Expert Sports News & Commentary
Romano post-Villa update: Man Utd want record-breaking midfielder in their squad next season if they qualify for UCL
Manchester United have made retaining captain Bruno Fernandes a top priority for the 2026-27 campaign, with Champions League qualification poised to heighten that resolve, according to transfer expert Fabrizio Romano.
The Red Devils strengthened their top-four credentials with Sunday’s 3-1 victory over Aston Villa, a result that leaves Erik ten Hag’s side well placed to secure a return to Europe’s premier club competition. Romano reports that United’s hierarchy view UCL football as a pivotal factor in convincing the 31-year-old playmaker to shelve any thoughts of an exit and instead spearhead the club’s midfield for at least another season.
Fernandes’ future at Old Trafford had been the subject of speculation in recent months, with suggestions the Portugal international was weighing up a move after five-and-a-half trophy-laden years. A host of elite clubs would queue for his signature should he become available; the midfielder remains, in Romano’s words, “head and shoulders above the rest” for creativity and consistency.
United had previously contemplated cashing in while Fernandes’ market value remains high—his contract expires in 2027, although the club hold a one-year extension option. Yet a string of influential displays this term has persuaded decision-makers to build around their skipper rather than entertain offers.
The Portuguese set a new club record on Sunday, registering his 16th Premier League assist of the season to eclipse David Beckham’s 24-year benchmark of 15. Freed from sole scoring responsibility by summer attacking arrivals Bryan Mbeumo, Benjamin Sesko and Matheus Cunha, Fernandes has flourished as chief creator while still chipping in eight league goals of his own.
United are now laying the groundwork for a long-term project with Fernandes at its core, irrespective of who occupies the dugout beyond the current campaign. Champions League qualification, increasingly likely after the Villa Park triumph, would provide both the financial muscle and continental appeal to reinforce the club’s determination to keep their record-breaking midfielder in Manchester.
Read more →OPEN THREAD | March 16, 2026
Madrid—The Daily Merengue’s latest open thread has gone live, inviting readers to weigh in on every angle of the football conversation. True to the site’s overt Real Madrid bias, the post welcomes discussion while reminding newcomers that the slant is baked into the brand itself. Moderators Kung_Fu_Zizou, Juninho, NeRObutBlanco, Felipejack, Ezek Ix, and Valyrian Steel received a public nod for their behind-the-scenes work keeping debates lively yet civil. Buried among the chatter lies the day’s most tantalizing hint: a key player has returned to training and could be in contention for upcoming fixtures, though no name or timeline is specified. With the floor officially open, Madridistas worldwide are already speculating who might be ready to rejoin the squad and what impact that return could have on the season’s final stretch.
Read more →Harry Maguire: Man United star comes up big in massive victory
Manchester United strengthened their grip on third place and edged closer to guaranteeing Champions League football next season with a commanding 3-1 victory over Aston Villa at Old Trafford yesterday afternoon.
While United’s attacking unit stole the headlines, the foundation of the win was laid at the back, where Harry Maguire produced another reminder of his enduring quality. The 31-year-old central defender, whose contract expires this summer, has quietly become one of the stories of the campaign, stepping into the breach after Matthijs de Ligt’s injury in November and refusing to relinquish the spotlight.
Against Villa, Maguire was a reassuring presence alongside French partner Leny Yoro. He won one of two attempted tackles, made two vital clearances and, most notably, dominated aerially, claiming 100 per cent of his duels. On the deck he was equally effective, prevailing in three of four ground contests. His composure in possession allowed United to play through Villa’s press, highlighted by a 91 per cent pass-completion rate and one incisive key pass that helped spring a dangerous counter.
Maguire’s willingness to stride forward with the ball also relieved pressure on midfield, carrying United up the pitch and eating up valuable yards as the clock ticked down. The performance continued a personal renaissance that has seen the England international make 19 appearances across all competitions this term, each one strengthening his case for a new deal or a seat on the plane to this summer’s World Cup.
With the international break looming, attention now turns to whether Maguire has done enough to enter Thomas Tuchel’s thinking for the forthcoming England squad. Another run of fixtures like this, and the defender once written off at Old Trafford may yet finish the season with silverware—or at the very least, a ticket to the sport’s biggest stage.
Read more →Hapoel Tel Aviv back on track in Euroleague return; Maccabi falls
Tel Aviv — Hapoel Tel Aviv snapped a three-game road slide and reignited its EuroLeague playoff push with an 80-75 victory over FC Barcelona at Palau Blaugrana on Thursday night, while crosstown rival Maccabi Tel Aviv stumbled in Italy, falling 96-87 to AX Armani Exchange Milan.
Playing their first continental contest since the competition’s two-week hiatus caused by the regional conflict with Iran, the Reds leaned on a pair of explosive performances from Dan Oturu and Elijah Bryant. Oturu poured in 22 points and Bryant chipped in 21, pacing Hapoel to its first away win since late February. Season-long contributor Jordan Blakeney added eight points as the Israelis improved to 18-11 and climbed into fifth place with two games in hand, distancing themselves from the fraught Play-In tournament zone.
Barcelona, now on the outside looking in at the top-eight picture, got 17 points from Kevin Punter and 15 from Will Clyburn. Veteran guard Tomas Satoransky finished with 11, but the Catalans could not overcome 18 turnovers and shaky foul shooting.
“We started rusty, let’s be honest,” Hapoel head coach Dimitris Itoudis admitted afterward. “But we got used to it after that very well. In two quarters, we gave up 14 points—the second quarter and the last quarter. The problems for us were turnovers. We turned the ball over too much and missed free throws. But other than that, we had a clear target of what to do.”
The win keeps Hapoel within striking distance of the top quartet and provides a timely confidence boost ahead of a condensed closing stretch.
Maccabi’s European fortunes moved in the opposite direction at the Mediolanum Forum. Gur Lavy posted a career-high scoring output for the yellow-and-blue, yet it was not enough to counter former Maccabi center Josh Nebo, who dominated inside and claimed game-MVP honors. Nebo’s two-way effort spearheaded a balanced Milan attack that shot efficiently from long distance and answered every Maccabi run down the stretch.
The defeat drops Maccabi to 14-16, leaving the club in 13th place—three games behind the final Play-In berth with only eight regular-season contests remaining.
“We played against a good team and they shot the ball really well,” Maccabi coach Oded Kattash said. “We did a better job in the second half and the most important thing is that we kept fighting. We have a week to recover and get the next one.”
Nebo, who spent two seasons in Tel Aviv before moving to Italy, emphasized the importance of closing strong: “In the past we had some trouble in the fourth quarter and today was a big step forward in responding to their run and closing the game out. It was a tough game and we’re trying to push for a spot in the playoffs, so I try to bring my best effort to every matchup.”
With the EuroLeague table tightening, Hapoel will look to capitalize on its momentum when action resumes next week, while Maccabi faces a desperate sprint to keep its postseason hopes alive.
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Arsenal's Max Dowman is becoming a global story – the real work of protecting him begins now
London – When Max Dowman wheeled away from the Gwladys Street End, arms outstretched, 16 years and 42 days on this planet, the Emirates erupted in a way that felt less like a football stadium and more like a launchpad. One swing of that luminous left foot had not only settled a wobbling title run-in, it had catapulted an Arsenal academy prodigy into a stratosphere where YouTube compilations travel faster than team coaches and every touch is dissected on four continents before breakfast.
The goal itself was story-book: collected on the halfway line, two decisive touches, a shimmy that turned a seasoned international inside-out, and a finish clipped high into the far top-corner. The sort of sequence that, as one club staffer noted privately, “looked like it had been story-boarded in a Hollywood writers’ room.” In real time it changed the complexion of the match, the weekend, and perhaps the season; in the slow-motion replays it changed a boy into a brand.
