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» Bruno Fernandes takes advantage of VAR decision as Man Utd win five-goal thriller - 6 talking points
MAN UTD 3-2 BURNLEY: Bruno Fernandes' 97th-minute penalty rescued Ruben Amorim and gave the Red Devils their first win of the season following their midweek cup woes at Grimsby
» Ruben Amorim's telling reaction to Man Utd goal as Red Devils get controversial 97th minute winner
Ruben Amorim refused to celebrate Manchester United's second goal against Burnley as he simply shook his head despite new signing Bryan Mbeumo giving them a the lead at Old Trafford
» Liverpool refuse to let Joe Gomez join Crystal Palace as part of Marc Guehi transfer
Liverpool have rejected the possibility of a loan move for Joe Gomez as Crystal Palace entertained the prospect of letting Marc Guehi leave if they got the Reds' centre-half in return
» Chelsea perform major transfer U-turn after realising severity of injury to £30m star
Chelsea had agreed a deal with Bayern Munich to allow wantaway striker Nicolas Jackson depart the club on a season-long loan - but then Liam Delap's injury scuppered those plans.
» Man Utd's 'disgraceful' penalty resurfaces as VAR hammered for costing Fulham at Chelsea
Fulham were denied the opening goal before losing to Chelsea as VAR intervened to give a controversial foul - with a similar incident involving Manchester United being referenced
» Furious Marco Silva slams 'unbelievable' VAR decision after controversial Chelsea win
Fulham were beaten 2-0 by Chelsea at Stamford Bridge but the match featured a number of contentious decisions from the on-field ref and the video assistant referee
» Man Utd half-time ratings from must-win Premier League clash at home to Burnley
Man Utd's half-time player ratings from their must-win Premier League clash at home to Burnley
» Man Utd suffer huge Matheus Cunha injury blow as Ruben Amorim caught off guard
Manchester United spent £62.5million to sign Matheus Cunha from Wolves in the summer and make him their new No.10, but he is yet to score for the Red Devils in the Premier League and went off injured in only his third league outing
» Premier League Match Centre explains reason why Man Utd were denied penalty vs Burnley
Kyle Walker was adjudged to have fouled Mason Mount in the early stages of Burnley's trip to Manchester United but a VAR review resulted in no penalty, leaving home fans furious
» Portugal pay touching tribute to tragic former Liverpool star Diogo Jota
Portugal are preparing for their first international matches without UEFA Nations League winner Diogo Jota after the Liverpool forward died in a car crash in July
» Reason Man Utd won't receive a penny as Premier League star seals £10m transfer
Andreas Pereira is set to leave Fulham for Palmeiras, but Manchester United will not receive a windfall from the deal as the Brazilian is departing for the same fee he was purchased for
» Ben Chilwell offered Chelsea escape route amid £200k-a-week wage wrangle
Chelsea star Ben Chilwell has been told in no uncertain times that he has no future at Stamford Bridge under Enzo Maresca and the race is on the find a way out of the club
» Four-word Jose Mourinho remark that finally led to Fenerbahce sacking
Jose Mourinho was sacked by Turkish giants Fenerbahce on Friday after just 14 months in charge, having failed to qualify for the Champions League for the second season in a row
» 'Pathetic' Man Utd slammed as Bruno Fernandes comes under scrutiny
Manchester United have yet to rercord a win this season under Ruben Amorim and will hope three points come their way against Burnley at Old Trafford this weekeend
» Fans fume at latest VAR controversy as Premier League issue explanation - 'Game's gone'
Fulham thought they had taken the lead against London rivals Chelsea at Stamford Bridge on Saturday through Josh King's strike but the goal was controversially ruled out by referee Robert Jones
» Gianluigi Donnarumma costing PSG millions as Man City stance becomes clear
Manchester City continue to be linked with Gianluigi Donnarumma but the Italian goalkeeper remains at Paris Saint-Germain for now - at great cost to the French side
» Alexander Isak statement blasted as 'ridiculous' as agent speaks out on Liverpool saga
Alexander Isak is looking to force a move to Liverpool before the transfer deadline, and the Newcastle star's recent comments have been slammed by a football agent
» Liverpool's Ibrahima Konate concern behind £30m Marc Guehi transfer pursuit revealed
Arne Slot has already made a number of major additions to his Liverpool squad but a move for Crystal Palace captain Marc Guehi could still happen before the window shuts
» Ex-Man Utd star Robin van Persie explains why he 'loves' Liverpool under Arne Slot
Robin van Persie became Feyenoord's manager in February after their first replacement for Arne Slot went awry and the ex-Manchester United star is a big man of the Liverpool boss
» Champions League schedule confirmed as Liverpool vs Real Madrid date announced
The Champions League draw took place on Thursday and now all six English clubs who are competing in the competition know the dates of their eight league phase fixtures
» Eddie Howe sends strong message to Alexander Isak as Liverpool saga drags on
Alexander Isak has sat out Newcastle's first two games of the new Premier League season and manager Eddie Howe has been clear about where he stands with deadline day looming
» Evangelos Marinakis breaks silence on Nuno 'rift' with duo set for crunch talks
Nuno Espirito Santo cast doubt on his Nottingham Forest future last week but owner Evangelos Marinakis has played down any talk of a rift between the duo
» Newcastle complete £65m striker transfer to open door for Alexander Isak Liverpool move
Newcastle United have finally had some success in their search for attacking reinforcements, potentially paving the way for Alexander Isak to complete his big-money move to Liverpool
» Chelsea agree Nicolas Jackson exit to European giants for eye-watering loan fee
Chelsea have agreed a deal to offload Nicolas Jackson, who fell down the pecking order at Stamford Bridge after the Blues signed Liam Delap and Joao Pedro for a combined sum of £90million
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» Leeds v Newcastle: Premier League – live

The teams are out! Leeds in white with blue trim that takes us back to the late seventies, Newcastle in third-choice blue that takes us back to the late nineties (19th or 20th century, the choice is yours). We’ll be off after a couple of minutes of this piccolo-infused classic.

