Expert Sports News & Commentary

USWNT to Play Japan Three Times in Seven Days: Here's How to Watch Each Game
The U.S. Women’s National Team will return to the pitch in April for a rapid-fire set of friendlies, facing Japan three times in seven days, U.S. Soccer announced. The series comes on the heels of the Americans’ SheBelieves Cup triumph in March and marks the first camp under new head coach Emma Hayes, who left Chelsea FC Women after 11 seasons to become the 10th full-time coach in program history.
FIFA’s second-ranked side will meet the fifth-ranked Japanese in three separate venues, with each match broadcast in English on TNT and truTV and streamed on HBO Max. Spanish-language coverage will air on NBC’s Universo and stream on Peacock.
Hayes has called in a 26-player roster that she intends to use across the condensed window, offering opportunities to evaluate talent ahead of this summer’s major tournaments. While U.S. Soccer has yet to release the specific dates, venues, and kickoff times, the federation confirmed all details will be published once logistical agreements are finalized.
The teams have a storied history, and the compressed schedule—though officially friendlies—promises to add another chapter to their rivalry.
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Texas football: Why a T-shirt can help explain Will Muschamp's defensive philosophy
Austin — When Will Muschamp stepped to the podium inside the Moncrief Athletics Complex on Thursday afternoon, the first thing reporters noticed wasn’t the Texas defensive coordinator’s familiar raspy voice or his first public comments since returning to Austin last December. It was the black T-shirt stretched across his chest, the letters “NT=NP” stamped front and center.
Moments later, Muschamp decoded the message.
“No thud equals no play,” he said, repeating the phrase twice for emphasis. “If you don’t thud at practice, and you don’t throw your face in the fan at practice, that means you’re probably not going to be a good tackler.”
The philosophy is as blunt as the slogan. Thud—a controlled, wrap-up technique that stops short of taking a teammate to the ground—has become the litmus test for who will travel on game day and who will watch from home.
“If you turn down too much, you won’t get on the bus to go to the game,” Muschamp said. “You’ll be watching it from home. So if you don’t thud, you won’t play.”
Thursday’s availability marked Muschamp’s first media session since head coach Steve Sarkisian lured him back to Texas to replace Pete Kwiatkowski. The 2025 Longhorns finished 28th nationally in scoring defense (20.3 points per game) and 40th in total defense (338.8 yards per game), numbers Muschamp believes can improve only if fundamentals improve.
According to Pro Football Focus, 11 different Longhorns missed five or more tackles last season. In Muschamp’s eyes, that statistic traces directly back to practice habits.
“The best defenses I’ve been a part of, they tackled extremely well,” he said. “And right now in offensive football, you better be able to tackle and play in space.”
Spring drills are only 11 practices old, but the coordinator’s message is already filtering through the locker room. Players who shy away from contact risk losing reps, then roster spots, then Saturdays on the field.
Muschamp’s shirt, then, isn’t just workout apparel. It’s the syllabus for a defense that must replace key starters and raise its standard to match College Football Playoff expectations.
The lesson plan is simple: no thud, no play.
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Strength in numbers: Bayern Munich fan club get creative in journey to the Bernabéu
Madrid—When Bayern Munich stepped onto the hallowed turf of the Santiago Bernabéu for their Champions League quarter-final against Real Madrid, they did so carrying the weight of a 25-year winless streak in the Spanish capital. By the final whistle that history had been shredded, and the travelling Red-and-Whites in the stands were every bit as responsible for the milestone as the eleven players on the pitch.
The twist? Many of those supporters were never supposed to be here at all. With economy flights from Munich to Madrid surging to an eye-watering €900 in the days before the tie, a routine away day had begun to look like a luxury beyond reach. Rather than surrender, a local Bayern fan club leaned on the same ingenuity their club has long preached on the pitch: strength in numbers.
Pooling resources and contacts, 180 supporters chartered an entire aircraft, slashing the per-seat cost to roughly half the market fare. The group departed Munich in full voice, beer steins in hand, and landed in Madrid as a self-contained sea of red, ready to propel their team toward a landmark 2-1 victory.
The scenes at the Bernabéu underlined the power of collective spirit. Every tackle, every counter, every last-minute clearance was met with a unified roar that travelled from the away end to the upper tiers. When the referee ended Madrid’s resistance, players sprinted toward the travelling contingent; history had been rewritten, and the fans who refused to be priced out of history books were there to see it.
In an era when digital fandom can feel isolating, the operation served as a reminder that football’s greatest currency remains shared experience. Bayern’s front three have shouldered the on-field narrative this season, but off the pitch it was 180 ordinary supporters who proved that creativity and solidarity can overcome even the steepest financial obstacle.
As the chartered plane lifted off for the return leg, the songs were louder, the beer a little flatter, and the memories indelible. Bayern Munich left Madrid with three points; their fans left with proof that no price tag is insurmountable when a community decides the journey is non-negotiable.
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Morgan Rogers joins Manchester United shortlist for summer 2026
Manchester United have placed Aston Villa’s versatile attacker Morgan Rogers on their summer 2026 transfer shortlist as they prepare to reinforce their wide options, The Times reports.
The 23-year-old England international, who can line up on either flank or through the middle, has emerged as one of the Premier League’s most dynamic performers this season, prompting a surge of interest from top-flight heavyweights including Arsenal and Chelsea. Villa, mindful of his importance to their project, are expected to demand a fee exceeding £80 million for any deal.
United’s pursuit of a left-winger has been well documented, and Rogers’ blend of physicality, direct running and end product has elevated him into the club’s attacking crosshairs. With uncertainty surrounding Marcus Rashford’s long-term future and a lack of consistent wide threats, the Villa star’s ability to carry possession over long distances and influence transitional phases fits the profile United are targeting.
Aston Villa remain under no immediate pressure to cash in. Rogers is under contract and integral to the club’s plans, leaving the Midlands side in a strong negotiating position.
United’s recruitment team are simultaneously exploring other avenues, having already registered interest in Yan Diomande. Yet Paris Saint-Germain’s parallel pursuit of the Ivorian has complicated that track, increasing the emphasis on alternatives such as Rogers.
Whether deployed as a winger or an advanced midfielder, Rogers has showcased adaptability and end product, scoring and assisting while thriving in high-intensity, open contests. His standout campaign has marked him as one of the division’s most coveted attacking talents.
