Expert Sports News & Commentary

UEFA fines Benfica for fan behaviour during Real Madrid game
European football’s governing body has imposed a financial penalty on Portuguese giants Benfica following incidents involving their supporters during the recent UEFA Champions League encounter against Real Madrid. The exact amount of the fine and the specific nature of the fan behaviour were not disclosed in the brief communiqué released by UEFA’s disciplinary arm. The sanction underscores the organisation’s ongoing efforts to clamp down on crowd disturbances inside stadiums, with Benfica now required to remit payment within the stipulated deadline. The Lisbon club have yet to issue an official response regarding the punishment.
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Senegal appeal to CAS against handing over of AFCON title to Morocco
Lausanne, Switzerland – Senegal have taken their fight for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations crown to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, formally challenging the Confederation of African Football’s decision to award the trophy to Morocco after a chaotic final in Rabat on 18 January.
The Senegalese Football Federation filed the appeal on Wednesday, CAS confirmed, asking the tribunal to annul CAF’s 17 March ruling that transformed Senegal’s hard-fought 1-0 extra-time victory into a 3-0 forfeit loss. If successful, the move would restore the Lions of Teranga as two-time continental champions and strip hosts Morocco of a title they did not secure on the pitch.
The controversy stems from the dying seconds of normal time, when Congolese referee Jean-Jacques Ndala used VAR to review a challenge by Senegal defender El Hadji Malick Diouf on Morocco winger Brahim Diaz and pointed to the spot. Incensed, Senegalese players left the field and supporters spilled toward the pitch, halting play for almost 20 minutes. Captain Sadio Mane eventually persuaded his teammates to continue, and goalkeeper saved Diaz’s penalty before Pape Gueye struck in extra time to seemingly clinch Senegal’s second AFCON, adding to their 2022 triumph.
CAF’s disciplinary arm later upheld Morocco’s protest, citing tournament regulations against teams abandoning the field. The decision flipped the result, promoted Morocco to champions, and provoked fierce debate across African football.
CAS Director General Matthieu Reeb acknowledged the urgency of the matter, pledging “swift” proceedings while safeguarding due process for all parties. CAF president Patrice Motsepe reiterated the governing body’s respect for CAS’s authority, and FIFA president Gianni Infantino, who witnessed the scenes in Rabat, had earlier labelled the walk-off “unacceptable.”
The Moroccan federation, while welcoming the revised outcome, insisted its appeal sought only regulatory compliance, not a diminishment of Senegal’s sporting performance. Senegal, meanwhile, remain adamant that the final whistle confirmed them as rightful winners and have now turned to sport’s highest legal forum for vindication.
Both nations return to action this week in friendlies ahead of World Cup preparations. Senegal meet Peru at Paris’s Stadium of France on Saturday, while a new-look Morocco under freshly appointed coach Mohamed Ouahbi face Ecuador in Madrid on Friday before tackling Paraguay in Lens on 31 March.
A CAS hearing date has yet to be announced, but the verdict will shape the legacy of the 2025 tournament and could reset the balance of power in African football.
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NBA owners vote to explore Seattle, Las Vegas expansion bids
The NBA took its first official step toward adding two new franchises on Wednesday, when the league’s Board of Governors voted to authorize exploratory discussions for expansion teams in Seattle and Las Vegas. Commissioner Adam Silver framed the decision as a measured advance into markets the league has long viewed as viable.
“Today’s vote reflects our Board’s interest in exploring potential expansion to Las Vegas and Seattle – two markets with a long history of support for NBA basketball,” Silver said in a statement released after the vote. “We look forward to taking this next step and engaging with interested parties.”
While the resolution does not guarantee that either city will ultimately receive a franchise, it opens a formal process for prospective ownership groups to submit bids. Industry estimates place the price of an expansion team between $7 billion and $10 billion, a range that would shatter previous records for North American sports franchises.
Seattle last hosted NBA basketball in 2008, when the SuperSonics relocated to Oklahoma City after arena negotiations collapsed. Las Vegas, which has never had an NBA franchise, has rapidly emerged as a major sports destination, already supporting the NFL’s Raiders and the NHL’s Golden Knights. Major League Baseball’s Oakland Athletics are also scheduled to relocate to the city in the coming years.
If the league proceeds, the two new clubs would likely begin play in the 2028-29 season, representing the NBA’s first expansion since the Charlotte Bobcats joined the league in 2004. Geographically, both markets sit in the Western Conference footprint, prompting expectations that either the Minnesota Timberwolves or the Memphis Grizzlies would shift east to maintain 16 teams in each conference.
The coming months will focus on vetting potential investors, assessing market readiness, and negotiating arena deals, with no firm deadline set for a final decision.
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Quickfire Quiz 84: Can you answer 10 questions in 90 seconds?
FourFourTwo has released its 84th Quickfire Quiz, challenging readers to rattle through ten football teasers in just 90 seconds. The sprint-style brainteaser is the latest addition to the magazine’s growing catalogue of member-only quizzes, delivered through its free-to-join “Club” portal.
Subscribers who sign up with an email address gain instant access to the timed test, alongside a weekly newsletter packed with trivia, features and footballing puzzles. The quiz itself spans the full spectrum of the sport, from emotional farewells at famous stadiums to the eye-watering sums spent on English talent across the global market.
Among the questions, participants are asked to recall West Ham’s starting XI from the final match at Upton Park—a dramatic night against Manchester United that brought the curtain down on 112 years of history. Another prompt invites fans to name the side that joined Michael Carrick for his last professional appearance in 2018.
Geography also plays a part: entrants must list every MLS franchise currently competing in North America and, for the continental completists, every club set to feature in Europe’s expanded leagues for the 2025/26 campaign. Transfer-fee aficionados face the daunting task of naming the 50 most expensive moves involving English players, while historians are challenged to reel off every champion from Europe’s top five leagues since 1992.
Visual recognition is tested too, with 50 club badges stripped of all context, plus the latest Weekend Crossword—number 45—featuring clues on starters, middles and finishers. Marks are logged automatically for Club members, allowing stat-tracking, badge collection and leaderboard progression.
Mark White, FourFourTwo’s Digital Content Editor, said the Quickfire series is designed to keep supporters “match-fit” between fixtures. “We wanted something sharp, addictive and genuinely testing,” White explained. “Ninety seconds sounds generous until you’re staring at a blank list of Carrick’s team-mates.”
Membership is open to readers aged 16 and over and requires acceptance of the site’s Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy. New registrants receive confirmation by email and are automatically enrolled in the weekly newsletter, ensuring the next batch of quizzes lands straight in their inbox.
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Bavarian Loan Works: Sieb scores in Europe, Bayern Munich loanees prep for international duty
Bayern Munich’s far-flung army of loanees experienced contrasting fortunes across Europe this week, but one name lit up the continent’s second-tier competition: Armindo Sieb. The 20-year-old forward, stationed at Mainz 05, etched his signature on the UEFA Conference League by sealing a 2-0 round-of-16 second-leg victory over Sigma Olomouc, propelling the Karnevalsclub into Friday’s quarter-final draw.
Sieb’s decisive moment arrived in the 82nd minute, eight minutes after coach Bo Henriksen had summoned him from the bench and moments after the Czech visitors had been reduced to ten men. His low finish killed the tie and ensured Mainz will face French side Strasbourg for a place in the last four. Domestically, Sieb was an unused substitute in Sunday’s 2-1 Bundesliga win over Eintracht Frankfurt, but his European strike already stamps this loan spell as a developmental success.
