Expert Sports News & Commentary

Who Needs Cup Final Victory Most – Arteta or Guardiola?
Wembley Stadium will stage more than a routine Carabao Cup final on Sunday when Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal meet Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City beneath the arch. With nine Premier League matches remaining and a potential FA Cup collision still on the horizon, the 16:30 GMT kick-off offers the first of what could be three season-defining showdowns between English football’s current heavyweights.
Arsenal arrive in north-west London armed with a nine-point lead at the top of the table and a Champions League quarter-final berth, while City, recently eliminated by Real Madrid for the third time in four European campaigns, must regroup quickly if they are to keep their quadruple hopes alive. The League Cup, often dismissed as the least glamorous domestic prize, now carries an outsized psychological payload: victory would either reinforce Arsenal’s conviction that the long wait for silverware is ending, or remind City that their capacity to win trophies remains intact even when Europe slips away.
Arteta has not lifted a trophy since the 2020 FA Cup, secured only nine months after he left Guardiola’s side to take the Emirates reins. Since then, Arsenal have fallen in successive semi-finals – Europa League to Villarreal in 2021, League Cup to Liverpool in 2022 and Newcastle in 2025, and last season’s Champions League last-four exit against Paris Saint-Germain. Across the same span, Guardiola has collected the Champions League, four Premier League titles, the FA Cup, two League Cups, the UEFA Super Cup and the Club World Cup. Head-to-head, the Catalan has won nine of 16 meetings, Arteta four.
Former Arsenal and England defender Matt Upson believes the trophy drought places the greater burden on the Gunners’ manager. “Overall, Arteta needs it most because he has not won enough trophies at Arsenal for how well they have done,” Upson told BBC Sport. “It has been ‘nearly but not quite’ after seasons finishing second. This is a big one for him.”
Yet Upson acknowledges Guardiola is not immune to pressure. “The short-term pressure is on Pep. It is very important City get that win to try and dent Arsenal’s confidence going into the last eight league games.”
Nedum Onuoha, who spent a decade in City’s back line, argues the final offers immediate therapy for midweek European heartbreak. “City can use the pain of the Real Madrid defeat to express how much going out has hurt them. To sign off before the international break lifting a trophy can change your perspective on the whole season.”
Arsenal’s relentless consistency – they have dropped only 11 league points all season – has opened a gap City must close while also juggling cup commitments. Guardiola’s side have drawn their last two league fixtures against relegation-threatened Nottingham Forest and West Ham, inviting questions about a rare dip in standards.
Sunday’s outcome, however, may not swing the title race automatically. Upson doubts defeat would destabilise Arsenal: “Their foundation is too strong. If they lost, I don’t think it will derail them.” Conversely, a Gunners triumph “would be confirmation of where they’re at. To beat City at Wembley would be a big psychological blow – more to City than vice-versa.”
Theo Walcott, who spent 12 years with Arsenal, views the final as a tone-setter. “That’s the game that essentially sets the tone for how this whole year is going to look for Arsenal,” he told BBC Radio 5 Live. “I think City will drop points. I think Arsenal will still drop points. It’s that cup final in between.”
Onuoha agrees the stakes are delicately balanced. “From a City perspective, you get the feeling their season could go either way. Lose the final and the mood going into the break is difficult; win it, against the team they’re chasing, and the momentum flips.”
Both pundits hesitate to predict a winner. Upson leans fractionally toward Arsenal “because I know what performance I’m going to get. City are still fantastic but more unpredictable.” Onuoha counters that finals are “about finding a way to grind out a result – and this season Arsenal have been the best at that.”
Whatever the outcome, the 90 minutes on Sunday will ripple far beyond the Carabao Cup. For Arteta, it is an opportunity to validate years of patient construction and to loosen Guardiola’s personal grip. For Guardiola, it is a chance to reassert City’s habit of collecting prizes when it matters most. One trophy, two managers, multiple futures at stake – Wembley’s spring showdown is anything but a consolation cup.
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‘One-nil down, two-one up’: when Arsenal won their first League Cup
Wembley, 5 April 1987. Under a flawless spring sky, Arsenal ended an eight-year trophy famine by toppling Liverpool 2-1 and lifting the League Cup for the first time in the club’s centenary season. The comeback victory, sealed by Charlie Nicholas’s brace, echoed the resilience George Graham’s emerging side had already displayed in a dramatic semi-final against Tottenham.
Arsenal arrived at the national stadium as underdogs. Liverpool, contesting their eighth domestic cup final in a decade, had not lost any of the 144 matches in which Ian Rush had scored, and the striker’s 23rd-minute opener—finished after Steve McMahon dissected the defence—appeared to set the Merseysiders on course for another Wembley coronation. Commentator Barry Davies reminded television viewers of Rush’s ominous record, while Gunners captain Kenny Sansom later admitted: “I felt sick from my stomach… this is not going as planned.”
Yet Arsenal, spurred by memories of their semi-final revival—having trailed Tottenham 2-0 on aggregate before forcing a replay and a 2-1 win at White Hart Lane—refused to wilt. Paul Davis struck a post from distance, and on the half-hour Nicholas pounced on a goal-mouth scramble to level, hitting the woodwork again before sweeping in the equaliser. “The moment Charlie got his first I knew we would win,” Sansom recalled.
The second half remained on a knife-edge until the 83rd minute, when substitute Perry Groves, signed for £50,000 from Colchester, surged past Gary Gillespie on the left and pulled the ball back for Nicholas. The Scot’s shot, aimed for the far corner, deflected off Ronnie Whelan and looped past Bruce Grobbelaar. Wembley erupted: Graham punched the air, Davies hailed “the Bonnie Prince”, and chants of “Arsenal are back” cascaded from the north-end terraces.
The victory not only snapped Rush’s remarkable run—he would score the following week in a defeat at Norwich—but also marked Arsenal’s third Wembley final triumph over Liverpool, following the 1950 and 1971 FA Cup successes. “Arsenal’s younger players came of age,” observed Guardian correspondent David Lacey, though headlines centred on Nicholas’s future. The striker departed for Aberdeen within a year, yet the trophy proved prophetic: Graham’s rebuilding project, begun in summer 1986, would soon challenge Liverpool’s domestic supremacy.
At the final whistle, Nicholas hoped Wembley would be “the start of something big”. It was—for the club, if not the player—as the League Cup triumph laid foundations for the titles and European nights that followed.
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'2-3 hazaar runs': 14-year-old Vaibhav Sooryavanshi sets sky-high IPL 2026 target - WATCH
NEW DELHI — When Rajasthan Royals open their IPL 2026 campaign against Chennai Super Kings on 30 March at the Barsapara Cricket Stadium in Guwahati, all eyes will be fixed on one name: Vaibhav Sooryavanshi. Barely 14, the batting prodigy has already forced the cricket world to recalibrate its notions of teenage possibility, and he appears determined to keep raising the bar.
Sooryavanshi’s audacious 175 in the final of the recently-concluded U-19 World Cup 2026 is still being replayed on highlight reels across the country, a knock that powered India to the title and burnished his reputation as the most precocious batting talent of his generation. That innings followed a trail of dominant performances in age-group cricket, where his solid technique, fearless stroke-play and ability to clear the boundary at will have become hallmarks.
Yet for a player whose bat does the loudest talking, Sooryavanshi is quickly learning to handle the noise off the field. Once visibly shy in front of cameras, the youngster showcased a new-found comfort during a Rajasthan Royals promotional event this week. Asked by a reporter to outline his personal targets for the upcoming season, Sooryavanshi dead-panned: “Aisa question bologe to main do-teen hazaar runs bol doonga,” sending the entire room into laughter. The quip—translating loosely to “Ask me that and I’ll say two-three thousand runs”—was delivered with the timing of a seasoned entertainer.
The laughter subsided, but the message remained grounded. “Aisa kuch plan nehi kar sakta na ki mujhe itne run banana hae,” he continued. “Jo process hae wo follow kar rahe hae aur team ke liye trophy jeetna hae.” Translation: there is no personal run quota in his diary; the focus is on process and silverware. “Baaki personal goals pe aisa kuch focus nehi hae. Bas humlog apne process pe dhyan de rahe hain aur accha karke ko dekh rahe hae is season.”
That philosophy has already paid dividends. Last season, Sooryavanshi became the youngest player ever to register an IPL century, a feat that catapulted him into headlines and heightened expectations for 2026. Royals management will hope the teen’s maturity beyond years translates into match-winning contributions from the opening slot, especially against a seasoned Chennai attack on the tricky Guwahati surface.
For now, the batting sensation insists he is not crunching numbers, only deliveries. If the process is indeed king, the runs—and perhaps the trophies—could follow in regal fashion.