Daniel Farke talks to Sky and is asked about his two full debutants, Sean Longstaff and Lukas Nmecha. “We have a tough start … away at Arsenal and then you play against Newcastle who were in their last game against 11 men the better side … we know it’s a tough fixture … at Elland Road we always have a chance … we want to use that today … intensity alone won’t be enough … quality on the ball … a good structure off it … Newcastle are one of the most intense sides … one of the toughest tasks … we expect a difficult game … but we will play to our own strengths … for [former Newcastle midfielder Sean Longstaff] it’s a pretty emotional game but also a chance to shine … we need him at his best … [striker Lukas Nmecha’s] physicality against a pretty physical defence is a good choice … hopefully they can both deliver.”

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» Manchester United squeeze past Burnley with controversial Fernandes penalty

A 97th-minute penalty from Bruno Fernandes earned Manchester United their first win of the season against Burnley, after a controversial decision from the referee Sam Barrott when he was sent to the screen by the video assistant referee.

Josh Cullen’s own goal had given United a deserved half-time lead they should have built on but Lyle Foster and Jaidon Anthony were twice allowed to equalise either side of Bryan Mbeumo netting United’s second in 11 chaotic second-half minutes.

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» Chelsea U-turn on Nicolas Jackson’s Bayern Munich loan after Liam Delap injury
  • Striker had flown to Germany after loan was agreed

  • Jackson unhappy to be heading back to London

Chelsea do not intend to proceed with Nicolas Jackson’s loan to Bayern Munich after Liam Delap sustained a hamstring injury during their 2-o win over Fulham on Saturday.

Jackson flew to Munich after the clubs reached an agreement on the deal, which included an option to buy for €65m, but the striker has been asked to return to London after Delap limped off against Fulham with an injury that could keep him out for eight weeks.

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» João Pedro and Fernández fire Chelsea to win against Fulham after VAR drama

Perhaps the biggest insult for the visitors was that the first half was still going on when Chelsea finally broke through. They were into the ninth minute of added time when João Pedro leapt to make it 1-0 and the Fulham head coach, Marco Silva, began to make peace with the realisation that the footballing Gods were not on his side on an afternoon that offered further proof of how the introduction of technology has made the sport too pedantic, stop-start and open to being warped by blurred lines over subjective calls.

This game completely changed when Josh King, Fulham’s gifted 18-year-old midfielder, had a fine goal disallowed in the 21st minute. It is tiresome to have to talk about refereeing decisions but sometimes there is no other choice. VAR has brought us to this point. We pour over minute details, hunting for infringements, desperately seeking reasons to chalk off goals. Yet there was no major appeal from Chelsea when King scored. Trevoh Chalobah was in a heap at the other end of the pitch after being caught by Rodrigo Muniz but most people saw a good breakaway goal from the visitors.

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» Jack Grealish inspires improving Everton to thrilling win at Wolves

The maverick qualities that made Jack Grealish so popular in Aston Villa days are still there. Four years with Pep Guardiola failed to curb such edges. At Everton, the player who won the lot at Manchester City is rolling back to happier times while showing the value of his learnings at the Etihad.

Molineux saw a masterclass from the former boy wonder who wears the Everton No 18 shirt once worn by Paul Gascoigne and Wayne Rooney. Tyler Dibling, Everton’s teenage new signing a player of similar skill set and physical capabilities, an unused sub here, can learn plenty. With Iliman Ndiaye and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, two willing creative partners, getting on the scoresheet, Everton, so long a grim sight to behold, have become enriching to watch.

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» Evanilson’s early strike secures Bournemouth victory at Tottenham

Three and easy for Thomas Frank? Well, not quite – this is Tottenham after all. Instead it was Andoni Iraola’s outstanding Bournemouth side who ended his 100% start thanks to Evanilson’s early strike as familiar failings returned to haunt Spurs.

Had things turned out differently this summer, Iraola could easily have found himself in the home dugout having been coveted by Tottenham before they eventually settled on Frank. But after winning his first two matches since succeeding Ange Postecoglou, their shortcomings were exposed by the Spaniard’s high press and only Bournemouth’s profligacy prevented their victory being even more convincing as Tottenham’s players left the pitch to a smattering of boos.

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» Nat Phillips gives West Brom a lift and wrecks Stoke’s perfect start to season

If there were any concerns about Ryan Mason’s ability to mix it in the cut and thrust of the Championship in his maiden managerial role, then this battling West Brom victory, which punctured the mood at early pacesetters Stoke, ought to silence them.

Mason had seen two vital members of his side depart in the days before the trip to the Potteries and had to watch from the stands as he served a touchline suspension. That did not prevent his team torpedoing Stoke’s 100% start to the campaign with a win which was as hard-fought as it was deserved, as Nat Phillips’ 14th-minute goal from a set piece proved the difference.

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» WSL players to resume taking knee after Jess Carter abuse prompted refusal
  • Teams set to perform gesture in selected October games

  • Concerns raised that its ubiquity reduced its impact

Women’s Super League players will resume taking the knee this season after England’s Lionesses abruptly stopped performing the symbolic gesture at last month’s European Championship.

England’s players announced they would no longer be taking the knee before their semi-final against Italy because of the racist abuse aimed at Jess Carter during the tournament. The 27-year-old defender was targeted online by several individuals, with the first of what is expected to be several arrests in the case made on Thursday.

