Expert Sports News & Commentary
Marcus Rashford: Barcelona propose swap deal for United loanee
Barcelona have tabled a straight-swap offer that would see Manchester United loanee Marcus Rashford remain at the Camp Nou on a permanent basis, with Uruguay centre-back Ronald Araujo heading to Old Trafford as compensation, according to reports in Spain.
Rashford, 28, joined the Catalans last summer on a season-long loan after slipping down the pecking order under former United boss Ruben Amorim. The forward’s temporary switch has proved mutually beneficial: Rashford has rediscovered his best form under Hansi Flick, registering 10 goals and 13 assists in 34 appearances—his most productive return since 2022-23—while Barcelona have climbed back to the summit of LaLiga.
United, meanwhile, reinvested the wages freed up by Rashford’s departure, recruiting Bryan Mbeumo, Matheus Cunha and Benjamin Sesko in a revamped front line that has fired 47 Premier League goals in 26 matches, level with third-placed Arsenal and seven adrift of leaders Manchester City.
Despite Barcelona’s £26 million purchase option, the club’s hierarchy are reluctant to meet the clause outright. Spanish outlet Football 365 claims that sporting director Deco has instead proposed a player-exchange deal, with Araujo—valued at €40 million—offered in a one-for-one swap. The 29-year-old defender has long been admired by United’s recruitment team and would address ongoing uncertainty surrounding Harry Maguire’s future, although the England international is reportedly determined to extend his own stay in Manchester.
Barcelona are also open to including 20-year-old midfielder Marc Casado in negotiations, having previously floated the academy graduate as a makeweight to reduce or eliminate the cash component of any Rashford transfer.
Caretaker United manager Michael Carrick is understood to be open to welcoming Rashford back, yet sources close to the player indicate he has no intention of returning to Old Trafford. With that in mind, United are expected to hold out for a straight cash fee, believing the proceeds will fund further summer reinforcements.
The coming weeks will determine whether Barcelona’s swap strategy persuades the Premier League giants to soften their stance and sanction Rashford’s permanent exit without a traditional transfer fee.
Read more →Endrick’s red card rescinded but Real Madrid loanee will still miss one Lyon game
Olympique Lyonnais have successfully appealed the straight red card shown to on-loan striker Endrick, yet the 19-year-old Brazilian will still sit out Sunday’s Ligue 1 encounter with OGC Nice. The decision reduces what could have been a two-match suspension to a one-game ban, clearing the forward to return against RC Strasbourg Alsace the following week.
Endrick was dismissed midway through the second half of Lyon’s 1-0 victory over FC Nantes after referee Clément Turpin issued a second yellow for an aerial challenge. Because VAR cannot intervene on bookings, the on-field verdict initially stood. Upon review, however, the video officials determined the offence merited an immediate red, prompting an upgrade that carried an automatic two-match sanction.
Lyon contested the ruling this week, arguing the challenge did not meet the threshold for violent conduct. The French league’s disciplinary committee agreed, reverting the punishment to the original double-yellow ejection and therefore limiting the suspension to a single fixture.
The ruling offers Lyon partial relief as they prepare for a congested run-in. Endrick’s absence against Nice leaves manager Paulo Fonseca short of attacking options, but the club will regain the teenager’s services for the subsequent trip to Strasbourg.
Endrick, who joined Lyon on a season-long loan from Real Madrid last summer, has featured in 18 league matches this campaign, scoring four goals.
Read more →Arsenal handed triple fitness boost as Saka, Trossard and Odegaard travel to Brentford
London, UK – Arsenal’s title charge received a timely lift on Wednesday morning after respected club insider Hand of Arsenal confirmed that Bukayo Saka, Leandro Trossard and captain Martin Odegaard have all been included in the travelling party for tonight’s Premier League meeting with Brentford.
The trio’s presence on the team coach represents a significant shot in the arm for Mikel Arteta, who has watched his side’s advantage at the summit shrink to three points following Manchester City’s mid-week victory. City’s win cranked up the pressure on the Gunners ahead of the 13 remaining league fixtures that stand between the club and a first championship triumph since 2004.
Saka, sidelined since the damaging defeat to Manchester United, has missed the last four matches but accelerated his rehabilitation in a bid to return for the north-London derby on 22 February. The winger has evidently surpassed initial recovery targets and is now pressing for immediate involvement at the Gtech Community Stadium.
Odegaard sat out the previous two games, while Trossard lasted 66 minutes against Sunderland in the FA Cup fourth-round replay before being forced off. Their inclusion in the travelling contingent raises the possibility of at least two of the attackers being named in Arteta’s final 18-man squad, though club sources caution that no decision will be taken until after the manager conducts his pre-match medical checks.
Not every reinforcement is available. Teenage prodigy Max Dowman and summer signing Mikel Merino remain unavailable; the latter is expected to be sidelined for several months. Yet the potential return of three first-team regulars offsets those absences and keeps alive Arsenal’s ambition of restoring a six-point cushion over Pep Guardiola’s reigning champions.
Brentford, renowned for their set-piece efficiency and relentless pressing, have already claimed notable scalps at home this term and will view the visit of the league leaders as an opportunity to climb further clear of mid-table congestion. Arsenal, however, have collected more away points than any other side this season and will fancy their chances of securing a victory that maintains their destiny in their own hands.
Hand of Arsenal, the widely followed social-media outlet credited by journalists including Fabrizio Romano, Charles Watts and Dharmesh Sheth, broke the news shortly after 09:00 GMT, prompting a wave of optimism among supporters desperate to see Arteta’s attacking unit back at full strength.
Kick-off at the Gtech Community Stadium is scheduled for 19:30 GMT, when the final composition of the matchday squad will be revealed.
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Real Madrid eyeing Tottenham’s Pedro Porro as Dani Carvajal successor
Madrid, June 11 — Real Madrid have placed Tottenham Hotspur right-back Pedro Porro on a three-man shortlist to succeed club legend Dani Carvajal, sources have confirmed to this publication.
Carvajal, 34, who finished fourth in the 2024 Ballon d’Or vote, has started only sporadically under interim coach Álvaro Arbeloa and is out of contract at the Bernabéu next month. With his future unresolved, Madrid’s recruitment team have accelerated plans to secure a long-term replacement.
Porro, 26, joined Spurs from Sporting CP in January 2023 and has since established himself as one of the Premier League’s most enterprising full-backs, registering two assists in 23 league appearances this season. Although the Spaniard has experienced a dip in form alongside several teammates, his attacking output and leadership qualities have impressed Madrid’s scouts.
Spanish outlet Fichajes reports that Porro is being assessed alongside AS Roma’s Wesley Franca and Bayern Munich’s Konrad Laimer as Madrid weigh up their options at right-back.
Los Blancos moved early last summer to bring in Trent Alexander-Arnold on a free from Liverpool, yet injuries have restricted the England international to just a handful of consistent runs in the side. That uncertainty has reopened the door to fresh targets, and Porro is viewed internally as a proven, home-grown solution who could adapt quickly to LaLiga.
Tottenham, however, are reluctant sellers. Club sources insist Porro is integral to Ange Postecoglou’s project and no offers will be entertained. Yet qualification for next season’s European competitions is not guaranteed, and failure to secure a berth could prompt the defender to reassess his future.
Privately, Porro is believed to be flattered by Madrid’s interest. The prospect of competing for Champions League and domestic titles at the Spanish capital is understood to hold significant appeal, and those close to the player say he would push for the transfer should Madrid firm up their admiration with a formal approach.