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How to watch Rayo Vallecano vs. Barcelona in the U.S.: TV channel and streaming options for March 22
Barcelona will aim to protect their top spot in La Liga when they welcome Rayo Vallecano to Camp Nou on Sunday, March 22, with kickoff set for 9 a.m. ET. The Catalan giants enter the weekend on 70 points, sitting first in the table, while Rayo Vallecano occupies 14th place with 32 points.
For viewers in the United States, the match will be available on both television and streaming platforms. Exact broadcast details can be found through the technology provided by Data Skrive, which powers this watch guide. Fans should check local listings and the league’s official streaming partners for the most up-to-date channel information and any geo-restrictions that may apply.
Betting odds, ticketing links, and streaming access referenced in this article are supplied by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply, and The Athletic retains full editorial independence over all content; partners do not review or influence stories before publication.
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Titans 2026 NFL Draft: Building the Ultimate Arsenal Around Cam Ward
NASHVILLE — The Tennessee Titans entered the 2026 NFL Draft with one mission emblazoned across every war-room whiteboard: protect quarterback Cam Ward and surround him with playmakers who can turn chain-moving moments into touchdowns. After a rookie season in which Ward absorbed hit after hit and the offense too often stalled, general manager Ran Carthon promised an “explosive” offseason overhaul. Seven rounds later, the franchise believes it has delivered exactly that.
The transformation began with the fourth overall selection, when Tennessee sprinted to the podium for Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love. The 2025 game film shows a blur through the hole—1,125 rushing yards, 17 touchdowns, and 28 receptions—yet the numbers only hint at the jolt he is expected to provide. Love’s acceleration erases pursuit angles and forces missed tackles in the open field, offering Ward a reliable safety valve and the offense a home-run threat every time he touches the ball.
Day 2 opened with the 35th pick and a pivot to the defensive interior. Georgia’s Christen Miller, listed at 6-4 and 321 pounds, brings raw power and a temperament that sets the tone in the trenches. While his pass-rush repertoire remains a work in progress, Miller’s ability to stack blockers and constrict running lanes gives the Titans the run-stuffing anchor they have lacked.
The third round (No. 66) returned the focus to offense, where Northwestern tackle Caleb Tiernan’s quick feet and leverage skills should fortify the line. Concerns about arm length could slide Tiernan inside to guard, but his initial burst fits the zone-heavy scheme the Titans envision. Later selections—Texas guard D.J. Campbell (184) and Alabama center Parker Brailsford (225)—complete what amounts to a full-scale interior rebuild.
Tight end Sam Roush, drafted 101st out of Stanford, arrives as a willing perimeter blocker with untapped upside as a seam receiver. Penn State’s Nicholas Singleton (142) complements Love as a 220-pound hammer who converts speed into contact, punishing defensive backs in the secondary.
The back half of the draft produced potential steals. Western Michigan edge rusher Nadame Tucker, chosen 144th, led the nation with 14.5 sacks in 2025 after climbing from junior college to the FBS. Tucker’s relentless motor and refined hand usage could turn a fifth-round flier into a situational pass-rush weapon. Buffalo linebacker Red Murdock (194) brings an intimidation factor, having logged 156 tackles and an FBS-best seven forced fumbles last fall. Though not the fastest in pursuit, Murdock’s strike power and instincts fit the downhill culture the Titans covet.
Carthon’s class addresses both sides of the ball with urgency. Offensively, Love and Roush diversify a unit that too often relied on Ward’s improvisation. Defensively, Miller and Tucker supply the front seven with contrasting skill sets—power to anchor and explosiveness to close. If the rookies acclimate quickly, the Titans believe they can vault from rebuilding project to AFC South wildcard contender.
Training camp will reveal how rapidly the newcomers adjust to NFL speed, but on paper Nashville has assembled the supporting cast Ward never enjoyed as a rookie. The clock is no longer ticking on a decision; it is counting down to kickoff, with a new arsenal locked and loaded.
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Football's demand for perfection has created the 'crazy' world where 'identical' fouls get different decisions
By Jacob Whitehead
Michael Carrick stood on the Vitality Stadium touchline on Saturday evening trying to reconcile two penalty-box grapples that looked the same, sounded the same and, according to the laws of the game, were the same. One brought a spot-kick and a 1-0 lead; the other brought only a wave-away and, 13 seconds later, a Bournemouth equaliser. Manchester United left Dorset with a 2-2 draw and a dossier of grievances already dispatched to PGMOL.
The flash-point sequence began just past the hour. Matheus Cunha cut inside Alex Jimenez, felt a two-handed tug on his shirt and hit the turf. Referee Stuart Attwell pointed to the spot; Bruno Fernandes converted. Six minutes later Amad, darting in from the opposite flank, was seized by Adrien Truffert in an almost carbon-copy hold. Attwell said play on. United’s bench erupted; within a breath Ryan Christie levelled.
Carrick, normally reluctant to rail against officials, could not hide his bemusement. “You get one, you must get the other,” he told Sky Sports. “It’s pretty much identical, two-hand grab — so either way, he’s got one wrong. To give one and not give the other… I just can’t get my head around it. It’s crazy.”
The interim United boss was equally accepting of the decision to send off Harry Maguire for a professional foul on Evanilson late on, acknowledging the defender had denied a clear scoring opportunity. Yet the symmetry of Maguire escaping censure for an earlier shove on the same striker — one of four major incidents Attwell allowed to stand without VAR intervention — underlined the inconsistency Carrick believes is warping matches.
United’s complaint to the refereeing body centres on that scatter-pattern of calls. In the 24th minute Maguire nudged Evanilson in the back as he shaped to shoot; no penalty. After 78 minutes the roles were reversed, Evanilson tumbled again, and this time Attwell did point to the spot. Between those moments came Cunha’s award and Amad’s denial. All four, slowed to a freeze-frame, carry the textbook characteristics of a foul.
PGMOL’s silence has only amplified the noise. Unlike rugby union, where referee-TMO exchanges are broadcast, football offers no window into the process. Viewers were left to guess why Truffert’s more forceful grip was judged less punishable than Jimenez’s, or why the VAR, Michael Salisbury, never asked Attwell to re-screen either incident. The league’s pride in having Europe’s lowest VAR intervention rate offers a partial answer: officials are under renewed instruction to let the on-field call stand unless a “clear and obvious” blunder stares them in the face.
But the phrase itself is elastic, and the grey area is widening. Pulling an attacker’s shirt is routinely labelled “soft” until the moment it is penalised; at set-pieces identical wrestling matches are ignored almost by tradition. Add the summer mandate to speed up play and the VAR becomes reluctant to muddy already turbulent waters.
The result is a sport trapped between two irreconcilable ambitions: absolute consistency and respect for the referee’s autonomy. Cricket can achieve the former because its decisions are binary — in or out, caught or not caught. Football’s laws are interpretative, and even PGMOL’s five-man key-match-incidents panel regularly splits 3-2 on whether an overturn was required.
United’s selective video edits — omitting Evanilson’s first tumble while highlighting Amad’s — and Bournemouth’s mirror-image cherry-picking illustrate another truth: every club calibrates memory to its own grievance. Yet Carrick’s broader point survives the spin cycle. When identical offences produce opposite outcomes inside the same match, the product risks looking arbitrary.
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Three new Yankee experiments are already failing
TAMPA—The Yankees have never been shy about betting on upside, but with Aaron Judge’s prime ticking away, the front office’s latest low-cost, high-reward gambits are flashing red before the regular season even begins. Three winter acquisitions—left-hander Ryan Weathers, reliever Chad Chivilli and Mexican League MVP José Torres—were brought in to deepen the roster without denting the payroll. Through the first month of camp, each move is trending toward regret.
Weathers, acquired from Miami for four prospects including three of the organization’s top-30 names, arrived with a triple-digit fastball and a wipeout off-speed mix. The 25-year-old has not lacked for stuff; he has lacked health and results. Over the past five seasons he has never topped 94 2/3 innings in a year and carries a 4.93 ERA across 281 big-league frames. This spring the ledger looks worse: 16 earned runs, 23 hits, three walks and two hit batters in 12 1/3 innings. The Yankees insist there is time to “find rhythm,” but every additional flat slider shortens the leash on a pitcher they control only through 2026.
Chivilli’s profile is similar—velocity that lights up the radar gun, numbers that dim the optimism. The Rockies castoff posted a 6.18 ERA in 90 1/3 innings at Coors Field the past two seasons, inviting the standard altitude alibi. Eight Grapefruit League innings torched that excuse: 11 runs on 11 hits, two plunked batters and a strikeout rate that continues to lag (15.6 percent in 2024). Optioned to Triple-A last week, Chivilli cost New York minor-league first baseman TJ Rumfield, who is 14-for-49 with four homers and five walks this spring for Philadelphia’s system.
