Expert Sports News & Commentary

Michael Carrick reveals Manchester United transfer plan
Manchester United caretaker boss Michael Carrick has confirmed that strengthening the left flank is firmly on the club’s agenda as he maps out long-term squad improvements, regardless of how long he remains in the dug-out.
Appointed only until the end of the season to steady the ship, Carrick has surpassed expectations, guiding United to six wins and a draw during an unbeaten sequence that has intensified calls for the 44-year-old to receive the permanent managerial reins.
Speaking ahead of Sunday’s meeting with Newcastle United, the former United midfielder underlined his commitment to decisions that serve the club well beyond the summer window.
“It’s my responsibility, however long I’m here, to make decisions that are the best for the football club in the long term,” Carrick said.
Pressed specifically on the left-wing role, he acknowledged the vacancy: “It’s a point to consider, definitely. I think Matheus Cunha can play in that position. Amad can do it too. But adding a left winger is a possibility, yes.”
While Cunha and Amad Diallo have deputised wide on the left, academy graduate Patrick Dorgu had made the spot his own prior to injury, earning January Player of the Month honours for his performances.
With Dorgu sidelined, recruitment staff have re-evaluated the position, placing a natural left-sided attacker high on the rebuilding shortlist alongside midfield reinforcements.
Carrick’s public admission marks the first time United have clarified a positional priority since the interim regime took charge, signalling intent to address balance in the final third ahead of next season.
Read more →
Transfer Rumors: Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool Circle Bournemouth’s Tyler Adams
Bournemouth’s Tyler Adams has emerged as a surprise name on the shortlists of three of England’s heavyweight clubs, with Manchester United, Chelsea, and Liverpool all monitoring the United States midfielder ahead of the summer window, according to a report in The Daily Mail.
Adams, 27, has logged only three Premier League appearances since returning from injury in last month’s 0-0 draw with West Ham, yet his combative style has kept him firmly in the spotlight. Sources indicate that an offer in the region of £40 million could persuade Bournemouth to sell, though any deal is unlikely to be completed until after the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
ESPN analyst Sam Tighe notes that while Adams offers elite ball-winning ability, questions persist over his distribution under pressure—an attribute top-six sides demand from deep-lying midfielders. Tighe cites Manchester United’s Manuel Ugarte as a cautionary tale: high defensive output but limited influence in possession. Whether Adams can refine that part of his game could determine if serious bids materialize from Old Trafford, Stamford Bridge, or Anfield.
For now, the player remains central to Andoni Iraola’s pressing system on the south coast, and Bournemouth will be reluctant to lose a lynchpin whose fitness and form could prove critical to their own season’s climax.
Keywords:
Read more →PSG turn down chance to sign Victor Osimhen, Bayern Munich interested
Paris Saint-Germain have declined the opportunity to pursue Victor Osimhen, leaving Bayern Munich as the most prominent suitor for the in-form Nigeria striker, according to Foot Mercato.
Osimhen, 27, has plundered 17 goals in 25 matches for Galatasaray this season, including seven in eight UEFA Champions League outings, prompting speculation over a return to one of Europe’s leading leagues.
Bayern Munich, preparing for a future beyond Harry Kane, have received encouragement from coach Vincent Kompany to pursue the forward, and the Bundesliga club are actively exploring a deal.
In contrast, PSG have balked at the financial package involved. The transfer fee is expected to exceed €150 million, while Osimhen’s wage demands sit at €20 million net per season. Sources indicate that head coach Luis Enrique is also reluctant to green-light such an outlay, effectively ruling out a move to the Parc des Princes.
Manchester United, Atlético Madrid and Juventus have yet to signal interest, leaving Saudi Arabian clubs as the most aggressive pursuers. Osimhen, however, has not prioritised a switch to the Gulf, keeping his focus on a top-five-league destination for now.
Read more →How Delhi cricket’s rejection shaped Sanju Samson’s resilience
Kolkata, Monday – The night sky above Eden Gardens was still crackling when Sanju Samson settled into the press-conference chair, helmet by his side and 97 not out blazing fresh on the scoreboard. The innings that carried India into the T20 World Cup semifinal had taken only 50 balls, yet the journey behind it, Samson confessed, had been anything but swift. “Had lots of ups and downs,” he said, voice low, almost apologetic. “I kept doubting myself, thinking will I ever make it?”
It was an admission rare in modern sport, where bravado is currency. Across 60 T20I appearances Samson has been compelled to watch another 100 matches in civvies, a stop-start cycle that has broken many careers. Instead of resentment, he chose research. From the dugout he studied Virat Kohli’s lane control, Rohit Sharma’s tempo shifts, MS Dhoni’s end-game calculus. “I noticed how they change their game according to situations,” he told reporters, crediting the masters for the calm that oozed through his 97* against West Indies in the virtual quarter-final.
The roots of that composure lie far from the Eden roar, in the police colony at GTB Nagar, North Delhi. Samson’s father, Samson Viswanathan, a former Delhi Santosh-Trophy defender and constable, still remembers the day an 11-year-old boy trudged home in tears after scoring more than 500 runs in eight school matches yet missing Delhi’s U-13 squad. “He came crying to me that day,” Viswanathan says. On another scorching afternoon, as father watched son net, a passer-by mocked, “Planning to get your son into the Sri Lankan team?” The elder Samson’s reply was simple: “People say a lot of things. As a parent, it is my job to give the best for my son.”
Realising Delhi’s Ranji gates were bolted, the family took voluntary retirement and relocated to Thiruvananthapuram, trading scepticism for anonymity. Away from the sniggers, Sanju rebuilt technique and mind. Kerala fast bowler MD Nidheesh, watching Sunday’s assault, saw the same serenity the batter displayed while hammering three centuries against South Africa in 2024. “Against the West Indies he looked incredibly calm,” Nidheesh says.
The calm was manufactured. Forty-eight hours before the Eden encounter Samson initiated what he calls a “mental reset”: phone off, social media off, world tuned out. “I just listened to myself,” he told broadcaster Parthiv Patel. The boy once rejected in a Delhi junior trial had tuned out the noise and tuned in his talent, steering India to a World Cup semifinal and, perhaps, finally answering the question that haunted him for years: yes, he does belong.
Read more →Barcelona winger optimistic about season despite Copa del Rey exit – ‘If we keep playing like this...’
Barcelona’s Copa del Rey dream ended in heartbreak at Spotify Camp Nou, but the roar that greeted the final whistle felt more like a beginning than an ending. A 3-0 victory over Atlético Madrid on the night brought the Blaugrana within a single goal of erasing a four-goal first-leg deficit, yet the aggregate scoreline sent the visitors through and left the home side to digest what might have been.
Captain Raphinha, who ignited the comeback with the second goal, stood amid the echoing anthem and insisted the performance should serve as a launchpad rather than an epitaph.
“I’m very proud of this team,” the Brazilian told reporters. “If we keep playing like this, we’ll have a spectacular end to the season.”
The winger’s strike, coupled with relentless pressure from the opening minute, embodied a side refusing to surrender. Fans responded in kind, the recently reopened Grada d’Animació leading a deafening chorus that shook the renovated stadium.
“The truth is, I think it’s us who should be thanking the fans; they were spectacular,” Raphinha said. “When we play at home, we need to feel the fans’ support. It’s important for us. I think the fans are proud.”
He was quick to credit Atlético for the first-leg display that ultimately decided the tie, acknowledging that the Rojiblancos “sealed the deal” in the Spanish capital. Yet the lingering sentiment inside the ground was one of pride rather than recrimination.
“We gave it our all,” Raphinha stressed. “We did everything we could, we just fell a little short. We’re disappointed not to reach the final, but we have more positives than negatives to take away.”
With the domestic cup now off the table, attention pivots immediately to the remaining objectives. La Liga and the Champions League represent the final frontiers for a squad that believes its midweek display signals a turning point.
“It’s time to keep our heads up. Tomorrow is another day. We have to leave here proud of what we’ve done,” Raphinha concluded. “Now it’s time to think about the weekend. On to La Liga and the Champions League, that’s what we have to focus on.”
Barcelona depart the competition, but not without a statement of intent that reverberated around Camp Nou and, perhaps, across Europe.
Read more →Real Madrid interested in Milan boss Max Allegri
Real Madrid have renewed their pursuit of AC Milan manager Max Allegri, placing the Italian coach high on the shortlist to take charge at the Bernabéu, according to Corriere dello Sport.