Porro, born in Don Benito, has six senior caps for Spain and is under contract at Tottenham until 2028, placing Daniel Levy in a strong negotiating position should Madrid decide to test Spurs’ resolve before the window closes.
Real Madrid’s hierarchy expect to make a definitive move once the club’s managerial situation is finalised, but sources indicate that Porro has already emerged as the leading candidate among the current trio under review.
Read more →Liverpool to pounce on stalled contract talks for new Mo Salah
Liverpool are ready to capitalise on stalled renewal negotiations and could launch a move for AC Milan’s rejuvenated forward Christian Pulisic, according to Italian outlet Tutto Mercato Web.
The 27-year-old American left Chelsea in 2023 after four trophy-laden but stop-start seasons in west London, culminating in a permanent switch to the San Siro. Since linking up with Max Allegri’s squad, Pulisic has flourished, operating across a variety of attacking roles and already reaching double figures for goals this campaign.
His renaissance has transformed him from bit-part Blues winger into one of Milan’s most influential figures, yet the club’s failure to formalise terms agreed months ago has opened the door to Premier League interest. Pulisic’s current deal expires in 2027, but with no extension signed, Liverpool and Arsenal are closely monitoring developments.
Tutto Mercato Web claims Milan still intend to table the long-discussed offer, yet the delay has encouraged English suitors to position themselves for a potential swoop. The report stresses that “hurry, it’s too late,” suggesting the Rossoneri risk losing their star unless swift action is taken.
For Liverpool sporting director Richard Hughes, Pulisic’s versatility and end-product could provide valuable depth to an already potent forward line. Whether the Merseysiders press ahead with a concrete bid will depend on how quickly Milan resolve their internal impasse.
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Read more →From Super League Ceasefire to Copa del Rey Fireworks: Spanish Football’s Tumultuous Thursday
Madrid, Spain – Thursday’s dawn brought with it a truce that has eluded European football for three years. Real Madrid and UEFA have formally buried the hatchet over the European Super League, a project that once threatened to redraw the continent’s football map and now, in the words of several Spanish editors, “ends as a journey to nowhere.” The accord dominates every sports front page in the country, elbowing aside even the Copa del Rey, whose own drama is unfolding on the pitch rather than in courtrooms.
The Super League’s demise—hailed by detractors as a failed coup and acknowledged even by backers as a strategic retreat—still carries ripple effects. Sources close to the negotiations admit that “sooner rather than later” the redistribution of broadcasting and commercial revenues will reflect the new reality, though precise mechanisms remain undisclosed. What is certain is that the headline “Peace at Last” splashes across multiple dailies, signaling an end to the legal skirmishes that have dogged UEFA’s calendar since April 2021.
Yet the cup competition refuses to be a footnote. Tonight, Atlético de Madrid host FC Barcelona in a quarter-final clash that could tilt the season for either club. The tie arrives barely 24 hours after the Basque derby semifinal first leg left Athletic Club and Real Sociedad separated by the slimmest of margins and a cauldron of post-match rhetoric. Editors have cleared space for both narratives: the treaty that reshapes Europe’s governance and the knockout tournament that shapes Spanish bragging rights.
Newsstand browsers will find dual coverage—one column tracing the legal ceasefire, another tracing the flight of the ball across a rainy pitch in San Mamés. In a single news cycle, Spanish football has moved from existential debate to the more familiar tension of away-goals and last-minute VAR reviews. The Super League may be archived, but the Copa del Rey is still writing its own headlines.
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Do the Strand: the Manchester United haircut guy exposes our lust for content | Jonathan Liew
London – A routine 1-1 Premier League draw between West Ham and Manchester United on Tuesday night will be remembered less for Tomas Soucek’s early opener or for United’s aborted attempt at a fifth consecutive victory than for the follicles of one supporter: Frank Ilett, now immortalised as “The United Strand”.
Since pledging in October 2024 to avoid scissors until his team recorded five straight wins in all competitions, Ilett’s locks have lengthened in tandem with his online following. Kick’s live-stream of the Oxford-born super-fan watching the match drew 250,000 concurrent viewers; cameras inside the London Stadium repeatedly cut to the 23-year-old, whose split-screen agony became a real-time barometer of United’s fluctuating fortunes.
The spectacle migrated rapidly from social media to the professional sphere. Wolves forward Matheus Cunha admitted this week that “the pressure of the haircut” had entered the United dressing-room lexicon, while Bruno Fernandes and Michael Carrick fielded questions on grooming rather than tactics. By Tuesday morning, catalogue retailer Argos had issued a press release confirming Ilett as an “Official Delivery Partner”, promising to rush clippers to his door the instant the streak was achieved.
The episode is, on the surface, a harmless diversion. Yet it illuminates football’s accelerating mutation into a content engine whose currency is attention, not silverware. United’s on-pitch struggles have proved lucrative for an ecosystem of influencers: Ilett, pundit Andy Tate, streamer Mark Goldbridge, even manager Ruben Amorim, whose profile rises with every meme. Liverpool head coach Arne Slot recently framed Champions League qualification in purely financial terms, underscoring a climate in which existence itself—match-day vlogs, viral haircuts, betting-sponsored reaction streams—often outweighs excellence.
Critics dismiss Ilett as a privileged opportunist capitalising on algorithmic reward. Supporters counter that he is merely adapting to a rigged attention economy in which personal agency is reduced to metrics of reach. Either way, the haircut has become a mirror: a reminder that in 2026 football’s most valuable asset is no longer the ball, but the gaze fixed upon it.
Read more →Analysis: Sunderland attack fails to spark
Sunderland’s impressive Stadium of Light form this season—seven wins and five draws before kick-off—was not enough to ignite their attack against Liverpool, who left the north east with a 1-0 victory that rarely looked in doubt.
Head coach Régis Le Bris kept faith with the shape that had served his side so well on home soil, making only one alteration to the XI beaten at Arsenal as Nilson Angulo replaced Chemsdine Talbi on the left. The tweak appeared designed to test a Liverpool back line decimated by injuries at right-back, yet Angulo seldom troubled stand-in Wataru Endo, and the hosts’ threat down that flank never materialised.
Without the composure of the injured Granit Xhaka, watching from the stands in a protective boot, Sunderland’s passing rhythms were hurried. Liverpool’s superior possession was expected, but the home side’s inability to retain the ball allowed the visitors to turn the screw as the match wore on. Gaps opened between midfield and defence, and only Liverpool’s lack of ruthlessness kept the scoreline respectable.
Alisson, celebrating his 250th Premier League appearance for the Reds, was a virtual spectator for long spells, forced into just one routine save in the opening period and otherwise untested. Le Bris will take heart from a club-record home run that has transformed the Stadium of Light into a fortress, yet the sobering reality remains: when the stakes were raised against elite opposition, Sunderland’s forward line failed to fire.
Read more →Mail: United ‘expected to make offer’ for £180k-a-week star with agreement now looking ‘increasingly likely’
Manchester United are poised to open formal talks with Harry Maguire over a new contract, with senior figures at Old Traffress now believing a deal to retain the 32-year-old defender is “increasingly likely”, according to MailSport’s Chris Wheeler and Nathan Salt.
Maguire’s present terms, worth £180,000 a week, expire in June, leaving the centre-back free to negotiate with overseas clubs since the turn of the year. AC Milan explored the possibility of a winter move but were informed that Maguire’s preference is to remain in Manchester, where he has spent the past seven years.
