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Page 1 of 194Real Madrid veteran needs a ‘miracle’ to be ready for CL quarterfinal second leg vs Bayern Munich
Madrid, Spain – Real Madrid’s hopes of having first-choice goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois available for the decisive leg of their UEFA Champions League quarter-final tie against Bayern Munich now hinge on what sources close to the club describe as “a miracle.”
The 33-year-old Belgian sustained a muscle injury during the second-half of the Round-of-16 return match against Manchester City on 4 March and was replaced by Andriy Lunin at the interval. Medical staff initially projected a six-week lay-off; with only ten days of that window elapsed, Courtois is not expected to return before late April.
That timeline rules him out of the first-leg duel with Bayern Munich at the Bernabéu and the subsequent La Liga encounter with Girona. More problematically, it leaves the former Chelsea keeper only four weeks into his rehabilitation when the return leg kicks off on 15 April at the Allianz Arena.
ESPN’s Rodra reported on Thursday that, barring an unforeseen acceleration in recovery, Courtois will miss the trip to Germany, leaving Lunin to deputise once again. The Ukrainian international, who already stood in against Atlético Madrid before the international break, is slated to start versus Mallorca next weekend and will carry the gloves for the remainder of the quarter-final barring a dramatic change.
While Lunin has previous Champions League experience, Madrid’s hierarchy had been counting on Courtois’ presence for the season’s defining stretch. Club sources say no risks will be taken with the veteran’s fitness, meaning the squad must plan without him unless his body responds well ahead of schedule.
For now, the message emanating from the Spanish capital is clear: only a medical miracle will see Thibaut Courtois back between the posts in Munich.
Read more →Texas Rangers’ first ABS challenge offers lesson on what not to do

PHILADELPHIA — Evan Carter etched his name into Texas Rangers lore on Saturday, though not in the fashion anyone envisioned. The rookie outfielder became the first Ranger to trigger the new automatic-balls-and-strikes (ABS) challenge, contesting a called second strike during a fourth-inning at-bat in the club’s 5-4 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park. The appeal failed, and the episode instantly became a case study in strategic restraint.
With two outs, no runners aboard and Texas leading by three runs, Carter disagreed with plate umpire Mark Carlson’s strike call on a 1-1 pitch from Aaron Nola. Carter tapped his helmet to initiate the challenge, but video review upheld the call. He eventually singled on the seventh pitch of the plate appearance, yet the cost lingered: the Rangers were left with only one challenge for the final six innings.
Manager Skip Schumaker, while praising Carter’s keen eye, acknowledged the situational misstep. “Maybe we may have wanted to hold onto that one in particular just in case there’s guys on base,” Schumaker said. “These are learning lessons that we’re all working through. It’s game two of the season.”
The ramifications surfaced an inning later. With a runner on and two outs in the fifth, first baseman Jake Burger was rung up on a pitch below the zone. Had the Rangers retained both challenges, Burger might have appealed; the call would have been overturned, extending the frame. Instead, he bit his lip and returned to the dugout, wary of burning the club’s final challenge and leaving the staff empty-handed for the late innings.
Schumaker said the staff has begun alerting hitters when “this might be the time” to challenge, emphasizing leverage and game context. “If it’s a borderline pitch, I think that’s when the leverage spot really comes into play,” he noted. “If it’s not a leverage spot, I think that’s when we really try to think about if it’s the right time or not.”
Through the season’s first three days, only seven teams have challenged an offensive call just once; Texas sits among them. The Rangers also challenged the 11th-fewest pitches in Cactus League play and posted the lowest success rate. Saturday’s sequence underscored the steep learning curve accompanying technology’s expanded role.
Carter’s single ultimately padded Nola’s pitch count, but the rookie’s inaugural ABS challenge will be remembered less for the outcome of the at-bat and more for the managerial memo it produced: conserve the red flag for the moments that truly swing games.
Read more →Ben Stokes injury ‘so much worse than what you think’, reveals coach
Durham head coach Ryan Campbell has warned that Ben Stokes’ facial injury is “so, so much worse than what you think,” as the England Test captain is ruled out of the county’s opening County Championship match against Kent. The setback prolongs a rehabilitation process that began in early February when a ball struck Stokes flush on the face while he stood close to a Durham academy net session, fracturing his cheekbone and requiring surgery.
Campbell, speaking on Saturday, painted a stark picture of the incident: “A couple of centimetres a different way it hits him in the eye and it could have been different. The ball was hit so hard. We are just lucky he got away with it.”
The delay compounds a turbulent period for Stokes, who recently presided over a 4-1 Ashes defeat. Despite the series loss triggering an internal review and reports of tension between Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum, the all-rounder has retained the captaincy alongside McCullum and director of cricket Rob Key. Off-field headlines also emerged after players, notably Ben Duckett, were reported to have engaged in heavy drinking in Noosa following England’s sole victory.
Campbell insists Stokes is using the lay-off to reset. “He has been training so hard to be ready. He has a lot to prove. You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to know the Ashes didn’t go so well, and he is a proud man who wants England to be the best team in the world.”
Although Durham do not expect their skipper back before early May, Stokes remains eager to play 50-over cricket this season after already withdrawing from The Hundred. With New Zealand’s tour beginning on 4 June, the 2019 World Cup winner is targeting sufficient match practice ahead of the first Test. For now, recovery, rhythm and full fitness dominate his agenda.
Read more →IPL 2026: Rohit Sharma will smash KKR bowling like 'halwa', former cricketer's remark goes viral
Mumbai Indians’ IPL 2026 curtain-raiser against Kolkata Knight Riders at the Wankhede Stadium on Sunday has already sparked a social-media storm after former India opener Kris Srikkanth predicted Rohit Sharma will “smash their bowling like eating halwa.” Speaking on his YouTube channel, Srikkanth recalled how KKR “used to be like halwa for Rohit Sharma a few years back” and labelled the franchise the batter’s “badam halwa team,” insisting the 38-year-old slips into a “comfort zone” whenever the purple-and-gold opposition is in town.
The numbers lend weight to the colourful analogy. Across 30 innings against KKR, Rohit has amassed 1,083 runs at a strike rate of 127.86, including six fifties and one unbeaten century. His 109 not out at Eden Gardens remains the high-water mark, while at the Wankhede he has pocketed 238 runs against the Knights at 120.81. Yet the narrative is not one-way: Sunil Narine has troubled Rohit in past duels and will again be KKR’s go-to trump card.
Although Rohit’s last half-century against KKR dates back to 2020, his recent gear-shift is impossible to ignore. After hovering around a 133 strike rate between 2016 and 2023, he surged to 150 in 2024 and 149.28 in 2025, signalling a more aggressive avatar that Mumbai will hope ends their five-year title drought. The last of their five trophies came in 2020; last season, under Hardik Pandya’s leadership, they fell to Punjab Kings in Qualifier 2 and finished third.
Sunday’s clash also marks the first look at a star-studded MI core fresh from India’s T20 World Cup triumph. Suryakumar Yadav, Pandya, Tilak Varma and Jasprit Bumrah headline a squad eager to turn early momentum into late-tournament silverware. For Rohit, the stage is set to turn Srikkanth’s viral prophecy into a Wankhede reality.
Read more →One final roll of the dice: Why did Spurs have to act now?

By any reasonable measure, Igor Tudor’s Tottenham reign was a short, sharp lesson in crisis management. Appointed in February to replace Thomas Frank, the Croatian oversaw only seven matches, collecting a solitary Premier League point and leaving the club hovering one place and one point above the relegation zone with seven fixtures remaining. On Wednesday, less than 24 hours after burying his father in Croatia, Tudor departed north London by mutual consent. The timing felt brutal, yet inside the club the decision had already been taken: Tottenham could not gamble their top-flight status on a head coach who had so far been unable to ignite a turnaround.
The mathematics are stark. One point from five league games under Tudor, back-to-back defeats to Crystal Palace and Fulham, and a listless second-half collapse at home to Nottingham Forest have pushed Spurs to the precipice. When the players reassemble after the international break, they could be in the bottom three ahead of a pivotal trip to Sunderland, live on Sky Sports. Relegation, unthinkable in pre-season, is now a genuine possibility.
Senior club sources insist the choice to part ways was not taken lightly. Tudor was popular among squad and staff, and his exit was framed as collaborative rather than confrontational. Yet the board arrived at a simple conclusion: the club’s chances of survival are greater with a change in the dugout than without one. The search for a successor, ideally a permanent appointment, is already under way, with Roberto De Zerbi’s name recurring in internal discussions. Whether an interim or long-term solution is found, the new man must possess Premier League know-how and an instant capacity to galvanise a dressing-room that has grown accustomed to setbacks.
Years of recruitment missteps, chronic injuries, suspensions to both club captain and stand-in skipper, and a succession of managerial resets have left Tottenham vulnerable. Tudor was hired to extinguish fires, a skill he had demonstrated at Juventus and Lazio, but the blaze at Spurs has proved hotter and faster than anticipated. From the opening whistle of his tenure, results trended downward; the unexpected 1-1 draw at Liverpool and a spirited second leg against Atlético Madrid offered brief respite, yet the pressure-cooker environment of a relegation fight proved overwhelming.
The club’s hierarchy now faces its most consequential appointment in decades. Fail, and Tottenham could end a 49-year unbroken run in the top flight. Succeed, and the allure of a storied stadium, ambitious owners and a potentially revamped squad may once again attract A-list managerial talent. For the incoming coach, the task is clear: restore belief, tighten a porous defence, and squeeze every point from a run-in that includes Wolves away, Leeds at home and Brighton in quick succession.
Inside the training ground, players have been told to expect a swift announcement. Whoever walks through the door will inherit a squad low on confidence but not devoid of quality. The next seven games will define not merely a season, but perhaps a generation. One final roll of the dice has been cast; the stakes could not be higher.
Read more →Barcelona make call on Xavi Simons return
Barcelona’s hierarchy have ended mounting speculation by formally ruling out a summer approach for former academy standout Xavi Simons, sources confirmed on Wednesday.
The 21-year-old Dutch attacker, currently starring for Bundesliga outfit RB Leipzig, has been repeatedly linked with a return to Camp Nou after flourishing in Germany. Recent reports suggested that Barcelona could capitalise on Tottenham Hotspur’s relegation plight, with Simons believed to be among the high-profile names who could seek an exit if the London club drop into the Championship.
However, club officials have now briefed that no pursuit is planned. “Barça are not contemplating his return at the moment,” a senior source said. “Not only because of the high cost of the operation, but also because of a matter of sports planning.”
The statement ends weeks of conjecture in Catalunya and clarifies the club’s immediate transfer priorities as they look to balance Financial Fair Play constraints with coach-led squad building.
Simens left Barcelona for Paris Saint-Germain in 2020 before moving to Leipzig, where his performances have elevated his reputation across Europe. Despite the player’s pedigree and familiarity with La Masia, Barcelona’s decision-makers insist the timing, valuation and long-term roster strategy do not align with re-signing him this summer.
The stance leaves the door open for other suitors to monitor Simons’ situation, while Barcelona will continue to explore cost-effective reinforcements that fit their evolving sporting project.
Read more →Dolphins trade proposal replaces Jaylen Waddle with young Packers receiver
Miami—In a dramatic reshuffle that underscores just how quickly the Dolphins’ offensive identity has changed, a new trade proposal would send Green Bay second-year wideout Dontayvion Wicks to South Florida while effectively closing the book on the Jaylen Waddle era.
The framework, floated by A-to-Z Sports’ Craig Smith, has Miami receiving Wicks plus a 2025 third-round selection in exchange for the Dolphins’ own third- and fifth-round picks. No players are listed as outgoing in the mock deal, but the premise is clear: Wicks would slide into a receiver room that has been stripped of the star power it boasted only 12 months ago.
Once headlined by Tyreek Hill and Waddle, Miami’s wide-receiver depth chart now ranks among the league’s thinnest. The offseason additions of veterans Tutu Atwell and Jalen Tolbert have done little to quell concerns about both productivity and ceiling. “The ceiling isn’t high for either,” Smith noted in his proposal, arguing that the Dolphins’ new front office must keep scouring the bargain bin—either via trade or free agency—for viable targets around new quarterback Malik Willis.
Wicks, a 2023 fifth-round pick out of Virginia, caught 24 passes for 315 yards and two touchdowns as a rookie operating behind Christian Watson, Romeo Doubs, and Jayden Reed in Green Bay. While those numbers are modest, the 24-year-old’s 16.1-yard average per reception hints at the vertical element Miami currently lacks. Equally important, the proposed move would reunite Wicks with both Willis and several former Packers assistants now populating Miami’s staff, potentially shortening an on-field learning curve.
Smith points to the front-office exodus from Green Bay to Miami as another factor that could grease the skids. “They’ve added multiple front-office personnel and a head coach from the Packers,” he wrote. “With Willis also coming from Green Bay, they should have some familiarity together.”
For the Packers, the hypothetical swap would net them a small jump of two rounds—from the fifth back into the third—while clearing a path for their younger receivers to compete for snaps behind the entrenched starters. For Miami, the transaction would represent the latest teardown of the previous regime’s offensive foundation, following the trades of Hill earlier this offseason and, if this deal were executed, the presumed departure of Waddle.
Neither the Dolphins nor the Packers have commented on the proposal, and no formal offer is known to be on the table. Still, the mere suggestion illustrates how aggressively Miami’s new brain trust is expected to hunt for low-cost, high-upside talent after purging two of the NFL’s most explosive weapons in the span of a single year.
Read more →Virat bhai’s only instruction was to keep the run-rate up, reveals Padikkal after RCB’s record blitz
Bengaluru, 22 March 2026: Devdutt Padikkal has revealed that the only message Virat Kohli gave him during Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s chase on Saturday night was blunt and brief: “Keep the run-rate up and put pressure on the bowlers.”
The 25-year-old left-hander obeyed to perfection, walloping 61 off 26 balls in a partnership of 101 from 45 deliveries with Kohli, who finished unbeaten on 69 from 38 as the defending champions hunted down 202 with 26 balls to spare—the fastest successful 200-plus chase in IPL history.
Speaking on Star Sports’ Amul Cricket Live after the 15.4-over romp at a raucous M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Padikkal said Kohli’s calming presence freed him to play an attacking role once Phil Salt had fallen early.
“His presence took the pressure off me and let me play freely. We knew SRH’s bowling is not very strong, so we believed we could chase down the target in a smooth manner,” Padikkal explained. “My job was to take risks while he anchored the chase.”
The innings continued a striking reinvention for the Karnataka opener, who credits head coach Andy Flower and batting coach Dinesh Karthik for driving the transformation.
“They really worked hard on me. It wasn’t easy because there was a lot I needed to change. It wasn’t just technical; it was a lot mentally as well. I needed to really believe that I can play this aggressive brand of cricket,” Padikkal said, adding that the evolution of T20 cricket since his 2020 debut demanded a shift in mindset.
Earlier, Sunrisers Hyderabad had recovered from a wobble at 3 for 3 inside the powerplay to reach 201 for 9, largely through Ishan Kishan’s 38-ball 80 and Aniket Verma’s 18-ball 43. Jacob Duffy and Romario Shepherd claimed three wickets apiece for Bengaluru, while Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Abhinandan Singh and Suyash Sharma picked up one each.
Kohli’s measured anchor act and Padikkal’s fireworks ensured the target never looked daunting. Rajat Patidar provided the late flourish, clattering 31 off 12 balls as RCB sealed a four-wicket win to launch their title defence in emphatic style.
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Read more →How Tottenham’s Next Five Fixtures Compare to Relegation Rivals After Igor Tudor Exit
Tottenham have parted ways with another manager amid their fight for survival, leaving the club to navigate a pivotal stretch without Igor Tudor in the dugout. With relegation rivals also facing defining fixtures, the timing of the managerial shake-up intensifies scrutiny on the remaining schedule. Every point in the coming weeks will carry added weight as the battle to avoid the drop reaches boiling point.
Read more →Kai Rooney handed potential Manchester United first team opening

