Expert Sports News & Commentary

Goalkeeper who ‘plays a bit like’ Manuel Neuer might leave Bundesliga club, handing Tottenham a boost
Tottenham Hotspur’s goalkeeping overhaul could receive a timely lift as SC Freiburg’s highly-rated No. 1 Noah Atubolu is weighing up a summer departure, with the Premier League believed to be his preferred destination. The 23-year-old, described by German outlet Bild as a keeper who “plays a bit like” Bayern Munich and Germany icon Manuel Neuer, has signalled his readiness to leave his boyhood club at the end of the season to accelerate his development on a bigger stage.
Atubolu has been Freiburg’s first-choice since the start of the 2023-24 campaign, registering 36 clean sheets in 111 competitive appearances. Renowned for penalty-saving prowess and cat-like reflexes, the 6ft 3in German has enhanced his reputation this season and is eyeing involvement in the 2026 FIFA World Cup. That ambition, coupled with a desire to test himself abroad, has put several top European clubs on red alert.
Tottenham, West Ham, Napoli, AC Milan and Inter Milan have all been credited with an interest, but Spurs’ need is arguably the most pressing. Guglielmo Vicario, signed from Empoli in 2023, has failed to convince between the sticks and is actively pushing for a return to Italy amid the persistent instability at the north-London club. Inter Milan have already explored a loan-plus-option structure for the 29-year-old, and former Italy international Walter Zenga has publicly endorsed the move.
Beyond Vicario, back-up keeper Antonin Kinsky is also seeking regular football elsewhere, leaving Tottenham’s goalkeeping cupboard bare ahead of the 2026-27 campaign. Securing Atubolu would represent a significant upgrade for a side currently hovering just one point above the Premier League relegation zone, although survival remains a prerequisite if Spurs hope to entice the former Germany Under-21 international to N17.
With Atubolu set to spark a summer scramble, Tottenham’s hierarchy view the Freiburg star as a long-term solution capable of growing into one of the world’s elite keepers under the right guidance. Whether they can beat rival suitors to his signature may hinge as much on league status as on financial muscle.
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Who Should Be England’s Number 10 at the World Cup?
Dallas, 17 June 2026. England kick off their World Cup campaign against Croatia and the only question louder than the Texas heat is this: who wears the number 10 shirt? Thomas Tuchel, the man tasked with ending 60 years of hurt, must decide between the industrious form horse who carried him through qualifying and a constellation of galactic names peaking at precisely the right moment.
Morgan Rogers has been the incumbent for two years, starting four of the last five internationals and helping England post an immaculate eight wins, zero goals conceded in qualifying. The 23-year-old Aston Villa schemer has been his club’s catalyst this season—ten goals, seven assists—and Tuchel values his relentless pressing, ball-carrying and refusal to drift out of games. Yet his England ledger is modest: two direct goal involvements in ten caps. Is that enough to keep Jude Bellingham, Cole Palmer, Phil Foden and Eberechi Eze at arm’s length?
Bellingham remains the romantic choice. The Real Madrid midfielder was England’s talisman at Euro 2024, scoring a last-gasp overhead kick against Slovakia and a winner versus Serbia. A year of injuries and fluctuating form has clouded his club season, but the 21-year-old’s capacity for the spectacular keeps him in every debate. Tuchel has already shifted him deeper to accommodate Rogers; reverting the balance would be a statement of star power over system.
Cole Palmer’s case is built on moments. He set up Ollie Watkins’ 90th-minute semi-final winner against the Netherlands, equalised in the Euro 2024 final, and struck a Club World Cup final brace for Chelsea in the very stadium that will host this summer’s showpiece. No squad member conjures match-winning magic as routinely, but Palmer’s recent injury record forces Tuchel to weigh brilliance against continuity.
Eberechi Eze took his summer move to Arsenal and turned it into a personal highlight reel: eight goals, six assists, and a north-London derby demolition of Tottenham in which he scored five across two meetings. On song, Tuchel’s staff concede, he is the most unplayable attacker in the pool. Still, the feeling inside the camp is that Eze’s impact is best served off the bench or from wide areas.
Phil Foden’s stock has slid after two underwhelming seasons, yet the 25-year-old’s Champions League pedigree and ability to manipulate pockets of space remain elite. Tuchel values versatility, and Foden’s past status as England’s—and perhaps Europe’s—outstanding performer buys him one last audition. The March friendlies against Uruguay and Japan will decide whether he boards the plane as a wildcard or stays home.
Spain sit atop the bookmakers’ boards at 9/2; England are 11/2 second-favourites, a price that reflects both their defensive dominance and the firepower Tuchel must now sort. Rogers offers the safest tactical fit, Bellingham the generational x-factor, Palmer the chaos agent, Eze the wildcard, Foden the fading genius seeking rebirth.
When the squad is unveiled on Friday, all eyes will drift to the attacking-midfield line. Stick with the process that delivered perfection in qualifying, or twist for the marquee names who live for the biggest stage? In the Texas dusk on 17 June, Tuchel’s answer will either extend an empire of hope or resurrect an old English ghost.
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Varun Chakravarthy used his skills incorrectly at T20 World Cup: Amit Mishra
Kolkata, June 11 — Varun Chakravarthy’s dramatic reversal of fortune between IPL 2023 and last November’s T20 World Cup was not the result of batsmen “reading” his mystery spin, but of the bowler himself abandoning the methods that made him successful, insists veteran India leg-spinner Amit Mishra.
Speaking exclusively to TimesofIndia.com, Mishra said the 32-year-old’s dip in the global tournament—despite finishing joint-highest wicket-taker—stemmed from a hurried, pace-heavy approach that stripped away the subtlety that had tormented IPL line-ups.
“In the T20 World Cup, Varun was using his skills a bit incorrectly,” Mishra stated. “He started bowling a bit too fast, leaving his strengths. In the IPL last year, he used to bowl one slow ball, one top-spin, one googly, and one leg-spin. He wasn’t doing that under pressure when runs were being scored.”
Mishra, who owns three IPL hat-tricks, believes the fix is straightforward: return to the tempo and sequencing that brought Chakravarthy 20 wickets at an economy of 8.15 in IPL 2023. “You need someone to tell you, to explain. Everyone knows execution is important; that’s why I say stick to your strengths.”
The conversation highlights a wider trend in T20 cricket: the rise—and occasional fall—of mystery spinners. Since the format’s birth, bowlers like Sunil Narine, Ajantha Mendis, Abrar Ahmed and Mujeeb Ur Rahman have shaped team strategies, aided by the Decision Review System that encourages umpires to trust marginal calls. Yet Mishra cautions that variations alone cannot replace classical virtues.
“Simple bowling in T20 means that when you already have some help from the pitch, you shouldn’t try too hard for wickets,” he explained. “Stick to your good areas, stick to your strengths. If it’s going well, keep bowling at that pace until it’s necessary to change.”
The former India spinner also addressed the modern batting arsenal—reverse sweeps, switch hits, power-hitting in the first two overs—that forces bowlers into a defensive mindset. “Indian players now have a variety of shots we earlier saw mostly from foreign players. If you put pressure on the bowler in the first 12 balls, it puts them on the backfoot.”
Even so, Mishra argues that spinners must not over-react to soaring totals—250 has become routine in the IPL—by overloading on variations. “A spinner’s job is to spin the ball. You should know how to spin it.”
On analytics-driven match-ups, Mishra remains sceptical of rigid rules. “I never believed a left-arm orthodox spinner can’t bowl to a left-hander or an off-spinner can’t bowl to a right-hander. If you have the skills, you can do it.” He cites Rashid Khan as the template for discipline: “He stays around 100 kph, that’s his strength. He doesn’t leave it.”
Looking toward the next IPL cycle, Mishra refuses to single out rising spinners but sets a clear benchmark: “When you are new, people haven’t seen much of you, so you have more chances to perform. Now I want to see what changes they have made in their bowling this year, what mindset they have brought, what they have enhanced.”
For Varun Chakravarthy, the message from one of India’s most successful T20 wrist-spinners is unambiguous: slow it down, trust the variations that worked, and remember that mystery minus execution is merely guesswork.
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Premier League predictions: Tottenham vs Forest, Newcastle vs Sunderland and the rest of Matchday 31
Matchday 31 arrives with only eight fixtures on the schedule, Manchester City and Arsenal having been displaced by Sunday’s Carabao Cup final, and the stakes could scarcely be higher at either end of the table. In The Athletic’s rolling predictions game—now entering its 31st week—writer Oliver Kay trails the subscriber panel by a single point and six-year-old Wilfred by the same margin, but a late surge inspired by Max Dowman’s stoppage-time heroics for Arsenal against Everton has reopened a contest that once looked runaway.
