Expert Sports News & Commentary
Gatti: ‘Absurd’ red card for Kelly, but Juventus’ reaction ‘incredible’
Juventus defender Federico Gatti branded the early-second-half dismissal of Lloyd Kelly “absurd” but saluted the Bianconeri’s “incredible” response as they pushed Galatasaray to the brink of elimination before succumbing on Wednesday night.
Juventus entered the second leg of their Champions League 2025/26 League Knockout Play-off trailing after a chastening first-leg result in Istanbul, and although they prevailed 3-2 on the night at a raucous Allianz Stadium, two late extra-time goals from the visitors condemned the Italians to a 5-4 aggregate exit.
The pivotal moment arrived within minutes of the restart when Portuguese referee João Pinheiro produced a straight red card for Kelly, forcing the hosts to defend a slender aggregate advantage a man down for more than 45 minutes. Gatti, who doubled Juve’s lead on the night shortly after the hour, did not hide his frustration with the decision.
“The red card for Kelly seems absurd to me,” the centre-back told Amazon Prime Video Italia. “Us defenders are far too penalised by these rules. The reaction was incredible; the fans really helped support us too, but we were exhausted in extra time.”
Despite the numerical disadvantage, Juventus appeared to have completed a stunning turnaround when they took a 3-0 lead on the evening through goals by Kenan Yıldız, Gatti, and a deflected strike from Andrea Cambiaso. Yet Galatasaray’s stoppage-time brace flipped the tie on its head and booked the Turkish giants a place in the Round of 16.
Gatti conceded the damage had been done long before the dramatic finale. “The problem is that we threw qualification away in the first leg,” he admitted. “Tonight was an extraordinary performance, but we threw it all away in the first leg. It’s so disappointing, because the qualification is ultimately the only thing that counts.”
The 26-year-old revealed he is still regaining sharpness after a recent injury lay-off. “I’m so exhausted. I was coming back from an injury and I am still not at 100 per cent, but the more I play, the better I’ll get.”
Juventus’ elimination leaves Atalanta as the sole Serie A survivor in the competition. Gian Piero Gasperini’s side edged Borussia Dortmund 4-3 on aggregate and will learn their Round of 16 opponent—either Arsenal or Bayern Munich—during Friday’s draw.
Juventus, meanwhile, must regroup quickly as domestic commitments resume, left to rue a tie they believe slipped from their grasp well before the drama of the second leg.
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Champions League: Vinicius helps Real Madrid advance, PSG and Atalanta also through
Vinícius Júnior fittingly had the final say in an emotionally charged rematch with Benfica to guide Real Madrid into the round of 16 of the Champions League. The Brazilian forward’s decisive contribution capped a tense encounter and ensured the Spanish giants progressed safely through to the knockout stage. Paris Saint-Germain and Atalanta also booked their places in the next round, rounding out a night of high-stakes drama across Europe’s premier club competition.
Read more →Round of 16, quarterfinals, semifinals, final... the official UEFA Champions League schedule
The road to European glory has been mapped out. UEFA confirmed the complete knockout-phase calendar for the 2025-2026 Champions League after sixteen clubs secured their places in the round of 16. England supplies the largest contingent, with Arsenal, Liverpool, Tottenham, Chelsea, Manchester City, and Newcastle all still in contention, while Spain’s challenge will be led by FC Barcelona, Real Madrid, and Atlético Madrid.
First-leg ties of the round of 16 are slated for March 10 and 11, 2026, with the return legs on March 17 and 18. The survivors move directly into quarterfinal action on April 7 and 8, completing those ties on April 14 and 15. Semifinals follow on April 28 and 29, with the decisive second legs on May 5 and 6.
The season will culminate on May 30, 2026, when the final kicks off in Budapest’s showcase stadium, bringing the continent’s premier club competition to the Hungarian capital for the first time in its modern format.
Before any ball is struck in the knockout stage, the draw to determine the round-of-16 pairings will be conducted at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, on Friday, October 27.
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Tottenham target Crystal Palace captain Dean Henderson as Vicario replacement
Tottenham Hotspur have identified Crystal Palace and England goalkeeper Dean Henderson as a prime candidate to succeed Guglielmo Vicario, sources have confirmed, with the Italian expected to leave North London this summer.
Vicario, signed two-and-a-half seasons ago, has failed to convince supporters or coaching staff of his reliability, with lapses in command and composure blamed for dropped points. The 28-year-old is reportedly open to a move to Inter Milan once the current campaign closes, forcing Spurs into the market for a new first-choice keeper.
Former Tottenham chief scout Mick Brown told Football Insider that Henderson’s form since the start of last season has put him on the club’s shortlist. “He’s really upped his game for Palace and has become a crucial part of the success he’s had. He’s become a really top-class goalkeeper,” Brown said. “Tottenham have been impressed by him.”
Henderson left Manchester United in 2023 in search of regular football and has since established himself as Palace’s undisputed No. 1, seeing off competition from Sam Johnstone and summer signing Walter Benitez. The 28-year-old, capped four times by England, was recently handed the club captaincy after Marc Guehi’s departure to Manchester City.
Palace are understood to be reluctant sellers, regarding Henderson as a key figure on and off the pitch. Yet with Oliver Glasner set to step down at season’s end and the club mired in poor form, the goalkeeper could reassess his future if a top-six side firm up their interest.
Any deal would hinge on Tottenham’s own circumstances. The club remain in danger of relegation, and their league status could determine both transfer budget and appeal to prospective signings. Should they survive and receive a fee for Vicario, Spurs are expected to test Palace’s resolve with an official approach for Henderson, viewing him as an immediate upgrade between the sticks.
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WWE Superstar Says Tom Brady Is on His ‘RKO’ List
Randy Orton has officially placed seven-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady atop his infamous “RKO list.” The playful declaration came after Brady dismissed WWE as “cute” during a recent appearance on Logan Paul’s podcast, igniting a cross-sport war of words that has since lit up social media.
The exchange began when Brady joined Paul to discuss the upcoming Fanatics Flag Football Fest in Saudi Arabia. As the conversation shifted toward athletic credentials, Brady waved off Paul’s WWE résumé and high-flying repertoire, labeling professional wrestling “cute” while insisting flag football is “real football with real competition.”
The quip did not escape Orton’s attention. Appearing later on a WWE program, the 14-time world champion said he had watched the clip and immediately added Brady to the list of celebrities he would love to surprise with his signature move. “I’ve never met Tom Brady,” Orton quipped, “but I’d love to—just to hit him with an RKO.” He added that the quarterback now sits “on top of the list,” punctuating the remark with a grin.
For the uninitiated, the RKO is Orton’s sudden, spring-loaded neck-breaker that has floored everyone from John Cena to Brock Lesnar. Popularized by viral videos in 2014 touting the maneuver as coming “outta nowhere,” the move has become synonymous with Orton’s initials—Randal Keith Orton—and remains one of wrestling’s most recognizable finishers.
Online reaction was swift. One fan joked, “7 rings can’t protect you from an RKO outta nowhere,” while another countered, “Why are we acting like Tom wasn’t getting hit by 300-plus-pound linemen?” A third post summed up the sentiment: “Brady calling wrestling ‘cute’ and now Orton wants to RKO him—this content writes itself.” Detractors also weighed in, questioning the legitimacy of scripted entertainment, but supporters were quick to note the physical toll WWE performers endure.
Whether the feud remains verbal or escalates into something more theatrical, one thing is clear: Tom Brady has unwittingly secured the top spot on Randy Orton’s hit list, and wrestling fans are ready to see if the GOAT can dodge an RKO should the two ever cross paths.
Read more →“If we get Chelsea, we’ll have a few things to work on” admits PSG boss ahead of UCL draw
Paris Saint-Germain head coach Luis Enrique has acknowledged that a Champions League round-of-16 tie against Chelsea would require immediate attention on the training ground, less than 24 hours before Friday’s draw in Nyon.
