Expert Sports News & Commentary

Where to Watch Barcelona vs. Newcastle: Champions League Live Stream, TV Channel and Kick-Off Information
Barcelona and Newcastle United will settle their UEFA Champions League Round of 16 tie on Wednesday when they meet in the second leg at Camp Nou, with the contest delicately balanced after a dramatic opening encounter.
A late Lamine Yamal penalty in the first leg prevented Newcastle from claiming a historic victory and instead sent the teams into the return match on level terms. That result keeps both clubs firmly in contention for a quarter-final berth and sets the stage for a decisive 90 minutes in Catalonia.
Form appears to favor the hosts, who routed Sevilla 5-2 at the weekend in La Liga, while Newcastle also enter the match on a high after edging Chelsea 1-0 at Stamford Bridge in Premier League action.
Kick-off is scheduled for 6:45 p.m. local time on Wednesday, March 18, under the lights of Camp Nou.
For viewers in the United States, the match will be streamed exclusively live on Paramount+. The platform carries every UEFA Champions League contest, alongside NFL, UFC, March Madness and thousands of hours of on-demand entertainment.
Paramount+ subscribers can watch the game on a wide range of devices, with live coverage beginning shortly before kick-off.
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Welcome to Chelsea, Liam Rosenior. Where does this extraordinary week leave the head coach?
By Simon Johnson
Stamford Bridge, once a fortress, has become a theatre of escalating crisis. In the space of seven days, Chelsea head coach Liam Rosenior has watched his team suffer the joint-heaviest aggregate defeat in the club’s European history, lose a key midfielder to suspension, mislay two right-backs, incur a record Premier League sanction and, most ominously, seen his on-pitch captain raise the possibility of an exit.
The 3-0 second-leg humbling by Paris Saint-Germain on Tuesday night, completing an 8-2 aggregate rout, was merely the loudest explosion in a chain reaction that began in the 74th minute of the first leg in Paris. Since then, Rosenior’s Chelsea have conceded six goals, collected zero points from two home fixtures, shed their most influential defender for weeks and been fined £multi-millions with a suspended transfer ban hanging overhead like a guillotine.
Enzo Fernandez, handed the armband in the continued absence of Reece James, chose the aftermath of the club’s worst European exit to drop the broadest of hints that his own long-term future may lie elsewhere. “You think about where you want to be in two years,” the Argentine told reporters, a statement that lands like a lead weight on a dressing-room already stripped of confidence. With James sidelined by a hamstring injury sustained late against Newcastle, Fernandez’s leadership was supposed to be the constant; instead it has become another variable.
The optics are brutal. Fans booed the XI at kick-off, howled at Rosenior’s substitutions and headed for the exits when 19-year-old Senny Mayulu stabbed in PSG’s third. Television microphones caught a chorus of dissent aimed at the technical area; the head coach’s name, sung affectionately a month ago, was conspicuously absent on the final whistle.
Rosenior’s selection gambles have unravelled at speed. The decision to start Filip Jorgensen in Paris backfired when the keeper’s misjudgement allowed Vitinha to restore the French side’s lead; Robert Sanchez’s subsequent recall could not prevent Tuesday’s collapse. Pedro Neto, already sent off at Arsenal this month, earned an additional one-game ban for shoving a ball boy in the French capital, removing a pace option for the Newcastle defeat. Malo Gusto’s illness on the morning of the second leg left the bench short, while Trevoh Chalobah’s stretcher-assisted exit reduced Chelsea to ten men for the closing minutes. In between, Wesley Fofana’s demotion was leaked to RMC Sport hours before kick-off, another unwanted headline.
Off the field, the club’s week was equally toxic. A Premier League investigation concluded that historical bookkeeping offences under the previous ownership warranted a record financial penalty and a suspended two-window registration ban. In an unrelated matter, academy recruitment restrictions were imposed for nine months. Both rulings broke on Monday, shredding any hope of a focused build-up to the PSG return leg.
Yet Rosenior, flanked by weary-looking assistants, fronted up. “This is football,” he insisted. “Moments can change the flow of things. We were 2-2 in Paris and in the tie; we don’t take care of the moments.” He pledged an immediate inquest, promising to “make sure we go into the Everton game in a really positive frame of mind.”
The arithmetic of the season still offers a lifeline. Chelsea sit sixth, one point behind Liverpool and three off Aston Villa with eight matches remaining. Qualification for next season’s Champions League, the minimum requirement set by the board when the regime took over, remains mathematically achievable. But the trajectory feels vertiginous: in 2023 a 4-0 last-eight defeat by Real Madrid preficed a two-and-a-half-year absence from the competition. No one at the club wants a repeat.
Whether Rosenior can prevent a slide may depend on how quickly he can restore belief inside a bruised squad. Fernandez’s public equivocation is the loudest alarm bell; privately, staff admit the mood has nosedived since the Newcastle loss. The pre-match huddle, introduced in January to foster unity, descended into farce when referee Paul Tierney was inadvertently encircled, a moment that felt metaphorical: Chelsea, confused and going nowhere fast.
For the first time since his appointment in late January, the head coach must confront the possibility that his tactical blueprint is being undermined by fragility rather than execution. “What I have to do is make sure we get that back on track and that comes from not making mistakes or errors,” he said, a tacit admission that basic lapses, not systemic failure, have fed the carnage.
Welcome to Chelsea, Liam Rosenior. The honeymoon is officially over; the reckoning starts now.
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Dink, flick, twirl, crack: Eberechi Eze’s beautiful moment – and why it meant so much to Arsenal
Eberechi Eze’s first Champions League strike for Arsenal was not merely a goal; it was a statement of arrival, a distillation of everything the club hoped for when they lured their boyhood supporter to north London last summer. In the 63rd minute of a breathless last-16 second-leg against Bayer Leverkusen, the 27-year-old produced a moment of outrageous audacity that turned a night of mounting frustration into one of unbridled Emirates euphoria.
Collecting Leandro Trossard’s firm pass on the edge of the D, Eze dinked the ball into the air with his left foot, pirouetted past a sliding challenge, and in one fluid arc cracked a right-footed volley past the previously unbeatable Janis Blaswich. The net rippled, the stadium gasped, and William Saliba’s open-mouthed celebration in the technical area told the story: this was special even by Arsenal’s recent standards of wonder goals.
It was a strike that felt pre-ordained. Since rejoining the club he supported as a child, Eze had shown flashes of his trademark springtime bloom – most memorably in derby skirmishes against Tottenham – yet consistency against other opponents had remained elusive. Mikel Arteta admitted the adaptation to Arsenal’s high-octane structure had “needed time, space, understanding and learning,” a process that included December and January spells on the bench.
Those months of patience crystallised in one balletic explosion. Eze’s finish was both ice-cool and white-hot, a goal that doubled the Gunners’ aggregate advantage and effectively sealed a quarter-final berth. The midfielder milked the acclaim with arms-outstretched nonchalance, yet the relief inside the ground was palpable: Arsenal had peppered Leverkusen’s goal with a season-high tally of shots on target, but Blaswich’s defiance demanded genius rather than graft.
Arteta labelled it “a magical moment,” the clearest evidence yet of the idiosyncratic flair Arsenal craved. The Spaniard has spent months tweaking Eze’s positioning – sometimes as a roaming No. 10, sometimes deeper, sometimes pushed tight to the striker – searching for the alchemy that would marry individual brilliance to collective intensity. Tuesday night suggested the experiment is clicking. Eze has now logged more minutes than in any previous campaign, and the rhythm shows: he was inches from a second sensational goal moments after his first, denied only by a last-ditch block.