Kay, who correctly called both the 2-0 scoreline at the Emirates and Manchester United’s 3-1 defeat of Aston Villa last weekend, will look to capitalise on a reduced slate that still offers plenty of intrigue. Chief among the talking points is Sunday’s early kick-off at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, where Spurs and Nottingham Forest meet in what Kay labels “a scrap” with relegation implications. Neither Vitor Pereira nor Igor Tudor has yet registered a league victory, but Tottenham’s mid-week comeback to eliminate Atlético Madrid on penalties—coupled with an extra 24 hours of recovery—has persuaded Kay to abandon an initial impulse favouring Forest and side instead with a home win.
Friday night’s curtain-raiser on the south coast pits Bournemouth against a Manchester United side buoyed by Bruno Fernandes, the division’s form player. Although the Cherries are unbeaten in five previous Premier League encounters with United (two wins, three draws), Kay concedes that an away victory feels “lazy” yet unavoidable given the visitors’ attacking armoury.
Liverpool’s visit to Brighton on Saturday lunchtime triggers similar hesitation. The Seagulls have the quality to trouble Jürgen Klopp’s men, yet Kay expects the Merseysiders—fresh from a dazzling display against Galatasaray—to edge it on firepower alone. Likewise, Chelsea’s trip to Everton is framed by the Blues’ erratic form and an 8-2 aggregate humbling by Paris Saint-Germain, but their superior away record (seven league wins) trumps the Toffees’ meagre five home victories and tips the scales in favour of an away triumph.
Leeds, desperate to escape the drop zone, host Fulham at Elland Road. Marco Silva’s contract situation continues to make headlines, yet Kay believes the Cottagers’ relative stability outweighs any off-pitch uncertainty and forecasts a home success that would hand Leeds “much-needed breathing space”.
The weekend’s emotional crescendo comes at St James’ Park, where Newcastle attempt to end a league derby drought against Sunderland stretching back to August 2011. Despite the Magpies’ draining 7-2 aggregate loss to Barcelona in the Europa League, Kay trusts the fervent atmosphere and a week-old hunch to predict a Newcastle victory, reversing the outcome he foresaw—and got right—in December.
West Ham and Aston Villa close the round on Monday. Villa’s early-season over-performance of expected goals has regressed, while West Ham have flirted with extremes: dominating matches only to draw, then scoring with their sole effort to steal a point against Manchester City. Anticipating a cagey affair, Kay opts for a cheeky draw that edges David Moyes’ side closer to safety.
With only eight matches on offer, every prediction carries amplified weight. Kay, Wilfred, the rotating subscriber guest—this week Elizabeth, a 42-year-old Newcastle devotee from San Francisco—and the resident algorithm all know that a single correct scoreline could swing the season-long standings. After 30 rounds the subscribers lead Wilfred by a point; Kay lurks a further seven back; the algorithm props up the table. Matchday 31 offers no guarantees, only the promise of more drama in the race that really matters.
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Is Free Hit the smartest play for Fantasy Premier League Gameweek 31?
Blank Gameweek 31 has arrived, stripping the schedule of Arsenal, Manchester City, Crystal Palace and Wolves and forcing Fantasy Premier League managers into a familiar dilemma: burn the Free Hit chip or hold firm and accept a reduced XI. With millions of rivals facing the same void, the decision is less about panic and more about mathematics.
The golden rule, according to seasoned analysts, is simple: if you can field nine starters without assistance, keep the chip. Fewer than nine active players and the Free Hit becomes almost compulsory. A calculated –4 hit can also bridge the gap, because the outgoing player would have contributed zero anyway, while a well-chosen replacement still has 90 minutes to recoup the penalty.
Those leaning against the chip point to Gameweek 34, forecast to be an even larger blank, and to the double-fixture Gameweek 33 that precedes it. Squads that survive this round with transfers alone will have far more flexibility when the calendar tightens again later in the run-in.
Should you trigger the chip, the target list is short and enticing. Fulham, at home to last-placed Burnley—the division’s worst defence by goals and expected goals conceded—head the queue. Three Cottagers are viewed as essential: Harry Wilson at £6.0 m, bargain centre-back Joachim Andersen at £4.5 m, and either Alex Iwobi (£6.4 m) or Raul Jimenez (£6.2 m) for a third attacking slot. A double defensive stack is also in play.
Newcastle’s visit from local rivals Sunderland offers the next-best route to points. Anthony Gordon (£7.3 m) arrives in form with goals in back-to-back league outings, assured minutes and penalty duties, while full-back pair Malick Thiaw (£5.0 m) and Lewis Hall (£5.3 m) give budget access to a home clean-sheet shot.
Manchester United, under Michael Carrick, supply the most reliable captaincy anchor in Bruno Fernandes (£10.2 m). The Portuguese combines set-piece responsibility, penalties and near-certain starts, making him the standout armband choice. Carrick’s other recommended asset is midfielder Bryan Mbeumo (£8.6 m).
Liverpool assets such as Mohamed Salah, Dominik Szoboszlai, Hugo Ekitike and Virgil van Dijk will be popular among Free Hitters for their away date with Brighton, yet the prevailing view is that this is a week to fade the Reds and invest elsewhere.
A template Free Hit side built on these principles features a spine of Fulham and Newcastle talent, Fernandes as skipper, and a bench stocked with playing defenders like Ezri Konsa and Van Dijk alongside keeper Martin Dubravka. The emphasis is on guaranteed minutes rather than long-term value, because the entire squad resets next Monday.
For managers who have already played their Wildcard—or plan to deploy it in Gameweek 32 to set up a Bench Boost in the Double Gameweek 33—the Free Hit offers a clean slate without compromising future structure. Conversely, anyone Wildcarding in 32 can afford one-week punts now, knowing a full squad overhaul is only days away.
Whether you spend the chip or soldier on with nine men, the priority is protecting rank ahead of the season-defining doubles ahead. Navigate Blank Gameweek 31 with restraint, and the rewards could resonate through May.
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German NT coach Julian Nagelsmann talks national team debutant Lennart Karl
Germany head coach Julian Nagelsmann has hailed the fearless approach of 18-year-old Lennart Karl after awarding the Bayern Munich teenager a maiden senior call-up that vaults him past several youth levels and straight into the senior squad.
Speaking via the @iMiaSanMia social channel, Nagelsmann outlined his expectations for the youngster, who has caught the eye since breaking into the Bavarian club’s first-team picture earlier this campaign.
“I expect him to bring his youthful exuberance to the pitch,” the national-team boss said. “He likes to play centrally, but we also plan to use him on the right. However, I won’t put any pressure on him to perform miracles. He should bring exactly what a young player embodies and play football freely and from the heart, as he’s been doing at FC Bayern.”
Karl’s rapid ascent means he will join the senior setup barely a month after turning 18, underscoring both his early-season form and the coaching staff’s willingness to fast-track emerging talent. Aside from a brief off-field distraction involving Austria international Alexander Prass, whose ill-advised comment and accompanying thumbs-up gesture drew criticism, the teenager’s trajectory remains steeply upward.
For Nagelsmann, the message is clear: Karl’s invitation is a reward for fearless, creative play, and the youngster will be encouraged to express himself without the burden of unrealistic expectations.
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What football thinks of Tottenham's tailspin: 'Incompetence of the highest order'
London — For months the rest of the game has watched Tottenham Hotspur’s spiral with the same horrified fascination reserved for a multi-car pile-up. With eight Premier League fixtures remaining the club sit one place above the relegation zone, winless in the league since New Year’s Day and, in the blunt verdict of one Champions League club executive, guilty of “incompetence of the highest order”.
The Athletic canvassed more than a dozen figures — sporting directors, chairmen, analysts, agents and coaches across England and Germany — to discover how the sport views Spurs’ predicament. Every respondent was granted anonymity to speak candidly; several conversations took place before Wednesday’s 3-2 second-leg victory over Atlético Madrid, a result that merely trimmed an ultimately fatal 7-5 aggregate Champions League exit.
Inside Bundesliga boardrooms the scenario feels ominously familiar. “We saw this with big German clubs — wrong decisions stacked up for years,” said one director. “Hamburg assumed promotion would be automatic. They spent seven seasons in the second division.”