While Mainz march on, most of Bayern’s temporary exports have closed their continental accounts for 2024-25. Stuttgart and goalkeeper Alexander Nübel saw their Europa League hopes extinguished in Portugal, conceding twice at Porto to fall 4-1 on aggregate. Nübel produced two saves on the night but was powerless to stop the Primeira Liga side’s efficiency. The Germany international rebounded three days later in league play, recording five stops as Stuttgart routed Augsburg 5-2 to stay entrenched in the top-three race. Nübel has since been summoned by Julian Nagelsmann for Die Mannschaft’s upcoming friendlies with Switzerland and Ghana.
Elsewhere in Germany’s top flight, Arijon Ibrahimović watched from the stands as Heidenheim clawed a dramatic 3-3 draw with champions Bayer Leverkusen; the 19-year-old attacker is now on U21 duty for Germany’s Euro qualifiers. In England, João Palhinha remained in concussion protocol for Tottenham’s Champions League farewell—a 3-2 second-leg win that could not overturn a 7-5 aggregate deficit to Real Madrid. The Portuguese enforcer returned to the bench for Spurs’ 3-0 defeat at Nottingham Forest and will hope to reclaim his starting stripe after the international window.
Fulham’s teenage striker Jonah Kusi-Asare did not feature in the Cottagers’ 3-1 defeat of Burnley, while second-tier Southampton keeper Daniel Peretz underlined his growing reputation with back-to-back clean sheets: seven saves in Wednesday’s 1-0 triumph over Norwich City and one save in Sunday’s 2-0 dismissal of Oxford United. Peretz has been called up by Israel for a March 26 friendly against Georgia.
In Italy’s Europa League drama, Bryan Zaragoza saw just 11 minutes of Roma’s 4-3 extra-time heart-breaker against Bologna, a tie decided by a 109th-minute visitor strike that cancelled the Giallorossi’s away-goals cushion. The Spaniard was again unused in Roma’s 1-0 league win over Lecce.
Turkish Super Lig representative Sacha Boey delivered a first-half masterclass at Anfield—three tackles, a goal-line clearance and two blocks—but Galatasaray still surrendered their 1-0 aggregate advantage in a 4-0 defeat to Liverpool. Boey was withdrawn at the interval and will look to regroup against Trabzonspor after the break.
Swiss Super League midfielder Lovro Zvonarek saw 66 minutes of damage limitation in Grasshopper’s 5-0 capitulation at Servette, posting four tackles and two recoveries, while compatriot Jonathan Asp Jensen created two chances before an error contributed to the rout. Both youngsters have been summoned by Croatia’s U21s.
Second-team loanees in Germany’s lower tiers had quieter weekends. Noël Aséko supplied a key pass and robust defensive numbers in Hannover’s 1-0 win over Braunschweig and joins Ibrahimović in the Germany U21 camp. Javier Fernández logged 93 percent pass completion in Nürnberg’s 3-0 victory, while Maurice Krattenmacher and Tarek Buchman remained unused substitutes for Hertha and Nürnberg respectively.
From the Regionalliga to Brazil’s women’s top flight, the picture was similarly mixed—Benedikt Wimmer completed 90 minutes in Sandhausen’s scoreless draw, Ana Guzmán anchored a back-line shutout in Palmeiras’ 6-0 rout of Vitória—but the headline takeaway is clear: as clubs recalibrate for the international hiatus, Bayern’s loan pipeline continues to deliver match-shaping moments, none bigger than Sieb’s continental clincher that keeps Mainz dreaming of a maiden European trophy.
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Max Fried, Yankee bats deliver historic Opening Day defeat for Giants
SAN FRANCISCO — All the talk out of the Giants’ clubhouse this spring centered on a fresh, college-style energy that rookie manager Tony Vitello was importing to Oracle Park. By the final out Wednesday, the only thing echoing through the bayside ballpark was the sound of Yankees bats and Max Fried’s fastball popping into catcher Austin Wells’ mitt.
Fried subdued San Francisco on two hits over 6 1/3 innings and New York rode a seven-run second inning to a 7-0 victory in the 2026 lid-lifter, handing the Giants their most lopsided Opening-Day loss since the club moved west and matching the fewest hits (two) they have managed on day one since 1965.
“We could nitpick,” Vitello admitted, “but this wasn’t a March Madness game where we drew up the wrong play at the end.”
Instead it was a textbook dismantling. Logan Webb, the Giants’ homegrown ace, recorded the first out of the second inning and then watched the lineup unravel: Giancarlo Stanton singled, Jazz Chisholm was hit by a 92.5-mph sinker, Jose Caballero laced an RBI single, Ryan McMahon flipped a two-run changeup into center and Wells followed with another knock. Trent Grisham capped the barrage by ripping a two-run triple to the right-center gap, making it five straight runs before Webb recorded a second out. By the end of the frame the Yankees led 5-0; they tacked on two more in the fifth to chase Webb after five innings, nine hits and seven runs (six earned).
It matched the most runs Webb has surrendered in San Francisco in 91 career starts at Oracle Park.
Fried, meanwhile, navigated early traffic and never buckled. He walked Luis Arraez on four pitches to open the bottom of the first and, one out later, faced runners on the corners against cleanup hitter Willy Adames. A 95-mph cutter and a first-pitch groundout later, the threat was extinguished. The Giants would not reach second base again until the eighth, long after Fried had exited to a standing ovation from the Yankees’ dugout and a smattering of appreciative cheers from the travel-heavy crowd of 40,856.
“It was one of those outings where you’ve just got to figure out how to get it done when you aren’t the most locked in,” said Fried, who went 19-5 with a 2.86 ERA a season ago. “When the guys go out and put up five in the second, it lets you take a deep breath.”
Every Yankee starter except reigning MVP Aaron Judge—who fanned four times in his first six trips—collected at least one hit and either scored or drove in a run. Grisham’s triple was New York’s first on Opening Day since Johnny Damon in 2009, and the club’s lone moment of frustration came when Jose Caballero became the first player in major-league history to employ the new ABS challenge, only to see a called strike confirmed and the Yankees lose the review.
“I wanted to go for it,” Caballero said. “I just wish it was the other way around.”
The Giants drew post-game praise from their manager for maintaining effort, but the numbers told a stark story: two hits, zero extra-base knocks, 0-for-7 with runners on base and a 7-0 final that equals the widest margin of defeat the franchise has ever absorbed in a season opener.
Yankees skipper Aaron Boone cautioned against overreaction—”We’re just one game into this thing,” he said—yet admitted the performance checked every box on the club’s off-season blueprint.
“That’s what an ace looks like when he’s grinding,” Boone said of Fried. “And this is a lineup that can do this often. We trust one another.”
For San Francisco, the college spirit will get another exam Friday. For the Yankees, the message was delivered before the kayaks had even left McCovey Cove: energy is nice, but execution wins openers.
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Will Brighton have another World Cup winner in 2026?
Brighton & Hove Albion could be represented by as many as 12 players at this summer’s expanded World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico, reviving memories of the club’s triumphant connection to the 2022 tournament in Qatar. Argentina’s Alex Mac Allister, then a Brighton midfielder, returned to the south-coast club with a winner’s medal and a hero’s welcome; the question now is whether any of his former team-mates can follow suit.
Eleven senior squad members have dispersed on international duty this month, with four still involved in the final throes of qualification. Kaoru Mitoma is already assured of a place after Japan became the first nation to book passage beyond the co-hosts, scoring in a 2-0 win over Bahrain that sealed an eighth consecutive finals appearance. Mitoma contributed a goal and three assists in seven Asian qualifiers and will hope to improve on Japan’s last-16 exit of four years ago.
