Tag: UEFA Champions League

FROM OUR CEO: As Luis Enrique Proves, Authenticity Is Everything

Authenticity is everything. Always.

Luis Enrique won the UEFA Champions League with Paris Saint-Germain last weekend, becoming only the sixth man to win the title with two different teams. He’s a true icon of the game.

Eleven years ago I wrote “authenticity is everything” because without it we have nothing. This piece was about Icons.com as a brand and our endless quest to prove that our signed memorabilia products were and are genuinely signed by the world’s best and never faked.

Something else I said recently, when describing how we’ve survived in the shark-infested waters of football memorabilia for 26 years, was that we turn up on time, we pay our bills and we do what we say we will. Sadly, in the world of football, the bar can set very low for such things.

Looking back, I hadn’t appreciated just how much and how often we worry about the authenticity of our products, while striving to be authentic as people in all that we do.

Before our signing with the then one-time UEFA Champions League winner, we’d been told that Luis Enrique was quite a prickly personality and didn’t suffer fools gladly. So, as we climbed a mountain in a minibus in a nature reserve outside of Barcelona, and came upon a set of ornate iron gates, we were worried we were arriving little late.

We needn’t have been concerned as we were met by a handsome young man who helped us into the estate with a smile on his face. Enrique’s son, Pacho, offered us drinks, helped us with our cases and showed us into the office where the signing would take place. 

Luis arrived. To say he was friendly and welcoming is to underscore his charisma; he immediately smiled, hugged and welcomed every one of our team to his beautiful home in Finca. He carries a definite energy, a special “fuerza vital” or life force that lights up any room he’s in.  

The next two-hour signing session were to become my favourite of all the hundreds we have ever done. We barely talked football. We chatted about how he had completed the Marathon des Sables, the toughest running competition in the world; how he’d competed in ironman triathlons; how he had gone to Australia to clear his head and learn to surf post playing career; and how he had a new obsession: cycling. It was partly why he now lived with his family in a converted farm on a mountaintop. Because, as he put it, “it’s always uphill to get home.” 

Luis was out of work at the time, not knowing what the future would hold. But he was truly engaging and genuinely interested in us too. I found a common interest in the architecture of Alvar Aalto who had inspired my own family home built by my architecture parents and how Luis had battled for years to bring his crumbling Finca vision to life. It was a true challenge, he said.

This was not been his greatest challenge, however. Far from it.

His beloved daughter Xana had died after a battle with a rare form of bone cancer aged just nine. He’d quit his job with Spain to be with her and his family in their darkest hour. In a documentary about his life entitled You’ve No ****king Idea it’s remarkable how he reframes the worst possible outcome. 

“Can I consider myself lucky or unlucky?” Enrique says. “I consider myself to be lucky, very lucky. My daughter lived nine marvellous years with us. We’ve got a thousand memories of her, videos, incredible things.”

Enrique then continues: “My mother couldn’t keep photos of Xana until I arrived home and asked her “why aren’t there any photos of Xana, Mum?” ‘I can’t, I can’t’. “Mum, you have to put [photos of Xana] up”. Xana is alive. She isn’t in the physical plane, but she is in the spiritual plane. Because every day we talk about her, we laugh and remember.”

Famously he laughed, joked and played with Xana on the pitch after his FC Barcelona side won the UEFA Champions League — and the treble — in 2015. The most iconic image of the night is of Xana planting a massive Barca flag in the turf with his help.

In the press conference leading up to this year’s final he explained again how, while Xana could not be with him in person in Munich, she would be there in spirit. After Luis’s Paris Saint-Germain side won convincingly, the incredible, raucous PSG fans unveiled a massive tifo that moment. As authentic as ever, Luis described after that “my daughter has been with me since she left… I don’t need a win or a defeat in the Champions League: I feel it anyway.”

I wrote to his family the day after the final in Munich to say my own young boys were in tears after PSG beat our favourite team, Liverpool FC, in an earlier UEFA Champions League round. I’d explained to them about Luis, his beautiful family, his home and the journey they’d been on. “We should cheer for him now through the rest of the competition,” I told them. We all cheered when they won — me in the stadium, the boys watching at home. There were more tears.

