Expert Sports News & Commentary

Brazilian media praise Endrick after his 15 minutes against Croatia

Brazilian media praise Endrick after his 15 minutes against Croatia

Rio de Janeiro — A quarter of an hour was all it took for 18-year-old Endrick to turn a routine friendly into a national talking point and, perhaps, to nudge his name onto Brazil’s final squad list for the upcoming FIFA World Cup. Introduced in the 75th minute against Croatia at the Arena da Amazônia, the forward altered the match’s trajectory almost instantly, earning the penalty that put Ancelotti’s side ahead before slipping a precise pass to Gabriel Martinelli for the sealing third goal in a dramatic comeback victory. Newspapers and television networks across Brazil were quick to anoint the teenager as the instant catalyst the Seleção has been missing. “He did what Neymar was supposed to do in just 15 minutes. He was Neymar in those 15 minutes,” declared prominent outlets, suggesting the brief cameo could reverberate all the way into the tournament’s knockout stages. The sentiment underscores both the weight of expectation on the squad and the belief that Endrick’s fearless directness might offer a late-match alternative capable of unlocking deep-lying defenses. The performance arrives at an opportune moment. Since leaving Real Madrid for a season-long loan at Lyon, Endrick has steadily found rhythm in Ligue 1, sharpening the movement and composure that first caught Madrid’s eye. Brazilian pundits now argue that if he can replicate Saturday’s impact on the World Cup stage, his standing within the Madrid hierarchy will rise from promising project to cornerstone of next season’s attacking blueprint. National-team staff have remained coy on roster decisions, but the press consensus is clear: those 15 electrifying minutes against Croatia have propelled Endrick from outside contender to compelling option, a trajectory that could ultimately shape Brazil’s fate in Qatar.
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Chema Andrés: The Real Madrid-raised midfielder keeping calm amid Rodri comparisons

Chema Andrés: The Real Madrid-raised midfielder keeping calm amid Rodri comparisons

Stuttgart, Germany — On a rain-slicked afternoon at the Mercedes-Benz Arena, Chema Andrés blends into the swarm of red-and-white shirts warming down after training. No entourage, no neon boots, just the same measured stride that persuaded VfB Stuttgart to invest €5 million up front — and potentially another €1 million — in a 20-year-old defensive midfielder last summer. Twelve months on, the Valencia native has 32 senior appearances, two goals, two assists and, more importantly, a growing reputation as the latest in Spain’s endless production line of poised, positionally astute midfielders. Headlines have already bracketed him with Rodri, Manchester City’s Ballon d’Or winner and Spain’s metronome. Andrés shrugs. “Those comparisons come from you guys,” he tells The Athletic, smiling. “They’re more about our physical profile — 6ft 2in, positional style — but he’s still miles ahead. Hopefully one day I can reach his level. They don’t affect me at all.” The parallels are tempting: both grew up on Spain’s eastern seaboard, both favour patience over pyrotechnics, and both spent formative years in La Liga academies before stepping onto the European stage. Yet Andrés’s path has already detoured through three of Real Madrid’s most storied recent figures: Raúl, Xabi Alonso and Álvaro Arbeloa. From 2017-2025 he progressed through La Fábrica, Madrid’s fabled academy, collecting tactical lessons and life advice in equal measure. Arbeloa, his under-19 coach from 2022-24, earns the warmest praise. “I wasn’t playing much, I was struggling, and he told me exactly why. He’s the best communicator I’ve had.” Raúl, who oversaw Castilla for the final two years of Andrés’s academy journey, “trusted me when I needed it most”, while Alonso’s single season with the under-14s left a memory of post-training pizzas and dressing-room unity. All three, Andrés says, share “the hunger to win” that defines Madrid. That winning mentality was never more evident than in January 2025 when, under Carlo Ancelotti, Andrés made his senior debut in the Copa del Rey. Three first-team appearances followed, but with Federico Valverde, Jude Bellingham and Aurélien Tchouaméni ahead of him, regular minutes looked remote. Stuttgart’s call — and coach Sebastian Hoeneß’s personal pitch — offered a bridge to professional stability. The Bundesliga has asked more of him than Madrid ever did. Stuttgart’s high-octane system demands box-to-box mobility; Andrés has responded by adding three-to-four kilograms of muscle and covering more ground per match than in any previous season. “Last year I didn’t score at all; this year I have two. If I’d been more clinical, it could be more,” he admits. On international duty with Spain’s under-21s — he has five caps since September — he is equally pragmatic about the senior squad. “Rodri, Zubimendi… the level is the highest in the world. My role is to qualify for the under-21 Euros. Playing for the senior team is a dream, but you have to keep a level head.” That level-headedness extends to transfer talk. Madrid inserted a 50 per cent buy-back clause, and speculation flares each time Stuttgart’s third-placed side catches the eye. Andrés has instructed his agent to keep him in the dark until the season ends. “I’m very happy at Stuttgart,” he insists, though he jokes with team-mate Angelo Stiller about who might leave for the Bernabéu first. For now, Andrés’s focus is narrower: Sunday’s opponent, the next interception, the next late run into the box. Low-key, cheerful and resolutely unaffected by the Rodri rhetoric, the 20-year-old is content to let his football speak — calmly, steadily, and on his own terms.
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Patrick Madden: April's sporting holy trinity is upon us and a 1,500-1 spring treble takes the eye

Patrick Madden: April's sporting holy trinity is upon us and a 1,500-1 spring treble takes the eye

By Patrick Madden April has arrived, and with it the annual sporting convergence that turns even the bleakest commute into a countdown to drama. While the Six Nations signals winter’s retreat, the fourth month delivers the calendar’s richest crossover: football’s decisive stretch, cricket’s fresh start, and a trio of headline events that demand attention from couch to pub to betting slip. The football season enters its crescendo under lengthening evenings. Night matches begin in soft daylight before floodlights take over, and hope still clings to every corner kick. West Brom’s 7,000 travelling fans descending on Ewood Park for an Easter Monday relegation scrap are proof that resurrection is not merely a religious concept. Across the white-line spectrum, the County Championship wakes from hibernation on Good Friday. September’s mud-stained whites are shaken out, linseed oil perfumes dressing rooms, and Australia’s Ashes humiliation lingers in selectors’ minds. With the first Test against New Zealand at Lord’s fixed for 4 June, runs and wickets in April may finally carry weight in the minds of Rob Key, Brendon McCullum and Ben Stokes. Yet the month’s centrepiece is its holy trinity: the Grand National, the Masters and the World Snooker Championship. On 9 April, Augusta National offers four days of hushed azalea-lined tension, building to a Sunday climax that last year kept viewers awake as Rory McIlroy completed his career slam. Two days later, Aintree’s famous fences loom for serious punters and once-a-year 50p-each-way optimists alike. Then, on 18 April, the Crucible’s electric silence descends for a fortnight, concluding on 4 May when summer feels official. The triptych also invites the season’s most entertaining flutter. I have never landed the National-Masters-Crucible treble, but 2026’s heart-over-head attempt carries an ‘R’ theme: Rory McIlroy to reclaim the Green Jacket, Nick Rockett to go back-to-back in the National, and Ronnie O’Sullivan to secure a record eighth world title. The Rory-Rockett-Ronnie wager pays in excess of 1,500-1. A summer bankrolled by that? Priceless. Patrick Madden is a Racing Post columnist.
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Jadon Sancho Set for Three-Week Lay-Off After Dislocating Shoulder in Friendly