Paraguay’s Diego Gomez is another guaranteed traveller. The versatile midfielder started 11 of Paraguay’s South American fixtures, registering six clean sheets and scoring the winner against Brazil in September 2024 to help clinch sixth place and a first World Cup berth since 2010.
European qualifying has delivered two more certainties. Bart Verbruggen kept three clean sheets in six outings to help the Netherlands top Group G, while centre-back Jan Paul van Hecke started twice alongside Virgil van Dijk as Ronald Koeman’s side sealed their place with a 4-0 defeat of Lithuania. Maxim De Cuyper’s attacking output—two goals and two assists—was instrumental in Belgium winning Group J without defeat.
Jason Steele’s surprise inclusion in Thomas Tuchel’s 35-man England squad for upcoming friendlies against Uruguay and Japan keeps the 35-year-old goalkeeper in the frame for a squad role, though former Under-21 colleague Danny Welbeck appears a distant contender after being omitted. Pascal Gross, 34, is back in the Germany fold following a strong second spell at Brighton, recalled for fixtures against Switzerland and Ghana after drifting out of Julian Nagelsmann’s plans post-Euro 2024.
The remaining Brighton hopefuls must navigate the European play-offs. Italy’s Diego Coppola, buoyed by regular minutes at Paris FC, could face Wales—Brighton first-team coach Andrew Crofts is assistant to Welsh boss Craig Bellamy—while Yasin Ayari hopes to feature for Sweden against Ukraine. Ferdi Kadioglu’s recent club form has earned a place in Turkey’s contingent for a semi-final with Romania, and Evan Ferguson—currently sidelined with an ankle injury sustained on loan at Roma—will watch on as the Republic of Ireland meet the Czech Republic for a place in the finals.
Elsewhere, Matt O’Riley’s lack of game time since January has cost him a Denmark call-up, and Brajan Gruda’s loan switch to RB Leipzig has yet to yield a Germany summons. Facundo Buonanotte’s limited minutes at Chelsea and Leeds have ended any lingering Argentina hopes, while Canada’s Tom McGill, third in Brighton’s pecking order, has fallen out of consideration. Cameroon’s failure to qualify rules out Carlos Baleba, still courted by Manchester United, and Gambia’s absence means Yankuba Minteh will watch the tournament from afar.
Should any of Brighton’s dozen contenders go all the way, the club will once again bask in global glory—just as it did when Mac Allister paraded the trophy through the training ground in 2023.
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Liverpool need to replace Mohamed Salah. Who could fill the void?
Liverpool always knew the day would come, yet the speed with which it has arrived has still caught Anfield off-guard. Mohamed Salah’s new contract last April was meant to postpone the succession conversation; instead, a sharp dip in form has accelerated it. The numbers that once felt untouchable—255 goals, 119 assists in 435 games—now sit as a benchmark the club must replicate, not merely remember.
The brief handed to the recruitment team is exacting. Salah’s heir must beat full-backs in isolation, must possess genuine pace, must press with relentless intensity and must still be 25 or younger when the ink dries. With Alexander Isak, Hugo Ekitike and Florian Wirtz already earmarked as the next attacking cycle, the incoming winger will not be asked to carry the scoring load alone, yet the drop-off in wide threat is stark enough that one replacement may not suffice. Rio Ngumoha is expected to step up, but Liverpool entered the summer needing another senior winger even before Salah’s exit became likely. Two may now be required.
Head coach Arne Slot’s own future adds another layer of urgency. The Dutchman’s tactical blueprint—potentially Wirtz operating behind a central pair, as trialled against Galatasaray—needs pace on the outside to stretch defences. Last weekend’s evidence suggests the current squad cannot provide it.
Below, The Athletic examines five candidates who fit the age, profile and financial parameters.
Michael Olise
The ideal, if improbable, solution. Only six months into a move from Crystal Palace to Bayern Munich, the 24-year-old left-footed right-winger leads Europe’s top-five leagues with 17 assists. His ability to glide past defenders at top speed and finish clinically off his left recalls Salah at peak powers. Bayern have given no indication they would sell, yet Olise’s output—at least one goal or assist per game in Germany—makes him the archetype Liverpool are chasing.
Yan Diomande
Still raw at 19, the Ivorian has already forced defenders into 150-plus take-ons for RB Leipzig this season, a figure bettered only by Vinicius Junior and Lamine Yamal. A top speed of 36.3 km/h places him inside the Bundesliga’s top three, while 10 goals and six assists mark steady progress. Leipzig will demand a premium, and questions remain over how a right-footed right-winger dovetails with Jeremie Frimpong’s overlapping runs, yet Diomande’s ceiling is undeniable.
Rayan
Bournemouth’s Brazilian teenager moved to England after a 14-goal season in Brazil’s Serie A and, at 6ft 2in, offers aerial dominance rare among modern wingers. Predominantly right-sided, he drives inside on his stronger left foot, combining pace and power. A €100 million release clause is the obstacle, but Liverpool’s strong relationship with the south-coast club—sporting director Richard Hughes previously worked there and Milos Kerkez arrived last summer—could facilitate negotiations.
Serhiy Fofana
Injury restricted the 20-year-old to 19 appearances this term, yet Lyon’s left-winger managed 11 goals and six assists in 2024-25. Comfortable on either flank and effective in one-v-one situations, Fofana would arrive at a fraction of the cost commanded by Premier League-proven names. The risk is medical rather than technical.
Yaser Minteh
Slot knows the 21-year-old better than most after coaching him at Feyenoord, where Minteh delivered 10 goals and five assists en route to KNVB Cup glory. Since joining Brighton for £30 million he has shown flashes—most notably terrorising Liverpool’s own back line last weekend—but two goals and four assists in 27 league games illustrate the gap between promise and production. His 12 goal involvements across the past two seasons remain the most of any under-21 winger in the Premier League, and Slot believes he can refine the defensive side of the game.
Liverpool’s final league position, and whether Champions League revenue arrives, will shape how aggressively they pursue these targets. What is already certain is that the post-Salah era has begun, and the next man—or men—through the door must hit the ground running.
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Bukayo Saka, the load of expectation and what's changed this season
For six consecutive seasons Bukayo Saka has been the compass by which Arsenal navigate, yet the needle has wobbled of late. A first-half exit in the Champions League last-16 trip to Bayer Leverkusen and a subdued showing in Sunday’s Carabao Cup final loss to Manchester City have amplified a question few imagined asking two years ago: what happens when the player who rescues the rescue mission needs rescuing himself?
The raw numbers feel unfamiliar: nine goals and five assists across all competitions, a downturn from the double-double campaigns that became his benchmark between 2021 and 2025. His maiden Premier League assist this term did not arrive until match-day 13, the November 30 meeting with Chelsea. Still, deeper metrics portray a creator functioning at elite level: 52 chances fashioned (fifth in the division), 44 from open play (fourth) and an expected-assist tally of 5.76 that ranks sixth, narrowly behind Manchester City’s Rayan Cherki on 6.62. The difference is finishing: Saka has three league assists to Cherki’s eight.
Context, however, is everything. Between the ages of 18 and 22 the winger was among Arsenal’s two most-used outfielders in three of four seasons, a stretch that included a club-record 87 consecutive Premier League appearances from May 2021 to October 2023. A three-month hamstring lay-off last December offered only a brief reprieve; reinforcements have since arrived in Noni Madueke and 16-year-old Max Dowman, allowing Mikel Arteta to rest Saka during congested winter windows. Even so, he has already logged 2,867 minutes this season compared with 2,607 in the previous one.
England head coach Thomas Tuchel, granting Saka and others a delayed arrival at March’s camp, noted the cumulative toll: “More important than the pure number of minutes is that some of these guys have already played more minutes than the whole last season and there is still a lot of football to play.”
