Expert Sports News & Commentary

Thresher flag football team drops opener to Cottey

Thresher flag football team drops opener to Cottey

North Newton, Kan. — Bethel College’s flag football program began its 2024 campaign on a sobering note, falling 47-0 to Cottey College in the season opener. The Threshers struggled to find offensive rhythm and were unable to contain Cottey’s attack, resulting in the shutout defeat. With the loss behind them, Bethel now turns its attention to a daunting road test against defending national champion Ottawa University on Wednesday. The matchup will serve as an early measuring stick for a Thresher squad looking to regroup quickly.
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Messi scores twice in Miami comeback at Orlando

Messi scores twice in Miami comeback at Orlando

Orlando, Fla. – Lionel Messi delivered a vintage performance on enemy soil, scoring twice and setting up another as Inter Miami overturned a two-goal deficit to defeat Orlando City 4-2 in the heated Florida derby. The reigning champions arrived at Exploria Stadium still stinging from a season-opening loss to Los Angeles FC and found themselves in deeper trouble when Marco Pasalic and Martin Ojeda struck inside the opening 25 minutes to give Orlando a commanding 2-0 lead. Hope arrived seven minutes after the restart through midfielder Mateo Silvetti, whose thunderous 25-yard drive halved the deficit and ignited the Miami bench. With the match tilting, the 38-year-old Argentine seized control. In the 57th minute Messi collected possession on the edge of the area and arrowed a precise left-footed strike beyond Maxime Crepeau for his first goal of the campaign, restoring parity and silencing the home crowd. The eight-time Ballon d’Or winner then turned provider, slipping a perfectly weighted pass into the path of Telasco Segovia, who finished calmly with five minutes remaining to give Miami its first lead of the night. Messi capped the stunning turnaround in the 90th minute, curling a low free-kick that evaded the wall and crept inside the near post, prompting a signature celebration in which he cupped his hands in a signing gesture toward the touchline. Inter Miami had never won in nine previous trips to Orlando; the victory snaps that skid and lifts early pressure on first-year head coach Javier Mascherano. “He’s the best player to ever play this sport. He’s a leader, and as a leader, he inspires others, but he also often needs to be inspired himself,” Mascherano said of Messi. “He has the ability to create chances like no-one else, and that’s what allowed us to turn the game around.” The brace lifts Messi’s career tally to 898 goals for club and country, including 79 in 90 appearances for Miami. Next up for the Herons is a road date at DC United on Saturday as they look to build momentum from their first win of the campaign.
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Sejarah Aneh Tercipta usai Arsenal Gilas Chelsea, Arteta Full Senyum

Sejarah Aneh Tercipta usai Arsenal Gilas Chelsea, Arteta Full Senyum

London – Sebuah catatan langka tercatat di Premier League setelah Arsenal meraih kemenangan 2-1 atas Chelsea di Emirates Stadium pada Minggu (1/3/2026) malam WIB. Laga ini tidak hanya memperkokoh posisi The Gunners di puncak klasemen dengan keunggulan lima poin atas Manchester City, tetapi juga menandai hari pertama dalam sejarah kompetisi di mana minimal empat pertandingan berlangsung dengan skor identik. Gol-gol William Saliba dan Jurrien Timber memastikan tiga poin penting bagi tuan rumah. Chelsea sempat menyamakan kedudukan lewat gol bunuh diri Piero Hincapie sebelum jeda, namun tidak cukup untuk menghentikan laju Arsenal yang terus membara dalam perburuan trofi musim 2025-2026. Fenomena unik terjadi di seluruh Inggris saat itu. Selain Arsenal versus Chelsea, tiga laga lainnya—Brighton & Hove Albion kontra Nottingham Forest, Fulham melawan Tottenham Hotspur, dan Manchester United berhadapan dengan Crystal Palace—semuanya berakhir 2-1. Penulis sepakbola Andrew Beasley menegaskan bahwa belum pernah ada hari di Premier League yang menampilkan minimal empat laga dengan skor sama sejak kompetisi ini dibentuk. "Ini adalah hari pertama dalam sejarah Premier League yang menampilkan setidaknya empat pertandingan yang semuanya berakhir dengan skor yang sama," tulis Beasley di media sosial, dikutip Sport Bible. Catatan sebelumnya terjadi pada 1995 ketika lima dari delapan laga di hari yang sama berakhir 1-1. Kemenangan ini mempertahankan ritme sempurna Arsenal menjelang fase penting musim, sekaligus memperpanjang rentetan hasil positif yang membuat senyum lebar Mikel Arteta tak lepas dari wajahnya. SEO keywords:
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Real Madrid’s strong relationship with Bundesliga giants could pave the way for defensive signing

Real Madrid’s strong relationship with Bundesliga giants could pave the way for defensive signing

Madrid, Spain – As Real Madrid prepare for a potential overhaul at centre-back, the club’s long-standing rapport with Borussia Dortmund has emerged as a decisive factor in their pursuit of Germany international Nico Schlotterbeck. With David Alaba set to depart when his contract expires in June and Antonio Rudiger’s future dependent on his physical condition over the remainder of the season, Madrid’s technical staff have spent months scouring the market for a reliable central defender. William Saliba’s extension at Arsenal and Dayot Upamecano’s new deal at Bayern Munich removed two early targets, while Liverpool’s Ibrahima Konate has failed to convince the Spanish giants. Attention has now shifted firmly to Schlotterbeck, the 26-year-old left-footed defender whose current Dortmund contract runs until 2027. Although Dortmund are historically tough negotiators and rate the player highly, Madrid believe their relationship with the German club gives them a head start over any rival bidders. That relationship spans more than a decade and is anchored by the friendship between Dortmund president Hans-Joachim Watzke and Madrid president Florentino Perez, as well as general director Jose Angel Sanchez. The bond remained intact even when the two clubs found themselves on opposite sides of the Super League debate, and it has repeatedly translated into concrete business. The most recent example is Jude Bellingham, who joined Madrid in 2023 for an initial €103 million plus €30 million in add-ons. Despite richer financial packages being tabled elsewhere, Watzke’s personal recommendation helped steer the midfielder to the Bernabeu. Earlier transactions included Nuri Sahin’s 2011 move to Madrid and subsequent return to Dortmund, Achraf Hakimi’s two-year loan in Germany, and the attempt to facilitate Erling Haaland’s transfer before the striker opted for Manchester City’s release clause. Should Madrid decide to press ahead, that same goodwill could smooth negotiations for Schlotterbeck, giving the Spanish champions a potential solution to their looming defensive shortage.
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Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s action

Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s action

Arsenal’s corner-kingdom remains intact, Jordan Pickford produced a career-defining stop, and Antoine Semenyo’s winner kept Manchester City within sight of the summit as another turbulent Premier League weekend delivered defining moments up and down the table. 1. Arsenal 2-1 Chelsea: Set-piece supremacy Mikel Arteta’s side matched the competition record of 16 goals from corners with nine fixtures still to play. Gabriel out-muscled Reece James to tee up William Saliba, before Jürriën Timber punished Robert Sánchez’s flap for the winner. Chelsea, meanwhile, have shipped seven set-piece goals in Liam Rosenior’s first 13 matches. 2. Pickford’s “best save ever” Everton’s 3-2 triumph at St James’ Park hinged on their keeper’s sensational last-gasp denial of Sandro Tonali. “An absolute rocket,” Pickford called it, the save preserving a victory that cranked up pressure on Newcastle and on England rival Nick Pope, whose error gifted Beto the visitors’ decisive second. 3. Semenyo steps up for City With Erling Haaland absent, summer signing Antoine Semenyo struck the only goal at Leeds, his sixth in little more than a month. “Win, win, win, win, win,” the Ghanaian said of his new mindset as Pep Guardiola’s squad clung to the leaders’ coat-tails. 4. Palace stay spirited Oliver Glasner’s men led at Old Trafford before Maxence Lacroix’s red and a subsequent Bruno Fernandes penalty flipped the script in Manchester United’s 2-1 win. The Austrian, who last month claimed he was “not good enough” for the Selhurst Park job, saw enough fight to believe survival is on. 5. Gray’s versatility masks Tottenham turmoil Nineteen-year-old Archie Gray has already featured as a holding midfielder, centre-back, right-wing-back and, at Fulham, left-back, supplying the cross for Spurs’ goal. An admirable apprenticeship, yet the north Londoners still hover dangerously above the drop zone. 6. Brentford edge seven-goal Burnley thriller Mikkel Damsgaard book-ended the scoring, heading in after seven minutes and drilling home in stoppage time for a 4-3 victory. Zian Flemming thought he had completed a Clarets comeback, only for VAR to disallow his late strike; Ashley Barnes, 36, remains without a Premier League goal since May 2021. 7. Liverpool’s set-piece renaissance The Reds scored three first-half corners against West Ham—the first team to do so in a decade—lifting their tally to nine since 1 January after managing just three before that date. Lewis Mahoney’s expanded role since December has coincided with more inswinging deliveries and a surge up the table. 8. Welbeck joins Vardy in the 33-plus club Danny Welbeck’s 10th league goal of the campaign—his personal best—made him the first player aged 33 or older to hit double figures since Jamie Vardy. Fabian Hürzeler credits the striker’s professionalism for Brighton’s 1-0 defeat of Nottingham Forest. 9. Bournemouth’s makeshift back line stands firm Despite losing an entire defence last summer, the Cherries have been beaten only by Arsenal in 2026. Centre-back James Hill, plucked from Fleetwood, is thriving alongside Marcos Senesi and boasts a menacing long throw that underlines Andoni Iraola’s resourceful rebuild. 10. Emery urges calm after Villa stumble A 2-0 reverse at Wolves stretched Aston Villa’s winless league run to three in 10, but Unai Emery preached perspective ahead of a pivotal mid-week meeting with Chelsea. “Five months ago we were worried about relegation,” he said. “Now we fight for the Champions League.” From records at corners to teenage resilience, the title race, European battles and relegation dogfights all intensified—proof, once again, that the Premier League’s narrative never pauses for breath.
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Germany manager laments Marc-Andre ter Stegen’s situation ahead of World Cup – ‘It’s tragic’