Jadon Sancho Set for Three-Week Lay-Off After Dislocating Shoulder in Friendly

Jadon Sancho’s season on loan at Aston Villa has been halted by a dislocated shoulder that is expected to sideline the winger for up to three weeks, The Athletic’s Jacob Tanswell reports. The injury occurred during a behind-closed-doors friendly against Spanish side Elche last week, when Sancho landed awkwardly under a challenge from Gonzalo Villar and was forced off before full-time. Subsequent scans confirmed the joint had been dislocated, ruling him out of Villa’s immediate Premier League restart and their Europa League quarter-final first leg against Bologna in Italy on 9 April. The setback comes just as Sancho, 26, appeared to be hitting form. He provided assists in each of his last two competitive appearances: teeing up a goal in the Europa League last-16 second leg against Lille and again for John McGinn during Villa’s 2-0 league victory over West Ham. Those contributions had raised hopes that the on-loan Manchester United attacker could influence the club’s push for European progression and a strong domestic finish. Instead, Sancho will now miss the trip to Nottingham Forest that sits between the two legs of the Bologna tie, as well as the return leg at Villa Park. Villa currently sit well placed in the Premier League table, while Forest remain embroiled in a relegation scrap. Sancho’s loan spell expires at the end of the current campaign, after which he will return briefly to Old Trafford before becoming a free agent on 30 June. No purchase option or obligation was inserted in the loan agreement, leaving Villa free to negotiate a permanent deal once his United contract lapses should they wish to retain his services. Off the pitch, speculation continues to swirl over Sancho’s long-term future. Borussia Dortmund, the club where he first made his name, have been linked with a renewed approach for the England international once his deal with United officially concludes. For now, though, Sancho’s immediate focus will be on rehabilitation and regaining fitness in time for what remains of the 2025-26 season, with Villa hoping he can return to bolster their ambitions on multiple fronts.
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Goalkeeper joins the attack! La Liga's top earners

Goalkeeper joins the attack! La Liga's top earners

French daily L’Équipe has lifted the lid on the wage packets of Spain’s elite, and the headline-grabber is a goalkeeper who now ranks among La Liga’s five highest-paid players. According to the publication’s latest survey of monthly gross salaries across Europe’s leading leagues, the custodian’s wage is high enough to nudge him into attacking territory on the pay scale. While the full top-five list was truncated in the release, it confirms that Jude Bellingham occupies fifth position, with the remaining quartet—including the shot-stopper—earning even more. The figures, supplied directly by L’Équipe, underline the league’s financial firepower and the premium placed on match-defining talent between the sticks. La Liga watchers will now debate whether the keeper’s wage reflects market reality or a new era of goalkeeper valuation in Spain’s top flight.
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Schlotterbeck: Dortmund set their price tag for United target after U-turn

Schlotterbeck: Dortmund set their price tag for United target after U-turn

Borussia Dortmund have slapped a €30–35 million valuation on Nico Schlotterbeck after the Germany centre-back put contract talks on ice, opening the door for Manchester United to pounce this summer. Only months ago the 26-year-old appeared ready to extend his stay at the Westfalenstadion, with German outlets reporting that a renewal was “nearly finalized.” But the exit of sporting director Sebastian Kehl has stalled negotiations, and Schlotterbeck now concedes that discussions are far from advanced. Sky Sports Germany’s Florian Plettenberg reports that Dortmund suspect Premier League interest—specifically from United and Liverpool—has triggered the abrupt about-face. With Schlotterbeck entering the final 12 months of his current deal, the Bundesliga club have scheduled fresh meetings between the defender’s representatives and newly appointed sporting director Oli Book. Top of the agenda: a potential release clause that would allow a summer exit for the €30–35 million fee. United, long-term admirers of the left-footed stopper, are expected to lead the queue. Erik ten Hag’s side are bracing for life after Harry Maguire, whose contract situation remains unresolved, while Lisandro Martínez’s ongoing fitness issues and the rawness of teenagers Leny Yoro and Ayden Heaven have left the club light at centre-half. Schlotterbeck’s pedigree fits the profile Old Trafford chiefs are pursuing. A commanding presence in the Dortmund back line, he marries aerial dominance with elite ball progression—ranking among Europe’s most assured carriers and passers from deep. Leadership credentials honed in the Bundesliga add further appeal as United look to solidify a defence that shipped 58 league goals last term. For Dortmund, the coming weeks are critical. Cash-strapped after missing out on the Champions League final, they must decide whether to cash in now or risk losing their defensive lynchpin on a free in 2025. Schlotterbeck, for his part, appears content to let the saga play out, knowing the ball is firmly in his court.
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Atletico Madrid-Barcelona Preview: Diego Simeone to damage Barcelona’s title tilt?

Atletico Madrid-Barcelona Preview: Diego Simeone to damage Barcelona’s title tilt?