Sources close to the negotiations say United will table an offer in the coming weeks, with discussions expected to centre on both the length of the extension and a restructured salary. Despite his current remuneration, Maguire is understood to be willing to accept a “sizeable” reduction in wages to continue at the club he joined from Leicester City in 2019.
The development follows a sharp upturn in Maguire’s form under interim boss Michael Carrick, who has selected the Sheffield-born captain in every match since taking the reins. During that sequence United have collected four wins from five fixtures, recording morale-boosting clean sheets against Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur.
Maguire’s resurgence has reignited debate over his international future. Former England captain John Terry has publicly advocated for the defender’s return to the Three Lions squad ahead of March’s friendlies, the first fixtures to be overseen by new head coach Thomas Tuchel. Neither Maguire, left-back Luke Shaw nor teenage midfielder Kobbie Mainoo have featured since Tuchel succeeded Gareth Southgate at the start of 2025.
With four months remaining on his deal, Maguire’s next signature will shape both United’s defensive planning for next season and Tuchel’s defensive options as Euro 2026 qualifying looms.
Read more →'I'd love to play with him': Steven Gerrard on 'world class' Liverpool star
Liverpool’s bounce-back performance at Sunderland on Wednesday night was headlined by Florian Wirtz, the 22-year-old German whose every touch carried menace and imagination. After the Reds’ subdued showing against Manchester City last weekend, manager Arne Slot demanded a bolder approach; his players responded with a display that blended attacking ambition with defensive composure and, crucially, kept alive the club’s push for a top-four finish on a night when both Chelsea and Manchester United slipped up elsewhere.
Operating as the central hub of Liverpool’s forward thrusts, Wirtz did not score, yet no one on the pitch attempted more shots, worked the goalkeeper more often, saw more of the ball or probed the final third with greater regularity. Speaking to TNT Sports afterwards, the midfielder struck a modest tone—“Every good game gives you confidence, when you get the ball and you can do special things, it is always good to have these games”—but the numbers told a story of outright dominance.
The exhibition did not go unnoticed by one of Anfield’s favourite sons. Steven Gerrard, assessing the contest for TNT Sports, lavished praise on the youngster: “His technical level, it is world class. He’s got the world at his feet and he’s so exciting to watch. In tight areas his first touch is immaculate, his awareness is superb. I always watch players and think to myself: would I like to play with him? As a player, I would have loved to play with him. He’s always in space, he’s so clever in terms of where he receives the ball.”
Gerrard’s endorsement underlines the rapid rise of a player who has become Liverpool’s primary creative force during a turbulent stretch. With the season entering its decisive phase, Slot will hope Wirtz can maintain that influence and propel the club back among the Premier League’s elite.
Read more →Lewis Hamilton: Fans won’t understand “ridiculously complex" F1 energy management
Sakhir, Bahrain – Lewis Hamilton has warned that the sport’s 2026-spec hybrid power units are so intricate that even seasoned engineers need a “degree” to grasp them, let alone the millions watching at home.
After his first morning in Ferrari’s SF-26 at Bahrain’s final pre-season test, the seven-time champion told reporters that the new 50:50 split between electrical and internal-combustion output has turned every lap into a high-speed chess match between driver, battery and software. “None of the fans will understand it, I think,” Hamilton said. “It’s so complex, it’s ridiculously complex. I had seven meetings one day and they take us through it.”
The crux of the problem is energy bookkeeping. Drivers must discharge and recharge the battery repeatedly each lap, yet the optimal harvesting and deployment windows are still unknown. Algorithms learn a driver’s style on the fly, but a single lock-up or off-line moment scrambles the calculations, forcing teams to re-evaluate on the next pass. “We’re just trying to get on top of it,” Hamilton admitted. “But everyone’s in the same boat.”
The knock-on effects are visible from the grandstands. To generate enough regen under braking, cars are being dropped to second or even first gear in corners where they previously carried sixth-gear speeds. The resulting rpm spikes unsettle the rear axle just as the new low-downforce aero packages shed grip. “We can’t recover enough battery power, so that’s why we have to rev the engines very, very high,” Hamilton explained. “If you look at Barcelona, [there was] about 600 m lift-and-coast on a qualifying run. That’s not often the case.”
Whether drivers will be able to hold the throttle flat through qualifying, or how they will manage the increased turbo-lag at race starts, remains an open question. What is clear is that software, not right foot, will decide the fastest way around the lap. “The driver’s role will simply be to do as cued,” Hamilton conceded, raising fears that television audiences will struggle to appreciate the skill involved.
Teams spent the opening day in Bahrain experimenting with braking points, lift-and-coast lengths and gear-ratio choices, producing lap-to-lap variations even within the same driver’s programme. With five days of Spanish shakedown data already logged, the focus has shifted to pure performance, yet the learning curve remains steep.
As the sun set over the desert circuit, Hamilton’s summary was blunt: the 2026 regulations promise greener racing, but at the cost of a spectacle only a postgraduate engineer might love.
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England captain Brook confident of Super 8 qualification despite West Indies loss
Mumbai — England captain Harry Brook insists his side’s path to the T20 World Cup Super 8 remains intact after a 30-run defeat to the West Indies left them third in Group C with two fixtures to play.
Set 197 on a used surface at the Wankhede, England were dismissed for 166 in the 19th over as slow left-arm duo Gudakesh Motie and Akeal Hosein, supported by off-spinner Roston Chase, shared seven wickets and exposed familiar frailties against spin.
The loss follows a narrow opening-night escape against Nepal, and means Saturday’s meeting with Scotland in Kolkata is now effectively a knockout. A second defeat would leave England on two points and vulnerable to an early exit.
Brook, leading the side in his first global event as captain, refused to accept the campaign is drifting off course.
“You have to be confident in this game,” he told Sky Sports Cricket.
“We thank God we won against Nepal the other night, otherwise we’d be in a tricky situation. We play Scotland and Italy next. We’ve just got to go back, do our homework on them, go back to the basics and see how we go.”
Former England skipper Nasser Hussain believes the West Indies performance should serve as a wake-up call rather than a death knell.
“You have to give credit to how well the West Indies spinners bowled,” Hussain said.
“It is survival of the fittest nowadays in T20 cricket and adapting, because your match-up is never going to always be in your favour. If there is an Achilles heel, it is the playing of spin for England.”
Hussain pointed to Phil Salt’s early assault on the seamers as proof of England’s explosive depth, but warned the Scotland clash now carries added jeopardy.
“That Scotland game becomes absolutely key,” he added.
“Scotland, in the last World Cup in Barbados, caused a bit of a scare for England. If England lose to Scotland, Scotland go to four points, England are on two and then anything can happen.”
Still, Hussain backed England to advance if they address their spin issue.
“I expect England to beat Scotland and I expect them to beat Italy. One loss against the West Indies is not doom and gloom. You’re still a very good side.”
England’s final group matches against Scotland and Italy will be shown live on Sky Sports, with the winners progressing to the Super 8 phase in Sri Lanka.
Read more →PSG President Hails Collapse of Super League as Victory for Football
Paris Saint-Germain president Nasser Al-Khelaifi has declared “football is the winner” after Real Madrid formally announced the demise of the proposed Super League, ending a three-year standoff that once threatened to fracture the European game.
Speaking to reporters after Madrid confirmed the project’s closure, Al-Khelaifi—who also serves as the European Club Association’s representative on the UEFA Executive Committee—praised the Spanish club’s chairman for initiating the debate, while welcoming the final outcome.