Manchester United’s most famous surname could soon be back on a senior teamsheet, with 16-year-old centre-forward Kai Rooney in line for a first taste of top-level football during the club’s forthcoming pre-season campaign. The teenager, eldest son of United’s all-time leading scorer Wayne Rooney, has spent the past year tormenting Under-18 defences and, according to The Mirror, will be invited to train and travel with Erik ten Hag’s senior squad this summer provided he overcomes a recent season-ending injury.
Kai, who only last month helped United’s Under-16s lift the Premier League Shield, announced on Instagram that he will miss the remainder of the current campaign after sustaining an injury, writing: “Disappointed to be out for the rest of the season. Back stronger pre-season.” That recovery timeline is now critical: if the first-year scholar is declared fit by early July, he is expected to join the squad that will tour Scandinavia and other European destinations as part of the club’s 2026/27 preparations.
Although yet to sign professional terms—something United cannot formally complete until next season—the forward’s prolific form at Carrington has accelerated internal plans for his integration. Academy staff have pencilled in the 2026/27 season for his gradual introduction to first-team proceedings, but the coming pre-season offers an earlier audition.
Kai will not be the only prodigy on the plane. Highly-rated academy attacker JJ Gabriel, already praised by interim boss Michael Carrick as a “big talent” after training with the seniors, is also slated to link up with established stars such as Kobbie Mainoo and Bruno Fernandes. United intend to blood a clutch of youngsters during the tour, using the platform to evaluate who might bridge the gap to senior football.
The schedule is complicated by the June 11–July 19 World Cup, forcing United to condense their traditional early-July Carrington training block before heading abroad. Whether Carrick remains in temporary charge or a permanent manager is appointed by then, the emphasis on youth will be central to the club’s summer strategy.
For Kai Rooney, the opportunity represents more than a family reunion with the Old Trafford spotlight; it is a chance to begin writing his own chapter at the club where his father scored 253 goals in 559 appearances between 2004 and 2017. Emulating those numbers remains a distant dream, but a successful pre-season cameo would mark the first official step in the 16-year-old’s bid to follow in famously illustrious footsteps.
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Read more →Pochettino, De Zerbi, Redknapp: Who will replace Tudor as Spurs boss?
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Tottenham Hotspur have opened the search for a new manager after parting ways with Igor Tudor, and the early shortlist already features three headline-grabbing candidates: Mauricio Pochettino, Roberto De Zerbi and Harry Redknapp. The trio represent contrasting profiles—club legend, progressive tactician and experienced Premier League operator—leaving the club’s hierarchy with a pivotal decision that could shape the direction of the North London side for seasons to come.
Pochettino’s return would mark a sentimental homecoming for the Argentine, who previously guided Spurs to a Champions League final and established a high-pressing identity that resonated with supporters. De Zerbi, currently turning heads on the continent with his possession-heavy, fluid system, offers a forward-thinking blueprint that aligns with modern tactical trends. Redknapp, the wily Englishman who once steered Tottenham into the Champions League quarter-finals, brings institutional knowledge of the Premier League and a proven ability to galvanise dressing rooms.
With no further details released regarding a preferred timeline or additional candidates, speculation will intensify around which of the three will ultimately inherit the dugout at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.
Read more →Quarterback Derby Headlines Rutgers Spring as Surace and Lonergan Vie for Starting Role

Piscataway, N.J.—When Rutgers opens spring practice this week, the loudest buzz will not surround the wholesale remake of a defense that surrendered historic yardage in 2025. Instead, every camera lens and notebook will tilt toward the offensive backfield, where a two-man race has emerged to replace graduated starter Athan Kaliakmanis under center.
Rising junior AJ Surace, a 6-foot-2, 205-pound Pennington native who has waited three years for his moment, takes the first snap of what offensive coordinator Kirk Ciarrocca calls “an open evaluation.” Surace’s lone résumé consists of four completions in nine attempts, 58 yards and two touchdowns, all compiled in late-game duty. Across from him stands Boston College transfer Dylan Lonergan, a 6-2, 210-pound senior from Snellville, Georgia, who logged more than 2,000 passing yards with 12 touchdowns and five interceptions for the Eagles last fall.
Ciarrocca, entering his fourth season directing Rutgers’ multiple-pro-set attack, said Friday that Surace’s grasp of the system could offset Lonergan’s game-experience edge.
“AJ’s had a really good winter,” the coordinator noted after the team’s first workout. “He’s a really hard worker, very conscientious young man… but he needs repetitions out there to learn and grow from. Dylan and Sean Ashenfelder are in the same boat. We’ll give them all equal work and see who earns the right to lead.”
The playbook, renowned throughout the Big Ten for its layered protections and sight-adjustment tree, historically requires multiple seasons to master. Kaliakmanis exemplified that trajectory, jumping from 1,600 yards as a first-year starter to more than 3,000 yards and 20 touchdowns in year two. Surace has spent every practice since 2023 immersed in those nuances, while Lonergan, who also spent two seasons at Alabama before starting at BC, must compress the learning curve this spring.
Whoever prevails will pilot an offense that averaged 29 points per game in 2025, the program’s highest mark since joining the conference. Receivers coach Dave Brock returns future NFL prospect KJ Duff plus a deep stable of wideouts, and a veteran offensive line is expected to pave the way for a power-running game led by returning 1,000-yard rusher Jabara Glasper.
Surace, wearing the No. 10 jersey he hopes will become familiar to fans this fall, insists the competition has not altered his daily approach.
“There’s always competition within the room,” he said. “Between everybody, we’re constantly pushing each other. My job is to get a little bit better every day and be the best I can be.”
Lonergan, equally diplomatic, welcomed the battle.
“I think nowadays nobody really knows what to expect with the portal,” he said. “The decision to come here was a no-brainer. Competition is competition. We’re all working together to be the best as a team.”
Head coach Greg Schiano will not stage a public spring game this year after last year’s exhibition cost receiver Famah Toure a season-ending knee injury. Instead, evaluations will unfold behind closed doors, with Ciarrocca and Schiano poring over practice tape before announcing a pecking order by the end of preseason camp.
“It’s going to be based on performance,” Ciarrocca said. “Doing this as long as I have, it becomes apparent at some point. When that time comes, we’ll sit down and talk, and Coach will make the decision. I’m in no hurry.”
For a program desperate to return to bowl relevance after a 4-8 finish, the right answer at quarterback could flip close defeats into the narrow victories needed to navigate a daunting Big Ten slate. Spring drills conclude in late March, but the echoes from every throw, read and audible will resonate until the season opener Sept. 1.
Read more →'A long wait of nearly seven decades': PM Modi hails J&K's historic Ranji Trophy win
NEW DELHI — Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday lauded the Jammu and Kashmir cricket team for clinching their maiden Ranji Trophy title, describing the triumph as a “proud and emotional moment” for the region after almost 70 years of endeavour. Addressing the nation during his monthly Mann Ki Baat broadcast, Modi said the landmark victory underscores the squad’s “years of continuous efforts” and has resonated far beyond the dressing room.
“It is most heartening to note that after a long wait of nearly seven decades, the team achieved its first Ranji Trophy title,” the Prime Minister observed. “This unprecedented success is the result of hard work and dedication.”
Modi reserved special praise for two protagonists of the campaign. Captain Paras Dogra earned recognition for steering the side through high-pressure contests, while 21-year-old pace bowler Aaqib Nabi, whose 60-wicket burst turned heads across the country, was singled out as a symbol of the region’s emerging talent pool. “This victory has thrilled the players and coaching staff, as well as the people of Jammu and Kashmir,” Modi added.
The Prime Minister believes the title will act as a catalyst for sporting aspiration in the Union territory. “The people of Jammu and Kashmir have a tremendous passion for sports. I am glad that it is now becoming a hub for major sporting events,” he said, citing Gulmarg’s growing calendar of winter competitions and the popularity of football among local youth. Modi expressed optimism that the “winning streak of Jammu and Kashmir sportspersons” will extend well beyond the current cricket season.
Read more →Christian Nitu Goes Through a UW Practice Drill