Crucially, the maverick matched the flash with diligence. He pressed relentlessly, linked fluently with Declan Rice and Martin Ødegaard, and regained possession six times. Arteta was quick to highlight that diligence: “Without that, you have no chance to play in this team. Everybody does it, and that’s why we’re so consistent.”
The manager’s satisfaction was mirrored across the squad. Rice doubled the advantage with a curling 20-yard pearl that kissed the inside of the post, capping a dominant display that followed Saturday’s Max Dowman-inspired rout of Everton. Three hurdles in eight days – Everton, Leverkusen, Sunday’s Carabao Cup final against Manchester City – have now been cleared with style and swagger.
Inside the Emirates, the mood has shifted. A club sometimes accused of over-thinking is suddenly playing with freedom, buoyed by a local hero who has turned boyhood dreams into Champions League reality. Outside, the wider football community may debate whether Arsenal are entitled to such exuberance, but inside the camp the focus is fixed on the trophies within reach.
For Eze, the journey from fan in the stands to headline act has reached its first crescendo. If spring remains his season, Arsenal will believe the best is yet to come.
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Hansi Flick to Extend Barcelona Stay Through 2028, Plans to End Career in Catalonia
Barcelona, Spain — Hansi Flick is poised to commit the remainder of his coaching career to FC Barcelona. According to a report from Sky Germany journalist Florian Plettenberg, the German tactician will extend his current contract until at least 2028 after club president Joan Laporta secured re-election.
Laporta signaled during his campaign that retaining Flick would be a priority if he returned to office, and the first item on the presidential agenda appears to be locking down the 58-year-old for the long term. While Flick declined to confirm the specifics ahead of Wednesday’s Champions League showdown with Newcastle United, he offered the strongest hint yet that Barcelona will be his final stop.
“I don’t think it’s the right time. We have a very important match,” Flick told reporters when asked about the extension. “Everyone knows I’m very happy here, but I need to talk to my family. There will be time to talk, it’s not the time now.”
Pressed on whether the Camp Nou would serve as the curtain call for his coaching journey, Flick left little room for interpretation: “I’m not thinking about going anywhere else. This will be my last club, my last job, and I’m delighted.”
The remarks will disappoint any lingering hopes at Bayern Munich of a future reunion with the coach who delivered a historic sextuple in 2020. Instead, Flick appears determined to build a lasting legacy in Catalonia, citing the support of both the board and what he calls his “great family” within the club.
Barcelona supporters will now await official confirmation of the new deal, but all signs point to Flick’s tenure stretching well beyond the current season as he targets sustained success on the European stage.
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The case for Pep Guardiola to stay at Manchester City
Manchester City’s Champions League elimination at the hands of Real Madrid has intensified speculation about Pep Guardiola’s future, yet every strand of evidence emerging from the Etihad points to one conclusion: the Catalan should resist any temptation to walk away and instead shepherd this nascent squad into its next era.
Guardiola, approaching the final 12 months of a contract that would take him to an 11th season in Manchester, has spent the past week repeating a simple mantra—“we will be back next season.” The phrasing is deliberate. Speaking after the 3-2 second-leg defeat that sealed a 5-1 aggregate loss, he used the collective pronoun “we” even when pressed on whether he would personally be present. “I will say I will be back, because I am part of that,” he explained, citing the same emotional attachment he retains to Barcelona and Bayern Munich. The distinction matters: Guardiola sees himself as inseparable from the club’s fabric, regardless of job title.
The argument for continuity is strengthened by the scale of transition underway. Since January 2025 City have overhauled more than half their match-day squad, integrating 11 new signings while bidding farewell to cornerstone figures Ederson, Kyle Walker, Ilkay Gundogan and Kevin De Bruyne. Academy graduate Nico O’Reilly has been promoted, Matheus Nunes re-engineered as a right-back, and a raft of stylistically un-Guardiola profiles—Omar Marmoush, Antoine Semenyo, Savinho—introduced to meet a Premier League increasingly obsessed with direct duels. Rayan Cherki, Rayan Ait-Nouri and Tijjani Reijnders offer flair but require tutoring in the defensive diligence Guardiola demands, while Abdukodir Khusanov’s aggressive defending and Gianluigi Donnarumma’s shot-stopping provide immediate solutions to high-line vulnerabilities.
Results have oscillated between exhilarating and exasperating. A 3-0 first-leg surrender in Madrid was followed by a spirited but flawed second-leg riposte; a limp 1-1 draw at West Ham United underlined the inconsistency. Yet within those performances lie fragments of a team learning to coexist: 19 shots on Tuesday night, Cherki’s effervescence, Khusanov’s last-ditch authority, Jeremy Doku’s persistence. Guardiola himself admits he is “still finding the best way to have stability,” a confession that should be read not as weakness but as an honest appraisal of a roster in flux.
Supporters appear to agree. While social-media pessimism surged after the Bernabéu debacle, the Etihad’s mood shifted during the return leg. A red card to Bernardo Silva in the 20th minute could have precipitated collapse; instead it forged unity. Fans mocked Madrid with “You’re just a s**t Barcelona,” serenaded Edin Dzeko on his 40th birthday and belted out Blue Moon even as Vinicius Jr netted a stoppage-time decider. Cherki’s raised thumb to the crowd after the final whistle felt symbolic: a young star acknowledging a fan-base willing to invest emotional capital in the future.
That future is Guardiola’s to shape. He has never coached a squad this raw at City; by next August, January recruits Semenyo and Marc Guehi will have had six months of immersion, most incumbents a full year or more. The cycle mirrors 2016-17, when a mid-table finish laid foundations for a century-point season. The difference is that the current group already owns the league’s highest expected-goals tally since the turn of the year, hinting at untapped ceiling.
Critics point to back-to-back round-of-16 exits and a title race littered with self-inflicted wounds. Yet context tempers judgment: last season’s injury crisis, this season’s systemic rebuild. City sit within striking distance of Arsenal and remain alive on three domestic fronts. More importantly, the players are fighting not for a paycheck but for a manager who has won every major honour yet still prowls the technical area as if trophies remain elusive.
Real Madrid’s travelling support recognised the threat, sarcastically urging Guardiola to “stay” because they sense what City supporters quietly fear losing: the single greatest guarantee that potential converts into silverware. The best way to discover how high this new ensemble can climb is for the architect to remain atop the scaffolding. Guardiola should listen to the Bernabéu’s mischiev chorus and oblige.
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This is not the season Xavi Simons was expecting at Tottenham Hotspur
When Tottenham Hotspur shelled out £51.8 million to lure Xavi Simons from RB Leipzig last August, the script seemed obvious: the Dutch prodigy would sprinkle stardust on Champions League nights and propel a depleted midfield in the Premier League. Instead, Wednesday’s round-of-16 second leg against Atlético Madrid risks becoming a footnote in a campaign that has twisted into a relegation battle, leaving Simons himself on the margins.
The 21-year-old arrived with pedigree—he had navigated the Champions League knockout rounds with Leipzig and carried a reputation for fearless creativity. Spurs, shorn of James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski for long stretches, craved exactly that. Yet as the club slides toward the lower reaches of the table, Simons has started none of the last three fixtures, watching from the bench as defeats to Crystal Palace and Atlético Madrid, plus a dogged draw at Liverpool, unfolded.
