Expert Sports News & Commentary

Newcastle's Harvey Barnes to replace injured Eberechi Eze in England squad

Newcastle's Harvey Barnes to replace injured Eberechi Eze in England squad

Newcastle United winger Harvey Barnes is poised to receive his second senior England call-up after Crystal Palace forward Eberechi Eze withdrew from Thomas Tuchel’s squad with a calf injury. Eze, 27, missed Arsenal’s Carabao Cup final loss to Manchester City on Sunday and will undergo a follow-up scan this week after sustaining the problem in last Tuesday’s Champions League defeat to Bayer Leverkusen. “We have to do another scan in six or seven days and wait and see the results,” Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta confirmed on Sunday. Barnes, 28, has been rewarded for a prolific season on Tyneside in which he has contributed 14 goals and five assists in 50 appearances across all competitions. The winger has featured in every Premier League match bar one and started all 12 of Newcastle’s Champions League fixtures, establishing himself as a key component of Eddie Howe’s attack. The impending invitation ends a six-year wait since Barnes earned his solitary England cap in a friendly against Wales in October 2020. Scotland had recently attempted to persuade Barnes to switch allegiance ahead of the next World Cup through his Scottish grandparents, but the player declined the approach and remains committed to the Three Lions. England are preparing for back-to-back Wembley friendlies against Uruguay on 27 March and Japan four days later. Barnes is expected to link up with the squad once the formalities are completed, though the Football Association has yet to confirm the replacement. In a further blow to Tuchel’s defensive options, Leverkusen have announced that centre-back Jarell Quansah will also miss the international window after sustaining a left-thigh muscle injury in the same Champions League tie that ended Eze’s participation.
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Penn State Defenseman Jackson Smith Takes the Ice in Historic Big Ten Clash at Beaver Stadium

Penn State Defenseman Jackson Smith Takes the Ice in Historic Big Ten Clash at Beaver Stadium

Beaver Stadium, best known as the thunderous home of Penn State football, briefly traded cleats for blades as defenseman Jackson Smith glided across a temporary rink for the Nittany Lions’ Big Ten showdown with Michigan State. The outdoor setting provided a dramatic backdrop for Smith, whose steady presence on the blue line has been one of the few constants during a roller-coaster season that now leads the Lions straight into the NCAA Tournament. Smith and his teammates are set to face No. 2 seed Minnesota-Duluth at Albany’s MVP Arena on March 27, a single-elimination test that arrives with little margin for error. The matchup marks the first meeting between the programs and Penn State’s third NCAA appearance in four years, but the Lions carry scant momentum after going 3-7-2 down the stretch and failing to record a victory over a ranked opponent in that span. Center Reese Laubach recently acknowledged the team’s fragile psyche, saying players were “starting to check out” after a lopsided loss to Wisconsin. Yet Laubach also reminded observers that the current roster “is light years ahead” of last year’s Frozen Four squad, urging a return to selfless, team-first play. Injuries have ravaged the lineup since January, though the return of star center Charlie Cerrato for the final three games offered a late boost. Now healthy and refreshed after a two-week hiatus, Penn State will need every healthy body—including Smith’s reliable defense—to slow a Bulldogs attack led by the Plante brothers. Max Plante ranks fifth nationally with 49 points, while Zam Plante sits 11th with 46. The Albany Regional shapes up as a minefield, featuring No. 1 overall seed Michigan and AHA champion Bentley. With Michigan, Michigan State, and Wisconsin also securing bids, the Big Ten has placed four teams in the field, underscoring the conference’s depth and the challenge that awaits Smith and the Lions if they hope to return to the Frozen Four. Penn State and Minnesota-Duluth drop the puck at 9 p.m. ET, their first-ever meeting, with a berth in college hockey’s final four hanging in the balance.
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Arsenal 0-2 Man City, EFL Cup 2025-26 Final: O'Reilly's Brace Helps Citizens Clinch Title Victory

Arsenal 0-2 Man City, EFL Cup 2025-26 Final: O'Reilly's Brace Helps Citizens Clinch Title Victory

Wembley Stadium, London — Manchester City captured the first major domestic trophy of the 2025-26 campaign, defeating Arsenal 2-0 in Sunday’s English League Cup final to hand Pep Guardiola his fifth triumph in this competition as City manager. The breakthrough arrived just after the hour mark when Manchester-born left-back Nico O’Reilly, a product of the club’s academy, reacted quickest to a Kepa Arrizabalaga fumble and headed home the opener. Four minutes later, O’Reilly rose unmarked to nod in a second, effectively sealing the contest and sparking jubilant scenes among the City support. The brace from the 20-year-old defender proved decisive, ending Arsenal’s hopes of an unprecedented quadruple and delivering Guardiola his 16th major trophy during his tenure in Manchester. Across his managerial career, the Catalan has now amassed 34 titles, including successes at Barcelona and Bayern Munich. Sunday’s result may also resonate beyond the confines of the cup, handing City a timely psychological edge ahead of the Premier League run-in. Guardiola’s side sits second, nine points behind league-leading Arsenal with a match in hand, and the pair are still scheduled to meet at the Etihad Stadium. Speaking to Sky Sports pitch-side, O’Reilly beamed: “My whole family came down today … I know they’ll be buzzing and I can’t wait to see them.” With the League Cup secured, City turn their attention to sustaining momentum on all remaining fronts, while Arsenal must regroup quickly to preserve their advantage in the title race and keep their Champions League and FA Cup dreams alive.
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Ake: I’m very happy with Carabao Cup success

Ake: I’m very happy with Carabao Cup success

Wembley, Sunday – Nathan Ake hailed Manchester City’s 2-0 Carabao Cup final victory over Arsenal as “very special” and believes the triumph can ignite a late-season push on multiple fronts. Second-half goals from 20-year-old midfielder Nico O’Reilly sealed City’s first trophy since 2023 and delivered Ake his second League Cup medal since arriving at the Etihad in 2020. The Dutch defender, now 31, collected his 11th major honour with the club and underlined the importance of returning to winning ways after a barren 2025-26 campaign. “Obviously, last season we didn’t win anything so we wanted to win something this season,” Ake told reporters pitch-side. “This was a perfect way to do it against title contenders. It was a good win.” City dominated the second period against Mikel Arteta’s side, and O’Reilly’s brace capped an impressive individual display that highlighted the club’s next generation. Ake, one of the senior figures in Pep Guardiola’s squad, praised the youngsters’ mentality and stressed that standards at the club never drop. “Suddenly, you’re one of the older ones – it’s a bit weird!” he smiled. “We have a lot of young and talented players, but as you saw, a lot of mentality as well. The manager already touched on it every day in training and in meetings, that we’re expected to win.” The victory narrows the psychological gap to Arsenal, who lead City by nine points in the Premier League but have played one more match. With an FA Cup quarter-final still to come, Ake insists the squad will chase every available prize. “It’s a massive boost,” he said of lifting the Carabao Cup. “Every title is one you take. This gives a little boost. We go again after the international break and you never know what can happen. We have the FA Cup as well. We’re going to give everything and then we’ll see.” City now head into the international break buoyed by silverware and determined to ensure the 2026-27 season ends with more trophies in the cabinet.
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Pep Guardiola Officially Overtakes Sir Alex Ferguson Trophy Record

Pep Guardiola Officially Overtakes Sir Alex Ferguson Trophy Record

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has moved ahead of Sir Alex Ferguson in the history books after lifting a record-extending fifth Carabao Cup on Sunday. A 2-0 victory over Arsenal at Wembley, sealed by two quick-fire goals from academy graduate Nico O’Reilly on the hour mark and again four minutes later, delivered the season’s first piece of silverware to the Etihad and nudged Guardiola past the tally Ferguson, Jose Mourinho and Brian Clough each collected in the competition. The triumph continues a remarkable sequence for the Catalan, who arrived in Manchester in 2016 to succeed Manuel Pellegrini and has since collected eight league titles. While Ferguson’s 13 Premier League crowns remain an English benchmark, Guardiola now stands alone in the League Cup pantheon, adding another layer to the perennial debate over which coaching icon can claim outright supremacy. Critics point to the contrasting financial landscapes that framed each manager’s era, arguing Ferguson delivered sustained success at Old Trafford without the same level of investment afforded to Guardiola. Supporters of the City boss counter that his tactical innovation and relentless pursuit of perfection set a new standard in the modern game. The statistical swing comes only days after Guardiola surpassed Ferguson in another category: Champions League fixtures managed. City’s mid-week 2-1 defeat at the Etihad marked the 55-year-old’s 191st outing in Europe’s premier tournament, eclipsing Ferguson’s 190. Whether the numbers tilt the argument in Guardiola’s favour or merely add fuel to a timeless discussion, Sunday’s result ensures his name now sits atop the Carabao Cup roll of honour, carving another line in the ledger of managerial greatness.
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Former NFL QB Plans to ‘Go for Gold’ With Team USA in 2028 Olympics