“I thank Florentino Perez, the elegant and intelligent man, the visionary, who always strives to develop and improve things,” Al-Khelaifi said. “And whoever says or believes that Perez ‘lost’ today is completely ignorant and understands nothing about football.”
The breakaway competition, unveiled in April 2021, sought to create a closed league format independent of UEFA governance. Resistance from fans, governments and the majority of Europe’s top clubs quickly reduced the original 12 founding members to a rump of two Spanish giants. Barcelona’s recent decision to abandon the project left Real Madrid as its sole public supporter, prompting the club to acknowledge defeat and re-engage with UEFA and the ECA.
Al-Khelaifi expressed satisfaction that unity had been restored, thanking “everyone, all the parties involved in this historic agreement” and singling out UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin for his “tireless” efforts on behalf of the continent’s teams.
“The most important thing here is that we are all winners, no one is a loser,” he insisted. “Football is the winner, and that’s what we all wanted. This was the goal we set for ourselves for the good of football and its fans.”
With the Super League chapter now closed, attention turns to the next cycle of UEFA competitions and the ongoing push for governance reforms promised in the wake of the 2021 crisis.
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Barcelona ace Robert Lewandowski has ‘five serious offers’ – including one from Atletico
Robert Lewandowski faces a pivotal summer as the 37-year-old striker weighs up “five serious offers” while entering the final months of his Barcelona contract, according to Mundo Deportivo.
Atletico Madrid have emerged as a surprise suitor, while Major League Soccer’s Chicago Fire, AC Milan, Turkish giants Fenerbahce and an unnamed Saudi Arabian club have also tabled proposals. Despite the external interest, Lewandowski’s first choice remains a renewed deal at Camp Nou, even if it requires accepting a significant reduction on his current salary.
Barcelona sporting director Deco told Sport this week that no resolution is imminent. “I think time will take care of it. I think Robert also has his personal plans and from there, we’ll see,” Deco said. “Before we also need to know a little about how we have Fair Play, we have to clarify the future of the squad and we have not yet reached this point. The moment we are clear about everything we can do, we will face the issues we have, such as Robert’s.”
Mundo Deportivo report that the Poland captain will hold off on any commitment until April, when he expects clearer guidance on Barcelona’s financial position and squad planning. The veteran forward has maintained strong form this season, reinforcing his reputation as, in Deco’s words, “one of the best strikers in the world.”
With the clock ticking on both the season and his existing deal, Lewandowski’s decision will shape the attacking landscape for several clubs across Europe and beyond.
Read more →“We focus” – Unai Emery reacts as Aston Villa cap off bad week of results for Chelsea
Aston Villa manager Unai Emery refused to be drawn into talk of the top-four race after his side’s late winner against Brighton extended Chelsea’s miserable run, insisting his only concern is the next match on Villa’s schedule.
The 2-1 victory at Villa Park, sealed by a stoppage-time goal, lifted Villa six points clear of Chelsea, who have now endured a damaging sequence of results. Chelsea entered the midweek round buoyed by a bright opening against Leeds United on Tuesday, racing into a 2-0 lead inside the first 45 minutes. Yet a rare lapse from Mois Caicedo, followed by defensive uncertainty, allowed Leeds to claw back a 2-2 draw at Stamford Bridge.
Leeds boss Liam Rosenior highlighted the Ecuadorian’s mistimed challenge as the turning point, praising his own side’s response without singling out the Chelsea midfielder for blame.
Above Mauricio Pochettino’s team, the picture darkened further. Manchester City kept the pressure on leaders Arsenal with a 3-0 rout of Fulham, while Manchester United salvaged a late point at West Ham to remain one point ahead of Chelsea in the standings.
Villa, meanwhile, appeared destined to stay only four points clear of the Londoners until their dramatic winner against Brighton. Emery, whose side have now taken maximum advantage of Chelsea’s stumbles, was quick to swat away questions about the shifting table.
“I don’t want to speak about other teams,” the Spaniard told Birmingham Live. “We focus on ourselves, in our way, our points, and how we build the team. We are trying to focus on each match. Other teams will win and lose. If we lose, then we are out, but if we win, then we keep a good way. We focus on each competition and each match.”
With the gap widening and fixtures running out, Villa’s late flourish has intensified the pressure on Chelsea, whose top-four hopes now hinge on a swift reversal of form.
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Deco Confirms Barcelona’s Plans for Andreas Christensen
Barcelona sporting director Deco has outlined the club’s intentions regarding defender Andreas Christensen, whose contract expires this summer and who is currently sidelined with injury. Speaking to Sport, Deco said the Catalan giants will table an offer that reflects both the player’s past contributions and his uncertain physical condition.
“With some players, such as Andreas, the idea was to follow his trajectory a little this season,” Deco explained. “He is a player who has given us a lot. In his first year here, with Xavi, he played a lot of games and was key in the league he won. He is a player of a very high level.”
The 27-year-old’s recent campaigns, however, have been disrupted by recurring injuries. “It is true that in recent years he has been very conditioned by injuries,” Deco acknowledged. “The idea this season was to analyse their situation and, from there, decide how to proceed. The injury is a little ahead of that decision.”
Deco stressed that the club does not wish to leave Christensen in limbo while he rehabs. “We don’t want to leave the player in a complicated situation, because we believe that he will hardly be able to play between now and the end of the season. Therefore, the idea is to offer him something compatible, which we believe is fair.”
The final call will rest with the Denmark international. “From there, the player is free to make decisions. He is not obliged to stay at Barça, but we are going to try, at least, that he has an offer on the table, that he can evaluate it and then decide what he considers best for his future.”
Christensen has previously stated his desire to remain at Camp Nou, insisting he has “no Plan B,” a stance that suggests he is open to accepting whatever terms Barcelona propose. With the summer window approaching, both parties face a pivotal few weeks as they attempt to secure continuity amid ongoing fitness concerns.
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England Coach Tuchel Set To Sign New Deal Until 2028: Report
London – England head coach Thomas Tuchel is poised to commit his future to the national team through 2028, according to a report in The Times. The Football Association is expected to confirm the extension later on Thursday, removing any uncertainty over the German’s position only months before this summer’s World Cup in North America.
Tuchel, appointed as Gareth Southgate’s successor in October 2024, has repeatedly stated his ambition to add a “second star” to the England shirt by winning the 2026 tournament. Securing a new four-year deal would underline the FA’s faith in the former Chelsea manager to end a 62-year trophy drought for the men’s side, dating back to the 1966 World Cup triumph on home soil.
Qualification for the forthcoming World Cup proved routine for Tuchel’s squad, who won all eight fixtures in a group containing Albania, Serbia, Latvia and Andorra. The path ahead in North America is expected to be far steeper: if England top their group, a last-16 meeting with co-hosts Mexico looms, potentially followed by a quarter-final showdown against five-time champions Brazil.
The contract extension would also end speculation linking Tuchel with a return to club football. Manchester United have been searching for a permanent successor to Ruben Amorim, and the 50-year-old had been mentioned as a candidate despite caretaker Michael Carrick guiding the club to improved results in recent weeks. By signing fresh terms with England, Tuchel would rule himself out of contention for the Old Trafford role once the World Cup concludes.
An official announcement from the FA is anticipated imminently, signalling the governing body’s long-term vision around a coach who has quickly galvanised both players and supporters since taking charge less than a year ago.
