Expert Sports News & Commentary

Senegal to parade Afcon trophy despite title being stripped

Senegal to parade Afcon trophy despite title being stripped

Senegal will parade the Africa Cup of Nations trophy on Saturday ahead of their friendly against Peru in Paris, defiantly celebrating the silverware even after being stripped of the continental crown. The Lions of Teranga, who lifted what they believed was a second Afcon title on 18 January, remain locked in a public dispute with tournament organisers over the decision to revoke the championship. The head of Senegal’s Football Federation has promised a “crusade” to contest the ruling, insisting the team’s on-field triumph be recognised. Fans arriving at the Parc des Princes are expected to be greeted by the trophy display as part of pre-match festivities, underscoring the federation’s refusal to relinquish its claim to the title.
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Everton plotting sensational move for Manchester City defender

Everton plotting sensational move for Manchester City defender

Everton are exploring a dramatic return for former favourite John Stones as the Merseyside club look to bolster their defensive options ahead of a potential European push next season. The 31-year-old Manchester City centre-back is set to become a free agent when his contract expires at the Etihad Stadium, placing him firmly on the Goodison Park radar. With Sean Dyche’s side currently sitting just three points behind fifth-placed Liverpool in the Premier League table, the prospect of continental qualification has accelerated Everton’s summer planning. Club officials have already outlined a prudent transfer strategy centred on free transfers and low-cost acquisitions, a brief that aligns perfectly with Stones’ availability. Stones, who made 95 appearances for Everton between 2013 and 2016 before his £47.5 million move to City, is understood to be open to a homecoming. The England international has amassed 292 club appearances in all competitions, scoring 19 goals and collecting six Premier League winners’ medals and a Champions League crown during his trophy-laden spell in Manchester. Yet the 2025-26 campaign has proved frustrating for the Barnsley-born defender, who has been restricted to only four league starts after a succession of injury setbacks. With no new deal on the table from City, Stones is expected to seek regular first-team football elsewhere, rekindling Everton’s interest. Beyond his central-defensive duties, Stones’ versatility – he is comfortable at right-back or even as an auxiliary midfielder – and renowned ball-playing qualities would add tactical flexibility to Dyche’s squad. His winning pedigree and 64 senior England caps also promise the kind of leadership Everton crave as they target a sustained climb up the table. Crucially, a free-transfer swoop would satisfy the club’s stringent budgetary constraints while delivering a statement signing capable of elevating the dressing-room standard. Negotiations have yet to commence, but sources on Merseyside indicate that initial dialogue could begin once the summer window officially opens.
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JULES BREACH: Why the Premier League title race is far from over - and absolutely thrilling

JULES BREACH: Why the Premier League title race is far from over - and absolutely thrilling

By Jules Breach The best league in the world has found a title race to match. Since Arsenal and Manchester City detached themselves from the pack in October, every weekend has felt like sudden-death theatre, every dropped point seismic, every twist another layer of drama. Arsenal have sat at the summit since the autumn, their longest sustained spell at the top in two decades, and have got there through a combination of defensive steel, set-piece prowess and a refusal to fold when momentum swung against them. Yet the reigning champions have never been more than a hot streak away, and the knowledge that Pep Guardiola has already collected six Premier League trophies has fuelled a creeping sense of inevitability that City will find one more devastating sprint when it matters most. The evidence is threaded through the last two months. A routine trip to Molineux in February looked like a chance for Mikel Arteta’s side to tighten their grip; instead they squandered a two-goal lead and conceded in stoppage time to draw 2-2, the kind of self-inflicted wound that only happens when the stakes are suffocating. Ten days later City needed an 80-minute rearguard action to escape Elland Road with three points against a Leeds side newly promoted and supposedly outgunned. Guardiola’s men prevailed, but the nervy finale underlined that even the serial winners are feeling the squeeze. Those margins have turned ostensibly innocuous fixtures into cup finals. The most vivid example arrived on the final Saturday of March: 16-year-old Max Dowman stepped off the Arsenal bench against Everton to become the youngest scorer in Premier League history, sealing a 1-0 win moments before City laboured to a 1-1 draw at West Ham. A swing that felt decisive in real time may yet be cited as the pivotal weekend of the run-in. Critics have queued up to question Arsenal’s reliance on set-pieces and game-management, but history will record only the colour of the ribbons if Arteta guides the club to a first championship since 2004. There is, in any case, far more substance to this Arsenal iteration than dead-ball efficiency: a carefully orchestrated evolution under their Spanish coach has produced a squad comfortable controlling territory without the ball and ruthless when space appears. The lingering doubt is psychological—Arsenal have taken fewer points than City in the closing months of each campaign since 2021-22, a trend that haunts supporters and encourages the chasing pack. City, for their part, look relaxed. Guardiola’s press-room humour has sharpened, his laughter looser, his answers longer. Experience tells him that talent married to nerve often peaks in April and May. The calendar now tilts toward the champions: no European travel, a core that has crossed this finish line repeatedly, and the knowledge that one mis-step from the leaders returns the initiative. Below the summit, the plot thickens. Tottenham’s injury-ravaged slide has dragged them into a relegation dogfight that could yet feature West Ham, Nottingham Forest and Leeds, each stumble amplifying the pressure on the next. Europe, too, has become an unexpected prize for Brentford and Everton, two clubs who began the season tipped for mid-table anonymity. With a handful of fixtures remaining, the arithmetic is gloriously simple: Arsenal hold the advantage, City hold the pedigree, and the rest of us hold our breath. The Premier League has long marketed itself as the planet’s most compelling division; this spring, the product has exceeded the hype. Whatever the outcome on May 25, the 2025-26 season has already delivered a title race worthy of the league’s global stage, and the final chapters promise still more chaos.
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Roll Call: Two Alabama Women’s Basketball Players Planning to Enter Transfer Portal

Roll Call: Two Alabama Women’s Basketball Players Planning to Enter Transfer Portal

