Expert Sports News & Commentary

Ladies of the house ... ': Yograj Singh's shocking remark blames wives for player retirements

Ladies of the house ... ': Yograj Singh's shocking remark blames wives for player retirements

NEW DELHI — Yograj Singh, former India cricketer and father of ex-India all-rounder Yuvraj Singh, has triggered controversy by claiming that wives and women in the household often push players toward retirement. In an interview released Friday with InsideSport, Yograj alleged that domestic pressure, rather than form or fitness, is steering modern players into early exits. “Ladies of the house, your wifes, they start coaching, they tell you it’s time for you to retire, it’s time to look after the family, the kids, let’s enjoy kids,” Yograj said. Expanding on the point, he argued that “women should not come in between the legendary prospect of a player,” adding, “fakir aur player yeh dono ka koi dharam nahi hai, warg nahi hai, they belong to god.” The 66-year-old, who featured in one Test and six ODIs during the early 1980s, also directed barbs at star batters Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. Both recently retired from T20Is after India’s 2024 World Cup victory and stepped away from Test cricket last year, now playing only ODIs. Yograj questioned the timing of their decisions. “Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli are young cricketers and they want to quit. Laanat hai zindagi bhar,” he remarked. “Make the world realise that you are the best, that you are indispensable. Even if you are fifty years old and still scoring a double hundred, no one will drop you. So this age factor is very funny in this country.” In a notable shift from his previous criticisms, Yograj praised former India captain MS Dhoni, who continues to play competitive cricket. “He is still playing and should keep on doing so for the next 10 years. Because he has proved his fitness with the right discipline and dedication. I still see his forearm, amazing man. Who the hell are people to tell him to retire? No. As far as cricket is concerned, hats off to him,” Yograj said. Kohli will return to the field in IPL 2026 with Royal Challengers Bengaluru, while Rohit will lead Mumbai Indians. The tournament begins Saturday at Bengaluru’s M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, where RCB face Sunrisers Hyderabad in the season opener.
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When football turned to penalties to end 'cruel' system

When football turned to penalties to end 'cruel' system

Boothferry Park, Hull, 5 August 1970. The air was warm, the terraces were packed and an 11-year-old Martyn Kelly stood on tiptoe, wishing he had a stool like the other children so he could see over the sea of heads. History was about to unfold: the first officially sanctioned penalty shootout in professional football. Manchester United, crowned European champions only two seasons earlier, had been held 1-1 after extra time by second-tier Hull City in the opening round of the Watney Cup, a pre-season competition for the highest-scoring teams from each division. With no replay scheduled, the new tie-breaker—approved barely six weeks earlier by the International Football Association Board—would decide the outcome. Five kicks each, 12 yards out, keeper against taker. No coin toss, no drawing of lots, no summoning of luck. Kelly’s pulse raced. “Blimey, it’s George Best,” he thought as the United icon placed the ball. Best promptly dispatched the first spot-kick in shootout history, low to the keeper’s left. Hull’s player-manager Terry Neill answered, and after nine more attempts the tally stood at 3-3. Then Denis Law, one of the game’s great scorers, saw his drive clawed away by Tigers keeper Ian McKechnie. McKechnie had already become the first goalkeeper to save a penalty in a shootout; minutes later he would become the first to take one. His powerful effort crashed against the bar, sealing a 4-3 win for United and etching his name in folklore for contrasting reasons. The shootout’s arrival was born of frustration. At the 1968 European Championship, Italy advanced to the final by correctly calling heads. Four months later, Israel’s Olympic quarter-final against Bulgaria was settled when captain Yisha’ayahu Schwager pulled a slip reading “no” from a sombrero. Israeli FA official Yosef Dagan deemed the method “immoral and even cruel.” Together with colleague Michael Almog, he drafted a proposal for five alternating penalties, submitting it to Fifa in 1969. Ifab adopted the idea on 27 June 1970, and the Watney Cup provided the first live trial. Replays, coin flips and corner-counts had long been used, but none carried the visceral theatre of the shootout. Since McKechnie’s bar-rattling miss, 24% of shootout penalties have been missed, and the device has settled three World Cup finals and countless continental titles. Yet on that humid evening in Hull, no one knew whether the successor to the coin would prove any kinder. More than half a century on, the question still lingers every time the referee points to the spot.
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Ronald Araujo Opens Up: Red Card Against Chelsea Sparked Mental Health Break

Ronald Araujo Opens Up: Red Card Against Chelsea Sparked Mental Health Break

Barcelona defender Ronald Araujo has revealed that the red card he received against Chelsea in the Champions League at Stamford Bridge was the moment he realised he needed to step away from football to address his mental health. In a frank interview with Movistar, the Uruguay international said the dismissal crystallised months of internal struggle. “It’s obvious that diving there with a yellow card was crazy,” Araujo admitted. “Then I arrived at the dressing room and it was clear to me that something was happening to me, that I had to ask for help. I spoke to my wife and told her.” The 24-year-old centre-back explained that cultural expectations initially made it hard to acknowledge his difficulties. “We are country people and it is difficult to show feelings. It’s hard for you, there’s that barrier,” he said. “You say, ‘There’s something going on and I need to work on it, raise my hand and ask for help.’ It was very difficult for me to recognize that I needed to seek help from a professional. You go on, on and on, but there was a moment, after the action against Chelsea, when I said: ‘That’s it’. It wasn’t that action specifically, it was an accumulation of things, but that was the triggering moment.” Araujo has since resumed playing, scoring the decisive goal for Barcelona against Rayo Vallecano in their most recent fixture. He is now with the Uruguay national team and is expected to feature in today’s match against England.
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Bayern Munich officially renews two injured talents

Bayern Munich officially renews two injured talents

Bayern Munich has underlined its reputation as a club that looks after its own by extending the contracts of long-serving academy products Younes Aitamer and Louis Richter through 2027, the club confirmed via its official website. The pair, both rehabilitating from anterior-cruciate-ligament setbacks, had been facing uncertain futures with their previous deals due to expire next year. Aitamer, 21, has spent nearly a decade on Bayern’s books but has not appeared in an official match for almost two years after rupturing his ACL. Richter, 23 and a 12-year veteran of the club’s youth system, suffered his injury only weeks ago. Terminating their contracts at this stage would have left the duo without income or immediate access to elite-level medical care at a critical moment in their recoveries. By retaining the players, Bayern ensures they continue to receive full salaries and unrestricted use of the club’s state-of-the-art rehabilitation facilities at Sabener Strasse. The gesture mirrors the Bavarians’ long-standing policy of supporting homegrown talent even when fortune turns against them. While the Bundesliga giants are renowned for a ruthlessly competitive environment that quickly jettisons those who cannot meet the highest standards, the renewals serve as a reminder that loyalty within the Bayern family cuts both ways. Keywords:
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Are these Manchester United's summer transfer priorities?

Are these Manchester United's summer transfer priorities?