SEATTLE — For one October afternoon Christian Nitu looked every bit the part of a 6-foot-11 rim protector the University of Washington hoped could stabilize its front line. The left-handed sophomore out of Toronto moved through a mid-practice drill, showing enough mobility to suggest he could help a program suddenly thin in the post.
“I’ve played all over the world,” Nitu told reporters that day, ticking off stops that included FIBA competition, a season at Florida State and prep ball in Canada. “I’ve traveled around to America all the time.”
Within weeks the itinerary changed. A toe injury flared, Nitu announced plans to redshirt, and when the regular season began he was nowhere near the Hec Edmundson Pavilion floor. Coach Danny Sprinkle, who had flown to Tallahassee for a personal workout before signing Nitu, declined public comment on the split, but people inside the program say two strong-willed parties simply stopped communicating.
The separation became official after barely a month: Nitu gone, UW left to sort out its depleted frontcourt without him. He has since posted solo workout clips—location uncertain, perhaps Canada—while awaiting another program willing to gamble on a mobile 6-11 big man whose résumé now includes an unflattering footnote in Seattle.
Read more →Rashford reports of Milan and PSG interest intensifying
Speculation surrounding Marcus Rashford’s future is gaining momentum, with Milan and Paris Saint-Germain emerging as potential suitors should Barcelona decide against exercising their €30 million purchase option on the Manchester United forward.
Rashford, 28, has spent the season on loan at Camp Nou, registering 10 goals and 13 assists in 39 competitive matches for the Blaugrana. Despite the statistical resurgence, the Catalan club have yet to commit to making the move permanent, leaving the door ajar for other European heavyweights.
Spanish outlet Mundo Deportivo and English platform Caught Offside both report that Milan and PSG are monitoring developments closely. The Rossoneri are in the market for attacking reinforcements after a disappointing return from Santiago Gimenez and the likelihood that Niclas Fullkrug will return to West Ham United following his loan spell. Stefano Pioli’s squad already boasts a strong English contingent, including Ruben Loftus-Cheek and Fikayo Tomori, potentially easing Rashford’s integration into the Serie A side.
Interest from Milan is not unprecedented; Rashford has been linked with a switch to the San Siro on previous occasions. Meanwhile, PSG—perennial contenders for high-profile offensive talent—are also weighing a move as they plan ahead for the summer window.
Rashford remains contracted to Manchester United through June 2028, but his temporary departure has opened a pathway for Europe’s elite to test United’s resolve should Barcelona pass on the option to buy. With the season entering its decisive phase, the coming weeks are expected to clarify whether the forward’s renaissance in Spain will be made permanent or if a new chapter awaits in Italy or France.
Read more →Uruguay football drops Real Madrid, Barcelona reminder after 1-1 draw vs. England
London — Uruguay’s national-team Twitter account issued a pointed reminder to the global game on Thursday night, moments after La Celeste clawed back a 1-1 draw against England at Wembley. The post, which quickly circulated across social platforms, paired photographs of Federico Valverde and Ronald Araujo with a single declarative sentence: “Go explain how from a country with three million inhabitants came the current captains of Real Madrid and Barcelona.”
The timing was no accident. Valverde had just slammed home an injury-time penalty—awarded by VAR—to cancel out Ben White’s 81st-minute opener and preserve Uruguay’s unbeaten run in pre-World Cup friendlies. The strike capped a spirited display by the South Americans, who finished the match pressing for a winner against a seasoned England side.
Uruguay’s tweet underscored a wider narrative: a nation of barely three million continues to punch far above its weight, supplying Europe’s powerhouse clubs with leaders in the mould of Valverde and Araujo. Both players featured prominently in the Wembley contest, with Valverde operating in midfield and Araujo anchoring the back line before the late drama unfolded.
The equaliser ensured the visitors left the capital with a morale-boosting result, while the social-media salvo reinforced Uruguay’s reputation for relentless overachievement on the world stage.
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Read more →Inter Milan target move for Manchester United midfielder in summer 2026

Milan, Italy – Inter Milan have entered the race to sign Manchester United midfielder Casemiro ahead of the 2026 summer transfer window, according to Brazilian outlet Tupi. The Nerazzurri are monitoring the 34-year-old’s situation as his contract at Old Trafford approaches its June expiry, viewing the experienced Brazilian as a strategic opportunity to reinforce their engine room.
Casemiro, who lifted five Champions League trophies during his nine-year spell at Real Madrid before moving to Manchester in 2022, is expected to leave the Premier League giants on a free transfer. While Inter Miami have tabled a formal proposal, financial details remain under negotiation, and the player’s preference to remain in Europe has kept a host of continental clubs on alert.
Juventus and city rivals AC Milan have already been credited with interest, but Inter’s emergence adds a fresh layer of intrigue to the saga. Simone Inzaghi’s side currently boast a deep midfield roster, yet club scouts believe Casemiro’s tactical intelligence, ball-winning ability and vast experience could prove invaluable as they target domestic and European silverware next season.
A switch to Serie A would also ensure Casemiro stays in the spotlight of European football, maintaining the visibility he has enjoyed during successful stints at Porto, Madrid and Manchester United. With the player now weighing offers from Italy, the United States and beyond, the coming weeks are set to determine where the decorated midfielder will continue his career.
Read more →Tudor Era Ends at Tottenham After Just Seven Matches as Relegation Looms
Tottenham Hotspur severed ties with interim head coach Igor Tudor on Sunday, bringing the Croatian’s brief and turbulent White Hart Lane tenure to a close after only 44 days and seven competitive fixtures. The parting, described in a club statement as “mutually agreed,” leaves Spurs without a permanent manager with seven Premier League games remaining and the club clinging to top-flight survival.
Tudor, appointed on 14 February until the end of the season, departs with a record of five defeats from his seven matches, including four consecutive losses at the start of his reign. His final game in charge, a 3-0 home defeat to Nottingham Forest on 22 March, left Tottenham 17th in the table—one point above the relegation places—and extended the club’s winless league run to 13 matches dating back to December.
The 3-0 reverse also came amid personal tragedy for the 47-year-old coach; the club confirmed that Tudor’s father had passed away shortly after the final whistle and that the manager would not face the media. Sunday’s statement extended condolences, reading: “We also acknowledge the bereavement that Igor has recently suffered and send our support to him and his family at this difficult time.”
Tudor’s spell was marred by on-field setbacks and off-field scrutiny. In Europe, he guided Spurs to a round-of-16 Champions League exit against Atlético Madrid, headlined by a 5-2 first-leg loss in Spain during which he substituted backup goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky after only 17 minutes. The public nature of the change, and Tudor’s refusal to acknowledge the 22-year-old as he left the pitch, drew heavy criticism from pundits, with former Manchester United keeper Peter Schmeichel claiming the decision “killed” the young keeper’s confidence.
Domestically, the north London outfit never found rhythm under Tudor. A 4-1 derby defeat to Arsenal in his first match set the tone, and a subsequent six-match losing streak equaled the worst sequence in the club’s 144-year history. The manager’s post-match assessment of Arsenal as “probably the best team in the world at this moment,” while arguably accurate, further alienated a support base desperate for signs of fight.
Tottenham has occupied a place in England’s top division since 1978 and has been an ever-present in the Premier League since its 1992 inception. Survival now hinges on seven remaining fixtures and, crucially, on the identity of the next permanent appointment. Chairman Daniel Levy’s shortlist is believed to include former Brighton manager Roberto De Zerbi, ex-Monaco coach Adi Hütter, and Sean Dyche, recently departed from Everton. Club stalwart Ryan Mason, twice previously interim, remains an internal option, while 79-year-old former manager Harry Redknapp has publicly declared his willingness to return.
The Tottenham Hotspur Supporters’ Trust summarized fan sentiment in a social-media post: “In a season of bad calls, let’s hope we now see a wise choice for the remainder of the campaign… someone who understands the club and is up to the task in front of them: retaining our Premier League status.”
With no manager, no league victory since 15 December, and a goal difference of minus 19 under Tudor, Spurs enter the season’s final stretch in crisis. Whoever takes the reins will inherit a squad low on confidence but rich in top-flight experience and facing a battle that will define the club’s modern era.
Read more →Barcelona receive reassurances from Spain NT over key superstar’s workload
Cornellà de Llobregat – FC Barcelona have secured the commitment of the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) to handle Lamine Yamal with care during the current international window, easing mounting anxiety at the club over the 17-year-old’s workload after Raphinha’s recent injury setback.
The Catalans arrived at the November break already without their Brazilian winger, who was hurt on Seleção duty, and are wary of losing another cornerstone with La Liga and Champions League ambitions on a knife-edge. Yamal, who has stepped into a leading role in Raphinha’s absence, featured for 63 minutes in Spain’s 3-0 friendly win over Serbia last week, raising questions about how much more game time he would be given in Tuesday’s closing fixture against Egypt at the RCDE Stadium.
Barcelona’s concern intensified when the teenager began the camp training apart from the main group, pedalling on a stationary bike to manage the load on a body that only recently overcame a pubic issue. Yet subsequent checks have shown no reaction, and Yamal has since trained normally with the national squad.
Sporting director Deco has maintained daily contact with Aitor Karanka, the RFEF’s technical and development director, and the dialogue is described by both parties as positive and fluid. Sources inside the federation stress that head coach Luis de la Fuente’s priority is “the welfare of the players,” a message that has been relayed explicitly to the Camp Nou offices.
The proximity of the Egypt match – played barely five kilometres from Barcelona’s Ciutat Esportiva – removes the strain of long-haul travel, while De la Fuente intends to rotate his starting XI and distribute minutes as part of broader World Cup preparation. Although Yamal’s competitive instinct pushes him to start every match, Spain’s staff have pledged to balance development with preservation, mindful that the club season is entering a decisive phase.
With Raphinha sidelined, Barcelona view any additional absence as potentially title-altering; the RFEF’s reassurances therefore arrive as a welcome relief ahead of the final whistle on the international calendar.
Read more →Colombia vs France, International Friendly 2026: Will Kylian Mbappé Play Tonight's Match in United States?

Maryland, United States — When France and Colombia kick off Monday night at an undisclosed venue in the United States, the biggest question hovering over the friendly will not involve tactics or formations, but the presence of Les Bleus captain Kylian Mbappé. The Real Madrid star, who scored in France’s 2-1 victory over Brazil last time out, is nursing an injury that has put his availability in doubt.
Coach Didier Deschamps guided ten-man France past Brazil after Dayot Upamecano’s sending-off, thanks to strikes from Mbappé and Hugo Ekitiké. Deschamps now eyes consecutive wins over South American opposition, yet he must balance that ambition against the wishes of Madrid executives who are wary of overloading their marquee forward ahead of a congested club schedule.
Mbappé addressed the issue directly in an interview with French broadcaster Telefoot. “In Spain, there’s a bit of concern about whether I’ll play enough and then go straight into the World Cup,” he said. “The best way to prepare is to win everything first with Real Madrid.” Those comments have fueled speculation that the 25-year-old could be limited to a substitute role against Colombia.
Los Cafeteros, meanwhile, arrive short-handed. Arsenal defender Hincapié will miss the contest, forcing coach Néstor Lorenzo to reshuffle his back line. Colombia, considered a potential dark horse for the 2026 World Cup, last faced France in a 2018 friendly that ended in a 3-2 Colombian triumph. A repeat result would signal their intent on the global stage.
Kickoff is scheduled for Monday, March 30, Indian Standard Time, with broadcast details yet to be confirmed. Until the teamsheets are released, all eyes remain on Mbappé: starter, substitute, or spectator?
Read more →Coco Gauff explains how Alysa Liu inspired her at the Miami Open this year

Miami Gardens, Florida – Even in defeat, Coco Gauff found a silver lining. The 22-year-old American fell to world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 in Saturday’s Miami Open final, yet walked off the Hard Rock Stadium court with renewed perspective and a fresh source of motivation: Olympic figure-skating champion Alysa Liu.
Gauff, who had never previously advanced past the quarterfinals at her home-state WTA 1000 event, credited Liu’s performance at last month’s Winter Olympics for helping her reframe the loss.
“I think I can talk down on myself, but in that moment…you know an athlete that I was inspired by at the Winter Olympics was Alysa Liu,” Gauff told reporters. “I had the mindset today that it doesn’t matter what happens, you lose but there’s no real loss in this situation.”
The reigning French Open champion said she watched Liu compete in Beijing and felt moved by the skater’s poise under pressure. That admiration carried into her own post-match reflections as she scanned the stands for family and friends.
“I was just looking at my box and seeing all my family and friends and hearing them in the crowd,” Gauff said. “I know how much they supported me to be on this stage, so I was just thinking more gratitude and things like that.”
Gauff admitted the immediate aftermath of a final defeat is “tough,” replaying points in her head while still on court. Yet the shift toward gratitude, she insisted, is deliberate.
“It is a mindset shift, because as soon as you lose a final it’s tough… Then after it’s over you just learn from it and yeah I’m grateful, because I didn’t think I’d be here and I’m here, and I know that I can repeat this and come with the bigger trophy, and I feel confident in that.”
The run to her first Miami final caps a resurgent fortnight for Gauff, who arrived at the tournament amid questions about her form and fitness. Her result will lift her back to No. 3 in the WTA rankings, but the American now faces a demanding clay-court stretch. She has 3,408 ranking points to defend through Roland Garros—more than any other player—after winning the French Open, finishing runner-up in Madrid and Rome last season.
Gauff’s clay campaign begins at the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix in Stuttgart on April 13, where she reached the quarterfinals a year ago. Top-ranked Sabalenka, Elena Rybakina and defending champion Iga Swiatek are also slated to compete in the German event.
Read more →New York 6-foot-7 TE tells why he canceled all other official visits after committing to Alabama

