Expert Sports News & Commentary

Premier League giants can't afford to miss Champions League riches for even a season

Premier League giants can't afford to miss Champions League riches for even a season

The return of the UEFA Champions League this week is a reminder that, for England’s biggest clubs, participation is no longer a luxury—it is a financial lifeline. Liverpool, Manchester United and Chelsea are locked in a frantic battle to secure one of the three remaining qualification places behind presumed top-two finishers Arsenal and Manchester City, and the stakes could scarcely be higher. Between them, Liverpool, United and Chelsea have lifted the famous trophy 11 times; add Aston Villa’s 1982 triumph and the English contenders have amassed as many European Cups as Serie A has managed in seven decades. Yet history alone does not pay the bills. The modern reality is that a single season outside Europe’s premier competition can destabilise even the most commercially muscular outfits. Paris Saint-Germain’s latest accounts underline the point. The French champions collected £125.06 million from UEFA for winning the tournament last spring, while runners-up Inter Milan took £118.3 million. Of the eight quarter-finalists, Aston Villa earned the smallest share—£72.5 million—but still recorded a transformative windfall. For Premier League clubs, whose domestic rivals are also their direct competitors for only four—or at most five—group-stage tickets, that level of income is increasingly difficult to guarantee. Manchester United are the cautionary tale. Exiled from all European competition this season, they forfeit roughly £5 million in Old Trafford match-day revenue every time a Champions League fixture is not staged, a shortfall that would have reached £30 million had they replicated Villa’s run to the last eight. Their £90 million-a-year Adidas shirt deal carries a £10 million claw-back clause for missing the Champions League, and while the squad’s 25% wage reduction for non-qualification saves £78.25 million against a £313 million annual wage bill, the saving does not offset the wider losses. With £422 million in outstanding transfer fees—£238 million due by next summer—United’s scramble to return to the competition after a 2023-24 absence is as much about solvency as silverware. Chelsea’s dependence is even starker. UEFA figures show the club posted a £355 million loss in 2024-25, more than double that of any other side. Winning the FIFA Club World Cup last summer injected £84 million, but their Conference League triumph brought only £19.06 million, a fraction of what Champions League involvement would have yielded. Even Liverpool, freshly crowned Premier League champions, tread a narrow financial tightrope. Despite receiving £174.9 million in domestic-title prize money and £46 million for reaching the Champions League round of 16, the club’s pre-tax profit was just £15.2 million. A wage bill already at £428 million—before new contracts for Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk or last summer’s £450 million recruitment drive—leaves little margin for error. Chief financial officer Jenny Beacham warned that “significant cost challenges” require the club to “compete at the highest level of the game” to balance the books. Manager Arne Slot, who inherited Europa League football in his first season, admitted the restricted budget meant only Federico Chiesa arrived, illustrating how quickly a downgraded European path can stall squad evolution. For Europe’s perennial powers, such anxiety is alien. PSG last missed the Champions League in 2011-12; Bayern Munich have played every edition since 2007-08, Barcelona since 2003-04, Real Madrid since 1996-97. Their domestic dominance makes qualification automatic, allowing long-term planning and spending with certainty. In the Premier League, by contrast, as many as eight clubs harbour genuine top-four ambitions. The brutal mathematics—four places, five if England tops the coefficient—mean at least one heavyweight is guaranteed to miss out every May. The cost of that failure escalates with every passing season, turning Champions League participation from a glittering aspiration into an existential necessity.
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Newcastle United vs Barcelona: Champions League – team news, start, lineups

Newcastle United vs Barcelona: Champions League – team news, start, lineups

St James’ Park will stage one of the most evocative nights in its modern history on Tuesday when Newcastle United welcome La Liga leaders Barcelona for the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie (kick-off 20:00 GMT). For Newcastle, it is only a second appearance in the knockout phase of Europe’s elite competition and the first since the 2002-03 campaign. Eddie Howe’s side, currently 12th in the Premier League, have already exceeded expectations by edging past Qarabag in the play-off round, yet the step up in class against the five-time European champions is stark. “We’ve never been in this position in the Champions League before, and it’s the best competition there is,” Howe said. “For obvious reasons it’s a massive game in our history. We need to approach it that way, and we need the supporters to think that way.” The Magpies’ schedule has done them no favours: Saturday’s FA Cup fifth-round defeat at Manchester City was their 47th match of the season and 19th in 63 days. Injuries have bitten hard, with Emil Krafth, Lewis Miley, Fabian Schar and Bruno Guimaraes ruled out. Howe rested Dan Burn, Joelinton and Anthony Gordon at the Etihad in anticipation of this encounter and hopes the returning trio, along with Nick Woltemade, Sandro Tonali and Tino Livramento, can inject fresh impetus. Barcelona arrive on Tyneside unbeaten in La Liga since early January and four points clear at the summit. Hansi Flick rotated liberally during the 1-0 win at Athletic Bilbao at the weekend, keeping one eye on England’s north-east, and saw teenage winger Lamine Yamal settle the game with a curling 68th-minute strike. “We’re already seeing what Lamine can do,” Pedri told Movista. “He’s very young, and he’s only going to get better.” Flick will be without Frenkie de Jong, Jules Kounde, Alejandro Balde and Andreas Christensen through injury, while Gavi is unlikely to feature after eight months out with a knee complaint. Marc-André ter Stegen remains sidelined, so Joan García continues in goal behind a back four of Eric García, 17-year-old Pau Cubarsi, Gerard Martín and João Cancelo. Pedri and Marc Casado anchor midfield, with Yamal, Fermín López, Raphinha and Robert Lewandowski forming the attacking quartet. Newcastle’s predicted XI: Pope; Trippier, Thiaw, Botman, Hall; Willock, Tonali, Joelinton; Barnes, Wissa, Gordon. Barcelona’s predicted XI: Joan García; Eric García, Cubarsi, Martín, Cancelo; Pedri, Casado; Yamal, López, Raphinha; Lewandowski. History offers Newcastle scant comfort: although Faustino Asprilla’s famous hat-trick beat Barca 3-2 in 1997, the Catalan club have won the four subsequent meetings, including a 2-1 success at St James’ Park in September when Marcus Rashford, on loan from Manchester United, struck twice in nine second-half minutes. Anthony Gordon’s late reply that night proved mere consolation. Howe insists the past is irrelevant. “We need to find energy from somewhere that will elevate our performance to a level that we’ve not seen before this season, because I think that’s the only way we’ll get through.” If Newcastle are to reach the quarter-finals for the first time, the performance of a lifetime may be required against opponents who have lost only once in 2025 and have scored in every Champions League fixture this season. The narrative of resurgent hosts against seasoned European royalty kicks off at a raucous St James’ Park under the March lights. SEO keywords:
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Liverpool star opens up on his future following January interest

Liverpool star opens up on his future following January interest

Andy Robertson has confirmed that he rejected a January approach from Tottenham Hotspur and remains fully committed to Liverpool, despite starting only five Premier League matches so far this season under head coach Arne Slot. The 31-year-old Scotland captain, who is approaching a decade on Merseyside, told reporters that discussions took place between the clubs, but he quickly made it clear he wished to stay at Anfield. “There was obviously interest there, there were discussions had with both sets of clubs but the decision was that I wanted to stay,” Robertson explained. “We stayed at Liverpool and that was the decision made.” Robertson stressed that his loyalty to the Reds has never wavered, even as game-time has become more sporadic. “I’ve been committed to Liverpool for the last eight and a half or nine years now and I’ll be committed until I’m no longer needed,” he said. “This club has given me everything and I’ve given this club everything.” The left-back, a key figure in last season’s title-winning campaign, refused to divulge specifics of the negotiations, preferring to keep dialogue “in-house” out of respect for sporting director Richard Hughes, Fenway Sports Group president Mike Gordon, and incoming CEO Michael Edwards. “I’ve had a good relationship with these people and these people brought me to the football club,” he added. “They have helped make me who I am, so in that respect, we’ve had a fantastic relationship.” Although Liverpool sit sixth in the table after a stuttering league defence, Robertson says his attention is fixed on the ongoing FA Cup and Champions League challenges. “Whatever was happening behind the scenes happened. All I can say is that I kept focusing on football,” he noted. “January happened, but it is now gone. Now we move forward and my focus never came off trying to help the lads on the pitch and in training.”
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Champions League round of 16 analysed: Real Madrid vs Man City (again), Club World Cup final rematch

Champions League round of 16 analysed: Real Madrid vs Man City (again), Club World Cup final rematch