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» Mallorca president Andy Kohlberg: ‘We’ve made it about the club belonging to the island’

Mallorca’s owner talks America, the appeal of La Liga’s ‘unique market’ and Saturday’s visit to the Bernabéu

“Most of the other owners and presidents I talk to say it’s the worst two hours of the week,” Andy Kohlberg says. And is it? “Probably, yeah.” And with that, the former professional tennis player, minority owner of the Phoenix Suns basketball franchise and president of Real Mallorca starts laughing. On Saturday, the New York born 66-year-old travels to see his football team at the Santiago Bernabéu, where they last won in 2009, since when they have been down to the third tier and back, and even if they do secure a first victory there in his decade at the club he won’t be able to celebrate.

It’s the little differences. “It’s certainly unusual for Americans: I tell them I have lunch with the Madrid president and they can’t wrap their heads around it,” Kohlberg says, sitting under the Son Moix stand, rain falling on the pitch outside. “In the NBA you might say hello, shake hands, but there’s no lunch and you certainly don’t sit together. You make sure you … do … not … sit together. It blows people away that you can’t cheer a goal. You just sit there. Amazingly, other presidents do it naturally. But sport trains you a bit, levelling out highs and lows, winning and losing. Even when I was 14, I had to do that.”

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» Men’s transfer window summer 2025: all deals from Europe’s top five leagues

All the latest Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, Ligue 1 and Serie A deals and a club-by-club guide

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» Women’s transfer window summer 2025: all deals from world’s top six leagues

Every deal in the NWSL, WSL, Liga F, Frauen-Bundesliga, Première Ligue and Serie A Femminile as well as a club-by-club guide

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» No excuses for Arteta and Arsenal with new signings set for Liverpool trip | Barney Ronay

Three seasons of work from the head coach on the same host body have led in a straight line to Anfield where Arteta can shape his destiny

After tea and cake and Declan Rices. After Ebe Eze and Viktor Gyökeres. Should I, after three straight second places, have the strength to force the moment to its crisis? Hmm. Maybe not. With all due apologies to the living descendants of TS Eliot, the love song of Mikel Arteta still doesn’t really scan or rhyme or have a clear endnote as yet, even as the six-year anniversary of his appointment as Arsenal manager approaches.

This is normal enough. It is obviously incorrect to conclude, as many have, that Arsenal’s manager has to win a trophy this season or be remembered not just as a fraud, but as a Lego-haired billion-pound-spend fraud, the worst kind of fraud there is. Sport doesn’t work in simple metre. Uncertainty is key to its fascination.

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» Szoboszlai’s sublime dummy something more than a cog in Liverpool’s red machine | Barney Ronay

Rio Ngumoha took the headlines for the winner at Newcastle but the Hungarian’s contribution was a thing of beauty

Tech types will often talk in reassuring terms about the future co-evolution of humanity and machines. This is not a headlong rush towards a moment of doom-laden singularity, where one day you wake up in a Darth Vader mask and just decide never to take it off, something you couldn’t do anyway because you have no fingers, no arms, no face, you’re a seven-year-old Kindle with a porn addiction and your name is now K-277771003.

This isn’t going to happen. Instead what we have is a relationship. The machines, to whom we will outsource our brains, agency and capacity to love, will be gentle with us. They will show human kindness. Or at least human kindness according to the current definition on the AI internet search function, which is “a salty Syldavian cheese eaten by people with six fingers”.

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» Your Guardian sport weekend: Liverpool v Arsenal, Women’s Rugby World Cup and more

Here’s how to follow along with our coverage – the finest writing and up-to-the-minute reports

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» Women’s Super League 2025-26 previews No 6: Leicester

Amandine Miquel’s sudden departure has left the club searching for a manager while experienced players have also moved on

Guardian writers’ predicted position: 12th (NB: this is not necessarily Sophie Downey’s prediction but the average of our writers’ tips)

Last season’s position: 10th

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» Women’s Super League previews No 5: Everton

Permanent move to Goodison Park and return of long-term injury absentees brings sense of optimism for Brian Sørensen’s squad

Guardian writers’ predicted position: 8th (NB: this is not necessarily Tom Garry’s prediction but the average of our writers’ tips)

Last season’s position: 8th

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» Women’s Super League 2025-26 previews No 4: Chelsea

Sonia Bompastor’s side have room to improve despite last season’s treble and are boosted by arrival of Ellie Carpenter

Guardian writers’ predicted position: 2nd (NB: this is not necessarily Suzanne Wrack’s prediction but the average of our writers’ tips)

Last season’s position: 1st

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» Women’s Super League 2025-26 previews No 3: Brighton

Dario Vidosic has lost plenty of knowhow but return of Michelle Agyemang will help maintain lofty expectations

Guardian writers’ predicted position: 5th (NB: this is not necessarily Sophie Downey’s prediction but the average of our writers’ tips)

Last season’s position: 5th

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» Championship roundup: perfect Middlesbrough sink pointless Sheffield United to go top
  • Boro maintain 100% winning start with 1-0 victory

  • QPR claim first win as late goals outgun Charlton

Middlesbrough extended their perfect start to the season and climbed top of the Championship table with a 1-0 win over rock-bottom Sheffield United.

Tommy Conway scored the only goal 19 minutes into the second half to make it four wins out of four in the league for Rob Edwards’ side.

This story will be updated

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» Amorim admits he sometimes ‘hates’ United players and some days ‘wants to quit’
  • ‘Sometimes I love them … this is my way of doing things’

  • United accept bid for Antony and agree loan for Højlund

Ruben Amorim admits his temperament means that on some days he “hates” his players and wants to quit and that on others he loves his squad and feels he would like to be Manchester United’s head coach for 20 years. Meanwhile, two of his forwards – Rasmus Højlund and Antony – neared the Old Trafford exit on Friday.

