Expert Sports News & Commentary

Haway The Podcast | ROOM 101 – PART TWO | We Talk Shin Pads, Rule Changes & Prices!

Haway The Podcast | ROOM 101 – PART TWO | We Talk Shin Pads, Rule Changes & Prices!

Sunderland-focused show Haway The Podcast has released the second instalment of its ROOM 101 mini-series, doubling down on the gripes that divide football’s hardcore support. Picking up where Monday’s opener left off, one of the regular panellists cashes in an “advantage” carried over from part one before the squad dives into a fresh batch of bugbears. The agenda is unashamedly fan-centric: socks and shinnies take an unexpected star turn, with the merits—and irritations—of modern shin-pad culture dissected in detail. The International Football Association Board (IFAB) is next under the microscope as the lads debate whether the game’s evolving “rules” or its stately “laws” irk host Andrew more. The conversation widens to so-called “open-play snobs” who dismiss set-piece drama, before the panel lands on a topic every supporter feels in the pocket: spiralling prices for tickets, travel, food and even the socks themselves. Listeners are reminded that the daily podcast is free to stream and that new episodes drop every day. Contact can be made via HawayThePodcastSAFC@Gmail.com or through the @RokerReport social channels, while daily Sunderland-centric articles remain available on RokerReport.SBNation.com. Keywords:
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Club scout: Man Utd have secured themselves a player who can be ‘one of the world’s best’

Club scout: Man Utd have secured themselves a player who can be ‘one of the world’s best’

Manchester United goalkeeping scout Tony Coton has hailed Senne Lammens as a future global elite, revealing he has tracked the Belgian since the keeper was 17 and personally championed the move that brought him to Old Trafford last summer. While senior figures at the club weighed up a swoop for then 32-year-old Aston Villa veteran Emiliano Martínez as competition for André Onana, Coton produced a detailed dossier compiled over six years and urged INEOS to pivot toward the 23-year-old Club Brugge graduate. United broke off negotiations with Martínez after agreeing personal terms and instead secured Lammens for a fraction of the cost. “I saw somebody that loved to protect his goal, defend his goal,” Coton told club media. “It hurt him when a goal went in—it meant something because he conceded. He wasn’t happy.” The emotional investment has translated into instant impact. In 25 senior appearances for United, Lammens has been on the losing side only three times and has recorded five clean sheets. With seven league fixtures remaining, the keeper is determined to improve both numbers and convince national-team boss Rudi Garcia he deserves a seat on the plane to the World Cup, even as backup to Thibaut Courtois. Lammens’ club form earned a first Belgium cap in November during a 7-0 rout of Liechtenstein, and he doubled his tally on 28 March in a 5-2 friendly win over the United States. Coton believes the ceiling is even higher. “If Senne keeps working hard, as he has been doing, he can be one of the world’s best,” the chief scout said. United’s faith in youth over experience has already reaped early dividends, and the club will hope Lammens’ trajectory continues skyward as they chase a strong end-of-season finish.
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Real Madrid defender ruled out of first leg clash vs Bayern Munich – report

Real Madrid defender ruled out of first leg clash vs Bayern Munich – report

Madrid, Spain – Real Madrid will head into Tuesday’s Champions League semi-final first leg against Bayern Munich without the services of first-choice left-back Ferland Mendy, ESPN reports, leaving coach Alvaro Arbeloa to reshuffle a position that had suddenly become one of the squad’s deepest. Mendy, who has been managing a fresh injury setback, had been pencilled in for a return after the recent international window. Recovery has progressed more slowly than anticipated, however, and medical staff now consider the French defender unavailable for the meeting at the Santiago Bernabéu. Club sources remain optimistic that Mendy could rejoin the group by 15 April, when Los Blancos travel to the Allianz Arena for the return leg. His potential availability for that encounter is viewed as pivotal, as Madrid hope his pace and one-on-one defending can help blunt the influence of Bayern dangerman Michael Olise, described by analysts as one of the planet’s most in-form wingers. With Mendy sidelined, Arbeloa’s selection puzzle narrows to two candidates: Alvaro Carreras and Fran Garcia. Carreras, who retained the starting role during the weekend’s disappointing showing against Mallorca, appears the favourite to continue at left-back despite drawing criticism for that performance. The 21-year-old, formerly of Benfica, now faces the immediate task of raising his level against a Bayern side spearheaded by England captain Harry Kane. Kick-off between Madrid and Bayern is set for tomorrow evening, with the tie level at 0-0 and everything still to play for ahead of next week’s decisive second leg in Germany.
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Chelsea target is open to leaving his club this summer with movement expected

Chelsea target is open to leaving his club this summer with movement expected

Morgan Rogers is prepared to leave Aston Villa this summer, fuelling speculation that Chelsea could intensify their pursuit of the 23-year-old winger. Multiple outlets have long linked Rogers with a move to Stamford Bridge, and fresh reports suggest the England international is open to joining one of the Premier League’s heavyweight clubs. Rogers’ friendship with Chelsea forward Cole Palmer is understood to be a factor in the situation, potentially giving the Blues an edge should formal negotiations materialise. Yet any deal is expected to command a significant fee, and it remains uncertain whether Chelsea can meet Aston Villa’s valuation. According to The Sun, Rogers wants to join a side that regularly competes for major silverware. Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal have all tracked the attacker for some time, and the player’s willingness to consider a transfer is likely to accelerate discussions once the window opens. Champions League qualification could prove pivotal. Sources close to the player indicate that elite European football is a key requirement, placing added pressure on Chelsea to secure a top-four finish in the remaining weeks of the season. Palmer, recently recovered from injury and buoyed by captaining the side in Saturday’s 7-0 rout of Port Vale, could play an influential role in persuading his close friend to make the switch to west London. For now, though, the move remains speculative, with financial and sporting hurdles still to be cleared.
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DC VARSITY SPORTS SCHEDULE

DC VARSITY SPORTS SCHEDULE

Monticello—Local readers of Monticello, Arkansas and the surrounding counties can now find the complete DC varsity sports schedule in this week’s edition, providing the only official release of game times and dates for every Drew Central High School varsity team this season. The schedule covers all sanctioned sports and reflects any recent conference realignments or time changes issued by the Arkansas Activities Association. Because the release originates from the same trusted outlet that serves Monticello and the broader southeast Arkansas region, athletes, families, and fans are encouraged to clip or bookmark the listing for quick reference as the fall and winter campaigns unfold. No further details were available at press time.
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Karl-Heinz Rummenigge looking to see Bayern Munich take the edge back from Real Madrid