Speaking to Movistar after PSG secured their place in the knockout phase, the Spanish coach referenced the clubs’ most recent meeting, a one-sided 2025 summer clash that ended with Chelsea lifting the Club World Cup trophy. That comfortable victory for the Londoners remains fresh in Enrique’s mind as he contemplates the possibilities of Monday’s draw.
“They are two incredible teams,” Enrique said when asked about facing either his former employers Barcelona or the Premier League side. “Since it doesn’t depend on me, I’ll adapt to whatever comes. Barca is very special to me and is already becoming a classic for me. Like Manchester City and Real Madrid. Barcelona is a unique city and the club is special. And if we get Chelsea, we’ll have a few things to work on.”
The draw, scheduled for 11 a.m. on Friday, leaves PSG with a 50-50 chance of meeting Chelsea, who can themselves be paired only with the Parisians or Newcastle United. Both potential opponents represent a step up in class for the Blues, who are braced for a stern examination should they travel to the French capital next spring.
Enrique, however, insists his squad will not be overawed. PSG navigated a demanding league-phase schedule that the coach believes has hardened his players for whatever awaits. “There’s one team in the Champions League that played against the toughest group: it’s us,” he stated. “We’re used to playing against any team. Of course, we want to improve, but we faced a very high-level opponent. Chelsea or Barca would be tough, but if there’s one team that’s ready, it’s us.”
Injuries have complicated PSG’s campaign—Enrique revealed he has rarely fielded a fully fit squad this season—yet he refuses to use that as mitigation. “That’s not an excuse,” he said. “There are three months of competition left, and we have the same mentality to go out and win.”
With the path to European glory now narrowed to a best-of-two knockout format, PSG’s potential showdown with Chelsea looms as an early flashpoint. Enrique’s message was clear: should the balls align, his staff will waste no time addressing the scars left by that chastening Club World Cup defeat.
Read more →Man United Looking To Sell Expensive Flop This Summer
Manchester United are ready to cut their losses on Andre Onana and sanction the goalkeeper’s permanent departure this summer, TalkSport understands, ending a £50 million experiment that never took flight.
The Cameroon international, signed from Inter Milan in July 2023 to anchor Erik ten Hag’s possession-based rebuild, was quietly shipped to Trabzonspor on loan in September after a calamitous EFL Cup exit at League Two Grimsby. The symbolism was stark: the man brought in to modernise United’s build-up play instead became the face of a season wobbling under its own expectations.
TalkSport reports that there is no route back into the first-team picture for Onana once his Turkish sojourn concludes. Trabzonspor are not expected to trigger a purchase clause, and United have already informed intermediaries that they will listen to offers for the 27-year-old. Senior club figures accept they will have to write off a sizeable portion of the original fee, acknowledging that the recruitment gamble has cost both capital and credibility.
Goalkeeping stability has proved elusive at Old Trafford since the Peter Schmeichel era, and the hierarchy had hoped Onana’s sweeping style would usher in a new age of assurance. Instead, erratic positioning and high-profile errors eroded confidence inside the dressing room and across the terraces. Once trust between keeper and defence fractures, coaches warn, it is almost impossible to rebuild.
United’s decision signals a willingness to absorb a financial hit in pursuit of clarity. With Tom Heaton’s contract expiring next month and doubts lingering over understudy Altay Bayindir, the club will enter the market for a new number one. Into the void has stepped 20-year-old Senne Lammens, whose composed displays since being elevated to the senior squad have offered a rare glimmer of optimism. Whether the Belgian youth international is viewed as a long-term solution or merely a short-term salve remains uncertain.
For supporters, the impending sale represents an overdue admission that performance must outweigh pride. Spending close to £50 million on a goalkeeper only to reverse course inside two years highlights the turbulence that has plagued United’s recent recruitment strategy. Yet the willingness to acknowledge the misstep, rather than double down, may offer a foundation for a more coherent rebuild.
TalkSport’s report lands at a pivotal moment. United finished the campaign scrambling for consistency, and the goalkeeper position embodies the broader tension between ambition and reality. Off-loading Onana will not erase the errors, but it could mark the first move of a recalibrated summer strategy built on accountability rather than sentiment.
The club’s next step will be scrutinised closely. Fans crave transparency: is Lammens genuinely viewed as the future, or will another marquee signing arrive to shoulder the pressure? Either way, the message from Old Trafford is clear—mistakes will be owned, and lessons, however expensive, will be learned.
Read more →Every Time We Ask: Chelsea Dodge Blame as Red-Card Crisis Deepens
Chelsea’s disciplinary meltdown has reached boiling point, with nine red cards in all competitions this season and nobody inside the club willing to accept responsibility, according to The Telegraph’s Matt Law.
The latest flashpoint came at Turf Moor, where Wesley Fofana’s dismissal in the draw with Burnley became the club’s sixth Premier League sending-off of the campaign. The centre-back will now miss Sunday’s pivotal London derby against Arsenal, further depleting a squad already walking a suspension tightrope. Moisés Caicedo sits two yellow cards from a two-match ban that could arrive at the worst possible moment.
Speaking on The London Is Blue Podcast, Law vented his frustration at the evasive responses he receives whenever the topic is raised with Stamford Bridge officials. “Every time we ask anybody at the club about the disciplinary issue, they never want to take accountability,” he said. “It’s driving me insane this issue, that they won’t get on top of it and they pretend like it’s not really that bad.”
The numbers tell a different story. Those nine ejections—one of which was handed to head coach Enzo Maresca—have already cost Chelsea valuable points in the race for Champions League qualification. With a daunting run of fixtures ahead, the margin for error is now zero, yet the message from the dressing room and boardroom remains one of down-playing rather than confronting the problem.
Interim boss Liam Rosenior has followed Maresca’s lead by publicly minimising the idea of a systemic discipline problem, but former England manager Sam Allardyce has urged the 40-year-old to impose immediate and tangible sanctions. “Clamp down now,” Allardyce warned, “or the season will slip away on the back of childish decisions.”
Beyond Fofana’s looming absence, the broader concern is a squad still lacking the maturity to balance aggression with control. Each needless caution chips away at Chelsea’s top-four hopes, and Law argues that until senior figures at the club admit the fault lies within, solutions will remain elusive. “If the Blues can’t do the basics like keep their discipline in check,” he concluded, “then they don’t deserve to play Champions League football next season.”
Chelsea travel to the Emirates sitting on a disciplinary powder keg. How Rosenior handles the next 72 hours—both in training and in the media—could define whether this campaign ends in redemption or regret.
Read more →The Hoddle of Coffee: Tottenham Hotspur news and links for Thursday, February 26
In the latest edition of the daily Tottenham Hotspur blog, the self-styled “hoddler-in-chief” reopened the community feature “What are you reading right now?” after a month-long hiatus, revealing a turn toward classic gothic literature that has already ignited conversation among the club’s well-read online supporters.
The columnist, who traditionally mixes Spurs chatter with cultural asides, disclosed that Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has finally moved from the to-be-read pile to the bedside table. Having previously devoured Bram Stoker’s Dracula—described as “one of the most haunted texts I’ve ever encountered”—the writer framed the pairing as a “monstrous duo” worthy of exploration.
Attention was drawn to textual nuance: the copy in hand is an 1838 edition, prompting curiosity about the better-known 1831 revision that Shelley herself re-worked. Early impressions centre on the novel’s epistolary opening addressed to Elizabeth, a device that evoked memories of Stoker’s style, though the blogger concedes the comparison may be “superficial” at this stage. Plans are already afoot to compare the 1831 and original 1818 versions once the current read is complete.
Beyond plot, the column outlines three lenses through which the book will be assessed: gothic and romantic themes, the symbolic weight of Frankenstein’s creation, and—through the prism of the author’s self-professed Deadhead identity—the novel’s unlikely influence on Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia more than a century after publication.