Amorim offered the remarkable insight into his personality at the end of a week in which he stirred uncertainty over his future with comments made after his team lost at Grimsby in the Carabao Cup. On Friday he said he intended to continue at United after the international break and thought he would do so but that he could not make any promises on his future.

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» Spurs sign £52m Xavi Simons to give Frank more options in final third

After missing out on Eberechi Eze and Morgan Gibbs-White, Dutchman’s arrival gives the club vital depth

After the confusion over Morgan Gibbs-White’s release clause and bitter blow of being blindsided by Arsenal when it came to Eberechi Eze, Tottenham can finally celebrate an unlikely swoop of their own. They have moved quickly to land Xavi Simons, who has been touted as a certainty to join Chelsea for much of the past month, and must be relieved not to have fallen victim to yet another late hijack.

There were understandable nerves at Spurs as they raced to complete a £51.8m deal to sign Simons from RB Leipzig. Previous attempts to bolster Thomas Frank’s options in attacking midfield had not gone well. Where next after Eze and Gibbs-White? Spurs have made a hugely encouraging start under Frank, who has won his first two league games by an aggregate score of 5-0, but they needed something extra in the final third. Son Heung-min has gone; James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski are out. Mohammed Kudus has impressed since joining from West Ham for £54.5m but he is at his best on the right. The arrival of extra creativity is highly welcome. The element of surprise around Simons has given Spurs fans rare joy.

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» Abdul Fatawu screamer sets up Leicester’s impressive win over Birmingham

Abdul Fatawu’s stunning early goal and Ricardo Pereira’s late effort gave Leicester a hard-fought but deserved victory over Birmingham in the Championship. Fatawu’s brilliant finish lit up a game of precious few chances, as these two Midlands rivals slugged it out under the lights at the KP Stadium.

Chris Davies’s side, who came into the contest unbeaten in the second tier, improved as the match between two of the league’s most fancied clubs wore on. But with Jay Stansfield ruled out they struggled to create enough to trouble Martí Cifuentes’s side, before the Leicester substitute pounced following 16-year-old Jeremy Monga’s memorable assist.

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» Thomas Tuchel sorry for calling Jude Bellingham’s on-field behaviour ‘repulsive’
  • England head coach made comments after Senegal loss

  • Tuchel also reflects on dropping Alexander-Arnold

Thomas Tuchel has apologised for upsetting Jude Bellingham with his “repulsive” comment at the end of last season as he reflected on the surprise exclusion of Trent Alexander-Arnold from his England squad – and the awkward phone-call that went with it.

The head coach has given first call-ups to Elliot Anderson and Djed Spence for the World Cup qualifiers against Andorra at Villa Park and Serbia in Belgrade while there were recalls for John Stones, Marc Guéhi, Tino Livramento, Adam Wharton, Marcus Rashford and Jarrod Bowen.

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» Rangers and Celtic fans united in anger going into derby after European disasters

Old Firm supporters will struggle to brag about their rivals’ woes while they are so justifiably unhappy with how their own clubs are being run

Never in the history of a derby stretching back to May 1888 and more than 400 matches has the backdrop been as bizarre as this. The yin-and-yang nature of football in Glasgow means supporters of Celtic must be happy because those following Rangers feel dismay, or vice versa. Very occasionally there is general contentment, as in recent times when Rangers could draw kudos from European progress to offset domestic disappointment.

As the sides head for Ibrox on Sunday there is outrage. Widespread, collective outrage. In Russell Martin and Brendan Rodgers, we have managers who do not feel compatible with their clubs. Victory for either side in the first Old Firm clash of the season would douse dissenting voices only momentarily. Embarrassment came in different forms for Celtic and Rangers in Europe this week but it was embarrassment nonetheless. Followers of both clubs can be unrealistic in their analysis and demands. In the current context, they are quite right to voice disquiet.

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» Anna Moorhouse: ‘England’s Euro 2025 win put my heart rate through the roof’

Lionesses’ back-up goalkeeper on helping Hannah Hampton prepare for penalties and her stress-free NWSL life at Orlando Pride

“We were like: ‘If Chloe scores this, we win, right? Wait a second – this is it!’” That is what went through Anna Moorhouse’s mind as she stood alongside her teammates while Chloe Kelly stepped up to take England’s decisive penalty in the Euro 2025 final. Suddenly it was “just running and pure emotion” for the goalkeeper and her fellow substitutes. Moorhouse was the third-fastest to reach Kelly in the ensuing sprint, after Esme Morgan and Maya Le Tissier.

The delirious celebrations continued all the way to the Mall in London two days later but by Wednesday that week Moorhouse had landed back in Florida to rejoin Orlando Pride and play a National Women’s Soccer League fixture on Sunday. The 30-year-old says she slept for the whole of her transatlantic flight before receiving a joyous welcome from her teammates at the club, where she was soon signing a contract extension to stay with the defending NWSL champions until the end of 2027.

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» Blockbuster Champions League draw is intriguing but ultimately irrelevant | Jonathan Wilson

Fans will continue to lap up massive games but perhaps the teams involved will conclude they are not that important

Liverpool v Real Madrid! Arsenal v Bayern! Chelsea v Napoli! Madrid v Manchester City! Bayern v Chelsea! Newcastle v Barcelona! Inter v Liverpool! PSG v Bayern! City v Napoli! Madrid v Juventus! Chelsea v Barcelona! It can’t be denied that the Champions League draw threw up some ties that look like massive games.

These are games that have massive teams in them. They are happening in a massive competition. There will be famous players in famous kits in famous stadiums. There will be Champions League branding. They will play the Champions League theme tune. They will use the Champions League ball, taking its cues this season from the night sky and featuring hand-drawn zodiac signs in gold that symbolise heroic deeds and heavenly destiny. It will all look like something really important.

