Expert Sports News & Commentary

Sinner Raises Alcaraz Stakes with Historic Sunshine Double

Sinner Raises Alcaraz Stakes with Historic Sunshine Double

Miami Gardens, Florida — Jannik Sinner tightened his grip on the men’s tennis narrative Sunday, completing a ruthless fortnight on North American hard courts by capturing the Miami Open without surrendering a set. The 6-4, 6-4 dismissal of Czech 21st seed Jiri Lehecka in a rain-dampened final gave the Italian the fabled Sunshine Double—Indian Wells plus Miami—and etched his name alongside Roger Federer as the only man to sweep the double since 2017. The milestone is more than a footnote in the record books; it is a direct message to Carlos Alcaraz. While the 22-year-old Spaniard packed his bags after a surprise third-round exit in Miami, Sinner collected his third consecutive ATP Masters 1000 crown, trimming the world No. 1’s advantage to a mere 1,190 points heading into the European clay season. Sinner, 24, has now taken 34 consecutive sets at Masters events, a streak that places him in the rarefied company of Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal. The Italian’s path through Miami was defined by a serve that bordered on unplayable: 70 aces in six matches, only one break conceded, and 92 percent of first-serve points won in the final. At 2-1, 0-40 in the opening set, he produced five unreturnable first serves to snuff out Lehecka’s lone glimmer of hope. Frances Tiafoe, dismissed by Sinner in the quarter-finals, labelled the Italian “one of the best ball-strikers the game has ever seen,” yet Sinner insists he can still wring more pace and variety from his forehand. Evidence came in the first-set clincher, when he stepped inside the baseline to obliterate Lehecka’s second serve with a pair of inside-out winners. Marion Bartoli, analysing for Sky Sports, summed up the challenge facing the field: “The guy has zero weakness—that’s why he has won so much.” The victory also reopens the rankings race. Because Sinner served a three-month suspension during last spring’s clay swing, he has zero points to defend until the Italian Open. He is slated to compete in Monte Carlo and Madrid, two Masters events that each offer 1,000 points to the champion. A strong run could see him overhaul Alcaraz before the Roland Garros draw is made. Alcaraz, already back on the red dirt in Murcia, understands the stakes. His priority is clear: defend the French Open crown he seized in a five-set epic against Sinner last June. Whether he arrives in Paris as No. 1 may hinge on how quickly he can find the incremental gains that have kept him fractionally ahead of a rival now operating at an historic level. For the moment, the momentum belongs to Sinner. “It has been an incredible swing for me,” he said, cradling the Miami trophy. “Seeing this kind of result makes me happy, as does the level we are trying to produce and the player we’re trying to achieve.” The tour heads to Europe, but the plot remains anchored in the same two protagonists. On clay, Alcaraz will seek answers; Sinner will seek ascendancy. By the time the Parisian dust settles, the question of who sits atop men’s tennis may look very different than it did a week ago.
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Salmond Sit Down: VKH' Mike Davis talks IFL National Championship, 2026 season & much more

Salmond Sit Down: VKH' Mike Davis talks IFL National Championship, 2026 season & much more

Las Vegas—The championship afterglow still shimmers across the desert, and when VKH’s Mike Davis settled into the latest edition of Salmond Sit Down with host Bryan Salmond, the conversation carried the weight of a title run and the promise of what comes next. Though the segment opened with a nod to the IFL National Championship triumph, the pair quickly pivoted to the 2026 campaign, mapping out expectations, roster dynamics, and the organizational mindset required to defend a crown in the ever-fluid Indoor Football League landscape. Davis, whose voice still carried the gravelly edge of a coach fresh off celebratory festivities, offered concise glimpses into the franchise’s blueprint without tipping strategic specifics, leaving fans eager for training-camp revelations. Salmond kept the exchange brisk, ensuring every minute echoed the urgency of a team that knows the target on its back grows larger with each passing week.
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Ilia Malinin Pulls Off Jaw-Dropping Figure Skating Move — in Jeans

Ilia Malinin Pulls Off Jaw-Dropping Figure Skating Move — in Jeans

Ilia Malinin opened the figure-skating offseason with a stunt that left fans buzzing: he executed one of his most audacious moves yet, casually dressed in jeans. The 19-year-old American prodigy, renowned for pushing technical boundaries, posted the moment on social media, instantly sending ripples through the skating community. Performing in denim rather than traditional stretch fabric underscored both his confidence and the move’s jaw-dropping difficulty, signaling that even without the competitive spotlight, Malinin intends to keep raising the bar.
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Manchester City have another England international in their ranks and they cannot afford to lose him

Manchester City have another England international in their ranks and they cannot afford to lose him

James Trafford’s ascent from Manchester City academy hopeful to senior England international has been swift, but the Etihad hierarchy now face a dilemma that could shape their goalkeeping future: how to keep a player who is ready to start yet blocked by one of Europe’s elite No. 1s. The 21-year-old keeper, long regarded as the finest shot-stopper produced by City’s youth system, collected his first England cap in the 1-1 draw with Uruguay after Thomas Tuchel elected to trial fringe contenders ahead of the 2026 World Cup. Trafford’s composed display at Wembley underlined why club staff have spent years touting him as a future first-choice, and why City captain İlkay Gündoğan singled him out for praise following February’s Carabao Cup victory over Arsenal, in which Trafford produced a string of decisive saves. Yet for all the plaudits, Trafford’s path to regular club football is blocked by Gianluigi Donnarumma, the Italian international signed to give City the elite presence they craved. With Donnarumma entrenched as starter, Trafford has been limited to cup cameos, a situation that jeopardises both his development and England ambitions. Regular minutes at the highest level are non-negotiable for a goalkeeper hoping to unseat Jordan Pickford before the next major tournament. Trafford’s résumé already features 18 months of Championship football at Bolton Wanderers and a Premier League loan at Burnley, experience that accelerated his maturity and showcased the commanding presence and footwork Pep Guardiola demands. Returning to Manchester last summer was supposed to be the final step toward inheriting the gloves; instead, he finds himself at a career crossroads. City’s coaching staff are acutely aware of the stakes. Letting Trafford leave permanently risks repeating the scenario that saw Kasper Schmeichel and, more recently, Gavin Bazunu depart before fully flourishing. A loan exit in 2024-25 is viewed inside the club as the most pragmatic compromise—allowing Trafford weekly starts elsewhere while retaining long-term control—but suitors will push for an outright purchase, and the player himself is understood to favour a permanent move if a clear pathway is not guaranteed. Director of football Txiki Begiristain must weigh short-term squad depth against a decade of potential service. With Donnarumma’s contract running until 2027 and no obvious signs of regression, the clock is ticking on a decision that could define City’s goalkeeping succession plan. For now, Trafford’s England debut is both a personal milestone and a reminder of what is at stake. City have nurtured another homegrown international; the challenge is ensuring he does not become a star for someone else.
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Quickfire Quiz 86: Can you answer 10 questions in 90 seconds?

Quickfire Quiz 86: Can you answer 10 questions in 90 seconds?