The search for a single scapegoat ends empty-handed. Igor Tudor, appointed in February after the dismissal of Thomas Frank, has found no public defenders inside the game. “They hired the only coach in Europe willing to risk relegating a Super League side,” an English club executive said. “He’s never worked in England, never stayed anywhere longer than a year, and fans looked at the CV and said, ‘What the hell?’”
Yet managerial churn is viewed as symptomatic, not causal. Since 2016 Spurs’ revenues have rocketed 152 per cent to a record £528.4 million, turbo-charged by a state-of-the-art stadium hosting NFL fixtures, concerts and boxing. The training ground, opened in 2012, remains the envy of the country. “They built the perfect platform,” said a Premier League sporting director, “then forgot the team.”
Recruitment is painted as directionless. “They don’t know what they are,” a rival chairman concluded. “They can’t replicate Brighton’s model, can’t outspend Arsenal or Chelsea, and end up with a Frankenstein squad stitched together by different coaches with different philosophies.”
January’s panic signing of Conor Gallagher on wages that instantly eclipsed those of senior pros has further unsettled the dressing room. “If Gallagher is suddenly the top earner, Van de Ven and Romero are saying, ‘Hold on…’” an agent noted. “Daniel Levy would not have done that deal.”
Levy’s removal last September after 24 years as chairman divides opinion among fans but not among industry peers. “He was never the problem,” one executive said. Another agent added: “If Daniel was there, no chance they’d be in this mess. The seismic boardroom change has left them looking inexperienced.”
On the pitch the identity has evaporated. Analysts see neither the defensive rigour of Antonio Conte’s tenure nor the front-foot pressing of Ange Postecoglou. “They’re trying to combine both and achieving neither,” said a data specialist. The nadir arrived in Madrid: 4-0 down after 21 minutes, rookie goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky substituted in the 17th minute, eventually eliminated 7-5 on aggregate.
Still, the consensus says Spurs will scrape clear. “Whatever happens, they face years of surgery: moving on average players, rebuilding the squad, finding people who understand football, not just revenue streams,” warned one board member.
Sunday’s home fixture against Nottingham Forest, one spot below them in 17th, shapes as a season-defining six-pointer. Spurs have not won a league match at their own stadium since 6 December. The football world will be rubbernecking once again.
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Breaking down the 15 seconds and Emiliano Martinez's incredible pass that gave Aston Villa their fireworks
Aston Villa’s Europa League last-16 tie with Lille was drifting toward anxiety until one electrifying 15-second burst lit up Villa Park and settled the contest. The moment began with a routine save and ended with captain John McGinn sliding the ball into the bottom-right corner, but everything in between was pure theatre orchestrated by Emiliano Martinez.
In the 54th minute, Nabil Bentaleb’s curling free-kick was comfortably gathered by the Argentine keeper. Within six seconds, Martinez had ignored Victor Lindelof’s plea to slow play, steadied himself on the edge of his box and unleashed a laser-like 50-metre pass that kissed the turf once before meeting Jadon Sancho’s laces. The side-winding, top-spun delivery evaded Olivier Giroud’s half-hearted block and invited Sancho to surge into the vacant Lille half.
Sancho, instructed by Unai Emery at half-time to “run in behind”, did exactly that. He chopped inside Felix Correia, drew the last defender and squared for the onrushing McGinn, who arrived in stride to finish first-time. From Bentaleb’s strike to McGinn’s celebration, the clock read 15 seconds; the aggregate scoreline read 3-1; Villa Park read pandemonium.
Martinez celebrated as if he had scored, barging into Amadou Onana and roaring toward the Holte End, fully aware that his distribution, not merely his shot-stopping, had propelled Villa into the quarter-finals. It was the latest chapter in his personal saga with Lille, dating back to World Cup taunts and last season’s penalty-shootout drama.
Emery, marking his 100th club win, later recalled Martinez’s similar assist against Club Brugge and praised his keeper’s ability to “help us a lot… playing with the ball in combination.” The long pass was no fluke; it was a calculated weapon, and on this night it turned cautious possession into decisive transition, extinguishing any French resistance.
McGinn wheeled away pointing straight at Martinez; Morgan Rogers sprinted back to hug him; Sancho met him on the halfway line. The stadium, momentarily subdued, now belted out the goalkeeper’s name, fireworks overhead matching the on-pitch pyrotechnics Martinez had single-handedly supplied.
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Japan vs Australia: Women’s Asian Cup final – team news, start and lineups
Sydney’s Stadium Australia will stage a shot at redemption on Saturday night when an unbeaten Australia meet two-time champions Japan in the AFC Women’s Asian Cup final, kick-off at 8pm local time (09:00 GMT).
The same stretch of turf that witnessed the Matildas’ 3-1 World Cup semi-final heart-break to England in 2023 now offers the hosts the chance to claim a first major trophy in front of an expected 83,500-strong crowd and finally erase the memory of two previous final losses to the Nadeshiko.
Australia’s road to the decider has been dramatic. After finishing second in Group A behind a late 3-3 draw with South Korea, Joe Montemurro’s side edged North Korea 2-1 in the quarter-finals before a bruising 2-1 semi-final win over nine-time champions China. Skipper Sam Kerr, four goals in five games since returning from a two-year ACL lay-off, struck the decisive goal mid-week, while centre-back Alanna Kennedy has contributed five goals in as many matches and Caitlin Foord has created three assists.
Japan, by contrast, have been ruthless. World No 6 and the tournament’s highest-ranked side, the Nadeshiko topped Group C with a perfect record, scoring 17 goals without reply, then demolished the Philippines 7-0 and South Korea 4-1 to reach their fourth consecutive final. Riko Ueki’s six goals lead the competition, while winger Kiko Seike has four in four. Across five matches Japan have tallied 28 goals and conceded only once.
History favours the visitors. Japan defeated Australia 1-0 in both the 2014 and 2018 finals and routed the Matildas 4-0 in last year’s SheBelieves Cup. Australia’s lone continental triumph came in 2010, when a 16-year-old Kerr opened the scoring in a penalty shoot-out victory over North Korea.
The victors will pocket US$1.8 million, unchanged from 2022 and a fraction of the US$14.8 million awarded to the men’s Asian Cup champions last year.
Montemurro is expected to reward defender Winonah Heatley with a start ahead of Clare Hunt. Mackenzie Arnold will anchor a back four that includes Ellie Carpenter, Steph Catley and Kaitlyn Torpey, while Kyra Cooney-Cross, Kennedy and Katrina Gorry marshal the middle. Kerr will spearhead the attack alongside Mary Fowler and Caitlin Foord.
Japan coach Nils Nielsen, who labelled Australia “massive favourites” on home soil, is likely to stick with the XI that overcame South Korea: Ayaka Yamashita in goal; Hana Takahashi, Toko Koga, captain Saki Kumagai and Hikaru Kitagawa across the back; Fuka Nagano, Hinata Miyazawa and Yui Hasegawa in midfield; and the front three of Maika Hamano, Ueki and Aoba Fujino.
Al Jazeera Sport’s build-up begins at 06:30 GMT, with live text commentary streaming from the opening whistle.
Japan vs Australia, Women’s Asian Cup final, Stadium Australia, Sydney, Saturday 8pm (09:00 GMT)
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Messi Scores 900th Career Goal, Joins Ronaldo In Elite Club
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. — Lionel Messi etched his name even deeper into football immortality on Wednesday night, striking inside seven minutes to register the 900th senior career goal of his storied journey and propel Inter Miami to an early lead over Nashville SC in the second leg of their Concacaf regional last-16 tie. The landmark finish, a low left-footed drive that beat keeper Joe Willis at the near post, ignited celebrations at Chase Stadium, where Miami hoped to turn the occasion into both a qualification party and a fond farewell to their home of five seasons.
The jubilation proved short-lived. Cristian Espinoza lashed a 74th-minute equalizer past Miami goalkeeper Drake Callender, leveling the aggregate score at 1-1 and sending the visitors through on the away-goals tiebreaker after the hosts could not find a second reply. The 1-1 final whistle ushered Nashville into the quarter-finals and ended Miami’s continental campaign on a bittersweet note.
Yet the night will be remembered primarily for the Argentine’s milestone. At 38, Messi became only the second man in modern recorded history to reach 900 senior goals, joining long-time rival Cristiano Ronaldo (965) in a statistical stratosphere few have approached. The strike was his 81st since arriving in South Florida in 2023, supplementing career hauls of 672 for Barcelona, 32 for Paris Saint-Germain and 115 for Argentina. Wednesday’s goal arrived almost exactly 21 years after his first, a May 2005 effort against Albacete that announced a 17-year-old prodigy to the world.
