Expert Sports News & Commentary

Eight players leave England camp ahead of Japan clash
Wembley Stadium will host a patched-up England side on Tuesday after eight senior players departed the national camp on Saturday, forcing head coach Thomas Tuchel into a major reshuffle ahead of the friendly against Japan.
The exodus, triggered by a combination of injuries and illness, has trimmed the original 35-man squad that gathered for the March internationals. The timing is particularly awkward: the Three Lions laboured to a 1-1 draw with Uruguay on Friday night and now have only one training session before their final warm-up of the break.
John Stones was the first to leave, returning to Manchester City after picking up an injury before the Uruguay game. Adam Wharton and Noni Madueke joined him on the casualty list after both were forced off with knocks during Friday’s contest. Arsenal trio Declan Rice, Bukayo Saka and goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale have headed back to North London for assessment, while defenders Fikayo Tomori and Dominic Calvert-Lewin complete the list of early exits.
The departures leave Tuchel short across multiple departments. The engine room has been hit hardest: the absence of Rice and Wharton strips the squad of two specialist midfield pivots, while Stones’ withdrawal compounds defensive concerns. Yet the German tactician views the crisis as an audition for fringe contenders hoping to secure one of the 26 berths available for this summer’s expanded World Cup squads.
England will open their Group L campaign against Croatia in Arlington, Texas, on 17 June, followed by meetings with Ghana and Panama. Tuesday’s sell-out at Wembley therefore represents the final chance for understudies to press claims, with a heavily rotated line-up expected from the 7.45 pm GMT kick-off.
Despite the setbacks, Tuchel remains upbeat, insisting the squad’s depth will be proven over the coming months. A victory against Japan would provide a timely dose of momentum heading into the final stretch before the North American tournament.
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The teams in Europe’s top leagues with the most players selected for March’s international break
Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain lead the continent in supplying talent for national teams this month, each releasing 17 players for international duty, according to figures compiled across Europe’s top five leagues. Pep Guardiola’s squad tops the Premier League contingent, underlining the depth of star power at the Etihad Stadium.
Crystal Palace have emerged as the surprise runners-up, matching heavyweight outfits Bayern Munich and Juventus with 15 call-ups. Patrick Vieira’s side are represented across a range of countries, including France debutant Maxence Lacroix, who featured against Brazil earlier in the window.
Manchester United and newly promoted Sunderland follow closely, contributing 14 players apiece to national squads. The March window features a packed schedule of World Cup qualifiers and preparatory fixtures, making squad depth a priority for clubs hoping to avoid fatigue and injury.
The data highlights the global reach of Europe’s elite leagues, with players jetting to every continent to represent their countries in a pivotal month for the international calendar.
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IPL 2026: Virat Kohli scripts history, becomes the first player to feature in all 19 seasons of the Indian Premier League
Bengaluru, March 28 — In a moment that will be etched into IPL folklore, Virat Kohli walked out at M. Chinnaswamy Stadium on Saturday evening and, with that single stride across the rope, became the first cricketer ever to appear in all 19 editions of the tournament. The milestone arrived during Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s lung-opener against Sunrisers Hyderabad, and Kohli marked it in signature style: an unbeaten 69 off 38 balls that piloted the hosts to a commanding six-wicket victory.
Chasing 202, RCB never allowed the asking rate to climb beyond reach. Devdutt Padikkal provided the early rocket fuel, blistering 61 from 26 deliveries and reaching his fifty in only 21 balls. His innings featured back-to-back leg-side sixes off David Payne and a carved four-six combo off Harsh Dubey, but it was Kohli who steered the chase with surgical precision. The 37-year-old blended vintage drives, wristy flicks and his trademark swat shot to raise a 33-ball half-century, then stayed till the finish as RCB wrapped up proceedings in 15.4 overs.
The pair’s 101-run second-wicket stand came in just 45 balls, shrinking a once-steep target into a formality. Brief flutters followed the departures of Padikkal, Rajat Patidar (31 off 12) and Jitesh Sharma, yet Kohli’s presence ensured the result was never in doubt.
Earlier, Sunrisers Hyderabad had threatened to set a steeper bar. Reduced to 29 for three by Jacob Duffy’s disciplined new-ball burst—3 for 22 on a pitch that had not seen top-flight cricket in almost ten months—SRH were revived by stand-in skipper Ishan Kishan. The wicket-keeper batter smashed 8 fours and 5 sixes in a 38-ball 80, sharing a 97-run fourth-wicket alliance with Heinrich Klaasen (31). Kishan’s blitz ended with a jaw-dropping one-handed grab by Phil Salt at deep backward point, but Aniket Verma kept swinging, finishing 43 not out off 19 after Kohli had shelled him on 26.
Yet all sub-plots were overshadowed by the headline act. As fireworks erupted beyond the stadium roof, Kohli acknowledged a capacity crowd that had witnessed more than a routine season starter: they had seen the league’s most enduring participant add another indelible chapter to its history books.
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Senegal, the AFCON trophy and a day of defiance in Paris: 'A people’s memory cannot be rewritten'
Paris — The Stade de France shook on Saturday evening, not merely because of the 68,000 spectators inside, but because of what they had come to defend. Senegal’s footballers, coaching staff and supporters staged a public reclamation of the Africa Cup of Nations trophy, 57 days after the Confederation of African Football (CAF) declared the title forfeited to hosts Morocco.
Two stars still sit above the national badge on every Senegal shirt, a silent rebuttal to the CAF appeals committee ruling that turned a 1-0 extra-time Senegalese victory in January’s Rabat final into a 3-0 forfeit win for Morocco. The decision, delivered on 28 February, cited Senegal’s temporary walk-off in protest at a late penalty award. Senegal’s government labelled the move an “attempt at unjustified dispossession,” and the Senegalese Football Federation (FSF) has since taken the matter to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) while lodging a criminal complaint against five individuals, none of them Moroccan federation officials.
Saturday’s friendly against Peru therefore became more than a World Cup warm-up. It was billed on social media as a trophy presentation, and the diaspora responded: trains from the Paris banlieues disgorged green, yellow and red; metro carriages rang with chants of “Nous sommes les champions!”; and outside the stadium vendors sold T-shirts bearing two stars long before kick-off.
Inside, a pre-match montage tracked the trophy’s journey from Dakar to Paris. When captain Kalidou Koulibaly emerged with the cup hoisted high, the roar rattled the upper tiers. The squad paraded the golden prize to every stand, pausing so head coach Pape Thiaw — architect of the Rabat walk-off — could lift it alone. A framed photograph with singer and former tourism minister Youssou N’Dour followed, then Koulibaly and stand-in skipper Edouard Mendy climbed to the VIP level. Mendy raised the trophy in one hand, flashed two fingers with the other, and set the cup on a Senegal flag draped in front of FSF president Abdoulaye Fall. It remained there throughout the 2-0 victory, guarded at half-time by a lone steward who, at full-time, zipped it into a rucksack and delivered it back to the players.
None of Koulibaly, Mendy or Sadio Mané featured on the pitch, yet Nicolas Jackson and Ismaila Sarr scored stylishly to suggest Group I opponents France and Norway, plus Tuesday’s Iraq-Bolivia play-off winner, will meet a confident side at the upcoming World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
The bigger contest, however, is being fought in offices 600 kilometres away. CAS in Lausanne is expected to need seven to nine months to rule on Senegal’s appeal; the FSF will request an accelerated procedure, though CAF and Morocco must agree. That timeline ensures the controversy will shadow the Lions into the global tournament.
In the mixed zone, Mendy cut short one reporter who queried whether he still considered himself champion. “Why should I not feel like an African champion?” he asked. “Everybody feels that Senegal are the champions… the football on the pitch is going faster than these people in the offices.” He later posted online: “A people’s memory cannot be rewritten. We will continue to defend what we have earned. Not out of arrogance, but out of respect for the game. And for the truth.”
Midfielder Lamine Camara admitted the squad still discusses the saga daily, while national-team ambassador El Hadji Diouf suggested a CAS victory should be marked with a third star. For now, Senegal’s supporters are content to celebrate the second, regardless of what any paper decree says.