Germany manager laments Marc-Andre ter Stegen’s situation ahead of World Cup – ‘It’s tragic’

Berlin – Germany head coach Julian Nagelsmann has described Marc-André ter Stegen’s latest setback as “extremely tragic,” conceding that the veteran goalkeeper’s hopes of starting at the 2026 World Cup are now hanging by a thread. The 33-year-old Barcelona captain, currently on loan at Girona, was widely expected to inherit the No. 1 shirt after Manuel Neuer’s 15-year international reign ended following Euro 2024. Instead, a fresh injury—suffered in only his second appearance for Girona—has left ter Stegen sidelined once more and Nagelsmann openly questioning whether time has finally run out. “It is obviously an extremely tragic situation for Marc; now it would have been his turn,” Nagelsmann told Kicker, via Mundo Deportivo. “That something so dramatic arises from such a simple action as a normal pass.” The Germany boss stopped short of closing the door completely, but admitted the numbers are working against the shot-stopper. “The book is not completely closed, but there is no doubt that it will be very tight, because one must take into account not only the recent downtime, but also the previous period. He has hardly played for a year—this is extremely little.” Ter Stegen, who will turn 34 in April, has accumulated 44 caps for Germany yet has never started at a major tournament. Neuer’s voluntary retirement from Die Mannschaft appeared to clear the path to the 2026 World Cup, only for injuries to intervene again. With ter Stegen’s game time dwindling, Hoffenheim’s 35-year-old Oliver Baumann has emerged as the front-runner to guard Germany’s goal in North America, leaving ter Stegen to confront the possibility that his long-held ambition may remain unfulfilled.
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What can players and clubs do about 'AI slop'?

What can players and clubs do about 'AI slop'?

Scroll through TikTok on any given day and you might see Lionel Messi trimming Cristiano Ronaldo’s hair, Kylian Mbappé sharing a ski-lift with a turtle, or Edwardian-era versions of the pair strolling onto the deck of the Titanic. Welcome to football’s newest opponent: AI slop—cheap, viral, machine-made images that place stars in scenarios that never happened and, at first glance, appear completely real. The phenomenon is exploding because generative tools are now powerful, free and simple to use. A prompt and a few clicks can turn fantasy into what looks like photographic evidence, blurring the line between satire and deception. For players who have spent years turning their names, faces and even goal celebrations into marketable brands, that line matters. Chelsea’s Cole Palmer has already moved to protect his commercial identity, trademarking “Cold Palmer”, his autograph and his signature shivering celebration with the UK Intellectual Property Office. Yet experts warn that registering marks is only half the battle when anonymous accounts can churn out thousands of synthetic images overnight. “Various governments are scrambling to decide how to react to AI,” says Jonty Cowan, legal director at media-specialist law firm Wiggin LLP. “In the UK there is very little legislation covering someone’s likeness or, in football parlance, image rights.” The gap in the law means that, unless a deepfake causes clear commercial or reputational damage, legal redress is thin. A sexually explicit fake became a criminal offence under the Data (Use and Access) Act that came into force last month, but a surreal still of a player in a burger bar or on a ski-lift with a turtle is unlikely to meet that threshold. Manchester City discovered the reputational grey zone in January. Before the club had even released official unveiling shots of new signings Antoine Semenyo and Marc Guehi, social media was circulating convincing AI images of the pair shaking hands with Pep Guardiola and of Semenyo being welcomed by Yaya Touré at the training ground. None of it happened, yet the fakes were plausible enough to fool many fans. A similarly realistic image showed Manchester United head coach Michael Carrick alongside devoted supporter Frank Ilett, whose uncut hair has become a social-media talking point. Again, the meeting never took place. Cowan points out that clubs can sometimes lean on other intellectual-property levers. “If someone is using the Manchester City crest or design rights in the shirt, that can be challenged,” he explains. City, for their part, believe supporters understand that only official channels carry bona fide news, but the club accepts the landscape is shifting. Even when there is a clear infringement, dragging an anonymous user through the courts is slow and expensive. Cowan advocates a faster, cheaper route: demanding platforms remove the content. The UK’s Online Safety Act already obliges services to take down illegal material; AI slop that infringes trademarks or amounts to “passing off” could fall under those obligations. Specialist businesses already scrape the web using AI to locate unauthorised use of player likenesses or club IP, then issue takedown notices on behalf of their clients. Expect more firms to enter that space as demand grows. Platforms are feeling pressure. Meta’s oversight board last year banned a gambling advert that used an AI-cloned voice of Brazilian striker Ronaldo, ruling that the tech giant must introduce “easily identifiable indicators” to separate genuine and synthetic content. TikTok removed fake interviews of England manager Gareth Southgate during Euro 2024 for breaching policy on harmful impersonations, but only after the clips had racked up millions of views. The EU’s AI Act imposes transparency requirements on tech companies, but the rules do not apply in the UK. Cowan predicts Britain could follow a lighter model, perhaps requiring an “#AI-generated” label on manipulated media. Enforcement, however, would remain tricky; bad actors creating defamatory deepfakes are unlikely to add disclaimers. For now, most clubs treat AI slop as background noise of social media rather than a front-burner issue. Yet every technological leap makes the fakes more persuasive and the potential for reputational or commercial harm more acute. Players can trademark celebrations, and clubs can police their crests, but in a game increasingly played out in the digital sphere, the newest tactical battle may be fought in pixels rather than on grass.
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Man United continue incredible record from Boxing Day

Man United continue incredible record from Boxing Day

Old Trafford, Monday — Manchester United’s resurgence under interim boss Michael Carrick shows no sign of slowing after Sunday’s 2-1 victory over Crystal Palace extended an eye-catching sequence that began on Boxing Day. The win, United’s sixth in seven matches since Carrick stepped into the technical area in January, stretched the club’s unbeaten league run to 11 games and lifted them to the unique status of being the only Premier League side yet to drop a point since the festive period. From the 1-0 triumph over Newcastle United on 26 December, Carrick’s squad have collected 25 points, a haul that has reignited belief among supporters who left Selhurst Park singing once again. Resilience was the watchword in south London. Palace, organised and aggressive, pushed United to the limit, but the visitors found a way to prevail, a trait that has characterised Carrick’s brief tenure. During the unbeaten stretch, United have already accounted for Manchester City, Arsenal, Fulham, Tottenham Hotspur, Everton and now Palace, a roll-call that underlines the quality of the run. The only blemish since Boxing Day came in the FA Cup when Brighton & Hove Albion edged a tight contest while Darren Fletcher held the reins. In league combat, United’s last reverse remains the 2-1 loss at Aston Villa, a match club observers still regard as harsh given the balance of play. Carrick inherited a side that had stuttered toward the end of Ruben Amorim’s stewardship, drawing 1-1 with both Wolverhampton Wanderers and Leeds United, and he has quickly injected momentum. Fletcher’s lone Premier League game in temporary charge brought a 2-2 draw at Burnley, but the former midfielder has since stepped back into a support role as Carrick has guided the team into uncharted territory for this season. While the current streak is a source of pride, history offers context. The famous Arsenal Invincibles of 2003-04 set the benchmark with 49 league matches unbeaten, and United themselves have scaled greater heights: Sir Alex Ferguson presided over a 29-game league run bridging the 1998-99 and 1999-2000 campaigns, and the club holds the Premier League record for consecutive away fixtures without defeat, 29 between 2020 and 2021. For now, though, Carrick’s charges are writing the present chapter. Eleague matches without loss, 25 points banked, and supporters dreaming of what may still lie ahead.
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Ally McCoist has 'problem' with VAR after Rangers vs Celtic penalty decision as he spots way to bring clarity

