Expert Sports News & Commentary

Newcastle United vs Manchester City – Match preview and team news

Newcastle United vs Manchester City – Match preview and team news

St James’ Park is braced for a seismic FA Cup fifth-round collision tonight as Newcastle United welcome Manchester City for the fifth instalment of their 2025-26 rivalry, a tie that carries the added prize of a quarter-final berth and fresh momentum for the victor. Eddie Howe’s side arrive buoyed by Wednesday’s stirring 2-1 triumph over Manchester United, a contest that saw William Osula snatch glory in the 90th minute despite Newcastle playing the entire second half a man down after Jacob Ramsey’s red card. The dramatic success halted a wobble in league form and restored belief ahead of a daunting run that now includes cup, domestic and European obligations. Yet recent history against City offers sobering context. While Newcastle edged the first meeting of the campaign in November, they have since suffered Carabao Cup semi-final elimination and a 2-1 league reverse at the Etihad on 21 February, underscoring the scale of the task against Pep Guardiola’s star-studded ensemble. City, smarting from a 2-2 draw with Nottingham Forest in which they twice relinquished leads, trail Premier League pacesetters Arsenal by seven points and have consequently placed greater emphasis on cup silverware. Their FA Cup pedigree is formidable: 23 consecutive wins in the third, fourth and fifth rounds since 2020, amassing an aggregate score of 89-11, and 18 victories from their last 20 ties over the past four seasons. The only blemishes in that span came in the 2024 and 2025 finals. Guardiola must weigh rotation against continuity with a Champions League last-16 first leg at Real Madrid looming next week, but Erling Haaland is expected to start after completing 90 minutes against Forest following a minor injury scare. Team news tilts heavily in City’s favour. Newcastle will be without Ramsey through suspension, while Bruno Guimarães (hamstring), Fabian Schär (ankle), Emil Krafth (knee) and Lewis Miley (thigh) remain in the treatment room. Tino Livramento is unlikely to be risked, yet Sandro Tonali returns from his own ban and Nick Woltemade could rejoin the squad after illness. Harvey Barnes, who has five goal involvements in seven home FA Cup starts, is poised for a key role. City’s infirmary houses Joško Gvardiol (tibial fracture) and Mateo Kovačić (ankle/heel), while Nico O’Reilly is doubtful with an ankle knock. Guardiola may hand recalls to James Trafford, John Stones and Rico Lewis, but the spine of the side is expected to remain strong. Statistically, the Magpies have progressed from nine of their last 10 fifth-round ties, including two previous FA Cup victories over City, and will seek to exploit home comforts where Barnes leads the club in both shots (8) and chances created (4) in this season’s competition. City, meanwhile, have profited from three own goals en route to the last 16, matching a Premier League record for a single campaign, and can become only the third team to eliminate Newcastle from both domestic cups in the same season. Predicted line-ups suggest a blend of experience and youthful promise. Newcastle’s provisional 4-3-3 reads: Pope; Trippier, Thiaw, Botman, Hall; Willock, Tonali, Joelinton; Barnes, Woltemade, Gordon. City may line up in a 4-1-4-1 with Donnarumma; Nunes, Dias, Guehi, Ait-Nouri; Gonzalez; Cherki, Reijnders, Foden, Semenyo; Marmoush. Kick-off is at 20:00 GMT, with live coverage on TNT Sports 1 from 19:00. In a season where both clubs crave silverware to define their campaigns, tonight’s 90 minutes could shape the narrative for months to come.
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Five Premier League Club Captains Who Could Leave This Summer

Five Premier League Club Captains Who Could Leave This Summer

Uncertainty is swirling around the futures of several Premier League captains as the summer transfer window approaches, with Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United, Tottenham and West Ham all facing pivotal decisions over their armband-wearers. Arsenal’s Martin Odegaard, once the creative heartbeat of Mikel Arteta’s side, has seen his influence wane after an injury-ravaged campaign that has restricted him to only 13 league starts and a solitary goal. The arrival of Eberechi Eze from Crystal Palace has intensified competition for the advanced midfield role, and the Gunners’ need to raise transfer funds has put the Norwegian’s status under scrutiny. Leading European clubs are already tracking developments in North London. Across Manchester, Bernardo Silva’s nine-year residency at the Etihad Stadium could reach its conclusion. The 31-year-old Portugal international’s contract expires in June, and despite Pep Guardiola’s previous determination to retain him, fresh suitors are circling. Juventus, Benfica and a cluster of Saudi Pro League outfits have all registered interest in the decorated midfielder, who may decide a new challenge beckons after collecting major honours with City. Manchester United must resolve the long-term future of club captain Bruno Fernandes before the new season kicks off. The playmaker enters the final year of his deal this summer, forcing United into a binary choice: extend or cash in. Fernandes, who tops the Premier League assist chart with 14 this term, will turn 32 in September, and the club are wary of offering a lengthy, high-value contract to a player approaching the latter stages of his peak. The Portuguese star, however, believes he remains at the summit of his game and will push for terms that reflect his importance. Tottenham’s Cristian Romero has grown increasingly vocal about the club’s direction, publicly criticising the board for a perceived lack of investment and poor communication. The Argentine centre-back’s discontent has alerted clubs in England and Spain, and relegation from the top flight would accelerate his departure from N17. At West Ham, Jarrod Bowen’s loyalty is being tested by the balance sheet. The Hammers posted a £104.2 million loss for the last financial year, meaning player sales are required regardless of whether they retain their Premier League status. Bowen, who has struck 82 goals in 269 appearances since arriving from Hull City in January 2020, is one of the club’s most marketable assets, and his exit would represent a severe blow to manager Nuno Espirito Santo. With budgets tight and ambitions high, the futures of these five captains promise to dominate headlines throughout the close-season.
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FC Breakfast: Mbappé to Sit Out PSG’s Monaco Showdown, Revenue Rankings Spotlight Europe’s Elite

FC Breakfast: Mbappé to Sit Out PSG’s Monaco Showdown, Revenue Rankings Spotlight Europe’s Elite

Paris Saint-Germain’s meeting with AS Monaco on Sunday will mark the fifth instalment of a rivalry that has already produced four memorable clashes this campaign, but the Parc des Princes will be missing its headline act. Kylian Mbappé has been left out of the squad, a decision that follows a brief, good-natured exchange between the forward and supporters in the French capital earlier in the week. While the club offered no official reason for his omission, the timing fuels speculation that the France captain could be entering the final weeks of his Paris tenure. Even without Mbappé, the fixture retains its box-office appeal. PSG and Monaco have traded blows in every encounter this season, each match delivering goals, drama and momentum swings that have kept Ligue 1 observers enthral. With European places and local pride at stake, both sides are expected to attack from the first whistle. Off the pitch, a sweeping review of club finances since 1999 has underlined the economic dominance of Europe’s traditional powerhouses. The study, released ahead of the weekend programme, ranks the top 15 clubs by cumulative revenue over the past 25 years. While the identities of the highest earners are not detailed in the data supplied, the findings highlight the widening gap between football’s financial super-elite and the chasing pack. Tonight’s Ligue 1 card offers two additional fixtures for armchair viewers. At 19:00 CET, struggling Auxerre welcome Strasbourg in a relegation six-pointer streamed live on Ligue 1+ via OneFootball. Three hours later, Toulouse host Marseille in the late kick-off, with both sides aiming to strengthen their push for European qualification. PSG-Monaco may be missing its marquee attraction, but the narrative surrounding Mbappé’s future, combined with the relentless entertainment these clubs have served up this season, ensures the spotlight will remain firmly on the capital. Keywords:
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Fabrizio Romano confirms Liverpool's plan for Mo Salah