As 25-year-old Senegalese-Guinean fan Khady Mendes put it before kick-off: “Come and get the cup if you want it.” On Saturday night in Paris, no one dared try.
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Barcelona consider Tottenham defender Vuskovic as Bastoni’s alternative
Barcelona have placed Tottenham Hotspur’s 18-year-old centre-back Luka Vuskovic on a shortlist of defensive reinforcements as they brace for Andreas Christensen’s expected free-transfer exit, AS reports.
With the Catalan club hunting a centre-half to compete with Eric Garcia, Ronald Araujo, Pau Cubarsi and Gerard Martin, Inter Milan’s Alessandro Bastoni remains the preferred target. Yet the Italy international’s €70 million valuation may force sporting officials to look elsewhere.
Vuskovic has emerged as the leading fallback option. Spurs paid Hajduk Split roughly €12 million for the teenager last summer before installing him at Hamburg, where he has started 24 Bundesliga matches. Data from those outings show the 6ft 4in defender winning 75 percent of aerial duels and 57 percent of ground duels, while his composure in possession has marked him as one of Europe’s most promising ball-playing centre-backs.
An unexpected bonus has been his threat at set pieces: five goals this season illustrate a knack for timing late runs into the opposition area. Such performances have attracted admiring glances from Bayern Munich, and sources indicate Vuskovic would welcome a move to a Champions League heavyweight should the opportunity arise.
Barcelona must weigh whether to double down on youth—Pau Cubarsi, 17, already features regularly—or prioritise experience and recovery pace to protect their high defensive line. Vuskovic, for all his talent, does not yet offer the leadership or seasoned judgement the coaching staff crave.
Any approach will meet stiff resistance in north London. Tottenham regard Vuskovic as a long-term pillar of their back four and, with Cristian Romero, Micky van de Ven and Radu Dragusin all facing uncertain futures, chairman Daniel Levy is expected to demand a premium fee well above the original investment.
Barcelona’s pursuit of Bastoni is unlikely to fade, yet Vuskovic’s name is now firmly in the conversation as the club maps out a pivotal summer rebuild.
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IPL 2026 Opener: Steyn’s Signed Jersey, Kohli’s Record Chase Power RCB Past SRH
Bengaluru, 30 March 2026 — Even before the first ball of IPL 2026 was bowled, M Chinnaswamy Stadium witnessed a scene that blurred the line between competition and camaraderie. Sunrisers Hyderabad bowling consultant Dale Steyn, clad in an early-iteration India jersey, approached Royal Challengers Bengaluru superstar Virat Kohli for an autograph. Kohli obliged, scrawling his signature across the fabric and handing it back with a grin. The brief exchange, captured on the broadcast feed, instantly went viral and set an unexpectedly nostalgic tone for the season’s curtain-raiser.
Once play began, Kohli ensured the focus swung back to the present. Chasing 202, the 37-year-old opener finished unbeaten on 69 off 38 balls, becoming the first batter in IPL history to accumulate 4,000 runs while batting second. The knock also nudged him past Pakistan’s Shoaib Malik (13,571 runs) to sixth place on the all-time T20 run charts.
RCB’s pursuit was anything but sedate. After early wickets, Impact Player Devdutt Padikkal detonated 61 from 26 deliveries—seven fours and four sixes—while captain Rajat Patidar muscled 31 off 12. The hosts galloped home in 15.4 overs, sealing a four-wicket victory and the fastest successful chase of a 200-plus target in IPL annals.
Earlier, Sunrisers had slipped to 32 for 3 inside the Power Play before stand-in skipper Ishan Kishan counter-attacked with 80 off 38 balls. Aniket Verma’s 18-ball 43 provided late lift, pushing SRH to 201 for 9. Jacob Duffy and Romario Shepherd claimed three wickets apiece for RCB, but the night ultimately belonged to the men in red and black—and to the signature that started it all.
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Man United have 'strong interest' in €45 million 'warrior' with historic feat
Manchester United have set their sights on AS Roma defender Evan Ndicka as they look to reinforce a back line that has struggled with both form and fitness this season. Sources close to the situation indicate that United have “strong interest” in the 26-year-old Ivorian, who is valued at €45 million ahead of the summer window.
Ndicka has emerged as one of Serie A’s most durable and consistent performers, logging every minute of every league fixture last campaign—a milestone that made him the first Roma outfield player to achieve the feat since the division expanded to 20 clubs in 2004. That remarkable availability addresses one of Erik ten Hag’s primary concerns, with injuries repeatedly depleting United’s defensive options.
Beyond reliability, the centre-back offers a blend of physicality and technical composure that scouts believe will translate seamlessly to the Premier League. He has already showcased an attacking threat, scoring three times in his last four appearances, and his ability to step out with the ball has become a hallmark of his game.
United view Ndicka as a potential long-term successor to Harry Maguire, whose future at Old Trafford remains uncertain. The club’s recruitment team believe the Roma man’s profile—left-footed, comfortable in a high line and dominant in the air—fits the tactical blueprint being implemented in Manchester.
Roma legend Claudio Ranieri has lauded the defender’s mentality, labelling him “a warrior” and praising his “phenomenal” impact on the squad. That combative streak has reportedly endeared him to United’s decision-makers, who are eager to inject greater resilience into the squad.
While United are confident they can meet the €45 million asking price, they are unlikely to have a clear run at the player. Liverpool and Tottenham are also monitoring developments, and the Premier League’s global appeal could sway Ndicka’s thinking as he contemplates the next step in his career.
Negotiations are yet to reach a formal stage, but the coming weeks are expected to determine whether United accelerate their pursuit and table an official bid. For now, the Ivorian remains focused on finishing the season strongly in Rome, even as speculation intensifies over a potential move to English football.
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David Beckham Talks Trent Alexander-Arnold's World Cup Hopes After England Snub
England legend David Beckham has voiced his surprise at Trent Alexander-Arnold’s continued omission from the national set-up, admitting he would find it “very hard” to leave the Liverpool defender out of a World Cup squad. The former Three Lions captain, whose own set-piece mastery and crossing ability helped define the national team for a decade, offered a blunt assessment of the selection dilemma surrounding one of English football’s most creative full-backs.
Speaking in the wake of Alexander-Arnold’s latest England snub, Beckham underlined the 25-year-old’s unique qualities, suggesting the right-back’s range of passing and attacking threat would be an asset in tournament football. While the current coaching regime has opted to look elsewhere, Beckham’s intervention amplifies the ongoing debate about balancing defensive solidity with offensive ingenuity on the international stage.
The comments from one of England’s most celebrated figures are likely to fuel fresh discussion among supporters and pundits alike as the next global showpiece edges closer, leaving question marks over whether Alexander-Arnold’s playmaking talents will ultimately be on display at a World Cup.
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Sports Focus: China's grassroots leagues kick sports economy into high gear
Amateur football leagues are exploding in popularity across China, turning ordinary players into hometown heroes and transforming weekend matches into citywide celebrations. These city-level competitions, now sweeping the nation, are stoking local pride and packing modest stadiums with drum-beating, scarf-waving supporters.
According to Xinhua sportswriter He Leijing, the phenomenon is more than a sporting curiosity: it is becoming a powerful new driver of consumption. As residents rally behind neighborhood clubs, bars, restaurants and merchandise vendors near match venues report a noticeable uptick in sales, underlining the economic ripple effect of grassroots sport.
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Virat Kohli spills truth: ‘Risk of burnout always higher than being undercooked’
Bengaluru: Virat Kohli opened IPL 2026 with a statement innings and an even louder statement on player workload, declaring that modern scheduling makes burnout a bigger danger than being under-prepared. The 36-year-old’s unbeaten 38-ball 69 piloted Royal Challengers Bengaluru to a six-wicket romp over Sunrisers Hyderabad at a packed M. Chinnaswamy Stadium on Saturday night, as the hosts hunted down 202 in just 15.4 overs.
Kohli, now an India player only in 50-over cricket after stepping away from Tests and T20Is, said selective breaks have become essential. “The kind of scheduling over the last 15 years meant there was always a risk of getting burnt out rather than being undercooked,” he explained after collecting the Player-of-the-Match award. “These breaks help me mentally… as long as you’re physically fit and mentally excited, both things come together nicely, then you’re able to contribute to the team’s cause.”
