Expert Sports News & Commentary

2026 Division IV-V-VI-VII All-Ohio Girls Basketball Teams

2026 Division IV-V-VI-VII All-Ohio Girls Basketball Teams

COLUMBUS — The Ohio High School Basketball Coaches Association on Tuesday released the 2026 All-Ohio girls basketball squads for Divisions IV through VII, honoring the state’s top small-school talent and highlighting record-setting performances from the state tournament trail. Shaker Heights Laurel senior guard Tristan Williams claimed Division IV Player of the Year after averaging 22.8 points per game and steering the Gators to a berth in the state semifinals. Williams, a 5-8 senior already signed with a Division I college program, headlines a 40-player first-team list that features seven other 20-point scorers, including Columbus International’s high-scoring senior Leila Carter (27.0 ppg) and Circleville junior forward Addison Edgington (20.1 ppg). Toledo Ottawa Hills sophomore Kendell Skiver earned top billing in Division VII, pacing the state in the division with a 26.8-point average. Skiver, a 5-11 combo guard, led the Green Bears to their first regional final since 2011 and is the program’s first girls’ POY since 1997. London Madison-Plains mentor Nathan Warner was selected Division IV Coach of the Year after guiding the Mohawks to a 25-2 record and a district title. In Division VII, Johnstown Northridge head coach Bill Mitchin and Pleasant Hill Newton’s Stefanie Landis shared coaching honors after combining for 46 victories and league championships. The full All-Ohio selections span 400-plus athletes across four divisions, recognizing statistical leaders, defensive standouts, and postseason difference-makers from every corner of the state. Players are listed with grade, height, and regular-season scoring average. First-team honorees also include Cincinnati Purcell Marian’s 6-3 junior Samaya Wilkins (22.4 ppg), Carrollton senior guard Kylie Ujcich (13.4 ppg), and Ashtabula Edgewood junior Carly Kray (23.5 ppg). Division V standouts feature Anna sophomore Adyson Bales, Beachwood sophomore Zoe Walters (20.0 ppg), and Uhrichsville Claymont senior Ava Edwards (20.3 ppg), while Division VI touts Rootstown senior Colbie Curall (14.7 ppg) and Mechanicsburg junior Clara Forrest (15.0 ppg). Second- and third-team lists recognize rising underclassmen, among them freshman phenoms Annie Sullivan of Gates Mills Gilmour Academy (17.3 ppg) and Tenzlee Burns of Seaman North Adams (17.1 ppg), along with a host of juniors and seniors who keyed deep tournament runs. Complete rosters are available through the OHSBCA website and will be published in the state tournament program this weekend.
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Saying the truth – Fabrizio Romano opens up on big Chelsea transfer details

Saying the truth – Fabrizio Romano opens up on big Chelsea transfer details

London – In a candid assessment of Chelsea’s looming summer dilemma, transfer specialist Fabrizio Romano has underlined why supporters should treat every public hint from Enzo Fernández as a signal rather than simple speculation. Speaking amid mounting chatter around the Argentine World Cup winner, Romano stressed that Fernández has been “saying the truth” when insisting no negotiations with Real Madrid are under way. Yet the journalist’s broader message was unequivocal: the absence of talks today does not equate to an absence of interest tomorrow. “Nothing has started at the moment in terms of talks or negotiations,” Romano explained. “It’s normal, it’s still March. But Enzo Fernández obviously is not denying any interest from Real Madrid. He’s denying negotiations and talks.” Romano contrasted Fernández’s phrasing with that of Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Vitinha, who weeks ago shut down exit rumours by declaring, “I’m not leaving PSG.” According to Romano, Fernández’s wording—“I’m not having contacts with Real Madrid now”—leaves the door ajar, a nuance Chelsea’s hierarchy cannot ignore. The situation presents a strategic quandary for the club. Romano believes that if a player makes clear he wants out, the answer should always be to sanction the move rather than fight an internal battle that risks destabilising the squad. Chelsea’s anxiety is compounded by an uneven run of form. In the weekend’s 2–0 defeat to Everton, the midfield saw Romeo Lavia make his first Premier League start since October—a rare bright spot, albeit one that failed to mask wider shortcomings. Goalkeeper Robert Sanchez endured another error-strewn afternoon, finishing as the team’s lowest-rated performer. With the summer window still three months away, Romano’s verdict is stark: there is no smoke without fire, and Chelsea must prepare for the possibility that Fernández could agitate for a switch. Whether the club opts to resist or reluctantly cashes in could shape the narrative of their next rebuilding phase.
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Workload no barrier as Boland eyes Shield final

Workload no barrier as Boland eyes Shield final

A fit and firing Scott Bolland is reaping the benefits of a heavy bowling workload and has set his sights on helping Victoria reach the Sheffield Shield final. The 34-year-old quick has sent down the most overs of any pace bowler in the competition this season, yet insists the volume has sharpened him rather than drained him. Far from feeling the pinch, Bolland says the constant overs have kept his rhythm intact and his body resilient ahead of the business end of the campaign. With Victoria entrenched in the top half of the table, the Tasmanian-born seamer is confident the squad has timed its run to perfection. He credits the consistency of selection and a clear role for each player for the side’s late-season surge, noting that every member of the attack understands the job required in each phase of the game. Boland’s experience at first-class level has been pivotal on pitches that have flattened out in recent rounds. He has mixed disciplined line and length with subtle variations in pace, capping several spells with late swing that has flummoxed opposition lower orders. The result is a tally of wickets that sits among the competition’s elite, despite bowling predominantly in the challenging twilight sessions of day-night fixtures. While acknowledging that the road to the final remains steep, the fast bowler says the group is embracing the challenge. He believes the momentum built during a congested schedule will count for plenty when the sides meet again in the knockout stage, and he is eager to convert Victoria’s regular-season promise into a title. For Bolland, personal milestones take a back seat to the pursuit of another Shield triumph. The workload, once viewed as a potential obstacle, has instead become the platform for what he hopes will be a defining finish to the summer.
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Vanderbilt Baseball Looks to Get Back on Track: The Anchor

Vanderbilt Baseball Looks to Get Back on Track: The Anchor

Vanderbilt baseball is seeking a return to form, according to The Anchor, the university’s daily briefing on all things Vanderbilt Athletics. While the briefing offered no additional specifics, the headline alone signals that the program is at a pivotal moment and eager to reverse recent fortunes. The Anchor, a concise daily rundown of what’s happening across Vanderbilt sports, placed the baseball team’s rebound effort atop today’s agenda, underscoring the heightened attention surrounding the squad as the season progresses.
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‘40 is young’ — Vincent Kompany urges on Bayern Munich’s Manuel Neuer

‘40 is young’ — Vincent Kompany urges on Bayern Munich’s Manuel Neuer

Vincent Kompany has dismissed any suggestion that Manuel Neuer’s looming 40th birthday should signal the twilight of the Bayern Munich goalkeeper’s career, insisting the milestone is no barrier to prolonging elite-level performance. Neuer, who celebrates the landmark at the end of March, has returned to peak form this season after a serious injury lay-off, and Kompany believes the veteran’s mental drive is the decisive factor in his longevity. “40 is young – I didn’t realize that back then,” the Bayern head coach reflected in comments carried by @iMiaSanMia. “But now I know. My knees had other ideas; otherwise I could have carried on playing. ‘Hunger’ is the key word.” Kompany, himself still only a year younger than his skipper, highlighted the psychological resilience required to maintain top-flight standards. “Manuel has fought his way back from a serious injury. He was in incredible form this season – that was impressive. He keeps delivering time and again. We’re almost the same age. It’s about the mental side, not just the physical. If his body stays in good shape, that’s one thing. But what’s impressive is how he keeps motivating himself mentally time and time again. You really need a lot of motivation to reach that level.” Footage released on Bayern’s social channels shows Neuer training with the intensity of a player a decade younger, prompting Kompany to joke that he too could dust off his boots if granted a clean bill of health. The shared mindset between coach and captain underpins Bayern’s belief that age is merely a footnote when ambition and professionalism remain intact.
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Paul Clement idolised Dave, his England footballer father. Then, aged 10, his world changed