Madrid – When Barcelona cross the white lines at the Cívitas Metropolitano on Saturday night (kick-off 8 p.m. UK, live on Disney+), they will step into a ground that has become a personal chamber of horrors for the Catalans and, potentially, a launchpad for Atletico Madrid’s late-season ambitions. Diego Simeone’s side, fresh from a 4-0 rout of the Blaugrana here earlier in the campaign, can again torpedo the league leaders’ charge toward the championship while tightening their own grip on a top-three finish. The numbers scream advantage Atleti. At home they score almost three times as many goals as they do on the road (20 versus 7), fire 33% more shots and enjoy 75% more efforts on target, while conceding barely half their away tally of open-play goals. Barcelona, for their part, see their vaunted open-play production sliced in half whenever they leave Montjuïc: 36 goals at home, 18 away. In short, geography alone tilts this tie toward the red-and-white half of Madrid. Philosophically, the clubs are mirror images. Hansi Flick’s visitors craft 69% of their goals from open play and hoard 67% short passes, spending 10% more time in the opposition third than in their own. Simeone’s men, by contrast, source 22% of their offence from set pieces, play 40% long balls and split possession evenly across the pitch, content to sit deep before springing rapid counters. Yet the Argentine has evolved: the “New Simeone” version enjoys 55% possession and concedes a stingy 0.8 goals per match, a far cry from the pure-grit era. Width will be decisive. Both attacks lean 38-39% toward the right, but Atletico generate 6% extra shots from the left thanks to Ademola Lookman’s resurgence. Barcelona, once established in the final third, channel the ball relentlessly through Lamine Yamal on the opposite flank. The teenager’s duel with Reinildo and company could dictate the rhythm. Defensive shapes offer another layer of intrigue. Atleti’s compact midfield and low block allow a league-low 50% of opposition shots from inside the box but a league-high 42% from distance. Barcelona’s high line produces the inverse: 71% of chances conceded arrive from close range, only 21% from outside. Simeone has already exploited that high line this season, switching to a vertical 4-2-4 and sending Lookman and Julián Álvarez sprinting into the vacuum behind. The stakes extend well beyond three points. A Barcelona defeat would pare their cushion over Real Madrid to a solitary point, injecting fresh momentum into the capital rivals. Atletico, meanwhile, can leapfrog Villarreal into third and secure a more favourable Champions League draw path next term. Psychologically, victory would hand Simeone’s squad a precious edge ahead of the upcoming quarter-final double-header with the same opponent, while also fuelling belief ahead of their first Copa del Rey final in 13 years. All clues point to another suffocating night for the visitors. If the pattern holds, the Metropolitano roar will once again accompany a Simeone master-class that leaves Barcelona’s title tilt wobbling at the worst possible moment. SEO keywords:
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Wild clinch spot in NHL playoffs with another chance to advance for 1st time since 2015

Wild clinch spot in NHL playoffs with another chance to advance for 1st time since 2015

ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Minnesota Wild punched their ticket to the NHL playoffs on Tuesday night, ending a two-season absence from the postseason and setting up their first opportunity to advance past the opening round since 2015. The clinching victory, played in front of a raucous home crowd at Xcel Energy Center, locks the Wild into the 16-team tournament and revives championship hopes for a franchise that has not progressed beyond the first round in eight years. While the opponent and series details remain to be determined, the Wild’s berth guarantees them at least four more games and a shot at ending the longest series-victory drought in the club’s current iteration. Minnesota now turns its attention to seeding and health, mindful that the path through the playoffs offers a fresh slate and the possibility of rewriting recent history. For players who joined the organization after the team’s last series win, the postseason stage represents both a milestone and a proving ground. Fans across the state greeted the news with excitement, recalling the 2014-15 campaign as the last time the Wild celebrated a playoff series triumph. With the drought officially snapped, the focus shifts to preparation, matchups, and the singular goal of advancing when the puck drops on the opening round.
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Around Town: Stuff a Bag - Cricket Gives Back

Around Town: Stuff a Bag - Cricket Gives Back

The local cricket community is turning goodwill into action this week with the return of the Stuff a Bag initiative, an annual drive that invites fans to fill kit bags with new or gently used cricket gear and drop them off at designated points around town. Organizers say every bat, ball, and pair of pads collected will be redistributed to junior programs and schools where equipment shortages often limit participation. Collection stations will remain open through the weekend, making it easy for players of all ages to clear out old kit and help grow the game at the grassroots level.
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From cricket to data centres: where India's biggest deals happened in Q1

From cricket to data centres: where India's biggest deals happened in Q1

Mumbai, 2 April — India’s mergers-and-acquisitions market opened 2024 on a quieter note, with deal-making activity touching US$17.4 billion in the first quarter, down 44.5 per cent from the same period a year ago, according to data released on Tuesday. The headline figure, while marking a sharp year-on-year retreat, still leaves room for sector-specific stories of ambition and consolidation. From high-profile cricket-league franchises to the rapidly expanding data-centre segment, the quarter’s largest transactions underline investors’ selective appetite for assets that promise long-term visibility in a slowing global economy. Details of individual transactions were not disclosed, yet market watchers note that sports and digital-infrastructure assets have consistently attracted outsized cheques even as broader private-equity flows cool. The contrast between the subdued aggregate number and the buzz around marquee deals suggests that capital is being rationed for businesses with resilient cash flows or strategic national importance. Advisers say the 44.5 per cent slump mirrors global caution amid rising borrowing costs, but also reflects a base effect: the year-earlier period included several multi-billion-dollar take-private bids and energy mega-mergers that are unlikely to repeat every cycle. With valuations resetting, buyers are stepping back to reassess price expectations, elongating timelines for due diligence and approvals. Whether the downward trend extends deeper into 2024 will hinge on macroeconomic signals, but the first-quarter tally confirms that India remains on dealmakers’ radar—albeit with a sharper focus on quality over quantity.
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Barcelona Women Crush Real Madrid Women 6-2 to Reach Champions League Semi-Finals

Barcelona Women Crush Real Madrid Women 6-2 to Reach Champions League Semi-Finals

Barcelona Women underlined their supremacy in Spanish women’s football by dismantling Real Madrid Women 6-2 in the second leg of their UEFA Women’s Champions League quarter-final tie, sealing a commanding 12-2 aggregate victory and booking a place in the competition’s last four. The Catalan giants, who have now recorded back-to-back resounding wins over their domestic rivals in Europe’s premier club tournament, never looked in danger after the first-leg rout and carried their momentum into the return encounter. The result keeps Barcelona on course for another deep run in the Champions League and reinforces their status as one of the continent’s most formidable sides.
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Sunderland and Newcastle Battle for €32M-Rated Manchester City Defender