As Premier League giants line up, the battle for Rogers’ signature promises to become one of the headline sagas of the upcoming window, with Manchester United determined to secure a player capable of elevating their forward line.
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Barcelona complain to Uefa about VAR in Atletico loss
Barcelona have formally lodged a complaint with Uefa over what they term a “grave lack of VAR intervention” during Wednesday’s 2-0 Champions League quarter-final first-leg defeat to Atlético Madrid at the Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys.
The flash-point arrived in the 54th minute, moments after the visitors had taken the lead through Julián Álvarez’s exquisite free-kick. Atlético defender Marc Pubill, already on a yellow card, appeared to handle the ball inside his own area after goalkeeper Juan Musso had resumed play with a quick goal-kick. Barcelona’s players immediately surrounded Romanian referee István Kovács appealing for a penalty, yet no spot-kick was awarded and video assistant Christian Dingert elected not to intervene.
“The club considers that the refereeing did not adhere to the current law, directly influencing how the game progressed and the result,” Barcelona said in a statement released on Thursday. “This decision, along with a grave lack of intervention by VAR, represents a major error.”
Barça have requested that Uefa open an investigation, grant access to the match officials’ communications and, “where applicable”, issue an official acknowledgment of the mistakes together with “the adoption of the relevant measures”.
The Catalans were already down to ten men at the time of the incident; 17-year-old centre-back Pau Cubarsí was sent off in the 44th minute after Kovács upgraded an initial yellow to red following a VAR review of his foul on Giuliano Simeone, who had been clean through on goal.
Speaking after the match, Barça head coach Hansi Flick did not hide his frustration: “The VAR was very focused today for Atlético. I don’t know what happens in the situation where the goalkeeper starts the game and the defender stops it with the hand and then plays again. For me it is a clear red – well, a double yellow – and then a red card and penalty.”
Alexander Sørloth sealed the tie’s first-leg advantage with a 70th-minute strike, handing Atlético their first victory at the Nou Camp since 2006 and leaving Barcelona with a mountain to climb in next week’s return at the Metropolitano.
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La Liga Staging Coordinated Retro Kit Weekend
Madrid—This weekend La Liga will make European football history by becoming the first of the continent’s five major leagues to synchronise a league-wide retro kit campaign, with 38 of the 42 clubs across the top-flight and Segunda División taking the pitch in heritage shirts designed to honour their past and the supporters who have carried them through it.
The collection, revealed on 19 March amid the spotlights of Madrid Fashion Week, turns Spanish stadia into living museums: referees will swap contemporary colours for vintage tunics, broadcast graphics will flicker with old-school typography, and a retro-styled match ball will roll across every pitch from Vigo to Villarreal.
Barcelona, Rayo Vallecano and Getafe will stick to their standard strips for logistical reasons, Spanish daily Marca reported, yet all three remain part of the broader activation. Real Madrid, by contrast, will not participate in any facet of the programme.
Speaking at the runway unveiling, La Liga director Jaime Blanco framed the initiative as a bridge between eras. “It allows us to bring the past into the present while continuing to build experiences and strengthen the legacy that emotionally connects with supporters,” he said. “Presenting this collection during Spain’s leading fashion week is the perfect platform to project that identity beyond the field and position soccer at the heart of the cultural and creative conversation.”
The Spanish project arrives amid a wider wave of nostalgia rippling through global sport. Liverpool released a line of shirts harking back to the 1960s earlier this season, Juventus recently added a fourth kit inspired by their 1996-97 design, Nike has relaunched its T90 range, and Adidas stitched its classic Trefoil badge onto 2026 World Cup away jerseys for the first time in 36 years. The retro shirt market alone is now valued at nearly £40 million, according to specialist retailer Classic Football Shirts.
Jordan Clarke, founder of Footballer Fits, an Instagram platform chronicling the overlap between football and fashion, argues the appetite for throwback aesthetics mirrors a broader societal mood. “I think nostalgia is something in society, not just in football,” Clarke said. “A lot of people look back fondly at times during their lives, when they were maybe younger, and there was less worry in the world. Football is just a microcosm of how society feels in the world that we are living in nowadays.”
Other codes have already mined similar territory: Australia’s National Rugby League and Australian Football League have both staged dedicated retro rounds, proving that what is old can still feel radically new when stitched into modern competition.
For 90 minutes this weekend, La Liga will offer its own history lesson—taught not in classrooms, but on the turf where memories were first made.
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Barcelona complain to Uefa about 'grave lack of VAR intervention' in Atletico Madrid loss
Barcelona have formally lodged a complaint with Uefa over what the club describes as a “grave lack of VAR intervention” during their Champions League quarter-final defeat to Atlético Madrid. The Catalan side, beaten at Camp Nou, believe a pivotal penalty decision went unchecked by the video officials and could have altered the outcome of a tie that ended their European hopes for the season.
The club’s grievance centres on a second-half incident in which Barcelona players and staff felt a clear foul merited a spot-kick, only for play to continue without review. Sources close to the club say the complaint, submitted to European football’s governing body on Monday, requests “clarity and accountability” on the protocols that left the VAR silent.
The loss also marked a historic milestone for Atlético, who snapped a 20-year winless streak at Camp Nou in the competition. Julián Álvarez, whose set-piece strike doubled the visitors’ advantage, revealed post-match that he had studied Lionel Messi’s free-kick technique while preparing for the encounter. “Watching Leo was part of my homework,” Álvarez told ESPN. “To score here, in this stadium, is something special.”
While Atlético celebrated a commanding performance that mirrored Paris Saint-Germain’s dominant display against Liverpool elsewhere in the quarter-finals, Barcelona were left to rue a defeat that Spanish media labelled “potentially fatal” to their season. Sports Illustrated highlighted four sobering takeaways from the match, emphasising defensive lapses, missed chances, and the psychological blow of exiting Europe so early.
The New York Times confirmed that Barcelona’s letter to Uefa specifically questions why the on-field referee was not advised to review the contentious incident on the pitch-side monitor. With no avenue for appeal beyond the written complaint, the club now awaits Uefa’s response as they turn their full attention to domestic matters.