Read more →Oman fields first against co-host Sri Lanka at the T20 World Cup
PALLEKELE, Sri Lanka — Oman won the toss and elected to field first against co-host Sri Lanka in their Group B T20 World Cup clash, a decision that quickly backfired as the home side piled up a tournament-best 225-5.
Captain Dasun Shanaka shattered his own national record for the fastest Twenty20 half-century, reaching the milestone in just 19 balls before departing the next delivery. Shanaka’s assault included five sixes, bettering the 20-ball fifty he had posted against India in 2023.
Kusal Mendis (61) and Pavan Rathnayake (60) set the platform with a 94-run third-wicket stand off 52 balls after Sri Lanka lost Pathum Nissanka and Kamil Mishra inside the power play.
In reply, Oman managed only 120-9, succumbing to a 105-run defeat. Off-spinner Maheesh Theekshana led a five-pronged bowling effort with 2-11 from his four overs.
Forty-three-year-old Mohammad Nadeem provided lone resistance for Oman, becoming the oldest man to score a T20 World Cup half-century with an unbeaten 53 from 56 balls. Wasim Ali was the only other Oman batter to reach double figures, scoring 27.
The result leaves Sri Lanka with two wins from two games, though they are yet to face Group B heavyweights Australia and Zimbabwe.
Read more →The WSL2 January Transfer Window: A Tale of Contrasts, Caution and Ambition
The January transfer window has always been a barometer of intent in the second tier of English women’s football, but the 2025 edition felt like a lightning rod. Across the division, clubs either flexed new financial muscle or tightened belts, exposing a widening chasm between those who can buy immediate solutions and those who must trust in youth, loans and patience. From Birmingham’s sweeping rebuild to Newcastle’s headline-grabbing international imports, the market told two stories: one of bold ambition, the other of sober restraint. Few clubs embody that tension more starkly than Sunderland, whose quiet window has become the talking point of the league’s second half.
Birmingham City set the early pace, overhauling half a squad in a bid to claw back towards the WSL. Japanese full-back Asato Miyagawa and Norwegian centre-half Michaela Kovcs arrived with Scandinavian steel, while Swedish attacker Wilma Leidhammar and Finnish forward Lotta Lindström broadened the attacking palette. Out went six squad players, a signal that manager and board are aligned on an immediate return to the top flight. Bristol City, by contrast, refined rather than revolutionised: Katie Robinson’s pace from Aston Villa and Camila Sáez’s bite from West Ham added WSL know-how to a youthful squad that believes continuity can carry it over the line.
Charlton Athletic and Crystal Palace both targeted leadership. Charlton’s capture of Glasgow City captain Katie Lockwood and Hearts defender Lizzie Waldie added spine to a promotion push, while Palace’s coup of Welsh international Hayley Ladd from Everton gave the south Londoners a midfield general who has won trophies in two countries. Palace’s net outflow—creative winger Shanade Hopcroft to Birmingham—hinted at a squad reshuffle rather than pure addition, but the message was clear: aim up, not sideways.
Further north, Durham stuck to their tried-and-tested model: low-key but laser-focused. Dee Bradley’s arrival from Burnley adds Championship minutes, while Lily Agg’s loan from Birmingham supplies composure in the middle third. It is the sort of business that rarely trends on social media but keeps a club in the promotion hunt year after year.
No club trended louder, however, than Newcastle United. Backed by Premier League revenues, the Magpies splashed global talent across the league: United States full-back Kaitlyn Torpey, Swedish winger Emilia Larsson and forward Simone Charley arrived from the NWSL and Damallsvenskan respectively, while Ashanti Akpan’s move from Southampton added domestic depth. Each announcement was accompanied by slick graphics and sell-out shirt pre-orders, turning a winter window into a marketing carnival.
That spectacle casts a long shadow over Wearside. Sunderland’s only reinforcements were two loans: Manchester United teenager Mared Griffiths and Northern Ireland international Caragh Hamilton from Nottingham Forest. Both are highly rated; neither alters the long-term geometry of the squad. Headlines elsewhere screamed ambition; on Sunderland’s official channels the tone was measured, praising sustainability and pathway development. Supporters applaud the philosophy in principle yet lament its limitations in practice. When derby rivals Newcastle are importing World-Cup-level talent, the absence of a permanent signing feels less like prudence and more like surrender.
Club insiders insist targets were identified, fees agreed, personal terms negotiated—only for moves to collapse late, victims of wage structures that cannot compete with top-flight subsidisation. The hierarchy maintain that promotion remains plausible with the current group, pointing to a cohesive dressing-room and one of the country’s most productive academies. Yet the table is tightening: wins are morphing into draws, draws into defeats, and the gap between mid-table comfort and relegation unease is only four points.
The broader pattern is impossible to ignore. Ipswich Town’s international shopping list—Juventus keeper Lysianne Proulx, Deportivo midfielder Colette Cavanagh, Lazio winger Lucy Ashworth-Clifford—underlines how lower-league clubs now scout across borders. Portsmouth’s quieter window still added proven attackers Charlie Estcourt and Lucy Shepherd, plus two academy prospects, illustrating survival planning without financial roulette. Even Sheffield United, reticent by reputation, brought in Leicester’s Simone Sherwood and Wolves’ Tammi George to shore up a promotion push.
Forest, meanwhile, conducted the division’s most voluminous overhaul, signing seven players including ex-West Ham striker Leanne Kiernan and American youth international Joy Omewa. Out went Caragh Hamilton to Sunderland and Casey Howe to Wolves, evidence of a club aggressively re-positioning for a second-half surge.
Southampton’s solitary addition, Birmingham midfielder Tegan McGowan, was emblematic of a club confident in incremental gains rather than blockbuster splurges. It is a stance mirrored by Durham and, to a lesser extent, Charlton: trust the process, supplement sparingly, win sustainably.
Yet sustainability feels like a risky strategy when others are sprinting. The league’s financial topography now mirrors the men’s game: Premier League backing (Newcastle), Championship parachute finance (Birmingham), community ownership (Durham) and everything between. January merely magnified those fault lines.
For Sunderland, the frustration is existential. The region boasts a proud women’s football heritage, a fanbase that travels in hundreds not dozens, and an academy that produced England’s current No 9. Potential, however, does not score last-minute winners. Loans develop someone else’s asset; permanent signings build legacies. Every window that passes without adding lasting quality is another season gambling on the fitness and form of a wafer-thin squad.
Head coach and board alike stress that the model is not austerity for its own sake but a long-term vision to marry academy graduates with selective, value-driven recruitment. They point to data showing Sunderland’s average squad age remains among the lowest in the division, hinting at upside without the cliff-edge of decline. Critics counter that upside is meaningless if the club is not in the promotion places when the music stops.
The arithmetic is stark: nine clubs now harbour realistic promotion or survival agendas, and the table can pivot on a single weekend. One injury to a key Sunderland creative midfielder, one suspension to a 15-goal striker, and the season’s narrative flips from push to panic. Loans cannot be recalled fast enough; permanent depth insulates against calamity.
Still, the season is not lost. The squad retains one of the division’s stingiest defences, a testament to organisation and spirit. If Griffiths or Hamilton can provide the marginal gains management crave, the gamble may yet pay off. Football is littered with clubs who spent big in January and still fell short; Sunderland hope to become the counter-example, the team that trusted continuity and reaped reward.
