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Trump pardons former Tottenham Hotspur owner Joe Lewis, who pleaded guilty to insider trading

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Trump pardons former Tottenham Hotspur owner Joe Lewis, who pleaded guilty to insider trading - NBC News
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President Donald Trump has issued a pardon to Joe Lewis, a British billionaire who pleaded guilty last year to federal insider trading charges.

Lewis, whose family remains the controlling shareholder of the English Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur, was indicted in 2023 on allegations that he schemed for years to abuse his access to corporate boardrooms and repeatedly shared inside information with romantic partners, associates, private pilots and others.

“Mr. Lewis admitted he made a terrible mistake, did not fight extradition in the case, and paid a $5 million fine,” a White House official told NBC News in a statement Thursday confirming the pardon first reported by The Athletic.

The statement said that the 88-year-old Lewis, who now lives in the Bahamas, “requested a pardon so that he may receive medical treatment and visit his grandchildren and great-grandchildren in the United States.”

Lewis’ net worth is $6.9 billion, according to a Forbes estimate.

In a statement provided through Harry Roxburgh, a spokesperson for Tavistock Group, Lewis said: “I am pleased all of this is now behind me, and I can enjoy retirement and watch as my family and extended family continue to build our businesses based on the quality and pursuit of excellence that has become our trademark.”

A source close to the Lewis family said in a statement that Lewis and his family “are extremely grateful for this pardon and would like to thank President Trump for taking this action.”

Trump recently resumed issuing pardons after the White House temporarily paused and sought to tighten its reviews following concerns that the process had become a lucrative business for lobbying and consulting firms during Trump’s second term.

Trump on Monday pardoned his former attorney Rudy Giuliani and 76 others who have been tied to efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results, including attorneys Sidney Powell, John Eastman and Kenneth Chesebro, as well as his former chief of staff Mark Meadows. Those pardons, however, are viewed as largely symbolic since none of the individuals were convicted of federal crimes, which are shielded by presidential pardon power.

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Tottenham beats Man United to win Europa League title and end long trophy drought

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BILBAO, Spain — Tottenham beat Manchester United 1-0 to win the Europa League final and lift its first European trophy in more than four decades on Wednesday.

It is the first major title for Tottenham since it won the English League Cup in 2008, and first European triumph since it won its second UEFA Cup — the equivalent of the Europa League now — in 1984.

Brennan Johnson squeezed in the winner at the end of the first half to help Spurs salvage a dismal season in which it will finish near the bottom of the Premier League standings.

The title guarantees Spurs a spot in next season's Champions League, and brings some much-needed relief for coach Ange Postecoglou after he struggled to keep his team on track all year.

The victory comes six years after Tottenham fell short against Liverpool in the Champions League final.

The defeat adds pressure on United coach Ruben Amorim, whose team sits in 16th place — just ahead of Tottenham — in the Premier League. The club won't play in any European competition next season.

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The soccer manager on the verge of a major championship — and losing his job

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The soccer manager on the verge of a major championship — and losing his job - NBC News
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Standing on the grass inside a small, Norwegian stadium north of the Arctic Circle this month, Ange Postecoglou, the manager of the English soccer club Tottenham, blew kisses to his wife in the crowd. Around him, players and fans who had made the trek joined in the celebration of a rarity in the club’s 142-year-old history: a berth in the championship final of a European tournament.

Tottenham’s palatial stadium in north London, modern practice facility and international fan base rival those of its biggest competitors in the sport’s richest league, the English Premier League. Its trophy case, however, does not. The club has not won a major trophy since 2008 or a major European tournament since 1984. Its history of coming close but failing to win during both the domestic season and the European championships that play out in parallel has spawned a pejorative description — “Spursy.”

That drought could soon end. And so, too, could the tenure of Postecoglou, the manager who got them there.

Because when Tottenham won in Norway to advance to Wednesday’s Europa League final against Manchester United in Bilbao, Spain, it put the club in the bizarre position of being on the verge of a trophy it has long dreamed of to end a dreadful season it would otherwise rather forget.

That discordant contrast between Tottenham’s awful Premier League season with its run to the Europa League final — which guarantees the victor a position in next season’s Champions League, Europe’s most prestigious club tournament, and millions in revenue that come with qualification — has reignited the debate of what defines success in the upper level of global soccer and whether a trophy would be enough to save Postecoglou's job.

“Winning the club’s first trophy in 17 years and its first European one in 41 years would be one hell of an achievement and it would transform him from the club’s worst manager statistically to one of their most successful,” Alasdair Gold, a longtime Tottenham beat reporter for Football.London, told NBC News by email.

Yet win or lose Wednesday, Gold believes, “a parting of the ways seems inevitable.”

