Expert Sports News & Commentary
Liverpool prepare bid to fight Arsenal for 19-year-old breakout forward
Liverpool have stepped into the burgeoning battle for Bayer Leverkusen’s teenage sensation Christian Kofane, setting up a three-way Premier League tug-of-war with Arsenal and Manchester City, TEAMtalk understands.
The Merseysiders have formally made contact over the 19-year-old Cameroon centre-forward, whose explosive rise from Albacete to full international status in early 2025 has turned heads across Europe. Leverkusen, who triggered his €5 million release clause barely a year ago, now value him in excess of €50 million after rebuffing offers around €45 million.
Standing 6 ft 2 in, Kofane marries size and power with straight-line speed, registering eye-catching numbers for goals, shot volume and defensive output. His direct, vertical style—favouring channel runs, shoulder drops and long, forceful carries—has drawn admiring glances from Anfield, the Emirates and the Etihad.
While his pressing intensity and aerial presence are already first-team ready, Leverkusen coaches continue to refine his link-up play and decision-making in congested areas. That potential has convinced Liverpool to join the queue that already includes Chelsea, Newcastle United, Everton, Brentford, Barcelona and Bayern Munich.
With some recruitment models assigning a 75 per cent probability to a near-term switch, Leverkusen nevertheless insist they are under no financial pressure to cash in on a player they now regard as a potential franchise forward.
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Sports on the air: Here’s what games are on TV and radio for the week of April 12-18
With no schedule details released, viewers and listeners will need to check local listings and network announcements throughout the week of April 12-18 to discover which games will be carried on television and radio. The absence of an official program grid means fans should monitor daily sports sections, network websites, and channel scrolls for real-time updates on upcoming matchups, start times, and broadcast outlets.
Read more →What is going on with Garnacho?
By any measure, Alejandro Garnacho’s first season at Chelsea has been a tale of flickers rather than fireworks. The 21-year-old Argentine arrived from Manchester United last summer in a £40 million deal adorned with the promise of blistering pace and fearless dribbling, yet seven months on he is still waiting for a true breakthrough moment in blue.
Head coach Liam Rosenior has handed the winger only seven starts from his first 20 matches at the helm, and those appearances have largely been rationed to cup assignments against Pafos, Charlton, Hull City and Wrexham. In the league, Garnacho’s ledger is stark: one goal in 20 Premier League outings, an under-performance of his 3.11 expected goals from 28 shots, and repeated criticism for lapses in defensive concentration during defeats to Brentford, Bournemouth and West Ham.
The statistics, however, tell only half the story. Garnacho’s willingness to confront his own shortcomings has been refreshingly candid. Speaking to Premier League Productions, he admitted that the final six months at Old Trafford were pock-marked by “bad things” – ill-discipline, social-media controversies and a growing frustration at life on the bench. “In my mind it was like I had to play every game,” he reflected, while insisting he retains deep affection for United and treasures memories of scoring in the 2024 FA Cup final against Manchester City.
Since swapping M16 for SW6, the Madrid-born attacker has leaned heavily on compatriot Enzo Fernandez – “like my dad,” he jokes – and has immersed himself in extra work designed to sharpen his tracking and positioning. Rosenior, while withholding regular minutes, has not withheld praise: “He’s got huge ability and potential… he’s shown really good signs – not just in training, but in meetings – that he’s on a really good track.”
Good signs have yet to translate into consistent end-product. Eight goals and four assists in 37 games across all competitions represent respectable raw numbers, but a closer split – two cup strikes against Arsenal in the Carabao Cup semi-final first leg, against a solitary league goal – illustrates where his influence has been felt most. With rival left-winger Jamie Gittens sidelined for three months, an avenue has opened, yet Garnacho still finds himself jostling for relevance.
Off the field, the bleached hair, Stranger Things tattoos and social-media swagger have made him a lightning rod for opposition boo-boys. “People judge a book by its cover,” Rosenior offered. Garnacho himself is philosophical: “I know some people think I’m arrogant… I’m just a normal boy.”
Uncertainty clouds the summer. Chelsea publicly deny that a decision has been reached on his future, though whispers of a loan to River Plate refuse to die. The club’s planned addition of Sporting’s Geovany Quenda for 2025-26 signals further competition, and with cost-cutting expected, a player purchased for £40 million yet sitting outside the top wage bracket is an obvious candidate for departure.
Still, Garnacho clings to optimism. “There is a lot more to come, this is just the start,” he insisted, pointing to a missed pre-season and the need to acclimatise to new tactical demands. “I will try to be ready from the start in pre-season because I know what I can do.”
For the moment, the tattooed slogan of another favourite show, Prison Break, feels apt: freedom and full expression remain tantalisingly out of reach. Whether Chelsea or a fresh start elsewhere provides the key to that release will dominate the coming months. Until then, the question lingers: what exactly is going on with Garnacho?
Read more →Missing Persons Report: Serge Gnabry sidelined for historic Bayern Munich win due to knee issue
Munich—Bayern Munich’s 5-0 demolition of St. Pauli at the Millerntor on Saturday was historic in its own right, yet the comprehensive victory was notable for an absence rather than a presence. Serge Gnabry, the resurgent winger who has become one of Vincent Kompany’s most influential performers this season, never left the bench, left out of the match-day squad entirely after reporting “minor knee problems,” according to the club’s terse pre-match bulletin.
The timing of the complaint is as inconvenient as it is cryptic. With only days separating the league rout and Tuesday’s Champions League quarter-final second leg against Real Madrid, every training session now doubles as a fitness test for the 28-year-old. Gnabry had started the first leg at the Bernabéu and provided the pinpoint assist for Luis Díaz’s early opener; his potential void would force Kompany into an immediate reshuffle, with Jamal Musiala looming as the natural successor should Gnabry fail to recover.
Bayern’s statement offered no prognosis beyond the vague “minor knee problems,” and club officials declined to expand when pressed. Sky commentator Wolff-Christoph Fuss floated the possibility that the decision to withhold Gnabry from Saturday’s contest was “a resting measure,” hinting that the issue may be more precautionary than perilous. Yet with Madrid awaiting and a semifinal berth on the line, the medical staff have scant margin for error.