The musical footnote of the day belongs to Wolf Alice’s “Don’t Delete the Kisses,” offered as the soundtrack for commuters scanning the morning links.
Those links themselves are succinct but eye-catching. The Guardian highlights Norwegian champions Bodø/Glimt’s “crazy” mid-week Champions League upset of Inter Milan, while the Telegraph reports that Sheffield Wednesday’s proposed takeover has collapsed just three days after the club’s relegation to League One.
With Spurs fans still awaiting fresh developments on the pitch, the blog’s blend of literary reflection and European football roundup provides the daily dose of distraction until the next whistle blows in north London.
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Read more →Barcelona learn their possible UEFA Champions League round of 16 opponents
NYON—The path ahead for Barcelona in the knockout phase of the UEFA Champions League snapped into focus late Wednesday as the final play-off ties settled the last two places in the round of 16. Hansi Flick’s side, which ended the inaugural league-phase campaign in fifth position, now knows it will face either Paris Saint-Germain or Newcastle United when the draw is conducted at UEFA headquarters on Friday morning.
The new Swiss-model format split the top eight finishers into fixed pairing brackets, separating Barcelona from sixth-placed Chelsea and locking the Catalans into a segment whose opponents could only come from two concurrent play-off match-ups: AS Monaco v Paris Saint-Germain and Qarabag FK v Newcastle United.
In the all-French showdown, PSG squeezed past Monaco on aggregate after 180 tense minutes, while Newcastle stamped their ticket with a commanding performance against Azerbaijani champions Qarabag. Those results trimmed Barcelona’s list of potential adversaries to two: the Parisians or the Magpies.
Barcelona supporters need no reminder of Newcastle, having already encountered Eddie Howe’s squad on Matchday 1. A trip to St James’ Park produced a confident 2-1 Barça victory that set the tone for Flick’s European tenure. A reunion would also nudge Barcelona to the right-hand side of the knockout bracket, whereas drawing PSG would place the Blaugrana on the left.
Regardless of Friday’s pairing, the return leg of the round of 16 will unfold at Spotify Camp Nou, handing the Spanish giants a decisive home advantage in the tie’s critical showdown.
With the contenders narrowed to two, anticipation inside the Catalan dressing room is palpable. The coaching staff will spend the next 24 hours refining scouting reports, but the identity of Barcelona’s next European challenge now rests solely in the hands of the draw.
Read more →Why Villa are this season's big overperformers
Aston Villa’s current standing of third in the Premier League defies every statistical projection. Opta’s expected-points model places them 12th on 33.8 points, yet Unai Emery’s squad have 43 on the board and have occupied a Champions-League berth since 23 November. That gap between data and reality is the widest in the division, making Villa the campaign’s most conspicuous overperformers.
The story becomes more striking when set against their early-season turmoil. Four matches in, Villa had mustered two points and no goals – their worst start to a top-flight season since 1995. Since then, Emery has coaxed a run that keeps them nine points clear of fifth-placed Chelsea with a game in hand and within striking distance of Manchester City above them.
Emery, appointed in November 2023, has engineered the transformation while operating under financial constraints and, since last month, without midfield anchors Boubacar Kamara and Youri Tielemans, as well as captain John McGinn. Despite those absences, only the current top two have conceded fewer than Villa’s 28 goals. Their defensive xG of 38 illustrates a back line consistently papering over cracks, with Emiliano Martínez and a reshuffled defence repelling 10 goals’ worth of additional danger.
At the other end, pragmatism has replaced pizzazz. A league-high 13 goals from outside the box – albeit at a 10.4% conversion rate – masked earlier shot-quality issues, and that reservoir has since dried up: eight goals in eight games, with Ollie Watkins managing one in ten and Morgan Rogers similarly subdued. Tammy Abraham’s arrival from Roma has yielded two quick strikes, yet Villa’s collective xG ranks only 12th, underlining a collective struggle to manufacture clear chances.
Still, Villa have lost just three of their 16 league fixtures since Christmas, collecting more points in that span than Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool or Newcastle. Their recent wobble – 12 points from the last 24 – has stalled whispers of an audacious title tilt, but it has not dislodged them from the top-four positions they have held for four consecutive months.
Emery, who averages 1.8 points per Premier League game across his spells with Arsenal and Villa, sits tenth on the all-time managerial list for matches managed (179) and points accrued. Above him, only Mikel Arteta has not lifted a championship, a context that makes the Spaniard’s insistence that Villa remain “underdogs” sound less like modesty and more like a calculated shield against expectation.
The 52-year-old’s meticulous game-planning has elevated previously unheralded talents: £16m Morgan Rogers has graduated from Middlesbrough bench player to England international inside 18 months, while the squad’s collective work-rate has risen to meet the manager’s relentless standards. Players speak of double sessions and video marathons, a workload designed to out-prepare rather than out-spend rivals.
Villa’s schedule offers both jeopardy and opportunity. A trip to bottom club Wolves on Friday could extend their cushion over Chelsea to nine points before Sunday’s visit to leaders Arsenal, where a win would leave them two adrift of second-placed City. Thereafter, encounters with Chelsea, Manchester United, Liverpool and a final-day trip to the Etihad await – a slate that will test their capacity to keep outrunning the metrics.
Emery, ever the realist, frames the run-in as a continuation of process rather than a pivot. “Everything we built before makes sense,” he said after last weekend’s draw. “It is not easy now to change everything. No, it is completely wrong if we are feeling that.” Translation: Villa will keep defending deeper than the models advise, keep grinding out goals from set pieces and snapshots, and keep trusting a coach who has already delivered European nights Villa Park had not tasted since 1983.
Whether the numbers finally catch up or Villa continue to sprint clear will decide if this season ends with a 30-year trophy drought ended via Europa League glory, or merely a return to Europe’s premier club competition. Either outcome would represent a triumph of coaching alchemy over financial gravity – and confirmation that, in 2024-25, no club is bending reality quite like Aston Villa.
Read more →Premier League Giants To Battle For Frankfurt Fullbacks
Arsenal and Liverpool have emerged as headline suitors in what is shaping up to be a summer scramble for Eintracht Frankfurt’s dynamic defensive duo, Nnamdi Collins and Nathaniel Brown, TEAMtalk can reveal. The 22-year-old Collins, capped last August by Germany, has rocketed onto the radars of England’s top tier after swapping Borussia Dortmund’s academy for the Bundesliga in 2023 and nailing down a starting role. His ability to shift seamlessly between right-back and centre-back has drawn direct comparisons to Arsenal’s Ben White, with the Gunners viewing the Nigerian-born defender as an ideal blend of recovery pace, physicality and positional intelligence.
Liverpool are equally attentive, but the queue does not end there. Manchester City, Newcastle United, Brighton and Brentford have all registered sustained interest, aware that elite, versatile defenders are in perilously short supply and that Collins’ contract—locked to 2030—hands Frankfurt the leverage to demand premium fees.
While Collins dominates headlines, fellow full-back Nathaniel Brown is generating a Manchester-centric tug of war. United and City have reportedly ramped up scouting missions during Frankfurt’s Champions League nights, with Old Trafford officials increasing their presence in recent weeks. Brown’s athletic profile and tactical flexibility align with the data-driven recruitment models now championed by Premier League powerhouses, clubs that increasingly prioritise multi-phase contributors over traditional, one-dimensional full-backs.
For Arsenal, the attraction is obvious. Uncertainty over White’s long-term role has accelerated succession planning, and although Sporting CP’s Ivan Fresneda remains a monitored alternative, Collins’ Bundesliga baptism and senior international recognition could give him the decisive edge. Yet questions linger: would a player without Premier League minutes adapt quickly enough to a squad now measured against title-winning standards, and would funds be better allocated to a midfield rebuild?