Fabrizio Romano confirms Liverpool's plan for Mo Salah

Liverpool are heading toward a pivotal summer on the wings, with Mohamed Salah’s future at the forefront of the club’s planning. According to transfer specialist Fabrizio Romano, the Reds are preparing for a major overhaul of their wide options as the Egyptian enters the final 12 months of his contract. Speaking on his YouTube channel, Romano outlined the club’s thinking: “For Liverpool, it’s going to be a busy summer for wingers. It’s very clear that Liverpool need to reinforce their wingers – the situation with Mo Salah, Cody Gakpo. I think in general, Liverpool need to add something fresh in that position.” Salah, who earns a reported £400,000 per week, has seen a dip in form this season as Arne Slot’s side have underperformed across the Premier League, Champions League and Carabao Cup. With no extension agreed and the clock ticking, the club must decide whether to cash in now or risk losing the 31-year-old for nothing in 2025. Romano dampened speculation linking Liverpool with Bayern Munich’s Michael Olise, comparing the scenario to previous pursuits of players tied to European giants. “Bayern have no intention at all to let him go,” Romano stressed. “Bayern are very happy with Olise and Bayern don’t even want to negotiate. Liverpool appreciate Olise, yes for sure, but who doesn’t appreciate Olise? At the moment, that’s the story.” Instead, Romano suggests Liverpool will turn to alternative targets as they look to inject pace and creativity into a floundering attack. With Salah’s situation unresolved and Gakpo’s role still evolving, the Anfield hierarchy are expected to prioritise fresh faces on the flanks ahead of the new campaign. Liverpool fans can anticipate movement once the window opens, but the identity of the incoming talent remains a work in progress.
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Rams star Puka Nacua Rams into Vegas for UFC 326 action

Rams star Puka Nacua Rams into Vegas for UFC 326 action

LAS VEGAS — One week after the Los Angeles Rams saw their 2025 season end in a 31-27 heart-breaker to the Seattle Seahawks in the NFC Championship, All-Pro receiver Puka Nacua traded shoulder pads for sweat suits and touched down in his hometown for UFC 326. Nacua, 23, confirmed his arrival Friday with a simple Instagram post: “UFC weekend!!!!” The accompanying photo showed the league’s second-leading receiver lounging in a luxury Strip hotel bathroom, dressed head-to-toe in Rams-blue sweats and ready for Sunday morning’s championship card at T-Mobile Arena. The Pro Bowl wideout finished the 2025 campaign with 129 receptions for 1,715 yards and 10 touchdowns, numbers that placed him second in the NFL in receiving yardage and tied for sixth in touchdown catches. His rookie season a year earlier was equally historic—105 catches for 1,486 yards broke a 63-year-old league record once held by Bill Groman. While Nacua will be a spectator this weekend, the main event carries personal resonance. Max Holloway and Charles Oliveira meet in a long-awaited rematch that harkens back to their 99-second 2015 bout, which ended abruptly when Oliveira suffered a freak esophagus injury. Holloway enters on the heels of a unanimous-decision victory over Dustin Poirier at UFC 318. For Nacua, the trip is more than an off-season diversion—it’s a homecoming. Born in Las Vegas on May 29, 2001, he first made waves in the Nevada Youth Football League before starring for the Little Cowboys, a powerhouse program bankrolled by UFC CEO Dana White and former co-owner Lorenzo Fertitta. White’s son, Dana White III, played in the same backfield, forging a friendship that still links the two families. “My kids grew up with Puka. He grew up in our house,” White told reporters. “To see Puka doing what he’s doing now…it could not happen to a better human being.” The Little Cowboys squad that featured Nacua and White III showcased its dominance in Las Vegas before advancing to the Pop Warner Super Bowl in Orlando, providing an NFL-caliber environment that helped shape the receiver’s competitive edge. With the Rams set to open the 2026 regular season in historic fashion against an opponent to be determined at Australia’s Melbourne Cricket Ground—the first NFL game ever staged there—Nacua will eventually shift his focus back to football. For now, he is savoring an off-season respite in the city where his athletic journey began, taking in championship-level mixed-martial-arts action just a few blocks from his childhood fields.
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Why are there no Premier League games this weekend? Break in EPL schedule explained

Why are there no Premier League games this weekend? Break in EPL schedule explained

For the first time since the season’s opening months, Premier League supporters will find their screens devoid of top-flight action on the weekend of 7-8 March. The competition that habitually dominates Saturdays and Sundays from August through May has deliberately stepped aside, creating an unusual four-day lull that stretches from Tottenham’s 5 March defeat to Crystal Palace until the league’s resumption on 14 March. The reason is straightforward: the FA Cup fifth-round ties command the calendar. With Premier League match-week 29 condensed into a midweek window (3-5 March), clubs still involved in the cup were given a clear weekend to focus on knockout football. The manoeuvre ensures no fixture congestion and preserves the integrity of both competitions. When will the Premier League return? Saturday, 14 March marks the resumption, kicking off a full programme that features five Saturday fixtures, four on Sunday and one Monday-night encounter to complete match-day 30. A similar pause will occur next month, when the FA Cup sixth round occupies 4-5 April. For broadcasters, betting markets and fantasy managers, the hiatus is a reminder that English football’s calendar remains anchored to traditions that pre-date the Premier League era. For fans, it is a rare breather—one that ends as soon as the whistle blows again next weekend.
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Vinicius, Courtois react after Celta Vigo 1-2 Real Madrid – ‘Have to thank the youth team players’

Vinicius, Courtois react after Celta Vigo 1-2 Real Madrid – ‘Have to thank the youth team players’

Vigo, Spain – Real Madrid kept their La Liga title hopes alive with a dramatic 2-1 victory away to Celta Vigo on Sunday night, a result that hinged on Federico Valverde’s thunderous stoppage-time strike and lifted the champions to within one point of leaders Barcelona ahead of the Catalans’ late kick-off against Athletic Club. With ten first-team players unavailable through injury or suspension, Carlo Ancelotti was forced to dip into the club’s academy, and the gamble paid off as La Fabrica graduates Thiago Pitarch and César Palacios saw valuable minutes in the closing stages at a raucous Balaídos. Speaking to club channel RMTV moments after the final whistle, Vinícius Júnior praised the resilience of a patched-up squad and singled out the youngsters for special praise. “It was a very difficult match in which we were missing many players, but we came here to win,” the Brazilian forward said. “We worked hard, suffered quite a bit, and in the end were able to win, which was the most important thing to gain confidence for Wednesday’s match. “We also have to thank the youth-team players who came on to help out, as well as all the players who were called up, because we knew it was going to be a very difficult match, with many players injured and others suspended.” Vinícius, who has logged heavy minutes in recent weeks, admitted fatigue but stressed the importance of finishing strong. “I like to win matches earlier, when things are easier, but it’s always good to win, especially with a goal at the end. It was Fede’s goal, who is always available for us, helps us every day, and does everything for our team.” The 23-year-old now turns his attention to the Champions League round-of-16 second leg against Manchester City at the Bernabéu on Wednesday. “We need to be at our best because we’re playing the round of 16 against a very difficult opponent, Manchester City, whom we always face. But we’re playing at home, with our fans and everyone’s support, which is something we really need.” Goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois echoed Vinícius’s sentiments, underlining the psychological lift provided by the last-gasp win on the 122nd anniversary of the club’s founding. “It’s very important to win, especially on our great club’s birthday. A great joy for all the fans. It wasn’t an easy game. They played with 11 men behind the ball, they wanted to defend, and it was a bit difficult for us,” the Belgian international said. Courtois, who required a fingertip save onto the woodwork and a fortunate deflection to preserve the advantage, acknowledged the narrow margin of victory. “In the end, we were a bit lucky with the post and the deflected shot. But I think we deserved it.” The 31-year-old also lauded the academy reinforcements, noting the character required to enter a high-stakes contest. “The youth-team players came on really well and I congratulate them because it’s easy to come in as a youth player when everything is going well and you’re winning. It’s more difficult in moments like today and they showed character on the pitch. That’s what’s important.” Courtois, who continues to manage his workload after the knee surgery that sidelined him for much of last season, reported feeling “great” and credited an intensive gym regimen for keeping him injury-free this campaign. Looking ahead to the visit of Manchester City, the keeper called for a raucous Bernabéu atmosphere. “We need the team to be incredibly intense and focused. We know it’s important to win this match, and we need the fans to be with us from the first minute. They were with us against Benfica, and I’m sure it can be a great night at the Bernabéu.” The victory, sealed by Valverde’s 91st-minute rocket, ensures Real Madrid head into the midweek European showdown buoyed by momentum and a deeper squad than the injury list suggested possible.
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Stan Collymore claims €46.2m Chelsea ace is the best he’s “seen in the flesh this season”

Stan Collymore claims €46.2m Chelsea ace is the best he’s “seen in the flesh this season”

