Expert Sports News & Commentary

Roy Keane labelled 'bully' by former Manchester United staff member
Roy Keane’s confrontational reputation has followed him from the Old Trafford dressing room to the television studio, but the latest salvo against the former Manchester United captain comes from inside the club’s own corridors. Rod Thornley, United’s first-team physio for 19 years under Sir Alex Ferguson, has publicly accused Keane of bullying behaviour and branded him a hypocrite.
The row ignited after Keane appeared on The Overlap, Gary Neville’s YouTube show, and launched a broadside at modern-day backroom staff. Among other grievances, Keane claimed that some physiotherapists and masseuses overstepped their roles—selecting dressing-room playlists, encroaching on the pitch post-match, buying players’ cars at cut-price rates and “scavenging” for discarded boots.
Thornley, who left United in 2019, responded on The Busby Way podcast. While he praised Keane as “very funny and really intelligent,” he alleged: “I witnessed him bully people many a time.” Thornley took particular exception to Keane’s insinuation that staff improperly acquired players’ vehicles, pointing out that Keane himself “sold his car to the caretaker at Man United,” adding: “So like, I can’t buy one off a player, but you can sell it to a member of staff.”
The long-serving physio also denied Keane’s specific claims that he had lobbied for a Premier League medal or dictated dressing-room music, dismissing the entire tirade as “bulls***” designed to wound. Thornley said the subsequent online abuse “affected me mentally” and laid the blame squarely at Keane’s door: “That’s what Roy Keane’s about a lot of the times.”
Thornley further accused Keane of double standards, referencing the pundit’s willingness to allow his daughter Caragh—recently engaged—to promote her breakfast-cereal brand on The Overlap. “He’d have snapped 20 years ago if someone was doing something like that,” Thornley said. “He’s a hypocrite.”
For supporters who lionise Keane for the relentless competitiveness that underpinned United’s success, Thornley’s testimony offers a sobering counter-narrative: the same intensity that drove the team forward could leave collateral damage among those tasked with keeping the squad on the pitch.
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Real Madrid stunned by Getafe as title gap widens to four points
Madrid, Spain – Real Madrid’s La Liga title defence suffered another jolt on Monday night when a disciplined Getafe side snatched a 1-0 victory at the Santiago Bernabeu, leaving the champions four points adrift of leaders Barcelona.
Uruguayan forward Martín Satriano’s spectacular 39th-minute volley was enough to decide a tense contest and inflict Madrid’s second straight league defeat, following last weekend’s reverse at Osasuna. The result also ended Getafe’s 16-year wait for a win at the Bernabeu and lifted José Bordalás’s team to 11th in the standings.
Without injured talisman Kylian Mbappé, who remained in France to treat a knee sprain, Madrid controlled possession but struggled to convert dominance into clear chances. Vinícius Júnior, fresh from a productive run of form in 2026, saw an early effort blocked by David Soria, while Arda Güler’s curling attempt was tipped over as whistles rang out at the interval.
The breakthrough arrived against the run of play. A half-cleared cross dropped to Satriano on the edge of the area and the striker lashed an unstoppable shot into the top-left corner, capping a swift move that began with compatriot Mauro Arambarri’s headed assist.
Madrid introduced Dani Carvajal, Dean Huijsen and Rodrygo after the restart, yet Getafe’s deep back line, marshalled expertly by Kiko Femenía, repelled wave after wave of attacks. Antonio Rüdiger came closest to an equaliser with a stoppage-time header that sailed over, moments before the match descended into further drama.
Franco Mastantuono, the 17-year-old Argentine prodigy, received a straight red card for dissent deep into added time, reducing Madrid to ten men. Seconds later, Getafe substitute Adrián Liso also saw red for kicking the ball away after already being cautioned, but the visitors clung on for a historic triumph.
Speaking after the final whistle, Madrid coach Álvaro Arbeloa refused to concede the title race. “Four points is a distance we can cut back, and we will fight for that,” he insisted. “Nobody here is throwing in the towel; this is Real Madrid.”
The defeat leaves Madrid anxiously awaiting news on Mbappé’s fitness ahead of Friday’s trip to Celta Vigo and next week’s Champions League last-16 showdown with Manchester City. Barcelona, meanwhile, extended their advantage by hammering Villarreal on Saturday, intensifying pressure on the reigning champions.
For Getafe, the victory represents a landmark moment. “It’s very hard to get points when you come here,” Femenía said. “We defended with everything, took our chance, and could even have scored again.”
Real Madrid, now looking over their shoulders, must regroup quickly or risk watching Barcelona disappear further down the road in the race for Spanish football’s biggest prize.
Read more →If Man Utd stay above Villa, Champions League football will return
Manchester United’s late-season surge has rewritten the script of the Premier League’s top-five battle, and the revised plotline is impossible to ignore: if Erik ten Hag’s side finish the campaign above Aston Villa, a return to the Champions League is all but assured.
Sunday’s 2-1 victory over Crystal Palace lifted United into third place for the first time since 2023, a position that seemed unattainable two months ago when Michael Carrick was still in interim charge. At that stage, Villa sat 11 points clear of the Red Devils and appeared locked into the top three alongside Arsenal and Manchester City. The conversation then centred on which of United, Liverpool or Chelsea would be left stranded in sixth.
That gap has evaporated. United have now leapfrogged all three traditional powerhouses, while Villa have managed only three wins in their last ten league outings after a blistering 12 victories in 13 matches earlier in the campaign. The expected-goals models that once flagged Villa as over-performing have begun to level out, and United have capitalised ruthlessly.
The fixture list offers a further twist. Villa remain embroiled in a Europa League push that carries the prize of Champions League qualification, a route that could distract Unai Emery from domestic slip-ups. With United free from European commitments, every training session and recovery day can be tailored to Premier League points.
Ten Hag’s squad, therefore, control their own fate. Stay above Villa and the financial and sporting windfall of Champions League nights at Old Trafford is guaranteed, regardless of how Chelsea or Liverpool finish.
Come May, the table may tell a simple story: United’s resurgence timed to perfection, Villa’s early-season brilliance faded just too soon.
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Rival watch: Real Madrid slip four points behind Barcelona in La Liga title race
Madrid – The Santiago Bernabéu sounded more like a wake than a fortress on Monday night as Getafe left with a 1-0 victory that nudged Real Madrid four points adrift of La Liga leaders FC Barcelona and left the home support fearing the worst for their championship hopes.
The decisive moment arrived two minutes before the interval. Antonio Rüdiger’s half-cleared cross fell invitingly to Martín Satriano, the Uruguayan forward on loan from Lyon, who lashed a spectacular volley into the top corner. The strike stunned the stadium into a brief, ominous hush before whistles of frustration began to ring out.
The result marks José Bordalás’ first win over Madrid at the 17th attempt, earned with textbook Getafe disruption: six fouls inside the opening seven minutes and relentless pressing that never allowed Álvaro Arbeloa’s side to settle. Without the injured Kylian Mbappé, Madrid’s attack relied almost exclusively on Vinícius Júnior, who repeatedly beat defenders but could not find a finish.
Arbeloa handed a league debut to 18-year-old midfielder Thiago Pitarch, yet hooked him for Rodrygo after the break as the hosts searched for inspiration. It never arrived. David Soria ensured the clean sheet with a fingertip denial of Rodrygo’s late header, while Madrid’s composure crumbled: Rüdiger was fortunate to escape punishment after appearing to knee the prone Diego Rico, and substitute Franco Mastantuono received a stoppage-time red for dissent. Seconds later Getafe’s Adrián Liso also saw red for kicking the ball away amid the chaotic finale.
The defeat, coupled with Barcelona’s 4-1 rout of Villarreal, opens a four-point gap at the summit. While the title race is far from over, the Bernabéu exits told the story of a club feeling the absence of departed veterans Toni Kroos and Luka Modrić more acutely than ever.