Frankfurt, for their part, face a delicate balancing act. Losing one starter would force a tactical tweak; losing both would necessitate a back-line overhaul. English clubs, emboldened by unrivalled financial muscle and strategic urgency, are circling. Whether the German outfit resist or cash in may hinge on timing, valuation and the scale of their own ambition.
What remains undisputed is Collins’ trajectory: from quiet Dortmund graduate to genuine Premier League target inside 18 months. The next chapter promises high-stakes negotiations, soaring price tags and, potentially, a reshaped defensive landscape for both Frankfurt and whichever English giant lands its man.
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Bayern Munich News: Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur leading on Leon Goretzka
London’s two biggest clubs have emerged as the early front-runners to prise Leon Goretzka away from Bayern Munich this summer, with Inter Milan and Bayer Leverkusen struggling to match the Germany midfielder’s wage expectations.
Sources close to the negotiations say the Nerazzurri and the Bundesliga runners-up have already sounded out the 29-year-old’s camp, yet both accept that assembling a financial package commensurate with Goretzka’s current terms at the Allianz Arena is proving problematic. That salary impasse has shifted momentum firmly towards the Premier League, where Arsenal and Tottenham are best placed to satisfy the player’s remuneration demands while also offering Champions League football.
Goretzka, whose combative presence and late runs into the box have made him a mainstay for club and country, has two years remaining on his Bayern deal. Although the Bavarian giants have not actively placed him on the market, sporting director Max Eberl is understood to be open to restructuring the squad after a trophyless campaign, and the former Schalke man is among the high-earners whose futures could be reviewed.
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has long admired Goretzka’s versatility, viewing him as the ideal profile to add physicality and goals from midfield to a young Gunners engine room that sometimes lacked ruthlessness in the title run-in. Spurs, meanwhile, see the German as a potential marquee acquisition to anchor Ange Postecoglou’s high-tempo system, replacing the departed Pierre-Emile Højbjerg with a proven elite-level operator.
Neither North London club has yet submitted a formal bid, but intermediaries have been told that a package in the region of €45 million would be enough to trigger serious discussions with Bayern hierarchy. With Leverkusen’s budget capped by their self-sustaining model and Inter constrained by Serie A’s tax regulations, Arsenal and Tottenham currently occupy the driver’s seat in what could become one of the summer’s most protracted transfer tussles.
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Read more →Vincent Kompany calls maiden Manchester City league triumph his favorite title ever won
Bayern Munich head coach Vincent Kompany has lifted a cluster of trophies since taking the reins at the German giants, yet none of those triumphs eclipse the moment he rates as the pinnacle of his career in football, whether as a player or as a manager.
Speaking to reporters, the Belgian pointed to the dramatic 2011-12 Premier League decider as the standout memory. “The first title we won with Manchester City. We won it at the very last second,” Kompany recalled, as relayed by the X account @iMiaSanMia. “We had actually lost it in the final matchday and then Kun Agüero scored at the last second and we won the title. I’d say that was my favorite.”
The scene is etched into English football lore. Entering the final round of fixtures, Manchester United held a three-point advantage over their crosstown rivals but trailed on goal difference. While United sealed a 1-0 victory over Sunderland through Wayne Rooney’s strike, City stumbled to a 2-1 deficit against Queens Park Rangers at the Etihad.
Hope flickered when Edin Dzeko headed home in stoppage time, but the championship still appeared to be slipping away until Sergio Aguero collected Mario Balotelli’s pass, darted into the area, and lashed the ball past Paddy Kenny. The strike clinched a 3-2 win, City’s first top-flight championship since 1968, and sparked bedlam from the stands to the streets of Manchester.
For Kompany, who captained the side that afternoon, the emotion of that last-gasp success remains unmatched by any accolade he has collected since, including the silverware now arriving at the Allianz Arena.
Read more →West Indies vs South Africa Live Streaming: When and where to watch T20 World Cup 2026 Super 8 clash
Ahmedabad’s Narendra Modi Stadium will be the cauldron for a high-stakes Super 8 showdown on Thursday when an unbeaten West Indies unit, fresh from a 107-run demolition of Zimbabwe in Mumbai, confronts a similarly undefeated South Africa side that humbled host nation India by 76 runs in its last outing. With both camps eyeing early qualification to the semifinals, the afternoon contest carries added weight for India, whose path ahead tightens should the Caribbean side prevail.
South Africa’s pace quartet of Marco Jansen, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi and the wiles of spinner Keshav Maharaj have grown increasingly comfortable on the Ahmedabad surface, extracting bounce for the quicks and late-evening turn for the slow bowlers. That familiarity could prove decisive against a West Indian batting order that has shown a penchant for rapid scoring but will now meet its sternest examination of the tournament.
Head-to-head history in T20Is tilts narrowly toward the Proteas, who hold a 10-8 advantage in 18 meetings, yet the explosive capabilities of Johnson Charles, Shimron Hetmyer and Sherfane Rutherford ensure the outcome is anything but predictable. South Africa will again rely on captain Aiden Markram, opener Quinton de Kock and finisher David Miller, while the West Indies, led by Shai Hope, have depth that extends to all-rounders Jason Holder and Roston Chase.
First ball is scheduled for 3:00 pm IST. Viewers in India can catch the telecast on Star Sports Network or stream the action live via the Jio Hotstar app and website. TimesofIndia.com will provide ball-by-ball updates and in-depth coverage throughout the day.
Squads
West Indies: Shai Hope (c), Johnson Charles, Shimron Hetmyer, Brandon King, Rovman Powell, Sherfane Rutherford, Quentin Sampson, Roston Chase, Jason Holder, Romario Shepherd, Matthew Forde, Akeal Hosein, Shamar Joseph, Gudakesh Motie, Jayden Seales
South Africa: Aiden Markram (captain), Quinton de Kock (wk), Ryan Rickleton, Dewald Brevis, Tristan Stubbs, David Miller, Marco Jansen, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Keshav Maharaj, Corbin Bosch, Anrich Nortje, Kwena Maphaka, George Linde, Jason Smith
Read more →How Arsenal and Man City could face 'World Series' fixtures in 2026: Champions League draw key to Guardiola-Arteta matchups
London—When the velvet bags are opened in Nyon on Friday, 25 February, UEFA’s last-16 draw will do far more than pair Arsenal and Manchester City with first knockout opponents; it will map out the possibility of a four-week, five-match slugfest that could decide the Premier League, the Carabao Cup, the FA Cup and the Champions League.
Mikel Arteta’s side enter the ceremony as the only perfect record left in Europe—eight wins from eight in the new league phase—while Pep Guardiola’s City backed in through the side door, edging Galatasaray on the final night to finish eighth on goal difference. Both are seeded, so they will face a playoff survivor and play the second leg of their round-of-16 tie at home.
Yet the plot thickens immediately after that. Should City dispose of their last-16 opponent, they would meet either Arsenal or Bayern Munich—the league-phase runners-up—in the quarter-finals. The Champions League quarter-final first legs are scheduled for 7/8 April, the return legs for 14/15 April, three days before City host Arsenal in the Premier League on the weekend of 18/19 April. A domestic title race that already sees the Gunners five points clear, with City holding a game in hand, would collide head-on with a continental showdown.
The congestion does not end there. On 22 March the two clubs are booked to meet in the Carabao Cup final at Wembley. If both survive the FA Cup fifth round—Arsenal travel to League One surprise Mansfield Town, City visit Newcastle for a fifth meeting this season—the quarter-final draw could pair them again on the weekend of 4/5 April.
That scenario would create a sequence unrivalled in English football:
4/5 April – FA Cup quarter-final, City vs. Arsenal
7/8 April – Champions League quarter-final first leg, City vs. Arsenal
14/15 April – Champions League quarter-final second leg, Arsenal vs. City
18/19 April – Premier League, City vs. Arsenal
Guardiola has been here before: in 2011 his Barcelona met José Mourinho’s Real Madrid four times in 18 days, a stretch that came to define an era of Clásico animosity. Arteta, then Guardiola’s assistant, watched those duels from the Camp Nou touchline. Now the student could subject the mentor to the same furnace.