Paul Clement idolised Dave, his England footballer father. Then, aged 10, his world changed

Paul Clement’s home office is a museum of modern football. Medals from Chelsea, Paris Saint-Galermain, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich glint in a glass cabinet; a replica of the 2014 Champions League trophy sits alongside a Premier League manager-of-the-month award and a man-of-the-match trophy Didier Drogba pressed into his hands for support during a difficult Stamford Bridge spell. The newest curios are bright yellow Brazil caps, eight and counting, accumulated while assisting Carlo Ancel-otti as the national team prepares for this summer’s World- Cup. Yet amid the gleaming proof of a life in the elite game, the most treasured items are the oldest: five England caps, a No 2 shirt, and a photograph of a four-year-old Paul wearing one of those caps while standing next to his father, Dave Clement, at a Christmas tree in 1976. Dave was the formidable QPR right-back who helped take the 1975-76 title race to the final day, earned five England caps and was renowned for a physique sculpted by squash courts, road runs and relentless push-ups. “Ray Wilkins told me he roomed with Dad on England duty and said he was unbelievable: ‘Come on, Ray, let’s do some press-ups,’” Paul recalls. Paul’s childhood memories are fragmentary—waiting beside the training pitch, sensing pride when his father watched him play for primary-school sides—but they end abruptly on a March morning in 1982. Ten-year-old Paul woke to find the house in chaos; he was told he would not be going to school, and then his grandfather explained that the man he idolised was dead. The previous months had been brutal. A broken leg sustained in January 1982 while playing for Wimbledon had left Dave, 34, in a full-length cast, fearing the end of a career already sliding from QPR’s title chase to the old Third- Division struggle. Relegation worries, shrinking wages and uncertainty over how to support his family gnawed at a man who had lost a brother to suicide three years earlier. The coroner recorded depression exacerbated by football-related anxiety; Dave had convinced himself he had cancer, though pathology found none. Paul remembers being driven to London Zoo that day with his three-year-old brother Neil, “in a daze”, while the adults tried to shield them. The tragedy made Paul the second active England full international to die after Munich 1958, preceded only by Laurie Cunningham seven years later. It also shaped a career Paul never imagined. He played semi-pro football, realised at 14 he would not reach the top, and channelled his drive into PE teaching and coaching. A part-time role at Chelsea’s academy snowb-alled into full-time work at Fulham, a return to Cobham, and rapid promotion from under-16s coach to first-team assistant under Guus Hiddink and then Carlo Ancelotti. The Italian’s trust took Paul to Paris, Madrid, Munich and now Brazil, where World-Cup preparation awaits. “Even when I went into Chelsea and Fulham, I thought I might have a career in youth development,” Paul says. “I never thought I’d get to this level.” Four managerial posts—Derby County, Swansea City, Reading and Belgian side Cercle Brugge— lasted less than a year each, but his partnership with Ancelotti has yielded a Champions- League medal and, imminently, a global stage with Neymar and company. Somewhere between the academy and the Bernabéu he found time to guide Swansea to a Premier-League manager-of-themonth award, tangible proof that a surname synonymous with English football fortitude has now earned its own coaching stripes. Fifty years on from Dave’s debut against Wales—QPR were top of the First Division that week—R’s supporters staged a reunion. Paul’s mother Patricia received a commemorative shirt with No 2 on the back; the FA later handed her a red legacy cap numbered 917 to mark Dave’s place in England’s chronological roll. Paul’s own son, David, took it all in. “Our dad would be proud that both of his boys have had good careers in football,” Paul says of himself and Neil, who played 103 Premier-League games for West Bromwich Albion. “And he would be proud of everything our mum has done for us.” Paul keeps a 1970s Norwegian television clip in which his father, articulate and forward-thinking, predicts English football’s commercial future and warns academy players to stay in school because “you’ve got to be prepared for the worst”. The footage also catches Dave teaching young Paul to putt and laying a driveway with Patricia. “Family must always come first,” he insists. The words echo across four decades to a home office where new Brazil caps keep arriving and a son who never got to ask his father “Why?” or “How bad were you?” channels the answer into every training session.
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Who is your country's Max Dowman?

Who is your country's Max Dowman?

Every World Cup cycle produces a single, breathless question inside training camps and living rooms alike: do we gamble on a teenager who might light up the tournament for the next decade, or do we protect him from the glare? England are wrestling with that dilemma over 16-year-old Arsenal prodigy Max Dowman, left out of this month’s friendlies against Uruguay and Japan but still very much on Thomas T’s radar. Across the globe, the same “Dowman dilemma” is being rehearsed, because every nation believes it has the next fearless gem. ARGENTINA – Freitas, the River Plate centre-forward who only turned professional in November 2025, carries a €100 million release clause and the Julian Álvarez comparisons. With Lionel Scaloni’s attack already stacked, the reigning champions could afford to blood a fearless No. 9 for the final minutes of a tight knockout match. BRAZIL – Rayan, the jet-heeled winger who left Vasco da Gma for England in January, has forced his way into Carlo Ancelotti’s long-list after Rodrygo’s injury opened a door on either flank. Fernando Diniz has lobbied for him since October; a handful more Premier League explosions could clinch a seat on the plane. PORTUGAL – Anisio, Benfica’s 6ft 2in left-footed striker, has already scored in the Under-17 European Championship and Under-17 World Cup finals, then marked his two Primeira Liga cameos with goals. At 17 he is more Theo Walcott 2006 than guaranteed starter, yet José Mourinho’s Drogba comparison keeps him in the “closer” conversation. USA – Adri Mehmeti, the Red Bulls defensive midfielder, captained their Next Pro title winners and has started 2026 looking every inch a Sergio Busquets facsimile. At 6ft, the New Yorker has the stature and serenity to fit Mauricio Pochettino’s crowded engine room. SENEGAL – Idrissa Gueye (Udinese, on loan from Metz) is pushing 19 and scored five in Ligue 2 last year; Pape Thiaw has already capped him at 16. After Ibrahim Mbaye’s AFCON goal at 17, the Teranga Lions have proved they are not afraid of teenage firepower. FRANCE – Kroupi, Bournemouth’s 19-year-old marksman, has represented Les Bleus at every youth level and turns 20 during the group phase. In a squad bursting with Mbappé, Dembélé, Barcola, Doué, Ekitike, Cherki and Akliouche, Didier Deschamps could still use a late-game fox-in-the-box. CANADA – 17-year-old Toronto Inter winger Jimoh is 5ft 5in off the pitch, 90 minutes of chaos on it. Jesse Marsch gave him an unofficial debut in January and believes “players of his age with his quality can develop very quickly.” A 2030 project who might get a 2026 apprenticeship. GERMANY – Said El Mala, the 19-year-old Gladbach winger released at 14 for being “too slight,” is now 6ft 2in, driving at defenders and forcing Julian Nagelsmann to notice. One crucial equaliser away to Hamburg reminded everyone why he was top scorer at the 2025 Under-19 Euros. NETHERLANDS – Read, the Feyenoord right-sided defender, is the long-planned heir to 30-year-old Denzel Dumfries. Only a handful of under-21 caps and injuries have delayed him, but Ronald Koeman’s staff expect him to graduate soon. SPAIN – Garcia, Real Betis’s zippy winger, scored four in a 6-5 under-19 Euro thriller against Germany, including a corner-kick special and a 119th-minute winner. Senior minutes in LaLiga are scarce, yet Spain have never been shy about parachining in teenagers—just ask Pedri, Gavi or Yamal. The question, then, is not whether these players are ready today; it is whether their country can afford to leave tomorrow at home. As Tucel keeps the door ajar for Dowman, every other manager must decide: will your Max Dowman be watching the World Cup from the sofa or from inside the squad?
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Sherman High parts ways with head football coach