Until Saturday evening Dowman’s ascent had been carefully rationed. Pre-season cameos, a League Cup penalty won, a few headline writers practising his surname. Mikel Arteta’s staff, together with the player’s family, stage-managed each incremental step, mindful of the hysteria that can attach itself to any London teenager who can trap a ball cleanly. The Premier League strike alters that calculus overnight. A club story has become a football story; an Arsenal secret has become a global commodity.
Inside the club there is pride, but also the unmistakable sound of seat-belts fastening. The Athletic understands that Arsenal’s academy and medical departments held a previously scheduled performance review on Monday morning. The agenda, say sources familiar with the meeting, was formally about “load management” but conversation kept drifting toward the new gravitational pull now orbiting the 16-year-old. Social-media following has tripled since the weekend; shirt-sales desks have received requests from Seoul to São Paulo; the club’s in-house media team have been asked for comment by outlets that rarely cover football. Dowman himself has not spoken publicly since the goal – a deliberate policy – yet the noise around him is already deafening.
The broader concern is no longer physical. Dowman, who turned 16 in March, has, according to first-team coaches, “no issue with the contact side of the game,” having bulked up through a tailored gym programme while still a schoolboy. The questions now are psychological. How does a GCSE candidate process headlines comparing him to Lionel Messi? How does he metabolise a tweetstorm that places him alongside Lamine Yamal, runner-up in the most recent Ballon d’Or? Arsenal’s safeguard has been a tightly knit triangle: academy liaison officer, club psychologist, and, crucially, his parents, who have been present at every training ground decision point since he was 14.
Arteta, who in January name-checked Messi when discussing Dowman’s spatial awareness, struck a relaxed tone after Sunday’s session. “He doesn’t seem to be fazed by the occasion, the moment, the context or the opponent,” the manager said. “But we must remember the sample size is still small. Our duty is to keep the environment stable around him.”
That environment is about to get stormier. Arsenal face Manchester City in next weekend’s League Cup final, then again in a league fixture on 2 April. A Champions League quarter-final, should they protect their first-leg advantage, would bring at least six more high-stakes fixtures before the season’s midpoint. The calendar offers no soft landing, and after the Everton winner there is an implicit expectation that the teenager can summon sorcery on demand.
History offers sobering footnotes. Bojan Krkic, once Barcelona’s youngest debutant for a generation, later admitted to anxiety attacks before Clásicos; the weight of comparison to Messi, he said, “started in press conferences and ended inside my head.” Arsenal believe their internal support systems are more sophisticated than those at the Camp Nou in 2007, but privately accept that control ends at the training-ground gate. The content machine – TikTok edits, transfer rumours, fantasy-football hype – is already in overdrive.
For now the club retains one simple lever: minutes on the grass. Selection, they argue, will be dictated solely by performance data, not commercial pressure. Dowman will continue to train with the first group, attend school two mornings a week, and play for the U-18s when fixture density allows. Any deviation from that rhythm will be signed off by Per Mersin, the academy technical director, and Edu, the sporting director, rather than marketing executives.
Yet the wider circus is unavoidable. Shirt sales of his No. 71 jersey spiked 900% within 48 hours; the club’s commercial partners have requested imagery for summer campaigns; a streaming platform has floated the idea of a fly-on-the-wall documentary. Each new proposal lands on the desk of Arsenal’s head of player protection, whose job description barely existed five years ago but now ranks among the most pivotal at London Colney.
Whether Dowman emerges as the face of Arsenal’s title push or merely a dazzling cameo in a longer narrative, the guardrails must hold. The Premier League, for all its riches, remains an unforgiving laboratory for teenage talent. “Everyone is OK until they are not,” one staffer said. “Our job is to extend the OK for as long as humanly possible.”
The goal has been scored, the genie is out, and Dowmania is no longer a local curiosity. Somewhere in north London a 16-year-old went to bed on Saturday night dreaming of league titles. The adults around him are charged with ensuring the dream does not become a distraction. The real work, as one source put it, starts now.
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Yankuba Minteh and the strange goal that sums up his season
Stadium of Light, Sunderland – The only goal of Saturday’s Premier League meeting between Sunderland and Brighton & Hove Albion arrived in the 64th minute via a ricochet so bizarre that even the scorer seemed unsure whether to celebrate or apologise. Yankuba Minteh, racing in from the right, miscued a cross, saw the ball squirm under goalkeeper Melker Ellborg, and jogged away wearing the sheepish grin of a man who had just won the lottery with a torn ticket.
Team-mate Mats Wieffer, now operating as an emergency right-back, called it “one of the craziest goals of the season” and, in truth, it was a moment that encapsulated Minteh’s entire campaign: chaotic, unpredictable, occasionally maddening, yet ultimately decisive.
The build-up was typical Minteh. With Habib Diarra prone inside the Sunderland box, the home defence hesitated. Minteh ignored the distraction, darted at Granit Xhaka, felt a tug on his arm, stumbled, and somehow shovelled the ball goal-wards. Jan Paul van Hecke’s smart dodge allowed it to roll untouched inside the near post. Brighton had their lead, their third win in four matches, and a jump above Sunderland on goal difference in the congested mid-table.
Statistically, the strike ended a 20-game league drought stretching back to September’s 2-2 draw with Tottenham. It was only his second goal of 2025-26, yet the 21-year-old still leads all under-21 players for total goal involvements since joining Brighton for £30 million from Newcastle in August 2024 – eight goals and eight assists in all competitions.
The raw numbers hint at untapped potential. Before kick-off at the Stadium of Light, Minteh had amassed 124 touches inside the opposition box, the most of any Premier League player in the first half of the season, one more than Erling Haaland. He had carried the ball into the area 61 times, second only to Manchester City’s Jeremy Doku among wide men. Yet the end product has lagged behind: Doku, playing four additional matches, owns one goal and six assists, compared with Minteh’s one goal and four assists.
Brighton’s coaching staff remain encouraged. “People forget he is still only 21,” Wieffer reminded reporters. The pair previously overlapped at Feyenoord, where Arne Slot – now Liverpool boss – oversaw Minteh’s first half-season of European football. “The first months were up and down; the second half he was really good,” Wieffer recalled. “His decision-making is better, but when you have that much pace you sometimes miss the free player. He’s improved it a lot.”
Improvement is visible, yet so are the flaws. Minteh’s defensive concentration wavered late on Saturday: a skied clearance almost gifted Omar Alderete an equaliser, a petulant shove on Luke O’Nien earned a yellow, and a clumsy foul on Chris Rigg prompted Fabian Hurzeler to withdraw him after 76 minutes. “We needed to protect him,” the Brighton head coach admitted. “We want unpredictable things offensively, but defensively he must be reliable.”
Hurzeler, who has used Minteh sparingly since a thigh injury in late December, insists the forward is responding. “He understands more and more what is needed – not only to be creative but to be there for the team. This goal should give him another boost.”
Next up is Liverpool at the Amex, where Minteh’s old mentor Slot will visit knowing full well that the winger can drift through 89 minutes of mis-control before producing one decisive, bizarre moment. Expect the unexpected: it has become both Brighton’s headache and their greatest hope.
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The Briefing: Will late goals cost Slot's Liverpool? Has Dowman calmed Arsenal's anxiety?
Liverpool’s habit of conceding late goals is threatening to derail their season and, perhaps, Arne Slot’s tenure. For the ninth time this campaign, a goal shipped on or after the 84th minute turned a potential win into a damaging draw, as Richarlison’s stoppage-time header earned Tottenham a 1-1 result at Anfield. The equaliser, slammed home after Dominik Szoboszlai had lost his man, means Liverpool have now surrendered 13 points to late strikes; had they held on, Slot’s side would sit second with 62 points instead of scrapping to stay in the Champions-League places.