Tuscaloosa, Ala. — Alabama women’s basketball is bracing for another round of roster turnover, as junior guard Jessica Collins and redshirt sophomore forward/center Jada Jones intend to enter the NCAA transfer portal, sources confirmed to Roll Call on Tuesday. The departures would raise the program’s offseason exodus to four, joining freshman forward Joy Egbuna and redshirt sophomore forward Reychel Douglas, both of whom previously announced plans to leave the Crimson Tide. Where the quartet ultimately lands remains unclear, but their combined production accounted for a significant chunk of Alabama’s 2024-25 statistical output. Collins, a two-year starter after transferring from Ohio State, started all 33 games this season and logged 28.1 minutes per night. She averaged 8.4 points, 2.9 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 1.0 steal while posting 11 double-digit scoring performances. A five-game streak of double-figure outings between Dec. 17 and Jan. 8 highlighted her mid-season surge, culminating in a career-best 20-point effort against Jackson State on Dec. 14. Ten days later she grabbed a personal-best eight rebounds versus Troy. Jones, granted a medical redshirt after an ACL wiped out her 2024-25 campaign, returned to appear in 31 games with 13 starts. In 16.6 minutes per contest she contributed 4.7 points, 4.9 rebounds and a team-leading 1.8 blocks. Her 61 rejections paced the squad, while her 58 offensive boards ranked second. She set career highs with 15 points against Jackson State and 11 rebounds in a Jan. 18 meeting with Tennessee. The impending departures leave head coach Pauline Love, recently hired away from Oklahoma where she was an assistant under Jennie Baranczyk, with significant roster reconstruction ahead of her first season in Tuscaloosa. Baranczyk praised Love’s ability to “build something special” upon her departure from Norman, but the Crimson Tide will now need to replace nearly one-third of this season’s minutes played. Alabama finished the year 19-14 and reached the second round of the WNIT before falling at home to eventual champion Illinois State. With spring workouts on the horizon, Love and her staff are expected to scour both the portal and high-school ranks to replenish backcourt depth and interior size.
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Will Notts be County Championship top dogs again?

Will Notts be County Championship top dogs again?

The 2026 County Championship begins on Friday 3 April with reigning champions Nottinghamshire aiming to prove last summer’s triumph was no one-off, while Surrey plot an immediate return to the summit after being denied a fourth title in a row. A seven-round block of matches will unfold before England’s first Test against New Zealand at Lord’s on 4 June, offering players a shop-window and counties the first clues as to who will still be in contention when the Lord’s Taverners Trophy is lifted in late September. Nottinghamshire, champions for the first time since 2010, welcome back England opener Ben Duckett for part of the early programme after he withdrew from his IPL deal with Delhi Capitals to rediscover form. Captain Haseeb Hameed, fresh from last year’s leadership and run-scoring double act, will again lean on a pace pack that includes Olly Stone, Josh Tongue and Australia’s new-gen quick Fergus O’Neill. Surrey, stung by surrendering their crown, pin rebound hopes on Ollie Pope, who is desperate for runs after losing his England place during the Ashes. Sean Abbott’s return and Gus Atkinson’s continued development add bite to a seam attack that expects to set the standard. Somerset are tipped to join the front-runners. Archie Vaughan, back from a productive Australian grade stint, and the Rew brothers – James, newly contracted, and England Lions skipper Thomas – supply youthful energy to a squad that believes its time has come. Behind the leading trio, the field looks tightly bunched. Essex, rescued from relegation worries by a late surge last term, have reinforced with Durham’s Mitchell Killeen and Gloucestershire’s Zaman Akhter around evergreen new-ball operator Sam Cook. South African batting phenomenon Wiaan Mulder, fresh from a 367* for his country, teams up again with spinner Simon Harmer, while Jordan Cox’s dual role as top-order batter and wicket-keeper adds X-factor if franchise duties allow. Hampshire, reprieved by a single point in 2025, still possess batting depth and Liam Dawson’s all-round craft. South African quick Codi Yusuf steps in after plans for Michael Neser and Jayden Seales fell through, and 22-year-old Sonny Baker’s raw pace will be closely monitored after a tough international baptism last summer. Warwickshire’s late change of captain from Alex Davies to Ed Barnard has not dimmed optimism that Chris Woakes, now freed from England duty, can steer the Bears to more wins than losses. Glamorgan return to Division One for the first time since 2005, led by Jersey-born opener Asa Tribe, whose runs sealed promotion, decorated a Lions tour and lit up the SA20. If England come calling, Sean Dickson and Colin Ingram provide seasoned back-up. Leicestershire, promoted after a 22-year absence, bank again on Rehan Ahmed’s leg-spin and lower-order runs. Stevie Eskinazi and Josh Davey bring experience, Jake Weatherald replaces Peter Handscomb for the opening block, and Ajaz Patel’s left-arm spin will be available all campaign. Yorkshire must replace Dawid Malan and Jordan Thompson, pinning overseas hopes on the fitness of Australian pair Jhye Richardson and Will Sutherland. Early-season availability of Harry Brook and Joe Root could prove crucial if the quicks break down. Sussex start on minus 12 points after ECB sanctions for financial breaches, leaving new captain Ollie Robinson with a mountainous task. The possible absence of The Hundred’s top earner James Coles on England duty only adds to the uncertainty hanging over Paul Farbrace’s developing squad. With narratives of resurgence, redemption and survival already simmering, the only certainty is that every session will matter in a season where Nottinghamshire and Surrey are expected to set the pace—yet nothing can be taken for granted.
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On the air - Wed, 01 Apr 2026 PST

On the air - Wed, 01 Apr 2026 PST

Sports viewers scanning their Wednesday evening schedules will find the only confirmed programming note in Thursday’s TV Highlights, a concise listing that leaves the lineup tantalizingly open. With no games, matches, or athlete features explicitly flagged for the 1 April 2026 broadcast window, the brief entry underscores a rare mid-week lull before networks reload for the weekend slate. Fans are advised to check local listings for any last-minute additions as stations finalize their sports rotations.
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APEX round for Apache tested at U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground

APEX round for Apache tested at U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground

YUMA PROVING GROUND, Ariz. — The Yuma Test Center at the U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground has completed testing of a new 30-mm Aviation Proximity Explosive round, designated APEX, designed specifically for employment from the AH-64 Apache attack helicopter. Engineers and range personnel evaluated the round’s performance characteristics during recent trials, marking a critical step toward fielding the enhanced munition to aviation units. The APEX round is intended to expand the Apache’s lethality against a range of battlefield targets through a proximity-fuzed fragmentation warhead optimized for aerial engagements. U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground, one of the Defense Department’s premier test and evaluation facilities, provided the expansive range space, instrumentation, and expertise required to validate the round’s ballistic properties and safety protocols. Data collected during the test series will inform final production specifications and deployment timelines for the new cartridge.
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Why Arsenal may need to show a bit more caution in the Champions League semi-finals

Why Arsenal may need to show a bit more caution in the Champions League semi-finals