Digital Content Editor Mark White and the FourFourTwo team have released the 86th edition of their popular Quickfire Quiz, challenging readers to rattle off 10 football teasers in just 90 seconds. Available through the magazine’s free Club portal, the rapid-fire test is the latest in a weekly series delivered to members’ inboxes. This instalment opens with a geographical gauntlet: naming every English county that can claim at least one of the 92 Premier League and Football League clubs. From there the quiz switches to the international stage, asking participants to identify every nation that has previously appeared at a World Cup but will be absent from the expanded 2026 tournament in North America. A section devoted to modern greats focuses on Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah, probing knowledge of the Egyptian winger’s club career and goal-scoring exploits. European pedigree is examined through two bruising tasks: listing every club outside Europe’s traditional “big-five” leagues to have reached a Champions League quarter-final, and then naming every side ever to have contested a UEFA competition final, spanning the Cup Winners’ Cup and UEFA Cup eras. The dramatic side of continental competition is celebrated with a question on comebacks: readers must recall every team that has overturned a two-goal first-leg deficit to win a Champions League tie. A final “Pre-Match Poser” is billed as elite-level, designed to test even the most ardent statisticians. Participants can log their scores, earn badges and climb FourFourTwo’s global leaderboard by signing up to the Club, which also grants access to premium articles and the weekly Weekend Crossword. The quiz suite is powered by trivia partner Kwizly, promising “loads more” head-scratchers in the coming weeks. Keywords:
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Europe Flexes Before 2026: France, Belgium and Co. Shine in March World Cup Warm-Ups

Europe Flexes Before 2026: France, Belgium and Co. Shine in March World Cup Warm-Ups

The last FIFA international window before the expanded 2026 World Cup ended with a clear message from Europe: the continent’s heavyweights are rounding into form, while several South American, African and host-nation hopefuls still have gaping holes to plug. France headlined the March friendlies with a pair of statement victories. Kylian Mbappé’s audacious lob over Ederson and Hugo Ekitike’s tidy finish from Michael Olise’s cut-back sealed a 2-1 win over Brazil in Foxborough, a result Les Bleus protected even after Dayot Upamecano’s red card forced a late defensive rearguard. Three nights later a largely second-choice side toppled Colombia 3-1; 19-year-old Désiré Doué’s double and Marcus Thuram’s header showcased depth that could prove invaluable across a seven-game sprint next summer. Croatia, the Netherlands, Austria and Germany supplied further evidence of UEFA’s muscle. Luka Vušković’s deflected thunderbolt and Igor Matanović’s towering header flipped a 0-1 deficit into a 2-1 win over Colombia in Orlando, reinforcing the Balkan side’s reputation as the tournament’s quintessential dark horse. Austria dismantled Ghana 5-1 in Vienna, Marcel Sabitzer orchestrating a rout that leaves the Black Stars searching for answers. The Netherlands recovered from Andreas Schjelderup’s early strike to edge Norway 2-1 in Amsterdam, captain Virgil van Dijk and Tijjani Reijnders providing the decisive blows. Germany served up the window’s most dramatic storyline, scoring four unanswered goals to stun Switzerland 4-3; Florian Wirtz contributed to every goal, capping the comeback with an 85th-minute rocket into the top corner. Spain, meanwhile, never broke stride against Serbia, monopolising 70 percent possession and riding Mikel Oyarzabal’s brace plus Víctor Muñoz’s debut strike to a serene 3-0 win. The picture was murkier elsewhere. Colombia’s back-to-back defeats exposed familiar frailties—an ageing spine, inconsistent goalkeeping and over-reliance on James Rodríguez—while Argentina laboured to a 2-1 win over lowly Mauritania, managing no second-half shots on target even after Lionel Messi’s introduction. Ecuador, Paraguay and Uruguay produced mixed results, none dispelling doubts about CONMEBOL’s depth beyond the top tier. Africa’s qualified nations offered flickers of encouragement. Senegal eased past Peru 2-0 through Nicolas Jackson and Ismaïla Sarr, Ivory Coast thumped South Korea 4-0 in a statement win, and Algeria routed Guatemala 7-0 in a second-half procession. Yet South Africa’s 1-1 draw with Panama and Morocco’s 1-1 stalemate with Ecuador felt like missed chances to build momentum. For the 2026 hosts, the window sounded alarms. Canada clawed back a 2-2 draw with Iceland thanks to two Jonathan David penalties but finished with ten men after Tajon Buchanan’s late red card. Mexico’s goalless stalemate with Portugal at a reopened but sombre Azteca—marred by a fatal fan accident—showed familiar attacking bluntness. The United States suffered the harshest lesson, conceding five second-half goals in a 5-2 loss to Belgium that laid bare defensive disorganisation and transition woes Mauricio Pochettino must urgently address. With 90 days until coaches must submit provisional rosters, Europe’s contenders have reason to feel bullish. France’s seamless squad rotation, Germany’s explosive midfield, Austria’s high-tempo pressing and Spain’s possession dominance all suggest tactical clarity and depth. For the rest of the world, the clock is ticking—and the answers are not yet obvious.
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Ananya Panday, Suhana Khan to Sara Arjun, Ishaan Khatter: B-towners add filmy touch to MI vs KKR match

Ananya Panday, Suhana Khan to Sara Arjun, Ishaan Khatter: B-towners add filmy touch to MI vs KKR match

Mumbai, March 30: As the 19th edition of the Indian Premier League gathers momentum, Sunday’s clash between Mumbai Indians and Kolkata Knight Riders at the Wankhede Stadium turned into a heady cocktail of cricket and cinema. A constellation of Bollywood A-listers descended on the venue, ensuring the stands shimmered as brightly as the floodlights. Ananya Panday arrived in a pistachio co-ord set, waving to shutterbugs before joining friends in the VIP box. Suhana Khan, keeping it understated in a white tank and denim, was seen chatting animatedly with fellow actor Sara Arjun, both clutching neon MI thundersticks. Ishaan Khatter, fresh off a dance rehearsal, swapped his studio sneakers for a pair of navy loafers and slipped into the aisle seat beside them, instantly triggering a wave of phone-camera flashes from the upper tiers. The quartet, seated strategically behind the dugout, mirrored every boundary and wicket with theatrical flair—jumping in unison for a Rohit Sharma six, cupping their faces at a dropped catch, and later grooving to the stadium DJ’s remix of a chart-topper from last year. Their presence, captured on the giant screen between overs, drew louder cheers than several on-field moments, underscoring the IPL’s unique fusion of sport and stardom. With the tournament still in its early phase, Sunday’s star turnout sets the tone for what promises to be another season where cricket and celluloid share the marquee.
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Lionel Messi’s exit from FC Barcelona was ‘the right decision,’ says president Joan Laporta

Lionel Messi’s exit from FC Barcelona was ‘the right decision,’ says president Joan Laporta

Barcelona president Joan Laporta has declared that allowing Lionel Messi to leave the club in 2021 was “the right decision,” insisting the choice has been vindicated by the club’s subsequent financial recovery and squad overhaul. Speaking to El País after securing a third term with 68.8 % of the vote on 15 March, Laporta addressed the lingering controversy surrounding the Argentine’s departure. “It is something I will always carry with me,” he admitted, before adding: “I believe I got it right.” The 36-year-old’s exit became a flashpoint during the election campaign when former coach and Messi confidant Xavi Hernández accused Laporta of bearing primary responsibility for both his own dismissal and the failure to engineer Messi’s return in 2023. Laporta, who first placed Messi in Barcelona’s first team during his earlier presidency, countered that the club’s economic survival demanded painful choices. “We were able to recover the club’s economy, we built a competitive team, and it was time for a generational handover,” Laporta said, pointing to the 555 million euro package Messi’s final contract commanded. “Leo was at the end of his career, and we had to build a new team. Would I have liked to build the new team with Leo helping? Yes. We tried that, but it wasn’t meant to be.” While Messi has remained silent on the matter, Laporta confirmed efforts to mend relations, including plans for a commemorative statue outside Spotify Camp Nou and a tribute match. “Barça is his home,” Laporta insisted. “At some point, our interests will converge again.” Despite acknowledging the emotional weight of Messi’s departure, Laporta stressed the outcome has justified the process: “I let the results speak for themselves.”
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Atlético Madrid to Host Global Sports & Entertainment Summit at Riyadh Air Metropolitano

Atlético Madrid to Host Global Sports & Entertainment Summit at Riyadh Air Metropolitano

