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PSG and Qatar finally reach Champions League summit

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This was a night of firsts. A first Champions League for Paris Saint-Germain. The first time a final has been won by five goals. And a first European trophy for Qatar.

“Everyone doubted us,” said Qatari club president Nasser Al-Khelaifi after the match. ” A lot of people didn’t have faith in our project. Today we’ve proved it. Honestly, I can’t believe it, we won 5-0. It’s a dream,

As PSG coach Luis Enrique and his players bounced joyfully on the Munich pitch before lifting up Al-Khelaifi after a stylish 5-0 dismantling of Inter on Saturday night, Qatar Airways advertising provided both backdrop and a further reminder of the engine of their success.

After 14 years of near misses, implosions and the departures of Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappe, Neymar and the rest of the big names, Qatari Sports Investments, which is operated by the Qatari government, had finally got the statement win it craved. Given that Inter warmed up with Qatar Airways emblazoned on their training kit too, perhaps they couldn’t really lose.

That Qatar Airways branding is a familiar sight in Munich, with Bayern Munich — who usually play their home matches at this stadium — wearing the logo on their sleeves until the deal ended in 2023, following intense pressure from fans about the country’s human rights record.

Qatar and Bayern Munich parted, but why?

Michael Ott led fan pressure at the time and told DW that football higher-ups will not be forced to cut their ties with countries with questionable human rights records.

“It was a deception. You feel a bit betrayed, but I think we expected it,” he said of the fact that Bayern signed a new deal, with another country with a questionable record, Rwanda, shortly after they ended their public relationship with Qatar.

“All signs were showing the deal wasn’t continued because of Qatar and not because of the Bayern officials. There wasn’t really a shift in the mindset of the Bayern officials.”

Bayern Munich fans hold up a banner protesting the Qatar World CUp
Bayern Munich fans protested heavily against Qatari sponsorship. This reads: 15,000 dead for 5760 minutes of football. Shame on you. (Photo: November 5, 2022)Image: Jan Huebner/IMAGO

Now the win with PSG has even more eyes on Al-Khelaifi, whose claim to be the most important man in football grows ever stronger.

As well as being president of PSG, the 51-year-old former tennis player is chairman of the European Clubs Association — which represents the interests of 700 European clubs — is on the executive committee of UEFA — which organizes European football including the Champions League — and on the organizing committee for the upcoming FIFA World Club Cup. He is also a minister without portfolio in the Qatari government and chairman of state-owned broadcaster BeIn Sports, which has bought the rights to the Champions League.

Bayern’s fans, and German fans in general, tend to object to state ownership of clubs that were once community assets and made the point when PSG visited Munich last November. They raised a huge banner of Al-Khelaifi with a red line through it. The same image was stuck to escalators, walls and benches across the city on Saturday.

Paris welcomes Al-Khelaifi

Paris, however, seems largely to have welcomed Qatar and Al-Khelaifi.

Ott, who now lives in France, said the attitude of PSG fans is “a stark contrast to Germany.”

“Of course, they have been speaking about human rights problems before the [2022 Qatar] World Cup, but way less than in Germany, and when I speak to the French, most of them care way less than the Germans about this topic,” he said.

“It has taken longer than we imagined but we have won the Champions League,” PSG fan Sebastian told DW shortly after the match. “The players were so good tonight but of course we needed the money from the owners to get here. They have been great for us. This is just about football.”

As the big screen camera panned to Al-Khelaifi just before the trophy was presented, the crowd greeted him with warm applause. The Qatari reciprocated then took his place in the lineup of dignitaries, hugging each player as they collected their medals. 

Doue and co. promise bright future

About an hour earlier as, Doue, 19, finished yet another sumptuous team move to score PSG’s third goal on 63 minutes, it was easy to see just why so many fans don’t concern themselves with the ownership question. Two goals from a French teenager in the most dominant Champions League final performances in memory is exactly the kind of story that draws people to the game.