Former Premier League striker Stan Collymore has hailed Alejandro Garnacho as the outstanding winger he has witnessed live this campaign, after the Argentine inspired Chelsea to a 4-1 demolition of Aston Villa at Villa Park. The 20-year-old’s €46.2 million summer switch from Manchester United is already looking money well spent, and Collymore believes the wide man’s display on Sunday was the benchmark for any flank player in the country. Garnacho’s electric showing down the left complemented Joao Pedro’s hat-trick and Cole Palmer’s strike, a result that lifted the Blues back above Liverpool into fifth and within three points of third-placed Manchester United and fourth-placed Villa. While the Brazilian forward took the headlines, Garnacho’s relentless running, direct dribbling and defensive diligence caught the eye of pundits and supporters alike. Speaking on talkSPORT, Collymore said: “You had Garnacho down the left-hand side, the best wide-man performance I’ve seen in the flesh this season. Malo Gusto overlapping Reece James down the right, the movement of Joao Pedro, the calm of the midfield enforcer Moises Caicedo. It really was a top-drawer performance.” The compliment carries extra weight given Collymore’s extensive travels watching top-flight football this year, and it underlines the growing belief that Garnacho can become a consistent match-winner for the west Londoners. With six goals in 31 appearances, the Argentina youth international is beginning to marry end product to his natural flair, and assistant boss Liam Rosenior is expected to keep faith with him for Saturday’s FA Cup third-round tie at Wrexham. Beyond individual praise, Collymore sees collective potential in Liam Rosenior’s squad. Although he still tips Arsenal to lift this season’s title, the ex-England forward believes Chelsea could gate-crash next year’s championship race if they maintain momentum and avoid the injury setbacks that have dogged recent campaigns. “So I’m not getting carried away, I think Arsenal will win the title this season,” Collymore added. “But if Chelsea can keep everyone together and they can continue this forward momentum and get some crucial consistency, I think they could be an exceptional team moving forward.” With the mid-season break looming and a favourable run of fixtures ahead, Stamford Bridge insiders suggest the squad is buying into Rosenior’s high-tempo, high-press blueprint. Should Garnacho reproduce Sunday’s level with regularity, Collymore’s bold prediction may yet look prescient come next May.
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Pedri gesture for family of Atletico Madrid captain goes viral

Pedri gesture for family of Atletico Madrid captain goes viral

Barcelona midfielder Pedri González has won fresh admirers off the pitch after a heartfelt act of kindness toward the family of Atletico Madrid captain Koke Resurrección following their dramatic Copa del Rey semi-final second leg at Camp Nou. The 21-year-old Canary Islander was at the heart of Barcelona’s audacious attempt to overturn a four-goal deficit from the first leg, driving the Blaugrana to 3-0 with 20 minutes remaining. Atletico ultimately clung to their aggregate advantage to book a first cup final appearance in 13 years, yet the respect between the two midfield generals was evident long after the final whistle. Less than 24 hours later, Koke’s wife, Beatriz Espejel, took to Instagram to reveal that Pedri had quietly looked after her and the couple’s son, Leo, during their stay in Barcelona. “We want to give thanks especially to Pedri and his family for taking such good care of Leo and me yesterday in Barcelona, and for the presents. We love you family,” Espejel wrote on her story. The “presents” in question were Pedri’s own match-worn boots, inscribed with the message “With affection, for Leo” and signed by the Spain international. The gesture quickly circulated across social media, drawing praise from supporters of both clubs. Koke had already lauded his compatriot in a post-match interview with Movistar, telling El Desmarque: “Pedri is a machine. We’re lucky he’s Spanish… he’s the present and future of Spain. He’ll bring a lot of joy to Barca and the national team. Besides being a great footballer, he’s a spectacular guy.” Television cameras captured the Atletico skipper consoling a visibly exhausted Pedri on the Camp Nou turf moments after the final whistle, underscoring a mutual admiration forged in the white heat of a derby knockout tie. The two players are set to renew acquaintances on 4–5 April when Barcelona visit the Metropolitano for the return league fixture. Should both sides advance in Europe, a potential fifth and sixth meeting this season could yet be on the horizon.
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What Gameweek 29 Taught Us in FPL: Injury Updates, the Haaland Question and the Rogers Dilemma

What Gameweek 29 Taught Us in FPL: Injury Updates, the Haaland Question and the Rogers Dilemma

The curtain has closed on a turbulent Gameweek 29, leaving Fantasy Premier League managers sifting through the wreckage of red cards, surprise benchings and another blank from one of the game’s most bankable assets. With only a handful of matchdays left and cup replays threatening to redraw the fixture map, the lessons learned this weekend could shape mini-league destinies. Patience remains the sharpest tool in the kit. Harry Wilson’s minor ankle twist kept him out of Fulham’s lineup, but the midfielder could return for GW-30, while Arsenal’s William Saliba is expected to rejoin the back line against Everton after sitting out the Brighton victory. Their temporary absences underline the value of a reliable first-bench option rather than an early transfer splash. In the same defensive bracket, Joachim Andersen missed out through illness and Crystal Palace’s Daniel Munoz is now a major doubt after damaging a shoulder against Spurs. Each forced change ripples through FPL squads, amplifying the risk of knee-jerking before the FA Cup ties conclude. Tactical positioning offered a silver lining. Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon continued to operate as a central striker, cementing his out-of-position appeal at a mid-tier price. Further south, Joao Pedro underlined his arrival among the elite with a hat-trick against Aston Villa; only Erling Haaland has outscored him among forwards this campaign. Yet the Chelsea strike story is mirrored by uncertainty between the sticks. Robert Sanchez was dropped for Filip Jorgensen, and caretaker boss Liam Rosenior insists he has no “clear favourite,” turning the Blues’ goalkeeper slot into a weekly coin flip. Which brings us to the elephant in the room: Erling Haaland. Since Gameweek 17 the Norwegian has delivered just one double-digit haul, a stark fall from his former “perma-captain” status. Selling the robot still feels like fantasy treason, but the numbers no longer scream indispensability. Budget punters have their own headache in Morgan Rogers, who blanked again. With heavy rotation looming and a Gameweek 31 blank on the horizon, the winger’s owners are better served holding firm rather than burning a transfer they may need for bigger fires. Elsewhere, Micky van de Ven will watch Tottenham’s trip to Liverpool from the stands after a straight red against Palace, while Ismaila Sarr appears to have penalty duties locked down for Crystal Palace in the continued absence of Jean-Philippe Mateta. Manchester United’s Benjamin Sesko started a second consecutive match, though his early-sub risk keeps FPL faith tepid, and Manchester City’s Nico O’Reilly sat out with an ankle complaint, awaiting word from Pep Guardiola. The overarching mandate: resist the urge to hit the transfer button until the FA Cup picture crystallises. Should Newcastle upset Manchester City, the postponed City-Palace fixture could yet be squeezed into Gameweek 31, erasing the anticipated blank for both clubs. In a season of slim margins, the managers who wait may be the ones still standing in May.
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The Maxx Crosby trade is a cannon shot signaling the start of a massive Raiders rebuild around Fernando Mendoza

The Maxx Crosby trade is a cannon shot signaling the start of a massive Raiders rebuild around Fernando Mendoza