The Champions League’s knockout stage resumes on Tuesday with a slate of round-of-16 ties that feel both familiar and freshly loaded with narrative, none more so than Real Madrid’s Wednesday-night meeting with Manchester City at the Bernabéu. By the time the final whistle sounds on this two-legged encounter, the clubs will have faced each other 13 times since 2020, turning Europe’s premier competition into a private rivalry. City arrive in Spain buoyed by December’s league-phase victory in Madrid and by the belief that the 15-time champions are at their most vulnerable in years. “Facing Real Madrid is hardly a prospect to be relished but they are at their relative weakest in years and City could do some real damage,” says Sam Lee, who covers the English champions. A win would pitch Pep Guardiola’s side into a likely quarter-final with Bayern Munich and, potentially, a semi-final against Paris Saint-Germain or one of three remaining Premier League clubs. Wednesday also delivers a rematch of last summer’s Club World Cup final, as PSG welcome Chelsea to the Parc des Princes. Chelsea’s 2-1 upset in New Jersey still rankles with Luis Enrique’s squad, and Cerys Jones, reporting on the London club, notes that PSG “will be out for blood” to prove the defeat was an aberration. Chelsea, for their part, would have preferred Newcastle—whom they have beaten more recently—but see the tie as a chance to signal a return to Europe’s top table. English interest stretches well beyond those headline acts. Liverpool open the round at Galatasaray on Tuesday, a tie Gregg Evans describes as a “reward” for topping the league phase, while Newcastle entertain Barcelona at St James’ Park in a repeat of an earlier group-stage clash. George Caulkin says Newcastle “viewed Chelsea as the marginally preferable draw,” yet the Magpies will relish the atmosphere against a Barça side that, according to Laia Cervello Herrero, “went to buy a lottery ticket and won” with the draw. Tottenham, mired in a domestic relegation fight, travel to Atletico Madrid seeking what Jack Pitt-Brooke calls “respite from their Premier League struggles.” Diego Simeone’s men, beaten 3-2 at Anfield in September, are targeting a first quarter-final appearance since 2017 and would face Barcelona or Newcastle next. Arsenal, meanwhile, welcome Bayer Leverkusen to north London after winning all eight league-phase matches; Art de Roche believes the Gunners “would be confident against any team in Europe” after avoiding City and Madrid in their half of the draw. Italian and German representatives also harbour distinct ambitions. Atalanta, the lone Serie A survivor, travel to Bayern Munich after overturning a two-goal deficit against Borussia Dortmund in the play-off. James Horncastle reports that Gian Piero Gasperini’s side “do not expect to win this competition” but intend to “make life difficult” for the Bavarians, who must cope without Manuel Neuer and Alphonso Davies for the opening leg. Bayern themselves, Stafford-Bloor adds, “have every reason to be hopeful” with Jamal Musiala back in training and Harry Kane spearheading a Ballon d’Or-calibre campaign. Leverkusen, sixth in the Bundesliga, visit Arsenal hoping to build on a 2-0 league-phase win over City. Though underdogs, they view the tie as a learning experience for a young squad that has already exceeded expectations. Key performers could decide tight margins. Erling Haaland remains City’s primary threat, while Thibaut Courtois may need “heroics” to paper over Madrid’s defensive cracks. Dominik Szoboszlai drives Liverpool’s midfield, Bukayo Saka has 12 goals and eight assists in just 24 European appearances for Arsenal, and PSG’s Gianluigi Donnarumma could prove decisive against a Chelsea attack led by Joao Pedro, whose winner against Napoli has infused him with confidence. Should underdogs progress, romance is assured: Bodo/Glimt meet Sporting CP for the right to face either Arsenal or Leverkusen, guaranteeing at least one quarter-final debutant. As Horncastle concludes, the Norwegian side “ran the gauntlet” in the play-offs and now keep the dream alive against a Sporting team that upset PSG in the league phase. With Madrid-City renewing hostilities and PSG-Chelsea settling a score, the round of 16 offers both the comfort of familiarity and the promise of fresh plotlines. By May 30 in Budapest, today’s draw may look either prescient or pleasantly obsolete.
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Reporter pours cold water on stunning Chiefs, Travis Kelce update

Reporter pours cold water on stunning Chiefs, Travis Kelce update

Kansas City, MO — A weekend of breathless speculation about Travis Kelce’s future ended with a firm splash of cold water late Sunday, as Associated Press reporter Rob Maaddi contradicted an earlier report that the Chiefs’ perennial All-Pro tight end could finish his career in another uniform. On Sunday morning, The Athletic’s Dianna Russini and Jesse Newell startled the NFL world by writing that Kelce “is expected to return to play for a 14th season this year” but “may feature for a team other than the Chiefs for the first time in his pro career.” The phrasing opened the possibility that the 36-year-old future Hall of Famer would test the open market for the first time since Kansas City selected him in the third round of the 2013 draft. Less than 12 hours later, Maaddi posted a blunt rebuttal on X: “Reported this at the combine … A person with knowledge of Kelce’s thinking told The Associated Press the four-time All-Pro tight end will not test the market. If the 36-year-old Kelce returns for a 14th season, it’ll be in Kansas City with coach Andy Reid and quarterback Patrick Mahomes.” The conflicting narratives arrive at a pivotal moment. Monday at noon ET marks the opening of the league’s “legal tampering” window, when agents may begin fielding calls from rival clubs. Kelce, whose current deal is set to expire, is technically free to speak with other teams if no extension is reached. Yet Maaddi’s source insists those conversations will never happen. Chiefs brass have spent the offseason publicly courting their veteran standout. Owner Clark Hunt said in January he wants Kelce “to return and spend another season with the club,” while general manager Brett Veach told reporters weeks later that the two sides “are going to continue to have positive dialogue and see where this thing ends.” Still, no agreement has been struck. Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio noted Sunday that the standoff could hinge on dollars rather than geography: “The truth could be as simple as this — the Chiefs’ current offer falls below Kelce’s expectations. If it doesn’t improve, Kelce could (in theory) see what else is out there. For now, the notion that his agents will listen to other teams could be nothing more than an effort to shake more cash from the Kansas City tree.” Florio added that, as of late Sunday, “there has been no indication that another team plans to aggressively pursue [Kelce] once the negotiating window opens.” Kelce himself has issued no public guarantee that he will remain a Chief for life, leaving room for maneuvering even if Maaddi’s source proves correct. Any suitor would be acquiring a player who, according to ESPN data, led the 2025 Chiefs with 76 receptions, 108 targets and 851 receiving yards, adding five touchdowns across 17 games. Whether those numbers are enough to entice a contender — or simply to motivate Kansas City to sweeten its offer — should become clearer once Monday’s negotiating period begins. For now, the storyline has shifted from “Where might Kelce land?” to “Will the Chiefs pay to keep him?” The answer figures to arrive quickly; franchise legends rarely linger long on the open market, even ones who have never worn another NFL logo.
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Barcelona: Gessime Yassine is attracting interest from the Catalan club!

Barcelona: Gessime Yassine is attracting interest from the Catalan club!

FC Barcelona have opened preliminary talks over a potential swoop for RC Strasbourg Alsace winger Gessime Yassine, sources have confirmed to this outlet, signalling the Moroccan teenager’s rapid rise on the European radar. Discussions between Barça’s sporting department and the 20-year-old’s camp have already begun, although they remain exploratory at this stage. No written offer has been forwarded to Strasbourg, leaving the Ligue 1 side awaiting formal contact from Spain before contemplating any transfer scenario. Yassine, born in Salon-de-Provence on 22 November 2005 and raised in Avignon, began turning heads with ACS Morières before spells at Istres and Marignane-Gignac honed the pace and technical flair that now characterise his game. His performances in Alsace have amplified the buzz, persuading Barcelona’s recruitment staff to monitor him closely. The player’s entourage is understood to be holding off on further negotiations until the Blaugrana firm up their interest, placing the onus on the Catalan giants to decide their next move. With the winger under contract in France, Strasbourg are under no immediate pressure to sell and will only engage once an official approach materialises. For now, the saga remains in its infancy, but the mere fact that Barcelona have initiated dialogue underlines Yassine’s burgeoning reputation as one of Morocco’s most promising exports.
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PREVIEW: Newcastle seek Champions League revenge against Barcelona