Historically Arsenal hold the edge with 100 wins to City’s 65, but City’s 12 consecutive league victories between November 2017 and April 2023 tilted the modern narrative. Since that run ended, Arsenal are unbeaten in six against the champions, winning three and drawing three, including the 2023 Community Shield on penalties.
The Premier League calendar leaves both sides with five fixtures after the Etihad meeting in April. The Champions League draw may determine whether those games are a coda—or the climax of a spring so compressed it could pass for a best-of-seven World Series on European soil.
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Tottenham receive surprise boost in chase for 23-year-old goalkeeper who’s valued at £50m
Tottenham Hotspur’s search for a new first-choice goalkeeper has gained unexpected momentum after Brighton and Hove Albion indicated they will not stand in the way of a summer move for Bart Verbruggen, the 23-year-old Netherlands international valued at £50 million.
Spurs have scouted Verbruggen extensively this season and have identified him as the leading candidate to succeed Guglielmo Vicario, whose erratic form has fuelled speculation that Inter Milan or Juventus will firm up long-standing interest and lure the Italian back to Serie A before the 2026-27 campaign.
Brighton’s willingness to elevate academy graduate Carl Rushworth, 24, into the senior squad should Verbruggen leave has removed a significant bargaining chip for the Seagulls, clearing the path for Tottenham to press ahead with what would be a club-record outlay for a goalkeeper.
Since arriving from Anderlecht in 2023, Verbruggen has matured into one of the Premier League’s most consistent shot-stoppers and has displaced several older rivals to become Ronald Koeman’s No. 1 for the Netherlands. His commanding presence, reliable distribution and composure under the high defensive line favoured by Ange Postecoglou’s coaching staff make him an attractive long-term solution to the uncertainty that has surrounded Vicario during three turbulent years in north London.
While Manchester United, Chelsea and Bayern Munich have all monitored Verbruggen’s progress, Brighton’s relaxed stance on succession planning hands Tottenham a rare head start in what is expected to be a crowded market for elite goalkeepers at the end of the season.
Technical staff at Hotspur Way believe Verbruggen’s age profile aligns with the club’s strategy of acquiring players who can anchor key positions for the next decade, and club insiders suggest the £50 million valuation is regarded as manageable within the current recruitment budget.
Negotiations are yet to open formally, but the pathway is now clearer for Spurs to test Brighton’s resolve and offer Verbruggen the opportunity to step into the No. 1 shirt at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
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Vinicius Junior Breaks Neymar’s Underrated Champions League Knockout Record
Real Madrid’s electric left winger Vinicius Junior has added another historic line to his résumé, eclipsing Neymar to become the Brazilian player with the most goals in UEFA Champions League knockout-phase history. The 25-year-old struck in the 80th minute against Benfica, sealing a 2-1 victory that carried the Spanish giants into the Round of 16 and, in the process, lifted his personal tally of knockout goals to 14.
Neymar had held the previous benchmark with 13 such goals, accumulated during headline-laden runs with Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain that included a treble with the Catalan side and PSG’s maiden final appearance. Vinicius, however, reached the new mark in fewer seasons and now sits alone atop the list.
The goal at the Estádio da Luz underlined the Brazilian’s reputation for decisive performances on Europe’s biggest stage. He has already played a starring role in two of Madrid’s recent Champions League triumphs, in 2021-22 and again in 2023-24, and his knack for rising to high-pressure moments has become a hallmark of his still-young career.
While neither Neymar nor Vinicius has yet claimed the Ballon d’Or, the Madrid star’s latest milestone positions him as the foremost Brazilian performer in the competition’s knockout rounds, a record that may stand for some time given his age and upward trajectory.
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The less remembered Antonio Conte outburst that foreshadowed Tottenham's plight
Four years ago this week, Antonio Conte sat in a press room at Turf Moor and delivered a warning that Tottenham Hotspur chose to ignore. Burnley had just beaten Spurs 1-0, the club’s fourth defeat in five league matches, and the Italian’s patience was evaporating. “I’m ready to go,” he said, inviting chairman Daniel Levy to “make an assessment about me.” The soundbite was filed away as a momentary tantrum; in hindsight it was an early tremor of the structural collapse now threatening to drag the club into a relegation fight.
Conte would last another 13 months, his reign ending only after the infamous St Mary’s monologue in which he labelled his squad “selfish” and heartless. That March 2023 rant is remembered because it was spectacular television, yet the more instructive press conference had come a year earlier, on the eve of a home meeting with an Everton side managed by Frank Lampard and anchored to the bottom three.
Speaking on 12 March 2022, Conte forecast a bleak future for any Premier League club that presumed safety on reputation alone. “The level of this league is so high,” he said. “You have to pay great attention and it’s my forecast that in the future it will be worse… Teams that at this moment seem to be in the middle, they could slip. Everton is a good example. You look at the Everton squad, their players, and you can think it’s impossible that Everton is fighting relegation.”
He could have been reading Spurs’ eventual obituary. Within three seasons the north Londoners would finish 17th, surviving on goal difference, and this campaign they sit four points above the drop with 11 fixtures left, winless in the league since December. Harry Kane has gone, Son Heung-min has turned 32, and the wage structure that once underpinned a new stadium has become a competitive straitjacket. Aston Villa, Newcastle, Brighton, Bournemouth, Fulham and Brentford have all overtaken them.
Conte’s diagnosis was clinical: complacency at boardroom level, a squad built on “fragile foundations” and a league whose middle class was armed with ambition and petro-dollars. The day after his prophecy, Spurs thrashed Everton 5-0 and clambered back into the top-four race, allowing the hierarchy to dismiss the sermon as melodrama. The Italian, after all, had serial-winner pedigree; surely he would arrest drift simply by existing.
Instead, the drift accelerated. Kane forced his exit to Bayern Munich 16 months later, Son’s output dipped, and injuries exposed a threadbare roster. Interim head coach Igor Tudor now inherits a dressing-room low on confidence and a fixture list that offers little respite. West Ham, in 18th, have taken 11 points from their last six matches; Spurs have taken two.
Conte was hardly blameless—his tactical inflexibility and public spats accelerated discord—but he was not the root. The rot, supporters argue, can be traced to the summer of 2018, when Spurs became the first Premier League club to sign nobody in a transfer window, or to any number of pivot points where ambition was sacrificed for balance-sheet prudence. José Mourinho and Ange Postecoglou have since echoed Conte’s misgivings, Mourinho suggesting Levy prioritised profit over silverware, Postecoglou declaring Spurs “not a big club” until they compete financially.
The lesson is stark: Tottenham’s current predicament is not an aberration but the culmination of years of strategic myopia. Conte’s voice was merely the earliest to carry the warning from inside the building, a voice most chose to mute.
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What’s Happened to Villa Park’s Atmosphere – and How Can It Be Fixed?
Aston Villa’s on-field resurgence under Unai Emery has turned Villa Park into a statistical fortress: 13 consecutive league wins propelled last season’s top-four finish, and a club-record 15 straight home victories are being chased this campaign. Yet the decibel level inside the stadium is failing to match the numbers, and players, staff and supporters are asking why.
After the 3-1 January win over Nottingham Forest that lifted Villa to second in the Premier League, striker Ollie Watkins broke ranks with the usual post-match platitudes. “The atmosphere was quite flat,” he told broadcasters, noting fans filing out before the whistle. “People need to enjoy it… stay until the end and keep singing.”
Watkins’ candour echoed a growing concern inside the club. Emery, who learned the English word “fortress” specifically to describe his home-ground objective, believes support can act as an extra midfielder. Senior aides such as director of football operations Damian Vidagany share that view, and the club’s fan advisory board (FAB) has been told Villa will explore every avenue to reignite the noise, including the creation of a dedicated singing section in the Holte End.