INDIANAPOLIS — The moment the NFL scouting combine ended, the Las Vegas Raiders detonated the first charge of what promises to be a franchise-altering reconstruction, shipping four-time Pro Bowl edge rusher Maxx Crosby to the Baltimore Ravens for first-round picks in 2026 and 2027. The deal, finalized late Friday night, instantly converts the Raiders into the league’s most asset-rich rebuilding project and crystallizes an unmistakable mandate: every brick laid from this point forward must protect and propel presumed No. 1 overall selection Fernando Mendoza. Multiple league sources confirmed Baltimore outbid the Dallas Cowboys, who had offered a comparable package, to secure Crosby for the final two guaranteed seasons of Lamar Jackson’s contract. Yet the seismic tremors radiating across the league are centered not on the Ravens’ Super Bowl push, but on the Raiders’ sudden surplus of ammunition. Las Vegas now owns four selections among the top 67 in April’s draft (Nos. 1, 14, 36 and 67) and projects to have three more inside the top 64 in 2027, plus well over $100 million in cumulative cap space the next two offseasons. The calculus is blunt: surround Indiana’s tough-minded quarterback with a fortress before he ever takes a snap. An AFC executive who spent the week dissecting the 2026 quarterback class summarized the Raiders’ imperative succinctly: “They have to keep the kid upright. If they repeat what they did to the last few guys, none of this matters.” Mendoza, praised inside the combine for his resilience and clutch throws, also carries evaluative question marks—limited middle-of-field production, heavy shotgun usage, and the benefit of an offense stocked with future early-round receivers and a veteran-laden line. Those concerns only amplify the urgency to construct a cleaner runway than the one that derailed recent Raiders quarterbacks. Already the teardown has accelerated. Veteran bridge starter Geno Smith will be released, freeing $25 million in cap room. Guard Alex Cappa, a 2024 free-agent disappointment, is expected to follow, trimming additional dead weight. The Crosby trade, meanwhile, removes the roster’s most marketable defensive cornerstone, a concession that the timeline has shifted from win-now to develop-now. Head coach Klint Kubiak, hired for his offensive ingenuity, now inherits the league’s most scrutinized incubation chamber. He will lean on second-year tight end Brock Bowers and rookie sensation Ashton Jeanty—two ascending skill-position talents who, alongside the incoming offensive-line reinforcements, form the nucleus designed to accelerate Mendoza’s acclimation. “Pressure?” an NFC talent evaluator said late Friday. “They’ve got a war chest. Now we see if they can draft.” The Raiders have not advanced beyond the wild-card round since the 2002 season. By mortgaging their present pass rush, they have declared, unequivocally, that the drought ends only when Mendoza is fortified. Friday’s cannon shot was heard league-wide; the reconstruction, formally, has begun.
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2026 World Baseball Classic: Aaron Judge sets tone with first-inning homer

2026 World Baseball Classic: Aaron Judge sets tone with first-inning homer

HOUSTON—The moment the United States needed a spark, Aaron Judge delivered. On a night when the Americans drew a tournament-record 17 walks and rolled to a 15-run outburst against Brazil, it was Judge’s first-inning blast that announced Team USA’s arrival in the 2026 World Baseball Classic. Batting second and wearing the captain’s “C” bestowed on him by manager Mark DeRosa, Judge took a 3-0 green light and punished a middle-middle sweeper, launching it 405 feet into the right-field seats for a two-run homer that gave the tournament favorites an immediate 2-0 lead. The shot came in Judge’s first-ever Classic at-bat—he had declined invitations to previous editions—and set the table for a relentless offensive display that never let up. “He’s our tone-setter,” DeRosa said afterward. “When your captain jumps on the first pitch he sees in the biggest tournament in the world, it sends a message.” The long ball also provided an early cushion for starter Logan Webb, who recovered from a leadoff homer by 20-year-old Brazilian slugger Lucas Ramirez to retire 12 straight and punch out six across four innings. Ramirez, youngest son of Manny Ramirez and owner of only three professional home runs entering the night, stunned the Daikin Park crowd with solo shots in the first and eighth, the only Brazilian highlights on an otherwise lopsided evening. While Judge finished 1-for-4 with two walks, two RBIs and three runs scored, the story was the Americans’ patience. Brazil’s nine pitchers needed 221 pitches to navigate the onslaught, issuing free passes in bunches—five with the bases loaded—and watching the U.S. score four in the fifth and seven more in the ninth. Brice Turang’s bases-clearing double highlighted the former frame; Kyle Schwarber and Roman Anthony added multi-hit nights as the lineup turned walks into runs with ruthless efficiency. Brazil’s brightest arm belonged to 17-year-old Joseph Contreras, son of former Yankees right-hander Jose Contreras, who broke Judge’s bat on an inning-ending double play in the second and touched 97 mph with a forkball straight from his father’s playbook. Yet even Contreras couldn’t slow the American juggernaut for long. Team USA stranded 13 runners and went 5-for-21 with men in scoring position—flaws that will be scrutinized in later rounds—but the patient approach wore down every arm Brazil trotted to the mound. With the win, the Americans open Pool B play at 1-0 and turn their attention to Great Britain on Saturday night. Judge’s homer may have been the exclamation point, but the entire lineup authored the statement: the U.S. is here to finish the job after falling to Japan in the 2023 final.
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Five quick takeaways from the first F1 qualifying session of 2026

Five quick takeaways from the first F1 qualifying session of 2026

Albert Park’s twilight qualifying session has offered the first competitive glimpse of Formula 1’s brave new world, and while the 2026 regulations remain a work in progress, the early verdict is cautiously optimistic rather than catastrophic. 1. The predicted “sh*tshow” never materialised Senior engineers had warned that Melbourne’s energy-hungry layout could expose the new hybrid limits, and there were sobering moments of cars crawling through the Turn 9-10 complex as the battery hit empty. Yet the session completed without red-flag chaos, and the FIA’s overnight reversal of a hurried straight-mode deletion showed that governance, not the tech itself, is the more pressing refinement target. 2. The competitive order is genuinely tight Mercedes’ George Russell grabbed pole, but the top four teams are separated by little more than a heartbeat. Across the 22-car field, a 1.5-second blanket covers the bulk of the entrants, a stark contrast to the half-second spread witnessed at some 2025 events. Circuit-specific energy curves and aggressive in-season development rates promise a volatile pecking order from round to round. 3. Mercedes has stepped out of the shadows After years of false dawns, the Silver Arrows finally converted promising testing mileage into single-lap supremacy. Russell’s lap was underpinned by tidy energy deployment, and the team’s long-run simulations suggest they have found the sweet spot others are still chasing. Ferrari, led by a rejuvenated Lewis Hamilton, emerged as the closest threat, validating its decision to sacrifice the 2025 campaign and channel resources into the new regs. 4. McLaren and Red Bull are on the back foot—for now Both organisations entered the weekend admitting they lagged Mercedes and Ferrari in Bahrain-style energy tracks, and the timesheets confirmed that honesty. McLaren’s qualifying struggles will trigger intense factory work as it tries to defend both championships, while Red Bull can take heart from Isack Hadjar’s standout third, proof that its nascent power-unit division is punching above its current weight. History warns against writing either camp off; both have clawed back deficits before. 5. The paddock’s two outliers travel divergent paths Aston Martin’s Honda partnership is unravelling in real time; vibration gremlins limited running and left Fernando Alonso grateful simply to reach Q1’s cusp. Public admissions from Adrian Newey underscore a disconnect that must be fixed before Japan’s spotlight arrives. Cadillac, by contrast, achieved its primary objective—both cars qualified despite persistent gremlins traced back to Barcelona. The American newcomer’s marketing machine is already humming, and on-track respectability will only amplify its off-track value to the championship. Sunday’s grand prix will provide a fuller picture, yet the opening qualifying salvo of 2026 has already delivered intrigue, unpredictability and the reassuring sense that F1’s latest rule revolution is anything but a write-off.
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'He Can’t Beat Logan': Former NFL Star Comments on Hypothetical Myles Garret vs. Logan Paul Fight

'He Can’t Beat Logan': Former NFL Star Comments on Hypothetical Myles Garret vs. Logan Paul Fight

A social-media-fueled thought experiment pitting Cleveland Browns pass rusher Myles Garrett against YouTube-turned-boxer Logan Paul has drawn a blunt verdict from former NFL running back Le’Veon Bell. Responding to online chatter about whether an NFL athlete could test Paul in the ring, Bell posted on X: “ima football player, that would beat the dog sh*t outta Logan ..” Bell, who earned three Pro Bowl nods during a career highlighted by patient running and dual-threat versatility, has stayed in the combat-sports spotlight since stepping away from football. His willingness to trade shoulder pads for boxing gloves has made his opinion a talking point among fans tracking cross-discipline athlete transitions. Garrett, widely viewed as one of the league’s most explosive defenders, has not publicly campaigned for a boxing match, yet his rare combination of size, speed and power keeps his name in speculative fantasy bouts. Paul, meanwhile, has parlayed internet fame into lucrative exhibition fights, attracting audiences well beyond the traditional boxing base. While no negotiations or offers exist, Bell’s confident dismissal of Paul’s chances adds another layer to the ongoing fascination with crossover contests between professional athletes and entertainment figures.
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'Me bas fielding pe cricket nahi khela': Mohammad Amir launches brutal attack on Mohammad Kaif

'Me bas fielding pe cricket nahi khela': Mohammad Amir launches brutal attack on Mohammad Kaif