Karl-Heinz Rummenigge looking to see Bayern Munich take the edge back from Real Madrid

Bayern Munich icon Karl-Heinz Rummenigge believes the next Champions League clash with Real Madrid offers his former club a chance to reclaim the upper hand in European football’s most-played fixture. Speaking to AS, the former striker and long-time club CEO noted that the 29th meeting between the sides will add another chapter to a rivalry that has defined the modern era of the competition. “It’s the most-played matchup in Champions League history – I looked it up. There have been 28 meetings so far. Madrid have two more wins than us. It’s the same in the UEFA club rankings: they’re first, we’re just behind. It’s the pinnacle, the game of all games, a final before the final. It’s the tie that has generated the most buzz over time,” Rummenigge said, as captured by @iMiaSanMia. He acknowledged a recent shift in momentum. “In the 2000s we made life hardest for Madrid; lately they’ve taken the edge.” To reverse that trend, Rummenigge urged Bayern to replicate the intensity shown in their league-phase victory over Paris Saint-Germain. “We need to reach the level we showed against PSG in the league phase. In the first half we were outstanding; in the second, after Luis Díaz’s red card, we grew huge defensively. That’s exactly what we’ll need in Madrid. If we can match that level, we’ll have a chance to lay a solid foundation for the return leg.” Rummenigge stressed that respect, not bravado, will be vital. “Humility is key – we’re facing a massive challenge.” With 28 previous encounters, bruising tackles, late drama and a combined cabinet of European trophies, the Bayern-Madrid rivalry remains one of the continent’s most compelling subplots. For neutrals and die-hards alike, the upcoming tie promises another installment of high-stakes theatre.
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Bernardo Silva Confirmed to Leave Manchester City, Ushering in a New Era at the Etihad

Bernardo Silva Confirmed to Leave Manchester City, Ushering in a New Era at the Etihad

Manchester City will begin next season without one of the defining figures of their modern success story, after assistant manager Pep Lijnders confirmed that captain Bernardo Silva will depart when his contract expires in six weeks’ time. The announcement, made in the aftermath of City’s emphatic 4-0 FA Cup quarter-final victory over Liverpool, brings long-running speculation to a close and guarantees a reshaped squad for Pep Guardiola’s forthcoming campaign. Silva, who joined from AS Monaco in 2017, has been an ever-present cog in the club’s trophy-laden machine, praised by Lijnders for his unique ability to “control games, move, receive, lead and see solutions.” The Dutch coach stressed that replicating the Portuguese international’s influence is impossible: “You never replace a player with the same kind of player because they don’t exist. Bernardo Silva is unique.” Rather than seeking a direct replacement, City will redistribute responsibilities across the existing squad, potential new signings and emerging academy talents. Lijnders emphasised a collective approach: “You search for what is needed to grow with the team and somebody who can fit in the first XI… with our academy, with the young players we already bought, that they can make that step as well in the midfield positions.” Silva’s exit follows last season’s farewell to Kevin De Bruyne, marking the second consecutive summer in which a senior talisman leaves the Etihad. While the news carries emotional weight, it also opens pathways for fresh faces to stamp their authority on a side that has dominated English football in recent years. As the 29-year-old prepares for a farewell stretch of fixtures, supporters face the reality of a City lineup devoid of his ingenuity and versatility. Yet the club’s hierarchy appears ready to embrace evolution, trusting Guardiola’s tactical blueprint and the club’s recruitment strategy to forge a new identity. The final whistle on Silva’s City career will signal not just an end, but the dawn of a reconfigured Manchester City—one whose shape and style promises to be fascinating viewing when the new season kicks off.
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Mike Washington Jr. hopes his ‘$1 million run’ inspires others overlooked on NFL draft path

Mike Washington Jr. hopes his ‘$1 million run’ inspires others overlooked on NFL draft path

Indianapolis—The clock read 4.33 seconds, but for Mike Washington Jr. the number felt like a lifetime of validation. Moments after blazing the fastest 40-yard dash among all running backs at February’s NFL combine, the 6-foot-2, 228-pound back sank to the sideline, buried his face in both hands and wept. “I finally got my chance to prove everybody wrong,” Washington recalled thinking, the emotion hitting him as the unofficial time became official and vaulted him to the top of the position group. The sprint ended more than a stopwatch; it silenced years of skepticism that shadowed his winding route through three college programs—Buffalo, New Mexico State and finally Arkansas. Tony Sanchez, who coached Washington at New Mexico State, said the performance forced scouts to drop their qualifiers. “OK, s–t, there’s no more buts anymore,” Sanchez said. Washington’s climb from overlooked transfer to SEC feature back and consensus top-five prospect in the 2026 draft class has become a contemporary blueprint for perseverance. His combine showing, which many inside the league now refer to as his “$1 million run,” encapsulated the very purpose of the annual event: an open forum where production meets proof. Sitting on the Indianapolis turf, tears still fresh, Washington hoped the moment would resonate beyond his own ambitions. “I want kids who keep getting told they’re not big enough, fast enough or don’t come from the right school to look at that time and know their shot can come,” he said. For Washington, that 4.33 was more than a personal record—it was an invitation for every overlooked prospect to keep running toward opportunity.
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Promising Attacking Player at Leipzig Linked to PSG

Promising Attacking Player at Leipzig Linked to PSG

Paris Saint-Germain’s forward line already features the reigning Ballon d’Or winner Ousmane Dembélé, as well as elite wide threats Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, Désiré Doué, and Bradley Barcola. Despite the club’s steady goal production under manager Luis Enrique, the French champions are exploring further reinforcement on the flanks. Transfer specialist Fabrizio Romano, writing for PSG Report, states that PSG have registered interest in RB Leipzig’s 19-year-old prodigy Yan Diomande. The versatile teenager, comfortable on either wing, has scored 10 goals and supplied seven assists in 27 Bundesliga appearances this season, attracting admiring glances from several top-tier clubs. Leipzig, aware of the mounting attention, are simultaneously attempting to extend Diomande’s contract. Any move for Diomande could prompt squad churn at Parc des Princes. While Arsenal have been linked with Kvaratskhelia and Liverpool with Barcola, neither exit is considered imminent. Conversely, South Korean international Kang-In Lee has emerged as a plausible departure candidate; Romano notes that Atlético Madrid are among the clubs monitoring his situation. Historical dealings between PSG and Leipzig—including the transfers of Nordi Mukiele and Xavi Simons—could smooth negotiations should the Parisians press ahead. Yet the anticipated fee for a player still honing his craft is expected to be prohibitive, and sources close to the player believe another developmental year in Germany remains the most likely outcome. PSG, therefore, may have to wait before securing one of Europe’s most exciting teenage attackers.
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The Champions League quarter-finals start this week. Here are five things to look out for