Arsenal’s passage to the UEFA Women’s Champions League semi-finals was greeted with euphoric celebrations at Stamford Bridge, yet the 1-0 second-leg defeat by Chelsea that sealed a 3-1 aggregate win ought to serve as a flashing warning light rather than a confidence boost. A stoppage-time concession, two first-half woodwork strikes and a string of outstanding saves from Daphne van Domselaar underlined how close the Gunters came to self-inflicted peril against a side languishing in the lower reaches of the Women’s Super League and braced for a summer rebuild. Manager Renée Slegers set up in an ostensibly aggressive 4-4-2, pairing Alessia Russo behind Stina Blackstenius in the hope of pinning Chelsea deep and countering at pace. The plan rarely materialised. Russo, excellent at receiving and rolling markers, particularly Keira Walsh, subsequently mis-controlled or mis-placed five promising moves, leaving Blackstenius starved of service and, aside from a late offside finish, peripheral. “We didn’t create a lot apart from at the end,” admitted Chelsea boss Sonia Bompastor, whose own team might have buried the tie inside 15 minutes had either of their early efforts crept inside the frame. The wide areas offered little relief. Olivia Smith’s first touch deserted her on the right, Caitlin Foord’s endeavour on the left was not matched by end product, and Arsenal’s midfield lacked the extra body that Frida Maanum’s inclusion would have provided. Slegers’ commitment to two strikers, so decisive in the first leg when Russo and Blackstenius combined for a two-goal cushion, looked less prudent when Chelsea poured forward. Defensively, Arsenal were again stretched by balls in behind and, crucially, by aerial deliveries. Slegers twice opted to withdraw or omit Laia Codina, recognising her lack of recovery speed against Chelsea’s runners. When Steph Catley hobbled off before half-time, Katie McCabe again slotted in as an emergency centre-back, a role she has performed creditably but one that weakens the left flank. Late on, Codina was summoned to repel crosses only for Sjoeke Nusken to ghost between markers and head Chelsea’s consolation. Leah Williamson’s anticipated return for the last-four tie will help, yet Arsenal’s discomfort under high balls remains a live issue. Slegers conceded the flaws. “We’re going to look at this and reflect and see how we can be better in different moments,” she said. The Dutch coach knows her squad possesses depth and adaptability—January arrival Smilla Holmberg has already featured as both right midfielder and right-back, Beth Mead and Chloe Kelly wait in reserve, and McCabe’s versatility is proving invaluable—but the semi-final opponents, Lyon or Wolfsburg, are unlikely to spurn the chances Chelsea squandered. Arsenal have proved they can survive adversity: last year they clambered past Real Madrid and Lyon en route to lifting the trophy, and their 2024 final win over Barcelona came after ceding the initiative for long spells. Still, the road to the trophy is smoother when comebacks are not required. A more conservative shape, a midfield extra, and a sharper attacking edge could transform a team that currently looks thrilling going forward only in patches and vulnerable when pressed. The Emirates will roar whatever the line-up; Arsenal’s travelling support already dwarfed Chelsea’s, and a weekend semi-final date guarantees another raucous crowd. Yet the lesson of Stamford Bridge is clear: against elite European opposition, flair must be balanced by pragmatism. Slight tweaks, not wholesale changes, may decide whether the Gunners return to the final or fall one step short.
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Wells Trust Grant Funds Championship Rings for Owensboro High Football

Wells Trust Grant Funds Championship Rings for Owensboro High Football

Owensboro High School’s 2025 Red Devil football squad will receive state-championship rings after the Wells Trust awarded a grant earmarked for the commemorative hardware. The team captured the KHSAA Class 5-A title last December, and the grant ensures each player and coach will have a permanent reminder of the milestone victory.
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Bayern Munich News: An opening for Manchester United on Harry Kane?

Bayern Munich News: An opening for Manchester United on Harry Kane?

Manchester United are monitoring developments at the Allianz Arena after contract-extension talks between Bayern Munich and Harry Kane stalled, sources have told Football Insider. Bayern remain confident the 30-year-old will ultimately commit to fresh terms, yet the absence of a signed agreement has encouraged Old Trafford officials to explore whether the England captain could be lured back to the Premier League. Former Manchester United chief scout Mick Brown believes the uncertainty gives English clubs a rare opportunity to intervene. “Harry Kane’s future is going to be interesting,” Brown said. “Everybody you speak to says he’s happy at Bayern Munich, but now it’s been suggested he could be tempted away. When people [Uli Hoeness] are saying things like that, of course you’re going to be aware of it. “If his contract talks maybe aren’t going as planned and they think he could be tempted to go to Saudi, what’s stopping a Premier League club from making a move? Whoever it may be, Man United maybe or any other club, if Kane is considering leaving Bayern Munich they would be silly not to be having a look. “He might want to return to England and have a go at breaking Shearer’s record, that was all the talk when he was leaving Tottenham. By all accounts, I think he’s happy at Bayern and that’s probably not going to change, but if there is a suggestion he could leave, the interest will be there.” Bayern still regard an extension as the most probable outcome, meaning United could be left chasing a long-shot target. Elsewhere, Real Madrid are weighing up a 2027 swoop for Liverpool’s Hugo Ekitike after balking at Erling Haaland’s €200 million valuation, while Barcelona have identified Leverkusen left-back Alejandro Grimaldo and Atlético Madrid striker Julián Álvarez as summer priorities. Manchester United, for their part, have also added Fulham’s Antonee Robinson to their left-back shortlist as they prepare for Tyrell Malacia’s expected departure.
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Saints Set Sights on 2026 Supremacy After Productive Offseason

Saints Set Sights on 2026 Supremacy After Productive Offseason

New Orleans, LA—Speaking to reporters at the Ochsner Sports Performance Center on the eve of training camp, Saints general manager Mickey Loomis radiated quiet confidence about a roster that has already undergone significant retooling. With the 2026 NFL Draft less than nine months away, New Orleans believes it has positioned itself as the early front-runner in the NFC South. The club’s offseason ledger shows four headline additions: veteran guard David Edwards, explosive running back Travis Etienne Jr., linebacker Kaden Elliss—touted as the eventual successor to Demario Davis—and standout punter Ryan Wright. Those moves, Loomis indicated, are only the opening salvo. “We like where we are compared to where we finished 2025,” Loomis said. “But we’re not done.” The Saints currently hold eight selections in the 2026 draft, beginning with the No. 8 overall pick. Ohio State wide receiver Carnell Tate has emerged in internal discussions as the ideal target should he remain available. New Orleans also owns choices at 42 (second round), 73 (third), 132 and 136 (fourth), 150 and 172 (fifth), and 190 (sixth). Remaining roster voids are clear: cornerback, the No. 2 wide receiver role, and an edge rusher to anchor the pass rush. The draft is viewed as the primary avenue to fill those gaps, yet the front office continues to monitor the veteran market. Keenan Allen, Deebo Samuel, and Stefon Diggs headline available receivers, while cornerback help could come via Marshon Lattimore or Trevon Diggs. On the edge, Cameron Jordan—still unsigned—tops the wish list, with Haason Reddick, Joey Bosa, and Jadeveon Clowney also on the radar. Loomis emphasized that the Saints’ trajectory will hinge on how effectively they finish the dual path of draft preparation and veteran recruitment. “We’ve improved,” he noted, “but April and the months after it will determine whether we’re holding a trophy next February.”
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Jets Commit to Breece Hall, Quiet Trade Buzz with Franchise Tag