Dubai, June 24 — The ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 commentary box has spilled onto social media as Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Kaif traded barbs in an escalating war of words that shows no sign of cooling. The flashpoint came after Kaif, working as a pundit for an Indian broadcaster, suggested the former Pakistan left-arm quick was “chasing eyeballs” by repeatedly singling out India during his tournament analysis on Pakistani television. Kaif’s remarks followed Amir’s on-air prediction that the current Indian squad—minus the retired troika of Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ravindra Jadeja—would fall short of the semi-finals, and his earlier dismissal of India opener Abhishek Sharma as a mere “slogger”. Amir hit back within hours on his YouTube channel, dismantling Kaif’s playing record number by number. “I checked his stats; he just played 29 matches in the IPL with a strike rate of 103,” Amir said. “Mr Kaif, I have played 350 T20s. You can verify every figure. Main bas fielding pe cricket nahi khela—I didn’t play cricket simply because of my fielding.” The 33-year-old, who has 271 international wickets across 36 Tests, 61 ODIs and 62 T20Is, went further, claiming Kaif owed his India career to Sourav Ganguly’s patronage. “Aap Dada ko thank you bole. I’ve heard people say you were picked for India primarily as a fielder. A cricketer of your stature should not reduce himself to such statements.” Amir insisted his tournament opinions were analytical, not antagonistic. “When Rohit, Virat and Jadeja were in the T20 mix, I always labelled India favourites. The current combination, in my view, isn’t the front-runner. That assessment isn’t attention-seeking; it’s professional observation.” Kaif, who represented India in 13 Tests and 125 ODIs for more than 3,000 runs, never won a T20I cap but played 75 T20s, scoring 1,237 runs at a strike rate hovering either side of 120. He was part of Rajasthan Royals’ title-winning squad in the 2008 IPL inaugural season and later served as Delhi Capitals assistant coach under Ricky Ponting. The spat traces back to Pakistan’s rocky start in the 2024 T20 World Cup, where an opening-match defeat to the USA invited heavy scrutiny. Kaif referenced that result while questioning Amir’s standing to critique India. Amir, in turn, reminded Kaif that Pakistan’s early exit had no bearing on his own credentials as a bowler who featured in 350-plus T20 fixtures worldwide. Neither the ICC nor the respective broadcasters have commented on the row, but with both teams still alive in the 2026 race for semi-final berths, the Amir-Kaif narrative is adding extra spice to an already high-stakes Super-Eights phase. For now, the scoreline reads: Amir 1, Kaif 0—at least in the court of social media metrics, where the Pakistani’s rebuttal video has racked up more than a million views in under 24 hours.
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Vikings Rumors Swirl around Kyler Murray Time, Jalen Nailor, T.J. Hockenson

Vikings Rumors Swirl around Kyler Murray Time, Jalen Nailor, T.J. Hockenson

Minneapolis — With the NFL’s legal tampering window set to open Monday, the Minnesota Vikings find themselves at the center of three converging storylines that could reshape their 2026 roster. Kyler Murray to Minnesota? Sportsbooks say it’s practically a done deal. DraftKings has installed the Vikings as the -110 favorite to sign the former No. 1 overall pick once the Cardinals release him next week, well ahead of the Jets (+175), Dolphins (+320) and Browns (+450). The same lopsided odds appear on prediction market Kalshi, where Minnesota is the overwhelming choice among bettors. League insiders expect a one-year, prove-it contract at the veteran minimum to materialize quickly after Murray hits the open market. While the quarterback carousel spins, Minnesota’s front office is bracing for a bidding war over wide receiver Jalen Nailor. The Athletic’s Alec Lewis reports that more than 10 clubs have already expressed interest in the 27-year-old, who has logged just 69 career receptions and never cracked 450 yards in a season. Evaluators point to Nailor’s vertical speed, route nuance and willingness as a run blocker as indicators of an 80-catch ceiling. That optimism projects a three-year deal worth $12-15 million annually, a price tag the cap-strapped Vikings are unlikely to match. Minnesota entered the weekend more than $40 million over the 2026 salary cap and has prioritized other needs. The tight-end room could look dramatically different as well. T.J. Hockenson, once viewed as a trade or release candidate, is now negotiating a straight pay cut to lower his cap number, according to Lewis. Hockenson is open to the reduction, leaving the final number to negotiators. If the two sides tear up and restructure the pact as expected, Minnesota would still need a contingency plan; Josh Oliver, Gavin Bartholomew, Ben Yurosek and Bryson Nesbit are under contract through 2026, but none profiles as a clear-cut TE1. Free-agent veterans Isaiah Likely, Darren Waller or Cade Otton, along with early-round draft prospects Kenyon Sadiq of Oregon and Eli Stowers of Vanderbilt, remain on the club’s radar. With free agency officially opening in days, the Vikings are positioned to make headlines at quarterback, wide receiver and tight end—whether by addition or subtraction.
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Sunderland Greats: Vic Halom

Sunderland Greats: Vic Halom

Roker Park faithful still speak in reverential tones about the burly centre-forward whose goals propelled Sunderland from relegation worries to FA Cup glory in 1973. Vic Halom, the Swadlincote-born striker, arrived on Wearside in February 1973 after a cruel twist of fate and left as a legend whose name is etched into club folklore. Halom’s journey north began when John Hughes, signed only weeks earlier to spearhead Bob Stokoe’s attack, collapsed with a career-ending knee injury against Millwall. Within days Stokoe raided Luton Town for £30,000 and unveiled Halom, a 25-year-old who had learned his trade in London with Charlton, Leyton Orient and Fulham before establishing a one-in-three scoring rate at Kenilworth Road. The impact was immediate. Halom debuted in a league fixture against Sheffield Wednesday and, by the time the campaign closed, Sunderland had climbed from 17th to sixth while embarking on a cup run that would define a generation. His home debut brought a goal in a 4-0 rout of Middlesbrough; days later he crashed in the opener against Manchester City in a 3-1 fifth-round replay witnessed by 51,000 delirious fans. In the semi-final he tormented Arsenal’s defence, setting the platform for Wembley glory against Leeds. The following season Halom reached his peak: 21 goals in all competitions, a League Cup hat-trick against powerhouse Derby County, and European nights on Wearside. Nine more goals arrived in 1974-75 as promotion pushes gathered steam, though niggling injuries dulled his edge by the time Sunderland finally ascended in 1975-76. A move to Oldham Athletic rekindled his fire for four productive years before closing days at Rotherham United. More than half a century on, supporters still recall the big, aggressive No 9 who never allowed centre-halves a moment’s peace, the man whose thunderous strike against Manchester City lit the fuse for one of English football’s greatest cup stories. As the fifth round of this season’s FA Cup approaches, Halom’s place among Sunderland immortals remains secure. Keywords:
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Ex-Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore takes plea deal

Ex-Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore takes plea deal

Former University of Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore has accepted a plea deal, bringing a legal matter involving the ex-Wolverines assistant to a close. Details of the charges or the specific terms of the agreement were not disclosed in the announcement, but the resolution signals the end of any pending litigation against Moore. Moore, who served as Michigan’s offensive coordinator and offensive line coach under head coach Jim Harbaugh, was not retained after the 2023 season. His departure from the program had already marked a significant shift for the Wolverines’ coaching staff prior to the emergence of the legal case. With the plea now entered, Moore avoids the uncertainty of a trial and can begin to move forward personally and professionally. Neither Michigan athletics nor Moore’s representatives have issued additional statements regarding the plea or his future plans.
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The making of Taty Castellanos, the 'X-factor' forward driving West Ham's survival bid

The making of Taty Castellanos, the 'X-factor' forward driving West Ham's survival bid