Ally McCoist has 'problem' with VAR after Rangers vs Celtic penalty decision as he spots way to bring clarity

Rangers and Celtic came to blows at the weekend on Premiership business, and the flashpoint that has dominated post-match discussion centres on a VAR-awarded penalty that former Rangers striker Ally McCoist insists highlights a deeper flaw in the system. Speaking after reviewing the incident, McCoist said he has a “problem” with the way the video officials reached their verdict and believes a simple procedural tweak could bring immediate clarity to similar situations. While the brief statement released by the league confirmed only that the teams met on league duty, McCoist’s on-air analysis argued that the current protocol leaves too much room for interpretation. He stopped short of questioning the officials’ integrity, but underlined that supporters, players and coaches deserve transparent communication when a match-defining decision is overturned. McCoist’s proposed solution centres on publishing the audio between the VAR team and the on-field referee in real time, a step already adopted by other competitions. He contends that hearing the conversation would remove suspicion, speed up acceptance of contentious calls, and ultimately protect the credibility of the Scottish top flight. The debate adds fresh urgency to the ongoing review of VAR procedures, with the league now facing calls to follow McCoist’s advice before further high-profile fixtures are clouded by uncertainty.
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Arvid Lindblad: ‘I told Lando Norris five years ago I’d be in F1 – it’s always been my dream’

Arvid Lindblad: ‘I told Lando Norris five years ago I’d be in F1 – it’s always been my dream’

London – Arvid Lindblad’s Formula 1 arrival has been 14 years in the making. This weekend in Melbourne the 18-year-old will partner Liam Lawson at Racing Bulls, Red Bull’s junior squad, and become the youngest British driver ever to start a grand prix, usurping Lando Norris and Ollie Bearman. Yet the Surrey teenager can still recall the exact moment the dream took hold: 2011, age four, watching a race on the family sofa. “I asked my Dad: ‘How do you get there? Could I be there one day?’” The path from that question to an F1 cockpit was neither straight nor simple. Karting success came first—weekends at Hooton Park in Birkenhead while visiting grandparents in Bolton, then European events that repeatedly pulled him out of lessons at RGS Guildford. His mother, Anita, insisted that the first sign of plateauing results would mean a permanent return to full-time schooling. “That moment never came,” Lindblad laughs. “She only told me the story a few years ago.” By 13 he had caught the eye of Helmut Marko, then head of Red Bull’s driver academy, who phoned Stefan Lindblad during the 2019 World Karting Championships in Portimão to offer Arvid a place on the programme. A year later, undeterred by a recent coeliac-disease diagnosis, Lindblad strode up to McLaren’s Lando Norris at Adria Karting Raceway and delivered a promise that has since gone viral: “Lando, I want you to remember me. I will see you in five years.” Norris, amused, replied: “Yeah? Alright!” The five-year deadline expires this season with Norris the reigning world champion and Lindblad stepping onto the same grid. “Manifestation, maybe?!” he jokes, seated in Red Bull’s Covent Garden offices. “Lando’s been very friendly whenever we’ve met since, and he sent a nice message after the announcement.” Lindblad’s junior single-seater résumé is compressed but eye-catching. He made his F2 debut only last season, claiming a memorable win in Barcelona but also a costly Monza shunt on the way to sixth overall. Mixed results did not stall Red Bull’s plans; the energy-drink giant has never hesitated to fast-track its juniors, as Isack Hadjar’s impressive 2025 rookie campaign proved. “It’s very impressive what Isack has done,” Lindblad notes, “but I’m focused on myself now.” Off-track he continues to juggle academics with apexes. GCSEs of 9s and 7s (the equivalent of A*s and As) were followed by home-schooling from age 15; A-Levels in maths and chemistry remain a work in progress, dyslexia making numbers far friendlier than essays. “I don’t know if I’ll sit the exams this year, but if I do I want at least an A,” he says, mindful of a 24-race calendar. “Education is important; RGS were very accommodating.” Socially, the constant absences took a toll. “I’m not really in contact with classmates anymore,” he admits. “Racing meant Europe every weekend. It wasn’t easy, but it was a sacrifice I was always willing to make.” Family backing, though sometimes reluctant, has been unwavering. Anita, of Indian heritage, championed education; Stefan, Swedish and a former club racer himself, avoided track-side pressure. “Dad always left me to it,” Lindblad says. “He knew if he pushed too much, I’d lose the internal passion.” That passion now propels him to Albert Park as the only rookie on the 2026 grid and, at 18 years and 234 days, the fourth-youngest F1 starter in history. A measured first season with Racing Bulls is the immediate target, but the long-term aim is unambiguous. After a brief pause he states: “I’m working towards becoming a Formula 1 world champion one day, that’s for sure.” Five years ago he told Norris he would reach F1. On Sunday he will line up on the same Melbourne grid, the latest proof that childhood dreams—when combined with talent, sacrifice and a supportive but balanced family—can indeed come true.
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Richard Hughes has made a bold Mo Salah decision at Liverpool

Richard Hughes has made a bold Mo Salah decision at Liverpool

Liverpool sporting director Richard Hughes is ready to sanction the most significant exit of the FSG era, with Mohamed Salah increasingly likely to leave Anfield this summer after a dramatic downturn in form, BBC Sport understands. The 32-year-old Egyptian, whose two-year contract extension last summer was greeted as a coup, has failed to score in his last ten Premier League appearances and is on course to fall well short of last season’s output. The slump has convinced Hughes that the club must cash in rather than risk losing Salah for nothing in 2027, when his current deal expires. Senior Anfield sources say Hughes has now informed the board that a sale in the upcoming window is the “preferred course of action”, provided the buying club can meet Salah’s wage expectations. The Saudi Pro League, long-term admirers of the forward, remain the most plausible destination, while Major League Soccer has also registered exploratory interest. The development marks a stark shift in supporter sentiment. Twelve months ago fans overwhelmingly opposed any Saudi approach; now, according to club surveys and social-media metrics, a majority appear resigned to – even supportive of – an exit if funds are immediately reinvested. Liverpool’s hierarchy are conscious that allowing Salah to run down his contract would represent poor asset management, yet accepting a cut-price fee for a player who has 18 months remaining also carries risk. With form diminishing and age advancing, the club accept that next summer’s market value will be markedly lower than the nine-figure sums floated in 2023. Replacing a talisman who has delivered 211 goals and 137 assists in 339 appearances will be Arne Slot’s most daunting assignment. Scouts have compiled dossiers on Ivorian teenager Yan Diomande and Crystal Palace wide-man Michael Olise, but either target would command a premium at a time when Liverpool’s self-sustaining model offers limited headroom. Privately, club officials insist no final decision will be taken until the season concludes, particularly with a Champions League quarter-final place still attainable. Yet the internal expectation is that Hughes will listen to formal offers once the window opens, effectively ending Salah’s eight-year stay on Merseyside. For a forward who once defined Liverpool’s attacking identity, the coming months could signal the closing chapter of an era – and the beginning of a daunting rebuild.
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Arsenal, Manchester City Among Premier League Clubs Tracking PSG Young Star

Arsenal, Manchester City Among Premier League Clubs Tracking PSG Young Star

Paris Saint-Germain’s 2027-contracted midfielder Senny Mayulu has emerged as one of the most-watched teenagers in Europe after a breakthrough season that has caught the attention of half of the Premier League’s top tier. The 18-year-old, promoted to the senior squad by Luis Enrique, has featured in 28 matches across all competitions this term, logging 1,705 minutes, four goals and five assists while operating in a variety of roles. Despite PSG’s determination to extend the deal that binds him to the Parc des Princes for another three years, talks have stalled, alerting Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City, Tottenham, Aston Villa and Newcastle. CaughtOffside reports that all six clubs have already sounded out the player’s entourage through informal channels, with the understanding that a protracted impasse could force the French champions into a sale rather than risk losing Mayulu on a free. Sources indicate PSG would demand between €65 million and €70 million to part with the academy graduate, a valuation that would be offset for English suitors by the prospect of tripling his current wages. The outlet adds that a decisive bid is most likely to arrive from either Arsenal or Chelsea once the summer window opens, although PSG remain hopeful a last-ditch salary hike of record proportions can persuade the midfielder to stay. If no extension is agreed by May, PSG will reluctantly listen to offers, setting the stage for a potential auction among England’s elite for one of European football’s most coveted young talents.
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Liam Rosenior ‘really disappointed’ as ‘set plays and discipline’ cost Chelsea yet again