Sunderland and Newcastle Battle for €32M-Rated Manchester City Defender

By Oscar Daniel Cortés Rincón Rico Lewis’s Manchester City future has clouded over, and the North-East is poised to profit. The 21-year-old right-back, valued by Transfermarkt at €32 million, is weighing up a summer exit after slipping down Pep Guardiola’s pecking order, TEAMtalk has confirmed, with Sunderland and Newcastle United leading a queue of Premier League suitors. Lewis, contracted until 2030, had banked on becoming City’s first-choice right-back this season after emerging as a key cog in last year’s title run-in. Instead, he has logged barely 1,000 minutes across 21 appearances, spending most match-days anchored to the Etihad bench. The England youth international now believes a loan or permanent switch is essential to reignite a career that once looked set to blossom under Guardiola’s tutelage. Sunderland, under head coach Regis Le Bris, have made the first move. Black Cats officials have been in contact with Lewis’s camp for several weeks, convinced the versatile defender can anchor a promotion-chasing squad that craves top-flight experience. Sporting director Kristjaan Speakman is prepared to meet the €32 million asking price, viewing the fee as a long-term investment in Le Bris’s expansive project. Yet any deal will be fiercely contested. Newcastle, flush with fresh commercial revenue and eyeing European qualification, have identified Lewis as an ideal home-grown option to bolster depth on both flanks. Eddie Howe’s recruitment team have already held informal talks with the player’s representatives, stressing a clear pathway to first-team minutes at St James’ Park. Behind the two North-East giants, Fulham, Crystal Palace, Brentford and Brighton are monitoring developments, though none have yet matched the concrete interest emanating from Wearside and Tyneside. Lewis, aware of the clamour, is expected to make a definitive decision after the European Championship, prioritising a club that can guarantee sustained Premier League football. For now, the tug-of-war intensifies: Sunderland’s ambition versus Newcastle’s top-tier allure, both circling a talent City once considered untouchable. SEO keywords:
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Marcus Freeman Offers Stark Contrast To Lane Kiffin By Encouraging Fights During Practice

Marcus Freeman Offers Stark Contrast To Lane Kiffin By Encouraging Fights During Practice

South Bend, IN — As Notre Dame pushes through spring practice ahead of the 2026 season, Marcus Freeman is making it clear that a few fists flying inside the Guglielmino Athletics Complex are not only tolerated, they’re encouraged—so long as they stay within his carefully drawn lines. Freeman, entering his sixth season as head coach, told reporters that brief, contained scuffles between teammates are a by-product of the competitive culture he is cultivating. “If we don’t have scuffles or tussles then we’re probably not as competitive as I aspire to have our team to be,” Freeman said, repeating the sentiment for emphasis. “You want that.” The policy is simple: two players may square up, everyone else breaks it up, and nothing carries beyond the field. The coach likens the exchanges to brothers sparring in the backyard—heated in the moment, forgotten once the helmets come off. “We have a simple rule. Two guys fighting is the max. We’re not going to have full-team melees,” Freeman explained. “It’s like brothers. Brothers fight, but there’s a line you don’t cross… and you don’t take it off the field. It can’t be personal.” Freeman’s stance stands in direct opposition to the approach taken 500 miles southwest in Baton Rouge. LSU’s Lane Kiffin recently acknowledged that spring workouts had produced half-dozen altercations in a single day, prompting immediate intervention. “We had to teach them that we don’t fight,” Kiffin said. “You’ve got to go back and teach everything from the beginning as if they don’t know anything.” Where Kiffin clamps down, Freeman sees a teachable edge. The Irish coach is willing to risk an occasional 15-yard penalty if it means his roster sustains an aggressive, attacking mindset every snap. Neither philosophy is being billed as the definitive model; both staffs are simply molding their rosters in the image they believe best suits championship football. For Notre Dame, that image includes the understanding that a quick pop in the shoulder pads can be the cost of keeping the intensity dialed up through the dog days of spring. Freeman’s message to his squad remains uncomplicated: compete, scuffle if you must, but when the whistle ends the period, the fight ends with it.
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Judge denies Virginia QB Chandler Morris' bid for seventh year of college eligibility

Judge denies Virginia QB Chandler Morris' bid for seventh year of college eligibility

A judge has ruled against Virginia quarterback Chandler Morris, ending his pursuit of a seventh season of college eligibility. The decision effectively closes the quarterback’s collegiate career, as he will no longer be able to compete at the NCAA level. Morris had sought the additional year in an effort to extend his time in college football, but the court’s denial means he must now move on from the sport in an official capacity. With the ruling finalized, Morris’ playing days at Virginia are over, and he will not return to the field for the program. Virginia now turns its attention to the upcoming season without the veteran quarterback, whose bid for an unprecedented seventh year has been formally rejected.
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Black Ops 7 Season 03 Is Live! Play Free for a Limited Time

Black Ops 7 Season 03 Is Live! Play Free for a Limited Time

Call of Duty fans can jump into the action immediately: Black Ops 7 Season 03 has officially gone live and, for a limited window, the title is available to play at no cost. The announcement, confirmed through Cerebral-overload.com and Techburgh.com’s Verizon Wireless Reviewer, signals a rare chance for newcomers and lapsed players to experience the latest seasonal content without opening their wallets. Ben, owner of Cerebral-overload.com and the voice behind Techburgh.com’s wireless coverage, broke the news to his readers. Known for translating complex tech talk into plain language, Ben channels a lifelong passion for gadgets—sparked by a childhood void of a Nintendo Game Boy—into coverage that aims to satisfy hardcore enthusiasts and casual consumers alike. When he isn’t dissecting the newest devices, he serves as a 911 telecommunicator just outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, bringing a first-responder’s precision to his reporting. Although the source material does not detail specific maps, weapons, or battle-pass tiers arriving with Season 03, the key takeaway is clear: Black Ops 7’s newest season is active, and the complimentary access period won’t last forever. Players eager to sample the latest multiplayer tweaks, Zombies expansions, or Ranked Play refinements should download the client and log in while the promotion remains active. Stay tuned to Cerebral-overload.com and Techburgh.com for deeper analysis once Ben puts the update through its paces.
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Asterisk Talley Seizes Solo Lead at Augusta National Women’s Amateur