Desire Doue strikes the ball towards goal in the Champions League final 2025
Desire Doue scored twice and announced himself to the worldImage: Peter Cziborra/REUTERS

But Doue isn’t quite the homegrown talent narrative of old, he was signed from Rennes for €50 million ($57 million) last year. No other French club has ever spent that much on a player while PSG and Qatar have surpassed it 10 times. Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, the Georgian winger who scored the fourth cost even more, though substitute Senny Mayulu, who added a fifth, has come through the PSG youth system. That mix of smart big money purchases and finally beginning to tap their rich local market of talent will worry more traditional European powerhouses.

For the masses of Parisian fans making their way into the Munich night, there seemed to be no worries at all.

Edited by Sean Sinico

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Europe can end the run of home dominance at the Ryder Cup – the competition needs them to do it

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AND SO THE talking can finally stop and the heckling and hectoring can begin. 

The five-day build-up to the first tee shot of the Ryder Cup is a kind of Olympiad of Guff, where the captains explain their various motivational techniques, the players speak earnestly of how great everything and everybody is; as all the while the world’s media assemble to try and figure out how to say the same thing a thousand different ways. 

Journalists in the media centre were yesterday like inmates counting down to parole as they waited for the 4pm announcement of the today’s foursome sessions, so starved have they been of the glorious light of hard news.

We recall a former colleague who advised us that the only way to make these days interesting would be for the respective captains to go full GAA and announce dummy teams. We’d at least have a bit of fun trying to figure out the chances to your match programme. 

If you have been blessed with ignorance so far, the week has focused on the half-hearted stirring of a skirmish about the American’s getting paid to play this week, while the European players have gone to remarkable lengths to be trained in the art of being a punch bag. 

The atmosphere will be raucous and rowdy, and Europe captain Luke Donald did his best to prepare his players for this verbal onslaught by handing them VR headsets pre-loaded with tailored abuse ringing with an American twang. Jon Rahm cited his experience from the practice days in admitting they headsets weren’t creative enough. One American fan was heard asking Rahm where he had left his Ozempic. Still, great to see that American belief in pills and medicine has thus far survived their president’s ludicrous war on paracetamol. 

Trump is going to be here later today, though apparently has been convinced to limit some of the logistical drama by arriving for the afternoon fourballs. The American players have been tripping over themselves to pay homage to their leader, with Bryson DeChambeau saying “I think he’ll be a great force for us to get a lot of people on our side.” 

Judging by the amount of MAGA tat we have seen around the course this week, Bryson is right regarding the on-course support.

That support is the signature element of the Ryder Cup. There are a few signs around the course calling for respectful fan behaviour but they are not enforced. This competition has bloomed in status because it  provides a one-week holiday from golf’s haughty notions of etiquette and fair play. That support has also skewed the competition enormously to the favour of the home side, and Rory McIlroy set Europe’s tone two years ago in Rome, where he said winning away was one of golf’s most difficult feats before vowing amid Europe’s celebrations that they would go to Bethpage and win.

europes-rory-mcilroy-arrives-for-a-practice-round-at-the-ryder-cup-golf-tournament-thursday-sept-25-2025-on-the-bethpage-black-golf-course-in-farmingdale-n-y-ap-photolindsey-wasson
Shane Lowry and Rory McIlroy arrive for a practice session on Thursday. Alamy Stock Photo


Alamy Stock Photo

Europe want to win but the Ryder Cup needs them to do so. Or, at least, come close to doing so. There has been no away win since Europe’s in Medinah 13 years ago, which is now being recast as a miracle in ends as well as means. The closest winning margin in that time has been five points. If home advantage continues to be the equivalent of having serve in a tennis match, then the Ryder Cup is facing into an existential problem. 

But this European team are well set to buck deadening precedent. The Americans have shaved down the rough at Bethpage Black to suit their bomb-and-gouge stylings, but this is PGA Tour golf with which the Europeans are familiar. 

“It’s like a different golf course, honestly”, says Shane Lowry. “You stood here at the PGA [Championship, in 2019] and you were scared to miss a fairway. They have obviously set it up for that thinking they are going to make more birdies than us, but we will try to make more birdies than them and see where it leaves us.” 

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Europe have deliberately sought continuity, which is why the only change has been the swapping of Rasmus Hojgaard for his twin brother Nicolai.