Former NFL QB Plans to ‘Go for Gold’ With Team USA in 2028 Olympics

Los Angeles—The 2028 Summer Games will mark flag football’s Olympic debut on American soil, and a familiar face from Sundays past wants in on the history. Robert Griffin III, the 2011 Heisman Trophy winner and eight-year NFL veteran, announced Saturday that he will pursue a roster spot with the United States national team. “Proud and Honored to announce that I will be going for Gold in Flag Football with the USA National Team in 2028,” Griffin posted on X. “The journey starts now and there is no greater honor than wearing USA across your chest and representing something more than yourself. USA! USA! USA!” The declaration lands amid a weekend of flag-football fanfare in Los Angeles. At BMO Stadium, the Fanatics Flag Football Classic pitted NFL luminaries—Tom Brady, Rob Gronkowski, Stefon Diggs, DeAndre Hopkins, Odell Beckham Jr., Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley and Von Miller—against a cohesive U.S. men’s national squad. The national side rolled to a 43-16 victory, underscoring the gap between all-star collections and a unit trained specifically for the five-on-five, non-contact discipline. Griffin, 34, has not played in the NFL since 2020 but has stayed close to the game through podcasting and analyst work for Fox Sports. He noted earlier this month that any hopeful Olympian must be “entrenched” in flag football’s unique rhythm for the next two years to reach elite form by 2028. While Brady flashed vintage precision—hooking up with Diggs for a touchdown and watching Gronkowski convert a two-pointer—the seven-time Super Bowl champion dampened speculation that he might suit up for Los Angeles, telling Good Morning America he is content in retirement and with his duties as a Fox broadcaster and Raiders minority owner. Griffin’s résumé includes 9,271 passing yards and 43 touchdowns across Washington, Cleveland and Baltimore stops, plus 1,800 rushing yards and 10 scores. Whether that mobility translates to the flag game will be tested over the coming qualification cycles. For now, the former Baylor star has set his sights on the one accolade missing from his football life: an Olympic medal. Keywords:
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Real Madrid vs. Atletico Madrid: Vinicius Brace Settles Bernabeu Thriller and Keeps Title Hopes Alive

Real Madrid vs. Atletico Madrid: Vinicius Brace Settles Bernabeu Thriller and Keeps Title Hopes Alive

Madrid, Spain — Real Madrid answered Barcelona’s earlier statement with a thunderous one of their own, edging city rivals Atletico Madrid 3-2 on Sunday night in a derby that crackled from first whistle to last. Vinicius Junior struck either side of halftime to propel Los Blancos within four points of the league leaders with nine matches remaining and set up a potential title-deciding Clásico on 10 May. The defeat leaves Atletico reflecting on what might have been after Ademola Lookman’s cool first-half finish, crafted by Giuliano Simeone’s slide-rule pass, had them in front at the interval and dreaming of a first Bernabeu triumph since 2016. Instead, Madrid emerged a team reborn. Seven minutes after the restart, Vinicius slammed home a penalty to level matters. On 63 minutes Federico Valverde, ever the opportunist, punished hesitant Atletico defending to flip the scoreline. The Uruguayan’s evening soured moments later when he was shown a straight red for a studs-up challenge on Alex Baena, yet Madrid’s ten men refused to retreat. Atletico drew level once more through full-back Nahuel Molina, whose 25-metre rocket into the top-left corner will live long in derby folklore. Parity lasted six minutes. Collecting a deft lay-off from substitute Trent Alexander-Arnold, Vinicius shifted inside and curled a sumptuous right-foot effort beyond Musso to seal the points and ignite bedlam in the stands. Julian Alvarez came within a coat of paint of a dramatic equaliser, cracking a low drive off the upright in stoppage time, but Madrid clung on to claim a victory that felt as precious as any this season. The result ensures Barcelona’s earlier 1-0 win over Rayo Vallecano does not swell the gap beyond a single Clásico swing. With the international break now upon La Liga, Madrid will spend the next fortnight buoyed by belief rather than burdened by deficit; the Catalans, meanwhile, must regroup for a daunting trip to the Metropolitano on their return.
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Manchester City wins English League Cup by beating Arsenal 2-0

Manchester City wins English League Cup by beating Arsenal 2-0

London – Manchester City secured the first major domestic trophy of the season on Sunday, defeating Arsenal 2-0 in the English League Cup final at Wembley Stadium. The victory was sealed by Manchester-born midfielder Nico O’Reilly, who struck twice after the interval to hand Pep Guardiola’s side a deserved triumph. The result not only adds another piece of silverware to City’s expanding collection but may also provide Guardiola with a timely psychological edge as the domestic campaign continues.
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Besiktas midfielder scouted by Manchester United

Besiktas midfielder scouted by Manchester United

Manchester United have stepped up their summer recruitment planning after dispatching scouts to Istanbul to run the rule over Besiktas playmaker Orkun Kokcu, sources have confirmed. The 25-year-old, who will complete a permanent switch from Benfica to Besiktas at season’s end, was watched by Old Trafford representatives during the Turkish side’s 2-1 victory over Kasimpasa. Kokcu delivered another energetic display in the heart of midfield, taking his personal tally to 15 goal involvements – seven goals and eight assists – across all competitions this term. United’s interest arrives amid growing acceptance that reinforcements are required in the engine room regardless of whether interim boss Michael Carrick guides the club back into the Champions League. Carrick has steadied the ship since replacing Ruben Amorim, yet with Casemiro expected to depart and Kobbie Mainoo still awaiting a long-term partner, technical chiefs view the acquisition of a dynamic midfielder as a priority. Newcastle United’s Sandro Tonali and Bruno Guimaraes remain high-profile targets, but their combined price tags could stretch United’s budget. Kokcu, valued by Besiktas at no less than €50 million once his permanent transfer is ratified, is viewed as a cost-effective alternative who still offers top-tier pedigree. Scouts were impressed by the Feyenoord academy graduate’s composure in tight spaces, leadership qualities and expansive passing range. Tottenham Hotspur and Inter Milan have also tracked the Turkey international, with Inter considering him a long-term successor in their midfield rotation. Although Kokcu is unlikely to head Erik ten Hag’s wish-list, his blend of creativity, work-rate and attainable valuation could see him emerge as a strategic option as United look to balance the squad and the books ahead of the 2026-27 campaign.
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Manchester City 2 Arsenal 0: City player ratings as Manchester City claim the Carabao Cup

Manchester City 2 Arsenal 0: City player ratings as Manchester City claim the Carabao Cup