Szoboszlai, whose superb first-half free-kick had put Liverpool ahead, was blunt in his assessment. “I don’t know what happened… if we carry on like this, we should be happy with the Conference League.” The Hungarian’s candour underlined a dressing-room confusion that increasingly points toward the manager. Slot, lauded for last season’s title run, now faces uncomfortable questions: is the collapse physical, mental, tactical—or all three? Liverpool’s board may have to decide in the summer whether continuity or change offers the better route back to contention.
Across the divide, Tottenham will gratefully pocket the point. Igor Tudor’s first three league fixtures brought humiliation; the fourth delivered resilience. “Today was important to show what they showed,” the Croatian said, hoping the late fightback can spark a survival push. With a daunting second leg against Atlético Madrid looming and a relegation six-pointer versus Nottingham Forest next, Tottenham at least travel with proof they can compete.
While Liverpool agonise, Arsenal exult. Mikel Arteta’s side opened a nine-point lead at the summit after seeing off Everton 2-0, the clincher supplied by 16-year-old Max Dowman. The substitute’s stoppage-time counter-attack finish—slotted after Arsenal cleared an Everton corner—made him the Premier League’s youngest ever scorer at 16 years 73 days, but its significance stretched beyond the record book. The goal released the tension that had gripped the Emirates as the visitors pushed for an equaliser, allowing fans to breathe and, finally, to enjoy.
Dowman had already ignited the contest, his dazzling right-wing cross creating Viktor Gyokeres’ opener. “It’s not only the goal that he scored,” Arteta beamed. “I think he changed the game.” In a season when Arsenal supporters have at times seemed too anxious to savour superiority, a teenager born six years after their last title has offered both catharsis and conviction that this might, at last, be their year.
For Liverpool, the clock is ticking on solutions; for Tottenham, the clock offered redemption; for Arsenal, a 16-year-old has turned the clock back to a time when titles felt routine. The questions now: can Slot arrest the slide, can Tottenham build on a single point, and can anything stop Arsenal’s kids from accelerating toward glory?
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Spikes, brief lulls and a Dowman-induced frenzy: What watching Arsenal does to your heart rate
By Nnamdi Onyeagwara
London — When 16-year-old Max Dowman slammed home Arsenal’s 97th-minute clincher against Everton on Saturday, the roar that echoed around north London living rooms was matched only by the thud of pulses racing well beyond the British Heart Foundation’s safety zone. One supporter’s Apple Watch peaked at 134 beats per minute—more than double the 65 bpm resting rate recorded at kick-off—proof that Mikel Arteta’s runaway league leaders remain the most exhilarating cardiac stress test in English football.
The 2-0 victory kept Arsenal nine points clear at the Premier League summit and preserved the best attack (61 goals), best defence (22 conceded) and most clean sheets (15) in the division. They have lost only three of 48 fixtures in all competitions, stand in the last-16 of the Champions League, quarter-finals of the FA Cup and face Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final on 22 March. A first top-flight crown in 22 years—and even an unprecedented quadruple—loom into view.
Yet the cost of such ambition is measured in frayed nerves. Sky Sports commentator Alan Smith, once Arsenal’s title-winning striker, sighed during Saturday’s broadcast: “It is not good for the blood pressure of these Arsenal fans. It was a really tough watch for so long.”
The tension is rooted in history. Arsène Wenger’s 2007-08 side surrendered a five-point lead after 26 games to finish third. The 2015-16 team beat eventual champions Leicester home and away yet still trailed in second. Three consecutive runner-up finishes followed, the most recent two derailed by injuries to William Saliba and Takehiro Tomiyasu and a final-day duel with Manchester City. Opposition supporters’ taunt—“second again, ole ole”—has become a familiar refrain.
This season’s narrow escapes have done nothing to calm supporters. Fourteen of Arsenal’s wins have come by a single goal—29.2 per cent of all fixtures. Bukayo Saka’s header was brilliantly denied by Jordan Pickford in the 13th minute; Riccardo Calafiori’s last-ditch block and David Raya’s second-half fingertip stop kept Everton at bay. Michael Keane’s unpunished stamp on Kai Havertz added to the simmering ire.
The pattern repeats across the calendar: Gabriel Martinelli’s 93rd-minute equaliser against Manchester City; Gabriel’s 96th-minute winner at Newcastle; Yerson Mosquera’s 94th-minute own goal versus Wolves; 95th-minute Palace pressure in the Carabao Cup; last-gasp setbacks at Liverpool, Sunderland and Aston Villa. Even Mansfield Town pushed the FA Cup tie to the brink on 7 March.
Saturday’s denouement followed the script. Viktor Gyokeres’ 89th-minute opener nudged the supporter’s heart rate to 107 bpm; Dowman’s teenage exclamation point sent it to 134 bpm and the neighbours diving for ear-plugs. The average for the 100-minute contest: 83 bpm, with readings lingering in triple figures long after the whistle.
Arteta, whose own pulse was tested when David Raya’s stoppage-time save denied 10-man Chelsea on 1 March, joked: “My heart almost stopped, but David’s hand was there to bring it back to life.” With at least 10 fixtures remaining—and potentially more in Europe and domestic cups—Arsenal’s medical staff may need to add cardiologists to the back-room team.
Three points, clean sheets and teenage sensations are wondrous things. But for supporters whose hearts refuse to beat at a normal rhythm between now and May, the plea is simple: win the title, Mikel—just do it before we all need pacemakers.
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Florida A&M's Head Drum Major Makes Historic Appearance At The Oscars
Los Angeles—When the lights came up on the 98th Academy Awards, viewers expecting Hollywood glamour were treated to a different kind of show-stopping moment: Florida A&M University’s newly appointed head drum major, Oluwamodupe “Dupe” Oloyede, commanding the stage as part of the “I Lied to You” Sinners ensemble at the Dolby Theatre.
The senior theater major’s Sunday-night cameo—her first ever at the Oscars—adds another milestone to a semester already bursting with them. Only days earlier, Oloyede and her line sisters were initiated as the newest members of the Beta Alpha Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated, capping a whirlwind few weeks she calls “living up to my name.” In Yoruba, Oluwamodupe translates to “Lord, I thank you.”
Oloyede’s appearance at the Oscars arrives just as she prepares to take the podium as the first female head drum major in the 133-year history of FAMU’s renowned Marching “100.” Dr. Shelby Chipman, director of bands, announced her selection last week, signaling a new era for the ensemble that has performed at Super Bowls, presidential inaugurations, and the Olympics since 1892.
“Last year my goal was to be clean, precise, beyond par,” Oloyede told HBCU GameDay’s Vaughn Wilson. “Now the beautiful burden is integrity—I have to do it first for people to follow.”
A Southwest DeKalb High School product, Oloyede became only the second woman to serve as a drum major in the Marching “100” last season, following trailblazer Cori Bostic. Under her leadership, the band will open the 2025 football campaign at the Orange Blossom Classic in Miami on August 30, where she will blow the ceremonial first whistle.
Between sorority rituals, rehearsals, and red-carpet calls, Oloyede remains focused on the legacy she now carries. “We’re standing on the shoulders of giants,” she said. “Band of the year—how could you forget? You have to step up to the plate.”
With the 2025–2026 season on the horizon, the Marching “100” is poised to electrify audiences nationwide under the guidance of its history-making maestra.
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Frustrasi! Arne Slot Soroti Penyakit Lama Liverpool usai Ditahan Imbang Tottenham Hotspur
Liverpool – Liverpool harus menelan pil pahit usai hanya mampu menang 1-1 atas Tottenham Hotspur dalam laga yang berlangsung di Anfield. Kekecewaan ini kian menyakitkan lantaran gol penyama kedudukan tercipta pada menit ke-90 melalui Richarlison, membuat The Reds kehilangan dua poin penting di tengah perebutan posisi puncak klasemen.