This is not the first time Los Blancos have attempted to lure Allegri to Spain. The 56-year-old came close to joining the club on two previous occasions, first in 2019 and again in 2021. During the latter approach, a comprehensive agreement was virtually sealed before a late intervention by former Juventus president Andrea Agnelli persuaded Allegri to return to Turin instead.
Allegri is currently under contract at Milan and is said to be content with his role at the San Siro. Yet his long-term future hinges on an end-of-season appraisal. Once the campaign concludes, the Rossoneri hierarchy and the manager will sit down to review the direction of the sporting project. Allegri has expressed a strong desire to continue and is already mapping out plans to reinforce the squad, but the final verdict will rest on whether the club’s vision aligns with his ambitions.
Should Milan opt for a new direction, Real Madrid are poised to make a decisive move, potentially bringing Allegri’s protracted flirtation with the Spanish giants to a close.
Read more →“‘I don’t like Erling’ – Pep Guardiola cracks Manchester City team selection joke for Nottingham Forest”
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola lightened the mood at his pre-match press conference on Tuesday afternoon with a tongue-in-cheek declaration that star striker Erling Haaland has been permanently dropped, moments after confirming the Norwegian could return against Nottingham Forest on Wednesday night.
City head to the City Ground looking for a seventh straight victory in all competitions and aiming to trim Arsenal’s five-point lead at the Premier League summit, albeit having played one game more than the Gunners. Guardiola’s side edged Leeds United 1-0 at Elland Road at the weekend through Antoine Semenyo’s second-half strike, a fixture Haaland sat out after sustaining a minor training-ground knock.
Asked whether the 25-year-old will be reinstated against Forest, Guardiola grinned: “We won 0-1, he’s not going to play in any more games until the end of the season. I don’t like Erling,” before quickly adding that the forward remains “massively important” to the club’s quadruple pursuit.
Guardiola stressed that injuries are an inevitable part of a marathon campaign and praised Haaland’s overall contribution, noting the striker has featured in “a lot, a lot of games” and directly influenced countless goals. The Catalan coach will assess his leading marksman ahead of kick-off, with the FA Cup fifth-round trip to Newcastle also on the horizon.
Teenage midfielder Nico O’Reilly, who lasted 70 minutes against Leeds before an ankle issue forced him off, is similarly being monitored. Should either player fall short, Guardiola could turn to Tijjani Reijnders as part of the rotation policy designed to keep his squad fresh for the season-defining weeks ahead.
With the Carabao Cup final against Arsenal looming on 22 March, every fixture is effectively a final for City, leaving Guardiola to balance immediate results with long-term fitness.
Read more →Transfer rumour roundup: Madrid’s midfield shortlist grows; Spurs set world-record Van de Ven price tag
Real Madrid have placed the recruitment of a central midfielder at the top of their summer agenda as they prepare for life after Luka Modric, with the Premier League now viewed as the most fertile hunting ground for his successor.
According to well-placed sources, Manchester City’s Rodri and Liverpool’s Alexis Mac Allister have both been identified as primary targets, yet the Spanish giants are split over which route to take. Chief scout Juni Calafat is championing Crystal Palace’s 22-year-old Adam Wharton, believing the England U-21 international profiles as a decade-long solution, while president Florentino Pérez is inclined to monitor Rodri’s recovery from a serious knee injury before committing to a blockbuster bid.
The uncertainty at the Bernabéu could open the door for Wharton, whose composure in possession and tactical intelligence have reportedly left Calafat convinced he can make the step up to Champions League football.
Across the capital, Tottenham Hotspur have slapped a staggering £100 million valuation on centre-back Micky van de Ven, a fee that would constitute a world-record sum for a defender. Spanish publication Sport claims both Barcelona and Real Madrid have registered their interest in the Dutchman, but Spurs’ stance is immovable: the 23-year-old is not available at a discount and any deal must shatter the existing benchmark for a rearguard transfer.
In Serie A, Inter Milan have issued a hands-off warning to Arsenal over teenage striker Pio Esposito. Gazzetta dello Sport state that the Gunners have enquired about the 20-year-old, only to be told the Nerazzurri consider him untouchable regardless of any offer.
Aston Villa are pressing ahead in the race for Fulham’s out-of-contract winger Harry Wilson. With his deal set to expire in June, Villa have already opened negotiations, although a queue of suitors is forming for the Welshman’s signature on a free transfer.
Brentford, meanwhile, are bracing themselves for renewed interest in right-back Michael Kayode. Both Tottenham and Newcastle have expressed admiration for the 20-year-old, whose long-throw weapon has become a tactical asset. Brentford have signalled they will not stand in Kayode’s way should a club meet their €30 million valuation.
Keywords:
Read more →Chelsea 'running out of time' for Champions League
Liam Rosenior has warned that Chelsea are fast exhausting their margin for error in the race for next season’s Champions League, insisting qualification is the non-negotiable benchmark by which the club’s campaign must ultimately be judged.
Speaking after Sunday’s defeat at Arsenal extended the Blues’ winless sequence to three matches, the 41-year-old head coach—appointed from partner club Strasbourg in January—cut an urgent tone ahead of Wednesday’s pivotal trip to Aston Villa. Chelsea enter that contest six points behind both Villa and Manchester United, the two sides currently occupying the Premier League’s fourth and fifth positions.
“A successful season for this club has to be to qualify for the Champions League. It has to be,” Rosenior told reporters. “I’m not shouting from the rooftops. That’s the level of club this club is. Where we are, we still have a very, very good chance of achieving that.”
The manager, who has been tasked with reviving a squad that has under-performed for much of the season, revealed that the looming knockout phase of European competition has already sharpened the mood at the training ground. “It’s funny today, it’s the first time we trained with the white balls,” he noted. “For me, when those white balls come out, we can’t make those mistakes that we’re making. Because you’re running out of time and that’s the message myself and my staff have given the players this morning.”
Although England could yet receive an extra Champions League berth depending on how its clubs fare in Europe this term, Rosenior rejected any suggestion that he might begin prioritising certain fixtures. “No. I don’t look at it that way,” he said. “I want to win every game I play. I know it sounds very cliched but it’s true. That’s why we’re here. Whether it’s Arsenal, Aston Villa or Wrexham away, we want to win and we expect to win every game.”
Chelsea’s immediate schedule offers little respite. After the Villa Park showdown, they travel to resurgent Wrexham—currently pushing for a Championship play-off place—before tackling European champions Paris Saint-Germain in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie. With each encounter carrying high stakes, Rosenior’s message is clear: the clock is ticking, and there is no further room for slip-ups.
Read more →Barcelona Player Ratings v Atletico Madrid: Pau Cubarsi puts in best performance of the season
Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys, Barcelona – The scoreboard still read 2-0 to Barcelona when the final whistle sounded, but the aggregate ledger showed 4-2 to Atlético Madrid, sending the visitors to the Copa del Rey final in Seville. Yet on a night when elimination was already all but certain, the hosts produced a performance that offered more encouragement than the raw outcome suggested, not least from 17-year-old centre-back Pau Cubarsi.
Cubarsi, who had looked short of confidence for much of the campaign, delivered the most authoritative 90 minutes of his senior career. Tasked first with neutralising Julián Álvarez and later Alexander Sørloth, he suffocated both with perfectly-timed interventions, the highlight a last-man lunge on Álex Baena that prevented a near-certain goal. His anticipation and willingness to step in rather than drop off set the tone for a back line that conceded little after Jules Koundé’s early departure.
Koundé’s injury after only 11 minutes forced a reshuffle that saw João Cancelo drop from wing-back to right-back. The Portuguese adapted seamlessly, driving forward in tandem with Lamine Yamal to create the majority of Barcelona’s danger and registering the assist for Marc Bernal’s opening strike.
Bernal, making his first start in a fixture of this magnitude, capped a mature display with a well-taken brace that briefly raised hopes of an unlikely comeback. Beyond the goals, his screening work limited Koke and Johnny Cardoso to sideways passes, allowing Pedri to orchestrate from deeper areas. The Canary Islander, labouring with cramp after the 75th minute, still managed two goal-saving tackles on Sørloth and won the penalty that Robert Lewandowski converted for the second goal.
Yamal tormented Atlético’s left flank all evening, skinning Matteo Ruggeri, Ademola Lookman and David Hancko with almost casual regularity. Both goals originated from his incision down the right, and every time Barcelona threatened a third it stemmed from his boots.