Authenticity is always everything. Win, lose or draw. Being true to yourself, even when you lose everything, makes you a winner whatever happens.



ANDY BRASSELL: Has The UEFA Club Comp Revamp Worked?

Ahead of the three intriguing finals, we find ourselves reviewing a new era for UEFA club competition.

It started with a revamp few understood – or few cared to understand. Now we’re approaching the moment of truth in the 2024-25 season it feels as though the new UEFA Champions League format has been in place forever and, while there have been few complaints, the effects continue to be felt, not just within the competition itself, but within its sister tournaments, the UEFA Europa League and UEFA Conference League.

If the all-new singular league phase created high tension and a greater sense of jeopardy towards its conclusion, the addition of the playoff round to bridge the gap to the knockouts was where fans were really rewarded. Manchester City’s epic tussle with Real Madrid CF, Bayern Munich’s narrow escape against Celtic FC, and SL Benfica’s struggle with AS Monaco were all prime edge-of-your-seat UEFA Champions League dramas. There were shocks too as PSV Eindhoven disposed of Juventus, Feyenoord dumped AC Milan out and Club Brugge eliminated an excellent Atalanta BC side – underpinning the notion that the re-rub of the competition has at least shaken things up in the short-term.  

That sense of change has continued throughout the knockouts. Even though Paris Saint-Germain and Internazionale are hardly strangers to a UEFA Champions League final, it feels inherently like there is a freshness to this year’s showpiece in Munich. 

PSG have been, by consensus, the best team in the competition, despite a tepid start to their league phase campaign. This columnist witnessed first-hand the moment their fluid football clicked into place away at Salzburg just before Christmas. Finally, post-Mbappé, Neymar Jr and Messi, PSG have begun to get neutrals on-side.  

Yet, as they proved by beating the most exciting FC Barcelona side in a generation, Inter are not to be underestimated. Their ability to roll with the punches and hang tough under extreme pressure is unfathomable. And, at the other end of the pitch, Lautaro Martínez, despite a punishing workload for club and country in the last two years, is the UCL’s top scorer among players remaining in the tournament. 

Away from the UEFA Champions League final, the English are coming (one of PSG’s 2024-25 highlights is besting four of the Premier League’s so-called finest). 

Normally having three teams from one country spread across the three UEFA finals would suggest that nation has a certain level of European dominance, but let’s not jump the gun on the basis of one singular season, albeit an eventful and potentially revealing one.

The UEFA Champions League doesn’t exist in a bubble. Its revamp has had one particularly big effect on the UEFA Europa League – that no longer do we get ‘lucky losers’ parachuting into the competition having finished third in a four-team group stage. Many have petitioned for this for years and would say the adjustment is fairer. But has it made the competition better?

Only time will tell if this season is an anomaly rather than the new normal, but the shift in the UEFA Europa League’s final stages could not be any more sharply underlined than by the fact its final will be contested not just by two Premier League teams, but by Premier League teams who occupy 16th and 17th in their domestic standings. The UEFA Europa League is a great competition that has in recent seasons built its reputation on thrilling knockouts.

That hasn’t quite been the same this term. Though, if Manchester United’s breathless 5-4 aggregate win over Olympique Lyonnais in the quarter-finals lives on in the mind of everyone who saw it (it certainly will in mine), it doesn’t hide the fact that the quality of this knockout stage has not been up to that of recent years.

United have been propped-up (and not just in that game) by the mighty Bruno Fernandes, the best player left in the competition. Yet Tottenham Hotspur are more than capable – if maddeningly inconsistent – and it would be a great denouement to Son Heung-min’s incredible time in North London if he’s fit enough to be as much of the decisive player as United hope Fernandes will be.

Chelsea FC are, to an extent, in the same boat as the other two English clubs in the UEFA finals. Almost overpowered in comparison to their competitors and expected to saunter home, especially having included Cole Palmer in the UEFA Conference League squad post-Christmas. It has been clear from September that they are the overwhelming favourites for this trophy but now, at the final hurdle, at least they have worthy opposition to contend with. The semi-final victory against ACF Fiorentina, and how Real Betis celebrated it, was everything European club competition should be. 