Inter Miami head coach Javier Mascherano, who partnered Messi for club and country, lauded the achievement before kickoff. “The number we’re talking about is insane, and that’s why Leo is one of a kind,” he said. “I’ve been lucky enough to see most of those goals much closer than you all, and that’s a privilege.”
The match also closed an era. Chase Stadium, a 19,000-seat venue that has housed Miami since their 2020 MLS inception, hosted its final contest before the club relocates next month to a new 26,700-seat, soccer-specific stadium three miles north. Messi waved to fans in a post-match lap, applauding supporters who have watched him lift the 2023 Leagues Cup and 2025 MLS Cup in the ground’s final seasons.
With his 900-goal benchmark secured, Messi now turns his attention to international duty. He is widely expected to feature in a record sixth World Cup later this year as Argentina defend their crown across the United States, Canada and Mexico. Under contract with Inter Miami through the 2028 season, the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner shows few signs of slowing the pursuit of the only man still ahead of him on the all-time list.
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Fabian Hurzeler thinks Brighton fans can make the difference during taxing run-in
Brighton & Hove Albion’s final weeks of the season read like a European contender’s nightmare, yet the Seagulls themselves are only 12th in the Premier League. Three of their last four home fixtures pit Fabian Hurzeler’s side against clubs currently in the scramble for Champions League places, beginning with Liverpool’s visit on Saturday and ending with Manchester United on May 24. Sandwiched between are Chelsea, whose league date of April 26 could yet shift to midweek if they progress past Port Vale in the FA Cup quarter-finals, and a May 9 meeting with already-doomed Wolves.
The Amex has become an unlikely king-maker. Liverpool have lost three of their last five trips to Sussex; Chelsea have won once in their last four league visits; United have lost seven of the last ten encounters with Brighton under four different caretakers or managers. Hurzeler, whose team have drawn six times at home this term, believes the decisive edge can come from the stands rather than the tactics board.
“I felt against Arsenal that we created a really good atmosphere,” the 31-year-old head coach said, referencing the 1-0 loss to the league leaders in which he publicly called out the visitors’ time-wasting. “The fans were behind it immediately. That gave us so much energy. If we stick together, we can be a club that no one wants to play against.”
The call for unity marks a sharp pivot from early February, when sections of the stadium chanted for Hurzeler’s dismissal after a 1-0 home defeat to Crystal Palace extended a winless league run to one victory in 12. A 2-1 win over Nottingham Forest on the first weekend of March, followed by the hard-fought loss to Arsenal, has restored a more buoyant mood around the Amex.
Hurzeler insists the volatility is welcome. “Everyone is allowed to share their emotions in our stadium because we want fans that are passionate. If I do bad things, I’m responsible and the fans can criticise me.”
Off the pitch, the club is working to keep supporters engaged beyond the glamour ties. Season-ticket renewal hit 90% last week, and from 2026-27 season-ticket holders will be able to share seats at no extra cost with club members, or with non-members for a small uplift. The initiative is part of a broader effort to combat what officials privately term “Premier League fatigue”: traffic bottlenecks around the Amex, limited parking after the loss of 400 spaces in 2021, and long post-match queues at Falmer station.
The Terrace fan zone, opened last year, has proved popular but keeps fans on site longer, extending the congestion. Even so, the club’s 125th anniversary next season—only 14 of which have been spent in the top flight—reminds supporters that the current stretch remains a historic outlier.
Brighton’s role as spoiler could yet shape the Champions League picture. A positive result against Liverpool on Saturday would tighten the race for fourth, while anything taken off Chelsea and United in the final fortnight could prove decisive for European qualification. Hurzeler’s message is simple: the 12th man may be the club’s most influential player over the next six weeks.
“We all together should create an environment where no one wants to come into our stadium,” he said. “That’s something we have to see as a long-term goal at this club—together with the fans.”
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Bayern Munich News: Amid Real Madrid, Liverpool interest, how much will it cost to extend Michael Olise’s contract?
Bayern Munich are preparing to reward Michael Olise with a lucrative new deal in an effort to fend off mounting interest from Real Madrid and Liverpool, sources have confirmed. The 24-year-old winger, who only arrived from Crystal Palace last summer, is already under contract until 2029, but the Bavarian giants now want to extend that agreement by an additional two seasons through 2031.
Olise’s current terms see him earn a base salary of €13.51 million plus €3.38 million in bonuses for a total annual package of €16.89 million, according to salary-tracking site Capology. With Europe’s elite circling, Bayern executives understand that a sizeable raise will be required to convince the France youth international to commit his long-term future to the club. Estimates within the club suggest a total financial package worth around €22 million per year could be necessary to get the extension over the line.
Real Madrid have emerged as the latest suitors, aiming to scupper any hopes Liverpool harbour of striking a deal for Olise at the end of the season. Spanish sources indicate that Los Blancos have already sounded out intermediaries over a potential summer swoop, while Liverpool’s recruitment staff have tracked the player since his days in south London. Aware of the escalating interest, Vincent Kompany’s side have prioritised securing Olise’s signature on fresh terms when the transfer window opens.
Despite the speculation, no formal offers have yet been submitted, allowing Bayern to retain control of the situation for now. Negotiations are expected to accelerate once the club finalise their budget for next season, with sporting directors keen to avoid another high-profile departure similar to those that have punctuated recent windows.
Elsewhere, Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur are monitoring Hoffenheim striker Fisnik Asllani, though Bayern have also registered their admiration for the 23-year-old, who has eight goals and five assists in 25 Bundesliga appearances this term. Any move for Asllani would be independent of Olise’s contract talks, but it underlines the club’s desire to continue investing in emerging talent.
For the moment, however, the focus remains squarely on Olise. Bayern know that the numbers involved will be steep, yet the cost of losing him to a European rival could prove even greater.
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The Mexico World Cup 2026 away kit is out - and it's absolutely stunning
Adidas has unveiled Mexico’s 2026 World Cup away jersey, and early verdicts from fans and kit spotters alike are unanimous: El Tricolor’s change strip is a master-class in understated elegance. Released ahead of this summer’s tournament, the shirt swaps the exuberance of the home kit for a crisp, clean aesthetic rooted in tradition yet sharpened for the modern game.
A pure-white base dominates the shirt, interrupted only by a barely-there geometric micro-pattern inspired by ancient Mesoamerican art. The motif, woven directly into the fabric, offers texture without clutter, ensuring the jersey feels fresh from the stands to the street. Adidas has deliberately dialled back the colour volume after the kaleidoscopic home shirt, trusting subtlety to carry the design.
Collar and cuffs provide the statement moments. A deep V-neck is edged in Mexico’s signature dark green, while slim red piping traces the neckline and sleeve hems, adding just enough contrast to catch the eye. The iconic adidas Trefoil—reinstated for all 2026 national-team away kits—sits proudly on the right chest, flanked by three stripes that run in a dark-green/red/dark-green sequence down each shoulder.
The full ensemble pairs the shirt with dark-green shorts and matching socks, both accented by red and white trim to complete a cohesive, travel-ready look. Purists will appreciate the continuation of Mexico’s long-standing white-and-green palette, yet the refined execution feels entirely new.
Available to purchase immediately, the jersey is already being tipped as a crossover hit. FourFourTwo notes that plenty of neutral supporters are likely to adopt it as a summer staple, testament to its versatile design. In a World Cup cycle crowded with bold experiments, Mexico’s away offering proves that restraint can still turn heads.
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Game time set for Arkansas basketball vs High Point in March Madness second round
Portland, Ore. — The Arkansas Razorbacks and High Point Panthers now know exactly when they will collide for a berth in the NCAA Tournament’s West Region Sweet 16. Tipoff is scheduled for 8:45 p.m. Central Time on Saturday, March 21, inside the Moda Center, the downtown arena normally home to the NBA’s Portland Trail Blazers.
No. 4 seed Arkansas (27-8) advanced with a dominant opening-round victory over Hawaii, while No. 12 seed High Point (30-4) turned heads by toppling fifth-seeded Wisconsin in the first major upset of this year’s bracket. The winner will move within one victory of the Elite Eight.
Saturday’s contest will be carried nationally on either TBS or truTV as part of the tournament’s second-round television rotation.
The appearance marks the 25th NCAA Tournament trip for Arkansas coach John Calipari, who owns a 60-23 record in national-bracket games. It is his second March Madness run at the helm of the Razorbacks.