PREVIEW: Newcastle seek Champions League revenge against Barcelona

St James’ Park will be the stage for a heavyweight Champions League last-16 first leg on Tuesday night as Newcastle United welcome Barcelona, eight weeks after the Catalans edged a 2-1 group-stage thriller at the same venue. Marcus Rashford’s double that evening ultimately cancelled out Anthony Gordon’s late strike, and the Magpies are determined to flip the script in front of another raucous Tyneside crowd. Newcastle’s route to the knockout phase was anything but straightforward. Finishing outside the automatic top-eight places forced Eddie Howe’s side into a play-off, where they obliterated Qarabag FK 9-3 on aggregate to book their place in the last 16 for the first time since the competition’s rebrand. Domestically the picture is bleaker: the Magpies languish 12th in the Premier League and have seen both domestic cup hopes extinguished by Manchester City inside the past month. Barcelona, by contrast, coasted through the league phase in fifth and received a bye to the last 16 alongside fellow heavyweights Arsenal, Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Tottenham, Chelsea, Sporting CP and Manchester City. Hansi Flick’s side sit four points clear atop La Liga, already have the Supercopa de España in the trophy cabinet, and despite a surprise Copa del Rey exit at the hands of Atlético Madrid last week, they remain seasoned European campaigners. The Blaugrana have missed the Champions League knockout rounds only twice in the past 17 years and have lifted the famous trophy five times, most recently in 2015 against Juventus. For Newcastle, the tie represents uncharted territory. “This is the biggest game in the club’s history,” Howe told reporters on Monday. “We need the supporters to think that way and we need to try and find some energy from somewhere. That will elevate our performance to a level that we’ve not seen before this season, because I think that’s the only way we’ll get through.” Kick-off is scheduled for 8 p.m. UK time, with the return leg at the Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys seven days later. Barcelona will expect business as usual, yet Newcastle sense a chance for redemption—and perhaps the signature upset of their new era.
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Sanju Samson a fusion of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, says Anil Kumble after T20 World Cup masterclass

Sanju Samson a fusion of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, says Anil Kumble after T20 World Cup masterclass

NEW DELHI: India’s decision to promote Sanju Samson to the top of the order midway through the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup has been vindicated in spectacular fashion, with the Kerala batter authoring one of the competition’s greatest late-tournament surges and compelling Anil Kumble to liken him to a composite of modern legends Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. Having spent the opening phase watching from the sidelines, Samson was handed the new-ball responsibility ahead of India’s Super 8 showdown against the West Indies in Kolkata. What followed was a sequence that turned the campaign on its head: an undefeated 97 in a virtual knockout, followed by successive scores of 89 in both the semi-final and the final as India sealed their second T20 world title. The right-hander’s 321 runs from five innings set a new benchmark for an Indian in a single edition of the tournament, while his 97 not out in the final remains the highest individual score ever registered in a T20 World Cup title clash. By becoming only the second Indian after Kohli to register half-centuries in the semi-final and final of the same World Cup, Samson placed himself in rarefied company. Yet for Kumble, the raw numbers capture only half the narrative. “If you look at the previous World Cup in 2024, it had Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. Both are great players, very difficult to replace them,” the former India captain told ESPNcricinfo. “I think Samson is a combination of Kohli and Rohit, in a sense.” The spin great elaborated that Samson toggled between Kohli’s calculated accumulation and Rohit’s power-packed assault with seamless precision. “When it required a little bit of Kohli, where you just plan and ensure that you don’t lose wickets,” Kumble noted, “and then whenever you need to accelerate in the powerplay, you want to take on the bowlers — like Rohit.” Even while shepherding the innings, Samson refused to blunt his natural aggression. India became the first side to clear the rope 100 times in a single World Cup edition; Samson’s 24 sixes topped the tournament chart and underlined a fearless approach that married flair with responsibility.
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Mac Allister to Real Madrid? His father speaks out

Mac Allister to Real Madrid? His father speaks out

Madrid, Spain — Speculation linking Liverpool midfielder Alexis Mac Allister with a future move to Real Madrid has intensified after his father and representative, Carlos Mac Allister, confirmed that no talks are underway to extend the player’s contract at Anfield. “There are currently no negotiations with Liverpool to renew the contract,” Carlos Mac Allister told reporters, a statement that will alert suitors across Europe. The 27-year-old Argentine international, signed from Brighton in 2023 for a fee of around £35 million, is tied to Liverpool until 2028, yet the absence of renewal discussions leaves the door ajar for potential bidders. Since arriving on Merseyside, Mac Allister has made 136 appearances for the Reds, contributing 19 goals and 17 assists. His combative style and technical quality have made him a standout performer even as the team has slipped to sixth place in the Premier League table. Liverpool’s hierarchy are understood to be prioritising other issues at present, leaving the midfielder’s long-term future uncertain. Real Madrid, long-term admirers of the World Cup winner, are expected to monitor developments closely, although no formal approach has been confirmed. With European clubs keeping close tabs, the coming months could prove pivotal in determining whether Mac Allister remains part of Arne Slot’s project or pursues a new challenge elsewhere.
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Laporta and Font Clash Over Deco, Flick and Yamal in Fiery Barcelona Election Debate

Laporta and Font Clash Over Deco, Flick and Yamal in Fiery Barcelona Election Debate

Barcelona’s presidential race ignited on Monday as incumbent Joan Laporta and challenger Víctor Font squared off in the campaign’s first head-to-head debate, trading barbs over the club’s sporting future less than two weeks before the 15 March vote. The sharpest exchanges centred on three names that could define the next era at Camp Nou: sporting director Deco, head coach Hansi Flick and teenage star Lamine Yamal. Font, runner-up in 2021, argued that Barcelona’s sporting structure needs an urgent overhaul. He proposed dismantling the current single-director model by replacing Deco with a three-man technical secretariat: Carles Planchart, Albert Puig and Francesc Cos. Font described the trio as architects of past Barça triumphs and claimed their collective expertise would give Flick the institutional backbone he requires. “With this experience we will have a structure that does not exist right now,” Font told the audience. “Flick is delighted here and has a contract. We’re working on a structure that provides him with what he asks for – stability and signings.” Font insisted the squad is already “top-level” and capable of challenging for every trophy, while conceding that targeted reinforcements are still necessary. “The sporting director will have to address this. They’ll explain it,” he added. Lorta fired back, calling Font’s plan a direct affront to Deco’s record. “To say that these three people know more than Deco is an insult,” the president countered, ranking the Portuguese alongside legendary sporting director Txiki Begiristain. He warned that removing Deco would jeopardise the competitive, youthful squad already assembled. “If you put Flick at risk without Deco, you’d ruin a project that inspires hope. The team Flick has is thanks to Deco,” Laporta said. “Flick has said he’s happy with Deco, and if they remove him, he won’t be. You have to be happy, and that’s not easy.” The debate pivoted to youth development when Laporta highlighted his refusal of a €250 million offer from Paris Saint-Germain for 17-year-old winger Lamine Yamal, whose contract runs until 2031. “It’s one of the things I’m most proud of,” Laporta declared. Font immediately shot back: “Do you know who signed him? Albert Puig,” name-checking the same man he wants to install in his proposed technical trio. With ballots set to be cast in under a fortnight, the row over Deco’s role, Flick’s environment and Yamal’s valuation has crystallised the broader question facing Barcelona members: continuity under Laporta or structural revolution under Font.
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Richard Hughes' £75m mistake could have cost Liverpool their season

Richard Hughes' £75m mistake could have cost Liverpool their season

Liverpool’s 2025-26 campaign has been pock-marked by scrutiny from the opening weekend, but the root of their struggles may trace back to a single summer miscalculation. Sporting director Richard Hughes sanctioned a club-record £125 million swoop for Alexander Isak, only to watch the Sweden striker struggle for fitness and form while a cheaper, more prolific alternative has flourished elsewhere. Isak’s arrival at Anfield was meant to turbo-charge Arne Slot’s attack. Partnered with Mohamed Salah, the 25-year-old was billed as the final piece in a title-chasing jigsaw. Instead, he has started sparingly, outshone by Hugo Ekitike, who has seized the centre-forward role with 22 goal involvements in all competitions. Isak’s limited minutes have yielded little return, leaving supporters to question whether the outlay—£50 million more than Chelsea paid for Joao Pedro—has paralysed the club’s wage structure and transfer planning. Joao Pedro, courted by most of the division’s heavyweights last summer, slipped off Liverpool’s radar when Chelsea met his £50 million release clause. The valuation was widely viewed as steep; in hindsight, it looks a bargain. Operating as the Blues’ central striker, the 24-year-old has contributed 26 goals across all competitions, outscoring Cody Gakpo—Liverpool’s de facto left-sided forward—by more than double. Gakpo’s paltry dozen strikes have been compounded by inconsistent displays, yet a lack of depth has forced Slot to start the Dutchman in virtually every match.
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Lakshya Sen puts up a valiant show despite running on empty, falls to Lin Chun-Yi in All England final