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Vancouver Whitecaps and MLS to pay out $347k settlement after Lionel Messi no-show
Vancouver, B.C. — The British Columbia Supreme Court has signed off on a C$475,000 (US$347,000) class-action settlement to be paid jointly by the Vancouver Whitecaps and Major League Soccer after the clubs marketed Lionel Messi’s expected appearance for Inter Miami on 25 May 2024, only for the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner to remain in Florida.
Court documents show that Messi, along with former Barcelona teammates Luis Suárez and Sergio Busquets, featured prominently in billboards, social-media posts and print advertisements that coincided with ticket-price surges of roughly ten times the club’s normal home-game rate. The Whitecaps billed the match as the centerpiece of their 50th-anniversary celebrations, staging street festivals and projecting a record crowd at BC Place.
Forty-eight hours before kick-off, the Whitecaps confirmed that none of the Miami stars would make the 6½-hour flight, citing coach Tata Martino’s decision to rest the trio ahead of consecutive home fixtures. The club responded by halving concession prices and, later, offering complimentary future-game vouchers to certain account holders, moves that did little to placate ticket buyers such as Rachele Renzi, whose brother flew 5,500 miles from Italy expecting to see Messi.
Lead plaintiff Ho Chun, a B.C. resident who paid C$404 for two primary-market tickets, alleged in his filing that the promotional campaign amounted to a “classic bait-and-switch,” violating Canada’s federal Competition Act and provincial consumer-protection statutes. MLS and the Whitecaps denied wrongdoing but elected to settle to avoid prolonged litigation.
Under the approved agreement, the defendants will donate the full C$475,000—minus C$156,000 in legal fees and a C$1,500 honorarium to Chun—to three youth-sports charities: KidSport BC, Canada SCORES and BGC South Coast BC. The Whitecaps have also amended their ticketing terms to state that “player depictions in marketing materials are for reference purposes only” and that match-day rosters cannot be guaranteed. Similar disclaimers will appear on Ticketmaster’s purchase pages.
Justice Andrew Majawa praised the settlement as “fair,” while noting the online harassment directed at Chun for bringing the action. “Being subject to such negative online criticism may discourage people from putting themselves forward as representative plaintiff,” Majawa observed.
The settlement contains no admission of liability and leaves intact the league’s right to promote marquee players without guaranteeing their participation.
Read more →EPL GW29: Team news, injury updates and live chat
The Premier League’s 29th gameweek arrives midweek with the table delicately poised and every point carrying the weight of a season’s ambition. Injuries, suspensions and the grind of a compressed calendar have left no squad untouched, forcing managers to dig deep into their depth charts as relegation fears and European dreams collide.
Manchester City’s camp remains fixated on Erling Haaland’s fitness after the striker was conspicuously absent from the weekend squad. Pep Guardiola offered no clarity post-match, leaving the Norwegian’s midweek status shrouded in mystery. Teenage midfielder Nico O’Reilly, who impressed early against Fulham, is now a major doubt after picking up a knock, further complicating Guardiola’s rotation plans.
Tottenham’s slide shows no sign of abating. A fourth straight defeat has dragged Ange Postecoglou’s side to within four points of 17th-placed West Ham, the relegation alarm bells ringing louder than any tactical message. Spurs already oversee the league’s longest injury list; Djed Spence’s calf issue only lengthens it. Confidence, like several star names, is in short supply.
At the other end of the spectrum, Fulham’s derby triumph over Tottenham catapulted them to the summit, yet Marco Silva must now navigate without Kevin Mbabu after ankle surgery. Joachim Andersen is questionable due to illness, and Saša Lukić continues to be assessed, reminding supporters that momentum can be fragile.
Bournemouth welcome back Evanilson from a dead leg, but Lewis Cook’s hamstring will sideline him until after the international break. Long-term casualties Ben Doak and Julio Soler remain out. Brentford, meanwhile, list Aaron Hickey and new father Caoimhín Kelleher as doubts, while Joshua Dasilva trains but is not yet ready for competitive minutes.
Everton’s injury woes deepen with Carlos Alcaraz ruled out for three-to-four weeks after a training-ground setback. Jack Grealish’s season is already over, leaving Sean Dyche to lean on a thinning creative pool. Burnley await Axel Tuanzebe and Armando Broja for at least several more weeks; Marcus Edwards is being monitored ahead of the fixture. Leeds keep monitoring Noah Okafor’s hamstring, anticipating another fortnight on the sidelines.
Sunderland’s medical room is even more crowded: Jocelyn Ta Bi, Nordi Mukiele, Brian Brobbey, Romaine Mundle, Reinildo and Dennis Cirkin are all unavailable. Wolves at least receive a boost as Ladislav Krejčí returns from suspension and Hwang Hee-chan rejoins training, though Florian Wirtz’s lower-back complaint keeps him out of Liverpool’s plans. Alexander Isak’s light running offers Newcastle encouragement for the longer term.
Aston Villa, still without five injured players, crave the creativity of John McGinn and Youri Tielemans to arrest inconsistent form ahead of hosting Chelsea. The visitors welcome Wesley Fofana back from suspension, yet no fresh faces are expected to exit the treatment room.
Brighton decide on Yasin Ayari’s shoulder issue after he missed the weekend win, while Arsenal await updates on Martin Ødegaard’s knee; Ben White’s probable return offers Mikel Arteta some relief. West Ham’s Pablo Fornals trains but remains unavailable, and Freddie Potts begins a ban.
Nottingham Forest’s winless streak stretched to five as defensive errors cost them against Brighton. Chris Wood edges closer to training, but goalkeeper Stefan Ortega’s calf is a concern. Crystal Palace must do without Maxence Lacroix, whose red card against Manchester United cancelled out his earlier goal.
Newcastle visit an in-form Manchester United third in the table on the back of six wins from seven. Jacob Ramsey is a doubt for Eddie Howe, and Tino Livramento needs at least another week, while the Red Devils, revitalised under Michael Carrick, sense another chance to tighten their grip on a Champions League berth.
Across the league, fine margins rule: a red card, a late fitness test, a youngster thrust into the spotlight. With the international break looming, GW29 may prove the hinge on which seasons swing.
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Read more →Why was Sanju Samson axed? Gautam Gambhir's big admission
New Delhi: A bruising bilateral series against New Zealand, not any lingering doubts over ability, convinced the Indian team management to leave Sanju Samson out of the playing XI at the start of the T20 World Cup, head coach Gautam Gambhir has revealed.
Samson, whose 97 not out against the West Indies on Sunday carried India into the semi-finals, had managed only 46 runs in five outings against New Zealand (10, 6, 0, 24, 6) after being given a full run. The sequence triggered a temporary break designed to release the Kerala batter from an unrelenting spotlight.
“Obviously, he had a tough series against New Zealand. So sometimes it’s important to give him a break as well, because you want to get the guy off that pressure situation,” Gambhir told reporters after the eight-wicket win.
The stop-start nature of Samson’s tournament began when he was left out of the opener against the USA. A last-minute illness to Abhishek Sharma opened the door for a cameo against Namibia, but the right-hander was dropped again until personal tragedy—Rinku Singh rushing home after his father’s death—combined with the side’s wish to balance left- and right-handers at the top. Samson was recalled and responded with a 24 off 15 against Zimbabwe that, in Gambhir’s words, “laid the foundation” for Sunday’s master-class.
Batting at a strike-rate of 194 yet appearing in complete control, Samson leaned on classical drives and sharp running rather than muscle. “I actually thought that he never accelerated the innings. It was just very, very normal cricketing shots,” Gambhir said. “That is the kind of talent he has.”
The coach, who has kept an open channel with every member of the squad, underlined that Samson’s three T20 hundreds mark him as a rare talent. “We always knew that whenever we need him in the World Cup game, he’ll come and deliver for us.”
With two matches remaining, Gambhir hopes the Caribbean innings proves a launchpad rather than an isolated flourish. “Hopefully this is a time for him to kick off and probably two more games to go, hopefully,” he said, sounding every bit the believer in a player whose roller-coaster month now carries the promise of a defining finish.