Arteta’s tactical evolution has also reshaped Saka’s environment. Once fed by Martin Odegaard and an overlapping Ben White, the 24-year-old is now frequently stationed wide while Jurrien Timber advances inside. Progressive passes to Saka have dipped from 16 per game in 2022-24 to 11 this season; he is receiving static on the touchline rather than in motion between the lines. A brief experiment as a central No. 10 against Wigan Athletic in February yielded four goals and Arteta’s approval—“closer to the goal…he can interchange positions with the wide player.”
Yet for every subdued half at Wembley there is a reminder of influence: Saka opened scoring in victories at Wolves and Brighton, became the first player to record 40+ chances created and 40+ take-ons this Premier League campaign, and ranks alongside Jeremy Doku, Elliot Anderson and Pedro Neto as the league’s most persistent dual threat.
The conversation, then, is less about decline than sustainability. After years of carrying Arsenal’s creative and emotional freight, Saka is finally receiving structural help; whether it arrives in time to shape a spring of silverware may determine how this defining season is remembered. As Arteta insisted: “When you look at his strength and the impact he has on the team, it’s just incredible.” The load has not lightened, but for the first time in years, it is being shared.
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Mohamed Salah will leave Liverpool a legend after ripping up the record books
When Mohamed Salah arrived at Anfield in the summer of 2017, the mood around Melwood was one of cautious optimism. Liverpool had spent the previous decade oscillating between flashes of brilliance and near-misses, and the club’s hierarchy hoped the Egyptian winger could accelerate a return to Europe’s summit. Few could have predicted the scale of impact that followed.
From his first training session, Salah’s blend of explosive acceleration and ice-cool finishing hinted at something special. Match after match, he translated those hints into numbers, rewriting the club’s scoring charts at a pace that left statisticians scrambling for superlatives. Each goal seemed to peel another layer from the record books: fastest to 20, fastest to 50, fastest century. The Kop soon learned to rise in anticipation the moment he collected possession on the right flank, sensing another entry in the making.
Beyond the raw tallies, Salah’s consistency became the bedrock of Liverpool’s renaissance. His ability to deliver in high-stakes fixtures turned doubters into believers and transformed cautious optimism into outright expectation. Title races, cup finals, Champions League nights under the Anfield lights—his imprint is indelible, his goals the punctuation marks in a story of resurgence.
As the final chapters of his Liverpool career approach, the narrative is no longer about what might be, but about what has been irrevocably achieved. Mohamed Salah will depart not merely as a prolific forward, but as a living legend whose legacy is etched into every significant record the club keeps. The cautious optimism of 2017 has given way to the certainty of history made, and no future generation will retell Liverpool’s modern era without speaking his name first.
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411 Wrestling Fact or Fiction: Is CM Punk vs. Roman Reigns a Dud Main Event For WrestleMania?
The latest edition of 411 Wrestling’s long-running Fact or Fiction column has turned its spotlight on the most polarizing match on the WrestleMania card: CM Punk versus Roman Reigns. Columnists Jake Chambers and Hel Stryer square off over a single, blunt question—does this headline bout deserve its marquee spot, or is it a creative misfire that could leave the showcase of the immortals ending on a flat note?
Within the tight word-count that defines the feature, Chambers and Stryer trade rapid-fire arguments, each labeling the other’s stance as either “fact” or “fiction.” While the full transcript of their exchanges is brief, the implications are significant for WWE’s flagship event. The column, which first appeared on 411MANIA’s Wrestling News section, offers no outside sourcing, no backstage quotes, and no updated statistics; instead it relies solely on the writers’ contrasting viewpoints to frame the debate.
Readers are left to decide whether Punk’s return momentum and Reigns’ dual-champion aura combine for must-see drama, or whether the pairing feels forced and underwhelming on paper. With the column now live, the wrestling community has a new reference point in the ongoing conversation about what truly constitutes a worthy WrestleMania main event.
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From Norwich to Barcelona: Ajay Tavares, the England Under-17 winger at La Masia
Barcelona’s famed academy, La Masia, has a new English accent. Sixteen-year-old winger Ajay Tavares swapped Norwich City’s Category-One academy for Catalonia in February, and within a fortnight had twice pulled on the blaugrana shirt for the club’s Under-19 side, Juvenil A.
Tavares’ debut arrived on 1 March, a 15-minute cameo against Real Mallorca at the Joan Gamper Stadium that left spectators asking for an encore. A week later he logged another 17 minutes in a 2-2 draw with Huesca. The appearances are brief, but inside the club they are viewed as the first public glimpse of a meticulously planned project.
Barça had tracked the wide player for months. Although Norwich never handed him a senior competitive debut, Tavares trained with their first-team last pre-season and featured in a friendly against Dutch side Volendam. An agreement in principle with the English club was struck early in the winter, yet the deal only crossed the line on deadline day thanks to the teenager’s Portuguese passport, which circumvented the strict Spanish regulations governing the international transfer of minors.
“Paperwork went right to the wire,” recalled his father, Helio Tavares. “You talk about Barcelona coming to pick up a boy from Norwich – it’s beyond unbelievable.”
Bayern Munich and RB Leipzig also explored the transfer, but once Barcelona declared firm interest Tavares’ mind was made. “This might have been a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to join arguably the biggest club in the world,” said Ryan Elton, a former Norwich academy coach who remained in contact with the player before his debut. “And he’s earned it.”
England youth set-up has capped Tavares at Under-15, Under-16 and current Under-17 level, and his rise has been swift. Rejected by Norwich at Under-9 level, he reapplied three years later and climbed rapidly, starring for the Under-16s in a 2023 Premier League National Cup final defeat to Aston Villa and scoring for fun during Charlton Athletic’s Valley Gold Cup tournament last year.
Elton remembers a winger “dedicated to maximising himself” and willing to “leave his body on the pitch,” traits that have followed him to Spain. A Barcelona source, speaking anonymously, praised the 16-year-old’s “remarkable physical strength for his age and brutal capacity for sacrifice,” adding that Tavares is “very confident and eager to learn, on and off the pitch.”
Style-wise, he prefers the left flank, cutting inside onto his stronger right foot in the manner of Thierry Henry, a comparison Elton believes is apt for his directness and eye for goal. Since arriving in Catalonia, Tavares has embraced the region’s famed nutrition programme and the heightened tactical demands of the Barça environment.
The move fits Barcelona’s wider strategy. With limited spending power at senior level, sporting director Deco has prioritised recruiting elite teenage talents who can eventually graduate to the first team. Tavares, signed as a long-term investment, is expected to feature prominently for Juvenil A next season.
For now, the winger is settling into a new country, a new language and a new style, but those who know him insist the adaptation will be swift. “He’s developed a young football brain,” Elton said. “Barcelona might be another level, but Ajay has never shied away from a challenge.”
Two substitute appearances, zero points on the scoresheet yet – but for Ajay Tavares, the journey from Norfolk to La Masia has only just begun.
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Aaron Rodgers Overlooked as Lavonte David Picks Steelers for Tom Brady’s Unretirement
Tampa Bay great Lavonte David set the football world buzzing during a recent appearance on NFL on CBS, declaring that Tom Brady could still walk into a starting quarterback job today—then singled out the Pittsburgh Steelers as his preferred landing spot, seemingly dismissing current Steelers passer Aaron Rodgers in the process.
David, who retired after a decorated career with the Buccaneers, was asked point-blank whether Brady could still start in the modern league. His reply was immediate and emphatic: “Yes.” When the follow-up question posed hypothetical destinations, Rodgers’ Steelers were the first team mentioned. David again did not hesitate: “Yes. Absolutely.”