Arkansas vs. High Point represents one of the more intriguing pairings of the round, pitting the Razorbacks’ high-major athleticism against a Panthers squad fresh off a statement win and looking to extend its historic season.
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Friday’s TV/Radio listings (March 20)
Texas Tech tips off its NCAA Tournament campaign against Akron on Friday, March 20, in a matchup featured among the day’s most anticipated first-round contests. The contest anchors a packed slate of opening-round games scheduled for broadcast across television and radio platforms, giving fans a full day of March Madness action.
Viewers can consult local listings for tip-off times and channel assignments, while radio audiences can catch the call on affiliated stations. The Red Raiders’ opening test against the Zips highlights a schedule loaded with potential bracket-busting showdowns, setting the stage for a dramatic start to the tournament.
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Stephen Curry’s Personal Trainer Shares Update on Warriors Star’s Return With Bold Playoff Claim
San Francisco—Golden State’s playoff pulse is being taken hourly, and the man who knows Stephen Curry’s body best insists the heartbeat is still strong. Speaking Wednesday on The Line with Dr. Kristine Holmes, Brandon Payne—the performance coach who has guided Curry through every stage of his 15-year career—offered the clearest window yet into the two-time MVP’s stalled recovery from a runner’s knee ailment that has sidelined him since late January.
“If he can play, he’s gonna play,” Payne said flatly. “He loves competing, he loves to play. He also understands and values the fact that people wanna see him play, and fans want to come watch him play, and he enjoys that and loves that he has that responsibility to play for the people that love and support him. It’s just been a little bit kind of tricky.”
The trickiness Payne references is a layer of bone bruising that surfaced after the initial patellofemoral diagnosis, pushing Curry past the originally targeted post-All-Star-break return. According to Payne, the immediate priority is stringing together consecutive days of pain-free loading before the Warriors medical staff clears game action.
“I think that, right now, figuring out what the proper loading is for him to get him to that point is still where they kind of are,” Payne explained. “And they’ll figure it out. I do believe he’ll play again this year.”
That belief comes with an unambiguous postseason proviso: “Any time you have Stephen Curry on your team, in a playoff setting, you have a chance to win.” Payne projects a re-entry window of “the last 6-7 games of the season,” enough time, he argues, for Curry to rebuild rhythm ahead of a play-in push and, should Golden State survive that gauntlet, a full playoff slate.
The numbers illustrate the stakes. In 39 appearances this season Curry is averaging 27.2 points, 3.5 rebounds and 4.8 assists; the Warriors are 23-16 with him and 10-20 without him. Since his exit they have slid to 10th in the Western Conference, following Tuesday’s 99-120 loss in Boston with a 2-8 mark over their last 10.
Head coach Steve Kerr, whose staff has spent the interim experimenting with rotations around Draymond Green and newcomer Kristaps Porzingis, conceded the standings reality while clinging to the upside of a healthy roster. “We’re going to be in the play-in one way or the other,” Kerr told reporters. “So we have to prepare… If we are prepared when they get back, we can do damage, we can go on a run.”
Curry has remained visible despite the knee issue, attending recent home and road games in support of teammates and, on at least one occasion, wearing a new pair of Brooks Glycerin Max 2 shoes that instantly ricocheted across social media. Yet visibility does not equal availability, and Golden State’s upcoming slate—Detroit on Thursday, Atlanta and former Warrior Jonathan Kuminga this weekend—will likely unfold minus their offensive engine.
Paying heed to Kerr’s emphasis on “building better habits” before the cavalry returns, the Warriors are hoping to pocket winnable games now so that a late-season Curry reactivation carries tangible meaning. According to Payne, the franchise icon shares that urgency while refusing to rush the final phase of rehab.
“He’s just as eager as his fans to get back on the court,” Payne reiterated, “but he’s got to finish the process.”
Should that process culminate in the projected early-April comeback, Golden State will still need to survive a single-elimination play-in. Still, Payne’s message to the rest of the league is unmistakable: if Curry laces them up, count the Warriors among the most dangerous outs in the bracket.
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Several WWE wrestlers respond to Tom Brady’s latest jabs
Las Vegas – The verbal volley between seven-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady and the WWE locker room shows no signs of dying down. Weeks after Brady’s headline-graining exchange with Logan Paul on the ImPaulsive podcast, the future Hall of Fame quarterback doubled down on his critique of sports-entertainment while attending the Fanatics Flag Football Draft night.
“You know all their stuff is so cute and scripted,” Brady told Sports Illustrated. “And they know what’s going on. In a football game, you don’t know. So they wouldn’t even get near me. Plus, if I had a good offensive line, they’d punch those guys right in the throat, and they’d be probably crying. There’s no fake BS we do in American football. So, for those guys, it would be a whole different story.”
The remarks ricocheted across social media, prompting a wave of responses from WWE talent.
Charlotte Flair, a record-setting multi-time women’s champion, distilled Brady’s comments into a single sentence: “A lot of words to say ‘if I had five guys to protect me, I might be ok’.”
Danhausen, the promotion’s newest signee known for his comedic supernatural persona, issued a warning steeped in his trademark humor: “It would only take one [WWE] superstar to CURSE Tim Bordy.”
The Bella Twins, Nikki and Brie, kept their retort short and direct: “I bet I can sack you.”
Austin Theory, Logan Paul’s on-screen associate, also chimed in, tagging the YouTube star and writing, “[Logan Paul] let me know when you want to drop this goof.”
Perhaps the most biting reply came from former WWE performer James Ellsworth, who alluded to past NFL controversies: “Says the guy who was a part of more obvious ‘fixed’ games in sports history.”
With WrestleMania 42 slated for Las Vegas, speculation is mounting that the back-and-forth could culminate in a surprise appearance by Brady—or at least a satellite-fed segment—on WWE’s biggest stage. For now, fans will continue to monitor social media for the next salvo in this unlikely cross-sport feud.
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Tyne-Wear Derby Towers Over Carabao-Cup Weekend as Premier League Plot Thickens
While Wembley prepares to crown the first domestic silverware of the English season on Sunday, the fiercest fire will already have been lit 275 miles north, where Newcastle United and Sunderland reignite the Tyne-Wear derby at St. James’s Park. The fixture, among the weekend’s standout attractions, arrives with both clubs bruised and desperate for catharsis.
Newcastle’s midweek Champions League humbling in Barcelona left wounds still raw, yet the Magpies know victory against their newly-promoted neighbours would both soothe European pain and avenge October’s comical 1-0 defeat at the Stadium of Light, settled by Nick Woltemade’s own goal. Sunderland, winless in six of their last eight league outings and dumped from the FA Cup by League One Port Vale, view the short trip as a chance to rekindle early-season belief.
The rivalry’s return to the Premier League after a nine-year hiatus ensures the north-east will barely notice events in the capital, yet the table’s wider picture guarantees every hour of this match-packed weekend carries consequence. Liverpool, Chelsea and Manchester United all face road tests that could shape next season’s Champions League cast, while a cluster of relegation six-pointers threatens to redraw the survival battle before Monday’s newspapers hit the stands.
Friday night opens the slate on the south coast, where Bournemouth’s four-match draw streak has stalled a previously rampant charge. Manchester United, beaten only once since Michael Carrick resumed control, arrive at the Vitality with Bruno Fernandes four assists shy of equalling the competition’s single-season record of 20. A Cherries win would slash the gap on seventh-placed Brentford to a single point and keep alive dreams of a maiden European tour.
Liverpool, fresh from a 4–0 midweek rout that snapped their late-surrender funk, head to Brighton optimistic that a re-jigged front line—featuring Florian Wirtz and Dominik Szoboszlai as twin tens behind Mohamed Salah—can replicate the fluency that dumped the Seagulls from the FA Cup last month. Brighton, unbeaten in their last three league meetings with the Reds at the Amex, have won three of four overall and scent another statement result.
Saturday’s ledger is loaded: Burnley, nine points from safety, host Fulham in a contest Scott Parker’s strugglers must treat like a final; Everton welcome a reeling Chelsea—smarting from a record off-field fine and speculation over Enzo Fernández’s future—to the Hill Dickinson Stadium hoping to nudge back into the European conversation; Leeds, three points above the drop zone, face Brentford at Elland Road where back-to-back home defeats have cranked anxiety toward critical levels.