Madrid, Spain – Atlético Madrid is expanding its influence far beyond the pitch, announcing it will stage an unprecedented gathering of international power brokers from sports, entertainment, and business on 23 April at the club’s Estadio Riyadh Air Metropolitano. The invitation-only summit, branded “THE FORUM: Leaders Inspiring the World,” will coincide with the club’s push toward a potential UEFA Champions League semi-final berth. Atlético, fresh off a quarter-final first-leg meeting with FC Barcelona on 8 April and the return leg on 14 April, will welcome more than 200 senior executives to discuss the accelerating convergence of sport, leisure, and global commerce. Miguel Ángel Gil, CEO of Atlético Madrid, will serve as host, joined by UEFA President Aleksander Čeferin, La Liga President Javier Tebas, Paris Saint-Germain and European Club Association chairman Nasser Al-Khelaïfi, Inter Miami CF owner Jorge Mas, Riyadh Air CEO Tony Douglas, and Madrid Mayor José Luis Martínez-Almeida. Apollo Sports Capital is co-producing the event with the club. “Since its inception in the mid-19th century, football has evolved season after season, but never at its current pace,” the club stated. “The world’s leading sport has ceased to be merely a game, transforming into a global phenomenon with unparalleled socio-economic impact. Consequently, competition is no longer confined to the pitch; this paradigm shift is the catalyst for THE FORUM.” Panels will cover Football Business Industry, Spanish Brands Go Global, Global Brands, Global Sports Properties, Entertainment, and Leading Brands, reflecting Atlético’s ambition to position itself at the intersection of sport and international business. “We are proud that the home of all Atléticos will become a meeting point for international leaders in sports, leisure, and entertainment—three sectors whose boundaries are blurring as they strive to enhance the experience for millions of fans worldwide,” Gil said. The single-day conference underscores Atlético’s strategy to grow its brand in non-match markets while the team vies for European glory.
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Manchester United squad audit: Exploring every player's contract and transfer status

Manchester United squad audit: Exploring every player's contract and transfer status

Old Trafford’s corridors are already humming with the annual summer calculus of who stays, who leaves and who must be replaced, even before the identity of next season’s head coach is settled. With Champions League qualification back within reach under interim boss Michael Carrick and the confirmed exit of Casemiro creating a high-profile vacancy in midfield, United’s hierarchy face a series of urgent roster decisions. The Athletic has sifted through every senior contract and loan arrangement to map out the likely ins and outs. GOALKEEPERS Andre Onana’s deal, which contains a club option through 2028, has looked safe ever since the Cameroon No 1 began producing decisive saves in key matches. United regard the £18.1 million fee paid last summer as money well spent and plan to build around the 23-year-old. Back-up Altay Bayindir, 27, has not appeared since the 3-1 loss at Brentford in September and was overlooked for January’s FA Cup tie in favour of third-choice Tom Lammens. With first-team minutes drying up, the Turkish international is expected to pursue a move that offers regular football. Onana’s compatriot, 29-year-old Andre Onana—currently on loan at Trabzonspor until June—has not given up on resurrecting his United career, though the form of those above him makes a return unlikely. Veteran Jonny Heaton, 39, has not played competitively since the 2023 Carabao Cup semi-final but remains influential behind the scenes. Fresh off being named in the club’s six-man leadership council, he is discussing another 12-month extension. DEFENDERS Diogo Dalot, also part of that leadership group, has missed only two league fixtures and is viewed as a long-term piece regardless of tactical shape. Fellow full-back Noussair Mazraoui, signed in 2024, offers wing-back and centre-back cover; a bout of niggling injuries and Morocco’s run to the 2025 AFCON final stalled his momentum, yet his versatility should keep him in Manchester. In central defence, United have already triggered an extension for 33-year-old Harry Maguire and negotiations on a new deal are advanced. Lisandro Martinez, who turns 29 in January, has another year available via club option, but persistent calf and ACL issues mean officials will weigh his long-term durability. Matthijs de Ligt, signed from Bayern Munich in a package that could reach £42.8 million, is rehabbing a serious injury yet, at 26, is still considered a foundation piece. The same long-term view applies to 20-year-old Leny Yoro, whose recent struggles are viewed as growing pains rather than red flags. Teenage defender Ethan Wheatley, signed from Arsenal 12 months ago, will continue his development, while 21-year-old Roony Dorgu—recruited to play left wing-back—has shown flashes as an attacking winger and is rated as depth with upside. Luke Shaw, 30, has started every league match this term, earning the right to enter the final year of his 2023 contract before the club re-evaluates. Fellow left-back Tyrell Malacia, 26, is expected to depart on a free when his deal expires. MIDFIELDERS Casemiro’s exit ends a lucrative era; the Brazilian will leave when his contract expires rather than trigger a 12-month extension that would have kept his £350,000-a-week salary on the books. Kobbie Mainoo’s renaissance under Carrick has accelerated talks over improved terms; a new long-term contract appears imminent after Amorim labelled the 20-year-old “the future of Manchester United.” Bruno Fernandes, club captain and creative engine, will attract fresh interest after Al-Hilal’s €40 million-a-year offer last summer. United hope Champions League qualification helps persuade the 31-year-old Portuguese to stay. Uruguayan Manuel Ugarte, signed from Paris Saint-Germain for an initial £42.5 million, has struggled to anchor midfield, logging only 753 league minutes. If a suitable bid arrives, United may seek to recoup funds. Mason Mount’s £55 million switch from Chelsea has been sabotaged by injuries; with two years left (plus an option), the coming months will determine whether the 27-year-old is persevered with or cashed in. Teenage midfielder Toby Collyer, 22, has endured stop-start loans at West Bromwich Albion and Hull City and enters the last year of his deal. His future hinges on how many reinforcements arrive. FORWARDS Bryan Mbeumo has justified his Brentford transfer that could top £70 million, scoring 10 goals in all competitions and offering years of peak production at 26. Mateo Cunha, 27, has seven goals and likewise looks an astute acquisition. Slovenia striker Benjamin Sesko, 22, has eight goals in his last 11 games; the club are convinced he will blossom into a top-tier No 9. Amad Diallo, 23, signed a new deal last January and is viewed as a future contributor. Joshua Zirkzee, 24, stayed put in January despite Roma’s loan enquiry, yet with minutes scarce he could agitate for a summer exit. LOAN WATCH Marcus Rashford has 10 goals and 13 assists for Barcelona, who hold a £26 million buy clause they are eager to activate. United will not lower the fee, so a permanent Camp Nou switch is probable. Jadon Sancho is at Aston Villa until June, when his contract also expires. United possess an option for an additional year but balk at triggering it given his £250,000-a-week wages and the danger of being stuck with an unsellable asset. Rasmus Hojlund has plundered 14 goals for Napoli, who are obliged to purchase him for £38 million if they secure Champions League qualification. With Napoli third in Serie A, United are already budgeting for the windfall and do not expect the Denmark striker to return. Whether the next manager favours a back three, a back four or something in between, the squad audit shows a blend of emerging talent, established core pieces and expendable assets. The coming window will be defined by midfield reconstruction, the final say on several injury-plagued veterans and the need to translate potential into points on the pitch.
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The tragedy of Adam Ankers - and why his family want football to learn from his death

The tragedy of Adam Ankers - and why his family want football to learn from his death