Lakshya Sen puts up a valiant show despite running on empty, falls to Lin Chun-Yi in All England final

Birmingham, England – For 57 gripping minutes on Sunday, Lakshya Sen carried the hopes of Indian badminton on blistered feet and sheer willpower, before bowing 15-21, 20-22 to Chinese Taipei’s Lin Chun-Yi in the All England Championship final. The result denied Sen a historic first singles crown for India at the world’s oldest tournament, yet the 24-year-old’s refusal to yield despite a body running at barely 60 percent fitness wrote a story every bit as compelling as the title itself. Playing his second All England final after finishing runner-up in 2022, Sen entered the arena at Utilita Arena Birmingham with visible tape on his right foot and a tournament-long tally of five hours 18 minutes already logged on court. The after-effects of Saturday’s draining semifinal win over Canada’s Victor Lai were evident from the first rally: the Indian’s lateral movement lacked its customary snap, and the customary dive on the forehand flank—so often his signature—was abandoned entirely. Lin, a left-hander and reigning India Open champion, pounced immediately. Targeting Sen’s compromised right side with angled smashes and deft net kills, the Taiwanese raced to a 4-1 lead and reached the interval 11-9. A burst of four unanswered points after the break stretched the advantage to 15-10; when Sen closed to 13-16, Lin reeled off three of the next four points to pocket the opener 21-15. The second stanza offered a different narrative. Freed from the shackles of tension, Sen unfurled a sequence of searing smashes and wristy drop shots that had the crowd roaring in disbelief. He led for the first time at 6-5, then surged ahead 10-5 as Lin misfired a trio of regulation lifts. At 14-10 the comeback felt real; at 18-18 the arena crackled with anticipation. A jaw-dropping round-the-head winner from Lin and a thunderous Sen reply made it 19-19. The Indian saved championship point at 19-20 with a forehand kill that scraped the tape, but on Lin’s second opportunity at 21-20, Sen misjudged the shuttle’s trajectory and pushed a backhand wide. The Taipei shuttler collapsed in celebration, becoming the first player from Chinese Taipei ever to claim the All England singles crown, minutes after compatriots Ye Hong Wei and Nicole Gonzales Chan had stunned the doubles field as unseeded mixed champions. “I’m pretty emotional right now to think about the match,” Sen admitted afterward, voice cracking. “In the first set he was the better player. I could have finished the second set better. But I’m happy with the way I played the whole week. My physical condition was not ideal, but when I was on court I only thought about giving my best.” Coach Vimal Kumar had warned beforehand that his charge was “100 percent mentally strong but only 60 percent physically,” a prophecy borne out as cramps resurfaced late in the contest. “Yesterday I was struggling with cramps,” Sen confirmed. “Though I got some time to recover, I could not recover 100 percent.” Lin’s tactics were ruthlessly efficient: keep the shuttle deep to Sen’s forehand, coax the Indian into multi-shot rallies, and accelerate once the legs inevitably slowed. The strategy yielded 42 winners, many carved from the very right corner Sen protected with caution rather than crouch. Still, the Indian departed to a standing ovation, having again reached a summit few compatriots have scaled. Runner-up in 2022, finalist again in 2024, Sen’s resilience suggests the breakthrough may be a matter of health rather than heritage. For now, the All England trophy heads to Taipei. For Indian badminton, the wait endures—but the conviction that it will soon be broken has never felt stronger.
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Jose Mourinho sent off in derby clash

Jose Mourinho sent off in derby clash

Lisbon—Jose Mourinho’s return to the Portuguese spotlight erupted in familiar controversy on Saturday night when the Benfica manager was shown a red card during stoppage time of a pulsating 2-2 draw with arch-rivals FC Porto at Estádio da Luz. The flashpoint arrived two minutes after substitute Leandro Barreiro’s 88th-minute equaliser completed a stirring comeback from two goals down. Wild celebrations on the home bench spilled into the technical area, prompting a furious exchange between Mourinho and members of the Porto staff. Referee João Pinheiro dismissed both Mourinho and Porto assistant coach Lucho Gonzalez for their roles in the scuffle, leaving the touchline briefly in chaos. Mourinho, who guided Porto to Champions League glory in 2004, rejected the official explanation for his sending-off. Speaking to reporters outside the dressing room, he insisted: “The referee said he sent me off because I kicked a ball toward the Porto bench, which is completely false. Many times after goals, I have kicked the ball into the stands to give it to a lucky fan and celebrate. I know I’m not very good technically, but it was meant for the stands.” Tensions escalated again in the tunnel after the final whistle. Mourinho claimed Gonzalez repeatedly branded him a “traitor”. “He called me a traitor 50 times in the tunnel. I’d like him to explain to me, a traitor to what? I went to Porto, I gave my soul to Porto. I went to Chelsea, then Inter, then Real Madrid. I traveled the world and gave 24 hours of my life every day, gave my life, my soul. Insults from the fans are one thing. But a fellow professional calling me a traitor, why? A traitor to what? Giving everything to Benfica? A traitor to what? I didn’t like it.” Saturday’s result keeps Benfica level on points with Porto at the summit of the Primeira Liga, yet the narrative will centre on Mourinho’s latest confrontation with the club where he first became a household name. Appointed at Benfica last September after his departure from Fenerbahce, the 61-year-old’s presence has intensified one of European football’s most combustible rivalries. His trophy-laden spell at Porto—six titles including the 2004 European Cup—makes every return trip to the Dragão a personal affair, and this derby proved no exception. The draw preserves Benfica’s unbeaten league record under Mourinho, but the Portuguese tactician must now watch from the stands after picking up the 18th dismissal of his senior managerial career. Disciplinary officials are expected to review additional footage of the tunnel incident before determining any extended ban. Benfica return to action next weekend at Gil Vicente; Mourinho’s availability will not be confirmed until the league’s disciplinary committee releases its findings early this week.
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T20 World Cup Final: Turning points in the India vs New Zealand summit clash

T20 World Cup Final: Turning points in the India vs New Zealand summit clash

Ahmedabad’s batting paradise set the stage, yet the pivotal moments of the T20 World Cup final were authored long before the last ball was bowled. Winning the toss, New Zealand opted to chase on a surface that promised runs, but their first gamble came in the team sheet: off-spinner Cole McConchhe was left out despite India’s left-handed top order having shown vulnerability against off-spin throughout the tournament. India pounced immediately. Abhishek Sharma, previously short of runs, and Sanju Samson tore into the new-ball pair with calculated savagery. Lockie Ferguson’s fourth over disappeared for 24, Matt Henry’s fifth for 21, and Jacob Duffy’s sixth for 20. At 92 for none after six overs, India registered the highest Powerplay total in men’s T20 World Cup history and tilted the contest irrevocably. Abhishek, unfazed by the occasion, raced to a 18-ball fifty—the fastest of the event—exemplifying fearless strokeplay under the greatest pressure. New Zealand’s response with the ball lacked imagination. Off-spinning all-rounder Glenn Phillips was introduced early, conceded a frugal five, and was then mothballed for the remainder of the innings. The decision denied the Black Caps a matchup that had troubled India earlier in the competition and allowed the onslaught to swell. Shivam Dube provided the late crescendo, hammering 24 off Jimmy Neesham’s final over to propel the total beyond the 220-mark and transform a stiff chase into a mountainous one. New Zealand’s reply unravelled just as swiftly. Axar Patel and Jasprit Bumrah scythed through the top order inside the Powerplay, removing the batsmen best equipped to match India’s tempo. Without early momentum, the chase spluttered, and the asking rate ballooned beyond reach. From an ill-fated selection call to an unused spinner, from an explosive Powerplay to a late-over blitz, the final’s narrative was shaped by a sequence of decisive moments that crowned India champions and left New Zealand ruing what might have been.
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'Intensity with a smile is a killer combo': Dhoni playfully praises Gambhir after India’s T20 World Cup win

'Intensity with a smile is a killer combo': Dhoni playfully praises Gambhir after India’s T20 World Cup win