For now, the Allianz Arena awaits a late verdict. Gnabry has roughly 48 hours to prove the knee can withstand the intensity of a knockout tie under lights. If he cannot, Musiala—fresh from a lively showing against St. Pauli—appears set for back-to-back starts on Europe’s biggest stage.
Read more →'At 15, I was still in school': Kieron Pollard makes honest Vaibhav Sooryavanshi admission
NEW DELHI – Mumbai Indians batting mentor Kieron Pollard has urged caution amid the mounting hype surrounding 15-year-old IPL prodigy Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, praising the teenager’s fearless approach while warning against the fickle nature of public acclaim.
Speaking to reporters on the eve of his franchise’s next fixture, Pollard recalled his own adolescence to underline how extraordinary Sooryavanshi’s early breakthrough is. “At 15 years, I was still at school, playing club cricket,” the former West Indies all-rounder said. “But, again, it’s exciting. It’s very exciting to see, you know, a young guy taking the world by storm. And he’s using his youthful exuberance to his advantage. And long may that continue for him. And, you know, for Indian cricket as well.”
Pollard, 39, emphasised that the cricketing ecosystem must guard against the temptation to elevate youngsters to cult status overnight only to discard them at the first sign of struggle. “We continue to churn out the talent. And we just need to continue to encourage him. One of the things I always say is Let’s not be on the bandwagon when he’s here. And if you have a couple of failures, and guys sort of figure him out, we then just trim at the wayside. And we forget all about him. I think that’s the biggest fear for me as an individual, being a cricketer. That we all run with the hype.”
The Trinidadian also used the platform to defend the longevity of modern greats such as Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli, arguing that age should not dictate retirement timelines. “Everyone has different motivations in playing for a long period of time… Dhoni is still playing at 44… Fortunately, I’m still playing around the world at 39,” he noted. “Again, what we tend to do as well, these guys have done well for cricket overall, but we tend to just look at the age… I believe we should continue to honour these guys… And let them decide when it’s time.”
Pollard’s message was clear: celebrate emerging stars like Sooryavanshi, but insulate them from the volatility of fame while simultaneously respecting the veterans who continue to anchor the game.
Read more →Match Preview: Sunderland v Tottenham Hotspur — The Lads Return To Action!
Sunderland step back into the Premier League spotlight this afternoon, welcoming crisis-hit Tottenham Hotspur to the Stadium of Light with only seven fixtures remaining in what has already been a remarkable return campaign for the Wearsiders.
Full live pictures will be carried by Sky Sports, while BBC Radio Newcastle will provide ball-by-ball commentary for listeners in the region. Supporters can also follow every kick through the Roker Report Twitter feed (@RokerReport) and find post-match player ratings at www.RokerReport.sbnation.com.
The international break has felt interminable for Sunderland fans still smarting from a derby-day defeat at home, but the resumption of club football offers an immediate chance to reset. Eleventh in the table and mathematically safe for more than a month, the Black Cats can still glance upward: only six points separate fifth-placed Liverpool from Sunderland, and the Premier League’s new-found European Performance Spot means a late dash could yet carry genuine continental significance. Should Aston Villa win the Europa League, or Liverpool lift the Champions League, the number of English qualifiers could swell further, keeping hopes alive deep into May.
Standing in Sunderland’s way are visitors who have spent the past three months in free-fall. Tottenham have collected just five points from the last 39 available, have not tasted victory since 28 December, and arrive on Wearside under a third head coach of the campaign after the departure of Igor Tudor. Former Marseille and Brighton boss Roberto De Zerbi has been entrusted with halting a 13-match winless sequence that has dragged last season’s Europa League holders into the relegation places.
Bookmakers rate both sides at 8/5 to claim victory, with the draw priced at 23/10, reflecting the uncertainty surrounding a Spurs squad that showed fleeting resilience in a 1-1 draw at Anfield last time out yet remains perilously short of confidence.
Sunderland’s probable XI: Mannone; Jones, Kone, O’Shea, Denayer; Manquillo, Rodwell, Ndong, Larsson; Borini (or Honeyman); Defoe. Unused substitutes could include Domingues, Love, Lescott, Pienaar, Gooch and Januzaj.
Tottenham’s likely lineup: Vorm; Walker, Rose (or Davies), Wanyama, Alderweireld, Dier; Son (or Sissoko), Dembele (or Janssen), Alli, Eriksen; Kane. Lopez, Wimmer, Carter-Vickers and Winks provide further options from the bench.
With De Zerbi’s voice still fresh in Spurs ears and Sunderland seeking a first home win in three attempts, a tight, tense afternoon beckons on the banks of the River Wear.
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Manchester City vs Chelsea: Latest City injury news and predicted City starting XI
London — Manchester City travel to Stamford Bridge on Saturday knowing victory over Chelsea will move them within six points of Premier League leaders Arsenal ahead of next weekend’s seismic meeting at the Etihad. Mikel Arteta’s side stumbled to a 2-1 home defeat against Bournemouth on Friday night, and Pep Guardiola’s men now have the chance to crank up the pressure with a fourth consecutive league win.
Yet the run-in rarely unfolds without complications, and Guardiola will have to navigate today’s contest without two defensive mainstays. Josko Gvardiol continues to recover from the right tibial fracture he suffered in the reverse fixture against Chelsea in January, while centre-back Ruben Dias has not shaken off the complaint that sidelined him for City’s last two assignments. Although Guardiola told reporters on Friday that both players are “progressing,” neither has been deemed ready for the short trip to west London.
John Stones, who damaged a calf on England duty, has rejoined partial training and could be fast-tracked back into contention, but the 29-year-old is unlikely to be risked from the start. In better news, Mateo Kovacic has been cleared to return after an Achilles problem restricted him to cameo minutes for much of the campaign. The Croatian’s availability offers Guardiola valuable midfield bite at a venue where City have routinely found chances hard to come by.
