Expert Sports News & Commentary

State education board investigating former Beckman football coach
DYERSVILLE, Iowa — The Iowa Board of Educational Examiners has opened a formal investigation into former Beckman Catholic High School head football coach Cole S. Mather after determining in January that probable cause exists to believe he violated the state’s Code of Professional Conduct and Ethics.
According to the board’s public licensure portal, the alleged breach centers on “an otherwise inappropriate relationship with a student.” No criminal charges have been filed, online court records show, and Mather, reached Wednesday by the Telegraph Herald, declined to comment.
Mather joined Beckman in 2023 as head football coach and also served as a physical education teacher and strength-and-conditioning instructor. A university announcement at the time of his hiring noted he holds a bachelor’s degree in physical education teaching from the University of Northern Iowa and a master’s in coaching and athletic administration from Concordia University.
Beckman Principal Marcel Kielkucki said Wednesday he could not confirm Mather’s current employment status, citing personnel confidentiality. “All I can share at this point is that it’s a personnel matter and that I’m not able to discuss it,” Kielkucki told the Telegraph Herald.
While the state investigation proceeds, Beckman has moved to fill the vacancy atop its football program. The school announced this week that longtime assistant Ryan Meissner will take over as head coach this fall. Meissner has spent the past 21 seasons on the Blazers’ sideline, including 16 as defensive coordinator, and has also coached track and field, softball, basketball and baseball at the school.
“We look forward to Coach Meissner’s leadership of our program and his ability to build on the recent success of the Blazer football program,” Activities Director Ryan Devereux said in a statement. “Coach Meissner has been a dedicated member of our program and staff for a number of years and will work to achieve our mission of spiritual, academic and personal excellence both in the classroom and on the field with our student-athletes.”
Meissner called the promotion “an honor” and emphasized a philosophy rooted in faith, leadership and family. “I hope to guide these young men while they continue growing in their faith, give them a sense of leadership, teach them about coming together as a family and overcoming challenging obstacles, all while having some fun playing the game of football,” he wrote.
Officials with the Iowa Department of Education referred additional questions to the board’s online licensure page and offered no further comment.
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Trey Hendrickson Joins Ravens as Maxx Crosby Stays Put and Daniel Jones Returns to Colts
In a trio of swift roster moves announced in the early hours, pass-rusher Trey Hendrickson has switched stripes to join the Baltimore Ravens, while Las Vegas keeps its defensive cornerstone Maxx Crosby off the trade block and quarterback Daniel Jones has re-upped with the Indianapolis Colts.
Hendrickson’s arrival gives Baltimore an immediate boost on the edge, pairing the Pro Bowl defensive end with an already formidable front seven. The Ravens have been aggressive in fortifying their defense this offseason, and landing Hendrickson signals continued urgency to close the gap on AFC contenders.
Across the conference, the Raiders elected to stand pat with Crosby, ending weeks of speculation about a potential blockbuster deal. Retaining the two-time All-Pro ensures that Las Vegas’ pass rush remains among the league’s most feared, providing stability as the franchise reshapes its roster around new leadership.
Meanwhile, the Colts moved quickly to secure continuity under center, bringing Jones back on a fresh deal. The move quashes quarterback uncertainty in Indianapolis and locks in a signal-caller familiar with the offensive scheme, setting the stage for a pivotal season in the competitive AFC South.
With training camps on the horizon, these decisions reset the balance of power across several divisions and set up high-stakes storylines for the coming campaign.
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Next piece of Bournemouth super-team puzzle revealed to Premier League masses: 'The Boy's A Bit Special'
Bournemouth’s recruitment drive has unearthed another precocious talent, and the early evidence suggests the 19-year-old Brazilian forward known simply as Rayan could be the most exhilarating yet. Arriving from Vasco da Gama for an initial £25 million, the teenager has already offered the Vitality Stadium faithful a glimpse of why Europe’s heavyweights tracked his development long before he touched down on the south coast.
Son of former Vasco defender Valkmar, Rayan grew up immersed in the mythology of the São Januário club. He announced himself in spectacular fashion during 2022, firing 29 goals in 34 games for Vasco’s Under-17 side and prompting admiring glances from Barcelona. Across nearly a century of senior appearances in Brazil’s top flight he found the net 25 times, a record that convinced Bournemouth to make him the latest marquee addition to an increasingly ambitious project.
Any lingering doubts about an immediate step-up were dispelled inside his first three Premier League outings. Rayan scored twice and created another, becoming only the third teenager in league history—after Robbie Keane in 1999 and Anthony Martial in 2016—to register a goal or assist in each of his opening three matches following the departure of Antoine Semenyo.
Capable of operating as a right-sided attacker or through the middle, Rayan offers manager tactical flexibility wrapped in fearless exuberance. He is, above all, a shooter: Vasco supporters became accustomed to his willingness to pull the trigger from distance, a trait borne out by the 280 goals he reportedly scored for the club’s academy sides before his 12th birthday. Yet his first two strikes in a Bournemouth shirt underlined a maturing composure, both arriving from inside the penalty area—one a low drive with his weaker foot after driving at Aston Villa’s back line, the other a stooping header that flashed beyond Everton’s Jordan Pickford.
The move represents a calculated gamble, as any direct jump from South America to the Premier League inevitably is. Questions of adaptation, cultural assimilation and physical readiness hover over every teenage import. Bournemouth, however, have cultivated a reputation for shepherding prodigies toward stardom before selling to the continent’s traditional superpowers. In the past 18 months alone Dean Huijsen has departed for Real Madrid, Milos Kerkez for Liverpool, Illia Zabarnyi for Paris Saint-Germain, Semenyo for Manchester City and Dominic Solanke for Tottenham Hotspur.
If Rayan maintains his blistering introduction, the next blockbuster exit may already be in the making. For now, Cherries supporters are savouring the present: a fearless Brazilian teenager turning the Vitality Stadium into his personal playground and fuelling belief that the next piece of the Bournemouth super-team puzzle has slotted perfectly into place.
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Trey Hendrickson Joins Ravens, Crosby Stays Put, Jones Returns to Colts
Cincinnati pass rusher Trey Hendrickson is on the move, agreeing to join the Baltimore Ravens, while Las Vegas will retain star defensive end Maxx Crosby and quarterback Daniel Jones will remain with the Indianapolis Colts after re-signing.