The linebacker’s blunt endorsement comes on the heels of Brady’s dazzling cameo at the Fanatics Flag Football Classic, where the 47-year-old avoided a flag pull and delivered a 20-plus-yard touchdown strike to Stefon Diggs. The sequence reignited public speculation that the seven-time Super Bowl champion could still compete at the highest level.
Yet David showed more caution when the Indianapolis Colts were floated as another possible fit, citing the organization’s commitment to Daniel Jones. “They really like Daniel Jones,” he said, “and I feel like Daniel Jones had a strong start to the season before he got hurt. But, if Tom comes in, so long, Daniel Jones.”
Despite the verbal vote of confidence, the notion of Brady returning remains purely hypothetical. A lucrative FOX Sports broadcast agreement and a minority ownership stake with the Las Vegas Raiders create layers of contractual hurdles, while the natural toll of age adds another barrier. Still, David’s candid admission that he would “rather face any quarterback playing today” than line up across from Brady underscores the lingering respect—and fear—Brady commands.
“I just don’t want to play against Tom,” David concluded, after also brushing aside Atlanta’s Michael Penix Jr. and Miami’s Tua Tagovailoa as comparably daunting matchups.
For Rodgers, the episode serves as an uncomfortable reminder that even in retirement, Brady’s shadow looms large over the league’s quarterback conversation.
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Liam Rosenior secure unless Chelsea ‘implode’ over final weeks of season — report
Liam Rosenior’s position as Chelsea head coach is under no immediate threat, with club hierarchy prepared to keep faith in the 39-year-old unless the team suffers a dramatic collapse during the final seven Premier League fixtures, according to a Telegraph report published earlier this week.
Rosenior, appointed last autumn, has overseen a recent upturn in results that has steadied the Blues’ campaign, yet the looming run-in presents a daunting sequence: Manchester City (home), Manchester United (home), Brighton & Hove Albion (away), Nottingham Forest (home), Liverpool (away), Tottenham Hotspur (home) and Sunderland (away). Sources close to the club concede that, on current form, only the visit of relegation-threatened Spurs looks like a realistic three-point opportunity.
The report stresses that Chelsea’s BlueCo ownership model mandates managerial reviews only after a minimum 12-month tenure, a policy that has been relaxed only when predecessors Graham Potter, Mauricio Pochettino, Enzo Maresca and Thomas Tuchel either under-performed dramatically, resigned, or were deemed culpable for spiralling results. Rosenior, therefore, must merely avoid a catastrophic slide—Champions League qualification is not a stipulated target—to secure at least one full season in charge.
Off the pitch, the club are prioritising a summer overhaul aimed at bolstering “mental resilience.” Recruitment plans centre on four new arrivals: a defender, a midfielder, a forward and 20-year-old goalkeeper Mike Penders, whose experience belies his age. Critics have questioned whether the combined age of the quartet will even reach 100, highlighting the continuing emphasis on youth.
For now, Rosenior’s fate rests on steering Chelsea through a forbidding finale without the kind of implosion that cost his predecessors their jobs.
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2026 Division IV-V-VI-VII All-Ohio Boys Basketball Teams
Columbus—The Ohio High School Basketball Coaches Association unveiled the 2026 All-Ohio boys basketball squads for Divisions IV, V, VI and VII on Monday, honoring the state’s most productive under-class and senior talent from rim-protecting giants to high-scoring guards.
Zanesville Maysville’s do-everything senior Gator Nichols capped his career by claiming Division IV Player of the Year after averaging 23.6 points a night and directing the Panthers to one of the state’s best records. Nichols headlines a star-studded first team that includes 30-point scorer Brody Denny of Germantown Valley View, freshman phenom William Peagler Jr. of Kettering Alter (18.4 ppg), sophomore swing-man Keonte Smith of Dayton Northridge (18.7 ppg) and Heath senior sharpshooter Jordan Kaminsky (25.0 ppg). Caledonia River Valley’s 6-6 senior Carter Myers (24.6 ppg), Ravenna’s versatile CJ Ross (24.0 ppg) and Canfield’s 6-7 junior Jace Riccardo (15.5 ppg) round out a front line loaded with size and skill.
Division V Player of the Year honors went to Columbus Academy senior wing Jason Singleton. The 6-4 scorer poured in 21.3 points per game and spearheaded a Vikings’ surge to the regional finals. Sullivan Black River’s Parker Reinhart and Ironton’s Ashton Layne were among the top vote-getters, while coaches Kyle Dack of Sullivan Black River and Drew Stevens of Ironton shared Coach of the Year accolades after guiding their programs to league and district crowns.
In Division VI, New Madison Tri-Village senior sniper Trey Sagester earned top billing after leading the state with a 25.0-point average and lifting the Patriots to a sectional title. Portsmouth West mentor Caleb McClanahan was tabbed Coach of the Year for orchestrating one of the state’s biggest turnarounds.
The selections span every corner of Ohio, from Cincinnati powerhouses like Deer Park—where 34-point scorer Antonio White patrols the backcourt—to northeast Ohio standouts such as St. Clairsville’s 23-point man Griffin Straub and Margaretta’s 24-point force Julian Washington. Northwest Ohio is represented by the high-flying 6-8 center Walter Plantz of Genoa Area, while central Ohio boasts prolific scorers like Columbus Africentric’s Joshua Smith and Derron Gray Jr.
The complete All-Ohio lists recognize more than 200 student-athletes, blending seasoned seniors with rapidly developing sophomores and freshmen expected to headline future honors. The teams were chosen by members of the OHSBCA with input from media and opposing coaches, using regular-season statistics, team success and overall impact as primary criteria.
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NYCFC open up on potential interest in Mohamed Salah
Atlanta—New York City FC chief executive Brad Sims has confirmed that the club has not yet approached Mohamed Salah or his representatives about a move to Major League Soccer, even as speculation mounts that the Egyptian star could be headed stateside once his Liverpool contract expires at the end of the current season.
Speaking on the sidelines of the SBJ Business of Soccer conference, Sims told reporters that while he would welcome the 32-year-old winger to the Big Apple, no formal dialogue has taken place.
“I would love to have Mo Salah. We have not had any discussions with him or his people,” Sims said, according to Give Me Sport. “What is most important is does the player want to come to MLS and be in New York City. We are not going to go out and sell someone on New York, the league or our club. We want players who really want to be here.”
The comments came hours after The Athletic floated NYCFC as a plausible landing spot for Salah, citing a club source who would not “rule out” the possibility once Etihad Park—the club’s soccer-specific stadium currently under construction in Queens—opens its doors in the summer of 2027. The timing of the report coincided with NYCFC’s topping-off ceremony for the venue, a milestone that marks the completion of the steel framework.
Sims downplayed the notion that a marquee signing is essential to christen the new building, though he acknowledged the upside.
“Would it be helpful? Of course,” he said. “I think the direction the league is going in is really exciting, with the change in calendar aligning with the top leagues in the world. That will bring more opportunity and more interest in major signings across the league. So, is it a non-negotiable? Do we absolutely need it? In my opinion, no. Will it help take our club to the next level? Yes.”
The CEO reiterated the club’s long-standing recruitment philosophy, stressing that cultural fit outweighs star power.
“We need the guys who are going to be the hardest trainers, good teammates and good for the locker room and the culture,” he said, echoing previous remarks made by sporting director Todd Dunivant.
Elsewhere in MLS, The Athletic reports that neither San Diego FC nor the Chicago Fire are actively pursuing Salah for the summer transfer window, leaving the door open for other suitors—potentially including NYCFC—to make a play should the player express genuine interest in relocating to North America.