Asterisk Talley Seizes Solo Lead at Augusta National Women’s Amateur

Evans, Ga. — Seventeen-year-old Asterisk Talley, a three-time junior All-American from Fresno, California, will take a one-shot cushion into Saturday’s final round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur after carding back-to-back bogey-free rounds of 66-67 for a 36-hole total of 11-under-par 133. Talley’s bogey-free streak reached a tournament-record 48 consecutive holes Thursday afternoon, eclipsing the previous mark and stamping her as the player to beat on the iconic course. “It’s been pretty good,” Talley said of her opening two rounds. “I had a bit of a slow stretch on both, but that’s what you need here—a little stretch of survival. I made a couple good pars, missed a few chances, but you can’t complain about two bogey-free rounds.” Chasing Talley are Stanford sophomore Meja Örtengren and Arkansas senior Maria Jose Marin, who share second at 134. One stroke farther back on 138 are Stanford’s Andrea Revuelta and Mississippi State’s Avery Weed. The cut fell at one-under, trimming the field to 32 players for the weekend. Talley, who finished runner-up to Spain’s Carla Bernat Escuder by a single stroke in 2025, has made no secret of her motivation this week. “Obviously, trying to win it,” she said. “Trying to play my best golf going into Augusta, and I’m excited for Saturday. Trying to up my game this time.” Before the trophy is decided, competitors will contest a Friday practice round to fine-tune strategy and settle any lingering nerves. NBC and Peacock will provide live coverage of the final round beginning at noon on Saturday.
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IPL 2026: Heinrich Klaasen leads the charge with bat as SRH crush KKR by 65 runs

IPL 2026: Heinrich Klaasen leads the charge with bat as SRH crush KKR by 65 runs

New Delhi: Sunrisers Hyderabad snapped a mini-slump in emphatic fashion on Wednesday night, cantering to a 65-run victory over Kolkata Knight Riders at the Arun Jaitley Stadium and climbing back into the IPL 2026 playoff conversation. The win was fashioned by a mature, match-defining fifty from Heinrich Klaasen and a clinical bowling effort that bundled KKR out for 161 in just 16 overs while chasing 227. Electing to field first, KKR watched Travis Head and Abhishek Sharma tear into their new-ball pair, rocketing to 82 inside the powerplay. The stand was eventually broken by Blessing Muzarabani, whose four-wicket burst dragged the visitors back into the contest and left SRH wobbling at 140 for 5. Enter Klaasen. The South African wicket-keeper batsman shelved the fireworks, instead nudging singles and finding the odd boundary to keep the innings breathing. Nitish Kumar Reddy matched the tempo during a vital middle-order alliance that nudged Sunrisers past 200 before the late-order hitters took them to 226 for 8. KKR’s reply began promisingly as Finn Allen muscled 28 off 14 balls, but the innings unravelled in a flurry of run-outs and reckless strokes. Cameron Green was the first to go after a mix-up, and even Angkrish Raghuvanshi’s enterprising 52 ended in similar fashion following another communication breakdown. Rinku Singh’s 35 briefly raised hopes, yet the required rate kept ballooning. Jaydev Unadkat, Nitish Kumar Reddy and Sri Lankan quick Eshan Malinga maintained a stranglehold, sharing the wickets as the Knight Riders folded for 161, handing SRH their most convincing win of the season. The result lifts Sunrisers into the top half of the table, while KKR remain mired in mid-table congestion with time running out in the league stage.
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Man City host Liverpool, Arsenal chase treble in FA Cup quarter-finals

Man City host Liverpool, Arsenal chase treble in FA Cup quarter-finals

The FA Cup quarter-finals this weekend are headlined by a heavyweight clash at the Etihad Stadium, where Manchester City welcome Liverpool in the pick of the ties. Mohamed Salah, who has illuminated Anfield for nine memorable seasons, will hope to propel the Reds past the holders and keep alive his dream of a farewell flourish in the competition. While City and Liverpool trade blows for a Wembley berth, Arsenal and Chelsea enter as heavy favourites against lower-league opposition, each sensing a straightforward path to the national stadium. The Gunners, still chasing a domestic treble, know that victory on Saturday would edge them closer to silverware and maintain momentum on three fronts. Elsewhere, Premier League survival will briefly take a back seat as West Ham and Leeds square off in an all-top-flight encounter. Both clubs sit precariously above the relegation zone, yet neither can resist the lure of a semi-final spot, ensuring a tense, high-stakes battle that could shape the remainder of their respective campaigns. With four ties spread across the weekend, the FA Cup’s last-eight stage promises drama, romance and, for one of the survivors, a step into the May sunshine at Wembley.
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Lyon beat Wolfsburg to reach Women's Champions League semis

Lyon beat Wolfsburg to reach Women's Champions League semis

LYON, France – Eight-time champions Olympique Lyon stormed into the Women’s Champions League semi-finals on Thursday night, overpowering VfL Wolfsburg 4-0 after extra-time to overturn a 1-0 first-leg deficit and progress 4-1 on aggregate. The French side, chasing their first title since 2022, entered the match needing a goal after Dutch striker Lineth Beerensteyn had given the Germans a narrow lead in last week’s opening leg. Lyon wasted little time setting the tone, as 18-year-old United States midfielder Lily Yohannes opened the scoring in the 16th minute, her low drive taking a deflection before nestling inside the far post. Despite Lyon’s relentless pressure, Wolfsburg’s defence, marshalled by goalkeeper Stina Johannes, held firm through 90 minutes. Johannes produced a fingertip save to deny Melchie Dumornay in stoppage time, and Lyon keeper Christiane Endler answered with a key stop from Janou Levels after 78 minutes to keep the tie level on the night. With the contest deadlocked 1-1 on aggregate, extra-time proved one-way traffic. Substitutes turned the tide: forwards Marie-Antoinette Katoto and Dumornay, introduced in the 69th minute, combined to devastating effect. Katoto saw a goal ruled out for offside, but Dumornay headed home from Selma Bachat’s corner in the 102nd minute after a VAR check. Five minutes later, Damaris Egurrola doubled the lead, powering in another Bachat delivery. As Wolfsburg pushed forward desperately, Tabitha Chawinga – the third of Lyon’s 69th-minute changes – sealed the result, racing clear on the counter to slot home a fourth with 119 minutes played. “We know what these Lyon versus Wolfsburg matches are like — always very competitive,” Lyon captain Wendie Renard told reporters. “They made things very difficult for us, with different tactical approaches, but I think we deserved it in the end.” The victory books Lyon a semi-final meeting with reigning champions Arsenal, who edged Chelsea 3-2 on aggregate despite a 1-0 loss at Stamford Bridge on Wednesday. Earlier on Thursday, Barcelona cruised into the last four, hammering Real Madrid 6-0 at a rebuilt Camp Nou to complete a 12-2 aggregate rout. Alexia Putellas celebrated her 500th club appearance with a goal, while Caroline Graham Hansen struck twice as the Catalan giants set up a tie with Bayern Munich. Lyon now turn their attention to the challenge of Arsenal, knowing a place in the final and the prospect of a ninth European crown are within reach.
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Barcelona need sales before going for Alessandro Bastoni