PRINCES RISBOROUGH, Buckinghamshire — On the morning of 31 January 2024, Adam Ankers left home with the easy confidence of a 17-year-old who believed the world was at his feet. He kissed his mother Naomi goodbye after the night shift, promised his younger brother Danny he would watch his school match later, and drove to Henley College for a Wycombe Wanderers Foundation under-19 fixture against Procision Oxford. On his left bicep he wore the captain’s armband, four words inked in black marker underneath the club crest: Strength, Inspiration, Leader, Desire. By sunset the armband had been cut away by paramedics and placed, still blood-stained, into his parents’ hands. Adam never came home. Seventy-four minutes into a 3-3 thriller, coach Christian Williams noticed Adam swaying near the centre circle. “You alright, Ad?” he shouted. “Yeah,” the teenager replied, then staggered: “Oh no, my heart.” He pitched forward, face-first, into sudden cardiac arrest caused by arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC), a silent genetic condition no scan or screening had ever detected. An on-site defibrillator was produced but, on the advice of a South Central Ambulance Service call-handler who was not medically trained, it was never used. Eight minutes passed before paramedics arrived; CPR began too late to save oxygen-starved brain tissue. Four days later, at Harefield Hospital, Alastair and Naomi Ankers—both senior clinicians—were shown brain-stem death scans. On 4 February, surrounded by family, Adam’s ventilator was switched off. He was buried in the yellow Arsenal away shirt he had coveted for Christmas. An inquest that was scheduled to last four hours stretched to six days. Coroner Valerie Charbit delivered a Prevention of Future Deaths report addressed to the English FA, citing “missed opportunities” that “more than minimally” contributed to Adam’s death: the absence of mandatory sudden-cardiac-arrest (SCA) training for grassroots coaches and referees; the lack of requirement that at least one person at every affiliated match be SCA-qualified; the failure to prioritise widespread cardiac screening for teenagers. Referee Leon Morris, a level-six official, testified he had never completed the FA’s standalone SCA module; the course itself has been online-only since Covid-19. Professor Charles Deakin, medical director for SCAS, argued the 999 call-handler’s instruction to place Adam in the recovery position was “reasonable”; Charbit rejected the claim, noting the handler had since been retrained and national protocols rewritten. The Ankers family—Naomi, Alastair, Danny, Cara and golden retriever Rocket—now speak publicly for the first time, determined that Adam’s legacy be measured not in minutes of silence but in systemic change. “If even one family never has to walk the path we’ve walked, that would be the greatest victory Adam never scored,” Alastair says. Naomi adds: “Twelve teenagers die every week in this country from hidden heart conditions. If 12 died in a bus crash there would be uproar. Because it happens one here, one there, nobody joins the dots.” Wycombe Wanderers have already renamed Adams Park to “Adam’s Park” for a fixture; the Foundation squad wear shirts embroidered with his four armband words. Yet the family want more: mandatory, face-to-face SCA certification for every coach, referee and physio in the national game; automatic availability of defibrillators at every grassroots venue; routine ECG screening for academy players aged 14-18. Research from Cardiac Risk in the Young shows one in every 300 voluntary screenings reveals a potentially fatal abnormality. Adam’s bedroom remains untouched: PlayStation controller on the desk, athletics medals dangling behind Arsenal curtains, pull-up bar still fixed to the doorframe. His friends—Keon, Taylor, Tom, Luke, Olly and Thomas—carried his coffin, and a stone at his grave reads “brother from another mother.” Birthdays are now pilgrimages to European stadiums: PSG on what would have been his 19th, Real Madrid’s Bernabéu on his 18th, Borussia Dortmund next. “He had so much promise,” Alastair says. “We’re just finishing the journey for him.” The FA, which supported the inquest, says it “will fully review the coroner’s findings.” For Adam’s family, review must become reform. The armband framed on the bedroom wall is fading; the message is not. Strength, Inspiration, Leader, Desire—four words English football can no longer afford to ignore.
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It wasn't supposed to end like this for Jon Scheyer and Duke

It wasn't supposed to end like this for Jon Scheyer and Duke

Washington, D.C. — For 20 minutes at Capital One Arena on Sunday, Duke looked every bit the juggernaut its résumé promised. The Blue Devils, owners of a 29–2 record, ACC regular-season and tournament titles, and the NCAA Tournament’s No. 1 overall seed, led No. 2 UConn by 19 and carried a 15-point cushion into halftime. A third Final Four in four seasons for the Huskies appeared improbable; a berth in Indianapolis for Jon Scheyer’s group felt inevitable. Then the second half unfolded like a recurring nightmare. UConn, ice-cold from deep and making only one of its first 18 threes, suddenly canned four of its final five. Duke, which had coughed up just five turnovers before the break, gifted the Huskies eight more after it. The last of those—a hurried decision by star point guard Cayden Boozer—caromed into the hands of UConn freshman Braylon Mullins, who had misfired on each of his first four attempts from distance. With less than a half-second remaining, Mullins launched from just inside the March-logo at mid-court. The buzzer sounded as the ball arced, the net rippled, and the arena erupted. “I knew I had to put one up,” Mullins said. “Man, I’m just happy that was the one that went down tonight.” The 72–71 dagger ended Duke’s season and extended a pattern Scheyer would prefer to forget. One year after squandering a 14-point second-half lead in the Final Four against Houston, the Blue Devils again found victory snatched away by turnovers and late-game calamity. “I don’t have the words,” Scheyer said, eyes red in a silent locker room. “I could not be more disappointed and feeling for our guys at the same time.” The collapse felt cruelly familiar. A roster stocked with NBA-level talent—including projected top-three pick Cameron Boozer—had navigated late-season injuries to veteran guard Caleb Foster and center Patrick Ngongba II, both of whom returned for the tournament at less than full strength. Foster’s gutsy 11-point effort in the Sweet 16 win over St. John’s left Scheyer in tears; his presence Sunday still wasn’t enough to stem the tide. “We just gave them easy baskets,” Scheyer said. “That was the big difference in the game.” And, for the second straight March, the difference in Duke’s season. In four years under Scheyer, the Blue Devils have reached two Elite Eights and a Final Four, yet the refrain persists: underachievement. A 29–2 campaign, a No. 1 overall seed, and a late double-digit lead were supposed to culminate in a trip to Indianapolis. Instead, another offseason arrives with more questions than answers. It wasn’t supposed to end like this for Jon Scheyer and Duke. But in the cruelest month, the story writes itself.
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Premier League fans feel the pinch from ticket price hikes

Premier League fans feel the pinch from ticket price hikes

The Premier League’s worldwide magnetism has always rested on full-throated stands and crackling match-day energy, yet the competition’s escalating pursuit of top talent is now being funded partly through the pockets of its most loyal supporters. With clubs locked in an arms race for star signings, ticket prices have climbed, leaving regular attendees to absorb the financial strain. The result is a growing tension between the league’s commercial ambitions and the everyday fan’s ability to keep cheering from the terraces. SEO keywords:
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Barcelona finish third in the first edition of U12 Futures World Cup

Barcelona finish third in the first edition of U12 Futures World Cup

BRUNETE, Spain — FC Barcelona’s U12 squad closed the inaugural U12 Futures World Cup on a high note Sunday, claiming bronze with a polished 2-0 victory over Paris Saint-Germain that showcased the tournament’s most lethal finisher. Destiny, the Blaugrana’s Spanish-Guinean star, struck either side of halftime to finish the competition on seven goals and secure the golden boot in front of a buoyant crowd at the Municipal Stadium. The win offered a measure of redemption after Saturday’s semifinal, when a physical Real Betis side ended Barça’s title dream with a 2-0 defeat. Coach Pol Combellé’s response was swift: rotate the lineup, keep the intensity, and trust the player who had carried the attack all week. The decision paid dividends inside the opening quarter-hour when Destiny pounced on a loose ball in the area to open the scoring, then sealed the result after the break by converting a sharp through ball from Joel Cabanes. Destiny’s brace was the culmination of a tournament defined by his composure in front of goal. He had already engineered the quarterfinal triumph over Real Madrid, setting up Cabanes for the late winner in a 2-1 comeback after Pedro’s header had cancelled Joel’s early strike for the Merengues. That Clásico, refereed by La Liga official Cordero Vega, remains the competition’s signature match for the Catalan side. Sunday’s third-place contest also allowed Combellé to distribute minutes among squad players who had seen limited action during the week, yet Barça still dictated play against a PSG side that struggled to contain Destiny’s movement off the shoulder of the last defender. Denzel spurned an early opportunity to tee up his teammate at the back post, but Destiny’s persistence ensured the missed chance did not prove costly. While Barça celebrated a podium finish, Betis lifted the inaugural trophy with a 3-1 comeback over Flamengo, Ameri, Jasper, and Lucas overturning Carlos Leonardo’s opener. Tournament organizers named Betis full-back Javier Secano MVP for his long throw-ins that rivaled corner kicks in attacking threat. Real Madrid, eliminated by Barça on Saturday, settled for consolation honors, edging Boca Juniors on penalties in a “historic champions” exhibition after a 1-1 draw highlighted by David Sánchez’s Panenka-style conversion. For Barcelona, the bronze medal and Destiny’s golden boot provide tangible proof that La Masia’s next generation can compete on a global stage—even when the top prize slips just out of reach.
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Ohio State Defensive Tackle Kayden McDonald Impresses During Buckeyes Pro Day