With Dias unavailable, Manuel Akanji is expected to partner Nathan Ake at the heart of defence, flanked by Kyle Walker and the ever-reliable Rodri, who drops back into the holding role that anchors City’s possession game. Ahead of him, Kovacic’s return could see the former Chelsea man join Phil Foden and Bernardo Silva in a fluid midfield three, allowing Kevin De Bruyne to operate in the advanced pocket behind striker Erling Haaland. Jack Grealish and Jeremy Doku provide wide penetration, though Guardiola may opt for the defensive diligence of Silva on the left if Mauricio Pochettino springs a pacy front line.
City’s predicted XI (4-3-3): Ederson; Walker, Akanji, Ake, Grealish; Rodri, Kovacic, De Bruyne; Foden, Haaland, Silva.
Chelsea, for all their inconsistency, still boast match-winners in Cole Palmer and Christopher Nkunku, so Guardiola will demand early control to prevent a frenetic endgame. Three points today would not only maintain City’s relentless title momentum but also plant a seed of doubt in Arsenal minds before the contenders collide in seven days’ time.
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Arsenal have blinked in the Premier League title race — can Manchester City take advantage?
By Daniel Taylor
London — For 222 days Arsenal had sat serenely at the summit, but on a tense Saturday at Emirates Stadium the Premier League leaders finally flinched. A 2-1 home defeat to 13th-placed Bournemouth has sliced their advantage to six points and, with City holding a game in hand, the chasing champions can scent a familiar scent: late-season vulnerability.
The mathematics remain forbidding. Even if Pep Guardiola’s side win their outstanding fixture, they would still trail on goal difference. Yet the emotional ledger has shifted. Mikel Arteta described the loss as “a big punch in the face” and admitted his players “didn’t respond to the standards” demanded by the occasion. It was the first time since mid-September that Arsenal have looked anything other than composed.
Inside the stadium, anxiety rippled from the stands to the pitch. Passes were under-hit, shots snatched. Viktor Gyokeres’ composed finish for the visitors merely confirmed what every neutral observer suspected: the weight of history — 22 years without a title — is pressing on Arsenal shoulders like a lead rucksack.
City, meanwhile, have been here before. Sergio Agüero’s 93:20 moment in 2012 and Vincent Kompany’s rocket against Leicester in 2019 are etched in club folklore as the weekends when belief crystallised. Guardiola’s squad, battle-hardened by four titles in five seasons, now travel to Chelsea on Tuesday before welcoming Arsenal next Sunday in what could be a de-facto eliminator.
Arteta’s challenge is to halt the slide immediately. He referenced the 2-2 draw at Wolves in February — when Arsenal surrendered a two-goal lead in stoppage time — as the last occasion he publicly criticised his squad; the response then was four straight league wins. A repeat is essential if the Gunners are to avoid a fourth runners-up finish in three campaigns.
City’s recent stumbles — draws against Nottingham Forest and West Ham — reminded rivals they are fallible, but late-season nerves are rare in the blue half of Manchester. If Guardiola’s presumed farewell tour is to end with a fifth championship, the next seven days may provide the storyline.
The title race is alive. For the first time since September, Arsenal must glance in the rear-view mirror and wonder who is closing in.
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Minnesota Monsters drop first AF1 game in Albany
ALBANY—The Minnesota Monsters saw their unbeaten start to the AF1 season come to an end Saturday night, falling in Albany after a second-half collapse that turned a tight contest into a decisive defeat.
Leading 21-17 at the break, the Monsters were held to just six points after halftime while surrendering 29, allowing the hosts to pull away and seal the victory. The loss marks Minnesota’s first of the campaign and leaves the club searching for answers ahead of its next outing.
Read more →Lionel Messi and Inter Miami end Saturday's game with the New York Red Bulls in a 2-2 tied game
Harrison, N.J. — A match billed as a generational collision delivered exactly that on Saturday night, as 37-year-old Lionel Messi and 17-year-old Adri Mehmeti each authored decisive moments that finished in a 2-2 draw between Inter Miami and the New York Red Bulls.
The result keeps Miami (3-1-3) unbeaten in six consecutive MLS outings and extends the club’s point streak inside its new stadium, which opened seven days earlier with a draw against Austin FC. For the Red Bulls (3-2-2), the point snapped a four-match winless slide and provided a morale boost after they surrendered an early advantage.
Jorge Ruvalcaba had given the hosts a 1-0 lead, but Miami clawed back through teenage winger Mateo Silvetti to level before halftime. The pivotal sequence arrived in the 55th minute, when Messi, surrounded inside the area by no fewer than four Red Bull shirts, saw the ball knocked off his foot only for it to roll invitingly to Germán Berterame. The Argentine midfielder smashed a first-time right-footed strike past Ethan Horvath, handing Miami its first lead on home soil and igniting a raucous celebration that ended with Messi locking Berterame in a headlock beside the corner flag.
The advantage lasted 22 minutes. In the 77th, Julian Hall, himself only 18, darted to the end line and cut back a precise ball that Mehmeti—born two days after Messi’s famous Champions League brace for Barcelona on April 8, 2009—steered home for his maiden MLS goal.
Both sides thought they had gone ahead again, only for offside flags—and, in New York’s case, a video review—to nullify the efforts. Deep into stoppage time, Messi stood over a 25-yard free kick and curled a dipping effort that Horvath parried away to preserve the 2-2 scoreline.
The draw leaves Miami searching for its first victory in its new surroundings, while the Red Bulls will take heart from salvaging a result after relinquishing control.
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Goodell Defends Australia Opener After Shanahan Criticism
Phoenix — NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell on Wednesday dismissed San Francisco 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan’s misgivings about the league’s historic Week 1 game in Australia, insisting the league will protect competitive balance while continuing its global expansion.
Speaking at the Arizona Biltmore during the 2026 NFL Annual League Meeting, Goodell addressed Shanahan’s public frustration with the 49ers’ 18-hour haul to Melbourne for a Friday, Sept. 11 matchup against the Los Angeles Rams at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. The 10:35 a.m. local kickoff—Thursday evening back in the Bay Area—will be the first regular-season game ever staged on Australian soil.