Manchester United’s 2026-27 rebuild is already taking shape behind the scenes, and the Talk of the Devils team has spent the international break mapping out what the club’s hierarchy believe must be addressed once the window opens. The conclusion, after three dedicated podcast episodes on midfield, attack, defence and goalkeeping, is that midfield remains the single most urgent theatre of operations – and that the scale of the overhaul could yet stretch to a £140 million double swoop. Casemiro’s departure is now set in stone. The Brazilian confirmed to The Athletic that he will not reverse January’s decision to leave when his contract expires, and United will not trigger the appearance-related extension clause that could have kept him at Old Trafford for an extra year. That leaves seven fixtures before the 33-year-old’s farewell, and leaves Erik ten Hag’s successor (the identity of the permanent manager remains undecided) with a gaping hole at the base of midfield. Talk of the Devils understands that United’s recruitment department has drawn up a 10-man shortlist for the No 6 role, only half of which has surfaced publicly. Names floated on the podcast include Elliot Anderson, Carlos Baleba, Adam Wharton and Sandro Tonali, but the club accept that replacing Casemiro’s cocktail of experience, positional cunning and set-piece threat is almost impossible in one purchase. Instead, the emerging strategy is to recruit two high-grade midfielders at roughly £70 million apiece, mirroring last summer’s forward-line splurge on Matheus Cunha, Bryan Mbeumo and Benjamin Sesko. A second midfielder – an alternative or eventual successor to Kobbie Mainoo – is viewed as essential. Doubts over Manuel Ugarte’s long-term suitability mean a third addition is not being ruled out, although academy graduates Toby Collyer, Sekou Kone, Jack Fletcher and Jim Thwaites could yet fill the developmental slot. The profile of the second recruit will be shaped by the attributes of the first: if United land a deep-lying playmaker, the partner may need to be more destructive out of possession. Further forward, the next priority is a left-sided attacker. The failed January pursuit of Antoine Semenyo, who joined Manchester City, is seen inside Carrington as a hint of the profile desired. With Sesko operating centrally, Amad on the right and Cunha drifting from the left, the coaching staff must decide whether a proven Premier League winger or a back-up centre-forward offers better value. Joshua Zirkzee’s fit within the current system is under review, while Patrick Dorgu’s long-term role – full-back or auxiliary winger – remains fluid. Outgoings will shape the attacking budget. Napoli are expected to make Rasmus Hojlund’s loan permanent, Jadon Sancho’s contract expires when his Villa loan ends, and Barcelona are pushing to extend Marcus Rashford’s stay. In that context, a romantic homecoming for Danny Welbeck – 12 Premier League goals for Brighton this term – is again under discussion, with United mindful of his leadership and local ties. Defensively, left-back is third on the agenda. Luke Shaw has started every league game this season, but, at 31 and facing the added strain of European football, he needs both support and succession planning. Tyrell Malacia will depart on a free, doubts persist over whether teenagers Harry Amass and Diego Leon are ready, and Dorgu’s hybrid status muddies the waters. United believe the centre-back group is overstocked – injuries to Matthijs de Ligt and Lisandro Martínez notwithstanding – while Diogo Dalot and Noussair Mazraoui provide adequate competition on the right. Goalkeeper is a sleeper issue. Senne Lammens has been undisputed No 1 since October, yet Andre Onana is expected to return from Trabzonspor only to be moved on, Altay Bayindir wants regular football and Tom Heaton is out of contract. Radek Vitek, excelling on loan at Bristol City, wants to challenge Lammens, but the club must decide whether the 22-year-old Czech is ready or whether an experienced deputy is required. In short, United’s summer list is long, expensive and intertwined. The midfield is the keystone; everything else flows from how effectively the club reinvents the engine room.
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Lynn Lim Sets Vanderbilt Women’s Golf Record

Lynn Lim Sets Vanderbilt Women’s Golf Record

Clemson, S.C. — Vanderbilt senior Lynn Lim authored a historic opening round at the Clemson Invitational on Friday evening, firing a 9-under-par 63 to reset the program’s single-round scoring record and propel the Commodores into the team lead at 13-under. Lim’s nine-birdie effort eclipsed the previous Vanderbilt benchmark of 64, a mark she already shared with Elizabeth Rudisill and Louise Yu. The 63 gives her a one-shot cushion atop the individual leaderboard heading into the tournament’s second day. “What a day for Lynn,” head coach Greg Allen said. “She made golf look easy today. What made her round even more special is the way her teammates reacted when they found out. It was really cool as a coach to see the love and joy they had for her.” Lim’s brilliance was hardly a solo act. Ava Merrill signed for a 3-under 69, good for seventh place after a five-birdie performance, while Sarah Im posted a 2-under 70 to sit 11th. Allen expects even more from the pair over the weekend. “Ava and Sara played really well and probably felt like they left a few out there, so I’m excited for them to get back out there tomorrow,” he said. “I saw a lot of good things from Rudy and AT, and I believe they will get it going the next two days.” With Lim leading the charge, Vanderbilt holds a commanding team advantage and will take that momentum into Saturday’s second round at the Clemson Invitational.
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Managers on the rise: Cesc Fabregas – the tactical tyro ruffling the feathers of Serie A's traditionalists

Managers on the rise: Cesc Fabregas – the tactical tyro ruffling the feathers of Serie A's traditionalists

Mozzate, Como – The classroom is a flood-lit patch of grass tucked behind the team offices, and the lecturer is a 38-year-old in a tracksuit who still looks as if he could play a 90-minute Champions League quarter-final. Cesc Fabregas, first-time head coach and lifelong football obsessive, is drawing triangles in the turf with the tip of his boot, re-enacting the one-two he once used to escape a press. “I didn’t have the dribble,” he tells the circle of players, “so I needed the idea before the ball.” That idea—anticipation married to technique—has become the operating system of Como, the lakeside club that only returned to Serie A last spring after a 21-year absence and now sit on the cusp of Champions League qualification. Eighteen months into Fabregas’ reign, the Nerazzurri have improved their points haul by 27, boast the league’s best defence and, after a 5-0 humiliation of Pisa, were publicly labelled “one of the best teams in Italy” by fellow young outsider Oscar Hiljemark. Yet the louder Como’s results speak, the more some corners of Italian football cover their ears. Fabregas’ press conferences—lucid, tactical, generous—are studied by a new generation of analysts and coaches, but dismissed by a swathe of ex-pros and gate-keeping editors as moralising “Barça-splaining”. When he noted that Cagliari had allowed the grass to grow longer before Como’s visit, the comment was twisted into a sermon on how “football should be played”. Never mind that Fabregas praised rookie counterpart Fabio Pisacane; the caricature of the Catalan purist had to be served. Inside the league, however, the respect is palpable. Luciano Spalletti, architect of Napoli’s 2023 scudetto, grins when asked about Como surreptitiously widening the Sinigaglia pitch by 50 centimetres on each side. “If I were a player, I’d like to be coached by him,” Spalletti says. “He’s my idol.” The numbers back the admiration. Only Inter have scored more; no one has conceded fewer. Como top Serie A in final-third pressures and PPDA (passes per defensive action), rare metrics for a country wedded to man-marking and the 3-5-2. They do it with a 4-3-3 or 4-2-3-1 featuring quick, skilful wide men Jesus Rodriguez and Assane Diao—players more commonly associated with Ligue 1 or the Bundesliga than with Lombardy. Fabregas’ project is undeniably foreign-funded: Indonesian owners the Hartono brothers, the richest in the division, have bankrolled the highest net spend since promotion. Yet the recruitment thesis is not galáctico but graduate. Real Madrid prospect Nico Paz, Betis winger Rodriguez, Dinamo Zagreb creator Martin Baturina and Jayden Addai arrived with scant senior minutes; Maxence Caqueret and Maximo Perrone added ballast. Anastasios Douvikas, previously a support striker, has been converted into a No. 9 who trails only Lautaro Martinez in the capocannoniere race. Goalkeeper Jean Butez, centre-back Marc-Oliver Kempf and full-backs Ivan Smolcic and Mergim Vojvoda cost a combined €2 million; all look like heists. The lone Italian to see the pitch this season, Edoardo Goldaniga, appeared for one added-minute cameo in September. Fabregas insists he would love local blood, but academies are not producing first-ready talent and Como’s own youth pathway is still in infancy. When he voices that uncomfortable truth, critics hear condescension rather than a diagnosis. Victory over Roma crystallised the culture clash. Fabregas spent three years obsessing over Italy’s universal man-marking—“I go to bed thinking how to free my players”—and devised a plan that dragged Stephan El Shaarawy into unfamiliar corridors, allowing centre-back Jacobo Ramon to step into midfield as the spare man. Roma managed one shot on target; Gian Piero Gasperini refused the post-match handshake. Earlier, Max Allegri reportedly called Fabregas “a child” after the Como coach impulsively tugged Alexis Saelemaekers’ shirt near the technical area. Fabregas apologised; the narrative of the upstart foreigner upsetting the old guard was already inked. Como’s ascent is not without sub-plots. UEFA licensing, home-grown quotas and Financial Fair Play compliance are being stress-tested behind the scenes, though club sources exude calm. The bigger picture is a 38-year-old manager who has synthesized La Masia schooling, Wengerian spatial principles, Mourinho pragmatism and Conte detail into a side that plays nothing like the Serie A template. At the next Panchina d’Oro—Italy’s Golden Bench—Fabregas will likely poll well among peers, yet history is stacked against him. Only one foreign coach has won the award since it became domestic-only: Jose Mourinho in 2010, and that took a treble at Inter. Whether or not the voters reward him, Fabregas has already forced Calcio to confront its reflexive traditionalism. Como, the club that once gave Dele Alli a training-ground audition, are preparing for the possibility of Barcelona, Manchester City or Paris Saint-Germain on the lakefront. Their coach would prefer the conversation stayed on the football that got them there. In Italy, that request might be the most radical idea of all.
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Saddle savvy