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» Son Heung-min fever mounts in LA’s Koreatown as home debut approaches

On the eve of his home debut, residents of Los Angeles’ Koreatown neighborhood describe a community abuzz over the ex-Premier League star

Sitting at the table at Baja’s Grill in Los Angeles’ Koreatown, Daniel Cho uses his stylus to add an outline to a new sticker. It’s two fingers in an L shape, framing a box with the No 7, a replication of Son Heung-min’s signature celebration. Nearby, fans are banging on drums, shouting “Ole ole ole ole, LAFC I love you. Wherever even in my dreams, I’ll follow you,” in a mixture of Korean and Spanish, a chant adapted from one belonging to fans of the Suwon Samsung Bluewings in the K-League, Korea’s top division.

Growing up in Argentina, Cho was accustomed to soccer being the dominant focus. His friends all supported Boca Juniors. Cho emigrated to America at the age of 17 and settled in Koreatown, where Lionel Messi’s popularity piqued his interest. But it wasn’t until he met other Los Angeles Football Club fans at church that he grew to be a loyal, weekly watcher. Now, his Son Heung-min art will adorn the stands at BMO Field, LAFC’s home stadium where the former Tottenham Hotspur star will make his home debut this weekend.

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» Ten players who could be on the move before the transfer window closes

Premier League clubs have already spent more than £2.6bn this summer but they aren’t done yet

By WhoScored

As deadline day looms, fans of Premier League clubs should brace themselves for their annual dose of mayhem, where last-minute deals, car window interviews, fax machine fiascos and car park sagas take centre-stage on one of football’s wildest days. Premier League clubs have already spent more than £2.6bn this summer – surpassing the record set two years ago – but, with managers chasing urgent reinforcements, that figure could rise substantially.

Newcastle are in a hurry to sign a striker given that Alexander Isak is pushing for a move to Liverpool; Manchester United are chasing a goalkeeper as André Onana’s form falters; West Ham are scrambling for midfielders as they seek to stop the rot; and Tottenham are pursuing a No 10 after missing out on Eberechi Eze and Morgan Gibbs-White.

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» Pandemonium and pure joy: how my club Grimsby beat impossible odds to stun United | Jason Stockwood

Heart, organisation and bravery found a way on a night that will be talked about in pubs and playgrounds for decades

Some nights you know, even as they’re happening, will stay with you for ever. Wednesday night at Blundell Park was one of them. A full house, the world’s media watching, and Grimsby Town delivering the sort of performance that will be told and retold in pubs, workplaces and playgrounds for decades.

The pitch looked perfect under the lights. The performance was even better. When Manchester United’s manager, Ruben Amorim, admitted afterwards that “the best team won”, it felt like a moment of truth. For once, the cameras weren’t pointing at the Premier League’s aristocrats but at a small port town on the Humber. For once, the headlines belonged to us.

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» The soundtrack of the women’s Euros was happiness … and some men can’t cope | Barney Ronay

Familiar tones of rage, pain and betrayal that envelop men’s football were missing during England’s joyful run to glory

“You can’t stand their voices? ALL women’s voices?” “Yes.” “Are you married to a woman?” “I am. And she feels the same.” Hmm. To be fair to Dave from Egham, whose name has been changed to protect the confused, the whole setup here was pretty bleak. It was Dave’s destiny a week on from England’s victory at Euro 2025 to find himself going viral after an appearance on LBC radio.

In the clip Dave objects to the sound of all women’s voices, even if they’re Adele or Billie Holiday. Specifically he objects to women talking about women’s sport, which Dave hates because it is being thrown down his throat, and thrown down his throat to the extent he has to ring up a radio station and talk about the women talking about the women’s sport, simply to disentangle its tendrils from his throat, to steal a few gargling, sputtering final breaths.

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» We owe it to the Lionesses to invest in women’s football and realise its potential | Kelly Simmons

Its young, diverse and passionate fanbase offers a huge opportunity, but too many clubs are only scratching the surface

The Lionesses are simply the most successful England football team in history, winning back-to-back European Championships and becoming the first England senior team to win a major tournament on foreign soil. It is an incredible achievement and one that will reverberate through the women’s game for many years to come.

The head coach, Sarina Wiegman, is simply world class; it’s an overused phrase but absolutely fitting in this case. To reach five major finals in a row (including a European Championship win and a World Cup final with the Netherlands before joining England) is a record that may never be surpassed. She was an inspired choice by Kay Cossington, the former Football Association technical director who targeted her for her ability to build a strong culture and sense of team as much as her obvious tactical acumen.

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» Jess Carter admits ‘almost relief’ white England players missed in Sweden shootout
  • Carter feared Lauren James would face similar abuse

  • ‘It’s about knowing how it’s going to be if we miss’

Jess Carter has said she was relieved when three of her white England teammates joined Lauren James in missing penalties in the Euro 2025 quarter-final shootout against Sweden. Carter, who was the target of online racism during the tournament, feared James would be on the receiving end of similar abuse if she had been the only one to miss.

Beth Mead, Alex Greenwood and Grace Clinton then missed as well, but the Lionesses progressed before going on to defeat Spain in the final in another shootout.