The issue is not volume alone. Ticket prices, fixture scheduling, corporate encroachment and rising expectations have combined to mute the traditional claret-and-blue roar. Category-three pricing for the recent Leeds United visit set a minimum adult ticket at £58 and an upper-tier Holte End seat at £77, a £24 increase on lower-category matches. The club argues demand justified the banding—Saturday 3 p.m. slots have become so rare that Leeds was Villa’s first in 371 days—but supporters say the cost is reshaping the crowd.
“You have some people there to watch Premier League football, not to support Villa,” says Rob Steele, a Holte End season-ticket holder since 2013. “The season we got promoted from the Championship was superb—crowds were lower but everyone was there for Villa. Now ticket prices are creating a tourist-style atmosphere.”
Premium seating has expanded into the Trinity, North and Doug Ellis Stands; 900 fans were asked either to relocate or pay hospitality rates after new lounges were installed. The Holte Suite, once a 1,000-capacity social hub, is now an exclusive “Lower Grounds” dining area for 500. Empty seats in corporate blocks, fans say, fragment the vocal support just as kick-off times scatter across television schedules.
The tension crystallised during the 1-1 draw with Leeds. Villa, expected to win, laboured until the 42nd minute without a shot on target. Groans drifted around the back-line passing sequences, prompting defender Ezri Konsa to motion for calm. The final whistle brought another ripple of early leavers, a scene increasingly common despite Villa sitting third in the table.
Disquiet over atmosphere can feel incongruous given Emery’s acclaim. “Any Villa fan criticising performances under the best coach we have ever had is ridiculous,” says Stephen Morley of the Aston Villa Supporters Trust, who attended every match of the 1980-81 title run. Yet Morley also accepts that modern realities—cost, congestion, Champions League jeopardy—feed anxiety inside the ground.
Francesco Calvo, appointed last July as president of business operations, is tasked with balancing revenue and experience. Unlike predecessor Chris Heck, Calvo attends FAB meetings and fields questions via supporter-liaison officer Matthew Dainty. Champions League progress—Villa reached the quarter-finals and earned more than £70 million—buys goodwill, but fans know qualification is not guaranteed. Failure could mean player sales, budget cuts and, potentially, the departure of a head coach who has lifted expectations to levels not seen since the European Cup era.
Short-term fixes are being discussed: a singing section, safe-standing areas once legislation allows, and improved concourse facilities. Long-term hope rests on the North Stand redevelopment, due to start this summer and add 5,926 seats, lifting capacity to 48,809 while trimming a season-ticket waiting list of 27,000. More bodies, the theory goes, equals more noise.
For now the equation remains two-way. “The atmosphere can be directly linked to what happens on the pitch,” Steele adds. “We need something to feed off.” Emery’s programme notes ahead of Leeds urged supporters to be “full throttle”; the response was hesitant. With Chelsea, Liverpool and Europa League ties looming, Villa require both a raucous home and the results to keep their European dream alive. Whether Villa Park can again strike that harmony will determine if the fortress Emery craves is restored—or remains a slogan on a quieting stand.
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Penalty-saving king Diogo Costa: 'It's instinct, having the nose for it, feeling what a player is going to do'
Porto, Portugal – When the clock struck 100 minutes and Sporting CP were awarded a penalty that could tilt the Primeira Liga title race, Estádio do Dragão turned its collective gaze toward one man: Diogo Costa. No water bottle covered in scribbled notes, no last-minute flick through mental video reels. Just the 26-year-old goalkeeper, eyes locked on Luis Suárez, sniffing for intention. Costa guessed correctly, diving low to his left, but the rebound fell kindly for Suárez to tap in and salvage a 1-1 draw. The ricochet was cruel, yet the moment encapsulated why Costa has become Europe’s most feared penalty stopper.
The near-miss was the 14th penalty Costa has kept out of 50 faced in normal time, a 28% success rate that borders on the absurd. Last year he became the first Champions League keeper to save three spot-kicks in succession—four if you count the original and retake against Club Brugge. Months later he replicated the feat for Portugal, denying three Slovenian penalties in the same European Championship shoot-out. In June his stoppage-time save from Álvaro Morata clinched the Nations League title over Spain.
Despite the highlight reel, Costa insists his edge is not forged on the training ground. “I used to train for them when I was 18, 19, 20, but today I don’t like to work on them,” he told The Athletic. “It’s about instinct, about reading how your opponent approaches the ball… feeling what a player is going to do.” Video analysis, he argues, can blind as often as it informs: players know they’re being studied and adapt. “I prefer to have nothing… I like to feel the game, to feel what my opponent is saying with his body language. A lot of the time I choose a side based on his eyes.”
That old-school approach belies the modern numbers behind Porto’s season. Opta credits Costa with preventing 5.4 goals from the quality of chances faced, second-best in the league even though he has seen only 43 shots. Porto have conceded seven goals in 23 league matches—the stingiest record among Europe’s top 20 divisions—and carry a four-point lead at the summit.
Costa’s résumé already bulges: 230 club appearances, 42 caps, two league titles, three Taças de Portugal, three Portuguese Super Cups and three Primeira Liga Goalkeeper of the Year awards. A fourth gong feels inevitable. Signed to a new deal in December that runs until 2030, he became Porto’s top earner even as his release clause dipped from €75 million to €60 million—an inviting figure for Premier League suitors. “If I had to stay here for the rest of my career, I would be extremely happy every day,” he said, while acknowledging English football’s allure. “If you asked every player in the world if they would like to play in the Premier League, I don’t think a single one would say no.”
Porto’s current project is overseen by head coach Francesco Farioli, himself a former goalkeeping coach. Farioli’s build-up philosophy demands a keeper comfortable as an 11th outfielder, a requirement Costa relishes. “Against certain teams the goalkeeper is the free man and receives the ball a lot… you have to read the game, interpret it.” Distribution drills date back to his academy days under mentor Wil Coort, yet Costa stresses shot-stopping remains paramount. “Above all, we are goalkeepers. Our biggest concern should always be the goal.”
Leadership now comes naturally too. The armband sits on Costa’s arm, and veteran defender Thiago Silva, 41, has become another sounding board. “It’s up to me to take the best of what he can teach me about leadership,” Costa said. Farioli has married Silva’s polish with Porto’s working-class ethos—pressing opponents before slicing through midfield lines. “We’re running three, four, five, six kilometres more than our opponents… talent alone is not enough to bring success. You have to want it more than everyone else.”
Costa’s next quest is the World Cup in June, likely Cristiano Ronaldo’s last and perhaps the final chance for Bernardo Silva and Bruno Fernandes to propel Portugal beyond the quarter-finals. Motivation will be laced with emotion: the squad still mourns the loss of Diogo Jota and his brother André Silva, who died in a car crash last summer. “We really want to honour him by winning this trophy,” Costa said. “He will be with us in the dressing room. I hope he will be guiding us from up above.”
Whether saving penalties or carrying the hopes of a nation, Diogo Costa continues to trust the instincts honed since boyhood. No cape, no cheat sheet—just a goalkeeper who believes the ball will tell its story if you watch closely enough.
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Cincinnati Suing QB Brendan Sorsby for $1 Million Over Transfer
Cincinnati has filed a federal lawsuit against former quarterback Brendan Sorsby, demanding the payment of a $1 million exit fee the university says he owes after transferring to Texas Tech. The suit, lodged in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, claims Sorsby breached an 18-month name, image and likeness agreement that was scheduled to cover the 2025 and 2026 seasons.
According to court documents, the NIL contract required Sorsby to remain with the Bearcats for two seasons and included a liquidated-damages clause triggered by an early departure. University officials contend they paid the quarterback a significant sum in 2025 “with the express expectation that it would realize the majority of the benefits during the following season, 2026, after Sorsby’s play developed and his brand grew.”