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Barcelona say club has filed UEFA complaint over penalty decision vs. Atletico Madrid
Barcelona have formally lodged a complaint with UEFA after officials refused to award a second-half penalty during their 2-0 Champions League quarter-final first-leg defeat to Atlético Madrid on Wednesday night. The Spanish champions argue that referee Istvan Kovacs and the VAR team committed a “significant error” when they declined to punish Atlético defender Marc Pubill for an apparent handball inside the area.
The flashpoint arrived early in the second half at Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys. From an Atlético goal kick, goalkeeper Juan Musso rolled the ball to Pubill, who had lined up alongside centre-back partner Robin Le Normand. Replays showed Pubill crouching and using both hands to stop the ball on the edge of the six-yard box before nudging it back to Musso, who then cleared upfield. Several Barcelona players instantly appealed for a penalty, noting that Pubill had already been cautioned in the match; a second yellow for deliberate handball would have reduced the visitors to ten men.
In a strongly worded statement released after the final whistle, the Catalan club said the decision “contravened current regulations, directly affecting the course of the match and its result.” Barcelona requested that UEFA open an investigation, grant access to the officials’ communications, and, “where appropriate,” acknowledge the mistake and adopt “relevant measures.” The statement added that recent Champions League editions have featured “incomprehensible refereeing decisions” that “seriously disadvantaged” the team and “prevented it from competing on equal terms.”
Manager Hansi Flick echoed the club’s frustration while speaking to Movistar TV. “The situation with the handball was very clear,” he said. “I don’t know why VAR did not enter. We all make mistakes, but these types of situations are why we have VAR. I cannot understand because normally it’s a penalty and a second yellow, and red.”
The incident carries added weight because Barcelona were already down to ten men after defender Pau Cubarsí received a straight red card late in the first half for a foul on Giuliano Simeone. Had the spot-kick been given and Pubill dismissed, both sides would have finished the contest a man short.
UEFA guidelines on restarts state that a ball is considered “in play” once the goalkeeper releases it from his hands. Officials in other Champions League fixtures have interpreted similar scenarios differently: Aston Villa were penalised when defender Tyrone Mings handled after Emi Martinez had put the ball into play against Club Brugge in November 2024, while Arsenal’s Gabriel escaped punishment in an April 2024 tie against Bayern Munich.
Julian Alvarez’s curling free-kick and Alexander Sorloth’s close-range finish ultimately sealed a 2-0 victory for Atlético, giving Diego Simeone’s side a commanding lead ahead of next Tuesday’s return leg at the Metropolitano. Barcelona now hope their formal protest will prompt a review that could, at minimum, lead to greater transparency in officiating standards as the competition progresses.
UEFA has yet to respond publicly to the complaint.
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Duce Robinson’s 1,000-Yard Breakthrough Signals Bright Spot for Florida State
Tallahassee, FL — When Florida State wide receiver Duce Robinson hauled in his 56th catch of the 2025 season, he did more than move the chains; he crossed a threshold no Seminole pass-catcher had reached since 2019. Robinson’s 1,081 receiving yards made him the first FSU receiver to eclipse the 1,000-yard mark in six years, a feat that has drawn national attention as he prepares for his senior campaign.
The 6-foot-6 former five-star recruit transferred to Florida State last season after beginning his career at USC, where he lined up primarily as a tight end. The switch to outside receiver in Mike Norvell’s offense unlocked a new gear: Robinson averaged 19.3 yards per catch, posted six touchdowns, and accounted for 35.3 percent of the Seminoles’ total receiving yards despite the program finishing 5-7.
Bleacher Report analyst Brad Shepard recently tabbed Robinson as the No. 1 senior wide receiver in the country for 2026, citing his rare blend of size and speed. “Duce Robinson is both exciting and good, and the Seminoles are very fortunate to keep the legacy star in the fold after two awful seasons,” Shepard wrote. Legacy indeed—Robinson’s father, Dominic, started at defensive back for Florida State in the early 2000s.
Sports Illustrated’s CFB HQ echoed the praise, placing Robinson among the elite returning talents at the position. The towering target recorded five 100-yard games last fall and gives defensive coordinators across the ACC a weekly schematic headache. With quarterback stability still a question mark, Norvell’s staff is expected to lean heavily on Robinson once again to manufacture explosive plays and provide an offensive identity.
Off the field, Robinson’s decision to focus solely on football—abandoning past two-sport aspirations in baseball—has sharpened his NFL draft stock. He enters spring practice, which concludes Wednesday, April 15, intent on refining route-running nuance and expanding his leadership role inside the locker room.
For a program seeking to recapture national relevance, the senior wideout’s emergence offers both a statistical foundation and a symbolic spark. If Florida State can solve its quarterback puzzle, Robinson’s final season could feature conference-leading numbers and, more importantly, a return to postseason contention.
Read more →Top Alabama Target Maxwell Hiller Chooses Florida, Shaping 2027 Offensive Line Battle
Maxwell Hiller, the 6-foot-5, 300-pound interior force from Coatesville Area High School (Pa.), has ended weeks of speculation by committing to Florida over Alabama, Ohio State, and Tennessee, according to Rivals’ Hayes Fawcett.
The announcement lands a significant early blow in the 2027 recruiting race, as Hiller had long been projected to join the Crimson Tide. Rated No. 1 among interior offensive linemen and No. 5 overall in the 247Sports Composite, H gives the Gators a cornerstone piece for their future front five.
Alabama, which had positioned Hiller as a priority target, now turns its attention to the remainder of a deep 2027 board.
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Falcons agree to 1-year deal with former Chiefs RT Jawaan Taylor as possible McGary replacement
Atlanta Falcons have bolstered their offensive line by agreeing to terms on a one-year contract with former Kansas City Chiefs right tackle Jawaan Taylor, the team confirmed. The deal is worth a base value of $5 million and can rise to $6 million through an additional $1 million in performance-based incentives, according to ESPN, which first reported the agreement.
Taylor, who spent the past season protecting Patrick Mahomes’ blind side in Kansas City, now becomes the presumptive front-runner to replace Kaleb McGary at right tackle in Atlanta. The 26-year-old’s arrival gives the Falcons an experienced option on the edge and adds immediate competition to a unit looking to solidify quarterback protection ahead of the upcoming season.