The Champions League quarter-finals start this week. Here are five things to look out for

The Champions League quarter-finals open this week with storylines ranging from a historic heavyweight rematch to a homecoming for Arsenal’s record signing and a Spanish civil war in the last eight. Below are the key narratives to follow as the first legs unfold. 1. Real Madrid v Bayern Munich: the rivalry that refuses to cool No two clubs have met more often in the European Cup/Champions League era than Madrid and Bayern, who will face off for the 29th time. Madrid hold a slender 13-11 edge with four draws, but the recent narrative tilts heavily toward the Spanish giants: Bayern have not eliminated Madrid since 2011-12, losing each of the four knockout ties contested since. Zinedine Zidane, who lifted the trophy as Madrid boss three times, calls the fixtures “the games we always want to play,” and the latest instalment arrives with both sides in contrasting domestic form. Bayern have plundered 97 goals in 27 Bundesliga matches under Vincent Kompany and swatted Atalanta aside 10-2 on aggregate in the previous round, while Madrid trail Barcelona by seven points in La Liga after Saturday’s defeat at Mallorca. Something has to give. 2. Viktor Gyokeres’ emotional return to Sporting CP Arsenal’s €63.5 million summer purchase will step back into the José Alvalade Stadium where he scored 68 league goals in 66 games and transformed from Coventry City export to elite marksman. The 27-year-old has endured a bumpier transition in London—11 Premier League goals in 29 appearances and rotation with Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus—but a Sweden hat-trick against Ukraine and an 88th-minute winner versus Poland in World Cup qualifying have restored confidence. First-leg Sporting vs Arsenal now carries the subplot of whether the striker can punish the club that catapulted him into the global spotlight. 3. Liverpool’s shot at redemption against PSG Twelve months after losing to Paris Saint-Germain on penalties in the round of 16, the English champions confront the holders again, this time in the quarter-finals. A 4-0 FA Cup humbling by Manchester City on Saturday underscored a turbulent domestic campaign that sees Arne Slot’s expensively assembled side sitting fifth, but European glory remains a viable escape route. PSG have eliminated three English clubs en route to last season’s final and demolished Chelsea 8-2 last month; stopping Kylian Mbappé and company would instantly rehabilitate Liverpool’s season. 4. Spain’s civil war: Barcelona vs Atlético Madrid For the first time this season two Spanish clubs meet in the knockout phase, guaranteeing a Liga presence in the semi-finals. Barcelona edged the league clash 2-1 at the weekend and top the table on 76 points, yet Atlético hold recent psychological sway after a 4-0 Copa del Rey first-leg rout at the Metropolitano. Hansi Flick can unleash 18-year-old prodigy Lamine Yamal, Robert Lewandowski and Raphinha, while Diego Simeone counters with January recruit Ademola Lookman and Julian Alvarez—ironically a summer transfer target for Barça. 5. A lopsided draw opens the door for Arsenal The bracket has split into a brutish side and a comparatively navigable one. Whoever emerges from Madrid-Bayern will face either PSG or Liverpool, forming a murderers’ row of past or present favourites. The other section pairs Arsenal against Sporting before a prospective semi-final with either Barcelona or Atlético. Mikel Arteta’s side, yet to lift the trophy, possess the division’s best defensive record and will view the pathway to the May 30 final in Budapest as the most inviting of any remaining contender. Viewers in the UK can follow the drama on TNT Sports, now housed on HBO Max, with Amazon Prime airing select Tuesday fixtures including Sporting-Arsenal on 7 April and the Liverpool-PSG return leg on 14 April. US audiences can stream matches on Paramount+ and DAZN, while TUDN provides Spanish-language coverage.
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The Briefing: Could Arsenal end the season empty-handed? Will the FA Cup help or hinder Leeds survival hopes?

The Briefing: Could Arsenal end the season empty-handed? Will the FA Cup help or hinder Leeds survival hopes?

By Oliver Kay Arsenal’s season, once framed as a potential quadruple chase, has narrowed to a high-stakes duel on two fronts after Saturday’s FA Cup quarter-final exit at the hands of Championship side Southampton. The 2-1 defeat at St Mary’s not only ended any realistic hope of domestic silverware beyond the Premier League, but also intensified scrutiny on Mikel Arteta’s squad as they enter the most decisive weeks of the campaign. Arteta had never hidden the hierarchy of objectives: Premier League and Champions League took precedence, with domestic cups viewed as developmental rather than essential. Team selection underlined the stance—Kepa Arrizabalaga started the Carabao Cup final, and a rotated side travelled to the south coast at the weekend. Yet the manager also acknowledged that winning breeds momentum. “Winning always helps,” he said before the City game, “and winning a trophy helps more.” The corollary is now unavoidable. Back-to-back defeats, including the cup loss, strip away the protective gloss of victory and leave questions hanging over Arsenal’s resilience. They remain nine points clear of Manchester City in the league, but have played one more match and must still visit the Etihad on 19 April. In Europe, a quarter-final against Sporting CP in Lisbon on Tuesday offers passage towards an historic first Champions League crown, yet the path looks steeper after a limp exit to lower-league opposition. City, by contrast, appear to be hitting their familiar spring stride. The Carabao Cup is already secured, an FA Cup semi-final against Southampton awaits, and Pep Guardiola’s side have rediscovered their swagger. Arsenal’s relief at avoiding further fixture congestion is tempered by the knowledge that every remaining league encounter now carries title-defining weight. At the other end of the table, the cup weekend offered Leeds United both hope and headache. Daniel Farke’s team edged West Ham on penalties at London Stadium to reach their first FA Cup semi-final since 1987, despite making three changes with survival in mind. The Hammers, who made five alterations and sit in the relegation zone, were left to rue a dramatic late comeback that fell just short. Farke’s pre-match declaration—“It makes no sense to wrap the players in cotton wool”—was vindicated by the eventual shoot-out success, yet the physical and emotional cost could be significant. Leeds, four points above the drop zone in 15th, saw midfielder Anton Stach and defender Joe Rodon pick up injuries, and must now prepare for a pivotal home date with bottom-placed Wolverhampton Wanderers on Friday while also plotting for a Wembley meeting with Chelsea. Nuno Espírito Santo admitted the “sadness” of defeat could hamper recovery, whereas Leeds will hope the euphoria of their cup run injects momentum. The dilemma is classic: does the distraction of a glamour semi-final drain focus from the bread-and-butter battles that determine Premier League status? Farke, ever the optimist, will argue that belief gathered at the capital can translate into points. Elsewhere, Manchester City confirmed that Bernardo Silva will leave when his contract expires in June, bringing the curtain down on a nine-year tenure that yielded 14 major honours. The Portuguese midfielder, captain for the current campaign, may yet add a third FA Cup and a seventh league title before departing. Guardiola resisted Bernardo’s previous attempts to leave, and the decision looks prescient: the 29-year-old remains the side’s “glue, brains and heartbeat,” according to colleague Jordan Campbell, and his understated intelligence has underpinned City’s era of dominance. As the Premier League pauses for international week, the plot lines sharpen. Arsenal must prove that cup setbacks are mere footnotes in a glorious double pursuit; Leeds must balance dreams of Wembley with the stark reality of survival; and City, buoyant and relentless, sense another narrative-shifting spring. The answers will unfold in the next six league match-days, where margins are thin and the stakes could scarcely be higher. Arsenal, empty-handed? Leeds, cup-inspired survivors? The next chapter is days away. SEO keywords:
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Jack Wilshere suggests 16-year-old Max Dowman for England’s World Cup squad: who is the youngest ever to play?