Liverpool, N.Y. — Oakley Keegan’s recruitment ended the moment he stepped off Alabama’s campus. Less than a month after the 6-foot-7 tight end accepted the Crimson Tide’s summer offer, the 2027 prospect quietly canceled every remaining official visit, locking his calendar onto Tuscaloosa and nowhere else.
“I always wanted to play in the SEC,” Keegan said in an interview with Touchdown Alabama. “Getting closer down to family — we have family that lives in Georgia — and the discipline that they have, the coaching staff … the connection I have with them already has just been incredible.”
Keegan, who attends Liverpool High School in central New York, collected offers from Syracuse, Vanderbilt and several other programs before Alabama entered the picture. The Tide extended the scholarship after an offseason camp in which Keegan believes he delivered the best performance of his circuit tour.
“We went to a bunch of camps, and I think throughout all these camps I got progressively better,” he said. “Alabama, I think that was the best camp I’ve had. Coach Owens went over my film and he loved it.”
An injury cost Keegan much of the 2025 season, but Alabama’s staff maintained steady contact throughout his rehab — a gesture that resonated with the prospect and his family.
“They were super supportive,” Keegan said. “That meant a lot.”
On the field, Keegan sees himself as a classic every-down tight end. “I enjoy running out for routes and getting in the pass game as well and run game as well,” he said. “I’m willing to work my tail off to help out the team.”
That versatility aligns with Kalen DeBoer and offensive coordinator Ryan Grubb’s 2025 scheme, which featured multiple tight ends in a variety of personnel groupings. Keegan said he has already studied the usage and plans to sit down with coach Owens during A-Day on April 11, his lone official visit, to discuss how the role will evolve by the time he arrives.
For now, Keegan is content to shut the door on the rest of his suitors. No more visits, no more what-ifs — just Alabama.
“I love Alabama,” he said. “I think it’s the right choice.”
Read more →Mumbai Indians hit 300-match mark, first franchise to reach T20 milestone
NEW DELHI – When the floodlights come on at Wankhede Stadium this Sunday, Mumbai Indians will not merely open their IPL 2026 campaign against Kolkata Knight Riders; they will stride into uncharted territory as the first franchise side ever to contest 300 T20 encounters. The five-time champions join an exclusive club populated only by Pakistan’s national team and England’s Somerset County Cricket Club, yet stand alone as the only franchise outfit to have reached the landmark.
The milestone arrives at a pivotal juncture. Having last hoisted the trophy in 2020, MI enter the new season determined to end a five-year title drought and extend their record haul to six crowns. Under the stewardship of captain Hardik Pandya, the squad blends proven match-winners with resurgent stars: Suryakumar Yadav, Jasprit Bumrah and Tilak Varma form the nucleus of India’s recent T20 triumphs, while a rejuvenated Rohit Sharma eyes a return to peak form. Overseas reinforcements Trent Boult and Ryan Rickelton complement domestic stalwarts Deepak Chahar and Shardul Thakur, giving Mahela Jayawardene’s think-tank enviable depth.
Selection headaches persist. New Zealand spinner Mitchell Santner and England batter Will Jacks have been granted extended leave and will miss the season opener, though Jayawardene expects both to link up with the squad shortly.
For Kolkata Knight Riders, led by stand-in skipper Ajinkya Rahane, the equation is more urgent. Injuries and last-minute reshuffles have destabilised their bowling attack, thrusting additional responsibility onto the shoulders of mystery spinner Varun Chakravarthy. With Mumbai eyeing history and Kolkata seeking early momentum, Sunday’s clash offers more than two points—it presents a fresh narrative for a rivalry that continues to shape the IPL landscape.
Read more →Preview: Lithuania vs Georgia – prediction, team news, lineups

Vilnius will provide the backdrop for an intriguing international friendly on Sunday as Lithuania welcome a Georgia side brimming with confidence despite a patchy run of results. The hosts are seeking consecutive victories after dispatching Moldova 2-0 on Thursday, while Georgia halted a four-game slide by battling Israel to a dramatic 2-2 draw on the same evening.
Edgaras Jankauskas’ Lithuania enter the contest buoyed by Thursday’s clean sheet but acutely aware that bigger tests lie ahead. The Baltic side finished bottom of Euro 2024 qualifying Group G with just three points from eight outings and have never reached a World Cup finals. With the 2026 tournament already out of reach, the focus has shifted to June’s Baltic Cup semi-final against Latvia and September’s UEFA Nations League opener versus Liechtenstein.
Georgia, by contrast, arrive still basking in the glow of last summer’s fairytale run to the Euro 2024 quarter-finals. Willy Sagnol’s men ultimately came up short in a bruising World Cup qualifying group, managing only three points from six matches to finish third in Group E, yet the attacking talent within the squad suggests brighter days ahead.
Recent history favours the Crusaders: Georgia have won four of the seven previous meetings between the nations, including a 4-0 rout in the most recent friendly in March 2018.
Team news
Lithuania are expected to keep faith with the nucleus of the side that overcame Moldova. Armandas Kucys, the 23-year-old top scorer in the current squad with five goals, will spearhead the attack, supported by Torino midfielder Gvidas Gineitis. Veteran defender Justas Lasickas is poised to collect his 68th cap.
Georgia will unleash their star-studded front line once more. Paris Saint-Germain winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, who struck twice against Israel, will be flanked by Villarreal’s Georges Mikautadze and Heidenheim’s Budu Zivzivadze. Liverpool goalkeeper Giorgi Mamardashvili is set to earn cap number 37.
Probable lineups
Lithuania: Gertmonas; Lasickas, Sirvys, Utkus, Armalas; Vorobjovas, Gineitis, Golubickas, Kalinauskas; Kucys, Dubickas
Georgia: Mamardashvili; Beriashvili, Dvali, Lochoshvili, Azarovi; Mekvabishvili, Kiteishvili, Gagnidze; Kvaratskhelia, Mikautadze, Zivzivadze
Prediction
Lithuania’s midweek success should not mask the gulf in individual quality between the squads. Georgia’s attacking trio possesses the pace and invention to trouble any defence, and after ending their winless streak they will be eager to build momentum ahead of September’s Nations League return. Expect the visitors to edge a competitive contest.
Read more →Colombia vs. France: Time, date, TV channel and how to watch today

Landover, Maryland—Sunday’s friendly at Northwest Stadium pits Colombia against France in the final dress rehearsal for both nations before this summer’s World Cup in North America. Kickoff is set for today, and viewers can find the match on their local TV listings.
Los Cafeteros arrive looking to rebound from Thursday’s 2-1 setback against Croatia in Orlando, their first defeat since March 2025. James Rodríguez, still the creative engine for his country at 34, will pull the strings alongside Liverpool winger Luis Díaz and Al Nassr striker Jhon Durán, a trio capable of troubling any back line.
France, ranked third globally, enter with wind in their sails after a 2-0 victory over Brazil in Massachusetts on Thursday. Kylian Mbappé and Liverpool forward Hugo Ekitike found the net in that win, and Les Bleus have not tasted defeat since last June’s Nations League semifinal loss to Spain. With momentum and depth across the pitch, Didier Deschamps’ side shapes as one of the tournament favorites.
On paper, France holds the edge in form and firepower, yet Colombia’s attacking flair ensures a compelling contest for neutrals. All eyes will be on Rodríguez and Díaz to spark a response and send their fans into the World Cup on a high note.
Read more →Cristian Romero: United poised to table tempting bid in race for Spurs defender
Manchester United are ready to accelerate their pursuit of Tottenham Hotspur centre-back Cristian Romero by lodging a €60 million offer that could knock both Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid out of the running, according to Spanish outlet Defensa Central.
The 27-year-old World Cup winner emerged as a target for United earlier this week when initial reports linked the Red Devils with the Argentine alongside persistent interest from the two Madrid giants. While the La Liga clubs have expressed caution over Old Trafford’s involvement, INEOS-backed United are now prepared to formalise their admiration with a concrete bid.
Romero’s current contract with Spurs runs until 2029, yet sources indicate a gentlemen’s agreement exists that would allow him to leave north London for the right price. That valuation is understood to be the very figure United are willing to table, positioning the Premier League side as front-runners for the defender’s signature.
United’s hierarchy view Romero as the type of proven, battle-tested acquisition that served them well last summer. Injuries to Harry Maguire, Lisandro Martínez and Matthijs de Ligt have underlined the squad’s fragility at centre-half, prompting the club to prioritise reinforcements even though midfield and left-wing vacancies dominate headlines.
Romero’s aggressive, front-footed style—marked by dominant one-v-one duels, relentless pressing and crisp tackling—fits the profile United believe can sustain a multi-competition campaign. His South American steel is seen as an antidote to the defensive instability that cost the team points during prolonged stretches without senior options.
With INEOS moving swiftly and strategically, United could repeat last summer’s successful recruitment of established Premier League talent, ensuring Erik ten Hag’s rearguard remains competitive regardless of future fitness setbacks.
Read more →‘Tough call’: Sam Curran reveals injury that forced IPL 2026 withdrawal
NEW DELHI — England all-rounder Sam Curran has described the groin complaint that ended his Indian Premier League 2026 campaign before it began as “an injury that I’ve kind of been battling with a little bit,” acknowledging that the decision to withdraw was one of the hardest of his career.
Curran, 27, had been traded to Rajasthan Royals ahead of the season and was poised to spearhead their attack after helping England reach the T20 World Cup semi-finals. Instead, post-tournament scans revealed what the player termed “reasonable damage,” prompting an immediate rehabilitation programme at home.
“It has gradually got fractionally worse,” Curran told BBC Sport. “I went for a couple of scans, and it showed reasonable damage, so I had to make the tough decision. It was hindering me quite a bit.”
The timing compounds the frustration. “To miss the IPL was very disappointing… but now I have a rehab block of trying to get strong and fit,” he said, casting doubt over his availability for Surrey’s early-season fixtures and his prospective role as T20 Blast captain.
Curran conceded that a concrete comeback date remains elusive. “It’s all going to come down to symptoms. It is obviously still a way off from that,” he noted, adding that this is his first extended rehabilitation stint in England. “It will be tough to watch the IPL because I know that I’d like to have been there, but injuries are part of sport.”
Rajasthan have moved swiftly to secure Sri Lankan dasher Dasun Shanaka as his replacement, yet Curran’s withdrawal highlights the physical toll exacted by an unrelenting international calendar and adds another high-profile name to the tournament’s growing injury list.
Read more →Ferran Torres, Robert Lewandowski, Ronald Araujo? Which Barcelona players do you expect to leave this summer?