Liam Rosenior ‘really disappointed’ as ‘set plays and discipline’ cost Chelsea yet again

Liam Rosenior cut a frustrated figure after Chelsea’s 2-1 defeat to Arsenal, lamenting that the same two flaws—set-piece defending and ill-discipline—have become a weekly albatross. Two corner concessions and a red card, this time to Pedro Neto, left the Blues empty-handed at the Emirates and left their head coach searching for answers that feel increasingly elusive. “We worked on a certain scheme,” Rosenior revealed, noting that video review of the previous Arsenal meeting had shown the Gunners “very, very close to scoring” from identical routines. The staff drilled an alternative setup on the training ground, yet the tweak offered no immunity: Arsenal again profited from first-phase chaos at a corner, replicating the sucker-punch Burnley had delivered earlier in the month. “It’s the first time the lads have done it. It didn’t pay off today,” Rosenior admitted, “but we need to make sure we’re better in those moments because at the moment we’re losing points not based off our performances, but based off of set plays and discipline.” The numbers are stark. Chelsea have now shipped multiple goals from dead-ball situations in consecutive league outings, while a third red card in recent weeks—Neto’s double-yellow inside two second-half minutes—reduced the visitors to ten men just as they were pushing for an equaliser. The Portuguese winger was first cautioned for dissent, then dismissed after an ill-advised lunge that Rosenior branded “unnecessary”. Yet the manager refused to isolate Neto. “It’s not just Pedro. I think as a group, me as the leader as well, we have to take more accountability for some of the decision-making we’re having in terms of our discipline and in terms of the moments of the goals.” Rosenior added that several concessions this season have been “just not acceptable at this level”. Chelsea’s attacking play, by contrast, was bright but blunt. Faced with the division’s stingiest back line, the visitors managed only sporadic threats before Arsenal sat deep on their one-goal advantage, content to absorb pressure once Chelsea were numerically diminished. Rosenior praised the “technically, tactically” strong passages his side produced, yet conceded that aesthetic quality rings hollow without points. “I don’t want to be sat here saying how well we play every week without picking up the points.” The consequence is a table that flatters neither performances nor potential. Chelsea remain outside the Champions-League places, and with Aston Villa looming at Villa Park in a matter of days, Rosenior senses the urgency of a fix. “There’s something deep-lying that we need to get to the bottom of,” he said. “If we get to the bottom of those two main things—set plays and discipline—we can be a very, very good team and we can achieve all the things we want to achieve.” Until then, the same script threatens to repeat: promising spells undermined by self-inflicted wounds, dropped points, and a manager left to rue what might have been. “It’s only another massive game coming up,” Rosenior warned. “For our own top-five ambitions, these are a must-have three points.” Chelsea, he insists, still have time to turn the narrative, but only if they eradicate the errors that have become their unwanted trademark.
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On This Day (2nd March 1991): A Whole Season Summed Up In One Game!

On This Day (2nd March 1991): A Whole Season Summed Up In One Game!

Roker Park, 2 March 1991 – If Sunderland’s 1990-91 campaign ever needs a single snapshot, the breathless 3-3 draw with Derby County serves perfectly: enterprising, fearless, exhilarating… and ultimately laced with the kind of self-inflicted wounds that would keep the red-and-whites in a relegation dog-fight until the final whistle of the season. Only two clubs were destined for the drop after the First Division’s expansion to 22 members, yet with a dozen fixtures left the table was a tangle of anxiety: seven points covered Nottingham Forest in 11th down to Sheffield United and Sunderland, locked with three others on 25 points. Bottom sat Derby County, six points adrift at 19 and winless since they had edged Sunderland 2-1 at Roker in early December. Arthur Cox’s side, boasting Peter Shilton, Mark Wright and a potent strike duo of Sunderland-born Mick Harford and Dean Saunders, looked too good to be bottom – but the Rams had taken only one victory in 20 league outings since that December success. Sunderland, stung by a 6-0 League Cup humiliation at the Baseball Ground, sensed a chance for retribution. They could not have asked for a sharper start. Inside 60 seconds Harford’s forearm knockout on Paul Hardyman forced the defender off and Richard Ord into the fray; within ten minutes the reshuffled hosts were ahead. Gordon Armstrong’s high press forced a Derby error, a slick one-two with Peter Davenport sent the midfielder clear, and a crisp finish into the far corner ignited the home support. Five minutes later it was 2-0. Paul Bracewell’s reverse cross invited Kevin Ball to cushion and deliver first time from the left; Marco Gabbiadini hurled himself at the back post to head his tenth of the season. On 23 minutes the scoreboard read 3-0, Ball again the catalyst, smashing a half-volley beyond Shilton after Ord’s long free-kick had only been half-cleared. Cue the familiar plot twist. Derby, aided by Sunderland’s high line, clawed one back through Saunders, then levelled on the stroke of half-time – both goals originating from straight balls over the top. The pattern persisted after the restart: Saunders latched onto another long pass, rounded Tony Norman and was felled for a 75th-minute penalty he gleefully converted to complete his hat-trick and secure a point that felt like a liberation for the visitors. The numbers told the wider story: Derby would finish 10 points adrift with just five league wins, yet Saunders’ 17-goal haul earned a £2.9 million English-record switch to Liverpool that summer. For Sunderland, the sickening sense of two points tossed away merely reinforced a season-long narrative – praise from press boxes for enterprising football, frustration in the stands at points tossed away in the dying embers. Team line-ups Sunderland: Norman; Owers, Bennett, Ball, Hardyman (Ord 1), Mooney, Bracewell, Armstrong, Pascoe, Davenport, Gabbiadini. Sub not used: Hawke. Derby County: Shilton; Sage, Cross, Williams, Wright, Forsyth, Micklewhite, Wilson, Harford, Saunders, McMinn. Subs not used: Williams, Hebberd. Scorers Sunderland: Armstrong 11, Gabbiadini 16, Ball 23 Derby County: Saunders 37, 45, 75 (pen) Sunderland would survive on the season’s final day; Derby would not. Yet on this windswept March afternoon, both clubs left the pitch with what they had come to expect: the Rams grateful for Saunders’ brilliance, the Wearsiders wondering how on earth they had let another commanding lead slip – a storyline that, by 1991, felt almost as traditional as the roar of the Roker faithful itself. SEO keywords
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Arsenal Loss Exposes Cracks Luis Enrique's PSG Can Exploit vs. Chelsea

Arsenal Loss Exposes Cracks Luis Enrique's PSG Can Exploit vs. Chelsea

Paris, France – Paris Saint-Germain’s coaching staff will spend the coming days dissecting Chelsea’s 2-1 defeat to Arsenal, a result that highlighted several vulnerabilities Luis Enrique’s side can target when the two clubs meet in the Champions League round of 16. The first leg at the Parc des Princes is scheduled for 11 March, with the return at Stamford Bridge six days later. Chelsea arrived at the Emirates Stadium on Sunday night hoping to close the gap on the Premier League summit but left with their sixth-place status intact after a dramatic London derby. Arsenal struck first in the 21st minute when William Saliba capitalised on a corner routine that ended with Mamadou Sarr inadvertently turning the ball past his own goalkeeper. The Blues levelled deep into first-half stoppage time through Piero Hincapie’s own goal, yet parity lasted only until the 66th minute. Another set-piece, this time from Declan Rice, caused panic in the Chelsea box; Robert Sanchez, crowded by Andrey Santos, flapped at the delivery and Jurrien Timber nodded home from close range. The visitors’ task grew steeper four minutes later when Pedro Neto collected a second yellow card for a high challenge on Gabriel Martinelli, reducing Chelsea to ten men. Down a player, they still pushed for an equaliser and thought they had found it in the 96th minute, only for Delap’s finish to be correctly ruled offside. Despite the numerical disadvantage, Chelsea created the clearer chances late on, only to be denied by a sharp David Raya. The sequence reinforced concerns about the Blues’ defensive organisation on restarts and their discipline under pressure—areas PSG will look to exploit after cruising past Le Havre 1-0 in Ligue 1 action on Saturday. PSG advanced to the knockout phase by eliminating AS Monaco in the playoff round and now view the Chelsea tie as a prime opportunity to reach the quarter-finals. With the Gunners exposing set-piece frailties and a propensity for costly fouls, Luis Enrique’s analysts have a clear tactical brief ahead of the March showdowns.
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An Abrasive Sunderland Team Can Be A Successful One