Ohio State Defensive Tackle Kayden McDonald Impresses During Buckeyes Pro Day

Columbus, OH — Ohio State defensive tackle Kayden McDonald put his power on full display Wednesday, anchoring the interior line through a series of rapid-fire bag drills, board work, and one-on-one pass-rush reps at the Buckeyes’ pro day. The 6-foot-2, 326-pound senior showed the same leverage and heavy hands that helped him lead all FBS defensive tackles with a 91.2 Pro Football Focus run-defense grade last fall. McDonald, who posted 65 tackles, nine for loss, three sacks, and two forced fumbles in 2025, was measured at 33-inch arms and recorded a 5.15-second 40-yard dash. More importantly for scouts, he flashed quick feet during the short-shuttle circuit and repeatedly reset the line of scrimmage during team drills, a trait that has already earned him a Top-30 visit with the New England Patriots. Several clubs picking in the back half of Round 1—including the Chicago Bears, who sent area scouts to Columbus—have studied McDonald as a potential plug-and-play run stuffer. Bears general manager Ryan Poles has publicly emphasized adding “hearty football players” over scheme-specific projects, and McDonald’s résumé fits that profile after he logged 30 run stops for the Buckeyes. With the 2026 NFL Draft less than a month away, Wednesday’s workout solidified McDonald’s standing as one of the class’s most stout interior defenders and a likely Day 2 selection.
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How Gustafson’s Short-Pit Decision Turns Martinsville In Hendrick’s Favor

How Gustafson’s Short-Pit Decision Turns Martinsville In Hendrick’s Favor

Martinsville, Va.—In a race where brake rotors glow above 1,000 degrees and every fender-bender can derail a season, Hendrick Motorsports leaned on precision over brute force to wheel Chase Elliott back into victory lane. The decisive moment arrived 0.526 miles into the final stage, when crew chief Alan Gustafson summoned the No. 9 Chevrolet to pit road earlier than the leaders, executing a textbook short-pit that flipped the running order and, ultimately, the outcome. The 0.526-mile paperclip has always punished the impatient. Drivers trade paint through the flat corners, tire falloff is immediate, and track position is currency. Elliott arrived with five career top-fives here and more than 500 laps led, but raw speed meant little without strategic guile. Gustafson, calculating tire degradation, fuel windows, and the looming threat of a late caution, opted for a controlled escape rather than a desperate gamble. With 10.8 seconds the No. 9 crew bolted on four fresh Goodyears, Elliott rejoined the fray in clean air and promptly ripped off laps in the low-20-second bracket—four-tenths quicker than the leaders on worn rubber. By the time the field cycled through its stops, the No. 9 had assumed command, a lead Elliott would not relinquish. Short-pitting can doom a team to a lap-down purgatory if a yellow flag flies mid-cycle; Gustafson’s timing neutralized that risk. The call provided Elliott a clear racetrack, predictable lap times, and the authority to dictate pace while rivals scrambled through traffic. Fuel mileage, often a Martinsville afterthought, was locked in with margin to spare. The maneuver underscored a partnership forged since 2016, one that has produced 19 wins and a championship. Elliott never questioned the directive, hitting pit-road speed and his box with millimetric precision, while the over-the-wall crew delivered their fastest stop of the afternoon. Clean execution converted strategy into daylight between the No. 9 and the pack. When the checkered flag waved, the victory delivered more than another grandfather clock to Hendrick Motorsports’ trophy case—it reaffirmed the organization’s capacity to out-think as well as out-drive the field. On an afternoon where contact is constant and variables multiply, Gustafson distilled chaos into a singular, data-driven decision that returned Hendrick Motorsports to Martinsville’s pinnacle.
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Broncos May Reunite with Shelby Harris After Draft to Plug Defensive Line Depth

Broncos May Reunite with Shelby Harris After Draft to Plug Defensive Line Depth

Denver, CO—While the Broncos continue to guard the 2027 compensatory picks they expect to receive for John Franklin-Myers and P.J. Locke, one familiar face has emerged as a low-cost option to shore up the defensive line: veteran Shelby Harris. Harris, 34, remains unsigned after visiting the New York Giants earlier this offseason. The 6-foot-2, 288-pound tackle logged 32 tackles, seven tackles for loss, and one sack in 17 games for Cleveland last season, operating primarily in a rotational role. Denver’s front office is reluctant to add any player whose contract might cancel the projected mid-round comp picks, but Harris could likely be had for around the $3 million he earned with the Browns in 2024. Because Franklin-Myers signed a lucrative deal with Tennessee, and Locke’s free-agent contract is similarly valued, a modest offer to Harris would not jeopardize Denver’s compensatory formula. The Broncos currently project second-year pro Eyioma Uwazurike and undrafted rookie Sai’vion Jones to compete for Franklin-Myers’s old spot opposite Zach Allen. Both are high-upside but unproven, leaving general manager George Paton open to a veteran hedge—especially one who already knows the scheme. Harris started 42 games for Denver from 2019-2021 before being shipped to Seattle as part of the Russell Wilson blockbuster. A short-term reunion would give the Broncos an experienced rotational piece without blocking the development path of Uwazurike or Jones. League rules stipulate that free-agent signings no longer count toward the compensatory equation once the draft concludes. If Denver waits until late April, it could also explore bigger names such as former Saints All-Pro Cameron Jordan. Should the club opt for familiarity and fiscal prudence, however, Harris stands out as an ideal post-draft depth add.
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Duke's season ends with its latest painful collapse

Duke's season ends with its latest painful collapse

DURHAM—For the second straight year, Duke’s March dreams dissolved in a haze of missed opportunities and final-second heartbreak. A 19-point lead late in the first half vanished Friday night, as top-seeded Duke fell 73-72 to UConn on a Braylon Mullins corner three-pointer that was set up by a Cayden Boozer turnover in the closing seconds. The sequence replayed in stunned silence inside the arena: Boozer, trying to protect a one-point edge, lost possession near mid-court; the ball found Mullins, who rose, fired, and buried the shot as the horn sounded. The Blue Devils, once cruising at 40-21, could only watch the Huskies celebrate a stunning reversal that sends Duke home earlier than any preseason projection imagined. The collapse is the program’s second straight season-ending nightmare. Last April, Duke led Houston by 14 in the second half and by six with 1:14 remaining in the Final Four, yet still found a way to lose. Twelve months later, the script feels cruelly familiar—an elite seed, a double-digit cushion, and a finish that will linger long into the offseason.
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Egypt national team director warns Salah against MLS move

Egypt national team director warns Salah against MLS move

Cairo—Egypt national team director Ibrahim Hassan has issued a blunt warning to Mohamed Salah over the forward’s post-Liverpool future, advising the 31-year-old to steer clear of Major League Soccer when his Anfield contract expires at the end of the season. Speaking publicly for the first time since reports surfaced that Salah is weighing options beyond England, Hassan cautioned that a switch to MLS would risk “fading into obscurity” and could diminish the winger’s global profile at a pivotal stage of his career. The intervention underscores Egyptian football’s stake in keeping its most marketable star on a high-visibility stage ahead of upcoming international tournaments.
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Baseball preview: Craig set to roll out young, athletic bunch for the 2026 season