Yet perception matters. Every social-media scroll brings images of Newcastle players holding black-and-white scarves aloft, of Birmingham’s new Scandinavian defender scoring on debut, of Ipswich’s American keeper pulling off stoppage-time saves. Sunderland’s feeds show training-ground smiles and academy call-ups—uplifting, wholesome, but unlikely to shift the needle of expectation.
The window, then, told a tale of two philosophies. One believes money spent is ambition proved; the other that money unspent is future secured. Both can be right, both can be wrong, but only May’s final table will adjudicate. Until then, Wearside waits, watches, and wonders what might have been.
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Premier League's Nottingham Forest fires head coach Sean Dyche
Nottingham Forest have dismissed manager Sean Dyche, the club confirmed late Wednesday, ending his brief tenure after a goalless draw with bottom-of-the-table Wolves. The result leaves the Reds searching for their fourth permanent head coach of the campaign as the club scrambles to halt a slide that has seen them slip toward the relegation zone.
Dyche, appointed earlier this season, was relieved of his duties following the stalemate at the City Ground, a performance that failed to convince the Forest hierarchy that the former Burnley boss could reverse the team’s fortunes. The club’s statement did not specify a timeline for naming a successor, but sources inside the organisation say the recruitment process is already under way.
Forest’s revolving-door dugout underscores the mounting pressure on the two-time European champions, who have oscillated between encouraging performances and damaging defeats. Wednesday’s draw extended an uneven run that has left supporters frustrated and the board fearing a return to the Championship after last season’s promotion.
With the Premier League season approaching its final third, the next appointment is viewed inside the club as pivotal to preserving top-flight status. Until a replacement is found, assistant coach Steven Reid is expected to take temporary charge of first-team affairs, beginning with Saturday’s trip to an as-yet-unnamed opponent.
Nottingham Forest declined to comment further on Dyche’s departure or the terms of his exit, but the decision signals a clear demand for immediate improvement as the East Midlands outfit fights to avoid a relegation dogfight.
Read more →Liverpool plotting €80m move for Barcelona defender Jules Kounde
Liverpool are ready to test Barcelona’s resolve with an €80 million bid for Jules Kounde next summer, Mundo Deportivo reports, as the Reds scramble to solve an injury-ravaged right-back department.
The Merseysiders have already committed £60 million to Rennes centre-back Jeremy Jacquet for 2025-26, but further reinforcements are now deemed essential. Jeremie Frimpong’s maiden campaign has been repeatedly interrupted by fitness setbacks, Conor Bradley is expected to miss the rest of the current season after knee surgery, and emergency stand-in Wataru Endo was stretchered off with a serious ankle injury during Wednesday’s clash with Sunderland.
Kounde, a 27-year-old French international, has redefined himself as an elite right-back since arriving at Camp Nou, despite arriving as a centre-back. He was a key figure in Barcelona’s domestic treble last term, memorably striking the winner against Real Madrid in the Copa del Rey final. This season has brought a dip in output—three goals and two assists in 35 games—and patchy form has invited scrutiny from supporters and pundits alike.
Barcelona, however, retain leverage: Kounde’s contract runs to 2031 and the club will not entertain anything below the €80 million marker. Such a windfall would ease the club’s ongoing financial strain and allow them to operate under La Liga’s 1:1 spending rule without restriction. Eric Garcia and Joao Cancelo provide cover at right-back, while 19-year-old Hector Fort is impressing on loan at Elche and is scheduled to return ahead of next season.
For Liverpool, the equation is simple—pay the premium or risk another campaign of instability on the flank.
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Christian Norgaard, Arsenal's selfless 'spare man' and his important role in Arteta's squad
London – When Arsenal’s team bus rolled out toward Elland Road on 31 January, Christian Norgaard’s name did not appear on the official teamsheet. The 31-year-old Denmark international instead travelled as the club’s designated “spare man”, a role usually reserved for academy prospects or third-choice goalkeepers. That a former Brentford captain and Premier League ever-present would accept such an assignment underlines both Norgaard’s humility and Mikel Arteta’s trust in him.
Within minutes of arrival, the plan changed. Bukayo Saka pulled up in the warm-up, and Norgaard was promoted to the substitutes’ bench. No fuss, no frantic re-wiring of tactics: the midfielder had prepared all week as if he would start, a discipline he repeats daily despite starting only four league fixtures and totalling 22 Premier League minutes this season.
Fifteen times this campaign Norgaard has watched the final whistle from the dug-out without leaving it. Twice in January he was omitted entirely, again listed as the emergency spare. Yet those absences have never translated into apathy. “I knew it would be a different role here,” Norgaard said before the Champions League tie with Kairat Almaty. “I try to embrace it as much as possible.”
Arteta’s decision to sign Norgaard last summer was born of necessity. Jorginho and Thomas Partey departed, and with them more than 300 top-flight appearances of midfield know-how. Arsenal explored a loan for Bayern Munich’s Joao Palhinha but balked at the cost. Brentford’s Danish anchor, fresh from signing a new contract in west London, emerged as the pragmatic solution. Brentford reluctantly sanctioned the move after receiving glowing references about Norgaard’s professionalism.
The midfielder’s adaptation to north London has been seamless off the pitch, painstaking on it. Training sessions at London Colney are renowned for their forensic detail; Norgaard needed weeks to acclimatise but never wavered. Arteta calls him “someone who makes all of us better every day”, while Martin Zubimendi labels the Dane the club’s “best trainer”.
Team-mates echo the praise. Asked by the Premier League in February which player raises daily standards, Leandro Trossard nominated Norgaard instantly: “He always wants to set a higher standard for himself on and off the pitch.”
That influence has been particularly valuable in cup competitions. Norgaard played the full 90 minutes in all three Carabao Cup ties en route to this month’s Wembley final, and featured in five of eight Champions League fixtures, including an emergency shift as centre-half during the 3-0 win at Club Brugge. With Mikel Merino now sidelined after foot surgery, Norgaard’s readiness to step into the league’s most critical double-pivot alongside Declan Rice and Zubimendi could yet shape the run-in.
Tonight Norgaard returns to the Gtech Community Stadium, the ground he captained for two seasons. The prospect of facing Brentford, where he was once the first name on the teamsheet, carries emotional weight, yet selection remains contingent on the fitness of those ahead of him. “If everyone is available, maybe I’m the spare man again,” he conceded. “But I’ll be ready.”
That readiness defines his contribution. Arsenal’s staff credit him with normalising competition, pushing first-team regulars through the simple force of example. “Whether he plays more or fewer minutes, his attitude is immaculate,” Arteta said in December. “A really good example for all of us.”
For Norgaard, motivation is internal. “I don’t train to get closer to the team,” he said. “I do it because I feel better as a human being.” Still, frustration surfaces on the days he is left out entirely. “You feel a little bit helpless,” he admitted. “It’s about how you turn that frustration into positive energy you can transmit to team-mates.”
The personal rewards compensate. Hearing the Champions League anthem fulfilled “a childhood dream”; seeing his son Elliot in an Arsenal shirt bearing the family name moved him to tears. Back in Denmark his grandmother compiles every newspaper clipping into annual scrapbooks, a Christmas-Eve ritual that could yet feature trophy celebrations should Arsenal convert cup runs into silverware.
Sunday’s FA Cup tie at home to Wigan offers another opportunity for Norgaard to add minutes, lighten the load on Rice and Zubimendi, and edge closer to the medals that have eluded him outside Denmark. Whether he starts, sits among the substitutes, or once again assumes the low-profile mantle of spare man, Christian Norgaard’s role in Arteta’s squad is already secure: the selfless professional whose standards quietly drive Arsenal’s pursuit of success.
