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Barça using Madrid complaints as final motivation

Barcelona Femení head coach Pere Romeu said his team will use Real Madrid's complaints over scheduling as "extra motivation" in Sunday's Spanish Supercopa final.
Madrid manager Alberto Toril has voiced his issue with Barça having extra rest before the final and the fact they trained in the later time slot on Saturday at Leganés' Estadio Municipal Butarque, where the game will be played.
Barça progressed to the final on Wednesday, courtesy of a 3-0 win over Atlético Madrid, while Real beat Real Sociedad 3-2 24 hours later.
"The rules are very clear," Romeu said when asked about Toril's comments. "If you win LaLiga and the Copa [de la Reina], as we did, you get to choose when you train as the designated home team.
"We made the decision and that's it. A final is always extra motivation, regardless of the competition or the opposition, because you are 90 minutes away from a trophy. And it would be my first, I hope of many, as the coach.
"[Toril's complaints] have only served as extra motivation for the game. We're going to go out there and show on the pitch that we deserve to win the trophy and we will give everything possible to do that."
While Barça have benefitted from a longer break between the semifinal and the final, they have had to travel more this week with all the games played in Leganés, a city which is part of the Madrid metropolitan area.
"It made me laugh," Barça goalkeeper Cata Coll chuckled when responding to Toril. "Last year we played the second semifinal and won the trophy, so that shows how much of an influence there is.
"We are playing here in Madrid and have had a lot of travelling this week. They can come to Barcelona if [they prefer].
"There are always advantages or disadvantages for all teams. It's making excuses for the sake of it. At the end of the day, you have to play the game and do your talking on the pitch."
Barça go into the final as massive favourites. The back-to-back European champions have won all 16 of their Liga F games so far this season and sit 11 points clear of Madrid, who have a game in hand, at the top of the table.
The Catalan side have also won all 15 games between the two teams since Madrid fully absorbed CD Tacon in 2020.
Madrid have shown signs of improvement in that time, and have progressed to the quarterfinals of the Champions League for the second time this season, but a first Clásico win continues to elude them.
"We are looking to reach finals and to have the chance to win trophies," Toril said. "I believe we are on the right path; that we are progressing. The club is growing.
"Our improvement has also been mental. Every day we are more competitive. During this four year journey, the results tell you that.
"When we face top sides, we try to match them. There have been games against Barça when we have done well. I am sure we will make it difficult for them tomorrow."
Pep: Man City no longer feared by opposing teams

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has said teams have changed tactics because they are no longer intimidated by his side, which is making their Champions League campaign more difficult.
City are down in 25th place in the Champions League table, two points off the playoff spots, and Guardiola has noticed an increase in opposing teams adopting a man-marking approach, showing they don't fear City as they used to.
"Everyone came to the Etihad and stayed back," he told a news conference on Friday.
"The first team I saw man-marking was Neil Warnock at Cardiff. Now everybody does it. Everybody comes here, it doesn't matter, man-to-man.
"They just jump on [City's goalkeepers] Éderson or Stefan Ortega. You have to adapt, you have to be better with the ball, otherwise you will not qualify for the Champions League."
Guardiola said while his side may have been outplayed by Paris Saint-Germain in a 4-2 defeat on Wednesday, their problems were more about effective use of the ball than physicality.
"Speed is important, but against PSG we ran more than they did," he said. "Our problem is with the ball. That is what we have been lacking this season.
"When you have the ball and you don't pass it properly to your partner, everything is so difficult."
He stressed the importance of passing accuracy and said there was room for improvement despite the influx of new talent.
City signed Egypt forward Omar Marmoush from Eintracht Frankfurt on Wednesday after bringing in 19-year-old Brazilian defender Vitor Reis and Uzbekistan defender Abdukodir Khusanov.
Guardiola believes Champions League qualification would be as significant an achievement as winning a trophy, especially with injuries to key players like Rodri and a depleted defence.
City are fifth in the Premier League, 12 points adrift of leaders Liverpool, as they prepare to host fourth-placed Chelsea on Saturday trailing the London club by two points.
Despite their struggles, Guardiola remains focused on making tactical adjustments to restore their competitive edge and a return to the Champions League via a place in the top four.
Ange: Spurs 'playing with fire' without signings

Tottenham are "playing with fire" if they do not sign new recruits during the January transfer window, manager Ange Postecoglou has said as the injury-hit squad continues to struggle in the Premier League.