Wembley Stadium, London – A second-half double from academy graduate Nico O’Reilly propelled Manchester City to a 2-0 victory over Arsenal in the Carabao Cup final, delivering the first major silverware of the season to Pep Guardiola’s reshuffled side and igniting celebrations among the sky-blue half of north-west London. Guardiola rang four changes from the team beaten by Real Madrid in mid-week, handing recalls to goalkeeper James Trafford, defender Nathan Ake, winger Antoine Semenyo and the match-winner O’Reilly, who lined up at left-back but finished the afternoon as the final’s undisputed star. Ruben Dias missed out with a hamstring problem confirmed by Sam Lee of The Athletic. The opening exchanges belonged to Arsenal. Mikel Arteta’s men settled quicker, monopolised possession and should have led inside ten minutes when Kai Havertz was picked out by Martin Zubimendi only to be denied by Trafford’s instinctive stop. Bukayo Saka twice looked certain to score from the rebound, yet Trafford sprang across his line to complete a remarkable triple save that kept the contest goalless and swung momentum City’s way. City’s first genuine threat arrived on 20 minutes. Matheus Nunes, operating in an unfamiliar right-back role, released Semenyo beyond Piero Hincapié and the Ghanaian’s teasing cross just eluded Erling Haaland at the far post. It was a warning Arsenal heeded only temporarily; Semenyo continued to torment Hincapié, but a succession of half-chances drifted wide or were smothered by a disciplined Gunners back line. The first half ended in stalemate, Haaland heading over from another Semenyo delivery under heavy pressure, yet the tactical dial shifted dramatically after the restart. City emerged with greater intensity and within four minutes Jeremy Doku raced clear after a swift counter only to be hauled back by Kepa Arrizabalaga. The referee’s decision to pull play back for a yellow card rather than allow the advantage incensed Guardiola, and Semenso curled the resulting free-kick over the bar. Arsenal’s reprieve was brief. On the hour Bernardo Silva fed Rayan Cherki down the right; the youngster’s centre was fumbled by Kepa and O’Reilly reacted fastest to head home his first senior Wembley goal. Four minutes later the 19-year-old struck again, steering a pinpoint Matheus Nunes cross past the despairing dive of Kepa to double the advantage and effectively settle the tie. Arteta introduced fresh legs in search of a lifeline, but Trafford remained largely untroubled. Riccardo Calafiori struck the woodwork with a sweet left-foot volley and Gabriel Jesus glanced a late header onto the bar, yet City saw out the closing stages with composure, Doku twice threatening on the break as the blue end of the stadium belted out celebratory choruses. The final whistle confirmed City’s eighth League Cup triumph and underlined the depth of Guardiola’s squad, with O’Reilly’s brace stealing headlines and Trafford’s early heroics providing the platform for victory. Player Ratings – Manchester City James Trafford – 9 Hardly overworked after the opening flurry, but his breathtaking treble stop from Havertz and Saka proved match-defining. Matheus Nunes – 8.5 Solid defensively and increasingly influential going forward, supplying the assist for O’Reilly’s second with a measured cross. Abdukodir Khusanov – 7.5 Shaky start but grew in assurance, timing interceptions well as Arsenal pressed late on. Nathan Ake – 9 Imperious at the heart of defence, organising the line and making several last-ditch blocks. Nico O’Reilly – 10 Electrifying from left-back, the teenager showcased tireless energy, positional intelligence and a predatory instinct for both goals. Rodri – 9 Dictated tempo throughout, shielding the back four and initiating attacks with trademark precision. Bernardo Silva – 8 Captained by example, knitting moves together and creating the opener with a clever slide-rule pass. Antoine Semenyo – 8 City’s first-half outlet, constantly pinning Hincapié deep and delivering a stream of dangerous balls. Rayan Cherki – 8.5 Fearless in possession, directly involved in the breakthrough and always looking for the killer ball. Jeremy Doku – 9 Unplayable after the interval, his raw pace stretched Arsenal and drew the foul that should have brought a red. Erling Haaland – 7.5 Starved of clear chances yet relentless in his pressing and physical duels with Gabriel and Saliba. The victory not only adds another trophy to City’s burgeoning cabinet but also offers Guardiola further evidence that the next generation of Etihad talent is ready to contribute when it matters most.
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Carabao Cup final ratings: O'Reilly faultless as Arsenal fall hopelessly flat

Carabao Cup final ratings: O'Reilly faultless as Arsenal fall hopelessly flat

Wembley, Sunday – Manchester City lifted a record-extending fifth Carabao Cup and Pep Guardiola’s 19th trophy as manager with a ruthless 2-0 dismissal of Arsenal, the story of the afternoon distilled into four second-half minutes when 19-year-old Nico O’Reilly punished a goalkeeper haunted by ghosts of finals past. The teenager, nominally starting at left-back, finished as match-winner, burying two headers in quick succession to turn a tight contest into a procession. Both finishes were born of conviction: the first, on 68 minutes, when Kepa Arrizabalaga misjudged a teasing cross from Jeremy Doku and O’Reilly attacked the loose ball; the second, four minutes later, when he ghosted in at the far post to convert Matheus Nunes’ delivery. In a stat that underlined his predatory instinct, O’Reilly’s only two touches inside the Arsenal box produced goals. For Kepa, the nightmare was familiar. The Spain international, remembered for refusing substitution in the 2019 League Cup final and for failing to stop any of Liverpool’s 11 penalties in the 2022 shoot-out, again found himself the unfortunate protagonist. After flapping at Doku’s initial centre, he was beaten to the rebound by O’Reilly; the second strike slipped beneath his despairing dive. From that moment Arsenal’s resistance evaporated. Guardiola’s side, shorn of both first-choice centre-backs, controlled every department. Rodri touched the ball 103 times, completed 14 passes into the final third and screened with imperial authority. Bernardo Silva, indefatigable, recovered possession nine times—more than any player on the pitch—while Bernardo’s compatriot Doku tormented full-back Hincapié, winning 12 duels and completing six dribbles. City’s width and relentless pressing forced Arsenal backwards; the Gunners mustered no shot of note after the 12-minute mark. Arsenal’s attacking trident barely left a footprint. Bukayo Saka, remarkably appearing in his first cup final for the club, saw an early effort tipped onto the woodwork by James Trafford but faded to extend a run of two goals in 24 games. Leandro Trossard was anonymous, Viktor Gyokeres failed to register a single attempt, and Kai Havertz, substituted after 65 minutes, never imposed himself. Behind them Declan Rice, so often the heartbeat, was subdued, attempting only 23 accurate passes as City’s midfield monopolised the ball. Defensively the Gunners were stretched. Centre-back William Saliba stuck doggedly to Erling Haaland yet received scant protection; left-sided Hincapie, booked before half-time, was repeatedly isolated against Doku and Semenyo, and both goals originated down his channel. Ben White, diligent in his own box, could not provide the customary attacking overlap, stifled by City’s disciplined set-piece defence. City’s collective maturity contrasted sharply with Arsenal’s stage-fright. Manuel Akanji led by example, winning every aerial duel, while stand-in full-back Sergio Gomez offered width and security, registering nine recoveries and six duels won. Between the posts Trafford enjoyed relative calm after early heroics, parrying efforts from Saka and Calafiori when the game was still in the balance. The victory continues City’s domestic cup dominance and leaves Arsenal to reflect on a fourth consecutive defeat in major finals. For O’Reilly, the night belonged to him alone: a local product announcing himself on the national stage with the coolness of a seasoned striker rather than a makeshift defender. Guardiola hailed another milestone; Arsenal, meanwhile, depart Wembley with questions louder than the answers provided across a chastening 90 minutes.
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Arsenal Step Up Pursuit of Roma Star Wesley França as Ben White Exit Looms

Arsenal Step Up Pursuit of Roma Star Wesley França as Ben White Exit Looms

London – Arsenal have accelerated their chase for Roma’s in-form Brazilian right-back Wesley França, viewing the 22-year-old as the long-term successor to Ben White, sources have confirmed to TEAMtalk. França, signed from Flamengo last summer, has caught the eye of Gunners scouts with a four-goal return and a string of dynamic displays that underline both his defensive reliability and willingness to surge forward. Technical staff have been particularly impressed by the defender’s athleticism and tactical diligence, qualities Mikel Arteta’s setup prizes in full-backs who invert into midfield during build-up play. The north-London club are now formalising background checks and initial contact with Roma representatives, signalling serious intent ahead of the summer window. Everton have also registered interest, but Arsenal’s recent track record of qualifying for the Champions League and their reputation for developing young talents give them an edge in any forthcoming negotiations. White, 26, is understood to have been granted permission to listen to offers should an attractive bid materialise. The England international has been a consistent presence since arriving from Brighton, yet the club hierarchy believe a refresh is required to sustain a title challenge and França’s profile fits the evolution Arteta envisions. Arsenal’s recruitment team are not putting every egg in one basket. Newcastle United’s Tino Livramento, Eintracht Frankfurt’s commanding centre-back Nnamdi Collins and Monaco’s attack-minded right-back Vanderson remain live options as the club weigh cost, home-grown status and stylistic fit before committing to a final target. The potential overhaul does not stop at right-back. The Daily Telegraph notes that multiple squad members could be made available as Arteta and sporting director Edu look to fine-tune a group that believes it can go one better than last season’s near-miss in the Premier League title race. With European competitions expanding fixture lists and the physical demands of English football ever rising, Arsenal’s willingness to invest early in a high-upside defender like França illustrates their determination to stay ahead of rivals Manchester City and Liverpool in the transfer market arms race. Whether a deal crosses the line will depend on Roma’s valuation, thought to be upwards of £30 million given the player’s age, contract length and burgeoning reputation, plus any counter-moves from Everton or unforeseen twists as the window approaches. For now, though, the spotlight is firmly on Wesley França – the Brazilian full-back who could soon be patrolling the Emirates touchline rather than the Stadio Olimpico turf.
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Hansi Flick goes crazy for Joao Cancelo after Barcelona beat Rayo