The flurry of roster decisions, confirmed late Tuesday night, reshapes the AFC landscape heading into the next phase of the offseason. Hendrickson, who has posted double-digit sacks in each of the past four seasons, brings immediate punch to a Ravens defense that finished near the top of the league in pressure rate a year ago. Terms of his deal were not disclosed.
Across the conference, the Raiders opted to stand pat with Crosby, ending speculation that the two-time Pro Bowler could be dealt. Crosby has recorded 52 sacks over the last four campaigns and anchors a Las Vegas pass rush that figures to remain a strength.
Meanwhile, Jones returns to Indianapolis after a brief foray into free agency. The Colts moved quickly to secure the veteran signal-caller, ensuring continuity under center as they retool around an offense that showed flashes in the previous season.
With training camps still months away, the trio of moves sets an early tone for what promises to be another active offseason across the NFL.
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Sports in brief: Thanksgiving Eve may join the NFL's holiday lineup
The National Football League is weighing the addition of a primetime contest on the night before Thanksgiving, a move that would create a new holiday-week broadcast window and extend the league’s traditional tripleheader into a four-game showcase. According to an initial report by ESPN, the prospective Thanksgiving Eve game could be inserted as soon as the current season’s schedule, pending final logistical approval.
For decades the NFL has reserved Thanksgiving Day for a trio of games, but the prospective Wednesday-night matchup would mark the first time the league has staged regular-season play on the eve of the holiday. Executives see the slot as an untapped opportunity to capture viewers gathering for the long weekend, and discussions center on how quickly the extra game can be integrated without disrupting competitive balance or travel schedules.
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Maxx Crosby commits to the Raiders following failed trade to the Ravens
Las Vegas—One day after a proposed deal that would have sent star edge rusher Maxx Crosby to Baltimore collapsed, the defensive standout publicly reaffirmed his allegiance to the Las Vegas Raiders.
Crosby’s declaration ends 24 hours of speculation that began when negotiations between the Raiders and Ravens reached an advanced stage. The trade, which was ultimately called off, would have shifted one of the league’s most productive pass rushers to the AFC North. Instead, Crosby has chosen to state his intention to remain in silver and black, offering the franchise and its fans clarity at a pivotal point in the offseason.
The abrupt end of talks leaves the Raiders with their premier defensive weapon still on the roster and the Ravens searching elsewhere for reinforcements on the edge. Crosby’s commitment provides stability for a Las Vegas defense that has relied heavily on his ability to disrupt opposing backfields.
With organized team activities on the horizon, the Raiders now move forward knowing their defensive cornerstone remains in place, while Baltimore must regroup and explore alternate avenues to bolster its pass rush.
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Bakersfield High School searches for new football coach after Shehee departs
Bakersfield High School is in the market for a new head football coach following the confirmation this week that Rashaan Shehee has vacated the position he has held since 2021. The announcement leaves the Drillers program without the leader who guided them through the past three seasons and sets the stage for a fresh direction heading into the next campaign. School officials have not yet released a timeline for the hiring process or indicated whether an interim coach will be appointed to oversee off-season workouts.
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Yankees 2026 Season Preview: Ryan Yarbrough
TAMPA—While the Yankees’ winter headlines revolved around the health of Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón, Brian Cashman’s first move was quietly locking up the pitcher who saved the rotation last summer. Ryan Yarbrough’s one-year, $2.5 million reunion ensures the club retains its most dependable swingman entering 2026, a decision the front office views as insurance against another 162-game war of attrition.
Yarbrough arrived in the Bronx twelve months ago on a non-roster invite, penciled in as a lefty long reliever. By June he had evolved into something far more valuable: the stabilizer who kept the Yankees afloat when injuries gutted the starting five. Over eight spot starts from May to mid-June the 34-year-old went 3-1 with a 3.83 ERA across 40 innings, allowing two or fewer runs in seven of those outings. His lone blemish—an eight-run nightmare against Boston—skewed the surface numbers, yet even that clunker could not erase the impression that Yarbrough had become indispensable.
The final ledger read 19 appearances (eight starts), 64 innings, a 4.36 ERA and 0.1 fWAR, numbers that FanGraphs projects to hold steady in 2026: 54 games, 62 frames, 4.41 ERA, 0.1 WAR. Those modest projections miss the context: every club now budgets for seven, eight, even nine starters, and Yarbrough’s willingness to oscillate between bullpen and rotation is the rare skill set contenders covet.
Velocity has never been his calling card—Yarbrough’s fastball averaged 88 mph last season—but the Yankees’ pitching lab helped him thrive on unpredictability. Matt Blake’s staff convinced him to feature the cutter over the four-seamer or sinker, added two inches of fade to a changeup that jumped from fourth-most used in 2024 to second in 2025, and lowered his arm slot while shifting him slightly toward the first-base side of the rubber. The tweaks produced elite contact management: 97th percentile in average exit velocity, 92nd percentile in hard-hit rate.
Deception will again be paramount because Yarbrough’s role may hinge on circumstance. Cole and Rodón are returning from elbow procedures; Max Fried, Will Warren and Cam Schlittler are coming off career-high workloads; Luis Gil and Ryan Weathers carry injury red flags. If the rotation stays intact, Yarbrough slides back into multi-inning relief, the lone lefty the Yankees trust to face a string of tough divisional bats. If another wave of injuries strikes, manager Aaron Boone won’t hesitate to hand him the ball every fifth day, buoyed by last summer’s success against lineups like the Dodgers, whom Yarbrough held to one run over six innings.
Prospects Elmer Rodríguez and Carlos Lagrange could eventually vault past him on the depth chart, and the upside of Weathers, Warren or Gil may win the first crack at any vacancy. Yet none offers Yarbrough’s combination of experience, durability and institutional knowledge. In a clubhouse built to win now, the quiet re-signing of a soft-tossing journeyman may prove every bit as pivotal as the headline-grabbing moves still to come.
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Ray Fittipaldo: What does the addition of Michael Pittman Jr. mean to Steelers' WR corps?
PITTSBURGH — When Mike McCarthy guided the Green Bay Packers to victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XLV, he did so with Aaron Rodgers at the height of his powers and a balanced receiving corps in which four different pass-catchers recorded at least 500 yards through the air. None of those wideouts were destined for Canton, yet the collective production proved more than enough to secure a championship.
