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  • Barcelona in sight of Liga title, Villarreal secure top four and Champions League qualifiers spot
    BARCELONA, May 3 — Robert Lewandowski and Ferran Torres took Barcelona to the brink of the La Liga title with late goals to earn them a 2-1 win at Osasuna yesterday.Elsewhere, Villarreal guaranteed themselves a Champions League qualification spot with a 5-1 romp over Levante in La Liga.Diego Simeone rotated his whole team with the Champions League in mind as Atletico Madrid defeated Valencia 2-0 at Mestalla.Catalan giants Barcelona moved 14 points clear of second
     

Barcelona in sight of Liga title, Villarreal secure top four and Champions League qualifiers spot

3 May 2026 at 02:46

Malay Mail

BARCELONA, May 3 — Robert Lewandowski and Ferran Torres took Barcelona to the brink of the La Liga title with late goals to earn them a 2-1 win at Osasuna yesterday.

Elsewhere, Villarreal guaranteed themselves a Champions League qualification spot with a 5-1 romp over Levante in La Liga.

Diego Simeone rotated his whole team with the Champions League in mind as Atletico Madrid defeated Valencia 2-0 at Mestalla.

Catalan giants Barcelona moved 14 points clear of second-placed Real Madrid and will be crowned champions if their rivals drop points at Espanyol today.

Lewandowski headed home after 81 minutes to break the deadlock, with Torres slotting in a second with four minutes to go.

Osasuna pulled one back through Raul Garcia late on but Barca secured the three points to close in on a second consecutive league title and a 29th in the club’s history.

If Real Madrid do defeat Espanyol, then Barcelona’s next opportunity to clinch the title will be in the Clasico against their arch-rivals on May 10.

“For me the important thing was that today we did our job, it’s not in our hands what happens tomorrow,” Flick told reporters.

“It’s like that. We have to wait—this is a good situation...

“If we win the title (by Madrid slipping up), we will also celebrate, I think it doesn’t matter (how).”

Barca striker Torres said he would prefer for the title to be sewn up “as soon as possible”.

“We’ve put the pressure on Madrid because tomorrow, if they don’t win, then we really will be champions,” Torres told DAZN.

Barca’s first half was that of a team perched on a comfortable cushion and the feeling of having little at stake.

Without the injured Lamine Yamal, Barca lose a lot of their dynamism, and although they had much the ball in the first half they found it hard to break down Osasuna to create clear chances.

Osasuna had the best opening in the first period, forged by Croatian striker Ante Budimir all on his own, showing strength to hold off two defenders before prodding against the post.

Barcelona had a slightly higher tempo in the second half, particularly after Flick sent on winger Marcus Rashford to play on the right flank.

The Manchester United forward, on loan at Barca, curled narrowly over and offered a welcome injection of pace.

Rashford created the opener with a perfect cross for Lewandowski, who took advantage of slack marking to find space and power a header home.

Torres, another substitute, produced a clinical finish to double Barca’s lead, but they were made to sweat through eight minutes of stoppage time after Garcia headed in for the hosts when left free in the box.

The Catalans battled hard, thumping balls to safety as Osasuna turned the screw, but were eventually able to celebrate a 10th consecutive league win—and now they wait.

Flick said he was not going to watch Madrid’s clash with Espanyol and instead he was considering going to see magician El Mago Pop.

“I think it’s the last day... maybe I go with my wife,” said the coach.

UCL booked 

Marcelino’s Villarreal, third, moved 18 points clear of fifth-place Real Betis, who have only five games left to play.

Georges Mikautadze struck twice in the Yellow Submarine’s derby victory, with Alberto Moleiro, Tajon Buchanan and Nicolas Pepe also on target.

Carlos Espi netted for Levante, 19th, provisionally three points from safety and in severe danger of relegation, with Sevilla and Alaves above them still to play this weekend.

“Congratulations to each and every one of the players. Let’s continue enjoying this moment,” said Marcelino, poised to leave Villarreal at the end of the season according to Spanish reports.

“Let’s keep competing because we want to finish third.”

Villarreal are five points clear of fourth-placed Atletico, who won at Valencia despite Simeone rotating all 11 players from the Champions League semi-final first leg 1-1 draw against Arsenal.

This was match number 1000 for Simeone in his coaching career, but he was thinking more about 1001, in London on Tuesday against Mikel Arteta’s Premier League leaders.