Saddle savvy

Persistence pays off for generations of barrel racers, proving that dedication to the sport transcends age and era. Across arenas, families have passed down the finesse of tight turns and explosive sprints, turning a timed event into a legacy built one cloverleaf pattern at a time. The generational thread weaves experience with youthful drive, showing that the same gritty commitment that carried grandparents around the barrels now guides their children and grandchildren toward the finish timers. Their collective endurance underscores a simple truth in rodeo circles: steady resolve outruns fleeting talent, and the knowledge carried in worn leather saddles never truly retires.
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IPL 2026 preview: A new era at Rajasthan Royals, and can Mumbai challenge for RCB's crown?

IPL 2026 preview: A new era at Rajasthan Royals, and can Mumbai challenge for RCB's crown?

Mumbai, 24 March 2026 — When the 19th edition of the Indian Premier League begins on Saturday night, the narrative is already richer than any opening weekend in the competition’s history. Virat Kohli will raise the 2025 trophy to the Ahmedabad sky one final time before Royal Challengers Bengaluru take on Sunrisers Hyderabad, but the question that follows the champions into the new campaign is whether their crown can survive a two-pronged assault from Mumbai Indians’ restored dynasty and a Punjab Kings side desperate to finish the story that eluded them six months ago. RCB’s long-awaited breakthrough arrived via six runs in last year’s final, yet the off-season has done little to dull the hunger around the club. A consortium led by the Aditya Birla Group paid US $1.78 billion for the franchise this week — a 1,495 per cent appreciation on the 2008 purchase price — and the playing roster has been kept almost intact. Director of cricket Mo Bobat and head coach Andy Flower have retained the title-winning core: Kohli, opener Jacob Bethell, captain Rajat Patidar, finishers Tim David and Romario Shepherd, and wicketkeeper Jitesh Sharma. Venkatesh Iyer adds top-order ballast, Jordan Cox covers multiple spots, and uncapped left-arm quick Mangesh Yadav — signed after Yash Dayal was stood down pending court proceedings — offers raw pace above 140 km/h. The only cloud is Josh Hazlewood’s absence for the early rounds; the Australian’s 22 wickets in 12 innings last year drove RCB’s press-up attack, and his hamstring-Achilles management plan leaves 36-year-old Bhuvneshwar Kumar leading a thinner-than-preferred pace unit. If the champions negotiate the first fortnight, the structure that ended 17 years of hurt should push them into another late charge. Mumbai Indians, five-time kings of the league, believe the path back to supremacy runs through a familiar alliance. Rohit Sharma and Quinton de Kock reunite at the top, the pair that anchored the 2019 and 2020 triumphs. Behind them, India’s T20 World Cup-winning skipper Suryakumar Yadav and Tilak Varma give middle-overs control, while Hardik Pandya and Will Jacks provide all-round elasticity. Jasprit Bumrah remains the competition’s most decisive operator; supported by Trent Boult and Deepak Chahar, he forms a new-ball trio capable of deciding matches inside the first 30 balls. Mahela Jayawardene’s return as head coach, after two years as global head of cricket, has re-anchored the dressing-room culture that delivered three titles between 2017 and 2022. The squad’s thin domestic spin reserve and Bumrah’s occasional workload limits are the lone red flags. On paper, it is the strongest squad in the draw, and anything less than a final-day appearance will be judged failure. Punjab Kings enter the tournament as the side most scarred by 2025. They topped the league phase, then fell six runs short in the final. A record 21 retentions underline the faith in Ricky Ponting’s second-year project. Captain Shreyas Iyer, recovered from the spleen laceration that curtailed his winter, is reunited with the coach who moulded Delhi Capitals into serial qualifiers. An Australian spine — Marcus Stoinis, Ben Dwarshuis, Xavier Bartlett, Mitch Owen and teenage batting-spinner Cooper Connolly — offers Ponting both familiarity and flexibility. Arshdeep Singh and Yuzvendra Chahal continue to headline a well-balanced attack complemented by 6ft 8in Marco Jansen. The lingering doubt is whether Iyer’s rust and a selection headache among multi-skilled options cost them in clutch moments. Expect another top-four push; the leap from nearly-men to champions may hinge on Iyer’s first-month rhythm. Rajasthan Royals, meanwhile, begin life after a US $1.63 billion takeover. The consortium led by U.S. entrepreneur Kal Somani, backed by Walmart heir Rob Walton, will assume control after IPL 2026, ending Manoj Badale’s 18-year stewardship that delivered the fairytale 2008 title. On the field, 24-year-old Riyan Parag takes over as full-time captain, tasked with shepherding a callow but explosive batting group: Yashasvi Jaiswal and 14-year-old phenomenon Vaibhav Suryavanshi, who struck 175 off 80 balls in February’s Under-19 World Cup final. Ravindra Jadeja’s arrival from Chennai Super Kings and Ravi Bishnoi’s wrist-spin lend Parag control in the middle overs, yet the pace cupboard is threadbare beyond a returning but perennially fragile Jofra Archer. Sam Curran’s season-ending groin injury leaves Dasun Shanaka as cover; domestic pair Sandeep Sharma and Tushar Deshpande offer honest skill rather than fear factor. Until the Royals learn to chase — they lost eight of nine batting second last year — a mid-table finish appears the ceiling. Sunrisers Hyderabad round out the weekend double-header, still searching for the batting depth to complement a world-class attack built around Bhuvneshwar Kumar and T Natarajan. The franchise has never lacked bowling bite; whether new leadership can coax consistent runs will decide if they gate-crash the playoff picture. By the time the opening weekend closes, the contenders will have offered early clues. RCB’s attempt to turn one title into a dynasty, Mumbai’s pursuit of a record sixth trophy, Punjab’s bid to finish the job, and Rajasthan’s first steps into a billion-dollar future — all will shape a season that promises to be as lucrative as it is unpredictable.
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Birmingham Stallions open the UFL season with a victory