That historical snapshot raises an immediate question for the current Steelers regime: could the acquisition of Michael Pittman Jr. provide Pittsburgh with a similar brand of diversified firepower? While the provided excerpt offers no direct statistics or quotes on Pittman’s projected role, the Super-Bowl-winning template cited—four 500-yard receivers, no singular superstar—suggests the franchise may be prioritizing depth and reliability across the depth chart rather than banking on one headline-grabbing talent.
Pittman, known for his size and contested-catch ability, theoretically gives offensive coordinator Arthur Smith a possession-oriented complement to the existing wide-receiver room. If the Steelers can coax 500-plus yards out of Pittman and a handful of teammates, they would inch closer to the balanced distribution that proved so problematic for them in that February 2011 loss to McCarthy’s Packers.
Whether Pittsburgh’s current quarterback situation can replicate Rodgers’ elite efficiency is a separate debate, but the front office has at least signaled that surrounding the position with a varied cast of capable targets is a viable path forward. How quickly Pittman assimilates into the offense, and how his presence re-shapes target share, will determine whether the Steelers can finally replicate the multi-receiver formula that once buried them on the NFL’s biggest stage.
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Yankees Birthday of the Day: Darryl Strawberry
Darryl Strawberry turns 64 today, and while the slugging outfielder will always be linked to the 1986 champion Mets, the final act of his turbulent 17-year major-league career unfolded in the Bronx, where he helped transform the late-1990s Yankees from contenders into a budding dynasty.
Born March 12, 1962, in Los Angeles, Strawberry overcame an abusive home life to become the No. 1 overall pick in the 1980 draft. By 24 he owned a World Series ring, a National League Rookie of the Year trophy, two Silver Slugger awards and eight consecutive All-Star selections, but off-field drug issues derailed his stay in Queens and Los Angeles. Suspended for cocaine in 1995, he accepted an invitation from owner George Steinbrenner and resurfaced in New York as a left-handed DH, posting a 112 OPS+ as the Yankees snapped a 14-year playoff drought.
Unsigned the following winter, Strawberry resurrected his swing with the independent St. Paul Saints, hitting .435 with 18 home runs in 29 games—numbers so gaudy Steinbrenner brought him back in July 1996. He slugged three homers in the ALCS against Baltimore and walked off the White Sox with the 300th home run of his career, earning a championship ring as the Yankees captured their first title since 1978.
Limited playing time followed, yet Strawberry’s impact remained outsized. In 1998 he cracked 24 home runs in 101 games and became the first player in franchise history to swat two pinch-hit grand slams in the same season. Diagnosed with colon cancer during the ALDS, he missed the World Series sweep of San Diego but returned in 1999 to hit .327 down the stretch and slug two more postseason homers as the Yanks repeated.
A February 2000 drug violation triggered a season-long suspension and effectively ended his time in baseball, closing the book on a résumé that includes four World Series crowns, 335 lifetime home runs and a reputation—especially among teammates—for clutch swings and a whip-quick left-handed stroke that no hurler ever forgot.
Sober for more than two decades, Strawberry now frequents Yankees Old-Timers’ Day and saw the Mets retire his No. 18 in 2024. On this birthday, the organization and its fans salute the man who found redemption in pinstripes and helped restore championship glory to the Bronx.
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More Teams Book Their Place in the Copa Libertadores
The 2024 Copa Libertadores field grew by two on Wednesday night as Sporting Cristal and Deportes Tolima survived white-knuckle qualifiers to secure passage to the group stage.
At Estadio Alberto Gallardo, Sporting Cristal needed every nerve to edge Venezuela’s Carabobo FC. After the sides finished 2-2 on aggregate, the Peruvian side prevailed 3-2 in the ensuing penalty shootout, sending the home crowd into delirium and Cristal into Pot 4 of Friday’s draw.
Across the continent in Ibagué, Tolima completed a dramatic turnaround against an unnamed first-leg loser. Trailing 1-0 after the opener, the Colombian outfit levelled the tie and then watched Juan Pablo Torres etch his name into club lore, smashing home the decisive goal three minutes from time to clinch a 2-1 aggregate success.
The victories mean Sporting Cristal and Tolima join Universidad Central, Platense, Independiente Rivadavia, Mirassol and Barcelona SC in Pot 4. One berth remains unclaimed; Independiente de Medellín and Juventud will decide it on Thursday evening.
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OPEN THREAD — CL Reactions: 12 Mar. 2026
Madrid, Spain – In a pulsating UEFA Champions League knockout match that felt like a mirror-image contest, Real Madrid flipped the script on Manchester City, turning the visitors’ familiar flaws into a springboard for a statement victory. From the opening whistle at Estadio Santiago Bernabéu, Federico Valverde authored the headline, scoring twice and tracking back tirelessly to anchor a tactical approach that was part classic Madrid counterattack, part Atlético-style defensive block.
Valverde’s performance was so comprehensive that long-time forum moderator Juninho, writing in The Daily Merengue’s post-match thread, labeled it “the best game of his career.” Operating in a hybrid right-sided role, the Uruguayan neutralized Jérémy Doku’s early threat, repeatedly forcing the Belgian winger into traffic and springing transitions that led directly to both goals. “He’s the clean-up crew. He’s a fixer,” Juninho wrote, arguing that Valverde’s off-ball intelligence and progressive carries are maximized when he is freed from congested central zones.
The tactical wrinkle that enabled Valverde’s freedom was Arbeloa’s decision to morph into a back-five without the ball, a shape more associated with neighboring rivals Atlético than with the 15-time European champions. Thierry Correia, Tchouaméni and Guler screened passing lanes so effectively that City’s vaunted possession often stalled in harmless lateral patterns. “If City delayed on any pass, someone was immediately there to cut the lane,” the thread noted, praising the collective focus even as it questioned why such concentration remains intermittent in La Liga fixtures.
Yet the night was not without concern. Trent Alexander-Arnold, lauded for his distribution, was repeatedly targeted on the defensive end, with Doku and Semenyo both escaping down Madrid’s right in the first half. Valverde’s recovery runs masked the issue, but the forum consensus warned of bigger tests ahead, especially if Bayern Munich—tipped as the next opponent—elect to funnel attacks through Alphonso Davies or Luis Diaz against the English full-back.
In attack, Vinícius Júnior won and converted a penalty but again split opinion over spot-kick duties once Kylian Mbappé returns. “Vini needs to stop taking penalties,” Juninho argued, half-jokingly suggesting Valverde’s power strike would be a better alternative.