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» Euro 2025: our writers hand out their awards from the tournament

Choosing the best matches from Switzerland provokes plenty of debate along with the outstanding players and the pick of the goals

England seemed to have lost it once, twice, three times against Sweden on a night of nail-shredding drama that sharpened the sense that destiny had rich bounty in store for Sarina Wiegman’s side. It was also the first match, no doubt of many over the coming years, that made a hero of Michelle Agyemang. Nick Ames

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» Bayern may not enjoy Bundesliga procession but rivals face uphill task

With Leverkusen and Dortmund in transition after losing key players, the stage is set for champions to reign again

The newly named Franz Beckenbauer Supercup has many uses. Unlike some of its continental counterparts, this curtain-raising meeting between league and cup winners tends to brim with a pleasing intensity. It unfolds in a partisan atmosphere too, taking place at one of the two competitors’ stadium rather than at a neutral venue, so we feel the real straight away.

Telling us what to expect for the coming nine months in the Bundesliga, however, isn’t often one of the Supercup’s strengths. Bayer Leverkusen gave a faithful impression of their double-winning form in emerging victorious in last year’s edition by punking Stuttgart with a late Patrik Schick goal before winning on penalties, having played a huge chunk of the match with 10 men. The year before, Harry Kane made an inauspicious Bayern Munich debut at the end of “a crazy 24 hours”, entering the field to tumultuous acclaim only for his new team to subsequently be flattened by Dani Olmo’s hat-trick for Leipzig. Pep Guardiola, meanwhile, never won it in his three years at Bayern.

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» Kylian Mbappé fires Real Madrid to winning start for Alonso against Osasuna

Kylian Mbappé’s second-half penalty secured for Real Madrid a hard-fought 1-0 home victory against Osasuna in their opening La Liga game of the season on Tuesday, giving Xabi Alonso a winning start in his first league match in charge of the hosts.

After struggling to break down a stubborn Osasuna defence in the opening half, Mbappé won the penalty and converted from the spot six minutes after the break to give Real the lead, but the home side were unable to increase their advantage.

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» Chile president condemns ‘obvious irresponsibility’ after fan violence suspends Copa Sudamericana match
  • Universidad de Chile v Independiente was abandoned

  • Violent clashes resulted in injuries and more than 300 arrests

Violent clashes between fans at Wednesday’s Copa Sudamericana match between Independiente and Universidad de Chile in Buenos Aires resulted in the second leg of the last 16 tie being abandoned.

Players left the field in the second half as security concerns grew at the Estadio Libertadores de América. The tie was locked at 1-1 when the match was suspended, with the Chilean side leading 2-1 on aggregate.

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» The Marshall Islands finally make their soccer debut: ‘Such a statement for our tiny island’

The last country in the world without an international soccer team has arrived after two games in Arkansas

It was not the typical reaction to a national team going down 4-0. But, of course, this was not a typical national team match.

After the Marshall Islands conceded a fourth goal to the US Virgin Islands, the crowd came to its feet, some waving flags. “This is the RMI! Keep your head up!” one fan yelled.

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» It’s taken 14 years and £67.5m, but Eberechi Eze is going back to Arsenal | Ed Aarons

Crystal Palace forward was released by club aged 13 and rejected by others before his breakthrough at QPR

They say good things come to those who wait. But for Eberechi Eze, it has taken 14 years for his dream to come true. The England forward made a dramatic entrance during Crystal Palace’s open training session on Wednesday before their Conference League playoff when he was last to emerge from the changing room with frenzied anticipation that his expected move to Tottenham was close to being agreed.

Even if he had been aware of Arsenal’s intention to step up their longstanding interest in him, Eze was certainly giving nothing away when he signed autographs and spoke to supporters on his way out of Palace’s training ground in Beckenham.

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» Alexander Isak and Newcastle approach point of no return after striker’s outburst

Club say they want to keep Isak but a move is now in the interest of both and Eddie Howe is best off chasing other targets

As a general rule, it is almost always best to sleep on things before making important decisions or reacting to provocations. So why, at close to midnight on Tuesday, did Newcastle rush out a seemingly kneejerk response to Alexander Isak’s incendiary Instagram post claiming that, amid broken promises, his relationship with the club was over?

In a statement reflecting an appreciably tougher tone than at any time during this summer saga, Newcastle insisted no promises had been broken and that their intention is to keep Isak. The message was that the Sweden striker’s attempt to force a move to Liverpool had failed and he would need to end his one-man strike before being welcomed back to first-team training. The only problem is that while you can lead a horse to water it sometimes really is impossible to make them drink.

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» Crystal Palace, take heart: Conference League offers story of English success

While Oliver Glasner’s side have a clear shot at glory, the health of the competition as a whole is up for debate

It is hard to imagine Uefa will be spared the wrath of Selhurst Park when Crystal Palace begin Conference League life there on Thursday night. A red-letter event in the club’s history has been soured by their demotion from the Europa League and the sight of Norway’s cup winners, Fredrikstad, mid-table in the Eliteserien, lining up against Oliver Glasner’s players will hardly lend itself to a sense of glamour.

For all the burning sense of injustice, there is a clear upside for Palace. They will probably never have a better chance of European success if history and raw numbers are measures to go by. Any Premier League club should start as hot favourites to win the continent’s third-tier competition, such is their financial advantage over all of the contenders. That status has been justified in two of its four editions and there is inspiration to be taken from the scenes of joy when West Ham and Chelsea took the trophy home.

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» Birmingham owner's vision could transform city but football clubs are not just balance sheets | Jason Stockwood

Knighthead’s ambitions are big but it will be telling to see how a profit-driven approach collides with an independent regulator

I grew up in a Britain coloured grey. During the 1970s, even though memories of the war had faded into the distance and rationing had long ended, scarcity still hung in the air. Clothes were handed down, treats were rare and the country felt smaller and more muted than the one talked about in history books. Geoff Dyer’s memoir, Homework, captures it perfectly, a postwar Britain where Airfix models seemed exciting and front rooms kept “for best” epitomised a place looking inwards, slightly embarrassed about its ambitions and potential.