Birmingham Stallions open the UFL season with a victory

Birmingham, Ala. — The United Football League’s 2024 campaign kicked off under the lights Friday night, and the Birmingham Stallions emerged from the opener with a dramatic victory over the expansion Louisville Kings. In what marked the Kings’ inaugural contest, the visitors from Birmingham held on through a tense finish to secure the league’s first win of the year. From the opening whistle, the matchup carried the electricity of a fresh-season showcase, with the Kings eager to christen their new era and the Stallions determined to set an early tone. The back-and-forth affair kept the crowd engaged deep into the fourth quarter, but Birmingham ultimately made the decisive plays down the stretch to escape with the victory. The result positions the Stallions at 1-0 as they turn their attention to the remainder of the schedule, while Louisville falls to 0-1 in its franchise debut.
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Westerville North’s Elijah McCree Caps Historic Season with Division II Player of the Year Honor

Westerville North’s Elijah McCree Caps Historic Season with Division II Player of the Year Honor

Dayton, Ohio — The snapshot that will live on in Westerville North yearbooks is frozen in time: Elijah McCree rising up for a first-half jumper in the Division II state title game at University of Dayton Arena on March 22, 2026. By season’s end, that single frame had become the emblem of a championship run and an individual accolade no Warrior has ever claimed. On Thursday the Ohio Prep Sports Media Association confirmed what every opposing coach already suspected, naming McCree the Division II Player of the Year. The 6-foot-5 junior guard averaged a double-double throughout the tournament trail and delivered clutch performances when the stage was brightest, cementing his place atop the All-Ohio list released this week. “Elijah’s work ethic is unmatched,” Westerville North head coach Ryan Bobo said after the announcement. “He turned our program into a destination for tough, winning basketball.” McCree headlines a Division II honor roll that also features: - Isaiah Mack-Russell, Cincinnati Winton Woods, junior - Steven Skaljac, Brecksville-Broadview Heights, senior - Marcus Johnson, Garfield Heights - Adam Guthrie, Washington Court House Miami Trace, senior The association staggered its release, unveiling Divisions IV-VII on Wednesday and Divisions I-III on Thursday. Among the other top individual awards: Division I Coach of the Year: John Feasel, Lewis Center Olentangy Division III Player of the Year: Gator Nichols, Zanesville Maysville Division IV Player of the Year: Jason Singleton, Columbus Academy Division V Player of the Year: Trey Sagester, New Madison Tri-Village Division VI Player of the Year: Cameron Elwer, Delphos St. John’s Division VII Player of the Year: Trey Sagester, New Madison Tri-Village (repeat honoree) Coaches of the Year in the smaller divisions included Kyle Dack, Sullivan Black River; Drew Stevens, Ironton; and Caleb McClanahan, Portsmouth West. For McCree, the hardware adds another layer to a legacy still under construction. College scouts flocked to Westerville this winter to watch a player capable of scoring in flurries while locking down the opponent’s top threat on the other end. His 28-point outing in the state semifinal propelled the Warriors to the title contest, where McCree’s first-half rhythm kept Westerville North within striking distance before eventual champion Columbus Africentric pulled away late. “Individual awards are great,” McCree said, “but we’re chasing a banner. This motivates me to get back in the gym and finish the job next year.” With every starter expected to return except one senior reserve, the Warriors will enter 2027 as the early favorite in central Ohio. McCree, already holding multiple mid-major offers, will headline a roster stacked with length, speed, and a year of championship experience. Ohio’s high-school landscape continues to churn out talent capable of making noise on the national scene, and McCree’s name now sits at the forefront of that conversation. If the Warriors needed any more proof that their star is built for the moment, they need only glance at that iconic photo: ball high above his head, eyes locked on the rim, the University of Dayton Arena crowd buzzing in anticipation. One frame, one season, one unforgettable year — and for Elijah McCree, the story is just beginning.
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Illinois One Win from Final Four as Underwood’s Illini Face Cinderella Iowa in Sweet Sixteen

Illinois One Win from Final Four as Underwood’s Illini Face Cinderella Iowa in Sweet Sixteen

Houston — Brad Underwood strode through the Toyota Center tunnel late Thursday night with the satisfied stride of a coach who knows his team is peaking. Ninety minutes earlier, Illinois had just ground down last year’s national runner-up Houston on the glass and on the scoreboard, punching a ticket to the South Regional final and moving within one victory of the program’s first Final Four since 2005. Standing between the Illini and a trip to Detroit is the most improbable of opponents: No. 9 seed Iowa, a team that finished the Big Ten regular season 10-10 and on a three-game skid, yet has since toppled No. 8 Clemson, No. 1 Florida and No. 4 Nebraska under first-year coach Ben McCollum. The contrast in styles will be stark. Iowa ranks among the five slowest teams in Division I, averaging just six fast-break points a game in the tournament. Illinois, 286th in adjusted tempo, is comfortable walking the ball up the floor as well, but boasts the deeper arsenal of scorers. Keaton Wagler, Andrej Stojakovic and Kylan Boswell each dropped at least 17 in the Jan. 11 win at Iowa City, the lone regular-season meeting. Saturday’s chess match begins with Illinois’ defense against All-Big Ten point guard Bennett Stirtz. The 6-4 senior has played 37-plus minutes in every game since mid-January, but is shooting 6-for-28 from deep in the NCAAs. The Illini believe their length—two 7-footers in the rotation—can further crowd Stirtz while exploiting Iowa’s rebounding woes. Illinois crushed Houston 43-34 on the boards Thursday; Iowa finishes outside the top 325 nationally in rebounding on both ends. Tip-off is set for shortly after 5 p.m. CT. A Final Four berth, and the ghosts of 2005, await the winner.
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Bayern Munich News: The Aftermath of Germany’s 4-3 Win Over Switzerland

Bayern Munich News: The Aftermath of Germany’s 4-3 Win Over Switzerland

Basel, Switzerland – Germany escaped with a 4-3 victory over Switzerland in a roller-coaster friendly on Wednesday night, yet the final scoreline papered over cracks that will worry coach Julian Nagelsmann only months before the World Cup kicks off. Nagelsmann’s starting XI raised few eyebrows, though the continued inclusion of Leroy Sané drew audible skepticism from travelling supporters who fear the winger’s form may dip once the tournament pressure mounts. Florian Wirtz, fresh off a stellar club campaign, was handed creative duties, while Antonio Rüdiger sat out, allowing Nico Schlotterbeck to partner Jonathan Tah in central defence. The tone was set early. In the sixth minute Joshua Kimmich’s attempted diagonal pass ricocheted off Swiss forward Dan Ndoye’s head; the ball looped out for a throw-in, but the moment foreshadowed a disjointed German display. Ndoye exacted swift revenge, ghosting between Kimmich and Tah in the 18th minute to slot the opener and expose a back line that looked anything but tournament-ready. Germany’s response arrived via a quick corner in the 25th minute. Tah atoned for his earlier lapse, steering a firm header past Gregor Kobel after Wirtz’s inswinging delivery. Parity, however, did little to settle nerves. Kai Havertz twice forced Kobel into smart saves, yet Switzerland continued to find space behind Germany’s midfield shield. On 41 minutes Breel Embolo outmuscled Tah to head Widmer’s cross beyond Marc-André ter Stegen, and only the woodwork denied Fabian Rieder a third for the hosts seconds later. The half appeared lost until Wirtz threaded a defence-splitting pass that Serge Gnabry converted with the outside of his boot, dragging Germany level at 2-2 before the whistle. The second period showcased Wirtz’s brilliance. On 61 minutes the 21-year-old whipped a corner short, shifted onto his right, and arced a dipping shot inside the far post for 3-2. Bayern Munich teenager Lennart Karl entered two minutes later for his senior debut, immediately injecting energy down the right flank. But defensive frailties resurfaced. In the 78th minute Miro Muheim’s cut-back found Joël Monteiro unmarked on the edge of the area; the substitute’s venomous finish flew past ter Stegen to level at 3-3. Once again Germany’s composure deserted them. Salvation came from an unlikely source. A determined recovery tackle by Tah deep in Swiss territory launched a counter that ended with Karl’s mazy dribble and a simple square ball from Pascal Groß. Wirtz did the rest, steering a low shot beyond Kobel in the 85th minute to seal a scarcely deserved 4-3 win. Post-match, Nagelsmann praised Wirtz’s “world-class moments” but conceded the overall performance “lacked control and conviction.” Captain Kimmich admitted the squad “made life difficult for ourselves,” while Karl, still eligible for the U-21s, called his debut “a dream I’ll remember, even if we must defend better.” For Bayern Munich watchers, the evening offered mixed signals. Sané and Gnabry never found rhythm, Leon Goretzka’s positioning invited Swiss counters, and Schlotterbeck’s distribution remains high-risk. Yet Karl’s confident cameo and Wirtz’s match-winning intervention provide optimism that youthful exuberance could yet ignite Germany’s campaign. The result keeps Germany unbeaten in four friendlies under Nagelsmann, but defensive lapses and midfield rigidity suggest significant fine-tuning is required before the opening World Cup group stage. Switzerland, meanwhile, depart with heads high, having twice come from behind and exposed the visitors’ soft centre. Germany return to Munich on Thursday for a closed-door training session ahead of next week’s final warm-up. Nagelsmann’s message will be simple: flair wins friendlies; structure wins tournaments. Keywords:
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Jorge Mendes pushing Barcelona to sign Bernardo Silva on free transfer