Where the Masters only begins with the back nine on Sunday, recent Ryder Cup generally ends by lunchtime on Friday. Crucial to victory is making a strong start in the first foursomes session, as the winner of it has gone on to win every edition of the Cup since Medinah. 

Much will hinge on the very first match. The US are starting with a slam on the accelerator, with DeChambeau leading the States’ out alongside Justin Thomas. Donald is fighting fire with fire, picking Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton as Europe’s first pairing. 

He has mixed up some of the pairings from Rome, however. The Aberg/Hovland duo have been splintered, with Aberg joined by Matt Fitzpatrick in the second foursomes match, where they will face Scottie Scheffler and Russell Henley. This looks risky, given Aberg’s lack of experience, while Fitzpatrick has a miserable Ryder Cup record, winning just one point in eight matches. Hovland, meanwhile, teams up with Robert MacIntyre in the anchor match against veteran American pairing Xander Schauffele and Patrick Cantlay. Of their nine foursome games across Ryder and President Cups, they have won six. 

Rory McIlroy teams up again with Tommy Fleetwood, and they’ll face Collin Morikawa and Harris English. For Europe, that match is must-win. 

McIlroy is his team’s spiritual leader, and Europe’s win two years ago was founded on his best-ever showing, winning four points out of five and providing the spark in his sole defeat by squaring up to caddie Joe LaCava. He will also be the lightning rod of much of the American attention, but history is teaching him how to deal with it. 

“I felt like at Hazeltine [in 2016], I probably engaged too much at times, and then Whistling Straits, I didn’t engage enough and felt pretty flat because of it. It’s just trying to find that balance.

“I can’t tell anyone on the team what that balance is. They really have to find it themselves. But that’s the challenge of playing away.” 

With the form of Jon Rahm and Viktor Hovland much iffier than it was two years ago, a huge amount rests on McIlroy’s shoulders. The better news is that in Fleetwood, MacIntyre and even Justin Rose, McIlroy has team-mates arriving at Bethpage in a much better place than they were two years ago. 

Shane Lowry was irked two years ago by comments from Richard Bland doubting that he deserved to be on the team. Since then, Lowry has transformed himself into one of the best players in the world, a truly elite ball-striker who would have minted more silverware but for a streaky putter. His form line over recent months, however, has dipped, but the Ryder Cup offers him a chance to play the team game his father and uncle took for granted, so you can back him to play above himself. 

“Other players might be more individual”, he says “But honestly, I love this. I live for this.” 

The United States’ talisman is Scottie Scheffler but their showman will be DeChambeau. They simply can’t afford for Scheffler to reprise his showing in Rome, where he became the first current world number one not to win a Ryder Cup point. The American team has more questions marks hovering over it. How will everyone gel with Bryson? How will their quartet of rookies cope with the sheer scale of this? Can Patrick Cantlay ignore a year’s worth of bad form? And how sharp is Xander Schauffele, who has taken time off lately following the birth of his son? 


Bryson DeChambeau rallies the crowd on the final day’s practice. Alamy Stock Photo


Alamy Stock Photo

Xander is the only American player facing ring-rust questions this time around, as the rest of the team bar LIV’s DeChambeau played the Procore Championship on the PGA Tour a fortnight ago. Infamously, nine of America’s 12 players hadn’t played in five weeks when they rocked up to Rome two years ago. Europe have lost that advantage this time around. 

The figure of Bradley is fascinating. He is a rarity among American pros in that he truly, deeply cares about the Ryder Cup all-year round, and was heartbroken to have been omitted from their disastrous Roman venture. He vowed to return to the team in Bethpage and thus went and played well enough to deserve a spot. . . only to be appointed captain instead. Hence his mad quandary. 

Sure, Keegan, you can play the Ryder Cup. Only you have to publicly pick yourself. And you then have to face the post-mortem afterwards if it all goes wrong. 

The Europeans were happy for Bradley to be a playing captain, signing all the necessary documentation to allow it to happen. To understand this European eagerness in Irish terms: the most famous non-playing captain in our history, Eamon de Valera, knew that it was better to allow his counterpart to involve himself in the fray while he himself stood above it all. Bradley almost stumbled into signing his own kind of warrant, but recoiled at the 11th hour. 