Because the contract is structured for a single season, both parties maintain flexibility: Atlanta can evaluate Taylor’s fit within its scheme, while the veteran lineman has an opportunity to re-establish his market value in 2025. The Falcons have not disclosed how Taylor will be deployed, but his résumé as a full-time starter suggests he will be given every chance to secure the starting role during training camp.
Atlanta’s front office has prioritized reinforcing the trenches this offseason, and the swift pursuit of Taylor underscores the franchise’s urgency to keep its quarterback upright. With organized team activities on the horizon, all eyes will be on how quickly the ex-Chief acclimates to his new surroundings and whether he can cement himself as the long-term solution on the right edge.
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Holger Rune to begin Achilles comeback at Hamburg
Copenhagen-born rising star Holger Rune has set his sights on the Hamburg Open as the venue for his return to competitive tennis after suffering a ruptured Achilles tendon. The 20-year-old Dane, whose explosive game has marked him as one of the sport’s brightest prospects, confirmed that next month’s clay-court event in Germany will mark his first tournament back on the ATP Tour since the injury.
Rune’s rehabilitation has been closely monitored since the tendon tear sidelined him earlier this season, and the Hamburg Open, scheduled for late July, now looms as the pivotal moment in his comeback trail. Organisers of the ATP 500 event are preparing to welcome the Dane, whose presence is expected to boost both fan interest and the tournament’s competitive depth.
The Hamburg clay has traditionally served as a key battleground for players sharpening their games ahead of the North American hard-court swing, and Rune’s return adds a compelling narrative to this year’s edition. Tournament officials have yet to outline the specific session in which Rune will play, but ticket sales have already spiked on news of his planned appearance.
For Rune, the objective will be to regain match fitness while testing the resilience of the surgically repaired Achilles under match conditions. A successful outing in Hamburg would not only restore confidence in his movement but also provide invaluable momentum heading into the summer circuit.
Denmark’s top singles player has not competed since the injury layoff, making the Hamburg Open a highly anticipated re-entry point for a talent many expect to challenge for Grand Slam honours in the coming seasons.
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'Dedicated' former Center Grove QB back from injury, impressing Indiana football in spring
BLOOMINGTON — Curt Cignetti acknowledged Thursday that Tyler Cherry’s return to the Indiana football field this spring was anything but guaranteed. A severe knee injury suffered in December 2024—during a non-contact drill while the Hoosiers prepared to face Notre Dame—sidelined the former Center Grove standout for the entire 2025 season and cast doubt on whether he would ever play again.
Cherry, a 6-foot-5, 220-pound redshirt freshman, has quieted those doubts. After Indiana removed him from the roster and used him as a student assistant during last fall’s national championship push, Cherry has regained his place on the practice field and is turning heads with his progress.
“He’s dedicated,” Cignetti said. “There were some people that didn’t think he’d come back from that knee, and he did. He had his mind made up, and he was committed to playing football.”
The four-star prospect originally pledged to Duke before flipping to IU when Mike Elko departed for Texas A&M. Cherry enrolled early in 2024, split third-team duties with Alberto Mendoza behind Kurtis Rourke and Tayven Jackson, and preserved his redshirt by appearing in only one game.
Now fully cleared, Cherry has bulked up roughly 20 pounds since arriving on campus and possesses the deepest grasp of Indiana’s offense among the younger quarterbacks. That command prompted Cignetti to rest presumed 2026 starter Josh Hoover and backup Grant Wilson on Thursday, funneling first-team reps toward Cherry, Jacob Bell and Maverick Geske.
“I needed to see him against better competition,” Cignetti said. “I needed to see Tyler Cherry with the ones.”
The coach still found teaching moments—tighter footwork, quicker release, a pair of off-target throws—but left encouraged.
“He’s only going to get better,” Cignetti said. “I really like the way he’s improving.”
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Marcelo Names Who Was Tougher to Face: Cristiano Ronaldo or Lionel Messi
Few footballers have experienced both sides of the modern era’s defining rivalry, but Marcelo’s career offered him a vantage point few can claim. The Brazilian full-back lined up alongside Cristiano Ronaldo for trophy-laden seasons at Real Madrid and, on dozens of occasions, stared across the touchline at Lionel Messi in the clásico cauldron and in Brazil-Argentina showdowns. When pressed to choose which icon caused him more sleepless nights, Marcelo did not hesitate.
“Messi. Messi is unbelievable—I’m still trying to catch him to this day,” he told Romario during a candid interview, settling the debate with a grin that hinted at years of pursuit. The left-back explained that the Argentine’s spatial awareness made him almost untraceable: “He understands all the positions on the field very well. When a guy passes the ball, he already knows where he has to go in, where he has to go out.”
The raw numbers reinforce Marcelo’s verdict. Across 33 career meetings—his most frequent duel against any opponent—Marcelo’s sides managed 10 wins, 7 draws, and 16 defeats against teams led by the Rosario native, underscoring the uphill battle defenders faced.
Yet the Brazilian was quick to frame his answer in appreciation rather than lament. “I am grateful for that; I was able to live in the time of both of them,” he said, likening the privilege to previous generations who witnessed Romario, Ronaldo Nazario, Diego Maradona, and Pele. For Marcelo, sharing an era with Ronaldo and Messi was not a burden but a badge of honor—proof that he belonged to a golden age that may never be replicated.
Read more →Juan Angulo: Ecuadorian wonderkid’s future unveiled as Man United circle
Manchester United are bracing themselves for a summer scramble after transfer expert Ben Jacobs revealed that 18-year-old Ecuadorian striker Juan Riquelme Angulo is on the cusp of a move to Europe, with Barcelona currently leading a queue of heavyweight suitors.
Angulo, a 6’3 powerhouse who has exploded onto the scene for Independiente del Valle, is already being hailed as the next breakout star from the academy nicknamed El Matagigantes. The Sangolquí outfit have become a conveyor belt for elite talent: Moises Caicedo and Kendry Paez are now on Chelsea’s books, while Arsenal’s Piero Hincapié and PSG’s William Pacho have both shone in this season’s Champions League. In the past 12 months alone, Chelsea have secured 16-year-old centre-back Deinner Ordonez for 2028, Arsenal have tied up twins Edwin and Holger Quintero for 2027, and Newcastle have locked in winger Johan Martinez for 2028.