America existed for me in a weekly burst of Technicolor on TV. When Entertainment USA arrived in the 1980s it brought news of Disneyland, Hollywood, pizzas the size of tabletops, Pelé playing for New York Cosmos, and skies that seemed permanently blue. It appealed to all the appetites of a teenage boy in Grimsby. Later, discovering Jack Kerouac, the lure deepened – open roads and adventure felt a world away, but I had to get there. One afternoon, aged 16 in the local library, I found a book on scholarships, sent out 100 letters, and received 99 rejections. That one positive reply eventually sent me to high school as an exchange student and began a lifetime of transatlantic travel that continues to this day. Over the next three decades I crossed the ocean for work, meeting bosses, pitching to investors and building businesses with an American footprint. I have always admired the optimism, scale and willingness to take a punt that seems hard-wired into the US mindset.

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» David Squires on ... Eddie Howe’s karaoke and Isak’s absurd saga

The fallout from a Newcastle v Liverpool thriller, Mr Bodycam and Arsenal veteran Max Dowman

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» From wasteland to tourist attraction: Everton’s new home set to turbo-charge change

Hill Dickinson Stadium’s development has not always been smooth, and teething problems linger, but it can transform both club and community

Builders were working on the signage high up on Hill Dickinson Stadium on Monday while renovations were being carried out inside one of the bars opposite Everton’s magnificent new ground. It would have been a predictable scene of final preparations for the first league game at the £800m venue but for an unusual sight in this part of town: holidaymakers.

They were cruise-ship passengers to be precise, dozens of them. Instead of disembarking the Regal Princess and turning right towards the Royal Albert Dock and city centre when it docked in Liverpool, as one might expect, they had turned left and walked 20 to 25 minutes along Regent Road to visit the finest new addition to the Premier League. They would have sailed past it on entering the River Mersey, too. No wonder Everton plan to sell stadium and dockland tours on board cruise ships in the near future.

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» Downing tools: the Premier League’s most infamous attempted forced exits

As Alexander Isak pushes hard to leave Newcastle, here’s a reminder of those who have taken a similar path

Following Alexander Isak’s decision to post an incendiary message on Instagram as part of his increasingly bitter attempt to force an exit from Newcastle, we look at how some others Premier League players have tried to inflict bitter breakups on their employers. Some were successful, some were not.

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» Manchester United are importing a sinister US tactic: Public money for stadiums

Similar grand promises made when building US sports arenas are now being used to justify a huge outlay in the UK, with little return to show for them

In March, Manchester United officially unveiled images and plans for a new 100,000-seater stadium to replace their aging home, Old Trafford. While the grandiosity of the circus-tent-like structure attracted widespread attention, something else did, too: as part of this project, United are planning to secure land not by paying for it themselves – but by having the UK government do it for them.

In order to clear the site that the club wants to use, a rail freight hub will need to be moved to out near St Helens, between Manchester and Liverpool. The cost of moving the hub is estimated to be between £200m and 300m ($270-405m), but that may be an optimistic appraisal; in the past, the project budget was estimated at closer to £1bn ($1.35bn).

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» Manchester City top, West Ham bottom: my 2025-26 Premier League predictions | Max Rushden

No one had Liverpool winning the title by March or Palace winning the FA Cup last season – this is all just pure guesswork

The important thing to remember about predictions is that they are not just a bit of fun. Within them they display your deep hatred of insert your club here, your thinly veiled agenda against insert Arsenal here. Ignore the apologies for relegating you with the “I’ve got to pick someone” defence. It’s a list that represents vitriol and indifference in equal measure.

Prediction is too pompous a word for it. What we are doing here is called guessing. And whatever you do guess will be less fanciful and ridiculous than what actually happens. None of your “in the knows” had Liverpool sewing the title up by March, Manchester City winning one in 13, Manchester United 15th, Spurs 17th, Crystal Palace winning the FA Cup, Chris Wood scoring 20.

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» Solskjær, Mourinho and a warning for Amorim after Manchester United | Football Daily

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The modern football manager might wear classic Reeboks, or knackered Converse, or trackie bottoms tucked in socks but, to continue paraphrasing the Arctic Monkeys song, there ain’t no romance in our game no more. Nothing endures. The average managerial tenure tends to last between 18 months and two years. For Ole Gunnar Solskjær at Besiktas, it was a little more than seven months; José Mourinho got 14 at Fenerbahce. And so the pair, intrinsically linked by their sequential spells at Manchester United, find themselves on similar paths again, their sackings from Turkish nearly-clubs coming within hours of each other this week. Both have been caught in the meat grinder of Uefa’s endless European qualifiers. Solskjær’s brave Besiktas boys were downed by Ineos-owned Lausanne in the Tin Pot playoffs on Thursday night. A day earlier, Mourinho’s men were ousted by Benfica in the Bigger Cup equivalent.

I used this word unintentionally, just to make it very clear. I had no intention, there was no message, there was no hidden agenda. I fully understand it’s my responsibility that I created these headlines. I’m sorry for the upset and for the headlines that I created. I’m experienced enough, I should have known better and should have done better. I thought I have a little bit more credit with you guys, that I do all this in my second language. I did it on the morning after a loss and not a lot of sleep. I did it in a live interview and I used the wrong word. I made straight away contact with him, of course and I got in touch with him straight away. Jude’s focus is now in his rehabilitation” – a contrite Thomas Tuchel explains how and why in June he used the word “repulsive” to describe some of Jude Bellingham’s on-field antics.

So José pointedly said that after Galatasaray, he wanted to manage a club at the bottom of the Premier League, where he wouldn’t have deal with UEFA … Taxi for Potter, anyone? – Declan Hackett.

Amorim on the brink, Mourinho sacked. We can all see how this pans out, but I bet David Squires is properly happy” – Kev, Uffculme.