Ahmedabad, 2026 – India etched a fresh chapter in cricket folklore on home soil, becoming the first nation to win three T20 World Cups, the first to defend the title, and the first to lift the trophy in front of its own fans. The 96-run demolition of New Zealand in the final sparked celebrations from the Narendra Modi Stadium to every corner of the diaspora, and among the first to salute the champions was the captain who started the journey exactly 19 years ago: Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Taking to Instagram minutes after the last Kiwi wicket, Dhoni posted a tongue-in-cheek tribute that quickly went viral. “History gets created at Ahmedabad,” he wrote. “Big congratulations to the team and support staff and to all the fans of Indian Cricket Team worldwide. Such a pleasure to see all of u play. Coach Sahab's smile looks great on u, intensity with smile is a killer combo, very well done. enjoy guys (BUMRAH ke baare mein kuch na likhoon tou hi acha hai. CHAMPION BOWLER).” The “Coach Sahab” in question, head coach Gautam Gambhir, has cultivated a reputation for fierce sideline stares, but the relaxed grin captured on the big screen during the victory lap clearly caught Dhoni’s eye. The playful jab—“intensity with a smile is a killer combo”—was read by fans as both a compliment to Gambhir’s evolving demeanour and a nod to the calm aggression that defined India’s campaign. Dhoni also singled out Jasprit Bumrah, whose scorching spell of 4 for 15 earned Player of the Match honours. The veteran simply labelled him “Champion bowler,” insisting any further praise would be superfluous. New Zealand’s decision to bowl first backfired spectacularly. Abhishek Sharma announced his return to peak form with a 21-ball 52, featuring six fours and three sixes, in a 98-run opening stand with Sanju Samson. Samson went on to add a century partnership with Ishan Kishan, who hammered 54 off 25 balls. A late flurry from Shivam Dube—26 not out off eight balls—propelled India to an imposing 255 for 5, the highest total ever recorded in a T20 World Cup final. The chase never gained momentum. Axar Patel struck early to finish with 3 for 23, while Bumrah’s double-wicket opening burst left New Zealand reeling at 72 for 5. Tim Seifert’s entertaining 26-ball 52 provided brief resistance, but once he departed the tail folded. Daryl Mitchell and skipper Mitchell Santner added starts, yet the required rate kept climbing. The innings ended at 159 all out, sealing India’s historic triumph and igniting a celebration that began at the boundary rope and reverberated across digital platforms worldwide. Keywords:
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FIFA President Gianni Infantino congratulates ICC Chairman Jay Shah on ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026 success

FIFA President Gianni Infantino congratulates ICC Chairman Jay Shah on ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026 success

New Delhi, March 9: In a rare moment of cross-sport camaraderie, FIFA President Gianni Infantino has publicly lauded International Cricket Council (ICC) Chairman Jay Shah for the seamless execution of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026, which climaxed on Sunday with a high-stakes final between India and New Zealand. Infantino took to Instagram on the day of the title clash, posting a photograph in which he is seen holding an Indian jersey. The image, shared with his millions of followers, was accompanied by a congratulatory message directed at Shah, acknowledging the tournament’s successful organisation and the global excitement it generated. The gesture underlines the growing appreciation among leaders of major sporting bodies for cricket’s expanding footprint and the ICC’s ability to stage marquee events that capture worldwide attention. While the final result was not detailed in the communication, Infantino’s outreach signals a mutual respect between football’s world governing body and cricket’s global custodian, highlighting the unifying power of sport across disciplines.
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T20 World Cup: The Rohit Sharma playbook Suryakumar Yadav keeps in his pocket

T20 World Cup: The Rohit Sharma playbook Suryakumar Yadav keeps in his pocket

Mumbai — When Suryakumar Yadav sat in front of reporters on the eve of India’s T20 World Cup opener, the question sounded harmless enough: how had he managed to imprint such an unapologetically aggressive DNA on the national side? The captain’s answer was swift, almost reflexive. “It’s not me who started it,” he said. “We began playing this brand of cricket under Rohit.” In that single sentence, Suryakumar acknowledged what dressing-room insiders have long known: the template India are using to bludgeon their way through global T20 cricket was first sketched by Rohit Sharma, the man who no longer leads the side but whose philosophy still travels in the current captain’s pocket. The roots of the revolution can be traced to a November night in Adelaide 2022. England’s openers romped to a 10-wicket semifinal win, chasing 169 with four overs to spare. Rohit, then captain, left the ground convinced that timidity, not talent, had derailed India’s campaign. Over the next 18 months he and head coach Rahul Dravid tore up the conservative manual that had served India since the MS Dhoni era. Powerplay par scores—once 45-50—were redrawn at 75. Wickets in the first six overs were re-classified as acceptable collateral rather than crisis. The recalibration began with Rohit himself: promoted to open, told to swing from ball one, and encouraged to keep swinging. The new doctrine demanded structural sacrifice. Four specialist bowlers gave way to three, buttressed by three—or sometimes four—multi-skilled cricketers. In the 2024 World Cup cycle Jadeja, Axar Patel, Shivam Dube and Hardik Pandya surrounded Jasprit Bumrah, Arshdeep Singh and Kuldeep Yadav. Bumrah’s four-over stinginess—rarely more than 25 runs conceded—became the safety net that allowed batters to chase 200 with impunity. Rohit’s 41-ball 92 against Australia in St Lucia, an innings that knocked the five-time champions out of the tournament, was the emblematic knock of the era. When Rohit, Virat Kohli and Jadeja retired from T20Is after that 2024 triumph, Suryakumar inherited more than the armband. He inherited conviction. Appointing Gautam Gambhir—another evangelist for fearless cricket—as coach, Suryakumar doubled down. Abhishek Sharma was anointed first-choice opener with a simple brief: “Keep going,” a message the skipper repeats after every IPL innings he monitors. Sanju Samson, drafted late into this World Cup, was told his previous failures were irrelevant; style and intent were non-negotiable. The result: totals of 256-4 and 253-7 against Zimbabwe and England, and a chase of 199 versus the West Indies when elimination stared India in the face. The volatility of the approach has produced wobbles—Varun Chakravarthy’s rhythm deserted him, South Africa exposed the all-rounder-heavy balance—but Suryakumar has refused to retreat. “In sports, wins and losses keep happening,” he said after the South Africa defeat. “I have learnt from Rohit that in life, being balanced is important.” It is that equilibrium—an attacking batting order stretching to No. 8, a trio of frontline bowlers backed by versatile hybrids, and the ever-reliable Bumrah—that forms the Rohit Sharma playbook Suryakumar still consults. The handwriting may be Gambhir’s, the marginalia now belongs to a new generation, but the title page carries the same author: Rohit Sharma. As India stand on the threshold of a second T20 world title, the manual remains unaltered, its pages dog-eared from constant use, its instructions followed to the letter.
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Pep Guardiola approval awaited as Barcelona circle for Manchester City’s Omar Marmoush

Pep Guardiola approval awaited as Barcelona circle for Manchester City’s Omar Marmoush

Manchester City’s resurgent forward Omar Marmoush has emerged as a summer transfer target for Barcelona, but any deal hinges on manager Pep Guardiola sanctioning the departure of the 27-year-old Egypt international. Marmoush underlined his value to the Premier League champions with a match-winning brace in Sunday’s 3-1 FA Cup quarter-final triumph over Newcastle United, a performance that intensified interest from the Spotify Camp Nou. The former Eintracht Frankfurt attacker, signed for £59 million only four months ago, has rediscovered his scoring touch since returning from Africa Cup of Nations duty and has offered City a reliable secondary source of goals behind Erling Haaland. Yet the striker’s early months in Manchester were spent largely on the periphery. Guardiola preferred combinations involving Rayan Cherki, Tijjani Reijnders and Phil Foden in support of Haaland, leaving Marmoush frustrated by a lack of starts. With Antoine Semenyo arriving from Bournemouth in January and immediately establishing himself as a first-choice option alongside Haaland and Marc Guehi, Marmoush now faces competition from Foden, Savinho, Reijnders, Cherki and Jeremy Doku for the final attacking berth. Barcelona, preparing for life after Robert Lewandowski, have placed Marmoush on a shortlist of potential replacements, according to The Athletic’s Pol Ballus. Financial constraints mean a move for primary target Julián Álvarez is unlikely, increasing the appeal of a more cost-effective deal for Marmoush. No formal discussions have taken place, and City’s hierarchy will not consider offers until Guardiola, whose own future has been the subject of speculation, gives his explicit consent. Marmoush, contracted until 2029, is open to a new challenge if it brings the guarantee of regular football. Several European clubs are monitoring his situation, but Barcelona’s interest is the most advanced. City will demand full market value for a player whose goals could yet prove pivotal in their pursuit of an unprecedented quadruple, having already reduced Arsenal’s Premier League lead to seven points. For now, Guardiola’s approval remains the decisive obstacle between Marmoush and a surprise Camp Nou switch.
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T20 World Cup: Why Gautam Gambhir dedicated India’s win to Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman

T20 World Cup: Why Gautam Gambhir dedicated India’s win to Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman

Kolkata, June 30 — Moments after India wrapped up a commanding 96-run victory over New Zealand in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup final at a raucous Narendra Modi Stadium, head coach Gautam Gambhir steered the spotlight away from his own dressing room and toward two men who never took the field in this campaign: Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman. “I would dedicate this trophy to Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman,” Gambhir told reporters, his voice steady above the din of fireworks outside. “To Rahul bhai for putting the Indian team in a place and Laxman for creating the pipeline at CoE.” The acknowledgement was more than ceremonial. Dravid, who guided India to the 2024 title before stepping aside, laid the structural bedrock on which the current squad was built, Gambhir explained. Laxman, now head of the BCCI’s Centre of Excellence, has overseen a talent conduit that has funnelled young players into the national set-up with increasing precision. India’s triumph on home soil made history on multiple fronts. The 255 for five posted batting first is the highest total ever recorded in a T20 World Cup final, and the subsequent dismissal of New Zealand for 159 delivered a winning margin that eclipsed any previous final. The victory secures India’s third T20 world title, adding to the inaugural 2007 crown and the 2024 edition, and makes them the first side to successfully defend the trophy as well as the first to win it on home soil. Gambhir, appointed coach in late 2024, endured a turbulent start, including home Test series defeats to New Zealand and South Africa. He credited Ajit Agarkar, the chief selector, and Jay Shah—now ICC chairman and formerly BCCI secretary—for steadying the ship when criticism peaked. “Ajit took a lot of flak and worked with a lot of honesty,” Gambhir said. “And Jay bhai—during my lowest ebb after those losses—he called me. That support matters.” Captain Suryakumar Yadav also drew lavish praise. “Surya made my job easier,” Gambhir noted. “He has been a leader who is a father figure. The bigger purpose is to celebrate trophies, not milestones. For too many years we have celebrated milestones. I will urge people to stop celebrating personal milestones.” The coach’s appeal to shift focus from individual statistics to collective silverware resonated in a dressing room now wearing fresh winners’ medals. Whether that philosophy endures will be tested in future assignments, but for one June night in Ahmedabad, the emphasis was squarely on a team effort—and on the two former greats whose influence, Gambhir insists, made it all possible.
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2026 NFL Free Agent Rankings: Tight ends

2026 NFL Free Agent Rankings: Tight ends

The 2026 free-agency window is open, and the tight-end market offers a blend of proven veterans, rebound candidates and situational specialists. Pro Football Focus has released its positional rankings, and the headline name is Atlanta’s Kyle Pitts. At 25, Pitts is coming off a career renaissance: a 73.6 overall PFF grade—his best since 2021—and a 91.3 receiving mark from Week 13 onward, second among all tight ends. Expect his phone to ring early and often. Dallas Goedert heads the next tier. The longtime Eagle has posted 70.0-plus overall grades in seven of eight seasons, and while his 2025 line—64 receptions, 624 yards—was modest, a dozen touchdowns and a 135.0 passer rating when targeted underscore his red-zone reliability. Blocking remains a question, but as a move-piece receiver he still carries value. Travis Kelce’s future appears locked into Kansas City. Though no longer the position’s gold standard, Kelce finished 2025 inside the top 25 in yards per route run, receiving yards and PFF receiving grade, indicators that he can function as an above-average starter for at least one more season. Baltimore’s Isaiah Likely will enter 2026 at 26 and with a 2024 receiving grade of 77.1 on his résumé; a foot injury derailed his follow-up campaign, making him a buy-low flier with upside. Pittsburgh’s Durham Smith is in the opposite boat—his 46.8 overall grade ranked last among 42 qualifiers—but the memory of his 2024 Dolphins tape (1.95 YPRR, 5.9 YAC per catch) could entice a reclamation project. David Njoku, freed from competition with rookie Harold Fannin Jr., offers starter-level talent at 29 if medicals check out. Tennessee’s Chigoziem Okonkwo, once an 84.6-grade rookie, still averages 1.46 yards per route run for his career and brings field-stretching speed. Baltimore’s third tight end, Charlie Kolar, parlayed 71.5 run-blocking and 75.0 receiving grades into dark-horse appeal for offenses that prize versatility. Veteran wild cards include Darren Waller, who flashed an 87.6 receiving grade in nine games after a two-year hiatus, Austin Hooper, who rebuilt his stock in New England with 72.1 and 73.9 overall and receiving grades, and Cade Otton, whose 3,951 snaps over four seasons speak to durability even if production has lagged. At the back end, blocking specialists like 34-year-old Giants vet Chris Manhertz and 26-year-old Ravens depth piece Kolar will attract teams seeking trench help, while 42-year-old Marcedes Lewis and 33-year-old Durham Smith face prove-it paths to roster spots. With salary-cap space to spend and offensive schemes increasingly reliant on matchup pieces, the 2026 tight-end class blends star power, bounce-back bets and niche role players—an equation that should keep negotiations active well into the spring.
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Pillars of the T20 dynasty: Key inflection points for Team India from 2024–26

Pillars of the T20 dynasty: Key inflection points for Team India from 2024–26

Mumbai, June 2026 — When India ended an 11-year wait for a T20 World Cup title in 2024, the triumph was only the opening chapter of a broader transformation. Over the next 24 months the national side shed its superstar-centric skin and emerged as a ruthlessly efficient, data-driven Twenty20 unit. From captaincy recalibration to surgical selection calls, every decision was engineered to sustain a dynasty rather than celebrate a lone trophy. TOI maps the pivotal inflection points that turned a powerhouse of individuals into a relentless winning machine. 1. Moving on from Hardik Pandya as captain Hardik Pandya’s explosive skill set had long earmarked him as the heir apparent, but the think-tank concluded that stability outweighed continuity. Recurrent fitness concerns threatened availability, while the burden of leadership diluted his core value as India’s premier allrounder. Stripping the captaincy freed Pandya to focus on match-turning cameos and crucial overs, keeping him physically and mentally primed for high-leverage moments. 2. Elevating Suryakumar Yadav as T20-only skipper Handing the armband to a 36-year-old who plays only the shortest format was a leap of faith that underscored India’s commitment to format-specific planning. Suryakumar’s fearless stroke-play and innovative mindset mirrored the brand management wanted: intent-laden Powerplay starts, audacious shot-making against spin, and bowling changes dictated by match-ups rather than reputation. The appointment guaranteed leadership continuity without spilling into ODIs or Tests, aligning every tactical message with T20 demands. 3. Dropping Shubman Gill for intent-based selection Shubman Gill’s classical elegance and 50-over pedigree were undeniable, yet his strike rotation-oriented game was judged incompatible with the side’s new attacking ethos. By moving on from Gill, selectors served notice that averages would be subordinate to strike-rates, clearing the runway for explosive yet volatile talents such as Abhishek Sharma, Sanju Samson and Ishan Kishan. 4. Installing Sanju Samson as Rohit Sharma’s successor Replacing a colossus like Rohit Sharma carried enormous risk, but Samson’s like-for-like aggression paid dividends. Reinstalled as primary Powerplay aggressor during the 2025 World Cup, the Kerala batter shrugged off old “inconsistency” tags, punishing good-length balls for boundaries and redefining India’s offensive floor. His dual role as keeper-batter also provided strategic flexibility, turning a perennial backup into the squad’s tactical heartbeat. 5. Institutionalising left-right batting alternations India enshrined a left-right equilibrium from the first over to the 20th. Openers Abhishek Sharma (left) and Sanju Samson (right) set the tone; Ishan Kishan (left) and Suryakumar Yadav (right) sustained the angle disruption through the middle; finishers Shivam Dube (left) and Hardik Pandya (right) continued the ploy in the death overs. The constant change of hands wrecked bowlers’ rhythm, forced captains to shuffle fields and unlocked boundary pockets that same-hand pairings seldom found. 6. Investing in specialist finishers Instead of hoping for top-order spill-over, India carved bespoke roles for players who live for the final five. Shivam Dube and Rinku Singh trained to target pace and spin alike, their remit clear: maximise scoring, not anchor the innings. The recalibration acknowledged modern T20 reality—matches pivot in the back end—and ensured finishers were as rehearsed as openers. 7. Flooding the XI with multi-skilled allrounders Hardik Pandya, Shivam Dube, Axar Patel and Washington Sundar gave the team six-plus bowling options while stretching the batting order to No. 9. The allrounder density allowed Suryakumar to toggle between aggressive and conservative structures without diluting either discipline, a luxury that proved decisive on varied global surfaces. Collectively, these pillars forged a two-year stretch that yielded bilateral rubbers, regional clashes and, ultimately, a second global title. India no longer enter tournaments banking on individual brilliance; they arrive as a calibrated, self-sustaining T20 dynasty built to keep winning. SEO keywords:
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Commanders should target Colts' defender to improve secondary