Hansi Flick goes crazy for Joao Cancelo after Barcelona beat Rayo

Barcelona tightened their grip on top spot in La Liga with a hard-fought 1-0 victory over Rayo Vallecano at the Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys, and the post-match spotlight fell squarely on Joao Cancelo. Head coach Hansi Flick was effusive in his praise for the Portuguese full-back, whose dynamic display down the right flank proved instrumental in securing the three points. Ronald Araújo’s towering second-half header proved the difference, but it was Cancelo’s relentless energy and attacking thrust that repeatedly unlocked Rayo’s compact back line. Flick, usually measured in his touchline demeanor, was seen pumping his fists and embracing his No. 2 after the final whistle, a rare show of emotion that underlined the 29-year-old’s impact. The win keeps Barcelona two points clear at the summit and extends their unbeaten league run to seven matches. Speaking to the club’s official channels, Flick hailed the collective effort—“the team are doing fantastic,” he said—yet insiders confirmed he singled out Cancelo in the dressing room for “setting the tempo from the first minute.” Rayo arrived aiming to frustrate, packing five across midfield and inviting pressure, but Cancelo’s willingness to drive inside and combine with the forwards stretched the visitors until cracks appeared. Araújo eventually exploited the space, glancing home the decisive goal on 63 minutes. With the season entering its decisive stretch, Flick’s animated reaction suggests Cancelo has cemented himself as more than a rotation option; he has become the catalyst for a side intent on reclaiming the Spanish crown.
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Duke’s New Wave Rolls into Sweet 16 Behind Boozer, Evans, Sarr

Duke’s New Wave Rolls into Sweet 16 Behind Boozer, Evans, Sarr

Greenville, S.C. — The Bon Secours Wellness Arena scoreboard had barely stopped flickering when Dame Sarr flashed the grin that said everything about this Duke reboot. With 14 points, four triples and a sequence of momentum-swinging defensive plays, the Italian freshman helped power No. 2 seed Duke to an 87-64 demolition of TCU on Saturday night, sending the Blue Devils to the Sweet 16 for the third straight season and stamping the program’s reload as an unqualified success. One year after Cooper Flagg, Kon Knueppel, Khaman Maluach and Sion James exited as lottery picks, the torch has been passed to a new core. Cameron Boozer, the 6-foot-9, 250-pound freshman forward, looked every bit the projected top-three selection, carving up the Horned Frogs for 19 points on 7-of-10 shooting, 11 rebounds, 4 assists and 3 steals. After an uneven opener against Siena in which he committed five turnovers and missed seven shots, Boozer responded with poise, even if the giveaway bug bit him again (five more turnovers). “He’s a problem,” TCU’s overmatched frontline could be overheard repeating during timeouts. Boozer’s combination of power and touch was evident in a second-half spin move that ended with a gentle push-shot off the glass, stretching the lead to 20 and igniting the pro-Duke crowd of 17,823. Sophomore wing Isaiah Evans supplied the perimeter punch, scoring 17 points on 6-of-14 shooting and burying a pair of momentum triples when the Horned Frogs trimmed the deficit to nine midway through the second half. The former five-star recruit is now averaging 15.0 points while launching 7.4 threes per game at a 35.8-percent clip, the volume and efficiency combination that has scouts slotting him as a potential first-round pick in 2026. Yet the evening’s emotional catalyst was Sarr. The 6-foot-8 Barcelona product came in shooting 31.8 percent from deep for the season but caught fire against TCU’s zone, knocking down 4-of-7 from beyond the arc and punctuating each make with a theatrical punch of the air that whipped the Cameron-in-Greenville crowd into a frenzy. Add eight rebounds, two steals and a block, and Sarr’s stat line quietly rivaled the headliners. Duke’s 23-point margin was the largest in a Round-of-32 game under the current tournament format, a testament to a defense that held TCU to 38-percent shooting and forced 15 turnovers. The Blue Devils now await the winner of Sunday’s marquee matchup in the East Region, one win away from a fourth consecutive regional semifinal and yet another step toward the Final Four the program reached in 2025. For a roster that boasts six freshmen and only two scholarship upperclassmen, the moment never looked too big. They celebrated at midcourt, arms interlocked, as the final horn sounded, a new era already living up to the standard set by the stars who left Durham behind.
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Oman officially appoint new manager to replace former Sir Alex Ferguson assistant

Oman officially appoint new manager to replace former Sir Alex Ferguson assistant

Muscat – The Oman Football Association has moved swiftly to fill its managerial vacancy, naming Moroccan coach Tarik Sektioui as the new helmsman of the senior national team. Sektioui steps into the role vacated by Carlos Queiroz, the former Manchester United assistant to Sir Alex Ferguson, whose tenure was cut short by regional instability. An official statement released on the federation’s X account confirmed the appointment: “The Oman Football Association announces its signing of Moroccan coach Tarek Al-Sektiwi to lead the senior national team during the upcoming phase.” Sektioui arrives with a burgeoning reputation forged in his homeland. After taking charge of Morocco’s Olympic side in 2024, he guided the national squad to the 2025 Arab Cup title in Qatar, a triumph that reportedly caught the eye of Omani officials seeking a fresh direction. The 44-year-old’s first assignment will come at the end of March when Oman host Sierra Leone in an international friendly, offering an early glimpse of the tactical approach he intends to imprint on the squad. Queiroz, whose coaching pedigree was honed during two spells alongside Ferguson at Old Trafford, had overseen Oman’s fortunes since 2008. His departure leaves the Portuguese tactician at a career crossroads, though sources close to the veteran expect a flurry of offers given his résumé, which includes a one-year stint in charge of Real Madrid. For Oman, the appointment signals a desire to harness Sektioui’s continental insight and attacking philosophy as the federation targets qualification success in forthcoming regional competitions.
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Barcelona 1-0 Rayo Vallecano, La Liga 2025-26: Joan Garcia Shines In Victory As Pressure Mounts On Real Madrid

Barcelona 1-0 Rayo Vallecano, La Liga 2025-26: Joan Garcia Shines In Victory As Pressure Mounts On Real Madrid

Barcelona tightened their grip on the La Liga title race with a hard-earned 1-0 victory over Rayo Vallecano at Camp Nou, opening a provisional seven-point cushion over Real Madrid with only nine matches remaining. Defender Ronald Araujo, deputising for the injured Jules Kounde, settled the contest in the 24th minute, soaring above his marker to power Joao Cancelo’s inswinging corner inside the far post. The goal capped a poignant personal milestone for the Uruguayan, making his first league start since returning from a mental-health hiatus that stretched from November to early January. Barça should have been out of sight before the interval, but Raphinha endured a profligate first half. The Brazilian twice failed to convert rapid counters—dragging one effort wide and drawing a smart stop from Augusto Batalla—before rattling the frame of the goal moments after Araujo’s opener. Rayo emerged with renewed intent after the restart and would have levelled but for the brilliance of Joan Garcia. The former Espanyol goalkeeper, who recently received a maiden Spain call-up, clawed away Carlos Martin’s close-range attempt inside 60 seconds and produced an even better reaction save to repel Unai Lopez’s downward header early in the second period. With time ticking away, Garcia sprawled low to his left to turn aside Jorge de Frutos’ drive, preserving both the clean sheet and the three points. Garcia, who briefly required treatment for a knock late on, finished with the official player-of-the-match award and the praise of head coach Hansi Flick. “This is exactly why we brought him,” Flick said. The 26-year-old has been a revelation in his debut campaign for the club and now boasts 11 league shut-outs. “It was important to get these three points, even if it wasn’t our best game,” Garcia admitted. “We needed to win, and now what the others do doesn’t depend on us.” The result leaves Barcelona on 73 points, seven clear of second-placed Real Madrid, who must travel to city rivals Atletico Madrid later on Sunday. With the title run-in rapidly shrinking, the pressure has swung decisively toward the capital. For Araujo, the evening carried deeper significance. “I am feeling good, physically too,” he noted. “I’m always here to help the team, whether at centre-back or right-back. I always felt the support of Barcelona’s fans.” Nine games remain, but the Blaugrana have issued a statement: every week that passes, the summit looks increasingly theirs to lose.
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New low for 'pathetic' Newcastle - as Sunderland in dreamland