Unlike those teenagers, Angulo’s age works in his favour. At 18, the San Lorenzo native is free from the post-Brexit restrictions that delay South American prodigies joining English clubs, meaning he could walk straight into the Premier League this summer. “He is the next big thing,” Jacobs told the United Stand, describing the forward as “the real deal” and “close to being ready to make the jump to Europe.”
United’s interest is long-standing. Scouts have tracked Angulo for months, and while Erik ten Hag’s squad already contains Benjamin Sesko, INEOS’s recruitment model since taking control in 2024 has centred on hoovering up the planet’s most coveted youngsters. The memory of missing out on Caicedo—now a midfield engine for Chelsea—still stings inside Old Trafford corridors, and executives are determined not to repeat the mistake.
Yet the competition is fierce. Jacobs reports that “a lot of top European clubs” have registered firm interest, but it is Barcelona who have moved to the front of the pack. With Robert Lewandowski approaching his 38th birthday and only a one-year extension on the table, the Catalan giants are urgently sourcing a long-term No. 9. Angulo’s blend of speed and physicality has convinced Deco and the Camp Nou hierarchy to “make a massive push” for the Ecuadorian.
For United, the clock is ticking. Formalising interest into a concrete offer will be essential if they are to beat Barcelona to the signature of the striker who could define the next decade in M16.
Read more →Fans trying to buy World Cup tickets for KC games report multiple issues
Kansas City’s World Cup 26 countdown hit a snag on Tuesday as supporters attempting to secure seats for matches at the city’s future tournament venues reported a string of technical and procedural problems. The complaints surfaced even as a commemorative FIFA World Cup 26 sign was installed on the corner of Pennsylvania Avenue and Nichols Road at the Country Club Plaza, a symbolic reminder that the global event is now less than a year away.
Ticketing portals opened briefly Tuesday morning, but would-be buyers described slow-loading pages, sudden logouts, and error messages that appeared after payment details were entered. Several fans said they reached the final purchase screen only to be told inventory had vanished, forcing them to restart the queue. Social-media feeds quickly filled with screenshots of stalled transactions and pleas for clarity from tournament organizers.
City officials have not yet released a statement addressing the glitches, and FIFA’s customer-service channels directed frustrated users to automated responses. With demand expected to outstrip supply for Kansas City’s group-stage fixtures, the early hiccup has heightened anxiety among local soccer followers eager to witness the sport’s biggest spectacle inside Arrowhead Stadium.
The newly installed sign—positioned amid the Plaza’s twinkling holiday lights—serves as both a celebratory landmark and a reminder of the logistical challenges that accompany an event of this magnitude. Organizers have promised additional ticket windows in the coming weeks, but for many supporters, the first-come, first-serve experience left a sour taste less than 24 hours after the sign’s unveiling.
Read more →Fox Sports adds Mexico star Javier 'Chicharito' Hernandez to World Cup coverage
Fox Sports has bolstered its 2026 FIFA World Cup talent roster by luring Mexico’s all-time leading scorer, Javier “Chicharito” Hernández, into the broadcast booth for his television debut. The 37-year-old striker, fresh off a second stint with boyhood club Chivas and currently a free agent, will trade cleats for commentary as part of the network’s marquee coverage this summer.
The tournament carries extra resonance for Hernández: Mexico will serve as co-host alongside the United States and Canada, ensuring El Tri matches dominate headlines and airtime. “When the opportunity came to join a great company like Fox Sports and cover the FIFA World Cup this summer, it was a no brainer,” Hernández said in a network release. “I’m a rookie, so I expect to have fun as an analyst and learn, but really I just want to share my perspective on how I see the beautiful game and sport that I’ve been playing my entire life with fans watching at home.”
Hernández’s résumé spans Europe’s elite, including trophy-laden stops at Manchester United, Real Madrid, Sevilla, Bayer Leverkusen and West Ham, before he returned to North America with the LA Galaxy in 2020. His international pedigree is equally glittering: 52 goals in 109 senior caps between 2009 and 2019, plus goals in each of the 2010, 2014 and 2018 World Cups.
Fox Sports president and executive producer Brad Zager said the move was designed to pair authenticity with star power. “Chicharito is synonymous with El Tri and with Mexico playing a major role in the tournament, we wanted to make sure we found voices who bring instant international credibility to our coverage,” Zager noted. “We’re thrilled to have him going from striker to studio analyst in his television commentator debut with Fox Sports.”
Hernández joins an already stacked Fox lineup that includes Zlatan Ibrahimović, Thierry Henry and host Rebecca Lowe. The network will finalize its full broadcast lineup as the World Cup draws nearer.
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‘This isn’t over, culers’ – Lamine Yamal sends stirring message to Barcelona fans after Atletico loss
Barcelona trail Atlético Madrid 2-0 after the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final, but teenage winger Lamine Yamal insists the tie is far from decided. Taking to Instagram moments after the final whistle at Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys, the 18-year-old posted: “This isn’t over, culers. We’ll give everything in the second leg. All together, always.”
Yamal was one of the few bright sparks on a frustrating night for Hansi Flick’s side, repeatedly unsettling Atlético’s back line and drawing admiration from his coach. “Of course, he’s disappointed—everyone was disappointed,” Flick told reporters. “But Lamine played a fantastic game, from beginning to end, in defence and in offence. He had one-v-one situations, three, four, five players around him. It’s unbelievable.”
The manager urged perspective around his young star, emphasising the need for protection from officials. “I said it yesterday: he’s 18 years old, and for me he’s doing a fantastic job. We have to support him, not make so much noise about things. He’s 18, come on! For your country [Spain], he will be one of the best players ever. The referees have to protect him. This is why everyone goes to the stadium—to see football from these players: Mbappé, Vinícius Júnior, Lamine, Pedri.”
Barcelona’s task next week at the Metropolitano is steep, especially with Raphinha still sidelined through injury. If they are to overturn the deficit, Yamal will once again be central to their hopes—but he will need collective reinforcements across the pitch.
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Daniel Farke confirms former Manchester United winger ruled out of Old Trafford return
Leeds United will travel to Old Trafford on Monday night without Daniel James, manager Daniel Farke confirmed on the eve of the match, removing a compelling subplot from a fixture already rich with history.
The Welsh winger, who joined Leeds after two seasons at Manchester United, has been sidelined by an abductor injury and will not face his former club. James had been eager to return to the ground where he once scored on debut in a 4-0 victory over Chelsea, but medical staff have ruled him out of contention.