“Coaches have a focus on winning. That’s their number one job,” Goodell told reporters. “Coach Shanahan is enthusiastic and a great football coach, but also someone who truly understands the importance of growing our game globally. His job is to win. His job is to play. We’ll make it a great experience for the team.”
Shanahan, who earlier in the week lamented the lack of built-in recovery time after the trans-Pacific flight, said he sees “no real upsides” beyond the league’s international marketing ambitions. Goodell countered that the NFL’s operations staff has managed similar challenges in Europe and will do so again, even offering a personal tip.
“I have not felt any jet lag at all,” Goodell said. “I thought it was a relatively easy trip. I can send him an app to help with jet lag.”
The commissioner emphasized that the game will count in full in the standings, leaving both West Coast clubs little margin for error in an NFC race that could come down to tie-breakers. Neither the 49ers nor the Rams have received confirmation of extra rest before Week 2, raising concerns that the loser of the Australia contest could carry both fatigue and an early-season loss into the remainder of the schedule.
Goodell, however, framed the trip as an investment in the sport’s future rather than a competitive handicap.
“When they go back, they go to make sure they can continue their competitiveness because this game is real. This counts,” he said.
The league has not announced travel itineraries or recovery protocols for the two clubs, but senior officials reiterated that player-wellness metrics will guide the final plan.
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La Liga title race: How it stands and remaining fixtures for Barcelona and Real Madrid
Barcelona tightened their grip on the La Liga championship with a comprehensive 4-1 derby victory over Espanyol at Camp Nou on Saturday, opening a nine-point lead over reigning champions Real Madrid with only seven matchdays remaining.
Ferran Torres, teenage sensation Lamine Yamal and January recruit Marcus Rashford all found the net as the Catalans recorded a fourth consecutive league win, stretching their advantage after Madrid were held to a 1-1 draw by Girona 24 hours earlier at the Santiago Bernabéu. Both clubs now have a maximum of 21 points left to play for.
The title rivals are still scheduled to meet once more this season. Madrid claimed a 2-1 win in the first Clásico at the Bernabéu, but Barcelona will have the opportunity to exact revenge on home soil next month. Should results fall their way before that encounter, the Blaugrana could even secure the league crown by defeating their historic foes in front of their own supporters.
With the season entering its final stretch, every fixture carries title implications. Barcelona’s superior cushion allows little margin for error, yet Madrid know that any slip from the leaders could yet reopen the race. The coming weeks will determine whether the trophy remains in Catalonia or heads back to the capital.
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Lionel Messi and Inter Miami get 2-2 tie with Red Bulls, after 17-year-old Mehmeti scores late
MIAMI — Seventeen years after Lionel Messi scored twice for Barcelona on the day Adri Mehmeti was born, the two teenagers—now separated by a generation—collided on an MLS stage and produced a dramatic 2-2 draw Saturday night at Inter Miami’s new stadium.
Messi, 37, did not find the net himself but twice altered the match’s momentum. In the 55th minute he drew four New York Red Bulls defenders before the ball squirted loose to Germán Berterame, whose one-time strike gave the hosts their first lead in their new building. It ended a 150-minute scoring drought for Miami on home soil and sent the sold-out crowd into delirium, the Argentine immediately wrapping Berterame in a headlock beside the signage boards.
The advantage lasted only 22 minutes. In the 77th minute, 17-year-old Red Bulls academy product Adri Mehmeti—born two days after Messi’s famous Champions League double against Bayern in 2009—slammed home his first MLS goal. Fellow teenager Julian Hall, 18, created the chance, driving to the end-line and cutting the ball back for Mehmeti’s confident finish that preserved a point for New York.
Earlier, Jorge Ruvalcaba had capitalized on an uncertain Miami clearance to open scoring in the 18th minute, while Mateo Silvetti’s close-range finish in first-half stoppage time pulled the hosts level at 1-1.
Both sides thought they had gone ahead again, only for offside flags—and a video review in New York’s case—to erase second-half goals. Messi came within inches of a stoppage-time winner when his 25-yard free kick in the 94th minute forced Ethan Horvath into a full-stretch parry.
The result extends Inter Miami’s unbeaten streak to six league matches (3-1-3), while the Red Bulls (3-2-2) have just one victory in their last five outings yet escaped South Florida with a morale-boosting point after surrendering an early lead.
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Inter Miami CF-New York Red Bulls Ends In a 2-2 Tie In Marquee MLS Game
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. — In a match that felt scripted for the ages, Inter Miami and the New York Red Bulls traded haymakers for 90 riveting minutes before settling for a 2-2 draw on a humid Saturday night at Miami’s gleaming new stadium. The result preserved the hosts’ six-game unbeaten run, yet left a sell-out crowd wondering how victory slipped away in the dying embers of a thriller that showcased both a living legend and the league’s next generation.
The Red Bulls arrived with no intention of playing supporting actors to Lionel Messi’s marquee billing. Their intent was clear in the 12th minute when Jorge Ruvalcaba lashed home the opener, momentarily hushing the pink-clad faithful who have waited since the stadium’s opening for a first home triumph.
Inter Miami answered on the stroke of halftime. Defender Mateo Silvetti thundered in the equalizer, lifting the decibel level and teeing up a second half dripping with tension.
Then came the 55th-minute sequence that underscored why defenses still scheme entire game plans around the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner. Picking up possession 25 yards out, Messi surged toward the penalty arc and instantly drew a swarm of four Red Bull shirts. While the visitors converged, Germán Berterame ghosted into the void they left behind. A tackle dispossessed Messi, but the loose ball sat up invitingly for Berterame, who ripped a right-footed strike inside the far post for a 2-1 Miami lead. Messi sprinted over, wrapping the Mexican in a headlock as the stadium erupted in relief and belief.
Soccer, however, delights in late twists. Enter the kids. In the 77th minute, 18-year-old Julian Hall drifted to the end line and clipped a precise cut-back that found 17-year-old Adri Mehmeti — born, almost impossibly, two days after Messi’s famous Champions League brace against Bayern in April 2009. Mehmeti’s first-time finish flashed past the keeper, leveling the score and silencing the home crowd once more.