Head coach Igor Tudor’s preference for a muscular 4-4-2 has prioritised the industry of Mathys Tel and Souza on the flanks, leaving Simons—the squad’s most technically gifted available player—waiting. His last start came on 1 March at Fulham, curtailed after an hour. Since then he has mustered 25 minutes of football across two substitute appearances, a dramatic fall from the turn of the year when he was arguably Tottenham’s standout performer under Thomas Frank.
Between December and February, Simons started 11 consecutive league matches, operating chiefly as a No 10. He scored his first Spurs goal in a 2-0 win over Brentford, ran the show against Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League, and almost single-handedly hauled his side level against Manchester City. His entourage—strength coach, personal trainer, mindset coach and video analyst—underscored a commitment to mastering English football’s physicality, while pre-match inspiration came from Hans Zimmer’s Interstellar score.
But Frank’s sacking on 11 February reset the narrative. Tudor’s opening two fixtures included Simons, yet the winger has since been peripheral. Asked before the Anfield trip why the Dutchman was benched, the Croatian replied he selects “what is best for the club,” praising Simons while omitting him again.
Now the landscape is stark. Sunday’s visit of Nottingham Forest, 16th versus 17th, dwarfs the European encounter in significance. If Tudor opts to rest senior legs against Atlético, Simons could earn a rare start—an opportunity to re-state his case before the relegation six-pointer. Eight league games remain and Spurs need ingenuity; whether Simons supplies it from the pitch or the periphery will shape both his personal trajectory and Tottenham’s fight for survival.
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Sir Jim Ratcliffe talked about Man Utd's players, coach, finances and future. One year on, how does it look?
Twelve months have passed since Sir Jim Ratcliffe sat down with the BBC, The Times, The Telegraph and The Overlap and delivered an unflinching audit of Manchester United: over-paid players, a manager he expected to last “a long time”, a balance sheet he warned could tip the club toward bankruptcy by Christmas, and a £2 billion stadium plan he insisted was “eminently financeable”.
Today, the landscape at Old Trafford is both recognisably Ratcliffe’s and dramatically altered. Ruben Amorim, the coach he backed publicly, was dismissed in January and replaced by interim boss Michael Carrick. More than £239 million was committed to summer transfers, yet fan favourites Alejandro Garnacho and Marcus Rashford were moved on. A gleaming 100,000-seat stadium remains a sketch on an architect’s easel, while United’s debt has swollen to £777 million and transfer-related IOUs have climbed from £287 million to £314 million.
Ratcliffe’s most eye-catching line last March was that certain squad members were “probably overpaid” and “not good enough” for a club that ultimately finished lowest since 1974. The subsequent exodus of Antony, Andre Onana and Rasmus Hojlund on loan or permanent deals, plus the impending exit of Casemiro, has sliced the wage bill from £365 million in 2023-24 to a projected sub-£300 million this season, United’s leanest since 2018. Some 450 non-playing jobs have been eliminated, credit cards withdrawn and complimentary lunches cancelled as part of what the club calls a “transformation plan”.
On the pitch, the recruitment strategy has yielded mixed dividends. Bryan Mbeumo, Matheus Cunha and Benjamin Sesko have flashed Premier League quality, while goalkeeper Senne Lammens has brought composure. Yet the jury remains out on £86 million pair Manuel Ugarte and Joshua Zirkzee, Noussair Mazraoui has regressed, Matthijs de Ligt has not kicked a ball since November and Leny Yoro’s development has stalled. The squad, built for Amorim’s possession-heavy blueprint, is suddenly light on natural width—an imbalance the next window must correct.
Off the field, the new stadium promised within five years has encountered friction. Land negotiations with Freightliner have stalled over a £350 million valuation gap, forcing United to contemplate scrapping Foster + Partners’ signature canopy. Collette Roche has been hired as chief executive for stadium development and the Old Trafford Regeneration Mayoral Development Corporation has convened, but no financing mechanism has been detailed and the anniversary of the fanfare launch slipped by without an update.
Ratcliffe’s £125 million cost-saving boast looks optimistic. Operating expenses plus wages fell from £514 million in 2023-24 to an estimated £450 million this year, a noteworthy drop but barely half the headline figure. Senior-management pay has doubled to £7.8 million, amortisation charges are heading past £200 million annually and another £20 million evaporated when Amorim was sacked. Interest on the Glazer-era debt consumes £34 million a year; the principal remains untouched and renewal of a £650 million tranche looms, set to push borrowing costs higher.
Still, the injection of £238.5 million from Ratcliffe’s INEOS has underwritten more than £500 million in gross transfer spend since February 2024, staving off the liquidity crunch he warned could leave United “bust by Christmas”. Whether the club truly skirted insolvency or simply required fresh equity is debatable, yet without the cash infusion the trajectory would have been bleak.
The clearest path to solvency now runs through Champions League qualification. A top-four finish would trigger player bonus clauses and tens of millions in UEFA distributions, easing the strain on a wage bill already trimmed to fifth in England and allowing further squad surgery. Failure, conversely, would extend the cycle of cost-cutting and speculation around marquee sales.
One year on, Ratcliffe’s rhetoric has cooled and the revolution is only half-complete. The squad is younger, the wage structure slimmer, the transfer debt re-profiled, but the stadium is a field of cranes only in the mind’s eye and the club’s borrowings continue to climb. United’s future under their new co-owner is no longer hurtling toward a financial cliff edge, yet the promised land of self-sustaining, record-breaking profitability by 2028 remains a distant mirage, contingent on footballing success they have not consistently achieved.
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Cummins to Rana: Full list of injured players and their replacements
With the tournament on the horizon, franchises are scrambling to finalise their rosters after a spate of late injuries has forced several high-profile changes. While the headline pairing of Pat Cummins and Naveen-ul-Haq Rana signals the most eye-catching swap, the league has confirmed a broader reshuffle across multiple squads.
Officials released a concise statement noting that “all franchises will be eager to resolve these fitness challenges and ensure their squads are fully prepared for the season ahead.” The brief communication did not specify the nature or severity of each injury, nor did it outline individual recovery timelines. Instead, it underlined a collective determination to have every team at full strength before the opening match.
The league has yet to publish the complete medical bulletins or the updated player lists, leaving fans to await further clarity on the extent of the reshaping. Until then, the headline remains the most concrete indication of the changes: Cummins to Rana, with more replacements expected to follow.
Read more →Sacramento State football begins spring practice under new leadership
Sacramento State football officially opened its spring practice, ushering in a new era under first-year head coach Alonzo Carter. The Hornets’ initial workouts signal the start of preparations for their inaugural campaign in the Mid-American Conference, a move that marks the program’s debut in the FBS ranks. With Carter at the helm, the squad will use the 15 allotted spring sessions to install schemes, evaluate personnel, and lay the groundwork for the challenges that await in the MAC this fall.
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Kansas Football Faces Long Odds in 2026 as FanDuel Projects 5.5 Wins
Manhattan, Kansas — The image of Lance Leipold trudging off the Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium turf last Oct. 26, shoulders slumped after another loss to in-state rival Kansas State, has become the snapshot of a program stuck in neutral. On that day the Jayhawks fell to 5-7 for a second straight season, extending a bowl-less stretch that began after their 9-4 breakthrough and Guaranteed Rate Bowl triumph three years ago. With spring drills on the horizon, national books are already casting their verdict on whether KU can escape the rut.