Sherman High parts ways with head football coach

SHERMAN, Texas — Sherman ISD announced Monday morning that it has parted ways with Head Football Coach Josh Aleman after the Bearcats closed the 2026 season with a 2-7 record. Aleman, a 2004 graduate of Sherman High, guided the program for three seasons and compiled an overall record of 8-21. His tenure did include a signature moment in 2024 when the Bearcats snapped Denison’s 11-year streak in the Battle of the Ax, rolling to a 31-13 victory. With summer workouts approaching, district officials said the search for a new head coach will begin immediately.
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5 Most Impactful Injuries in the Premier League This Season

5 Most Impactful Injuries in the Premier League This Season

Injuries have long been the unseen hand that can derail a Premier League club’s ambitions, and the 2025/26 campaign has provided a stark reminder of how fragile success can be. From relegation battles to title tilts, five absentees have reshaped the destiny of their teams more than any tactical tweak or blockbuster signing ever could. At Turf Moor, Burnley’s survival hopes were already on life support when skipper Josh Cullen limped off in December, his season ended by a serious injury. The indefatigable midfielder had been both metronome and motivator for Scott Parker’s side, and without his relentless running and authority on the ball, the Clarets’ fight lost its heartbeat. The club now face the drop with a squad visibly stripped of leadership. Chelsea, meanwhile, have spent the season searching for defensive solidity that never arrived. Levi Colwill’s absence explains part of the void: an ACL injury suffered moments after the Club World Cup has denied the 22-year-old even a single minute of Premier League football. England will also feel the ripple effect, as the centre-back’s composure and ball-playing ability would have made him a near-certainty for the 2026 World Cup squad had he remained fit. North London has cursed the training room twice over. Tottenham, mired in relegation trouble, have yet to see Dejan Kulusevski’s distinctive blend of width and creativity. The Swede’s role as a wide playmaker—tasked with unpicking deep-lying defences—has no like-for-like replacement in the Spurs ranks. James Maddison’s pre-season setback compounded the misery; the midfielder’s prognosis remains uncertain, with whispers that only the final day of the campaign might see him return, potentially in a Championship fixture if results go awry. No injury, however, has cost more in pounds and potential silverware than Alexander Isak’s broken fibula. Liverpool invested a record £125 million to secure the Swedish striker, yet just two league goals preceded a fracture that has sidelined him for the majority of the season. The timing proved catastrophic: Isak’s momentum was building, and his void up front has coincided with the Reds sliding to fifth, their title challenge extinguished. From Burnley’s captaincy vacuum to Chelsea’s missing defensive organiser, and from Spurs’ creative drought to Liverpool’s goal-scoring shortfall, these five casualties have carved the true narrative of 2025/26. In the Premier League, talent wins matches, but availability wins seasons—and each of these clubs has learned that lesson the hard way.
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Bayern Munich News: Is FC Bayern planning a heist of Tottenham Hotspur loanee Luka Vušković?

Bayern Munich News: Is FC Bayern planning a heist of Tottenham Hotspur loanee Luka Vušković?

Munich — For months the whispers have drifted across the Elbe and Isar alike: Bayern Munich are watching Luka Vušković. The 19-year-old Croatian centre-back, on Tottenham’s books but cutting his teeth with Hamburger SV, has reportedly been on the Bavarians’ long-range radar since the autumn. Yet until recently the noise was just that — noise. Senior club sources indicated that a concrete approach was “unlikely,” and that the defensive reshuffle would wait. Those tones have shifted inside the Säbener Straße offices. Bayern now stand ready to accelerate a move for Vušković should South Korean international Kim Min-jae leave for what sporting director Christoph Freund deems a “suitable” offer. Kim, signed last summer as a marquee reinforcement, has slipped to rotational status under Vincent Kompany, who wants a more dynamic challenger for Dayot Upamecano and Matthijs de Ligt. Chelsea and, ironically, parent club Tottenham are monitoring Kim’s situation, giving Bayern the exit lane they require to fund and justify a splash in the transfer market. The dominoes are straightforward: sell Kim, trigger the Vušković pursuit. Bayern would not hide their intentions; scouts have filed glowing reports on the teenager’s composure in a back-three, his timing in the air and, crucially, his comfort building play out from deep — traits Kompany values highly. Hamburger SV managing director Jonas Boldt, aware of the growing attention, has already briefed the player’s camp that a summer departure is “probable” if a Bundesliga heavyweight meets Spurs’ valuation. Competition is fierce. Borussia Dortmund have placed Vušković on their defensive short-list as they prepare for Mats Hummels’ successor, while RB Leipzig have also registered interest. Bayern, however, believe their pull — Champions League football, a clearly defined pathway to the first XI and the chance to remain in Germany — offers an edge. From Tottenham’s standpoint, the math is equally intriguing. Chairman Daniel Levy sanctioned the Hamburg loan to accelerate development, but with the club braced for a midfield overhaul and a possible managerial change, cashing in on a prospect not yet integrated into Ange Postecoglou’s plans could fund immediate reinforcements. Spurs would demand a premium, thought to be north of €25 million, a fee Bayern historically do not balk at for a teenager tagged “special talent” by Bundesliga scouts. Timing remains fluid. Kim’s future dictates the sequence; should he accept a new challenge, Bayern will formalise interest quickly, mindful that Dortmund are pressing. Vušković, for his part, has not agitated for a move but is understood to be flattered by Bayern’s overtures and open to staying in the league where he has logged 1,500-plus senior minutes this season. Elsewhere, Bayern’s loan-out strategy could yield another Premier League twist. João Palhinha, plying his trade at Tottenham, is unlikely to see his €30 million option triggered by the Londoners as they reassess squad priorities. Bayern will re-list the Portuguese midfielder across England, confident his combative displays have burnished his reputation rather than diminished it. For now, the Vušković saga sits on standby, hinging on one departure and one phone call. Should Kim Min-jae pack his bags, expect Bayern to test Tottenham’s resolve — and perhaps pull off the summer’s first blockbuster heist.
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Real Madrid down At Atletico in derby

Real Madrid down At Atletico in derby

Viniciero Junior scored twice and Federico Valverde added a thunderbolt as Real Madrid edged city rivals Atletico 3-2 on Sunday night, keeping the gap to La Liga leaders Barcelona at four points ahead of the international break. The pulsating contest at the Santiago Bernabéu swung one way and then the other inside 90 breathless minutes. Ademola Lookman’s first-half opener rewarded an enterprising start by Diego Silleone’s visitors, yet Madrid emerged from the tunnel with renewed intent. Vinicius swept home the equaliser three minutes after the restart and, within moments, Valverre smashed a rising drive past Jan Oblak to complete a rapid turnaround. Atletico refused to yield. Nahuel Molina’s stunning long-range effort restored parity, only for Vinicius to pounce again, this time with a decisive finish after a swift counter. The Brazilian’s 10th goal in 11 appearances across all competitions proved enough, even after Valverde received a straight red for a late foul on Alex Baena that forced the hosts to see out the final minutes a man short. “It made things hard for us and we had to suffer a lot,” admitted Madrid coach Alvaro Arbeloa, who registered his first derby victory since taking charge in January. “We showed mental toughness and strength worthy of this club’s badge.” Arbeloa introduced Jude Bellingham and Kylian Mbappe from the bench as both players continued their return from recent injuries, but the closing stages became a rearguard action rather than a showcase for star power. Madrid’s back line, marshalled by Antonio Rudiger, repelled a late surge to preserve the win and cap a successful week that began with elimination of Manchester City in the Champions League last 16. “We’re evolving and working hard so that in games like these Madrid fans can be happy,” Vinicius told Real Madrid TV. “Everyone deserves credit—the coach, the players, the fans.” The result leaves Atletico a point behind third-place Villarreal, while Barcelona maintained top spot on Saturday with a hard-fought 1-0 win over Rayo Vallecano thanks to an Araujo header and a series of fine saves from goalkeeper Joan Garcia.
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Illini Season Ends in Nashville: Cold Shooting, Blakes’ Brilliance Doom Illinois