The third experiment never truly left the petri dish. José Torres, reigning Mexican League MVP after slashing .347/.425/.730 with 27 homers in 326 at-bats for Algodoneros de Unión Laguna, was signed as insurance against Cody Bellinger’s free-agency decision. Once Bellinger returned, Torres became a man without a position—or plate appearances. He received a late invite to camp and is 1-for-5 so far, a depth piece buried behind entrenched veterans at first base and both outfield corners.
Yankees officials continue to preach patience, noting that spring statistics are not binding and that each player offers minor-league options. Yet the urgency of a championship window fronted by Judge, Gerrit Cole and a retooled lineup makes every March misstep feel magnified. If the early returns hold, New York will have surrendered four legitimate prospects and a productive minor-league bat for 20 1/3 innings of 10-plus ERA baseball and a bat that has yet to leave the bench.
The diamond-in-the-rough philosophy worked for DJ LeMahieu and, briefly, José Caballero. Three weeks into camp, the 2025 class of rough is still waiting on its first polish.
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March Madness shuts out mid-majors as none reach 2nd round of women's NCAA Tournament for 1st time
For the first time since the women’s NCAA Tournament expanded to a 64-team field in 1994, the opening weekend produced a clean sweep for the sport’s power brokers: every program that survived to the second round hails from a major conference, leaving the mid-major ranks empty-handed when the bracket trimmed to 32. The historic shutout marks a stark departure from past tournaments that periodically featured Cinderella runs by smaller-conference representatives and underscores the widening competitive gap in women’s college basketball’s showcase event.
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Bayern Munich News: The aftermath of FC Bayern vs. Union Berlin
Munich—Bayern Munich answered November’s frustrating 2-2 draw in Berlin with a statement 4-0 demolition of Union Berlin at home, producing the focus and intensity that had been missing from the reverse fixture earlier in the 2025 calendar year. From the opening whistle the Rekordmeister dictated tempo, ensuring there would be no repeat of the sluggish start that had plagued them in the capital.
The comprehensive victory keeps Bayern atop the Bundesliga conversation and offers several immediate talking points:
• The four-goal margin matched the side’s most convincing league win of the campaign and underlined the squad’s growing cohesion.
• The clean sheet was equally welcome; Bayern had conceded in each of their previous three league outings.
• The result also serves as timely momentum ahead of a looming Champions League showdown with Real Madrid, confirmed to be staged without Madrid’s first-choice keeper Thibaut Courtois.
While the club savours the three points, work behind the scenes continues at pace. Bayern remain locked in a multi-club scramble for 16-year-old Hertha Berlin prodigy Kennet Eichhorn, with Manchester United, Arsenal, Borussia Dortmund, RB Leipzig, Eintracht Frankfurt, Barcelona and Real Madrid also circling the midfielder. Bayern executives have made it clear they will pursue Eichhorn aggressively if a path opens, though competition is expected to be fierce.
Further afield, Real Madrid are reportedly willing to field offers for 23-year-old French international Eduardo Camavinga, who has started only 12 of Madrid’s 21 LaLiga fixtures this term. A fee upwards of €50 million is being mooted, and several Premier League clubs have already registered interest. Bayern, long-time admirers of Camavinga’s ball-winning range, have yet to table a bid but are monitoring developments closely.
On the outbound radar, Brighton & Hove Albion have secured a verbal agreement with FC Köln winger Said El Mala. The Seagulls are prepared to meet a €40 million summer valuation after seeing an initial €30 million approach rebuffed in January. The deal is sweetened by Brighton’s parallel pursuit of Said’s brother, Malek El Mala, allowing both siblings to play in England—an arrangement the family considers “the dream.”
Barcelona, meanwhile, are positioning themselves for a cost-free swoop on João Cancelo. The Portuguese full-back, currently on loan from Al Hilal, would consider a significant salary reduction to join Barça permanently if the Catalan club can negotiate a free transfer, with his Saudi contract running until 2027.
Bayern’s own recruitment team have stepped up scouting of 19-year-old Karlsruher SC forward Louey Ben Farhat, who featured prominently in a recent 3-3 draw with Dresden. Club scouts view the teenager as a developmental project who would not demand immediate first-team minutes. Any move, however, is contingent on budget left after addressing priority slots at right-back and in attacking depth behind Harry Kane. Serge Gnabry’s freshly signed extension places him in pole position as Kane’s primary back-up, potentially freeing resources for a low-risk flier on Ben Farhat.
Elsewhere, speculation swirls around Crystal Palace winger Michael Olise, whose camp expects Bayern to table a lucrative package, while the club must fend off Borussia Dortmund for Tottenham prodigy Archie Gray and outmanoeuvre multiple suitors for Club Brugge winger Nathan De Cat.
With the Union Berlin result now in the rear-view mirror, Bayern turn their attention to tightening the squad for the season’s decisive stretch—both on the pitch and in the transfer market.
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Real Madrid Expect Possible UEFA Sanctions for Barcelona in Negreira Case
Madrid, Spain – Real Madrid believe disciplinary action from UEFA against FC Barcelona in the long-running Negreira case is now a realistic prospect, sources familiar with the club’s thinking have told journalist Jesús Bengoechea, raising the possibility of a Champions League ban and severe financial fallout for the Catalan giants.
The case centres on payments totalling more than €7 million made between 2001 and 2018 by Barcelona to companies linked to José María Enríquez Negreira, then vice-president of Spain’s referees committee. Prosecutors contend the arrangement may constitute sporting corruption, arguing the money was designed to secure favourable refereeing treatment. Barcelona have repeatedly denied wrongdoing, maintaining the fees were for technical reports on match officials.
UEFA opened a disciplinary file when the scandal surfaced but suspended proceedings while Spanish courts took the investigative lead. That pause is nearing its end, according to Bengoechea, who says witness testimony in Spain is almost complete and UEFA is poised to re-engage. “UEFA declared itself competent in the case when it first emerged,” he noted. “From a legal point of view that step is extremely important.”
Inside Real Madrid, optimism has grown that European football’s governing body will act. Club officials are preparing formal submissions to both UEFA and FIFA setting out their concerns, though under sports administrative law they cannot request a specific penalty. “Sanctions are discretionary and it is the governing bodies that decide,” Bengoechea explained.
Should UEFA proceed, the most probable punishment is exclusion from the Champions League, with the duration ranging from a single season to a maximum of ten. A one-year ban beginning next season is viewed as the starting point, but a multi-year suspension has not been ruled out. Such a scenario would deprive Barcelona of substantial revenues from prize money, broadcast rights and commercial bonuses tied to Europe’s elite competition. Sponsorship contracts often contain Champions League participation clauses, meaning income could fall further, while elite players may reconsider their futures at a club absent from the continent’s premier tournament.
“A ban of four or five years from the Champions League would be a financial catastrophe for Barcelona,” Bengoechea said, highlighting the wider economic and sporting ramifications.
The impending conclusion of the Spanish court’s witness phase is seen as the trigger for UEFA’s next move. Several Barcelona presidents have acknowledged the payments in testimony, while former coaches, including Luis Enrique and Ernesto Valverde, have reportedly stated they never received the refereeing analyses the fees were meant to fund. These admissions, Bengoechea argues, are pivotal from a sports-law perspective.
For months, scepticism prevailed that the scandal would yield meaningful consequences. That mood has shifted inside the Bernabéu. “I had already fallen into pessimism and thought nothing would happen,” Bengoechea admitted. “But the latest information I am hearing from inside the club makes it seem there is now a very high probability that sanctions will arrive.”
Any UEFA decision to sanction Barcelona would reverberate well beyond Spain, setting a precedent for how sporting governance bodies address allegations of refereeing-related corruption and reshaping the competitive landscape of European club football.
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Vikings Draft Thoughts
Minneapolis — With the NFL Draft still five weeks out, the Minnesota Vikings are carrying more urgency into late April than most 8-9 clubs. An offseason that began with the dismissal of general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah has left the franchise’s long-term roster plan in the hands of an interim front office, a respected but green decision-making structure, and a coaching staff that knows the window to contend is narrowing faster than the salary-cap spreadsheet says it should.
Team president Mark Wilf did not mince words when he announced Adofo-Mensah’s exit on Jan. 30: the Vikings must “re-establish the draft as the lifeblood of the roster.” The numbers explain why. From 2022-25, no club harvested fewer approximate-value points above historical expectation than Minnesota, according to Pro Football Reference’s AV-over-expectation model. Two first-round defenders — safety Lewis Cine and cornerback Andrew Booth — have combined for virtually no return. Quarterback J.J. McCarthy, selected 10th overall last April, has logged only four AV; Bo Nix, taken two slots later, already sits at 26. Fourth-round cornerback Khyree Jackson’s tragic death last summer only added to the ledger of misfortune.