FanDuel Sportsbook opened Kansas’ 2026 win total at 5.5, installing the over at –154 and the under at +126. The implied probability tilts slightly toward six victories—enough, perhaps, for bowl eligibility—yet the modest line places KU in the bottom half of the reconfigured Big 12, alongside Cincinnati, Iowa State, Oklahoma State, UCF and West Virginia. Only Colorado sits lower at 4.5.
The projection reflects both recent history and an uncertain future. Longtime starting quarterback Jalon Daniels has exited, taking 35 career touchdowns and a cult-hero status with him. Several veteran defenders and key special-teamers have also graduated or transferred, leaving Leipold to restock a roster that lost five one-score games in 2024. The recurring theme: Kansas matched up statistically with most opponents but faltered in fourth-quarter execution on both sides of the ball.
Sophomore Isaiah Marshall is expected to take the first-team reps this spring, with newly rehired offensive coordinator Andy Kotelnicki tasked with recapturing the explosive rhythm that defined KU’s attack during its nine-win campaign. Kotelnicki returned to Lawrence after a brief stint at Penn State, reuniting with Leipold for a second tour.
Until the Jayhawks prove they can flip the script in tight games, oddsmakers see 5.5 wins as the fair median. A swing of two or three possessions could vault Kansas to seven or eight victories and into the postseason mix—or deliver a third consecutive year on the outside looking in.
Odds provided by FanDuel Sportsbook and current as of publication. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available at 1-800-GAMBLER.
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EQT, KKR-Temasek, Pai in race as RCB's sale price nears $2 billion: Report
Swedish private equity firm EQT and a consortium led by Manipal Group’s Ranjan Pai are vying for ownership of Royal Challengers Bangalore, according to a report that values the Indian Premier League franchise at close to $2 billion. Also in contention is a partnership between global investment giant Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and Singapore state investor Temasek. With the valuation approaching the landmark figure, the three-way contest sets the stage for one of the most lucrative deals in cricket history.
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Why Boston College Men’s Hockey Will Play With ‘Hunter’ Mentality Against UConn: The Rundown
Boston College head coach Greg Brown wants the Eagles to skate like predators, not pugilists, when they face UConn in Friday’s 7 p.m. Hockey East semifinal at TD Garden. After watching his team bulldoze Maine 5-0 in last weekend’s quarterfinal, Brown is convinced that controlled aggression—not reckless hitting—will decide whether BC’s season advances another step.
“That has to be part of the equation,” Brown said following Tuesday’s practice. “We’re never going to be like a run-you-out-of-the-building physical team, but you still have to be physical, especially in the playoffs. It means you’re skating. It means you’re hunting.”
Brown’s definition of “hunting” is systematic: pressure the puck, eliminate outlets on the back check, turn mistakes into quick offense. The coach believes the mindset accelerates every phase—forecheck, breakout, transition—without sacrificing positional discipline. BC struck that balance against Maine, jumping on the Black Bears early and never relenting.
Senior captain Brady Berard embodied the approach. The fourth-line forward’s presence alone tilted ice, forcing Maine into rushed decisions and visible hesitation. “Frankly, Maine looked scared when Berard was on the ice,” one observer noted, and the ripple effect undercut the Black Bears’ structure for sixty minutes.
Brown praised the leadership group for resisting the temptation to reinvent itself for the postseason. “We didn’t have to change our game that much,” he said. “We just had to execute it at a little bit higher of a level.” That conviction, he hopes, travels down Commonwealth Avenue to the Garden on Friday.
With tournament survival on the line, the Eagles expect the same hunt-from-every-line mentality against a UConn squad that has already proven it can end seasons. Brown’s message is simple: be first to the puck, finish every check within the system, and let the scoreboard reflect the pursuit.
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Bayern Munich News: Talks open with Feyenoord right-back phenom Givairo Read
Bayern Munich have moved swiftly to secure their defensive future, opening formal discussions over personal terms with Feyenoord’s highly-rated right-back Givairo Read ahead of a potential summer switch, according to Sport Bild’s Christian Falk.
The Bavarian giants hope to integrate the 19-year-old Dutchman into Vincent Kompany’s squad for the 2025-26 campaign and are simultaneously exploring ways to free up space on the balance sheet. Central to that plan is the expectation—yet to be confirmed—that Turkish powerhouse Galatasaray will trigger their purchase option on current loanee Sacha Boey, a transaction that would provide Bayern with both a cash injection and roster clarity.
Read’s name has circulated around the European elite for months, with Liverpool, Manchester City, Arsenal, Barcelona and Brighton all credited with keeping close tabs on the Rotterdam academy product. While Bayern’s interest is now concrete, negotiations with Feyenoord are expected to be complex given the competition and the Eredivisie club’s desire to extract maximum value for one of its brightest prospects.
Elsewhere on Bayern’s wide-ranging recruitment radar, Brentford’s Germany-eligible winger Kevin Schade remains under active observation. Sources at the London club have indicated an asking price in the region of €70 million—a valuation Bayern deem excessive for a player currently viewed as a back-up option to existing wide talent rather than a marquee priority. Chelsea and Tottenham are also monitoring Schade, whose potential national-team relevance adds long-term appeal.
In the goalkeeping department, Bayern are planning for life after Manuel Neuer, 40 in March, yet to commit to a contract extension. The club’s hierarchy has pencilled in rising shot-stopper Jonas Urbig as future No. 1, while veteran Sven Ulreich is poised to receive a one-year extension to provide immediate stability. Any pursuit of Brighton keeper Bart Verbruggen is firmly off the table; Bayern, if they recruit at all, will target an experienced deputy comfortable with a secondary role.
On the outgoing front, Filip Kostić is set to depart Juventus on a free transfer when his contract expires in June, although no link to Bayern has been mooted. Similarly, Manchester City’s Bernardo Silva is expected to leave the Etihad after nine trophy-laden seasons, but there is no indication the Bavarians will enter the race for the Portuguese midfielder.
With the summer window still months away, Bayern’s early groundwork underscores a desire to act decisively on emerging talents like Read while maintaining financial prudence.
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Liverpool vs. Galatasaray live stream, how to watch, odds: Can Reds mount UCL comeback at Anfield?
Anfield is bracing for a European night of reckoning. Liverpool enter Wednesday’s Champions League round-of-16 return leg trailing Galatasaray by a single goal after a chastening 1-0 loss in Turkey, yet the aggregate deficit is the only number that matters now. Everything else points toward a Reds revival.
The first-leg defeat capped a bruising week that also saw Jürgen Klopp’s side concede a late equaliser to Tottenham, but the tie remains delicately poised. Galatasaray’s form flips dramatically once they leave the raucous confines of Rams Park: in five away Champions League fixtures they have shipped 11 goals, recorded just one victory—a narrow win over an Ajax side in freefall—and looked increasingly vulnerable when forced to chase games.
Contrast that with Liverpool’s historic edge on Merseyside. Anfield has long ranked among Europe’s most intimidating venues, and the hosts have lost only once to Turkish opposition across two-legged ties in their continental history. Virgil van Dijk’s aerial dominance from set pieces offers an immediate route to goal, while the anticipated return of attacking catalyst Florian Wirtz could provide the early breakthrough that changes the complexion of the contest.
Galatasaray’s task is complicated by the need to balance caution with ambition. Sitting deep invites sustained pressure from Mohamed Salah and company; pushing forward risks exposing a back line that has already conceded twice per game on its European travels. Victor Osimhen remains a lightning-rod threat on the break, yet even his pace may be neutralised if Liverpool establish control and force the visitors to open up.