Spurs are a lowly 15th in the table, closer to the relegation zone than European qualification spots after just one win in their last 10 games, which include seven losses.
The club also have the longest injury list in the league, with 12 players sidelined including record signing Dominic Solanke.
The England striker is expected to miss six weeks of action due to a knee injury.
Postecoglou has drafted multiple younger players into the team to deal with the injury crisis and said he has had daily discussions with the club's technical director Johan Lange about "trying to get some help for the players" by dipping into the market.
"I'm not out there trying to find opportunities for the club, that's not my role at this time. There isn't time to do it," Postecoglou told reporters.
"I don't think I'm stating anything other than the obvious and for me to come here and say something else would be disingenuous. This playing group needs help, there's no doubt about that.
"We're sort of playing with fire by not bringing anyone in, but the flip side of that is the club is trying to change that situation."
Despite the club's woeful run of form, Spurs have retained faith in Postecoglou after he guided the team to the semifinals of the Carabao Cup, where they lead Liverpool 1-0 after the first leg. The return leg is at Anfield on Feb. 6.
Spurs have also been boosted by Cristian Romero's return to training while his centre-back partner Micky van de Ven is also expected to be ready before the second leg.
"Of the long-terms [injuries], they are the only two who have a chance of that week, but we've still got 12 days or something," Postecoglou said.
"Part of that process is to see how they cope with training over the next week or so. Both of them are scheduled around that sort of time to be available."
Reddy and Rinku injured, Dube and Ramandeep join India's T20I squad

Dube's last outing for India was in August 2024, during an ODI series in Sri Lanka. He then missed India's home T20I series against Bangladesh with a back injury. Dube returned to cricket with the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, where he scored 151 runs in five innings at a strike rate of 179.76, and took three wickets at an economy of 9.31.
In all, he has played 33 T20Is for India, for 448 runs at a strike rate of 134.93 with the bat, and 11 wickets with the ball. He was part of India's T20 World Cup-winning squad in the West Indies and USA last year.
Ramandeep has played just the two T20Is for India, both in South Africa last November. In the recent Vijay Hazare Trophy, the 50-over tournament, he totalled 126 runs from six innings for Punjab, mostly providing quick runs for a strike rate of 134.04.
India's updated T20I squad
Suryakumar Yadav (capt), Axar Patel (vice-capt), Sanju Samson (wk), Abhishek Sharma, Tilak Varma, Hardik Pandya, Harshit Rana, Arshdeep Singh, Mohammad Shami, Varun Chakaravarthy, Ravi Bishnoi, Washington Sundar, Dhruv Jurel (wk), Shivam Dube, Ramandeep Singh.
*The story was updated after the BCCI put out a statement.
Spin runs riot again as Noman, Warrican lead the way on 20-wicket opening day

West Indies 163 (Motie 55, Warrican 36*, Noman 6-41) lead Pakistan 154 (Rizwan 49, Warrican 4-43, Motie 3-49) by nine runs
Kraigg Brathwaite and Kavem Hodge put together a brief partnership that saw off fast bowler Kashif Ali, and initially held off the spinners. But once that stand was punctured, bloodletting followed. West Indies lost five wickets in the next 13 balls that reduced them from 32 for 2 to 38 for 7.
Three balls at the start of the 12th over from Noman got him his hat-trick with a mixture of deliveries. Justin Greaves' edge came as a result of a touch of extra bounce, while Tevin Imlach missed a sweep to a straight one. With just about everyone crowding around the bat for the hat-trick ball, Noman pushed it in at pace and found a bit of turn off the pitch. It was much too good for Kevin Sinclair's tentative prod, and Noman had his hat-trick.
However, what transpired in the final hour before lunch showed that while the wicket was highly conducive to spin, it wasn't necessarily unplayable. West Indies' bottom three had made history last Test when they became the three highest scorers in an innings for the first time ever, and they repeated the feat in this game. Motie, Roach and Warrican produced a canny mix of resolute temperament and entertaining flair to somewhat steer West Indies out of troubled waters.
Roach and Motie put on 41 for the ninth wicket before a missed sweep from the former gave Noman his fifth wicket. But Motie and Warrican linked up for another substantial contribution. It was a mix of good-cop, bad-cop as Motie shut the spinners out while Warrican gave them whacks from the other end. Lunch was extended as the final stand went on, and against all odds, went past 137 to get West Indies to their highest score of the series.
A whack down the ground from Warrican brought up the 50-partnership before Motie brought up his own half-century. It was only at the stroke of lunch that Motie missed a slog sweep off Noman that rattled his off stump, and a session that began with total Pakistan dominance ended on a rather more neutral tenor.