Jets Commit to Breece Hall, Quiet Trade Buzz with Franchise Tag

East Rutherford, N.J.—The New York Jets removed any lingering doubt about Breece Hall’s immediate future on Saturday, applying the franchise tag to the dynamic running back and effectively ending months of speculation that the 23-year-old might be wearing a different uniform in 2026. Hall, who burst through New England safety Craig Woodson for key second-half yardage in the Jets’ Dec. 28 victory at MetLife Stadium, was scheduled to hit unrestricted free agency this spring. Instead, the tag locks him into a one-year, top-of-market salary and keeps the organization’s most explosive offensive weapon in green and white while both sides explore a longer arrangement. According to multiple reports, the Jets intend to reopen extension talks with Hall’s representatives after the 2026 NFL Draft, hoping to convert the placeholder deal into a multi-year contract that would solidify the backfield around the former second-round pick. Although the tag technically preserves the club’s right to trade Hall, insiders view that scenario as remote. Sports Illustrated’s Albert Breer dismissed the notion in a recent mailbag, writing, “I just don’t think you can get the sort of value for a running back on a franchise tag that would make it worth everyone’s while to lose another of your best players.” Breer added that a mid-season move could surface only if negotiations stall and the team underperforms, but labeled that outcome unlikely. The Jets’ actions over the past year support that assessment. Despite persistent rumors ahead of the 2025 trade deadline, New York rebuffed inquiries and retained Hall, then doubled down by choosing the more expensive franchise tag over the transition tag—an intentional barrier designed to deter offer sheets from rival clubs. Each procedural step, from declining trade offers to assigning the premium tag, signals an organizational commitment to build around Hall rather than auction him off. Barring an unforeseen collapse in talks, the Iowa State product is expected to take the first snap of the 2026 regular season in a Jets uniform, either on the tag or a new long-term pact.
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NCAA approves suspensions for coaches and fines for schools that take ‘ghost transfers’

NCAA approves suspensions for coaches and fines for schools that take ‘ghost transfers’

INDIANAPOLIS — The NCAA Division I Cabinet enacted emergency legislation Wednesday that will impose steep penalties on coaches and programs that roster or play athletes who have not completed the mandated transfer-portal process. Effective immediately and covering all transfers on or after Feb. 25, 2026, the rule carries two primary sanctions: a head-coach suspension for 50 percent of the season and a financial penalty equal to 20 percent of the sport’s annual budget. The measure, first advanced by the Football Bowl Subdivision Oversight Committee, applies across all Division I sports. “I am grateful the DI Cabinet approved the FBS Oversight Committee’s recommendation to impose significant penalties on head coaches and programs who circumvent transfer rules, along with immediate accountability,” Vanderbilt coach Clark Lea said. “This is a necessary step to address a critical roster management issue facing our sport and to protect the integrity of football’s transfer window.” The action targets so-called ghost transfers, a loophole highlighted in January 2025 when former Wisconsin defensive back Xavier Lucas moved to Miami without entering the portal. A similar situation occurred in July when quarterback Jake Retzlaff left BYU and walked on at Tulane. In a parallel effort, the Division I Board of Directors has tasked an Infractions Process Task Force with reviewing NCAA enforcement procedures. The group will examine transfer-rule violations and tampering penalties, with recommendations for modernizing the infractions process expected later this year.
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Jason Pierre-Paul Hints at Comeback, Eyes Return to New York Giants

Jason Pierre-Paul Hints at Comeback, Eyes Return to New York Giants

East Rutherford, N.J.—As John Harbaugh’s new era dawns with the New York Giants, another familiar face has joined Odell Beckham Jr. in signaling interest in a reunion. Longtime fan favorite defensive end Jason Pierre-Paul used social media Tuesday to let the franchise—and its fans—know he is ready to suit up in blue once again. “@nygiants I’m still available and ready to take on some OT’s and dominate in run-stop football the GIANTS WAY,” Pierre-Paul posted from his verified account. “Let’s make it happen, Giant Fans, Giant Nation Let’s go!! I know I know I know.” The playful but pointed message arrives amid reports that Beckham met with Harbaugh at the league owners’ meetings in Arizona, and it instantly stirred memories of Pierre-Paul’s peak seasons in New York. Selected 15th overall out of South Florida in the 2010 NFL Draft, Pierre-Paul became a cornerstone of the Giants’ pass rush, registering 58 sacks—still tenth in club history—during his first stint with the team from 2010-2017. His signature campaign came in 2011 when he led the Giants with 16.5 sacks, 86 tackles, two forced fumbles, and seven pass deflections, propelling the franchise to a championship run capped by a 21-17 victory over New England in Super Bowl XLVI. Over six seasons he piled up 433 tackles, 17 forced turnovers, and 51 passes defensed, helping the defense finish inside the league’s top 10 three times. New York traded Pierre-Paul to Tampa Bay in March 2018 for draft-pick compensation. He rebounded with three consecutive seasons of 8.5 or more sacks, including a second Lombardi Trophy with the Buccaneers in 2020. A torn rotator cuff cost him most of 2021 and precipitated short stops in Baltimore, New Orleans, and Miami, where he totaled 13 starts in 22 games over the past four seasons. Now 37 and unsigned for 2026, the 15-year veteran sees Harbaugh’s arrival as a potential opening. The Giants’ defensive line struggled against the run last season and could use reinforcements, though Pierre-Paul’s recent Pro Football Focus run-defense grades have climbed above 70 only once in the last five years. Whether the organization views the tweet as more than nostalgia will depend on whether team officials extend a formal invitation for a workout to gauge his current health and effectiveness. For the moment, Pierre-Paul’s online pitch serves as both a reminder of past glory and a question mark about whether the Giants will mine their history for help along the trenches—or continue to cultivate younger talent already on the roster and in the upcoming draft.
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Flag football photos: Mount St. Dominic vs No. 18 Passaic Tech, April 1, 2026

Flag football photos: Mount St. Dominic vs No. 18 Passaic Tech, April 1, 2026

WAYNE — Mount St. Dominic and No. 18-ranked Passaic Tech squared off in a high-stakes flag football contest on Wednesday afternoon, April 1, 2026, delivering a fast-paced showcase of skill and strategy that unfolded under clear skies at the Wayne venue. A full gallery of game-day images captures every sprint, snag, and flag-pull, placing viewers on the sideline for each pivotal moment. Readers can open the interactive collage to scroll through the action shots and share the collection with friends and relatives. Individual photos are available for purchase in multiple sizes and finishes; clicking the “BUY IMAGE” link below any picture displays pricing options. NJ.com subscribers receive complimentary, print-quality digital downloads of every frame. Because galleries are published rapidly after the final whistle, additional photographs will continue to populate the page; fans are encouraged to refresh periodically for the latest additions. For optimal resolution when downloading high-definition images or completing purchases, desktop or laptop access is recommended.
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Real Madrid move closer to signing Premier League star