Jack Wilshere suggests 16-year-old Max Dowman for England’s World Cup squad: who is the youngest ever to play?

London — When Jack Wilshere speaks about Max Dowman, the enthusiasm is unmistakable. Speaking to The Telegraph, the former England midfielder argued that the 16-year-old Arsenal prodigy should be fast-tracked into the Three Lions’ 2026 World Cup squad, a move that would catapult Dowman past Norman Whiteside and into the record books as the youngest player ever to appear in the competition. Dowman, born on 31 December 2009, has already rewritten the age-related chapters of European football. Still 15, he became the youngest player to feature in the UEFA Champions League and the youngest to score in both that tournament and the Premier League. Those feats have not gone unnoticed inside the England camp. Wilshere, who coached Dowman at Arsenal’s academy after retiring in 2022, is adamant the teenager is ready now. “The only thing I would say is, Spain would take him,” Wilshere told The Telegraph. “We have this way at times in England of building them up but then protecting them… He is definitely good enough. Even if he goes and he doesn’t play that much — which I think he can — I think he is good enough.” The comparison with Lamine Yamal, the 16-year-old who drove Spain to the Euro 2024 title, is deliberate. “Yamal went as a 16-year-old and he was the best player in the tournament,” Wilshere noted. England head coach Thomas Tuchel has left the door ajar. After omitting Dowman from his March squad, Tuchel said: “We always have the chance to call him up for the World Cup. Why wouldn’t I keep the door open? … Let him fight for his minutes.” History suggests the leap is possible. Northern Ireland’s Norman Whiteside set the current benchmark at 17 years 41 days during Spain 1982. Cameroon’s Samuel Eto’o (17 years 98 days) and Nigeria’s Femi Opabunmi (17 years 101 days) followed close behind. With the 2026 tournament kicking off in less than three months, Dowman — currently 16 — could shatter that mark if Tuchel heeds Wilshere’s advice and hands him a debut on the sport’s biggest stage. For now, Dowman continues to train with Arsenal’s first team, each session another audition for a World Cup berth that would make him not merely England’s next superstar, but a global sensation before his 17th birthday.
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Real Madrid hoping Champions League magic halts Bayern juggernaut

Real Madrid hoping Champions League magic halts Bayern juggernaut

Madrid—On a rain-slick Tuesday evening at the Estadio Santiago Bernabéu, the 15-time European champions will attempt to summon the competition’s most reliable sorcery. Real Madrid, bruised by a patchy domestic campaign and a seven-point deficit to Barcelona, welcome a Bayern Munich side that has not tasted defeat since January and believes its moment has arrived. Vincent Kompany’s visitors arrive with the swagger of a team that has scored 10 goals across 180 minutes against Atalanta and clawed back a two-goal deficit at Freiburg on Saturday. The likely return of Harry Kane—48 goals in 40 games this season—adds star power to an attack already featuring Michael Olise and Luis Diaz. “He’d play in a wheelchair,” insisted Joshua Kimmich, summing up the squad’s determination to see their No. 9 lead the line in Spain. Bayern’s hierarchy is equally bullish. “We haven’t had such great chances in terms of playing quality as we have this year in a long time,” honorary president Uli Hoeness admitted, while Karl-Heinz Rummenigge warned that the Bernabéu “transforms into a hurricane that sweeps over the opponent.” Memories of past collapses here—Sven Ulreich’s 2018 error, Manuel Neuer’s mishap in last year’s dying minutes—linger, but the club feels the narrative is ripe for rewriting. Madrid, meanwhile, cling to pedigree. Their last-16 dismantling of Manchester City, spearheaded by hat-trick hero Federico Valverde, reminded Europe that form lines blur when the anthem plays. Yet coach Alvaro Arbeloa still searches for balance among a constellation of talents—Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Junior, Jude Bellingham—after four losses in the period Bayern has gone unbeaten. “They’re not playing the best football, but they’re outstanding in terms of experience,” Hoeness noted, echoing the respect that keeps Bayern wary in spite of their status as bookmakers’ favourites to lift the trophy. Tuesday’s meeting will be the 29th continental clash between the clubs, more than any other pairing in Champions League history. Bayern’s last triumph over Madrid came in 2012; since then Los Blancos have eliminated the German giants four straight times, going on to raise the trophy in each of those seasons. Whether history repeats or reverses will hinge on which force proves stronger: Bayern’s high-pressing, goal-laden juggernaut or Madrid’s uncanny ability to bend Europe’s most glamorous nights to their will. One thing is certain—only nerves of steel will survive the hurricane.
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Premier League clubs alerted to Vinicius Junior availability amid Real Madrid contract stalemate

Premier League clubs alerted to Vinicius Junior availability amid Real Madrid contract stalemate