Barcelona need sales before going for Alessandro Bastoni

Barcelona have identified Inter Milan defender Alessandro Bastoni as a prime summer target, but any formal pursuit hinges on player sales, according to Sky Germany reporter Florian Plettenberg. The Catalan club have opened discussions with Bastoni’s representatives and are confident the 25-year-old Italy international would welcome a switch to Camp Nou. Yet financial realities mean significant departures must precede a bid. Robert Lewandowski and Andreas Christensen are both out of contract at season’s end, while Barcelona are open to offers for Jules Kounde, Alejandro Balde and Ferran Torres. The futures of Marcus Rashford—currently on loan with a €30 million purchase option—and several squad members remain unresolved, leaving the club’s hierarchy to weigh which assets to cash in on before mounting a move for Bastoni. With the summer window approaching, Barcelona’s ability to restructure the squad will determine whether they can secure the Inter centre-back.
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ESPN Shaking Up NFL Broadcast Team with ‘Dark Horse’ Candidate Emerging

ESPN Shaking Up NFL Broadcast Team with ‘Dark Horse’ Candidate Emerging

Bristol is quietly re-drawing its NFL map. With Disney’s $3 billion absorption of NFL Network now official, ESPN is using the moment to re-tool the voices fans will hear on its No. 2 NFL broadcast team, according to a Thursday report by The Athletic. Chris Fowler, Dan Orlovsky and Louis Riddick Jr.—the current trio for ESPN’s secondary game package—could be displaced by scheduling conflicts created by the league’s new international inventory. Because the NFL retained seven stand-alone games that may be played overseas, ESPN will no longer stage the traditional Monday Night Football doubleheaders, tightening the calendar for Fowler, the network’s lead college play-by-play voice, and for Orlovsky and Riddick, who also juggle college duties and studio work. Sources tell The Athletic that retired Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce has emerged as a “dark horse” candidate for the analyst chair. Kelce, who signed a multi-year ESPN deal in May 2024, currently appears on Monday Night Countdown and across other network properties. NFL Network’s Kurt Warner is also under consideration for the same role. On the play-by-play side, ESPN’s Dave Pasch and Mike Monaco are viewed as front-line options, while veteran Bob Wischusen has been mentioned as a possible surprise addition. The eventual pairings will slot behind the established A-team of Joe Buck and Troy Aikman, who are entering the final seasons of five-year contracts worth a combined $165 million and are already penciled in to call ESPN’s first-ever Super Bowl in February 2027. Elsewhere in the merger shuffle, ESPN hopes to retain NFL Network insider Ian Rapoport, whose contract expires at month’s end. Rich Eisen will continue to host the network’s draft coverage in April. As of Wednesday, ESPN/Disney has absorbed all existing NFL Network talent contracts, completing a transaction that gives the NFL a 10 percent equity stake in ESPN while bringing RedZone, NFL Fantasy Football and other assets under the Disney umbrella.
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Champions League: Barcelona dominates, makes semifinals with Bayern, Arsenal and OL Lyonnes

Champions League: Barcelona dominates, makes semifinals with Bayern, Arsenal and OL Lyonnes

Barcelona produced the most lopsided quarter-final in recent Women’s Champions League memory, sweeping aside Spanish rival Real Madrid 12-2 on aggregate to book a place in the final four alongside Bayern München, Arsenal and Olympique Lyonnais. The Catalans scored six goals in each leg, capping the tie with a 6-0 victory Thursday evening that doubled as the official reopening of a renovated Camp Nou. A sell-out crowd of 60,067 watched Ballon d’Or winner Alexia Putellas open the scoring, setting the tone for a night that became a celebration of Barcelona’s attacking power. Real’s only replies in the tie came from 21-year-old Colombian forward Linda Caicedo during the first encounter. Barcelona’s urgency was evident from the opening whistle. Players who still carry the sting of last year’s final—decided by Arsenal’s late winner—pressed relentlessly, as though every pass were an audition for the trophy match in June. The result is a semifinal date with Bayern München, who squeezed past debutants Manchester United 3-2 and 2-1 on consecutive matchdays. Bayern captain Glódís Perla Viggósdóttir’s set-piece header in the second leg proved decisive, highlighting the German side’s aerial threat ahead of the late-May showdown. Barcelona and Bayern met once already this campaign, the Spanish side romping to a 7-1 group-stage win in October. While knockout football rarely mirrors group play, the memory of that night will hover over both camps. The other bracket pairs defending champion Arsenal with record eight-time winner Lyon. The Gunners edged Chelsea in a fiery all-London affair, surviving a late push and a touchline row that saw Blues manager Sonia Bompastor dismissed for protesting an unpunished foul. Lyon, meanwhile, needed extra time to subdue a disciplined VfL Wolfsburg. After 29 unsuccessful shots and a disallowed goal, French full-back Selma Bacha twice delivered the decisive corner—one turned in by Melchie Dumornay, the other headed home for a 4-0 win that belied Lyon’s earlier frustrations. Arsenal and Lyon also met on Oct. 7, Dumornay’s brace overturning an early Alessia Russo strike to give the French club a 2-1 group-stage victory. Russo currently leads the Golden Boot race; Lyon’s Ewa Pajor and Bayern’s Pernille Harder sit one goal behind. Semifinal first legs are scheduled for the end of the month. On paper Barcelona and Arsenal enter as favorites, but Bayern’s maturity in tight contests and Lyon’s pedigree for late heroics ensure no tie will be decided before the final whistle. SEO keywords:
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Fede Valverde Opens Up on Viral Moments, Zidane, and Ancelotti in Candid Interview

Fede Valverde Opens Up on Viral Moments, Zidane, and Ancelotti in Candid Interview