Elsewhere, the night was mixed. Andreas Christensen’s distribution was hurried before the interval, though he steadied after the break. Fermín López rarely imposed himself and departed midway through the second half, while Lewandowski endured a quiet first 45 minutes before growing into the contest. Ferran Torres, substituted earliest of the starters, spurned three presentable first-half chances and never imposed himself on the game.
From the bench, Iñigo Martínez replaced Koundé but lasted only an hour before an injury of his own reduced him to tears. Dani Olmo, Vitor Roque and Fermín’s replacement, Dani Rodríguez, were unable to alter the rhythm, with Roque caught offside twice in the closing stages as Atlético comfortably saw out the tie.
In the end, Barcelona bow out of the cup, but the evening belonged to Cubarsi, whose resurgence offered a rare shaft of light amid an otherwise gloomy deficit.
Read more →
The final push for glory and survival for football clubs across Devon
North Devon is bracing itself for a breathless eight-week crescendo as clubs from Plymouth to Torrington confront promotion dreams and relegation nightmares in equal measure. With barely a dozen fixtures remaining, every point will shape the peninsula’s footballing map for 2025.
Plymouth Argyle’s resurrection has been the story of the Sky Bet League One winter. Bottom before Christmas, the Pilgrims have climbed to 12th on the back of a startling away-day renaissance. Victories at Burton, Doncaster and Blackpool have flipped the narrative at Home Park, and although the loss of top-scorer Lorent Tolaj is a jolt, manager Tom Cleverley’s side still harbour outside hopes of pinching a play-off berth. A Devon derby against Exeter City on 11 April looms as the emotional centrepiece; revenge for the tame loss at St James Park in October would soothe supporters even if the top six drifts out of reach.
Exeter City, meanwhile, are desperate for calm. Financial clouds, a 10-1 humbling at Manchester City in the FA Cup and the departure of Gary Caldwell to Wigan have left the Grecians 15th and glancing over their shoulders. Four draws under interim coach Dan Green steadied the ship until Bolton inflicted a 5-1 rout. A new manager is expected imminently; keeping Jayden Wareham fit and prolific will decide whether Exeter ease to safety or are dragged into a late dogfight.
Down in the National League South, Torquay United’s gamble on promotion is on a knife-edge. Paul Wotton’s side topped the table in January, but one point from five games and a 5-0 humiliation by Chelmsford cost the manager his job. Veteran Neil Warnock has stepped in to steady a squad that still scores freely yet wobbles defensively. Sitting fourth with 11 matches left, only a blistering sequence will reel in the three-point gap to the automatic spot.
The region’s semi-professional ranks are just as volatile. Bideford AFC, five points above the Southern League drop zone, must guard against complacency in their final 11 fixtures. Barnstaple Town, fifth in the Western League with games in hand, dream of pinching the sole automatic promotion place; a prolonged FA Vase run has congested their calendar but also sharpened belief. Torridgeside and Ilfracombe Town, fifth and sixth respectively in the South West Peninsula League, can both finish strongly to underline steady seasonal progress, while Torrington, 12th and harder to beat than last year, will look to climb into mid-table security.
From League One to county football, Devon’s clubs enter the home stretch with everything on the line. Glory or survival will be settled not by rhetoric but by what happens between now and the final whistles of early May.
Read more →“Really comfortable” – Unai Emery explains why he’s confident ahead of massive Chelsea game
Birmingham – Aston Villa manager Unai Emery has underlined the importance of Villa Park as a catalyst for recovery, insisting his side’s familiarity at home can tilt Wednesday’s pivotal Premier League clash with Chelsea in their favour.
Villa enter the match clinging to fourth place, six points clear of the sixth-placed visitors, who have a game in hand. A victory for Chelsea would slash that cushion to just three points and intensify the scramble for Champions League qualification, yet Emery believes the surroundings of B6 can re-ignite a squad smarting from Friday’s shock defeat to bottom club Wolves.
“Our objective is to be in Europe, and we are in,” Emery told the club’s official website. “Even not in good form, we are in. Of course, we are every day trying to recover our good form and our confidence, and tomorrow, Chelsea is our opponent, and, of course, it’s a tough match. In Villa Park, we are feeling, overall, really comfortable, playing, showing our form, consistency, except the last matches as we played. We want to recover our good form at home. We were winning a lot of matches in a row, and we were feeling so, so strong.”
The numbers support his assertion: prior to recent slips, Villa had pieced together a formidable sequence on their own turf, a run that catapulted them into the top-four picture. Reclaiming that momentum, Emery argues, is now non-negotiable.
Chelsea, meanwhile, arrive in the Midlands on a wobble of their own. Sunday’s loss at Arsenal means Mauricio Pochettino’s men have collected just two points from the last nine available, a sequence that has stalled progress after an encouraging mid-season surge. Anything less than maximum return on Wednesday would leave their top-five ambitions hanging by a thread.
Selection issues further complicate the task. Pedro Neto sits out through suspension, teenage talent Estevao remains sidelined, and although Marc Cucurella could rejoin the squad, the cupboard looks bare on the flanks. That shortage may thrust Alejandro Garnacho into the spotlight; the Argentine has seen limited minutes under Liam Rosenior but impressed as a substitute against Arsenal and is now the only natural winger available, making a maiden start of the campaign almost inevitable.
Villa also have revenge on their minds. Chelsea’s 2-1 triumph at Stamford Bridge in the reverse fixture remains fresh, and Emery’s squad are eager to signal that result was an anomaly rather than a precedent.
With so much on the line for both clubs, the atmosphere inside a sold-out Villa Park promises to be white-hot. Emery’s message is clear: harness the energy of home, rediscover the swagger of earlier months, and the path back to Europe will look far less treacherous.
Kick-off on Wednesday is scheduled for 19:45 GMT, and the outcome could reshape the complexion of the race for next season’s continental competitions.
Read more →Newcastle United vs Manchester United – Match preview and team news
St James’ Park will stage a pivotal Premier League encounter on Wednesday night as resurgent Manchester United target a statement victory that would tighten their grip on third place, while Newcastle United scramble to arrest a downward spiral that has seen them lose five of their last six league fixtures.
Michael Carrick’s visitors roll into Tyneside on the back of a 2-1 comeback win over Crystal Palace, their sixth victory in seven league matches since mid-January. The result lifted United level on points with Aston Villa and three clear of Liverpool, reinforcing Carrick’s reputation for engineering defensive resilience: only one defeat in 11 away league outings (five wins, five draws). Yet the Red Devils have not tasted victory at St James’ Park since 2020, drawing twice and losing once on their last three visits.
Opposite number Eddie Howe, meanwhile, is wrestling with a congested treatment room and a schedule that threatens to derail Newcastle’s season. The Magpies’ 3-2 home loss to Everton at the weekend extended a sequence of three consecutive Premier League defeats on their own patch, during which they have shipped eight goals. With looming assignments against Manchester City, Barcelona and Chelsea, Wednesday’s fixture represents a last, best chance to revive European ambitions before the horizon darkens further.
Team-sheet uncertainty dogs both camps. Newcastle hope Jacob Ramsey can return after a bout of illness, but Bruno Guimarães, Tino Livramento and Fabian Schär remain short of match fitness, Lewis Miley is still troubled by a thigh problem, and Emil Krafth is ruled out for the season. Nick Woltemade is a major doubt, leaving Sven Botman pressing for a recall to shore up a creaking back line.
United’s medical staff will assess Luke Shaw and Harry Maguire after the pair were forced off against Palace, one with illness, the other with a knock. Noussair Mazraoui and teenage defender Ayden Heaven are on red-alert, while Lisandro Martínez and Mason Mount have rejoined training but may be spared from the starting XI. Matthijs de Ligt (back) and Patrick Dorgu (hamstring) are confirmed absentees.
Statistically, the contest presents a study in contrasts. Newcastle have lost only two of their last 20 home evening kick-offs (7 p.m. or later) in the Premier League, but their current three-game losing streak at St James’ is the club’s worst since 2018. Anthony Gordon’s domestic form has dipped; he has converted just 8% of his league shots compared with 29% in continental and cup competitions.
United, by contrast, have become the division’s comeback specialists in 2026, retrieving nine points from losing positions—more than any other side—and have lost only one of their last eight matches after falling behind. Bruno Fernandes leads the league with 13 assists, the most by a United player in a single campaign since 2012, while striker Benjamin Šeško averages a goal every 49.7 minutes in recent weeks.