Betis come equipped with their best team in years and even if their 2025 surge looks to have to come too late to get them a UEFA Champions League spot via their standing in La Liga, they would quickly dismiss that as a disappointment if the season ended with the club’s first ever European silverware.

How this will pave the way to the next few years of UEFA club competition remains to be seen. The logjam of quality at the top of the Premier League, with Newcastle United and Aston Villa joining the previously ring-fenced English UEFA Champions League places, might mean that English teams further dominate the UEFA Europa League and UEFA Conference League in years to come, almost by default.

The counterpoint is that Italy and France have also developed incredibly competitive races for European places. It feels as if even with the extra competition, tickets to ride in Europe are maybe even more precious than ever. Either way, it doesn’t feel like the traditional powers of recent seasons are going to be able to monopolise the UEFA Champions League over the next few years. The field is as open as these three finals promise to be.



Eight Reasons We Loved The Career of Don Andrés

Legendary former FC Barcelona and Spain midfielder Andrés Iniesta today officially announced his retirement from football. We first signed with Andrés well over a decade ago and have always thoroughly enjoyed working with him, indeed every bit as much as his balletic football.

Counting down eight reasons why we loved the career Don Andrés led for club and country, all of us at Icons.com would like thank him for the memories as we hope to see him soon for another signing session.

To celebrate the great career of the great man, we are offering 10% OFF all items in our Andrés Iniesta collection – simply use the code ‘INIESTA8’ at the checkout on eligible items.


1. UEFA EURO 2012 Best Player of the Tournament

Fresh from winning the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, Spain entered UEFA EURO 2012 as defending champions and heavy favourites. Even so, the Roja side of 2012 sparkled with Andrés Iniesta as its muse.

Andrés was extraordinary in Poland and Ukraine, winning the UEFA EURO 2012 Best Player of the Tournament, awarded by the UEFA Technical Team – a testament to his overall contribution given he did not score and registered just one assist.

“In many ways, he symbolised the tournament – the creative, incisive runner, with and without the ball. We felt that he epitomised a lot of what we saw,” said UEFA technical director Andy Roxburgh.


2. Camp Nou farewell

Though it was a deeply affecting and an ultimately sad moment for fans of the man and his club, the image of Andrés Iniesta soaking in his last appearance for FC Barcelona at Camp Nou, alone in the middle of a pitch he had made his own, speaks to his passion for Barça.

When respect and admiration goes both ways, from player to fans and fans to player, that’s when you get a true club legend.


3. Bernabéu ovation

You have to be a special player to get a standing ovation from opposing fans. In this case, the opposing fans weren’t just any opposing fans. In November of 2015, with 15 minutes left of a brutal 4-0 Clásico defeat, it was Madridistas of all people showing their appreciation for Iniesta with a standing ovation.

It was a moment to remember for Don Andrés and symbolic of a player who was able to transcend football rivalry.


4. Partnership with Xavi

Lennon and McCartney. Batman and Robin. Tom and Jerry. Not all duos are created equal. Forming a midfield partnership that produced mountains of trophies, countless awards and too many goals and assists to count, the partnership of Andrés Iniesta and Xavi will go down as the best of a magnificent era and quite possibly the greatest ever.


5. Uncontainable

A picture paints a thousand words. This photo, taken by Ullstein Bild, sums it up. The respect from world class opposition. The art of it, the audacity, the absurdity. It’s all there. Wonderful.


6. Maestro of the “Greatest Team Ever”

The 2010-11 campaign for FC Barcelona will not soon be repeated – if indeed it ever can be. Sir Alex Ferguson described that team as the greatest he’d ever faced. He had every right to say so and every humility to, in the aftermath of Barça’s crowning achievement that season, a 3-1 demolition of Manchester United at Wembley Stadium in the UEFA Champions League final.

No one game could truly define the majesty of that team and that season and, of course, Andrés Iniesta was at the very heart of its success with nine goals and 15 assists in an eye-watering 50 appearances.


7. The ‘Iniestazo

This would be THE goal of Andrés Iniesta’s storied career if he hadn’t, well, we’ll get to that. The ‘Iniestazo’ goal will be forever remembered by Blaugrana the world over not only as one of the most dramatic goals in a golden generation for the club but also as the goal that set up an iconic UEFA Champions League triumph.