Read more →La Liga: Real Madrid player faces lengthy suspension!
Madrid—Real Madrid’s teenage Argentine midfielder Franco Mastantuono is staring at a heavy La Liga ban after being sent off for verbally abusing referee Alejandro Muñiz Ruiz in Monday night’s shock 1-0 home defeat to Getafe on Matchday 26.
The 19-year-old, signed last winter from River Plate, received a straight red card in the 94th minute at the Santiago Bernabéu. The official post-match report submitted to the Spanish Football Federation details that Mastantuono approached the referee and shouted repeatedly: “What a shame… what a shame, you idiot,” amplifying the insult with each repetition.
Under the RFEF disciplinary code, such offences normally carry a two-to-three-match suspension, but the wording allows the ban to stretch to a full month if the incident is deemed aggravated. With the disciplinary committee set to review the case on Tuesday, Mastantuono risks missing a crucial stretch of fixtures for Álvaro Arbeloa’s side as they fight to climb back into the European places.
Real Madrid have yet to issue an official statement, though club sources indicate they will await the written resolution before deciding on any internal sanction or appeal.
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Canadian Natural Resources Set to Unveil Q4 2025 Results Before Thursday’s Opening Bell
Calgary, March 4, 2026 — Canadian Natural Resources Limited (NYSE/TSE: CNQ) will release its fourth-quarter 2025 financial results before markets open on Thursday, March 5, the company confirmed. Management will host a conference call at 11:00 a.m. ET the same day to discuss the numbers.
Analysts polled ahead of the release forecast earnings of $0.53 per share on revenue of roughly $6.64 billion for the quarter, according to consensus data. The figures will cap a year in which CNQ shares have climbed from a 52-week low of $24.65 to a high of $45.85; the stock closed Tuesday’s session at $44.30.
The energy producer, valued at $92.3 billion, currently trades at 19.6 times trailing earnings and carries a beta of 0.62. Balance-sheet metrics show a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.41, a quick ratio of 0.53 and a current ratio of 0.86. Shares have recently traded above both their 50-day ($36.88) and 200-day ($33.72) moving averages.
Brokerage sentiment has shifted in recent months. Goldman Sachs maintains a “buy” with a $35 target set on Jan. 2, while Wall Street Zen upgraded the name to “hold” on Jan. 31. Desjardins moved to “hold” on Nov. 24, Zacks Research lowered its rating to “hold” on Dec. 19, and Evercore cut its view to “in-line” on Jan. 6. Across the street, five analysts rate CNQ a “buy” and six call it a “hold,” producing an average target price of $48.50.
Institutional activity has been brisk. Sunbelt Securities opened a $25,000 position in Q4, Manchester Capital Management initiated a $28,000 stake, and Quarry LP acquired a $32,000 position in the third quarter. Geneos Wealth Management increased its holdings by 47.3% in Q1, now owning 1,644 shares, while Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. boosted its stake by 885.9% in Q4 to 2,238 shares. Overall, 74% of CNQ stock is held by institutions and hedge funds.
Founded in the early 1970s and dual-listed in Toronto and New York, Canadian Natural Resources is one of North America’s largest independent energy companies. Its portfolio spans conventional and unconventional reservoirs, oil-sands mining, in-situ thermal projects, plus midstream processing and upgrading facilities concentrated in Western Canada.
Investors can access the full earnings materials and live webcast via the company’s investor-relations webpage ahead of Thursday’s call.
Read more →Iranian women’s national team refuse to sing national anthem in Asia Cup opening game
Gold Coast, Australia – Iran’s women’s national team stood in silent formation as their national anthem played ahead of Thursday’s Women’s Asian Cup opener against South Korea, a deliberate act that instantly became the most talked-about image of the tournament’s first matchday.
The squad lined up on the Cbus Super Stadium turf, faces composed and expressionless, while the anthem echoed through the stands. Not a single player sang, a stark departure from the customary pre-match ritual. Head coach Marziyeh Jafari watched from the technical area, arms folded, as cameras captured the moment against a backdrop of heightened geopolitical tension.
The scene unfolded hours after confirmed US-Israeli strikes killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, an event that has sent shockwaves through the region. Inside the ground, the silence felt louder than any song.
Iran went on to lose the contest 3-0, but the result was almost a footnote to the pre-match demonstration. The tournament marks only Iran’s second appearance at the Asian Cup and doubles as qualification for the 2027 Women’s World Cup, yet global attention fixed firmly on the anthem protest.
Earlier in the day, Jafari and captain Zahra Ghanbari fronted a brief press conference restricted to three questions. When a journalist attempted to ask about the players’ feelings regarding recent developments in Iran, an AFC media officer intervened before the coach’s answer could be translated.
“OK, I think that’s all for your question. Thank you for asking. Let’s just focus on the game itself,” the official said, shutting down the line of inquiry.
Jafari and Ghanbari later reiterated their focus on football, insisting the squad is determined to compete strongly during the group stage. Iran must still face co-hosts Australia and the Philippines as they chase a maiden World Cup berth.
Whether the silent anthem stance will continue in upcoming fixtures remains to be seen, but the opening act has already ensured the Iranian women’s team will be watched far beyond the touchlines of Australia’s Gold Coast.
Read more →Transfer rumour roundup: Manchester United bid for another Bruno; Mac Allister wanted in Madrid
Manchester United are pressing ahead with plans to pair Bruno Fernandes with a second midfield general named Bruno, as informal approaches have been made to Newcastle United captain Bruno Guimaraes, according to Spanish outlet AS. Newcastle hierarchy maintain that the 26-year-old is not for sale, yet the prospect of missing out on next season’s Champions League could weaken their stance. Should Guimaraes arrive, out-of-favour midfielder Mason Mount is expected to depart. Mount, signed from Chelsea for £55 million in 2023, has struggled with persistent injuries and is now free to listen to offers. Aston Villa are poised to provide an escape route, though any bid is anticipated to fall well short of the original outlay.
Across the continent, Real Madrid continue to circle Liverpool’s squad. After luring Trent Alexander-Arnold last summer and persistently monitoring defender Ibrahima Konate, the Bernabeu board have now elevated Alexis Mac Allister to the top of their wish-list. TEAMtalk reports that the Argentine World Cup winner is “fast becoming” a primary target for the Spanish giants ahead of the next window.
While Real Madrid look to reinforce, they are determined to retain Vinicius Junior. The Brazilian winger has rediscovered peak form following a mid-season rift with former coach Xabi Alonso and is now thriving under Alvaro Arbeloa. Fresh contract discussions are underway, with Saudi Arabian interest expected to be rejected.
Bayern Munich, meanwhile, are moving to secure their own star asset. Fabrizio Romano reveals that the Bundesliga champions are preparing a lucrative extension for Harry Kane, whose remarkable tally of 130 goals in 133 games has convinced the club to improve terms and fend off long-term admirers Barcelona.
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Danny Welbeck agrees one-year Brighton contract extension through to 2027
Danny Welbeck will remain a Brighton & Hove Albion player until 2027 after the club activated a one-year extension clause embedded in his previous deal, the club confirmed today. The 35-year-old striker reached the 30-appearance threshold across all competitions during Sunday’s 2-1 victory over Nottingham Forest, automatically triggering the additional season.
The forward’s new terms reward a campaign in which he has already struck ten Premier League goals, matching last season’s career-best tally and leaving him one shy of joining an exclusive group of players to score more than ten top-flight goals in a season at 35 or older. Only Gary McAllister (Coventry City, 1999-2000) and Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Manchester United, 2016-17) have previously achieved the feat.
Welbeck has found the net in each of Brighton’s last two league fixtures, scoring the opener in the 2-0 win at Brentford before repeating the trick against Forest at the Amex Stadium. His brace of goals has propelled the Seagulls to 11th in the table, arresting a slide that had seen the club register just one victory in 13 league matches.