An Abrasive Sunderland Team Can Be A Successful One

Bournemouth, England — Sunderland left the Vitality Stadium on Saturday convinced they had been robbed of a precious Premier League scalp. Referee Jarred Gillett’s erratic whistle, a stonewall penalty ignored and a straight red that never materialised combined to turn what should have been a statement away victory into a 1-1 draw. Yet within the injustice, head coach Régis Le Bris saw the restoration of a trait that has underpinned every successful Sunderland vintage: an abrasive refusal to yield. The statistics told only part of the story. The Black Cats pressed higher, won the majority of second balls and restricted Andoni Iraola’s fluent Bournemouth to a solitary shot on target after the 33rd minute. More telling was the body language of a side that has spent the past fortnight stung by back-to-back home defeats. Dan Ballard’s crunching challenges set the tempo, Omar Alderete and Trai Hume matched the Cherries’ forwards for pace and physique, while Habib Diarra’s relentless pressing forced three hurried clearances inside the opening quarter-hour. Granit Xhaka, operating in an unfamiliar advanced role, repeatedly demanded the ball under pressure, embodying the visitors’ intent to turn a technical mismatch into a street fight. That approach has precedent. The club’s most celebrated eras — under managers Reid, Keane and Neil — were built on the premise that lost causes do not exist and backwards steps are forbidden. Le Bris, though quieter in demeanour, has made clear he expects the same uncompromising standard. “Playing for Sunderland should be a matter of real pride,” he reminded his squad in Friday’s final training session, a message reinforced by the sight of Ballard signing a contract extension hours before kick-off. Saturday’s result, while frustrating, extended an encouraging pattern against elite opposition. The 2-2 home draw with Manchester City in November and the last-gasp equaliser against Arsenal six weeks earlier both hinged on a willingness to turn matches into duels. The south-coast display offered a further template: defend the width aggressively, funnel play into congested central lanes, then spring quick counters through Diarra and the overlapping full-backs. If goals remain scarce — Sunderland have scored more than once in only two of their last nine league fixtures — the defensive cohesion suggests survival remains eminently achievable with eight fixtures remaining. Next up is a trip to Elland Road on Tuesday, where a wounded Leeds side will look to respond after slipping to a 2-1 home loss against City. The memories of last season’s late collapse at the same venue still linger, yet Le Bris senses an opportunity to weaponise the weekend’s sense of grievance. “We want the red-and-white fire burning,” he said. “No fear in that cauldron.” Injuries continue to bite — the club remain without a recognised senior striker — but the manager believes the collective mindset can compensate. If Saturday proved anything, it is that Sunderland function best when they feel slighted. An abrasive edge, rather than a hindrance, may yet prove the surest route to Premier League safety in 2026-27.
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$80 Million Coach Predicted to Lead College Football Powerhouse for Next Five Years

$80 Million Coach Predicted to Lead College Football Powerhouse for Next Five Years

Miami, FL — While the coaching carousel spins faster every winter, The Athletic’s Ralph D. Russo is ready to fasten one seat belt shut. In his long-range look at the sport through 2030, Russo projects that Hurricanes head coach Mario Cristobal—now in the fourth year of an $80 million deal—will remain on the Miami sideline for at least the next five seasons and possibly far beyond. The reasoning is as much about biography as it is about business. Cristobal was born in Miami, starred as an offensive lineman for the Hurricanes through the early 1990s, and later started his coaching career on staff at his alma mater. After successful stops that included a pair of top-ten finishes at Oregon, he returned home in December 2021 to take over a program that had drifted from its championship pedigree. A 12-13 record across his first two seasons invited questions, but the past 24 games have silenced most doubters. Miami is 23-6 since the start of the 2024 campaign, capped by a berth in the 2025 national-title game that ended in a narrow loss to Indiana. The surge has positioned the Hurricanes as the clear front-runner in an ACC suddenly short on sure things: Florida State is regrouping after a downturn, and Clemson’s Dabo Swinney has struggled to embrace the transfer-portal era. Cristobal, by contrast, has plunged in head-first. On3 ranked the Hurricanes’ incoming transfer class 14th nationally, but the composition of the group turns heads: five four-star transfers arrived without a single four-star departure. Duke quarterback Darian Mensah will step in for graduating senior Carson Beck, reuniting with Blue Devils teammate Cooper Barkate at wide receiver. Missouri edge rusher Damon Wilson, Ohio State defensive lineman Jarquez Carter, and Boston College safety Omar Thornton round out a defensive reload that should keep Miami in the playoff conversation. At 55 years old and coming off the best season of his career, Cristobal shows no wanderlust, even as NFL rumors swirl around other high-profile college coaches. “It feels like Cristobal is just getting started at his alma mater,” Russo writes, noting that the confluence of local ties, roster momentum, and institutional support makes Miami the rare job that checks every box for the coach—and for the administration writing the checks. If the roster build continues on its current trajectory, Russo believes the baseline five-year forecast could stretch well past 2030, turning an already massive financial commitment into one of the sport’s safest long-term bets.
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EXCLUSIVE: Royal Spanish Football Federation Arrives in Chattanooga

EXCLUSIVE: Royal Spanish Football Federation Arrives in Chattanooga

Chattanooga, TN — Exactly 100 days before the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off across North America, the Royal Spanish Football Federation touched down in the Scenic City on Sunday to finalize preparations for what could be a title-defining summer. A 15-member delegation of Spanish officials toured key sites and inspected Baylor School, which will serve as La Roja’s training base when the tournament begins June 11 on FOX. The visit marked the federation’s first on-ground assessment since selecting Chattanooga over Chicago as its host city. Sources with direct knowledge of the decision told NewsChannel 9 that Spain’s brain trust weighed proposals from both Midwestern metropolises before concluding that Chattanooga met every logistical, security, and cultural requirement on its checklist. The world’s top-ranked national team is now counting on local fans to adopt them as hometown favorites. During a walk-through at Baylor, the delegation examined locker rooms, training pitches, and recovery facilities, repeatedly praising both the campus infrastructure and the city’s hospitality. “It’s pretty clear how impressed they are,” said a reporter who accompanied the group. City planners expect Spanish-themed decorations to begin appearing downtown within weeks, transforming Chattanooga’s core into a mini-Madrid ahead of the squad’s arrival. Merchants and restaurateurs are already brainstorming tapas specials and fan-festival events designed to welcome the European powerhouse. Spain’s stay in Chattanooga will be brief but high-stakes: the team enters the World Cup as the betting favorite, and every training session at Baylor will be scrutinized by global media. Local tourism officials anticipate a surge of international visitors eager to catch a glimpse of the stars before group-stage matches commence. For continuing coverage of Spain’s Chattanooga residency, visit NewsChannel9.com and FOXChattanooga.com.
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NFL MOCK DRAFT POST COMBINE