Jorge Mendes pushing Barcelona to sign Bernardo Silva on free transfer

Barcelona’s annual summer link with Bernardo Silva has surfaced months ahead of schedule after Diario Sport revealed that the Portugal midfielder's representative, Jorge Mendes, has opened talks with sporting director Deco. With Bernardo set to leave Manchester City when his contract expires in June, Mendes is attempting to steer the 31-year-old to Camp Nou on a free transfer. According to the report, Bernardo "is doing everything possible and impossible to sign for Barça for next season" and has instructed Mendes to prioritise the Catalan club. Mendes believes the versatile midfielder can slot into Hansi Flick’s plans and argues that a zero-fee deal makes the operation attractive to a club constrained by La Liga’s financial regulations. While Major League Soccer, Saudi Pro League side and Turkish giants Galatasaray have all expressed concrete interest, Bernardo has his heart set on Barcelona and is prepared to delay committing elsewhere while the Blaugrana weigh up a move. The major sticking point is squad composition: Bernardo operates most effectively in the same zones currently occupied by Pedri and teenage prodigy Lamine Yamal, raising questions about game time as he approaches his 32nd birthday in August. For now, Mendes continues to lobby Deco and the Barça hierarchy, hoping to secure what could be the final big contract of Bernardo Silva’s career.
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Peska: Cyclones’ gymnastics program was cut, here’s what sport should be added

Peska: Cyclones’ gymnastics program was cut, here’s what sport should be added

Ames, Iowa — When Iowa State discontinued its women’s gymnastics program after internal strife scuttled the most recent season, the move did more than silence the music on the floor exercise. It triggered a Title IX equation that now obliges the athletic department to balance the ledger by adding a women’s sport. With campus conversation shifting from mourning to momentum, three realistic paths have emerged: women’s wrestling, women’s flag football, or a reboot of gymnastics itself. The frontrunner is women’s wrestling, a choice that leans heavily on Iowa’s cultural fabric. The Cyclone men have already authored one of the nation’s most storied programs—eight NCAA team titles and 71 individual champions—and the state’s high-school girls’ scene is exploding after sanctioning the sport in 2022. The Hawkeye wave across the state border adds another push: Iowa’s first-year women’s team captured an NCAA crown last March, proving instant competitiveness is possible. Athletic department officials have not committed publicly, but the infrastructure—coaching expertise, fan interest, and regional recruiting base—makes wrestling the most seamless fit. A second option gaining cursory attention is women’s flag football. Resource-wise, the concept works: winter practices and games could rotate through the Bergstrom Indoor Training Facility, while fall contests would shift to the outdoor Cyclone Sports Complex. Yet viability remains shaky. NCAA Division I sponsorship is minimal, and assembling a full schedule against like-minded programs would require creative—and potentially one-sided—matchmaking. Until the sport stabilizes at the collegiate level, flag football looks more like a long-range experiment than an immediate fix. The third route circles back to the very program that created the vacancy: gymnastics. Facilities remain intact, staff expertise lingers, and the administrative playbook for running the sport is already written. Supporters argue that a clean restart—new coaches, fresh athletes, and revised oversight—could restore balance without the capital costs a brand-new sport would demand. Critics counter that Athletic Director Jamie Pollard’s decisive cancellation may have burned bridges with donors, athletes, and USA Gymnastics stakeholders, complicating a resurrection. Timing is equally thorny: how long must a program stay dormant before a reset is viewed as genuine rather than a reversal? For now, the department is performing due diligence, weighing fan sentiment, budget projections, and conference realignment against the non-negotiable Title IX quota. Wrestling carries the clearest runway, flag football offers novelty, and gymnastics presents a path of redemption. Whichever option prevails will shape Iowa State’s athletic identity for the next decade—and determine how quickly the Cyclones can turn a contentious subtraction into a strategic addition.
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JOE BLACK: Understanding the ACL

JOE BLACK: Understanding the ACL

In the high-stakes world of athletics, few injuries carry the weight of an ACL tear. Sports medicine specialist Joe Black emphasizes that prevention, not reaction, remains the cornerstone of modern care. Speaking on behalf of his colleagues, Black notes that sports medicine professionals continually seek methods to stop injuries before they start. By collaborating directly with coaches, they design training protocols aimed at both avoiding ACL damage and reducing its severity when it does occur. Their shared goal: keep athletes on the field and out of the operating room.
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Sophomore’s late go-ahead goal carries Liverpool girls lacrosse past CBA: ‘Really stepping up’

Sophomore’s late go-ahead goal carries Liverpool girls lacrosse past CBA: ‘Really stepping up’

Liverpool, N.Y. — A sophomore’s clutch strike deep into the final minutes lifted the Liverpool girls lacrosse team to a dramatic victory over Christian Brothers Academy on Tuesday, capping a balanced offensive effort that saw six different Legends find the net. With the contest hanging in the balance, the underclassman attacker seized possession, sliced through the CBA defense and buried the decisive tally, erasing a late deficit and igniting the home sideline. The goal proved the difference as Liverpool held on for the win, extending its early-season momentum. “She’s really stepping up,” teammates said of the sophomore, whose poise under pressure has already become a hallmark of her young varsity résumé. The Legends’ offense showcased its depth throughout the game; half-dozen players recorded goals, preventing CBA from keying on any single threat and underscoring Liverpool’s versatility. The balanced scoring attack complemented timely defensive stands that limited the Brothers’ chances down the stretch. The victory marks another high-stakes triumph for Liverpool in a season that has seen the program emphasize resilience and collective contributions. With league play intensifying, the Legends will look to build on the momentum generated by their sophomore hero and a full-roster offensive effort.
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Revealed: The ‘impossible signing’ that Barcelona are keen on this summer