Since arriving on a free transfer from Watford in October 2020, Welbeck has amassed 48 goals in 191 appearances for Brighton, 11 of which have come this season in all competitions. A purple patch of seven goals in seven games during September and October fuelled speculation of an England recall under new national coach Thomas Tuchel ahead of the upcoming World Cup.
Off the pitch, Welbeck is a senior member of Fabian Hurzeler’s leadership cadre, a group that also includes fellow thirty-somethings Jason Steele, Lewis Dunk, Pascal Gross, Joel Veltman and evergreen 40-year-old James Milner, who recently surpassed Gareth Barry’s Premier League appearance record by featuring for the 654th time.
Hurzeler has leaned heavily on experience of late, naming the same starting XI for back-to-back fixtures against Brentford and Forest. The unchanged side registered an average age of 28 years and 355 days at the Brentford Community Stadium, making it Brighton’s oldest line-up of the campaign.
Next up for Welbeck and Brighton is a high-profile encounter with league leaders Arsenal—one of the striker’s former clubs—at the Amex Stadium on Wednesday night, where another goal would etch his name deeper into the club’s history books.
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South Africa, India eye T20 World Cup rematch as semi-finals begin
Kolkata and Mumbai are bracing for a pair of high-stakes showdowns that could set up a dream final between India and South Africa, the same pairing that produced a nail-biting finish in Barbados two years ago. The Proteas, still unbeaten after seven matches, open the knockout phase on Wednesday against New Zealand at Eden Gardens, while India must first negotiate a Thursday night collision with England at a heaving Wankhede Stadium before thoughts of revenge or redemption can truly take hold.
Aiden Markram’s side has already flashed its credentials against the Black Caps once in this tournament, cruising to a seven-wicket win in the group stage when the captain’s undefeated 86 helped overhaul 176 with 17 deliveries unused. That result underlined South Africa’s all-round balance and a new-found composure in global events, traits that have carried them to the top of the Super Eight table and within one victory of a first T20 World Cup final since 2021. Eight members of the squad that broke South Africa’s world-title drought in last year’s World Test Championship final are in the current group, lending experience to a lineup long dogged by the “chokers” tag.
New Zealand, by contrast, reached the last four largely through net-run-rate gymnastics after stumbling against England and relying on other results to squeeze past Pakistan. Mitchell Santner’s team will need a dramatic upturn to deny South Africa a Sunday berth in Ahmedabad, where the Proteas hope to avenge the 2024 final that slipped from their grasp when 26 were required off the last four overs and six wickets remained. A mini-collapse left them 169-8, seven runs short of India’s 177, a memory that still fuels Markram’s side.
India’s path is no less fraught. Rohit Sharma’s men carry the hopes of a nation desperate to see the world’s top-ranked T20 outfit become the first to defend the trophy—and the first to lift it on home soil. The weight of history sits heavy: after an early Super Eight loss to South Africa, India responded with season-saving performances, piling up 256 against Zimbabwe before Sanju Samson’s unbeaten 97 steered a tense chase of 196 past the West Indies. Suryakumar Yadav’s 84 against the USA in Mumbai already stands as a tournament-defining rescue act, proof that India can survive calamity and still advance.
England, however, arrive in form. Harry Brook’s side swept their Super Eight fixtures in Sri Lanka, and the captain’s own promotion to No. 3 yielded a scintillating century in a chase of 165 against Pakistan. Familiarity with Wankhede’s conditions—England played two group games there—adds to their confidence, while India’s recent reliance on late-order heroics suggests vulnerability under a full house of 35,000 expectant fans.
Should South Africa account for New Zealand and India subdue England, the 2024 final will be reprised in 2025, this time with the trophy on Indian soil and the prospect of history rewritten for one of the sport’s enduring rivalries. For now, the equation is simple: two wins stand between the finalists and cricketing immortality.
Read more →Gary Neville: Chelsea “three signings away” from genuine contention
Former Manchester United and England defender Gary Neville believes Chelsea are only three experienced additions away from transforming a frustratingly inconsistent squad into a genuine force.
Speaking on his Sky Sports podcast, Neville admitted the current Chelsea side leaves him conflicted. “I’ve never commentated on a team that make me feel so many different emotions during a single game,” he said. “You can watch them and think they’re naive, they’re too nice, they’re ill-disciplined or that they’re electric, they’re a great possession team and they’re so talented. I flip between thinking they’re miles away and thinking if they can get a goalkeeper, an experienced centre-back and an experienced centre-forward they could be in business.”
Neville pinpointed the goalkeeper position as an immediate concern, arguing that Robert Sanchez “invites problems” and leaves him with “my heart in my mouth” every time the ball approaches the penalty area. He cited Sanchez’s uncertain attempt during the recent Arsenal match as evidence of the need for an upgrade between the posts.
Equally important, according to Neville, is an authoritative presence at centre-back. “They need a top-class centre-back with experience,” he stressed, specifying a player “who has real presence who can give them some solidity.” Rather than targeting the transfer market’s flashiest names, Neville envisions a seasoned defender capable of organising the back line and adding resilience.
Up front, the former right-back wants a proven No. 9 to complement the emerging pair of Joao Pedro and Liam Delap. “Have three strikers – Pedro who is very good, Delap who is young with potential – and then bring someone in,” he explained, suggesting a 27- or 28-year-old with Premier League know-how rather than “a 33-year-old striker.”
Neville’s overall assessment is that, once those three strategic signings are completed and key players remain fit, Mauricio Pochettino’s squad could quickly bridge the gap between erratic performances and consistent results. “I still can’t work Chelsea out,” he conceded, “but they are three players short.”
Chelsea return to action on Wednesday against Aston Villa with several injured stars nearing a comeback, giving the club a timely opportunity to regroup before the season’s decisive stretch.
Read more →Every India-England semi-final winner has won the T20 World Cup — trend to continue?
NEW DELHI — When India and England stride out under the Wankhede lights for Thursday’s ICC Men’s T20 World Cup semi-final, they will not merely be battling for a place in the final; they will be confronting a statistical ghost that has haunted every previous edition in which these two sides have met at this stage. In both 2022 and 2024, the team that overcame the other in the last four went on to lift the trophy, a trend that adds a layer of destiny to an already electric contest.
This will be the third consecutive tournament in which the powerhouse pair collide in the semi-finals. In 2022 at Adelaide, England toppled India before overwhelming Pakistan in the final to crown themselves champions. Twenty-four months later, the script flipped: Rohit Sharma’s India ousted England in Guyana and rode that surge to a title-clinching victory over South Africa in Barbados. The symmetry is impossible to ignore—winner takes all, and then winner takes the world.
The Wankhede, steeped in drama, offers no guaranteed comfort to either camp. England have won three and lost three of their six T20Is at the venue, while India have prevailed in five of seven, their only reverses coming against West Indies in 2016 and England itself in 2012. Since December 2017, the Men in Blue have remained unbeaten on Mumbai turf in the shortest format. In two previous T20I meetings at the ground, honours are even: one win apiece.
Across T20 World Cup history, India and England have met five times, India edging ahead 3-2, a ledger that underscores how thin the margins have been. One of the rivalry’s immortal moments was minted in the competition’s very first edition: Yuvraj Singh’s blistering assault on Stuart Broad in Durban 2007, when six sixes in an over announced the audacity of the format and framed this fixture as must-watch theatre.
At the semi-final juncture, the ledger is mathematically pristine—one win each, and both times the victor paraded the silverware days later. Thursday offers the next chapter, and the numbers insist that whoever solves the Wankhede puzzle will not simply reach the final—they may well have one hand on the cup already.
Read more →Fan Focus: What’s The Secret Behind Leeds United’s Magic Form?
