Real Madrid star Vinicius Jr. tattoo includes interesting Michael Jordan mistake

Real Madrid football star Vinicius Jr. recently got a tattoo that includes Chicago Bulls star Michael Jordan, but there’s a small mistake.

During his time with the Chicago Bulls, Michael Jordan became a worldwide phenomenon. The shooting guard not only dominated other teams on the basketball court, but his fame extended far beyond the walls of the NBA. Millions of people from all over the world turned into Bulls fans because of Michael Jordan. He’s one of the most well-known names in sports today.

Real Madrid football star Vinicius Jr. recently traveled to Los Angeles to visit famous tattoo artist Ganga. He got a huge back piece depicting a bunch of different famous athletes, including Jordan, Kobe Bryant, Pele, and Muhammad Ali.

However, fans quickly noticed a mistake with the Jordan portion of the tattoo – he is shooting left-handed.

In the tattoo, Jordan is taking a free throw, but he’s taking his left-handed even though he’s a righty.

Some were quick to point out that this could be a nod to the time Jordan shot lefty for a game as a method of showing up the Atlanta Hawks. However, he is more well-known for his eyes-closed free throws than his left shooting.

Regardless, the images of Jordan, Bryant, and others came together beautifully to form an amazing collage of sports greats on Vinicius Jr.’s back, and he should be thrilled with the outcome.

Vinicius Jr. is from Brazil, but he clearly has knowledge of Jordan and the other athletes in his tattoo, proving just how famous the Bulls star became worldwide.

He’s transcended the fame that players get from playing in the NBA, and his global brand will survive forever.

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Real Madrid players and fans rally around Vinicius at Santiago Bernabeu

The Brazil star has been at the center of a firestorm after he was racially abused over the weekend

Real Madrid players and fans came together to show their support for Vinícius Jr. in their first match after the Brazil star was racially abused.

On Sunday the Real Madrid forward was subject to a host of racial abuse from fans at Mestalla Stadium during Valencia’s 1-0 win over Madrid.

The incident has ignited a firestorm in Spain. Vinícius, who has been subject to racial abuse on multiple occasions this season, charged that “racism is normal in La Liga,” and added: “The championship that once belonged to Ronaldinho, Ronaldo, Cristiano [Ronaldo] and [Lionel] Messi today belongs to racists.”

La Liga president Javier Tebas was initially defensive in his response to Vinícius, telling the Real Madrid star “it is necessary that you inform yourself.” Tebas would eventually back down from those comments, issuing an apology on Wednesday.

Vinícius was sidelined with an injury on Wednesday as Madrid hosted Rayo Vallecano in a La Liga match, but he watched on from the stands as his teammates and fans at the Santiago Bernabéu paid tribute.

Madrid players entered the pitch all wearing the Brazilian’s No. 20 jersey, while fans unveiled a large banner that read: “We are all Vinícius. Enough is enough.”

In the 20th minute of the match, fans gave Vinícius a standing ovation, which he acknowledged from the stands.

Here are some of the best images from Wednesday’s game at the Bernabéu.

Musah offers Vinicius support after racist abuse from Valencia fans

The USMNT midfielder condemned the actions of several of his Valencia side’s fans

U.S. national team and Valencia midfielder Yunus Musah has offered his support to Real Madrid star Vinícius Jr. after the Brazilian was racially abused by Valencia fans during Sunday’s La Liga match.

Fans at the Mestalla Stadium targeted Vinícius during the game, which was suspended for several minutes after the Madrid winger pointed out Valencia supporters who were abusing him.

It was hardly the first time Vinícius has been racially abused this season, which has featured a number of ugly incidents involving the 22-year-old winger.

After the game the Brazil international highlighed the fact that he’s been targeted repeatedly, and that the Spanish authorities have thus far failed to do anything to stop it.

“It wasn’t the first time, nor the second, nor the third. Racism is normal in La Liga,” he said on Twitter. “The competition thinks it’s normal, the [Spanish Football] Federation does too and the opponents encourage it.

“I’m so sorry. The championship that once belonged to Ronaldinho, Ronaldo, Cristiano [Ronaldo] and [Lionel] Messi today belongs to racists.”

Musah responds

On Tuesday, the USMNT midfielder issued a message of support for Vinícius on Instagram.

“The incidents that occurred on Sunday, a day which should have been marked by the performance of the team and amazing fans, have been marked by the racist remarks made by the few people, who ultimately ruin it for all. Valencia CF strongly forbids racism,” Musah said.