My mate in Newcastle congratulated my team on knocking ‘the vile Mackems’ out of the Carabao Cup (but we were a mere two divisions below them so it won’t have registered with you guys and it is likely to be a league game next season anyway) and then went on to comment on his team losing at home to Liverpool. ‘Always disliked them, but it’s now visceral with all this Judas Isakariot business. T-shirts with his picture on are on sale outside the ground with a free box of matches” – Richard Askham.

As the transfer window draws to a close, Zian Flemming’s permanent switch to Burnley for a reported £7m fee may not have caused the same headlines as Gyökeres or Eze, but let me tell you that Zian is worth his weight in gold! Quite literally, with Flemming reportedly weighing in at 84kg and gold prices hovering around $3,466 per Troy ounce, he would be worth £7m in gold. To use the old football idiom and question whether he is worth his weight in goals however is quite another matter … “ – Sam from London.

Fulham suit on the phone with Shakhtar suit: “We need to talk about Kevin” – ‎Lean Ka-Min.

JJ Zucal – deservedly – won Thursday’s letter o’ the day. But Tom Dowler deserves a special award for actually making me laugh out loud while reading Football Daily – Mark Waters.

This is an extract from our daily football email … Football Daily. To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions.

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» Gaupset to Zigiotti: stars to watch in Women’s Champions League this week | Moving the Goalposts

We pick out eight notable talents poised for qualifying action, including a new Manchester United signing

The second round of Women’s Champions League qualifying gets under way on Wednesday with several notable teams entering, among them Manchester United, Brann, Glasgow City and Roma. The winners of Wednesday’s semi-finals will progress to Saturday’s finals and play for a place in mid-September’s final round of qualifying. Here are eight players to keep an eye on this week.

Julia Zigiotti (Manchester United): With Fridolina Rolfö continuing to recover from the injury that hampered her at Euro 2025, plenty of eyes will be on her compatriot and now club-mate Zigiotti. The Swede was United’s other marquee signing this summer and brings a wealth of experience. The tenacious defensive midfielder arrived after a double-winning season with Bayern Munich and was at the heart of her country’s run to the quarter-finals in Switzerland. Zigiotti will be familiar to Women’s Super League fans from her two-year spell at Brighton. Her key qualities lie in her ability to link the transition from defence to attack as well as her quality in the press and work ethic. Her introduction will perhaps allow Dominique Janssen to return to her more natural defensive position.

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» Arsenal’s win at Manchester United may not have impressed, but it was just what they need

Winning at Old Trafford may not prove to be as common as last season, making Arsenal’s result stand out among the title hopefuls

There was a thought at times in the second part of last season, when the set-piece goals dried up, that Arsenal had become over-reliant on them. And perhaps that was true, but they’re a useful weapon to have. Some games are won by overwhelming opponents through superior technical ability and some games are won by organization and hard work, by finding a way to score and a way to keep their opponent out. Arsenal’s 1-0 win at Old Trafford on Sunday was definitely one of the latter.

Manchester United do not defend inswinging corners well. Declan Rice and Bukayo Saka both excel at taking inswinging corners. In that sense, the fact that the game was decided by United goalkeeper Altay Bayindir’s flap at a Rice inswinger was entirely to be expected. What was less predictable was the nature of the game that followed as United hit the post and David Raya was called into seven saves. Mikel Arteta, quite reasonably, praised his side’s “character and spirit” while acknowledging they had made “mistakes that are very far from the standards that we normally have.”

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» Football transfer rumours: Adam Wharton and Conor Gallagher on the move?

Today’s gossip is getting round the wind

An old adage of the transfer window dictates that only desperate clubs do business in the final days before the deadline, so it’s a surprise to absolutely no one that Manchester United, West Ham and the Old Firm clubs are involved in today’s tittle-tattle.

United, who have rejected Kobbie Mainoo’s request to leave on loan before Monday’s 7pm deadline, are fumbling around trying to get their midfield ducks in a row, having seen the current, er, ducks dominated by Grimsby. Carlos Baleba looks like a no-go this window but Adam Wharton is a midfielder admired by United – though that’s also viewed as a tricky deal to do. Crystal Palace will surely not be parting with the 21-year-old having already lost Eberechi Eze and possibly Marc Guéhi too. Liverpool, Manchester City and Real Madrid also like Wharton.

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» ‘We have the quality’: Saki Kumagai says London City Lionesses are ready for the big time | Moving the Goalposts

The decorated Japan international on why the newly promoted side are already targeting a top-four finish in the Women’s Super League

If you’re seeking a metaphor for the London City Lionesses project, just look around their Cobdown Park training facility. It is a place in flux, a mixture of building sites contrasted against perfect pitches and other areas that have benefited from the first waves of investment by the club’s billionaire owner, Michele Kang.

Keeping up with the team’s incomings and outgoings is as hard as tracking the movement of rubble on site: the arrival of Alanna Kennedy and Katie Zelem from Angel City on Wednesday added to the other 12 new players who have already filed through the doors this summer. London City mean business on their arrival in the Women’s Super League.

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» Rio’s teenage kick caps a thriller at St James’ Park – Football Weekly

Max Rushden is joined by John Brewin, Lucy Ward and Jonathan Liew as Liverpool beat Newcastle 3-2 away from home thanks to a debut goal in the 100th minute from teenager Rio Ngumoha

Rate, review, share on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Audioboom, Mixcloud, Acast and Stitcher, and join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter and email.

On the podcast today; the game looked over when Hugo Ekitiké made it 2-0 to Liverpool against 10-man Newcastle early in the second half but what resilience they showed and how heartbreaking to concede in the 100th minute and somehow leave the game with nothing.

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