MLS commissioner Don Garber welcomed the prospect of adding Salah to the league’s growing list of global talents, telling reporters that MLS “would provide him with a great platform.”
For now, however, the ball remains firmly in Salah’s court, and New York City FC is content to wait for a signal that the former Premier League Golden Boot winner is ready to trade Anfield for the five boroughs.
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Wrong Knee Diagnosis' Kylian Mbappé Clarifies Reports About His Injury Saga
Madrid—Kylian Mbappé has stepped forward to quell mounting speculation over his physical condition, issuing a firm denial of reports suggesting Real Madrid’s medical staff evaluated the wrong knee during his recent injury assessment. The forward’s statement, released through club channels on Tuesday, seeks to extinguish what he labelled “sensational claims” that had ignited across European media in recent days.
The 25-year-old striker, who has been sidelined since picking up a knee complaint on international duty, said clarity was required to halt the swirl of rumours. While the club has not disclosed a timeline for his return, Mbappé stressed that the diagnostic process followed standard protocol and that any narrative implying a mix-up is “categorically false.”
Sources close to the player indicate that the confusion arose when images surfaced of him receiving treatment on his left leg, prompting unfounded theories that medical personnel had misidentified the affected joint. Mbappé’s camp moved swiftly to confirm that both knees were examined as a precaution and that the primary issue remains isolated to the initial impact site.
Real Madrid have yet to release an updated medical bulletin, but the player’s intervention is designed to reassure supporters and sponsors alike that his rehabilitation is progressing on course. With the club entering a pivotal stretch of domestic and European fixtures, the France captain’s availability is being monitored on a daily basis.
Mbappé concluded his brief communiqué by thanking fans for their messages of support and urging patience as the final stages of recovery unfold.
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Tuberville proposes bill to limit college athlete transfers
Washington, D.C. — Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) on Tuesday introduced legislation aimed at curbing the current free-movement climate in college athletics, telling reporters that unlimited transfers have “screwed up” college sports. The former head football coach at Auburn, Mississippi, Texas Tech and Cincinnati said his bill would grant athletes a single transfer without penalty but restrict additional moves, reversing the surge in portal activity that has reshaped rosters across the country. Details of enforcement mechanisms were not released, though Tuberville emphasized the measure is designed to restore stability for coaches, players and programs alike.
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Mohamed Salah to MLS? The Latest on the Liverpool Legend’s Potential Next Move
Mohamed Salah’s future beyond the 2025-26 campaign continues to generate headlines, but a switch to Major League Soccer appears increasingly improbable. Despite persistent speculation tying the Liverpool star to a host of MLS destinations, sources indicate that a trans-Atlantic move is unlikely once his current commitments on Merseyside conclude.
Chicago Fire have been among the clubs most frequently mentioned in connection with the Egyptian forward, yet no substantive negotiations have materialized. With the forward’s contract situation at Anfield set to enter its decisive phase, the possibility of Salah plying his trade in North America next summer remains remote.
For MLS supporters hoping to witness one of the Premier League’s most prolific scorers on home soil, the latest word is clear: the Salah-to-MLS storyline is, for now, more rumor than reality.
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PNG Barramundis to feature at National Indigenous Cricket Championships
Port Moresby — Cricket history will be made this summer when Papua New Guinea’s national side, the PNG Barramundis, accept an invitation to compete in the National Indigenous Cricket Championships on Australian soil. The invitation marks the first time a visiting international team has been woven into the tournament fabric, underlining the event’s rapid growth since its inception.
Tournament organisers confirmed the Barramundis’ inclusion this week, praising the squad’s reputation for fearless cricket and vibrant fan engagement. Officials believe the move will deepen cultural exchange between First Nations communities in Australia and the Pacific, while raising the on-field standard of a competition already renowned for its fierce rivalries and carnival atmosphere.
The Barramundis, who have steadily climbed the ranks of associate cricket, view the invitation as both an honour and a strategic step in their preparations for future international fixtures. Players and coaching staff are expected to arrive in Darwin next month for a brief acclimatisation camp before the opening round.
Match schedules and broadcast details are due to be released in the coming days, with organisers promising a festival atmosphere that celebrates cricket, culture and community.
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Paredes reveals Barcelona “didn’t expect to have four-goal lead” against Real Madrid
Madrid—Barcelona defender Irene Paredes admitted the Catalans were stunned by the size of their cushion after a rampant 6-2 win over Real Madrid in the first leg of their UEFA Women’s Champions League quarter-final on Wednesday night.
Paredes, who headed home her side’s third goal at the Estadio Alfredo di Stéfano just moments after Linda Caicedo had reduced the deficit to 2-1, said the four-goal margin was beyond expectations.
“We are so happy that we already beat them many times but each time is a new game, a new opportunity,” the 34-year-old told CBS Sports. “Today it was an important game, a tough one also and we are happy with the result.”
Barça’s victory was built on ruthless finishing and relentless pressure, yet Paredes acknowledged defensive lapses that allowed Caicedo to score twice. “We didn’t want to concede two goals, but Real Madrid are a really good team. They had their chances. I think Linda played a really good game,” she said. “We didn’t expect to have a four-goal lead so we are happy with that. Of course we will have to continue working on the mistakes because we can do better.”
The tie is the first of three clásicos in eight days. The teams meet again on Sunday in Liga F before the return leg at the Spotify Camp Nou next Thursday. Paredes conceded the condensed schedule is demanding. “It’s not easy to play against this team three times in a row in such a short period of time, but it’s like this,” she said.
With seven league fixtures remaining, Barcelona hold a 10-point advantage over Madrid at the top of Liga F. Paredes stressed the importance of maintaining momentum: “We will go back to Barcelona and we want to rest, we will prepare for the weekend’s game. It is important also for us to win on the weekend to have good feelings but also to continue our road to the league title.”
Barcelona now carry a commanding lead into next week’s second leg, but Paredes warned against complacency as the pursuit of a domestic and European double intensifies.
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Training Report: Bayern Munich’s Alphonso Davies, Manuel Neuer making progress
Munich—While the majority of Bayern Munich’s squad is away on international duty, two of the club’s highest-profile stars remained at Säbener Straße on Monday to push ahead with their rehabilitation programs. Goalkeeper Manuel Neuer and left-back Alphonso Davies both logged individual sessions that suggest their returns to first-team action are imminent.
Davies, sidelined recently with a hamstring issue, completed a series of ball-based exercises, an indication that the Canadian international has progressed beyond straight-line running and is now testing the muscle under football-specific loads. Neuer, nursing a calf complaint, worked under the close supervision of rehab specialist Jannis Bärtl and trained while wearing strobe glasses designed to sharpen reaction times and visual tracking—an encouraging sign that the 37-year-old is re-integrating goalkeeper-specific stimuli into his recovery.
Also present at the training complex was attacking midfielder Jamal Musiala. Although the 21-year-old has yet to resume on-pitch work, he spent roughly 20 minutes in discussion with rehab coach Simon Martinello on the facility’s terrace, outlining the next steps in his own comeback plan.
The timing of their progress is critical. Bayern are entering a season-defining stretch that features a tight Bundesliga title race, a DFB-Pokal semifinal against Bayer Leverkusen, and a Champions League quarterfinal clash with Real Madrid. Having Davies’ explosive pace on the flank, Neuer’s commanding presence between the posts, and Musiala’s creativity in the final third could prove decisive as the club chases silverware on multiple fronts.
Club medical staff have not attached definitive timetables to any of the trio, yet the intensity and specificity of Monday’s sessions indicate that availability updates could be forthcoming within days rather than weeks.