Barcelona are bracing for a pivotal summer in which outs may prove every bit as decisive as ins. While headlines have centred on potential reinforcements like Julián Alvarez and Alessandro Bastoni, club chiefs believe sales are essential to finance ambitious plans and to give incoming coach Hansi Flick a leaner, more balanced squad.
Several first-team regulars now find their futures the subject of intense speculation. Among them:
Ferran Torres – The Spain forward has shown flashes of productivity yet remains one of the most debated names in exit discussions. A sale would free both salary space and a non-EU squad slot.
Robert Lewandowski – The prolific No 9 still guarantees goals, but the club must soon decide whether to extend a contract that enters its final 12 months or cash in while market value remains high.
Ronald Araujo – The Uruguayan centre-back has attracted heavyweight suitors after a string of commanding displays. Barcelona’s financial equation could tempt officials to listen to offers, though losing him would weaken a back line already coping with injuries.
Alejandro Balde – The dynamic left-back has struggled with recurring hamstring issues throughout the campaign, casting doubt on whether the club will keep relying on his progression or seek a more reliable option.
Jules Kounde – A mainstay under Flick, the French defender is nonetheless mentioned as saleable if a premium bid arrives, given the club’s need to generate pure profit on the balance sheet.
With the window approaching, the hierarchy’s stance is clear: no player is untouchable if the price helps restructure the wage bill and bankroll fresh talent. The final list of departures will hinge on negotiations still to unfold, but Torres, Lewandowski and Araujo currently sit at the centre of the conversation.
Barca Blaugranes readers are now weighing in on which names they expect to see on the way out—setting the stage for a summer of high-stakes decisions at Camp Nou.
Read more →Updated Penn State football Class of 2027 commitment tracker
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — Penn State’s football program is rebuilding its recruiting board from scratch after the Class of 2027 was wiped clean in the wake of James Franklin’s departure to Virginia Tech. The Nittany Lions entered the post-Franklin era with zero remaining pledges from the cycle, forcing the new staff to re-establish relationships across the country.
According to the latest update dated March 29, 2026, Penn State has not yet announced any new verbal commitments for the Class of 2027. The tracker currently lists only the high schools that have been evaluated or contacted by the staff:
- Dillard (Fort Lauderdale, Florida)
- McKeesport (McKeesport, Pennsylvania)
- Appoquinmink (Middletown, Delaware)
- Pine-Richland (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
- Imani Christian Academy (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
These programs are expected to be priority recruiting grounds as the Nittany Lions attempt to rebound from a cycle in which more than half of the 2026 class followed Franklin to Blacksburg. The staff will continue to monitor players who previously pledged before reopening their recruitments, with future updates added as commitments occur.
Read more →How Manchester City grew a die-hard fanbase in Uganda
KAMPALA — At 3 a.m., when most of the Ugandan capital is asleep, the bars along Acacia Avenue are vibrating. Hundreds of fans, shoulder-to-shoulder in sky-blue shirts, crane toward flickering screens, erupting when Erling Haaland taps in another goal. There is no live commentary, the stream buffers, and the Wi-Fi threatens to collapse, yet no one considers leaving. This is match-night in Kampala, and Manchester City—7,000 kilometres away—has become the home team.
English football has long been Uganda’s sporting soap opera, but City’s surge from Premier League punch-line to serial trophy collector has coincided with a technological revolution that turned the club into a local obsession. When the Abu Dhabi takeover reshaped the blue side of Manchester in 2008, Uganda was simultaneously experiencing an explosion of affordable smartphones and cut-price data bundles. Champions League nights suddenly appeared in people’s pockets, and City’s marquee signings offered a glamorous shortcut to glory for youngsters in Jinja, Mbarara and Gulu.
“Supporting a club from thousands of miles away is an act of hope,” says Brian Kato, a 24-year-old accountant who runs two WhatsApp fan groups. “City were building something in front of our eyes. We wanted in.” Kato’s story is typical: he began streaming games in secondary school, saved for a 2013-14 away shirt, and now organises 4 a.m. meet-ups that draw more than 300 paying customers to a single bar.
The Pep Guardiola era accelerated the boom. Guardiola’s intricate, possession-heavy style translates effortlessly to mobile screens, allowing fans to appreciate patterns of play without needing the panoramic television experience. Bars brand themselves as “City zones” every weekend, and regulars treat the shirt not as merchandise but as a uniform of belonging. In Entebbe, a fishing town on Lake Victoria, a supporters’ club has negotiated group discounts with satellite providers so that dozens can watch every fixture together.
Social media stitched these pockets of enthusiasm into a national network. Facebook groups such as “Uganda Man City Family” boast tens of thousands of members who trade line-up predictions, injury updates and post-match memes in real time. Twitter Spaces debates on whether Guardiola should rest De Bruyne regularly attract Swahili, Luganda and English voices long after full-time.
Betting culture also played an unlikely role. Across East Africa, football and sports wagering are inseparable, and City’s recent dominance made them a data-driven favourite. Punters who once studied the club purely for odds found themselves emotionally invested after weeks of tracking tactics and squad rotation. “When you stake your rent money on a team, you care about the result more than you planned,” laughs Sandra Amongi, a shopkeeper in Gulu whose City tattoo is a permanent reminder of the 2022-23 Treble.
Timing, aesthetics and narrative all help explain why City outgrew traditional heavyweights in Uganda. Manchester United arrived with history, Liverpool with romance, Arsenal with loyalty, but City’s ascent dovetailed with Uganda’s expanding middle class and the arrival of cheap Android handsets. The distinctive sky-blue colour pops on low-resolution feeds, while stars such as David Silva, Kevin De Bruyne and Riyad Mahrez—an Algerian widely admired across North and East Africa—make casual viewers pause. Mahrez’s dribbling reels still circulate on Ugandan TikTok, soundtracked by Afrobeats and local kadongo kamu guitar.
Crucially, City’s underdog-turned-emperor arc resonates. Older supporters who remember the club’s pre-2008 struggles pass that memory to younger fans, creating a generational conversation that feels authentic rather than corporate. “We didn’t inherit City; we discovered them,” says Kato. “Now the heartbreak and the joy are ours.”
Uganda’s City faithful have built rituals that mirror those in Manchester: late-night walks home after extra-time winners, communal silences following Champions League exits, arguments over substitutions shouted across taxi parks. The club may be on another continent, yet the emotional bandwidth is immediate. As dawn breaks over Kampala and the final whistle blows, sky-blue scarves are hoisted like flags of a second home. In Uganda, at least, Manchester City is no longer the noisy neighbour; it is the mainstay of football life.
Read more →Hincapie returns to Arsenal due to an injury
Arsenal’s defensive depth has taken another hit after Piero Hincapie was forced to leave Ecuador’s training camp and fly back to London with an injury. The 22-year-old, who has operated as both left-back and centre-half for Mikel Arteta’s side this season, was substituted in the 73rd minute of Ecuador’s friendly draw with Morocco and subsequent medical tests revealed a problem that rules him out of national-team duty.
Hincapie, signed this summer, has quickly become a key component of the Gunners’ back line, racking up 33 appearances, one goal and two assists after a gradual acclimatisation period. His absence compounds a mounting injury list that already includes Gabriel Magalhaes, Declan Rice, Bukayo Saka and Noni Madueke, while William Saliba, Eberechi Eze and Martin Odegaard continue their own recoveries.
With the Premier League title race poised on a knife-edge and Champions League and FA Cup obligations still to fulfil, Arteta must now lean on Riccardo Calafiori to stay fit and may hand teenager Myles Lewis-Skelly another opportunity to impress. The spate of setbacks tests the squad’s resilience, yet Arsenal’s ambitions of ending a 20-year wait for the league crown demand immediate solutions rather than sympathy.
Read more →Inter Milan Could Raise Over €100 Million In Player Sales This Summer & Overhaul Squad With 5 Leaving On A Free
Milan—Inter Milan are bracing for a transformative summer window that could see the club bank in excess of €100 million from player sales while simultaneously waving goodbye to five senior squad members on free transfers, sources have confirmed.
With contracts winding down, goalkeeper Yann Sommer, defenders Francesco Acerbi, Stefan de Vrij and Matteo Darmian, and midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan are all set to depart when their deals expire, leaving the Nerazzurri with significant holes to fill. Only third-choice shot-stopper Alessandro Di Gennaro has received assurances that he will remain at San Siro.
Ownership has already underlined its commitment to refresh the roster, with Oaktree Capital Management informing the board that a competitive transfer budget will be available irrespective of funds recouped through sales. Nevertheless, a series of high-profile exits could swell the coffers dramatically.
Davide Frattesi is viewed as the most likely departure, with the Italy international expected to fetch between €30 million and €35 million. Hakan Calhanoglu continues to attract strong interest from Turkish giants Galatasaray, while centre-back Alessandro Bastoni carries a €70 million valuation that has piqued the attention of Barcelona, though no official talks have commenced. Inter officials have indicated that an offer approaching €60 million would be enough to green-light a negotiation, especially after a testing campaign has left the club increasingly open to cashing in on the France forward.
The combination of free-agent departures and lucrative sales has positioned Inter for one of the most active windows in recent memory, and planning is already well under way as the hierarchy maps out a revamped squad ahead of the new season.
Read more →2026 NFL Mock Draft: End of March Edition
With the 2026 NFL Draft set to open on April 23, the late-March forecasting cycle has produced its clearest snapshot yet of how Round 1 could unfold. From franchise quarterbacks to game-breaking receivers and trench-dominating linemen, the projected order below captures the prospects most frequently linked to each slot as decision-makers finalize their boards.
1. Las Vegas Raiders – QB Can Mendoza
The Raiders end a decade-long search under center by tapping the poised, accurate Mendoza, hoping he can lift a roster that stumbled to the bottom of the standings in 2024 back into the 2025 playoff conversation.
2. New York Jets – LB Arvell Reese
Aaron Glenn welcomes a Swiss-army defender who can pressure quarterbacks, drop into coverage and align at multiple spots, giving the Jets’ front seven the versatility it has lacked.
3. Arizona Cardinals – Edge Bain
Despite short-arm concerns, Bain’s elite bend and college production make him the first pass-rusher off the board, a critical addition for a defense that finished near the bottom in sacks.
4. Tennessee Titans – RB (unnamed)
Rather than address several roster holes, Tennessee pairs Heisman-winning quarterback Cam Ward with a potential superstar runner, gambling on upside over need.
5. New York Giants – LB Sonny Styles
Cincinnati’s loss of defensive identity after Trey Hendrickson’s departure is remedied by Downs, a scheme-versatile safety who starred at both Alabama and Ohio State and projects as an immediate tone-setter.
6. Cleveland Browns – OT Monroe Freeling
Freeling’s raw power and mean streak should solidify Baker Mayfield’s blind side, even if the former Clemson tackle must iron out consistency issues.
7. Washington Commanders – CB Mansoor Delane
A 4.38-second 40-yard dash and willingness to support the run make Delane the ideal chess piece for a secondary seeking a new CB1.
8. New Orleans Saints – WR Tyson
Injuries limited Tyson in 2025, but his healthy tape shows a potential class-leading receiver who can help franchise quarterback Tyler Shough take the next step.
9. Kansas City Chiefs – Edge David Bailey
The national sack leader (14.5) joins Chris Jones and George Karlaftis, giving Steve Spagnuolo the three-headed rush presence required in today’s AFC.
10. Cincinnati Bengals – S Caleb Downs
Downs’ experience in multiple schemes should provide instant impact for a defense searching for a post-Hendrickson identity.
11. Miami Dolphins – WR Makai Lemon
Malik Willis inherits a route-running technician who plays bigger than his frame and specializes in creating separation in critical moments.
12. Dallas Cowboys – CB McCoy
A 2025 ACL tear drops McCoy, yet his pre-injury tape and clean medicals convince Dallas to pair him with DaRon Bland for a potentially elite outside duo.
13. Los Angeles Rams – WR Sadiq
After leading the NFL in touchdowns, Davante Adams could use a complementary burner; Sadiq’s 4.39 speed offers Sean McVay another vertical threat.
14. Baltimore Ravens – WR Tate
Tate’s 4.53 combine 40 did not dent scouts’ love for his contested-catch prowess, strong hands and physicality—traits Baltimore’s receiving corps desperately needs.
15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers – OG Ioane
The class’s top guard should open holes in the run game and stabilize an interior line that has underperformed since the club’s last postseason run.
16. New York Jets – WR Cooper
Geno Smith receives a fearless yards-after-catch weapon who rarely drops the football and should thrive in the Jets’ upgraded offense.
17. Detroit Lions – OT Mauigoa
Taylor Decker’s release forces Penei Sewell to the left side; Mauigoa’s potential top-10 talent slides to Detroit at 17, preserving the franchise’s line-first identity.
18. Minnesota Vikings – C Fano
Ryan Kelly’s retirement opens the pivot for Fano, a college tackle who projects as a future Pro Bowl center in Kevin O’Connell’s zone scheme.
19. Carolina Panthers – DB Thieneman
A 4.35-second 40 and 41-inch vertical headline Thieneman’s résumé; his versatility to play corner or safety gives Carolina a chess piece on the back end.
20. Dallas Cowboys – LB (unnamed)
After missing out on free-agent linebackers, Dallas lands a run-stuffing signal-caller to captain the middle of the defense.
21. Pittsburgh Steelers – OT Miller
With Broderick Jones struggling and Aaron Rodgers’ future uncertain, Pittsburgh bets on a 54-game college starter to fortify the edges.
22. Los Angeles Chargers – Edge Mesidor
Jim Harbaugh adds a clutch performer who recorded 5.5 sacks during the College Football Playoff, hoping to secure the franchise’s first postseason victory of his tenure.
23. Philadelphia Eagles – DL Faulk
Rather than replace Lane Johnson immediately, Howie Roseman grabs a versatile defensive lineman who can line up across multiple techniques.
24. Cleveland Browns – WR Boston
Now armed with a franchise left tackle, Cleveland gives its quarterback room a 6-foot-4 red-zone weapon on the perimeter.
25. Chicago Bears – Edge Parker
Caleb Williams can mask offensive deficiencies, so Chicago focuses on a long-armed pass-rusher who brings varied moves to disrupt NFC North quarterbacks.
26. Buffalo Bills – DT McDonald
Sean McDermott prioritizes run defense by selecting a two-down thumper who logged 65 tackles in 2025, shoring up a front that leaked yardage late last season.
27. San Francisco 49ers – WR Concepcion
Kyle Shanahan salivates over a jitterbug slot weapon who turns short throws into explosives, fitting perfectly into the 49ers’ yards-after-catch attack.
28. Houston Texans – S McNeil-Warren
A 6-foot-3, three-down safety from Toledo adds attitude and range to a secondary that needs playmakers behind a rebuilt front.
29. Kansas City Chiefs – CB Avieon
Brother of Falcons standout A.J. Terrell, Avieon’s instincts and quickness provide the boundary coverage skills Kansas City requires after a cornerback exodus.
30. Miami Dolphins – OL Proctor
After securing Lemon, Miami continues to build around its quarterback by adding a road-grading run blocker who excels on outside-zone calls for De’Von Achane.
31. New England Patriots – Edge Howell
Mike Vrabel nabs a productive if short-armed edge defender to juice a pass rush that came up empty in the Super Bowl.
32. Seattle Seahawks – CB Hood
Fresh off a championship, Mike Macdonald still finds roster space for a 4.4-speed cover man with a 40-inch vertical, ensuring the Legion of Boom ethos remains alive.
Read more →Vote! Who should be Active Chiropractic girls Athlete of the Week?
Eugene, Ore. — With the 2026 spring high-school sports season officially underway, Oregon’s track and field diamonds and softball diamonds have already produced a stack of eye-popping performances. Now it’s up to readers to decide which girl deserves the first Active Chiropractic Athlete of the Week honor of the new campaign.
The Register-Guard’s weekly fan vote, sponsored by Active Chiropractic, opened Monday morning and runs until 9 a.m. Thursday at registerguard.com/sports. Eleven nominees are on the ballot, each owning at least one performance that currently ranks among the state’s best.
Thurston senior Brooklyn Anderson headlines the track contingent after clocking 14.44 seconds to win the 100-meter hurdles at the March 19 Jim Barks Grizzly Bear Open in McMinnville. Her time sits nearly a full second ahead of the next-fastest mark in Oregon this spring. Anderson also leapt 18 feet, 5 ¼ inches to capture the long jump—No. 2 in the state rankings.
Freshmen and sophomores are making noise as well. South Eugene’s Eva Johnson Hess won both the 1,500 (4:43.70) and 800 (2:19.51) at The Opener on March 18, posting the state’s top time in each event. Creswell senior Jordyn Lee owns the quickest 400 of the young season, stopping the clock at 58.80, while North Eugene senior Cricket Phipps sits second in the 1,500 (4:44.52) and 800 (2:19.75).
On the oval, Pleasant Hill senior Ryan Thomas sprinted to a personal-best 12.42 in the 100, good for fifth-best statewide, and Springfield junior Sailor Hall unleashed a 117-foot-11 discus toss at the Harvey Lewellen Throws Invitational—third-best in Oregon so far.
Softball sluggers supply the rest of the ballot. North Eugene sophomore Ella Anderson needed only four at-bats to collect four hits and three RBIs in a 26-0 rout of McKay on March 22. South Eugene sophomore Ripley Buckhantz followed by going 3 for 5 with a double, a triple and four RBIs during a 14-8 win over North Salem on March 23.
In a high-scoring rivalry clash March 21, Sheldon senior Presley Debaldo put together one of the most productive days of the week, finishing 5 for 6 with two home runs, a triple and nine RBIs in a 31-18 victory over Thurston. Not to be overshadowed, Thurston senior Daphnie Heckel went 3 for 5 with a home run, two doubles and five RBIs in the same game.
Marist junior Lillian Wobbe rounded out the nominations by dominating both sides of the ball in a 12-4 win over Henley on March 19. She fanned 10 in a complete-game effort and went 2 for 4 at the plate with a home run, a double and five RBIs.
Fans can cast one vote per device until the poll closes Thursday morning. The athlete with the most votes will be featured in next week’s print and online editions as the Active Chiropractic girls Athlete of the Week.
To submit future nominations, e-mail athlete name, stats and game details to Register-Guard sports reporter Jarrid Denney at jdenney@registerguard.com.
Read more →US loss can be a catalyst for improvement insists coach