It’s one of those goals you watch time and again if you’re a Barça fan. And not just that, it’s a damn good goal of a highly technical nature as Iniesta, in the dying embers of their epic semi-final second leg at Stamford Bridge, lets a pass from Lionel Messi drag across his body before whipping the ball in to the roof of the Chelsea net.


8. 2010 FIFA World Cup Final winner

Time stood still during this iconic Andrés Iniesta moment, surely the highlight of a remarkable career. Spain had never been world champions and were searching for the breakthrough of a tense FIFA World Cup final in Johannesburg.

They needed a moment of magic. Good thing they had Iniesta, a FIFA World Cup winner in more than one sense.



ANDY BRASSELL: What To Watch On Matchday One Of The New UEFA Champions League

The newly-reformatted UEFA Champions League is here! Who better to guide you through the first matchday of a new era for European football’s biggest and brightest club competition than continental football expert ANDY BRASSELL, here to take you through the main focal points of the first week of action.

HUGE MATCH-UPS

There have been two main stages to the build-up to this year’s reformatted UEFA Champions League; pre-draw, in which many were confused by what the big, new, all-in-one league phase would look like, and post-draw, in which many of the original naysayers were now drooling with anticipation over some of the big fixtures.


And we have them from the get-go this week. AC Milan v Liverpool FC, Manchester City v Internazionale and AS Monaco v FC Barcelona are all outstanding matches with the potential to get this fresh era off to an absolute flier. With the UEFA Champions League restarting in bold fashion with fixtures over a three- day window rather than two, each one of Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday has its huge, must-watch game.


Wednesday’s centrepiece between City and Inter is probably the ultimate pick, a rerun of the 2023 Final and one containing two of Europe’s best sides who have every right to believe in their chances of going deep into this season’s campaign. The Italian champions have a far better team now than the one that got to Istanbul in 2023; in fact they were improved last season too, and still managed to drop the ball against Atlético Madrid in the Round of 16. With City feeling a bit mugged-off by Real Madrid CF last season, both sides have scores to settle.

HANDBRAKE OFF

We were used to a degree of caution in the UEFA Champions League group stages as teams managed workload and resources and played it safe to ensure they finished in the top two. Maybe a best practice approach to this new megagroup will emerge at some point, but it is unlikely to do so this season, and it certainly won’t in the opening weeks.


Why? Quite simply there is no way of knowing yet how many points a team needs to make it into the top eight (and thus directly into the last 16) or, for those below-elite clubs with slightly lesser aims, into the top 24 to make it into the playoffs for the first knockout round.


It might be that, for instance, somewhere around the 16-point mark from the eight games gets top eight – and you bet your last pound/euro that the biggest clubs will do everything they can to get two midweek
matchdays of rest – while around nine should earn teams a playoff spot. For now, though, we just can’t know. And neither can the clubs.


So from Paris Saint-Germain or Real Madrid CF to Brest or Sturm Graz, the only option is to go for it. The biggest clubs can’t play conservatively with that tangible prize of a couple of games off lying ahead of them. The smaller clubs know a couple of good results will keep them in the mix for post-January involvement. So whether your aim is to top the class or to scrape a passmark, being aggressive and positive is probably the only way to do it, which has to be good news for the watching public.

NEW SIGNINGS WITH POINTS TO PROVE

Generally European clubs are counting the pennies more closely than in a long while but a few clubs have been determined to change their squads profoundly this summer, and have often traded furiously to that end. Juventus (who start against PSV Eindhoven on Tuesday) are one giant who has used the summer to get rid of players as well as bring them in and present an exciting new squad for this return to the UEFA Champions League.


It is the biggest stage and for that reason the new boys will be keen to take their opportunities to show their new clubs that they did the right thing in signing them. Michael Olise’s European debut is hotly anticipated, having already conquered swathes of France fans on his first senior squad call-up earlier this month. FC Bayern Munich (who play Dinamo Zagreb) have a rich history of wide players and the Hammersmith-born man scored his first goal for the club in their 6-1 demolition of Holstein Kiel this weekend.