Real Madrid move closer to signing Premier League star

Madrid, Spain – Real Madrid’s summer rebuild is gathering pace, and the club have edged nearer to securing a marquee defensive addition without paying a transfer fee. Sources close to the negotiations confirm that Liverpool centre-back Ibrahim Konate has emerged as the leading candidate to reinforce a back line set to lose both David Alaba and potentially Antonio Rudiger once their contracts expire in June. Konate, 24, was initially discarded from Madrid’s shortlist earlier in the campaign, but a dramatic reversal in planning has placed the France international at the top of the recruitment dossier prepared for the next transfer window. The player has yet to accept the extension offer tabled by Liverpool, leaving his future unresolved only weeks before he becomes free to talk to foreign clubs. While Anfield officials maintain that a renewal remains possible, the likelihood of the defender staying on Merseyside is dwindling with each passing day, handing the Spanish giants a clear advantage in the race for his signature. Should Konate opt for the Bernabeu, Madrid would acquire a physically imposing centre-back once considered among the Premier League’s elite. Although his current season has fallen below previous standards, club analysts are confident that a change of scenery and the demands of La Liga will restore the form that made him a mainstay for both club and country. Securing him as a free agent would also free significant capital for other areas of Alvaro Arbeloa’s squad, with midfield and attacking reinforcements still on the agenda. Konate is not the only defender monitored by Madrid. Borussia Dortmund’s Nico Schlotterbeck continues to be scouted, yet the growing optimism surrounding the Frenchman’s situation has pushed the German left-footed option into a secondary role for now. Until pen is put to paper, uncertainty persists, but the momentum in the Spanish capital is unmistakable: Real Madrid believe they are winning the battle to bring another Premier League star to the Bernabeu.
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The Chicago Bears Comp Picks Situation has New Hope

The Chicago Bears Comp Picks Situation has New Hope

By [Staff Writer] Chicago, IL — When the NFL released its list of compensatory selections for the 2026 draft last month, the Chicago Bears were conspicuously absent. The ruling appeared to extinguish the club’s lingering hope of receiving draft capital for the off-season departure of Assistant General Manager Ian Cunningham, who was hired by the Atlanta Falcons as their new General Manager. Yet, inside Halas Hall, the matter is far from closed. The sticking point is the league’s interpretation of the Rooney Rule. Teams must designate a single primary football decision-maker—whether that person carries the title of general manager, team president, or head of football operations. Any executive beneath that individual, regardless of title, is viewed as a secondary voice. Because the Falcons already list a separate person as their top football authority, the NFL treated Cunningham’s move laterally, disqualifying the Bears from the standard compensation awarded when minority executives depart for elevated positions elsewhere. Chicago initially appealed the decision, arguing that Atlanta’s organizational chart mirrors its own, a structure they believe should qualify them for picks. That appeal was denied. Undeterred, Chairman George McCaskey, Team President Kevin Warren, and General Manager Ryan Poles boarded a flight to New York for a face-to-face meeting with Commissioner Roger Goodell at this week’s annual owners’ meetings, resurrecting the issue. Speaking to reporters after Tuesday’s session, Warren confirmed the trip and expressed measured optimism. “We laid out our case thoroughly and respectfully,” he said. “We feel we deserve the compensatory picks, and we expect a final decision soon.” Time is short. The 2026 draft kicks off later this month, leaving little runway for the league to insert additional choices. Still, insiders believe Goodell could craft a compromise—perhaps awarding the Bears a single selection in 2027 while instructing the competition committee to tighten the Rooney Rule’s language for future cycles. Such a move would acknowledge both the uniqueness of this situation and the evolving definitions of front-office hierarchy. Until the league rules, Chicago’s football operations staff will continue preparing for every scenario, hopeful that a late reprieve can add valuable capital to their rebuilding effort.
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Jonathan Tannenwald: The USMNT’s World Cup auditions are over. Now it’s time to project the tournament roster.

Jonathan Tannenwald: The USMNT’s World Cup auditions are over. Now it’s time to project the tournament roster.

ATLANTA — The curtain has closed on the try-out phase. After 24 matches spread across Mauricio Pochettino’s 18-month reign, the U.S. men’s national team moves from experimentation to expectation. With the final audition complete, attention now shifts to forecasting which 26 names will land on the plane to the sport’s grandest stage.
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Bears brass looking for quick movement on a new stadium to open by 2030

Bears brass looking for quick movement on a new stadium to open by 2030

CHICAGO — The Chicago Bears front office set a firm timeline on Wednesday, telling reporters they intend to secure a swift decision on a new enclosed stadium and have it ready for kickoff by 2030. Team leaders emphasized urgency in their search, narrowing the focus to two potential locations: Arlington Heights and a site across the state line in Indiana. While details on financing, design, and infrastructure remain undisclosed, the organization’s public commitment to a 2030 opening date signals an accelerated push to move away from their current home-field arrangement. Officials offered no preference between the two finalist destinations but reiterated that speed is now the priority in reaching a definitive agreement.
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NFL Quarterback Chris Streveler Retires at 31 with Quiet Farewell

NFL Quarterback Chris Streveler Retires at 31 with Quiet Farewell

Chris Streveler, who spent three seasons on the margins of NFL rosters, announced his retirement from professional football in a low-key Instagram post released just before April Fools’ Day, closing the book on a career that ended at age 31. The quarterback shared a video montage that traced his path from Marian Central Catholic High School in Illinois through collegiate stops at Minnesota and South Dakota, ultimately landing in the NFL with the Arizona Cardinals and New York Jets. Over the accompanying clip he wrote simply, “I love you all. Thank you.” Among the flood of replies, the most poignant came from his father: “As your dad it overwhelms me with pride seeing all this love and support. It has been an incredible journey and I’ve been blessed to have that front row seat. But as I’ve always said I am way more proud of the man you’ve become than the football player you were… You have always been so much more. Love you – Dad.” Streveler’s stat line reflects the uphill battle he fought for playing time: nine regular-season appearances, 27 completions on 40 attempts, 231 yards, one touchdown and one interception. His lone start came in a 19-3 loss to Jacksonville while with the Jets in 2022, the same season he bounced between the active roster, practice squad and injured reserve. Undrafted and undersized by league standards, Streveler maximized every opportunity, earning a reputation for toughness and adaptability while shuttling through more than a dozen transactions across two franchises. Now he is channeling that resilience into new ventures. He has partnered with former teammate Justin Pew at Thursday Sports to produce football-centric digital content, is expanding a real-estate portfolio anchored in Arizona, and is booking public-speaking engagements focused on leadership, mindset and perseverance for corporate audiences and youth athletes. Chris Streveler leaves the NFL without the accolades reserved for household names, but his story underscores the tenacity required to survive even on the fringe of the league’s ecosystem.
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Arsenal could give Barcelona boost in bid to sign world class defender