United States head coach Mauricio Pochettino believes Saturday’s heavy defeat to Belgium can serve as a springboard for sharper performances with the World Cup opener only 75 days away. Speaking after the thumping, the Argentine stressed that the painful lesson must accelerate the squad’s refinement rather than dent confidence. Pochettino, appointed to guide the program toward the upcoming tournament, views the setback as an urgent reminder of the standards required on the global stage. He is confident the showing will focus minds in the limited preparation window remaining.
Read more →Former FC Barcelona President Bartomeu Claims Messi Could Have Renewed
Barcelona—In a pointed interview with the Catalan daily ARA, former FC Barcelona president Josep Bartomeu has asserted that the club’s current leadership under Joan Laporta had the means to retain Lionel Messi in the summer of 2021, contradicting long-standing claims that financial constraints made a renewal impossible.
Bartomeu, who stepped down in October 2020, broke his silence to argue that Laporta’s board “inflated” the club’s pandemic-era losses to €555 million, a figure that triggered La Liga’s second audit and ultimately slashed Barça’s salary-cap allowance. “When La Liga received that news, it decided to do a second audit and considered that the losses were not these, since there were provisions worth €283 million,” Bartomeu told ARA. “But Barça decided to keep their proposal, La Liga applied it and the club lost fair play that it has not yet recovered to this day.”
The 61-year-old businessman, whose final years in charge were marred by spiraling debt and fierce scrutiny over player contracts, insisted that the outgoing administration left tools for renewal. “If they had done what had to be done, Leo Messi could have been perfectly renewed and other players could have been signed,” he said. “It wasn’t the fault of the inheritance, but of fair play because the new board inflated the losses.”
Messi, then 34, ended weeks of speculation by signing for Paris Saint-Germain on a free transfer in August 2021 after Laporta reneged on an electoral promise to secure the Argentine’s continuity. The episode remains raw for supporters who believed a last-minute agreement could be struck, especially after the forward had agreed to a 50-percent wage cut.
Bartomeu also defended the terms of the deal he sanctioned in 2017, which Spanish newspaper El Mondo reported totalled €555,237,619 across four seasons. “He was paid little for what he gave, both on a sporting level and economically or commercially,” Bartomeu argued, adding that Messi “would have loved to participate in the renewal of the squad, with these young people who are there now,” in reference to emerging talents such as 16-year-old winger Lamine Yamal. “But they threw him out and it wasn’t to be.”
The timing of the remarks is significant. Laporta, re-elected for a second consecutive term a fortnight ago after defeating rival Victor Font, faces renewed questions over his handling of club icons. In March, former manager Xavi Hernández told La Vanguardia that a 2023 return for Messi—once his PSG contract expired—was “agreed” only for Laporta to halt negotiations because “he didn’t want a war” with the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner.
Bartomeu’s intervention ensures the debate over who shoulders responsibility for Messi’s departure will persist as Barcelona attempt to balance their books and restore competitive stability. For many supporters, the lingering sense of a missed opportunity remains the defining subplot of Laporta’s modern presidency.
Read more →Man United need to decide soon whether to back Carrick or hire someone else

Manchester United are approaching a managerial crossroads. With the World Cup looming in July and the summer transfer window set to open, the club must decide whether to hand the reins permanently to interim boss Michael Carrick or wait for a marquee name to shake loose after the tournament.
The 42-year-old’s audition could scarcely have gone better. Since stepping in, Carrick has guided United to 23 points from a possible 30, catapulting the side from seventh to third and rekindling Champions League hopes. The upturn has been fuelled by shrewd tactical tweaks: Bruno Fernandes has been pushed higher, where he has already broken David Beckham’s club record for Premier League assists in a season, while a return to a back four has revived Harry Maguire’s England prospects. Three January additions—Bryan Mbeumo, Matheus Cunha and Benjamin Sesko—have added pace and goals, and the squad suddenly looks capable of grinding out victories that slipped away last term.
Inside the dressing-room, the softly-spoken Carrick has shown a sterner edge. After the lone defeat at Newcastle he reportedly “read the riot act”, a moment that prompted headlines of “No more Mr. Nice Guy”. He is backed by a no-nonsense staff—Jonny Evans, Jonathan Woodgate and Steve Holland—who have quickly set non-negotiable standards.
Yet reservations persist. Carrick’s only previous managerial experience came at Middlesbrough, where a blistering start—16 wins in 23 matches—faded into an eighth-place finish and a Carabao Cup semi-final before his dismissal in June 2025. Critics argue that a bright opening stretch, however impressive, is no guarantee of long-term success; United have been burned before by high-profile appointments that promised much but delivered little.
The stakes are amplified by the club’s looming squad overhaul. Casemiro is expected to depart, and United are targeting elite midfielders such as Nottingham Forest’s Elliot Anderson and Crystal Palace’s Adam Wharton, each valued above £80 million. Newcastle’s Sandro Tonali and an ambitious swoop for Real Madrid’s Jude Bellingham have also been mentioned. A top-class centre-back to eventually succeed Maguire and reinforcements at full-back are also on the wanted list. Whether Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the minority owner now running football operations, will entrust such critical business to Carrick remains an open question.
Qualifying for the Champions League would almost certainly tilt the balance in Carrick’s favour, handing him both the job and the financial muscle to reshape the squad. Until then, United must weigh the promise of stability against the allure of a bigger name waiting in the post-World Cup wings. The clock is ticking.
Read more →Fans kicked to the kerb yet again as Liverpool announce ticket price increases from next season
Liverpool have triggered a fresh row with their own supporters after confirming a rise in Anfield admission prices for the 2025-26 campaign, a move the club’s official supporters’ body has branded “extremely disappointing”.
In a statement released on Thursday morning, the Reds said increases will be “in line with inflation” over the next three years, stressing that match-day operating costs have surged 85 per cent since 2016-17. The club argued the adjustment is essential “in the highly competitive environment” of modern football.
The practical impact is modest: adult general-admission match tickets will climb by between £1.25 and £1.75 per game, while adult season-ticket prices edge up £21.50 to £27. Yet the symbolism has reopened old wounds. The Liverpool FC Supporters Board, which lobbied for a two-year freeze, rejected the inflation justification and accused the club of generating “greater revenue on the backs of supporters” without allowing fans to “share in those rewards”.
The timing has intensified frustration. Liverpool posted record turnover of £703 million for the 2024-25 financial year, while performances on the pitch have dipped below the standards set during last season’s title challenge. Supporters already grappling with spiralling living costs, ever-shifting kick-off times and escalating TV subscription fees now face paying more for what many regard as an inferior product.
Although the rises fall well short of the £77 ticket proposal that sparked a mass 77th-minute walk-out against Sunderland in 2016, critics see the announcement as another example of loyalty being monetised. Anfield’s capacity has expanded beyond 61,000 in the past decade, yet demand still dwarfs supply, leaving the club confident that every seat will be filled regardless of price.
For a fan-base renowned for its devotion, the latest increase is less a financial body-blow than a reputational one, reinforcing the perception that ordinary match-goers remain an easy target when balance sheets need balancing.
Read more →There are big concerns over Noni Madueke’s health.