Real Madrid’s summer agenda is poised to revolve around one pivotal question: can the club secure Vinicius Junior’s long-term future? The 25-year-old Brazilian winger will enter the final year of his current deal on 1 July, and with negotiations stalled since 2025, Europe’s leading clubs are monitoring developments closely. Talks between Madrid officials and Vinicius’ representatives resumed earlier this year but quickly exposed a significant gap in expectations. Rather than force an agreement, both parties elected to pause discussions until the off-season, when a fresh round of negotiations is anticipated. The delay has opened a brief window of uncertainty that intermediaries are already attempting to exploit. Sources have confirmed that emissaries have sounded out Manchester United, Liverpool, Chelsea, Arsenal and Manchester City about the prospect of a summer move for Vinicius. Although the player has given no public indication that he wishes to leave the Bernabéu, Madrid’s determination to avoid losing him on a free transfer in 2027 means a sale could be sanctioned if an extension remains elusive. Inside Valdebebas, the mood is described as calm. Club decision-makers remain focused on brokering a renewal and view the current impasse as a routine phase in high-stakes contract discussions. Madrid’s hierarchy regard Vinicius as a foundational piece of their project, pointing to his decisive performances between January and March, when he carried the attack in the enforced absence of Kylian Mbappe. While a Premier League switch is viewed as the most plausible destination should the winger become available, those close to the process still expect him to commit his peak years to the Spanish giants. For now, Europe’s elite clubs wait, conscious that a single breakthrough in talks could end their hopes of prising one of world football’s most explosive talents away from the Spanish capital.
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Ronaldinho Gives His Verdict on Lamine Yamal Wearing the No. 10 Shirt at Barcelona

Ronaldinho Gives His Verdict on Lamine Yamal Wearing the No. 10 Shirt at Barcelona

Barcelona’s most celebrated No. 10, Ronaldinho, has broken his silence on the teenager now wearing the jersey that once belonged to him and, later, to Lionel Messi. Speaking to Argentine daily Ole, the Brazilian icon offered a ringing endorsement of 16-year-old Lamine Yamal, who inherited the number this season and has already become a focal point for the Catalans. “Without a doubt,” Ronaldinho said when asked if the shirt is in safe hands. “One of the best in the world, still very young, but already doing incredible things. It’s very well taken care of.” The endorsement carries extra weight given the lineage of the jersey. After Ronaldinho, Messi took the No. 10 and used it to cement his status as the planet’s premier player during a trophy-laden spell at Camp Nou. Yamal, who has been repeatedly compared to Messi, is the next in line and has quickly justified the faith shown in him by coach Hansi Flick. Ronaldinho also weighed in on the current side’s direction under the German tactician. “Without a doubt, they continue to be one of the strongest teams in Europe, and we’re always watching and hoping that Barça will do something beautiful,” he added. Yamal’s latest standout performance came in a high-stakes victory away to Atlético Madrid, a result that leaves Barcelona in pole position in La Liga. Although the winger’s visible frustration at full-time was captured by television cameras, the win keeps the Blaugrana on course for domestic silverware and underlines the teenager’s growing influence on the team’s fortunes.
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Bernardo Silva exit from Man City confirmed with Messi’s MLS and Ronaldo’s SPL among reported options

Bernardo Silva exit from Man City confirmed with Messi’s MLS and Ronaldo’s SPL among reported options

Manchester City’s longest-running summer saga has reached its conclusion: Bernardo Silva will leave the Etihad Stadium on a free transfer when his contract expires in June 2026, bringing the curtain down on a trophy-laden nine-year spell in England. The 31-year-old Portuguese midfielder, who skippered City in Saturday’s 4-0 FA Cup quarter-final rout of Liverpool, received a public send-off from Pep Lijnders, Pep Guardiola’s assistant, moments after the final whistle. “You never replace a player with the same kind of player because they don’t exist,” Lijnders said. “Bernardo Silva is unique—the way he controls games, the way he moves, the way he receives, the way he leads, the way he sees the solutions. Every good story comes to an end. I hope he enjoys the last six weeks; he deserves all that attention as a farewell.” Silva arrived from Monaco in July 2017 and has since collected six Premier League titles, five Carabao Cups, three Community Shields, two FA Cups, one FIFA Club World Cup and the club’s maiden UEFA Champions League crown. With fewer than two months remaining on his deal, Europe’s elite and a pair of high-profile leagues across the Atlantic are already jockeying for his signature. Inter Miami have emerged as early favourites to lure Silva to Major League Soccer, where a reunion with Lionel Messi has been floated. Yet the Herons would need to perform financial gymnastics to accommodate Silva’s wages while also navigating reported interest in Casemiro. Fabrizio Romano reports that the Saudi Pro League is equally determined to win the race, though a prospective link-up with Cristiano Ronaldo at Al Nassr is complicated by the club’s foreign-player quota; Wesley’s return from loan at Real Sociedad leaves the Riyadh side at the maximum ten allotted overseas stars, meaning an exit would be required before Silva could be registered. Juventus have made formal enquiries, according to CBS journalist Ben Jacobs, while clubs in Turkey and Spain continue to monitor developments. Silva, still performing at an elite level, will weigh sporting ambition against lifestyle before selecting his next destination, with the MLS and SPL routes each presenting distinct logistical hurdles. For City, the focus now shifts to succession planning. Lijnders rejected the idea of a like-for-like swap, insisting the club will instead “search for what is needed to grow with the team, and somebody who can fit in the first XI.” Silva’s departure, though long anticipated, marks the end of an era for a side that has redefined English football over the past decade. The final chapter of his City story will be written over the next six weeks, after which one of European football’s most decorated modern midfielders will be free to write the first line of his next adventure.
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Michigan Superstar Defied Agent To Play Meaningless Minutes In Final Four Blowout

Michigan Superstar Defied Agent To Play Meaningless Minutes In Final Four Blowout

Lucas Oil Stadium, April 5, 2026 — Michigan’s Final Four matchup with Arizona was never in doubt, but Yaxel Lendeborg still found a way to make the night memorable. The veteran forward rolled his left ankle and sustained a low-grade MCL spram on a first-half drive, crumpled to the hardwood, and briefly retreated to the tunnel for ice and evaluation. Every signal—from the training staff, from his mother, from his agent—said sit. Lendeborg waved them all off. “I’m gonna get out there no matter what,” he told CBS Sports after Michigan’s 30-point demolition of the Wildcats. “There’s no way they’re gonna keep me off the floor.” The 14 minutes he ultimately logged were statistically superfluous: 11 points, 3-for-3 from beyond the arc, zero impact on the final margin. Yet to Lendeborg, the stint carried season-long significance. He had never played inside a domed football stadium; depth-perception quirks have bedeviled shooters in past Final Fours. Tuesday’s national championship against UConn will be staged on the same floor, and Lendeborg wanted the reps. “Even if I don’t feel good this game, I could try to get a feel for the gym, get a feel for the rims,” he explained. “Try to make it feel a little better for Monday.” Team trainer Chris Williams informed ESPN that an MRI returned “very clean” results and that all ligaments appeared strong. Still, the risk-reward equation tilted heavily toward precaution. Michigan led 16 at intermission and pushed the advantage past 30 midway through the second half. With the outcome secure, Lendeborg could have donned a walking boot and protected the draft stock that has hovered in the mid-to-late first round of most 2026 mock boards. Instead, he lobbied to return. His agent refused. His mother refused. He refused their refusal. Leadership, he insisted, meant staying visible for teammates who had carried the Wolverines to within 40 minutes of a title. Leadership also meant convincing himself the knee would hold when the stakes skyrocket 48 hours later. The jumper splashed. The ankle stiffened. The scoreboard never tightened. None of it mattered to Lendeborg as he jogged off the court to a standing ovation, mission accomplished: he now knows the sight-lines, the backboard’s give, and—most important—his own body’s resilience. Michigan moves on. Its star moves forward. And the minutes everyone called meaningless may yet prove the most meaningful of Lendeborg’s career.
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Fantasy Baseball Week 3 Preview: Top 10 Sleeper Pitchers Feature Jose Soriano, Reynaldo Lopez