Valentin “Taty” Castellanos has waited four years for the chance now gripping the London Stadium. Since joining West Ham United from Lazio on an undisclosed January fee, the 27-year-old Argentine has struck three times in 11 matches, each goal a header, each moment a jolt of belief for a club still mired in the drop zone yet level on 28 points with Nottingham Forest after Tuesday’s priceless win at Fulham. His first taste of English football could have arrived in January 2022. Multiple sources tell The Athletic that West Ham’s recruitment staff filed glowing reports after extensive scouting of Castellanos at New York City FC, where he had amassed 42 league goals in 109 MLS appearances. Majority shareholder David Sullivan, however, elected not to sanction any signings that window, and Castellanos’ Premier League dream was deferred. Instead, he detoured through Girona—where a four-goal demolition of Real Madrid on loan in 2022-23 announced him to European audiences—before a three-season spell at Lazio that yielded 22 league goals in 98 games. When Niclas Füllkrug’s loan to Milan opened a striker vacancy this winter, West Ham finally pounced. Head coach Nuno Espírito Santo reshaped his attack from 4-2-3-1 to 4-4-2 to accommodate Castellanos and fellow January arrival Pablo Felipe. The tweak has re-energised Crysencio Summerville and captain Jarrod Bowen, who have combined for nine goals and five assists since the turn of the year. Those who watched Castellanos’ formative years are unsurprised by the seamless adaptation. “The speculation never affected him,” says former NYCFC head coach Nick Cushing. “Training would finish and he’d ask to work on headers, finishing, free kicks—he wanted every tool.” That dedication culminated in the 2021 MLS Golden Boot, presented to him by his mother, Marilu, flown in from Mendoza for the occasion. Born in Argentina’s wine-country capital and rejected as a youth by River Plate and Lanús, Castellanos began his senior career at 16 with Universidad de Chile. A loan at City Football Group’s Montevideo City Torque became a permanent transfer and, eventually, the springboard to New York. There, compatriot Maximiliano Moralez eased his transition; by 2021, with Heber injured, Castellanos seized the No. 9 role and scored 19 times to share the league scoring crown. David Lee, NYCFC’s former sporting director, remembers an 18-year-old winger “whose aggression with and without the ball jumped off the screen. We saw a future forward.” The loan to Girona hardened him against elite defenders; the stint in Rome refined tactical nuance. Now, back in England, the late bloomer is compensating for lost time. All three West Ham goals have arrived via headers: the 120th-minute winner in the FA Cup third-round replay at QPR; the clincher in a 2-0 victory at Burnley; and a consolation in the 5-2 defeat at Liverpool. Each aerial finish traces back to those post-training sessions in Queens, where Castellanos would remain on the pitch perfecting the timing and power that now torment Premier League centre-backs. “He generates incredible force on headers,” Cushing says. “My favourite memory is the 109th-minute winner against New England in the 2021 play-offs—he just destroyed the defender.” West Ham hope for similar moments between now and May. Nuno, speaking ahead of Monday’s FA Cup fifth-round tie with Brentford, praised the striker’s instant adaptation: “Taty’s brought energy; we expect much more.” Level on points with safety, West Ham believe they have located the elusive X-factor. After four years of circling, Taty Castellanos has finally landed in east London, and the survival fight now carries an unmistakable Argentine accent.
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TOTD: Does it matter if only a handful of Manchester United stars make the 2026 World Cup?

TOTD: Does it matter if only a handful of Manchester United stars make the 2026 World Cup?

Manchester United’s winter of uncertainty may extend all the way to North America. With fewer than 100 days until the expanded 48-team World Cup kicks off across the United States, Canada and Mexico, Old Trafford faces the very real prospect of supplying only a token contingent to the planet’s biggest tournament—and, for the first time since Brazil 1950, none at all to England. The numbers are stark. Cameroon and Slovenia failed to qualify, ruling out Bryan Mbeumo and Benjamin Sesko. Denmark must survive a play-off if Patrick Dorgu is to book a ticket. Matthijs de Ligt, already battling injury, was never a lock for the Netherlands, while Joshua Zirkzee and Tyrell Malacia have been conspicuously absent from recent national squads. Uruguay’s Manuel Ugarte and Portugal’s Bruno Fernandes and Diogo Dalot are expected to travel, but beyond that the list thins quickly. England is the headline concern. Since John Aston and Henry Cockburn boarded the boat to Rio de Janeiro 76 years ago, every Three Lions World Cup squad has contained at least one United player. That streak is in jeopardy. Harry Maguire, Luke Shaw and teenage midfielder Kobbie Mainoo remain on Thomas Tuchel’s radar, yet none has been summoned in this campaign cycle. Marcus Rashford could still be a Red when the tournament begins, but Mason Mount’s hopes of a shock recall appear remote. Talk of the Devils host Ian Irving, writing in his weekly column, admits the club’s diminishing international footprint is “a pattern across the past year or so.” The upside, he argues, is a rare summer of recuperation. “I’d prefer it if they rested over the summer rather than played in an expanded World Cup,” Irving says, echoing a sentiment familiar to supporters who watched Sir Alex Ferguson’s best years coincide with minimal mid-season release of his stars. Yet the moral calculus is complicated. “It matters to them,” Irving concedes, citing Luke Shaw and Harry Maguire, both of whom sense Qatar 2022 may have been their last shot. Pride also pulses through players like Ugarte, whose Uruguayan heritage carries fierce patriotic expectation. And history shows a stellar tournament can recalibrate a career: Wayne Rooney’s explosive Euro 2004 display preceded his move to Old Trafford, while Lisandro Martínez’s World Cup winner’s medal in 2022, earned despite only two starts, “changed his demeanour” upon return, according to dressing-room sources. Irving’s personal wish list is succinct: a triumphant swansong for Casemiro, suddenly captaining Brazil after Carlo Ancelotti’s appointment, and meaningful minutes for Mainoo alongside England colleague Elliot Anderson—experience that could pay dividends when United reconvene next season. Whether United fans view a sparse World Cup representation as blessing or blight, the conversation underscores a broader truth: the club’s global cachet has long been intertwined with its export of talent to major tournaments. If the current trajectory holds, the summer of 2026 will test whether prestige can be rebuilt from the inside out—starting with a quiet July at Carrington.
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Headless Batting in Semi-Final: R Ashwin’s Brutal Verdict on Abhishek Sharma

Headless Batting in Semi-Final: R Ashwin’s Brutal Verdict on Abhishek Sharma

Mumbai, 2 July 2026 — Ravichandran Ashwin has labelled Abhishek Sharma’s semi-final dismissal “headless batting” but insists the 25-year-old must open for India in Saturday’s T20 World Cup final against New Zealand at the Narendra Modi Stadium. Speaking on his YouTube show Ash Ki Baat, the former India off-spinner tore into the left-hander’s shot selection against England at the Wankhede, where Abhishek holed out to Phil Salt after spooning Will Jacks to long-off in the second over. The wild swing, minutes after back-to-back boundaries, continued a wretched tournament that has already featured three ducks and four spin-induced exits. “He scored eight runs against Jacks, but he intended to score 30,” Ashwin said. “Sometimes you have to leave the ball. Sanju Samson is going so well—just take the single and get to the other end. You’ll get your tee time.” Despite the blunt critique, Ashwin urged head coach Gautam Gambhir and captain Suryakumar Yadav to shield Abhishek from extra pressure ahead of the title clash. “He’s a damn good talent who relies on timing. If you burden him, he’ll try to hit the ball harder. Keep him in a good space and I will continue with him.” Ashwin cited Abhishek’s recent dominance over New Zealand’s attack—Mitchell Santner and Matt Henry included—as proof of his match-winning potential. “He has that factor. One lean patch doesn’t erase what he did in that series.” India booked their final berth with a seven-run thriller, defending 253 for 7 in a run-soaked evening that saw nearly 500 runs scored. Whether Abhishek can shrug off his semi-final brain-fade and repay Ashwin’s faith will shape India’s pursuit of a third T20 world title. SEO keywords:
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Bayern Munich News: The aftermath of FC Bayern’s 4-4 win over Gladbach