Arsenal could give Barcelona boost in bid to sign world class defender

Barcelona’s pursuit of Inter Milan centre-back Alessandro Bastoni may receive unexpected assistance from Arsenal, as the London club’s willingness to sell defender Riccardo Calafiori could smooth the path for the Serie A giants to secure a replacement. Barcelona have identified the 26-year-old Bastoni as their primary defensive target for the summer window, and confidence is growing inside Can Barca that a deal can be struck. Yet Inter are reluctant to lose one of their star defenders without first lining up a successor, and they have zeroed in on Calafiori as the ideal candidate. CaughtOffside reports that Calafiori is open to a return to Italy, a preference that aligns with Inter’s needs. Arsenal, for their part, are ready to sanction an overseas sale rather than risk strengthening Premier League rivals, with Chelsea also monitoring the 22-year-old’s situation. Should Inter successfully negotiate Calafiori’s transfer, the domino effect would significantly enhance Barcelona’s chances of landing Bastoni. Head coach Hansi Flick and sporting director Deco view the Inter man as the long-term solution to their defensive issues, and the club’s hierarchy are hopeful that financial constraints can be navigated once La Liga’s 1:1 spending rule is reassessed at the start of July. Barcelona’s ability to complete the marquee signing ultimately hinges on Inter securing Calafiori, leaving the Catalans anxiously watching developments in north London and Milan.
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Fernandez, Gallen, Carroll Power D-backs Past Tigers in Statement Sweep

Fernandez, Gallen, Carroll Power D-backs Past Tigers in Statement Sweep

PHOENIX — The Arizona Diamondbacks did not merely sweep the Detroit Tigers; they re-introduced themselves to the National League with a three-game showcase of resilience, rookie fireworks and a reminder that last October’s swagger still lives inside Chase Field. Jose Fernandez, summoned from the prospect pipeline and slotted at first base for his big-league debut Tuesday, authored the loudest arrival. The 23-year-old went 3-for-4, depositing a pair of baseballs into the seats—including a two-run, eighth-inning blast off All-Star closer Kenley Jansen that flipped a 5-5 stalemate into a 7-5 victory and ignited the first sellout crowd of the season. “I’ve pictured that moment a thousand times,” Fernandez said, still sporting eye-black smudges. “Never with Kenley on the mound and never in a comeback like that.” The rookie’s encore Wednesday was quieter at the plate—0-for-3—but electric with the glove. Fernandez twice ranged to his right, scooping low throws and starting 3-6-3 double plays that short-circuited Tiger rallies. The performance was all the more notable considering he had logged only 17 professional games at first base before this week. While Fernandez supplied the fresh face, Zac Gallen provided the familiar ace look. Six days after a single crooked inning against the Dodgers stained an otherwise sharp outing, Gallen avoided the big frame entirely in Thursday’s finale. He scattered four singles over six innings, outpitching reigning American League Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal and securing a 1-0 win. Gallen recorded just two strikeouts, yet pounded the zone with 72 percent of his 84 pitches going for strikes. “The goal was simple—don’t let the game speed up,” Gallen said. “When the defense is this good, let them work.” Corbin Carroll ensured Gallen’s lone run would hold. The left-handed outfielder, playing seven weeks after hamate-bone surgery sapped the power of many hitters before him, turned on a 95-mph Skubal fastball in the fourth and launched it 410 feet the opposite way for his second homer of the series. Carroll finished the set 5-for-10 with two homers, a double, a triple and seven RBIs, becoming just the sixth left-handed batter ever to homer off Skubal. The bullpen, an acknowledged liability entering the year, toggled between terrifying and terrific. An 8-0 cushion Monday morphed into a save situation after the relievers leaked six runs in the seventh, but the unit rebounded with six scoreless frames the final two nights, converting every save chance. Paul Sewald’s return as closer fueled the turnaround. Re-acquired over the winter after a brief Seattle sojourn, Sewald locked down back-to-back saves without allowing a baserunner and struck out the side Wednesday. His fastball sat 92-93 mph, mirroring 2023 pennant-drive form, while a refined sweeper generated empty swings at the top of the zone. Managerial faith in right-hander Brandon Pfaadt remains a work in progress. Pfaadt cruised through three innings Tuesday before a five-run fourth buried him. He limited the damage to that frame, completing six innings and positioning the offense for its eventual comeback, but the big-inning bugaboo lingers. Arizona’s sweep trims its early-season ledger to 3-3, equaling the record after an 0-3 Dodger bludgeoning. More importantly, the Diamondbacks believe they relocated the identity that carried them to the 2023 World Series: relentless at-bats, aggressive defense and a refusal to concede the late innings. “We got punched, we punched back,” Carroll said. “That’s us.” The schedule offers little breather—NL West rivals await next—but the D-backs exit the homestand convinced their best baseball is not confined to memory. SEO keywords:
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AJ Hill’s Spring in Fayetteville: From Memphis Legacy to Arkansas’s Wide-Open Quarterback Race

AJ Hill’s Spring in Fayetteville: From Memphis Legacy to Arkansas’s Wide-Open Quarterback Race

FAYETTEVILLE — The first real chapter of AJ Hill’s college career is being written on the Arkansas practice fields this spring, and every rep is freighted with history, relationships, and a competition the coaching staff still calls a literal coin flip. Hill, a former five-star recruit from Warner Robins, Georgia, arrived in Fayetteville by way of Memphis, where he became the highest-rated quarterback signee in program history. He chose the Tigers after de-committing from Colorado and watching larger programs back away. “Memphis was just real and authentic,” Hill said. “Coach Cramsey and Coach Silverfield gave me a plan and I really just stuck with it.” That plan detoured north when Ryan Silverfield accepted the Arkansas head job in December and brought key staffers — including offensive coordinator Tim Cramsey and wide receivers coach Larry Smith — with him. Hill followed, walking into a quarterback room where no depth-chart promises are made. He and redshirt sophomore KJ Jackson have alternated with the ones and twos all spring, each snap an audition for the season-opener. “It has been going good for me and KJ,” Hill said. “We love to compete with each other. Making each other better every day is going to have us ready for the season.” Comfort in the scheme helps. Hill spent the 2024 season learning the offense at Memphis, giving him a head start most true freshmen never receive. “I’m real comfortable with the offense,” he said. “I’m really just trying to hone in on the protection part of it … get the timing right on a couple more things and I’ll be good.” Self-scouting is already a strength. Hill trusts his pre-snap reads and wants the ball out quickly, but he knows pocket patience must improve. “I can move a lot in the pocket when I don’t need to,” he admitted. “Staying calm and just trusting my protection more” is the daily emphasis. An unexpected reunion has aided that growth. After the Tigers’ Gasparilla Bowl loss, Hill thought he had seen the last of Mitch Stewart, the former Memphis analyst turned quarterbacks coach. Stewart had accepted a job at South Alabama, but when Clint Trickett left for Maryland, Silverfield asked Hill about bringing Stewart to Arkansas. Hill’s endorsement was immediate; days later Stewart was on campus, emotional about the second chance to coach his protégé. The connection runs deeper than football. Stewart held a clipboard at Valdosta State in the early 2000s while Hill’s uncle, Derrick Hill, started on the defensive line. Neither coach nor player knew the link until months into their Memphis relationship, but it reinforced the trust already in place. “That did not play a role” in any decision, Hill said, “but it just goes back to say with Georgia football this is all connections and relationships.” Those relationships have now converged in the Ozarks, where a freshman who once fielded offers from Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Florida State, Georgia, Miami and Penn State is simply trying to win the next practice period. The quarterback battle may still be 50-50 on the coaches’ internal ledger, yet Hill’s grasp of the offense, candid self-evaluation, and chemistry with a position coach he helped hire give him a legitimate shot to flip that coin by August. Spring drills continue this week, each throw and read moving Hill closer to a decision that will shape Arkansas’s 2025 season — and prove once again that the paths connecting player, coach, and family can stretch across decades before arriving, unannounced, on a Fayetteville practice field.
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UConn Coach Dan Hurley and a Frozen Moment That Will Echo Through March Lore