The chase was anything but conventional. Early loss of Phil Salt for 8 could have stalled RCB, but Kohli found an audacious ally in impact substitute Devdutt Padikkal, who blasted 61 off 26 balls. Their 101-run second-wicket stand came at better than two runs a ball and left SRH’s attack gasping. “Outstanding knock,” Kohli said of Padikkal. “Right from the word go, I had plans of going aggressive in the powerplay. But when I saw him play, I was like, just keep putting him back on strike. He completely took the game away.”
Kohli’s own knock was a masterclass in controlled aggression: five fours and five sixes, including a straight hit that rattled the sight screen and a swivel flick that sped to the fine-leg boundary with minimal footwork. The innings also extended his love affair with the IPL opener; his last T20 appearance before tonight was last year’s final, yet a recent one-day run for India kept him sharp. “I wasn’t playing shots that I don’t usually play… these breaks help me mentally. I stay fresh, I stay excited. Whenever I come back to play, it’s 120%.”
Earlier, Sunrisers rode a blistering 80 off 38 balls from stand-in skipper Ishan Kishan to reach 201/9. Kishan’s innings featured eight fours and five sixes, but New Zealand quick Jacob Duffy, on IPL debut, scythed through the top order to finish with 3/22. Salt contributed in the field as well, diving to his right to latch onto a one-handed catch that ended Kishan’s assault.
RCB’s reply was swift and clinical. Kohli and Padikkal’s fireworks ensured the required rate never crept above nine, and when Padikkal finally holed out, the skipper simply shepherded the chase home with 26 balls to spare. “As a player, you don’t want to just hold on to a spot; you want to keep performing and keep putting in the work for the team,” Kohli said, underlining the collective ethos he believes powers title bids.
Off the field, the evening carried sombre undertones. RCB wore black armbands and left 11 seats empty—one for each fan who tragically died during last year’s title parade—while players and spectators observed a minute’s silence before the first ball. The victory, dedicated to those supporters, sets an upbeat tone for a franchise chasing a maiden IPL crown.
Kohli’s message was clear: freshness trumps frequency. In an era of non-stop cricket, the former India captain is betting that selective availability will keep him firing at full capacity for the games that matter most.
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Aston Villa XI vs Chelsea – Predicted lineup and team news
Kingsmeadow, Sunday 29 March 2026, 12:00 GMT – Aston Villa arrive in south-west London chasing a slice of history. After 11 straight defeats against Chelsea in the Women’s Super League, manager Natalia Arroyo believes her eighth-placed side can finally post a first point – or more – against the Blues.
Villa’s recent form supports the optimism. Four points from the last six, including a resilient goalless draw with Manchester City and a stirring comeback victory at Leicester City, have lifted spirits inside the camp. That win at the King Power saw Kirsty Hanson and Anna Patten both find the net, and the pair are expected to carry that confidence into today’s contest.
Arroyo, however, continues to juggle a depleted squad. Rachel Daly and Gabi Nunes remain sidelined, while Missy Bo Kearns is unavailable after announcing her pregnancy earlier this month. The return of Japan international Maya Hijikata from Asian Cup duty offers a timely attacking boost; the forward’s pace and creativity are viewed as essential weapons against a Chelsea back line that has conceded in eight consecutive league fixtures.
In goal, Ellie Roebuck keeps her place behind a back four of Adriana Wilms, Patten, Anita Parker and Jenna Nighswonger. Oriane Jean-François will sit at the base of midfield alongside Jill Taylor, tasked with disrupting Chelsea’s possession rhythm. Ahead of them, a fluid three of Rachel Grant, Chloe Kendall and Laura Maritz will support lone striker Hanson, who has licence to drift wide and exploit spaces behind the hosts’ full-backs.
A repeat of the disciplined, compact display that frustrated Manchester City will be demanded; anything less risks another chapter in a lopsided head-to-head story. Yet with confidence rising and an opponent leaking goals, Villa sense the moment is ripe to rewrite the narrative.
Aston Villa predicted XI (4-2-3-1): Roebuck; Wilms, Patten, Parker, Nighswonger; Jean-François, Taylor; Grant, Kendall, Maritz; Hanson.
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How Spain won the 2010 World Cup: Clean sheets, lots of short passes, and a Barcelona core
Johannesburg, 11 July 2010 – When Andrés Iniesta’s right-foot shot thundered past Maarten Stekelenburg four minutes from the end of extra time, Spain’s decade of promise finally crystallised into glory. The 1-0 victory over the Netherlands in Soccer City delivered La Roja’s first World Cup and capped a campaign built on three uncompromising principles: immaculate defending, relentless short passing, and a spine drawn almost entirely from Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona.
Vicente del Bosque’s side arrived in South Africa as European champions, yet few predicted the manner in which they would dominate the tournament. While rivals complained that the Jabulani ball’s unpredictable flight neutered long-range efforts, Spain simply refused to hit them. Opting for metronomic combinations rarely exceeding 15 metres, they hoarded possession to suffocate opponents and protect a back line that would finish the competition without conceding in four straight knockout matches.
The foundation was midfield saturation. Sergio Busquets, Xavi Hernández, Iniesta and, in the latter stages, Pedro Rodríguez, replicated the Barca carousel; Xabi Alonso provided metronomic range in place of Lionel Messi, turning a club 4-3-3 into a national 4-2-3-1. The approach frustrated purists who craved width, and after a shock opening loss to Switzerland, Del Bosque sacrificed David Silva for more vertical options. David Villa, initially deployed on the left, drifted inside to score five of Spain’s eight goals, none of which came from a recognised No 9.
Knock-out football became a study in patience. Portugal, Paraguay, Germany and the Netherlands were all beaten 1-0, every deadlock broken after the hour mark. Direct reinforcements proved decisive: Fernando Llorente unsettled Portugal’s centre-backs, Jesús Navas stretched tiring full-backs, and Cesc Fàbregas supplied the final pass for Iniesta’s historic strike in the final.
That goal settled a brutal contest. Dutch aggression – Nigel de Jong’s chest-high challenge on Alonso could have produced a red – threatened to derail Spain’s rhythm, and Arjen Robben twice escaped only to be denied by Iker Casillas. Yet the goalkeeper’s Golden Glove campaign and Carles Puyol’s commanding aerial display ensured Spain needed only one moment of brilliance. Iniesta provided it, ripping off his jersey to reveal a tribute to the late Dani Jarque, a moment of raw emotion that encapsulated a squad united by more than tactics.
Spain’s triumph was never about individual stardom. Villa finished third in the Golden Ball vote behind Diego Forlán and Wesley Sneijder, reflective of a team that excelled through collective excellence rather than reliance on a headline performer. They kept four clean sheets in the knock-out phase, completed more passes per sequence than any previous champion, and became the first European side to lift the trophy outside their continent.
Critics argued Spain never produced a single vintage performance; supporters countered that control itself was the spectacle. In an era when pressing was still sporadic, Spain’s positional mastery allowed them to ration energy, break opposition will and, ultimately, make history. The sight of captain Casillas lifting the trophy in red shirts – swapped from the blue match kit – confirmed a new footballing superpower, its identity forged in Catalan technique and Castilian resilience.
Spain 2010: the World Cup winners who proved that patience, precision and harmony can be just as lethal as flair.
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Chelsea vs Aston Villa: Match preview and team news
Chelsea will attempt to steady their season when they host Aston Villa at Kingsmeadow on Sunday lunchtime, knowing that anything short of victory could endanger their hold on third place in the Barclays Women’s Super League.
Blues boss Sonia Bompastor has branded the club’s final four fixtures “must-win” after a bruising week that brought a 1-1 draw with London City Lionesses and a 3-1 Champions League loss to Arsenal. Chelsea remain two points above the Gunners in the last automatic European-qualification slot, but Arsenal now hold games in hand.
History offers encouragement: Chelsea have defeated Villa in all 11 previous WSL meetings, scoring 28 and conceding only two. The most recent encounter, on 14 September 2025, finished 3-1 to the Londoners at Villa Park.