The final quarter-hour resembled a heavyweight slugfest. Both sides saw would-be winners negated by offside flags, the most agonizing coming on a Red Bulls strike overturned by video review. Deep into stoppage time, Miami earned a free kick 25 yards out. Messi stood over the ball; 21,000 phones rose in unison. His curling effort seemed destined for the upper corner until goalkeeper Ethan Horvath launched himself leftward to paw the ball away, preserving the 2-2 scoreline.
When referee Ismail Elfath’s whistle ended proceedings, Miami’s streak survived, yet the locker-room mood felt more frustration than celebration. On a night that pitted a generational icon against a pair of teenagers old enough to be his sons, MLS once again proved its uncanny knack for delivering theater no Hollywood writer could devise.
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England showcased for the first time as ‘Celebrate’ debuts for 2026
Santa Clarita’s Canyon Country Community Center became a trans-Atlantic crossroads on Friday evening as the city’s long-running “Celebrate” series welcomed England to the stage for its inaugural 2026 showcase. Drawing inspiration from the music, dance, and street-performance traditions of Liverpool and London, the debut program marked the first time the series has placed an English spotlight front and center. Residents packed the community center to sample the sights and sounds that crossed the pond, setting an upbeat tone for the year-long “Celebrate” calendar ahead.
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Rory McIlroy Stumbles at the Masters, Shares Lead with Cameron Young
Augusta, Georgia — Rory McIlroy’s bid to complete the career grand slam hit an unexpected snag during the Masters, as a late-round stumble allowed playing competitor Cameron Young to pull even atop the leaderboard. McIlroy, who had appeared in control through the tournament’s early stages, saw his advantage erased after a series of miscues down the stretch. The result is a dead-heat heading into the weekend, with both golfers locked at the top of the standings and the tournament’s narrative suddenly wide open.
The development sets the stage for a dramatic shootout at Augusta National, where McIlroy must now regroup quickly to keep his lifelong quest for a green jacket on track, while Young eyes a breakthrough maiden major title.
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'Big Punch to the Face' – Arteta Apologizes to Fans After Arsenal's Listless Loss
Arsenal’s Premier League title hopes took a heavy hit on Sunday as the Gunners slumped to a 2-1 home defeat against Bournemouth, a result manager Mikel Arteta branded “a big punch to the face.” The loss, Arsenal’s third in four matches across all competitions, leaves the north-London side reeling and prompted an immediate apology from their head coach to the club’s supporters.
From the opening whistle the hosts looked short of confidence and ideas, and Bournemouth capitalized with a clinical first-half double that left Emirates Stadium stunned. Arsenal pulled a goal back late on but never truly threatened an equalizer, allowing the Cherries to depart with a deserved three points.
Speaking after the final whistle, Arteta did not hide from the scale of the setback. “It’s a big punch to the face,” he admitted. “We let our fans down today, and I take full responsibility. The performance was not acceptable, and I can only apologize to every supporter who came hoping to see us fight for the title.”
The defeat continues a wretched sequence for the Gunners, who have now lost three of their last four fixtures in all competitions. With the season entering its decisive stretch, the latest slip leaves Arsenal facing an uphill battle to keep pace at the summit of the table.
Arteta insisted the squad must confront the reality of their form. “We have to look in the mirror, accept the criticism, and respond together,” he said. “There is no hiding from this kind of result.”
Arsenal now face a pivotal run of fixtures in which any further missteps could extinguish their championship ambitions altogether.
Read more →Tigres thrash and outclass Chivas at El Volcán!
San Nicolás de los Garza, MX – Tigres roared back into the Liga MX Clausura 2026 title conversation on Saturday night, dismantling league-leading Chivas 4-1 at a raucous Estadio Universitario. The emphatic victory not only snapped the visitors’ momentum at the summit but also vaulted the felines to 20 points and provisional sixth place in the race for a Liguilla berth.
Juan Brunetta ignited the onslaught in the 16th minute, steering home the opener to send the sell-out crowd into early rapture. Chivas, momentarily stunned, replied nine minutes later through Daniel Aguirre’s spectacular volley that leveled the scoreboard and hinted at a genuine contest.
The illusion was short-lived. Rodrigo Aguirre restored order for the hosts in the 40th minute, climbing above the defense to head past a helpless “Tala” Rangel and send Tigres into the interval with a deserved 2-1 advantage.
Any hopes of a Guadalajara resurgence evaporated moments after the restart. Ángel Correa, thriving under Pizarro’s high-tempo blueprint, buried a third to effectively seal the result. Brunetta then punctuated the rout, racing clear on a lethal counter before slotting his second of the night and completing the 4-1 scoreline.
The comprehensive win extends Tigres’ unbeaten streak at El Volcán and injects fresh belief into a squad eyeing postseason redemption. Chivas, meanwhile, must regroup quickly after absorbing one of their heaviest defeats of the campaign.
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Neymar’s Santos Contract Expires as FC Cincinnati Push for MLS Move
Santos, Brazil—Neymar’s emotional return to his boyhood club will reach a contractual crossroads on 31 December, freeing the 34-year-old striker to explore a lucrative stateside switch that FC Cincinnati are working feverishly to secure.
Sources tell ESPN Brazil that dialogue between the Brazilian superstar’s camp and the MLS side has escalated from preliminary discussions to face-to-face negotiations within days. Neymar Sr., long the player’s most influential advisor, is expected in Cincinnati alongside a team of image-rights specialists to meet club co-CEO Jeff Berding, general manager Chris Albright and sporting staff to hammer out financial terms and logistical hurdles.
Chief among those obstacles: Cincinnati already have all three Designated Player slots tied up in long-term deals, meaning any mid-season arrival would require creative roster maneuvering or patience until the 2027 MLS sprint season, when Neymar would be available on a free transfer.
Timing is equally delicate on the international stage. Neymar, who regained full fitness after a string of injuries, has reeled off three goals and two assists in four Santos appearances since late February—form compelling enough for Brazil head coach Carlo Ancelotti to reconsider the forward for a fourth World Cup run in 2026. FC Cincinnati, currently 10th in the Eastern Conference with a league-low 10 goals through seven matches, would prefer to integrate Neymar next summer, after the tournament, though they could opt to wait for a winter 2027 unveiling.