Fantasy Baseball Week 3 Preview: Top 10 Sleeper Pitchers Feature Jose Soriano, Reynaldo Lopez

Fantasy managers searching for a pitching edge in Week 3 should circle the waiver wire immediately. According to early-season trends, one of the most impactful free-agent pickups of the young season is scheduled to take the mound twice in the coming scoring period, amplifying both strikeout potential and ratio impact for savvy owners. While the complete top-10 list highlights right-handers Jose Soriano and Reynaldo Lopez among its deepest cuts, the looming two-start availability of the week's breakout surprise underscores why aggressive bidding is warranted ahead of lineup deadlines. Monitor rotation announcements closely; securing the as-yet-unnamed dual-start sleeper could swing head-to-head matchups and rotisserie categories alike.
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Hansi Flick explains Lamine Yamal anger after Barcelona win over Atletico Madrid

Hansi Flick explains Lamine Yamal anger after Barcelona win over Atletico Madrid

Barcelona’s dramatic 2-1 victory over Atlético Madrid on Matchday 30 kept the Catalans firmly in the La Liga title race, yet the post-match spotlight fell on 18-year-old winger Lamine Yamal, who stormed down the tunnel without celebrating. Head coach Hansi Flick moved quickly to defuse any suggestion of discord, telling reporters that Yamal’s visible frustration was simply the by-product of a fiercely contested night at the Metropolitano. “He was a little bit angry,” Flick acknowledged in his press conference. “He gave everything, he tried to score goals and give the last pass. It’s normal. Of course he has emotion. This was the game, with emotion, but he’s in the dressing room and everything is good.” Yamal’s evening was emblematic of a match in which chances came and went: the teenager fired seven attempts, none on target, and repeatedly attempted to unlock Atlético’s back line without reward. Flick conceded he did not know the precise flashpoint but suggested the forward’s angst was rooted in the near-misses rather than any deeper issue. “Some situations, he tried everything … at the moment he does not have this fortune that he scores the goals, but it can come back,” the coach said. According to Mundo Deportivo, the irritation may have been stoked by an overload of touchline instructions from goalkeeping coach José Ramón de la Fuente, who also oversees set-piece strategy. Television pictures caught Yamal gesturing in apparent annoyance as he left the field alongside De la Fuente, though Flick insisted the matter was closed once the squad returned to the sanctuary of the dressing room. The timing of the episode is less than ideal. Barcelona will meet Atlético twice more inside a week in the Champions League quarter-finals, beginning Wednesday 8 April at Camp Nou and concluding Tuesday 14 April in Madrid. Flick expects Yamal to rebound quickly. “We have three days now to prepare for the next match. It’s a very important one in the Champions League and he will be in a better mood than after the game,” he said. While Yamal’s mood dominated headlines, Barça also received sobering injury news: teenage midfielder Marc Bernal, substituted in the 62nd minute, will miss both European encounters. Yet the club’s immediate priority is ensuring their brightest attacking prospect is mentally refreshed for the continental battles ahead.
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Leeds beats West Ham in penalty shootout to reach FA Cup semifinals for first time since 1987

Leeds beats West Ham in penalty shootout to reach FA Cup semifinals for first time since 1987

LONDON — Leeds United survived a dramatic late collapse and two extra-time scares before edging West Ham United 4-2 on penalties at London Stadium on Sunday, booking a place in the FA Cup semifinals for the first time since 1987. Daniel Farke’s side appeared to be cruising when Ao Tanaka and Dominic Calvert-Lewin struck to build a 2-0 lead, only for Mateus Fernandes and Axel Disasi to score in the 93rd and 96th minutes and drag the tie into extra time. The Hammers thought they had completed the turnaround moments into the additional 30 minutes when Taty Castellanos rounded Leeds goalkeeper Lucas Perri and finished, but VAR intervened to disallow the goal for offside. Jarrod Bowen later rattled the crossbar and saw a rebound effort from Pablo ruled out for the same offence. With penalties looming, West Ham introduced 20-year-old debutant goalkeeper Finlay Herrick for Alphonse Areola, who required treatment with five minutes of extra time remaining. Herrick immediately denied Joel Piroe from the spot, yet Leeds converted their remaining attempts and clinched victory when defender Pascal Struijk hammered home the decisive kick. Farke praised his team’s resilience and poked fun at the club’s long wait for a last-four appearance. “At least I’m old enough that I was already born when there was the last semifinal for Leeds United in the FA Cup in the '80s,” he said. “It was a crazy game.” The closing stages were played in front of swathes of empty seats after thousands of home supporters headed for the exits, missing the frenetic finale and shootout. West Ham had briefly considered holding the shootout at the opposite end from the travelling Leeds support because of reported safety concerns, but the club reversed the decision following criticism. Hammers manager Nuno Espírito Santo preferred to focus on his players’ spirit. “What I saw on the pitch was more important than anything,” he said. “A group of boys that didn’t give up. This is the major lesson that we have to take from today.” Leeds, currently battling relegation in the Premier League, will face Chelsea in a rematch of the 1970 final at Wembley on April 25-26, while Manchester City meets second-tier Southampton in the other semifinal. Keywords:
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PREVIEW | Always Ready vs LDU Quito – team news, lineups, predictions