Probable line-ups suggest an open, attacking affair. Howe is expected to persist with a 4-3-3 that could see Pope; Trippier, Thiaw, Botman, Hall shield Willock, Tonali and Joelinton, with Barnes, Woltemade and Gordon forming a fluid front three. Carrick is likely to mirror the shape that beat Palace: Lammens; Dalot, Yoro, Maguire, Mazraoui sitting behind Casemiro and Mainoo, with Mbeumo, Fernandes and Cunha supporting lone striker Šeško.
The stakes are unambiguous. A United win would extend their cushion inside the Champions League places and maintain momentum ahead of a spring sprint. A Newcastle triumph would not only arrest a slide but also rekindle belief that St James’ Park can once again serve as a fortress during the season’s defining stretch.
Kick-off is at 19:00 GMT, with live coverage on TNT Sports 1 beginning an hour earlier.
Read more →
Liverpool are losing control late in games. Arne Slot needs to fix it
By Gregg Evans
Molineux, March 2025 – When the final whistle sounded deep into stoppage time, Arne Slot sank to his knees, the same posture that has become an unwelcome signature of Liverpool’s season. A 2-1 defeat to bottom-of-the-table Wolverhampton Wanderers, sealed by Andre’s heavily-deflected strike in the 96th minute, was the fifth time this Premier League campaign that Liverpool have conceded a winning goal in the 90th minute or later. No side in the competition’s history has ever done so more in a single season; add two equalisers in added time and the club have hemorrhaged nine points after the 88-minute mark.
The raw numbers are jarring. Across the previous seven seasons, Liverpool averaged one such defeat per year. The leap from anomaly to epidemic points to a systemic failure in game management rather than misfortune. Slot, hired to refine the Reds’ possession-based approach, now confronts a paradox: his team dominates the ball, carves out chances, yet repeatedly collapses when victory should be secured.
Saturday’s script felt achingly familiar. Liverpool were sluggish before the break, spurned glaring opportunities—Cody Gakpo and Curtis Jones both missed from inside the six-yard box—then chased the game after Wolves’ opener in the 78th minute. Ibrahima Konaté, central to the visitors’ aerial authority, was withdrawn for winger Federico Chiesa as Slot chased an equaliser. Within minutes, the hosts countered into the vacuum Konaté had patrolled, culminating in Andre’s fortuitous winner.
It is the fourth time in five last-gasp defeats that Konaté has been off the field when Liverpool conceded. Slot’s willingness to sacrifice defensive stability for attacking impetus has become a recurring, costly gamble.
Individual errors compounded the structural flaw. Hugo Ekitiké lost possession cheaply; Dominik Szoboszlai was outmuscled by Andre; Jones elected to pass back to Alisson rather than clear his lines, forcing the goalkeeper into a panicked clearance that quickly returned. Neither Rio Ngumoha nor Chiesa tracked the midfield runner, and Joe Gomez’s attempted block merely diverted the shot past the wrong-footed keeper.
Slot labelled the outcome “the same old story,” echoing Virgil van Dijk’s assessment of a performance that was “slow, predictable and sloppy.” The manager elaborated: “We’ve had far more ball possession than the other team, we’ve created more chances in general but in open play we’ve struggled to score. The one we concede is not even a chance. We gave away one chance and conceded two.”
The broader pattern is bleak. Liverpool have relinquished leads or parity in added time at Bournemouth, Chelsea, Crystal Palace and Manchester City, each capitulation preceded by an unbalanced offensive shape. The old adage—if you cannot win, do not lose—appears absent from the Reds’ late-game thinking.
Wolves, winless in their first 19 league fixtures, celebrated as though a cup final had been clinched. For Liverpool, the ramifications are stark. With nine matches remaining, they trail the top four by a margin that could widen if Aston Villa and Chelsea take points off each other yet Liverpool continue to donate points in the dying embers of games.
Slot’s next challenge is not tactical evolution but psychological restraint: convincing a squad wired to chase victories that, on occasion, restraint is the braver option. Until that message lands, the final minutes of Liverpool matches will remain high-stakes dramas the manager can scarcely bear to watch.
SEO keywords:
Read more →T20 World Cup semifinal SA vs NZ Live streaming: When and where to watch South Africa vs New Zealand match
Kolkata’s Eden Gardens will stage the first semifinal of the T20 World Cup on Wednesday, 4 March, as South Africa and New Zealand collide in a contest that pits two captain-performers against one another in Aiden Markram and Mitchell Santner. The 7:00 pm IST start (toss at 6:30 pm) will be broadcast live on the Star Sports Network, with continuous online updates available on TimesofIndia.com.
Markram, who has hammered 268 runs at a strike-rate above 175, leads a Proteas batting order stacked with Quinton de Kock, Dewald Brevis, Ryan Rickelton, David Miller, Tristan Stubbs and Marco Jansen—an arsenal that has the muscle to post or chase 200-plus on a surface expected to favour free-flowing strokeplay. Santner, meanwhile, has controlled the middle overs with an economy of 6.35 and will rely on a spin trio of Rachin Ravindra (nine wickets at under seven an over), Glenn Phillips and Cole McConchie to apply the brakes.
The Black Caps’ path to Kolkata included Super Eight fixtures on Sri Lanka’s slower tracks, so adapting to Eden’s truer bounce will be critical. Finn Allen, Tim Seifert, Phillips and Daryl Mitchell are expected to take the attack early, while Lockie Ferguson’s new-ball burst and Lungi Ngidi’s mix of slower deliveries, wide yorkers and leg-cutters could decide the tempo.
History adds spice: New Zealand’s 2015 ODI semi-final thriller still haunts South African greats like Dale Steyn and AB de Villiers, but coach Shukri Conrad’s current unit shed its “chokers” tag by claiming the World Test Championship last year and now eyes a maiden white-ball crown. Ish Sodhi’s quiet tournament leaves the Kiwis without a dominant wrist-spin option—an imbalance Markram’s side may target as they weigh the merits of chasing on a good batting night.
Star Sports Network will carry every ball, and real-time coverage, scorecards and video highlights will stream on TimesofIndia.com.
South Africa (likely XI): Aiden Markram (c), Quinton de Kock (wk), Ryan Rickelton, Dewald Brevis, David Miller, Tristan Stubbs, George Linde, Corbin Bosch, Anrich Nortje, Kwena Maphaka, Lungi Ngidi.
New Zealand (likely XI): Tim Seifert (wk), Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra, Glenn Phillips, Daryl Mitchell, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner (c), Cole McConchie, Matt Henry, Ish Sodhi, Lockie Ferguson.
Read more →Chicago Fire Breaks Ground on $750 Million Downtown Stadium, Ushering in New Era for Club and City
Chicago—In a ceremonial moment more than three decades in the making, Chicago Fire FC officially began construction Tuesday on a privately funded, $750 million soccer-specific stadium within The 78, the riverfront mega-development on the city’s South Loop. The project, scheduled for completion before the 2028 Major League Soccer season, will deliver a 22,000-seat open-air venue designed expressly for the beautiful game and will become the first major professional sports stadium built in Chicago since the early 1990s.
Club owner Joe Mansueto, who has poured in excess of $1 billion into the franchise since taking full control in 2019, called the groundbreaking “a historic day for Chicago Fire FC and for the city we are proud to call home.” Mansueto’s investment portfolio for the club already includes the $100 million Endeavor Health Performance Center training facility, an expanded academy and youth-development pipeline, and a significantly enlarged front-office staff.
The new stadium will replace Soldier Field, the oversized and multi-purpose venue the Fire have historically shared with the city’s American-football crowds. By contrast, the forthcoming ground promises intimacy: steep stands wrapping a pristine natural-grass pitch, a dedicated supporters’ section engineered to amplify chants and tifo displays, and sight-lines built for soccer rather than the oval contours of a football gridiron.
Architectural renderings released Tuesday reveal a structure that embraces its riverfront setting. Outdoor plazas will flank the stadium, allowing pre- and post-match crowds to spill into pedestrian-friendly promenades. Mixed-use residential towers, retail storefronts, and public gathering spaces will knit the venue into daily neighborhood life, transforming the stadium into what city planners envision as a year-round destination rather than a 30-use-a-year facility.
Location played a pivotal role in the design. The 78, a 62-acre tract once envisioned for Amazon’s second headquarters, sits steps from the Chicago River and within walking distance of downtown business districts. Stadium architects integrated riverfront green space and bike-pedestrian paths, ensuring match-day foot traffic energizes the broader district while minimizing vehicular congestion.
Timing is equally strategic. If construction remains on schedule, the ribbon-cutting will coincide with MLS’s anticipated post-World Cup growth spurt, giving the Fire a state-of-the-art stage on which to reassert themselves among the league’s marquee markets. For supporters who have long campaigned for a permanent home, the project answers a rallying cry that predates the club’s 1997 debut.