Should the deal materialize, Neymar would join countryman Evander—one of Cincinnati’s incumbent Designated Players—in an attack desperate for star power and production. The move would also continue the recent trend of global icons choosing MLS for their career epilogues, following Lionel Messi’s headline-grabbing arrival at Inter Miami in 2023 and Antoine Griezmann’s recent signing with Orlando City.
For now, Santos retain Neymar’s rights through the calendar year. Once the clock strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve, the Seleção’s all-time leading scorer with 79 goals will be free to chart the next—and perhaps final—chapter of his storied career.
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Trump Returns to Sports Spotlight at UFC 327 Amid Iran War Ceasefire
Miami, April 11, 2026 — President Donald Trump stepped back into the sports arena Saturday night, drawing a thunderous ovation from a capacity crowd at UFC 327 in the Kaseya Center. The appearance marks Trump’s first at a major sporting event since the outbreak of war with Iran and comes just days after a Tuesday cease-fire agreement paused hostilities.
Flanked by UFC CEO and president Dana White, Trump entered the arena shortly before the headline bout between Jiri Prochazka and Carlos Ulberg. Fans erupted in cheers as the president made his way cageside, pausing to exchange words with longtime UFC commentator Joe Rogan and gesture appreciatively toward the stands.
Television cameras captured Secretary of State Marco Rubio leaning in to speak privately with Trump moments before the walk-out, cupping his hand over the president’s ear amid the arena din. Trump responded with a raised fist and a wide smile, then pointed into the crowd, signaling his recognition of supporters.
Earlier in the day, Trump addressed reporters at the White House about ongoing negotiations with Tehran. “We’re in very deep negotiations with Iran. We win regardless. We’ve defeated them militarily,” he said. “Whether we make a deal or not makes no difference to me. And the reason is because we’ve won, whether you listen to the fake news or not.”
Saturday’s fight night ends a conspicuous absence from high-profile sports events. Trump last attended the College Football Playoff national championship on Jan. 19 but skipped February’s Super Bowl and the Winter Olympics in Italy as fighting escalated in the Persian Gulf. He has long been a fixture at UFC events, attending UFC 316 and a Miami Fight Night card in 2025, as well as UFC 302 and UFC 309 during the 2024 campaign.
With the cease-fire in place, the president appears eager to re-engage with a constituency that has welcomed him at past fights. White, who has cultivated a friendship with Trump for decades, again served as the conduit for the commander-in-chief’s return to the mixed-martial-arts spotlight.
Trump departed Washington from Joint Base Andrews on Saturday afternoon, landing at Miami International Airport before heading to downtown Miami. After the final bell, he waved to media assembled on the tarmac and boarded Air Force One for the flight back to the nation’s capital.
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Celtic 1-0 St Mirren: Hoops close regular season with narrow win
Celtic Park, Glasgow – The Scottish Premiership’s regular season curtain fell on a controlled, if unspectacular, note for Celtic as a 15th-minute strike from Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain sealed a 1-0 victory over St Mirren and ensured the champions of last season finished with a modicum of momentum.
The former Arsenal and Liverpool midfielder, operating in a fluid front line, capitalised on a sharp passing move to sweep home the game’s only goal, a finish that proved enough to keep the home crowd buoyant and the visitors at arm’s length for the remainder of the contest.
Celtic dominated possession and dictated tempo throughout, but the single-goal margin was a fair reflection of a match that never fully ignited after the opener.
With the three points, Celtic reached 67 points from 33 fixtures, securing second place in the table. Hearts, 70 points, took the title, leaving Celtic to contemplate a campaign that promised more for long spells but ultimately slipped away in key moments.
Attention now turns swiftly to the Scottish Cup. The draw has paired Celtic with St Mirren once more, this time in the semi-final on April 19, a fixture that now carries the weight of the club’s season. A trophy would cast a different light on a year of mixed emotions; anything less would deepen the sense of a prize that got away.
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OSU football: Legree makes good impression in first scrimmage
CORVALLIS — Oregon State freshman receiver Jesse Legree wasted little time announcing his arrival, authoring a pair of highlight-reel plays during Saturday’s spring scrimmage that turned heads inside the Beavers’ football complex.
True freshmen are rarely made available to reporters during spring drills, but the Baltimore native was granted the exception after his performance and handled the spotlight with the same poise he showed on the field. Legree’s burst and sure hands were on full display as he connected on two long gains that helped ignite an offense looking for new playmakers.
While coaches continue to evaluate every position and see no benefit in naming starters months ahead of the season opener, Legree’s early impression suggests he intends to force his way into the conversation sooner rather than later. Cornerbacks, for their part, are already anticipating another stiff test when the Beavers reconvene for their next scrimmage.
Oregon State, sports editor Les Gehrett contributed.
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Lucknow Super Giants v Gujarat Titans - IPL scorecard
The Indian Premier League served up another high-stakes contest as Lucknow Super Giants clashed with Gujarat Titans, and fans can now pore over the full scorecard to relive every boundary, wicket and momentum swing. With both franchises eyeing crucial points in the race for playoff berths, the encounter promised fireworks from the opening delivery.
The scorecard, released in its entirety, captures the ebb and flow of the contest, detailing each batter’s contribution, every bowler’s spell and the decisive moments that shaped the outcome. Supporters of the Super Giants and Titans alike will find the complete statistical breakdown an essential reference, offering insights into partnerships, economy rates and the pivotal overs that tilted the balance.
As the league phase intensifies, such comprehensive data becomes invaluable for analysts, fantasy managers and casual followers tracking form and fitness. The full scorecard stands as the definitive account of the night’s action, preserving every run and dismissal for posterity.
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‘He Wasn’t Ready’—MLS Commissioner Admits Mistakes with U.S. Soccer Prodigy Freddy Adu
Major League Soccer Commissioner Don Garber has publicly acknowledged that the league mishandled the career of Freddy Adu, the once-heralded American prodigy who became the second-youngest player in MLS history when he debuted for D.C. United at 14 in 2004. Speaking on a podcast last week, Garber said the league, the team and commercial partners pushed Adu too hard, too soon, leaving a promising talent exposed rather than nurtured.