UConn Coach Dan Hurley and a Frozen Moment That Will Echo Through March Lore

Washington, D.C. — With 4.2 seconds left and the deficit at two, every heartbeat inside Capital One Arena belonged to freshman guard Braylon Mullins. Among the thousands rendered powerless, none carried more narrative weight than Dan Hurley, the two-time national-champion architect whose comic arrogance has defined the 2020s. On Sunday evening, the coach who ordinarily choreographs endings surrendered his fate to an 18-year-old taking his fifth collegiate three. CBS’s panoramic shot—initially buried in a routine YouTube compilation of Mullins’ game-winner from ten angles—captured the tableau: Hurley, arms folded but eyes skyward; Bill Murray, worth $180 million yet as helpless as any fan in the upper deck; Rudy Gay, towering over two boys craning for a glimpse; the entire UConn bench on the verge of hyperventilation. Only one spectator, astute observers noted, held a phone aloft. The rest were too transfixed by the orange sphere arcing toward destiny. The Blue Devils led 72–70 when Cayden Boozer, so sharp all afternoon, failed to break the Huskies’ press. Chaos ensued, Mullins caught, elevated, and released. In the frame that @patlenehan14 froze on social media, Hurley’s expression is neither swagger nor strategy—just raw, unfiltered vulnerability. It is an image devoid of secrets, the kind that joins Babe Ruth’s farewell, Ali’s Liston victory, and Rapinoe’s triumph in the American sports pantheon. Some in the collage were there for the 2023 and 2024 coronations; others, like the toddlers perched on seats, were new to the Huskies’ empire. All shared the same breathless limbo. A frame later, the ball descended, the net rippled, and UConn had its 73–72 comeback escape, propelling the program within two wins of a third title in four years.
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Arsenal book UWCL semifinal spot after chaotic Chelsea clash, hair-pulling incident with Alyssa Thompson

Arsenal book UWCL semifinal spot after chaotic Chelsea clash, hair-pulling incident with Alyssa Thompson

LONDON – Arsenal are through to the UEFA Women’s Champions League semifinals after surviving a tempestuous 1-0 defeat at Chelsea that finished with ten-man Chelsea, a manager sent to the stands, and a hair-pulling controversy that is sure to reverberate well beyond Stamford Bridge. Trailing 2-0 from the first leg, Chelsea threw everything at their London rivals and thought lifeline had arrived when Sjoeke Nüsken stabbed home in stoppage time. Yet the goal only reduced the aggregate arrears to 2-1; the second that would have forced extra time never came, and the final breathless exchanges descended into mayhem. The flashpoint arrived in the 88th minute when Arsenal full-back Katie McCabe, attempting to slow Chelsea winger Alyssa Thompson, seized a fistful of the American’s ponytail. Thompson shrieked “she pulled my hair” toward the assistant referee; McCabe escaped with only a yellow after a VAR review that left Chelsea incensed. Blues manager Sonia Bompastor’s protests earned two rapid yellow cards and an early exit, meaning the team chasing the game did so without its head coach. Post-match Bompastor brandished phone footage of the incident, demanding to know why McCabe was still on the pitch. “At this level the refereeing is not good enough,” Bompastor said. “If VAR cannot check that, what are we doing? Alyssa’s hair was pulled. McCabe should have been sent off.” McCabe later used Instagram to insist she had “reached for the shirt” and meant no disrespect to Thompson. The tie’s narrative had twisted long before the late drama. Stina Blackstenius appeared to kill the contest in the 80th minute, only for the flag and VAR to adjudge her offside by the narrowest margin. Up the other end Sam Kerr earlier had a goal chalked out for offside, while Chelsea struck the woodwork and watched Arsenal keeper Daphne van Domselaar repel a flurry of first-half chances. When the whistle finally blew, Arsenal’s players sank to the turf in relief; their bench erupted in celebration. Renée Slegers’ side now await the winner of Wolfsburg v Lyon for a place in the final. “We are in a really good place,” Slegers reflected. “The way this group maximises every day, they deserve this moment. Now we want to be in this place consistently.” For Chelsea, focus turns to a domestic title race and the possibility of retrospective disciplinary action against McCabe. For Arsenal, the dream of defending their European crown remains alive – and the rivalry with Chelsea has a combustible new chapter.
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Joan Laporta hints at reduced Barcelona transfer activity

Joan Laporta hints at reduced Barcelona transfer activity

Barcelona president Joan Laporta has signalled that the club will adopt a restrained approach to the forthcoming summer window, cautioning supporters not to expect a flurry of high-profile arrivals despite clear areas in Hansi Flick’s squad that require attention. Speaking to Món Esport (as carried by MD), Laporta acknowledged that reinforcements at centre-back and striker remain on the agenda, while the long-term future of left-sided target Marcus Rashford remains unresolved. Yet the president-elect stressed that necessity alone will not drive Barça’s market strategy. “We don’t need to go to the market for the sake of going,” Laporta said. “We must continue to look at what we have at home to, if necessary, improve the squad. What I think should be done after getting such a competitive team is to maintain it and consolidate it.” The comments represent a continuation of Laporta’s long-standing faith in La Masia. He reiterated that the next generation of academy graduates will be given every opportunity to step up, echoing the philosophy that underpinned Barcelona’s most successful eras. “I believe in La Masia. I already focused on it during my first term. In this, I am not doubtful,” he added. “The best Barça team in history has been when we have had a core of players from home with others of great quality who have come from abroad.” Laporta indicated that any incoming business will be dictated solely by specific requests from the football department, stating: “We will only sign if the management team asks us for a player or two who can reinforce this great team we have.” With financial prudence still a guiding principle at Camp Nou, the club’s summer trajectory now appears to hinge on internal promotion rather than lavish spending. Whether that strategy will prove sufficient to propel Barcelona back to the summit of European football remains an open question.
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Real Madrid bemused by England’s Jude Bellingham conduct