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Why Avram Glazer’s billion-dollar pursuit of Indian cricket power makes perfect business sense
Avram Glazer is no stranger to headline-grabbing price tags, and the numbers now swirling around the Indian Premier League suggest he may finally be ready to land one. Reports from Mumbai last week place the Manchester United co-owner among the leading bidders for both the Rajasthan Royals and Royal Challengers Bengaluru, franchises that could command $1.2 billion and $1.8 billion respectively. If successful, Glazer would add a trophy asset in the world’s fastest-growing major sport to a portfolio that has already delivered a 400 per cent appreciation on the £790 million the Glazer family paid for United in 2005.
The timing is no accident. Since 2019, when he first explored entry into the IPL, Glazer has methodically circled cricket’s most lucrative league, missing out on expansion teams that ultimately sold for a combined $1.7 billion in 2021. Rather than retreat, he pivoted—acquiring the Sharjah-based Desert Vipers for $30 million in 2022 and attempting to buy into English cricket’s Hundred competition last year. Those moves, while smaller, kept him inside the sport’s increasingly Americanised ownership club that already includes Todd Boehly and Tom Wagner.
Industry analysts say the attraction is obvious. “The IPL is the biggest shooting star in global sport right now,” says Gareth Balch, CEO of analytics firm Two Circles. Franchise valuations have multiplied ten-fold since 2008, powered by a $1.2 billion annual domestic media-rights deal that is expected to rise sharply when it is re-tendered next year. Clubs share that income equally, operate under a strict player-salary cap and face no threat of relegation—mirroring the closed-league, cost-certainty model American investors prize in the NFL.
India’s macro-economics add rocket fuel. The country overtook China as the planet’s most populous nation in 2023, boasts 1.47 billion residents and a top-five global economy. Cricket is woven into daily life; no other sport registers in the national consciousness. “Demographics are destiny,” Balch notes. “There are more cricket fans in India than any other country has people.”
That scale creates a moat. Start-up costs for a new IPL team would be prohibitive, and no rival league can match the tournament’s broadcast reach or commercial pull. “Your risk of disruption is almost zero,” says Amber Pinto, partner at Pinto Capital. Oakwell Sports Advisory projects average franchise revenue will top $150 million by 2031, double today’s figure, as India’s middle class expands and digital platforms bid for rights.
American investors also spy a domestic angle. The south-Asian diaspora in the United States—many in high-paying tech jobs—has pushed cricket into the mainstream conversation. T20’s inclusion in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, championed by an ICC heavily influenced by India’s board, will only accelerate that trend. “Cricket is the second-biggest sport on earth and yet has hardly penetrated the U.S. market. But it will,” insists Andrew Umbers of Oakwell.
For Glazer, the appeal is threefold: a league with NFL-style economics, a demographic tailwind in India and an untapped frontier at home. Having already extracted an estimated £1.4 billion in dividends and asset sales from Manchester United while retaining control of a club now valued near £5 billion, he has the liquidity and the template. Whether he ultimately lands the Royals or the more expensive Royal Challengers, the bet is the same: Indian cricket’s trajectory still points steeply upward, and the window to board the rocket may be narrowing.
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Bayern Munich News: The aftermath of FC Bayern’s 2-0 win over RB Leipzig in the DFB-Pokal
Allianz Arena, Munich — Vincent Kompany’s Bayern Munich cleared the latest hurdle on their DFB-Pokal journey, grinding out a 2-0 victory over an RB Leipzig side desperate to snap a long-running losing streak against the record cup holders. From the opening whistle Leipzig played with the urgency of a team tired of being “torched” by the Bavarians, yet Bayern’s composure in front of their home crowd ultimately told the story.
The win keeps Bayern on course for one of the club’s stated seasonal objectives—lifting the trophy in Berlin—and offered Kompany another data point as he evaluates which combinations best balance steel and creativity. Although the scoreline suggests comfort, those inside the stadium saw a tense affair settled by efficiency in the final third and a disciplined defensive shape that limited Leipzig to half-chances.
Attention now pivots to the looming summer window, where movement in and out of Säbener Straße is expected to pick up pace. The most definitive exit on the horizon is Leon Goretzka. Multiple reports confirm the 31-year-old Germany international will leave after the campaign, with the Premier League his preferred destination. Arsenal remain long-time admirers, while Tottenham Hotspur’s entry into the race gives Goretzka two high-profile London options. AC Milan have maintained regular contact with his representatives, yet Calciomercato notes that the Rossoneri’s financial reservations over his salary demands could prove prohibitive. Atlético Madrid also linger in the background, but England increasingly looks like the next chapter for the midfielder.
Elsewhere on the rumor front, Bayern have distanced themselves from links to Manchester United right-back Diogo Dalot. Sport Bild’s Christian Falk categorically ruled out interest, explaining that the club’s immediate budgetary focus lies in attacking reinforcements. “They’re searching for a player behind Luis Díaz,” Falk indicated, adding that defensive targets have been “parked” until the hierarchy clarifies other positional plans.
While Bayern prioritize offensive additions, Manchester United are reportedly ready to test Newcastle’s resolve for Sandro Tonali. The 25-year-old Italian, who was tentatively connected with Arsenal in January, is seen as an ideal partner for the resurgent Kobbie Mainoo at Old Trafford. Champions League football next season is understood to be a key factor for Tonali, placing Newcastle under pressure should they fail to secure a top-four finish. Manchester City and Juventus are also monitoring the situation, hinting at a potential scramble for the midfielder’s signature.
In other transfer notes, Juventus continue to lead the chase for Paris Saint-Germain’s Randal Kolo Muani. Tottenham, who have the Frenchman on loan, appear reluctant to trigger a permanent deal, leaving the Bianconeri in pole position despite Muani’s two remaining years in the French capital.
Back in Bavaria, speculation around a shock swoop for Werder Bremen’s Nick Woltemade persists, while pursuit of Borussia Dortmund defender Nico Schlotterbeck looks unlikely. Bayern’s recent three-point haul against Hoffenheim has lifted spirits, yet the club remain guarded about the availability of emerging talent Lennart Karl, suggesting any attempt to prise him away will be met with resistance.
For comprehensive reaction to the Leipzig cup win, readers can revisit the outlet’s Initial Analysis, Match Awards, Observations, and Postgame Podcast. Additional Bayern and German national team insight is available via the Bavarian Podcast Works network on Acast, Spotify, Apple, and other major platforms.
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High school scoreboard: Manor stuns No. 4 Lake Taylor in boys basketball upset
In a dramatic turn on the hardwood, Manor pulled off the night’s biggest shock, toppling fourth-ranked Lake Taylor in a boys basketball upset that will reverberate through the rankings. Details of the final score and standout performers were not released, but the result alone underscores the unpredictability of the season’s closing weeks.
Elsewhere on the local hardwood, top-ranked Princess Anne continued its dominant march, collecting its 21st win of the campaign by routing Landstown 85-33. The victory further cements the squad’s grip on the No. 1 spot and highlights the widening gap between the region’s elite and the rest of the field.
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Knoxville Webb vs. Alcoa: Where to watch Tennessee boys high school basketball nondistrict matchup live
Defending state champion Webb rides a 17-game winning streak into Thursday night’s nondistrict showdown at Alcoa. The contest pits two of East Tennessee’s most competitive programs, with Webb looking to extend its momentum and Alcoa aiming to snap the streak on its home floor. Tip-off is scheduled for Thursday evening; local broadcast and streaming options will carry the game live.