West Indies had, in Roach, a fast bowler they trusted even on this surface, and in the first hour, he showed why. Getting the new ball to nip both ways in the air and off the seam, he drew Mohammad Hurraira forward before rapping him on the front pad with one that seamed in, to draw first blood. It was the first of three wickets inside 14 balls.
Babar Azam was beaten by the lack of bounce from Motie as he tried to slice off the back foot and missed a cut that saw the ball crash into off stump. The stumps were disturbed once more when Shan Masood played all around another Roach delivery that came back into him, and 163 suddenly seemed a long way off.
Shakeel and Kamran Ghulam dug in, playing survival cricket in a passage of play that spelled danger for Pakistan. They drew the sting out of the game over the next half an hour, halting West Indies' momentum and taking the pressure off themselves as the partnership inched up and got Pakistan to 50.
After Ghulam's forward defensive shot to Motie hit him high on the bat and Alick Athanaze took a sharp catch, Shakeel and Rizwan took over. They looked more assured than any batter from either side all day: Shakeel absorbed pressure while Rizwan transferred it back on to the opposition. Providing the clearest template of how to bat in trying circumstances, Rizwan's use of the feet, manipulation of the fields, and the sweep shot got the runs ticking along, bearing down on West Indies' first-innings score.
But a bit of brilliance in the field, and then with the ball, saw West Indies wrest control back. When Shakeel looked to jab Warrican through midwicket, his mistimed shot interested Roach at long-on. The veteran seamer dived forward at full extension to take a catch that injured him in the process. The wind in his sails, Warrican removed Rizwan soon after with a beauty, as one spun prodigiously to leave Rizwan high and dry halfway down the crease, giving Imlach all the time in the world to whip the bails off.
West Indies had none of Pakistan's problems when it came to running through the lower order. Pakistan went on to lose their last six wickets for 35 runs, the 20th of the day coming courtesy of a mix-up between Sajid and Kashif that resulted in a run-out. It was a gift to the bowlers on a day they had no need for such generosity.
Danyal Rasool is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent. @Danny61000
India opt to bowl, make two changes for second T20I; Smith debuts for England

Toss India opt to bowl vs England
Suryakumar Yadav won his second toss of the T20I series against England and decided to do the same. He opted to chase when the dew makes the pitch quicker to bat on if not significant enough to make bowling nightmarish. While he dipped into the box of white new Kookaburras to choose the ball for India's bowling innings, Mohammed Shami continued to sit on the bench, which means we wait for his international comeback some more.
India lead the five-match T20I series 1-0 after a comprehensive win in the first game in Kolkata, where they had chased down 133 with 43 balls remaining.
India: 1 Abhishek Sharma, 2 Sanju Samson (wk), 3 Suryakumar Yadav (capt), 4 Tilak Varma, 5 Hardik Pandya, 6 Dhruv Jurel, 7 Washington Sundar, 8 Axar Patel, 9 Ravi Bishnoi, 10 Arshdeep Singh, 11 Varun Chakravarthy
England: 1 Phil Salt (wk), 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Jos Buttler (capt), 4 Harry Brook, 5 Liam Livingstone, 6 Jamie Smith, 7 Jamie Overton, 8 Brydon Carse, 9 Jofra Archer, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Mark Wood
Rahane lauds J&K seamers, admits he misread the conditions

"When we saw the wicket [before the match], it looked really dry," Rahane said after the loss which puts Mumbai's knockout qualification in danger. "Comparatively, the games which we played here previously, this was the driest wicket. We thought three spinners will be the best option. I thought in the second innings the third spinner will come handy. We thought it would turn from day two, but it didn't. It's fine.
"I think we were not up to the mark as a team, as a unit. And as I said, you know they challenged us and they played really well, so they deserved to win."
While crediting the J&K pace attack, Rahane said he was particularly impressed by the "courage" and "fitness" of the trio. They bowled long spells, sending down more than 90 of the 107.2 overs bowled to Mumbai. On the first morning they troubled the Mumbai line-up with swing, seam and bounce, and once the ball got older they tried short-ball plans to the tail to try and create opportunities.
"I'm happy to see their fast bowlers running hard, bowling in the right areas for a consistent period of time," Rahane said. "They're eager to do well for their team. I thought most of them bowled 8-10 over spells and that needs courage and good fitness. So really happy for them, the way they bowled, the way they showed their character. It's a really good thing.
