done now, and things are moving fast.

Griezmann isn’t just another player for Atlético; he’s their all-time top scorer and still one of their most important guys on the pitch. He’s already played 22 La Liga games this season, and the team’s got some serious matches coming up, including a Copa del Rey semifinal second leg against Barcelona on Tuesday.

Simeone, speaking earlier in the week, said Griezmann has earned the right to choose what comes next after everything he’s given the club.

“I already said it the other day,” Simeone told reporters on Friday before Atlético’s game at Oviedo. “I’m not going to keep repeating myself. We honestly don’t know what’s going to happen. Everyone knows how much Antoine means to us.”

Friday’s Champions League draw threw Atlético up against Tottenham, with the first leg in Madrid on March 10 or 11 and the return in London a week later.

After the draw, Atlético’s director of football, Mateu Alemany, tried to shut down the rumours. “Antoine has this season and two more years on his contract. He’s totally focused on what’s ahead. He’s playing great. Right now, we’re counting on him for tomorrow, for Tuesday, and for the Champions League. Everything else is just talk.”

But sources tell ESPN that Griezmann might actually leave sooner, with a possible farewell at home against his old club, Real Sociedad, on March 7.

If that happens, Griezmann would have just three more games in red and white: Oviedo on Saturday, Barcelona on Tuesday, and then Real Sociedad.

“We’re talking with Antoine,” Simeone said. “He knows what he means to us. There’s no need to pressure him. We just have to focus on what’s in front of us: Oviedo, Barcelona, Real Sociedad, and Tottenham. Big games.”

MLS’s transfer window closes on March 26 and then opens again in July.

Right now, all sides are working out the final details of the transfer, according to ESPN’s sources.

Simeone would have liked Griezmann to finish out the LaLiga season, then leave in the summer, but there’s a verbal agreement in place. Atlético promised Griezmann he could go for free whenever he decided it was time.

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