Commanders should target Colts' defender to improve secondary

When the NFL’s legal negotiating window opens Monday, the Washington Commanders will weigh moves at premium spots such as edge rusher and wide receiver, yet the club’s most urgent upgrade may sit deeper on the depth chart: safety. Despite entering 2025 confident in the position, Washington watched the group collapse—Quan Martin regressed, Will Harris missed most of the year, and the back end produced almost no game-changing plays. The result is a stealth need that could be solved by one under-the-radar free agent: Indianapolis Colts safety Nick Cross. Cross, 24, checks every box for a franchise looking to blend youth, durability and upside. A third-round selection in the 2022 draft, he appeared in 51 of a possible 52 career games, logging only one absence. After spot starts as a rookie and sophomore, Cross became a full-time starter in 2024 and posted a 70.4 overall Pro Football Focus grade, buoyed by an 80.2 mark against the run. Even in a follow-up campaign that saw his overall PFF rating dip to 59.8, his run-defense grade remained stout at 72.0, and he continued to flash as a downhill attacker and occasional blitzer. At 6-foot-0 and 212 pounds, Cross pairs that physicality with rare long speed—he blazed a 4.34-second 40-yard dash at the scouting combine. The Maryland native and DeMatha Catholic product would also offer local ties while addressing a Commanders defense that finished last season among the league’s worst tackling units. Cross has spent the past two seasons working closer to the line of scrimmage, experience that should translate to tighter run fits on the back end for Washington. The Commanders enter free agency with both cap space and a laundry list of roster holes, ensuring they will be linked to nearly every marquee name. Still, the smartest additions are often the subtle ones. Cross, young, homegrown and trending upward, fits that mold and could stabilize a safety room suddenly desperate for reliability and playmaking punch.
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Xavi Hernandez: Barcelona hierarchy snubbed my request to sign Arsenal star

Xavi Hernandez: Barcelona hierarchy snubbed my request to sign Arsenal star

In a candid interview with La Vanguardia that could sway next month’s Barcelona presidential election, former manager Xavi Hernandez has accused the club’s hierarchy of rejecting his 2023 bid to sign Martin Zubimendi—months before the midfielder eventually moved to Arsenal. Xavi, who left the Camp Nou dug-out last summer, told the Catalan daily that once Sergio Busquets confirmed his departure, he immediately identified the Real Sociedad pivot as the ideal successor. “I asked them to sign Zubimendi,” Xavi said. “They told me no because of an economic issue.” Twelve months later Zubimendi joined Arsenal, leaving Xavi to lament the lost opportunity to refresh the base of midfield on his own terms. The 44-year-old used the revelation to underline a wider grievance: that footballing decisions were taken away from the coaching staff and placed in the hands of a board he believes mismanaged the transition. “When we were the ones making the decisions, the team was developing and rising,” he insisted. “When they started making the decisions, the team’s level dropped, and that’s no coincidence.” The interview, published over the weekend, is the latest salvo in Xavi’s increasingly public rift with incumbent president Joan Laporta, who is seeking a fourth mandate. Xavi, who is actively supporting rival candidate Víctor Font, claims Laporta’s inner circle orchestrated a media campaign against him and even misled senior players about his intentions. “They told Sergi Roberto, Araújo, Pedri and Raphinha that I wanted to sell them,” Xavi said. “That hurts me because it’s not true. We only planned one sale due to FFP constraints, and I fought for Sergi Roberto to renew.” Away from the boardroom battle, Xavi offered warm words for his successor Hansi Flick, revealing that the German visited his home to apologise after learning that Barça officials had negotiated with him while Xavi was still in charge. “He’s a good guy, very noble, and I’m glad he’s doing well,” Xavi said, stressing that the pair remain in regular contact. With Barcelona members set to vote for a new president, Xavi’s testimony adds political fuel to a campaign already dominated by questions over financial stewardship, squad planning and the legacy of the club’s legendary No. 6.
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Xavi drops Lionel Messi bombshell and hits out at Joan Laporta over his Barcelona exit

Xavi drops Lionel Messi bombshell and hits out at Joan Laporta over his Barcelona exit

Barcelona icon Xavi Hernández has broken his silence on the circumstances surrounding his departure from the club and has accused president Joan Laporta of sabotaging a pre-agreed deal to bring Lionel Messi back to Camp Nou. Speaking to La Vanguardia ahead of the forthcoming presidential elections, the former midfielder—who has publicly endorsed rival candidate Víctor Font—claimed that Messi’s return was “signed” in March 2023 before Laporta personally intervened to block it. “Leo was signed,” Xavi insisted. “After winning the World Cup we got in touch; he told me he was excited about coming back. We talked until March, I told him, ‘When you give me the OK, I’ll tell the president because I see it as a good move from a footballing perspective.’” According to Xavi, LaLiga had already approved the operation and the club was preparing what he termed “a last dance like Jordan’s” at the Estadi Olímpic de Montjuïc while Camp Nou underwent renovations. The 44-year-old alleges that Laporta began parallel negotiations with Messi’s father, Jorge, only to pull the plug. “The president told me, and I quote, that if Leo came back he was going to wage war against him and that he couldn’t allow it,” Xavi said. “Suddenly Leo stopped answering my calls because he’d been told on the other end that it couldn’t be done.” Xavi also directed fierce criticism at the club’s former director of football, Alejandro Echevarría, describing his conduct as “the biggest disappointment” and accusing him of orchestrating a media campaign against the coach. “Echevarría went around talking to players like Sergi Roberto, Araújo, Pedri and Raphinha, telling them that I wanted to sell them,” Xavi claimed, adding that he had sought only “one change to the squad, not 10” as Laporta has previously stated. Having previously kept quiet “out of respect for Barça,” Xavi now says he feels compelled to speak. “I’ve already completed my time as a player and coach,” he concluded, signalling that he does not foresee a return to the club in any capacity. The revelations come at a sensitive moment for Barcelona, with elections looming and scrutiny intensifying over Laporta’s management of both sporting and financial affairs.
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The next Rio Ngumoha is destined to join Liverpool

The next Rio Ngumoha is destined to join Liverpool

Liverpool’s reputation for turning Chelsea’s cast-offs into Anfield icons may be about to repeat itself. Rio Ngumoha has already validated the well-worn west-to-east pathway, and the club’s recruitment staff believe they have identified his successor still on Chelsea’s books: 17-year-old winger Ryan Kavuma-McQueen. Ngumoha’s switch last year caused consternation at Stamford Bridge, yet the teenager wasted no time proving the doubters wrong. Handed a swift first-team opportunity that Chelsea’s endless spending spree could never guarantee, he has become the latest poster-boy for a transfer route that previously delivered Mohamed Salah and Daniel Sturridge to Merseyside. Liverpool’s policy of cherry-picking the country’s brightest teenagers—Harvey Elliott and Trey Nyoni arrived under the same mantra—has created an environment in which Ngumoha has flourished. That success story is now being used as a magnet for the next target. Kavuma-McQueen, an electric right-winger who torments full-backs with blistering pace and a trademark cut inside onto his left foot, has been labelled “the next Ngumoha” inside Cobham. His England U17 record backs up the hype: five goals in his last four outings and 25 goal contributions in 23 appearances across youth levels. Liverpool came close to adding Kavuma-McQueen to their academy last summer but deliberately paused business to underline a clear pathway for Joshua Abe, another highly-rated winger already on the club’s books. Chelsea seized the moment, tying the teenager to a scholarship deal, yet the Merseyside club remain confident the long game is in their favour. Digital breadcrumbs suggest the feeling is mutual. Kavuma-McQueen’s social-media footprint is dotted with Liverpool-centric reposts, while his Instagram following list reads like a Reds team-sheet. Fans trawling platform X have highlighted repeated shares of Liverpool content, fuelling speculation that the London-born flyer sees his future at Anfield rather than in blue. For now, the player remains contracted to Chelsea, but history shows the pull of Liverpool can prove irresistible when pathways and passions align. If the pattern holds, Kavuma-McQueen could become the latest prodigy to swap Stamford Bridge for the Kop and, in the process, extend a cross-club pipeline that has quietly become one of English football’s most productive.
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A flight to quality – Chelsea tipped to sign more players this summer by former CEO