In a wide-ranging conversation with Terapia Picante, Real Madrid midfielder Federico Valverde peeled back the curtain on the moments that have defined his career, from the thunderous shots that have sidelined goalkeepers to the split-second decision that earned him a red card in a Super Cup final. The 25-year-old Uruguayan laughed as he recalled the collateral damage of his strike. “I’ve injured a goalkeeper or two. I injured Luca Zidane’s shoulder. I was devastated, I thought they were going to fire me. I injured Zidane’s son,” Valverde said, adding that most of the damage has been to shoulders. “I have really skinny legs, I don’t know where I get them from.” Valverde also revisited the infamous tackle on Álvaro Morata in the Spanish Super Cup, a challenge that instantly went viral and became a talking point across world football. “It’s not an image for children. But at that moment I felt I had to take the risk for the team. I knew I was going to get sent off,” he admitted. “I’m Uruguayan, sometimes things get out of hand, but I did what I had to do. I was only thinking that Real Madrid had to win.” The midfielder traced his evolution from a slight, energetic teenager nicknamed “little bird” by one coach—much to his father’s displeasure—to the more aggressive presence he calls “the hawk.” Yet, he insists, the original moniker still fits: “I’m still ‘little bird.’” One of the highlights of his career, Valverde said, came against Manchester City, when he scored a hat-trick in a scintillating 50-minute spell. “Everything went my way against City. I never thought I could score three goals. It was incredible,” he said, adding that the roar of the fans made the night unforgettable. “The day before, I told my wife I hoped I’d score, but three goals? Unthinkable.” Valverde reserved special praise for two managers who shaped his trajectory. Of Zinedine Zidane, he said: “He gave me tranquility and peace of mind, knowing that things would work out for me. The fact that he would ask about my wife and children on a daily basis made me very happy.” Carlo Ancelotti, now in his second stint at the Bernabéu, drew even warmer words. “Ancelotti made me believe in myself. He’s like family to me. I love him very much,” Valverde said. “The way he made us feel every day. That hunger and that desire to win. Ancelotti is the most complete.” From accidental injuries to match-winning explosions, Valverde’s interview underlined a player comfortable with his past, energized by the present, and eager for the chapters still to be written.
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The Bernabéu’s Unfinished Revolution: Inside Real Madrid’s Vision for a Living Stadium

The Bernabéu’s Unfinished Revolution: Inside Real Madrid’s Vision for a Living Stadium

MADRID—From the Paseo de la Castellana, the Santiago Bernabéu now gleams like a spacecraft that has landed in the heart of the Spanish capital. Its titanium-toned skin catches the late-afternoon sun, and after dusk the first LED nodes flicker to life, hinting at the digital skin Real Madrid promised when club president Florentino Pérez first unveiled plans to turn Europe’s most decorated ground into “a 21st-century technological icon.” Yet the shimmering exterior masks a work still in progress. Roughly 10,000 RGB LED lights have been embedded in the stadium’s shell, but only portions of the system are active. On the Castellana side, where installations have been running for months, the lights pulse in controlled tests; on the eastern flank and at both ends, panels remain dark, exposing the skeleton of a canvas not yet stretched to full tension. The result is a segmented glow rather than the seamless, high-definition membrane that early renderings suggested would display everything from Zinedine Zidane’s 2002 Glasgow volley to immersive sponsor campaigns. Inside the club, the message is consistent: judge the façade only when every node is synchronized. Engineers are using international breaks and mid-week quiet periods to calibrate mapping software that will eventually allow the entire exterior to function as a single screen. Until then, what supporters photograph and critique on social media is, in effect, a publicly viewable laboratory. The stakes extend beyond aesthetics. With state-backed rivals inflating transfer markets and wage bills, Madrid view the LED envelope as a revenue engine capable of hosting premium, time-based advertising slots during global events. One club source likened the potential to “owning the largest billboard in Western Europe, one that can be rented by the minute.” The Bernabéu is hardly alone in betting on light as identity. Bayern Munich’s Allianz Arena, with its color-shifting diaphragm, set the benchmark in 2005; Athletic Club’s San Mamés and Atlético’s Metropolitano have followed. Madrid’s research trips, however, keep landing in the United States. SoFi Stadium’s roof-mounted Oculus and Allegiant Stadium’s obsidian LED fascia have become reference points, studied frame-by-frame by the club’s innovation team. The façade is only one chapter of a broader metamorphosis. Last summer the dressing rooms were expanded to meet NFL specifications, a move vindicated when the Bernabéu hosted its first regular-season American football game. A second gridiron date is locked in for 2026. Outside, the Castellana entrance will soon open into a soaring atrium; opposite, the former shopping mall footprint has been re-landscaped into gardens and the Bernabéu Market, a gastronomic hall drawing tourists and locals alike. Perhaps the most ambitious layer is invisible to the naked eye. In collaboration with Apple, Madrid is prototyping the “Infinite Bernabéu,” a virtual-reality platform designed to pipe match-day atmosphere to headsets anywhere on the planet. Apple engineers have already shadowed press conferences and league fixtures, capturing spatial data to render a digital twin of the stadium. For now, the LED gaps mean the Bernabéu still looks unfinished under close inspection. But Madrid’s hierarchy urges patience: the same venue that has already hosted Champions League nights, NFL drama, and sold-out concerts is, in their words, “a living stadium, growing layer by layer.” When the final diode fires and the mapping software goes live, the club believes the result will shift from fragmented sparkle to cohesive spectacle—an architectural statement that the Bernabeú’s revolution, though delayed, was never abandoned. SEO keywords:
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Dusty May returns to the Final Four. This time, it was expected

Dusty May returns to the Final Four. This time, it was expected

INDIANAPOLIS — The first time Dusty May reached the Final Four, the storyline was improbable. Three years ago, his Florida Atlantic Owls were branded a Cinderella, a label that grated on the coach and his players. They finished 28-3, earned a No. 9 seed, and clawed their way to Houston, where they played in front of 74,000 fans and millions more on CBS. The run was so unexpected that May spent the Monday after the regional final phoning veteran coaches, scrambling to learn how to handle the media swarm, the open locker rooms, and the cavernous football stadium that hosts the national semifinals. On Saturday night inside Lucas Oil Stadium, May will walk the same sideline with a different swagger. In his second season at Michigan, the Wolverines enter as the betting favorite, a juggernaut that clinched an NCAA bid in November, bulldozed the Big Ten, and pulverized Tennessee 95-62 in the Midwest Regional final—the most lopsided regional-clinching win in 37 years. The post-game press conference revolved around Michigan’s Final Four pedigree—six in the last seven decades—not whether the program belongs. “It felt a lot different than it did at FAU,” May said. “This felt like something our guys expected, and even our fan base, it felt like they expected it a little bit, as well.” The contrast is stark. At Florida Atlantic, total home attendance that season was 38,050 across 17 games; simply making the field of 68 was historic. This Michigan team wrapped up a tournament berth before Thanksgiving and has spent the winter checking boxes on a title chase. Instead of leaning on peers for advice, May huddled with his staff this week, reviewing notes from 2023 to refine travel plans, practice schedules, and scouting reports. “This year, it was more of our staff getting together,” May said. “Going through our notes and checklist about what we didn’t do well and what we did, and try to recreate what we did well.” May called his lone season after the Final Four run at FAU—when he returned almost every key contributor—the “most difficult year” of his coaching life. The inevitability of his departure hung over the program until he accepted the Michigan job. Now, with a roster built to win now, May is back where he always hoped to be—only this time, nobody is surprised.
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Nuno Tavares Hints Lazio Mismanaged His Injuries, Admits ‘Restrain’ Under Sarri