Oddsmakers have installed the Reds as clear favourites, and the data backs the narrative: a multi-goal surge at Anfield would continue Galatasaray’s road woes and propel Liverpool into the quarter-finals. Expect a fast start, a rocking atmosphere, and a 3-1 Liverpool victory that renders the first-leg disappointment a footnote.
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Venezuela beats US 3-2 on Suárez’s 9th-inning double to win first World Baseball Classic title
MIAMI — Thirty-three minutes after the final out, the Venezuelan national anthem still echoed through loanDepot park as Eugenio Suárez and his teammates sang from a stage behind second base, gold medals flashing under the stadium lights. Venezuela had just captured its first World Baseball Classic championship, edging the United States 3-2 on Suárez’s tiebreaking double in the top of the ninth inning Tuesday night.
The dramatic swing capped a back-and-forth final that saw Bryce Harper erase a two-run deficit with a two-out, two-run homer in the eighth, only for Venezuela to answer in its last turn at bat. Luis Arraez drew a lead-off walk in the ninth, pinch-runner Javier Sanoja stole second, and Suárez rifled a full-count change-up from Boston’s Garrett Whitlock into the left-center gap to bring home the winning run.
Manager Omar López, who began the day negotiating pitcher availability via text message, watched Daniel Palencia strike out two of the three batters he faced—capping the game with a 99.7-mph fastball that Roman Anthony swung under—to seal a three-hit complete game for the bullpen.
“We’re warriors,” outfielder Wilyer Abreu said. Abreu’s fifth-inning homer off rookie Nolan McLean and Maikel Garcia’s third-inning sacrifice fly had built the early 2-0 lead before Harper’s swing briefly silenced the pro-Venezuela crowd of 36,190.
Left-hander Eduardo Rodríguez set the tone with 4 1/3 innings of one-hit ball, handing off to a parade of relievers—Eduard Bazardo, José Buttó, Angel Zerpa, Andrés Machado and Palencia—who kept the star-studded U.S. lineup at bay until Harper’s eighth-inning bolt.
The loss extends America’s title drought to eight years; the U.S. has not won the WBC since 2017. Manager Mark DeRosa, who also guided the 2023 runners-up, conceded his club never found an offensive rhythm, batting .188 across three knockout games and scoring only nine runs.
Venezuela’s triumph reverberated far beyond Miami. Acting President Delcy Rodríguez declared Wednesday a National Day of Joy, granting a non-working holiday to all but essential workers. In Caracas, thousands packed Plaza de la Juventud, waving flags and chanting the anthem in unison. “The United States is a superpower, and the fact that we beat them makes me very proud,” high-school student Yorleiny Mestra said.
Tournament MVP Maikel Garcia finished with a WBC-best 10 hits and seven RBIs while hitting .385, bolstering his claim that Venezuela should sit atop the next world rankings. “They underestimated us because we had never won anything, but we are powerful,” Garcia said.
For veteran catcher Salvador Pérez, the moment transcended sport. “When you fight for your country, that goes beyond” the World Series, he said. “The sacrifices made by our parents, those people that helped us—that’s why this means a lot to me and to Venezuela.”
As Venezuelans poured onto the infield, the stunned Americans leaned against the dugout rail, absorbing a defeat that will linger until the next tournament in 2029. Harper, who went 2-for-4 on the night, crossed the field to offer congratulations. “They had a great tournament,” he said. “They're the best team in the world.”
Venezuela now joins the Dominican Republic as the only Latin American nations to win the WBC, while the global baseball community is reminded that October-like drama can unfold in March when flags, not franchises, are stitched across players’ chests.
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Opinion: Reasons for optimism in the U.S.-Israeli campaign in Iran
While cable-news chyrons have blared a drumbeat of gloom about the unfolding U.S.-Israeli campaign in Iran, a growing counter-chorus inside the foreign-policy establishment contends that the war is quietly delivering strategic gains that were considered unattainable only a month ago.
Writing in The New York Times on 12 March, columnist Bret Stephens chastised what he called “relentless pessimism,” noting that predictions of “another Iraq” are surfacing barely two weeks into a conflict many analysts believe will conclude before April. Wall Street Journal deputy editor Matthew Hennessey amplified the point a day later, arguing that American outlets are “flooding the zone with negative coverage” while ignoring operational successes.
That narrative is beginning to draw pushback from specialists with battlefield and sanctions experience. Mark Dubowitz and Richard Goldberg of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, in a 16 March essay for The Atlantic, concede the fight is “unfinished” yet insist “the outlines of victory are beginning to emerge.” They credit President Trump’s strike on Kharg Island with crippling Iranian radar, Revolutionary Guard protection, and coastal defenses while deliberately leaving the oil terminal intact—thereby positioning CENTCOM to throttle Tehran’s economic lifeline if tanker traffic can be safely restored.
Muhanad Seloom, an assistant professor at the Doha Institute and former U.S. State Department adviser, offers a parallel assessment in Al Jazeera. He argues critics err by “measuring the wrong things,” noting that Iran’s ballistic-missile arsenal, nuclear infrastructure, air-defense grid, navy, and proxy command networks have all suffered “systematic, phased degradation.” Seloom emphasizes that the price of inaction—a nuclear-capable Iran able to close the Strait of Hormuz at will—far outweighed the costs now being tallied.
Both analyses highlight intangible shifts: Iran’s supreme leader is reported dead, his successor wounded, and the regime’s most potent levers of regional coercion are, for now, degraded beyond quick repair. Dubowitz and Goldberg term these developments “once-unimaginable strategic gains for the free world,” while Seloom concludes that “the strategy—measured in degraded capabilities rather than cable news cycles—is working.”
The consensus among this cohort is not that the war is free of risk, but that the arc of the campaign, when viewed against the baseline of a month ago, justifies guarded optimism. Whether CENTCOM can translate battlefield gains into durable containment of Iranian power remains the open question driving the next phase of operations.
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Ruling Overturns Senegal’s Africa Cup Title and Declares Morocco the Champion; Senegal to Appeal
In a sensational reversal, Morocco has been declared the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations champion after Confederation of African Football appeals judges overturned Senegal’s victory in the January final. The CAF appeals board ruled that Senegal is “declared to have forfeited the” contest, effectively stripping the Teranga Lions of the continental crown they believed they had secured on the field. The decision thrusts Morocco into the spotlight as the new title-holder and sets the stage for a protracted legal battle, with Senegalese officials immediately confirming their intention to appeal the ruling.
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Three questions and three answers from Manchester City 1-2 (1-5 agg.) Real Madrid
Manchester – Real Madrid marched into the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals with a 2-1 victory at the Etihad Stadium, sealing a commanding 5-1 aggregate triumph over Manchester City. Vinícius Júnior struck either side of Erling Haaland’s close-range reply, converting a first-half penalty and tapping home in stoppage time to underline Madrid’s supremacy on the night and in the tie.
1. Would Real Madrid make it 36 times in a row progressing from a 3-0 first leg lead?
History said yes, and history repeated itself. Los Blancos have now protected a first-leg advantage of three or more goals on 37 occasions without ever being eliminated. Álvaro Arbeloa’s men not only preserved that immaculate record but dominated the Premier League champions even after Bernardo Silva’s red card for handball left City a man short. The result also meant Arbeloa became the first Madrid coach to win each of his first four knockout ties in the competition, sending morale soaring ahead of a likely quarter-final date with Bayern Munich.