Tuesday’s groundbreaking did not disclose updated renderings of interior amenities, but the club reiterated its commitment to fan-first features: safe-standing sections, a micro-brewed beer garden, and technology that will allow the venue to pivot from soccer to concerts and large-scale community events within hours.
City officials hailed the development as a catalytic investment. “This stadium anchors The 78 and signals to investors that Chicago remains a global sports destination,” said one Department of Planning spokesperson. No public subsidies have been pledged, keeping the financial risk squarely on Mansueto’s private ledger.
With shovels now in the ground, attention turns to the construction calendar. The Fire will continue to play at Soldier Field through at least the 2027 campaign, after which they hope to christen their new riverfront fortress and, in the words of Mansueto, “give our fans the home they’ve always deserved.”
Read more →
Journalist Pours Cold Water on 43-Year-Old PL Manager’s Links with Tottenham Despite Him Approaching End of Contract
Tottenham Hotspur’s search for a permanent successor to Thomas Frank has taken another twist, with Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola no longer viewed as a leading contender despite his contract on the south coast expiring this summer.
Senior transfer correspondent Pete O’Rourke told Football Insider that momentum has shifted away from the 43-year-old Spaniard, even though his name featured prominently in early speculation. “I think there’s growing optimism from Bournemouth that they can persuade Iraola to stay at the club,” O’Rourke said. “He was linked with the Tottenham job as well, but it doesn’t seem like he’s among the frontrunners for that role right now.”
Iraola, who has earned plaudits for Bournemouth’s progressive style and consistent improvement, is free to talk to foreign clubs from January and will be available on a free transfer domestically once his deal expires. That availability had placed him on a reported three-man shortlist alongside Mauricio Pochettino and Roberto De Zerbi, yet sources indicate the Cherries are increasingly confident of tying their head coach to a new long-term agreement.
O’Rourke added: “If there’s no other possibilities for him, I’m sure that Iraola will be happy to stay at Bournemouth and continue the great work that he’s done over the last couple of seasons.”
The development leaves Tottenham’s hierarchy focusing on higher-profile targets. Pochettino, currently preparing the United States for the upcoming World Cup, remains open to a sentimental return to North London, though Real Madrid’s lingering interest could scupper any approach. De Zerbi, meanwhile, is thought to favour Manchester United should the Old Trafford board look beyond interim coach Michael Carrick.
Interim head coach Igor Tudor, appointed after Frank’s departure, has struggled to convince during his temporary tenure and appears unlikely to earn the role permanently unless results improve dramatically.
With Iraola’s stock still rising across Europe, the coming weeks will determine whether Bournemouth can finalise an extension or whether another elite club swoops. For now, Tottenham’s managerial picture is narrowing, and the 43-year-old’s route to N17 looks increasingly blocked.
Read more →
What’s Going On With Kylian Mbappé’s Knee Injury at Real Madrid?
Madrid, Spain – More than two months after Real Madrid’s last medical bulletin on Kylian Mbappé, the club issued a terse update Monday evening confirming what many already suspected: the French forward is still nursing the same left-knee sprain first diagnosed in late December, and no surgery is planned.
The 27-year-old has been managing discomfort in the joint since a blow sustained in the 2-0 La Liga loss to Celta Vigo on 7 December. He subsequently featured in every remaining match of 2025, equalling Cristiano Ronaldo’s club record of 59 goals in a calendar year, yet training-ground sources say the knee never fully settled. Madrid’s New Year’s Eve statement labelled the injury a “sprain” and promised only that “his progress will be monitored.”
That vagueness has become a pattern. The club never offers return dates, and Mbappé’s availability has swung from week to week. He sat out the Champions League visit of Manchester City on 11 December because of what was officially described as “muscular discomfort” in his left leg, then played 90 minutes three days later in a Copa del Rey tie at third-tier Talavera. He travelled separately to Saudi Arabia for the Supercopa de España, appeared for 15 minutes in the 3-2 final defeat to Barcelona, and did not feature in the subsequent Copa elimination at Albacete.
Since January he has started eight matches and scored nine goals, but flare-ups have forced two recent omissions: the second-leg victory over Benfica that sealed Madrid’s passage to the Champions League round of 16, and Monday’s shock 1-0 home defeat to Getafe. Manager Álvaro Arbeloa admitted the decision to rest Mbappé was taken after consultation with medical staff. “When someone isn’t playing, it’s because he’s injured,” Arbeloa said. “We’ll have to wait and see if it’s a matter of days.”
Mbappé underwent fresh scans in Paris last week accompanied by Madrid fitness coach Sebastien Devillaz and physio Willy Zurdo. The findings reaffirmed a sprain; conservative treatment—reduced training loads, no knife—remains the plan. Club sources say there is still no fixed timeline for his return, and day-to-day pain levels fluctuate. One training-ground staffer described “days he feels nothing and others where the pain is sharp,” explaining the on-off selection policy.
The approach has fuelled debate about whether Madrid have allowed an unstable knee to become chronic by pitching Mbappé into must-win fixtures. Medical experts consulted by The Athletic stress that low-grade sprains rarely require surgery, but persistent loading can delay healing. “If a player keeps playing, these injuries tend to worsen the prognosis,” said Juan Ayala, former president of the Spanish Society of Sports Traumatology. “A minimum of three weeks’ rest is required for a grade-one sprain, six for grade-two. If it does not heal properly, it may remain unstable and require surgery later.”
With the Champions League round-of-16 first leg against Manchester City looming next Wednesday and Madrid four points adrift of Barcelona in La Liga, the timing is perilous. Mbappé has supplied 38 of the team’s 87 goals this season (43.7%) and missed five of 15 matches in 2026. France, meanwhile, prepare for June’s World Cup opener against Senegal in New Jersey. Dressing-room sources say Mbappé is “calmer” now that a clearer management plan is in place, yet neither club nor country can say with certainty when he will reappear.
For the moment, all parties continue to wait—hoping the conservative gamble pays off before the season, or the World Cup, slips away.
Read more →'Has become star in short time': Ex-India cricketer blasts Abhishek Sharma before T20 World Cup semifinal
Mumbai, 4 March 2026 – As India braces for a high-stakes T20 World Cup semifinal against England at the Wankhede Stadium on Thursday, opener Abhishek Sharma finds himself at the centre of a growing debate over form, technique and temperament. The 24-year-old left-hander, heralded for his explosive potential, has managed only 80 runs in six tournament outings and is yet to string together a sequence of match-defining innings.
Abhishek’s campaign began with three consecutive ducks against the USA, Pakistan and the Netherlands, a sequence broken by a 15-ball 15 versus South Africa. His lone half-century came against Zimbabwe, but the knock has been followed by single-digit scores, including a laboured 10 off 11 balls in Sunday’s must-win Super 8 clash against the West Indies. Compounding his batting woes, he also put down two catches in the field.
Speaking on Cricbuzz, former India batter Manoj Tiwary pulled no punches in assessing the youngster’s approach. “When you don’t put a price on your wicket, then you will play loose shots like that,” Tiwary said. “Abhishek has already become a star in such a short time, but if he wants to be a superstar, he has to win games for the team. There is so much competition, so many match winners, so he has to be ahead of them. Today it was a good opportunity for him. He dropped two catches as well. He has to cultivate the mindset where he has to decide which balls to go for and which not.”
Irfan Pathan, the former India all-rounder, zoomed in on a technical glitch that has crept into Abhishek’s game. “After scoring that fifty, it felt like he would continue making runs,” Pathan noted on his YouTube channel. “But when he went for that shot, his back knee was bent too much, and his body weight was falling backwards. Ideally, more weight should have been on the front foot, as that suits him better. He will need to pay attention to that.”
With India’s top order stacked with proven finishers, the management’s patience could hinge on whether Abhishek can translate range-hitting potential into runs under knockout pressure. England’s pace-heavy attack, led by bowlers who have already exposed the left-hander’s tendency to lunge, will scent opportunity in the first-over exchanges.
The semifinal stage has historically separated pretenders from performers; for Abhishek Sharma, Thursday offers both a shot at redemption and a moment of truth.
Read more →
Future bright for North Scott boys despite substate final loss to Prairie
CEDAR RAPIDS — A 59-54 defeat to Prairie in Tuesday night’s Class 4A Substate 6 Championship denied North Scott its first state berth since 2020, yet head coach Shamus Budde believes the program’s trajectory remains pointed skyward. The back-and-forth contest at Prairie High School saw the Lancers within striking distance until the final buzzer, but clutch possessions down the stretch tilted the Hawks’ way.