Elland Road is crackling with cautious optimism. Leeds United have lost only three of their last 15 Premier League fixtures, a sequence that has hauled Daniel Farke’s side to within six points of safety and convinced supporters that survival is more than a pipe-dream. The transformation can be traced to a single tactical tweak: the switch to a back-three system at half-time against Manchester City in late autumn. Since that Etihad recalibration, Farke has flitted between 3-5-2 and 3-4-2-1, unleashing twin No.10s and tailoring the shape to the strengths of a squad previously deemed too open for top-flight football.
The numbers back up the mood. Only Arsenal have truly subdued the new-look Leeds, while City themselves were pushed to the limit. “We pose different questions now,” a senior club source told Fan Focus. “The players believe in the structure, and the structure believes in them.”
Belief, however, is a delicate commodity for a fan-base that has endured more false dawns than sunrise. Yet the run-in offers genuine hope, and Farke’s reputation has been rehabilitated in tandem. Three months ago the German was odds-on to be the next Premier League managerial casualty after a streak of six defeats in seven games. The formation shift not only steadied the ship but showcased an adaptability many thought beyond a coach previously pigeon-holed as a Championship specialist.
Between the sticks, the revolving door has finally slowed. Karl Darlow is now undisputed No.1, relegating summer signing Lucas Perri to the bench. Perri’s early-season ankle injury opened the door; alarming save-percentage and distribution metrics slammed it shut. Darlow’s steadiness and an easy rapport with Wales team-mates such as Ethan Ampadu have added calm to a back-line that looked jittery in August.
Individual excellence has helped. Polish midfielder Anton Stach has been lauded as “the signing of the season”, his all-round game crowned by a dead-ball prowess that has already swung tight matches. Ampadu continues to fly under the national radar yet provides the midfield screen that frees Stach to roam. On the left, Gudmundsson has been a defensive revelation, although staff privately urge the Icelandic full-back to add final-third output.
Conversely, the goalkeeper position remains the clearest reminder of how fine margins dictate league position. “Had we bought Roefs instead of Perri, we’d be where Sunderland are,” one analyst admitted. “The goalkeeper position is really THAT pivotal.”
So where can opponents hurt Leeds? “Pass fast,” the same source warned. “We attack in numbers; if you break quickly, space opens.” Farke expects exactly that on Saturday evening and is plotting a possession-heavy approach designed to “counter the counter-attack”: press high, win the ball back in the final third, and deny transition runners a runway.
Injuries are minimal. Darlow will start behind a back three of Gudmundsson, Rodon and Bijol, with Bogle and Struijk offering wing-back width. Ampadu and Gruev anchor the midfield, Stach and Aaronson operate as dual 10s, and Dominic Calvert-Lewin leads the line. The XI picks itself; the stakes demand nothing less.
Leeds edged the reverse fixture 3-1 on home soil in December, and supporters sense a repeat. “Under the lights at Elland Road is a very difficult place to come,” the source said, while conceding that a 2-2 thriller would not shock. Whatever the scoreline, the wider verdict is unanimous: “The Premier League is just better with Sunderland and Leeds in it and competing.” After weeks of magic, Leeds intend to stick around.
Read more →Don't expect Deebo Samuel back with Commanders in 2026
Washington acquired Deebo Samuel one year ago for a 2025 fifth-round pick, hoping the versatile receiver could reignite the offense and give quarterback Jayden Daniels a dynamic weapon. Samuel attended every offseason session, quickly built chemistry with Daniels, and appeared poised for the hybrid slot-backfield role that had made him a matchup nightmare in San Francisco.
The blueprint unraveled fast. Terry McLaurin’s contract hold-in turned into two separate injury stints, Austin Ekeler was lost in Week 2, and Noah Brown barely saw the field. Forced into a more conventional flanker role, Samuel still posted 72 receptions, 727 receiving yards and five touchdowns—each figure ranking among the top seasonal totals of his career—while adding 75 rushing yards and a rushing score. Yet his 10.1 yards per catch was a career low, the by-product of an offense that leaned heavily on quick screens designed to let him run after the catch.
Now, with Kliff Kingsbury gone and new coordinator David Blough installing an under-center, run-heavy scheme modeled on Ben Johnson’s Bears attack, Samuel’s fit in Washington is murky. The receiver turned 30 this offseason and is unlikely to command the long-term payday Spotrac projects at roughly $15.8 million per year. According to industry chatter gathered by analyst Matthew Berry at last week’s NFL combine, the Commanders are not expected to pursue an extension, making Samuel’s lone season in burgundy and gold appear exactly that.
Read more →Matchweek 29: Premier League injury update as title contenders, top four hopefuls & relegation battlers sweat over key absences
The Premier League’s relentless schedule rolls into midweek with Matchweek 29, and the treatment rooms are as busy as the dressing rooms. While Manchester United celebrated a 2-1 victory over Crystal Palace that lifted them to third—their highest perch since May 2023—and Wolves stunned Aston Villa 2-0 to keep survival hopes flickering, a growing casualty list threatens to reshape the run-in for every section of the table.
United, now unbeaten in seven under interim boss Michael Carrick (W6, D1), have concerns over Jack Grealish (foot), Carlos Alcaraz (unspecified) and veteran Seamus Coleman (knock). Villa, reeling from the Molineux defeat, must plan without Boubacar Kamara (knee), Youri Tielemans (ankle), Andres Garcia (hamstring) and Harvey Elliott (unspecified) when they travel to Chelsea for a pivotal top-four clash.
Liverpool, preparing for a tricky trip to buoyant Wolves, will monitor Wataru Endo (ankle), Alexander Isak (leg), Conor Bradley (knee) and teenage defender Giovanni Leoni (knee). The hosts, fresh from watching their relegation rivals all lose at the weekend, are without Dennis Cirkin (thigh), Reinildo Mandava (knee), Romaine Mundle (thigh), Brian Brobbey (groin), Nordi Mukiele (calf) and Jocelin Ta Bi (ankle).
Chelsea’s lengthy absentee roster includes Estevao (hamstring), Jamie Gittens (thigh), Dario Essugo (thigh) and Levi Colwill (ACL), while Ben White (knock), Declan Rice (knock) and Martin Odegaard (knee) are doubtful. Manchester City could again be without Josko Gvardiol (tibial fracture), Mateo Kovacic (ankle) and Max Alleyne (knock), with Erling Braut Haaland (knee) and Nico O’Reilly (ankle) rated doubtful.
Newcastle’s European push has been dented by Emil Krafth (knee), Fabian Schar (ankle), Valentino Livramento (hamstring), Bruno Guimaraes (muscle) and Lewis Miley (knee), while Tottenham’s lengthy lay-offs include Wilson Odobert (knee), Destiny Udogie (hamstring), Lucas Bergvall (ankle/foot), Ben Davies (ankle), Rodrigo Bentancur (hamstring), Mohammed Kudus (thigh), Dejan Kulusevski (knee) and James Maddison (ACL).
Crystal Palace travel to face opponents still to be confirmed without Cheick Doucoure (knee), Jefferson Lerma (hamstring), Jean-Philippe Mateta (knee) and Eddie Nketiah (hamstring). Burnley’s survival bid is hampered by Josh Cullen (knee), Connor Roberts (calf), Zeki Amdouni (knee), Axel Tuanzebe (calf), Armando Broja (ankle), Jordan Beyer (hamstring) and Mike Tresor (ankle), while Joe Rodon (hamstring) and James Justin (cut) are doubtful.
Elsewhere, Brentford list Fabio Carvalho (knee), Antoni Milambo (knee), Josh Dasilva (knee) and Vitaly Janelt (knock) as out, with Aaron Hickey (knock) and Caoimhin Kelleher (personal reasons) doubtful. Nottingham Forest are without Chris Wood (knee), John Victor (knee), Stefan Ortega (calf) and Nicolo Savona (knee), while Everton’s Matthijs de Ligt (back) and Patrick Dorgu (hamstring) join the long-term list, and Mason Mount (knock), Lisandro Martinez (calf) and Luke Shaw (ankle) remain doubtful.
