Barca Liga homecoming against Valencia reduced to tiny stadium

A picture taken on September 3, 2025 shows the ongoing construction of the new FC Barcelona's Camp Nou Stadium in Barcelona. (FILE/AFP)
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Updated 12 September 2025
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Barca Liga homecoming against Valencia reduced to tiny stadium

  • The Catalan giants will host Valencia at their 6,000-capacity Johan Cruyff training ground stadium as they bid to keep pace with leaders Real Madrid and Athletic Bilbao

BARCELONA: After three weeks on the road to start the La Liga season champions Barcelona play their first home match on Sunday, although it won't be the glorious return to the rebuilt Spotify Camp Nou they had hoped for.

The Catalan giants will host Valencia at their 6,000-capacity Johan Cruyff training ground stadium as they bid to keep pace with leaders Real Madrid and Athletic Bilbao.

Barca, fourth, are two points behind the top two after a 1-1 draw at Rayo Vallecano before the international break in which Hansi Flick's side were outplayed.

After being given permission to play away at the start of the season so the Camp Nou could be readied, Barca's time ran out.

They did not announce the venue for their game against Valencia until Tuesday, in the hopes they would get the permits they needed to play before a reduced-capacity crowd at their revamped stadium.

With a concert being held at the Olympic stadium -- where Barcelona have been playing the last two seasons during building work at Camp Nou, which is due to be completed in 2026 -- the club have been reduced to playing before a tiny crowd.

Rivals Real Madrid also played at their Alfredo Di Stefano training ground stadium during renovations at the Santiago Bernabeu, but it was mainly during the 2020/21 season when fans were not allowed to attend because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

"We will go back to Camp Nou as soon as possible, we're really looking forward to returning," said Barcelona president Joan Laporta on Thursday.

The Catalans thumped Italian side Como 5-0 at the Johan Cruyff stadium in August in a friendly, which they had also hoped to play at the Camp Nou, originally due to reopen in November 2024.

Barcelona granted Valencia 290 tickets for the match, which quickly sold out.

"We have to adapt even though we know that we want to play in big stadiums," complained Valencia midfielder Pepelu.

"In the end we can do little other than just playing the game and winning it."

Flick's rampant Barcelona thrashed Valencia 7-1 at the Olympic stadium last season but Pepelu expects a closer game on Sunday.

"We're ready to see if we can get a good result. We've worked to correct things from last year and we're convinced it will be a good match," he added.

Flick suggested his Barcelona team needed to keep their egos in check if they are to succeed this season following their domestic treble. Playing at the Johan Cruyff might bring them down to earth.

"It's important there are no egos, that kills the chances of success," said Flick, upset after the team's poor display against Rayo at Vallecas.

Teenage sensation Lamine Yamal also insisted Barcelona stars needed to be focussed after returning from international duty.

"We did not start (the season) with the intensity that we finished, we made mistakes," admitted Yamal.

"We are hungry for more, you have to give us time."

Real Madrid visit Real Sociedad while Athletic Bilbao host Alaves, both on Saturday, in a Basque Country double-header.


Dortmund’s new CEO defends sponsorship deal with arms manufacturer Rheinmetall

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Dortmund’s new CEO defends sponsorship deal with arms manufacturer Rheinmetall

  • Cramer said “it’s maybe a part of life that we do not need to agree 100 percent to everything the club are doing”
  • At the 2024 AGM, a majority of members present voted against further cooperation with Rheinmetall

BERLIN: German soccer club Borussia Dortmund’s new chief executive has defended their contentious sponsorship agreement with Rheinmetall, the country’s largest arms manufacturer.
Carsten Cramer, who took over from outgoing Dortmund CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke last month, said Thursday he was 100 percent committed to the three-year deal announced by the club in May 2024, and that he was “convinced it was the right decision” despite many Dortmund fans making their opposition to it clear.
“I do accept the criticism,” Cramer said. “It’s maybe a part of life that we do not need to agree 100 percent to everything the club are doing. But in certain times it is necessary to take responsibility, and in these dangerous times where the safety and security of our country is not protected by diplomatic relationships and political relationships, I think it is a clear commitment of a club like Dortmund that we have to invest in defense.”
Rheinmetall last month announced record figures for the first nine months of 2025, with sales up 20 percent to 7.5 billion euros ($8.8 billion), while its backlog in orders reached 64 billion euros ($75 billion). It announced record sales of weapon systems, ammunition and protection systems driven by wars in Ukraine and elsewhere.
“We have to start and run a discussion in our country how to defend our country and Dortmund are always taking responsibility,” Cramer said. “We are always saying we are more than just a football club.”
Dortmund present Rheinmetall on their website as a “champion partner” and they display the company’s banner on advertising hoardings during games.
The agreement has caused friction among supporters to varying degrees with some Dortmund fans even going so far as to renounce their support. There were boos for Watzke at the club’s AGM last month, when he was appointed club president with 59 percent of the vote though he might have expected more. Watzke played a significant role in steering the club through a financial crisis in 2005.
At the 2024 AGM, a majority of members present voted against further cooperation with Rheinmetall.
That came after the team’s first game of the 2024-25 season was marked by fan protests against the sponsorship deal.
“Five years ago, I never expected that we would work together with a defense company. But now democracy, the system, the defense structure of our territories (is) under pressure, and I think we have to open the eyes of the people that we are not able to defend our country, our system, just by hoping that the Americans will care for us,” Cramer said.
“If a club like us are not inviting (people) to discuss something like this, who should do it?”