Josiah Harrington repeatedly attacked the baseline, creating offense after shaking Prairie defender David Fason, while Vasaun Wilmington navigated heavy traffic against Cayden Larson on the wing. Their efforts kept North Scott within a single possession for much of the fourth quarter. Budde, directing from the sideline throughout, praised his team’s fight afterward and emphasized the experience gained by a roster that will return a strong nucleus next winter.
Although the loss ends the 2024-25 campaign, the Lancers’ competitive showing against a battle-tested Prairie squad reinforced internal belief that the program’s next breakthrough is near. With memories of Tuesday’s heartbreak serving as fuel, North Scott enters the offseason confident the gap to a trophy has never been narrower.
Read more →A Joe Burrow Trade for the Vikings Is Realistic … in Time
Minneapolis — The notion of Joe Burrow wearing purple is no longer confined to bar-stool speculation. League chatter has coalesced around a single, stunning possibility: the Cincinnati Bengals could move their franchise quarterback, and the Minnesota Vikings have emerged as a uniquely positioned suitor—provided everyone is willing to wait until 2027.
The timeline crystallized this week when NFL insider Jason La Canfora reported that Burrow’s seventh season in Cincinnati “is it,” citing a deteriorating roster, stalled contract talks with standouts such as edge rusher Trey Hendrickson, and the looming departure of top receivers Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins after 2025. An anonymous executive told La Canfora the Bengals “aren’t going out and trading for Maxx Crosby,” adding, “the defense sucks … it’s going to come to head, trust me.”
Those sentiments echo Burrow’s own public frustration. Last December, while rehabbing another injury, he said, “It feels like everybody’s trying to do everything in their power to make me not play football … I just want to play ball.” Three months ago he told reporters he was unhappy with both football and life in general, igniting a wave of hypothetical destinations. Minnesota, perennially linked to marquee quarterbacks, surfaced immediately.
Why the Vikings? Start with geography and friendship. Burrow and star receiver Justin Jefferson formed one of college football’s most prolific partnerships at LSU during the Tigers’ 2019 national-title run. The two remain close, and Jefferson could become Minnesota’s most persuasive recruiter. Equally important, an intra-conference swap would spare Cincinnati the nightmare of facing Burrow in the AFC playoffs every season, instantly eliminating half the league from bidding.
Minnesota also owns the trade capital to entice the Bengals. Cincinnati’s defense finished near the bottom of most metrics, and the Vikings possess a surplus of edge talent: Jonathan Greenard, Andrew Van Ginkel and 2024 first-round pick Dallas Turner. Any deal would likely start with multiple first-round selections; attaching Greenard—entering his prime on a reasonable contract—could satisfy Cincinnati’s need for an immediate impact defender while allowing Turner to ascend in Minnesota’s lineup.
Money, however, dictates patience. A Burrow trade this spring would saddle the Bengals with a record-setting $56.5 million dead-cap charge, an almost impossible pill for any franchise to swallow. Waiting until next offseason slices that obligation to $35.7 million, a figure the team could amortize across future years if relations sour further. Burrow’s 2026 cap hit effectively blocks any movement before early 2027.
La Canfora’s sourcing suggests the Bengals owe themselves one last evaluation. If Zac Taylor’s squad again misses the postseason, Cincinnati could fire its head coach, honor a potential Burrow trade request, and reset the organization at a palatable cost. For Minnesota, the path is equally clear: decide whether 2026 is a bridge year, preserve cap flexibility, and keep the LSU pipeline humming.
The Vikings have danced around quarterback uncertainty since Kirk Cousins’ departure. A Burrow pursuit would signal an all-in mindset, pairing an elite signal-caller with Jefferson, Jordan Addison and a retooled defense. First, both franchises must confront 2025. Should the Bengals underachieve and Burrow’s unhappiness resurface, the Vikings will be waiting—checkbook open, LSU reunion ready, and only a phone call away from altering the NFC landscape.
Read more →Barça sowed doubts. But Atlético held on to make the Copa del Rey final
Madrid, Spain – For 70 minutes at Spotify Camp Nou on Tuesday night, FC Barcelona threw everything they had at Atlético Madrid, trimming a 4-0 first-leg deficit to a single goal and turning the Copa del Rey semifinal return leg into a knife-edge affair. When Raphinha slammed home a 45th-minute penalty to make it 2-0 on the night, the aggregate score stood at 4-3 and the roar inside the stadium suggested a historic remontada was minutes away.
It never came. A third Barcelona goal, bundled in with 19 minutes left, left the home side still one strike short of forcing extra time, and Atlético clung on for dear life to reach their first Copa del Rey final since 2013. The 3-0 defeat was just enough to see the Rojiblancos through 4-3 on aggregate, setting up an April 18 showdown against either Athletic Club or Real Sociedad.
The performance will not live long in the club’s hall of fame. Diego Simeone’s men arrived in Catalonia with a four-goal cushion but spent most of the evening on the back foot, retreating in passive banks rather than the compact blocks that have defined the Argentine’s best sides. Barça monopolised possession, out-shot their visitors 21-7 and, in 18-year-old Lamine Yamal, boasted the game’s outstanding individual. The winger finished with 14 completed dribbles and the opening assist for Marc Bernal’s close-range finish.
Atlético’s only genuine first-half opening fell to Ademola Lookman in stoppage time, but the Nigerian headed over. Within seconds Marc Pubill felled Pedri, Raphinha converted from the spot, and a tie that had felt comfortable at kick-off suddenly teetered.
Simeone’s side were technically still in front, yet every clearance was panicked and every counter fizzled out. When the third goal arrived, the travelling supporters feared the worst. Instead, goalkeeper Juan Musso produced a series of vital interventions – six saves in total, including a reaction double-stop later flagged for offside – to keep the margin at three and the aggregate lead intact.
At the other end Antoine Griezmann embodied the team’s graft. He managed only 48 touches, four more than Musso, yet created three chances, recovered possession nine times and tirelessly dropped deep to stem the tide. “With another 34-year-old Griezmann, Atlético score one. With a young Griezmann, they score three,” read one viral tweet after the final whistle. On this evidence, the Frenchman’s influence remains undimmed.
The manager admitted his nerves. “At 3-0 I kept saying, ‘esto es Atleti’,” Simeone revealed, referencing the club’s tradition of suffering. Suffer they did, but the prize is considerable: a first domestic cup final under the coach since the 2020 Supercopa and a first shot at Copa glory in 12 years.
Attention now shifts to a potentially chaotic spring. Both Spanish giants could meet again in the Champions League quarter-finals if Atlético overcome Tottenham and Barcelona see off Newcastle, with the second European leg pencilled in just days before the cup final. Simeone and opposite number Hansi Flick even joked about the prospect at full-time.
For now, however, Atlético will savour the relief of progression, however unconvincing. They have booked their place in the final. How they navigate the fixtures that surround it will decide whether a turbulent campaign ends with silverware.
Read more →
Cody Gakpo’s Liverpool stock has reached an all-time low
Liverpool’s brief resurgence after three consecutive Premier League victories came to an abrupt halt at Molineux, and no player embodied the Reds’ regression more starkly than Cody Gakpo. The Dutch forward, long favored by manager Arne Slot, produced a display so devoid of menace that it has intensified calls for an urgent overhaul on the left flank.
Slot’s side had entered the weekend buoyed by a five-goal demolition of relegation-threatened West Ham United, but the euphoria evaporated against another struggling outfit in Wolves. The 2-1 defeat not only checked Liverpool’s momentum but also exposed the tactical gamble of building the attack around Gakpo in the continued absence of injured playmaker Florian Wirtz.
Tasked with leading the line from an unfamiliar left-sided role, Gakpo failed to register a single key pass or completed dribble despite seeing a steady supply of possession. Where predecessor Luis Diaz once tormented Premier League full-backs with direct running and improvisation, Gakpo offered static movement and predictable passing lanes, allowing Wolves to compress the middle and spring repeated counters.
While Mohamed Salah’s giveaway-heavy performance on the opposite wing was partially redeemed by a late goal, Gakpo provided no such lifeline. He was, in effect, an attacking black hole: conservative in possession yet unable to create, cautious in retention yet incapable of stretching the back line. The statistical ledger—zero chances created, zero successful take-ons—told only half the story; the eye test supplied the damning evidence of a player ill-suited to the dynamism Slot’s system demands.