Dominik Szoboszlai menjadi pahlawan sementara tuan rumah setelah tendangan bebasnya pada babak pertama berhasil menjebol gawang Spurs. Gol tersebut membuat Liverpool tampil lebih percaya diri, menguasai jalannya pertandingan, dan menciptakan sejumlah peluang berbahaya sepanjang babak pertama hingga sebagian besar waktu pertandingan.
Namun, ketajaman di lini depan yang kembali menjadi momok bagi Liverpool. Meski unggul penguasaan bola dan mengendalikan ritme permainan, mereka gagal memperlebar keunggulan. Akibatnya, satu-satunya keunggulan yang ada tidak bertahan hingga wasit menutup laga.
Arne Slot, pelatih Liverpool, menyoroti kegagalan ini sebagai penyakit lama yang masih menghinggapi timnya. “Kami tampil dominan, tapi kami tidak membunuh pertandingan. Ini menjadi pelajaran berharga bahwa sepak bola bisa menghukum Anda jika tidak memanfaatkan peluang,” ujarnya singkat.
Hasil imbang ini membuat Liverpool harus berbagi poin dan menunda ambisi meraih kemenangan beruntun, sementara Tottenham pulang dengan satu poin pahit namun berharga hasil dari balasannya di menit-menit akhir.
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Nolan McLean to Start for Team USA in World Baseball Classic Final
Miami—With one victory standing between the United States and a World Baseball Classic title, manager Mark DeRosa has turned to 24-year-old New York Mets right-hander Nolan McLean to take the ball in Tuesday night’s championship game against the winner of Venezuela and Italy.
The assignment arrives less than a week after McLean’s lone WBC outing, a rocky three-inning start against Italy in pool play in which he allowed three earned runs—all on home runs—and absorbed the loss. His tournament ERA sits at 9.00, but the small sample has not diminished DeRosa’s confidence in a pitcher whose six-pitch mix includes a heavy sinker and a swing-and-miss curveball.
McLean’s résumé beyond the Classic is glowing. After a rapid ascent through the minors, he debuted in the majors last August, spinning seven shutout frames against Seattle while striking out eight. He finished the 2025 season 5-1 with a 2.06 ERA and 57 punch-outs in 48 innings, positioning himself as a leading candidate for National League Rookie of the Year. MLB Pipeline ranked him the sixth-best prospect in baseball entering 2026, the highest placement for any pitcher on the list.
Team USA reached the final by edging the Dominican Republic 2-1 in a taut semifinal that featured stellar pitching, airtight defense, and a handful of controversial umpire decisions. Paul Skenes set the tone on the mound Sunday, limiting the explosive Dominican lineup to one run and handing the bullpen a lead it would not relinquish.
Now the Americans hope McLean can duplicate that effort on the sport’s biggest international stage. Venezuela and Italy each present unique challenges: the Italians already toppled the U.S. 8-5 in pool play, while Venezuela eliminated defending champion Japan to advance.
First pitch is scheduled for prime time, with a global audience expected and a legacy-seizing victory on the line. For McLean, the moment offers an immediate shot at redemption—and a chance to etch his name alongside the aces who have preceded him in red, white, and blue.
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Bayern Munich News: Manchester United, Tottenham Hotspur to battle FC Bayern for Anderlecht’s Nathan De Cat?
Bayern Munich’s pursuit of Anderlecht prodigy Nathan De Cat is shaping into a summer showdown that spans two of Europe’s richest leagues. The 17-year-old Belgian, already a regular in the Purple & White midfield with 36 senior appearances, three goals and five assists this season, has emerged as the focal point of a tug-of-war that pits Bundesliga heavyweights against Premier League powerhouses.
German outlet Fussball Daten frames the race as “Bundesliga vs Premier League,” with Bayern joined by Borussia Dortmund, Bayer Leverkusen and RB Leipzig in a domestic coalition determined to keep the 6ft 4in deep-lying playmaker on German soil. Standing in their way are Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur, both of whom are described as plotting “blockbuster offers” for the teenager Anderlecht regard as the finest graduate of their academy in years.
Anderlecht have slapped an initial valuation of €30–35 million on De Cat and will entertain only “serious offers” within that bracket, a figure that reflects not only his statistical output but a skill-set centred on rare vision, composure and close control for one so young.
While Bayern have tracked De Cat for months, the Bavarians now face the prospect of outbidding multiple suitors if they are to secure the midfielder before the 2025-26 campaign kicks off. With negotiations expected to intensify once the European season concludes, the coming months promise a high-stakes auction for one of world football’s most coveted rising stars.
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Read more →La Liga round-up: Atletico Madrid sneak past Getafe as Real Sociedad close on battle for 5th
Matchday 28 of the 2025-26 La Liga season delivered another weekend of tight scorelines and shifting table dynamics, with Atletico Madrid extending their winning streak to four games and Real Sociedad tightening their grip on the race for fifth place.
Atletico Madrid 1-0 Getafe
Nahuel Molina’s fourth-minute strike held up as the only goal at the Metropolitano, where Diego Simeone’s side were pushed hard by neighbours Getafe. The visitors’ task grew steeper after defender Abdelkabir Abqar received a straight red card following a second-half altercation with Alexander Sorloth, yet Atletico could not add insurance and were forced to defend their slender advantage to the whistle.
Real Sociedad 3-1 Osasuna
At Anoeta, Mikel Oyarzabal opened the scoring from the spot before Goncalo Guedes struck either side of half-time to put Pellegrino Matarazzo’s men in control. Victor Munoz’s late reply for Osasuna proved little more than consolation as La Real moved closer to the coveted fifth position.
Girona 3-1 Athletic Club
Hugo Rincon’s early goal set the tone for Girona’s most eye-catching win of the campaign. Athletic improved after the break, but further finishes from Azzedine Ounahi and Claudio Echeverri sealed a statement victory for the Catalan side.
Real Oviedo 1-0 Valencia
David Costas’ 30th-minute header gave the Asturians a priceless triumph that trims the gap to safety to seven points ahead of a relegation six-pointer against Levante next weekend.
Mallorca 2-1 Espanyol
Espanyol led through Charles Pickel until the Swiss midfielder was dismissed in the 54th minute. Pablo Torre levelled soon after and Samu Costa completed the comeback to hand Mallorca a dramatic victory in Palma.
Real Betis 1-1 Celta Vigo
Ferran Jutgla’s fourth-minute opener stunned the Benito Villamarín, and although Hector Bellerin equalised soon after, Betis could not find a winner that would have kept them firmly in the top-four hunt.
With Barcelona and Real Madrid having already recorded comfortable wins over Sevilla and Elche respectively, the weekend results leave the upper reaches of the table tightly contested and the relegation battle as tense as ever with ten matchdays remaining.
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Review: Raphinha hat-trick keeps Barcelona 4 clear in La Liga
MADRID, March 15 — Raphinha delivered a virtuoso performance, scoring a hat-trick to power FC Barcelona to a 5-2 home victory over Sevilla on Sunday afternoon and preserve the Catalans’ four-point cushion atop La Liga ahead of Real Madrid.
With an eye on Wednesday’s Champions League round-of-16 second leg against Newcastle United, Barcelona coach Hansi Flick opted to rest teenage stars Lamine Yamal and Fermin Lopez. The rotation did not disrupt the hosts’ rhythm; instead, Barça seized command early through Raphinha’s brace of penalties, setting the tone before a packed Montjuïc crowd.
The Brazilian winger completed his treble later in the contest, capping a clinical display that underlined Barcelona’s attacking depth even without some of their headline names. Sevilla twice found the net but never threatened to close the gap as the Blaugrana surged to a commanding win that keeps the title destiny firmly in their hands.