The result is a roster that has papered over draft shortcomings with selective free-agency strikes. Signing Andrew Van Ginkel, Jonathan Greenard and Blake Cashman in 2026 jump-started a defense that helped Minnesota stay in playoff contention until Week 17. Sam Darnold’s $10 million deal stabilized the quarterback room while McCarthy red-shirted. Yet the front office cognoscenti inside TCO Performance Center understand the ceiling of that approach. Free agents arrive older, costlier and without the developmental upside that fills out the back half of every 53-man roster. “Draft-and-develop” is not sloganeering in the NFC North; it is survival.
Survival, however, now rests with an unfamiliar cast. Salary-cap architect Rob Brzezinski will run the draft room for the first time in his two-decade tenure. Co-assistant GMs Ryan Grigson and Demetrius Washington will anchor scouting, but head coach Kevin O’Connell and defensive coordinator Brian Flores are expected to wield unusual influence — Flores especially after the franchise doubled down on his vision with a January extension. The coach already reshaped the defensive depth chart this month, parting with high-priced interior linemen Javon Hargrave and Jonathan Allen, two 2026 additions whose scheme fit and locker-room chemistry never matched their paychecks.
Flores’ preferences figure to steer a four-pick top-100 haul that currently sits at No. 18 overall, 50th, 81st and 98th. Minnesota does not own a fourth-round choice but holds a fifth, sixth and three sevenths. League sources believe the Vikings will lean defense early, targeting an interior lineman or hybrid safety who can execute the multiplicity Flores demands. Cornerback is also in play after the team met with San Diego State’s Chris Johnson (6-0, 193, 4.43 speed) at his pro day and again on a Top-30 visit. Offensive line help could arrive on Day 2; Clemson’s Tristan Leigh has already been in for a private workout, and Oregon’s Alex Harkey followed his pro-day performance with a one-on-one session in Floweryer.
Skill-position meetings have raised eyebrows. Georgia State’s big-bodied WR Ted Hurst and Penn State RB Kaytron Allen were both formally interviewed at the combine, fueling speculation that Tai Felton’s readiness as WR3 is not yet trusted. Running back looks like a late-round flier at best after formal interviews with Nebraska’s Emmett Johson and North Carolina Central’s Chris Mosley.
Inside the building, decision-makers insist the board remains fluid. Brzezinski has spent March gathering intel from agents and rival executives; Grigson leans on five years of experience as Indianapolis’ GM; Washington overlays an analytics model borrowed from their shared San Francisco roots. Yet the tiebreaker may ultimately belong to Flores, who began his NFL climb as a Patriots scout and still calls personnel work his “favorite part of the job.” Expect Minnesota’s first three selections to carry his fingerprints — high-motor front-seven pieces and three-down linebackers who can blitz, traits reflected in visits with Gracen Halton and Anthony Hill Jr.
The stakes are obvious. Harrison Smith, if he returns, will be 37. Aaron Jones turns 32. Eight other projected 2027 starters are already 30 or older. The Vikings can’t buy their next nucleus; they must draft it. Whether an interim GM, a reshuffled scouting department and an ascendant defensive coordinator can reverse four years of draft-day decline will determine whether 2026’s near-miss was a speed bump or the start of a free fall.
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The Business of Football: How many players do you need to win a World Cup anyway?
By Matt Slater | The Athletic UK
Birmingham — Stop me if you’ve heard this one before, but the Premier League and the English Football Association are at war again. The latest skirmish over club-versus-country rights arrives at a delicate moment: England sit inside FIFA’s top five, Thomas Tuchel’s side are second-favourites in most World Cup markets, and 16-year-old Max Dowman has just become the Premier League’s youngest goalscorer. All of which suggests the production line is humming. Yet the numbers tell a different story.
Of the 296 starters and substitutes who featured on the most recent Premier League weekend, only 82 (28 per cent) are eligible for England. The share of minutes banked by England-qualified players (EQPs) is even lower: just under 26 per cent. Tuchel’s first squad since taking charge contained 35 names but still omitted Trent Alexander-Arnold and six others who would have strolled into previous eras. The manager has also been forced to call three goalkeepers who, between them, have started only 12 league matches this season.
So how many players does a country actually need to win a World Cup? Argentina used 23 in Qatar. Tuchel can currently pick five EQPs who play Champions League minutes every week and a scattering of dual-nationals who might have worn the Three Lions had the FA courted them earlier. The Premier League, when pressed, cites those facts and argues that 30 years of foreign imports have raised technical standards to the point where any regular starter — English or not — is operating at or near international level.
The stand-off matters because the FA controls the post-Brexit work-permit system. In 2023 it granted clubs an “elite significant contribution” (ESC) loophole: four foreign teenagers per season for top-tier sides, two for League One and Two, even if the players fall short of the points-based threshold. Hidden in the small print is a trigger: if EQP minutes drop below 25 per cent in any division, the FA can scrap the ESC route overnight. With the Premier League hovering just above that line, the governing body has begun brandishing the clause.
That threat framed last month’s EFL conference at The Belfry, where officials from the FA, Premier League and EFL tried to sell a compromise. The proposal would allow Premier League academies to send youngsters on short “development loans” outside the traditional window-to-window rules, and add two extra group games to the EFL Trophy featuring Under-21 sides. In return, the Professional Game Youth Fund would receive an extra £16 million over three years — roughly £175-200 k per academy depending on category.
Many EFL chairmen balked. They do not want more fixtures against youth teams that fans refuse to watch, and they fear another wave of Premier League loanees will crowd out their own academy graduates. Some asked why their access to foreign talent should be jeopardised because top-flight clubs stockpile overseas players, then demand lower-division sides solve the minutes problem for them.
The loan plan is now on hold, but the broader financial fight shows no sign of ending. The EFL wants the Premier League to pool broadcast revenues and split them 75-25, scrapping parachute payments that currently give relegated clubs a trampoline back to the top flight. The Premier League, while insisting its “door is always open”, will restart talks only if the EFL drops the parachute issue and accepts a 4:1 merit rake in the Championship. The EFL has countered with a 2:1 rake across both leagues to soften the promotion-relegation cliff edge. Negotiations remain stalled.
Enter the independent football regulator, legally able to impose a settlement yet publicly reluctant to do so. Chair David Kogan reiterated at the recent Financial Times Business of Football summit that he would rather the game govern itself. Whether the parties can find common ground before legislation forces one upon them is the multibillion-pound question.
In the meantime, Tuchel must prepare for a summer World Cup with a talent pool that looks deep at first glance but shallow once minutes, form and fitness are examined. The answer to how many players you need to win a tournament is, in theory, 23. In practice, England may discover that the real number is however many can get on the pitch in the Premier League between now and kick-off in the United States.
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Digging Deeper Into Liverpool’s 2-1 Defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion
Liverpool arrived on the south coast hoping the momentum of a mid-week Champions League demolition of Galatasaray would translate into a rare Premier League flourish. Instead, Brighton & Hove Albion handed the Reds a sobering 2-1 loss that deepened the sense of a season drifting off course and intensified the scrutiny on head coach Arne Slot.
Milos Kerkez’s 27th-minute opener—an instinctive, audacious finish after pouncing on a loose ball—briefly offered the visitors a reprieve from their domestic struggles. The Hungarian left-back, long cast as Andy Robertson’s under-pressure understudy, celebrated his first senior goal for the club with the vigour of a man eager to silence lingering doubts. Yet the elation proved fleeting.
Brighton’s game plan targeted the yawning half-spaces between Ryan Gravenberch and Liverpool’s centre-backs, repeatedly funnelling runners into central pockets behind the midfield screen. The tactic paid dividends: Seagulls forwards found themselves unmarked inside the penalty arc twice before the interval, and although Alisson Becker’s deputy denied the first wave, the pressure told early in the second half when two quick goals flipped the scoreboard.
Slot’s side never rediscovered the attacking verve that scorched Turkish opposition four days earlier. Cody Gakpo, Florian Wirtz and academy spark Rio Ngumoha showed flashes of intent, but the collective rhythm remained disjointed. Passes went astray, transitions stalled, and Brighton’s back line comfortably soaked up sporadic pressure. By the final whistle, Liverpool had managed only two shots on target since Kerkez’s strike—an anaemic return that left travelling supporters venting frustration.
Defensively, the Reds looked a step slow and numerically outmatched. Brighton’s rotations dragged Liverpool’s back line into unfamiliar lanes, isolating full-backs and forcing centre-backs to step out, creating the very gaps Graham Potter’s successors have long exploited. The visitors’ inability to adjust on the fly underscored a worrying trend: last season’s hallmark—Slot’s knack for decisive half-time tweaks—has evaporated in 2024-25 league fixtures.