Revealed: The ‘impossible signing’ that Barcelona are keen on this summer

Barcelona have set their sights on Osasuna winger Victor Munoz ahead of the summer transfer window, yet the Catalan giants privately concede that a deal for the 21-year-old is all but unattainable, according to a report in Mundo Deportivo. Club scouts have tracked Munoz throughout the current campaign and have been encouraged by his rapid development, culminating in La Liga’s Under-23 Player of the Month award for March and a maiden call-up to the senior Spain squad. Despite that enthusiasm, Barcelona classify the pursuit as an “impossible signing” because of the complex ownership structure surrounding the player. Munoz, who was born in Barcelona and spent part of his formative years in the club’s academy before moving to Damm and later Real Madrid, is co-owned by Osasuna and Real Madrid. Last summer Osasuna purchased 50 percent of his economic rights, but Madrid retained a three-year buy-back clause exercisable at €8 million in 2024, €9 million in 2025 and €10 million in 2026. That arrangement gives the Bernabéu hierarchy effective control over the winger’s future and effectively blocks any approach from their Clásico rivals. Compounding the difficulty, Osasuna have informed suitors they will not entertain offers below Munoz’s €40 million release clause. With Madrid able to activate their cut-price option at any point, Barcelona see no viable route to securing the player without triggering a prohibitive bidding war or risking the loss of a key target to their historic adversary. For now, Munoz remains focused on finishing the season strongly in Pamplona, while Barcelona’s hierarchy continue to monitor a talent they covet but concede they are unlikely to land.
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Enzo Fernández scores in Argentina win

Enzo Fernández scores in Argentina win

Madrid—When the intercontinental showpiece “Finalissima” was scrapped because of security concerns in Qatar, Argentina and Spain were left to fill the void with hastily arranged friendlies. La Roja obliged by coasting past Serbia 3-0 at the Estadio Nuevo Arcángel in Córdoba, yet the headline act 500 kilometres north at the Metropolitano came from the world champions. Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernández marked 59 minutes of work with the opening goal in Argentina’s 2-1 victory over Mauritania, continuing the most prolific scoring season of his professional career. Stationed at the edge of the six-yard box, the 23-year-old timed his arrival perfectly to side-foot home the finish that settled any early nerves and set Lionel Scaloni’s side on course for a low-key but useful win. Spain, meanwhile, leaned on full-back Marc Cucurella for the entire contest as Luis de la Fuente’s experimental XI subdued a blunt Serbia. The left-back’s energy down the flank mirrored the industry shown by Fernández at the other venue, underscoring why both players remain central to their nations’ plans despite the cancellation of the glamour tie. Elsewhere, England were held 1-1 by Uruguay at Wembley, where Chelsea’s Cole Palmer emerged from the bench to provide the creative spark that nearly clinched victory. A pinpoint cross from the 21-year-old should have been converted by Dominic Calvert-Lewin, and although the chance went begging, Three Lions coach Thomas Tuchel took heart from Palmer’s resurgence. “We saw good data lately,” Tuchel noted in the build-up. “For the first time in a long time I had the feeling his stride was back to the original lengths… he is back to full confidence and we see it in training.” With a World Cup looming this summer, both Fernández and Palmer will hope the weekend’s encouraging cameos are stepping-stones to bigger stages than the friendlies that replaced the ill-fated Finalissima.
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Israel Adesanya admits frustration over being forced to adapt his style due to opponent’s coaches

Israel Adesanya admits frustration over being forced to adapt his style due to opponent’s coaches

Las Vegas – Former UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya has voiced his irritation at what he sees as a growing trend among opposing camps: detailed game-planning that neutralizes one of his most effective offensive tools. Speaking ahead of his next Octagon appearance, Adesanya said he believes rival coaches have specifically targeted a signature element of his arsenal, forcing him to rethink his approach. “Coaches have helped take away one of my best weapons,” Adesanya stated, without specifying the exact technique he feels has been scouted and countered. The admission underscores the cat-and-mouse dynamic between elite fighters and the ever-evolving strategies devised by their teams. Despite the tactical setback, Adesanya vowed that fans will see a more aggressive version of the Nigerian-born Kiwi when he returns to competition. The promise of increased forward pressure marks a potential stylistic shift for the striking specialist, who has long been celebrated for his measured, counter-based game. While the 34-year-old declined to reveal precisely how he intends to re-establish his offensive rhythm, his commitment to a more proactive mindset suggests forthcoming fireworks inside the cage.
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'We will always protect him' - Tuchel defends White after Wembley boos

'We will always protect him' - Tuchel defends White after Wembley boos

Wembley, London — England manager Thomas Tuchel issued a staunch defence of Ben White after the Arsenal defender was booed during the Three Lions’ 1-1 draw with Uruguay, insisting the squad will “always protect him” and urging supporters to “move on” from the controversies that have shadowed the 27-year-old’s international career. White, making his first England appearance since leaving the 2022 World Cup camp early for personal reasons, entered the match to a mixed reception and was jeered again when his 81st-minute goal — his first at senior level — was announced. The mood darkened further in stoppage time when White was adjudged to have fouled Uruguay’s Matías Arezo, allowing Luis Suárez to convert a late penalty and snatch a draw. “I heard that he was booed,” Tuchel said post-match. “I didn’t hear it on the field because I was involved in the changes, so it cannot be the majority. There were some boos and some mixed reception, which I am disappointed about. We protect our players and he was excellent in camp. He deserved to come on, he deserved to start, and he got us almost the winner.” The defender’s reintegration has been anything but seamless. White rejected a subsequent call-up under former manager Gareth Southgate following a reported rift with then-assistant Steve Holland, triggering a self-imposed exile that ended only when Tuchel replaced Southgate last autumn. Summoned this month as an injury replacement for Jarell Quansah, White’s return divided opinion among fans who remain uneasy about his past withdrawal from national duty. Jordan Henderson, captaining England against Uruguay after previously being booed for his move to Saudi Arabia, urged White to keep perspective. “I have been through it myself,” Henderson said. “Some fans probably don’t even know why they are booing; they listen to what is said in the media, and a lot of the time that isn’t true. Ben has been good since he came back in and we will support him as team-mates.” White’s versatility — he featured at centre-back on Saturday despite being selected as a right-back option — keeps him in Tuchel’s thoughts ahead of this summer’s World Cup. Yet with Marc Guehi and Ezri Konsa set to return for Tuesday’s friendly against Japan, the competition for defensive places is fierce, and the manager conceded the scrutiny surrounding White may force a reassessment. Tuchel also questioned the VAR intervention that led to Uruguay’s equaliser. “I think it’s a very soft penalty,” he said. “Maybe Ben is also a bit greedy in this moment, but to overturn a decision when the referee clearly made the signal that he saw it… I was surprised VAR is in place.” For now, Tuchel’s priority is shielding a player he believes can still “write new chapters” for his country. “He needs to take it on the chin,” the manager acknowledged. “We will always protect him and hopefully everyone can move on and accept it.” Whether England supporters heed that plea could determine whether White’s renaissance story extends to the sport’s biggest stage this summer.
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Argentina beats Mauritania 2-1 as fans roar for Messi to chase a sixth World Cup