Barcelona now turn their focus to European duty, yet Sunday’s statement victory ensures they will head into midweek competition with momentum and an unchanged advantage at the summit of Spanish football.
Read more →Miami RedHawks didn't deserve NCAA at-large bid, per Tyler Hansbrough
Former North Carolina All-American Tyler Hansbrough bluntly dismissed the Miami RedHawks’ inclusion in the 2025 NCAA Tournament during Field of 68’s Selection Sunday show, arguing the Mid-American Conference program’s résumé did not merit an at-large invitation.
“I don’t think they should’ve made the tournament,” Hansbrough said. “Their strength of schedule is pretty weak. What is it—339th? No Quad 1 wins.”
Hansbrough compared Miami’s credentials to last year’s North Carolina squad, noting that while the Tar Heels also faced Quad-1 scrutiny, “we had a much stronger schedule.” He believes the committee should have rewarded power-conference hopefuls instead.
“Teams in bigger conferences that actually have a legit chance and didn’t schedule D-II schools in their pre-conference schedule, I feel like they should’ve been rewarded,” he continued, singling out Oklahoma as one example. “Realistically, is Miami of Ohio a contender? Absolutely not. I have them losing in the play-in game.”
The RedHawks, making their first at-large appearance since 1999 when Wally Szczerbiak carried them to the Sweet 16, were slotted into the First Four and will meet SMU on Wednesday, March 18, at 9:15 p.m. Eastern. Szczerbiak, now an analyst, told viewers he was “very surprised” the selection committee tabbed a MAC team for the Dayton play-in round for the first time.
CBS’s Seth Davis reported on the broadcast that Miami received the very last at-large spot. Committee chair Keith Gill later confirmed that North Carolina State, Texas, and SMU were all ranked below the RedHawks on the final ballot.
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Arsenal Extend Premier League Lead as 16-Year-Old Dowman Makes History
Arsenal FC moved another step closer to the Premier League summit on Sunday evening, defeating Everton FC 2-0 at the Emirates Stadium to extend their advantage at the top of the table. The victory was sealed by two late strikes, the first from Viktor Gyokeres and the second courtesy of 16-year-old academy prodigy Max Dowman, whose goal etched his name into the competition’s history books as the youngest ever scorer in the English top flight.
The match remained deadlocked until the closing stages, when the Gunners’ pressure finally told. Gyokeres broke the deadlock in the 81st minute, converting a low cross to ignite the home crowd. Five minutes later, Dowman—introduced only moments earlier for his senior debut—collected a loose ball on the edge of the area and curled a composed finish beyond the goalkeeper, doubling the advantage and sparking scenes of disbelief among teammates and supporters alike.
The result lifts Arsenal further clear of their pursuers, strengthening their title credentials with another valuable three points, while Everton leave north London empty-handed after a resilient defensive display that ultimately unravelled in the dying minutes.
Read more →2026 NCAA Tournament South Regional Breakdown: Top storylines, matchups and Cinderellas to watch
The bracket is set, the nets have been cut down in conference tournaments, and the 2026 NCAA Tournament’s South Regional is shaping up as the most volatile quadrant in the field. From a No. 1 seed that spent the winter defending its résumé to a pair of league champions that enter on double-digit win streaks, every pod from Birmingham to Houston carries land-mine potential.
1. Florida’s flawed favorite status
Florida owns the top line, yet even selection committee apologists concede the Gators are the softest of the quartet that also includes Duke, Arizona and Michigan. A December swoon was followed by a 12-game winning streak that ended only when Vanderbilt knocked them out of the SEC tournament, exposing spacing issues that opposing scouts have bookmarked. Still, KenPom ranks the Gators fourth nationally with top-10 units on both ends, a reminder that the reigning national champions remain capable of a repeat even while vulnerable.
2. Houston’s chip-on-the-shoulder chase
One slot below sits Houston, the fifth overall seed and the region’s co-favorite. KenPom separates the Cougars from Florida by a razor-thin 0.36 points in net rating, and the roster blends battle-tested veterans—Milos Uzan, Emanuel Sharpe, JoJo Tugler—with lottery-level youth. Freshman guard Kingston Flemmings paces the team in scoring and is projected as a top-five pick, while do-everything big Chris Cenac improves by the possession. Expect Kelvin Sampson’s defense, currently top-five in efficiency, to suffocate first-round opponent Idaho and set up a potential second-weekend collision with the Gators.
3. The Cornhuskers’ historic horizon
Nebraska’s men’s program won its first 20 games and, though it cooled late, carries a KenPom top-10 defense into its opener against Troy. The Huskers have never won an NCAA tournament game; they are now seeded fourth and positioned to collect that milestone plus more. A region without a dominant alpha increases the likelihood that a defensive juggernaut could ride one hot weekend to its maiden Final Four.
4. Illini offense vs. Ivy assassin
Illinois fields the nation’s second-ranked offense per KenPom, orchestrated by freshman sniper Keaton Wagler, who fires from the logo as casually as most players attempt layups. Their round-of-64 foe, Penn, arrives via an Ivy title upset of Yale sparked by TJ Power’s 44-point masterpiece on 26 shots. Power, formerly of Duke and Virginia, won’t be awed by Big Ten length and gives the Quakers a puncher’s chance at the bracket’s most lopsided-seeming 3-14 matchup.
5. VCU’s sneaky opening window
Cinderella chatter usually centers on double-digit seeds, but VCU sits at No. 11 and draws a North Carolina team missing star Caleb Wilson for the remainder of the season. The Rams are one of the country’s hottest teams down the stretch, and Shaka Smart’s havoc system is built for March chaos. One win over the depleted Tar Heels could ignite another Rams run reminiscent of 2011.
Second-round paths
Should chalk hold, Florida would meet Iowa-Clemson survivor, each capable of exploiting the Gators’ intermittent half-court stagnation. Houston’s likely foe, Texas A&M, is battle-tested from the SEC grind, while Vanderbilt—already a Florida slayer—could face Nebraska in a 4-5 duel of top-tier defenses. On the bottom half, Illinois-VCU would pit blitzkrieg pace against methodical execution, and a potential Saint Mary’s-Houston Sweet 16 would contrast the Gaels’ tempo-throttling style with the Cougars’ relentless pressure.
Cinderella radar
Beyond VCU, keep an eye on Troy. The Sun Belt champion shoots a ton of threes and has the guard play to scare Nebraska in the 4-13 game. McNeese, out of the Southland, draws a Vanderbilt squad that expended significant emotional energy toppling Florida in Nashville; if the Dores suffer a letdown, the Cowboys have the perimeter firepower to pounce.
Bottom line
The South Regional lacks a consensus juggernaut, but it compensates with balanced firepower and potential bracket-busting matchups at every turn. Whether it’s Florida proving the doubters wrong, Houston cashing in on its 1-seed gripe, Nebraska making history, or an underdog seizing the moment, expect the drama to peak long before the region’s champion boards a flight to San Antonio.
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English sides seek redemption from Champions League reality check
England’s six Champions League representatives arrived at the last-16 stage buoyed by dominant showings in the league phase, yet the first-leg ties delivered a sobering dose of continental reality. Across the board, the Premier League’s flag-bearers failed to produce a single victory, leaving the collective mission of English football hanging in the balance.
Hailed as kings of the group stage, the clubs now face an uphill struggle to salvage continental credibility. The combined tally of defeats and draws has transformed early-season optimism into urgent questions about tactical adaptability and mental resilience on Europe’s biggest stage.
With second-leg encounters looming, the focus shifts to swift regrouping and strategic recalibration. Anything short of a dramatic turnaround risks cementing this campaign as a watershed moment when English dominance was checked by Europe’s elite.