"We were not up to the mark as a team, as a unit. And as I said, you know they challenged us and they played really well, so they deserved to win."
Rahane after Mumbai's loss
"They bowled consistently in tight areas, they challenged our batting line-up, especially in both the innings, so credit to them.
"Frankly, we didn't expect that ball will seam that much. We thought it will be a good wicket to bat and it will spin on day two but obviously they bowled really well."
Mumbai came into this game on the back of winning four of their last five Ranji Trophy games with one draw, but the domestic red-ball season was split into two this time with the two white-ball tournaments in between. The Ranji Trophy resumed with this round and it's possible their momentum was broken. They also had changes in their line-up because of the availability of international stars Rohit Sharma and Yashasvi Jaiswal, which meant leaving out some in-form batters like Ayush Mhatre and Angkrish Raghuvanshi.
"If you see our Ranji Trophy set-up, we had [to make] five changes. We played a different team in the first five-six games [before the break], so it's tough to analyse this one match because all the guys coming in you know for this game - and all are quality players," Rahane said when asked if he was concerned about the team's batting failures in this game. "So one bad game can happen and I'm not too worried about what has happened.
"Sometimes it's a challenge [to switch between formats], you get used to it. This is not an excuse, but I feel this is a learning for all of us as a team, especially how can we do better. Because I'm sure going forward this will be the format - red-ball, then white-ball [tournaments] and then coming into red-ball again. So this is a learning for us. Win or lose it's all about what we can learn as a team and how we can get better. There's still 1% chance for us to qualify. So you never know."
Vishal Dikshit is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
Ranji round-up: J&K stun Mumbai, Gill ton in vain for Punjab

Major moment: American Keys wins Aussie Open

MELBOURNE, Australia -- Madison Keys said breaking through at the Australian Open for her first Grand Slam title "means the world" after she defeated world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in three thrilling sets Saturday.
Keys, the 19th seed, was a big underdog coming into the clash with two-time reigning champion Sabalenka, but she produced her best tennis to win in two hours and two minutes 6-3, 1-6, 7-5.
At 29, Keys becomes the second-oldest first-time women's winner of the tournament after China's Li Na broke through for her win in 2014 at 31.
The American started fast against Sabalenka, who struggled with her serve early. Two double faults helped gift Keys the opening game, and Keys held for 2-0 advantage.
While Sabalenka struggled on her serve, Keys flourished. Through two service games, she had landed all but one of her first serves to put pressure on Sabalenka, who was unable to win her way back to level and was instead broken again for a 4-1 Keys lead.
And while Keys had the chance to serve out the first set not long after, Sabalenka started to lift. She broke Keys, but the seeds of doubt didn't take root for the American, who broke back immediately. Another Sabalenka double fault -- her fourth of the set -- brought up break point and paved the way for Keys to take the first set 6-3 in just 35 minutes.
Sabalenka's four first-set double faults was her most in a single match in Melbourne, let alone in a set, while her lopsided return of just four winners and 13 unforced errors painted the picture of an uncharacteristically bad start for the Belarusian.
But Sabalenka's record coming back from a set down in Slams had been remarkable. Coming into the final, she was a staggering 10-1 in majors after losing the first set, well ahead of the next-best player in that time, Iga Swiatek, who boasts a 6-5 record.
After a quick bathroom break, three-time Slam winner Sabalenka reappeared, seemingly reenergized. Breezing through her first service game, Sabalenka converted on her third break-point chance of Keys' service game to lead 2-0.
Not long after, Keys gave up a second service game, and the reigning champion found herself up 4-1 and steaming toward taking the second set, eventually taking it 6-2 and sending it to a decider.
After exchanging 11 holds and with a tiebreaker looming large, the decisive moment of the third set -- and the match -- came with Sabalenka down 0-15 and serving to stay in the tournament at 5-6. Having already sent an off-balance forehand long, Sabalenka served wide and the American rattled off a huge backhand return winner to which Sabalenka could only grimace in frustration.
Sabalenka steadied momentarily for 15-30, but a forehand error into the net in the next point brought up two championship points for Keys. She sent one wide, but converted the second with a stunning inside-out forehand winner. Keys screamed in ecstasy as she secured her first Grand Slam title.
"I just kept telling myself, 'Be brave, go for it, just kind of lay it all out on the line.' At that point, no matter what happens, if I do that, then I can be proud of myself. It just made it a little bit easier," Keys said in her news conference.