Argentina beats Mauritania 2-1 as fans roar for Messi to chase a sixth World Cup

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Enzo Fernández and Nicolás Paz scored either side of halftime to give world champions Argentina a 2-1 victory over Mauritania on Friday night at La Bombonera, but the result was only part of the story. A capacity crowd spent the evening urging captain Lionel Messi to commit to a sixth World Cup appearance next month, serenading the 38-year-old with chants of “With Leo Messi leading the way, we’re all going to celebrate” the moment he emerged for warm-ups. Messi, who began the friendly on the bench, entered after the break alongside 17-year-old Real Madrid prospect Franco Mastantuono. While he did not score, the forward forced Mauritania keeper Babacar Diop into a sharp save with a curling 55th-minute effort from distance, briefly lifting the stadium to its feet and keeping the dream alive for supporters desperate to see their icon in the United States–Mexico–Canada tournament starting in June. Fernández opened the scoring in the 17th minute, steering home a low cross from Atlético Madrid right-back Nahuel Molina. Paz doubled the advantage on 32 minutes, whipping a left-footed free-kick through the defensive wall that left Diop rooted. The visitors pulled one back late, but Argentina comfortably closed out the win. Coach Lionel Scaloni, who told reporters 24 hours earlier that he would “do everything possible” to persuade Messi to play in the upcoming World Cup, used the match to experiment with younger options while giving the home public a farewell glimpse of their heroes. The Albiceleste were forced to scramble for opponents after their high-profile Finalissima date with Spain in Qatar was canceled amid Middle-East conflict, and low-ranked but willing Mauritania (115th in the FIFA rankings) stepped in. Zambia, ranked 91st, will provide Tuesday’s opposition in the same venue as Scaloni races toward the May 30 roster deadline. Argentina, also world champions in 1978 and 1986, will open their title defense in Group J against Algeria on June 16 in Kansas City, followed by Austria on June 22 and Jordan on June 27. Whether Messi joins that journey will hinge on how his body responds in the coming weeks; for one more night in Buenos Aires, the mere possibility was enough to set La Bombonera alight.
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Mexico and Portugal to Face Off for First Time Since 2017 as 2026 World Cup Looms

Mexico and Portugal to Face Off for First Time Since 2017 as 2026 World Cup Looms

Mexico City—Eight years after their last meeting, Mexico and Portugal will renew acquaintances on Saturday night inside a refurbished Estadio Azteca, the symbolic curtain-raiser for El Tri’s final push toward the 2026 World Cup on home soil. The hosts arrive buoyant, having snapped a six-match winless skid with January victories over Panama, Bolivia and Iceland. Those wins, however, came against experimental squads outside the FIFA window; the visit of Portugal marks the first 2026 cap for Mexico’s Europe-based regulars and a timely gauge of their readiness for a summer tournament that kicks off in barely ten weeks. Portugal, inactive since topping UEFA Group F last fall, will be without iconic captain Cristiano Ronaldo, yet manager Roberto Martínez still commands a star-laden roster headlined by Bruno Fernandes, João Cancelo and Nuno Mendes. The Seleção view the Azteca showcase as an ideal springboard toward their own World Cup fine-tuning, even if the surroundings promise to be fiercely hostile for what is officially only a friendly. Manager Javier Aguirre is expected to stick with his trusted 4-3-3 rather than experiment with the 3-4-2-1 shape he has recently tested. Raúl Rangel—now the presumptive No. 1 after Luis Malagón’s season-ending injury—should start in goal behind a back four of Jorge Sánchez, César Montes, Jesús Vásquez and Jesús Gallardo. A depleted midfield means Erik Lira will anchor, flanked by Carlos Rodríguez and debutant Fidalgo, while Raúl Jiménez leads the line between in-form wingers Roberto Alvarado and Alexis Vega. Julián Quiñones provides a potent alternative should Aguirre opt for fresh legs. Portugal’s injury list includes midfielders João Neves and Pedro Gonçalves, who trained separately before the trip. Rui Silva is set to replace rested starter Diogo Costa in goal, with Tomás Araújo partnering Gonçalo Inácio centrally. Vitinha and Rúben Neves project as the double pivot, freeing Fernandes to orchestrate behind a fluid front three of Pedro Neto, Francisco Conceição and Paulinho—the Liga MX scoring leader eager to state his case for a World Cup spot in the country where he plies his trade. While the talent gap between the sides is evident, Mexico’s historical knack for raising its level against marquee opposition—coupled with a near-capacity Azteca crowd—could level the scales. A win would inject genuine belief that El Tri can trouble elite nations when the global spotlight arrives this summer; for Portugal, it is an early chance to prove their depth extends well beyond their absent superstar. Kick-off is set for Saturday night with global broadcast coverage on TUDN USA, Univision, FOX Deportes, FOX One, FOX Sports App and ViX. Mexico predicted XI: Rangel; Sánchez, Montes, Vásquez, Gallardo; Rodríguez, Lira, Fidalgo; Alvarado, Jiménez, Vega. Portugal predicted XI: Silva; Cancelo, Araújo, Inácio, Mendes; Neves, Vitinha; Conceição, Fernandes, Neto; Paulinho.
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Argentina 2-1 Mauritania: Wonderkid Nico Paz steals show as world champions labour at La Bombonera

Argentina 2-1 Mauritania: Wonderkid Nico Paz steals show as world champions labour at La Bombonera

Buenos Aires — Argentina continued their post-World Cup habit of facing modest opposition on Friday night and were pushed all the way before edging 115th-ranked Mauritania 2-1 at a sparsely filled Estadio Alberto J. Armando. Enzo Fernández struck inside 17 minutes, steering in a precise Nahuel Molina cross, and the hosts appeared on course for a routine win when 21-year-old Nico Paz curled a sumptuous free-kick into the top corner on 32 minutes to double the advantage. The goal capped an eye-catching display from the Como midfielder, who has registered 11 goals and six assists for the Serie A surprise package currently sitting fourth under Cesc Fàbregas. Paz, a product of the Real Madrid academy, is expected to return to the Bernabéu when a €9 million buy-back clause can be triggered ahead of the 2026-27 campaign. Lionel Messi was introduced after the restart, symbolically replacing Paz, while Argentina also handed debuts to Palmeiras right-back Giay and Racing defender Gabriel Rojas. Palmeiras team-mate Flaco López followed off the bench as coach Lionel Scaloni rotated liberally. Mauritania, second-from-bottom in African World Cup qualifying Group B, grew in confidence and were rewarded when Jordan Lefort lashed home a stoppage-time consolation. The goal was scant reward for a spirited second-half display that briefly unsettled the hosts. The fixture continues a trend that has seen Argentina schedule only one top-30 nation — Ecuador — in friendlies since lifting the trophy in Qatar. Their next assignment is another African opponent, 91st-ranked Zambia, while regional rivals Brazil have recently tested themselves against France and will meet Croatia in the current window after earlier clashes with England, Spain, Senegal, Tunisia, Japan and South Korea. Argentina, now unbeaten in 11 exhibitions since December 2022, left La Bombonera with the win but also fresh questions about the level of competition being arranged ahead of the next competitive cycle.
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Meet the Athlete: Evan Anfinson

Meet the Athlete: Evan Anfinson

Evan Anfinson’s golf journey is defined less by scorecards and more by the people he meets along the way. Asked what he values most about the sport, the high-school senior keeps it simple: “Getting to interact with different people and all the memories.” That outlook has carried him to notable milestones. Last season Anfinson competed at the state tournament, and this year teammates rewarded his steady influence by voting him a team captain. The leadership role has reinforced a lesson golf keeps teaching him: “I can only control myself and have to adapt to changes.” On the course, Anfinson tries to channel the upbeat spirit of PGA Tour pro Viktor Hovland. “He’s always happy,” Anfinson notes, explaining why the Norwegian standout is his favorite player to watch. When competitive rounds end, his advice to younger golfers is straightforward: “Just go out and have fun while giving it my best.” After graduation, Anfinson plans to stay close to home and pursue an associate’s degree in law enforcement at Riverland Community College in Austin.
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Germany defeat Switzerland after 18 years in an energetic bout