Aston Villa, however, travel south with momentum after a comeback 2-1 win at Leicester City ended a winless away run that stretched back to November. The result lifted Natalia Arroyo’s side to eighth and maintained their hopes of a second successive late-season surge; last term Villa won their final five league fixtures.
Chelsea’s task has been eased by the return of Australian pair Sam Kerr and Ellie Carpenter after international duty at the Asian Cup. Kerr, who has not started a match since February, is in contention to lead the line. Aggie Beever-Jones is doubtful, and several long-term absentees remain sidelined.
Villa’s injury list is more extensive. Rachel Daly, Gabi Nunes, Paula Tomas and Missy Bo Kearns—ruled out through pregnancy—are all unavailable, but Maya Hijikata returns to the squad after helping Japan at the Asian Cup.
Form guide favours the hosts: Chelsea are unbeaten in their last four league matches and have scored in every WSL clash with Villa since the latter’s promotion. Their home form offers further comfort; the Blues have won their last three at Kingsmeadow and aim for a fourth on the spin.
Villa have taken four points from a possible six after a sobering 7-3 defeat to Tottenham, including a dogged 0-0 draw with champions-elect Manchester City. Yet defensive frailties against the league’s elite have dogged them all campaign; 28 of their 31 goals conceded against Chelsea alone illustrate the scale of Sunday’s challenge.
Chelsea predicted XI (4-2-3-1): Hampton; Carpenter, Girma, Buurman, Baltimore; Rytting Kaneryd, Potter, Kaptein, Nusken, Thompson; Kerr.
Aston Villa predicted XI (4-2-3-1): Roebuck; Wilms, Patten, Parker, Nighswonger; Jean-Francois, Taylor; Grant, Kendall, Maritz; Hanson.
Kick-off is at midday, with live coverage on Sky Sports and the Sky Go app.
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Meet Brian Peat, the man behind more than 50 years' worth of Manchester United flags
Brian Peat’s earliest memory of Old Trafford is not of a goal or a trophy, but of a pirouette. In 1956 his father, a Trafford Park night-shift worker, finally relented and took the seven-year-old to a reserve match. Bobby Charlton spun with the ball, the crowd murmured, and Peat was hooked. The second memory is less romantic: a cup of hot Bovril pressed into his small hands at half-time, the taste so vile he tipped it behind the seat. That was enough football for his father, who deemed first-team games too rough for a child, yet the spark had caught.
Peat, born and raised in Gorse Hill, Stretford, grew up in the shadow of the Stretford End and spent a lifetime attending matches while working amid the furnaces and cranes of Trafford Park, first in heavy industry and later as a trade-union lecturer. For more than half a century he has channelled his devotion into fabric and thread, crafting banners that have travelled from Wembley to Rome, from Moscow to the concourses outside Old Trafford itself.
The flag-making began almost by accident. In 1968, with Manchester United heading to the European Cup final, Peat wanted something to wave at Wembley. A local motorcycle shop refused to part with an old banner, so he borrowed a Union Jack, appliquéd a homemade United crest to its centre and worked through the night, fitting the labour between day shifts and evening classes. The flag disappeared in the post-match chaos, yet photographs of it survive in commemorative books. Peat counts only ten flags in total, each born only when “something inspires me,” he says. “I like the idea of keeping up the tradition of Manchester as a radical city.”
Radical, witty and occasionally barbed, the banners have become his trademark. For the 2009 and 2011 Champions League finals he stitched No Pasaran beneath the faces of Nemanja Vidic and Rio Ferdinand, evoking the Spanish Civil War resistance. Stewards in Rome confiscated the flag, only for it to be returned and flashed on the stadium screen. The 2011 follow-up read Busby Column, 19th Brigade, its centre recoloured green and gold in opposition to the Glazer ownership. Ahead of the 2008 Moscow final he lifted a lyric from local band James: If I hadn’t seen such riches, I could live with being poor.
Some salute individuals. Kevin Moran — a cut above the rest travelled to the 1985 FA Cup final, the first ever to see a player sent off. Moran’s granddaughter later visited Peat’s exhibition for a photograph beside the banner. Peat’s favourite, though, recalls the 1977 FA Cup final: Today’s Menu, Deviled Liverbird, a jab at Liverpool’s failed treble bid that survived the Wembley mayhem and remains in his possession.
Until recently Peat’s work was a private passion. When Stretford’s refurbished shopping centre planned a pop-up museum, curators asked residents for artefacts. Without his knowledge, Peat’s daughter-in-law — once wary of football culture — submitted a letter mentioning the flags. Curators invited Peat to display them; the result, The Stretford End, 1956-2026, drew supporters and former players’ families alike. A Northern Ireland expatriate spotted an Irish Starry Plough reinterpreted in United colours that had followed the team to the 2016 FA Cup final and been broadcast on Irish television.
Now in his 70s, Peat still queues for the Stretford End, still watches the next generation hoist new banners and sees his own handiwork as part of a continuum. “The flags represent what United have been, with the heroes of the past and will be going into the future,” he says. “It’s the fans saying: ‘This is what we are, not what you think we are.’”
Brian Peat, quiet union man, lecturer, life-long red, has sewn that declaration into more than 50 years of cloth and memory.
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Bayern Munich News: Bryan Zaragoza likely to return; Tottenham eyeing Fisnik Asllani; and MORE!
Munich—Bayern Munich are bracing for the early return of winger Bryan Zaragoza after AS Roma informed the German champions they will not trigger the €13 million purchase option inserted in the Spaniard’s January loan, according to Gazzetta dello Sport.
The clause would have become obligatory had Roma secured Champions League or Europa League qualification and had the 24-year-old featured in at least 50 percent of available minutes. Neither benchmark is within reach: Zaragoza has not played a single minute in Roma’s last three Serie A fixtures and the club sit outside the European qualification places with only a handful of matches remaining.
Instead, Roma will pay Bayern a €500,000 penalty to terminate the arrangement, six weeks after the player’s previous loan at Celta Vigo was cut short to facilitate the switch to the Italian capital. Zaragoza, whose contract with Bayern runs until 2029, is now expected back in Munich this summer, leaving the club to explore a cut-price sale or another loan, most likely to Spain.
The development marks another setback for a player once viewed as a cornerstone of Bayern’s long-term wide attack alongside Mathys Tel.
Asllani on Spurs’ radar
Tottenham Hotspur have retained their interest in Hoffenheim striker Fisnik Asllani, BILD reports. The north London club first monitored the 23-year-old last summer and have been encouraged by his productivity this season—nine goals and eight assists in 27 outings. Asllani, who can operate across the front line, is also believed to be on Bayern’s internal list of attacking targets.
Salah, Lewandowski, Jackson dominate transfer chatter
Elsewhere, Mohamed Salah has been linked with a sentimental return to Roma, but the winger’s €12 million net annual wage is three times what the Serie A side are prepared to offer. Saudi Pro League clubs Al Ittihad and Al Qadsiah remain in contention for the soon-to-be free agent.
Juventus have sounded out Robert Lewandowski’s camp over a potential move for the 37-year-old Barcelona striker, whose deal expires in June. Juve officials travelled to Warsaw this week to watch the Poland captain score in a 2-1 win over Albania, while they also weigh contract talks for Dusan Vlahovic and a possible swoop for Randal Kolo Muani, currently on loan at Tottenham from Paris Saint-Germain.
Newcastle United, meanwhile, are considering a summer bid for Chelsea forward Nicolas Jackson after offloading Alexander Isak to Liverpool for a British-record fee last year. Magpies boss Eddie Howe is eager to inject fresh firepower into a side that sits ninth in the Premier League and has been eliminated from every cup competition.
Midfield battle heats up
Liverpool and Manchester United are monitoring Wolverhampton Wanderers midfielder João Gomes, TEAMtalk understands. Chelsea and Manchester City are also tracking the 25-year-old, who registered his fourth assist of the campaign in Monday’s 2-2 draw with Brentford.
Bayern notes
Bayern remain adamant that Alphonso Davies will not be sold, while Michael Olise and emerging talent Lennart Karl are viewed as central to the club’s present and future plans.