Real Madrid bemused by England’s Jude Bellingham conduct

Madrid, Spain – Real Madrid return to La Liga action this weekend still puzzled and irritated by the way England handled Jude Bellingham during the international window, club sources have indicated. Bellingham, who tore his hamstring in early February, completed a six-week rehabilitation and featured briefly in the Madrid derby just before the break. With Fede Valverde suspended for Saturday’s visit to Mallorca, the 20-year-old midfielder had been pencilled in as a candidate to reclaim a starting berth for the first time since his injury. Yet Los Blancos’ medical and coaching staff now believe that opportunity has been compromised. Although England called Bellingham up, he never left the bench in either of the national team’s two fixtures. Real Madrid officials, who were reluctant to release him in the first place, had hoped competitive minutes would accelerate his return to peak condition. Instead, Bellingham spent the fortnight training with the Three Lions while playing no part in the games, leaving him short of match rhythm. Spanish daily Marca reports that Madrid consider the player “cold” and are unlikely to risk him from the opening whistle at Son Moix. Had they been consulted, the club would have preferred Bellingham to remain at the Valdebebas training complex, where coaches could have tailored a personalised programme designed to sharpen his readiness for the decisive stretch of the season, beginning with next week’s Champions League quarter-final against Bayern Munich. With Valverde unavailable, Carlo Ancelotti is expected to turn to Eduardo Camavinga or academy prodigy Franco Mastantuono to fill the void in midfield, while Bellingham is set to be introduced from the bench if required. The episode has intensified the perennial tug-of-war between clubs and national associations over player welfare, and Madrid will hope the matter does not resurface later in the campaign as they chase silverware on multiple fronts.
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Kiski Area’s Arnold Playing in Portugal with U16 National Soccer Team

Kiski Area’s Arnold Playing in Portugal with U16 National Soccer Team

Cascais, Portugal — While most 10th-graders are juggling homework and spring sports, Kiski Area sophomore Ellie Arnold is balancing passports and practice sessions on the Atlantic coast. The 16-year-old midfielder/forward is the lone girl from Western Pennsylvania on the Olympic Development Program’s National Select U16 girls roster that opened play this week at the IberCup Elite, an invitation-only tournament featuring academy sides from Manchester City, FC Bayern, and Japan’s RB Omiya Ardija. Arnold’s path to the Portuguese pitch began last winter inside a Pennsylvania state ODP pool. Six weeks of winter workouts and another six in the spring earned her a spot on the Pennsylvania team that traveled to regional competition in June. Scouts tagged her for the East Region camp in July, and in January she faced the country’s best at the inter-regional showcase. Each step produced a smaller jersey number and a bigger stage, culminating in the red, white, and blue kit she wore at training Tuesday morning. “I had a goal to get to the national team, and I knew how much hard work I needed to put in,” Arnold said via phone between sessions. “It’s been a fantastic year, and it keeps getting better.” National-team coaching duties here fall to Kerri Michel Hanks Petersen, the former Notre Dame striker and three-time age-group national-team veteran who has overseen the squad since arrival Monday. Arnold, fresh off a Beadling club tournament in Tennessee, reunited with two East Region teammates and immediately dove into tactical work ahead of group-stage matches. Back home, the itinerary is equally crowded. Arnold already submitted assignments early to stay ahead of Kiski Area’s curriculum, and the Lady Spartan/Wildcat Invitational awaits her on the track Saturday—provided jet lag cooperates. She is one of the Cavaliers’ top sprinters and, in the fall, led the soccer program with 21 goals, including a five-goal outburst against Elizabeth Forward. Kiski Area finished 8-7, pushed No. 5 Mars to a 1-0 playoff heartbreaker, and watched Arnold collect second-team Valley News Dispatch and all-WPIAL Class 3A honors. Gymnastics can wait; Olympic dreams cannot. Arnold, a WPIAL all-around champion as a freshman, tabled winter competition to focus on ODP. The sacrifice paid off with a boarding pass to Lisbon and a front-row seat to elite-level scouting that could shape Division-I recruitment and, down the road, professional or national-team futures. “Not everybody has the chance to do this,” she said, “and I don’t take it for granted.” For now, homework consists of game film on English pressing schemes and German transition play, with the beach serving as a classroom backdrop. The IberCup runs through the weekend; after that, it’s back to Kiski Area for the final stretch of track season and, soon enough, another run at WPIAL soccer glory. SEO keywords:
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Thursday’s TV/Radio Listings for Dallas–Fort Worth (April 2)

Thursday’s TV/Radio Listings for Dallas–Fort Worth (April 2)

Dallas–Fort Worth sports fans can plan their viewing and listening day with the release of Thursday’s local television and radio schedule for April 2. The lineup, issued for the metroplex area, details every sports broadcast available on regional TV channels and radio stations, ensuring supporters know exactly when and where to follow their teams.
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Mendoza impressive during Indiana’s pro day

Mendoza impressive during Indiana’s pro day

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — With representatives from all 32 NFL clubs looking on, Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza capped Indiana’s most-watched pro-day workout in program history by completing the vast majority of his 56 scripted throws inside the John Mellencamp Pavilion. The 6-foot-5, 236-pound quarterback—11 pounds heavier than his listed 2025 playing weight—alternated between short rhythm passes, intermediate in-breaking routes and deep shots to both sidelines, rolling out on several reps to showcase his movement skills. Only a handful of balls hit the turf, the most notable an overthrown post to Elijah Sarratt that sailed a half-yard past the receiver’s outstretched hands. “I feel like it went great,” Mendoza said afterward. “Quarterbacks have done shorter pro days than that, but I wanted to make sure everybody could showcase their abilities in front of all 32 NFL teams and run routes that are applicable to the timing we’re going to be running in the NFL.” The session drew more than 100 credentialed media members and dozens of former Hoosiers’ family members, creating a scene unprecedented for an Indiana pro day. While most positional drills proceeded in relative anonymity, the crowd clustered around the 50-yard line whenever Mendoza stepped under center, television lights illuminating both end zones. Wednesday’s workout marked the only on-field throwing Mendoza has done for scouts since skipping drills at February’s NFL scouting combine. The performance came three months after he completed 72 percent of his passes for 3,535 yards and 41 touchdowns against six interceptions, leading Indiana to its first outright Big Ten championship since 1945 and the school’s first national title. Along the way he defeated Ohio State, Alabama, Oregon and Miami in succession, further burnishing a résumé that has made him the presumptive No. 1 overall selection in the April 23 draft. Las Vegas, which holds the top pick, has already conducted two meetings with the Boston-born quarterback—one at the combine and another via Zoom—and has an additional session scheduled before draft night. Mendoza, a self-described longtime fan of Raiders minority owner Tom Brady, called the franchise “a perfect fit.” Even so, he emphasized the learning curve ahead. “There’s going to be a lot more snaps under center, and that’s a big adjustment,” Mendoza said. “The hash marks are more condensed, the speed of the game is faster—so all those things I look forward to learning.” After his final throw, Mendoza joined teammates in a sprint to the end zone, the group embracing in a moment he described as one of gratitude for a historic season. “It’s unlikely we’ll all play on the same team again,” he said, “but hopefully I’ll get to play against and with some of those guys again.”
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