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Carlos Alcaraz Learns Silver Lining from Miami Open Heartbreak after Boris Becker Reaction
Miami Gardens, Florida — When the final forehand clipped the tape and drifted long, Carlos Alcaraz dropped his racquet and stared toward the stands, the sting of a 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 third-round defeat to Sebastian Korda still fresh. Yet within minutes of Sunday’s exit, the 22-year-old world No. 1 received a timely reminder that March disappointment has, in the past, served as the launchpad for his most devastating stretches of tennis.
German great Boris Becker, watching from afar, posted a concise but pointed message across social media: “Remember last year, same time, Carlos took time out and went to Mexico with his family to recharge… guess it worked out!”
The reference is impossible to ignore. Twelve months ago Alcaraz was bounced from the Miami Open by David Goffin, departed South Florida, and reeled off nine consecutive finals between April and September, capturing seven titles including Roland-Garros, the U.S. Open, and three Masters 1000 crowns. The symmetry is striking: a spring setback followed by a historic clay-to-hard-court surge that reaffirmed his place atop the sport.
Sunday’s loss to Korda, which featured a animated mid-match exchange with coach Samuel Lopez, extends a mini-slump by Alcaraz’s stratospheric standards. After opening the 2026 campaign with 16 straight victories and back-to-back trophies at the Australian Open and Qatar Open, the Spaniard was upended by Daniil Medvedev in the Indian Wells semi-finals, then faltered against Korda on the lime-green courts of Hard Rock Stadium. The back-to-back defeats represent his second and third losses in only three tournaments.
Becker, a six-time major champion and longtime admirer of Alcaraz’s explosive game, dismissed any notion that the top ranking is slipping from the Murcian’s grasp. Speaking in March before Indian Wells, the 56-year-old cautioned against labeling anyone “unbeatable,” noting, “We all have good days and bad days. He is clearly No. 1, but a year ago, you would have said that about [Jannik] Sinner, right? So, things can happen in sport, it’s always very unpredictable.”
The next chapter begins in the Principality. Alcaraz is expected on court at the Monte-Carlo Masters, April 5-12, where the red clay season offers an immediate opportunity to reboot. If history is any guide, a deep run in the Côte d’Azur could ignite another torrent of trophies—and prove Becker’s optimism prophetic once again.
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Quesada left fuming as Real Madrid “stop believing” in hefty Barcelona defeat
Madrid, Spain – Real Madrid head coach Pau Quesada delivered an unsparing assessment of his side’s 2-6 capitulation to Barcelona in the first leg of their UEFA Women’s Champions League quarter-final, admitting his players “stopped believing” once the goals began to flow at the Estadio Alfredo di Stéfano on Wednesday night.
Barcelona struck after just six minutes and maintained a relentless tempo, cancelling out both of Linda Caicedo’s replies almost immediately to establish a commanding four-goal cushion ahead of next Thursday’s return at the Spotify Camp Nou.
Addressing the media moments after the final whistle, the 33-year-old apologised to the club’s supporters and did not hide from the scale of the setback.
“I don’t think that they deserved the way that we played today,” Quesada said. “We were far from the version of ourselves that we wanted. Against a great opponent, you can’t afford to lose focus twice in the game because they’ll make you pay for it.”
The coach reserved his sharpest criticism for the mental collapse that followed each Barcelona goal.
“What angers me the most is that we stopped believing in what we were doing after conceding. You can concede but you can’t stop believing and you can’t stop doing what you’ve been working on. We get a bit down and that’s partly what sets us apart from the teams that are fighting to win the Champions League.”
Quesada conceded that the gulf in class was evident over the 90 minutes, praising the Catalan side’s composure under adversity.
“I think there’s some real distance between us and we’ve got to accept that. They showed that they’re a cut above us in terms of both pace and mental strength. They concede a goal and they don’t fall apart; when we concede, we struggle to carry on.”
With a Liga F clash against the same opponents looming on Sunday, the coach challenged his squad to summon a swift response.
“We’ve been left with a sour taste in our mouths and we can change that on Sunday. We’ve got to accept that we played a bad game, and we’ve got to turn things around to win the Clásico on Sunday in front of our fans who really deserve it.”
The defeat leaves Real Madrid requiring a miraculous turnaround in the second leg if they are to keep their European dream alive, but Quesada insists the immediate priority is restoring pride before the next meeting in the domestic league.
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The Daily Bee: Ole Book Begins Work at Dortmund
Borussia Dortmund’s new Sporting Director, Nils-Ole Book, officially clocked in for duty today, and the 40-year-old German’s agenda was already bursting at the seams. Between a whirlwind of introductory meetings, handshakes with first-team players, and a joint press conference alongside CEO Carsten Cramer and academy boss Lars Ricken, Book’s maiden hours at the club were, in the words of club media, “pretty booked up.”
Speaking to reporters in a session streamed on the club’s official website, Book revealed that his previous contract contained a release clause that applied exclusively to BVB, underscoring the pull Dortmund exerted on the long-time scout and former Hoffenheim sporting executive. While the sound bites stayed within the realm of first-day platitudes, two themes stood out: a pledge to cast “a wide net” in future recruitment, and Ricken’s pointed remark that, after the Niko Kovač era, “we once again have someone from outside of the club who brings fresh impetus and new ideas.” The comment was interpreted internally as a signal that Book is expected to challenge consensus rather than rubber-stamp decisions.
Elsewhere on the training ground, youth buzz centered on 18-year-old German U18 international Elias Benkara, whose path to the senior side appears increasingly narrow. Sources indicate that Kovač currently favors Italian prospects Filipo Mane and Luca Reggiani, leaving Benkara likely to seek opportunities away from the Black & Yellow this summer.
The evergreen Jadon Sancho rumor mill also spun back to life. Club captain Marco Reus, asked about the Manchester United winger’s potential return, offered measured advice: Sancho should “look for where he feels comfortable and find his best form again.” Any sentimental reunion, however, would come at a steep financial sacrifice. Reports suggest Dortmund would require Sancho to accept a significant salary reduction and forgo any signing fee, a stance one senior source labeled “a test of humility.”
On the transfer ledger, VfB Stuttgart have triggered their obligation to make Bilal El Khannous’s loan from Leicester City permanent. The 21-year-old, who tallied six goal involvements in 1,328 competitive minutes this season, will now prepare to face his new employer’s next opponent—Dortmund—when Stuttgart host the Ruhr side on April 4. El Khannous, curiously, is also said to have won an AFCON winner’s medal despite his nation losing the final on penalties.
Away from Signal Iduna Park, Bayern Munich captain Manuel Neuer edges toward an exclusive centurions club. Should the 38-year-old keeper make another Bundesliga appearance this season, he will join Jens Lehmann, Claudio Pizarro, and former Dortmund great Manfred Burgsmüller among the ten oldest players in league history. Neuer, ever the traditionalist, reportedly plans to celebrate with tapioca pudding and a round of bingo.
Finally, a brief cross-border note: Liverpool stalwart Mohamed Salah is expected to depart Anfield at season’s end, marking the impending end of an era for one of Europe’s most prolific forwards.
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Robert Lewandowski & Roony Bardghji eyeing World Cup 2026 spots with Poland and Sweden
While most of their Barcelona team-mates are already booked for this summer’s World Cup 2026 in the United States, Mexico and Canada, Robert Lewandowski and Roony Bardghji still have everything to play for. The two Barca attackers enter this week’s decisive play-off semi-finals knowing that only one of their countries can ultimately squeeze through to the tournament.
On Thursday night in Warsaw, Lewandowski will captain Poland against Albania, hoping to add to the 88 goals he has scored in 163 senior appearances for his country. The 36-year-old is already Poland’s all-time leading scorer and remains the focal point of a side that needs a victory to keep its World Cup dream alive.