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Long-term plan: Bayern Munich’s Jamal Musiala keen to return against Real Madrid, but star’s health is paramount
Munich — Jamal Musiala’s talent has never been in doubt; keeping that talent on the pitch has become the urgent priority for both the player and Bayern Munich. After a six-month lay-off caused by an ankle injury, the 21-year-old briefly rejoined first-team training only to feel a familiar stab of pain in the same joint. The flare-up has reset the clock, and everyone at Säbener Straße is determined not to gamble with a career that could yet scale the very top of the global game.
According to Kicker journalist Mario Krischel, Musiala is now devoting up to eight hours a day to rehabilitation, splitting his time between the club’s performance centre and his own home gym. The routine is meticulous, deliberately cautious and entirely pain-driven: only when the ankle is free of discomfort will he be cleared for team training, currently pencilled in for “some point next week.” Initial outings, when they come, will be tightly managed cameos rather than 90-minute statements.
That timeline leaves the Champions League semi-final first leg against Real Madrid on the horizon, and Musiala has pencilled the fixture into his personal diary. Bayern have coped commendably in his absence, with Serge Gnabry and emerging talent Lennart Karl filling the creative void, allowing the staff the luxury of patience. If the pain subsides as hoped, Musiala could be eased back in time to influence the tie, a prospect that would immediately sharpen Bayern’s edge inside the final third, where his close-control dribbling and instinctive positioning can turn a congested penalty area into a playground of possibilities.
Yet the club’s medical team, coaching staff and the player himself are aligned on a broader objective: a fully restored Musiala for Germany’s World Cup campaign this summer. National-team coach Julian Nagelsmann is known to view the attacking midfielder as the creative keystone around which a new generation—potentially alongside Florian Wirtz and Karl behind Newcastle striker Nick Woltemade—can be built. Rushing a return against Madrid and risking a second, more serious relapse would jeopardise not only Bayern’s season but Germany’s plans on the sport’s biggest stage.
For now, Musiala’s focus remains methodical: re-enter team training next week, bank minutes when safe, and, if the stars align, make a timely cameo against the Spanish giants. The long-term blueprint is clear: arrive at the World Cup pain-free, in form, and ready to showcase the limitless ability that injuries have too often kept in the shadows.
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Arizona’s Second-Half Surge Sends Wildcats Past Purdue into Final Four
SAN JOSE, Calif. — For 20 minutes, Purdue looked every bit the team that could end Arizona’s charmed run. By the final buzzer, the Wildcats were the ones cutting down nets at SAP Center, 35-6 and counting toward a national-title dream that suddenly feels very real.
Brayden Burries’ corner three with 7:49 left punctuated a 28-13 second-half blitz that turned a nip-and-tuck Elite Eight showdown into a 59-51 Arizona advantage, a margin the Cats never relinquished on the way to a 75-62 victory that clinched the West Regional crown.
It was the first time all tournament Arizona had trailed, falling behind 10-9 when Boilermaker guard Braden Smith—scoreless from deep over his previous two games—drained a pair of early threes. Smith’s hot hand was short-lived; after intermission, Purdue managed just 5-of-16 from the floor and 0-of-4 from distance while Arizona sped up the tempo and attacked every crack in the defense.
“Sounds like a home game for Arizona!” blared across social media as SAP Center’s decibel level tilted crimson. Six Wildcats had already cracked the scorebook midway through the first half, and when Mo Krivas knocked down two free throws to flip an 11-10 lead, the momentum never truly swung back.
The second-half avalanche was methodical: relentless ball pressure, decisive extra passes, and a steady parade to the stripe that kept the shot clock and the scoreboard moving. Purdue, which controlled the glass early, simply couldn’t keep pace once Arizona imposed its preferred up-tempo style.
“Purdue really needed to control the first four minutes out of halftime,” one observer noted. “Most of that is because Arizona is so damn good.”
By the under-eight media timeout, the Wildcats were up eight and soaring. Burries’ celebratory pose after his dagger triple—arms outstretched, SAP Center roaring—captured the moment: a team peaking at the perfect time.
Arizona now needs three more wins to finish a 38-win masterpiece. On tonight’s evidence, few will bet against a squad running “like a well-oiled machine” with Burries and company steering the controls straight toward the sport’s biggest stage.
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Goodhue boys basketball falls in state championship heartbreaker, leaves lasting legacy on future generations
MINNEAPOLIS — The déjà vu in the bowels of Williams Arena was almost as heavy as the runner-up trophy in their hands. For the third straight March the Goodhue Wildcats filed into a post-game press conference beneath the historic arena, and for the second consecutive year they did so wearing silver medals, not gold, after an 81-69 loss to Minnehaha Academy in the Class 2A state championship.
Up two at halftime and trading punches with the Redhawks for 16 minutes, Goodhue watched a 40-39 lead evaporate when Minnehaha Academy buried a flurry of second-half threes, finishing 6-for-16 from deep while the Wildcats connected on just 2-of-17. The 12-point margin was the largest of the night, reached when the scoreboard read 81-66 with 17 seconds remaining.
“They made shots,” coach Matt Halverson said simply. “Our boys never quit. They never will quit. They’re from Goodhue.”
The numbers told the story: Goodhue shot 41 percent from the field, was out-rebounded in key stretches and could never find the rhythm that carried it to a school-record 31 victories. Yet the statistics hardly captured the emotional weight for a senior class that had played its final game in Wildcats colors. Luke Roschen, the guard who quarterbacked Goodhue to a state runner-up finish in football, poured in 22 points, six rebounds and four assists. Cousin Michael Roschen added five points and five boards. Together they closed a combined eight-year varsity career that included five section finals, three state trips and a 31-2 season that reset every win mark in school lore.
“We knew we had a special group,” Luke Roschen said. “We fell a little short, but I’m still proud of the guys.”
Junior Owen Roschen and sophomores Alex Loos and Cody Ryan will inherit the mantle. Loos, who scored a team-high 25 points Saturday, grew up studying the elder Roschens. “They taught me physicality, plays, everything,” he said. “It’s sad to see them go.”
The pain of Saturday’s loss will fade; the path these Wildcats carved will not. Goodhue’s current seniors were once the wide-eyed kids in the stands, mimicking fade-away jumpers with foam balls after games. On Saturday their coach’s 4-year-old son sat in the same spot, pretending to be Luke or Michael or Alex. Halverson believes that cycle—watch, emulate, become—matters more than any trophy.
“I hope it inspires a fourth-grader to become the next Luke Roschen,” Halverson said. “When you have little kids cheering for us, that feeds the tradition.”
Minnehaha Academy captured its sixth state crown and finished 26-5. Goodhue, handed only its second defeat, exits with the single-season wins record and a blueprint for every team that follows. The championship banner remains blank for now, but the legacy these Wildcats leave is already written in the next generation dribbling in elementary gyms across Goodhue, waiting for the torch to be passed.
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One Key Target Stat for Each Mariners Starter This Season
Seattle’s rotation has long been the envy of the American League, and 2026 may be the year the group propels the club to a second straight AL West crown. Health permitting, each starter carries a clear statistical benchmark that, if cleared, would signal both individual rebound and October readiness.
Logan Gilbert – 200 innings pitched
Handed the Opening Day assignment for the second consecutive season, Gilbert enters a contract year needing to prove last year’s 131-inning total was the outlier, not the new norm. The right-hander’s swing-and-miss credentials remain elite—his splitter alone generated a 50-plus-percent whiff rate in 2025—but inflated pitch counts routinely shortened his outings. Re-introducing the cutter should help him finish hitters more efficiently; reaching 200 frames would simultaneously restore ace-length durability and strengthen his case for a nine-figure extension.
Bryan Woo – Barrel rate ≤ 7.0%
Fresh off a fifth-place Cy Young finish, Woo dominated by filling the zone with a four-seam/two-seam fastball cocktail thrown nearly three-quarters of the time. The next step toward dethroning Tarik Skubal and Garrett Crochet is taming hard contact. Trimming his 9.1% barrel rate to the 6.5–7.0% range would place him among the game’s premier contact managers and turn a breakout season into a potential award-winning one.
George Kirby – 55% Zone rate
Kirby’s shoulder woes forced a lower, more horizontal arm slot that unlocked wicked slider spin and a 13-strikeout gem against the Angels, yet command suffered: his zone rate dipped below 50% and walks crept above 5%. A return to a 55% zone rate would marry his newfound swing-and-miss with the pinpoint control that once led the league in walk percentage, re-establishing the 28-year-old as one of baseball’s most complete pitchers.
