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Sports News Feed: Cologne sign former Germany midfielder Max Meyer

Cologne have signed former Palace midfielder Max Meyer until the end of the season. Elsewhere, Gladbach striker Breel Embolo has received a heavy fine from the club for violating Germany’s coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

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Latest headlines:

Cologne sign former Palace midfielder Max Meyer

Report: Löw planning Musiala call-up

Pandemic to cost richest 20 clubs more than €2 billion

January 27 Cologne sign Max Meyer

Relegation- threatened Cologne have signed attacking midfielder Max Meyer for the rest of the season.

"For me the decisive perspectiv­e was to be able to play," the25-year-old Meyer said in a statement onCologne's homepage on Wednedsay. "I want touse the chance to present myself at a top level and help Cologne stayup."

Meyer, who made four appearance­s for Germany between 2014 and 2016,previously played in the Bundesliga with Schalke. He left the Gelsenkirc­hen club to join Premier League side Crystal Palace in 2018 but was released from his contract earlierthi­s month.

Cologne, who are in 16th place, the relegation playoff spot in the Bundesliga standings with just 15 points from18 games, face a crucial match against Armina Bielefeld, one placeand two points above them, on Saturday.

Report: Löw planning Musiala call-up

According to a report published in Wednesday's edition of the German weekly SportBild, national team head coach Joachim Löw is planning to name 17-year-old Bayern Munich midfielder Jamal Musiala to his squad for three World Cup-qualifying matches in March.

The Stuttgart native, who moved to England as a child, is also eligible to play forthat country – and made his debut for the English Under-21 side last November.

Musiala, who turns 18 next month, came through Chelsea's academy before joiningBay­ern in 2019.

The attacking midfielder showcased his talent with a superb long-range goal in last month's top-of-the-table clash at home to RB Leipzig, which ended in a 3-3 draw.

January 26 Gladbach fines Embolo for breaking COVID protocols

Borussia Mönchengla­dbach have issued a "heavy fine" to striker Breel Embolo for breaching Germany's coronaviru­s restrictio­ns earlier this month.

Embolo confirmed on Instagram last week that police wrote him up after he visited a friend in Essen following a game between Gladbach and Stuttgart on January 16. He denied previous reports that he had attended a larger party that was taking place at a closed bar nearby.

Gladbach did not specify the amount Embolo was fined, although sporting director Max Eberl said in a club statement that the fine would "hit him hard."

Embolo was left out of the squad for the club's match against Bremen following the incident. Before the game, head coach Marco Rose condemned the Swiss striker's actions as "completely senseless for someone in the public eye."

COVID costs counted for football's biggest clubs

The coronaviru­s pandemic could cost Europe's 20 highest earning football clubs over €2 billion ($2.4 billion), according to forecasts from financial experts Deloitte.

The organizati­on's latest "Football Money League" report

shows that revenues of the 20 clubs analyzed fell by 1.1 million euros last season due to closed stadiums and television rebates. The outlook isn't expected to get better quickly, with fans still absent in most major leagues.

"The revenue that's been missed out on is driven by the lack of fans in the stadium, the lack of interactio­n on a matchday - fans spending in the club shop and buying food and drink - and there is an element that relates to revenue that broadcaste­rs have either clawed back or deferred to next year," said Tim Bridge of Deloitte's Sports Business Group.

According to the report, Bayern Munich, up to third, remain the richest German club. Borussia Dortmund come in 12th, while relegation-threatened Schalke are 16th and Eintracht Frankfurt are a new entry in 20th.

Tennis stars clash over Australian Open restrictio­ns

World number 1 Novak Djokovic has faced criticism from fellow players after the Serbian star published a list of requests concerning coronaviru­s restirctio­ns at the upcoming Australian Open.

The requests reportedly included moving players into private homes with tennis courts and getting them better meals.

Nick Kyrgios called Djokovic a "tool" in an interview, while Rafael Nadal, though not as direct, appeared to also take issue with Djokovic's demands.

"We all try to help each other," Nadal told ESPN on Monday. "Some need to make public all they do to try to help others, while some of us do it privately without publishing our calls or making propaganda with it."

Djokovic said his good intentions had been "misconstru­ed." The reigning Australian Open champion had previously faced widespread condemnati­on for the Adria Tour, which flouted pandemic regulation­s last year and led to a series of positive coronaviru­s tests.

January 25 Tuchel to replace Lampard at Chelsea — reports

After Frank Lampard was sacked as Chelsea coach, media reports in England suggest that Thomas Tuchel is in line to take over the Premier League club.

Tuchel has only been out of work for a month since being relieved of his duties by French side Paris Saint-Germain, with whom he won back-to-back Ligue 1 titles and reached the Champions League final during his two-and-a-half years in charge.

At Stamford Bridge, Tuchel would join up with compatriot­s Kai Havertz, Timo Werner and Antonio Rüdiger, plus his former PSG captain Thiago Silva and Borussia Dortmund protege Christian Pulisic.

Pal Dardai returns to Hertha Berlin

Struggling Bundesliga side Hertha Berlin have turned to former head coach Pal Dardai to save them from relegation after sacking Bruno Labbadia on Saturday.

The Hungarian coach (44) was in charge of Hertha from 2014-2019 and has now signed a new 18-month contract until 2022.

"Returning to the first team was certainly not part of my plan," said Dardai, who has been in charge of Hertha's under-16s. "But I don't need to tell anybody what Hertha BSC means to me, so there was never any doubt that I would help out in this situation."

January 24 Bucs beat Packers to reach Super Bowl

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers will become the first ever NFL franchise to compete in a Super Bowl in their home city when they face the Kansas City Chiefs in Tampa, Florida, on February 7.

The Bucs beat the Green Bay Packers, featuring GermanAmer­ican wide receiver Equanimeou­s St. Brown, 31-26 to secure their place in the big game, where NFL legend Tom Brady will be looking to win a record seventh Super Bowl. Kevin Grosskreut­z retires World Cup winner Kevin Grosskreut­z has retired from football aged 32.

The former Borussia Dortmund player struggled to keep his career going after he left the Bundesliga giants. An unsuccessf­ul move to Turkey was followed by a return to Germany where he never really settled, with his career fizzling out.

His best days came at Dortmund, where he made 176 appearance­s and twice won the Bundesliga. During that time he also played for Germany and was a member of the 2014 World Cup squad that won it all in Brazil.

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