Fran García, pressed into duty with Álvaro Carreras and Ferland Mendy unavailable, struggled at left-back, losing every tackle and duel and inviting two City penalty appeals. Yet the night offered a bright spot in goal: Andriy Lunin replaced Thibaut Courtois at the interval and produced three sharp saves, reminding supporters of his capabilities should the Belgian’s injury linger. Kylian Mbappé, declared fit on Monday, appeared for 21 minutes as a structured cameo rather than a rescue mission and picked up a soft yellow for time-wasting.
2. Is Álvaro Arbeloa to credit for Vinícius Júnior’s revival?
The numbers speak loudly. Vinícius has nine goals in 15 matches under Arbeloa, two more than he managed in 33 games beneath predecessor Xabi Alonso. His ice-cool spot-kick, just days after missing one against Elche, and his predatory finish in the 93rd minute showcased a striker reborn. With Mbappé hovering on the edge of the box late on, it was the Brazilian who gambled on the six-yard burst, a tell-tale sign of confidence restored.
Dean Huijsen, emblematic of Madrid’s rollercoaster campaign, looked every inch the elite prospect Europe fought to sign. The centre-back completed 94% of his passes, recorded 10 clearances and won both ground duels, second only to Arda Güler for forward-zone accuracy. Alongside Antonio Rüdiger, he repelled City’s star-studded attack and offered a glimpse of sustained excellence.
3. What awaits in the last eight?
Almost certainly Bayern Munich. The Bundesliga leaders crushed Atalanta 6-1 in Bergamo and average 3.6 goals per domestic match this term. Their only league-stage defeat came at Arsenal, and they have lost just twice in all competitions. A potential goalkeeper crisis for the Bavarians offers a sliver of hope, yet the heavyweight clash is precisely the sort of occasion on which Madrid have thrived this spring.
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Joan Laporta Says 'Doors Always Open' For Lionel Messi At Barcelona
Joan Laporta has secured a landslide victory to remain Barcelona president until 2031. Following his re-election, he immediately sent a message to club legend Lionel Messi, declaring that the doors of the Camp Nou are always open for the Argentine superstar.
The emphatic electoral win cements Laporta’s leadership of the Catalan giants for the next seven years, providing continuity at a pivotal moment for the club. In the aftermath of the vote, the president’s first public overture was aimed squarely at Messi, whose departure in 2021 sent shockwaves through world football.
While the brief statement released by the club did not detail specific plans or timelines, Laporta’s choice of words signals a clear intention to mend bridges and keep alive the possibility of a romantic return for the seven-time Ballon d’Or winner. The invocation of Messi’s legacy, coupled with the promise of an open door, places the ball firmly in the player’s court and ensures the narrative of a potential homecoming will linger over every transfer window between now and 2031.
Barcelona members delivered a resounding mandate, underscoring faith in Laporta’s long-term project. With financial restructuring ongoing and institutional stability now secured, the president appears determined to restore the emotional link between the club and its most emblematic figure.
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Zlatan Ibrahimovic Joins Fox As Studio Analyst For 2026 World Cup
Fox Sports has landed one of football’s most magnetic personalities for its 2026 FIFA World Cup coverage, confirming that Zlatan Ibrahimovic will make his full-time studio debut when the tournament kicks off across the United States, Mexico and Canada on June 11. The 44-year-old former striker will appear consistently throughout the month-long competition, anchoring Fox’s coverage alongside fellow marquee names Thierry Henry and Rebecca Lowe, who is on loan from NBC.
Fox Sports president Brad Zager told The Athletic that Ibrahimovic topped the network’s wish list from the moment planning began for the first 48-team World Cup. “He was at the top of the list of people we wanted to take swings at for this World Cup,” Zager said. “Zlatan was one that there was no reason to not take a swing and see if he would be willing to do this.”
Recruitment efforts began last autumn, and while Zager declined to detail whether Fox NFL analyst Tom Brady—an acquaintance of Ibrahimovic—assisted in the pitch, he praised the Swede’s early preparation. “He was so detail-oriented about if he is going to do this, he’s going to be good,” Zager noted.
Ibrahimovic’s arrival completes a high-wattage desk that also includes longtime American pundit Alexi Lalas. Fox had explored adding David Beckham and Jurgen Klopp to the roster; sources briefed on the conversations say Klopp at times appeared close to accepting, though Zager would not elaborate on those talks.
Known for a career that blended spectacular goals with headline-ready quotes, Ibrahimovic scored 52 times in 56 appearances for Major League Soccer’s LA Galaxy and retired in 2023 after a final stint with AC Milan. He participated in two World Cups, in 2002 and 2006, and played for elite European clubs including Inter Milan, Barcelona and both Milan giants. Inside Fox, his candid style has already drawn comparisons to NBA studio great Charles Barkley.
With Ibrahimovic’s deal sealed, Fox’s on-air blueprint for 2026 is now set: a blend of global star power, tactical insight and the unfiltered opinions that have defined Ibrahimovic’s public persona for nearly a quarter-century.
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What’s Next For Aaron Rodgers?
The NFL’s most enigmatic offseason storyline has returned: what will Aaron Rodgers do next? At 42, the four-time MVP is once again staring at a career fork in the road—return to the Pittsburgh Steelers, entertain overtures from a new franchise, or walk away from football after 21 seasons.
Rodgers’ 2025 campaign in Pittsburgh restored a measure of his vintage mystique. Steering the Steelers to an AFC North crown, he supplied the steadiness and schematic command that have defined his résumé. Yet the calendar is unforgiving; durability questions shadow every throw, and the organization must balance short-term contention against the long-term architecture of the quarterback room.
Inside the Steelers’ facility, the sentiment is clear: his leadership translated into victories. A second season in black-and-gold remains plausible if both sides agree the chemistry is worth extending. Still, Pittsburgh’s brain trust has to project life beyond the immediate horizon, weighing whether a bridge year with Rodgers accelerates or delays the search for a franchise successor.
Outside the confluence of three rivers, a handful of quarterback-needy clubs are expected to monitor Rodgers’ deliberations. Contending rosters in search of a final piece could view the veteran as a stabilizing force capable of raising the competitive floor without a multi-year commitment. The market will hinge on how front offices value a short-term ceiling versus the risk of allocating cap space to a passer entering his age-43 season.
Retirement, however, is not a token option. Rodgers has long cultivated interests in media, business, and entrepreneurial circles, and those pursuits gain momentum with each passing offseason. Friends close to the quarterback describe an annual reflective cycle—an honest audit of mind, body, and motivation—before he determines whether to re-enter the competitive fray.
Legacy, of course, is secure. A Super Bowl XLV title with Green Bay headlines a cache that includes four MVP trophies and a regular-season passer rating that ranks among the elite. A detour to the New York Jets ended abruptly in 2023 when a torn Achilles truncated his debut after four snaps, but he rebounded to play in 2024 before landing in Pittsburgh.
Now, as free-agency negotiations loom and draft boards crystallize, Rodgers’ choice will ripple across quarterback markets, coaching staffs, and fan bases league-wide. Whether he opts for a 22nd season, a new zip code, or a broadcast booth, the decision will shape the 2026 competitive landscape and etch the final chapter of a first-ballot Hall of Fame career.
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Wednesday’s TV/Radio Listings (March 18)
Dallas-area sports fans can mark their calendars for a triple-header of live action on Wednesday night, with Major League Baseball, the NBA and the NHL all offering local broadcasts.
The evening begins at 7 p.m. when KRLD-FM 105.3 The Fan carries the Royals-Rangers exhibition from Surprise, Ariz., giving listeners their final taste of spring-training baseball before Opening Day.