“My support to @vinijr and all the people who have been and are going through this in their lives. IF YOUR RACIST TO HIM YOU ARE RACIST TO ME!”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CslWktxIe4D/?igshid=MTc4MmM1YmI2Ng%3D%3D

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Real Madrid vs. Man City defined by two world-class goals

Vini Jr. and De Bruyne’s goals were both just *chef’s kiss*

Real Madrid vs. Manchester City in a Champions League semifinal? Those words virtually guarantee golazos, and both teams delivered on Tuesday.

Vinícius Jr. and Kevin De Bruyne scored on incredible strikes in a tense 1-1 first-leg draw that underlined what two of the world’s top teams are capable of.

Man City did well to manage the early stages of the game, keeping Real Madrid at bay, only for Vini Jr. to continue his scintillating form by providing the opening goal. Los Blancos‘ breakthrough came on an absolute rocket from the Brazil attacker, who turned some excellent work from Eduardo Camavinga into a shot that nearly ripped a hole in the net.

“A great strike, a fantastic moment,” manager Carlo Ancelotti told BT Sport following the game. “An interesting game. Difficult for us in the first half, and the second half was much better. We had good control in the game.”

The Santiago Bernabeu was buzzing, but a typically well-worked Man City move turned into a 67th minute equalizer thanks to an unreal strike from De Bruyne. Jack Grealish and Ilkay Gündoğan brought the ball into the area, with the latter turning to lay the ball off for De Bruyne.

From 23 yards, De Bruyne used utterly perfect shooting form to produce a thunderbolt that was still rising as it flew past Thibaut Courtois.

The goal marked the third year running that De Bruyne has scored at this stage of the Champions League, a mark of the consistency of both player and club.

“He [De Bruyne] is a massive player for us,” Man City’s Rodri told BT Sport after the match. “Always he has been great, and he helped us in the moment we most needed it. We were suffering a bit because they were keeping the ball and with the goal he gave us the confidence to keep pushing. It is a good result for us.”

Pep Guardiola agreed with Ancelotti’s analysis of how the game played out, noting that “When we were better, they score. When they were better, we score.”

Grealish may have had the best summary of the level of play, the goals, the atmosphere, and everything else, telling BT Sport that he had a great time.

“I loved it, man,” said Grealish. “You can have a few nerves but these are the nights you play football for and dream of. At a stadium and a game like this, it’s like a dream come true.”

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Carlo Ancelotti: Vinicius Jr. is the most decisive player in the world

The Brazilian scored two and assisted another as Madrid beat Liverpool 5-2 in the Champions League

Carlo Ancelotti called Vinícius Jr. “the most decisive player in the world” after the Real Madrid star scored a brace against Liverpool in the Champions League on Tuesday.

Liverpool went up 2-0 early in the last-16 first leg at Anfield, but Madrid came storming back with Vinícius leading the charge.

The Brazilian scored two goals and assisted one more as Madrid put up an incredible five unanswered goals to win the match 5-2 and take a giant step toward the last eight.

Vinícius victimized Liverpool for a second straight season in the Champions League, having scored the only goal in last season’s final.

After the game, Ancelotti heaped some major praise on the 22-year-old forward.

“Vinícius is the most decisive player in the world,” the Madrid boss told a press conference. “There is no other player like him right now. He doesn’t stop dribbling, shooting. I hope he can maintain this level.

“Winning like this isn’t easy, above all because of how the match began. We never lost confidence and little by little we won control of the ball. We were efficient up front and Vinícius produced an incredible performance.”

Vinícius has saved his top scoring form for the Champions League this season, as he’s scored seven goals in 21 La Liga games, and six goals in just seven Champions League matches.

Madrid will aim to seal a quarterfinal spot in the second leg at the Santiago Bernabéu on March 15.

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Real Madrid produced some Champions League Madness to overwhelm Liverpool

Liverpool’s dream start became a true nightmare

It’s not great to be struggling for form when you have to play Real Madrid.

Just ask Liverpool, who fell 5-2 at Anfield after some true Champions League Madness™ saw Real come from 2-0 down to emerge victorious in their last-16 first leg clash.

Liverpool were two goals to the good after just 14 minutes. It looked like they could be using this game as a platform to turn around an increasingly disappointing season. It was a thrilling, authoritative start for the Reds, the kind of soccer they haven’t been able to produce consistently in the 2022-23 season.

It’s just that they had to play the rest of the game.

Stung into action, Real Madrid rode a combination of Vinícius Junior’s brilliance, Liverpool mistakes, misfortune, and some ruthless counter-attacking play in the second half to produce five unanswered goals and take total control ahead of the second leg on March 15.

It all started so well for Liverpool. With Anfield in full voice, Mohamed Salah slipped a clever pass in behind to find Darwin Núñez, who supplied a stunning backheel finish to open the scoring in the fourth minute.

Liverpool had created a lead with ingenuity, and expanded it with luck. Thibaut Courtois would have certainly preferred a better back-pass from Dani Carvajal, but still had plenty of time to get the ball away without much trouble.