Illini Season Ends in Nashville: Cold Shooting, Blakes’ Brilliance Doom Illinois

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Illinois guard Destiny Jackson kept probing, slicing, searching for daylight against Vanderbilt’s long-armed forward Aiyana Mitchell, but every lane she found closed almost as quickly as it opened. The snapshot of Jackson (No. 2) trying to navigate around Mitchell (No. 14) in the second half Monday at Memorial Gym summed up the Illini’s night: plenty of effort, precious few answers. By the final buzzer, the Commodores had rolled to a 75-57 victory that sent Illinois home and propelled Vanderbilt into the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16. The game turned early and never pivoted back. Illinois shot 21-for-71 overall (29.6 percent) and a frigid 3-for-23 from beyond the arc (14.3 percent). Berry Wallace’s 18-point effort required 20 shots; Cearah Parchment added 12, but no other Illini reached double figures. Nine assists against 16 turnovers told the story of an offense that devolved into late-clock heaves against one of the nation’s most disciplined defenses. While Illinois misfired, Vanderbilt’s Mikayla Blakes put on a clinic. The guard finished with 25 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists, falling one dime shy of a triple-double. Justine Pissott complemented Blakes with 18 points, drilling four threes as the Commodores consistently produced the timely basket or defensive stop that blunted every Illini surge. The loss ends Illinois’ season at 20-12, the third 20-win campaign in four years under head coach Shauna Green. With the bulk of the rotation expected back in Champaign next fall, the Illini will carry both the sting of Monday’s lopsided defeat and the experience of a tournament-tested core into 2026-27.
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Real Madrid legend is finally achieving his biggest dream

Real Madrid legend is finally achieving his biggest dream

Zinedine Zidane, the man who embodied the elegance of the original Galácticos and later sculpted the most glittering chapter in Real Madrid’s modern history, is set to complete the final circle of his footballing destiny. After years of polite but firm rejections to Paris Saint-Germain, Manchester United and Juventus, the 1998 World Cup hero has struck an agreement with the French Football Federation to succeed Didier Deschamps as manager of Les Bleus once the 2026 World Cup is in the books, according to a report from RMC Sport relayed by the Madrid Zone. For a coach who collected three consecutive Champions League trophies between 2016 and 2018—an unprecedented feat in the competition’s 67-year existence—and who added a La Liga crown in his second spell at the Bernabéu, the national-team post has long represented the elusive final frontier. Those close to Zidane say the seed was planted five years ago, when he first stepped away from Madrid’s bench after a bruising, COVID-affected 2020/21 campaign. While Deschamps steered France to another final and a World Cup title in 2018, the federation never wavered in its loyalty, viewing 2026 as the natural moment to pivot toward a new era. The wait has only amplified anticipation. Supporters who once thrilled to Zidane’s balletic control in the Stade de France now envisage him unlocking the full force of Kylian Mbappé, a partnership Madridistas were denied at club level. Players of Jude Bellingham’s generation, weaned on YouTube compilations of Zizou’s velvet first touch, will now answer to him in the dressing room rather than admire him on a screen. Privately, federation officials believe the Marseille native’s appointment can both extend France’s golden window and exorcise the ghosts of Berlin 2006, when Zidane’s virtuoso tournament ended with an infamous red card and an Italian triumph on penalties. This time, the stage is his to script redemption on home soil—or, at least, under the tricolor he carried to its greatest summit a quarter-century ago. Zidane has spent the intervening months recharging, analyzing Madrid’s transition-era turbulence and mapping a blueprint he believes can marry French flair with the tactical rigor that underpinned his European dynasty. If the past is prologue, Les Bleus’ rivals have been warned: the quiet man from La Castellane has a habit of turning dreams into hardware. Keywords:
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Pressure on Italy as play-off hopefuls eye 2026 World Cup

Pressure on Italy as play-off hopefuls eye 2026 World Cup

The race for Europe’s final four tickets to the 2026 World Cup reaches its climax over the coming seven days, with 16 contenders still in contention and Italy among those feeling the heat. All remaining berths allocated to the continent will be settled in the condensed play-off window, leaving no margin for error as teams chase the sport’s ultimate stage. Italy, four-time world champions, enter the do-or-die phase knowing that anything short of victory will see them miss out on a second consecutive World Cup. Their predicament underscores the stakes for every side still in the hunt: with only four places left, the knockout tension is absolute. Across the continent, training grounds are locked in, travel schedules are finalized, and stadiums are being prepped for a series of sudden-death encounters that will complete the 2026 tournament lineup. For the Azzurri and their 15 fellow hopefuls, the next week will decide whether dreams are realized or a cycle of rebuilding begins.
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Hosts name strong extended squads ahead of National Indigenous Cricket Championships

Hosts name strong extended squads ahead of National Indigenous Cricket Championships

Queensland have announced competitive extended squads as they prepare to host the upcoming National Indigenous Cricket Championships. The selections underline the hosts’ intent to field formidable line-ups for the tournament, which brings together the nation’s top Indigenous talent. Cricket officials confirmed the extended squads on Tuesday, opting for depth across all disciplines ahead of the week-long competition. While final team lists will be trimmed in coming days, the initial selections signal Queensland’s ambition to claim the title on home soil. The National Indigenous Cricket Championships serve as a key showcase for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cricketers, combining elite performance with cultural celebration. Queensland’s early squad announcement allows players additional preparation time and gives selectors room to assess form and fitness before the opening fixture. Further details on squad composition and match schedule are expected to be released shortly.
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High school roundup for March 23, 2026: Latrobe picks up walk-off win in slugfest

High school roundup for March 23, 2026: Latrobe picks up walk-off win in slugfest

Latrobe’s offense erupted for 13 runs and needed every one of them, as Grady Riffner’s RBI single in the bottom of the eighth lifted the Wildcats to a dramatic 13-12 walk-off victory over visiting Penn-Trafford in Monday’s Section 1-5A baseball opener at Latrobe. The contest was a back-and-forth slugfest from the first pitch. Cole Short paced the Wildcats with a 4-for-6 performance that included two doubles, a home run and four RBIs, while Noah Noel added four hits in five trips, doubling once and driving in a run. The win keeps Latrobe perfect at 4-0 overall and 1-0 in section play. Penn-Trafford, now 2-1 overall and 0-1 in the section, received a monster effort from Nico Casciato, who went 3 for with a double, triple, home run and four RBIs. Elsewhere on the area diamond: Section 2-A Aquinas Academy 19, Summit Academy 1 Brendan Roney and Ian Patterson each doubled twice and drove in four runs, and Henry Hynds doubled, tripled and knocked in two to pace the Crusaders in their season opener. Jonah Burchill added two hits and three RBIs, while Jackson Stanton singled, tripled and plated two. Section 3-A Bishop Canevin 9, Sewickley Academy 8 JT Healey delivered a walk-off RBI single in the seventh, capping a wild finish. Jackson Maddix powered the offense, going 3-for-3 with two home runs and six RBIs. For Sewickley, Billy Pietrogallo was 2-for-2 with a homer, and both Carter Jackson and Logan Berezney doubled twice. Serra Catholic 15, Monessen 0 (3 innings) Liam Sommerer fired a no-hitter and Jake Anderson singled, doubled and drove in four runs as the Crusaders opened section play at 3-1 overall. Section 3-3A Deer Lakes 10, Southmoreland 0 Andrew Connelly struck out nine in five scoreless innings and doubled home a run to lead the Lancers. Eli Misera singled, tripled and knocked in three, while James Gall doubled and drove in two. Nonsection games Ligonier Valley 13, McGuffey 4 Miles Smith singled, tripled and plated four runs, and winning pitcher Austin Harr went 3-for-5 with a double and an RBI for the 2-0 Rams. New Castle 19, Clayton (N.J.) 0 Alex Rodgers, Dominic Miller and Phillip Laurenza each went 3-for-3, combining for three homers, five doubles and eight RBIs as the Red Hurricanes improved to 4-0. Plum 9, Armstrong 3 Max Vollmer’s 3-for-5 performance featured a double, home run and five RBIs. Andrew Monaco added three hits, two doubles and three RBIs for the 5-0 Mustangs. Greene County Tech 15, Avonworth 2 (Myrtle Beach) Kannon Ring went 3-for-3 with a homer and three RBIs, while Cooper Scharding and Carson Franc each singled and doubled for the Antelopes.
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Everton 3-0 Chelsea, Player Ratings: It just keeps getting worse