Read more →Rodri Hernandez reacts to Real Madrid transfer speculation
Manchester City midfielder Rodri Hernandez has brushed aside mounting speculation linking him with a summer move to Real Madrid, insisting his sole focus is on helping the Premier League champions overturn a 3-0 deficit when the sides meet again at the Etihad Stadium.
Speaking to Cadena SER and carried by Diario AS, the Spain international admitted frustration after last week’s heavy first-leg loss at the Bernabéu but believes City remain capable of producing a memorable comeback.
“A little frustrated (with the result), but it’s been the tone of this season,” Rodri said. “It’s costing us in that final third. That quality to score the last goal. Maybe it’s penalising us a lot, but in football the most important thing is to put the ball in the net.”
City dominated stretches of the opening encounter yet failed to convert their chances, a theme the 28-year-old says must change quickly.
“We have to be more accurate and take a step forward in that sense. I think we have the rest: the game, the ability to generate… It’s true that we couldn’t score the other day, but we have to lift the team, because on Tuesday we have an important game. Above all, we have to make sure that the team creates chances.”
Questions inevitably turned to persistent reports that Real Madrid view Rodri as a prime midfield target once the season ends. The player, who is under contract at the Etihad until 2027, offered little encouragement to the Spanish giants.
“I’m not going to answer that. It’s a moment to think about what we have now, with my team, in my season, and then we’ll see.”
Rodri’s campaign has been defined as much by rehabilitation as by competition. He ruptured an anterior cruciate ligament against Arsenal in September 2024 and only recently returned to full training. While City’s form has dipped during his absence, the midfielder says he is edging back to peak condition.
“The truth is that I feel very good. Very, very happy. Obviously on an individual level, not because of the team’s situation, but yes, happy, feeling better and better. Step by step.”
With Pep Guardiola’s side needing at least three goals without reply to force extra-time against the record 14-time European champions, Rodri’s composure and experience could prove pivotal. Tuesday’s return leg now carries added narrative: a potential farewell audition for the Spaniard—or the platform for a statement performance that keeps City’s continental dream alive.
Read more →WSL: Arsenal post another clean sheet with win over London City
Arsenal returned to Women’s Super League action after a three-week hiatus and left the Copperjax Community Stadium with a 2-0 victory over London City Lionesses, stretching their shut-out streak to four consecutive league matches and tightening their grip on fourth place with two games in hand.
Jonas Eidevall’s side weathered an early storm when Sanni Franassi’s pinpoint cross found Freya Godfrey unmarked, only for the forward to lift her effort over the bar. The miss proved costly in the 15th minute when Chloe Kelly threaded a low pass into the six-yard box for Olivia Smith, who rifled the ball into the roof of the net for her first WSL goal since arriving in North London.
Play was halted seven minutes later while medical staff attended to a spectator, but Arsenal retained control once the match resumed, calmly seeing out the half with their one-goal advantage intact.
London City emerged with renewed intent after the interval, and Franassi forced Anneke Borbe into a routine save in the 57th minute. Yet the hosts could not find an equaliser, and the contest swung decisively on 77 minutes. Second-half substitute Stina Blackstenius, introduced moments earlier, latched onto Alessia Russo’s square ball after Mariona Caldentey’s exquisite lofted pass had released Russo behind the defence, slotting low past Elene Lete to double the visitors’ lead.
The Lionesses responded fiercely, piling bodies forward and almost pulling one back when the ball bobbled on the Arsenal goal-line, but Borbe and her back line scrambled it clear. Kosovare Asllani’s late free-kick, curling toward the top-left corner, was gathered safely by the German keeper as Arsenal closed out a fifth win in six league outings.
Defender Poppy Pattinson embodied the hosts’ battling display, breaking up attacks and driving forward at every opportunity, but the visitors’ quality in the final third ultimately told.
The result keeps Arsenal within striking distance of the summit ahead of Saturday’s Emirates clash with West Ham, while London City—seventh in their maiden top-flight campaign—prepare to welcome reigning champions Chelsea to The Den.
Read more →Joan Laporta Re-Elected as Barcelona President: “This Result Makes Us Unstoppable”
Barcelona, Sunday – Joan Laporta sealed a landslide fourth term as president of FC Barcelona, capturing 68 % of the vote in a ballot that drew tens of thousands of socios to the Catalan capital under bright spring skies. His nearest challenger, Victor Font, mustered 30 %, leaving Laporta with 32,934 ballots—second only to Sandro Rosell’s record 35,021 in club history.
Moments after the electoral board confirmed the tally, Laporta stepped to the microphone on the club’s provisional stage and addressed supporters massed outside the Spotify Camp Nou.
“First of all, I want to thank this wonderful club that Barça has,” he began, voice cracking with emotion. “The members vote to decide who will represent them and that is unique in the world. An exaltation of Barça that is wonderful.”
He praised the travelling voters for turning election day into “a celebration of democracy, civility and Barça,” saluted the club’s workers, and thanked the interim board chaired by Rafa Yuste as well as the electoral commission for overseeing “this magnificent celebration.”
Laporta, who previously presided from 2003-10, framed the margin as more than a number. “It is a resounding result and gives us a lot of strength,” he declared. “It gives us so much strength that it makes us unstoppable. Some exciting years are coming and they will be our best years.”
The 61-year-old lawyer also reserved special praise for first-team coach Hansi Flick, who arrived to cast his ballot only hours after guiding Barcelona to a 5-2 league rout of Sevilla. “I ask for a round of applause for him,” Laporta said, prompting cheers. He extended gratitude to sporting director Deco, academy advisor Bojan Krkić, and a host of executives and athletes who voted, singling out former goalkeeper Jordi Masip, institutional delegate Mañana, and board secretary Jordi Finestres.
With the formal handover set for later this week, Laporta’s fourth presidency begins amid soaring expectations: the men’s team sit atop La Liga, the women’s side chase another European crown, and Espai Barça’s redevelopment races toward completion. Sunday’s vote, he insisted, has armed the club with the mandate to meet those ambitions head-on.
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NCAA Tournament: Ole Miss Women’s Basketball Draws No. 5 Seed, Will Face Gonzaga in Minneapolis
OXFORD, Miss. — For the fifth consecutive season, the Ole Miss women’s basketball program will take its place in the NCAA Tournament, earning a No. 5 seed in the Sacramento regional and opening play Friday, March 20, against No. 12 Gonzaga at a first-round site in Minneapolis.
The Rebels, 23-11 overall and owners of eight Southeastern Conference victories this season, will tip off at a time and television window still to be announced. Should Ole Miss advance, it would meet the winner of No. 4 Minnesota and No. 13 Green Bay in Sunday’s second round.
The selection marks Ole Miss’ 22nd appearance in the national championship and extends a half-decade run of sustained success under eighth-year head coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin. The Rebels have recorded five straight 20-win seasons, reached the SEC Tournament semifinals in four of the past five years, and, for the first time in school history, notched three victories over top-five opponents during the 2025-26 campaign.
Sophomore forward Cotie McMahon has spearheaded the surge, claiming SEC Newcomer of the Year honors and a spot on the All-SEC First Team. Her development has mirrored the program’s ascent, giving Ole Miss a legitimate star around whom a deep March run can be built.
Historically, Ole Miss owns 12 Sweet Sixteen berths and five Elite Eight appearances across 51 seasons of women’s basketball. McPhee-McCuin, now making her fifth NCAA trip as a head coach, emphasized a simple philosophy after the bracket reveal: “We’re going to be competitive. We’re going to defend, and we’re going to represent the conference and our university at a high level.”