With every point critical at both ends of the table, the coming days could hinge as much on medical bulletins as match tactics.
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Driveline Reborn: Jordan Walker’s Breakout Is Finally Here
Jordan Walker’s long-anticipated arrival appears to have reached its tipping point. After the fantasy baseball world circled 2023 as his coming-out party, the 6-foot-5 slugger instead delivered a lukewarm line of .276 with 16 home runs, 51 RBIs, and seven stolen bases across 420 at-bats—numbers that fell short of the lofty projections attached to his pedigree. Quietly, Walker’s bat slipped into a two-season hibernation, leaving scouts and statheads wondering whether the ceiling they once celebrated was more mirage than masterpiece.
Now, the narrative has flipped. Driveline Reborn: Jordan Walker’s Breakout Is Finally Here signals a definitive shift, one that no longer relies on minor-league legend or spring-training whispers but on tangible production at the highest level. The dormant power that once had evaluators dreaming of middle-of-the-order impact has re-awakened, transforming Walker from a post-hype question mark into a must-watch force every time he steps into the box.
The turnaround carries ripple effects across the fantasy landscape, where early-season investments in Walker were starting to look like sunk costs. Instead, managers who stayed the course are reaping the rewards of a player finally translating raw athleticism into consistent game results. Whether the catalyst was mechanical refinement, adjusted pitch selection, or simply the psychological weight of expectation lifting off his shoulders, the outcome is impossible to ignore: Jordan Walker is no longer a promise—he is a problem for opposing pitchers.
As the season deepens, the question morphs from “Will he break out?” to “How high can he climb?” If the early returns hold, Walker’s resuscitated profile could tilt playoff races in both real and fantasy leagues, redefining the perception of a swing once scrutinized for its length and a plate approach once deemed too passive. For a player whose bat had been missing in action, the reappearance could not be timelier.
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World Cup 2026, 100 days to go: 100 staff choose the players they're most excited to watch
With exactly 100 days until the first ball is kicked at World Cup 2026, The Athletic canvassed 100 of its own staffers—editors, writers, producers, designers—to name the one player they are most eager to see this summer. The only ground rule: no copying. Duplicates were discouraged, yet the magnetic pull of certain stars proved irresistible.
Lionel Messi, entering what many expect to be his last global appearance at 39, topped multiple ballots, joined by Brazil’s 18-year-old prodigy Endrick, who also collected more than one vote. Between those generational bookends, the selections read like a travelogue through football’s past, present and future.
Rising talents dominate the list. Bayern Munich’s Michael Olise, fresh from 26 goal involvements in 23 Bundesliga matches, will carry French hopes, while Norway’s Erling Haaland finally gets a crack at a major senior tournament. England’s Morgan Gibbs-White and Newcastle’s Dan Burn—both late-bloomers—were celebrated for transformative club seasons, as was Ghana’s Antoine Semenyo, whose Premier League breakout has eclipsed his bit-part role in 2022.
First-time finalists supply some of the romance. Uzbekistan’s 22-year-old defensive leader Abdukodir Khusanov, Cape Verde’s evergreen captain Ryan Mendes and Curacao’s all-time top scorer Jürgen Dijkstra will each introduce their nations to the sport’s biggest stage. Similarly, Canada’s Jonathan David and the United States’ Malik Tillman are viewed as the faces who could turn home-soil support into historic runs.
Veteran endurance stories proved equally compelling. Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo, already the only man to score at five World Cups, eyes a record sixth and a maiden knockout-stage goal. Croatia’s Luka Modrić, still pulling strings at 40, and Hearts’ 43-year-old goalkeeper Craig Gordon were picked as much for longevity as for enduring craft.
Several selections celebrated redemption arcs. Mexico’s Raúl Jiménez reclaimed talisman status after a life-threatening skull fracture, while Haiti’s Duckens Nazon—who once played in the Homeless World Cup—could become his country’s first World Cup scorer in 52 years. Morocco’s Ayoub El Kaabi, stung by a Panenka miss in the AFCON final, was chosen as a man motivated by recent heartbreak.
Even the benchwarmers charmed voters. France’s Rayan Cherki and Brazil’s Neymar—if fit—were picked for their ability to electrify from the sidelines, while Japan’s Ritsu Doan, architect of shock wins over Germany and Spain in 2022, was lauded for pure entertainment value.
From 5-foot-9 Portuguese ball-winner João Neves—tipped as the next N’Golo Kanté—to 6-foot-3 Portland Timbers defender Keesan Surman, who will duel Mohamed Salah and Belgium’s galaxy of talent, the eclectic roll-call captures why the tournament matters: narratives big and small, local and global, familiar and brand-new, all converging on North American pitches in 100 days’ time.
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Read more →India would've been knocked out: Ex-Pakistan star sparks fresh controversy after India's semifinal entry
Dubai, June 26 — Mohammad Amir’s pre-tournament proclamation that “India will not enter the semis” collapsed within minutes of the final Super 8 whistle, yet the former Pakistan quick has already lit a fresh firestorm by questioning the legitimacy of the very wicket that tilted the contest.
India’s five-wicket win over West Indies, sealed by Sanju Samson’s career-best 97 off 50 balls, carried Rohit Sharma’s side into the T20 World Cup 2026 semifinals and turned Amir into social-media target practice. Rather than retreat, the 34-year-old doubled down on the Pakistani chat show Haarna Mana Hai, zeroing in on the 12th-over dismissal of Shimron Hetmyer.
With West Indies 98 for 3, Hetmyer tried to slog Jasprit Bumrah; umpire Chris Gaffaney raised his finger on the caught-behind appeal. Hetmyer reviewed, replays indicated a faint nick, but the batter and the Caribbean dugout remained incredulous. Amir labelled the decision “questionable” and argued the ripple effect could have been terminal for India.
“I don’t think he was out,” Amir insisted. “If Hetmyer had stayed and the score had reached 220-230, India would have been knocked out today.”
The ex-left-armer did concede individual brilliance, praising Samson’s innings as “the best of his life” given its do-or-die context. Yet he refused to recant his broader assessment of the tournament favourites, citing sloppy fielding—three to four dropped chances—and an over-reliance on Bumrah as evidence that India are “not playing good cricket overall.”
The remarks instantly reignited cross-border banter, amplifying a rivalry that now extends beyond the boundary and into broadcast studios as the knockout phase looms.
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Row Z: VAR's end game, club-shop gems and a strange tunnel smell
By Tim Spiers, The Athletic, London
Football’s relationship with technology, commerce and celebrity culture collided in spectacular fashion this week, providing Row Z with a buffet of the bizarre.
First, the Video Assistant Referee system that was sold to supporters in March 2018 as “minimum interference — maximum benefit” has, eight seasons on, mutated into a stop-start spectacle that would test the patience of a monk. IFAB’s original pledge to intervene only for “clear and obvious errors” now feels like ancient folklore.
On 28 February 2026 Burnley’s Championship thriller at Brentford offered the clearest evidence yet that the experiment has sprinted past its remit. Jaidon Anthony’s potential go-ahead goal was placed under forensic review for two minutes 53 seconds to adjudicate an offside so marginal it required pixel-level scrutiny. Later, Ashley Barnes’ dramatic 94th-minute equaliser was pored over for a full five minutes to determine whether the ball had brushed his arm. The eventual decision to allow the goal arrived amid a chorus of boos and bewildered shrugs inside the Gtech Community Stadium.
IFAB, undeterred, doubled down days later, confirming that from next season yellow cards, corners and even correctly-tossed pre-match coins will fall under VAR’s ever-widening gaze. A press release headlined “Measures to improve match flow” accompanied the announcement, a document that may yet secure a nomination for satire’s highest honours.