Sorsby entered the transfer portal on Jan. 2 and subsequently appeared on a Times Square billboard announcing his commitment to Texas Tech, an act Cincinnati argues violated the exclusivity provisions of the deal. The university states that representatives for the quarterback “advised that Sorsby refuses to pay the University anything.”
During the 2025 campaign, Sorsby threw for 2,800 yards and 27 touchdowns against only five interceptions while completing 61.6 percent of his passes. He added 580 rushing yards and nine scores on the ground. Reports indicate his new NIL agreement with Texas Tech will pay between $4 million and $6 million for the 2026 season.
In a statement released to ESPN, Cincinnati Athletics emphasized its obligation to protect university resources: “As stewards of the university’s resources, the Athletics Department has a duty to do so. We thank Brendan for his time at Cincinnati and wish him success in the future.”
The case now heads to federal court, where a judge will determine whether the liquidated-damages clause is enforceable and whether Sorsby must remit the $1 million sought by his former school.
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Hilary Knight Urges Spotlight on U.S. Women’s Olympic Triumph, Not Trump’s ‘Distasteful’ Joke
Forward Hilary Knight says the conversation surrounding the U.S. women’s Olympic success should center on the team’s accomplishments rather than former President Donald Trump’s recent controversial remarks. Speaking after the Americans captured Olympic gold, Knight labeled Trump’s joke “distasteful” and emphasized that the players’ years of sacrifice and dominance on the international stage deserve the headlines. The veteran star underscored that the squad’s relentless pursuit of excellence—and the historic victory it just delivered—should remain the primary focus for fans and media alike.
Read more →Bruno Fernandes could set club and PL assist records this season
Manchester United’s renaissance since the turn of the year has coincided with the re-emergence of their Portuguese playmaker, Bruno Fernandes, restored to his preferred No. 10 role and once again dictating the tempo of the Reds’ attack.
Already a club centurion after tallying his 100th goal in all competitions earlier this season, Fernandes has now turned creator with conspicuous success. With 12 Premier League assists to his name and only 11 fixtures remaining, the 29-year-old is within striking distance of two significant milestones.
David Beckham’s Manchester United record of 15 assists in a single Premier League campaign, set during the 1999-00 season, is firmly in Fernandes’ sights. Should the midfielder maintain his current trajectory—and his fitness—he could eclipse that mark before the final whistle of 2023-24.
Further afield, the league’s all-time single-season assist record of 20, jointly held by Arsenal’s Thierry Henry (2002-03) and Manchester City’s Kevin De Bruyne (2019-20), is not mathematically out of reach, although it would require a blistering run of form over the closing weeks.
United’s condensed schedule—only two cup ties remain and no European football—has limited Fernandes’ overall appearances, yet his productivity has remained high. Under interim guidance from Michael Carrick, the side’s renewed attacking cohesion should continue to feed the Portuguese star’s creative numbers.
With every through-ball and set-piece delivery, Fernandes edges closer to etching his name alongside United legends and, potentially, Premier League immortals.
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UEFA Champions League 2025-26: Which Teams Qualified For Round Of 16 Following Conclusion Of Play-Offs?
The UEFA Champions League 2025-26 has completed both its inaugural 36-team league phase and the ensuing knockout play-offs, locking in the 16 clubs that will contest February’s Round of 16.
Arsenal wrote a new chapter of European history by sweeping all eight league fixtures for a maximum 24 points, finishing first overall. Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Tottenham Hotspur, Barcelona, Chelsea, Sporting CP and Manchester City also secured direct passage by placing inside the automatic-qualification positions in the single-table Swiss Model.
That left positions 9-24 to battle for the remaining eight berths. Two-legged ties produced a mixture of heavyweight escapes and seismic upsets.
Real Madrid edged Benfica 3-1 on aggregate, Vinicius Júnior scoring the decisive goal at the Bernabéu after a tie laced with controversy and a provisional UEFA suspension for Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni.
Holders Paris Saint-Germain survived a late Monaco rally, winning 5-3 on aggregate despite a frantic 2-2 draw in the second leg that ended with Monaco’s Wout Faes heading inches wide of forcing extra time.
Newcastle United rode a first-leg master-class from Anthony Gordon—four goals inside 45 minutes in Baku—to oust Qarabag 11-4 on aggregate, while Atletico Madrid relied on a hat-trick from Alexander Sorloth to see off Club Brugge 7-4.
Bayer Leverkusen kept their fifth straight home clean sheet to dispatch Olympiacos 2-0, and Atalanta stormed back from 2-0 down on aggregate to beat Borussia Dortmund on a last-kick penalty, the latest regulation goal ever recorded in a UCL knockout match.
Galatasaray ended an 11-year wait for knockout football, overcoming Juventus 7-5 in a pulsating extra-time victory in Turin, and Norwegian champions Bodo/Glimt stunned Inter Milan 5-2 to become the story of the round.
The eight play-off winners—Real Madrid, PSG, Newcastle United, Atletico Madrid, Atalanta, Bayer Leverkusen, Galatasaray and Bodo/Glimt—now join the top-eight seeds.
The Round of 16 draw will be held on Friday, 27 February 2026, at 4:30 pm IST in Nyon, Switzerland, with seeded teams hosting the second legs.
Read more →Bayern Munich legend Karl-Heinz Rummenigge calls for player agent reform
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge has added his voice to the growing chorus of concern over the unchecked power of player agents, urging football’s governing bodies to broker sweeping reforms before the sport’s finances spiral further out of control.
Speaking in a recent interview with the World Football Association (via Abendzeitung), the former Bayern Munich CEO echoed the warnings issued last month by ex-club president Uli Hoeneß, who lambasted agents for wielding disproportionate influence over transfers, contract negotiations and the broader relationship between players and clubs.
“We need reforms because it cannot go on to this extent — the way things are developing financially,” Rummenigge said. “It makes no sense to instigate any things and say: We have to abolish the consultants. That’s a nonsense story for me. It cannot be abolished. They are part of this business. We are becoming more and more dependent on consultants – and the influence on players is now enormous.”
Rummenigge stopped short of advocating for an outright ban on intermediaries, arguing instead for a structured dialogue involving FIFA, UEFA, domestic leagues, clubs and agents themselves. “Sit down at the table and talk to each other openly, honestly, but also correctly,” he urged, describing the current landscape as a gray area rather than a simple case of right versus wrong.
The 68-year-old’s intervention comes as transfer fees continue to shatter records once considered unthinkable. Neymar’s €222 million switch from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain in the summer of 2017 was widely viewed as an outlier at the time; seven years on, such sums no longer provoke widespread disbelief. The influx of cash has enriched clubs, players and, critically, their representatives, creating what Rummenigge sees as an unhealthy dependency on external advisors.
Germany’s 50+1 ownership model, which safeguards member control of clubs, was held up by Rummenigge as a bulwark against the kind of speculative investment seen elsewhere in Europe, where sovereign wealth funds, oligarchs and trading tycoons have acquired marquee teams. Yet even within the Bundesliga’s comparatively sheltered environment, the agent’s role has expanded to the point where, Rummenigge insists, reform is unavoidable.
Whether FIFA and UEFA will heed the call for formal negotiations remains to be seen, but with a figure of Rummenigge’s stature steering the debate, the prospect of regulatory change has moved firmly onto the agenda.
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UW-Oshkosh Women’s Flag Football Team Debuts in First Sanctioned Contest
Oshkosh, Wis. – History was made Wednesday evening when the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh women’s flag football team stepped onto the field for its first-ever sanctioned game, hosting Aurora University before a crowd of several hundred students, families, and community supporters at a campus venue.
The Titans’ program, the newest addition to Titan Athletics, was assembled at breakneck speed. Head coach Deante Jefferson, hired only a few months ago, pieced together the roster entirely from current UW-Oshkosh students after putting out an open invitation to campus.