NFL MOCK DRAFT POST COMBINE

Indianapolis — The 40-yard dashes have been timed, the verticals measured, and the on-field drills dissected. With the NFL Combine in the rear-view mirror, the 2026 first-round board looks dramatically different than it did three weeks ago. Here is a full, 32-pick projection that accounts for every eye-popping workout, buzzy interview, and medical flag that reshuffled the order. 1. Las Vegas Raiders — Fernando Mendoza, QB, Indiana At 6-4 and 236 pounds, Mendoza dazzled scouts with easy velocity and poise during throwing sessions, cementing his status as QB1. The Raiders, still hunting for a franchise signal-caller, are expected to make the Indiana product the draft’s opening selection. 2. New York Jets — Reese, EDGE, Georgia Premium pass-rushers still move the needle. Reese’s raw upside outweighs any temptation to grab safety Caleb Downs or linebacker Sonny Styles, giving the Jets an explosive edge presence. 3. Arizona Cardinals — Fano, OT, BYU New head coach Mike LaFleur inherits a roster in need of protection for his developing offense. Fano’s clean technique and minimal bust factor make him the safest cornerstone tackle available. 4. Tennessee Titans — Jeremiyah Love, RB, Notre Dame Love’s 4.36-second 40 blazed through Lucas Oil Stadium and punched his ticket to the top 10. Pairing the dynamic runner with quarterback Cam Ward gives Tennessee a backfield ready to compete now. 5. New York Giants — Caleb Downs, S, Ohio State Downs’ combination of range, instincts, and positional versatility has many evaluators labeling him the draft’s best overall athlete. New defensive-minded leadership views him as the next Kyle Hamilton-style chess piece. 6. Cleveland Browns — Jordan Lemon, WR, LSU Lemon’s elite yards-after-catch ability and toughness outshine any podium-interview drama. The Browns happily scoop up the Biletnikoff winner to operate the slot at a high volume. 7. Washington Commanders — David Bailey, EDGE, Texas Tech Bailey’s 4.51-second wheels at 260-plus pounds confirm his status as the class’ purest pass-rusher. Washington can pair him with Montez Sweat for a fearsome duo. 8. New Orleans Saints — Sonny Styles, LB, Ohio State Styles’ historic 4.46 40 at 6-5, 244, screams modern-day linebacker/edge hybrid. The Saints view him as the heir apparent to DeMario Davis in the middle of the defense. 9. Kansas City Chiefs — Bain, DL, Michigan Relentless hand usage and run-stuffing strength fit Steve Spagnuolo’s aggressive front. Bain’s high motor aligns with the Chiefs’ culture. 10. Cincinnati Bengals — Delane, CB, Penn State The Bengals need a true CB1. Delane’s technique and ball awareness suggest Pro-Bowl upside on the boundary. 11. Miami Dolphins — Tate, WR, Clemson Quarterback Tua Tagovailoa gets a true X-target. Tate’s size and red-zone acumen complement Jaylen Waddle’s speed. 12. Dallas Cowboys — McCoy, CB, Colorado Dallas’ pass defense finished near the league basement. McCoy’s length and mirroring skills project as immediate CB1 traits. 13. Los Angeles Rams (from Atlanta) — Francis Mauigoa, OT, Miami Sean McVay lucks into a dancing 6-6 tackle who can re-anchor a retooled offensive line on day one. 14. Baltimore Ravens — Banks, DL, Alabama An 85-inch wingspan and freaky testing numbers make Banks a traits lottery ticket for new head coach Jesse Minter. 15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers — Sadiq, TE, UCLA A 4.39 40 and 43.5-inch vertical create mismatch possibilities. Tampa doubles down on offensive talent in Round 1. 16. New York Jets (from Indianapolis) — Ty Simpson, QB, Alabama Gang Green doubles its upside gamble, adding Simpson’s prototypical frame and big arm to develop behind the current depth chart. 17. Detroit Lions — Terrell, S, Miami Ball-hawking production and physicality fit Detroit’s attacking secondary scheme. 18. Minnesota Vikings — Thieneman, S, Oregon State After a 4.37 40, Thieneman looks like the long-term successor to veteran Harrison Smith. 19. Carolina Panthers — Allen, LB, Texas High football IQ and leadership give the Panthers the defensive quarterback they covet. 20. Dallas Cowboys (from Green Bay) — Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, S, Toledo Dallas continues its secondary facelift with an ultra-athletic deep-third defender. 21. Pittsburgh Steelers — Omar Cooper Jr., WR, Indiana A 4.43 40 secures Cooper’s Round 1 slot. The Steelers envision Deebo Samuel-style deployment for the versatile weapon. 22. Los Angeles Chargers — Vega Ioane, G, Penn State Ioane is the draft’s top pure guard, ready to keep Justin Herbert upright from day one. 23. Philadelphia Eagles — Jordyn Tyson, WR, Arizona State Medical checks caused the slide, but the Eagles pounce on obvious Pro-Bowl upside at value territory. 24. Cleveland Browns (from Houston) — Lomu, OT, Utah Cleveland doubles down on trench dominance, adding franchise left-tackle potential to bookend the line. 25. Chicago Bears — McDonald, DL, Oklahoma An elite run defender to fortify the interior of the Bears’ front four. 26. Buffalo Bills — Boston, WR, Georgia Boston’s contested-catch dominance provides WR1 upside and immediate red-zone help. 27. San Francisco 49ers — Zion Young, EDGE, Missouri Explosive first-step traits translate to any scheme, even if new coordinator Raheem Morris tweaks the front. 28. Houston Texans (from Baltimore) — Freeling, OT, Nebraska A strong Combine performance locks Freeling into the first round and fills Houston’s glaring tackle need. 29. Los Angeles Rams — Drew Allar, QB, Penn State The draft’s biggest surprise sees Allar’s rocket arm and prototypical size land behind Matthew Stafford for seasoning. 30. Denver Broncos — Bell, WR, USC Returning from an ACL tear, Bell still offers elite YAC and vertical juice to a sputtering offense. 31. New England Patriots — Kadyn Proctor, G, Alabama A massive interior mauler who can start immediately, giving the Patriots flexibility if Will Campbell remains at left tackle. 32. Seattle Seahawks — Chris Johnson, CB, San Diego State Johnson’s strong Combine and starting-caliber traits make him the logical closing pick of Round 1 as Seattle reloads at corner.
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Bayern Munich News: No talks with Lennart Karl on extension...yet

Bayern Munich News: No talks with Lennart Karl on extension...yet

Munich – Bayern Munich have no immediate plans to open contract negotiations with 18-year-old attacking prodigy Lennart Karl, despite widespread speculation that fresh terms are already being drafted, sources have confirmed. The teenager’s existing deal, which automatically lengthened to 2029 when he turned 18, has fuelled reports that the Bundesliga champions are eager to secure his services through 2031. Senior officials acknowledge the long-term attraction of tying Karl to the club, yet concede that formal discussions have not begun. “At the moment, there are no talks between the club and his management,” senior sources told this outlet. Karl, currently earning €2 million per season, is represented by former Germany and Bayern captain Michael Ballack, whose longstanding relationships inside the Säbener Strasse hierarchy could streamline future negotiations. Bayern’s relaxed stance is rooted in the calendar: with four-and-a-half seasons remaining on the newly extended contract, sporting directors see no urgency to improve terms. Privately, they also believe Karl could enhance his bargaining power by accumulating senior minutes and, potentially, international recognition. While a surprise call-up for the upcoming World Cup is viewed as unlikely, even tentative involvement in national-team camps could inflate the winger’s market value. Karl’s camp, for their part, appear content to wait. Sources close to the player suggest that patience could yield a more lucrative package or, should development accelerate, attract heavyweight foreign interest that would further strengthen his negotiating position. For now, both parties are operating under a mutual, unspoken truce: Bayern monitor his progress, while Karl continues his apprenticeship with the club’s senior squad, aware that consistent end-product on match-day remains the surest route to a blockbuster extension. The impasse is not expected to last indefinitely. Karl’s representatives have indicated a willingness to engage once the club make an official approach, and Bayern insiders expect talks to materialise should the winger cement a regular first-team place before the 2026 winter window. Until then, the 18-year-old’s future in Bavaria remains secure, if not yet set in stone. SEO keywords:
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Tottenham Have Forgotten How to Win Football Matches

Tottenham Have Forgotten How to Win Football Matches

Craven Cottage, Sunday – As the final whistle confirmed a 2-1 defeat to Fulham, the statistic that has stalked Tottenham Hotspur all winter hardened into a damning truth: Spurs no longer know how to win. Their last Premier League victory came on 28 December; 10 league fixtures have since passed, yielding four meagre points and dragging the club into the relegation mire. Since Archie Gray’s stoppage-time header at Crystal Palace, Tottenham have collected fewer points than any top-flight side. Relegation, once unthinkable for the ninth-highest revenue generator in Europe, now looms as a plausible outcome. Unless the team doubles its recent points-per-game ratio in the remaining 10 matches, trips to Charlton Athletic, Portsmouth and Lincoln City await next season. The board acted last month, sacking Thomas Frank and appointing Igor Tudor in the hope of a quick spark. Two weeks and two matches into the Croat’s tenure, the search for a catalyst continues. After the game Tudor dismissed tactical tinkering as the primary fix. “The last thing that is important is the system,” he said, arguing that deeper fissures—confidence, belief, basic execution—have hollowed out the squad. Those fissures were visible from the opening minutes. Kenny Tete’s clipped cross found Harry Wilson unmarked; Alex Iwobi later exchanged passes with Wilson before curling in a second. Emile Smith Rowe should have added a third when Oscar Bobb shrugged off Joao Palhinha. Spurs’ defensive personnel—Micky van de Ven, Pedro Porro, Guglielmo Vicario, Palhinha—possess pedigree, yet none showed conviction when it mattered. Going forward, Tottenham offered even less. Richarlison’s headed reply, fashioned from a well-worked move, stood as an isolated moment of competence. Otherwise, hopeful punts from distance and scrambled set-pieces passed for attacking threat. Passes went astray under no pressure; Vicario’s second-half free-kick sailed straight out for a Fulham goal-kick; Palhinha mistimed a challenge on the turf he himself was protecting. The psychological weight is now crushing. Players appear startled by the ball, hoofing clearances because no teammate demands possession. One win, Tudor insists, could unlock the “forces inside” and trigger a chain reaction of positive results. The next opportunity arrives on Thursday at home to Crystal Palace, a fixture that once provided their most recent triumph but now feels Himalayan. West Ham United and Nottingham Forest also failed to gain ground this weekend, offering a sliver of consolation. Yet if Spurs cannot locate a victory soon, the memory of winning will become a myth from a previous era, and the club with the gleaming stadium and global commercial clout will be preparing for life in the Championship. Tottenham, simply, have forgotten how to win football matches. Until they remember, every week brings them closer to a plunge English football has not seen in generations.
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Welsh Fire owner 'won't discriminate' in auction