Injuries added a layer of urgency to the celebrations. Ferland Mendy departed at half-time with what early reports suggest could be a prolonged absence, while Fede himself finished the match visibly exhausted and Tchouaméni nursing a knock. With Carreras’ recovery timeline uncertain and Fran García’s cameo doing little to inspire confidence, the forum urged prayers for the medical staff as much as for the players.
Endrick’s impending return from international duty next season was floated as a potential antidote to Brahim Díaz’s underwhelming cameos, though the Brazilian teenager’s integration remains hypothetical. For now, Madridistas are savoring a victory that, in Juninho’s words, turned City into “the exact La Liga Getafe-styled team that we seem to suffer against,” while proving Los Blancos can weaponize that same identity when focus and fitness align.
The tie is alive, the squad is battered, but after a night when Fede Valverde ran the gamut from right-back to right-wing to goal-scoring hero, optimism reigns inside the Bernabéu and across the forums of The Daily Merengue.
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Indiana’s Season Ends in a Whimper: Hoosiers Fall to Northwestern, Miss NCAA Tournament for Eighth Time in Ten Years
Chicago, IL — The United Center scoreboard read 74-61, but the numbers felt heavier. Indiana’s 2025-26 campaign ended Wednesday night with a loss to a Northwestern team that entered the game 15-18 overall and 5-15 in Big Ten play, capping a collapse that began with so much promise.
First-year head coach Darian DeVries arrived in Bloomington to immediate optimism. A 12-3 non-conference record and 3-1 league start had Hoosier fans eyeing a return to March Madness. Instead, Indiana won only two true road games after that hot start and dropped 11 of its final 18 contests, eight by double digits. Wednesday’s defeat was the exclamation point on a month-long spiral that saw the Hoosiers tumble from “safely in the field” on Feb. 9 to the wrong side of the bubble.
The Wildcats, who improved to 2-0 against Indiana this season, have now beaten the Hoosiers in seven straight meetings. The last IU victory over Northwestern came on Feb. 10, 2021.
Social media lit up as the clock hit zeros. National analysts labeled the loss “inexcusable” and predicted it would cost Indiana an at-large bid. A split with Northwestern over the past three weeks might have been enough; instead the Hoosiers were swept, including a 13-point defeat in Evanston on Feb. 24.
Since Feb. 9 Indiana lost by 20 at Illinois, 29 at Purdue, 13 to Michigan State, 13 at Ohio State, and twice to Northwestern. The only respite was a home win over Minnesota. The free-fall leaves DeVries heading into an off-season with no postseason momentum and major roster questions. High-dollar NIL spending failed to translate into victories, and the program now faces its eighth NCAA Tournament miss in the last ten years.
Inside the United Center, the scene told the story. Forwards Tucker Devries, guard Lamar Wilkerson, and guard Conor Enright sat the entire second half, a visual reminder of a season that began with hope and ended with shoulders slumped and lockers to clean out.
Indiana basketball, once a February-to-April staple, will watch another March from home.
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Trey Hendrickson Joins Ravens, Maxx Crosby Stays Put, Daniel Jones Returns to Colts
In a trio of quick-fire moves that reshaped parts of the NFL landscape late Monday, pass-rusher Trey Hendrickson was dealt to the Baltimore Ravens, Maxx Crosby confirmed his continued presence with the Las Vegas Raiders, and quarterback Daniel Jones re-upped with the Indianapolis Colts.
Hendrickson, whose arrival in Baltimore adds immediate punch to the Ravens’ edge rotation, will now bring his 2023 sack production to a defense that perennially seeks postseason disruption. The terms of the transaction were not disclosed, but the swap positions the former Cincinnati Bengal to chase quarterbacks within the AFC North for the first time in his career.
Across the country, Crosby ended any speculation of a departure by reaffirming his commitment to the Raiders. The two-time Pro Bowl edge defender, known for his relentless motor and durability, remains the centerpiece of Las Vegas’ defensive game plan heading into the new league year.
Meanwhile, Jones inked a fresh deal to remain with the Colts, securing the signal-caller’s future in Indianapolis after a season in which he flashed resilience under center. The agreement keeps the veteran quarterback in a Colts helmet and provides stability for an offense looking to build on last year’s late-season momentum.
With free agency looming, these developments set an early tone for roster movement across the conference and underscore how quickly loyalties can shift—or be reinforced—before the new league year officially begins.
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Trent: “Fede Valverde is the most underrated player on the planet”
Madrid—Real Madrid full-back Trent Alexander-Arnold has labelled team-mate Fede Valverde “the most underrated player on the planet” after the Uruguayan’s match-winning display in Wednesday’s 3-0 Champions League victory over Manchester City.
Valverde delivered the finest performance of his career at the Bernabéu, scoring a hat-trick and contributing a string of decisive defensive actions to give the Spanish giants a commanding three-goal cushion ahead of the second leg.
Speaking in the mixed zone, Alexander-Arnold was effusive in his praise: “Fede Valverde is the most underrated player on the planet. He never lets us down, he’s always there. No words for him left. Even when I was at Liverpool, I admired him.”
The England international, who joined Madrid this season, also addressed the pressure that accompanies playing for the 14-time European champions. “When there’s so much hype about a game, playing for Real Madrid, there are no excuses. We have to win, we have to win the competition. No matter who’s in front of us,” he said.
Wednesday’s result came amid widespread predictions of a City triumph, but Alexander-Arnold believes the outcome underlined the club’s relentless mentality. “A lot of people expected us to get battered tonight, but we showed our mentality. No matter the injuries, this competition means a lot to the club and to our fans. We did the game plan perfectly,” he added.
The defender also reflected on his own start to life in the Spanish capital, acknowledging a brief spell on the sidelines. “Well, a couple of injuries, but since I found my fitness… I’m loving it here and I’ve loved it since the first minute. It’s a dream come true. I’m trying to adapt the best I can,” he said.
With the tie still alive, both Valverde and Alexander-Arnold will hope to carry their form into the return leg as Madrid chase another continental crown.
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Wednesday's Transactions
Major League Baseball released its daily transaction log on Wednesday, listing only a single notation: BASEBALL. The terse entry, devoid of player names, teams, or specific moves, leaves the industry speculating about what formal personnel changes—if any—were officially processed. Front-office personnel typically monitor these bulletins for waiver claims, disabled-list placements, and contract selections, but today’s ledger offered no actionable intelligence. With the transaction wire remaining effectively blank, clubs continue to operate with their current 40-man rosters as they prepare for the coming slate of games.