Luis Castillo – Fastball run value ≥ +10
Nicknamed “La Piedra” for his reliability, Castillo has generated double-digit run value on his heater in back-to-back seasons despite declining velocity. In what could be his farewell tour in Seattle, another mark of +10 or better would confirm the pitch remains a true plus offering, anchoring the back of the rotation and stabilizing a staff with championship aspirations.
Bryce Miller – HR/FB rate ≤ 11%
A second-half breakout in 2024 gave way to injury and a 15.5% home-run-per-fly-ball rate last season. Keeping the ball in the yard is the clearest path to redemption; if Miller can push that figure back toward his career norm of sub-11%, the hard-throwing righty should rejoin the upper tier of the Mariners’ enviable depth chart once he returns from the injured list.
Hit these benchmarks, and Seattle’s rotation won’t just be deep—it could be the catalyst for a long-awaited World Series push.
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Barcelona’s third kit for 2026-27 season leaked
Barcelona’s wardrobe for the 2026-27 campaign is taking shape after the club’s rumoured third strip surfaced online. The image, shared by the reliable memorabilia1899 account on X, shows midfielder Frenkie de Jong modelling a shirt that blends blue and green tones with subtle blaugrana piping at the collar and sleeve hems. Nike’s swoosh appears in a contrasting orange, giving the jersey a vibrant accent.
This leak follows earlier glimpses of the forthcoming home and away kits. The Camp Nou side’s primary shirt is expected to feature an expanded stripe design, while the road alternative will maintain the club’s link to Nike’s Kobe Bryant Mamba Collection, arriving in a purple-and-black palette.
Supporters have already begun weighing in on the trio of designs, debating whether the unconventional colour scheme of the third kit complements the club’s traditional identity or drifts too far from familiar blaugrana territory.
Barcelona has yet to confirm any of the circulating images, but history suggests the final products will closely resemble the versions now circulating across social platforms.
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USMNT Suffers 'Good Reality Check' In 5-2 Loss To Belgium
Atlanta — A buoyant first half that ended with Weston McKennie’s soaring header dissolved into defensive chaos on Saturday night as the United States men’s national team crashed 5-2 to Belgium at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, the heaviest home defeat after scoring first since 1959.
McKennie’s 39th-minute finish off Antonee Robinson’s corner — his first international strike in three years — sent a record crowd of 71,234 into halftime believing a sixth straight unbeaten outing was imminent. Instead, the visitors pounced.
Teenage defender Zeno Debast nodded in an equalizer deep into first-half stoppage time, and a 15-minute second-half blitz turned the contest into a rout. Amadou Onana powered home a header, Charles De Ketelaere converted a penalty, and Dodi Lukebakio twice beat Matt Turner, the second a curling 82nd-minute effort that capped the scoring. Patrick Agyemang’s late consolation only trimmed the margin.
The result, per Opta, marked the first time the U.S. had lost by three goals at home after opening the scoring since an 8-1 humiliation by England 66 years ago.
Injuries shredded an already experimental back line. Sergino Dest, Chris Richards and Miles Robinson were unavailable, while captain Tyler Adams sat out. Tim Weah, pressed into emergency duty at right back, was tormented by Manchester City’s Jérémy Doku, and the makeshift unit never settled.
Christian Pulisic, scoreless in seven consecutive appearances since November, spurned two clear chances to restore a two-goal lead in the opening period. “Of course, I’m disappointed. I have to finish my chances,” Pulisic said. “They aren’t easy chances, but at certain moments, that I expect to do better, for sure.”
Head coach Mauricio Pochettino refused to sound alarms, branding the evening “a good reality check.”
“I think we cannot arrive with the wrong idea that we are so good, we are so handsome, we are so well-dressed and we are Americans,” he said. “If we want to beat Paraguay, do you think that they are not going to fight?”
Belgium, missing Romelu Lukaku, Leandro Trossard, Hans Vanaken and Thibaut Courtois, still managed to expose every American weakness. Manager Rudi Garcia praised the hosts’ early aggression but noted his side “started bad” before finding rhythm.
The U.S. now travels to face fifth-ranked Portugal on Tuesday in its final friendly before Pochettino finalizes his World Cup roster at the end of May. “We have to beat teams like this if we want to have a chance to go far in the tournament,” Pulisic said.
For an American squad dreaming of a deep run this summer, Saturday’s scoreline was less a setback than a sobering mirror — and the clock is ticking.
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Liverpool, Aston Villa and Sunderland Battle to Sign Defender Permanently for €20M
Sunderland’s international break has been dominated by more than national-team call-ups; the club’s hierarchy is bracing for a three-way Premier League tug-of-war over right-back Lutsharel Geertruida. Liverpool and Aston Villa have joined Sunderland in pursuing a permanent deal for the 25-year-old Dutchman, with parent club RB Leipzig setting a €20 million valuation, according to a report in The Added Times.
Geertruida, on loan at the Stadium of Light until June, has featured in 28 matches this campaign and has impressed Regis Le Bris with his two-way influence on the right flank. Leipzig, who retain his registration, will not entertain offers below the €20 million mark, a figure that has not deterred the pursuing trio.
For Sunderland, the stakes are twofold: securing a player integral to their promotion push while fending off top-flight competition eager to reinforce ahead of next season. Le Bris views Geertruida as pivotal to the club’s ambition of establishing itself in the Premier League and, eventually, European competition.
The player himself will have the final say once the season concludes, leaving Wearside in limbo until the summer. Should Geertruida opt to remain in England, the decision will hinge on sporting project, European prospects, and the guarantee of regular first-team football.
Liverpool and Aston Villa, both eyeing defensive depth, are monitoring developments closely, aware that any hesitation could see the versatile full-back slip away. Sunderland, meanwhile, hope their promotion narrative and guaranteed starting role will persuade Geertruida to make his loan move permanent.
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Illinois Bullies Its Way Past Iowa and Into First Final Four Since 2005
HOUSTON — For 21 years the Illinois Fighting Illini waited for a return trip to the Final Four, and on Saturday night at Toyota Center they finally punched their ticket the only way this group knows how: by owning the paint, owning the glass, and daring anyone to match their sheer size.
No. 3 seed Illinois shook off a frigid 3-for-17 night from beyond the arc, erased an early nine-point deficit, and steam-rolled No. 9 Iowa inside to claim a 71-59 victory in the South Regional final. The win sends the Illini (28-8) to Indianapolis and the program’s first national semifinal since 2005.
“We kept chopping wood,” Illini coach Ben McCollum said, crediting his team’s persistence after Iowa’s hot start. “When the threes don’t fall, you’ve got to find another way.”
The Hawkeyes (24-13) looked poised for another March stunner when Bennett Stirtz poured in 15 first-half points and Iowa led 32-28 at the break. Illinois countered with a steady diet of second chances, corralling 10 offensive rebounds before halftime and finishing the night with a 16-8 edge on the offensive glass.
Keaton Wagler shook off early foul trouble to score 14, while Andrej Stojakovic added 17 and repeatedly broke down Iowa’s help defense off the dribble. Yet the night belonged to Illinois’ twin-tower tandem of Tomislav and Zvonimir Ivisic and 6-foot-9 bruiser David Mirkovic. The trio combined for 22 points, four blocks and a 40-12 domination of the paint that turned the game in the second half.
The decisive stretch came with just under seven minutes remaining and Illinois clinging to a 55-54 lead. Tomislav Ivisic caught on the left block on back-to-back possessions, sealed a smaller defender, and spun into the lane for consecutive baby hooks that pushed the margin to five and forced Iowa into desperation mode. A Stojakovic layup and six straight free throws from Wagler and Kylan Boswell capped an 8-0 burst that finally put Iowa away.
Stirtz finished with a game-high 24, but managed only nine after halftime as Illinois’ length closed every driving lane. The Hawkeyes shot 34 percent for the game and were out-scored 43-27 in the final 20 minutes.
“Defense has been our identity all tournament,” said forward Ben Humrichous, part of a rotation that limited Iowa to one field goal over the final 6:42. “When we’re locked in, we feel like no one can score on us.”