Bayern Munich News: The aftermath of FC Bayern’s 4-4 win over Gladbach

Allianz Arena—Bayern Munich turned the page on a frustrating run against their bogey side, dispatching Borussia Mönchengladbach 4-1 on a night when several regulars watched from the stands. Without a handful of first-choice names, the Bavarians showed no mercy, dictating tempo from kickoff and refusing to let the visitors settle into any rhythm. The comprehensive result vaults Bayern back into the thick of the title conversation and offers immediate vindication for a squad that had struggled to shake Die Fohlen in recent seasons. From the opening whistle, Bayern pressed high, recycled possession efficiently, and converted chances with the sort of cold precision coach Vincent Kompany has demanded since preseason. Gladbach, meanwhile, never found a foothold; their lone consolation came late, after the outcome was all but sealed. Harry Kane, whose name has been bandied about in speculative reports linking him to Barcelona, was again at the heart of the attack. Sport Bild’s Christian Falk extinguished any lingering smoke around that rumor, stressing that neither Kane, his brother-agent Charlie, nor his father have fielded contact from the Catalan club. Falk suggested the story was more useful for would-be presidential candidates at Barça than for reflecting actual negotiations, adding that the club’s true striker shortlist is headed by Atlético Madrid’s Julián Álvarez, not the England captain. Off the pitch, Bayern’s recruitment staff remain busy. Red Bull Salzburg’s 18-year-old utility forward Kerim Alajbegović has emerged as a live target. The Bosnia-Herzegovina international, who holds German citizenship, is comfortable across the front line and has drawn admiring glances from Milan and Juventus as well. Scouts praise his technique, set-piece delivery, and leadership traits rare for a player barely out of the youth bracket. In the same defensive department where speculation swirls, Kim Min-jae continues to field questions about his future. Falk reports that Galatasaray’s rumored interest is a non-starter; while suitors from Saudi Arabia tested the waters in January, a Premier League offer would hold far more appeal. Bayern, for their part, are open to a transfer if the 27-year-old opts for a new chapter. Elsewhere in the Bundesliga, FSV Mainz 05 are eager to retain Paul Nebel beyond his 2027 deal, yet the 23-year-old winger could still move this summer amid steady domestic enquiries. Nebel, newly represented by Sports360, has one goal and two assists in 30 appearances this season. His club teammate Nadiem Amiri is pushing for an exit despite a standout personal campaign of 15 goals and three assists. The 29-year-old German international, now working with agents Pini Zahavi and Max Bielefeld, views a transfer as essential to keeping his World Cup hopes alive and is open to opportunities outside Europe. Back in Munich, the club has no intention of cashing in on Michael Olise, while talks with academy product Lennart Karl are expected to materialize—if not immediately. The result against Gladbach underlined Bayern’s depth; the coming weeks will reveal whether that depth is reinforced or selectively trimmed. SEO keywords:
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College Sports Leaders Meet at White House to ‘Save College Sports’ as President Trump Promises Executive Order

College Sports Leaders Meet at White House to ‘Save College Sports’ as President Trump Promises Executive Order

Washington, D.C. — President Donald Trump announced Friday that he intends to sign an executive order within the next seven days designed to confront mounting challenges facing collegiate athletics, capping an extraordinary White House gathering that brought together some of the most influential voices in college sports. The closed-door meeting, described by attendees as both urgent and cordial, centered on safeguarding the long-term viability of college athletics amid seismic shifts in athlete compensation, conference realignment, and regulatory uncertainty. While the White House released no formal agenda, participants said the discussion focused on preserving competitive balance, protecting non-revenue sports, and ensuring that athletic departments remain integral to the educational mission of universities. Trump told reporters after the session that the forthcoming order will “address the very real concerns raised by commissioners, athletic directors, and student-athlete representatives who want to see college sports thrive for generations to come.” He offered no specifics on the order’s provisions but pledged that it would be “bold, comprehensive, and done very quickly.” The meeting underscores growing anxiety among campus leaders that legislative gridlock and patchwork state laws are eroding the collegiate model. By invoking executive authority, the president appears poised to chart a federal course that could supersede divergent state measures and provide uniform guidelines for name, image, and likeness rules, revenue sharing, and athlete employment status.
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Seven takeaways from Friday’s high school basketball quarterfinals, including another Feehan thriller

Seven takeaways from Friday’s high school basketball quarterfinals, including another Feehan thriller

Bishop Feehan’s postseason magic continued Friday night as the 14th-seeded Shamrocks knocked off No. 6 Bridgewater-Raynham, 65-60, in double overtime to reach the Division 1 boys’ semifinals for the first time in 11 years. The victory came just 48 hours after Feehan upset No. 3 Needham, making the Spartans the lowest-seeded squad still alive in any MIAA basketball or hockey bracket. Senior forward Brody Bumila, a 6-foot-9 Texas baseball commit, authored the latest chapter of the tournament’s most compelling storyline. After averaging 39 points and 17 rebounds through Feehan’s first two playoff games, Bumila delivered 36 points and 18 rebounds against the Trojans, scoring 18 of his team’s 22 points in the fourth quarter and both overtime periods. He has now amassed 117 points and 55 rebounds across three contests that have included six extra periods. The Shamrocks trailed by seven midway through the fourth before rallying to force overtime, then survived a second extra frame to secure the program’s first state semifinal berth since 2014. Feehan’s upset was one of only two on a boys’ bracket that saw 23 teams advance to the semifinals. In Division 3, No. 6 Lynn Classical rode 29 points from senior DJ Reynolds and lock-down defense from Shyheim Babb and Deshawn Rucker to topple No. 3 Tewksbury, 68-59. While the boys’ brackets produced drama, the girls’ quarterfinals followed form: all 13 higher seeds advanced. Top-seeded Medfield rolled past No. 8 Norwood, 66-46, behind sophomore Abby Broderick’s 31 points and five rebounds. Millis senior Grace Higgins anchored the paint with eight blocks, nine points and nine rebounds in a win that sets up a semifinal date with undefeated Norton. Whitman-Hanson senior Dylan Hurley turned her milestone moment into a victory, scoring the 2 points she needed for 1,000 in the game’s first eight minutes and finishing with 17 in a 51-47 Division 2 decision over Oliver Ames. Hurley, a Saint Anselm commit, now sits fourth on the Panthers’ all-time scoring list with 1,015 career points. Masconomet senior captain Jimmy Farrell stuffed the stat sheet in a 61-25 Division 1 rout of Burlington, posting 17 points, six rebounds, three assists, two steals and two blocks to pace the top-seeded Chieftains. With 13 more basketball quarterfinals on Saturday’s slate and five hockey semifinals set for the weekend, the MIAA tournament field will shrink to its final four in every division by Sunday night.
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Harrison boys basketball advances, Lafayette Jeff eliminated in sectionals

Harrison boys basketball advances, Lafayette Jeff eliminated in sectionals

LAFAYETTE — A defensive awakening from junior guard Brody Baker propelled Harrison to a 58-38 victory over McCutcheon in Friday’s IHSAA Class 4A sectional semifinal, sending the Raiders into Saturday night’s championship against Kokomo while ending Lafayette Jeff’s season in the opposite bracket. Baker, once labeled a scorer-only, harassed McCutcheon into a 34.3 percent shooting night and poured in 21 points of his own, validating coach Mark Rinehart’s preseason challenge. “That’s what I’m probably the most proud of,” Rinehart said of Baker’s two-way growth. “He’s become a tremendous on-ball defender, and we need him to keep doing that.” The Raiders (17-8) endured a slow offensive start before ripping off a near-eight-minute scoreless stretch by McCutcheon between the first and second quarters. Without leading rebounder Brady Henchon—lost to a torn ACL on Feb. 24—Harrison still controlled the glass 30-19. Junior Evan Munjack slid into Henchon’s spot, posting nine points and seven rebounds, while Quinn Clary added 10 points and Xavier Fidago chipped in eight after shaking off an early 0-for. “Our locker room knew we could figure it out,” Rinehart said. “It wasn’t easy, but I thought our kids showed a lot of poise.” Across town at the Crawley Center, Lafayette Jeff’s hopes of setting up a cros showdown dissolved in a 46-33 loss to Kokomo. Despite boasting senior standout Gavin Pritzel, sharpshooter Cris Olson (12 points) and 6-foot-5 Minnesota football signee Aaden Aytch, the Bronchos never found an offensive groove, hitting just 5-of-25 from beyond the arc. Aytch picked up two first-quarter fouls and fouled out with 3:19 left, stymied by Kokomo’s persistent double teams. Kokomo (18-6), playing without top scorer DJ Nash, leaned on Caleb Taflinger’s efficient 14-point, six-rebound performance, plus 12 from Korbyn Hammel and 11 from sophomore Austin Moos. The Wildkats outrebounded Jeff 24-19 and will now face Harrison for the sectional crown. “We rushed a couple of possessions,” Lafayette Jeff senior Kian Thomas said, tears visible in the closing minutes. “I don’t want the next generation to take moments like this for granted. Because it ends pretty fast.” Harrison seeks its second consecutive sectional title Saturday night back inside the same gym where its defense first turned heads—and where Baker’s complete game now sets the tone.
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Athletic Club vs Barcelona, La Liga: Preview