Farke’s injury bulletin did not end there. Midfielder Anton Stach will also miss the trip after damaging ankle ligaments in the FA Cup, while centre-back Joe Rodon has been declared unavailable. Further clouding the selection picture, forwards Noah Okafor and Jaka Bijol remain doubtful, leaving the visitors with a threadbare squad.
The timing is particularly awkward for Leeds, who held Manchester United to a 1-1 draw in the reverse meeting—a result that proved to be Ruben Amorim’s final match in charge before his dismissal. That stalemate remains a reference point for Farke as he urges his depleted group to maintain belief, citing last weekend’s FA Cup progression as evidence of the squad’s resilience.
James’s absence not only robs the contest of a headline reunion but also deprives Leeds of a player who signed an extended deal last summer in recognition of his development since leaving Old Trafford. In total, the 26-year-old recorded nine goals and eight assists during his United tenure before seeking more consistent minutes elsewhere.
Farke indicated that several casualties may not return until May because of ligament complications, underlining the long-term nature of the club’s current fitness crisis. Even so, he stressed the importance of seizing momentum during a pivotal stretch of the campaign.
Off the pitch, Leeds are expected to strengthen their defensive ranks by signing Manchester United youth product Alfie Walker this summer, adding another layer of connection between the fierce rivals. Yet when the sides walk out on Monday, one familiar face will be confined to the stands rather than patrolling the touchline he once called home.
Read more →Solo mailbag: Vini+Mbappé, ranking last summer’s signings and more
In the latest instalment of Madrid Mornings, host Lucas opens the floor to the show’s Patreon community, fielding a wide-ranging set of questions that zero in on Real Madrid’s most pressing talking points. Chief among the curiosities: how a prospective Vinícius Júnior and Kylian Mbappé partnership might reshape the club’s attacking identity, and where last summer’s fresh faces slot into the squad hierarchy after their first season in white.
Lucas, guiding the conversation solo, dissects the tactical fit of pairing the Brazilian wing dynamo with the French superstar-in-waiting, weighing spacing patterns, pressing triggers and the knock-on effect for teammates. Without revealing privileged specifics, he acknowledges that supporters on the Discord server—accessible via the invite link circulated during the episode—have floated everything from a fluid front three to a more rigid dual-striker look, depending on how the next transfer window unfolds.
The mailbag segment then pivots to evaluation mode, as listeners ask for a candid ranking of every 2023 summer acquisition. Lucas offers a tiered assessment based on minutes played, impact in decisive matches and adaptability to the club’s high-tempo demands. While the podcast stops short of assigning letter grades, the discussion highlights which newcomers have already carved out indispensable roles and which remain works in progress.
Throughout the hour-long programme, Lucas reiterates that Managing Madrid’s output—news reports, op-eds, tactical chalkboards, artwork and podcasts—relies on community backing. He reminds the audience that the small editorial team burns the midnight oil to keep the site and its audio offerings free of charge and free of click-bait, urging those who can afford it to support the Patreon so the coverage never drops in frequency or depth.
Madrid Mornings is available on all major podcast platforms, and the Real Madrid Discord remains open for live post-episode chatter.
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NFL Faces Justice Department Probe Over Potential Anticompetitive Consumer Practices
The National Football League is under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department for possible anticompetitive practices that could affect consumers, according to a Wall Street Journal report Thursday that cited people familiar with the matter.
While the full scope of the inquiry remains undisclosed, the Journal noted that regulators are examining issues related to the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961. That statute grants the NFL limited antitrust protection, permitting its 32 clubs to pool television rights and negotiate them collectively rather than on a team-by-team basis. Lawmakers and media watchdogs have increasingly argued that the current rights structure limits consumer choice by parceling out matchups across a patchwork of broadcast, cable and streaming outlets—many behind paywalls—rather than the free, over-the-air model that prevailed when the act was adopted.
The probe comes amid heightened scrutiny of how sports leagues distribute content. Media organizations, federal regulators and members of Congress have voiced concern that fans encounter rising costs and logistical hurdles when trying to follow their favorite teams, a dynamic they attribute to tightly controlled, high-priced rights packages. With NFL games now spread across CBS, FOX, NBC, Amazon Prime Video, ESPN and other subscription services, viewers often must purchase multiple platforms to catch a full season of any one club’s schedule.
The league’s media landscape could shift further in the wake of corporate maneuvering. The pending sale of CBS parent Paramount to Skydance Media contains a change-of-ownership clause that allows the NFL to reopen its $2.1 billion annual contract with the network. If the parties strike a revised deal, the Journal reported, the league is expected to pursue fresh terms with its remaining partners. The current agreements with FOX, CBS, NBC and Amazon run through the 2033 season, while ESPN’s deal stretches an additional year to 2034.
The Justice Department has not publicly commented on the investigation, and the NFL declined to address specifics when contacted Thursday. The inquiry follows last month’s overturning of a $4.7 billion judgment against the league in the long-running NFL Sunday Ticket class-action lawsuit, though that case centered on commercial pricing rather than consumer access.
Any potential action by federal antitrust enforcers could reshape how America’s most-watched sport reaches its audience, with implications for pricing, packaging and platform availability in an era of accelerating cord-cutting and streaming competition.
Read more →Milan intensify contacts for Barcelona’s Robert Lewandowski
AC Milan have significantly accelerated their pursuit of a marquee centre-forward, with Barcelona striker Robert Lewandowski now at the centre of their recruitment plans. According to Daniele Longo, the Rossoneri have moved beyond an initial enquiry and are holding advanced talks with the Polish international’s representatives, formally signalling their desire to bring the 37-year-old to San Siro.
The operation, however, is fraught with financial hurdles. Lewandowski currently earns a gross salary of roughly €20 million per season, a figure that eclipses Milan’s established wage ceiling. To secure the move, the veteran would need to accept a drastic reduction, with Milan offering a net salary of about €7 million annually.
Competition for Lewandowski’s signature is not confined to Europe. MLS outfit Chicago Fire have also thrown their hat into the ring, adding urgency to Milan’s efforts. Ultimately, the transfer hinges on the player’s personal ambition: whether he wishes to prolong his career at the pinnacle of European football or explore opportunities elsewhere.