London — Arsenal’s push for silverware on three fronts has been clouded by a fresh wave of injury anxiety, with winger Noni Madueke emerging as the most worrying case after England’s friendly against Uruguay at Wembley.
Madueke, who started Friday’s encounter, was substituted before the interval following an early collision and was later photographed leaving the stadium in a knee brace, favouring his left leg. The Football Association labelled the issue “a knock,” yet the sight of the 22-year-old limping through the players’ exit has done little to calm nerves among the Emirates hierarchy.
The forward’s setback is the headline concern among a spate of withdrawals that saw five senior players return to north London over the weekend. Midfield linchpin Declan Rice and forward Bukayo Saka were also released by England “for medical assessment,” while Ecuador centre-back Piero Hincapié and Spain’s Martín Zubimendi were sent back without completing their international windows. Hincapié departed without an official diagnosis; Zubimendi, complaining of discomfort in his right knee, was excused by the Spanish federation “to avoid any risk and to protect the player’s health.”
Manager Mikel Arteta, long a critic of the autumn and spring international cycles, reiterated his frustration earlier this month. “It’s a period that I don’t enjoy a lot,” he said, “especially when we have 18, 19 players playing… but it’s part of the calendar and we have to accept that.” Acceptance, however, does not equate to immunity: Arsenal have repeatedly seen pivotal squad members return from national-team duty in distress, a pattern supporters have ruefully dubbed the “FIFA virus.”
Compounding the concern, Crystal Palace midfielder Eberechi Eze — also on England duty — is expected to miss the whole of April with a calf problem sustained before the break even began.
Yet the club’s medical staff may take solace in the fact that not every absence stems from a fresh injury. Of the ten Gunners who missed international fixtures, five — Leandro Trossard, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhães, Rice and Saka — were withdrawn from friendlies despite starting last weekend’s Carabao Cup final against Manchester City and finishing the match apparently intact. With Arsenal still contesting the Premier League summit, the FA Cup and the UEFA Champions League, the ability to rotate could prove timely.
Arteta’s side resume competitive action with an FA Cup quarter-final visit to Southampton, offering a potential opportunity to ease returning stars back into contention ahead of a congested run-in that will determine whether this season ends in glory or regret.
Read more →Barcelona rule out move for €45 million-rated former La Masia pearl
Barcelona have definitively ended speculation linking them with a summer return for Xavi Simons, the 22-year-old Dutch attacking midfielder who left La Masia in 2019. Despite persistent rumours and fresh reports that the Catalan giants were weighing up an approach, club sources have told SPORT that no pursuit is planned.
Simons, who joined Tottenham Hotspur last year for €60 million, has struggled to lift the north-London side away from the Premier League’s lower reaches while also suffering Champions-League elimination at the hands of Atlético Madrid. Spurs’ disappointing campaign has fuelled talk of an early exit, with a valuation of around €45 million now attached to the former Barcelona academy standout.
Barcelona’s decision, however, is final. The club’s sporting hierarchy cite both economic and philosophical reasons for stepping away. A fee of that magnitude would collide with the club’s tightly-controlled budget, and priority targets elsewhere in the market make such an outlay unfeasible. Equally significant, officials believe re-signing a player who previously opted to depart could undermine the message being sent to current academy prospects: the pathway to the first team is reserved for those who commit to the club’s long-term project.
Consequently, Simons will not be pulling on the blaugrana shirt next season, and attention at Camp Nou will remain fixed on reinforcing other areas of the squad while continuing to promote homegrown talent.
Read more →Rangers star plays part in seven-goal thriller as World Cup warm-up cements position as international mainstay

A Rangers midfielder underlined his status as a mainstay of the Belgium national team by starting in a high-scoring World Cup warm-up that saw the Red Devils dismantle host nation USA. The seven-goal thriller, played on American soil, served as the final tune-up before the global showpiece and showcased the Glasgow club’s influential playmaker at the heart of the action. His performance further entrenched him in the national-side setup, suggesting he will be among the first names on the teamsheet when the tournament kicks off.
Belgium dominated from the outset, and the Rangers star’s composure in possession and tactical intelligence were central to the visitors’ commanding display. While the source text did not detail individual scorers, the emphatic nature of the victory signals strong momentum for the Belgians heading into the World Cup.
Read more →Man City vs Liverpool: Etihad Showdown Set for Saturday 12:45 Kick-Off
Manchester City will welcome Liverpool to the Etihad Stadium on Saturday 4 April for a 12:45 BST kick-off that could shape the closing chapters of the 2025-26 Premier League season. The match will be broadcast live in the UK on Prime Video, TNT Sports One and HBO Max, with global viewing options available through livesoccertv.com.
Pep Guardiola’s side, fresh from lifting the League Cup for a record ninth time after Nico O’Reilly’s Wembley double sank Arsenal, will face a Liverpool outfit guided by the league’s newest managerial sensation. The Dutch coach, appointed in June 2024 following Jürgen Klopp’s departure, became only the sixth manager in Premier League history to win the title in his first season and the first Dutchman ever to do so. His lone competitive defeat of 2024 arrived on 14 September, a 1-0 home loss to Nottingham Forest that also stands as the sole league fixture in which Liverpool failed to score.
City’s last meeting with the Reds produced late drama at Anfield. Bernardo Silva and an Erling Haaland penalty overturned Dominik Szoboszlai’s 74th-minute free-kick to secure a 2-1 victory. Tempers flared deep in stoppage time when Rayan Cherki’s long-range effort was chased down by Szoboszlai and Haaland, ending with the Hungarian midfielder receiving a red card.
Liverpool’s attacking thrust this season has centred on summer signing Hugo Ekitike. The 23-year-old French forward, signed after fruitful spells for his country at youth level, has 17 goals and six assists across all competitions, beginning with a strike in the Community Shield defeat to Crystal Palace and continuing through Matchday one. His versatility poses a tactical puzzle Guardiola must solve.
Alongside Ekitike, Dominik Szoboszlai has emerged as Liverpool’s main man. The Hungarian’s 12 goals and eight assists include a decisive strike against Galatasaray and relentless energy whether deployed centrally or wide. His Champions League form, coupled with relentless consistency, has drawn plaudits from across the continent.
Guardiola will preview the encounter at a media briefing on Friday 3 April from 12:30 BST, streamed live on mancity.com and the club’s official app. City will take the field in their 2025/26 PUMA home kit, currently available at 50 percent off through the club’s online store.
Supporters worldwide can access broadcast information via the club’s global TV listings, ensuring no moment is missed as two heavyweights renew hostilities under the Etihad lights.
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Read more →Mexico and Portugal Had an Abundance of Toughness but a Lack of Overall Quality

Estadio Azteca – A match that promised firepower on paper instead produced a bruising, scoreless draw as Mexico and Portugal combined for plenty of grit but precious little cutting edge. In a game played at a frantic tempo yet starved of genuine goalmouth action, El Tri held the European giants 0-0, leaving both camps with more questions than answers three days before their next friendlies.
Portugal, shorn of Cristiano Ronaldo, monopolised the ball after the tenth minute and twice should have gone ahead before the interval. Gonçalo Ramos, handed the central striker’s role, side-footed wide from seven yards and moments later steered another close-range effort off target, burying his head in his hands as Mexican fans roared their relief.
The second half followed a similar script: Portugal probed, Mexico soaked up pressure and waited for counters. The best chance of the night fell to substitute Armando González in the 83rd minute, but the young striker sent a free header from inside the six-yard box inches wide of Rui Silva’s far post, a miss that drew gasps from every corner of the ground.
Manager Javier Aguirre will take heart from the resolve his side showed against a top-five FIFA-ranked opponent, yet the familiar shortcomings that have dogged Mexico throughout this cycle were impossible to ignore. El Tri worked tirelessly to close spaces but produced little incision, registering only one shot on target and rarely threatening through centre-forward Raúl Jiménez, who was effective as a hold-up option yet never managed a clean attempt on goal.
Portugal’s technical superiority was evident in the statistics – 64 percent possession and 14 shots – but the absence of a reliable finisher rendered their dominance academic. Ramos’ profligacy was matched by Gonçalo Guedes, who fluffed every touch after the break, and Francisco Conceição, who failed to trouble Jesús Gallardo down the right.
Individual battles offered the night’s brightest sub-plots. Right-back Israel Reyes, shifted in from club duty as a centre-back, delivered a career-defining 90 minutes, shackling Nuno Mendes and João Félix before neutralising Guedes. His diagonal switches to Gallardo became Mexico’s lone consistent escape valve against the press. At the other end, Vitinha’s half-time introduction tilted the midfield decisively Portugal’s way, the Paris Saint-Germain metronome accelerating the tempo and pinning Mexico 30 yards deeper than they had been in the first half.
Samú Costa anchored with understated excellence, breaking up play and igniting transitions, while Pedro Neto tormented Gallardo after the restart, slicing inside to combine with Bruno Fernandes. Fernandes himself flashed the inventive passes that define his game, but like so many on the pitch, the final ball or finish never arrived.
Among Mexico’s bright spots, Julián Quiñones thrived in an unfamiliar deeper role, driving at João Neves and slipping team-mates into space. One perfectly weighted cross should have become an 80th-minute winner had González kept his header on frame. Goalkeeper Raúl Rangel, meanwhile, parried a Samú Costa rocket and distributed with poise, quietening recent calls for veteran Guillermo Ochoa’s return.
Yet the overarching narrative remained unchanged: Mexico grafted admirably but looked toothless in attack, a pattern that bodes ill with Belgium looming on the horizon and no altitude or home-crowd cushion to lean on. Portugal, for all their possession, left Mexico without ever looking like genuine World Cup contenders in Ronaldo’s absence.
The draw extends Mexico’s unbeaten run in friendlies under Aguirre, yet the performance underlined the urgent need for attacking solutions before the global tournament kicks off. Portugal, likewise, must ponder how to convert territorial control into goals if their all-time leading scorer is unavailable come November.
In the end, 0-0 was a fair reflection of two teams heavy on industry, light on inspiration, and still searching for the elusive formula that turns hard work into wins.
Read more →Cheers for champs: Pacers and Polo includes salute to USC Aiken's stars

AIKEN — Under crystalline skies and a gentle 70-degree breeze, Whitney Field transformed into a hive of tailgates and thundering hooves Saturday as the 2024 Pacers and Polo finale capped the Aiken Triple Crown. Roughly 2,500 spectators ringed the historic 300-yard-long meadow—equal in size to nine football fields—to watch the Singh Investment Group outlast Stella Artois 10-6 and, just as importantly, to salute a new set of local heroes.
Antonio Campos paced SIG with four goals, countering an early strike from Stella Artois’ Louis Galvan, who finished with a team-high three. After Galvan’s opener, SIG reeled off four unanswered goals and never trailed again. Joining Campos in the winner’s circle were teammates Rubin Cosia, Pedro Lara, Becky Mullins and Frank Mullins. Tiger Kneece, Padro Manion, Galvan and Julia Kline comprised the Stella Artois roster.
Between chukkers, public-address attention turned from seasoned professionals to collegiate champions. Aiken County Council Vice Chairman and polo booster Andrew Siders stepped onto the turf to present a county proclamation honoring USC Aiken’s first-place finish in the U.S. Polo Association Division I National Tournament. The Pacers routed Texas A&M 15-6 on March 22 to secure the title.
Team captain Madison Jordan and her twin sister Brianna Jordan accepted the applause on behalf of a squad that also includes vice president Winnie Branscum, who could not attend. Brianna said the players are using the off-season to prepare for a repeat run. “We’ll practice hard, travel to more Division I schools and go back-to-back—that’s our goal for next year,” she noted. Until classes resume in September, the trio will compete in the outdoor season with Aiken Polo Club while ramping up fundraising for the coming semester.
William C. Whitney, the avid horseman for whom the field is named, helped establish the surrounding Hitchcock Woods more than a century ago. On Saturday his legacy echoed in every cheer—for both the tournament victors and the newest stars wearing USC Aiken colors.
Read more →Time is running out for Foden to make England's World Cup squad