“He was a kid, and we pushed him, and the team pushed him, and I’m not sure that was the best thing for Freddy,” Garber said, reflecting on his fifth season as commissioner and the decisions that shaped Adu’s trajectory.
Adu’s arrival was accompanied by unprecedented fanfare. Then-D.C. United manager Ray Hudson likened the teenager to “a little Fabergé egg” whose talent was obvious but fragile. MLS, still in its formative years, lacked a proven model for developing adolescent stars and instead thrust Adu into a prominent role for one of the league’s flagship clubs. The midfielder appeared 133 times in MLS before embarking on a nomadic path through Europe, North America and South America, managing only 11 Portuguese top-flight appearances for Benfica and nine Ligue 1 outings for Monaco before drifting through clubs in Greece, Türkiye, Brazil, Serbia, Finland and Sweden.
Garber now views Adu’s experience as a cautionary tale that has reshaped MLS policy. The league has since refined its approach, sheltering emerging talents such as Alphonso Davies—who moved from Vancouver Whitecaps FC to Bayern Munich and won the UEFA Champions League—and Seattle’s Obed Vargas, who recently secured a transfer to Atlético Madrid. The latest teenager on the league’s radar, Philadelphia Union’s Cavan Sullivan, surpassed Adu’s record as the youngest MLS player by 13 days in 2024 and is contracted to join Manchester City at 18. Garber emphasized that Sullivan’s development plan involves measured minutes, limited media exposure and coordinated oversight among coaches, technical staff and family.
“I think we’re more thoughtful about how to manage a player’s career,” Garber said. “How do you get the coach, the technical director, whatever relationship you have with his manager and his family to be sure that you’re a caretaker of his future?”
While Adu never reached the heights projected for him, the lessons drawn from his story continue to influence MLS academies and player-management protocols, underpinning the league’s current reputation as a reliable pipeline for global clubs seeking polished young talent.
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Rory McIlroy Stumbles at the Masters as One-Man Show Becomes Wide-Open Race
Augusta, Georgia — A tournament that once looked like Rory McIlroy’s personal showcase has swung wide open after the Northern Irishman stumbled on the pristine fairways of Augusta National. The early storyline of a commanding, one-man advantage has dissolved into a scramble among a growing cast of contenders.
McIlroy’s misstep—details of which were not specified—has re-set the leaderboard and injected fresh drama into the year’s first major. With the presumed front-runner suddenly vulnerable, the Masters now presents a rare, unpredictable battle that could crown a surprise champion.
As the final groups work toward the clubhouse, the championship appears up for grabs, setting the stage for a thrilling conclusion that no one saw coming when the day began.
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Rory McIlroy Stumbles at the Masters and a One-Man Show Turns Into a Wide-Open Race
Augusta, Georgia — A tournament that had shaped up as Rory Mc’s personal procession veered sharply into uncertainty late on Friday, as the four-time major champion stumbled and the leaderboard compressed into a scramble that could include a dozen contenders by the weekend.
The Northern Irishman arrived at the Masters as the clear form player, but his charge stalled with an untimely run of errors that opened the door for a host of rivals. What had been billed as a one-man exhibition now appears a wide-open race for the coveted green jacket.
With the cut line still settling, the tournament’s narrative flipped from coronation to survival, setting up a weekend that could feature multiple lead changes and a parade of new names in contention.
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‘I won’t accept it’ – Hansi Flick sends Barcelona title warning after Espanyol win
Barcelona moved nine points clear at the summit of La Liga with only seven fixtures remaining after a derby triumph over Espanyol, yet manager Hansi Flick refused to entertain any notion that the title race is settled. Addressing his squad in the wake of the victory, the German coach issued a blunt reminder that complacency will not be tolerated inside the Camp Nou dressing room.
“It’s not over yet. Nine points is good, but we have to finish it off,” Flick stressed. “We can’t go on with this attitude, I won’t accept it. Until it’s over, we have to play our best, and then, too. We’re going to keep going like this, I hope we can show it on Tuesday.”
Barcelona have navigated a season punctuated by injuries, but a recent run of form has repaired the damage and restored confidence ahead of a decisive fortnight. Flick praised the collective response while urging his players to sustain the standards that have put the club within touching distance of domestic silverware.
“What we’ve achieved so far is fantastic. Now we want to advance in the Champions League,” he added. “We think we have the quality to win La Liga and the mentality to win, too. You can’t win anything with just quality. We can win La Liga, but it’s not over yet.”
Attention now pivots to Europe, where Barcelona must overturn a first-leg deficit against Atlético Madrid in the Champions League quarter-finals. Flick rejected suggestions that only a miracle can rescue the tie, insisting his side is more than capable of turning the contest around.
“We don’t need a miracle, we need to play a good game, and we can do that,” he said. “Anything is possible. Atlético is fantastic, but we have a good team and we are capable of doing it.”
The winners of the all-Spanish clash will face either Arsenal or Sporting CP in the semi-finals, with the English outfit holding a slender 1-0 advantage from the opening leg in Portugal.
Saturday’s derby hero, a teenage forward who struck twice to set another personal milestone, echoed his manager’s rallying cry, underlining that the squad’s focus remains fixed on trophies rather than statistics.
Barcelona, buoyed by a commanding league position and the belief instilled by their coach, now carry the fight on two fronts, mindful that the season’s defining moments are still to come.
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Chelsea vs. Manchester City: Can Pep Guardiola’s side win out and claim Premier League title?
London – When Manchester City step onto the Stamford Bridge pitch on Sunday, the mathematics are stark and simple: eight victories from the final eight fixtures will, in all probability, deliver a fourth consecutive Premier League crown. Yet the path from theory to reality runs straight through a Chelsea side eager to complicate the equation and an Arsenal team still nine points clear at the summit.