New low for 'pathetic' Newcastle - as Sunderland in dreamland

St James’ Park, once bouncing after Anthony Gordon’s ninth-minute opener, descended into a cauldron of boos as Brian Brobbey’s 90th-minute strike sealed a 2-1 Sunderland victory and a first league double over their neighbours since 2014-15. The turnaround, completed by Chemsdine Talbi’s equaliser, extends Newcastle’s winless derby run to 16 league meetings and leaves Eddie Howe’s side 12th on 42 points, four outside a potential Conference League berth. The defeat compounds a week that began with a 7-2 Champions League humiliation by Barcelona and ended with discriminatory abuse reported towards Sunderland’s Lutsharel Geertruida, crowd trouble outside the ground and the visitors’ coach pelted with bottles. “It is a very, very painful result,” Howe admitted. “I understand the criticism; we have not done our jobs in the second half.” Newcastle have now dropped 22 points from winning positions this season; add those to their tally and they would sit second on 64, six behind leaders Arsenal. Instead, continental football in 2026-27 is in jeopardy after successive group-stage exits. “We haven’t fixed the mental lapse,” Gordon said. “The stadium gets shaky when we’re ahead.” For Sunderland, promoted via last season’s play-offs, the scene was dreamlike. “To win twice against a Champions League side means a lot,” manager Regis le Bris said after Brobbey’s late strike sparked delirium in the away end. A pre-match banner taunted “Welcome to the region’s capital – you’ve been gone so long!”; by full-time the travelling faithful were celebrating a landmark double. Club legend Alan Shearer labelled the hosts’ second-half display “pathetic, weak, lazy, limp,” while Jamie Carragher noted: “Newcastle just cannot beat Sunderland.” With 13 league defeats already, Howe must regroup during a rare lull in a campaign that has seen Newcastle play more fixtures than any other top-five-league side in Europe. SEO keywords:
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Spurs, Leeds, Forest and West Ham: Relegation fears? Who could go down instead of you?

Spurs, Leeds, Forest and West Ham: Relegation fears? Who could go down instead of you?

By The Athletic Staff Sunday’s results have thrown the Premier League relegation fight into sharper focus than ever. Leeds United’s 0-0 draw with Brentford, West Ham United’s 1-0 loss at Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest’s stunning 3-0 win at Tottenham Hotspur have compressed the bottom half of the table, leaving four famous clubs looking over their shoulders with only a handful of games remaining. Leeds stay 15th, four points above the drop, but have not scored from open play in six league outings. West Ham remain inside the bottom three, while Forest’s victory lifts them above Spurs, who are now only two points clear of 18th place. With that in mind, The Athletic asked club correspondents to address three questions for each side: should supporters fear relegation, which rival is most likely to take their place in the Championship, and which upcoming fixture now looks season-defining. Leeds United – 15th, 31 played Fear level: High. A promoted club four points above the relegation line always has reason to worry, and Leeds’ recent form – one win in 11 – offers little comfort. The lack of creativity is stark; the only open-play goal in more than a month came via a Chelsea defensive error. Most likely to go down instead: Tottenham. Spurs’ talent is undeniable, but the mood inside the club has darkened after Sunday’s collapse. A managerial change could yet galvanise them, yet the possibility of a freefall remains real. Must-win match: Home to bottom club Wolverhampton Wanderers on 20 April. Fail to beat the league’s worst side and the anxiety around Elland Road will become deafening. Nottingham Forest – 16th, 31 played Fear level: Cautiously optimistic. Back-to-back wins over Midtjylland in the Europa League play-off and Spurs in the league have injected belief. Vitor Pereira has steadied the ship since replacing Ange Postecoglou in October, and the squad finally looks organised. Most likely to go down instead: Still Tottenham. Forest have momentum; Spurs have none. West Ham and Leeds are not safe either, but the north Londoners’ downward spiral is the most pronounced. Must-win match: Aston Villa at the City Ground on 6 April. Three points against Villa would edge Forest towards the magical 40-point mark before a daunting final quartet of fixtures. Tottenham Hotspur – 14th, 31 played Fear level: Rising rapidly. The feel-good factor generated by creditable displays against Liverpool and Atletico Madrid evaporated inside 90 sobering minutes against Forest. Goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario’s impending hernia operation compounds the gloom. Spurs have not won a league game since 28 December. Most likely to go down instead: Leeds. The Yorkshire side’s scoring woes make them vulnerable, whereas West Ham, under Nuno Espirito Santo, appear mentally better equipped for a dogfight. Must-win match: Wolves away on 25 April. Anything less than victory in the Black Country and Tottenham could enter May in the bottom three. West Ham United – 18th, 31 played Fear level: Concerned but hopeful. Nuno has tightened the defence and restored belief since taking charge. The loss at Villa was damaging, especially after Jean-Clair Todibo’s warm-up injury and Crysencio Summerville’s calf issue, yet the underlying performances suggest improvement. Most likely to go down instead: Tottenham. Historical data favours the Hammers: Spurs have a habit of late-season collapses, losing eight of their final ten league matches in 2023-24. West Ham will target a repeat. Must-win match: The April trilogy – Wolves (H), Crystal Palace (A), Everton (H). Six points from those nine is the stated minimum; achieve it and survival is likely. Bottom line With 27 points still to play for, none of the quartet can relax. Leeds need goals, Forest need to maintain momentum, Spurs need a footballing miracle and West Ham need their April schedule to deliver the points that keep the Championship at bay. The next five weeks promise tension, twists and, for one unlucky club, the unthinkable drop. SEO keywords:
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PSL 2026 to Begin Behind Closed Doors as PCB Warns IPL-Bound Players of Legal Action

PSL 2026 to Begin Behind Closed Doors as PCB Warns IPL-Bound Players of Legal Action

Karachi, Pakistan – The Pakistan Super League’s ninth edition will open on 26 March without a single spectator in the stands, the Pakistan Cricket Board confirmed on Sunday, citing government-imposed austerity measures triggered by the escalating Iran–USA–Israel stand-off that has roiled regional energy markets and forced nationwide belt-tightening. Chairman Mohsin Naqvi, flanked by PSL CEO Salman Naseer, told reporters that the tournament will be confined to just two cities – Karachi and Lahore – after the original six-venue plan was scrapped to conserve fuel and security resources. Schools remain shuttered, civil servants are on work-from-home orders, and an extended Eid holiday is already in force as Pakistan conserves every litre of fuel possible; the PCB has fallen into line by cancelling the glitzy Lahore opening ceremony and slashing travel requirements for teams and broadcast crews. “This is not a security decision, it is an economic one,” Naqvi insisted. “The PSL is Pakistan’s brand and our pride, so the league will be held on schedule, but no spectators will be allowed in the initial phase.” He left the door ajar for fans to return later in the competition if the regional crisis eases, adding that refunds will be processed for every ticket already sold and that the board will compensate all eight franchises for the gate revenue they would have earned in normal circumstances. Overseas signings are still expected to land from Sunday night onwards, and Naqvi pointed to a fresh influx of top List A players as proof that the league’s reputation remains intact despite the scaled-back surroundings. Yet the PCB’s legal department is simultaneously preparing for a different battle. Naqvi reiterated that any Pakistani cricketer who withdraws from the PSL to accept an IPL deal will face disciplinary proceedings. “We will take action against those players according to the rules. There was a case last year too, and the same thing will happen this time,” he said, without naming individuals. The warning underscores the board’s determination to protect its marquee window even as it juggles a compressed calendar and a national fuel crunch. Matches will run from 26 March to 3 May, all staged at the National Stadium, Karachi, and Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore. Cities dropped for this season – Faisalabad, Rawalpindi, Peshawar and Multan – have been promised hosting rights again once stability returns. For now, the PSL’s trademark roar will be replaced by echoing empty stands, a sonic reminder that sport, like everything else in the country, is living through extraordinary times.
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Liverpool have a creative genius and Arne Slot’s team still can’t score