Nuno Tavares Hints Lazio Mismanaged His Injuries, Admits ‘Restrain’ Under Sarri

Rome – In a candid interview aired on the official Serie A YouTube channel, Lazio full-back Nuno Tavares has lifted the lid on a turbulent 18 months in the capital, suggesting that last season’s succession of muscle problems stemmed from decisions that were “not entirely” in his hands and acknowledging that his trademark attacking bursts have been deliberately toned down under current boss Maurizio Sarri. The 26-year-old Portuguese international arrived in Rome on a season-long loan from Arsenal in the summer of 2024 before making the switch permanent a year later. His debut campaign exploded into life with eight assists in as many league matches, a haul that made him the league’s early assist king and Lazio’s standout performer. Twelve months on, the numbers paint a different picture: only one assist across all competitions, the most recent coming from a corner that teed up Mattia Zaccagni’s winner against AC Milan in the Coppa Italia. Tavares attributes the statistical dip to a tactical recalibration demanded by Sarri. “This season you’re not seeing much of my attacking output because we’re more tactically focused and perhaps more restrained, but it’s a way to improve as a team,” he explained. “We play good football, though. My goal is always to improve on last season; I don’t want to set a specific number of assists, but of course I’d like to get more.” The restraint has been visible. After a bright opening, Tavares found himself behind Luca Pellegrini in the pecking order for long stretches, returning to the XI only in recent weeks. Despite the reduced freedom, the full-back insists the experience is beneficial. “Playing for a coach who has won many trophies with different clubs is always positive. I always want to work with the best, and that’s why I’m happy to work with him. I want to keep improving this season. I need to be more decisive and consistent.” While the tactical tweak explains the present, Tavares offered a pointed reflection on last term’s injury nightmare. He suffered seven separate muscle setbacks and, crucially, believes he was rushed back too soon. “I know my body, but sometimes decisions don’t entirely depend on me,” he said. “I know what I can give and when I can’t perform at my best. There have been issues; we weren’t always on the same page on certain decisions, but the important thing is that I know how to read my body. I know what I need and when I need to stop.” Though he stopped short of naming former coach Marco Baroni, the implication is clear: the club’s medical and coaching staff during that period misjudged his readiness, a misstep that ultimately blunted a campaign which had begun in spectacular fashion. Away from the pitch, Tavares revealed a lesser-known passion. Born in Portugal to Cape Verdean parents, he briefly pursued music with the same fervour he reserves for football. “I enrolled in a school to learn and went three times a week. It was easy to combine the two passions; I had teachers who allowed me to balance both,” he recalled. “At 15, I had to make a choice between football and the cello. It was difficult, because music is always a part of me.” As Lazio push for a strong finish, Tavares hopes the compromises of this season—tighter positioning, fewer forays forward—will translate into collective success. “I hope we can achieve our objectives and that the fans are happy with us,” he said. If he can stay fit and marry defensive discipline with the explosive flair that once terrorised Serie A, the assists, and the music, may yet return.
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Barcelona brush aside Real Madrid to make Women's Champions League semis

Barcelona brush aside Real Madrid to make Women's Champions League semis

Barcelona have booked their place in the semi-finals of the UEFA Women’s Champions League after a commanding performance saw them sweep past Spanish rivals Real Madrid. The Catalan giants, continuing their dominant run on the European stage, sealed the tie with a display that underlined their credentials as tournament favourites. The victory caps a memorable knockout stage for Barcelona, who have now eliminated their domestic rivals to keep alive their pursuit of continental silverware. With progression secured, attention will turn to the draw for the last four, where Barcelona will aim to maintain momentum en route to a potential final appearance.
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Ole Miss Baseball vs. Florida Gators Start Time, Starting Lineup and How to Watch

Ole Miss Baseball vs. Florida Gators Start Time, Starting Lineup and How to Watch

Gainesville, Fla. — Mike Bianco and Co. return to action on Thursday evening in Gainesville, stage set for an SEC showdown. The Rebels will face the Florida Gators with first pitch scheduled for Thursday night, kicking off a pivotal conference series that could shape the postseason picture for both clubs. Broadcast information and the official starting lineups will be released by the schools prior to game time. Fans can follow the contest through the SEC Network and affiliated streaming platforms. SEO keywords:
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Rogers open to move as Man Utd, Arsenal and Liverpool close in

Rogers open to move as Man Utd, Arsenal and Liverpool close in

Aston Villa winger Morgan Rogers is prepared to leave the Midlands club this summer, with Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool all monitoring the 21-year-old’s situation, according to the latest Paper Round. Rogers, who joined Villa from Middlesbrough in February 2024, is said to be “open” to a transfer should one of the Premier League’s heavyweight suitors firm up their interest. The England U-21 international’s direct style and versatility across the forward line have reportedly caught the attention of scouts at Old Trafford, the Emirates and Anfield, setting the stage for a potential tug-of-war once the window opens. Meanwhile, the same report notes that Pep Guardiola will decide his own Manchester City future during the off-season, leaving the champions in limbo until the Catalan commits his long-term plans. With Rogers signalling his willingness to consider a new challenge and several top-six clubs circling, Villa may face a battle to retain one of the country’s emerging attacking talents.
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‘Ridiculous’—Kylian Mbappe Shares Unreal Moment With Lionel Messi, Neymar at PSG

‘Ridiculous’—Kylian Mbappe Shares Unreal Moment With Lionel Messi, Neymar at PSG

Even in the twilight of his career, the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner still upstaged his former teammates. Kylian Mbappe, reflecting on his time alongside Lionel Messi and Neymar at Paris Saint-Germain, labelled one particular on-field exchange “ridiculous,” underscoring the enduring brilliance of the Argentine icon. Despite the advanced stage of Messi’s career, the moment served as a vivid reminder of why he has collected a record eight Ballon d’Or trophies, eclipsing those around him with a flash of ingenuity that left both teammates and spectators awestruck. SEO keywords:
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