With tip-off in Minneapolis looming, the Rebels will spend the week refining a game plan geared toward neutralizing Gonzaga’s perimeter attack while leveraging their own athleticism and depth. A victory would keep alive Ole Miss’ hopes of adding another memorable chapter to a postseason résumé that already features some of the sport’s most iconic moments.
Read more →Christian Izien Leaving via Free Agency Could Be the Biggest Blow to Buccaneers Defense
TAMPA — While the departures of Jamel Dean and Mike Evans dominated the headlines, the quiet exit of defensive back Christian Izien to the Detroit Lions on a one-year, $2 million contract may ultimately sting the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ defense more than any other offseason loss.
Izien’s tenure in Tampa was brief—three seasons, only nine appearances in 2025, and fewer than 200 total defensive snaps—but his versatility inside Todd Bowles’ scheme made him what Fox Sports NFL Insider Greg Auman labeled “invaluable.” Per Pro Football Focus charting, Izien logged 63 snaps at free safety, 45 in the box, and 45 in the slot, allowing Bowles to disguise coverages without substituting. Add 179 special-teams snaps, and the 25-year-old effectively functioned as a 17-game Swiss-army knife.
The Bucs viewed Izien as a “backup and special-teams guy,” Auman noted, a projection that pushed the Rutgers product to seek a larger role elsewhere. The league’s lukewarm market left him with a minimum-level prove-it deal in Detroit, but Pewter Report cautions that Tampa has now created a depth void that won’t be filled cheaply. “Young players can develop into that,” the outlet wrote, “but development takes time, and mistakes in the secondary are costly.”
Tampa’s corner room will lean heavily on 22-year-old Jacob Parrish, last year’s third-round pick who finished second among Bucs corners in snaps and posted 76 tackles, seven tackles for loss, two sacks, two interceptions, seven pass breakups, and a fumble recovery. Yet even Parrish’s promising rookie campaign underscores the learning curve ahead; Izien already possessed the institutional knowledge of Bowles’ complex pressures and coverage checks.
With franchise legend Mike Evans in San Francisco, Dean locking down receivers in Pittsburgh, and 14-year linebacker Lavonte David contemplating retirement, the exodus of experienced talent is impossible to ignore. Still, the low-profile departure of a do-everything defensive back could be the subtraction that tips the balance in a division where every coverage bust can swing a playoff berth.
Tampa replaced Izien with veteran linebacker Alex Anzalone, acquired from the same Lions team that now hopes Izien’s versatility translates into a starting role. For the Bucs, the bet is that untested youth can replicate what one unheralded veteran accomplished in relative obscurity. If not, the Lions may wind up with the steal of free agency—and the Buccaneers may spend 2026 learning just how valuable a flexible, low-cost defensive back can be.
Read more →Faith, Trust, Grit and Audacity Come Together to Earn USF an NCAA Bid
Birmingham, Ala. — The story of South Florida’s 2024-25 men’s basketball season begins in the one place powerhouse programs rarely look: the scrap heap. Back in October the Bulls were a collection of transfers, cast-offs and overlooked high-school recruits who had never been anyone’s idea of a postseason threat. Coming off a losing record and 13 straight seasons without an NCAA Tournament appearance, USF was picked to finish near the bottom of the American Athletic Conference.
On Sunday afternoon that same roster turned skepticism into celebration, toppling Wichita State 70-55 at the Legacy Arena to capture the AAC tournament title and the league’s automatic bid to March Madness.
“We just have 15 dudes that have all been underdogs,” power forward Izaiyah Nelson said in the post-game din. “They’ve all been looked over their entire careers. Being able to go to March Madness and play teams that all overlooked us? It’s a proving point. We’re going to show them why y’all should have recruited us.”
The Bulls’ path to the championship was as unconventional as their roster. During the regular season USF played at break-neck pace, launching threes in bulk and averaging 88.4 points per game—one of the ten highest marks in the country. In Birmingham, however, they flipped the script. A 64-58 semifinal win over Charlotte was followed by a vintage defensive clinic against Wichita State, which shot a season-low 55 points and 34 percent from the field.
“We just had a lot of empty possessions,” Shockers head coach Paul Mills said. “Their tenacity on the ball and their ball pressure was really, really good. That had a lot to do with South Florida.”
The transformation traces back to head coach Amir Abdur-Rahim, who arrived in Tampa in 2023 preaching trust, unselfishness and love. In his first season he guided a program that had gone 43-133 in AAC play the previous decade to the conference’s regular-season crown. Although the Bulls missed the NCAA field a year ago, momentum was undeniable.
Tragedy struck last October when Abdur-Rahim died unexpectedly on the eve of the new season, leaving a grieving roster to forge ahead without the architect of their revival. The players responded by doubling down on the culture he installed, winning with the same faith, trust, grit and audacity that had become their mantra.
Now, for the first time since 2012, South Florida is headed to the NCAA Tournament, a band of misfits no more.
Read more →White Sox Pitching Falters in Loss to Kansas City
SURPRISE, Ariz.—The White Sox dropped a 10-4 decision to the Royals on Monday afternoon, but the Cactus League scoreboard was never the story. While Kansas City pounded out 15 hits and capitalized on three Chicago relievers who combined to allow nine runs, the only development that mattered to the South Siders came in the third inning, when 2024 first-round pick Hagen Smith took the mound and looked every bit the front-line starter the organization envisioned on draft day.
Smith needed only 26 pitches to navigate two frames, striking out five of the six outs he recorded and walking just one. The 22-year-old left-hander sat 95-97 mph with his fastball, snapped off a mid-80s slider that drew three swinging strikes, and buried a change-up for a punch-out of Royals top prospect Gavin Cross. It was the clearest evidence yet that Smith’s off-season mechanical tweaks—shortening his arm path and firming up his front side—have translated into game action.
“He was absolutely filthy,” one scout in attendance said. “That’s the guy you take fifth overall and don’t look back.”
The rest of the afternoon served as a reminder of how thin the major-league pitching depth remains. Right-hander Erick Fedde, penciled in as the No. 3 starter, was tagged for seven hits and three earned runs in 3 2/3 innings, his velocity down a tick and his splitter lacking finish. Rule 5 pick Alexander Alberto followed and was roughed up for four runs (two earned) on four hits in one inning, likely sealing his return to the Rays organization. Fellow bullpen candidate Brandon Eisert gave up three runs on four hits in 1 1/3 frames, pushing his spring ERA to 9.00.
Offensively, Miguel Vargas continued his torrid March, doubling twice and walking twice to raise his Cactus League OPS to 1.189. Catcher Edgar Quero drove in the Sox’ first run with a sharp single to right and threw out two would-be base-stealers. The remaining RBIs came from non-roster invitees Dustin Harris and Tanner Murray, long shots to break camp with the club.
Kansas City’s offense was paced by outfielder Lane Thomas, who produced the go-ahead runs with a sacrifice fly and an RBI single, and by veteran Brandon Drury, who launched a two-run homer off Alberto. Infielder Peyton Wilson and catching prospect Luca Tresh added late insurance with solo shots against Sox minor-league relievers.
Chicago (13-10-1) will send right-hander Sean Burke to the mound Tuesday evening against the Rangers and offseason acquisition Mackenzie Gore. First pitch is scheduled for 7 p.m. CT.
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Miami Open latest: Brits in qualifying action
Miami Gardens, Florida — British players are in the spotlight on the qualifying courts at the Miami Open, with the tournament’s latest developments centring on their efforts to secure main-draw berths. Organisers have confirmed that the qualifying stage is under way, and British hopefuls are among those battling through the early rounds at the Hard Rock Stadium complex.
Broadcasters are offering live coverage of every match, ensuring fans can follow the progress of the British contingent as they attempt to advance. The event promises comprehensive access to the action, with viewers able to stream or watch on television as the qualifying draws unfold.