The result leaves Liverpool outside the Champions League places at the international break, a juncture that could decide more than fitness battles. Alisson, Hugo Ekitike and Mohamed Salah are rehabbing injuries; Alexander Isak’s ongoing thigh issue further clouds selection clarity. With a daunting European quarter-final against Paris Saint-Germain looming, the club hierarchy face an uncomfortable calculus. Fail to progress in Europe, and the chorus for change may become irresistible, particularly if rivals circling the same managerial targets accelerate their own searches.
For now, Slot retains credit for last spring’s title triumph—an achievement only Jurgen Klopp had previously delivered. Yet goodwill is finite. Unless Liverpool discover the resilience and ingenuity that once defined their comebacks, the Seagulls’ victory may be remembered less as a solitary setback than as the moment a proud club confronted an unforgiving crossroads.
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Tottenham Hotspur have chance to turn relegation narrative around against Nottingham Forest
London — When the Premier League calendar flips to March, the conversation at the summit of the table is usually about who can still catch the leaders. Yet the most pressure-packed plotline this weekend sits far lower down, where Tottenham Hotspur travel to Nottingham Forest on Sunday in a fixture neither club can afford to lose. Label it a relegation six-pointer, because that is exactly what it is: Forest sit just outside the bottom three on goal difference, while Spurs cling to a solitary-point cushion above the drop zone.
That Tottenham are even flirting with demotion still feels surreal. Last season they lifted the UEFA Europa League and were spoken of as perennial top-four contenders. Their descent, however, has been swift and bruising. Since appointing Igor Tudor a month ago, the north Londoners have leaked 14 goals in four matches and watched a once-comfortable gap evaporate into the thinnest of margins.
Hope can be a fragile thing, but Spurs may have relocated it in the space of six days. First came a dogged 1-1 draw at Liverpool, fashioned with makeshift centre-backs and sealed by Richarlison’s 90th-minute equaliser. Then, on Wednesday, Tottenham produced their best performance in months to defeat Atlético Madrid 3-2 in the Champions League. The result did not overturn the first-leg deficit, yet it served as a timely reminder of the squad’s latent quality. Xavi Simons, so often peripheral this season, struck twice and converted a late penalty to punctuate a display that yielded 2.39 expected goals to Atlético’s 1.02.
For the first time since January, Spurs are eyeing a three-match unbeaten streak. Their last such sequence featured two league draws and a 2-0 win at Eintracht Frankfurt that sealed passage through the Champions League league phase. A similar run on Sunday would ease relegation fears and buy Tudor breathing room on the touchline.
Forest, meanwhile, are hardly in a position to throw stones. A year on from finishing seventh, Nuno Espírito Santo’s side have slid inexorably toward danger. Their midweek Europa League dead rubber was treated as exactly that — key starters were rested with one eye fixed firmly on this weekend. Victory over Spurs would lift them four points clear of the bottom three; defeat would drag Tottenham right back into the maelstrom and leave Forest looking nervously over their shoulders once more.
Sunday’s encounter, then, is not about aesthetics. It is about nerve, organisation and the sort of ruthlessness both sides have lacked for long stretches. Spurs have shown flickers of life; Forest have home advantage and a week’s worth of pent-up energy. In the Premier League’s unforgiving spring, that combination makes for compelling, desperate viewing.
Tottenham know the equation. One more performance akin to Wednesday’s, and the narrative shifts from crisis to recovery. Anything less, and the relegation trapdoor creaks open a little wider.
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Chappell Roan Draws Ire Of Soccer Fans After Allegedly Intimidating 11-Year-Old Daughter Of Star Player
São Paulo—Pop singer Chappell Roan is facing a wave of criticism from Brazilian soccer supporters after Flamengo and Italy midfielder Jorginho accused a member of Roan’s security team of aggressively confronting his 11-year-old stepdaughter in a São Paulo hotel.
According to a statement posted on Jorginho’s Instagram account, the girl—daughter of actor Jude Law and Jorginho’s wife, Catherine Harding—was staying at the same property as Roan ahead of the American’s headlining set at Lollapalooza Brasil on Saturday night. Jorginho says his daughter “simply walked past the singer’s table, looked to confirm it was her, smiled, and went back to sit with her mum,” without speaking to or approaching Roan.
Minutes later, Jorginho alleges, a security guard employed by Roan approached the family’s breakfast table and “began speaking in an extremely aggressive manner,” warning that the child had shown “disrespect” and threatening to file a complaint with hotel management. The player says the girl “was sitting there in tears” while the guard delivered the reprimand.
“Honestly, I don’t know at what point simply walking past a table and looking to see if someone is there can be considered harassment,” Jorginho wrote.
The incident ignited social-media outrage. Within hours, Roan’s Instagram comments were flooded with messages from Brazilian fans defending the child and demanding an apology. The backlash escalated when Rio de Janeiro mayor Eduardo Cavaliere declared that Roan would not be booked for the city’s free “Todo Mundo no Rio” concert series on Copacabana Beach “as long as I’m in charge.”
Neither Roan nor her representatives have publicly responded to Jorginho’s account. The singer, whose profile has risen rapidly on the strength of festival appearances and viral singles, has previously drawn scrutiny for testy interactions with admirers. Whether the São Paulo hotel episode unfolded exactly as described or was a misunderstanding, it adds another entry to a growing ledger of public relations flashpoints for the 26-year-old artist.
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Playio Casino – Quick-Hit Gaming for the Fast-Paced Player
In the high-velocity arena of online gambling, every second counts, and Playio Casino has built its entire platform around that reality. Designed for players who measure entertainment in minutes rather than hours, the site strips away friction and delivers adrenaline in concentrated bursts, turning coffee breaks, commutes, and grocery-line waits into potential winning moments.
The moment a user lands on the login screen, speed is the priority. A minimalist interface loads almost instantly, while multilingual support—covering English, Portuguese, German, Finnish, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Italian, Czech, Spanish, and French—removes language barriers that could slow a quick deposit or spin. The goal is simple: get in, get the thrill, get out.
Playio’s catalogue of more than 4,500 games is curated for rapid turnover. Slots such as Mystic Fortune and Dragon Spin are calibrated for high volatility and single-spin resolution, delivering jackpot potential inside 30 seconds. Live-dealer tables operate on compressed timers—Speed Roulette and Dealer’s Choice blackjack finish hands in seconds, not minutes—while crypto slots settle wagers on the blockchain instantly, letting players pocket gains before the next traffic light turns green.
Mobile optimization underpins the experience. Whether on a 5-inch phone or a tablet, touch controls remain crisp, audio stays unobtrusive, and each spin cycle—from bet to payout—clocks in under half a minute. A push notification can lure a commuter into a brisk session: tap, bet, spin, result, and the phone is back in a pocket before the train doors open.
Micro-betting strategies dominate these short sessions. Users routinely deposit as little as $5, spread micro-stakes across several slots or a rapid-fire roulette wheel, and exit once a preset win—often only 1.5x the buy-in—is achieved. Crypto depositors enjoy an added edge: Bitcoin or Ethereum winnings can flow back to private wallets within five minutes, eliminating the traditional pending period that can erode momentum.
Sports bettors also benefit from the hurry-up ethos. Live, in-game odds refresh by the second, and accumulator bets settle the moment a final whistle blows. A goal notification during stoppage time can prompt a swift wager, with returns flashed to the player’s balance before the next kickoff.
Banking versatility keeps the tempo high. Low minimum deposits mean funds hit the account almost immediately, while e-wallet and crypto withdrawals satisfy the need for near-instant gratification. Although some fiat methods carry modest limits or brief processing lags, the typical short-session grinder rarely notices; the objective is to convert small windows of free time into bursts of actionable excitement, not to fund marathon bankrolls.
For players who value immediacy, Playio Casino has engineered a friction-free ecosystem where every swipe, spin, or sports bet is designed to conclude before real life reclaims attention. In the currency of minutes, the house promises—and largely delivers—maximum thrill per second.
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Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid Have Produced Some Memorable Clashes in Recent Memory
Madrid braces for another seismic chapter in its fiercest footballing rivalry on Sunday night when Real Madrid host Atlético Madrid at the Bernabéu, a fixture that has repeatedly delivered drama and could now tilt the balance of an increasingly tight La Liga title race.
Both clubs arrive at the derby surging on multiple fronts. Álvaro Arbeloa’s Real Madrid exorcised early-season doubts by ousting Manchester City from the Champions League, recording a 3-0 home statement before completing the job 2-1 at the Etihad. The result restored belief that the Spanish giants have relocated their European swagger at precisely the right moment.