Youngsters Iker Luque and Miguel Cubo struck second-half goals for Atletico, with defeated Valencia, 13th, only five points clear of the relegation zone. — AFP

The invisible face of pregnancy and postpartum: one in every 16 women experiences serious depression

1 May 2026 at 17:08

Our collective imagination paints pregnancy and the postpartum period as an idyllic time, forever flush with happiness, no matter the circumstances. No other scenario is even considered. But reality is often much more complicated, its difficulties rendered invisible. There can be joy and excitement, but the period can also involve fits of crying with no apparent cause, sadness, anxiety and a feeling of emptiness that, on occasion, can be a precursor to serious mental health issues. A study published Thursday in The Lancet Psychiatry journal offers statistics related to serious depression in the peripartum period — which runs through pregnancy, and up to one year after childbirth — concluding that at least one in every 16 women suffers from major depressive disorder during that time. The most critical phase is two weeks after birth, during which there is the highest risk of experiencing the mental health condition.

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© Nasos Zovoilis (Getty Images)

A mother in a hospital with her newborn in her arms.

Nature’s analgesic power: ‘I stood there observing the greenery and it was as if the pain evaporated’

30 April 2026 at 14:33
Xavier Ruido, suffering from chronic pain, photographed at the Fira Barcelona fairgrounds.

When Xavier was told he had myofascial pain syndrome, he was relatively relieved. He no longer had to continue his search for an explanation for his knee and lower back pain. The diagnosis helped stop the rumination and banished the darkest thoughts. But he was dealt a blow when the doctor proposed a treatment: pills (anti-inflammatories and opioids) and a quiet life, with walks of no more than half an hour. “I told myself I wasn’t going to settle for that and I started looking for alternatives,” he says.

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Xavier Ruido, suffering from chronic pain, photographed at the Fira fairgrounds.

‘Athens cannot operate as a giant hotel’: mayor vows to rescue capital from overtourism

25 April 2026 at 08:00

Haris Doukas warns that with 700,000 residents and 8 million tourists, people are being pushed out of their neighbourhoods

In the heart of ancient Athens, on narrow streets and around archaeological sites, visitor groups appear to be everywhere, snaking their way behind tour guides.

At other times, officials would have welcomed such scenes. But for Haris Doukas, the socialist mayor who is determined to reclaim the capital’s congested city centre for its citizens, the start of the tourist season leaves much of its historic heart at risk of “over-saturation.” Entire neighbourhoods, he believes, are in danger of losing their authenticity because of uncontrolled tourist development.

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© Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images

Prayers, twerking and hundreds of millions of dollars: Pope Leo XIV and Bad Bunny become the latest explosive combination for Madrid

25 April 2026 at 04:00

They say that sinners who pray are even. Everything points to this being the plan for many in Madrid on the weekend of June 6 and 7. On the one hand, they’ll unleash their party side at one of the 10 concerts Bad Bunny will be performing in the capital; on the other, they’ll find time for prayer and contrition, taking advantage of Pope Leo XIV’s visit, scheduled for the same dates. The coincidences are striking: the pontiff’s first major public event, near Real Madrid’s Santiago Bernabéu stadium, will happen on the same day and in the same city as one of the Puerto Rican artist’s concerts, which will be held at the Metropolitano stadium, home to Atlético Madrid. And hotels are already starting to rake in the cash, even though there are still two and a half months to go before the events.

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© Getty Images

Pope Leo XIV and Bad Bunny.

The photographic universe of Valérie Belin: beauty between reality and fiction

Valérie Belin, 62, maintains that, “throughout history, beauty has functioned as a Holy Grail.” That is, as an ideal that’s eternally pursued. It fascinates because it’s an enigma that no one has been able to fully decipher.

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© Valérie Belin (EL PAÍS)

Ava (2025), part of the Cover Girls series, where it combines portraits made in the style of fashion photography with cutouts.

Jake Richards, historian: ‘Emancipation created new forms of inequality and injustice, and we need to learn how to resolve these harms’

21 April 2026 at 14:54

The year 1807, when the British Parliament outlawed the slave trade within the Empire, was not the end of the transatlantic slave trade or the exploitation of some 12.5 million Africans. Rather, it marked the beginning of another little-known chapter in the hell of forced labor and the legal maneuvers endured by the more than 200,000 people rescued — according to the most conservative estimates — by the Royal Navy or other naval patrols between 1807 and 1880 before finally gaining their freedom.

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The historian Jake Richards at the headquarters of the Center de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB), on April 13.

© FPG (Getty Images)

A group of enslaved people on a cotton plantation, watched over by a foreman on horseback, near Dallas, Texas, circa 1895.
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