Athletic Club vs Barcelona, La Liga: Preview

San Mamés is braced for another edition of its annual “Saturday Night Fútbol” blockbuster when Athletic Club welcome league-leading Barcelona to the Basque Country on 7 March, kick-off 21:00 CET. The Catalans arrive in Bilbao knowing that anything less than victory will allow Real Madrid to draw level at the summit after Madrid’s dramatic Friday-night win trimmed the gap to a solitary point. Both camps carry emotional bruises from mid-week Copa del Rey semi-final exits. Barcelona, edged out by Atlético Madrid despite a rousing second-leg display, at least departed with morale intact, whereas Athletic must stew over a scoreless two-legged defeat that hands bragging rights to neighbours Real Sociedad for the upcoming final. With no European football left on their calendar, Ernesto Valverde’s men have only domestic pride and a late push for continental qualification to play for—an uphill task after an injury-ravaged, inconsistent campaign that has eroded the relentless edge they showed last season. The hosts will be without Yeray Álvarez, Nico Williams, Unai Eguiluz, Maroan Sannadi and Beñat Prados, while Barça’s casualty list features Alejandro Balde, Gavi, Andreas Christensen, Frenkie de Jong and Jules Kounde. Those absences, coupled with Hansi Flick’s intention to rotate ahead of a pivotal Champions League meeting with Newcastle, mean the visitors will field a lopsided XI short on full-back depth and likely shorn of several habitual starters. Recent history favours the Blaugrana: a pair of comfortable wins this term, headlined by a 5-0 Super Cup rout in January. Yet San Mamés is a different beast. Athletic have not lost in five league outings and feed off a fervent crowd that traditionally coaxes extra intensity from the players when Barcelona come to town. Last season’s finale—when both sides were on autopilot—ended 3-0 to Barça, but Saturday’s stakes ensure a spikier affair. Flick’s projected 4-3-3 sees Joan guard the goal behind a back line of Eric, Cubarsí, Martín and Cancelo; Fermín, Casadó and Olmo anchor midfield; while Yamal, Ferran and Rashford spearhead the attack. Valverde is expected to counter with a 4-2-3-1: Simón; Vivian, Paredes, Laporte, Yuri; Galarreta, Jauregizar; I. Williams, Sancet, Berenguer; and Guruzeta up top. A draw would preserve Barcelona’s lead and keep destiny in their hands ahead of a looming Clásico, yet anything short of three points feels insufficient for a club of their ambition. Athletic, wounded and desperate, will view this as their shot at redemption. Expect fireworks under the arch of the Cathedral.
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Raiders Trade Maxx Crosby to Ravens for Two First-Round Draft Picks

Raiders Trade Maxx Crosby to Ravens for Two First-Round Draft Picks

In a stunning pre-free-agency blockbuster, the Las Vegas Raiders have agreed to ship five-time Pro Bowl edge rusher Maxx Crosby to the Baltimore Ravens in exchange for two first-round draft picks, including the No. 14 overall selection in next month’s NFL draft, according to multiple reports. Crosby, 28, has been the Raiders’ most consistent defensive force since entering the league in 2019. He recorded 10 sacks last season—his fourth campaign with double-digit sacks in seven years—and leaves Las Vegas with 52 career sacks, cementing himself as one of the league’s premier pass-rushers. The deal marks a dramatic pivot for both franchises. Las Vegas, which owns the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 draft and is widely expected to select Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, continues to stockpile premium capital after posting a 7-27 combined record over the past two seasons. The Raiders last reached the postseason in 2021 and now accelerate a roster reset under a new regime. Baltimore, meanwhile, ushers in a new era after parting ways with longtime head coach John Harbaugh and promoting former Chargers defensive coordinator Jesse Minter to the top job. Adding Crosby gives Minter an elite edge presence around which to mold an already formidable defense. Crosby was in New Orleans ahead of Super Bowl LIX when news of the trade broke. Neither team has commented officially, but the swap is expected to be finalized when the new league year opens.
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NJSIAA Region 2 semifinal pairings, 2026

NJSIAA Region 2 semifinal pairings, 2026

MOUNT OLIVE — The stage is set for the next step toward a state championship as the NJSIAA Region 2 semifinals take center stage at Mount Olive High School. With berths in the championship finals on the line, the remaining wrestlers will square off in bouts that promise both tension and fireworks under the spotlight of the packed gymnasium. A look at who's competing for a spot in the finals at Mount Olive reveals a bracket loaded with local contenders eager to punch their tickets to Saturday night’s title round. Each semifinal matchup carries the weight of season-long aspirations, and the winners will move one victory away from etching their names into Region 2 lore. Fans can expect a rapid-fire slate of high-stakes wrestling as athletes navigate the narrow path from semifinalist to finalist, knowing that one misstep ends the journey. The pairings, released earlier today, set the matchups that will decide who advances and who heads to the consolation rounds in pursuit of third-place hardware and a potential wild-card state-tournament bid. Action begins promptly, and with every takedown, escape, and near-fall, the tension inside Mount Olive will only intensify as the finalists emerge.
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AP Mock Draft 1.0: Edge rushers go 2-3-4 after Raiders take QB Fernando Mendoza No. 1 overall

AP Mock Draft 1.0: Edge rushers go 2-3-4 after Raiders take QB Fernando Mendoza No. 1 overall

Fernando Mendoza, fresh off a Heisman Trophy and the first national championship in Indiana history, is projected to hear his name called first overall when the Las Vegas Raiders step to the podium next month. According to the Associated Press’s inaugural mock draft, the Raiders will open the 2025 NFL Draft by selecting the championship-winning quarterback, setting off a run on pass rushers with edge defenders coming off the board at picks two, three, and four. Beyond the top selection, the rest of the league’s draft board remains fluid, but the early emphasis on elite quarterback talent and premium edge defenders is already taking shape.
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Athletic Club vs. Barcelona: Preview, Predictions and Lineups

Athletic Club vs. Barcelona: Preview, Predictions and Lineups

San Mamés is braced for a heavyweight La Liga showdown on Saturday night as Athletic Club welcome league-leading Barcelona for a fixture that could tilt the title race further in the Catalans’ favor. Hansi Flick’s side arrive in Bilbao with a four-point cushion at the summit, thanks to Real Madrid’s recent missteps, and with the confidence of having already swept Athletic aside twice this season by a combined 9–0 margin. Yet the hosts, currently ninth, have designs on redemption. Ernesto Valverde’s men saw their Copa del Rey hopes extinguished in midweek, but the quick turnaround offers an immediate chance to erase that frustration. The same applies to Barcelona, whose spirited second-leg display against Atlético Madrid—despite elimination—provided a tactical template Flick will hope his players replicate: suffocating pressure, relentless chance creation and a suddenly sturdy back line. Injuries, however, have bitten both camps. Athletic remain without Beñat Prados, Unai Egiluz and Maroan Sannadi, while winger Nico Williams’ persistent groin complaint keeps him doubtful and clouds his longer-term international future. Positively, Iñigo Ruíz de Galarreta escaped serious injury against Real Sociedad and should anchor midfield alongside Mikel Jauregizar, supplying ammunition for Oihan Sancet. Aymeric Laporte’s timely return to partner Daniel Vivian at center-back has underpinned a mini-revival, and San Mamés will expect the pair to repel Barcelona’s fluid attack. Barcelona’s rearguard is even more threadbare. Jules Koundé and Alejandro Balde are sidelined, thrusting Gerard Martín into the left-back slot and promoting Eric García—fresh off suspension—to pair with teenage standout Pau Cubarsí. João Cancelo’s January loan already looks prescient; the Portuguese’s marauding runs will be essential on the right. In midfield, 17-year-old Marc Bernal continues to blossom, stepping in for Frenkie de Jong alongside Pedri, while Raphinha, Lamine Yamal and Dani Olmo support Ferran Torres, preferred again to the recovering Robert Lewandowski, who is expected to start on the bench. With both squats smarting from cup exits, motivation will not be in short supply. Athletic need a statement result to reignite their European push; Barcelona crave another statement of intent to keep Madrid at arm’s length. Expect a fierce midfield battle, rapid transitions and, given the visitors’ ruthless recent form, another stern examination of San Mamés’ waning fortress credentials. Predicted lineups Athletic Club (4-2-3-1): Simón; Areso, Vivian, Laporte, Berchiche; Jauregizar, De Galarreta; Williams, Sancet, Berenguer; Guruzeta. Barcelona (4-2-3-1): J. García; Cancelo, Cubarsí, E. García, Martín; Bernal, Pedri; Yamal, Olmo, Raphinha; Torres.
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