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Leonardo shoves ref as PSG must wait for title

Paris Saint-Germain director of football, Leonardo, vented his frustration with a post-match shove on the referee, after his side failed to clinch the Ligue 1 title in a 1-1 draw with Valenciennes.

Leonardo shoves ref as PSG must wait for title
PSG football director Leonardo (R centre), shoves the referee (L centre) after captain Thiago Silva was sent off. The Paris club failed to clinch the Ligue 1 title on May 5th. Photo: Ligue1 Football+

Ten-man Paris Saint-Germain blew a chance to effectively wrap up their first Ligue 1 title since 1994 on Sunday as they were held to a 1-1 draw at home to Valenciennes.

Reacting to the earlier dismissal of PSG captain Thiago Silva, the Paris club's Brazilian director of football, Leonardo, demonstrated his unhappiness with the red card by pushing match referee Alexandre Casto in the tunnel after the full-time whistle (see video below.)

Gael Danic put the visitors ahead on 17 minutes, while the Parisians' captain Silva was shown a controversial first-half red card at Parc des Princes before Alex earned Carlo Ancelotti's side a point late on.

The result saw PSG, who own a far superior goal difference to that of second-place Marseille, have their lead at the top trimmed to seven points with three games remaining, while Valenciennes stayed 12th.

The fallout from last week's ill-tempered victory at Evian left Ancelotti without first-choice goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu and midfielder Marco Verratti, while David Beckham was also forced to watch from the stands with Thiago Motta still suspended as well.

A hamstring injury ruled out Valenciennes' top scorer Gregory Pujol, but Lindsay Rose almost gave the visitors a dream start as his glancing header from Danic's free-kick flashed just past Nicolas Douchez's far post.

Javier Pastore forced Valenciennes 'keeper Nicolas Penneteau to tip over, but it was the away side that broke the deadlock just past the quarter hour as the deputising Douchez palmed Vincent Aboubakar's 25-yard strike right into the path of Danic, who unerringly steered the rebound low into the corner.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic appeared well placed to haul PSG level after lifting the ball over the advancing Penneteau only for the Swede to try an ill-advised flick that allowed the visitors to clear.

Maxwell then fired a volley into the side netting shortly after, while Penneteau spread himself well to deny Ezequiel Lavezzi.

PSG's hopes were dealt a serious blow as Silva was dismissed three minutes before half-time following an altercation with referee Alexandre Castro in which the Brazilian placed his hands on the official, who appeared to tell protesting teammates he had been pushed by the defender.

Valenciennes' continuing quest for an unlikely win saw Kenny Lala repelled by Douchez, but it was the visitors' goal that was coming under increasing pressure as Ibrahimovic drilled narrowly wide from an acute angle before Penneteau made a vital intervention to deny Kevin Gameiro a tap-in.

Alex then had a header cleared off the line by Maor Melikson, but the away side failed to heed that warning as the towering centre-half escaped his marker to power Lavezzi's corner home seven minutes from time.

Earlier, Lyon remained on track to qualify for next season's Champions League after cruising past relegation-battling Nancy 3-0.

Bafetimbi Gomis struck two second half goals to take his season's tally to 16, while Yoann Gourcuff was also on target as Lyon recorded their third victory in four to take a three-point lead in the race for the third and final Champions League place.

Meanwhile, Nancy remain one point clear of the drop zone with three games remaining after their six-game unbeaten streak came to an end.

Nice strengthened their quest for European football next season, climbing to fourth, following a 3-0 victory at slumping Rennes.

Dario Cvitanich netted two second-half goals, the second of which came from the penalty spot, to take his haul to 17 for the campaign, while Eric Bautheac added a late third for Claude Puel's side.

Defeat for Rennes means they've now just won once their last 11 outings, a slide that has seen the League Cup runners-up drop from fifth down to a disappointing 11th.

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LOUVRE

Louvre partners US streetwear guru on €572 Leonardo hoodies

As an artist, architect and engineer, Virgil Abloh is fashion's renaissance man. Now the hyperactive US designer is measuring himself up against the greatest polymath of all with a collection of clothes inspired by Leonardo da Vinci.

Louvre partners US streetwear guru on €572 Leonardo hoodies
The hoodies are printed with a small copy of a Leonardo da Vinci painting. Photo: Off White
The T-shirts, sweatshirts and hoodies adorned with some of Leonardo's greatest works are a part of an official hook up with the Louvre museum in Paris, which is staging a blockbuster show to mark the 500th anniversary of the Italian master's death.
   
The hoodies selling for up to 572 euros a piece ($640) mix Leonardo male nudes and paintings like “Saint Anne” with the four-arrowed logo of Abloh's ultra-hip Off-White label.
   
The world's most visited museum has been a magnet for black American megastars of late, with music's most famous couple, singers Beyonce and Jay-Z, shooting a video there last year for their album, “Apeshit”.
   
Fans of the streetwear guru Abloh queued through the night last month to snap up a range of homewear he designed for a collaboration with budget furniture chain Ikea.
   
It included a backlit reproduction of Leonardo's “Mona Lisa” (159 euros) from the Louvre and a green synthetic turf rug bearing the legend, “Wet grass”.  Another rug was modelled on an Ikea till receipt.
   
Abloh, 39, who took the reins of Louis Vuitton's menswear line last year, is one of the hottest fashion designers in the world, with some 15 million followers on social media.
 
Beyonce and Jay-Z
 
“I wanted to create a fertile collision between fashion and high art, Abloh said of his Leonardo-inspired streetwear.
   
The Louvre for its part said that it “rejoiced that such a multi-faceted artist as Virgil Abloh” had been inspired by its collections.
   
Like the Beyonce and Jay-Z video, which featured them standing regally in front of the “Mona Lisa” while a squad of scantily-clad dancers gyrated in front of Jacques-Louis David's “The Coronation of Napoleon”, it argues that
the exposure brings its treasures to a whole new public.
   
Rapper will.i.am, one of the founders of the Black Eyed Peas, shot an acclaimed video for his hit “Mona Lisa Smile” there in 2016, where he transposed himself into some of its greatest paintings.
   
He later made a documentary about the museum for Oprah Winfrey's television channel, OWN.
 
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Abloh, a former creative director for rapper Kanye West also designs for Nike, and a retrospective of his work broke records at Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art before it transferred last month to Atlanta's High Museum of Art.
   
But the designer was forced to curb his manic globe-trotting schedule in September because of “health considerations”, which meant him missing his own Off-White women's show in the French capital.
   
He told Vogue at the time that his doctor had warned him that “'this pace that you've pushed your body to is not good for your health'.”
   
The Louvre's huge Leonardo show runs until February 24.
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