Liverpool have a creative genius and Arne Slot’s team still can’t score

Anfield’s newest magician is pulling rabbits out of the hat, only to watch his team-mates let them sprint away. Florian Wirtz, the £115 million summer signing from Bayer Leverkusen, is creating chances at a rate no other Premier League player can match this season, yet Liverpool’s March has produced one point from nine and a grand total of two goals, neither of them the product of open-play artistry. Saturday’s 2-1 loss at Brighton was the nadir of a wretched month. A wayward back-pass gifted Liverpool their equaliser; their other recent strikes have come from a free-kick against Tottenham and a set-piece at Wolves. In between, Wirtz has been asked to unpick deep blocks almost single-handedly. He supplied eight key passes in the mid-week Champions League win over Galatasaray and, according to TNT Sports’ in-match graphic, leads the league in chances created across all competitions. The numbers expose the contradiction. Liverpool have touched the ball inside the opposition box more than any top-flight side, yet rank only sixth for “big chances” and are nearer Crystal Palace in seventh than Manchester United in fifth. Without a credible counter-attacking threat or the off-ball movement to stretch compact defences, Wirtz’s deliveries are being converted at a trickle. Arne Slot’s reshuffle, prompted by Hugo Ekitiké’s injury, pushed the 22-year-old into a higher, more central role against Brighton. It was the German’s second full 90 minutes since a back complaint sidelined him in February, and the uptick in his influence was evident. Still, the Seagulls left with three goals points while Liverpool were left to rue another sobering lesson in finishing. Wirtz’s personal tally stands at four goals and two assists in 27 league appearances – modest returns that club sources insist will balloon once a coherent attacking structure is built around him. Despite whispers of a quick escape to Real Madrid, Liverpool consider the playmaker “untouchable” and plan to build their 2026-27 blueprint around his vision. For now, the vision is clearer than the execution. Liverpool possess the league’s most prolific chance-creator and one of its most profligate attacks. Until Slot solves the riddle of turning possession into clear-cut finishes, even genius will continue to go unrewarded.
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Three talking points from Barcelona 1-0 Rayo Vallecano as Ronald Araujo header seals win

Three talking points from Barcelona 1-0 Rayo Vallecano as Ronald Araujo header seals win

Barcelona tightened their grip on the Liga title race with a hard-fought 1-0 victory over Rayo Vallecano at the Estadi Olímpic, captain Ronald Araujo’s second-half header proving enough to settle a tense contest. The result keeps the Blaugrana in the thick of a frantic run-in, extending their recent domestic surge to six wins from seven and preserving a perfect home record that now stands at 14 league triumphs this season. Araujo’s winner arrived after 60 minutes, the Uruguayan climbing highest to meet a corner and bury his finish beyond visiting keeper Joan Garcia. It was a moment of redemption for the defender, who had earlier been culpable for Rayo’s clearest opening inside the opening minute and who continues to divide opinion when stationed on the right of a back four rather than his preferred central role. Critics argue that the positional switch leaves him prone to being caught upfield and unaware of runners, yet his aerial prowess ultimately tilted the balance. Rayo arrived in Catalonia on a wretched sequence of eight away league games without victory and without a goal in their last three meetings with Barça, but they frustrated the hosts for long spells. Hansi Flick’s side, fresh from a 7-2 demolition of Newcastle in midweek, struggled to replicate that fluency: Raphinha, Robert Lewandowski, Ferran Torres and Lamine Yamal found themselves crowded out, passes went astray and dribbles rarely came off. The visitors, with 24 hours fewer to prepare, repeatedly intercepted forward moves, a testament to their organisation and a warning to a side with bigger prizes in mind. Between the posts, Joan Garcia produced the kind of display that has become routine expectation for Barcelona supporters. His instinctive, full-stretch parry to claw away Unai López’s goal-bound header was the standout moment, yet his distribution was again immaculate, underlining why the club view him as indispensable. The lurking question remains how Barça would cope should the keeper suffer an injury at such a pivotal stage of the campaign. The victory leaves Barcelona buoyant heading into a decisive stretch on both domestic and European fronts, but the performance offered reminders that even heavy favourites must earn every point the hard way.
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Pakistan T20 cricket league to be held in empty stadiums amid oil crisis

Pakistan T20 cricket league to be held in empty stadiums amid oil crisis

Karachi—Pakistan’s marquee domestic T20 competition, the Pakistan Super League, will begin behind closed doors on Thursday after the Pakistan Cricket Board scrapped crowd access across all venues and cancelled the traditional opening ceremony in Lahore, citing an escalating national fuel emergency triggered by the Middle East conflict. PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi, speaking to reporters on Sunday, said the board had been forced to redraw the entire schedule after Islamabad directed citizens to limit non-essential travel to conserve dwindling oil supplies. “We can’t ask people to restrict their movements and then have 30,000 people in stadiums every day,” Naqvi said. “As long as this crisis is ongoing, we will not have crowds at matches.” The league, originally set to rotate through six host cities, has been compressed into two hubs—Lahore’s Gaddafi Stadium and Karachi’s National Stadium—with the tournament opener scheduled in Lahore. Rawalpindi, Faisalabad, Multan and Peshawar have lost their fixtures, and the PCB will refund all ticket sales within 72 hours while compensating franchises for lost gate revenue. Naqvi, who secured approval for the changes from Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in his capacity as PCB patron, offered an explicit apology to the four de-listed venues, noting that Peshawar had been poised to stage PSL matches for the first time. “There will be no crowds anyway, so there was no reason to go to those cities,” he explained. The fuel crunch, linked by officials to the widening US-Israel conflict with Iran, has sent oil prices surging across Pakistan and prompted emergency conservation measures. “We don’t know how long this war will continue,” Naqvi added, underscoring the uncertainty that framed the board’s decision. Player availability has also taken a hit. Australia’s Jake Fraser-McGurk and Spencer Johnson, South Africa’s Ottneil Baartman and West Indies spinner Gudakesh Motie have all withdrawn from their respective squads for personal reasons, further clouding the build-up to a tournament already stripped of its customary fanfare. Despite the upheaval, the PCB insists the competition will proceed on schedule, with televised matches intended to provide a diversion for a nation now counting every litre of fuel.
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Will derby be downfall for Eddie Howe at Newcastle or can he save the season?

Will derby be downfall for Eddie Howe at Newcastle or can he save the season?