Baseball preview: Craig set to roll out young, athletic bunch for the 2026 season

JANESVILLE — A blend of familiar faces and fresh talent will define Janesville Craig’s diamond outlook next spring as head coach Josh Shere prepares to launch a new chapter of Cougars baseball. While the roster will retain some experience, the 2026 edition is expected to lean heavily on a youthful, athletic core that will need to grow quickly at the varsity level. Shere, entering the campaign with an eye toward the future, sees the upcoming season as a pivotal transition period. The Cougars’ coaching staff has spent the off-season evaluating a pool of underclassmen whose speed, versatility, and raw ability could reshape the team’s identity. With limited returning starters, much of the lineup, rotation, and defensive alignment will be determined during winter workouts and early-spring practices. The emphasis on athleticism signals a shift in approach: aggressive base-running, gap-to-gap defense, and a pitching staff built around live arms rather than veteran polish. How rapidly the newcomers adjust to varsity competition will likely dictate whether Craig can contend in a traditionally rugged conference slate. Fans can expect an up-tempo brand of baseball when the Cougars open play in 2026, with every inning serving as a learning laboratory for a roster still discovering its ceiling.
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Vikings Mourn the Loss of Ring of Honor Member Joey Browner

Vikings Mourn the Loss of Ring of Honor Member Joey Browner

EAGAN, Minn. — The Minnesota Vikings are mourning the death of Ring of Honor safety Joey Browner, who passed away Saturday at age 65. The team announced Browner’s death on Sunday, capping a sorrowful weekend that began with news of the passing of former middle linebacker Jeff Siemon on Saturday. Browner, the 19th overall selection in the 1983 draft out of USC, spent nine seasons with the Vikings and became one of the most feared defensive backs of his era. He appeared in 138 regular-season games, starting 115, and compiled 37 interceptions, 18 forced fumbles and 17 fumble recoveries. His 987 tackles (by team records) rank second in franchise history among defensive backs, while his 9.5 sacks are also the second-most by a Vikings DB. “Joey was one of those players that could transcend any generation of player,” Ring of Honor linebacker Scott Studwell said in 2013. “He could’ve played today. When he played, he was one of the best at his position.” Browner earned six consecutive Pro Bowl berths from 1985-90, trailing only Randall McDaniel (11) and Ron Yary (seven) for the longest streaks in club annals. He was a First-Team All-Pro in 1987, 1988 and 1990 and a Second-Team selection in 1989, leading the Vikings in tackles in both 1986 and 1987. The 1987 squad reached the NFC Championship Game, with Browner recording six interceptions that season. Hall of Fame head coach Bud Grant, who tabbed Browner as the first defensive back Minnesota ever selected in the opening round, praised his speed and ball skills after the draft. “Any team he went to, he would improve the defense,” Grant said. Browner’s nose for the football was evident from the start. As a rookie he played all 16 games, picking off two passes and recovering four fumbles. He became a full-time starter in 1985 and helped anchor defenses that finished first in the NFL in yards allowed in 1988 and 1989. Fellow Ring of Honor member and longtime tight end Steve Jordan, who entered the league one year earlier and played nine seasons alongside Browner, visited him recently in the Twin Cities. “We’ve lost a great friend and one of the best Vikings teammates,” Jordan said. “God blessed Joey with phenomenal talent and a big heart to love people and be a beacon of positivity. Truly, he will be missed.” Browner’s legacy also lives on through current Vikings safety Harrison Smith, who matched his six Pro Bowl appearances and surpassed his interception total to move into fourth place on the franchise list last December. Smith called Browner “a guy who helped define what it is to be a safety” and said he felt “honored to be mentioned amongst him.” In 2013 Browner became the 21st inductee into the Vikings Ring of Honor, joining legends such as Fran Tarkenton, Jim Marshall, Chris Doleman and John Randle. “The Ring of Honor is something that is very special because there are very few of us that are in there,” Browner said at the time. Joey Browner is survived by his brothers, including former NFL players Ross, Jim, Keith and Gerald, who together forged one of the most prolific brotherhoods in league history.
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Burrow Leads Wildcats to Flag Football Podium, Eyes 2028 Olympic Shot

Burrow Leads Wildcats to Flag Football Podium, Eyes 2028 Olympic Shot

Los Angeles—Joe Burrow’s competitive itch is alive and well. The Cincinnati Bengals quarterback stepped away from off-season workouts and into the national spotlight on March 21 at BMO Stadium, guiding the Wildcats FFC to a second-place finish in the Fanatics Flag Football Classic, a showcase designed to drum up excitement for flag football’s Olympic debut at the 2028 Los Angeles Games. Selected as co-captain alongside Washington Commanders signal-caller Jayden Daniels, Burrow directed the Wildcats through a round-robin slate that included the Founders FFC and the star-studded U.S. National Team. The championship ended with a 24-14 loss to the national squad, but Burrow’s stat line—30 completions on 41 attempts for 196 yards, four touchdowns and one interception—underscored why organizers wanted him front and center. The performance did not come without trepidation. Burrow, who missed nine games last season following surgery on a turf-toe injury and has endured two other significant injuries since entering the league, planted, pivoted and even dove into the end zone during the tournament. Clips of the hits lit up phones across the NFL, including that of Bengals head coach Zac Taylor, who fielded a steady stream of texts from peers while watching NCAA basketball. “His phone was blowing up,” play-by-play voice Dan Hoard said on the Bengals Booth Podcast. “Every other coach and scout saying, ‘What’s Burrow doing?’” Taylor, per Hoard, shrugged off the concern and turned his attention back to the hoops. Social-media reaction was less restrained, but Burrow had already weighed the risk against a lifelong ambition. “I’ve always wanted to play in the Olympics,” he said before kickoff. “I’ve never necessarily played an Olympic sport before, so when this got announced, I was pretty excited about it. The opportunity to win a gold medal is something that I’ve thought about—a moment like that—for a long time, since I was a kid. I think it would be something very special.” For now, Burrow will trade the 7-on-7 field for Paul Brown Stadium, hoping to recapture the form that propelled Cincinnati to an AFC title and a Super Bowl berth in two of his first three seasons. The Bengals have gone 24-27 since that early surge and missed the playoffs in each of the past two campaigns. If Friday night was any indication, Burrow’s arm, accuracy and appetite for big stages remain intact—whether the stage is built for flags or for the AFC North.
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Whiff of controversy as South Australia claim back-to-back Sheffield Shield titles

Whiff of controversy as South Australia claim back-to-back Sheffield Shield titles