Everton 3-0 Chelsea, Player Ratings: It just keeps getting worse

Goodison Park, Saturday — Everton recorded their greatest margin of victory over Chelsea in the Premier League era, dismantling the visitors 3-0 in a contest that was effectively over inside the opening 20 minutes. The result extends Chelsea’s wretched run to three three-goal defeats in their last four matches, a sequence in which they have shipped 12 goals and offered precious little resistance. Head coach Enzo Maresca did not mince words afterward, stating bluntly that “the team gave up” once the third goal was conceded. From that moment on, Everton were allowed to stroll through the gears while Chelsea, according to Maresca, “showed no desire” and were found wanting in “just about every aspect of the game — attack, defense, planning, focus, strategy, execution.” The statistics underline the scale of the collapse. Chelsea have now suffered back-to-back 3-0 defeats and have registered three Hall of Shame entries in a fortnight. Their last two away fixtures — the 4-0 capitulation at Manchester City and today’s 3-0 surrender — amount to 180 minutes of football lost by a combined 8-0 scoreline. Eighteen-year-old Estêvão was the solitary bright spot, the only player credited with “any fight” by the travelling support. The rest of the squad earned ratings that hovered between bad and abysmal. BAD (3.5-4.4): Lavia 4.0, Hato 3.9, Palmer 3.8, Cucurella 3.7, João Pedro 3.6, Enzo 3.5. TERRIBLE (2.5-3.4): Caicedo 3.4, Santos 3.4, Tosin 3.3, Gusto 3.2, Neto 3.1, Garnacho 3.1, Delap 3.0. The loss matches some of the lowest moments of the modern era at Stamford Bridge, rivaling the 5-0 drubbing by Arsenal and creeping dangerously close to the infamous 6-0 defeat at the Etihad in 2018-19. With March only just begun and a crowded fixture list ahead, Chelsea still have ample opportunity to plumb new depths — a prospect that no longer feels unthinkable. For Everton and manager Liam Rosenior, the afternoon was a statement of intent: a first win of this magnitude over Chelsea in the top flight and a reminder that, on their day, they can expose any side lacking application. For Chelsea, it is another stark reminder that the rebuild remains painfully incomplete. Everton 3-0 Chelsea: the nightmare continues, and the only question now is how much lower the standards can fall before season’s end.
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What We Learned From the Fanatics Flag Football Classic, Plus the NFL’s Best Elderly Free-Agent Signings

What We Learned From the Fanatics Flag Football Classic, Plus the NFL’s Best Elderly Free-Agent Signings

The Fanatics Flag Football Classic, staged last Saturday at the L.A. Coliseum, began as a marketing spectacle and ended as a statement game for the sport’s Olympic future. Tom Brady’s first touchdown toss since 2022 drew headlines, but the day belonged to the athletes already wearing the red, white and blue of the U.S. national program, who routed a star-studded NFL squad 106-44 across three games and reminded onlookers that flag football is a discipline all its own. Brady, 48, looked comfortable in the five-on-five format, completing 8 of 12 passes for 85 yards and two scores. Yet the eye-opener was the performance of Team USA quarterback Darrell “Housh” Doucette, who went 8-for-8 through the air with three touchdowns, rushed six times for 76 yards and three more scores, and added five receptions for 79 yards. The 5-foot-7 former track standout earned tournament MVP honors and, voice cracking in the post-game interview, said the lopsidian result validated his August claim that he is “better than Patrick Mahomes” in flag football. “When it comes to flag football, I feel like I know more than him,” Doucette reiterated. Doucette’s teammate, Nico Casares, was nearly perfect as well, finishing 24-of-27 for 332 yards and five touchdowns. The pair exposed the NFL contingent’s learning curve: unfamiliar rules—ball carriers cannot jump, for example—produced a rash of penalties, while the Americans’ speed and space-creating ability repeatedly left defenders grasping at flags that were no longer there. Future Hall of Fame linebacker Luke Kuechly, playing for the NFL side, admitted the transition was jarring. “Their skill set was very different than anything we’ve seen in the NFL,” he said. “Our inability to put our hands on those guys made the game very difficult.” The exhibition carried added weight because flag football debuts as an Olympic sport at the 2028 Los Angeles Games. Jalen Hurts, the league’s Global Flag Football Ambassador, ignited the 2024 Olympic torch to herald the sport’s inclusion, a moment that rankled national-team veterans who fear NFL marketing muscle could muscle them out of roster spots. Saturday’s rout was their rebuttal. “We just don’t think they’re going to be able to walk on the field and make the Olympic team because of the name,” Doucte had said earlier. The scoreboard backed him up. Team USA coach Jorge Cascudo suggested the door remains open for crossover talent, noting Odell Beckham Jr. as a possible convert if he masters the nuances. Brady, meanwhile, has two years to reach the 50-year-old mark and attempt a redemption tour on Olympic soil. The other lingering off-season storyline concerns the veteran names still unemployed after the first wave of free agency. All are over 30 and all come with recognizable résumés: tight end Darren Waller (No. 88), quarterback Joe Flacco (No. 92), linebacker Bobby Wagner (No. 111), quarterback Russell Wilson (No. 113), receiver Tyreek Hill (No. 136) and pass rusher Von Miller (No. 144). In an era that prizes youth, their market has cooled, prompting a look back at the most fruitful “leftovers” signings in league history. Four stand out among players age 32 and up: 4. Jerry Rice to the Raiders at 39. Cut by the 49ers for salary-cap reasons in 2001, Rice signed a four-year, $5.4 million deal and averaged 1,000 receiving yards over three full seasons before continuing his march through the record books in Seattle. 3. Rod Woodson to the Ravens at 33. After seven Pro Bowls at cornerback, Woodson converted to safety, earned four more Pro Bowl nods, twice led the league in interceptions and anchored the 2000 defense that allowed fewer points than any unit since. 2. Shannon Sharpe to the Ravens at 32. The former Bronco instantly became Baltimore’s primary target, pacing the team in every major receiving category and clinching the AFC title with a 96-yard touchdown on third-and-18. 1. Peyton Manning to the Broncos at 36. Coming off spinal fusion that cost him the entire 2011 season, Manning signed an incentive-heavy contract and responded with an NFL-record 54 touchdown passes in 2013, two Super Bowl trips and a championship in 2015. The common thread: each veteran found a scheme that accentuated his remaining strengths while masking diminished physical traits. For today’s unsigned thirty-somethings, the template exists, but the waiting game continues. In Seattle, the Seahawks moved to secure their own young building block, agreeing to a four-year, $168.6 million extension with wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba. The deal, which ties the reigning Offensive Player of the Year to the franchise through 2031, resets the market for fourth-year receivers and sets the stage for similar negotiations involving Rams standout Puka Nacua. Taken together, the weekend offered a glimpse of football’s evolving landscape: Olympic flag football has its first marquee showdown, veteran NFL stars face an uncertain market, and one 24-year-old just became the highest-paid wideout in league history. The next chapter is already underway.
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5 Real Madrid Stars Are Pushing for Alvaro Arbeloa to Stay Permanently