West Ham, lifted by a dogged point against Manchester City, travel to a depleted Aston Villa side on a three-game slide and coping with Europa League fatigue. A positive result would likely lift the Hammers out of the relegation places for the first time in nearly four months. Nottingham Forest, just a point above the drop, face Tottenham in a contest billed as the club’s most significant league fixture in a generation; the loser could end the weekend inside the bottom three.
Yet for all the sub-plots, the Tyne-Wear derby remains the weekend’s emotional epicentre. Newcastle manager David Moyes, aware that local pride and European redemption collide, must galvanise a squad drained by travel and disappointment. On the opposite bench, Régis Le Bris knows another positive result against regional rivals could jolt Sunderland’s survival push back to life. Expect noise, colour and, quite possibly, a result that reverberates long after the Carabao Cup is lifted in London.
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Jay Hill's Michigan defense has deep roots in Utah's past
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — When Jay Hill steps to the lectern inside Schembechler Hall, he carries more than a playbook; he carries a lineage that stretches from the Wasatch Range to the Big Ten. Michigan’s new defensive coordinator confirmed Thursday that the scheme he will deploy this fall is “awfully similar” to the one Jesse Minter used to guide the Wolverines to a national title, yet the DNA of the defense traces back three decades to Salt Lake City and a family named Whittingham.
Fred “Mad Dog” Whittingham installed the aggressive, multi-front system as Utah’s defensive coordinator from 1992-94. When the elder Whittingham stepped away, his son Kyle—today the longest-tenured head coach in major college football—took the reins of the Utes’ defense and refined the concepts he had learned at his father’s knee. The scheme survived coaching changes, conference realignments and the evolution of spread offenses because, as Hill puts it, “the roots and the bare bones…go all the way back to those guys.”
Hill would know. He was a defensive back at Utah in the late 1990s, making him one of the few current Power Five coordinators who actually played in the system he now teaches. After a nine-year head-coaching tenure at Weber State, Hill returned to the scheme in 2022 as BYU’s defensive play-caller, importing the Whittingham blueprint wholesale. When Michigan lured him to Ann Arbor this off-season, he packed the same playbook—tweaked for Big Ten physicality but philosophically unchanged.
The appeal, Hill says, is the marriage of complexity and soundness. Pre-snap rotations disguise coverage shells; post-snap blitz paths spring from unexpected angles without exposing the secondary to one-on-one isolation. “Everything we do is sound,” Hill emphasized. “We’re not guessing…It’s evenly spaced, but it’s coming from different directions, and it’s tough to pick up.”
That multiplicity is coached by a former offensive mind. Hill spent six seasons on the other side of the ball at Utah, tutoring tight ends and running backs. Those meetings taught him how protections are slid, how blitz hot routes are identified, how quarterbacks tip run-pass checks. “I got to know how we tried to beat certain coverages,” he said. “Now I can take the flip of that and just try to beat the offensive mind on the other side of the ball.”
Michigan has completed only two of 15 spring practices, but players already speak of a defense that feels familiar yet refreshed. The terminology mirrors Minter’s 2023 unit; the ethos harkens to the days when Fred Whittingham prowled the Rice-Eccles Stadium sideline and a teenage Jay Hill first learned to read an offense’s intentions.
As the Wolverines grind toward the April spring game, Hill’s mission is clear: honor the past, torment the present, and keep a Utah tradition thriving under the bright lights of Michigan Stadium.
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What the Schedule now Looks Like for PSG
Paris Saint-Germain’s emphatic 3-0 victory over Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Tuesday, sealing an 8-2 aggregate triumph, has catapulted Luis Enrique’s side into a Champions League quarter-final rematch with Liverpool—and triggered a congested run of fixtures that will test the depth of the squad between now and May.
The first leg against Liverpool will be staged at Parc des Princes on Wednesday, 8 April; the return leg at Anfield follows six days later on Tuesday, 14 April. Before that double-header, PSG must negotiate two Ligue 1 assignments: a trip to Nice this Saturday evening at 21:00 CET and, after the international window, a home encounter with Toulouse on Friday, 3 April at 20:45.
The international break complicates preparation. Ecuador’s Willian Pacho, South Korea’s Kang-in Lee and Morocco’s Achraf Hakimi are all involved in friendlies on Tuesday, 31 March, while Portugal trio Vitinha, Nuno Mendes and João Neves face the United States in the early hours of 1 April—kick-off 01:00 CET in Europe—before racing back across the Atlantic. Marquinhos and Brazil meet Croatia in the States one hour later, further squeezing recovery time.
Domestic business resumes with the Toulouse fixture, after which PSG host Liverpool. The weekend of 11 April brings a potentially pivotal Ligue 1 clash with Lens at 17:00 CET; dropped points by Pierre Sage’s side last weekend have eased the title pressure marginally, yet rotation will be critical. Whether the league fixture can be postponed remains to be seen.
The second leg at Anfield precedes a home date with Lyon on the weekend of 17-19 April (time TBC) and a rearranged fixture against Nantes on Tuesday, 22 April at 20:45. A trip to Angers follows on the weekend of 24-26 April.
Progress past Liverpool would set up a semi-final first leg against Bayern Munich or Real Madrid at Parc des Princes on 28 or 29 April, with the return leg on 5 or 6 May. Sandwiched between those European ties would be a league meeting with Brest, date to be confirmed.
The domestic campaign concludes on Saturday, 16 May with the short journey to neighbours Paris FC at 21:00 CET, bringing the curtain down on a schedule that could yet stretch to 11 matches in little more than six weeks.
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SAGA Barcelona Game Fest is Born: Southern Europe’s New Flagship Convention for Industry and Community
Barcelona—The calendar of global gaming gatherings has a fresh entry. Organizers on Tuesday unveiled the SAGA Barcelona Game Fest, billing it as the region’s next major video game convention designed for both professionals and everyday players. Details remain sparse, but the announcement positions the event as a Southern European hub where publishers, developers, and consumers can converge under one roof.
No dates, venue, or participating companies were released alongside the reveal, yet the branding alone signals intent: Catalonia’s capital wants a marquee show to rival long-standing fixtures elsewhere on the continent. If early momentum holds, SAGA could fill a geographic gap for industry networking while giving local fans a home-field celebration of upcoming titles and technology.
Barcelona, already a draw for mobile-world congresses and tech expos, now appears ready to double down on interactive entertainment. Stakeholders will watch closely to see whether SAGA can secure keynote partners, secure floor space, and carve out a distinctive identity in an increasingly crowded convention circuit.
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From Alabama to Denver, Waddle and Surtain reunite
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — The reunion of two former Alabama standouts has already become the most-watched subplot of Broncos training camp. Wide receiver Jaylen Waddle and cornerback Pat Surtain II, teammates during their championship days in Tuscaloosa, are now lining up on opposite sides of the ball, turning each practice rep into a high-stakes chess match.
Coaches and teammates say the daily collisions between the explosive Waddle and the technically polished Surtain have produced instant fireworks. Every route, every press look, every downfield challenge is freighted with the kind of competitive tension that can sharpen an entire roster.
Their shared history adds an extra layer of intrigue: the pair spent seasons perfecting their craft together in the SEC, giving each an intimate knowledge of the other’s tendencies. Now, separated by only a stripe of paint on the Broncos’ practice fields, they are using that familiarity to push one another toward mid-season form before the first preseason snap.
While Denver’s staff has declined to detail specific practice statistics, observers note that the matchups have been refreshingly even, a testament to both players’ rapid adjustment to the professional environment. With each rep, Waddle tests Surtain’s hip fluidity and press technique; Surtain counters by trying to disrupt Waddle’s lightning release and top-end speed.
The outcome of these camp battles may foreshadow how Denver’s receiving corps and secondary evolve in the coming months, but for now the focus remains on the daily grind and the electric atmosphere generated whenever Alabama’s former stars realign under the Colorado sun.
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WATCH: Barcelona wonderkid Ebrima Tunkara on target for Spain’s Under-17s
Barcelona prodigy Ebrima Tunkara marked his 16th birthday with a statement performance on Wednesday, firing Spain’s Under-17s to a 3-0 qualifying victory over Scotland that leaves the young Roja top of their European Championship group with maximum points.
Handed a starting berth for the second consecutive match, Tunkara needed just minutes to justify the faith of the national coaching staff, latching onto a loose ball before arrowing a crisp left-footed strike beyond the Scottish goalkeeper to open the scoring. The finish was emblematic of a player already accustomed to the spotlight at La Masia: calm, clinical and technically assured.