Across town, Diego Simeone’s side are equally buoyant. After brushing aside Tottenham Hotspur to reach the last eight of Europe’s premier competition, Atlético have set their sights on a fifth consecutive league victory over their neighbours, a streak that would have seemed improbable only a few seasons ago. The visitors already hold a psychological edge after September’s 5-2 humiliation of Los Blancos at the Metropolitano, though Real answered with a Spanish Super Cup semifinal triumph that underlined the see-saw nature of this modern feud.
Sunday marks the third Madrid derby of 2024-25 and the first for Arbeloa in the technical area. With Barcelona four points clear at the summit, anything short of three points could puncture Real’s championship aspirations before players scatter for the March international break.
Quality and momentum appear evenly matched. Kylian Mbappé, fresh from a 20-minute cameo after injury, is expected to spearhead a 4-4-2 that also features Vinicius Jr, while Jude Bellingham could make his long-awaited return from a month-long lay-off, even if only from the bench. Defensive absences—Thibaut Courtois, Ferland Mendy, Dani Ceballos and Rodrygo—test depth, yet the recoveries of Éder Militão, Raúl Asencio and young Álvaro Carreras offer relief. Castilla graduate Thiago Pitarch keeps his midfield berth, and Arda Güler may usurp Eduardo Camavinga as Arbeloa tweaks his fluid engine room.
Simeone, famed for coaxing heroic displays in hostile territory, must also patch a midfield missing Pablo Barrios and Rodrigo Mendoza. Marcos Llorente is poised to drop alongside United States international Johnny Cardoso, freeing Nahuel Molina—whose thunderbolt sealed last weekend’s win—to bomb forward from right back. Between the sticks, Jan Oblak faces a late fitness test; Copa del Rey stalwart Juan Musso waits in the wings. Antoine Griezmann’s renaissance and Julián Alvarez’s hot streak give Atlético a razor-sharp edge up front.
Predicted lineups:
Real Madrid (4-4-2): Lunin; Alexander-Arnold, Rüdiger, Huijsen, Carreras; Valverde, Pitarch, Tchouaméni, Güler; Mbappé, Vinicius Jr.
Atlético Madrid (4-4-2): Musso; Molina, Pubill, Hancko, Ruggeri; Simeone, Llorente, Cardoso, Lookman; Griezmann, Alvarez.
Form, history and stakes converge on Sunday in a match that feels destined to be decided by the thinnest of margins. When the derby dust settles, the capital will know whether Real have kept pace with Barcelona—or if Atlético have tightened the title squeeze while extending their local rule.
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Hansi Flick finds a new Barcelona defensive anchor in Xavi Espart
Barcelona’s injury-ravaged back line has forced Hansi Flick to dig deep into the club’s famed academy, and the 18-year-old right-back Xavi Espart has answered the call with the poise of a veteran. With Jules Koundé, Alejandro Balde and Andreas Christensen unavailable and Eric García nursing discomfort, Espart’s seamless promotion from the reserve squad has become the story of the spring at Spotify Camp Nou.
Espart’s senior breakthrough arrived sooner than anyone expected. Thrown on as a late substitute for the injured Ronald Araújo during the Champions League round-of-16 first leg at Saint James’ Park on 10 March, the teenager did not blink. Three days later he was in the XI for the Liga clash with Sevilla, and he completed the whirlwind week by featuring in the return leg against Newcastle United. In the space of eight days, a youth-captain became a first-team fixture.
The defender’s ascent is no accident. Espart has lived inside the club’s training complex since 2015, arriving from Vilassar de Mar as a 10-year-old and climbing every rung of the academy ladder. Last season he anchored the Juvenil A side to a treble, and this year he wears the armband for the reserves while training his sights on a permanent leap to the senior squad.
“When I saw I was going onto the pitch, I couldn’t believe it,” Espart told club media. “I enjoyed it so much and my emotions were soaring.” Surrounded by familiar faces, the transition felt natural. “Being with these teammates has made it easier for me to adapt and perform.”
Flick, known for trusting youth, has already pencilled Espart into weekend plans. Diario SPORT reports the German is ready to hand the right-back a third consecutive start when Rayo Vallecano visits Catalonia on Sunday. Publicly, the coach has been effusive. “You are seeing the same thing I am—he is a player with confidence,” Flick said. “I love the calm with which he plays; it seems like he has a very low heart rate.”
That serenity underpins Espart’s rapid rise. “For a young person like me, the fact that the boss has trusted me has meant everything,” he admitted. “His way of trusting me has allowed me to be calm, without pressure, and play how I know how.”
Yet the teenager refuses to view the recent run as a finish line. “I have to keep working, training, and be prepared to take advantage of any new opportunity that arrives,” he stressed. If Espart continues on this trajectory, Barcelona’s next defensive anchor may already be in place.
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Real Madrid vs. Atletico Madrid: Injuries mount for Los Blancos ahead of LaLiga derby
Madrid—Less than 72 hours after edging Manchester City to reach the Champions League quarter-finals, Real Madrid have been forced to recalibrate their plans for Sunday’s city derby after losing first-choice goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois to a thigh injury that is expected to sideline him for roughly six weeks.
Courtois was withdrawn at half-time of the mid-week triumph over City, with Andriy Lunin stepping in to make three second-half stops and preserve the aggregate advantage. Yet the numbers surrounding Lunin’s three previous starts this season offer little comfort: eight goals conceded across those matches, including two victories that required Madrid to outscore their opponents rather than smother them.
That vulnerability arrives at an awkward moment. While Diego Simeone’s current Atletico Madrid side no longer cling to the ultra-defensive identity of years past, they have become increasingly adventurous through the summer additions of Ademola Lookman and Julian Alvarez—players capable of exploiting any uncertainty between the posts.
Manager Alvaro Arbeloa’s selection headaches are partially offset by the return of Kylian Mbappe, who has shaken off the knee complaint that kept him out since early February and is in contention for his first start in six weeks. His availability allows Vinicius Junior to revert to a creative role in which he has flourished, registering 10 assists in all competitions and repeatedly stretching LaLiga back lines with pace and vision.
The stakes extend beyond local bragging rights. Barcelona hold a four-point cushion at the summit, meaning Madrid can ill-afford a slip if they intend to keep the title race alive. History shows that reigning champions find a way to navigate setbacks—yet doing so after a bruising European encounter, and without their world-class keeper, will test that maxim.
Still, Madrid’s firepower should ultimately overwhelm Atletico across 90 minutes. Expect Mbappe to mark his return with a goal and Vinicius to orchestrate the supply line as Los Blancos protect their fortress and remain within striking distance of the league leaders.
Predicted outcome: Real Madrid 3, Atletico Madrid 1.
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Tight End from Liverpool Pledges to Alabama After Camp Performance
Liverpool, N.Y. — Oakley Keegan, a tight end who sat out his entire junior season while recovering from injury, has verbally committed to the University of Alabama football program. The pledge comes after Keegan impressed the Crimson Tide staff during a June camp visit and earned a scholarship offer.
Keegan’s return to the field and immediate recruitment by one of the nation’s premier programs underscores both his resilience and potential. After missing a pivotal year of high-school competition, the Liverpool product showcased enough athleticism and skill in Tuscaloosa to secure his spot in the 2024 recruiting class.
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Real Madrid’s Dominance Is Unmatched
Madrid—Real Madrid underlined their continental supremacy on Wednesday night, dismantling Manchester City 3-0 in the UEFA Champions League round of 16 and reinforcing the club’s unrivaled stature in the competition’s annals. The emphatic victory, played out in front of a raucous home crowd, showcased the Spanish giants’ ability to rise when Europe’s elite come calling.
With the win, Real Madrid not only seized a commanding edge in the tie but also reminded observers why they sit alone at the summit of Champions League history as the most decorated side in the tournament’s modern era. The three-goal margin was a statement of intent, each strike punctuating a night of precision, pace, and unyielding defensive resolve that left the English visitors searching for answers.
From the opening whistle, Madrid dictated tempo and territory, turning possession into menace and half-chances into a burgeoning lead that swelled with every passing quarter-hour. By the final whistle, the scoreline read 3-0, a result that echoed across Europe and further burnished the club’s reputation for delivering when the stakes are highest.
The triumph extends Real Madrid’s unique position in Champions League lore, a record haul of titles setting them apart from every rival past and present. Wednesday’s performance offered the latest evidence that, when the competition enters its knockout phase, the Spanish powerhouse remains the standard against which all others are measured.
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Team USA Flag Football Sends Clear Message to NFL Players About Olympics
Los Angeles — The roar inside the Fanatics Flag Football Classic on Saturday was supposed to celebrate the sport’s Olympic arrival in 2028. Instead, it became a ninety-minute warning siren to any NFL star eyeing a roster spot: the road to Los Angeles runs through the current kings of the flag game, and they are not surrendering their crowns.