5 Real Madrid Stars Are Pushing for Alvaro Arbeloa to Stay Permanently

Madrid—Less than three months after being asked to steady a listing ship, Alvaro Arbeloa has gone from interim band-aid to the hottest seat in Spanish football. According to a MARCA report carried by The Madrid Zone, a quintet of dressing-room heavyweights—Antonio Rudiger, Thibaut Courtois, Fede Valverde, Vinicius Junior and Aurelien Tchouameni—have made it clear to club hierarchy that they want the former academy coach to remain in charge beyond this season. The endorsement arrives on the back of a seismic 3-2 derby triumph over Atletico Madrid that flipped the narrative of the 2025/26 campaign. After a lopsided loss in the first Derbi, Real Madrid rebounded in front of a raucous Santiago Bernabeu, shrugging off injuries and external skepticism to christen the stadium with a statement victory that has players and fans alike singing Arbeloa’s praises. Valverde and Vinicius, both marginalized and played out of position under predecessor Xabi Alonso, have been reborn under the 43-year-old. The pair combined for pivotal moments against Atleti, validating Arbeloa’s man-management approach that prioritized harmony over hierarchy. While Alonso arrived in the summer as Europe’s most coveted tactician—fresh from guiding Bayer Leverkusen to an unbeaten Bundesliga title—his tenure quickly soured amid reports of strained relations with senior stars. Arbeloa, by contrast, carried no elite-level head-coaching résumé, only a deep institutional knowledge gleaned from 300-plus appearances as an unsung right-back and subsequent work with the club’s youth sides. That humility, players say, has translated into freedom and fight on the pitch. Courtois, long viewed as the squad’s unofficial barometer for managerial approval, has reportedly told president Florentino Perez that continuity is critical. With Rudiger anchoring the back line and Tchouameni anchoring midfield, the five advocates span every department, presenting a united front that sources inside Valdebebas believe will be hard for the board to ignore. Club officials have yet to formalize plans for the 2026/27 bench, but momentum inside the locker room suggests an upset is brewing: the interim tag may soon be ripped off, and Arbeloa could find himself leading Los Blancos into next season with the full weight of the dressing room behind him.
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2025 Bluebird Banter Top 40 Blue Jays Prospects: 33-36

2025 Bluebird Banter Top 40 Blue Jays Prospects: 33-36

Dunedin, FL—The latest quartet in Bluebird Banter’s annual countdown spotlights four very different arms, each finishing 2025 at a different minor-league rung and each carrying a unique set of questions into the off-season. No. 36 – RHP Cam Jennings Toronto’s 2022 fourth-rounder out of Louisiana Tech has already lived several baseball lifetimes. A draft-year shift to the bullpen juiced his fastball to 99 mph, but injuries over the next two seasons sapped velocity and consistency. Jennings still owns a starter’s repertoire—gyro-slider in the mid-80s, low-80s power curve, and a change-up he shelved after moving back to relief—but the 2025 returns were sobering: 43 walks and eight hit-batsmen in 58 innings while sitting only in the mid-90s. The swing-and-miss remains; the command does not. Another season like this and his big-league runway could disappear. No. 35 – RHP Jean Batista Acquired from Boston as part of the Danny Jansen swap, Batista spent 2025 as a 21-year-old swingman between Dunedin and Vancouver. The line—4.96 ERA, 15 homers allowed—looks pedestrian, yet 83 strikeouts against 26 walks hint at better days. His 92-94 mph heater and flashing-plus change-up keep hitters honest; the 85-87 slider still comes and goes. Unless the secondaries tighten, the path forward likely leads to the bullpen, but the raw ingredients remain intriguing. No. 34 – LHP Grant Coleman An undrafted senior sign out of LSU, Coleman blitzed through the system in his debut summer. After fanning 36% of hitters in Dunedin, he moved to High-A Vancouver and upped the rate to 40% while trimming the walks and posting a 1.40 ERA as the Canadians’ late-inning anchor. The low-slot lefty now sits mid-90s with ride, and his frisbee slider and change-up play up thanks to a tough angle. Several solid spring-training outings later, a 2026 major-league debut feels plausible. No. 33 – RHP Seth Rogers The 11th-rounder from McNeese State has been a volume monster: nearly 50 starts and 250 innings across three levels since 2023. Rogers pounds the zone with a heavy low-90s two-seamer and mixes three breaking variations—slider, curve, cutter—more for deception than whiffs. The profile is old-school ground-ball ballast, but spring looks against advanced hitters exposed the margins. If the craftiness translates, he could become an innings-soaking back-end starter; if not, the modern game may leave him behind. Together, the foursome illustrates the breadth of Toronto’s pitching depth—power arms trying to find the zone, polish pitchers trying to find swing-and-miss, and a crafty lefty who may have already found both.
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Barton Roundup: Bulldogs complete series sweep of Chowan

Barton Roundup: Bulldogs complete series sweep of Chowan

Wilson — First-year head coach Matt Padgett earned his first series sweep at the helm of the Barton College baseball program Saturday afternoon as the Bulldogs polished off a weekend sweep of Conference Carolinas foe Chowan with an 11-5, 14-6 doubleheader victory at Nixon Field. The twin wins gave Barton (7-17, 5-13) its first back-to-back victories of the season and completed a commanding three-game set that began with an 18-0 triumph on Friday. Game 1 – Barton 11, Chowan 5 Trailing 3-0 before they came to bat, the Bulldogs responded with a five-run third inning to seize control. Tyler Hughesman keyed the uprising, collecting three of Barton’s 13 hits and driving in two runs, including the go-ahead RBI. Gregory Melo delivered a two-run triple, and four different Bulldogs finished with two RBIs apiece. Reliever Joshua Wolkin quieted the Hawks the rest of the way to earn the win. Game 2 – Barton 14, Chowan 6 The offense erupted for 16 hits and seven runs in the decisive fifth inning. J.J. Faulkner led the charge, going 3-for-4 with three RBIs, including a two-run single during the game-breaking frame. Nathan Waldridge provided 3 1/3 innings of solid relief to secure the victory. Friday’s series opener saw Barton pound out 12 hits and score 11 runs across the seventh and eighth innings. David Lieux and Faulkner each drove in five runs—Lieux on a three-run homer and Faulkner on a pair of long balls. Myles Odom added three hits, while Hughesman chipped in two hits and two RBIs. Mason McDougall tossed six shutout innings for the win as Chowan managed only seven hits. The sweep drops Chowan to 3-19 overall and 3-15 in league play. Barton returns to the diamond Tuesday at 3 p.m. for a non-conference meeting with Lenoir-Rhyne before traveling to Belmont Abbey for a three-game conference set beginning Friday at 5 p.m.
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Brazil are ready for friendlies against France and Croatia

Brazil are ready for friendlies against France and Croatia

São Paulo – The Brazilian eNational Team clocked in at CBF headquarters on Monday afternoon and immediately hit the virtual pitch, opening preparations for a demanding pair of friendlies against France and Croatia. The matches will be contested on both eFootball (Mobile and Console) and EA FC platforms, with kick-offs set for 25 March at 13:00 local time against Les Bleus and 30 March at 17:00 against the Croatians. While the French encounter will feature bouts on eFootball Console and EA FC, the Croatian clash adds eFootball Mobile to the slate. In keeping with this season’s FIFAe Series regulations, the mobile segment will be played in tandem, requiring seamless coordination between teammates. PHzin, a two-time world champion and anchor of the Seleção squad, underlined the unique challenge awaiting the side. “Representing the Brazilian National Team in any friendly or competition is always special. It will be a different experience; we are not used to playing with such a distance. These will be two complicated games that require our attention. The French team is strong, experienced, and one of the best in the world.” Head coach Thiago Avaré echoed his star player’s caution while expressing confidence in the group’s readiness. “We are ready, the team is prepared. We have a new pair in eFootball Console, but they already know each other and have chemistry. They played the eBrasileirão last year for Flamengo and also in other competitions. We had to refine some things, bring our style of play to achieve the result we expect, which is victory in these friendlies. These will be complicated games with differences in actions during the match, as the teams are not in the same location. Whoever adapts better to this variable may have an advantage.” The squad will train again on Tuesday before traveling virtually to face France. All fixtures will be streamed live on CBF TV and follow a best-of-three format, with the first side to claim two victories declared the winner.
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Bills Host C/G Austin Corbett