Junction Oval, Melbourne — South Australia have become the first side since 1995-96 to defend the Sheffield Shield, but their 56-run victory over Victoria will be remembered as much for a marginal umpiring call as for the relentless bowling that sealed the win. Set 196 on the final day, Victoria resumed at 102 for five and inched to 112 before the game pivoted on the 53rd over. Oliver Peake, regarded as the home side’s last recognised batter, pushed forward to Liam Scott and feathered an edge to Alex Carey, who flung himself low to his right to hold a one-handed stunner. Side-on replays suggested Scott had over-stepped, yet the non-striker’s position obscured the TV angle and Peake was sent on his way for 4. From 112 for six, Victoria unravelled. Scott, crowned Shield Player of the Year this week, removed Mitch Perry and Nathan Murphy in quick succession, then returned to snare 3 for 32. Henry Thornton, swinging the old ball at pace, mopped up the tail with 3 for 12, including the final wicket of Fergus O’Neill that triggered manic South Australian celebrations at 2.47 pm local time. The last five Victorian wickets had fallen for 27 runs; the last seven for 37. The collapse completed a stunning turnaround engineered on day four by Nathan McAndrew and Carey. When McAndrew walked out, Scott Boland was on a hat-trick and South Australia were 122 for seven, only 119 ahead. The No. 8 counter-attacked for 60, Carey followed his first-innings century with a punchy 103, and the pair added 105 for the eighth wicket—enough to set Victoria a target that always felt within reach on a wearing surface. McAndrew finished with six wickets in the match and was an easy choice for Player of the Final. Carey’s back-to-back Shield final hundreds—he also struck a ton in last season’s decider—etched his name into South Australian folklore. Victoria had dominated the home-and-away season and were chasing a first title since 2018-19, yet they could not convert supremacy into silverware. Captain Will Sutherland’s dismissal, fending at a lifting Thornton delivery and parried to Ben Manenti at first slip, effectively ended resistance at 134 for eight. South Australia, who scraped into second spot on the last day of the regular season, have now won two consecutive shields for the first time in the competition’s modern era. “We really had to dig deep,” skipper Nathan McSweeney said amid a huddle of team-mates wearing matching green-and-yellow flags as capes. “The ability for us to stay in the game is incredible and to win two in a row with this group is super-special. It makes it even better when we’re all such good mates off the field. I couldn’t be prouder or luckier to captain such great cricketers and even better blokes.” The win ends a summer of tight finishes and cements South Australia’s resurgence after years in the Shield wilderness. For Victoria, the wait for a 33rd title goes on, clouded by the lingering image of a front-foot line that no camera could fully expose.
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Roblez’s Final Strike Seals 3-1 Win as Oregon State Sweeps Mercer

Roblez’s Final Strike Seals 3-1 Win as Oregon State Sweeps Mercer

Corvallis, Ore. – Moments after Albert Roblez snapped off the strikeout that slammed the door on Mercer, the Oregon State reliever thrust both arms overhead, the crack of the mitt still echoing around Goss Stadium. The celebration punctuated a 3-1 victory Sunday afternoon that capped the Beavers’ seventh straight win and a weekend sweep of the Bears. No. 16 Oregon State (21-5) needed every bit of its 17-strikeout pitching performance to subdue a Mercer club that refused to fold. After exchanging single runs in the first and third innings, the teams settled into a tense 1-1 deadlock that lasted until the bottom of the seventh. That’s when the Beavers manufactured the decisive two-run burst without the benefit of a base hit: Josh Procter’s sacrifice fly to right plated Easton Talt, and Adam Haight dashed home on a wild pitch for his second run of the day. Isaac Yeager, who entered in the sixth, earned the win by fanning six Bears in 2.1 innings and improving to 4-1 on the year. Long Beach State transfer Roblez polished off the ninth for his ninth save, striking out the final batter he faced to strand a Mercer runner and ignite the dugout celebration. Oregon State’s offense finished with eight hits and took advantage of two Mercer errors, the most costly coming in the opening frame when Devyn McEachron’s miscue allowed Haight to score from second. Beaver hurlers issued only three walks and hit one batter while piling up the 17 punchouts, five of the final six outs coming via strike. The Beavers remain perfect at home (7-0) and return to Goss Stadium on Tuesday night to host Washington. First pitch is set for 5:35 p.m. PT and will be carried on Portland’s CW and the Beaver Sports Network.
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Allen Spring Football: Eagles Eye Redemption After Semifinal Heartbreak

Allen Spring Football: Eagles Eye Redemption After Semifinal Heartbreak

Allen, Texas — Eight weeks before the pads pop on Eagle Stadium turf, head coach Lee Wiginton’s program will begin its 2025 reboot at dawn. Spring football opens March 31 with practices scheduled from 6:30 a.m. to 8 a.m. each day, save for two evening sessions on April 7 and April 22. The condensed schedule culminates in the annual spring game at 6:45 p.m. on Thursday, April 30, giving fans an early glimpse at a roster that must replace six All-State graduates. Gone are defensive back Lebron Bauer, defensive linemen Devin Palmer and Josh Shaw, linebacker Ja’Prei Wafer, punter Ethan Nava, and kick returner-wide receiver Caleb Smith — every Eagle honored by the Texas Sports Writers Association last season. Their departures leave sizable voids on both sides of the ball, but the staff welcomes the competition after a 14-1 campaign that ended with a 31-9 semifinal loss to Duncanville. That December defeat remains the freshest memory for a program that has amassed a 27-2 record over the past two seasons. Allen’s defense allowed just 11.4 points per game in 2024, posting four shutouts and holding two additional opponents to a single touchdown. Offensively, the Eagles churned out 2,672 rushing yards, averaging 267.2 yards per contest on the ground and 178.1 through the air. The road back to the state semifinals begins August 28, when Duncanville returns to Eagle Stadium for a rematch of last year’s Class 6A Division I showdown. Week 2 brings DeSoto — the reigning Division II champion — on September 4, followed by a trip to Southlake Carroll on September 11. Carroll also reached the Division II semifinals a year ago. After surviving that gauntlet, Allen will visit Prosper on September 16 in a sequel to last year’s 31-30 thriller. District 6-6A realignment adds fresh faces while subtracting familiar ones. Dallas Jesuit and Prosper Walnut Grove move up from 5A, joining McKinney, McKinney Boyd, Princeton, Prosper, and Prosper Rock Hill. Plano East and Plano are no longer on the district docket, tightening an already formidable lineup. Spring practices are slated for April 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 13, 15, 16, 21, 22, 23, 24, 27, and 28. With new starters auditioning across the depth chart, Wiginton and his staff hope the early mornings lay the groundwork for another deep playoff run.
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Jason Esposito looks on from the dugout | Vanderbilt Athletics

Jason Esposito looks on from the dugout | Vanderbilt Athletics

NASHVILLE — When Tommy Goodin stepped in as a pinch hitter with two outs in the bottom of the ninth on Sunday, the weight of a potential sweep of Tennessee rested on his shoulders. Goodin, who had watched the entire weekend from the bench, felt the moment pressing in until first-year hitting coach Jason Esposito’s voice rose above the noise of Hawkins Field. Esposito, stationed on the dugout steps with his ever-present iPad, called time. The brief delay was not about mechanics or matchups; it was about approach — the single word that has come to define Vanderbilt’s offense since Esposito arrived from the Cleveland Guardians organization last fall. “Hey, what are you thinking up there?” Esposito asked. Goodin outlined his plan: lay off the changeup away, sit on the low fastball. Esposito nodded. “Alright, let’s go do it.” Goodin took the first pitch, a changeup off the plate. When Krenzel came back with the low fastball, Goodin was ready, launching it over the left-center fence for a walk-off home run that sealed a 6-3 weekend advantage in homers over the Volunteers and kept Vanderbilt second in the nation with 62 long balls through 21 games. The at-bat was the latest example of Esposito’s in-game tutelage. He had stopped play earlier in the inning to deliver the same message to Mack Whitcomb, who responded with a pinch-hit RBI single. Those interventions have become routine; Esposito has paused hitters throughout the season to reinforce discipline, intent and a data-refined “go-zone” mentality — the specific areas of the strike zone each batter should target against a given pitcher. Goodin, now homering in nearly 15 percent of his 48 at-bats, credits the new process for his surge. “I used to be a ‘see ball, hit ball’ guy,” he said minutes after rounding the bases. “Now I have more of a process and understand what I’m looking for.” The transformation stretches beyond one swing. Of Vanderbilt’s 62 home runs, 49 have been hit by returning players from a 2025 roster that finished near the SEC cellar in every power category. Braden Holcomb (11) and Brodie Johnston (8) lead the holdovers, but the common denominator is Esposito’s synthesis of analytics — bat-speed metrics, attack-angle breakdowns, pitcher-tendency clips — into simple, executable plans. “We’re just kind of using objective means to help players grow,” Esposito said in the fall. “The data is coming from ‘hey, this is what leads to run scoring,’ and we’re trying to simplify that as much as possible.” The result is an offense whose volatility has been replaced by explosiveness, raising Vanderbilt’s ceiling as postseason play approaches. And while players such as Goodin, Whitcomb and reliever Jakob Schulz delivered clutch performances all weekend, it was Esposito in the dugout, iPad in hand, steadying the moment that mattered most. “He definitely has a go-zone mentality,” head coach Tim Corbin said. “The design, the plan and what we’re looking for as an offense — Jason has brought that to life.” Vanderbilt, now 21 games into the 2026 campaign, will need that approach to hold as SEC competition intensifies. But with Esposito orchestrating from the dugout steps, the Commodores believe every hitter — starter or substitute — knows exactly what to do when his number is called.
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Roseman’s New Silence Amplifies AJ Brown Trade Buzz at NFL Meetings