The Illini will carry that confidence into next Saturday’s national semifinal against the winner of Sunday’s Duke-UConn regional final. For a program that has waited two decades for another shot at a title, the road now runs through Indianapolis.
Illinois 71, Iowa 59 — and the biggest roster in college basketball is still standing.
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Turner Returns in Net as Belgium Routs U.S. 5-2 in Friendly
ATLANTA — Matt Turner’s first U.S. appearance in nine months was a trial by fire. Belgium struck five times, two shots ripping past him and three ricocheting across the line on their own, to hand the Americans a 5-2 friendly defeat on Saturday night at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
The 31-year-old goalkeeper, whose 53rd cap was his first since a 4-0 loss to Switzerland on June 10, reclaimed the starting role after Matt Freese had started the previous 12 matches, including last summer’s CONCACAF Gold Cup. Turner’s return comes amid a career reset that saw him leave Arsenal for Nottingham Forest, lose the No. 1 shirt, spend a quiet loan at Crystal Palace, and rejoin the New England Revolution last August.
“I understand and feel in my bones that this coaching staff is very fair and they’re going to give people that deserve chances a chance,” Turner said. “So just stay calm. I know that a lot can change in three months time and it did from September to November back in the last go-around.”
Coach Mauricio Pochettino said the switch was less a demotion for Freese than insurance for the future. “We thought that it was necessary to provide the opportunity to another keeper,” Pochettino explained. “For the World Cup, circumstances can happen.”
The U.S. led before Belgium equalized in first-half stoppage time and then poured on four more. Turner, who pounded the turf after the second goal, accepted the outcome. “I have to accept that the performance went the way it did and the team performed the way that we did,” he said. “And yeah, I’m just going to continue to claw and dig and nobody does that better than me.”
Turner’s path echoes his 2022 rise, when an injury to Zack Steffen opened the door for a World Cup starting spot. With qualifying for 2026 on the horizon, he hopes history repeats. “My overarching theme for earning that opportunity again is just to continue to be myself,” he said.
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Florian Wirtz Involved In All Four Goals As Germany Beats Switzerland
Basel, Switzerland – Florian Wirtz authored the most complete performance of his senior international career on Friday night, scoring twice and assisting the other two goals to propel Germany to a 4-3 friendly victory over Switzerland at St. Jakob-Park.
The 22-year-old Liverpool attacker, signed last summer for a club-record £116 million, single-handedly decided a see-saw contest that offered both encouragement and warning signs for a German squad preparing for the upcoming World Cup without the retired core of Manuel Neuer, Toni Kroos, Ilkay Gundogan and Thomas Muller.
Wirtz opened the scoring in the 12th minute with an audacious right-footed corner that curled over the Swiss defence, kissed the underside of the crossbar and dropped inside the far post. “I’d be lying if I said I meant it to go exactly there,” he admitted afterwards, “but I’ll take it.”
Any debate over intent was settled 20 minutes later when Wirtz collected a clearance 20 metres out and arrowed a left-footed drive into the top-left corner for his second. The brace was followed by two second-half assists: a pinpoint far-post cross that Jonathan Tah powered home and a slide-rule pass that Serge Gnabry dinked over onrushing goalkeeper Gregor Kobel.
“That was probably my best international match,” Wirtz said, a verdict few in the sold-out Swiss stadium would dispute. His direct involvement in all four German goals underscored his emergence as the team’s creative anchor in the post-Muller/Kroos era.
Yet the night was not without blemishes. Switzerland clawed back three times, exposing a German back line that coach Julian Nagelsmann concedes must improve rapidly. The defensive frailty was compounded by ongoing uncertainty over Jamal Musiala’s fitness, with Nagelsmann acknowledging this week that “time is running out” for the injured playmaker to prove his readiness.
Still, the result ends a turbulent week on a positive note for Germany, which has suffered group-stage exits in each of the past two World Cups and has not entered a major tournament without Neuer, Kroos, Gundogan and Muller since Euro 2008.
For Wirtz, the evening offered a timely reminder of why the German federation views him as the attacking focal point heading into a pivotal summer, even as his inaugural Premier League campaign under Arne Slot continues to evolve.
Read more →What Hornets’ streak-busting loss to Philadelphia means in NBA playoff chase
Charlotte, N.C. – The Hornets walked off the Spectrum Center floor late Saturday knowing they had let more than a game slip away. A 118-114 defeat to the visiting Philadelphia 76ers halted Charlotte’s momentum and, more importantly, dented the club’s bid to escape the Eastern Conference play-in fray with only eight days left in the regular season.
A victory would have nudged the Hornets—now 39-35—into a virtual tie for seventh place and within striking distance of sixth-seed Atlanta, granting them a realistic path to secure a first-round series without the sudden-death tension of the play-in bracket. Instead, they remain on the outside looking in, saddled with the league’s longest active postseason drought and a ticking clock.
“We know these last couple games, we’ve got to fight, we’ve got to claw away to improve our odds of making the playoffs,” guard Coby White said after leading the bench with 16 points, four rebounds and two assists. “It was hurt in the locker room.”
The hurt stemmed largely from a fourth-quarter collapse. Charlotte, which had poured in at least 28 points in each of the first three periods, managed just 17 in the final 12 minutes while shooting 5-for-22 on two-point attempts. Philadelphia outscored the Hornets 26-17 down the stretch, capitalizing on every lapse.
“In that fourth quarter especially, just our defensive focus started to wane a little bit as we were missing shots,” second-year head coach Charles Lee said. “Too many guys just driving without that physicality piece. Too many back doors, too many offensive rebounds in clutch moments.”
Lee, who earlier in the week admitted he and his staff constantly monitor scoreboard scenarios, reiterated the one-day-at-a-time mantra. “We try to focus on what we can control, which is our daily process. The game right in front of us … you just got to go 1-0 that day.”
Rookie Brandon Miller, still developing his two-way identity, said the team must avoid the emotional swing that accompanies cold shooting. “If you’re making shots or if you’re not making shots, you’ve still got to have the two-way mindset,” he emphasized.
White, acquired from Chicago at February’s trade deadline, has stabilized the second unit; Charlotte’s reserves outscored Philadelphia’s 33-21 on the night. “I just want to be aggressive,” White said. “The coaches trust me to make the right play … How can I impact winning?”
Philadelphia’s coaching staff, meanwhile, continued to marvel at rookie standout Knueppel, who entered the night leading the NBA with 253 three-pointers—an unprecedented figure for a player 22 or younger. Coach Nick Nurse recalled scouting the sharpshooter before the 2025 draft and praised his multidimensional impact: scoring, toughness, basketball IQ and willingness to do the dirty work.
The Hornets will get an immediate chance to rebound when they close the seven-game homestand Sunday against Boston. With the postseason picture tightening by the hour, anything short of a victory could relegate Charlotte to scoreboard-watching mode for the season’s final week.
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Renegades kick off 2026 UFL slate with dominant win over Gamblers
FRISCO, Texas — Newly minted starting quarterback Reed wasted no time making history, shattering the UFL regular-season single-game passing record with a commanding 376-yard performance to propel the Dallas Renegades to a 36-17 victory over the Houston Gamblers on Saturday night at Toyota Stadium.
Reed, officially named the Renegades’ QB1 earlier in the week, completed 26 of 40 attempts and tossed three touchdown passes, but the offense needed an early spark. The defense provided it. Cornerback Steven Jones Jr. jumped a Nolan Henderson pass in the first quarter and raced 30 yards the other way for a pick-six, staking Dallas to a 6-0 lead it would never relinquish.
Henderson’s night unraveled quickly. The Houston signal-caller connected on just 3 of 9 throws for 34 yards and two interceptions before giving way to Hunter Dekkers. The Gamblers finished with 284 total yards and a pedestrian 3.8 yards per rush against a swarming Renegades front.
Once Dallas found its rhythm, the offense proved unstoppable. The unit piled up 427 total yards and averaged 8.9 yards per pass attempt. Wideout Tyler Vaughns torched the Gamblers secondary for seven receptions, 144 yards and a score, while Greg Ward and Ellis Merriweather each added touchdown catches to round out the aerial assault.