St James’ Park, once a fortress of renewed hope, has become a crucible of doubt. In the space of seven bruising days, Newcastle United were humbled twice by newly-promoted neighbours Sunderland, battered 7-2 on aggregate by Barcelona to bow from Europe, and watched a once-promising league campaign drift to 12th place. The boos that echoed around the stadium after Sunday’s 1-0 home derby defeat carried the same uncomfortable question: is the League Cup-winning manager who ended the club’s 56-year trophy drought now one bad result away from the exit door? Eddie Howe’s blueprint unravelled in eerily similar fashion in both derbies. At the Stadium of Light, an early own goal settled a cagey contest in which Newcastle, missing Bruno Guimaraes, Sandro Tonali and teenage prodigy Lewis Miley, were accused of settling for a point they never truly pursued. Howe responded by ordering a full-throttle start in the return fixture; his side dominated territory and chances, scored once through Alexander Isak, yet were picked off 2-1 after half-time as Regis Le Bris shifted Sunderland’s shape and Newcastle again failed to counter. The pattern is stark: Newcastle have been outscored 8-0 in the second halves of the two derbies, extending a season-long trend that sees them concede 29 goals after the interval and 16 in the final 15 minutes alone. Those dropped six points to their closest geographical rivals carry extra sting because Sunderland now sit one place and one point above the Magpies. With seven Premier League fixtures remaining, Newcastle trail seventh-placed Brentford by four, a margin that encompasses six other clubs. European qualification, once an afterthought, now looks like a lifeline for Howe and for a dressing-room braced for an exodus should continental football disappear. Guimaraes, courted by Real Madrid, Tonali, linked with Manchester United, and Anthony Gordon, admired by Liverpool, could all reassess their futures if Sunday evenings in the Conference League are replaced by Thursday nights off. Howe’s authority over recruitment, assumed after sporting director Paul Mitchell’s departure, has complicated the narrative. Summer signings were billed as evolution; the returns have been uneven. Nick Woltemade scored four times in his first five league games, but a positional switch to attacking midfield after injury has yielded no goals since a December double against Chelsea. Yoane Wissa’s Champions League winner against PSV remains a bright spot, yet he has managed only two goals in 737 additional minutes and continues to nurse a knee complaint. Anthony Elanga’s raw pace has been blunted by a system that asks him to beat low blocks rather than sprint into space, while Malick Thiaw and Jacob Ramsey have emerged as genuine successes and Aaron Ramsdale’s loan has already displaced an out-of-sorts Nick Pope. The numbers paint a team that creates like a top-six side—second only to Manchester United in shots striking the woodwork—but converts like a mid-table one. Newcastle lead the division in crosses attempted, rank 11th in fast breaks, and have scored 26 goals from an xG of nearly 31. More damning is game-state management: when the scoreline is level, Newcastle’s goal difference is +3; when ahead, it collapses to –8. Opponents have learned to cede the first half-hour, when Newcastle score 15 and concede six, then squeeze the life out of a side that has mustered a league-worst –5 second-half goal difference. Still, the fixture list offers a sliver of hope. With no cup replays or European travel, Howe can prepare a week at a time for matches that will define the campaign: Crystal Palace (A), Bournemouth (H), Arsenal (A), Brighton (H), Nottingham Forest (A), West Ham (H), Fulham (A). Four of those opponents sit inside the scramble for seventh; two are mired in the relegation fight; Arsenal may yet be distracted by a congested run-in. The returns of Tonali and, potentially, Guimaraes could tilt midfield balance just as the calendar turns mercifully sparse. Club sources insist no ultimatum has been issued, but the hierarchy will conduct a wide-lens review. Qualify for Europe and the narrative rewrites itself: a Champions League knockout round, brave but undermanned against Barcelona, and early cup exits dictated by a Manchester City mismatch. Miss out, and the board must weigh the value of continuity against the temptation of a fresh voice—Oliver Glasner, Marco Silva and Mauricio Pochettino are known admirers of the project—ahead of a summer that could require rebuilding around new stars. For now, Howe retains the backing of a dressing-room that still believes in his process. Yet belief, like points, has a shelf life. Seven games remain for the 46-year-old to prove that two derby disasters are an aberration, not the moment a crevasse opened beneath Newcastle’s feet.
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A Solitary Goal Proved to Be the Difference

A Solitary Goal Proved to Be the Difference

Barcelona 1–0 Rayo Vallecano: Araujo header enough for nervy leaders Barcelona moved seven points clear of Real Madrid at the summit of La Liga on Sunday, yet the scoreboard flattered Hansi Flick’s side after a second-half wobble that almost undid their early authority at Camp Nou. Ronald Araújo, reinstated to the XI after Wednesday’s Champions League destruction of Newcastle United, thundered home a back-post header from João Cancelo’s 32nd-minute corner to give the hosts a deserved half-time edge. The Uruguayan’s strike, his first since returning from a mental-health break in January, appeared set to ignite a routine afternoon for the Blaugrana. Instead, Rayo Vallecano—fresh from Thursday’s Conference League heroics—emerged transformed. The visitors pressed higher, forced turnovers and twice came within inches of parity, only to be repelled by a string of sensational saves from Joan García. The goalkeeper’s fingertips denied Pathé Ciss and later substitute Raúl de Tomás, preserving the slender advantage as Barcelona’s passing lanes clogged and legs grew heavy. Flick, who made a solitary change to the side that routed Newcastle, resisted rotation despite a congested calendar. Pedri and Marc Bernal struggled to impose tempo against Rayo’s suffocating midfield screen, while Robert Lewandowski toiled anonymously before yielding to Ferran Torres at the interval. Raphinha, electric of late, spurned a gilt-edged one-on-one in the opening minutes and later watched a curling effort graze the upright. The pattern mirrored a recurring theme of Flick’s tenure: when the high-energy press fades, opponents sprint into the acres behind Barça’s advanced back line. Gerard Martín dropped deeper to compensate, Pau Cubarsí resorted to a last-ditch sliding tackle that whipped the crowd into brief applause, and Lamine Yamal received a fortunate reprieve after an audacious studs-up lunge. Rayo’s onslaught peaked inside the final quarter-hour. Dani Olmo, introduced alongside Marc Casadó on 61 minutes, squandered two rapid-fire counters, blazing over when teammates screamed for a square ball. At the other end, Cancelo continued to raid, but his teasing crosses found Torres static and Olmo hesitant. The whistle sparked relief rather than revelry. Barcelona banked a priceless three points ahead of next weekend’s Madrid Derby, yet questions linger over Flick’s gamble to field an unchanged, fatigued lineup with Champions League ambitions still burning. The Catalans may sit pretty atop the table, but the second-half tape will provide sobering viewing as they chase a first European crown since 2015. Barcelona, for now, survive; the title race, however, is far from over.
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Manchester City are advancing in their chase for an England international

Manchester City are advancing in their chase for an England international

Manchester City have accelerated their pursuit of Nottingham Forest midfielder Elliot Anderson, positioning the 20-year-old as a priority target for the upcoming summer transfer window. According to transfer expert Fabrizio Romano, the Premier League champions have opened advanced dialogue with Anderson’s representatives, signalling serious intent to secure the energetic England-eligible talent before the market is disrupted by the end-of-season World Cup. Romano, speaking on his YouTube channel, emphasised that while no agreement has been reached on personal terms or transfer fee, City’s hierarchy have formally registered their interest with those close to the player. “Man City are pushing to sign Elliot Anderson,” Romano revealed. “They are in advanced talks with his agents… just asking about the situation of the player.” The journalist stressed that the deal remains in its preliminary phase, yet City’s proactive approach underscores how highly they rate the former Newcastle academy graduate. The Etihad club expect a busy midfield rebuild this summer and have identified Anderson as a profile who can inject both dynamism and home-grown depth. Their urgency is fuelled by the looming international tournament; players involved in the World Cup traditionally prefer to settle transfer affairs beforehand, and City are keen to avoid a late-window scramble. Manchester United are also monitoring developments, with Romano noting United “love the player,” but sources indicate it is City who have taken the early initiative. With the window set to open in June, negotiations are anticipated to intensify quickly, and Forest now face the task of fending off a determined suitor with significant financial muscle. For Anderson, a switch to the Etihad would represent a remarkable rise, offering the chance to work under Pep Guardiola and compete for major honours. City, meanwhile, view the potential acquisition as a strategic move to refresh an ageing midfield unit while remaining compliant with Premier League squad regulations. Whether a deal can be finalised before the World Cup hiatus remains uncertain, yet Manchester City’s intent is unmistakable: they are moving swiftly to secure Elliot Anderson’s signature and gain an early advantage in what promises to be a fiercely contested summer market.
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Man City Dominates Arsenal to Win English League Cup and Make Statement in Premier League Title Race

Man City Dominates Arsenal to Win English League Cup and Make Statement in Premier League Title Race

London – Manchester City secured the first major domestic trophy of the season on Sunday, delivering a commanding performance to defeat Arsenal 2-0 in the English League Cup final. The victory not only adds silverware to the Etihad cabinet but also sends a resounding message to their Premier League rivals as the title race intensifies. From the opening whistle, City dictated the tempo, pressing high and pinning Arsenal deep inside their own half. The breakthrough arrived midway through the first half, and a second goal soon after the restart sealed the contest, leaving Arsenal with no route back into the match. The clean sheet underscored City’s defensive discipline, while the attacking display highlighted the depth and quality that have become hallmarks of the squad. With the trophy now in hand, attention turns to whether this triumph heralds further success. The source text suggests Sunday’s win may be the first of multiple honors this season, hinting that City’s dominance on the domestic front is far from finished. As the Premier League campaign enters its decisive stretch, the emphatic nature of this victory serves as a warning to challengers: City’s appetite for silverware remains insatiable.
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Manchester United 2-1 Everton Women: Late drama ends cruelly for Blues