It was her fifth three-set win at the tournament, the most in a single Australian Open since the Open era began. She knocked off four top-10 seeds (Sabalenka, Danielle Collins, Elena Rybakina and Swiatek) en route to the Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup. It's a feat tied only by Evonne Goolagong -- who presented Keys her trophy -- who defeated four top-10 seeds at Wimbledon in 1980.
"I really felt like going into each match that if I could just try to go out, play how I wanted to play, I was really just going to give myself the opportunity to try to win the match. I felt like not stressing about things that I couldn't control, I just felt like I was able to play a little bit more free," she said.
"I think there was a confidence in maybe not playing matches amazingly from start to finish and having some dips here and there, but being able to end on a really high note each time and figure out how to get back in matches, or how to close out a match really well ... I just slowly started continuing to build the confidence.
"I think part of it was that I never really got ahead of myself in each round. I never once thought about the next round until I was actually there. So, I think, yes, I believed that I could do it. I also think I did a good job of just focusing on the task at hand."
Keys mentioned she'd been using therapy as a way to unburden herself of expectations after years on the tour, and told ESPN that "letting go" of trying to win a major is what helped her succeed in Melbourne.
"I've done a lot of work to no longer need [winning a Grand Slam]. I really wanted it, but it's no longer the thing that was going to define me and, kind of letting go of that burden, I finally gave myself the ability to play for it," she said after the win.
Meanwhile, Sabalenka lamented her poor form in the first set, saying Keys managed to push her onto the back foot with powerful groundstrokes and assertive serving.
"I think she played super aggressive. It seemed like everything was going her way. I was just trying to put the ball back. Couldn't really play my aggressive tennis and didn't feel my serve that well. The return was off. Then in the second set I kind of got my rhythm back," Sabalenka said.
"She just played incredible. It seems like she was overhitting everything. The depths of the balls were really crazy. I was trying my best. Obviously [it] didn't work well."
Sabalenka also dismissed an unusual postmatch racket smash as "frustration," saying she needed to leave the arena briefly to compose herself before the ceremony.
"I was so close to [achieving] something crazy," she said. "When you're out there, you're fighting, but it seems like everything going not the way you really want to go. I just needed to throw those negative emotions at the end just so I could give a speech, not stand there being disrespectful. I was just trying to let it go and be a good person, be respectful."
With the breakthrough major title, Keys moves up No. 7 in the world, which matches a career high she last achieved in 2016.
Sources: Snyder 'hates' Commanders success

THIS PAST FALL, Dan Snyder had dinner in London with longtime associates. For only the second autumn since 1999, Snyder was not the owner of his beloved Washington football team.
He was not living the ups and downs of an NFL season, as he had done since his childhood in Maryland.
He was not presiding over the Commanders' rebuild, already on the cusp of a stunning turnaround, the kind of rise that Snyder lived for in a previous life: from 4-13 in 2023 to what would eventually be a 12-5 regular season and an underdog playoff run, culminating in an NFC Championship Game appearance Sunday against the Philadelphia Eagles.
But now Snyder is a ghost: The new-look Commanders are not only led by first-time general manager Adam Peters, new head coach Dan Quinn and sensational rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels, but they also have a new ownership group, led by Josh Harris and his Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment.
At the London dinner, Snyder, 60, was polite, if not subdued, and did things the associates had come to expect, such as ordering almost everything on the menu. Snyder said that he was enjoying a quiet existence, mostly in London. Life was better for his family, far from the controversies that had engulfed him and the team the past several years. Talk inevitably turned to the improving Commanders, already off to a strong start. When one associate returned to the United States, a colleague asked him the question that's been on the minds of many fans and league executives:
What's it like for Snyder, for years the most hated owner in sports, to watch the Commanders succeed without him?
"He f---ing hates it," Snyder's dinner companion told the colleague.
Neither Snyder nor any of his representatives responded to interview requests from ESPN. But according to league sources, team owners, sports executives, lawyers and others with knowledge of his current status, some of whom requested anonymity to discuss sensitive legal matters, Snyder has recast much of his life since he sold the Commanders under duress 19 months ago.
He has mostly lived in London, often surrounded by a security detail, or spent time on his superyacht. He is trying to sell his remaining U.S. real estate holdings and decided to give away a $35 million estate to the American Cancer Society after it sat unsold for months. Any business he conducts is from the U.K., where sources with firsthand knowledge say he has expressed interest in buying into a Premier League soccer club, although others who know him well doubt Snyder will ever own any professional sports team again.