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Netflix’s MLB Opening Night Spectacle: 73 Red Kayaks, Barry Bonds Nod, and Star-Studded Booth Signal Streaming Giant’s Grand Slam Ambition
San Francisco—When the Giants host the Yankees on March 25 to ring in Major League Baseball’s 2025 regular season, the first pitch won’t be the only thing grabbing headlines. Netflix, making its baseball broadcast debut, is anchoring 73 bright-red kayaks in McCovey Cove beyond Oracle Park’s right-field wall, an eye-catching tribute to Barry Bonds’ single-season home-run record of 73 set in 2001. Nine of Bonds’ historic blasts that year splashed down in the bay, and 35 of the 108 “splash hits” ever achieved by a Giant have come off his bat despite his seven-season tenure in a park that just turned 25.
While Bonds’ name was absent from the seven-person commentary roster released Wednesday, Netflix teased an eighth “special guest,” fueling speculation that the reclusive slugger could still appear in some capacity.
Veteran voice Matt Vasgersian will handle play-by-play alongside franchise-favorite analysts: Hunter Pence for the Giants and Hall of Fame Yankees left-hander CC Sabathia, a Vallejo native who grew up 30 miles from the ballpark. Studio segments will be staged live on site with Elle Duncan hosting, Hall of Famer Albert Pujols and former Yankees first baseman Anthony Rizzo offering additional insight, field-level reporting from Lauren Shehadi, and comedian Bert Kreischer reprising the sideline role he filled during Netflix’s inaugural NFL Christmas Day game last year.
Beyond the broadcast booth, Netflix is turning the waterfront into a fan zone. The pop-up bullpen will let spectators test their pitching velocity, and fans can reportedly climb into the branded red kayaks that will dot the cove. The gesture underscores Netflix’s strategy of latching onto marquee calendar fixtures: the streamer already owns rights through 2028 for the Home Run Derby and one “special event” per season, beginning with the Field of Dreams contest scheduled for August 13.
Whether a ball actually reaches the chilly bay waters remains uncertain. Oracle Park’s right-field wall stands 25 feet tall and sits roughly 20 feet ahead of the cove, and San Francisco’s notorious marine layer further suppresses flight. The Giants’ entire projected 26-man roster has combined for three splash hits; no current Yankee has ever achieved the feat, and only one right-handed batter in stadium history has cleared the wall and landed a ball in the drink on the fly.
Still, with Aaron Judge patrolling the visiting batter’s box and Netflix cameras rolling worldwide, Opening Night promises drama on and off the field. If nothing else, the 73 red kayaks will ensure the streaming giant’s first foray into America’s pastime makes, quite literally, a splash.
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Raiders Prepared To Keep Maxx Crosby; Team To Honor Free Agency Agreements
Las Vegas – Forty-eight hours after the most talked-about non-trade of the 2025 NFL off-season collapsed, the Raiders have circled the wagons around Maxx Crosby. According to multiple league sources, the club’s first move once Baltimore rescinded the deal late Tuesday night was to phone the 28-year-old defensive end and assure him he remains in their plans.
“He was back in the facility at 6 a.m.,” one team staffer told Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer, underscoring the organization’s desire to move forward quickly. Crosby, two months removed from a full meniscus repair performed by renowned surgeon Dr. Neal El Attrache, is “ahead of schedule” and intent on participating in the off-season program, agent CJ LaBoy confirmed in a statement released Wednesday morning.
The Raiders’ stance now appears straightforward: honor the free-agent contracts already agreed to when the front office believed Crosby’s $25 million-plus cap charge would be off the books, and simultaneously field exploratory calls on their star pass rusher without actively shopping him. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported that “several” suitors checked in after the trade fell apart, but the sense around the league is that no one is rushing to meet Las Vegas’ previous asking price of two first-round picks.
Dallas, considered the runner-up last week, has already stepped back. Instead of reviving an offer built around defensive tackle Osa Odighizuwa and draft capital, the Cowboys pivoted, allowing Odighizuwa to be dealt to San Francisco, effectively closing the door on a renewed Crosby pursuit.
Inside the Raiders’ building, the message is that Crosby will be welcomed—provided any lingering friction can be smoothed over. A previous Athletic report highlighted the defensive end’s unease with the expanding influence of minority owner Tom Brady’s long-time business partner, wellness coordinator Alex Guerrero. With Crosby suddenly back in silver and black, mending that relationship may be as critical as mending his knee.
From a financial standpoint, Las Vegas still holds the NFL’s largest remaining salary-cap cushion, giving it flexibility to absorb Crosby’s number while keeping the non-binding agreements struck with new free agents. “They told agents they would honor deals, and they plan to keep their word,” Breer wrote.
For now, the Raiders anticipate opening the season with Crosby anchoring the defensive line. Whether that vision lasts through training camp will depend on how quickly the four-time All-Pro regains full strength—and whether a desperate contender eventually meets a recalibrated price tag before Week 1.
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Messi stuck on 899 goals after 0-0 Miami draw at Nashville
Nashville, Tenn. – Lionel Messi’s march toward the historic 900-goal mark stalled on Wednesday night as Inter Miami battled Nashville SC to a scoreless stalemate in the first leg of their CONCACAF Champions Cup tie.
The reigning MLS Cup holder traveled to Geodis Park hoping to give its superstar forward a milestone moment, but a resolute Nashville back line kept the visitors at bay for 90 minutes. The result leaves Messi stranded on 899 career goals across club and country, a tally that now stretches into the return leg at Chase Stadium.
Inter Miami, making its debut in the revamped continental competition, created the clearer chances throughout the night yet could not find a breakthrough. Nashville, buoyed by a raucous home crowd, defended in numbers and rode timely interventions to preserve the clean sheet.
With the tie level at 0-0 ahead of the second leg, Miami will still fancy its chances of advancing, though the wait for Messi’s 900th goal will extend at least a few more days. The return match will determine which side moves one step closer to regional supremacy.
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Giants’ Steve Tisch aims to offload remaining ownership shares amid Epstein scrutiny
NEW YORK — Giants co-owner Steve Tisch, together with treasurer Jonathan Tisch and board director Laurie Tisch, has formally asked the NFL’s finance committee to approve the transfer of their combined 23.1 percent stake in the franchise to trusts benefiting their children, according to a league memo obtained by the New York Daily News.