Basketball follows at 7:30 p.m. on KEGL-FM 97.1 The Eagle, as the Mavericks host the Atlanta Hawks in a Western Conference matchup at American Airlines Center.
Hockey closes the night at 8:30 p.m. when the Stars visit Colorado; the call can be heard on both KTCK-AM 1310 and KTCK-FM 96.7 The Ticket.
All three broadcasts are available exclusively on radio; no television listings were released.
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Barcelona vs Newcastle, Champions League: Team News, Match Preview
Camp Nou will stage its first UEFA Champions League knockout tie in 37 months on Wednesday when Barcelona welcome Newcastle United for a decisive Round-of-16 second leg, the Catalans requiring only a one-goal victory to reach the 2025-26 quarter-finals after a stoppage-time penalty salvaged a dramatic 1-1 draw at St James’ Park seven days ago.
Hansi Flick’s side, fresh from extending their La Liga lead with a weekend win over Sevilla, have won all 12 competitive fixtures since returning to their rebuilt stadium, a sequence they must extend if the blunt attacking display produced in the north-east of England is to be forgiven. Dani Olmo’s ingenuity won the late spot-kick that Lamine Yamal converted in the first instalment, yet Barça conceded the bulk of chances and were spared by wayward Newcastle finishing and the crossbar.
The Magpies, for their part, travelled without central defensive pillar Fabian Schär, right-back Emil Krafth, influential midfielder Bruno Guimarães and teenage prodigy Lewis Miley, all ruled out through injury. Eddie Howe is expected to set up in a compact 4-3-3, content to cede possession and spring in behind with the pace of Anthony Gordon, Harvey Barnes and Elanga. Set pieces remain a prime weapon; Joelinton, Sandro Tonali and Dan Burn will crowd the six-yard box whenever Kieran Trippier shapes to deliver.
Barcelona’s casualty list is similarly lengthy. Alejandro Balde, Andreas Christensen, Frenkie de Jong and Jules Koundé are unavailable, meaning 17-year-old centre-back Pau Cubarsí again partners Iñigo Martín while João Cancelo and Gerard Martín provide width from full-back. The midfield hinge of 17-year-old Marc Bernal and Pedri must quicken the tempo that stuttered in the first leg, and Robert Lewandowski will demand better service after being starved of clear chances a week ago.
Discipline could yet tilt the tie. Lamine Yamal, Fermín López, Marc Casadó and Gerard Martín will all be suspended for a prospective quarter-final first leg if cautioned, while Newcastle quartet Joelinton, Tonali, Joe Willock and Burn walk the same tightrope. Spanish referee Jesús Gil Manzano showed 47 yellow cards across his last six European appointments, so expect a physical, stop-start affair.
Kick-off is scheduled for 18:45 CET at a sold-out Camp Nou, where 62,000 expect to celebrate a first Champions League progression since 2022. A 3-1 home win is the predicted outcome, propelled by an improved attacking display and the fortress-like atmosphere that has characterised Barça’s renaissance on home soil.
Barcelona probable XI (4-2-3-1): Joan García; Eric García, Cubarsí, Iñigo Martín, Cancelo; Bernal, Pedri; Yamal, Olmo, Raphinha; Lewandowski.
Newcastle probable XI (4-3-3): Ramsdale; Trippier, Thiaw, Burn, Hall; Ramsey, Tonali, Joelinton; Elanga, Gordon, Barnes.
TV listings: TUDN (USA), TNT Sports 2 (UK), SuperSport (Nigeria), Movistar Liga de Campeones (Spain). Live streaming: Paramount+, discovery+, Sony LIV, Movistar+.
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Eberechi Eze offers injury update after Arsenal vs. Bayer Leverkusen
Arsenal midfielder Eberechi Eze eased supporters’ concerns after he was seen limping off late in the Gunners’ Champions League Round-of-16 second-leg victory over Bayer Leverkusen, insisting he is not carrying an injury. The 25-year-old had just delivered the tie’s decisive moment, arrowing a venomous volley into the net to cap a performance that showcased both his growing influence and his willingness to take responsibility in tight moments.
Eze’s strike, struck with trademark venom, came at a juncture when Arsenal needed a spark. Rather than recycle possession, the midfielder elected to hit a first-time effort that flew past the Leverkusen goalkeeper and sent the Emirates crowd into raptures. It was a reminder of the ball-striking prowess that persuaded Arsenal to bring him to north London last summer, and it arrived at a time when questions had been raised about his consistency during his debut campaign with the club.
The goal appeared to signal a turning point in Eze’s season, yet anxiety rippled through the stadium when he pulled up moments after a challenge in the second half and subsequently asked to be replaced. Cameras captured the midfielder hobbling toward the touchline, prompting fears of a fresh setback.
Speaking to reporters immediately after the final whistle, Eze moved quickly to allay those fears. “I’m alright, I’ll be okay,” he said when pressed for an injury update, offering a succinct but reassuring message that he expects to be available for selection.
That availability could prove pivotal as Arsenal prepare for the League Cup final against Manchester City. While club captain Martin Ødegaard is also closing in on a return from the knee issue that has sidelined him in recent weeks, Eze’s ability to operate between the lines and produce moments of individual brilliance gives the Gunners an additional attacking dimension.
For now, though, Arsenal supporters can celebrate a place in the Champions League quarter-finals and the knowledge that the man who secured it appears to have escaped serious injury.
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Liverpool Must Come From Behind to Advance Against Galatasaray
Anfield’s famous European night awaits another chapter on Wednesday, but this time the script demands a comeback. Liverpool trail Galatasaray 1-0 on aggregate after last week’s sobering defeat at RAMS Park, leaving Arne Slot’s side 90 minutes—perhaps more—away from either redemption or a second straight Champions League round-of-16 exit.
The Reds’ tepid display in Istanbul, illuminated only by early flashes from Florian Wirtz and two missed chances that could have flipped the tie, has ratcheted pressure on Slot. A drab 1-1 draw with Tottenham Hotspur at the weekend only deepened the sense of unease around the club, and the Dutch coach knows another stumble against the Turkish champions could overshadow an otherwise dominant domestic campaign.
Galatasaray arrive on Merseyside buoyant. A 3-0 dismissal of İstanbul Başakşehir at the weekend stretched their Süper Lig lead to seven points and kept their quadruple-title dream alive. A disciplined first-leg performance, capped by Mario Lemina’s second-half strike and another menacing display from Victor Osimhen, has given Okan Buruk’s men a genuine chance to reach the Champions League quarter-finals for the first time since 2013.
Yet Liverpool have history on their side. The Kop has willed the team through seemingly lost causes before, and the return of Alisson Becker—back after a minor injury kept him out of the first leg—restores composure to a back line that looked skittish in Türkiye. Slot is expected to shuffle his pack, promoting teenager Rio Ngumoha after a bright cameo against Spurs, recalling Ibrahima Konaté and Hugo Ekitiké, and possibly handing Curtis Jones the midfield reins in place of an out-of-sorts Alexis Mac Allister. Mohamed Salah keeps his place on the right despite a quiet night in Istanbul, flanked by Szoboszlai and Ngumoha behind spearhead Ekitiké.
Galatasaray must cope without suspended centre-back Davinson Sánchez. Wilfried Singo is poised to drop into the heart of defence, while Sacha Boey mans the right-back slot. Enes Büyük is doubtful with a fitness complaint, but Osimhen—scorer and creator in both meetings with Liverpool this season—will spearhead a 4-2-3-1 designed to absorb pressure and counter at pace.