What little remains for him in the United States includes a tangle of unresolved legal issues -- and the thoughts of what might have been if he had never sold the team.
SNYDER NEVER WANTED to sell, even after putting the Commanders up for sale. Few people outside the league, Harris' company, or the Commanders organization know that he tried desperately to blow up the sale at the last minute.
Snyder had been pressured into the sale by fellow owners who roundly hated him and league executives eager to see the franchise returned to its former glory -- and profitability. Former NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue recently told confidants that Snyder is "the worst owner in the history of the National Football League."
A source with direct knowledge said that, after months of negotiations with Harris, Snyder was imagining ways to keep his team. One idea, the source said, was to announce that he had years earlier given up alcohol, and to say that much of his alleged misbehavior over the years that caused so much league and fellow owner angst happened while he was drunk. Snyder also purposefully set a minimum price of $6 billion for the Commanders, knowing that few people, even among the ultrarich, could afford that price tag.
Despite Snyder's resistance, the sale process moved ahead, with Harris' group barely clearing the asking price. Harris needed to recruit approximately 20 limited partners.
Then, on July 20, 2023, shortly after owners approved the sale for a North American sports franchise record of $6.05 billion, the NFL gave Snyder another reason to be mad, fining him a record $60 million on the way out. A league investigation led by attorney Mary Jo White not only affirmed Snyder's alleged sexual harassment of a team employee but also concluded he had fostered a toxic workplace culture and that the Commanders had withheld revenue from the NFL. Sources said Snyder was infuriated that the fine dropped the amount just below the $6 billion he had insisted on from the beginning.
"There's no way I'm paying," Snyder told confidants about the league fine.
Suddenly, the sale's closing -- a supposed formality -- turned into an eleventh-hour drama, multiple sources with direct knowledge told ESPN. Snyder threatened to kill the deal by refusing to share his bank information, preventing Harris from wiring him the money. At 1 a.m. on July 21, Snyder and his wife were fielding phone calls from various executives and confidants, urging him to do what he'd pledged and let go of the team.
"I don't want to do this," Snyder told a confidant.
A rally celebrating Harris' ownership group was scheduled for later that day at the since-renamed FedEx Field.
But as 1 a.m. became 2 a.m., Snyder was refusing to hand over the stadium keys.
"I don't care!" Snyder said, according to sources with direct knowledge of what transpired in those hours. "It would be trespassing if anyone goes there. It's still mine!"
League executives didn't know what Snyder would do next but told Harris' group to be on call, ready to wire the funds if and when Snyder shared his bank information -- and before he could renege.
In the days leading up to the close, sources said, Dan and Tanya Snyder were pressed by confidants and friends, including Hall of Fame coach Joe Gibbs, the three-time Super Bowl winner who supported Snyder even during the darkest times, to complete the deal out of love for the team and fans.
Associates reminded Snyder in those wee hours that the primary reason to sell was his family. The past few years of relentless revelations about bad behavior and questionable ethics, largely of Snyder's own doing, had taken a toll on his three children. Tanya reminded her husband that the sale would relieve their emotional distress. A confidant warned Snyder, "The only way your legacy gets worse is if you rip this back now."
Quiet minutes passed. Tanya said, "Dan, I know this is hard. This was a dream."
With that, Snyder relented. He gave the go-ahead to Jason Wright, then the Commanders' team president (he declined to comment for this story), to share the bank information so the Harris Group could wire the $6.05 billion. It was finally official: Harris and his fellow investors owned the Washington Commanders. The league had finally pushed out its most hated owner. The rally the next day at FedEx Field commenced as planned.
Months later, Tad Brown, CEO of HBSE, told confidants, "We don't get the Commanders if not for Joe Gibbs."
Despite Snyder's protests about the $60 million fine, it was paid July 21 "as part of the overall transaction," a league official confirmed.
"The fine was a condition of the sale and was included in the resolution that was voted upon and approved by the full membership," the official said.
A spokesman for HBSE declined to comment on the sale, citing a nondisclosure agreement signed by the two sides.
THOUGH DAN SNYDER held tight to the end, Dan and Tanya Snyder had been quietly planning their second act for months. Less than three weeks after announcing on Nov. 2, 2022, that they intended to sell the Commanders, the Snyders established a company to operate in England and Wales. The document established a new company, dubbed "Snyder UK Investments Limited," but it also signaled the Snyders' future intentions. On the documents setting up the company, Snyder, and Tanya, then the co-CEO of the Commanders, were asked where they "usually" reside.