He has thus decided to do as Donald has done and stood adjacent to it all. That is, until the first tee shot on Friday, when the theatre will erupt and happily engulf us all.  

USA need 14.5 points to win the Ryder Cup; Europe need 14 points to retain 

Friday schedule (all times Irish)

Friday foursomes 

12:10 – Jon Rahm/Tyrrell Hatton vs Bryson DeChambeau/Justin Thomas 

12:26 – Ludvig Aberg /Matt Fitzpatrick vs Scottie Scheffler/Russell Henley

12:42 – Rory McIlroy/Tommy Fleetwood vs Collin Morikawa/Harris English

12:58 – Robert MacIntyre/Viktor Hovland vs Xander Schauffele/Patrick Cantlay

Friday fourballs (pairings to be announced on Friday)

17:25 – Match one

17:41 – Match two

17:57 – Match three

18:13 – Match four

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‘He’s done an absolutely phenomenal job’ – Mayo star’s rise to AFL Grand Final

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MIDWEEK IN THE south Mayo village of Kilamine, and unfamiliar flags are being tied to the lampposts.

In the past, red and green was the only scene here. Not only for Mayo, but the local club also play in the same colours.

Instead, the navy blue and white of the Geelong Cats are proudly flying in honour of their famous son Oisín Mullin.

It’s the Australian Rules Grand Final week, 100,000 people packed into the Melbourne Cricket Ground, enjoying the mid-spring weather to see Geelong Cats up against Brisbane Lions this Saturday.

The Irish invasion of the AFL has deep roots, but this final stands out with the scale of Irish representation. For Geelong, Mullin is playing in his first final, while it is final number three for Mark O’Connor of Dingle and Kerry.

It might have been even greater as on the Brisbane Lions side, Darragh Joyce of Rower-Inistioge and Kilkenny has been named as an emergency sub, while Conor McKenna of Eglish and Tyrone has fallen well out of contention after his big impact at the tail end of last season.

O’Connor’s triumph in 2022 came alongside Zach Tuohy, when they became the second and third Irish players to win the title, after Tadhg Kennelly in 2005. McKenna became the fourth last year.

On Saturday morning, the senior panel of Kilmaine will gather around a big screen for the ‘bounce down’ at 5.30am. At half-time, they have caterers lined up to grab some breakfast.

His parents Jarlath and Noreen were brought out some weeks ago by the club to stay in Melbourne and take in a few games as the season entered business time. It was an open ticket and they hung around to see their son and his team mates progress to The Big Dance. His brother Jarlath has been out there for the past year anyway.

Last weekend, Kilmaine were beaten by Kilmeena in the Mayo intermediate championship quarter-final, 0-20 to 1-12. With Oisín’s brother Kevin at full-forward, the joint manager Alan Burke told him to swallow his disappointment and get on the next available plane to join his family in Australia.

Having lived in Perth for 15 years before returning home and taking up two of the most pressured jobs in his home club – joint-manager and treasurer, Burke knows all about the AFL, having attended two Grand Finals in his time.

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“It is one of the biggest sporting occasions in the world on Saturday morning.

“It’s guaranteed that there will be 100,024 people at that game in the Melbourne Cricket Ground. It’s one of the biggest crowds in the world.”

It’s not just one of the biggest days in the global sporting calendar, it’s the jamboree around it too.

“On Friday afternoon the two teams will parade through the city on the back of Toyota Hilux’s – probably because they sponsor the AFL,” Burke points out.

“You could have 50-60,000 people lining the streets, just for the parade alone.”

As for Mullin, as you might imagine there are mixed feelings.

“He is a big loss to the club. We are not a huge club. We did well this year in the intermediate – we had a couple of injuries with a few different people. Then you throw in the likes of Oisín and his brother Jarlath who is over there with him for the last year.

“You’re losing the calibre of these types of guys so it can be difficult.

“But you also have to look at the flipside of the coin and totally respect and appreciate Oisín’s ambition. It’s something he has done and you have to celebrate it really.”


In action against GWS Giants. Alamy Stock Photo


Alamy Stock Photo

Earlier in the championship, Brian Maloney, who first played for Mayo in 1999, made an appearance at the age of 45. He has played alongside Mullin and recounts how he, “buried me with a shoulder once in training. He was just off his first year of Mayo training, it must have been five years now. He broke my rib and my collarbone in one hit.