With the main draw set to begin shortly, the outcomes of these qualifying clashes will determine which British players join the seeded stars in the next phase of the Miami Open.
Read more →Gavi reacts to long-waited Barcelona return – “The most painful process”
Barcelona’s 5-2 stroll past Sevilla on Sunday evening will be remembered less for the scoreline and more for the sight of Pablo “Gavi” Martín Páez Gavira jogging onto the Spotify Camp Nou grass for the first time since September. The 21-year-old midfielder, cleared by club medics only 24 hours earlier, was introduced in the 80th minute with the hosts already 5-1 up and the stands roaring approval at a comeback they had waited more than half a year to witness.
Speaking to reporters after the final whistle (quotes via Marca), Gavi did not hide the scale of the ordeal he has endured. “It has been very hard, more so than the other time. It has been the most painful process and it has been more difficult for me on a day-to-day basis,” he said, referencing the anterior-cruciate and meniscal damage that cost him over a year in 2023. “The feeling at the Camp Nou, with my people, with the fans, is unique and I’m very happy.”
Coach Hansi Flick, who opted to ease the Spain international back into competitive action rather than start him, earned special praise. “Hansi Flick has always been with me, like a father. I am very grateful to him. He has always trusted me,” Gavi added.
The timing of the return could hardly be better for Barcelona. Frenkie de Jong remains sidelined, while Pedri and Marc Bernal have both shown signs of fatigue after a punishing sequence of fixtures. Although Gavi is unlikely to be risked in Wednesday’s trip to Newcastle United, he is expected to be in contention for next weekend’s home meeting with Rayo Vallecano, a match that could see him make only his fourth appearance of an injury-ravaged campaign.
For a squad stretched by knocks and congestion, the reappearance of one of its most energetic midfield engines offers both a psychological lift and a practical solution as the season enters its decisive weeks.
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Supercomputer Predicts 2025–26 Premier League Table As Arsenal, Man Utd Win Big
London — Opta’s supercomputer has issued its most decisive forecast of the 2025–26 Premier League season, projecting that Arsenal will end a 22-year wait for the title while Manchester United surge into the Champions League places and Tottenham claw their way out of relegation danger.
The model, updated after a weekend that saw Arsenal open a nine-point gap at the summit with a 2–0 defeat of Everton, awards Mikel Arteta’s side a near-certain 97.46 % probability of lifting the trophy in May. The forecast is rooted in more than raw points: Arsenal’s bench has contributed more direct goal involvements than any other club, a depth advantage that has offset the creative lull that has dogged the Gunners since the turn of the year.
Manchester City, meanwhile, are given only an outside chance of reeling in the leaders despite Pep Guardiola’s public insistence that “it’s not over.” The champions’ 1–1 draw at West Ham, combined with a paltry one substitute goal all season, has left the algorithm unimpressed; even a game in hand and an April Etihad showdown with Arsenal is not enough to shift the balance in City’s favour.
Below the summit, the race for top-five places has tilted decisively toward Old Trafford. Michael Carrick’s rejuvenated Manchester United moved seven points clear of fifth with a 3–1 dismissal of Aston Villa and, per Opta, are now firm favourites to secure a top-three berth. “We are in a good position at the moment,” Carrick said, “but still a lot to play for.”
Liverpool, held 1–1 at home by Tottenham amid boos from the Anfield stands, are still projected to sneak into the Champions League spots, though Dominik Szoboszlai’s warning that “if we carry on like this, we should be happy with the Conference League” reflects the unease around the club. Chelsea, beaten 1-0 by Newcastle despite 22 shots, have slipped to sixth and are now one point behind Liverpool.
At the foot of the table, Tottenham’s late equaliser at Liverpool has not lifted them out of the bottom four, but it has altered the mood and the maths. Opta now rates Spurs more likely than Leeds United, Nottingham Forest or West Ham to avoid the drop, crediting the resilience shown in the 90th-minute strike by Richarlison. “It’s a long way to our goal, which is to stay in the Premier League,” interim boss Igor Tudor admitted, “but today was important to show what they showed.”
Andrew Cole, whose old mentor Sir Alex Ferguson famously insisted “the season doesn’t get started until Easter,” may still view the run-in as the only arithmetic that matters. Yet with eight match-weeks remaining, the supercomputer’s numbers have already told a story: Arsenal are all but champions, Manchester United are back among Europe’s elite, and Tottenham have been granted a lifeline in their fight for survival.
The table, according to Opta, is no longer a matter of opinion. It is a matter of probability — and for the first time since 2004, that probability ends with Arsenal on top.
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Is Texas Tech Basketball on Upset Alert in March Madness?
By the time the Red Raiders step on the floor for their 2026 NCAA Tournament opener, the calendar will read March, but the mood inside Grant McCasland’s locker room may feel more like Groundhog Day. Texas Tech, once entrenched among the nation’s elite, limps into the Big Dance on a three-game slide, searching for answers after a season-ending injury to forward JT Toppin forced a late-season reshuffle. The result: a defense that has sprung leaks and a rebounding edge that has evaporated at the worst possible moment.
Waiting in the first round is Akron, the Mid-American Conference champion and arguably the most dangerous double-digit seed in the field. The Zips have dropped only once in their last 20 outings—an overtime heart-breaker to rival Miami (Ohio)—and steamrolled through the MAC tournament behind an offense that averages 88.6 points per game, seventh-best nationally. Akron’s lone major-conference test came in November at Purdue, where the Boilermakers prevailed 97-79. Five days later, Purdue thumped Texas Tech 86-56 in the Bahamas, a common-opponent data point that will do little to calm Red Raider nerves.
Experience tilts toward the underdog as well. Akron’s core has logged NCAA Tournament minutes in each of the past three seasons and four of the last five, while Texas Tech will rely on a rotation short on March pedigree. Among the projected starters, only Luke Bamgboye (a portal import) and Christian Anderson have tasted the tournament before, and the sidelined Toppin cannot help. Guards Donovan Atwell and Jaylen Petty, plus big man LeJuan Watts, are all making their debuts on college basketball’s biggest stage.
An initial film study suggests a coin-flip affair: Akron’s high-octane attack meets a Texas Tech defense that has slipped, yielding easy buckets and second-chance opportunities. The first projection had Akron stunning the No. 5 seed 84-80, and the deeper the dive, the fewer reasons emerge to change the pick—save for the possibility that the Red Raiders’ rugged Big 12 schedule has hardened them in ways the MAC cannot.
Should Texas Tech survive, the reward is a likely date with No. 4 Alabama, owners of the country’s top-scoring offense at 91.7 points per game. Facing two top-ten attacks in three days is a sobering prospect for a team still searching for defensive cohesion.
Bottom line: the Red Raiders have the talent and the schedule strength to escape the opening weekend, but the path is lined with land mines. Akron is no typical 12-seed, and Alabama looms as a potential nightmare matchup. If Texas Tech cannot recapture the defensive bite that defined its early-season rise, the 2026 bracket could feature another 5-vs-12 shocker—and Grant McCasland’s squad will be the cautionary tale everyone pencils in next year.
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Just: Business as usual best approach as Nebraska basketball heads to Big Dance
Lincoln — Until the buzzer sounds and the ball goes through the hoop, the narrative is fixed: Nebraska has never won an NCAA tournament game. Amie Just, writing for the Journal Star, argues that the storyline will persist only until the Huskers flip it, and head coach Fred Hoiberg’s steady, business-as-usual demeanor is precisely the antidote needed during this prep period. With no embellishments, no sweeping promises, Hoiberg has kept practices, film sessions, and travel plans identical to the regular-season routine, reinforcing the idea that the Big Dance is still basketball—just on a brighter stage. Just contends that treating the moment as ordinary could be the most effective way to make history for a program long defined by its March shortcomings.
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