Instead of an easy clearance, the Belgium No. 1 produced a disaster. His chest trap was casual enough to let Salah pressure him, and Courtois seemed to short-circuit. The ball bounced off of his knee as he tried to turn, setting Salah up to simply flick the ball past him.

If only the game could have just ended there for Liverpool. Unfortunately they had over 75 minutes left, and Real Madrid is still Real Madrid.

Vini Jr., who scored the winner in last year’s Champions League final between these teams, somehow conjured up a goal after he and Benzema combined despite being surrounded by seven red shirts.

When you’re in the kind of form Vini Jr. is in, a wall of defenders simply isn’t a problem. The Brazil attacker seemed like he was going to carry on dribbling only to snap a lovely, angled shot past Alisson and into the bottom corner.

With the game now well and fully careening out of control, it was only fair that Liverpool — having scored and conceded a golazo — cough up a howler to match Courtois’ error.

Alisson obliged, firing a low pass attempt right into Vini Jr. as the Brazilian applied only token pressure on a back-pass. The way Liverpool’s season is going, everyone in the building knew what was coming: a looping rebound that floated over Alisson, sucking the air out of Anfield and equalizing the score.

Halftime came, and whatever Jurgen Klopp did to try and get his side going again, it went out the window within seconds. Éder Militão took advantage of some absurdly hesitant set piece defending, trotting away from his markers to nod home a Luka Modrić free kick.

Barely 100 seconds into the second half, a game that had started so well for the Reds was now one they trailed.

Liverpool’s poor defensive work was one thing, but they were also cursed on the day, and those factors combined as Real made it 4-2. The Reds seemed to defuse the threat as Rodrygo’s cross was tipped away by Stefan Bajčetić, but no one could beat Carvajal to the resulting loose ball.

Rodrygo got the chance to try again, and this time he and Benzema casually carved a stagnant Liverpool open. The result? A classic “you make your own luck” goal, as Benzema’s shot glanced off of Joe Gomez’s calf, wrong-footing Alisson.

Liverpool was now having a full-fledged nightmare, and the last thing you want to do against this Real Madrid team is cough up a cheap turnover and open yourself to a counter.

Fabinho unfortunately did just that, losing the ball to Modrić with Liverpool having eight players in the attack. From there Real Madrid made it look simple: Modrić to Rodrygo to Benzema, who drew Alisson out only to cut the ball away from him and slide it into an empty net.

Los Merengues‘ demolition job was complete.

 

Liverpool laments defending on Militão goal

“Super start. We had everything we wanted,” Jurgen Klopp told beIN Sports after the match, before turning his attention to Real’s third goal.

“I’m really not sure if it’s a foul at all,” said Klopp, “but even when it’s not a foul and they get a free kick, we have to defend the free kick better. In that space, it’s not allowed that [Militão]’s alone. Absolutely not possible.”

“We made too many mistakes. Real Madrid punished us every time tonight,” lamented Jordan Henderson to BT Sport. “It’s difficult to come here and speak. Yes, they have a lot of quality. When you’re not 100% defending they punish you… The second goal obviously is a mistake. The third we’ll be disappointed with. That’s when the game went away from us.”

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Real Madrid had a cathartic response to all the racists

Vinícius Jr. is still dancing

It was easier than usual to root for Real Madrid on Sunday.

The team’s star winger Vinícius Jr. had been at the center of a firestorm, which was set off by Atlético Madrid midfielder Koke warning the Brazilian not to perform his trademark dance if he scored in the Madrid derby.

“There would be trouble, for sure, [that is] to be expected,” Koke said ahead of Sunday’s match at Atlético’s home Metropolitano Stadium.

In an appearance on Spanish TV later on Friday, leading agent Pedro Bravo backed Koke’s comments but added his own unique (read: racist) spin on things.

“When you score against a rival, if you want to dance samba, you go to the sambadrome in Brazil, here what you have to do is to respect your colleagues and stop playing the monkey,” Bravo said.

Amid that backdrop, some Atlético fans made things even uglier by calling Vinícius a monkey in pre-game chants outside the stadium. Unfortunately, as the linked video shows, it wasn’t just a few fans either.

Vinícius responds

After he posted a response on social media leading up to the game, Vinícius and his Madrid teammates had the perfect on-field response in Sunday’s derby.

After Rodrygo opened the scoring, he and his Brazilian teammates went to the corner flag and defiantly danced in front of the Metropolitano crowd.

Vinícius was heavily involved on Madrid’s second goal, as his shot hit the post and was put home by Federico Valverde.

Real Madrid would go on to win 2-1 in a game where Los Blancos had a lot more neutral fans than they are likely to ever have.

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