While lawmakers tinker, Premier League merchandising departments continue to prove that supporters will purchase anything embossed with a crest. A sweep of official online stores reveals Wolverhampton Wanderers and Aston Villa both asking £50 for a single golf-club cover—scorecard holders optional, wallets lightened. Bournemouth will happily relieve you of £15 for a three-in-one phone cable, while Brighton market an “air diffuser” for those who insist their oxygen arrive Seagulls-branded. Arsenal’s premium leather laptop bag tips the scales at £140; Chelsea will sell you a dual-action pump for a fiver. Newcastle’s stress ball promises relief for fans whose source of anxiety is, well, Newcastle. Manchester United hip flasks, Liverpool rubber ducks, Fulham’s £35 candle and Leeds’ wipe-clean table cover complete the carnival of cash-ins. Even dogs are targeted: Villa, Sunderland, Nottingham Forest and Burnley all offer pet bowls so Rover can sup in club colours.
The week’s whiff of excess was not confined to retail. Preston North End’s trip to Swansea on the same Saturday marked co-owner Snoop Dogg’s first matchday visit since his summer investment. The hip-hop icon’s presence, according to manager Paul Heckingbottom, announced itself through “the smell of weed in the tunnel.” Swansea boss Vitor Matos, grinning, noted that selfies with the rapper-chairman were the order of the day. Preston conceded a stoppage-time equaliser; unverified reports suggest Heckingbottom’s dressing-room debrief consisted of three words: “Chill out, lads.”
From VAR’s mission creep to clubs hawking Monopoly sets at £37 and car mats at the Everton store, football’s ability to parody itself remains gloriously intact. The game we love continues to deliver drama—just don’t expect it to deliver quickly, cheaply or without a scented candle.
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Myong Yu Jong’s first-half hat-trick powers North Korea past Uzbekistan at Women's Asian Cup
Pune, India – North Korea marked its return to the Women’s Asian Cup after a 12-year absence with a statement 3-0 victory over Uzbekistan on Monday, powered by a blistering first-half hat-trick from striker Myong Yu Jong.
The 25-year-old forward needed just 45 minutes to etch her name into the tournament ledger, converting three unanswered chances that left the Uzbek defence scrambling and sent a clear message to the rest of Group B.
Myong’s opening goal arrived inside the first quarter-hour, settling early nerves among the North Korean contingent. She doubled the advantage midway through the half before completing her treble on the stroke of half-time, ensuring the Chollima carried an unassailable lead into the dressing room.
The second half developed into a quieter affair as North Korea managed possession efficiently and denied Uzbekistan any route back into the contest. The scoreboard remained unchanged, sealing a commanding win that lifts North Korea level on points with regional heavyweights heading into the next round of fixtures.
The result also underscores the North Koreans’ intent to reassert themselves on the continental stage after missing the previous three editions of the competition.
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Best England XI Who WON’T Be At The 2026 World Cup
With the 2026 World Cup on the horizon, Thomas Tuchel is already trimming a bloated England talent pool down to the 26 names he will trust in North America. For every headline-catcher who boards the plane, a handful of worthy candidates will be left behind. Here is a full-strength England XI—lining up in a 4-3-3—of players who, for reasons of age, depth or sheer bad luck, look set to watch the tournament from home.
Goalkeeper: Aaron Ramsdale
Once Arsenal’s undisputed No. 1, Ramsdale lost his jersey to David Raya and has never reclaimed the spotlight. Still rated as England’s fourth-choice keeper, the 26-year-old would need a late injury to Jordan Pickford, Dean Henderson or the in-form Gavin Bazunu to squeeze into Tuchel’s luggage.
Right-back: Kyle Walker
A sprint champion turned defensive rock, Walker’s pace has underpinned a decade of England success. At 33, however, the Manchester City captain is now viewed as a squad option rather than a starter, and Tuchel is expected to back younger, fresher legs.
Centre-back: James Tarkowski
Everton’s organiser has been a model of consistency for Burnley and now the Toffees, yet a single cap in 2018 tells its own story. Heading into the summer at 33, Tarkowski remains behind Harry Maguire, John Stones, Marc Guéhi and several emerging talents.
Centre-back: James Hill
Bournemouth’s 22-year-old has blossomed alongside Marcos Senesi, but with only a season-and-a-half of top-flight football on his CV, Hill is likely to be told to keep developing for 2030 rather than force his way in now.
Left-back: Tyrick Mitchell
Crystal Palace’s energetic wing-back has improved both ends of his game, yet Luke Shaw, Ben Chilwell and Rico Henry continue to block his path. Mitchell’s versatility may earn him a standby call, not a seat on the jet.
Central midfield: Lewis Miley
Newcastle’s teenage prodigy has shone even amid Bruno Guimarães, Joelinton and Sandro Tonali, but at 19 he is viewed as one for the future. England’s engine room is stacked, and Tuchel is expected to favour proven World Cup-ready bodies.
Central midfield: Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall
Everton’s relentless runner has produced numbers from both central and advanced roles this season, yet the queue of English midfielders is endless. Dewsbury-Hall’s misfortune is to peak at the same time as Jude Bellingham, Declan Rice and Curtis Jones.
Right wing: Jacob Murphy
An old-school touchline winger with a wicked delivery, Murphy has never earned an England cap. At 29, this was probably his last realistic ticket to a major tournament; Tuchel is tipped to gamble on youth instead.
Attacking midfield: James Maddison
Before an ACL rupture wiped out his 2025-26 campaign, Maddison was inked into most pundits’ starting XIs. Rehabilitation timelines remain murky, and Tuchel cannot risk a half-fit creator when trophies, not sentiment, are at stake.
Left wing: Jaidon Anthony
Burnley’s surprise package has hit seven goals and laid on three more, but relegation form and a stacked left-flank queue—Marcus Rashford, Anthony Gordon, Jack Grealish—mean Anthony’s breakout year will end in front of a television.
Centre-forward: Danny Welbeck
Ten Premier League goals for Brighton at 35 have reignited a career many thought finished. Welbeck’s experience and link play are tempting, yet Harry Kane, Ollie Watkins and Ivan Toney sit firmly above him in the striker pyramid.
Honourable mentions
Several other names hover on the fringes—Fulham’s 31-year-old defender Tosin Adarabioyo, Chelsea’s forgotten midfielder Carney Chukwuemeka and West Ham’s perennial nearly-man Michail Antonio—but the depth of English talent means dreams will be dashed across every position.
For Tuchel, the headache is a pleasant one: how to leave quality footballers at home while still assembling a squad capable of ending 60 years of hurt. For the 11 above, the mission is simpler: use the disappointment as fuel for a final push toward 2030.
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Iranian Women’s National Team’s Silent Anthem Stance Steals Spotlight at Asian Cup Opener
Gold Coast, Australia—The Iranian women’s national soccer team delivered the most talked-about moment of the Women’s Asian Cup’s opening night without kicking a ball, standing in mute formation while their national anthem echoed through Cbus Super Stadium on Monday.
Every player fixed her gaze ahead, hands loosely at her sides, as the pre-match speakers blared the anthem customary to the Islamic Republic. The deliberate silence, rare in international competition, drew an audible reaction: initial jeers from sections of the crowd gave way to a ripple of applause once the anthem ended and South Korea went on to claim a 3-0 victory.
Manager Marziyeh Jafari watched from the technical area, a small smile visible as her squad held its collective pose. Photographers captured the scene—eleven motionless figures in white kits framed by the stadium’s electric signage for the AFC Women’s Asian Cup Australia 2026.
The gesture lands amid extraordinary geopolitical tension. A U.S.-Israeli military offensive, dubbed Operation Epic Fury, killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei over the weekend, prompting retaliatory Iranian missile and drone strikes against Israel and neighboring countries hosting American assets, including Bahrain and Qatar. Tehran has entered a 40-day state mourning period, yet tournament organizers allowed the women’s side to honor its Asian Cup fixture.
Questions about the political backdrop were shut down at Sunday’s pre-match press conference. When captain Zahra Ghanbari and Jafari were asked to comment on Khamenei’s death, an Asian Football Confederation media officer intervened before a translator could relay Jafari’s Farsi reply, stating, “Let’s just focus on the game itself.” The content of her answer remains undisclosed.