PREVIEW | Always Ready vs LDU Quito – team news, lineups, predictions

Estadio Municipal El Alto will stage Wednesday’s Copa Libertadores Group G meeting between Bolivia’s Always Ready and Ecuador’s LDU Quito, a clash that pits the competition’s seasoned campaigners against one of its newest regulars. Always Ready are appearing for only the sixth time in the tournament, while LDU Quito—former champions—return for their 23rd edition. Form offers contrasting narratives. Always Ready arrive buoyant after a 4-0 demolition of Real Tomayapo in Liga Boliviana 2026 action, a result that underlined their attacking edge. LDU Quito, by contrast, travel north on the back of a 0-2 home reversal to Barcelona SC in the Ecuador League 2026, a scoreline that will demand an immediate response if they are to keep qualification hopes alive. Historical precedent favours the Bolivians on this stage: the sides’ most recent encounter finished 3-1 to Always Ready, a memory both camps will revisit when the whistle blows at altitude. Probable LDU Quito XI (as listed versus Barcelona SC on 4 April 2026): Gonzalo Valle; José Quintero, Richard Mina, Ricardo Adé, Leonel Quiñónez; Fernando Cornejo, Kevin Minda; Rodney Redes, Alexander Alvarado, Janner Corozo; Deyverson. With group positioning in the balance, expect LDU Quito to lean on experience and the creativity of Alvarado and Corozo, while Always Ready will seek to exploit both the thin air and momentum gleaned from their weekend rout. A draw keeps the section tight; a win for either could tilt the balance ahead of the final match-day. SEO keywords:
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Bayern Munich’s Leon Goretzka would like to exact revenge on Real Madrid

Bayern Munich’s Leon Goretzka would like to exact revenge on Real Madrid

Munich — For Leon Goretzka and every FC Bayern supporter, the next meeting with Real Madrid is no ordinary Champions League tie; it is a chance to settle a score that has grown heavier with each recent elimination. Speaking to club media and relayed by the outlet @iMiaSanMia, the Germany midfielder did not hide the lingering sting: “We haven’t had much success against Real recently. We’d very much like to turn around the statistics from recent years.” Those numbers, left unspoken, are etched into Bayern’s collective memory: late goals, contentious decisions, and a trophy room in Madrid that now holds 15 European Cups. Goretzka acknowledged the obvious—Real Madrid remain “a world-class team with outstanding individual quality”—but he also noted their volatility this season, saying Los Blancos have enjoyed “very good—but also some bad—moments.” That unpredictability, however, is precisely what haunts Bayern. “At the moment, you never really know what you’ll get from them,” Goretzka conceded. “Experience tells us that they usually manage to pull something off in the Champions League.” Yet the 29-year-old insists the Bundesliga side will not enter the matchup in awe: “But we’ll be prepared for that.” The midfielder’s rallying cry mirrors the mood in the stands. From the Allianz Arena to fan pubs in Munich, the desire is singular: to see Bayern finally “have Real Madrid’s number” and, as one colorful passage put it, “mop the floor with them.” After years of painful exits, Goretzka and company believe the time has come to remind the Spanish giants of La Bestia Negra—the Black Beast that once haunted them. Whether the next encounter arrives in the quarter-finals, semi-finals, or later, Goretzka has made Bayern’s intent clear: the hunt for revenge is on.
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Leeds beat West Ham in shoot-out to reach FA Cup semis for first time in 39 years

Leeds beat West Ham in shoot-out to reach FA Cup semis for first time in 39 years

London – Leeds United booked a place in the FA Cup semi-finals for the first time since 1987 after edging West Ham United 4-2 on penalties following a breathtaking 2-2 draw at the London Stadium on Sunday. Daniel Farke’s Championship promotion-chasers looked to have sealed a routine passage when Ao Tanaka’s deflected first-half strike and Dominic Calvert-Lewin’s 75th-minute penalty put them two goals to the good. Yet the Hammers, mired in their own relegation worries, produced a rousing stoppage-time revival as Mateus Fernandes prodded home after Jarrod Bowen rattled the woodwork and Axel Disasi volleyed in Adama Traoré’s inviting cross in the 11th minute of added time. Extra time could not separate the sides, forcing a shoot-out that quickly tilted Leeds’ way. Lucas Perri, the Brazilian goalkeeper signed to provide cup cover, plunged low to deny Bowen on West Ham’s opening kick and then thwarted Pablo Fornals in the third round of attempts. Although Joel Piroe saw Alphonse Areola’s deputy, 20-year-old debutant Finlay Herrick, keep out Leeds’ first effort, Calvert-Lewin, Brenden Aaronson, Wilfried Gnonto and Pascal Struijk all converted to spark delirious scenes among 9,000 travelling fans housed behind the goal. The victory continues Leeds’ cup knack for late drama; they also eliminated Birmingham City on spot-kicks in round four. It also ends a 39-year wait for a last-four appearance, dating back to their 1987 defeat to eventual winners Coventry City at Hillsborough. Farke praised his side’s composure after the late psychological blow. “We always do it the tough way, never the easy way,” the German said. “To keep the nerves and win the penalty shoot-out shows great mentality and character. It’s a chapter of Leeds history.” Leeds will face Chelsea at Wembley later in April, seeking a first FA Cup triumph since 1972 and a maiden competitive win at the national stadium since the 1992 Charity Shield. Their recent Wembley record offers caution: defeats in the 1996 League Cup final, 2008 League One play-off final and last season’s Championship play-off final. For West Ham, the exit compounds a fraught campaign. Nuno Espírito Santo rested five starters with Friday’s relegation six-pointer against bottom club Wolves in mind, yet the manner of defeat will sting. The Hammers remain third-bottom, one point behind fourth-bottom Tottenham with seven league games left. A potential survival showdown looms on the final day when Leeds return to the London Stadium for a fixture that could decide both clubs’ top-flight futures. SEO keywords:
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Hansi Flick responds to Lamine Yamal’s fury after Barcelona edge Atlético Madrid

Hansi Flick responds to Lamine Yamal’s fury after Barcelona edge Atlético Madrid

Madrid—Barcelona’s 2-1 win at the Metropolitano vaulted the Catalans to a precious La Liga victory on Saturday night, yet the post-match spotlight fell on teenage winger Lamine Yamal, whose visible anger on the way to the dressing room demanded an explanation. The 18-year-old started on the right and, by all accounts, turned in another lively performance as the Blaugrana overcame Atlético Madrid to strengthen their domestic position. Cameras nevertheless caught Yamal gesturing and shouting in frustration as he disappeared down the tunnel, prompting questions about the source of his irritation. Addressing reporters minutes later, head coach Hansi Flick sought to downplay the incident. “I don’t know what happened but he tried his best, he was great,” Flick said. “Next week, Champions League, we go again, he’ll be in a better mood.” The remarks suggest the German tactician is unconcerned by the youngster’s emotional reaction, preferring instead to focus on Yamal’s contribution to the victory and the quick turnaround ahead of European action. Barcelona now turn their attention to continental commitments, hoping the three-point haul in the capital can serve as a springboard for momentum on multiple fronts.
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Namibia v Scotland - ODI tri-series scorecard