The summer’s biggest signing was Julián Alvarez, who arrived at Atlético looking a little jaded (hardly surprising given he played nearly 80 games in a last season for Manchester City and Argentina that lasted 11 months) but he has started to find an extra gear in recent weeks, scoring in a win against Chile for Argentina and then getting his first Atleti goal to seal a win against Valencia CF on Sunday night. Diego Simeone’s team host RB Leipzig and Alvarez may well be in the starting lineup.


Douglas Luiz is another overworked player who could do with finding some inspiration this week. The Brazilian made a first start for Juventus since joining from Aston Villa in the goalless draw at Empoli this weekend, and he received some criticism for his display. As with Alvarez, it is a little unfair after he arrived straight from a summer playing in the Copa América. Juve were prepared to push the boat out for him so he could give Kenan Yıldız, Teun Koopmeiners and Nico González the space to flex their creative muscles, so Douglas Luiz will be even more vital – arguably – in a UEFA Champions League context as the Serie A side look to return to the top table in style.

ICON OF THE MATCHWEEK: Vinícius Júnior (Real Madrid CF)

The brilliant Brazilian was on the scoresheet again at the weekend, netting the vital penalty opener at Real Sociedad in a hard-fought win. Much has been made of the relationship between Vini and Kylian Mbappé and how they might tactically fit; with them both being renowned for outstanding movement and having played significant parts of last season in a front two and as a central striker respectively, the flexibility they will give Carlo Ancelotti is significant.


This week, however, they land together in Real Madrid CF’s natural habitat, in the arena in which they will be judged ahead of all others. VfB Stuttgart, last season’s surprise Bundesliga runners-up, arrive at the Bernabéu and will prove a test.


Sebastian Hoeness’ team are not shy; they play attacking, possession-based football and this, combined with a habitually narrow midfield shape, should mean that Vini will find more space on the left flank than he would be likely to in your average La Liga game. VfB Stuttgart will come to spoil a Madrid party and, inadvertently, might give Vini and Mbappé the chance to party themselves.



FIFA World Cup Hero Emi Martinez signs with Icons.com!

Highly-decorated FIFA World Cup-winning goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez put pen to product at our latest signing session, adding to the already star-studded list of footballing heroes to sign for Icons.com.

The Icons signing team held a private session with Martinez in England’s city of Birmingham on March 7th. The Argentina and Aston Villa shot-stopper signed a number of items during our time with him, including shirts, gloves and photos.

The signing comes off the back of a highly successful few years for the Argentine, who lifted the CONMEBOL Copa America in 2021 and followed that with an unforgettable FIFA World Cup triumph beside Icons favourite Lionel Messi.

The former Arsenal goalkeeper will be long remembered for his heroics against France in the showpiece Doha final. He made a number of important saves and earned the prestigious Golden Glove award as the best goalkeeper at the tournament.

Martinez is currently plying his trade at former European champions Aston Villa and will be hoping to help the Midlands club return to continental football in the near future – it’s safe to say Villa are in good hands!

Each and every item of Martinez signed memorabilia from Icons.com comes with an official Certificate of Authenticity, which serves as your proof that the Argentine’s signature is 100% authentic and was genuinely signed by the man himself during this private signing session, organised and conducted by our dedicated signing team.

The full range of Martinez signed memorabilia is available to buy from Icons.com right now.

For the latest on who we sign with next, as well as early access to products and exclusive discounts, giveaways and much more, make sure you’re subscribed to the Icons.com email newsletter. Sign up today via icons.com/newsletter.



Italian Football Icon Francesco Totti Signs With Icons!

One-club men are hard to come by these days. So when Francesco Totti stepped onto the Stadio Olimpico turf for the last of his 619 Serie A appearances for AS Roma in May 2017, there was barely a dry eye among the sell-out crowd who’d come to pay homage to their Golden Boy.

One of Italian football’s all-time greats, only Silvio Piola scored more than Totti’s 250 league goals. Supremely talented, charismatic and colourful, he embodied everything great about Italian football.

That’s why our team has always been proud to sign with the man often referred to as ‘The Eighth King of Rome’ and were no less excited during our latest signing, which took place on November 22nd, 2022 in (where else?) Rome.