“He came out of the Mayo camp all bulked up and had gone very strong at this point.”

The time Mullin spent in a Mayo jersey was brief, but he still gathered up two Young Player of the Year awards and an All-Star.

His progress in AFL has to be put into context, Burke believes.

“I suppose a big thing with Oisín is he is very much down to earth and he hasn’t let this go to his head. It’s been a tough road, in his first season he didn’t get much gametime at all, to now playing pretty much all them, bar one or two,” he said.

“He’s been a huge inspiration to all around here. But equally, he’s been a massive loss to our club and to our county. No doubt he would be having a huge say in the Mayo setup if he was still around.

oisin-mullin-celebrates
After a Mayo win over Kildare. Bryan Keane / INPHO


Bryan Keane / INPHO / INPHO

“I was delighted he went to Geelong.

“Geelong always seemed to have a real steady ship. And then Mark O’Connor was already there, so I was glad to see him going to that club.

“But what people don’t appreciate about someone trying to play AFL, is that it is like somebody trying to pick up hurling at 22.

“The game, you really have to develop young with it. They play with such telepathy and they don’t take their eye off the ball.

“They can get tackled within five metres of the ball, so there is a lot of development in it.

“He went out there in November ’22 and he was actually injured and came back home.

“He went back out again and ended up playing a couple of games and he was playing professional sport within six months of taking it up. That’s absolutely phenomenal.”

This year, Geelong have used him as a ‘tagger.’ It means what you might think; mark the best and most creative players in the opposition.

“He probably got plenty of tips to do it by looking at Lee Keegan doing it to Diarmuid Connolly or a Ciaran Kilkenny,” says Burke.

“It is a very similar thing. You don’t want them to get the ball, they are the players who make the other team tick. And he’s done an absolutely phenomenal job for the last season. The Brownlow Medal award was on earlier this week and there were a few guys in the top ten that Oisín played against and he didn’t give them a ball. They might have had five touches throughout, when their typical disposals of the ball might be around 30.

“So it’s a great story, what he has done there.”

And it’s not done yet.

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Anxiety and uncertainty lingers as season looms

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Mark Jones, Josh Adams, Filo Tiatia and Dwayne PeelHuw Evans Picture Agency

As Wales’ four professional sides prepare for a new campaign, they have to wonder whether the 2025-26 season will be their final one.

For Welsh rugby to start in crisis is not unusual but even by its own chaotic standards, the beginning to this season is even more concerning.

The Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) has proposed cutting the number of professional clubs from four to two, putting the futures of Cardiff, Dragons, Ospreys and Scarlets at risk.

That radical solution is among four models being considered – with the WRU highlighting its own “optimal choice” is to halve the number of professional teams.

It has not proved popular.

The Welsh Rugby Players Association (WRPA) has told the WRU its proposals for the elite game would “drive talent to leave Wales”.

Wales and British and Irish Lions flanker Jac Morgan has told the WRU he will leave Welsh professional domestic rugby if Ospreys cease to exist.

The governing body insist no final decision has been made and has been undergoing a public consultation with players, fans and stakeholders.

An open survey on the state of Welsh rugby ends on Friday, on the first day of the United Rugby Championship (URC) season, with the official consultation process completed by the end of September.

A final decision on the future of Welsh rugby is expected by the end of October, just before Wales begin their autumn international series under new head coach Steve Tandy.

The timing is unfortunate with preparations for the new campaign affected by uncertainty and anxiety.

The four professional sides have outlined how they have been coping for the start the season with a situation that might well lead to job cuts and teams disappearing.

‘The what-ifs do infiltrate you’ – Jones

Ospreys head coach Mark Jones encourages his squadHuw Evans Picture Agency

Following the decision to leave the Swansea.com Stadium, Ospreys will play their home matches at the Brewery Field in Bridgend this season with the permanent switch to St Helen’s completed in time for the 2026-27 season.

Mark Jones’ side begin their campaign with two matches in South Africa, opening up against the Bulls on Saturday.

“There is always lots going on and one thing I have learned is it’s normally something close to home we have to deal with,” said Jones.