“We just said ‘hey if you want to come play, we’ll take you, and we’ll build with you,’” Jefferson explained. “We started practicing in the last week of January at 6 in the morning, so we just said ‘hey we’ll take what we have and we’ll go from there.’”
That abbreviated timeline—roughly three weeks between the first practice and opening kickoff—showed on the scoreboard, as Aurora University emerged with a 34-0 victory. Yet within the lopsided result, the Titans found validation for the culture they have already forged.
“The way I can call each one of those girls my sisters, and the way I can lean on every single one of them, and I’ve only known them for a month is insane,” said junior Ashlyn Clemens. “What we showed today is that we don’t quit and we’re never going to quit.”
Junior teammate Paige Vitek echoed the sentiment, emphasizing effort over outcome. “We went out there, we fought the whole time, we tried our best. It isn’t the result we wanted, but we seriously put some great grit and perseverance out there and I’m so proud of all these girls.”
Jefferson pointed to the stands as proof that the program has already succeeded in one crucial respect. “That felt good, and it means we have the support we know we already have, but also for the young women in our program it kind of solidified that people care about you and they see you,” he said. “It’s more just for the girls, getting the opportunity to do this, and play this sport, and we’re still excited; a lot of building is going to happen.”
With the inaugural game behind them, the Titans will look ahead to a March 22 doubleheader against Marian University and Illinois Wesleyan. For a roster that has already bought into the long-term vision, the next chapter can’t come soon enough.
“There’s no where to go but up from here and I’m excited to see where this program goes, and I’m so excited to be part of this history,” Clemens added.
Read more →Harrison Smith Replacement Apparently Identified for Vikings
Minneapolis — With Harrison Smith’s presumed farewell still hanging in the balance, the Minnesota Vikings have zeroed in on a candidate to anchor the back end of Brian Flores’ defense for the next era. According to analytics outlet Pro Football Focus, that player is two-time Super Bowl champion safety Bryan Cook, who is set to reach free agency after completing his rookie contract with the Kansas City Chiefs.
Smith, the 34-year-old icon known league-wide as the “Hitman,” exited U.S. Bank Stadium to a planned ovation in Week 18, fueling expectations that retirement paperwork could arrive at any moment. Even if the veteran opts for one final campaign, Minnesota’s front office views securing a long-term successor as a top priority this offseason.
Josh Metellus has emerged as a Swiss-army-knife in Flores’ blitz-heavy scheme, but coaches believe his optimal impact comes in a hybrid role rather than as a traditional high safety. That leaves a full-time spot next to Metellus up for grabs, and Cook’s résumé makes him an attractive solution.
Drafted 62nd overall in 2022, Cook has spent four seasons in Steve Spagnuolo’s aggressive Kansas City system, thriving in coverage behind frequent five- and six-man pressures. PFF charted him with an 80.3 coverage grade when the Chiefs blitzed this past season, a figure that placed him above the 90th percentile among safeties and slot defenders. The metric addresses a sore spot for Minnesota, whose secondary has periodically surrendered explosive plays when the front seven pressures fail to reach the quarterback.
Beyond numbers, Cook’s versatility stands out. He has aligned deep, in the box, and over the slot, mirroring the pre-snap flexibility that made Smith a cornerstone of the Vikings defense for a dozen years. Flores, who leans on disguise and late rotations, could deploy the 27-year-old in a similar chess-piece capacity.
The fit, however, is not without financial hurdles. Cook headlines a thin safety market that also includes Kamren Curl, and his price tag is expected to reflect both his championship pedigree and positional scarcity. Minnesota currently faces a tight cap situation, requiring creative accounting to clear room for a competitive offer.
If the Vikings can maneuver the books, Cook would arrive with both immediate starting credentials and the age profile—he turns 27 in September—to man the position well into the next contract cycle. In short, he offers Minnesota a potential bridge from the Smith era without a schematic rebuild, a combination that could make the pursuit of the former Chiefs safety one of the franchise’s defining moves of the 2026 offseason.
Read more →Should Benjamin Šeško be given a starting role?
Old Trafford has waited 13 years for a centre-forward capable of re-igniting title dreams, and the early evidence suggests the wait may finally be over. Benjamin Šeško, signed from RB Leipzig on 9 August 2025 for an initial €76.5 million, has spent the majority of his maiden Premier League campaign watching from the bench, yet no player has scored more non-penalty goals in the competition since the calendar flipped to 2026.
The 22-year-old Slovenian’s introduction to English football was anything but serene. Three defeats in his first three starts—against Manchester City, Grimsby Town and Brentford—left questions hanging in the Manchester rain. A first United goal against Brentford on 27 September hinted at better days, only for a knee injury sustained in the 2-2 draw with Tottenham Hotspur to stall his momentum for more than a month.
Since returning, Šeško has been deployed as Michael Carrick’s impact weapon. The pattern is well-established: enter after 70 minutes, tilt the game, decide the result. He levelled at West Ham with a deft late flick, struck a 94th-minute winner against Fulham and broke Everton’s resistance with a solo counter-attacking finish. In total, the striker has five non-penalty league goals in 2026—more than any other player—despite totalling fewer than 400 minutes.
The numbers are impossible to ignore, yet so is United’s form. Carrick’s side have taken 16 points from the last 18 available and sit fourth, within striking distance of Aston Villa above and clear of Chelsea and Liverpool below. Matheus Cunha, Bryan Mbuemo and Amad Diallo have helped craft that run, complicating the manager’s calculus.
Šeško’s pedigree, however, is emphatic. After leaving Slovenia at 16 he scored 22 goals in 44 games for Salzburg’s reserves, then 29 in 79 for the senior side while collecting three Austrian Bundesliga crowns. At Leipzig he tallied 18 goals in 42 matches during the 2023/24 season—highlighted by a DFL-Super Cup triumph over Bayern Munich—and followed up with 21 goals and six assists in 2024/25, finishing as club top scorer and finding the net against Juventus, Atlético Madrid, Dortmund, Sporting, Eintracht Frankfurt and a Bayern side he breached twice.
United have not possessed a striker with that combination of size, mobility and cold-blooded finishing since Robin van Persie’s title-winning 2012/13 campaign. The question now is whether Carrick trusts the hot hand off the bench or unleashes Šeško from the opening whistle, potentially reshaping a top-four race that remains delicately poised.
With 12 matches remaining and Champions League qualification at stake, the next team sheet could define both United’s season and the immediate trajectory of their record Slovenian signing. One thing already feels certain: Benjamin Šeško no longer looks like a project—he looks like a solution.
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‘No one will give us back the lost point’ – Joan Laporta reacts to CTA admission after Barcelona’s defeat to Girona
Barcelona president Joan Laporta has acknowledged the Spanish referees’ committee (CTA) admission that VAR should have intervened during the Catalans’ recent loss to Girona, but he says the belated recognition cannot restore the vital point that slipped away.
The flashpoint arrived late in the match when Girona’s Claudio Echeverri trod on Jules Koundé in the build-up to Fran Beltrán’s decisive goal. On-field officials allowed play to continue, and the subsequent strike stood, tipping the contest 4-2 in Girona’s favour.
Speaking after the CTA conceded the oversight, Laporta welcomed the validation yet stressed its limited practical value.
“My feeling is that they’ve recognized our complaint was justified,” he said. “All this mess could have been avoided if VAR had intervened. The stamp on Koundé was obvious. Recognizing their mistake is good, but no one will give us back the lost point. From there, we have a mixed feeling. Let’s hope it doesn’t happen again.”
The president added that the squad must now channel its frustration into performances that render refereeing controversies irrelevant.
“We have to be far superior to our rivals to win. The team is focused, we have talent, commitment, and we will make a Herculean effort. I am convinced that we will win the league against all odds.”
Barcelona have since regained first place in La Liga and prepare to face Villarreal on Saturday, determined to keep their title push on track.
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