Team USA, the reigning IFAF Flag Football World champion, treated two star-studded NFL sides like walk-ons, piling up 125 points on the afternoon while allowing only 44. The rout began with a 39-14 demolition of the Wildcats—quarterbacked by Joe Burrow and Jayden Daniels—and peaked with a 43-16 humbling of Tom Brady’s Founders. A mercy rule was openly discussed on the FOX broadcast as Team USA reeled off 24 unanswered points in the first half against Brady’s squad.
The NFL’s learning curve was steep. Hall-of-Fame-bound linebacker Luke Kuechly, lured out of retirement, was flagged twice in the opening half. Across both games, the Wildcats and Founders combined for seven penalties while struggling to corral flags from USA’s elusive ball carriers. “These guys might not be 6-4,” analyst Greg Olsen noted, “but they’re faster, shiftier, and they understand angles in a way the NFL guys simply don’t yet.”
Speed, agility and spatial awareness—cornerstones of elite flag football—were on full display from Darrell Doucette III, who punctuated his pre-tournament claim of superiority over Patrick Mahomes by accounting for six touchdowns and claiming Classic MVP honors. Team USA scored on 14 of its 15 drives, a conversion rate that underscored the gulf in specialization.
Not every NFL entrant left without highlights. Saquon Barkley’s two scores showcased burst and vision; DeVonta Smith and Odell Beckham Jr. combined for five touchdown receptions. Yet even the Wildcats’ moral victory—a 24-14 defeat in the championship rematch—only narrowed the gap, it did not close it.
The NFL has already secured Olympic participation: each franchise may send one player, plus an international athlete if designated. Saturday’s showcase suggests those invitations should come with an asterisk—roster spots must be earned, not gifted. As Brady, summing up the Founders’ 43-16 loss, admitted on air, “My heart is hurting right now.”
For Doucette and his teammates, the heartache belongs to the challengers. They have spent years refining the nuances of flag pulls, route angles and two-way stamina. Their message after the Fanatics Classic was unmistakable: if the Olympics are about putting the best possible product on the field, the best product already wears red, white and blue.
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‘It’s unbelievable energy’: Soccer fans can’t wait for Brazil/France game Thursday in Foxborough
FOXBOROUGH — By 4 p.m. Thursday, Gillette Stadium will feel more like Rio or Paris than New England. Third-ranked France and fifth-ranked Brazil are rolling into town for a star-studded friendly that local supporters are treating as a dress rehearsal for the World Cup this summer, and the anticipation is already spilling out of pubs like The Banshee in Dorchester.
“Two of the most talented international teams in the world are coming to Gillette,” said Scotland supporter Aaron Free, summing up the mood inside the bar. “So many good players on either side. I will be watching it for sure. It’s just a friendly, but it’s a good introduction to what it’s going to be like in June and July. I think the whole town will be buzzing.”
With final 26-man rosters to be finalized in May, both federations are bringing full-strength squads, turning what is technically an exhibition into a high-stakes audition. For fans who secured tickets months ago—like Bostonian Brian Gallagher—the chance to see global superstars on local soil was impossible to pass up.
“I’m really excited to see Mbappe play and some other big names,” Gallagher said. “Although it’s a friendly, it’s still really cool to see their full rosters play just months before the World Cup kicks off.”
French forward Kylian Mbappe, one of the planet’s most lethal scorers, headlines a cast of household names that has casual observers just as excited as lifelong followers. Sanket Bhagat, a neutral fan, framed the moment succinctly: “Mbappe is just a zip code away from where we are. It’s cool.”
Organizers expect a partisan, colorful crowd that will treat the 90 minutes like a knockout match. “It’s not often that two powerhouse nations play against each other in a friendly,” said Sarah Knupp, a Manchester United supporter who has traveled to two Women’s World Cups. “American sports fans need to understand the energy that comes with worldwide football and its unbelievable energy.”
That communal electricity is part of the sport’s sales pitch. Riley Knupp recalled how strangers become “best friends” over the course of a single game, and local devotees hope Thursday’s showcase accelerates soccer’s growth in the United States.
“If we give people a chance to see world-class like the best athletes in the world, they’ll be more likely to watch soccer,” said Chelsea fan Richard Abelard.
Kickoff is set for 4 p.m. at Gillette Stadium, an hour’s drive from downtown Boston, with Brazilian and French fans expected to converge en masse on Route 1. For one afternoon, the NFL’s home turf will belong entirely to the beautiful game.
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Flag Football-Team USA Dominates NFL Players to Win Flag Football Classic in LA
LOS ANGELES — In a commanding performance, Flag Football-Team USA overpowered a squad of NFL standouts to capture the Flag Football Classic title on Sunday night at Exposition Park. From the opening snap, the national side dictated tempo with crisp route-running and opportunistic defense, building an early lead that the NFL crew never threatened. The victory caps a showcase event designed to spotlight flag football’s surging popularity ahead of its Olympic debut in 2028, and it sends a clear message about the depth of elite talent already embedded within the American program.
Team USA, composed of specialists who compete year-round in international circuits, converted two first-half takeaways into quick scores, then protected the advantage with clock-chewing drives that kept the NFL offense on the sideline. The professional players—many of whom are Pro Bowl-caliber athletes experiencing flag rules for the first time—struggled to adjust to the faster pace and two-hand touch tackling, allowing gaps to widen as the second half progressed.
Fans packed the temporary grandstands lining the field, creating a festival atmosphere complete with youth clinics and music interludes between quarters. The event, jointly staged by the city’s tourism board and USA Football, drew a capacity crowd and trended nationally on social media throughout the evening.
With the win, Flag Football-Team USA reclaims bragging rights in the annual exhibition and reinforces its status as the team to beat on the global stage.
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Photo highlights from the World Indoor Athletics in Poland
TORUN, Poland — A global gathering of track and field talent unfolded over three days as the World Athletics Indoor Championships returned to the calendar, bringing together competitors from more than 100 national federations for the sport’s premier indoor showcase.
Held in the northern Polish city of Torun, the biennial event offered photographers a compact arena in which to capture the explosive starts, mid-race tactics, and celebratory finishes that define championship-level indoor athletics. The tight oval of the banked track, flanked by packed stands, provided dramatic backdrops for images that freeze split-second moments: the strain of a drive phase in the 60 metres, the arc of a pole bending under an athlete’s weight, and the airborne grace of a triple-jump hop.
With representatives from every continent, the championships served as both a season highlight and a proving ground for emerging stars, ensuring that each heat, final, and field-event attempt carried the weight of national pride. The resulting photo gallery chronicles not only the athletic feats but also the raw emotion—elation etched on faces, hands slapping the track in frustration, and teammates embracing in shared triumph—within the intimate confines of Torun’s indoor arena.
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FC Barcelona squad named for La Liga match against Rayo Vallecano
Barcelona, 8 December – Hansi Flick has finalised his 22-man selection for Sunday’s La Liga meeting with Rayo Vallecano at Camp Nou, keeping faith with the same group that overcame Newcastle in mid-week.
Goalkeepers Joan Garcia, Wojciech Szczesny and Diego Kochen have all been retained after Garcia shook off the knock that forced him off early against the English side. Defenders João Cancelo, Ronald Araujo, Pau Cubarsí, Gerard Martín, Eric Garcia, Álvaro Cortés and Xavi Espart complete the back-line options, while midfield resources include Gavi, Pedri, Fermín López, Marc Casadó, Dani Olmo and teenage pivot Marc Bernal.
In attack, Ferran Torres, Robert Lewandowski, Lamine Yamal, Raphinha, on-loan Manchester United forward Marcus Rashford and Swedish prodigy Roony Bardghji provide Flick with pace and variety.
The medical room remains unchanged: Alejandro Balde, Jules Kounde and Frenkie de Jong are still sidelined with hamstring issues, and Andreas Christensen continues his recovery from a knee complaint.
Kick-off is scheduled for 14:00 CET, with global coverage starting from 06:00 PT and 13:30 IST.
Barcelona, currently looking to consolidate their place at the sharp end of the table, will aim to extend an encouraging run of form against a Rayo Vallecano side that has already caused upsets this season.
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Hannah and Jared Schmidt Capture Silver Medals in World Cup Ski Cross Event at Craigleith
CRAIGLEITH, Ont. — Ottawa’s sibling ski-cross sensations Hannah and Jared Schmidt raced to silver on Saturday in a World Cup showdown staged at Ontario’s Craigleith Ski Club, marking the first podium finishes of the season for each athlete.