Bills Host C/G Austin Corbett

Buffalo continued its offseason offensive-line evaluation Monday by hosting veteran interior lineman Austin Corbett, according to Aaron Wilson of KPCR 2. The 30-year-old, who has logged 94 NFL appearances with 78 starts, is among the most seasoned blockers still available in free agency. A second-round selection out of Nevada in 2018, Corbett is searching for his fourth professional home as he readies for an eighth season. Cleveland drafted him but dealt him to Los Angeles in October 2019 after a benching; the Rams immediately plugged him in as a full-time starter and reaped the benefits during their 2021 championship run. Carolina signed Corbett to a three-year, $26.25 million contract the following spring. He responded with 17 starts at right guard in 2022, but a Week 18 ACL tear began a frustrating stretch of injuries. From 2023-25 he suited up for only 22 of 51 possible games, though he did reclaim a starting role last year. After beating out Cade Mays for the Panthers’ center job in camp, a Week 2 MCL sprain landed him on injured reserve; Mays held the spot during Corbett’s four-game absence, prompting the veteran to slide back to right guard for the remainder of the schedule. He ultimately started 11 of 13 contests and earned a 32nd-place ranking among 79 qualified guards from Pro Football Focus. In Buffalo, Corbett would not be ticketed for a starting center or right-guard role. The Bills locked up center Connor McGovern with a three-year, $52 million extension before the legal tampering window, and 2023 draftee O’Cyrus Torrence is entrenched at right guard. The left-guard job is less settled after David Edwards departed for New Orleans on a four-year, $61 million pact. Second-year pro Alec Anderson is the early favorite to replace Edwards, but Corbett’s experience could create legitimate competition. Even if he does not unseat Anderson, Corbett would give Buffalo a reliable, versatile reserve. Interior depth behind the projected starters is thin—Tylan Grable, Sedrick Van Pran-Granger and Nick Broeker have combined for four career starts—making Corbett’s résumé an attractive insurance policy as the Bills look to protect quarterback Josh Allen in 2026.
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UWCL: Alessia Russo and Renée Slegers discuss blockbuster Arsenal vs Chelsea clash

UWCL: Alessia Russo and Renée Slegers discuss blockbuster Arsenal vs Chelsea clash

London’s women’s football calendar rarely needs extra spice, yet Tuesday night at Emirates Stadium delivers exactly that as reigning UEFA Women’s Champions League holders Arsenal welcome domestic champions Chelsea for the first-leg of a quarter-final dripping with history, subplots and star power. The tie pits the only English club ever to lift the European trophy against a side that has come agonisingly close, and it does so under brand-new continental floodlights: never before have Arsenal and Chelsea met in UWCL competition. After a 5-0 dismissal of West Ham at the weekend, Arsenal approach the encounter buoyant, while Chelsea arrive smarting from a surprise 1-1 draw at newly-promoted London City Lionesses. Head coach Renée Slegers, however, is guarding against complacency. “All teams go through different phases,” Slegers said. “Chelsea have been excellent at staying at the highest level for a very long time. We’re preparing to face a very good team.” The numbers back up her caution. Chelsea have collected eight Women’s Super League titles since 2015 and reached the 2021 UWCL final, only to be swept aside 4-0 by Barcelona. Arsenal, meanwhile, carry the confidence of last May’s 1-0 triumph over the same Spanish giants in Lisbon, a victory that secured their second European crown and cemented their status as England’s lone continental queens. Striker Alessia Russo, who tops this season’s UWCL scoring chart with seven goals, believes that pedigree fuels the squad’s hunger rather than sates it. “We loved that feeling of winning the trophy, and every player wants to experience it again,” Russo said. “It’s a new season, times change, but our focus is on doing it again.” The 27-year-old credits her purple patch—21 goal involvements across all competitions—to the quality surrounding her and to the varied tactical puzzles European nights present. “I love diving into different styles and systems. That’s something I really enjoy in the Champions League. I came to Arsenal for these nights.” Off the pitch, FIFA’s recent mandate requiring at least two female coaching staff members on every bench adds wider resonance to a fixture already dripping with symbolism. Tuesday will showcase two female managers in Slegers and Chelsea’s Sonia Bompastor, the only woman to have won the UWCL as both player and coach. Russo, who is guided at club level by Slegers and internationally by Sarina Wiegman, welcomed the ruling. “I feel fortunate to learn from Renée and Sarina. Hopefully it inspires girls to create their own journey. It’s a shame it has to be put in place, but it sets up more people to have role models.” Selection headaches linger for the holders. Vice-captain Leah Williamson continues to nurse a hamstring complaint and will miss the opener, while the Australian trio of Steph Catley, Kyra Cooney-Cross and Caitlin Foord only landed back from Asian Cup duty on Monday morning. Club-record signing Olivia Smith is training individually but could be involved. Chelsea, too, have fitness concerns; Slegers noted that the Blues had “only eight outfield players training” in the build-up, forcing an element of guesswork into Arsenal’s preparations. “It’s been a very short turnaround,” Slegers admitted. “There’s unpredictability about how Chelsea will line up, so we have to be ready for all scenarios.” Whatever shape the visitors assume, a cauldron awaits. Arsenal and Chelsea have claimed 11 of the 13 WSL titles since 2011, and their duopoly has defined the domestic landscape. Extending that rivalry onto the European stage feels both inevitable and momentous. For supporters unable to squeeze into Emirates Stadium, the match will be streamed live on Disney+ and broadcast on BBC Two and iPlayer in the United Kingdom. A heavyweight first act is guaranteed; the only question is which shade of London red or blue will seize the advantage before next week’s return to West London.
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Cincinnati to orchestrate homecoming with Jerrod Calhoun as next HC

Cincinnati to orchestrate homecoming with Jerrod Calhoun as next HC

Cincinnati, Ohio — In a move that brings one of the program’s own back to Fifth Third Arena, the University of Cincinnati has tabbed Jerrod Calhoun as its next men’s basketball head coach, sources confirmed to The Field of 68. The 44-year-old Ohio native and 2004 Cincinnati graduate will leave Utah State after two seasons and return to his alma mater, replacing Wes Miller, who was dismissed earlier this month after failing to reach the NCAA Tournament in five tries. Calhoun’s ascent has been swift and spectacular. In just his second year in Logan, he guided the Aggies to a 29-7 record, the Mountain West regular-season title, and the MWC tournament crown. Seeded ninth in the 2026 NCAA Tournament, Utah State upset No. 8 Villanova by 10 points before bowing out to Arizona in the Round of 32. Over two seasons with the Aggies, Calhoun amassed a 55-15 mark and went 2-0 in NCAA Tournament games, earning Mountain West Coach of the Year honors this past season. The East Liverpool, Ohio, product began his coaching career while still an undergraduate, serving as a student assistant under Hall of Fame coach Bob Huggins during his senior year at UC. After graduation, he took his first full-time head-coaching post at NCAA Division-II Walsh University, later spending five seasons at Fairmont State. He then elevated Youngstown State to new heights, capturing the 2022-23 Horizon League regular-season title and being named Horizon League Coach of the Year after a 24-10 campaign. Cincinnati athletic department officials are banking that Calhoun’s blend of local roots, recruiting ties, and recent March success can re-energize a program that has not danced since 2021. Terms of his agreement with the Bearcats were not disclosed, but the deal is expected to be finalized shortly, ushering in a new era for a proud basketball tradition.
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Barcelona’s Hansi Flick wins La Liga Coach of the Month for March after perfect run

Barcelona’s Hansi Flick wins La Liga Coach of the Month for March after perfect run