If approved, the maneuver would end the Tisch siblings’ direct ownership of the club. “Following the transactions, the sellers will no longer own any interest in the club,” the memo states.
The timing is freighted with controversy. Steve Tisch, 77, has been under fire since Jan. 30, when Justice Department documents revealed a series of emails between the film producer and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The correspondence, dating to April 2013, shows Tisch seeking information about women in Epstein’s orbit and Epstein offering to facilitate introductions. In one exchange, Epstein urged Tisch to communicate via cellphone because he dislikes “records of these conversations.”
Tisch issued a brief statement on Jan. 30 asserting that the relationship was limited to “adult women” and that he never accepted invitations to Epstein’s island. Subsequent reporting by The Athletic and The Wall Street Journal detailed additional messages suggesting Epstein arranged meetings between Tisch and young women.
Neither the Giants nor the NFL have opened a formal investigation, and commissioner Roger Goodell deflected questions on the topic at the Super Bowl. A Giants spokesperson reiterated Wednesday that Tisch’s role remains “status quo.” Yet the proposed intra-family transfer, floated just days after owners concluded committee meetings in Palm Beach, could insulate the patriarch from the league’s personal-conduct policy, which empowers Goodell to punish conduct “detrimental to the integrity of and public confidence in” the NFL.
The memo notes that earlier phases of the Tisch restructure won finance-committee approval in 2023 and 2024, signaling the current request is the final step of a multiyear estate plan rather than a spur-of-the-moment exit. Still, the optics are stark: multiple owners, including Jerry Richardson and Daniel Snyder, have been compelled to sell teams after workplace scandals. By shifting shares to heirs rather than outside buyers, the Tisch family would retain effective control while distancing the franchise from Steve Tisch’s entanglement with Epstein.
The NFL’s owners are scheduled to reconvene March 28-31 in Phoenix, where the finance committee is expected to vote on the transfer. Approval would formalize the end of the Tisch trio’s half-century run at the top of the Giants’ organizational chart and, the family hopes, blunt further public-relations fallout.
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Bavarian Loan Works: Daniel Peretz earns FA Cup win for over Premier League team
London — Daniel Peretz, the only FC Bayern first-team player currently on loan in England’s second tier, stole the headlines on Sunday evening after leading Championship side Southampton to a 1-0 upset of Premier League outfit Fulham in the FA Cup fifth round.
The 22-year-old Israeli goalkeeper, making only his second appearance for the Saints since arriving from Munich in January, produced a flawless display at Craven Cottage, turning away all six shots he faced to preserve a clean sheet that sets up a quarter-final berth for Russell Martin’s men.
In a tie that looked destined for extra time, Southampton broke the deadlock from the spot in the 90th minute, converting the lone goal that separated the sides and sending the travelling fans into raptures. Peretz’s composure under steady Fulham pressure proved decisive, capping a memorable week that began with a 3-1 league victory at Sheffield Wednesday in which he stopped two of the three efforts on target.
The victory marks the second consecutive round in which a Bayern loanee has played a pivotal role in English knockout football, following João Palhinha’s full-throttle performance for Tottenham in their fourth-round replay win. While Spurs bowed out of the competition last week, Peretz’s heroics ensure the Bavarian giants still have a representative alive in the latter stages of the world’s oldest cup tournament.
Southampton, who have now won three straight in all competitions, return to league action with back-to-back away fixtures: a mid-week trip to West Bromwich Albion on Wednesday followed by a Saturday clash at Coventry City. Peretz is expected to retain his place between the sticks as the Saints push for an immediate return to the Premier League.
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Clark Returns in Style: 17-Point, 12-Double USA Debut Ignites World Cup Qualifying Win
San Francisco—Caitlin Clark’s eight-month hiatus from competitive basketball ended with the same flair that made her a global phenomenon, as the Indiana Fever guard posted 17 points and 12 assists to propel the United States to a 110-46 rout of Senegal in the opening round of the FIBA Women’s Basketball World Cup Qualifying Tournament at Chase Center.
Clark, who had not played since last suiting up for the Fever 239 days ago, checked in off the bench and promptly buried 4 of her 5 three-point attempts, erasing any rust that might have accumulated during her layoff. The performance marked her first appearance in USA senior-team colors and instantly re-energized an American squad eager to secure an early berth in next summer’s World Cup.
“I think I was just trying to get everybody else involved,” Clark said afterward. “I know that’s what I can kind of bring this team—getting easy shots for everybody else. That’s what I take a lot of pride in.”
Her pass-first approach produced a dozen assists, underscoring the playmaking dimension that often flies under the radar behind her deep-range scoring exploits. Head coach Kara Lawson, who guided Clark for the first time at the senior level, praised the guard’s immediate impact.
“With Caitlin she brings this dynamic play to the offensive end, that goes without saying,” Lawson said. “As much as she is dynamic as a scorer, she’s one of the most dynamic playmakers in the world as well.”
Lawson pointed to the second quarter as the turning point, noting that Clark’s vision and timing helped the Americans find a rhythm that produced a flurry of open looks and transition baskets. The 64-point margin stood as a statement of intent from a roster stacked with WNBA talent, yet one still adjusting to new rotations and shortened preparation time.
Clark’s seamless integration alongside established national-team veterans highlighted her adaptability. Despite missing eight months of game action while recovering from injury, she showed no hesitation attacking traps, threading pocket passes, and relocating for catch-and-shoot threes that kept Senegal’s defense off balance.
The win positions the United States favorably in the qualifying bracket, but for Clark the night carried added significance: a re-introduction to the world stage and a reminder that her unique blend of scoring and distributing remains intact.
As the tournament progresses, opposing coaches will be forced to decide whether to sell out on her long-range shot or risk conceding open lanes she consistently creates for teammates. Based on Wednesday’s evidence, neither option looks particularly appealing.
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Football Bet of the Day: Dan Childs has an 11-8 selection in the Europa League
Racing Post Sport’s resident football analyst Dan Childs has earmarked Braga as Thursday’s standout wager, pricing the Portuguese side at 11-8 to defeat Ferencvaros in Budapest and strengthen their grip on a Europa League quarter-final berth.