The Renegades (1-0) return to Toyota Stadium on April 7 for a 7 p.m. kickoff against the St. Louis Battlehawks.
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UFC Brings Cage-Match Bout to White House, Home of a President Who Favors Cage-Match Politics
Washington — In a spectacle that fuses sport and spectacle with presidential pageantry, the Ultimate Fighting Championship will erect a six-foot wire-mesh octagon on the South Lawn of the White House on June 14, staging a mixed-martial-arts showcase timed to President Donald Trump’s 80th birthday and the nation’s 250th anniversary.
The promotion, which has issued 85,000 free tickets, will seat 5,000 spectators in a temporary arena steps from the North Portico and erect eight giant screens in nearby Lafayette Square for overflow crowds. The Sunday-night card, streamed live on Paramount+, will be headlined by two championship bouts: Brazil’s Alex Pereira meets France’s Ciryl Gane for the interim UFC heavyweight title, and Spanish-Georgian lightweight king Ilia Topuria faces American interim champ Justin Gaethje.
Trump, who once hosted 2001’s “Battle on the Boardwalk” at his Atlantic City casino and became the first sitting president to attend a UFC event in 2019, has long embraced the league’s bruising aesthetic. “I have respect for fighters, you know, when you can take 200 shots to the face and then look forward to the second round,” he told podcaster Logan Paul while campaigning for a second term. The refrain “Fight! Fight! Fight!” became a 2024 rallying cry, amplified after the July assassination attempt that left him bloodied but defiant.
Veteran referee and commentator “Big John” McCarthy said the president’s affinity makes perfect sense. “Fighting is about technique and style, and understanding how to make your opponent make mistakes while you don’t,” McCarthy noted. “I totally understand why he likes it. Because I do.”
Scholars see strategic branding. University of Rhode Island professor Kyle Kusz, who studies sports and far-right politics, argues Trump “uses UFC to portray himself as a manly sportsman,” aligning the sport’s raw masculinity with his own pugilistic governing style. Historian Patrick Wyman calls the White House platform “a pretty perfect encapsulation of the way that Donald Trump thinks about politics,” citing its “transactional nature” and the blurred lines between business and power.
Yet the lineup has drawn jeers online. Former two-division king Jon Jones requested his release after being left off the marquee, and megastar Conor McGregor is nowhere to be found. Former champion Ronda Rousey, mounting a comeback outside the UFC, says the card “fell extremely short of expectations,” adding that UFC CEO Dana White “knows the White House card sucks.”
White House communications director Steven Cheung, a former UFC spokesman, dismissed criticism, calling the event “one of the greatest and most historic sports events in history” and “a testament to Trump’s vision to celebrate America’s monumental 250th anniversary.” The UFC declined to comment.
Once decried by the late Sen. John McCain as “human cockfighting,” the league has grown into a media juggernaut since its 2018 ESPN rights deal. Its core audience—men aged 44 to 62—overlaps heavily with Trump’s political base, making the White House spectacle as much a voter-outreach tool as a birthday bash. France has even postponed the Group of Seven summit to avoid clashing with the festivities.
Whether the night ends in submission, knockout, or decision, the image of an octagon on the nation’s most famous lawn will serve as the latest merger of sports and Trump-era political theater—an ultimate celebration of a president who insists he is always in the fight.
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LSU Baseball Pulls Off Major 7-0 Win Over Kentucky Wildcats to Even SEC Series
BATON ROUGE, La. – William Schmidt seized his first Southeastern Conference victory and Mason Braun produced a career-tying four-RBI performance Saturday, spearheading LSU to a commanding 7-0 shutout of No. 19 Kentucky at Alex Box Stadium, Skip Bertman Field.
The triumph lifts the Tigers to 18-10 overall and 3-5 in league play while the Wildcats slip to 21-5, 5-3 in the SEC. With the series now knotted at one game apiece, the clubs will meet in Sunday’s rubber match at noon CT, airing on the LSU Sports Radio Network and streaming on SEC Network+.
Schmidt, a right-hander, stifled Kentucky for 5.1 innings, scattering six hits, walking two and striking out three. The outing improved his record to 4-1 and marked LSU’s first SEC shutout since a 2-0 blanking of Oklahoma on April 3, 2025.
“I believe William is emerging into one of the best pitchers in the country,” LSU coach Jay Johnson said. “He’s had three really good starts now in the league. I thought he was excellent today.”
Zac Cowan slammed the door over the final 3.2 frames, permitting one hit, one walk and fanning seven to secure his first save of the season. Johnson praised the veteran reliever’s impact: “We don’t win the national championship last season without Zac Cowan. He’s really got it going now that we’ve gotten into league play.”
Kentucky starter Nate Harris (3-2) absorbed the loss, surrendering five runs on five hits and five walks in 4.2 innings.
Braun supplied the offensive fireworks, going 2-for-4 with a three-run home run and a run-scoring double. His fourth-inning blast, his second of the year, stretched the Tigers’ lead to 5-0.
“Mason gave us two really good at-bats,” Johnson noted. “He laid off some borderline pitches, got himself into some good counts and put some good swings on the ball.”
LSU jumped ahead 2-0 in the second when Zach Yorke lifted a sacrifice fly and Braun doubled down the right-field line. Steve Milam added insurance with a two-run double in the sixth, capping the scoring at 7-0.
The decisive victory sets up a pivotal Sunday showdown for both squads as they jockey for early-season SEC positioning.
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Rams Might Make a Move for Matthew Stafford’s Successor at the NFL Draft
Los Angeles enters the 2026 NFL Draft with the luxury of patience and the burden of foresight. Matthew Stafford, fresh off the first MVP trophy of his 15-year career, has already declared that he will pilot the Rams’ offense for at least one more season after guiding the club to the NFC Championship game. The 38-year-old’s return keeps the Super Bowl window wide open, but it also forces the front office to confront an inevitable question: what comes next whenever No. 9 walks away?
General manager Les Snead and head coach Sean McVay have repeatedly stressed that a rebuild is not in the franchise’s vocabulary. The roster’s spine is young and ascending—receiver Puka Nacua, edge rusher Jared Verse, running back Kyren Williams and newly extended corner Trent McDuffie have an average age of 23. That core gives the Rams flexibility to draft for 2027 and beyond rather than chase an immediate starter.
Still, the quarterback pipeline must be addressed. While blockbuster speculation linking Los Angeles to disgruntled stars like Josh Allen or Joe Burrow will flood social feeds, league sources consider those scenarios unlikely. Instead, the draft—set to begin with Fernando Mendoza off the board at No. 1 to Las Vegas—offers a more pragmatic path.
Sitting at pick 13, the Rams could select Alabama’s Ty Simpson, yet many evaluators view that slot as rich for the Crimson Tide signal-caller. A trade-back into the late first or early second round has gained traction inside the building, especially because McVay’s track record with developmental passers (most notably Jared Goff in 2016) encourages a bet on upside over polish.
Two names have dominated internal discussions since the college season ended: LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier and Penn State’s Drew Allar. Once forecast as top-five talents before injuries derailed their 2025 campaigns, both possess prototypical 6-foot-4 frames and rocket arms. Their tape is uneven, their pocket command raw, and their footwork inconsistent—traits that would terrify clubs seeking Week 1 starters. For Los Angeles, that timeline is a feature, not a bug.
With Stafford entrenched, Nussmeier or Allar could spend a full season—or two—absorbing McVay’s system without the pressure of live bullets. The Rams’ roster strength also insulates a young quarterback from being rushed into duty, a luxury few organizations can provide. If the gamble hits, the payoff mirrors the Green Bay model that incubated Hall of Famers behind established starters.
The alternative is waiting for the 2027 class, headlined by Texas phenom Arch Manning, but delaying increases the risk of being caught without a succession plan when Stafford ultimately retires. By striking on Day 2 this spring, Los Angeles secures a high-ceiling prospect at a discounted price while preserving 2027 capital to continue building around its young nucleus.
In a draft cycle where quarterback-desperate franchises are expected to overpay for the remaining first-round options, the Rams are positioned to be the patient predator, turning a second- or third-round flier into the most cost-effective insurance policy in the league.
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