Wembley, Friday night: the clock on Phil Foden’s international resurgence is ticking louder than ever. Handed a start against Uruguay in England’s final home friendly before this summer’s World Cup, the 24-year-old spent 56 largely anonymous minutes on the periphery of a drab 1-1 draw, his involvement curtailed further by a bruising challenge from Ronald Araújo that left him hobbling to the touchline. The grimace on Foden’s face told its own story: a player who senses the biggest stage of all may be slipping from his grasp.
Only two summers ago Foden arrived at Euro 2024 as the Premier League’s standout performer, second only to Erling Haaland, Cole Palmer and Alexander Isak in the goal charts. Fast-forward to the present and he has started just two league fixtures since being hauled off at half-time in Manchester City’s 2-0 defeat at Old Trafford in January. Across three seismic City encounters this month—the two-legged Champions League tie with Real Madrid and Sunday’s Carabao Cup final against Arsenal—Foden’s cumulative playing time amounted to a solitary minute, a late cameo branded a “charity sub” by Wayne Rooney.
The statistics are stark, but the subtext is even more sobering. Pep Guardiola has repeatedly insisted he harbours “zero doubts” about Foden’s gifts, urging the Stockport-born midfielder to rediscover the “joy, the smile and happiness” that once defined his game. Yet Guardiola’s own team-sheet selections have spoken louder than any press-conference reassurance. Foden has been shunted into deeper roles, rotated wide and, on occasion, omitted entirely as academy graduate Rayan Cherki’s influence grows.
There have been flickers of the old spark: eight goals in nine November-and-December outings, a September strike in the derby against Manchester United and a 90th-minute winner versus Leeds. Each flashback, however, has been followed by another lull. Foden himself attributes the stop-start campaign to an ankle problem and “things going on off the pitch mentally,” but consistency—his hallmark during the 2023-24 season that delivered both PFA and Premier League Player-of-the-Year accolades—has proved elusive.
International opportunity, therefore, felt like a lifeline. Instead, Friday’s audition against Uruguay only muddied the waters. Stationed nominally on the right of a midfield three, Foden saw little of the ball, completed neither a key pass nor a dribble and departed shortly after the hour. Within seconds of his withdrawal Cole Palmer, the man most likely to usurp him in Thomas Tuchel’s pecking order, clipped a corner from which Ben White headed England level and later carved open a gilt-edged chance for Dominic Calvert-Lewin. Head-to-head, the Chelsea attacker landed the more compelling audition.
Tuchel, a coach who relishes spelling out internal competition to his squad, now faces an unenviable conundrum. Jude Bellingham and Morgan Rogers will return against Japan on Wednesday, while Eberechi Eze, Palmer and, in wide areas, Bukayo Saka, Anthony Gordon and Marcus Rashford all offer more prolific, penetrative alternatives. Foden’s versatility—once seen as an asset—has become a liability: he struggled on the flank during Euro 2024 and, with the No. 10 role hotly contested, there is no obvious niche.
History offers a sliver of hope. Cast to the margins during City’s 2022-23 treble drive, Foden responded with the finest season of his career. A similar resurrection would require a seismic surge in form between now and the Premier League’s climax, beginning with whatever minutes Guardiola grants after the current international break.
For the moment, though, the sands are draining from the hourglass. Each unused substitute appearance, each training-ground session where others steal the spotlight, narrows Foden’s path to the plane. Tuchel will run more auditions against Japan, but with every passing week the competition stiffens and the narrative hardens: unless something changes, and changes fast, Phil Foden risks becoming the most gifted English player to watch a World Cup from home.
Read more →Arsenal could hijack Manchester City’s move for top midfielder
Elliot Anderson’s rapid ascent from promising talent to one of Europe’s most coveted midfielders has set the stage for a high-stakes tug-of-war between two Premier League heavyweights, with Arsenal now positioning themselves to muscle Manchester City out of the race for the Nottingham Forest star.
Sources close to the situation confirm that Arsenal have elevated Anderson to the summit of their summer shortlist after a sequence of commanding displays that have underlined his readiness for elite-level football. The 21-year-old’s composure in possession, tactical intelligence and capacity to dictate the tempo have convinced the Gunners’ hierarchy that he can be the transformative presence needed to elevate Mikel Arteta’s midfield from dynamic to dominant.
What adds extra intrigue to Arsenal’s pursuit is the existing chemistry Anderson has forged with Declan Rice on England duty. Coaching staff inside the FA set-up have privately lauded the balance the pair strike: Rice’s destructive ball-winning married to Anderson’s progressive passing and late third-man runs. Arsenal believe re-uniting that partnership at club level would give them the physicality and control required to sustain a title challenge across a 38-game season.
Manchester City, long-time admirers who have tracked Anderson since his breakthrough at Forest, had been working under the assumption that a deal could be struck once the campaign closes. Negotiations between City and the player’s representatives have remained active for months, with Pep Guardiola’s side confident their project and pedigree would ultimately win the race.
Yet Arsenal’s late intervention threatens to derail those plans. Give Me Sport understands that senior figures at the Emirates have now made a direct approach, signalling a willingness to match—or surpass—any financial package tabled by the champions. The north-London club regard Anderson as “among the top three English midfielders” currently operating outside the traditional top six and are prepared to structure a record-equalling offer to prove it.
Nottingham Forest, for their part, are under no pressure to sell. Anderson has become integral to Nuno Espírito Santo’s system, his energy and verticality key to the side’s survival push. Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis is adamant that only an “exceptional” bid—believed to start well above the £50 million mark—will even be entertained, a stance designed to deter suitors or at least spark an auction that drives the fee ever higher.
With both Arsenal and City flush with Champions League revenue and sporting agendas that demand continual improvement, the coming weeks promise a fascinating duel. For Anderson, the choice may ultimately hinge on where he sees his next stage of development: the proven trophy machine of the Etihad or the upwardly mobile project taking shape in north London.
One thing is certain: the battle for Elliot Anderson’s signature is only just beginning.
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Read more →FC Barcelona Star Raphinha Is Injured - What Now For The Blaugrana?
FC Barcelona’s April plans have been thrown into turmoil after the club confirmed that star winger Raphinha will be sidelined for five weeks with a right-thigh muscle injury sustained while on international duty.
The 30-year-old Brazilian limped off at halftime of Brazil’s 3-2 loss to France in Foxborough last week, immediately sparking concern across Catalonia. Those fears were cemented on Friday evening when the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) announced that imaging tests had revealed a muscle injury in the posterior region of Raphinha’s right thigh. The CBF statement added that both Raphinha and teammate Wesley had been released from the squad to undergo treatment, with no replacements called in.
Although Raphinha’s entourage initially indicated a four-week lay-off, Barça’s medical staff have set the recovery window at five weeks, ruling the winger out of a critical stretch that includes:
- The Champions League quarter-final first and second legs against Atlético Madrid on 8 and 14 April
- A potential semi-final first leg on 28-29 April
- La Liga clashes at the Metropolitano (4 April), the derby versus Espanyol (11 April), and pivotal top-of-the-table meetings with Getafe and Celta Vigo
With the league lead over Real Madrid standing at just four points, Hansi Flick must now reshuffle an attack that has relied heavily on Raphinha’s pace and creativity.
The most direct replacement would be January loanee Marcus Rashford, who impressed on the left wing for England against Uruguay on Friday, repeatedly exploiting space behind Barça right-back Ronald Araújo. Should Rashford slot straight into the front line, João Cancelo is expected to remain at left-back, at least until Alejandro Balde completes his own return from injury.
An alternative scheme could see Cancelo pushed higher up the flank, a ploy occasionally used during Xavi Hernández’s tenure, while Fermín López mans the left-sided attacking role, freeing Dani Olmo to operate as the central No. 10 until Gavi regains full fitness.
Saturday’s league visit to Atlético will offer the first glimpse of Flick’s preferred solution, but all signs point to Rashford being handed an immediate audition as Barça weigh up whether to make his loan from Manchester United permanent.
Either way, the next month will test the depth of the league leaders and could go a long way toward deciding whether the Blaugrana finish the season with silverware or regrets.
Read more →FC Barcelona News: 29 March 2026; Fallout from Raphinha injury continues, Barça increasingly confident in Alessandro Bastoni deal

Barcelona enter the final nine-match sprint of the La Liga campaign with the trophy in their sights, yet the mood at the Ciutat Esportiva is a blend of urgency and cautious optimism. While the first team prepares for the title run-in, off-pitch developments have intensified around two key dossiers: the uncertain future of Marcus Rashford and the accelerating pursuit of Inter Milan defender Alessandro Bastoni.
Raphinha’s five-week lay-off, suffered on Brazil duty, has reopened wounds between the club and FIFA. Mundo Deportivo reports growing outrage inside Barça over the timing of the friendly call-up, which has left the squad without its first-choice winger for the decisive stretch. The Brazilian’s absence simultaneously hands Rashford a gilt-edged audition; the Englishman, on loan from Manchester United, now has nine games to convince sporting directors that he merits a permanent contract. Sources close to United say the English club remain relaxed and are already mapping out alternative destinations should Barça decline their €35 million option.
Confidence is markedly higher regarding Bastoni. Barça technical staff have identified the 26-year-old Italian international as the cornerstone of next season’s defensive rebuild. Talks have progressed to the point that club officials consider the operation “under control.” Inter’s need to balance accounts before 30 June is viewed in Catalonia as an open door, and Bastoni has privately signalled his enthusiasm for a move to Camp Nou. Negotiations are expected to gather pace once the domestic season concludes.
Elsewhere, Barça Atlètic’s promotion hopes suffered another setback, falling 0-1 to seasoned visitors UE Sant Andreu despite dominating possession and carving out a raft of chances. The reserves remain outside the playoff places with only a handful of fixtures remaining.
In the international orbit, Kosovo striker Mirlind Asllani boosted his stock with a standout performance for his country, and agent Ayman Dahmani confirmed to Mundo Deportivo that Barcelona’s interest is live. Hoffenheim will only entertain offers that trigger the player’s €25–29 million clause. Meanwhile, a surprise sighting at the Ciutat Esportiva saw former La Masia gem Ansu Fati and Paul Pogba, now teammates at Monaco, put in a training session on Barça soil during the break.
Nine games, multiple sagas, one objective: reclaim the league crown and set the table for a transformative summer.
Read more →Titans Held Top 30 Visit with Miami C James Brockermeyer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Tennessee Titans continue to scour the 2024 draft class for help along the interior of their offensive line, and their latest evaluation brought Miami center James Brockermeyer to town for one of the club’s coveted Top 30 visits.
ESPN’s Turron Davenport reported late Saturday night that the Titans hosted Brockermeyer earlier in the pre-draft process, marking the first time Tennessee has been publicly linked to a center regarded among the top tier of this year’s class.
At 6-foot-3 and 297 pounds, Brockermeyer falls short of the league’s preferred prototype for the pivot, yet evaluators inside the organization were drawn to his refined technique and high football IQ. A meticulous student of the game with NFL bloodlines, he showed flashes as a downhill blocker during a strong week of practice at the Senior Bowl, solidifying his reputation for intelligence and toughness.
Questions remain about his length and overall athletic ceiling, traits that could limit him to a pure center role and reduce his schematic versatility at the next level. For a Titans front office searching for long-term stability in the middle of the line, the private workout and interview session provided an extended look at whether Brockermeyer’s technical polish can offset any physical limitations.
Tennessee currently carries uncertainty at both center and right guard, and while the franchise has been active on the pro-day circuit, Brockermeyer represents the first confirmed Top 30 visit devoted to the center spot. The meeting underscores the club’s willingness to examine every option before turning in its draft card later this month.
Read more →‘I would have gone to Liverpool or Tottenham’ says 42 G/A former PL midfielder as he rues career decision

Middlesbrough icon Juninho Paulista has reopened one of the Premier League’s great sliding-door moments, admitting he should have resisted the lure of La Liga and remained in England when his Middlesbrough future hung in the balance during the late 1990s. Speaking on a Brazilian podcast, the 50-year-old attacking midfielder—who registered 34 goals and 18 assists in 150 top-flight appearances for the Teesside club—revealed that official offers from Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur were on the table before he instead elected to join Atletico Madrid for £11.9 million in 1997.
The transfer saga began when Middlesbrough slapped a £12 million valuation on their diminutive superstar, a fee that Sir Alex Ferguson balked at, prompting Manchester United to walk away from talks. The collapse of that proposed move created an opportunity for two other English heavyweights. “Liverpool and Tottenham made offers,” Juninho confirmed, underscoring that a switch within the Premier League was a genuine possibility.
Yet the Brazil international opted for the Spanish capital, spending two seasons with Atletico before embarking on a series of loan moves, including a celebrated return to Middlesbrough. By the time he came back to the Riverside permanently in 2002, the price had dropped to £5.9 million, and while he helped the club lift the 2004 League Cup, the intervening years have given him ample time to reflect on what might have been.
“If I had the awareness I have today, I wouldn’t have left England,” Juninho said. “I would have gone to Liverpool or Tottenham.” His candid assessment highlights how a single decision can redirect a career trajectory, particularly in an era when £12 million represented a seismic outlay. Middlesbrough’s determination not to sell to a domestic rival such as Manchester United ultimately steered the playmaker abroad, a choice the player now views as misguided.
With Tottenham currently watching Igor Tudor attempt to steer them away from relegation trouble and Liverpool ever-present in the Champions League conversation, Juninho’s revelation adds a layer of nostalgia—and regret—to Premier League folklore. The 42 combined goals and assists he supplied for Middlesbrough hint at the creative spark either club missed, leaving fans to ponder how different the late 1990s landscape might have looked had he stayed on English soil.
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