Milan’s management have presented their sporting project and financial parameters, underlining that Lewandowski is viewed as the ideal candidate to deliver instant leadership and a reliable supply of goals. Yet, with no definitive answer from the striker, the deal remains in a holding pattern. The coming weeks will be pivotal as Milan attempt to pull off one of the summer’s most eye-catching moves, with all signs pointing toward Lewandowski’s departure from Barcelona.
Read more →'I can't fathom it': Ashwin left 'baffled' by David Miller’s decision in DC’s one-run defeat
Ahmedabad, May – Ravichandran Ashwin has delivered an unsparing critique of David Miller’s refusal to take a single on the penultimate ball of Delhi Capitals’ chase, a moment that preceded the run-out of Kuldeep Yadav and condemned the Capitals to a gut-wrenching one-run defeat against Gujarat Titans.
With two required off the final delivery, Miller blocked Prasidh Krishna’s slower ball and set off for a hopeless bye; Jos Buttler’s direct hit found Kuldeep short and sent the Titans into delirious celebrations. Speaking on his YouTube channel, Ashwin admitted he is still struggling to process the South African’s calculation.
“I am thinking what could have happened to Kuldeep and David Miller. If I was Kuldeep, I would have pushed him to the other end. I can’t understand. I can’t fathom it. It is just beyond me. It is bonkers,” Ashwin said. “You need two runs. What are the odds? You can take one run. Kuldeep will at least get on strike. Even if he gets bowled, in a 210 game you’ve earned a Super Over.”
The former Delhi Capitals spinner argued the decision did double damage: eroding the squad’s self-belief while handing the Titans a lifeline they scarcely deserved. “One, you have shaken the confidence of your team. Two, you’ve let Gujarat come back into the tournament thinking, ‘How do we reach from here?’ You gave them a lifeline while you’re still stuck at four points,” Ashwin concluded.
Miller, who had dragged the equation down with a sequence of late boundaries, left the field visibly distraught; Ashwin’s verdict suggests the repercussions could echo well beyond the final scorecard.
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How do you rate Barcelona’s chances of knocking out Atletico and what will be key to their comeback hopes?
Madrid – Barcelona’s road to the Champions League semi-finals took a sharp detour on Wednesday night at the Metropolitano, where a 2-0 first-leg defeat to city rivals Atlético Madrid left Hansi Flick’s men with a steep mountain to climb and a dressing-room full of grievances.
The tie, already spicy by virtue of its local derby status, ignited inside the opening quarter-hour. Teenage centre-back Pau Cubarsi was shown a straight red for a last-man foul, reducing the visitors to ten men before the contest had truly found its rhythm. Atlético captain Koke, fortunate to escape sanction for an earlier altercation, remained on the pitch and helped his side press the numerical advantage that ultimately produced two unanswered goals.
Barcelona’s sense of injustice deepened after the restart when defender Marc Pubill appeared to block a goal-bound effort with an outstretched arm inside the area. Flick’s staff appealed vociferously for both a penalty and a second yellow; neither was forthcoming, and the scoreline held to leave the Catalans two goals adrift ahead of next week’s return leg at Montjuïc.
With progression now hinging on a comeback performance, the central question is whether Barcelona can overturn the deficit. The task is complicated not only by the scoreline but by the disciplinary cloud hanging over the squad—Cubarsi’s suspension compounds an already lengthy injury list, while the coaching staff must lift a squad that feels aggrieved by the officiating.
Key to any revival will be early intensity and a clean sheet; conceding an away goal would force Barça to score at least four. Set-piece precision, rapid ball circulation against Atlético’s compact block, and a clinical edge from the front three will be non-negotiable. Above all, composure must replace the frustration that bubbled over in Madrid; channeling emotion into performance, rather than dissent, could yet turn the tie on its head.
Barcelona have staged famous European fightbacks before, but few have arrived under such a cocktail of adversity—down two goals, down a player for next week, and up against a rival that knows exactly how to protect a lead. The comeback is not impossible, yet every margin for error has vanished.
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Brazil bowler Cardoso takes 9 Lesotho wickets in record-breaking T20 win
Gaborone, Botswana – Brazil etched two new entries into cricket’s record books on Thursday evening as 21-year-old seamer Laura Cardoso produced a spell for the ages, claiming nine wickets to propel her side to a thumping 189-run victory over Lesotho in the BCA Kalahari Women’s T20 International Tournament.
Having opted to bat after winning the toss, Brazil rode a belligerent 69 off 41 balls from wicketkeeper-batter Monnike Machado to reach 202-8, the highest total of the competition so far. The South Americans then watched Cardoso steal the show with a devastating exhibition of new-ball bowling that skittled Lesotho for a paltry 13.
The carnage began in the second over of the reply. Cardoso, operating from the Kalahari Ovals pavilion end, completed a hat-trick with the final three deliveries of her first over, removing Lesotho’s top order in quick succession. Not content with that feat, she returned to trap two more batters in front with the first two balls of her next over, becoming the first woman in T20 International history to take five wickets in consecutive deliveries.
By the time Ret’sepile Limema became her ninth victim in the fifth over, Cardoso had single-handedly dismantled the Lesotho batting line-up. A bowling change denied her the opportunity to claim all ten wickets, but her figures of 3-2-4-9 were still enough to overhaul Indonesia’s Rohmalia Rohmalia, whose seven-wicket haul against Mongolia last year had stood as the women’s benchmark. Cardoso’s nine-wicket return is now the best bowling analysis in men’s or women’s T20 Internationals, eclipsing Bhutan’s Sonam Yeshey, who took eight for seven against Myanmar in 2023.
The right-armer also flirted with a second hat-trick, dismissing Lesotho’s batters with the last two deliveries of her second over to finish that set with four wickets. Her career tally now stands at 55 wickets in 48 T20 matches for Brazil.
Lesotho’s 13 is not the lowest total in women’s T20 Internationals – Mali were rolled for six by Rwanda in 2019 – but it underlined the gulf in class on the day. Brazil, who have won all five of their fixtures in the six-team event, will look to maintain their perfect record when they face Mozambique on Friday.
Read more →Luis Diaz describes Bayern Munich move as ‘the correct one’ after Barcelona talks
Madrid – Luis Diaz underlined that his €70 million switch to Bayern Munich last summer was “the correct decision,” revealing that while Barcelona made an approach, the Bundesliga champions offered the clearest path for his future.