The Football Federation Islamic Republic of Iran has already conceded that the national mood will shadow its other marquee assignment this year. Despite securing qualification for the 2026 FIFA World Cup—where Iran is drawn to meet New Zealand in June’s Group G opener—federation president Mehdi Taj told domestic outlet Varzesh3 that anticipation has evaporated.
“What is certain is that after this attack, we cannot be expected to look forward to the World Cup with hope,” Taj said. “The U.S. regime has attacked our homeland, and this is an incident that will not go unanswered.” FIFA confirmed it is monitoring developments.
For now, the women’s program carries the competitive torch. Their next Asian Cup assignment will be parsed as much for tactical shape as for any symbolic posture, but Monday’s wordless statement already resonates louder than the result that followed.
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Syracuse.com’s boys basketball Game of the Week: Nottingham rallies past Fulton for finals berth
Nottingham High School’s boys basketball team erased a late deficit to defeat Fulton on Tuesday night, earning the Bulldogs a spot in the Section III Class AA championship game. The comeback victory, highlighted in a 30-photo gallery on Syracuse.com, sets up a title showdown against East Syracuse Minoa.
The championship clash is scheduled for 7 p.m. Friday at Onondaga Community College’s SRC Arena, where Nottingham will vie for the sectional crown.
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Barcelona vs Atlético Madrid, Copa del Rey: Team News, Match Preview
Barcelona welcome Atlético Madrid to Camp Nou on Tuesday night needing nothing short of a miracle to keep their dream of a second consecutive Copa del Rey Final appearance alive. After a 4-0 defeat in the first leg at the Metropolitano three weeks ago, Hansi Flick’s side must overturn the heaviest of deficits if they are to progress.
Kick-off is set for 9 p.m. CET, with global broadcasts on Premier Sports 1 (UK), TVE La 1 (Spain), Sporty TV (Nigeria) and streaming on ESPN+ (USA), Premier Sports Player (UK), FanCode (India) and RTVE Play (Spain). Viewers in the United States will not find the match on traditional television.
The Blaugrana approach the contest on the back of a morale-boosting league victory over Villarreal that preserved their lead atop La Liga, but the memory of the first-leg collapse still lingers. On that night in Madrid, Barça were second best in every department; the four-goal margin, grim as it was, could have been worse. Subsequent wins have steadied the ship ahead of a decisive March that also includes the Champions League Round of 16 and pivotal league fixtures.
Gavi, Robert Lewandowski, Andreas Christensen, Frenkie de Jong and Eric García remain unavailable, leaving Flick to lean on youth and versatility. The anticipated XI lines up in a 4-2-3-1: Joan; Kounde, Cubarsí, Martín, Balde; Bernal, Pedri; Yamal, Raphinha, Rashford; Ferran. Atlético, coached by Diego Simeone, are expected to deploy a 4-4-2: Musso; Llorente, Pubill, Hancko, Ruggeri; Simeone, Koke, Johnny, Lookman; Griezmann, Alvarez.
While the tie appears decided, Barça’s objective is twofold: restore pride and plant seeds of doubt. An early double inside the opening ten minutes would electrify Camp Nou and test Atlético’s composure. Simeone’s outfit, long past the ultra-defensive stereotypes yet still masters of game management, are content to absorb pressure and strike on the counter. Whether they choose to sit deep or replicate the aggressive pressing that yielded the first-leg rout remains to be seen.
For Barcelona, the task is straightforward but daunting: score early, score often, and keep belief alive. Even if the comeback falls short, a dominant performance would serve as a springboard for the season-defining fixtures ahead. Expect a ferocious start from the hosts, with the first quarter-hour likely to dictate the evening’s narrative.
Prediction: Barcelona 3-2 Atlético Madrid (aggregate 3-6) – a spirited win, but Atlético advance to the Final.
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Three Takeaways from the Rockets’ Road Win over the Wizards
Washington, D.C. — The Houston Rockets closed their East Coast swing with a 123-118 victory over the Washington Wizards on Monday night at Capital One Arena, polishing off a week in which they faced three of the league’s bottom-tier clubs and lifting their record to 38-22.
1. Sengun seizes the spotlight
Second-year center Alperen Sengun delivered the night’s most dominant individual effort, pouring in 32 points on 12-of-20 shooting, adding 13 rebounds and two assists. The 20-year-old punished single coverage all evening—Washington never sent a consistent double-team—while knocking down 8-of-11 free throws. His 15-point second quarter fueled a 34-21 Rockets surge that flipped an early four-point deficit into a lead Houston would not relinquish. The outing marked Sengun’s seventh 30-point game of the season and his most explosive since a 39-point detonation against Indiana on Feb. 3. The only blemish: a career-worst eight turnovers that kept the Wizards within striking distance.
2. Sheppard stuffs the stat sheet
With Jabari Smith Jr. still sidelined, rookie guard Reed Sheppard remained in the starting lineup and responded with the most complete performance of his young career. The former Kentucky standout logged 42 minutes, scored 19 points, and set personal bests with 10 assists and six steals. Although his 7-of-18 shooting line was modest, Sheppard’s downhill aggression created easy transition chances and constant spacing for teammates. His plus-10 rating led all Rockets, and his on-ball defense helped limit Washington’s perimeter flow.
3. Houston owns the trenches
The final margin belied the Rockets’ control of the interior. Houston out-rebounded Washington 59-27—an eye-popping 32-board edge that included a 21-7 advantage on the offensive glass. Those second-chance opportunities translated to 62 points in the paint against just 40 for the Wizards. Amen Thompson’s two-way energy was central: the sophomore forward tallied 22 points and 12 rebounds on 10-of-15 accuracy before departing in the fourth with an apparent injury. Even with Washington holding a slim edge from beyond the arc, the Rockets’ relentless rim attacks and glass-cleaning proved decisive.
Houston now turns its attention homeward, where the Golden State Warriors await Wednesday night.
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Klara Bühl Ruled Out of Germany’s World Cup Qualifying Opener with Muscle Injury
Bayern Munich winger Klara Bühl will miss Germany’s opening 2027 Women’s World Cup qualifier after sustaining a muscle injury in training over the weekend, the club confirmed via FCBayern.com. The 25-year-old has returned to Munich for further evaluation, leaving the national team camp ahead of Tuesday’s 11:45 AM EST kickoff against Slovenia.
Bühl’s absence is a significant blow for the Germans. The left-sided attacker has been in career-best form for the Bavarians this season, replicating her entire 2023-24 league production—seven goals and 13 assists—in five fewer full-match equivalents. She has added another goal and eight assists in the current UEFA Women’s Champions League campaign, sparking fresh interest from FC Barcelona, who made a strong push to sign her last summer and are expected to renew their pursuit.
While Bayern hope to retain their star, the injury clouds both club and country plans as the transfer window approaches. Germany will now open qualifying without one of Europe’s most productive wide players, forcing the coaching staff to reshuffle the front line for the Slovenia clash.
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Montana Grizzlies finalize defensive coaching staff with three additions
MISSOULA — Head coach Bobby Kennedy has completed the reshaping of Montana’s defensive staff, importing three assistants from Big Sky rival Eastern Washington, the program announced as spring drills opened Monday inside the UM Indoor Practice Facility.
The trio of hires rounds out a defensive room that will install a new scheme this spring while integrating a large incoming transfer class. Kennedy, overseeing his first camp with the Grizzlies, said the additions bring immediate familiarity with Big Sky offenses and reinforce the program’s championship-level expectations.
Montana began spring practice on March 2 with renewed energy under Kennedy, who emphasized that the standard of competing for titles remains unchanged despite the fresh voices on staff. Further details about the three new coaches, including their specific roles and coaching backgrounds, were not released.
The Grizzlies will continue spring workouts as they prepare for the 2024 season.
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