While Braga have progressed quietly through the competition, their credentials are formidable. The Arsenalistas navigated the League Phase with five wins, two draws and a solitary defeat, conceding only five goals along the way, and have yet to lose on their European travels this season, registering four victories and three draws.
Ferencvaros, resurgent under Robbie Keane, are bidding to reach the last eight for the first time since 1972, but a 4-0 drubbing at Nottingham Forest on matchday eight highlighted the gulf in class they may face against seasoned opposition.
Braga’s European pedigree includes a run to the 2011 final, where they fell 1-0 to domestic rivals Porto, and Childs believes the visitors’ blend of defensive resilience and knockout experience should prove decisive in the Hungarian capital.
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Watch: Body cam shows Patriots party at downtown Boston restaurant
Boston police body-camera footage released Monday captures the final minutes of an after-hours celebration that spilled into the early morning of Jan. 27 at Estella, a Temple Place restaurant where New England Patriots players had gathered following their AFC championship victory hours earlier.
The five 30-minute recordings, obtained by Boston.com through a public-records request, show officers entering the dimly lit venue at 2:26 a.m. after complaints of an illegal party. Restaurant owner Helder George Brandao quickly greets them, saying, “It’s just the Patriots players. They’re getting ready to leave. They’re just celebrating the win. They’re not doing nothing.”
Throughout the footage, hookahs sit atop tables and dollar bills litter the floor, while three nude or partially nude women are discovered hiding in a rear stairwell, apparently attempting to avoid police. One woman, clad in a fur coat, tells an officer, “You have all the f—ing Patriots here, and this is their private party.”
Although poor lighting and crowded conditions make it impossible to clearly identify specific players, an officer is heard asking, “Are you talking about Kayshon Boutte?” when a patron mentions the Patriots wide receiver. Another man, referred to as “KC,” is believed by partygoers to be linebacker K’Lavon Chaisson; neither player is shown being questioned or detained.
Police reported smelling tobacco and marijuana and documented numerous liquor bottles past the 2 a.m. closing time mandated by state law. Brandao later acknowledged to the Boston Licensing Board that violations included indoor smoking, unauthorized adult entertainment, and after-hours alcohol service. He blamed the players for escalating the scene and leaving without settling their tabs.
The board ultimately imposed a three-day suspension on Estella’s liquor license, with two days held in abeyance for one year. No arrests or citations were issued to any Patriots players or patrons.
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Trey Hendrickson Joins Ravens, Maxx Crosby Stays with Raiders, Daniel Jones Returns to Colts
In a trio of quick-fire roster moves, pass rusher Trey Hendrickson has agreed to join the Baltimore Ravens, while defensive standout Maxx Crosby remains anchored to the Las Vegas Raiders and quarterback Daniel Jones has re-signed with the Indianapolis Colts.
The developments, confirmed late Tuesday evening, reshape portions of the AFC landscape as franchises lock in key pieces ahead of the upcoming season. Hendrickson, whose arrival in Baltimore bolsters the Ravens’ edge presence, now pairs with an already formidable defense. Crosby’s decision to stay keeps one of the league’s most consistent pass-rushers in silver and black, maintaining continuity for the Raiders’ front seven. Meanwhile, Jones’ return to Indianapolis solidifies the Colts’ quarterback room and ends any immediate speculation about a signal-caller change.
Further terms and contract lengths were not disclosed.
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Lapel’s seniors look to capture regional championship on home turf
LAPEL—Winning is nothing new to Lapel, particularly for seniors Devin Craig, Tyler Cash, Andrew Evelo and Quinn Wilkins, who have left their various fields of competition with a number of championship trophies. Now, in their final season, the quartet hopes to add one more piece of hardware to the collection by claiming a regional title on familiar ground.
The Bulldogs’ senior class has spent years stockpiling victories and memories, and the opportunity to secure a regional championship at home provides both motivation and a fitting stage for their last act together. With the support of the community echoing from the stands, Craig, Cash, Evelo and Wilkins aim to turn their decorated résumés into a storybook ending.
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Premier League elite suffer rude awakening in Europe
Madrid, Spain – A bruising 24 hours ended with England’s Champions League contingent battered, goal-shy and, in several cases, on the brink of elimination as Real Madrid’s 3-0 dismantling of Manchester City capped the worst collective round-of-16 showing the Premier League has endured since the competition reverted to a two-legged format.
Federico Valverde’s first-half hat-trick at a raucous Bernabéu not only left Pep Guardiola’s side needing a miracle to survive the tie but also completed a sobering set of first-leg results that saw Chelsea thrashed by the same scoreline at Paris Saint-Germain, Liverpool slip to a 1-0 defeat at Galatasaray, Tottenham humiliated 5-2 by Atlético Madrid, and both Arsenal and Newcastle held to draws against Bayer Leverkusen and Barcelona respectively.
The Premier League arrived at the knockout stage boasting six qualifiers and fresh talk of domestic dominance. Instead, City, Chelsea and Spurs must each overturn three-goal deficits, while Liverpool trail and only Arsenal and Newcastle remain within striking distance of the quarter-finals.
“We spoke about English teams and European dominance,” former England goalkeeper Paul Robinson told BBC Radio 5 Live from the Bernabéu. “But in the Champions League, not one English team has won a last-16 first-leg tie this week.”
City’s night unravelled early. A routine long clearance from Thibaut Courtois sailed over teenage midfielder Nico O’Reilly, allowing Valverde to race clear and beat Gianluigi Donnarumma for the opener. Two more lethal counters followed before the break, the Uruguayan completing his maiden Madrid treble and exposing the visitors’ high defensive line. A second-half penalty save by Donnarumma on Vinícius Júnior prevented further damage, yet Guardiola conceded the tie is all but gone.
“Three-nil is better than four, but we know the quality they have,” the City manager said. “We have six days to recover and we will try again, though we may not have much chance.”
The result mirrored Chelsea’s collapse in the French capital, where Khvicha Kvaratskhelia’s double helped PSG replicate Real’s 3-0 margin, and Tottenham’s defensive implosion at the Metropolitano, where Antoine Griezmann plundered a hat-trick of his own. Liverpool, meanwhile, were stifled in Istanbul, Arne Slot’s side falling to a solitary strike despite dominating possession.
Only Arsenal and Newcastle escaped with hope intact. Kai Havertz’s stoppage-time penalty salvaged a 1-1 draw for the Gunners in Leverkusen, while a late spot-kick from Robert Lewandowski denied the Magpies victory at St James’ Park.