“It develops resilience within your staff and players.

“I can’t compliment the group enough in how they are able to separate the two things and tried to remain focused on the job and control what we can as rugby players and coaches. They have been superb.

“I would be lying if I said there weren’t moments where it infiltrates you. Individuals are human beings and there are times your mind does drift into the what-if scenario.”

Jones says he has done his best to help the squad cope with the issues.

“I have tried to manage situations in an honest and upfront way, not walk passed things that need addressing and give as much clarity as I can from what I know,” he added.

“Sometimes being honest is not always what you want to hear but everybody deserves to know the truth or as much of it as you know.

“There will be time to reflect on when things will be worrying, but there will be times we have to put the team and badge first and give the squad the best chance of getting off to a good start in the URC.”

Scarlets have not tried to hide from uncertainty

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Scarlets head coach Dwayne Peel will see his side open their campaign against Munster in Llanelli on Saturday. His attitude is to tackle the off-the-field issues head on.

“There’s uncertainty in the game, you can’t hide from that and we haven’t hid from it,” said Peel.

“The consultation is going on, so things are out of our control, but all we can do is be as up front and as honest with the information we’ve had.

“We need the clarity of how we want to approach the season because you can waste all your energy worrying about the uncertainty.

“There are going to be elements of anxiety across the game. Every fan, player, coach, staff member of this club and other regions are going to be feeling the same.”

Scarlets fans will march before the game on Saturday to show their support for the future existence of the side.

“The big thing around this club is it’s the heart of the community and everything west of here is Scarlets through and through and what this place has been built on,” added Peel.

“I’m not surprised by the march and the feel and love now because it’s always been there.

“In times of need, they’ve been there, for this club, something I feel very strongly about.”

Peel says he cannot imagine the town of Llanelli or Welsh rugby without the Scarlets.

“It’s been a pivotal club and entity in this country,” he said.

“Scarlets need to be part of the future.”

Never a dull day for Cardiff

Cardiff’s survival is considered secure by many having been taken over by the WRU in April after going into administration.

WRU chief executive Abi Tierney admitted she could not see a situation where there was no professional rugby in Cardiff.

Despite these reassurances, the Blue and Blacks find themselves shrouded in uncertainty going into the new season.

Plans to return them to private ownership are on hold until after the consultation and they have an interim chief executive.

They will also start the season at home against Lions this weekend with no permanent head coach after Matt Sherratt left to join Steve Tandy’s Wales backroom staff.

This bombshell came less than a week before Cardiff’s first match, leaving the rest of the Arms Park coaching staff to initially fill the void.

Cardiff and Wales wing Josh Adams is used to the off-the-field chaos.

“We’ve always got to deal with something, there’s never a dull day,” said Adams.

“It’s nothing new. There is some disruption, but it’d be nice to have one year without it.

“This is a crucial time, the options on the table are important ones and we understand change has to happen.

“It hasn’t disrupted our training too much, we have cracked on as usual and had a decent pre-season.”

‘We must not burn energy thinking of other things’

Dragons head coach Filo Tiatia talks to his players after defeatHuw Evans Picture Agency

Dragons are the first Welsh team in action when they travel to face Ulster in Belfast on Friday night.

The club have been the most vocal of the regions in criticising the plans to drop to two sides, stating “Welsh rugby deserves better and the WRU must rethink”.

Chair David Wright says the initial proposals “don’t add up” and that there was no way the Dragons could agree to them as they were.

Co-captain and Wales lock Ben Carter says it is a concern but has praised his squad on focusing on the rugby which he says is “the number one priority”.

His head coach Filo Tiatia agrees.

“What happens with the WRU, we’ll leave it with our chairman and CEO and they’ll fight the battle,” said the former All Black.

“What we can focus on is how we move forward with the current conditions and what we know.

“There’s talk of two teams, we can’t control that. We might as well not focus on the things because we’re burning energy.”

Like the other coaches, Tiatia will just concentrate on the opening weekend.

“We’ve just got to focus on Ulster in front of us,” he added.

“The group of players and coaches are tight. They work hard together and it is no difference to probably Cardiff, Ospreys or Scarlets.”

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