The goal was only the beginning of Tunkara’s influence. Moments later he instigated the move that culminated in Barcelona team-mate Roberto Tomas doubling the advantage, exchanging slick passes on the edge of the area before releasing the decisive pass. The pair’s telepathic understanding, honed on the Catalan club’s training pitches, proved too sophisticated for a Scottish rearguard that had arrived in the contest unbeaten.
Spain’s triumph in the qualifying mini-tournament follows an equally convincing win over Northern Ireland and sets up a weekend showdown with Turkey. A solitary point from that fixture will guarantee progression to the elite round, yet Tunkara and company have made clear their intention to finish the group stage with a perfect record. The winger, who celebrated his milestone birthday only days ago, is expected to retain his place in the XI and will relish another opportunity to enhance his burgeoning reputation on the continental stage.
Barcelona’s representation in the squad underlines the club’s prolific production line. Alongside Tunkara and Tomas, defender Raul Exposito and creative midfielder Sergi Mayans have featured prominently, offering Spain a distinctly Blaugrana flavour. All four adolescents have featured in either starting or rotational roles, a testament to the confidence vested in the club’s youth methodology.
Spain’s Under-17 coaching staff will now turn their attention to recovery protocols and tactical tweaks ahead of the Turkey clash, but the mood inside the camp is buoyant. With Tunkara in scintillating form and Barcelona’s contingent gelling seamlessly, the 2024 European Championship finals appear an increasingly attainable objective.
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2025/26 Premier League season picks, score predictions for Matchday 31
Matchday 31 of the 2025/26 Premier League campaign arrives with the title race, European places and relegation scrap all poised on a knife-edge. Below are scoreline forecasts for every fixture on the slate, distilled from the weekend’s most compelling storylines.
Vitality Stadium, Saturday early kick-off
Bournemouth 1-2 Manchester United
Junior Eli Kroupi’s explosive form has made the Cherries a nightmare for the traditional powers, yet Michael Carrick’s visitors now possess their own antidote in Benjamin Sesko, whose recent hot streak should prove decisive in a tight contest.
Goodison Park, Saturday lunch-time
Everton 1-2 Chelsea
Liam Rosenior’s selections have been questioned—Filip Jorgensen in goal and Mamadou Sarr at right-back among them—but facing an Everton side that has struggled against top-half opponents, the Blues can paper over some cracks and reignite their push for a Champions League berth.
Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, Saturday tea-time
Tottenham 2-1 Nottingham Forest
Bad blood lingers from the Morgan Gibbs-White transfer saga, and Forest, fresh from resting starters in Europe, will arrive intent on dragging Spurs deeper into trouble. Spurs’ improved displays minus Thomas Frank, however, suggest a narrow home win.
St James’ Park, Saturday late game
Newcastle 1-1 Sunderland
The Tyne-Wear derby returns with the Magpies only two points above their neighbours despite a four-place gap. A St James’ Park roar should prevent defeat, yet a shaky back line that conceded seven to Barcelona remains vulnerable.
Villa Park, Sunday early
Aston Villa 1-2 West Ham United
Villa have not won in four league outings, while West Ham’s expensively assembled forwards are finding timely goals amid relegation fears. Expect the Hammers to ride that desperation to a surprise road victory.
Anfield, Sunday late
Liverpool 2-2 Brighton & Hove Albion
Buoyed by a midweek Champions League riposte against Galatasaray, Liverpool still look shaky defensively on the road. A repeat of last weekend’s late collapse versus Tottenham is forecast, leaving Jürgen Klopp’s men with another damaging draw.
Arsenal and Manchester City contest the League Cup Final this weekend and therefore do not feature in league action, while the remaining fixtures round out a Matchday that promises swings at both ends of the table.
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5 players who tanked their stock with nightmare Champions League Round of 16 performances
The final whistle on the Champions League Round of 16 has scarcely finished echoing, yet the reputations of several high-profile players lie in tatters after second-leg disasters that will shadow them long after the tournament moves on. From London to Newcastle and Manchester, these five performers turned Europe’s grandest stage into a personal nightmare, inviting fresh doubts about their readiness for elite football.
Mamadou Sarr, Chelsea
Chelsea’s rearguard crisis has been well-documented this season, but Sarr’s showing against Paris Saint-Germain plumbed new depths. Pressed into service at right-back by manager Liam Rosenior, the Frenchman looked adrift against the reigning champions, ceding the initiative time and again. Passive positioning and a costly lapse that led directly to a PSG goal underlined why supporters had already been pleading for the return of Wesley Fofana and Benoît Badiashile. If the 25-year-old was auditioning for a long-term role, the tape will make uncomfortable viewing at Stamford Bridge.
Malick Thiaw, Newcastle
Once tipped by Paolo Maldini as the next defensive stalwart at AC Milan, Thiaw arrived on Tyneside hoping to reignite a stuttering career. A series of commanding Premier League displays early in the 2025-26 campaign suggested he had found his footing—until Barcelona ruthlessly exposed familiar frailties. The German centre-back was powerless as the Catalans ripped open Newcastle’s back line seven times, highlighting the concentration lapses that saw him fall out of favour at the San Siro. On the biggest night of his Magpies tenure, Thiaw resembled the player Milan were happy to let go.
Kieran Trippier, Newcastle
Few full-backs in Europe can rival Trippier’s delivery from dead-ball situations, but defending remains the non-negotiable part of the job description. Assigned to shackle Raphinha, the veteran instead became a footnote in the Brazilian’s masterclass: two goals and two assists came directly down Trippier’s flank. The 35-year-old’s lack of recovery pace was ruthlessly targeted, and by the final whistle the sight of him chasing shadows offered a stark illustration of a career nearing its conclusion at the top level.
Bernardo Silva, Manchester City
Silva’s moment of madness arrived early at the Etihad. Already trailing Real Madrid 3-0 on aggregate, City’s Portuguese schemer instinctively batted a goal-bound effort away with his hand, collecting an inevitable red card and extinguishing any faint hopes of a comeback. The incident—his first dismissal as a professional—was symptomatic of a tie in which City’s midfield looked a step behind. At 31, Silva’s enduring importance to the champions underscores their urgent need for fresh blood in the engine room.
Jacob Ramsey, Newcastle
Tasked with providing energy and ball progression in central midfield, Ramsey toiled manfully without the ball yet imploded once asked to construct moves. A wayward back-pass gifted Raphinha the goal that effectively ended the tie, and from there the 24-year-old’s confidence evaporated. Barca’s press suffocated his touches, dribbles ran into dead ends, and forward passes rarely found stripes. In a contest that demanded composure, Ramsey offered only chaos.
For these five, the Champions League lights have never felt harsher. How they respond—whether with renewed purpose or lingering self-doubt—will shape not merely their own futures, but those of their clubs.
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Dodgers Acquire 5-Year Veteran Southpaw Ahead of Opening Day: Report
Los Angeles, CA — The Dodgers quietly bolstered their pitching stable on the eve of Opening Day, agreeing to a minor-league contract with 28-year-old left-hander Logan Allen, according to a Wednesday report by Shi Davidi of Sportsnet.
Allen, a five-year major-league veteran who split last season with the NC Dinos of the Korean Baseball Organization, becomes the latest low-risk addition to an organization that has repeatedly mined unexpected contributors during its recent championship runs. Over parts of five seasons with four clubs — San Diego, Cleveland, Baltimore and Arizona — Allen has compiled a 5.79 ERA across 124⅓ innings in 45 big-league appearances.
The southpaw’s 2023 campaign in South Korea was defined by volume rather than dominance: he logged 173 innings for the Dinos while posting a 4.53 ERA. While those numbers don’t project him into the heart of the Dodgers’ rotation, they underscore the durability Los Angeles values as it braces for a schedule that can quickly tax even the deepest staffs.
Allen also showcased his versatility on the international stage earlier this month, making two appearances for Team Canada at the World Baseball Classic.
Los Angeles enters the season with a frontline rotation largely set, yet the franchise has long subscribed to the mantra that pitching depth can never be excessive. Front-office officials will hope their renowned pitching lab can coax additional upside from Allen’s repertoire; if not, his ability to absorb innings at either the major-league or Triple-A level still addresses an organizational need.
The signing continues the Dodgers’ pattern of mining experienced arms for organizational insurance, a strategy that has paid dividends during each of their last two World Series titles. Should Allen crack the big-league roster at any point in 2024, he would give manager Dave Roberts another left-handed option capable of starting or providing bulk relief when the calendar turns crowded.
For now, Allen will report to the club’s minor-league complex, ready to bolster a system that prides itself on turning depth pieces into October difference-makers.