Across Europe, 18-year-old Roony Bardghji will pull on the Sweden shirt in a similarly high-stakes encounter against Ukraine. The Stockholm-born midfielder, who has been impressing on international duty, is poised for another influential performance as Sweden look to move one step closer to North America.
Should both Poland and Sweden prevail, the two nations will meet next week in a single-elimination showdown that will determine the final European berth for World Cup 2026. In that scenario, Lewandowski and Bardghji would line up on opposite sides, club friendship briefly set aside with a place at global football’s showpiece event hanging in the balance.
For now, the pair share a common objective: win on Thursday, then prepare for what could be a dramatic winner-takes-all collision days later.
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MLS dreams of global fanbase after World Cup showcase
Major League Soccer clubs must attract fans overseas to capitalize on the explosion of US football, officials said Wednesday, as the country prepares to co-host the World Cup.
The remarks underscore a strategic pivot for MLS, which sees the 2026 tournament as a springboard to build an international following rather than merely riding a domestic surge. With the global spotlight turning toward North America, league decision-makers believe the time is ripe to export the sport’s growing appeal beyond U.S. borders and turn casual observers into long-term supporters.
While details on specific initiatives were not disclosed, the emphasis on foreign fan acquisition signals a recognition that sustained growth depends on widening the league’s audience well before the first World Cup kickoff on home soil. By cultivating viewers worldwide now, MLS hopes to transform tournament curiosity into enduring loyalty and commercial returns that outlast the month-long spectacle.
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Ohio State football self-reports minor violations
Columbus, Ohio — Ohio State’s football program has voluntarily disclosed three secondary NCAA violations that occurred earlier this year, underscoring both the speed bumps inherent in major-college operations and the athletic department’s emphasis on proactive compliance.
According to a report in the Columbus Dispatch, the first infraction unfolded during summer 2025 when a student manager continued to handle clock-operation duties after enrolling at an Ohio State satellite campus rather than the Columbus main campus. Once roster checks revealed the enrollment mismatch, the individual was immediately removed from all on-field responsibilities. In response, the Buckeyes have instituted a centralized manager-enrollment tracking system designed to flag similar issues before they recur.
The second misstep came in January, when a football student-athlete took part in team strength-and-conditioning sessions before receiving formal medical clearance. Staff discovered the oversight during routine file reviews, promptly secured the necessary clearance from the sports-medicine team, and cleared the player for full participation. The program is now auditing its medical-clearance workflow to tighten internal timelines and documentation.
The third violation involved social-media protocol: an assistant coach posted an announcement that a transfer-portal target had committed to Ohio State. Because the player had not yet submitted his National Letter of Intent, the premature publicity ran afoul of NCAA bylaws. The post was deleted within minutes, and the coach underwent additional education and counseling through the compliance office.
All three cases were classified as Level III (minor) infractions, which carry no postseason bans or scholarship losses and are customarily resolved through institutional action and conference acknowledgment. By self-reporting, Ohio State reinforces a standard practice across high-profile programs: identify, disclose, and remediate before larger issues develop.
Ohio State compliance officials declined further comment beyond confirming that corrective measures for each violation have been implemented and that the Big Ten office has been notified.
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Brazil and France: Two of the 2026 World Cup Favorites Collide in Foxborough
Foxborough, MA – When the floodlights rise over Gillette Stadium on Thursday night, the marquee matchup of the March international window will pit two of the tournament’s leading title favorites against one another. Brazil and France, each carrying the burden of expectation and the glitter of superstar-laden squads, meet for the first time since 2015 and for the first time in 2026 with the World Cup now fewer than 80 days away.
For Brazil, the evening is another checkpoint in the still-evolving Carlo Ancelotti era. The Seleção booked their ticket to the summer showpiece with a June victory over Paraguay that ended a turbulent qualifying campaign, and the five-time champions are desperate to end a 24-year drought on world football’s biggest stage. Injuries have complicated Ancelotti’s build-up: Alisson, Alex Sandro and Gabriel will all watch from the sidelines, forcing a rejig that is expected to see Ederson start in goal and a new-look centre-back pairing of Juventus’ Bremer and Flamengo’s Leó Pereira shielding him. Up front, Vinicius Junior and Raphinha—likely flipped to the right—will try to supply Chelsea striker João Pedro, while Matheus Cunha drops into the No. 10 pocket behind them. Casemiro and teenage prodigy Andrey Santos are tipped to anchor midfield in a 4-2-3-1.
France arrive in New England as the benchmark. Didier Deschamps’ side strolled through UEFA Group D, winning it by six points, and Les Bleus—already champions in 2018 and runners-up in 2022—want a third star to cap the manager’s final campaign at the helm. William Saliba’s late withdrawal and Jules Koundé’s injury open doors for Ibrahima Konaté and Dayot Upamecano in central defence, with Malo Gusto eyeing a start at right-back and Theo Hernández competing with brother Lucas on the opposite flank. The midfield reunion of N’Golo Kanté and Real Madrid’s Aurélien Tchouaméni offers steel, while Lyon’s Rayan Cherki is in contention to pull the strings ahead of them. A front three of Michael Olise, Ousmane Dembélé and Kylian Mbappé gives France what many consider the most fearsome attacking trident in international football.
Although officially a friendly, the stakes feel higher. Ancelotti is still searching for consistent chemistry after repeated injury disruptions; Deschamps, by contrast, can rely on a core that has navigated multiple deep tournament runs together. That cohesion, coupled with France’s ability to isolate Brazil’s vulnerable full-backs, tilts the balance toward the Europeans, even on South American soil.
Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m. ET, and with roster spots still up for grabs, fringe players on both sides know a single moment of brilliance—or calamity—could decide whether they board the plane for the World Cup this summer. Expect fireworks, expect nerves, and expect a tantalizing glimpse of what could await when the planet’s two most decorated footballing nations chase the same trophy in June.
Brazil predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Ederson; Wesley, Bremer, Pereira, Douglas Santos; Casemiro, Andrey Santos; Raphinha, Cunha, Vinicius Junior; João Pedro.
France predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Maignan; Gusto, Konaté, Upamecano, Theo Hernández; Kanté, Tchouaméni; Olise, Cherki, Mbappé; Dembélé.
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Kendry Páez and Ian Subiabre Among World’s Top Prospects, per GOAL’s NxGN 2026 Ranking
London-based magazine GOAL has released its annual NxGN 2026 list, identifying the 50 most exciting teenagers in global football, and Argentine powerhouse Club Atlético River Plate can claim two of the coveted spots. Ecuadorian attacking midfielder Kendry Páez, whose registration is held by Chelsea, checks in at No. 17, while 19-year-old River Plate winger Ian Subiabre is ranked 36th.
Páez, 18, moved to River Plate after a brief stint in France, seeking regular minutes ahead of the upcoming World Cup. Under head coach Eduardo Coudet, the left-footed playmaker has quickly become a fixture in the starting lineup, dazzling with his vision and close control even as he manages a recent knee complaint.
Subiabre, meanwhile, has attracted admiring glances from Premier League heavyweights after a breakout stretch that has seen him combine goals and assists from the flank. The Buenos Aires native has cemented his place in the Millonario first team and now earns validation on the international stage.
The NxGN 2026 ranking is topped by Barcelona prodigy Lamine Yamal, while former River Plate academy graduate Franco Mastantuono—now on Real Madrid’s books—claims an eye-catching fourth position.
River Plate’s dual representation underscores the club’s reputation as a prolific talent factory, with Páez and Subiabre poised to follow in the footsteps of Mastantuono and other illustrious alumni.
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