A FIFA World Cup winner in 2006, the goalscoring legend will be forever adored by football fans around the world, while his stylish performances for Italy also helped to mould him into one of the most recognisable and popular footballers in the world.

Which is why memorabilia signed by Totti are hot property – at this latest private signing session he added his signature to AS Roma and Italy shirts, photos and boots, all of which are available on Icons.com now.

Each and every item of Totti signed memorabilia from Icons.com comes with an official Certificate of Authenticity, which serves as your proof that the Italian’s signature is 100% authentic and was genuinely signed by the man himself during this private signing session, organised and conducted by our dedicated signing team.

The full range of Totti signed memorabilia is available to buy from Icons.com right now.

For the latest on who we sign with next, as well as early access to products and exclusive discounts, giveaways and much more, make sure you’re subscribed to the Icons.com email newsletter. Sign up today via icons.com/newsletter.



Luka Modric Again Signs for Icons.com!

Icons.com are delighted to announce yet another signing with an iconic player – this time, it’s Real Madrid superstar and Ballon d’Or winner Luka Modric!

The private signing session took place in Madrid on November 4th, 2022 at which Modric added his signature to an array of fantastic new items including shirts, balls and photos.

Modric-signed Croatia, Real Madrid and Tottenham Hotspur shirts are available to buy not only in sleek Icons.com presentation options but also in our official and exclusive UEFA Champions League and FIFA World Cup memorabilia collections.

After starting his career at Dinamo Zagreb, Modric was snapped up by Premier League giants Tottenham Hotspur where he spent four years as a fans’ favourite.

Real Madrid signed Modric for £30million in 2012 – a shrewd move as the Croatian has gone on to win three La Liga titles and a staggering five UEFA Champions Leagues.

The mercurial midfielder also inspired his nation to an unlikely FIFA World Cup final in Russia in 2018. Modric will be hoping to go one better at the FIFA World Cup this year in Qatar and has his eyes set on winning that illustrious trophy so many dream of lifting.

Each and every item of Luka Modric signed memorabilia from Icons.com comes with an official Certificate of Authenticity, which serves as your proof that Modric’s signature is 100% authentic and was genuinely signed by the man himself during this private signing session, organised and conducted by our dedicated signing team.

The full range of Modric signed memorabilia is available to buy from Icons.com right now.

For all the latest on the next global megastar to sign with Icons.com – as well as early access to products and exclusive discounts, giveaways and much more – make sure you’re subscribed to the official Icons.com email newsletter. Sign up today via icons.com/newsletter.



Yaya Toure Signs With Icons.com!

Icons.com is delighted to announce yet another signing with an iconic player – this time, it’s former FC Barcelona and Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure!

The private signing session took place in London on September 9th, 2022 at which Toure added his signature to an array of fantastic new items including shirts, boots, balls and photos.

Toure-signed Ivory Coast, FC Barcelona and Manchester City shirts are available to buy not only in sleek Icons.com presentation options but also in our official and exclusive FC Barcelona, UEFA Champions League and Manchester City memorabilia collections.

Toure began his senior career at Belgian club Beveren before spells at Olympiacos and Monaco but his first major honours came with Spanish giants FC Barcelona, where he twice won La Liga. The Ivorian won the UEFA Champions League in 2009, playing in the Rome final famous for Lionel Messi’s brilliant header in the 2-0 triumph.

After 118 appearances for FC Barcelona, Toure moved to Premier League club Manchester City, where he quickly established himself as a vital part of the team and won three Premier League titles, an FA Cup and two League Cups.

Over an almost 20-year career, Toure played over 600 games and scored 103 goals from midfield. It almost goes without saying that Toure was one of the most influential African players of a generation.

Each and every item of Yaya Toure signed memorabilia from Icons.com comes with an official Certificate of Authenticity, which serves as your proof that Toure’s signature is 100% authentic and was genuinely signed by the man himself during this private signing session, organised and conducted by our dedicated signing team.

The full range of Toure signed memorabilia is available to buy from Icons.com right now.

For all the latest on the next global megastar to sign with Icons.com – as well as early access to products and exclusive discounts, giveaways and much more – make sure you’re subscribed to the official Icons.com email newsletter. Sign up today via icons.com/newsletter.