The result leaves Liverpool’s coaching staff with an uncomfortable reality. Plans already envisioned a fresh left-sided attacker arriving in the summer, but Gakpo’s form is deteriorating so rapidly that the club may be forced to accelerate the transition, phasing out his minutes before the January window even opens. Each additional start, the analytics suggest, is now costing precious points in a campaign where top-four margins are expected to be razor-thin.
Slot shouldered the brunt of supporter ire after full-time, yet the spotlight will inevitably shift toward his chosen offensive fulcrum. If Gakpo cannot rediscover confidence and productivity, his Anfield future could be measured in weeks rather than seasons.
Read more →
Patriots might have shot at top free-agent receiver after Colts’ franchise-tag gamble
Foxborough, Mass. — The New England Patriots’ search for a true difference-maker at wide receiver has taken an unexpected turn after the Indianapolis Colts opted not to place a franchise tag on Alec Pierce, clearing the way for the 25-year-old deep threat to test free agency next week.
Pierce, who led the NFL in yards per catch in each of the past two seasons (22.3 in 2024, 21.3 in 2025), instantly becomes the most coveted wideout on the open market. He finished last season with 47 receptions for 1,003 yards and six touchdowns, showcasing the kind of explosive, field-stretching ability that Patriots quarterback Drake Maye has thrived on during New England’s breakout offensive campaign.
The Colts’ decision to apply the transition tag to quarterback Daniel Jones instead of protecting Pierce shocked many around the league. Indianapolis now holds only the right to match any offer sheet Jones might sign elsewhere, leaving the 6-foot-3 receiver free to negotiate with all 32 teams.
For the Patriots, Pierce’s availability arrives at a pivotal moment. New England currently holds $39.2 million in salary-cap space, per Over The Cap, and is weighing multiple paths to surround Maye with more firepower. Among the alternatives: trading for Philadelphia’s A.J. Brown, drafting a blue-chip prospect such as Texas A&M’s KC Concepcion or Washington’s Denzel Boston, or standing pat with incumbent No. 1 Stefon Diggs.
Signing Pierce, however, would allow the club to land a proven vertical threat without surrendering draft capital. ESPN analyst Mina Kimes noted that Pierce’s 21-yard average per catch in 2025 created a gap over the next-closest receiver comparable to “the difference between Christian Watson and the 26th player” on the list. “You just cannot overestimate how much teams value explosive players,” Kimes said, adding that Pierce “wins with size” and has become “a much more complete player than people give him credit for.”
Projected to command between $25 million and $30 million annually, Pierce would still fit within New England’s budget, though the front office would likely need to restructure or release Diggs—who is due a $6 million roster bonus on March 13—to maximize flexibility. Moving on from Diggs would free $16.3 million in cap room, money that could help fund a long-term deal for Pierce while preserving space for extensions (cornerback Christian Gonzalez is extension-eligible) and other roster holes.
Pairing Pierce with a big-armed quarterback who orchestrated the league’s top explosive-play rate (8.1 percent) last season appears to be a natural match. After catching passes from Anthony Richardson, Joe Flacco, Philip Rivers, and most recently Daniel Jones in Indianapolis, Pierce could find a higher ceiling alongside Maye, who finished 2025 in the MVP conversation.
The Patriots have until the start of the new league year to decide how aggressively they want to pursue the market’s premier receiver. If they choose to act, the Colts’ gamble not to tag Alec Pierce may wind up altering the balance of power in the AFC East.
Read more →
Premier League Producing Fewest Open-Play Goals Since 2009-10
London — The Premier League’s reputation as the planet’s most thrilling division is facing its stiffest statistical test in 15 years. After 28 rounds of the 2025-26 campaign, the competition has mustered only 505 open-play goals, the lowest such tally since the eerily empty stadiums of the pandemic-shortened 2020-21 season and, discounting that anomaly, the worst return since 2009-10.
The numbers, collated by data provider Opta, reveal a broader erosion of attacking ambition. Open-play shots on target have fallen to 1,659, the fewest across the company’s 17-season database and more than 300 down on either of the past two title races. Perhaps even more telling, completed passes in the final third have slumped to 48,248, a figure last seen in 2011-12 and almost 10,000 below the totals recorded in each of the previous two seasons.
Analysts trace the decline to a league-wide tactical convergence that prizes defensive structure, set-piece efficiency and physical duels over the expansive, risk-forward approach that once underpinned English football’s global appeal. Man-to-man pressing schemes have compressed the field, squeezing out the pockets of space that previously fed high-volume attacks, while the overall quality of deeper-lying squads has risen sharply.
The trend is visible at the summit of the table. Leaders Arsenal have built their title charge around dead-ball proficiency, and Liverpool recently reignited their campaign by scoring seven consecutive goals from set-piece situations after overhauling their delivery mechanics. With the division’s elite effectively neutralising each other in open play, corners and free-kicks have become the most reliable path to goal.
One potential antidote gaining traction among analysts is a collective shift to back-three formations. Historical precedents are persuasive: Chelsea’s Champions League triumph in 2021 and Bayer Leverkusen’s unbeaten Bundesliga title in 2024 both rode the tactical flexibility of a three-man defence. Whether any Premier League club embraces that solution in the season’s final stretch remains to be seen.
For now, the league that once marketed itself on end-to-end entertainment is confronting an uncomfortable reality: the goals have dried up, the shots have vanished and the passes no longer flow in the areas that matter most.
Read more →
Western Albemarle survives Hidden Valley’s furious comeback in state semifinals
Roanoke County, March 3, 2026 — Western Albemarle withstood a late charge from Hidden Valley to escape with a 62-54 victory in Tuesday night’s Class 3 state quarterfinal at a packed gym in Roanoke.
The Warriors appeared in control for much of the contest, but the Titans trimmed the deficit in the closing minutes and had possession in the final 30 seconds with a chance to pull within a single possession. Each time Hidden Valley crept closer, however, Western Albemarle found an answer—whether it was a timely rebound, a forced turnover, or a clutch free throw—to keep the margin at two possessions.
Key moments came on the defensive end, where Western Albemarle’s Samuel Seaborn contested shots from Hidden Valley’s Riley James and Wyatt Clarke on consecutive possessions, and Zachary Chase challenged Steele Torrence’s drive to the rim. Nolan Stype and Wynn Womeldorf battled for a critical late loose ball that ultimately swung possession back to the Warriors, allowing them to run valuable seconds off the clock.
When the horn sounded, Western Albemarle had secured its spot in the state semifinals while ending Hidden Valley’s season in dramatic fashion.
Read more →
Diego Simeone reveals what he told Hansi Flick after Atletico knock Barcelona out of the Copa del Rey
Madrid, Spain – Atletico Madrid manager Diego Simeone has disclosed the brief exchange he shared with Barcelona counterpart Hansi Flick moments after his side eliminated the Blaugranes from the Copa del Rey on aggregate, despite losing the second leg 3-0 at Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys.
The tie finished 4-3 on aggregate in Atletico’s favor, rendering Barcelona’s spirited second-leg comeback insufficient. After the final whistle, television cameras captured Simeone approaching Flick on the touchline. Speaking in his post-match news conference, the Argentine coach quoted himself as telling Flick: “It was a great effort from your team; we suffered until the end. Good luck in the Champions League.”
Simeone praised Barcelona’s second-half intensity, acknowledging that the Catalans “put us under pressure that we have not felt in a long time.” He added that advancing to the semifinals “means a lot for our squad depth and confidence,” while wishing Barcelona well in their upcoming European fixtures.
Barcelona entered the contest needing to overturn a 4-0 first-leg deficit and managed to win 3-0, but the four-goal margin proved insurmountable. The result ends the club’s domestic-cup campaign and shifts their full attention toward continental competition.
Atletico, meanwhile, move one step closer to reclaiming the trophy they last lifted in 2013. Simeone’s side will learn their semifinal opponent when the draw is conducted in the coming days.
Read more →
Newcastle vs. Man Utd: Preview, Predictions and Lineups
St James’ Park will stage the Premier League’s mid-week showpiece on Wednesday as Newcastle United attempt to derail the division’s form side, Manchester United, in front of a raucous Toon Army.
Michael Carrick’s visitors arrive on Tyneside buoyed by a dramatic 2-1 comeback victory over Crystal Palace, a result that stretched United’s record to six wins from seven since the interim boss returned to the dug-out following Ruben Amorim’s exit. Benjamin Šeško’s towering header sealed the points and nudged the Red Devils into third, six clear of Chelsea and firmly in control of the race for next season’s Champions League.