Welsh Fire owner 'won't discriminate' in auction

Welsh Fire co-owner Sanjay Govil has told BBC Sport Wales he will not rule out signing Pakistan players at next month’s Hundred auction and is determined to “select the best team” regardless of nationality. The pledge comes after BBC Sport revealed last week that the four Indian-owned franchises in the competition were not considering Pakistan cricketers for the upcoming player draft. The absence of Pakistan talent from IPL-owned sides has been linked to enduring political tensions between India and Pakistan, a pattern now being mirrored at IPL-affiliated teams globally. The England and Wales Cricket Board responded by writing to all eight Hundred franchises to remind them of their anti-discrimination obligations. Welsh Fire, along with Trent Rockets, London Spirit and Birmingham Phoenix, were the four teams not purchased by IPL owners when The Hundred’s franchises were sold last year. Govil, an Indian-American IT entrepreneur who also owns Major League Cricket’s Washington Freedom, paid £40 million for a 50 per cent stake in Welsh Fire. Speaking ahead of the auction, he insisted player performance, not passports, will drive selections. “We are going to select the best team we can; there are going to be Pakistani players in the draft, so we just have to look at our needs because the number of international players we can sign is very limited,” Govil said. Welsh Fire have already filled two of their four overseas slots through pre-auction signings, snapping up South Africa’s Marco Jansen and New Zealand’s Rachin Ravindra, alongside England pair Phil Salt and Chris Woakes. “You only have four international players who can play. So two, we already have in Marco and Rachin. I have to look at all those things, but I’m not going to get boxed by Pakistani or South Africans or this or that,” Govil added. “I’m just going to choose the best team which is possible, and that’s the instruction which I have given to my team when they go for the auction. I’m not going to discriminate against anybody, but I’m going to choose the best players.” Pakistan fast bowlers Shaheen Shah Afridi and Haris Rauf, who have both previously turned out for Welsh Fire, are among the Pakistan players entered for this year’s auction. ECB chief executive Richard Gould stated last year that he expected “players from all nations to be selected for all teams” and emphasised that “clear anti-discrimination policies” govern the tournament. Welsh Fire men, who have yet to lift the Hundred title, will hope a merit-based approach at the auction can bolster a squad looking to make a mark in the 2024 competition.
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Tyler Shough is already pushing for the Saints to draft his former teammate in the 2026 NFL Draft

Tyler Shough is already pushing for the Saints to draft his former teammate in the 2026 NFL Draft

New Orleans Saints quarterback Tyler Shough has taken on an unexpected role ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft: unofficial recruiter. According to Louisville wide receiver Chris Bell, Shough has spent the pre-draft process lobbying the Saints’ brass to reunite him with his former collegiate teammate. “He said he’s been telling the Saints about me… he said they need a guy like me,” Bell told Arye Pulli of Saints on SI, adding that Shough has been in constant contact since the evaluation cycle began. “It would be great to reunite with Tyler Shough.” The 6-foot-2, 220-pound pass-catcher backed up the endorsement with production, posting nine receptions for 136 yards and two touchdowns in his most recent outing. Bell’s 4.4-second 40-yard dash at his weight has drawn comparisons to A.J. Brown’s blend of size and acceleration, and draft analysts project him as a potential day-two selection. NFL Draft Buzz praised Bell as a prototypical X-receiver who can win vertically against top corners and dominate at the catch point, a skill set New Orleans could use to complement its young quarterback. While mock drafts currently link the Saints to running back Jeremiyah Love or a defensive impact player in round one, selecting Bell on the draft’s second day would address an immediate need for perimeter playmaking. Shough’s advocacy adds a layer of familiarity that could sway the front office. Bell confirmed he has already met with New Orleans’ staff and left impressed, increasing the likelihood that the Saints will give the receiver strong consideration once the first round is complete. Whether the organization heeds its quarterback’s advice remains to be seen, but Shough has made his preference clear: bring Chris Bell to the Big Easy and let the reunion ignite the offense.
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Benjamin Sesko beginning to show his potential under Michael Carrick

Benjamin Sesko beginning to show his potential under Michael Carrick

Manchester United striker Benjamin Sesko is starting to demonstrate the qualities that prompted the club to secure his signature, with interim manager Michael Carrick’s increased faith in the forward cited as a key factor in his recent improvement. Speaking on NBC’s Premier League coverage, pundits Robbie Mustoe and Robbie Earle highlighted Sesko’s uptick in performances, noting that the 20-year-old is “beginning to show his abilities” after being granted more consistent minutes by Carrick. The pair agreed that the Slovenia international’s physical presence and intelligent movement are now translating into tangible contributions on the pitch, a development they attribute directly to the interim boss’s willingness to integrate youth into the first-team setup. Sesko’s emergence arrives at a pivotal moment for United, who have been searching for attacking fluency during a transitional period. With Carrick at the helm on an interim basis, the coaching staff has prioritised opportunity for emerging talents, a policy that has already benefited the former RB Salzburg marksman. Mustoe observed that Sesko’s confidence appears visibly higher, while Earle praised his “fearless” approach in recent fixtures, suggesting the striker is adapting quickly to the physical and tactical demands of English football. Although the sample size remains small, early indications suggest Sesko could become a central figure in United’s attacking plans should Carrick remain in charge beyond the current interim spell. For now, supporters will hope the forward’s upward trajectory continues as he builds momentum in the famous red shirt.
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Shohei Ohtani Got Rock Star Treatment While Arriving in Japan for World Baseball Classic

Shohei Ohtani Got Rock Star Treatment While Arriving in Japan for World Baseball Classic

Osaka—Shohei Ohtani’s return to Japanese soil ahead of the 2026 World Baseball Classic felt less like a ballplayer’s arrival and more like a Beatles homecoming. As the rest of Team Japan quietly disembarked from the shinkansen at Shin-Osaka Station on Sunday afternoon, a hushed reverence hung over the platform. The moment Ohtani stepped off the train, the silence shattered: thousands of phones shot skyward, cheers ricocheted off the glass roof, and the two-way superstar was instantly enveloped by a wall of sound reminiscent of a concert crowd. The scene evoked memories of Paul McCartney touching down in Liverpool—only this time the icon wore Dodger blue and a Team Japan cap. Fans pressed against temporary barriers, chanting Ohtani’s name as security guided him through the throng. The 31-year-old acknowledged the reception with a quick bow and a sheepish smile, never quite breaking stride as he headed toward the team bus. Ohtani’s rock-star status in Japan has only intensified since he captured the 2023 WBC MVP award and slammed the tournament’s storybook door with a ninth-inning strikeout of Mike Trout. That championship run—highlighted by a .435 batting average, eight RBIs, a home run, and a 1.86 ERA on the mound—cemented his legacy as a national hero. While he will not pitch in this edition of the Classic, expectations remain sky-high that his bat will power Japan’s title defense. The frenzy also underscores a remarkable 12-month stretch: Ohtani collected two hits during the Dodgers’ 2025 Tokyo Series opener, crushed a home run that nearly rattled the Tokyo Dome roof the following night, claimed his second consecutive National League MVP, and authored an NLCS-clinching masterpiece—10 strikeouts and three homers in Game 4 against Milwaukee—en route to a second straight championship over Toronto. Team Japan begins its pool-play slate March 6 against Chinese Taipei inside the same Tokyo Dome where Ohtani’s legend has grown larger with each swing. If Sunday’s welcome is any indication, the noise level will only rise every time the superstar steps into the batter’s box.
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Juliano Belletti impressed by Barcelona’s latest wonderkid Ebrima Tunkara