Namibia v Scotland - ODI tri-series scorecard

Windhoek—The latest official scorecard from the ODI tri-series clash between Namibia and Scotland has been released following the sides’ meeting at the capital’s main venue. Organisers confirmed the card reflects all runs, wickets, and overs as they unfolded in the round-robin contest, giving fans a concise statistical snapshot of how the match developed under the Windhoek sun. With the tri-series table tightening, every delivery counts, and the fresh numbers will be scrutinised by both camps as they plot paths toward the final. Keywords:
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Khabib Nurmagomedov brought in to train with Real Madrid after players watched PFL fights

Khabib Nurmagomedov brought in to train with Real Madrid after players watched PFL fights

Real Madrid’s stars appear to have caught the fighting bug – and have now drafted in the greatest of all time to help their end ... Khabib Nurmagomedov, the undefeated former UFC lightweight champion, has been brought into Real Madrid’s training complex after the squad spent recent evenings watching PFL fights. The players’ growing interest in mixed martial arts prompted club officials to invite the Dagestani icon for an unorthodox crossover session designed to sharpen mental edge and tactical discipline.
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Desert Sunrise baseball opens season with tribute to veterans

Desert Sunrise baseball opens season with tribute to veterans

The afternoon began with a quiet moment on the field at Desert Sunrise High School as members of the American Legion color guard marched toward home plate carrying the American flag. The ceremony marked the start of the Desert Sunrise baseball season and served as a tribute to local veterans. Desert Sunrise baseball opens season with tribute to local veterans
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Ranking Champions League Quarterfinals by Upset Potential: Real Madrid, Liverpool Underdogs

Ranking Champions League Quarterfinals by Upset Potential: Real Madrid, Liverpool Underdogs

The eight-team bracket for the UEFA Champions League quarterfinals is heavy on pedigree—four of the last six winners are still alive—but the bracket that will decide a May 31 final in Budapest is tilted toward a handful of favorites and a few hopefuls. Below, every tie is ranked from least likely to most likely to spring a surprise. Sporting Lisbon vs. Arsenal, 3 p.m. Arsenal have stumbled in domestic cups, yet they remain the competition’s front-runners and hold the most favorable draw. Sporting, the season’s Cinderella story, are outmatched in every department. Expect the Gunners to cruise and book a second consecutive semifinal berth. Real Madrid vs. Bayern Munich, 3 p.m. Real Madrid just dismantled Manchester City 5-1, but Bayern, one goal short of the Bundesliga single-season record, are organized in attack and defense. Vincent Kompany’s side is Arsenal’s chief challenger; Madrid’s star power is undeniable yet inconsistent. A competitive tie, yet Bayern are the safer pick. Paris Saint-Germain vs. Liverpool, 3 p.m. Reigning champions PSG are peaking—an 8-2 aggregate rout of Chelsea and a weekend off—while Liverpool limp in with one win in five matches and a 4-0 FA Cup thumping by Manchester City. A repeat of last season’s round-of-16 shootout is unlikely; PSG are the side in form. Barcelona vs. Atletico Madrid, 3 p.m. Barcelona sit seven points clear atop LaLiga, but Raphinha’s hamstring absence drops their win rate from 85.2% to 58.3%. Atleti, buoyed by an in-form Julian Alvarez, are best positioned to exploit Barça’s defensive lapses and pull the quarterfinal’s biggest upset. Upset watch: Atletico Madrid over Barcelona. Upset potential: Real Madrid and Liverpool underdogs. Upset verdict: Arsenal and Bayern Munich favorites.
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Bruno Fernandes (left) and Vinicius Junior headline the gossip

Bruno Fernandes (left) and Vinicius Junior headline the gossip

Manchester United’s Bruno Fernandes has reportedly identified West Ham United’s Mateus Fernandes as his ideal successor, yet the Red Devils do not view the Portuguese midfielder as their primary target, according to The Mirror. Meanwhile, Viniciius Junior’s representatives have contacted Manchester United and other Premier League clubs to gauge interest in a potential summer exit from Real Madrid, with Chelsea also alerted to the situation. Liverpool are ready to offload four players: Alexis Mac Allister, Cody Gakpo, Joe Gomez, and Federico Chiesa. Chiesa could return to Serie A as part of a swap deal for Inter midfielder Nicolò Barella, valued at $69.2 million. Newcastle United have slapped a $109.5 million price tag on Anthony Gordon to deter Arsenal interest. Liverpool and Manchester United are monitoring Fulham’s Harry Wilson, who will become a free agent and has been praised by Roberto De Zerbi as an ideal Tottenham signing. RB Leipzig have joined Arsenal’s Gabriel Martinelli in transfer rumors, with the Brazilian expected to leave this summer. Arsenal are preparing a formal offer for Bayer Leverkusen’s Christian Kofane, valued at $115.3 million. Manchester United could raise $132.1 million by selling Manuel Ugarte, Joshua Zirkzee, André Onana, Rasmus Højlund, and Marcus Rashford. Newcastle are among clubs chasing Ugarte, with Juventus leading the race valued at $46.1 million. Inter have lined up Arsenal’s Riccardo Calafiori as a replacement for Alessandro Bastoni, who may join Barcelona. Inter are also considering Tottenham goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario for $23.1 million. Barcelona remain firm on not exceeding €50 million for Julián Alvarez, while Atlético Madrid demand more than double. Real Madrid are confident of securing Rodri from Manchester City, and Diogo Dalot is on their shortlist to replace Dani Carvajal.
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Dani Olmo rejects lucrative €60m offer to leave Barcelona

Dani Olmo rejects lucrative €60m offer to leave Barcelona

Dani Olmo has reportedly rejected a highly lucrative offer to leave Barcelona and head for Saudi Pro League side Al Qadisiyah. There have been a few whispers that Al Qadisiyah are keen on Olmo and it is now being reported that an offer was made and swiftly rejected. Diario Sport say the club were willing to offer Barcelona €60 million for Olmo and were also willing to hand the Spain star a huge contract. The offer on the table was a four-year contract that would have made Olmo one of the highest-paid Spanish players in the world. Olmo was offered the chance to earn around €40m in total, about €9.5m net a year, but gave the offer short shrift and made it clear he wants to stay at Barcelona. Sport say Olmo is purely focused on continuing with the Catalans and establishing himself as a crucial part of Hansi Flick’s team.
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