The visitors’ Achilles heel could be mentality. They conceded a two-goal lead in the previous round in Turin before surviving on away goals, and Anfield’s crescendo has turned bigger advantages than theirs into rubble. Still, Liverpool’s recent rhythm has been pedestrian, and the crowd’s frustration is palpable. If the Reds are to progress, they must marry urgency with composure, break down a compact midfield duo of Torreira and Lemina, and deny Osimhen the half-chances that so often become decisive.
Expect fireworks from the first whistle. Liverpool need at least one goal to extend the contest, and two if they wish to avoid extra time or penalties. Galatasaray, masters of game management domestically, will happily slow the tempo, draw fouls, and spring forward through the pace of Barış Alper Yılmaz and the guile of Dries Mertens. The tie is poised on a knife-edge, and the next goal could decide whether Anfield erupts in celebration or falls into an uneasy, premature hush.
Prediction: Liverpool 3-1 Galatasaray after extra-time (Liverpool win 3-2 on aggregate).
Liverpool predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Alisson; Frimpong, Konaté, Van Dijk, Kerkez; Gravenberch, Jones; Salah, Szoboszlai, Ngumoha; Ekitiké.
Galatasaray predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Çakır; Boey, Singo, Bardakcı, Jakobs; Torreira, Lemina; Yılmaz, Sara, Lang; Osimhen.
Broadcast options include Paramount+, TUDN USA, UniMás, TNT Sports 1 and discovery+ platforms.
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Every Team Qualified for the 2025–26 Champions League Quarterfinals
The lineup for the 2025–26 UEFA Champions League quarterfinals is now complete, with the final four of eight berths officially locked in. European football’s premier club competition has reached the knockout stage, and the bracket is set for the last-eight showdown.
According to tournament updates released on Tuesday, four of the last eight teams in the Champions League are now solidified, bringing clarity to the path toward the semifinals. While the identities of all eight qualifiers were not disclosed in the brief announcement, the confirmation that the full octet is in place signals that the draw can proceed without delay.
The quarterfinal field will feature a straight knockout format, with ties decided over two legs and the away-goals rule no longer in play. The progression of these clubs into the final eight underscores the depth of quality across Europe’s top divisions and sets the stage for high-stakes drama as the continent’s elite chase continental glory.
UEFA is expected to release the official bracket and fixture schedule imminently, allowing supporters and analysts to map out potential semifinal matchups and storylines. With every ticket to the next round now punched, attention turns to the draw and the tactical chess matches that will define the remainder of the 2025–26 Champions League campaign.
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Football Bet Of The Day: James Milton has a 10-11 selection from the Champions League
Racing Post Sport’s resident football analyst James Milton has identified his standout wager from Wednesday’s Champions League programme, and it centres on the Anfield return leg between Liverpool and Galatasaray.
The Turkish champions have already proved themselves the scourge of Merseyside this term, recording 1-0 wins over Arne Slot’s side in both the league phase and the first leg of this last-16 tie. Despite holding that advantage, Galatasaray are still available at 2-1 to progress, yet Milton believes they will again make life awkward for the Reds.
Liverpool arrive at the contest on the back of a frustrating 1-1 Premier League draw with Tottenham on Sunday, a result that saw them squander Dominik Szoboszlai’s early free-kick opener. That setback underlined a recent trend: while Liverpool have been free-scoring domestically, their European performances have been markedly tighter.
Milton’s 10-11 (1.91) recommendation is under 3.5 goals, a line that has landed in eight of Galatasaray’s 11 Champions League outings this season, including their 2-0 defeat at Manchester City in January. Liverpool, meanwhile, have kept four clean sheets in their last five European fixtures, edging past both Real Madrid and Inter by the same 1-0 scoreline.
With Galatasaray showing little inclination to throw caution to the wind and Liverpool’s continental rearguard improving, the prospect of another controlled, low-scoring affair appears the most likely narrative at Anfield.
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Dragonkin: The Banished RUNE Free Download Now Live for PC
Dragonkin: The Banished has officially landed on Windows PCs via a single direct-download package, giving action-game enthusiasts immediate access to a dragon-blighted realm where survival hinges on skill, strategy, and the relentless pursuit of the Dragon Lords. The RUNE release bundles the full game into one installer, eliminating patch queues and letting players leap straight into the carnage.
The premise is stark: dragon blood has poisoned the land, birthing horrors that claw up from beneath the surface. Four legendary hero classes answer the call, each sworn to purge the infestation at its source. The Tracker, unrivaled in her clan, turns every encounter into a lesson—harvesting prey to refine poisons, traps, and precision strikes. The Barbarian, transformed by a perilous rite into a dragon-blood hybrid, wields ice-fueled rage to shatter the strongest scales. The Oracle, forever altered yet unbroken, channels electric draconic force and prophetic insight to envision—and engineer—humanity’s survival. Lastly, the Knight, fire-lance virtuoso and zealot of the Eternal, stands as living proof that faith and steel can still repel corruption.
Progression runs deep. Characters evolve alongside their gear, wyrmling companions, and the mysterious Ancestral Grid, ensuring that each skirmish reshapes both power and tactics. The ultimate objective remains unambiguous: carve a path through lesser beasts, confront the terrifying Dragon Lords, and sever the source of the blood-curse forever.
Prospective hunters need only verify their rigs against the listed minimum requirements, click the download link, and install the complete, untouched build. No additional storefronts, DRM checks, or incremental updates stand between players and the hunt.
Dragonkin: The Banished RUNE free download is available now for Windows.
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Kelowna Crows Rugby Football Club Sets Sights on 2026 Championships
Kelowna, B.C. – The city’s oldest rugby organization, the Kelowna Crows Rugby Football Club, has opened its 2026 campaign with two senior sides perched atop their respective tables and genuine title aspirations in their sights.
Both the men’s and women’s Division 2 squads enter the season in first place and are targeting championship silverware. The push begins in earnest on March 21 at Rutland Recreation Park, where the club will host a triple-header. The women’s Division 2 side kicks off the day at 11:15 a.m., followed by the men’s Division 3 team at 12:45 p.m. and the men’s Division 2 outfit at 1:30 p.m.
Established in 1969, the Crows carry the distinction of being the longest-running rugby club in the B.C. Interior and have built a tradition of deep playoff runs across multiple British Columbia Rugby divisions.
Beyond senior competition, the club is expanding its grassroots footprint. The annual Mini and Flag rugby programs launch April 12 and continue every Sunday through June 7. Mini sessions cater to children aged 3-8, while Flag Rugby welcomes participants aged 9-12. All instruction is provided by volunteers—current Crows players, junior athletes from local middle and high schools, and alumni eager to grow the game.
“This is a great way to learn rugby skills in a safe and non-contact learning environment,” said club spokesperson Aaron Sangster. “All profits go to the junior program, making Rugby more accessible to all kids in the community by reducing costs.”
With seasoned veterans leading the charge for championships and a new generation introduced to the sport each spring, the Kelowna Crows are reinforcing their legacy as both a competitive and community cornerstone.
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Red Wolves work out for pro scouts
JONESBORO — Arkansas State’s football program opened its doors to the next level Tuesday, welcoming NFL scouts to Centennial Bank Stadium for the Red Wolves’ annual Pro Day. A dozen former Red Wolves took the field to showcase their speed, strength and skill in position-specific drills, hoping to improve their draft stock or secure priority-free-agent consideration. With stopwatches clicking and clipboards busy, the workout provided the athletes a final collegiate-stage audition in front of league talent evaluators.
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