Roseman’s New Silence Amplifies AJ Brown Trade Buzz at NFL Meetings

Phoenix, Ariz. – The NFL’s annual league meetings have become the latest stage for the Philadelphia Eagles’ most persistent offseason subplot: the future of star wide receiver AJ Brown. On Sunday, general manager Howie Roseman faced reporters and, in a marked shift from his combine-week candor, offered only a rehearsed line when asked about the Pro Bowl pass-catcher. “I understand that there’s interest in the AJ Brown story,” Roseman said, per The Athletic’s Zach Berman. “But my answer to any question on AJ Brown is, ‘AJ Brown is a member of the Eagles.’ From my perspective, anything you ask me about AJ Brown, I’ll go right back to that answer.” The clipped response contrasts sharply with Roseman’s late-February remarks, when he called the likelihood of moving Brown “not very high” and lauded the receiver as a “difference-making player” who has helped propel Philadelphia to four consecutive playoff appearances. “We’re in the business of keeping great players,” Roseman said at the combine. “You’re not looking to get rid of players like that.” Yet the GM stopped short Sunday of repeating that stance, opting instead for a non-committal refrain that neither confirms nor denies ongoing trade discussions. The deliberate ambiguity keeps alive a narrative that has shadowed the Eagles since the postseason ended: whether the franchise is willing to part with its top receiver for the right return. No deal is imminent, and Brown remains on the roster, but Roseman’s refusal to shut the door entirely ensures speculation will persist as team officials convene in Phoenix. The evolution in tone— from open assurance to strategic silence—signals that Philadelphia, at minimum, is leaving every option on the table.
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Marc-André Ter Stegen, portero de Alemania, se enfrenta a un futuro incierto con la Mannschaft. El seleccionador nacional, Julian Nagelsmann, rebajó drásticamente este domingo las opciones de que el cancerbero de 33 años dispute el Mundial 2026, calificando su presencia en Norteamérica de “muy, muy, muy escasa”.

Marc-André Ter Stegen, portero de Alemania, se enfrenta a un futuro incierto con la Mannschaft. El seleccionador nacional, Julian Nagelsmann, rebajó drásticamente este domingo las opciones de que el cancerbero de 33 años dispute el Mundial 2026, calificando su presencia en Norteamérica de “muy, muy, muy escasa”.

La razón principal es la prolongada inactividad del guardameta. Tras una intervención quirúrgica en los isquiotibiales el pasado febrero, Ter Stegen apenas ha disputado minutos oficiales. “No jugó durante un año y luego se lesionó. Ha estado apartado un año, por decirlo así, y ha jugado muy poco”, explicó Nagelsmann en la rueda de prensa previa al amistoso contra Ghana, que se celebrará mañana en Stuttgart. El entrenador alemán reveló que mantuvo una conversación con el portero esta misma semana y, aunque le desea una completa recuperación, reconoció que la edad y el historial reciente complican su regreso al más alto nivel. “Debería darlo todo en su rehabilitación, pero ya no tiene 21 años. Tiene unos cuantos partidos a sus espaldas”, añadió Nagelsmann, quien confesó tener “los dedos cruzados” por él. Ter Stegen, cedido por el FC Barcelona al Girona, asumió la titularidad en la selección tras la retirada de Manuel Neuer tras la Eurocopa 2024. En febrero, el propio seleccionador lo había designado como portero titular para el Mundial, pero la sucesión de lesiones ha alterado el guion. Ahora, la puerta se abre de par para Oliver Baumann, guardameta del Hoffenheim que ya fue titular en la victoria 4-3 ante Suiza del pasado viernes.
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Mullins Madness: UConn Freshman’s 35-Footer Stuns Duke, Sends Huskies to Final Four

Mullins Madness: UConn Freshman’s 35-Footer Stuns Duke, Sends Huskies to Final Four

Storrs, Conn. — In a finish that will live in program lore, UConn freshman guard Mullins drilled a 35-foot buzzer-beater to lift the Huskies past Duke 73-72 on Saturday night, clinching a berth in the Final Four. The dramatic heave capped a back-and-forth contest that saw the lead change hands multiple times in the closing minutes. With the clock winding down and Duke clinging to a one-point edge, Mullins collected the ball well beyond the arc, took one dribble, and launched a high-arcing shot that found nylon as the horn sounded, setting off a wild celebration at center court. The victory propels UConn into the national semifinals and adds another chapter to the school’s storied tournament history. Duke, meanwhile, exits one game shy of the sport’s biggest stage after a valiant effort that fell a single point short. Mullins’ heroics finish a night in which the freshman’s confidence never wavered, and his long-range dagger ensures the Huskies’ season will continue under the brightest lights college basketball has to offer.
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France Have a Wealth of Attacking Talent

France Have a Wealth of Attacking Talent

When Didier Deschamps finalises his 26-man list for the flight to North America, the France head coach will carry the most enviable dilemma in global football: how to squeeze a constellation of attacking stars into one starting XI. Michael Olise, Ousmane Dembélé and Kylian Mbappé have all spent the past 12 months underlining why Les Bleus are considered the most lavishly stocked side ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Olise, 24, arrives fresh from a Ballon d’Or-calibre season at Bayern Munich. The London-born winger has tormented Bundesliga full-backs, cutting in off the right to curl sumptuous left-footed finishes into the far corner. Deschamps, recognising the player’s confidence, has already trialled Olise as a roaming No. 10 in recent friendlies, allowing him to interchange with a supporting cast that includes Antoine Griezmann and Marcus Thuram. Far from being overawed, Olise has embraced the freedom, suggesting he is ready to inherit the creative baton. Dembélé’s narrative is one of redemption. The PSG attacker, holder of the 2025 Ballon d’Or, endured a stop-start 2025–26 campaign, yet his two-footed explosiveness remains unmatched. Luis Enrique has coaxed maturity from the 28-year-old, who is desperate to erase memories of the 2022 final when an early foul on Ángel Di María preceded his substitution. With 11 previous World Cup appearances under his belt, Dembélé is targeting goal No. 1 on the biggest stage and believes the U.S. will provide the canvas for his breakthrough. Then there is Mbappé. Despite knee irritation that curtailed his European Golden Shoe defence, the 27-year-old captain has already served notice of his enduring class, clipping a delicate finish over Ederson in March’s friendly win over Brazil. A final hat-trick in 2022 leaves him four goals shy of Miroslav Klose’s all-time record; a fit Mbappé in knockout football remains the sport’s most reliable guarantee of fireworks. Deschamps’ challenge is not scarcity but abundance. France can field a front four without compromising midfield steel, a luxury no rival can replicate. Opponents must pick their poison: Olise’s artistry, Dembélé’s unpredictability or Mbappé’s cold-blooded pace. In a tournament where moments define dynasties, France’s embarrassment of attacking riches may prove the decisive edge.
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