Manchester United 2-1 Everton Women: Late drama ends cruelly for Blues

Progress with Unity Stadium witnessed heartbreak for Everton Women as a stoppage-time header from Melvine Malard snatched a 2-1 victory for Manchester United and halted the Blues’ WSL winning streak at the death. Marc Skinner’s side looked on course for a routine win after Elisabeth Terland’s 38th-minute opener, created when Ruby Mace blocked the Norwegian’s first attempt only for Terland to bury the rebound from close range. United controlled long stretches, spurning earlier chances when Julia Zigiotti dragged wide and Terland missed a placed effort. Everton, managed by Scott Phelan and showing one change as academy graduate Issy Hobson replaced the ineligible Hannah Blundell, emerged with renewed intent after the interval. Phelan’s double switch on the hour—Melissa Lawley and Inma Gabarro for Yuka Momiki and Toni Payne—injected urgency, and Zara Kramžar nearly equalised but headed Maz Pacheco’s cross over. The reshuffle paid dividends in the 90th minute when Gabarro met Lawley’s delivery to head past Phallon Tullis-Joyce, sparking jubilation among the travelling support. Yet the elation was fleeting; from the final corner of the match Malard climbed highest to power home, lifting United above Chelsea into second and leaving Everton to digest a first league defeat under Phelan. “It’s a mixture of emotions,” Phelan admitted. “To lose on a set piece with the last head of the game hurts, but the bravery we showed in the second half gives us something to build on.” Attention now turns to a potential salve: the Merseyside derby against Liverpool at Goodison Park on Saturday 28 March (12 pm GMT).
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Virat Kohli reacts to viral ‘chartered London flights’ rumour ahead of IPL 2026

Virat Kohli reacts to viral ‘chartered London flights’ rumour ahead of IPL 2026

Mumbai, 17 March 2026 — Virat Kohli has quashed swirling speculation that he sought bespoke trans-continental travel arrangements for the upcoming Indian Premier League season, branding the reports as little more than social-media fiction. Stories circulating since the weekend claimed the Royal Challengers Bengaluru talisman had asked franchise officials to place a chartered aircraft at his disposal so he could shuttle between India and London whenever the fixture list offered a gap of three days or more. The unverified narrative suggested Kohli, who has increasingly spent portions of his off-season in the United Kingdom, wanted the flexibility to join his family in London without sacrificing match availability. Kohli answered the chatter with characteristic brevity late on Sunday night, uploading a screenshot of one such article to his Instagram story and overlaying it with a string of laughing-face emojis. The post, visible to his 270 million followers, required no caption; the message was unmistakable: the story was baseless. The 37-year-old’s social-media rebuttal arrives less than a fortnight before IPL 2026 kicks off on 28 March, when defending champions RCB host Sunrisers Hyderabad at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium. Kohli, who finally lifted the trophy last season after 18 years with the franchise, remains the emotional and statistical heartbeat of the side. He enters the tournament on the cusp of multiple milestones. Already the IPL’s all-time leading run-getter with 8,661 runs in 267 matches, including eight centuries and 63 half-centuries, Kohli needs 339 more to become the first player to reach 9,000 IPL runs. Extend the canvas to all T20 cricket for RCB—including the now-defunct Champions League T20—and his aggregate rises to 9,085 from 282 appearances, leaving him 915 short of an unprecedented 10,000 runs for a single IPL franchise. Globally, Kohli’s T20 résumé reads 13,543 runs in 414 innings, punctuated by nine hundreds and 105 fifties. Another 857 runs will see him join an elite club currently occupied by Chris Gayle (14,562), Kieron Pollard (14,482), Alex Hales (14,449) and David Warner (14,028). Form is on his side. Last season he amassed 657 runs in 15 innings at an average of 54.75 and a strike rate of 144.71, topping RCB’s charts and finishing third league-wide while rattling off eight consecutive fifty-plus scores. With the chatter now relegated to the realm of memes, Kohli will hope to let his bat do the talking as he pursues history on home soil once again.
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Kelee Ringo faces an uphill battle in Eagles' crowded CB room

Kelee Ringo faces an uphill battle in Eagles' crowded CB room

Philadelphia—When the Eagles drafted Kelee Ringo in the fourth round of the 2023 draft, the organization believed it had secured a long, fast corner with championship pedigree fresh off two College Football Playoff titles at Georgia. Ringo immediately validated part of that projection by becoming a core special-teamer, the kind of versatile piece Philadelphia’s coaching staff has traditionally prized. Nearly two years later, however, his path to meaningful defensive snaps—and perhaps even a roster spot—has narrowed dramatically. The first warning signs surfaced last offseason. With Darius Slay and Isaiah Rodgers out of the picture, Ringo was penciled in to battle veteran Adoree’ Jackson for a starting outside job. Both competitors sputtered during training camp and the preseason, yet Jackson stabilized enough to earn the coaching staff’s trust. Ringo, meanwhile, never seized the moment, and the anticipated leap in coverage skills never materialized. If that missed opportunity felt like a temporary setback, the current depth chart suggests a more permanent problem. Second-year corners Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean have entrenched themselves as foundational pieces, while nickel defender Michael Carter II signed an extension this spring. The front office further fortified the room by adding veteran Riq Woolen, acquiring Jonathan Jones via trade, and drafting UCF’s Mac McWilliams—each move pushing Ringo another spot down the ladder. Roster construction math only compounds the pressure. NFL teams typically keep six cornerbacks on the 53-man roster; the Eagles have carried seven before, but that exception is hardly guaranteed. With at least eight players now vying for those chairs, every rep in OTAs and August practices becomes an audition for survival. Ringo’s special-teams résumé keeps him in the conversation, yet coverage units alone rarely justify a roster spot when the defensive staff questions a corner’s ability to hold up on Sundays. In short, Ringo’s battle has shifted. The goal is no longer unseating a starter; it is simply remaining in midnight green. The writing, as they say, is on the wall.
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Sunderland complete historic double over Newcastle after dramatic 2-1 comeback at St James’ Park

Sunderland complete historic double over Newcastle after dramatic 2-1 comeback at St James’ Park

St James’ Park, Newcastle – Sunderland struck late through Brian Brobbey to seal a pulsating 2-1 victory over Newcastle United, completing a league double over their North-East neighbours for the first time since 2010 and climbing above the hosts into 11th place in the Premier League table. The afternoon, however, will be remembered for more than the result. Play was halted early in the second half after referee Anthony Taylor was alerted to an alleged racist comment aimed at Sunderland defender Lutsharel Geertruida. Taylor immediately consulted the player, then spoke with Newcastle manager Eddie Howe, captains Kieran Trippier and Granit Xhaka, and stadium security before the Premier League’s anti-discrimination protocol was enacted. “Today’s match between Newcastle United and Sunderland was temporarily paused during the second half after a report of discriminatory abuse from the crowd, directed at Sunderland’s Lutsharel Geertruida,” the league confirmed via its Match Center X feed. “The incident at St James’ Park will now be fully investigated. We offer our full support to the player and both clubs. Racism has no place in our game, or anywhere in society.” CCTV footage and eyewitness testimony will be reviewed as authorities attempt to identify the perpetrator. When football resumed, Newcastle still held the 1-0 lead given to them by Anthony Gordon’s 10th-minute strike. Sunderland, showing the resilience that has characterised their season, levelled on 67 minutes. Chemsdine Talbi pounced after Newcastle failed to clear a Xhaka corner, firing home from close range after Dan Burn had scooped Brian Brobbey’s chested effort off the line. The decisive moment arrived in the 90th minute. Brobbey, a constant threat on the break, raced onto a loose ball and finished coolly to spark wild celebrations among the travelling faithful. The goal confirmed back-to-back league wins over Newcastle and extended the Magpies’ winless home run in this fixture to 14 years. The defeat compounds a bruising week for Eddie Howe’s side, who followed a promising 1-1 Champions League draw at home to Barcelona with a chastening 7-2 collapse at the Camp Nou. Sunderland, by contrast, head into the international break with momentum and local bragging rights firmly in hand.
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