Opta’s forecasting model now rates every English club less likely to reach the quarter-finals than before the first legs. “The margins are too big for City, Chelsea and Spurs,” former Manchester City defender Nedum Onuoha told BBC Sport. “Liverpool and Arsenal still have it in their hands, but the others are up against it.”
Whether fatigue from the Premier League’s relentless schedule has dulled Europe’s edge remains open to debate, yet the evidence is stark: teams that scraped through autumn qualifiers—Atlético, PSG, Galatasaray, Bodo/Glimt and a Madrid side missing key starters—out-thought and out-ran England’s wealthiest clubs.
For Spurs, the mauling compounds a domestic crisis that leaves them hovering a point above the relegation zone and raises fresh doubts over interim head coach Igor Tudor, who hauled off 19-year-old goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky after 17 minutes following two costly errors.
City, Champions League holders as recently as 2023, now face a third straight elimination at the hands of Madrid. Chelsea must find a way past the tournament’s most prolific attack without the away-goals safety net. Liverpool return to Anfield buoyed by European memories, yet aware that Galatasaray’s pace on the break has already unsettled them once.
Arsenal, unbeaten in the league phase, will back themselves at the Emirates, while Newcastle welcome a Barcelona side against whom they matched firepower on the night.
The Premier League’s reputation, so loudly trumpeted after a perfect group-stage haul, has taken a continental cold shower. Repair work begins next week; for some, the task already looks beyond reach.
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Real Madrid left back Ferland Mendy’s injury ‘doesn’t look good’
MADRID — Real Madrid defender Ferland Mendy is facing another spell on the sidelines after sustaining an apparent injury during Wednesday’s 3-0 Champions League victory over Manchester City, head coach Alvaro Arbeloa confirmed.
The 30-year-old France international was withdrawn at halftime of the last-16 first-leg tie at the Bernabéu, having only recently returned from a muscle problem that had sidelined him since November.
“We don’t know yet what it is, but it doesn’t look good,” Arbeloa told reporters, adding that Mendy will definitely miss Saturday’s La Liga meeting with Elche and could be unavailable for Tuesday’s return leg in Manchester.
Mendy had completed the full 90 minutes in last Friday’s league win over Celta Vigo, but Arbeloa conceded that rushing the left back back into action may have been premature.
“I appreciate his effort; after so long out, giving him two games was a risk,” the coach told Movistar. “It wasn’t ideal. I took that risk with him and I appreciate his performance.”
Real Madrid now await definitive medical results to determine the extent of Mendy’s setback as they prepare for a pivotal week in both domestic and European competition.
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Martin Ødegaard Headlines Summer Transfer Whispers as Real Madrid Circle Arsenal Captain
Arsenal captain Martin Ødegaard has emerged as the marquee name in a fresh batch of European transfer speculation, with Real Madrid reportedly plotting a dramatic Bernabéu reunion for the Norwegian playmaker.
According to FootballTransfers, the Spanish giants are preparing an approach for the 25-year-old midfielder, who left Madrid on a permanent deal to join Arsenal after an initial loan spell in 2021. The potential move would mark a sensational return for Ødegaard, who previously spent six years on Madrid’s books but never cemented a first-team place.
The interest from the La Liga powerhouse is the headline item in a sweeping roundup of summer window chatter that also features blockbuster valuations for several Premier League targets. Liverpool have been informed that Inter Milan will demand £80 million for defender Alessandro Bastoni, while Newcastle United value England right-back Tino Livramento at £60 million—figures that could deter suitors including Arsenal, who are monitoring the full-back’s situation.
Elsewhere on Merseyside, Alexis Mac Allister has formally requested an exit from Liverpool, opening the door to a potential £51.9 million switch to either Paris Saint-Germain or Real Madrid. The Argentine World Cup winner’s desire to move comes as Andy Robertson nears a crossroads over his Anfield future; the Scotland international is free to determine his next destination with Tottenham Hotspur maintaining long-standing interest.
Manchester United and Chelsea are vying for Bournemouth’s Tyler Adams, with the United States international expected to be available for £30 million. United are also eyeing Napoli’s Eljif Elmas as a midfield reinforcement, while reigning Premier League champions Manchester City brace for the departure of Bernardo Silva, whose representatives have already engaged Atlético Madrid in discussions.
Chelsea, facing the possibility of no Champions League football next season, could see Enzo Fernández push for a move to PSG, and the London club are simultaneously attempting to out-muscle City and Bayern Munich for Brentford striker Igor Thiago. Stamford Bridge could also sanction the permanent exit of loanee Axel Disasi to West Ham United if the Hammers avoid relegation.
In Spain, Athletic Club are ready to cash in on Nico Williams for less than his €95 million release clause after an underwhelming campaign, and Real Madrid are ready to back up their Ødegaard pursuit with a colossal €160 million swoop for Bayern Munich winger Michael Olise. Barcelona, constrained by impending presidential elections, must wait to finalize personal terms with Manchester United loanee Marcus Rashford, while also fending off Aston Villa for Bournemouth defender Marcos Senesi.
Completing the wide-ranging rumor mill, Parma’s 23-year-old midfielder Mandela Keita has attracted attention from Aston Villa, Brighton & Hove Albion and Tottenham, and Liverpool are weighing up an €70 million offer for Real Madrid center-back Dean Huijsen as a potentially cheaper alternative to Bastoni.
With Europe’s heavyweights already maneuvering for position, the stage is set for a high-stakes summer defined by record valuations and homecomings—none more eye-catching than the prospect of Martin Ødegaard trading North London for the Spanish capital once again.
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The latest PGA Tour-NFL theft is an old-school strategy
Rory McIlroy has taken notice, and the PGA Tour appears ready to borrow a page from the NFL playbook. Speaking ahead of this week’s event, McIlroy praised a tactic long mastered by professional football, calling it an “old-school strategy” that the Tour could soon adopt. The approach, which the NFL has “done better than anyone,” is now being eyed by Tour executives, with NFL executive Brian Rolapp positioned as a potential conduit for the crossover. While details remain scarce, the implication is clear: golf’s governing circuit sees value in mirroring the league-wide cohesion that has fueled the NFL’s commercial dominance. Whether Rolapp can shepherd that philosophy into the fairways and greens remains to be seen, but McIlroy’s endorsement signals the idea is gaining traction among the Tour’s most influential voices.
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