It's not often that match-ups like this in the later rounds of European competition haven't taken place already in the past: yet here we are in Amsterdam, where Ajax and Eintracht Frankfurt have had
Germany's bold step to rip up its fiscal rulebook could be a game-changer for Europe's stuttering economy, reestablishing its biggest nation as the powerhouse of a lethargic bloc that has fallen behind global peers.
The European Central Bank's payments crash last week meant salaries and welfare funds were delayed for thousands of people. It could have been much worse.
Inflation in Europe eased to 2.4% in February, supporting the case for another interest rate cut from the European Central Bank but leaving open how far the central bank will go in lowering borrowing costs.
Experts have deemed one popular holiday destination the best city to wake up in across all of Europe, based on air quality and average annual hours of sunshine
The two political parties expected to form the next German government have agreed to significantly loosen the country's constitutional restriction on borrowing, enabling 1 trillion euros ($1.08 trillion) or more in new borrowing and spending on defense and infrastructure.
Experts say that Europe could feel more pain from new tariffs, but U.S. workers and industry would also take big hits.
Bundesliga contenders Bayern Munich and Bayer Leverkusen could be forgiven for thinking of their Champions League date before they fulfill challenging domestic obligations this weekend.