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Rocky football signs 18 Montanans in Randy Bandelow's initial recruiting class
BILLINGS — First-year Rocky Mountain College head football coach Randy Bandelow unveiled his inaugural recruiting class on Wednesday, a 29-player group that features 18 Montanans and signals an emphatic commitment to home-grown talent.
Bandelow, who was introduced at the Fortin Center on Jan. 15, leaned heavily on in-state products to shape the foundation of his program. Among the signees are Billings West quarterback CJ Johnson, Melstone two-way standout Nolan Kamerman, Three Forks athlete Jace Wiseman, Columbus linebacker Colter Chamberlin, and Bozeman Gallatin defensive back Braeden Matthews.
The class spans the breadth of Montana’s high-school landscape, pulling prospects from Class AA powers to 6-Man outposts and reinforcing Bandelow’s pledge to keep the state’s top players inside its borders.
Rocky athletic officials said the emphasis on Montanans reflects both a philosophical approach and a strategic recruiting plan designed to build sustainable success.
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Atlético Madrid vs Barcelona, Copa del Rey: Team News, Match Preview
Madrid — When Barcelona step beneath the Wanda Metropolitano floodlights on Thursday night, they will do so knowing that the 2025-26 Copa del Rey may be decided over the next 180 minutes. The semi-final first leg (21:00 CET) pits the competition’s two heaviest hitters against one another, with the victors likely to enter the final as overwhelming favourites against either Athletic Bilbao or Real Sociedad.
Barça arrive in the capital buoyed by a weekend victory over Mallorca that kept them atop La Liga, yet the visitors have been forced to patch a midfield already missing Gavi, Pedri and Raphinha. January recruit Marcus Rashford and defender Andreas Christensen have also been ruled out, leaving coach Hansi Flick—who has not been named in the source material—reliant on a youthful spine anchored by Frenkie de Jong and 17-year-old centre-half Pau Cubarsí.
Atlético, meanwhile, must cope without American destroyer Johnny Cardoso and emerging Spanish pivot Pablo Barrios, both sidelined, while Nico González faces a late fitness test. The absences could prove critical: Barrios’ ball-winning and distribution have underpinned Atleti’s best performances this term, including last week’s 4-0 demolition of Real Betis in Seville. Without him, captain Koke will be asked to shield a back four that concedes territory when the side presses high.
Diego Simeone’s men have oscillated between exhilarating and exasperating all season. Three days after routing Betis in the cup, they succumbed to the same opponents in league play, highlighting a Jekyll-and-Hyde narrative that makes forecasting Thursday’s outcome perilous. What is certain is Atleti’s need to seize the initiative on home soil; a cagey, counter-attacking approach would cede momentum ahead of the return leg at Camp Nou, where Barça routed Atlético 3-1 earlier this campaign.
January signing Ademola Lookman has offered an immediate jolt on the left flank, his direct running complementing Antoine Griezmann’s invention and compensating for Julián Alvarez’s barren patch. Lookman’s duel against teenage prodigy Lamine Yamal—flanked by Fermín López and Dani Olmo in Barça’s 4-2-3-1—promises fireworks.
The midfield battle looks lopsided on paper. A De Jong–Marc Bernal pivot offers Barcelona control, whereas Atleti’s improvised quartet could feature Giuliano Simeone tucking inside from the right to bolster numbers. Expect Simeone to instruct his full-backs, Llorente and Ruggeri, to push aggressively, gambling that centre-backs Pubill and Hancko can contain Ferran Torres’ diagonal runs.
With both sides obliged to attack, a high-scoring affair looms. A 2-2 draw would leave the tie deliciously poised, rewarding the travelling Catalans for away goals yet offering Atleti hope that a single moment of magic from Griezmann or Lookman can flip the script in Barcelona next month.
Whatever the result, the Copa del Rey’s de facto final begins tonight—and the stakes could scarcely be higher.
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UK PM Demands Apology from ‘Offensive’ Ratcliffe
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has called on Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe to apologise after the 73-year-old told Sky News that Britain has been “colonised” by immigrants, comments Downing Street branded “offensive and wrong.”
Speaking to Sky News on Wednesday, Ratcliffe said:
“You can’t have an economy with 9 million people on benefits and huge levels of immigrants coming in. I mean, the UK has been colonized. It’s costing too much money. ... The UK has been colonised by immigrants, really, hasn’t it?”
Within hours, Starmer responded on X:
“Offensive and wrong. Britain is a proud, tolerant and diverse country. Jim Ratcliffe should apologise.”
The remarks triggered swift condemnation from fan groups and anti-discrimination bodies. The Manchester United Muslim Supporters Club (MUMSC) said Ratcliffe’s language “mirrors far-right narratives,” adding:
“Manchester United is a global club built on diversity—on players, staff and supporters from every background, faith and ethnicity. The strength of our club, and of our country, lies in that diversity. We stand with all communities who reject racism, anti-Semitism, Islamophobia and hatred in all its forms, and we call for leadership that unites rather than divides.”
The Manchester United Supporters Trust echoed the concern, stating:
“Comments from the club’s senior leadership should make inclusion easier, not harder.”
Kick It Out, football’s leading anti-discrimination organisation, said Ratcliffe’s views are “disgraceful and deeply divisive at a time when football does so much to bring communities together,” concluding:
“This type of language and leadership has no place in English football, and we believe most fans will feel the same.”
As pressure mounts, the focus now shifts to whether Ratcliffe will issue the apology requested by the Prime Minister and, if not, how the backlash will affect both his public standing and Manchester United’s reputation as a club that prides itself on global inclusivity.
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Member of K-State Men’s Basketball Coaching Staff Arrested for Domestic Battery
Manhattan, Kan. — Kansas State men’s basketball graduate student manager Mark Vital Jr. was arrested early Monday on a domestic-battery charge, according to Riley County Police.
Officers responded at 12:20 a.m. on Feb. 9 to 606 Vattier St., No. 2, where the 29-year-old was taken into custody and booked into the Riley County Jail. He was later released after posting a $2,000 bond.
A second person, 27-year-old Kristen Blake Whiting Daniels, was arrested at the same address and charged with domestic battery and criminal damage to property. Daniels was released on a $4,000 bond.
K-State athletic officials issued a brief statement late Monday: “We are aware of Mark Vital’s arrest on Sunday night. He has been removed from all team responsibilities until the judicial process runs its course.”
Vital is in his first season with the Wildcats while pursuing a master’s degree in counseling and student development. He arrived in Manhattan with an extensive résumé that includes three All-Big 12 selections and a key role on Baylor’s 2021 national-championship team. A three-time Big 12 All-Defensive Team honoree, Vital twice reached semifinalist status for the Naismith Defensive Player of the Year award and was a finalist in 2020. During Baylor’s title run he set a school record with 45 career Big 12 victories and finished 10th in program history with 144 steals. In the championship win over Gonzaga he logged six points and 11 rebounds.
After earning a bachelor’s degree in health, kinesiology and leisure studies from Baylor in 2021, Vital briefly signed as a tight end with the Seattle Seahawks’ practice squad before joining the Kansas City Chiefs’ practice squad. He is known to head coach Jerome Tang from their overlapping years in Waco when Tang served as an assistant under Scott Drew.
The case remains pending as both the athletics department and legal process move forward.
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