A flight to quality – Chelsea tipped to sign more players this summer by former CEO

Chelsea are expected to pivot from a youth-first recruitment model toward proven, top-tier talent in the upcoming summer window, according to former Everton chief executive Keith Wyness. Speaking exclusively to Football Insider’s Inside Track podcast, Wyness forecast “a flight to quality” at Stamford Bridge after two seasons dominated by the acquisition of development prospects. The west-London club posted a £355 million loss last season, and Wyness—who now advises elite sides through his football consultancy—believes that financial reality will force Chelsea to sell before they buy. “They’re going to have to look at selling players in the summer transfer window and change their transfer strategy to adapt to their financial situation,” he said. “It doesn’t mean to say they’re not going to buy. I think they will.” Wyness argues that the club’s strategy of signing young players with resale value is about to be stress-tested. “They had a flight to youth,” he explained. “Now I think they’re going to see if their strategy has worked, and can they sell those players they bought younger? Can they sell them now at a higher price? We’ve got to see. And this is where the market’s going to test themselves. And will there be enough buyers out there?” While Chelsea are anticipated to offload several of their home-grown or recently acquired youngsters, Wyness insists the club will still target high-calibre additions. “I think we’re going to see a flight to quality,” he reiterated, suggesting that marquee signings could follow once outgoing deals generate necessary funds. As the season enters its final stretch, Chelsea’s hierarchy are already mapping out scenarios for the summer market, balancing Financial Fair Play pressures with the need to close the gap to the Premier League’s top four. Wyness’s assessment underlines a critical juncture: after stockpiling teenage talents, Chelsea must now demonstrate they can monetise that portfolio while upgrading the first-team spine. The next transfer window, Wyness concludes, will reveal whether the club’s bold reset was visionary or simply expensive experimentation.
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Calls Grow for Australia to Grant Asylum to Iran’s Women’s Soccer Team After Anthem Protest

Calls Grow for Australia to Grant Asylum to Iran’s Women’s Soccer Team After Anthem Protest

Melbourne—Pressure is mounting on the Australian government to offer refuge to members of Iran’s national women’s football team after several players staged a symbolic protest during the Islamic Republic’s national anthem at a recent Asian Cup match. Multiple international outlets, including CNN, BBC, Bloomberg, Iran International and The Times of Israel, report that supporters have launched urgent appeals under the banner “Save our girls,” urging Canberra to extend protection to the squad amid fears of reprisals once the team returns home. The appeals intensified after Iran’s elimination from the tournament, which left players effectively stranded on Australian soil. Exiled Iranian Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi has added his voice to the chorus, publicly calling on Australian authorities to safeguard the women’s side. Human-rights advocates argue that the anthem protest—interpreted as a show of solidarity with nationwide demonstrations in Iran—places squad members at heightened risk of persecution by Tehran. Australian officials have yet to announce any formal response, but sources close to the Department of Home Affairs say the matter is under urgent review. With visas due to expire within days, refugee advocates warn that delay could expose players to forced repatriation and potential retaliation. The situation has triggered a groundswell of public sympathy across Australia, with online petitions gathering tens of thousands of signatures and local football clubs offering practical support. As the stand-off continues, all eyes are now on Canberra to decide whether sporting principle will translate into political protection.
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Football Bet of the Day: James Milton eyes over 2.5 goals in Espanyol v Osasuna

Football Bet of the Day: James Milton eyes over 2.5 goals in Espanyol v Osasuna

Racing Post Sport’s daily best-bet feature turns to La Liga on Monday, with resident football analyst James Milton isolating a 6-5 wager on over 2.5 goals when Espanyol host Osasuna. Espanyol began the 2025-26 season in upbeat fashion, sitting fifth at the Christmas break, but they have failed to win any of their last nine league outings and their defensive numbers have deteriorated sharply. The Barcelona club have shipped 11 goals across their past four fixtures alone, drawing 2-2 at Elche on March 1 after back-to-back four-goal defeats at Villarreal and Atletico Madrid in February. Their most recent home match, a 2-2 stalemate with Celta Vigo, continued the trend of high-scoring affairs. Osasuna arrive in equally prolific form; the over 2.5 goals line has cashed in six of their last eight league contests, most notably during a shock 2-1 victory over Real Madrid last month. With both sides showing a consistent inability to keep things tight at the back, Milton believes the price of 6-5 about a fourth successive Espanyol game breaching the three-goal barrier represents the standout wager on Monday’s Spanish schedule.
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Tough Moment: Chelsea Summer Signing Dario Essugo Opens Up on Difficult Period

Tough Moment: Chelsea Summer Signing Dario Essugo Opens Up on Difficult Period

Chelsea midfielder Dario Essugo has described the opening months of his Stamford Bridge career as “a very tough moment” after injury restricted him to just one competitive appearance since his summer arrival. The 19-year-old, signed from Sporting CP, last featured for the Blues in July’s Club World Cup before a succession of fitness setbacks forced him onto the sidelines for the remainder of the calendar year. Essugo finally returned to action as a second-half substitute in Saturday’s FA Cup third-round tie at Wrexham, marking his first taste of English football. “Of course, it is a very good feeling because it was a very tough moment,” Essugo told the club’s official website. “At a new club, a new experience, but for me, it’s very good to be back. Since the first day I got the injuries I had, I’ve had to wait but now I’m back and I feel very good.” The Racecourse Ground encounter provided an immediate education in the demands of the English game. Wrexham, buoyed by a raucous home crowd, pushed Chelsea all the way before the visitors edged a thrilling contest. Essugo, introduced midway through the second half, helped steady the midfield as the Blues protected their advantage. “It feels very good, it’s a good feeling. It was a tough game. They are a very good team, but we won and it’s perfect for us,” he added. “The FA Cup is very tough. You have to be prepared because every team is very tough, and this is what the FA Cup is about.” Essugo’s cameo offered a glimpse of the energy and composure that persuaded Chelsea to secure his signature last summer. With his lengthy rehabilitation now behind him, the Portugal youth international is targeting a consistent run of appearances to justify the club’s investment and kick-start his Stamford Bridge tenure. Chelsea supporters will hope the wait for Essugo’s next outing is measured in days rather than months as the squad continues to compete on multiple fronts.
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Chelsea Linked with Triple Barcelona Raid as Boehly Rumours Swirl

Chelsea Linked with Triple Barcelona Raid as Boehly Rumours Swirl

A speculative report originating from unnamed “Spanish sources” has suggested that Chelsea could launch a €250 million summer assault on Barcelona for three headline names—defender Jules Koundé, midfielder Dani Olmo and winger Raphinha—with club co-owner Todd Boehly said to be personally spearheading the move. The story, carried by Football365, paints Boehly as the driving force behind a proposed dismantling of the Catalan squad, claiming he is ready to table the blockbuster offer to president Joan Laporta and sporting director Deco. It adds that Boehly views Koundé’s current form as “not at his best” and believes that circumstance could smooth negotiations. Within Stamford Bridge corridors, however, the narrative is being greeted with scepticism. Boehly has not overseen day-to-day transfer strategy for some time; that remit has shifted to fellow co-owner Behdad Eghbali, who works alongside the club’s sporting directors. Sources close to the club therefore regard any suggestion of Boehly orchestrating a marquee triple swoop as “a complete load of nonsense”. No verifiable Catalan outlet has been identified, and the chain of reporting remains opaque, leaving the rumour short on credibility. For now, Chelsea’s focus appears fixed on domestic matters: interim boss Liam Rosenior handed Romeo Lavia a rare start in Saturday’s comeback victory over Wrexham, a result sealed when Josh Acheampong smashed home the equaliser. Until concrete evidence surfaces, the prospect of Koundé, Olmo and Raphinha swapping Blaugrana for blue London appears little more than summer silly-season chatter.
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