Newcastle, by contrast, have spent 2025 searching for traction. Saturday’s 3-2 home defeat to Everton was a fourth loss in five league outings and left Eddie Howe’s side 13th, a distant memory of the fifth-placed finish that fuelled European hopes last May. With a two-legged Europa League round-of-16 clash against Barcelona looming, Howe must balance short-term league recovery against continental ambition.
Illness has further muddied preparations on Tyneside. Jacob Ramsey felt unwell at the weekend, although he has recovered quickly and is expected to keep his spot, while summer signing Nick Woltemade remains under the weather. The treatment room is still crowded: Bruno Guimarães, Lewis Miley, Fabian Schär and Emil Krafth are all ruled out, but Tino Livramento is nearing a return after two months sidelined with a hamstring complaint.
Carrick, a North-East native, knows the cauldron that awaits, yet he could be bolstered by the possible availability of Harry Maguire and Luke Shaw, both withdrawn against Palace with illness rather than injury. Lisandro Martínez (calf) and Matthijs de Ligt (back) remain out, Patrick Dorgu is still weeks away from a hamstring comeback, but Mason Mount could rejoin the squad after resuming full training last week.
Probable XIs
Newcastle (4-3-3): Pope; Trippier, Thiaw, Botman, Hall; Joelinton, Tonali, Ramsey; Elanga, Gordon, Barnes.
Manchester United (4-2-3-1): Lammens; Dalot, Yoro, Maguire, Mazraoui; Casemiro, Mainoo; Mbeumo, Fernandes, Cunha; Šeško.
Prediction
United’s upward trajectory and Newcastle’s injury-hit, confidence-sapped squad point to a third straight away win for Carrick’s men, but cup-style nights on Gallowgate have a habit of defying logic. Expect a tight contest decided by a moment of quality from the league’s most in-form outfit.
SEO keywords:
Read more →
Aston Villa vs. Chelsea, Preview, Predictions and Lineups
Villa Park will stage one of the Premier League’s most pivotal top-four skirmishes on Wednesday night when Aston Villa welcome Chelsea, with both outfits desperate to arrest mid-season slides that have thrown the Champions League qualification race wide open.
Unai Emery’s side, surprise title dark horses only weeks ago, have tumbled to fourth after collecting one win from their last five fixtures. Friday’s shock 2-0 loss to bottom club Wolverhampton Wanderers intensified the scrutiny around a squad suddenly stripped of midfield steel. John McGinn, Youri Tielemans and Boubacar Kamara remain unavailable, while Andrés García and Harvey Elliott are also doubtful. Tielemans could return before March; McGinn is eyeing the final stretch. With Villa clinging to a six-point cushion over tonight’s visitors, the timing of the absentees could hardly be worse.
Chelsea, three points behind Liverpool in fifth, arrive with their own frustrations. Liam Rosenior has overseen three consecutive league matches without victory since an encouraging opening burst, and Sunday’s defeat at Arsenal underlined how quickly early optimism can evaporate at Stamford Bridge. Pedro Neto sits out after accumulating two yellows at the Emirates, but Wesley Fofana returns from suspension and could bolster a back line that has shipped soft goals of late. Cole Palmer and club captain Reece James have been declared fit to start; rotation is expected only for the weekend FA Cup trip to Wrexham. Marc Cucurella, Estêvão, Levi Colwill, Dário Essugo and Jamie Gittens remain sidelined.
Recent history tilts toward Villa—back-to-back wins over the Blues—yet the visitors are subtly recalibrated under Rosenior compared with predecessor Enzo Maresca, who struggled against Emery’s schemes. Villa’s makeshift midfield of Onana and Luiz will attempt to shield a back four that features Cash, Konsa, Torres and former Chelsea loanee Ian Maatsen. Ahead of them, Emi Buendia, Leon Bailey and Morgan Rogers support Tammy Abraham, whose uptick in form has nudged him ahead of Ollie Watkins in the pecking order.
Chelsea are expected to line up in the same 4-2-3-1 shape. Robert Sánchez starts in goal behind a defence of James, Trevoh Chalobah, the impressive 20-year-old Mamadou Sarr and Ajax loanee Jorrel Hato. Moisés Caicedo and Andrey Santos anchor midfield, with Palmer, Enzo Fernández and Alejandro Garnacho supplying service to Pedro, who continues to lead the line.
The stakes are deceptively high. A Villa triumph would steady nerves and re-establish breathing space inside the top four, while a Chelsea win would haul Rosenior’s men level on points with their hosts and intensify the battle for what is increasingly likely to become a fifth guaranteed Champions League berth. With both squ depleted by injuries and suspensions, Wednesday’s showdown could hinge on which set of understudies seize the moment under the Holte End lights.
Broadcast viewers in Canada can catch the contest live on DAZN, fuboTV and Fubo Sports Network 6.
Aston Villa predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Martínez; Cash, Konsa, Torres, Maatsen; Onana, Luiz; Bailey, Buendia, Rogers; Abraham.
Chelsea predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Sánchez; James, Chalobah, Sarr, Hato; Caicedo, Santos; Palmer, Fernández, Garnacho; Pedro.
Read more →
2026 World Cup Power Rankings: USMNT outside top 10; Lionel Messi’s Argentina just off top spot
With exactly 100 days until kick-off, the global game’s gaze is fixed on the first 48-nation World Cup, jointly hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico from 11 June to 19 July. Four berths remain unsettled—two via intercontinental playoffs and two from UEFA’s final pathway—yet the hierarchy of contenders is already taking shape.
Spain sit atop our board. Lamine Yamal’s electric form, even amid a turbulent club campaign at Barcelona, tilts the balance for a side placed in a negotiable group with Uruguay, Saudi Arabia and Cabo Verde. La Roja’s blend of youth and experience makes them the early bookmakers’ choice.
Reigning champions Argentina occupy second. Lionel Messi, set for his farewell World Cup, must navigate a section that includes Austria and Algeria—fixtures that could test squad depth if the Albiceleste pursue a historic repeat. France, third, confront a blockbuster opener against Erling Haaland’s Norway, followed by a tricky meeting with Senegal. Manager Didier Deschamps will depart after the tournament, with Zinedine Zidane widely expected to succeed him.
Five-time winners Brazil, fourth, lured Carlo Ancelotti to the dug-out and will extend the Italian’s contract before the first ball is kicked, underscoring long-term faith despite landing Morocco, Haiti and Scotland in Group E. England, fifth, turned to Thomas Tuchel after back-to-back European final heartbreaks; a group featuring Croatia, Panama and Ghana offers a clear path toward ending 60 years of hurt.
Portugal, sixth, enter Cristiano Ronaldo’s last dance with a squad deep enough to dream beyond the icon. Norway, seventh, ride Haaland’s staggering 55 goals in 48 internationals and a group-stage date with France that could define the opening week. Germany, eighth, seek redemption after group-stage exits in 2018 and 2022; Ecuador, Ivory Coast and Curacao await in Group H.
Belgium, ninth, lean on the fitness of Kevin De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku for one last push, while the Netherlands, tenth, look underrated despite a section that pairs them with Japan and a yet-to-be-determined UEFA playoff survivor.
The United States, 11th, headline the chasing pack. Mauricio Pochettino’s side drew Australia, Paraguay and the winner of UEFA Playoff B—an accommodating quartet that fuels outsider buzz without vaulting the Americans into the elite tier. Mexico, 12th, open the tournament against South Africa in a rematch of the 2010 curtain-raiser, but a brutal group including Brazil and Morocco tempers expectations.
Senegal, 13th, arrive as 2025 AFCON kings and the only side to out-duel Morocco in a final, yet must punch above their weight against France and Norway. Japan, 14th, brim with technical talent behind an in-form Netherlands, while Morocco, 15th, re-tool after a home AFCON final loss triggered a managerial shake-up.
Further down, South Korea bid farewell to Son Heung-min, Croatia to Luka Modric. Italy, still fighting to qualify, could complicate Canada’s home-soil ambitions if they edge through. Egypt, Iran, Colombia, Tunisia and Ecuador each carry sleeper potential, while debutants such as Curacao, Jordan and the smallest-ever qualifier—population 11,000—brace for daunting introductions to the world stage.
The countdown is on. Over the next 100 days, form, fitness and fate will refine this pecking order. For now, Spain flash the brightest signal, Messi’s Argentina stalk closely, and the United States—buoyant yet unproven—wait beyond the top 10 for their moment to shock the planet.
Read more →