The Colombian winger, who opened the scoring in Bayern’s 2-1 Champions League quarter-final first-leg victory over Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabéu on Tuesday night, told Movistar+ that he weighed every option before leaving Liverpool.
“There were talks, as is typical in the transfer market, with several teams. There were talks with Barcelona, that’s true,” Diaz said, as carried by Marca. “I made it very objectively, considering what was coming up for my future, which was very important… I’m very happy to be at Bayern, it’s a great club.”
Barcelona had identified Diaz as the primary target to reinforce their attack, with director of football Deco leading the chase. Yet once it became apparent that Liverpool’s valuation placed the winger beyond the club’s financial reach, the Blaugrana shifted focus. Athletic Club’s Nico Williams was considered next, but salary-limit concerns ultimately steered the Catalans toward a loan swoop for Manchester United forward Marcus Rashford.
President Joan Laporta confirmed in July that Diaz was keen on a move to Camp Nou, stating:
“It’s true that I also liked Luis Diaz, a very complete player, but due to his circumstances, with a Liverpool very entrenched it was complicated although I thank the player who wanted to come at all times.”
Diaz, now settled in Munich, harbours no second thoughts. “Coming to Bayern was the correct decision. I am very happy, and I enjoy every game,” he added after his man-of-the-match display against Madrid.
The 28-year-old’s early strike has put Bayern in the driver’s seat ahead of the return leg, and his form since arriving in Germany suggests the club’s record investment will continue to pay dividends on Europe’s biggest stage.
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Referee for Manchester United vs Leeds United clash facing misconduct hearing
Old Trafford is bracing for a powder-keg Monday-night derby against Leeds United, yet the fireworks may have been ignited 24 hours early after it emerged that assistant referee Richard West will keep his place on the touchline despite facing a gross-misconduct hearing within Humberside Police.
West, 51, a serving police sergeant, is scheduled to appear before a five-day disciplinary panel on 27 April following allegations made by a junior female colleague. The claims centre on an off-duty relationship said to have occurred while the woman was experiencing personal difficulties, and include accusations that West continued unwanted contact after the liaison ended, ignored warnings that his behaviour was under investigation, and allegedly adjusted rotas so the pair worked together.
The Professional Game Match Officials Limited confirmed it is “monitoring developments” but, as of Sunday night, had not removed West from the fixture. He is therefore poised to assist Paul Tierney, the referee whose previous decisions have drawn public criticism from United boss Erik ten Hag, most notably after a contentious 2023 meeting with Tottenham.
With Michael Carrick’s side already contending with Harry Maguire’s suspension after his red card against Bournemouth, and defensive resources stretched in the race for Champions League qualification, the club will hope off-pitch distractions do not spill into a contest already loaded with historic rivalry and top-four implications.
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'It was a great decision to come here fresh' - skipping Cheltenham pays off as Mange Tout lands Aintree opener
Aintree racecourse, Thursday: The decision to bypass the Cheltenham Festival was vindicated within minutes of the Grand National meeting’s first race as Mange Tout streaked clear to claim victory and set up a one-two finish for the same connections in the opening contest.
Connections had opted to keep the gelding fresh for Merseyside rather than press him into the fiercely competitive Festival programme last month, a move lauded by the winning camp afterwards as precisely the tonic required to maximise the seven-year-old’s seasonal target.
Under a measured ride, Mange Tout dictated affairs from the front end, kicking clear after the final fence and holding the late challenge of his stable companion to secure a memorable opening-day double for the yard.
The result immediately justified the tactical skip, emphasising how patience and prudent placement can reap dividends when the sport’s most coveted prizes are on the horizon.
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Newcastle United sell-on clause latest as Elliot Anderson Manchester City move expected to reach £100m
Newcastle United are set to receive no financial upside from Elliot Anderson’s anticipated £100 million transfer to Manchester City, a painful postscript to the 2024 fire-sale that saw the academy graduate leave St James’ Park for Nottingham Forest in a £35 million deal.
Sources close to the negotiations confirm that Newcastle, hamstrung by the Premier League’s Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR) deadline, were forced to sacrifice a sell-on clause in order to bank the maximum up-front fee. With the club facing an immediate threat of a points deduction, every pound of the £35 million had to be booked as pure profit, stripping negotiators of leverage to insert the standard 10–20 per-cent clause that normally protects a selling club’s long-term interest in a high-ceiling talent.
Head coach Eddie Howe conceded earlier this season that Newcastle’s bargaining position at the time was “non-existent,” a reality that now costs the club an estimated £10–15 million windfall once Anderson’s move to the Etihad is completed.
The original 2024 transfer was further complicated by a parallel £20 million purchase of goalkeeper Odysseas Vlachodimos from Forest, a swap designed to inflate both fees and help each club satisfy PSR accounting requirements. While the manoeuvre achieved its short-term goal, it eliminated room for future clauses, leaving Newcastle without a share of the exponential profit Forest stand to make on a player they signed only two years ago.
For Manchester City, the capture of one of English football’s most highly-rated young midfielders represents another statement of intent; for Nottingham Forest, the windfall equates to a 185 per-cent profit; for Newcastle, it is a sobering reminder of the cost of last summer’s financial scramble.
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How to watch FA Cup semi-finals on TNT Sports and HBO Max
Football fans in the United States will be able to stream both FA Cup semi-finals live this weekend as Wembley Stadium hosts a double-header that pits Chelsea against Leeds United before Manchester City face Southampton. TNT Sports and HBO Max have secured the English-language rights, ensuring every minute of the action is available without the need for a traditional cable package.
The first of the two ties will see Chelsea take on Leeds United, followed by the second contest featuring Manchester City and Southampton. Viewers can access the broadcasts through the TNT Sports app or the HBO Max streaming platform, both of which offer monthly subscription options and free trials for new users.
Kick-off times have not been disclosed, but subscribers can set reminders within either service to receive notifications once the schedules are confirmed. Coverage will include pre-match build-up and post-match analysis, allowing audiences to follow the narratives as the clubs compete for a place in the prestigious final.
The availability on HBO Max marks another step in the platform’s expansion into live sport, complementing its existing portfolio of drama, film, and entertainment content. Meanwhile, TNT Sports continues to serve as the primary television destination for top-tier European club competitions in the U.S. market.
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