They both answered: England.
London made sense as the place for the Snyders to envision their post-Commanders life together. The United Kingdom holds a special place in Snyder's heart. His late father, Gerald, who was an author and freelance writer for National Geographic and United Press International, held a dual U.S.-U.K. citizenship. At the age of 12, Dan Snyder moved from Silver Spring, Maryland, to Henley-on-Thames, outside London, as his father researched and wrote a book on the Loch Ness Monster. For two years, the family lived in the U.K. and Snyder attended a private school. It was then that Snyder became a devout Anglophile who today adores London's history, culture and nightlife, associates said.
Snyder left the United States with a raft of legal action against him or the team during his tenure, including expected subpoenas from federal and civil lawsuits, investigations by multiple attorneys general and a two-year-old FBI and IRS inquiry into the Commanders' finances.
Since November 2022, federal prosecutors in Alexandria, Virginia, have been investigating deceptive business practices alleged in an April 2022 letter that the House Committee on Oversight and Reform sent to the Federal Trade Commission.
A federal grand jury was impaneled, team financial records were subpoenaed, and several former team executives met with prosecutors, sources with firsthand knowledge told ESPN. No indictments have been returned. President Donald Trump this week appointed a new interim U.S. attorney for the district, and the future of the inquiry will be up to him. Snyder has been a loyal supporter of Trump, including writing a $1 million check to the president's 2017 inaugural committee.
Snyder also is the central figure in a federal lawsuit filed a year ago by one of his former minority partners against Bank of America, the bank that Snyder owed a debt of nearly $1 billion when he sold the team. In the lawsuit, a Tampa, Florida, billionaire and former minority partner of the Commanders, Robert Rothman, alleged that Bank of America conspired with the NFL and Snyder to force him and two other minority partners to sell their stake in the Commanders back to Snyder in 2021 at a valuation roughly half of the $6.05 billion Snyder was ultimately paid.
The lawsuit, which does not name Snyder as a defendant, alleges that Bank of America turned "a blind eye" to "financial red flags" raised by Snyder's management of the team, including his alleged failure to pay the partners a share of the profits and his increasing reliance on team debt to finance his lavish lifestyle.
The centerpiece of Rothman's lawsuit is Bank of America's December 2018 approval of the franchise's $55 million credit line taken out by Snyder without his minority partners' knowledge or required approval. The bank allowed Snyder to draw $38 million in March 2019 from the credit line "without verifying Snyder had obtained board approval," the lawsuit states.
A Bank of America spokesman has said the bank "will vigorously defend ourselves against these allegations."
A federal judge has given permission for Rothman's lawyers to begin to seek discovery on some of the claims in the original suit, which could include seeking sworn testimony of Snyder and NFL executives, including NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.
"Our complaint clearly alleges my client, Bob Rothman, lost hundreds of millions of dollars because of Bank of America's actions," attorney Brian Kopp said. "In the process, the bank overloaded Dan Snyder with debt, knowing that he would have to sell the team. Even though he made a lot of money selling the team, I suspect that Dan Snyder feels that he got squeezed by the bank."
Practically, Snyder's relocation to London marked the beginning of his estrangement from some of his American friends and longtime associates, including nearly everyone connected with the NFL, according to several sources who speak with members of Snyder's inner circle. During his 24 years at the helm of the Washington football team, Snyder's closest ally among NFL owners was Jerry Jones, who told ESPN recently that he has not spoken with Snyder since he sold the team.
But bridges were burning long before the move. In October 2022, ESPN reported that Snyder told close associates that he had dug up dirt on Goodell and fellow NFL owners, including Jones, and told a close associate he would use it to "blow up" those who forced him to sell. "They can't f--- with me," Snyder said privately.
When it came to Snyder's nearly quarter-century partnership with the NFL, Jones said simply, "It was time for a divorce."
WHEN HE'S IN London -- and not aboard his 305-foot superyacht, the $180 million Lady S, which was docked this month off Harlingen in the Netherlands -- Snyder has filled some of his days visiting Westminster pubs and restaurants, a source with firsthand knowledge says. The pubs are within walking distance of the luxury hotel where he's been living while a condo he bought is being renovated, the source says. On other days, the source says, he visits the Chelsea office where his U.K.-based investment firm is housed.
It's unclear how Snyder has invested the $6.05 billion windfall he received for the team he bought for $800 million in May 1999. On documents detailing his investment firm's holdings, the Snyders list 1 million in assets.