Germany defeat Switzerland after 18 years in an energetic bout

Zurich—In a breathless, end-to-end friendly that felt anything but cordial, Germany edged Switzerland 4-3 on Tuesday night to record their first victory over the Alpine side since 2008. The eight-goal thriller, played in front of a raucous crowd, snapped an 18-year winless streak for the visitors and offered Julian Nagelsmann a timely, if imperfect, statement of progress. From the opening whistle the contest carried the edge of a knockout tie. Switzerland, ranked eight places below Germany in FIFA’s listings, pressed high and forced turnovers, exposing a German back line that has become a regular talking point for all the wrong reasons. Yet every Swiss surge was met by a swift German riposte; the teams traded blows so evenly that the scoreboard read 3-3 inside the final quarter-hour before a late German strike settled matters. The 4-3 scoreline, delivered by a side still searching for defensive stability, flattered both teams. Germany’s attack, while undeniably productive, relied heavily on individual brilliance rather than the cohesive patterns Nagelsmann is attempting to ingrain. Up front, the talent gap told; behind it, gaps were equally obvious. Switzerland’s equalisers were born of midfield runners finding pockets of space that appeared alarmingly vacant. Midfield balance remains the conundrum. Without a natural pivot to anchor possession, Germany’s transitions veered from exhilarating to reckless within seconds. Nagelsmann, overseeing only his second match of the rebuild, cut an animated figure on the touchline as moves broke down in the centre circle. The manager knows time is short: with a World Cup looming in months, the spine of the team still looks provisional. Historically, Switzerland have been a stubborn obstacle for Germany. Since 2000 the nations have met nine times; Germany’s win tonight lifts their tally to four victories, against one defeat and four draws. Three of those wins, however, came before 2010, underlining how the Swiss have hardened into a formidable opponent. Germany’s post-2014 decline, mirrored by a World Cup victory hangover that never truly lifted, only magnified the barren run. Tuesday’s result will not mask the structural issues, but it does provide a jolt of momentum. For the first time in 18 years, Germany can celebrate a victory over Switzerland, and within the dressing room that psychological weight matters. Whether the back line and midfield can be shored up in time for the global showpiece remains the urgent question hanging over Nagelsmann’s project.
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Evanston's Justin Johnson on fast track to Illinois

Evanston's Justin Johnson on fast track to Illinois

EVANSTON, Ill. — Justin Johnson’s rise from track standout to one of the Midwest’s most coveted football prospects has been swift, and it now has a clear destination: the University of Illinois. The 6-foot-2, 180-pound junior defensive back announced this week that he will join the Fighting Illini as the first in-state pledge in the 2027 recruiting class. Johnson, who did not begin playing organized football until high school, parlayed elite speed — a 10.64-second 100-meter dash that earned him a medal at last spring’s IHSA Class 3A state track meet — into seven Big Ten scholarship offers. “I feel it was definitely fun to go to different schools and experience the different vibes going on,” Johnson said of a recruiting process he described as both enjoyable and stressful. “Trying to be my best version [of myself] talking to coaches” added pressure, but the decision ultimately came down to comfort. No one pressured him, Johnson insisted. Evanston head coach Miles Osei, a former Illini receiver, refused to steer him, and his parents — both Illinois alumni — simply urged their son to find the right fit. In the end, the program that first contacted him last fall felt like home. Ranked by 247Sports as a consensus four-star and the state’s No. 12 prospect in the junior class, Johnson plans to graduate early and enroll in time for 2027 spring practice. Before that, he has unfinished business in both sports. On the track he is a returning state medalist in the 200 meters and has set his sights on gold this season. On the gridiron he hopes to lead a resurgent Wildkits squad back to the postseason after a 3-6 campaign in 2025. “This offseason has been a grind, 6:30 lifts every morning,” Johnson said. “I’m taking this year [of track] super serious. I’m trying to win at least one gold.” If he succeeds, it will be one more milestone in a career that, by design, is on the fast track to Champaign.
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Team USA already shown it doesn't need NFL's help in flag football for 2028 Olympics

Team USA already shown it doesn't need NFL's help in flag football for 2028 Olympics

With flag football set to make its Olympic debut at the 2028 Los Angeles Games, the American squad has already signaled that it will not rely on the NFL’s infrastructure or personnel to craft a gold-medal roster. Early domestic exhibitions and international friendlies have underscored a deep, home-grown talent pool—drawn from grassroots leagues, elite seven-on-seven circuits, and former collegiate standouts—capable of matching the speed and precision the five-on-five, non-contact format demands. The results have quieted speculation that the sport’s Olympic arrival would prompt USA Football to lean heavily on NFL branding or active-roster athletes transitioning to the flag code. Instead, scouts and coaches have doubled down on specialized skill sets—quick-release passing, open-field flag pulling, and rapid-fire play design—that diverge from the padded version of the game. The message emerging from training camps is clear: the pathway to 2028 podium success is being paved within the flag community itself, not imported from the league that dominates Sunday headlines.
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Bruno Fernandes wins March award after standout United month

Bruno Fernandes wins March award after standout United month

Manchester United have named Bruno Fernandes as their Player of the Month for March following a sequence of influential displays under Michael Carrick. The 31-year-old Portuguese captain registered two goals, three assists and collected three Man-of-the-Match awards across the month, underlining his central role in the side’s recent form. Fernandes’ creative numbers have reached historic levels; he has now surpassed David Beckham’s long-standing Premier League single-season assist record set in 1999/2000. His impact was not limited to open play. The midfielder converted penalties in Old Trafford victories over Crystal Palace and Aston Villa, demonstrating the composure that has become a hallmark of his game. March’s accolade is Fernandes’ second Player of the Month prize of the 2025/26 campaign, having previously claimed the honour in September. Currently away on international duty with Portugal, the former Sporting CP and Udinese playmaker continues to embody the blend of productivity and leadership Carrick’s squad relies upon. United’s announcement reaffirms the captain’s influence at M16 and caps another month in which he combined decisive goals, record-breaking creativity and calm leadership to steer the team through critical fixtures.
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Texas A&M Cracks ESPN’s SP+ Top 10, Setting High Bar for 2026 Season

Texas A&M Cracks ESPN’s SP+ Top 10, Setting High Bar for 2026 Season

College Station, Texas — With the 2026 kickoff still five months away, Texas A&M has already secured a marquee preseason accolade. ESPN analyst Bill Connelly’s freshly released SP+ projections slot the Aggies at No. 9 nationally, the program’s first top-ten placement in the metric since the model’s initial 2025 forecasts. The ranking vaults A&M ahead of every other squad that had previously edged the Aggies out at the No. 11 line in early offseason polls. Connelly’s formula weighs four pillars: returning production, recent on-field performance, recruiting hauls—transfers included—and coaching continuity. By that calculus, Mike Elko’s third-year roster checks every box. Seventeen portal additions, headlined by former Alabama wide receiver Isaiah Horton and four SEC-experienced offensive linemen, will plug holes left by more than 20 departures to the draft and portal. All 17 newcomers are expected to push for starting jobs or key rotations, accelerating what could have been a rebuild into a reload. The offensive centerpiece is quarterback Marcel Reed, whose development Elko calls the potential “make-or-break” variable in a College Football Playoff push. Reed will operate behind an overhauled line and in front of a receiving corps that, with Horton in the fold, projects as one of the nation’s most explosive. On the other side of the ball, a seasoned secondary anchors the defense, while two high-upside pass-rushers—names withheld until camp—are ticketed to energize the pass rush. Special teams also factored into the Aggies’ SP+ breakdown, though unit-by-unit figures were not itemized in Friday’s release. What is clear is the road map: seven SP+ top-25 opponents await, five in hostile stadiums. A 10-2 regular-season record is the likely threshold for playoff consideration, with 9-3 representing the floor for staying in the conversation. Elko and his revamped staff have four spring practices in the books and two more weeks to mesh 17 transfers with 25 of 26 incoming freshmen from the 2026 recruiting cycle. If the early installation phase translates to September execution, the No. 9 SP+ ranking may look conservative by season’s end.
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