In the 20-team Premier League, in which the bottom three teams are unceremoniously relegated to a lower division in English soccer’s hierarchy, Spurs sit 17th with one game left. (Their opponent Wednesday, Manchester United, is 16th and mired in its own strange season.)

Injuries have wiped out many of Tottenham's best players. Reaching the semifinals of an English tournament led to even more attrition for a team already short on fresh legs. And yet Marcus Buckland, a television presenter who hosts a popular podcast about the club, said the most “catastrophic” domestic performance since he began following the club in the late 1970s went beyond injuries.

“There is an element of disbelief as to just how bad Spurs have been,” Buckland wrote.

“To have 21 defeats in the Premier League is embarrassing and cannot completely be put down to the injury crisis during the middle three months of the campaign,” Gold said. “Wednesday night will bring one game to decide for a lot of people whether the pain was all worth it or not.”

It would be for Buckland — with a caveat. The methods that helped Postecoglou and Tottenham advance through the Europa League, largely against competition with fewer resources, should not be confused with a foundation the club should continue to build upon.

“It’s all about silverware for the supporters so, if they do win the Europa League, all else (in the short term) will be forgiven and the 2024-25 season will be considered successful, particularly as Arsenal failed to win a trophy and Manchester United will have been left in the doldrums,” Buckland wrote by email. “That doesn’t mean the manager should keep his job though.”

When Tottenham hired Postecoglou in 2023, it was a stark difference from his predecessors, which included celebrity managers Jose Mourinho and Antonio Conte, whose huge personalities and championship track records Tottenham hoped would rub off. Instead, each burned out any goodwill within two years.

Postecoglou, by contrast, was Australian, affable and well-liked among his players, and he had worked his way up through lower-profile leagues.

He immediately faced skepticism that his style of play, which earned his teams some level of trophy during his second seasons coaching in Australia, Japan and Scotland, would work against wealthy Premier League opponents. Called “Angeball,” the system aggressively pushes to score, even at the expense of a vulnerable defense. Last season, his first, Tottenham finished fifth in the league.

This season, despite numerous injuries, Postecoglou continued to play according to his ideals, without tweaking the system to account for personnel, aggravating fault lines between the manager and the club’s fans that first opened last season. At one point, fans could be heard this season chanting from the stands, “You don’t know what you’re doing.” When, in April, Postecoglou cupped his ear in the direction of fans after a Tottenham goal, it was taken as a response; he later tried to wave off that interpretation, saying he wanted to hear fans celebrating after a “cracking goal.”

Both Gold and Buckland said that though the team’s terrible injury luck was widely acknowledged, Postecoglou’s breakdown in communication with the fans had contributed to this season’s dissatisfaction. Still, considering the club’s history, “I think it has to” qualify as a successful season if Tottenham wins the Europa League title, Gold wrote.

"It would be a huge moment for the fans and the club but whether it becomes more than a moment and something that changes the narrative around the club depends on what Spurs do next with it and whether they invest and improve," he wrote.

When Tottenham and Manchester United line up Wednesday, it should be possible to forget, for two hours, the brutal results in the months that preceded it, said NBC Sports analyst Robbie Mustoe, a former Premier League midfielder. Playing for a championship is rare, and it should be relished.

Nonetheless, Mustoe acknowledged that “I can’t detach it from a horrific Premier League season and a style of play that’s risky at best, reckless particularly if you haven’t got your best defenders out there.”

“Can you imagine a success, a victory, an on-field celebration with the fans that are there, a trophy lift, a manager that really is liked by the players, jumping up and down, a joyful Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday to celebrate that, an open-top bus ride through the city or the area of north London, and then they fire the manager?” Mustoe said.

“When they finally got a guy that gets them over the line, they’re going to just get rid of him and say, ‘I don’t care, it’s not good enough’? I think that would be harsh.”

The question is how much value Daniel Levy, Tottenham’s inscrutable top executive, who rarely talks with media, would take from a trophy. The celebratory scene in Norway on May 8 reminded Gold of happier days early in Postecoglou’s tenure. It was also, he said, “something we haven’t always seen this season through some fractured, difficult times.”

Postecoglou said Tuesday: “I don’t think my job is done here. There has been some growth that I would like to see through.”

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Clash of the clowns: How two of England's worst teams made it to a European soccer final

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Two of England’s worst-performing soccer teams have somehow found themselves in a high-stakes European tournament final.

Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur, who’ve served up shambolic displays in the English Premier League all year, will square off in the Europa League final Wednesday in Bilbao, Spain. The winner clinches automatic qualification for the prestigious European Champions League and the multimillion-dollar payout that comes with it.