One of Snyder's post-Commanders' investments backfired in a high-profile way. Snyder invested $6 million in a film titled "The Apprentice" through Kinematics, an upstart production company run by his 29-year-old son-in-law, Mark Rapaport. The film tells the story of Trump's early years under the mentorship of lawyer and fixer Roy Cohn. When he made the investment, Snyder assumed the film would depict Trump positively, a source with firsthand knowledge told ESPN. But last February, Snyder screened the film with Rapaport at an island home and, the source said, became enraged by the decidedly negative portrait. The film was shelved until Kinematics finally sold off its stake last summer, and the filmmakers searched months for a U.S. distributor. In October, "The Apprentice" was released in the United States to box-office failure but critical acclaim and, this week, Academy Award nominations for actors Sebastian Stan and Jeremy Strong.
Within months of closing on the Commanders sale, the Snyders listed for sale their Potomac, Maryland, estate, known as "River House," overlooking the Potomac River. The 30,000-square-foot mansion, the Snyders' main residence since 2001, was listed for $49 million, but after it sat unsold, the Snyders slashed its price to $35 million. Still, there were no buyers.
Finally, in March, the Snyders donated the estate to the American Cancer Society. It was the largest gift in the organization's 110-year history; the organization has still not sold the estate. It's now listed at $29.9 million. The Snyders will be able to use the $18.5 million appraised value as a tax write-off. They've also listed for sale their Virginia estate, not far from George Washington's Mount Vernon. The asking price is $60 million, but it remains vacant and unsold.
According to sources in London sports circles, Snyder in recent months has shopped for a piece of a soccer team, preferably in the Premier League, where exponential growth in team valuations rivals the NFL. A source close to the Premier League acknowledged hearing of Snyder's interest in a club but said no formal move has been made. "I keep hearing he wants another act as a team owner -- the Premier League is his dream," said another source who was briefed on Snyder's Premier League fandom and keen interest in an ownership stake.
Such a move would be "an act of redemption," the source said. "He could maybe prove people wrong by getting a Premier League team. ... He could reinvent himself there because he can't do it here. He literally can't."
But other sources close to Snyder and in the Premier League believe he would never buy into a soccer club or any other professional sports team, for that matter. The reason isn't because of finances, or prestige, or even baggage.
"He isn't a fan of other sports," one source said. "He's a fan of the [Commanders]. That was the biggest thing."
At the age of 6, Snyder attended his first Washington home game with his father, who scraped together enough money for two tickets. Snyder was hooked. "For him, it wasn't somebody losing a team. This was different. He loved that team."
IN THE MONTHS after the associates dined with Snyder in London, Washington's season continued its stunning rise to the NFC title game, led by Jayden Daniels, the type of superstar quarterback who Snyder for years contended might save him from being forced to sell the team.
And D.C. has rallied around its team in ways it hasn't for decades -- since its last Super Bowl win after the 1991 season -- and in ways Washington rarely rallies around anything.
In late December, after years of lobbying by Jason Wright and other Commanders executives, the U.S. Senate passed a bill to transfer the site of the team's former home, RFK Stadium, to Washington, D.C., paving the way for a long-awaited new stadium. Suddenly it's cool again to be a Washington football fan.
Even the former team employees who accused Snyder of fostering a toxic workplace have joined in, starting a text chain to discuss the turnaround with each other.
"Karma is real," said Melanie Coburn, the former team cheerleader and marketing director who testified about the team to Congress. "For years, we endured the dysfunction and toxicity at the organization under Dan Snyder and blamed all the losses on the dark cloud he brought over the team. Turns out, we were right."
Snyder's outlook has evolved. There's still anger, and he remains "in denial" about what led to his ouster, said a person close to his inner circle. But there's also something else: "Sadness -- for himself," that person said. "It's killing him. ... It's devastating for him."
But even from across the pond, Snyder's specter still hovers over the team. After Washington upset Tampa Bay in the wild-card round, its first playoff victory since Jan. 7, 2006, Josh Harris and limited partner Magic Johnson stood outside the locker room, surrounded by exuberant family members and cameras. Johnson put his right arm around Harris and spoke into the microphones.
"What does it take?" Johnson said. "New vision, new owner with a strategy, picking the right people ... and then, we all step out of the way and let them do their jobs."
"Talent, culture and people," Harris said.
Neither man mentioned Dan Snyder's name. There was no need.
Don Van Natta Jr. and Seth Wickersham are senior writers for ESPN. Reach them at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..