Juliano Belletti impressed by Barcelona’s latest wonderkid Ebrima Tunkara

Barcelona Atletic coach Juliano Belletti has lavished praise on 15-year-old midfielder Ebrima Tunkara after the teenager’s first start for the reserve side, a 2-0 victory over Valencia on Saturday. Two goals from Joaquin Delgado sealed the win, but it was Tunkara’s composure and fearlessness that dominated post-match conversation. The Gambian-born prodigy signed a new deal with the club this winter and was thrust into the starting lineup just days after making his debut for Belletti’s injury-hit squad. The Brazilian tactician highlighted the youngster’s immediate impact. “Ebrima is a youth player and he wanted the ball, he looked for one-on-one opportunities, he helped in defense,” Belletti told club media. “Campos played very well again. Pedro Villar created chances through the middle and helped both offensively and defensively, Shane Kluivert and Fofana in the second half... The club is on the right track with this approach and they accept their responsibility. And the older players are taking on their leadership roles.” Belletti stressed that the result should not obscure the broader process, noting that the team has “always played well even if it hasn’t always gotten results,” and urged his squad to maintain belief regardless of outcomes. “We mustn’t lose confidence even if we don’t win; we have to keep competing and have the mindset to improve. This victory gives us confidence, and we mustn’t let our level drop.” With a mounting injury list forcing rotation, Tunkara is expected to receive further opportunities as the campaign progresses, continuing a rapid rise that has already marked him as the latest La Masia graduate tipped for a long-term future at the top level.
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Guehi Speaks Out on Collapsed Liverpool Deal as Reds Find Solace in U21 Thriller

Guehi Speaks Out on Collapsed Liverpool Deal as Reds Find Solace in U21 Thriller

Marc Guehi has broken his silence on the transfer saga that almost saw him swap Crystal Palace for Liverpool last summer, revealing that the move collapsed after he had already completed his medical. Speaking for the first time about the episode, the England defender said Palace withdrew consent “at the eleventh hour,” leaving him to honour his contract at Selhurst Park with professionalism rather than protest. While contemporaries have agitated for exits—Alexander Isak recently went on strike to force a record switch from Newcastle to Anfield—Guehi opted for a low-key approach. “Showing up every day and giving everything in training was the least I could do,” he said, stressing that “throwing a tantrum would have been a massive disservice” to the club that gave him a Premier League platform. Palace’s resistance proved temporary. When Manchester City tabled an offer in January, the London club relented, allowing Guehi to sign a five-and-a-half-year deal at the Etihad. The 24-year-old immediately rewarded Guardiola’s faith, keeping a clean sheet in Saturday’s 2-0 defeat of Wolverhampton Wanderers, a result that ended a winless league run stretching back to the turn of the year. City had previously been held by Sunderland, Chelsea and Brighton, and beaten by Manchester United; the victory trims Arsenal’s lead at the summit to four points after the Gunners’ 3-2 loss to United on Sunday. Guehi’s arrival is perfectly timed. Ruben Dias, Joško Gvardiol and John Stones are all sidelined—Gvardiol long-term, Dias for “several weeks,” while Stones faces months out with a thigh injury and enters the final months of his contract. Ironically, it was Stones who spent much of the autumn persuading his international teammate to join City, conversations that may now accelerate the end of Stones’ own spell in Manchester. Across the Pennines, Liverpool’s hierarchy may lament what might have been, but the academy offered a morale boost on Merseyside. In Premier League 2 Matchday 17, the U21s twice came from behind to defeat Tottenham 4-2 at the club’s Kirkby complex. Wilson’s early opener for Spurs was cancelled out by Morrison, and after P. Cissé had edged the hosts ahead, Cassanova restored parity at 2-2. With the contest drifting toward a draw, W. Wright struck twice in the closing moments—an 86th-minute finish from Pecsi’s pass and a stoppage-time effort set up by Morrison—to lift Barry Lewtas’ side into fourth place and leave Tottenham ninth. The win underlines a growing belief that Liverpool’s next generation could ease the sting of near-misses in the senior market, even as Guehi’s revelations reopen questions about what might have been.
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Arsenal corner Chelsea into submission, Man Utd climb to third

Arsenal corner Chelsea into submission, Man Utd climb to third

Arsenal re-opened a five-point gap at the Premier League summit after a hard-fought 2-1 triumph over 10-man Chelsea on Sunday, underlining their staying power in the title race. The result keeps the Gunners in control at the summit and intensifies pressure on their pursuers. Chelsea, who played the majority of the contest a man short, briefly threatened a comeback but could not prevent Arsenal from claiming all three points at a raucous Emirates Stadium. The victory was Arsenal’s latest statement of intent as they look to convert consistent form into silverware. Elsewhere, Manchester United leapfrogged into third place thanks to a decisive strike from Benjamin Sesko against Crystal Palace. The Slovenian’s goal proved enough to secure victory and lift Erik ten Hag’s side above their rivals in the fiercely contested battle for Champions League qualification. With the season entering its decisive phase, Arsenal’s cushion at the top and United’s surge into the top three set the stage for a gripping finale to the Premier League campaign.
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Vincent Kompany cites Pep Guardiola’s massive influence on coaching philosophy

Vincent Kompany cites Pep Guardiola’s massive influence on coaching philosophy

Bayern Munich’s new head coach, Vincent Kompany, has acknowledged that Pep Guardiola’s methods have left a lasting imprint on his own approach to management, even as he insists he is writing his own story in Bavaria. Speaking to reporters, the Belgian underlined that Guardiola, under whom he captained Manchester City, reshaped his entire outlook on the game. “The best coach I’ve had was of course Pep Guardiola. He opened up my understanding of football,” Kompany said, via the X account @iMiaSanMia. “I’m not trying to do things the same as Pep. Pep is different, he was the best. I took certain things from every coach I worked with.” Kompany was quick to add that his philosophy is an amalgam of influences, citing former City boss Roberto Mancini and veteran Bundesliga tactician Huub Stevens as other key reference points. “(Roberto) Mancini, Huub Stevens were also good examples — you take things from every coach to write your own story,” he explained. While Guardiola’s tactical innovations are widely celebrated, Kompany stressed that the core lesson he absorbed was not systemic but psychological. “It’s not really about tactics. It’s about this mentality to always want to win everything, to see every game as an important game, no difference between a game against your main rival and a game against a team from the second division. Having this mentality to always be there.” Guardiola steered Bayern between 2013 and 2016 before moving to Manchester City, where Kompany skippered the side for several trophy-laden campaigns. Now, with the 38-year-old Belgian occupying the same dugout at the Allianz Arena once patrolled by his former mentor, the Guardiola legacy continues to echo through the club’s corridors, albeit filtered through Kompany’s evolving managerial identity.
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Real Madrid vs. Getafe: Preview, Predictions and Lineups

Real Madrid vs. Getafe: Preview, Predictions and Lineups

Madrid—Real Madrid return to La Liga action under mounting pressure on Monday night when neighbors Getafe visit the Santiago Bernabéu, knowing anything short of victory could see Carlo Ancelotti’s side drift four points behind leaders Barcelona with the title race tightening. Los Blancos surrendered first place last weekend after suffering their first domestic defeat of the Álvaro Arbeloa era, a 1-0 setback at Osasuna. The midweek response was encouraging: a hard-fought 3-1 win over Benfica secured passage to the Champions League round of 16 and, crucially, restored belief inside the dressing room. Yet the injury list remains daunting. Kylian Mbappé, Jude Bellingham and teenage centre-back Dean Huijsen are still unavailable, while Éder Militão, Dani Ceballos and academy graduate Raúl Asencio have been ruled out as well. In their absence, Vinicius Jr., Federico Valverde and the French midfield pairing of Aurélien Tchouaméni and Eduardo Camavinga have rediscovered top gear and are expected to start. Gonzalo García, 20, will be asked to lead the line in a makeshift 4-4-2 that could also feature summer arrival Trent Alexander-Arnold at right-back and Fran Carreras on the opposite flank. Veteran duo Antonio Rüdiger and David Alaba will anchor the defense ahead of Thibaut Courtois. Getafe arrive in the Spanish capital just five points above the drop zone and without a league triumph since December. José Bordalás’ men were beaten 1-0 by Sevilla last time out and will be without suspended captain Djené Dakonam, while injuries sideline Davinchi, Abdelkabir Abqar and top scorer Abu Kamara. Bordalás is unlikely to abandon his trademark 5-3-2 low block, with Diego Rico slotting in for Djené. Midfield metronomes Luis Milla and Mauro Arambarri will attempt to disrupt Madrid’s rhythm, and Uruguayan striker Martín Satriano will partner Luis Vázquez up front. Former Real Madrid academy graduate Borja Mayoral is in line for a cameo after two months out with a knee problem. Prediction: Madrid’s patched-up lineup still boasts too much individual quality for a Getafe side that has scored only twice in its last six league outings. Expect a patient, at times laborious, home win that keeps the title chase alive. Real Madrid predicted XI (4-4-2): Courtois; Alexander-Arnold, Rüdiger, Alaba, Carreras; Valverde, Güler, Tchouaméni, Camavinga; García, Vinicius Jr. Getafe predicted XI (5-3-2): Soria; Femenía, Duarte, Romero, Rico, Iglesias; Martín, Milla, Arambarri; Vázquez, Satriano.
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