Arctic underdogs Bodo/Glimt topple Champions League giants in ‘fairytale’

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Glimt’s players celebrate at the end of the Champions League playoff soccer match between Inter Milan and Bodo Glimt, at the San Siro stadium in Milan, Feb.24, 2026. (AP)
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Bodo/Glimt’s Nplayers celebrate their win at the end of their UEFA Champions League second-leg play-off match against Inter Milan at San Siro stadium in Milan, on Feb. 24, 2026. (AFP)
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Updated 25 February 2026
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Arctic underdogs Bodo/Glimt topple Champions League giants in ‘fairytale’

  • “This is the greatest club achievement ever by a Norwegian team,” Norway coach Stale Solbakken told NRK
  • “It’s so important for football that Glimt are doing this, that in 2026 it’s still possible for a small club to build itself up from almost nothing,” Skauge said

OSLO: In the space of just over a month, three massive football names, Manchester City, Atletico Madrid, and now Inter Milan, have fallen to Bodo/Glimt — a small Norwegian club based inside the Arctic Circle.
Having already beaten Inter at home 3-1, the Scandinavians edged the Italians 2-1 at the iconic San Siro on Tuesday to reach the last 16 of the Champions League.
The victory over the three-time Champions League winners, who are sitting pretty atop Serie A, continued Bodo’s surprise tour de force in the competition.
“This is the greatest club achievement ever by a Norwegian team,” Norway coach Stale Solbakken told public broadcaster NRK.
While their league season has been over since November, Bodo/Glimt have won all their European matches since the start of the year.
Before twice overturning leads by Inter, they beat Manchester City, led by compatriot Erling Braut Haaland, 3-1 in Norway, and also toppled Atletico 2-1 in Madrid.
It’s a feat few would have seen coming.
Bodo is a small coastal city north of the Arctic circle, which many would struggle to find on a map, with only 50,000 inhabitants.
Far from almost everything and battered by icy sea winds Bodo/Glimt (“glimt” meaning “glimmer” in Norwegian) keep the flame alive in a city plunged into darkness during winter months.
Their cramped and outdated Aspmyra Stadium — built in 1966 — can hold just over 8,200 spectators and the team came close to bankruptcy in 2016.
It is made up almost entirely of Norwegians and they have been working wonders since a return to the Eliteserien, Norway’s first division, in 2018.
Since then, they have been crowned national champions in four of the last six campaigns.
Last season they become the first Norwegian team to play in the semifinals of a major European competition with their run in the Europa League.

- ‘Fairytale’ -

“It’s so important for football that Glimt are doing this, that in 2026 it’s still possible for a small club to build itself up from almost nothing,” Mads Skauge, vice president of the club’s supporters’ group J-Feltet, told AFP.
“At a time when there is so much money in football, it’s truly unique. I can’t find any other example in modern history of a run as close to a fairytale as the one Glimt have had,” Skauge added.
Today, Bodo/Glimt’s fan base extends far beyond the town, and even outside Norway.
The club’s shirts are sold in Asia, and media from around the world are coming to report on the phenomenon.
The recipe for success is a team with no egos, where everyone knows their role.
“It’s a team in the truest sense of the word. There are no big stars, no freeloaders,” Skauge said.
“Everyone clearly knows their role and if they don’t fulfil it, they’re out,” Skauge added.
They have also adopted a style of play focused on attack, no matter the opponent.
“With so much repetition (in training), they play so fast that even the best teams struggle to keep up,” Skauge said.
To this they have now added a solid backbone.
Bodo/Glimt finished last season in second place with by far the best attack and the best defense of the Norwegian league.
“We’ve dared to follow our own path, to be bold, to find our own way of doing things and, each time, we assess and move forward, maybe even a bit more than we would have dreamed,” coach Kjetil Knutsen told broadcaster TV2.
Now confidence is sky-high — to the point where the players are daring to shed their traditional Nordic humility.
“We are incredibly strong. What we’re achieving is simply huge, we can beat anyone,” forward Jens Petter Hauge, who scored the first goal against Inter said.
Their next opponents — who will either be Manchester City once again or Sporting Lisbon — have been warned.


Liverpool thrash West Ham but Salah’s Premier League goal drought up to 10 games

Updated 28 February 2026
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Liverpool thrash West Ham but Salah’s Premier League goal drought up to 10 games

  • Hugo Ekitike, Virgil van Dijk, Alexis Mac Allister and Cody Gakpo all scored for Liverpool
  • Salah’s last league goal for Liverpool was way back on Nov. 1 against Aston Villa

LONDON: Mohamed Salah’s run of Premier League games without scoring is up to 10.
Fortunately for the Egypt star, his Liverpool teammates had no problem finding the net in a 5-2 thrashing of West Ham on Saturday that continued the defending champion’s midseason recovery.
Hugo Ekitike, Virgil van Dijk, Alexis Mac Allister and Cody Gakpo all scored for Liverpool, which also forced an own-goal as the team racked up more than four goals in a league game for the first time this season.
Liverpool have won four games in a row in all competitions and six in their last seven — the only blip being the home loss to Manchester City. Arne Slot’s side moved level on points with fourth-placed Manchester United, which play on Sunday at home to Crystal Palace.
Salah’s last league goal for Liverpool was way back on Nov. 1 against Aston Villa. It’s his longest scoring drought in the competition since joining from Roma in 2017.
On a high-scoring day in the Premier League, Brentford gave up a three-goal lead before grabbing a stoppage-time winner through Mikkel Damsgaard to beat next-to-last Burnley 4-3 — though there was late drama as Ashley Barnes thought he equalized in the final seconds only for his goal to be ruled out by VAR.
Everton won at Newcastle 3-2 and Bournemouth’s unbeaten run stretched to eight games by fighting back to draw with Sunderland 1-1.