City’s game in hand and the looming Etihad meeting with the Gunners mean the gap can shrink to three points inside a fortnight, but Pep Guardiola refuses to rely on favours from elsewhere. “We have to win every single game,” the Catalan said on Friday. “The situation we are in… we need to get all of them, otherwise it will not give us a chance to try until the end.”
Bookmakers have translated that urgency into odds that imply an 89 % likelihood of Arsenal finishing top; Opta’s model pushes the north Londoners to 97.2 %. The disconnect reflects the difficulty of perfection in a season where only Burnley have looked objectively outclassed. Aston Villa’s eight-match winning streak between November and December remains the division’s longest in 2025-26; City’s best is six, achieved after Christmas and snapped by a 1-1 draw at West Ham last time out.
Guardiola’s reference to inconsistency is borne out by underlying numbers. During the 12-game streak that overhauled Arsenal in 2022-23, City posted a non-penalty expected-goal difference of 1.05 per match; the following season’s run-in it rose to 1.33. This campaign the balance has swung wildly: Guardiola’s team can thrill in one half, as they did against Arsenal at Wembley in the EFL Cup final, then cede a dozen shots to Leeds, Fulham or Tottenham the next.
Sunday represents the first obstacle in a testing sequence. After Chelsea, City host Arsenal, visit Burnley, then close with Everton, Brentford, Bournemouth and Aston Villa – a slate of opponents likely to have European or survival incentives. Even a perfect record may not be enough if goal difference becomes decisive: a repeat of the 2-0 Cup-final margin over Arsenal would lift City to +34, still three behind the current leaders.
Still, recent history cautions against writing off City. In the Haaland era they have twice produced the league’s longest in-season winning sequences, both to hunt down Arsenal: 12 straight in 2022-23, nine the following year. “When City get hot, they’re scorching,” the Opta note reads, and Guardiola will hope the embers of February’s Liverpool dismantling and March’s Arsenal swagger ignite once more.
First, though, they must solve a Chelsea side unbeaten in five at the Bridge and carrying the confidence of a youthful squad loosened from mid-table anxiety. Anything less than three points and the arithmetic becomes moot; collect all 24 remaining points and the Premier League may yet witness another famous City chase.
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Cowboys Defensive Back Markquese Bell Arrested on Drug Charges North of Dallas
McKinney, Texas — Dallas Cowboys defensive back Markquese Bell was arrested Friday night on marijuana and controlled-substance possession charges after a traffic stop in Prosper, a fast-growing suburb north of Dallas, authorities confirmed Saturday.
According to Prosper police, an officer detected the odor of marijuana while speaking with Bell during the stop. A subsequent vehicle search yielded less than two ounces of marijuana and a THC vape cartridge. Bell, 27, was booked into the Collin County jail on misdemeanor marijuana possession and a related controlled-substance charge, police said.
The Cowboys organization acknowledged the incident through a team spokesman but offered no additional comment. Agent Deiric Jackson, representing Bell, struck a measured tone: “Certainly let Markquese have his day like anybody else,” Jackson said, indicating that his client will allow the legal process to unfold.
An undrafted free agent out of Florida A&M in 2022, Bell has carved out a steady role on special teams while serving as a key reserve in the secondary. He appeared in all 17 regular-season games in each of the past two campaigns, logging 94 tackles in 2023 and tying for the team lead with eight stops in the Cowboys’ wild-card loss to Green Bay. Entering the second season of a three-year, $9 million contract, Bell has accumulated 48 career appearances with 11 starts.
The arrest comes at a pivotal point in the offseason as teams prepare for organized workouts ahead of training camp. Bell’s availability for upcoming team activities could hinge on the resolution of the charges.
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New PL financial rules could allow Tottenham to have huge transfer kitty under Roberto De Zerbi
Tottenham Hotspur’s fight to stay in the Premier League has taken on added urgency after Friday night’s results dropped the club into the relegation zone for the first time since the opening weekend of the 2015-16 campaign. With more than 100 days having passed since Spurs last tasted league victory—a 3-0 win at Crystal Palace in December—Roberto De Zerbi’s immediate remit is clear: secure survival, then prepare for a summer spending spree made possible by English football’s new financial framework.
The league’s forthcoming switch from the Profit and Sustainability regulations to the Squad Cost Ratio gives clubs without European commitments licence to devote up to 85% of football-related revenue to transfers and wages. Because Tottenham will not be in Europe next season, they fall under this threshold rather than the stricter Financial Fair Play limits. In the first year of transition, an additional 30% leeway raises the ceiling to 115% of total revenue, effectively freeing the club from domestic sanctions while the new system beds in.
Football correspondent Ben Jacobs told The United Stand, via GiveMeSport, that Spurs are well placed to capitalise. “Tottenham will be able to exploit this loophole of no European football,” Jacobs explained. “Even without Champions League money they’ll have pretty decent revenue because of the size of their stadium and their brand has always brought in decent capital.”
The club’s 62,850-seat arena, opened in 2019, generates match-day income that rivals most European heavyweights, while global commercial deals ensure a steady off-pitch cash flow. Those twin revenue streams, combined with the relaxed ratio, mean chairman Daniel Levy could sanction a major overhaul of the squad should De Zerbi guide the side to safety.
The Italian, appointed midway through the current campaign, has so far been unable to halt a slide that leaves Spurs in the bottom three. Yet the club’s hierarchy view the coming window as pivotal: a chance to rebuild around the head coach’s preferred profile of technically assured, high-intensity players. The new rules offer the rare combination of financial muscle and regulatory freedom, but only if Premier League status is retained.
For supporters who endured the dizzying title race of 2015-16, the parallels end at the league table; this season’s narrative is one of survival rather than ambition. Should De Zerbi engineer an escape, the narrative could pivot swiftly. The North Londoners would enter the summer market unshackled, able to back their manager with funds that recent windows have lacked.
The stakes, then, are stark. Avoid the drop and Tottenham can leverage stadium scale, brand strength and regulatory leniency to re-arm for an assault on the upper reaches of the table. Fail, and the financial advantages evaporate in the Championship. With eight matches remaining, every point is a step toward either catastrophe or a transformative rebuild under the new Squad Cost Ratio regime.
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