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Galatasaray taking legal action after Noa Lang’s thumb injury in Champions League clash vs Liverpool
Istanbul—Galatasaray have confirmed they will sue for compensation after winger Noa Lang suffered a gruesome thumb laceration during Wednesday’s 4-0 Champions League defeat at Liverpool, an injury the Turkish giants contend was caused by a defect in the Anfield pitch-side setup.
The second-leg rout sealed a 4-1 aggregate comeback for the Reds, yet the evening’s major talking point arrived in the 76th minute when Lang, chasing a loose ball near the Kop end, lost his footing and crashed over the advertising hoarding. Television footage showed the Dutch international immediately clutching his right hand; medical personnel sprinted across to find the player in visible agony and administered oxygen before stretchering him off for emergency hospital treatment.
Early assessments understated the severity, but post-match comments from Netherlands teammate Jeremie Frimpong revealed the full extent. “When I went to check on him, several people told me half of his finger had been torn off. He was in a lot of pain,” Frimpong disclosed.
Lang later posted on social media: “Surgery went well! Thanks for all the messages,” accompanied by a photo of his bandaged thumb. Galatasaray’s medical staff subsequently announced that the 26-year-old had undergone a procedure to repair a deep laceration and will be unavailable for several weeks—news that hits the club doubly hard given Lang is on loan for the remainder of the 2025-26 campaign.
Sporting director Eray Yazgan told HTSpor that the club filed an official complaint with UEFA representatives immediately after the final whistle. “They have also conducted their own investigations and will evaluate what happened,” Yazgan said. “We are in talks with lawyers. We will file a lawsuit for compensation with UEFA. We will ask for our victimization in terms of salary to be eliminated.”
TRTSpor journalist Özgür Buzbaş highlighted a gap between the perimeter fence and the advertising boards, arguing the configuration created a hazardous void that exacerbated Lang’s fall. Galatasaray’s submission is expected to reference UEFA’s Stadium Infrastructure Regulations, which govern the installation and safety certification of pitch-side fixtures.
UEFA now faces the task of determining whether the board was improperly secured—amounting to structural negligence—or whether the incident constitutes an unfortunate accident with no regulatory breach. A decision is anticipated within weeks, potentially setting a precedent for how European governing bodies assess venue liability for player injuries.
In the meantime, Galasataray must regroup without one of their most creative attackers as the domestic season enters its decisive stretch. Lang’s absence, both on the field and on the balance sheet, has pushed the Istanbul heavyweights into uncharted legal territory, seeking recompense for a Champions League run that ended in far more than mere elimination.
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The Premier League weekend kicks off at the Vitality Stadium.
Bournemouth, England — The 2025-26 Premier League campaign resumes under the south-coast floodlights on Friday as Bournemouth welcome Manchester United to the Vitality Stadium for the curtain-raiser of Gameweek 31. Both sides arrive in contrasting form yet harbouring clear objectives: the Cherries desperate to reignite a stuttering push for Europe, the Red Devils intent on sustaining a late surge toward the summit.
Michael Carrick’s Manchester United enter the contest buoyed by a 3-1 dismissal of Aston Villa last weekend, a result that halted the club’s first defeat under the interim boss against Newcastle earlier this month. Bruno Fernandes, Bryan Mbeumo and Benjamin Šeško each found the net in the second-half flurry at Old Trafford, allowing third-placed United to open a three-point gap over Villa and keep neighbours Manchester City within striking distance, four points adrift in second.
Consistency has been Carrick’s calling card since taking the reins. United have lost only once in 11 league outings, a sequence that has installed a six-point cushion over sixth-place Chelsea and strengthened belief that a top-three finish — and automatic Champions League qualification — is firmly in their grasp.
Standing in their way is an Andoni Iraola-led Bournemouth side unbeaten in 10 league matches yet frustrated by four consecutive draws. The sequence has left the Cherries seventh off the pace of seventh-placed Brentford, a gap they will trim to a single point with victory on Friday night.
The reverse fixture in December offered a tantalising glimpse of what might await: a breathless 4-4 stalemate at Old Trafford under former manager Ruben Amorim, still spoken of as one of the season’s spectacles. Iraola’s men have proven especially stubborn in 2026, but a recent habit of settling for a point has stalled momentum.
Team news is relatively stable for both camps. Bournemouth remain without Justin Kluivert, Lewis Cook, Matai Akinmboni and Julio Soler, all ruled out through injury until after the upcoming international break. January arrival Rayan, quiet of late after a bright opening, is expected to rejoin fellow Brazilian Evanilson in attack, supported by Antoine Kroupi and club captain Marcus Tavernier.
United could be missing full-back Noussair Mazraoui, who is battling illness. Lisandro Martínez, Mason Mount, Matthijs de Ligt and Patrick Dorgu remain sidelined, though Mount returned to the squad against Villa and is pressing for minutes. Diogo Dalot and Luke Shaw are set to continue as the first-choice wide defenders, shielding a central pairing of Harry Maguire and teenage prodigy Leny Yoro.
With the Vitality Stadium primed for a raucous Friday night atmosphere, the stage is set for a pivotal encounter: Bournemouth seeking to convert draws into wins and revive European dreams, Manchester United aiming to sustain their upward trajectory and keep the pressure firmly on their cross-city rivals.
Kick-off is scheduled for 20:00 BST, with live coverage across Sky Sports platforms in the UK, USA Network and Telemundo in the United States, and DAZN in Canada.
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SMU’s back on the big stage, but Mustangs are still fighting to prove they belong
DAYTON, Ohio — SMU just wanted to put the narratives to bed. In football, the shadow of the death penalty stretched more than 30 years. In basketball, it was a decade-long NCAA Tournament drought and a reputation for falling short. Now, with the Mustangs back on the national stage, the program is determined to show the past no longer defines them.
The long-awaited return has been framed as both a breakthrough and a referendum: can SMU finally turn appearances into staying power? For a university whose football legacy was derailed by sanctions in the 1980s and whose basketball team spent ten years absent from March Madness, the moment carries weight far beyond the box score.
Athletes, coaches, and alumni alike see the current spotlight as an overdue chance to rewrite the storyline. Each possession, each game, is an opportunity to chip away at decades of skepticism. The Mustangs know perception won’t change overnight, but sustained success on this stage could finally quiet doubts that have lingered since the program’s darkest days.
Whether SMU can seize the opportunity remains to be seen, yet the very fact they are here—playing meaningful games under the bright lights—signals a new chapter. The narrative is no longer about the drought; it is about what the Mustangs do now that the drought is over.
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Which Brazilian club 🇧🇷 will celebrate? All 2026 Libertadores groups
Rio de Janeiro – The road to continental glory became clearer for Brazil’s representatives on Thursday evening when Conmebol staged the group-stage draw for the 2026 Copa Libertadores. Six Serie A clubs – Flamengo, Corinthians, Palmeiras, Cruzeiro, Mirassol and Fluminense – discovered their opponents in the tournament’s elite phase, setting up a series of high-stakes showdowns that will begin early next year.
With Brazilian football boasting the largest national contingent in the 32-team field, attention immediately turned to how the six sides were distributed across the eight groups. Conmebol’s draw, held at its Luque headquarters, paired each Brazilian club with three international adversaries, ensuring that every matchday will carry significant weight in the battle to reach the knockout rounds.
Flamengo, the most decorated Brazilian outfit still active on the continent, will look to navigate a section that promises both travel challenges and familiar regional styles. Corinthians, returning to the Libertadores after a brief hiatus, must quickly rediscover the defensive steel that once carried them to the trophy. Palmeiras, perennial contenders, were slotted into a group that could test their squad depth, while Cruzeiro’s re-emergence among South America’s heavyweights adds an intriguing subplot to the competition.
Mirassol, the tournament’s surprise package after a stunning domestic campaign, will relish the underdog tag as they prepare for a first-ever Libertadores group stage. Fluminense, fresh off recent domestic cup success, hope to translate that momentum onto the continental stage and cap a memorable era for the Rio club.
The draw also heightened the possibility of an all-Brazilian knockout tie, should two clubs finish as group winners and runners-up in corresponding sections. Such a scenario would guarantee at least one semifinalist from the country and keep alive the dream of a Brazilian champion lifting the trophy in 2026.
Matchday calendars will be released shortly, with the opening round scheduled for late February. Until then, supporters across Brazil will debate which of their clubs is best positioned to survive the group gauntlet and, ultimately, celebrate at the final whistle next November.
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