In the women’s big final, Switzerland’s Fanny Smith surged to gold, relegating Hannah Schmidt to second place. The result vaults the Canadian’s career medal tally to ten. Italy’s Jole Galli completed the podium in bronze, while reigning Olympic champion Marielle Thompson of Whistler, B.C., ended the day in tenth.
The men’s race saw France’s Youri Duplessis-Kergomard claim victory ahead of Jared Schmidt, whose runner-up finish boosts his lifetime podium count to seven. Sweden’s David Mobaerg rounded out the top three in third.
The event, hosted on the technical course overlooking Georgian Bay, drew a capacity crowd eager to witness Canada’s deep ski-cross contingent in action. The Schmidts’ twin silvers provided an early-season morale lift for the host nation as the World Cup circuit continues its march toward the finals.
The Canadian Press first published this report on March 21, 2026.
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Jose Mourinho’s touching words for ex-United coach Silvino Louro
Jose Mourinho has delivered an emotional farewell to Silvino Louro, the former Manchester United goalkeeping coach who has died at the age of 67. Mourinho posted the tribute on Instagram, pairing his words with a sequence of black-and-white photographs that charted the pair’s decades-long collaboration.
The images underline the breadth of their shared journey: Louro stood beside Mourinho at Porto, Chelsea, Inter Milan, Real Madrid and, finally, Old Trafford. In every dressing room he was the quiet constant, the specialist who prepared keepers and, just as importantly, the friend who steadied the manager’s nerves before kick-off.
Before carving out that coaching reputation, Louro guarded the nets himself, spending almost two decades as a goalkeeper with Benfica, Porto, Vitoria Setubal, Vitoria Guimaraes, Aves and Salgueiros. His playing career gave way to a coaching vocation that placed him at the heart of Mourinho’s most glittering triumphs, yet colleagues insist he never sought the spotlight.
Mourinho’s message captures that humility. “Now I cry, but I’ll be able to laugh, laugh a lot, talk about you, remember every moment,” he wrote. “In the Mourinho family you are loved and you’ll stay alive.” The manager signed off with the nickname born from Louro’s safe hands—“Rest easy little hands”—and a promise to keep hearing the pre-game reassurance that became ritual: “Bro, it’s going to be fine.”
The warmth of the tribute has resonated across football, a reminder that behind the silverware and the headlines, the sport is stitched together by relationships like the one Mourinho and Louro shared for more than twenty years.
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Jedd Fisch and Carver Willis Share Post-Game Moment After Purdue
Seattle—In a quiet but telling scene moments after Washington’s season-ending victory at Purdue, outgoing left tackle Carver Willis and head coach Jedd Fisch met near the 40-yard line, shook hands, and held the clasp long enough for photographers to capture the image. Place-kicker Grady Gross, helmet in hand, stood a few steps away, taking in the exchange that signaled both closure and continuity for a program in transition.
Willis, who started ten games at left tackle in 2025 and missed only three after an MCL sprain against Ohio State, had just finished his Husky career the same way he played it—up front and unfiltered. “You’ve got four starters returning with your No. 6 offensive guy on the O-line,” he told reporters earlier in the week, referencing redshirt freshman guard Champ Taulealea. “What more can you ask for?”
The 6-foot-6, 305-pound senior used Pro Day inside Dempsey Indoor to size up the unit he leaves behind. Junior quarterback Demond Williams Jr., every-game starter and “ridiculous” in Willis’s estimation, will operate behind an experienced front that includes 30-game starter Drew Azzopardi at right tackle, 15-game center Landen Hatchett—still in a protective sleeve after wrist surgery—and Hatchett’s brother Geirean, the only UW lineman to open all 13 contests in 2025. Sophomore left guard John Mills, already drawing All-American buzz, rounds out the group.
“Put a blindfold on and point and pick your favorite player and they’re going to have a great year,” Willis said, laughing that his own ACL remained intact while his MCL did not. “Now if I had torn like my ACL against Ohio State, you would have five-for-five returning.”
The handshake with Fisch, caught beneath the gray West Lafayette sky, served as Willis’s final on-field act in purple and gold. Gross, whose kicking helped secure the road win, lingered nearby, a reminder that while the lineman departs, the Huskies’ core remains stocked for 2026.
Washington, 9-4 on the year, will indeed return “just about everyone” along the offensive front. Willis, meanwhile, will be sending postcards from the NFL, keeping that ACL untouched and the memory of one last handshake firmly in frame.
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Enzo Fernández and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia Headline Mid-Week Transfer Whispers
London—While Europe’s top clubs brace for another summer of record-breaking spending, two names have vaulted to the front of Monday’s rumor mill: Chelsea’s Argentine World Cup winner Enzo Fernández and Paris Saint-Germain’s Georgian flyer Khvicha Kvaratskhelia.
Barcelona have set their sights on Fernández as the Catalans search for midfield metronome to re-energize Xavi’s possession-heavy blueprint. According to Spanish outlet El Nacional, the Blaugrana are exploring a swap that would send Dutch midfielder Frenkie de Jong to Stamford Bridge, a deal Chelsea’s hierarchy are reportedly willing to entertain. The potential exchange would represent a rare blockbuster swap in the modern market and could free up significant salary space for the Liga giants.
Across the Channel, Arsenal continue to monitor Kvaratskhelia after the 23-year-old’s explosive start to life in Ligue 1. North London sources tell Sports Illustrated that the Gunners have made initial enquiries, though PSG remain publicly steadfast that the winger is not for sale. Mikel Arteta’s side view the former Napoli star as a direct upgrade on the flank, but any pursuit will require persuading the Parc des Princes powerbrokers to reverse their stance.
Elsewhere, Manchester United’s revolving-door midfield picture shows no sign of slowing. Despite Casemiro’s previously announced exit, club officials have reopened internal talks about extending the Brazilian’s stay, per RTI Esporte. Should the five-time Champions League winner depart, United have identified Beşiktaş captain Orkun Kökçü as a successor, with Tottenham also circling the 23-year-old Turkish international. Interim boss Michael Carrick has additionally floated Everton’s Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall as a home-grown option, though Aston Villa are similarly keen.
Manchester City, fresh from another Premier League triumph, are plotting reinforcements in Portugal. Sporting CP’s Morten Hjulmand has emerged as a priority after Juventus cooled on the 26-year-old Dane, leaving City in pole position according to A BOLA. Sporting team-mate Maxi Araújo is also attracting Premier League attention; Chelsea and Tottenham dispatched scouts to evaluate the Uruguayan left-back during recent Europa League action.
Chelsea, meanwhile, are open to trimming attacking depth. Newcastle have been told striker Liam Delap will command £40 million if they wish to secure the England Under-21 international’s signature. Talks are ongoing, but the Magpies must weigh the fee against Profit & Sustainability constraints.
Liverpool’s wide areas could undergo a reshuffle. Cody Gakpo is open to a new challenge, with Tottenham monitoring the Dutchman’s situation. A Gakpo departure would accelerate Liverpool’s pursuit of Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon, a long-term admirer of Jürgen Klopp’s pressing philosophy. Reds talent-spotters have also been spotted in Denmark, running the rule over Midtjylland’s Chilean winger Darío Osorio.
Inter sporting director Piero Ausilio has been touring Europe to compile a shortlist of defensive reinforcements, with Arsenal’s Riccardo Calafiori the latest to be assessed. Conversely, Nerazzurri striker Marcus Thuram prefers a Premier League switch if he leaves the Giuseppe Meazza this summer; Aston Villa and Newcastle have already tested the waters, though Saudi Arabian interest has been rebuffed.
Relegation-threatened Tottenham face a potential exodus should they drop into the Championship. Manchester United are ready to pounce on teenage midfielder Archie Gray at a cut-price fee if Spurs succumb to the drop.
At Old Trafford, Harry Maguire has elected loyalty over a fresh start, rejecting advances from Everton, Sunderland, Tottenham and West Ham to sign a new deal, per TEAMtalk.
In Spain, Bayern Munich have joined the queue for Barcelona’s teenage centre-back Pau Cubarsí, while Real Madrid—concerned by the price tags on RB Leipzig’s Castello Lukeba and Liverpool’s Ibrahima Konaté—are attempting to convince Antonio Rüdiger to extend his Bernabéu tenure. Barcelona, meanwhile, would listen to offers for Jules Koundé despite manager Hansi Flick’s public backing.
Atlético Madrid have set their sights on Brentford’s Igor Thiago, who will be allowed to leave for €50 million, while Liverpool have re-established contact with Real Madrid’s Eduardo Camavinga and currently lead Chelsea in the race for his signature.
As the continental carousel accelerates toward the June window, Fernández and Kvaratskhelia remain the headline acts in a drama that promises more twists before the first official deal is even sealed.
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