It’s difficult to overstate how abysmal these iconic soccer teams have been in the English Premier League this season.

Manchester United is 16th in the table, barely above the relegation zone. Its much-maligned Cameroonian goalkeeper, Andre Onana, has been prone to calamitous mistakes. And its forward line, spearheaded by Danish striker Rasmus Højlund, has been largely impotent. The entire team has scored only 42 goals in 37 league games throughout the entire season.

“I always had this feeling of frustration for the season,” Manchester United manager Ruben Amorim said Friday after his team’s 18th defeat of the Premier League season. The young Portuguese coach acknowledged that winning the Europa League on Wednesday wouldn’t compensate for the shocking performances fans have been subjected to all year. “Europa League is not enough,” he said bluntly.

One of the few teams actually below Manchester United in the league table? Tottenham Hotspur, colloquially known as “Spurs.” The London team sits 17th, one position away from relegation to a lower league.

Spurs’ malfunctioning midfield and a slew of injuries haven’t helped their dismal league position. Their captain, Heung-min Son, has underwhelmed. The South Korean star has failed to fill the goal vacuum left by England captain Harry Kane, who departed for German giant Bayern Munich two seasons ago. And Spurs have lost more than half of their games this season.

In contrast to Amorim, who has conceded his coaching hasn’t been up to snuff, Tottenham’s Australian manager, Ange Postecoglou, has talked more glowingly about his performance despite leading Tottenham to its worst Premier League finish in history.

“I don’t think there’d be another manager who gets to a European final that’s had their ability to manage questioned as much as I have,” he said defensively in an interview with TNT Sports last week.

Postecoglou said he and Amorim are experiencing similar judgments ahead of the final.

“For both of us, this is a significant game, because it can really salvage what many will look at as either a disastrous year or, I think, in our perspective, certainly a historic year,” he said.

Despite their poor play in the Premier League, both squads have risen to the occasion in the Europa League. Manchester United hasn’t lost a match on its way to the final, brushing past Spanish club Athletic Bilbao and French club Lyon en route. Tottenham has also been impressive, defeating German outfit Eintracht Frankfurt, Dutch side AZ Alkmaar and the breakout team of the tournament, Norwegian club Bodø/Glimt.

European soccer elitists turn up their noses at the Europa League because of its second-rate status. The Europa League is considered junior varsity compared with the Champions League. The latter features soccer royalty like Real Madrid, Barcelona and Bayern Munich. The Europa League tournament’s appeal lies in the fact that the winner automatically qualifies into the Champions League, club soccer’s most prestigious tournament with the highest caliber of play.

Playing in the Champions League also means revenue generated by television rights, sponsorships and ticket sales.

Every team in the Champions League gets about $20.8 million from the governing body, UEFA. Plus, there’s prize money, with each win in the tournament garnering an additional $2.3 million and even bigger paydays for making it to the latter stages.

Both Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur could use that injection of cash to buy new players and overhaul their squads over the summer. Without it, they could be left languishing in the league table yet again next season.

“How much money you make is not why you get into the Champions League; it is what you do with that money,” Postecoglou said at a news conference in April. “I’ve always said it’s not just about having money; it’s how you spend it.”

Meanwhile, Amorim is hoping more cash can fund a cultural reset among the Manchester United squad and return the team to a winning mentality.

“The culture in the team ... we need to change that. We need to be really strong in the summer and to be brave,” he said at a news conference this month when he was asked about new players coming in.

How Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur found themselves in this final despite dreadful performances this season is a mystery to many. Some argue it’s the financial might of the Premier League that allows even its worst teams to go far in European competition. Others say it’s a freakish anomaly. What can’t be squabbled over is how important a win Wednesday would be for both fan bases.

Fans of Manchester United, one of the most widely supported teams on the globe, are the butt of world soccer’s joke. The club’s gradual demise after the retirement of their legendary manager Sir Alex Ferguson in 2013 has led to snickering from fans and jeering by rivals. A trophy at the end of the season should quiet the haters, at least for the summer.

For Tottenham Hotspur, a victory would bring a welcome trophy for its dusty silverware cabinet. The club hasn’t won a major competition since 2008, losing in four different finals. Postecoglou, a journeyman manager who has been successful in previous stints in Australia, Japan and Scotland, confidently declared that “I always win things in my second year” in a postmatch interview in September. A win Wednesday would prove him right.

Tottenham has beaten Manchester United all three times they have played each other this season. But Manchester United’s players have found it within them to roll back the years in cup finals, shocking the world by defeating Manchester City in the FA Cup final last season and picking up the English League Cup trophy the year before.

Who caps a season filled with despair and dread with delight is anyone’s guess. Both fan bases will be hoping for a reprieve from the ridicule.

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