Barcelona head coach Hansi Flick has collected his first La Liga Coach of the Month award of the campaign after guiding the league leaders to three victories from three league outings in March. The Catalan club defeated Rayo Vallecano, Sevilla and Athletic Club to maintain their position at the summit of the table ahead of the international hiatus. Speaking after the final fixture of the month, Flick acknowledged the demanding schedule his squad has negotiated across domestic and European competitions. “It hasn’t been easy for us, but after so many matches in recent weeks, the three points were the most important thing. Now we have two weeks off,” he told reporters. The German tactician also recognised the imminent international commitments of his players, noting: “The players are going away to join their national teams. We know there’s a World Cup coming up and everyone wants to be with their country, so it’s understandable.” Barcelona’s stars will reassemble ahead of a pivotal league encounter against Atlético Madrid on 4 April.
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McCullum and Key very lucky to survive Ashes review - Vaughan

McCullum and Key very lucky to survive Ashes review - Vaughan

Michael Vaughan has labelled Brendon McCullum and Rob Key “very, very lucky” to keep their posts after England’s chastening 4-1 Ashes defeat, insisting most management teams would have been dismissed after such a poor away campaign. Speaking on the BBC’s Test Match Special debate, the 2005 Ashes-winning captain said Ben Stokes’ role as Test skipper “was never a question” but argued that the retention of head coach McCullum and team managing director Key sent a lenient message. “There’s not many management groups that deliver something so poor away from home in an Ashes series and get the chance to carry on,” Vaughan said. “They seem to me like a football management team. I actually felt if one went, they all went.” England’s review, released last week, cited inadequate planning and on- and off-field lapses during the tour. ECB chief executive Richard Gould conceded that sacking McCullum would have been the “easy thing to do”, but the board opted for continuity, demanding instead a recalibration of detail and accountability. Vaughan believes that shift has already begun. “From what I’ve heard today from the ECB, the attention to detail is going to come back,” he noted, suggesting McCullum has been told that survival hinges on tightening the famously relaxed environment that characterised the ‘Bazball’ era. Key, also on the programme, admitted selection had become too cosy. A newly formed “county insight group” will funnel domestic coaches’ views into the England set-up, breaking what many counties saw as a closed shop favouring attacking stylists over consistent performers. “We’ve overvalued loyalty and overvalued having a settled team,” Key said. “We need to be more ruthless.” McCullum, who will return from a brief break at the end of May ahead of the New Zealand series starting 4 June at Lord’s, was urged by Vaughan to re-engage with the domestic game earlier for the sake of perception. “Get seen around the counties, talk to coaches, speak to umpires—he needs the fans and the game behind his philosophy,” Vaughan added. With the review complete but questions lingering, England’s leadership trio now face the twin challenge of winning back supporters and proving that lessons from a bruising Ashes campaign have truly been learned.
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Michigan Football hiring co-founder of AI scouting platform as assistant GM

Michigan Football hiring co-founder of AI scouting platform as assistant GM

Ann Arbor, Mich. – Michigan’s football program has quietly landed one of the most intriguing front-office additions of the offseason, appointing longtime NFL evaluator Chris Pettit as assistant general manager, 247Sports first reported Monday evening. Pettit arrives in Ann Arbor with more than two decades of professional scouting experience, the bulk of it spent with the New York Giants. During his tenure as the Giants’ director of college scouting, he helped assemble the rosters that captured two Lombardi trophies, establishing a reputation for identifying difference-makers at the highest level of the sport. Beyond his traditional résumé, Pettit brings a technological edge to the Wolverines. He serves as chief operating officer and co-founder of Scout Smarter AI, a patented, AI-powered talent-evaluation platform engineered by former NFL executives. The system promises to streamline scouting workflows, sharpen decision-making, and deliver predictive analytics on player performance—tools that could immediately amplify Michigan’s recruiting operation. Pettit will report directly to newly installed general manager Dave Peloquin, who was hired in February after two decades in Notre Dame’s recruiting department and a subsequent stint leading the college division of Athletes First. Peloquin’s first personnel move was the addition of Skylar Phan, previously USC’s director of recruiting strategy and described by industry sources as an “up-and-coming superstar” in the recruiting landscape. Phan is expected to oversee visitor experience and strategic outreach for the Wolverines. While Michigan has not publicly confirmed adoption of Scout Smarter AI, Pettit’s presence makes its integration all but certain. Pairing his evaluative acumen with Peloquin’s relational expertise and Phan’s event management savvy gives Michigan a three-pronged approach designed to compete for elite prospects on every front.
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Lamine Yamal and João Félix Headline Global Transfer Whispers

Lamine Yamal and João Félix Headline Global Transfer Whispers

Paris Saint-Germain have tabled a staggering €350 million bid for 16-year-old Barcelona prodigy Lamine Yamal, according to Spanish outlet Fichajes, instantly making the Spain international the most talked-about name on the summer rumour mill. The offer, which converts to roughly $404.6 million, would shatter the existing world-record transfer fee if Barça ultimately decide to cash in on the winger. While Yamal dominates headlines in France, Portugal forward João Félix is generating equal buzz in England. Fichajes reports that Manchester United have opened talks with Al-Nassr over a potential move for the 24-year-old, who is said to be enthusiastic about the prospect of relocating to Old Trafford. The former Atlético Madrid and Chelsea attacker has spent the past season in Saudi Arabia, but a return to a high-profile European stage appears to be gathering momentum. Elsewhere, Liverpool continue to monitor Bayern Munich’s Michael Olise after the player’s family were spotted in the stands during the Reds’ 2–1 loss to Brighton on Saturday. Defensa Central suggests that Jürgen Klopp’s side view Olise as their “dream” successor to Mohamed Salah and could trigger his €100 million release clause. Chelsea, meanwhile, are weighing a €40 million swoop for AC Milan defender Strahinja Pavlović, while Aston Villa have slapped a £100 million price tag on England midfielder Morgan Rogers—interest from both Chelsea and United remains strong despite the lofty valuation. Arsenal’s pursuit of Bayern stalwart Leon Goretzka has been complicated by AC Milan’s late intervention, and the Gunners’ scouts continue to track Lille teenager Ayyoub Bouaddi, who is also admired by Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester City. Other notable snippets include Julián Álvarez opting to leave Atlético Madrid for Arsenal, Bernardo Silva pushing for a Camp Nou switch, and Joshua Zirkzee prioritising a Serie A return over a proposed West Ham move. With PSG’s record-breaking bid for Yamal and Félix’s potential Premier League comeback leading the chatter, the summer window is already promising fireworks.
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Barcelona Add Juventus Star Andrea Cambiaso to Summer Transfer Radar

Barcelona Add Juventus Star Andrea Cambiaso to Summer Transfer Radar

Barcelona have placed Juventus full-back Andrea Cambiaso on their growing list of defensive targets ahead of the summer window, according to a report from SportItalia. The Catalan club are searching for a versatile defender capable of operating on both flanks, and Cambiaso’s tactical profile has caught the eye of the recruitment team. Sources close to the negotiations indicate that the 24-year-old Italian international is viewed as an ideal fit for Hansi Flick’s system at Camp Nou, with scouts monitoring his performances in Serie A ahead of a potential approach. Cambiaso has established himself as a regular in Massimiliano Allegri’s starting XI this season, making him a more attractive proposition for the Spanish giants. Interest from Manchester City, managed by Pep Guardiola, has previously circulated around Cambiaso, but the player opted to remain in Turin to continue his development. Barcelona’s pursuit now adds a new layer of competition for his signature. Cambiaso is not the only defender on Barcelona’s wish list. Inter Milan’s Alessandro Bastoni remains a primary objective, while teenage prospect Luka Vuskovic of Hajduk Split and Tottenham’s Micky van de Ven have also been mentioned as viable alternatives as the club look to reinforce the back line. In addition to fresh faces, Barcelona are exploring the possibility of retaining Joao Cancelo beyond the expiry of his current loan. The Portuguese full-back has impressed since arriving in January and the club are weighing up a permanent move. With the summer window approaching, Barcelona’s defensive overhaul is poised to dominate headlines as the club balance financial constraints against the need for quality reinforcements.
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