» With Arsenal clear and rivals stumbling, is the Premier League title race over?
Mikel Arteta’s side have experience of being top of the table but have been unable to finish the job in previous seasons
All the signs point to it finally being Arsenal’s season. But given that they have spent almost 800 days top of the table since last being champions in 2004, nothing will be taken for granted at this stage. After an outlay of more than £250m in the summer, Mikel Arteta has a formidable squad that has been able to cope with injuries to important players such as Kai Havertz and Martin Ødegaard – a problem that derailed them in three successive runner-up finishes.
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» Rage against the Lamine: Real Madrid revel in clásico win after cheap talk | Sid Lowe
It was just like old times as Dani Carvajal sparked a full-time ruckus with Barça’s teenage star after his pre-match barbs
“As long as I win they can’t say anything,” Lamine Yamal said once, but this time he didn’t win and they were coming for him. They said he spoke too much; they replied that, yeah, they would see him outside; they told him talk is cheap. And that was just the players: there was more from the preachers in their pulpits, men who never lose.
On the eve of the clásico, the teenager who claims he left fear behind in Mataró suggested that Real Madrid rob and moan, or so it goes. He also offered a reminder that the last time he had been at the Santiago Bernabéu – a kid with blaugrana braces, a glint in his eye and a right foot they didn’t know he had – he beat them 4-0. But that was then and this was now. And, an adult now, exactly a year on, he was beaten back. He knew, they told him so.
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» Boxing Day could be left with just one Premier League match
TV deals and squeezed calendar cause conundrum
Boxing Day lands on Friday, which has one broadcast slot
The traditional Boxing Day feast of top-flight football may end up looking like leftovers this winter, with a squeezed calendar meaning there may be only one Premier League fixture.
Boxing Day lands on a Friday and that has left the Premier League with a scheduling conundrum because of an expanded Champions League and a commitment to preserving a platform for the FA Cup.
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» Referees at Manchester United and Brentford got heat but there is much to learn from the decisions | Chris Foy
Incidents in both games generated a lot of noise, not least the yellow card for Dorgu when Minteh was running towards goal
Two fixtures at the weekend generated a lot of noise in terms of refereeing decisions: Manchester United v Brighton and Brentford v Liverpool. In each case there were incidents that can serve as good educational pieces for understanding the calls that match officials make.
Starting at Old Trafford, the yellow card for Patrick Dorgu after fouling Yankuba Minteh, when the Brighton man looked as if he was through on goal, frustrated a lot of people. Everybody screams: “Last man, you’ve got to go” – which is absolutely false. Just because you’re the last defender it doesn’t mean you have to be sent off. In this kind of incident, the referee awards a foul and then has to consider the criteria of what fits the denial of an obvious goalscoring opportunity.
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» Toone and England braced for Australia revenge mission after World Cup heartache
Ella Toone has said she expects Australia to treat Tuesday’s game against England as a revenge mission after the Lionesses “broke their hearts in the World Cup”.
England last faced Australia in Sydney in the semi-finals of that 2023 tournament, earning an emphatic 3-1 win over the co-hosts before losing 1-0 to Spain.
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» Sheffield Wednesday face further points deductions but ‘four or five’ bidders emerge
Sheffield Wednesday could face two further points deductions this season for breaching English Football League regulations but the administrators of the Championship crisis club are optimistic there are “four or five” credible bidders. Wednesday are bottom on -6 points after the chair, Dejphon Chansiri, placed the club into administration last Friday, triggering an automatic 12-point penalty.
Wednesday have failed to pay wages on time for five of the past seven months. An independent commission hearing will determine the sanction for the non-payment of March’s and May’s player wages. Wednesday are expected to be charged with further breaches this season, thought to relate to the non-payment of wages in June, July and September, for which they could also be docked points. If Wednesday are deducted further points, it is expected the penalties would apply this season.
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» Why Sunderland’s success matters for the Premier League at large
Recent history has seen all three sides promoted from the Championship be relegated the same season – Régis Le Bris’s side could break the spell
Last season, all three promoted sides in the Premier League were relegated. The season before that, all three promoted sides were relegated. The fear was that the gulf between the Premier League and Championship had become too big, with the increasing stratification of the English game essentially making it impossible for the promoted sides to survive, much less to thrive. It’s a self-perpetuating issue; the longer the other 17 remain in the Premier League, fattened on television rights, the harder it will be for teams coming up to make an impression.
There was a need for the promoted sides to put up a better fight than they managed last season when, between them, Leicester, Ipswich and Southampton collected just 59 points. Nine games into this season, not quite a quarter of the way through, Sunderland, Leeds and Burnley already have 38 points between them. None of the three are currently in the relegation zone. But most striking have been the performances of Sunderland, who have taken 17 points already and, to widespread surprise, lie fourth in the table.
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» Turkish football federation finds hundreds of referees have betting accounts
Turkey’s football federation (TFF) will launch disciplinary action against referees found to have bet on football matches after discovering that hundreds of them had betting accounts, its president said on Monday.
The TFF president, Ibrahim Haciosmanoglu, said a federation investigation — based on data from state institutions — revealed that 371 of 571 active referees in Turkey’s professional leagues had betting accounts, and 152 of them were actively gambling.
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» McTominay’s form cools Conte’s fire after tempestuous week for Napoli | Nicky Bandini
Serie A’s best player last season showed his class against Inter despite his coach getting mouthy with former players
Scott McTominay could have been forgiven for a moment of self-pity after Napoli’s 6-2 defeat to PSV in the Champions League last week, a night when he scored twice and still wound up on the wrong end of a historic shellacking. Instead, he was the voice of reason.
While Antonio Conte debuted a new line of complaint, putting aside a career’s worth of laments about employers failing to back him in the transfer market to this time protest that Napoli had bought him too many new players, McTominay said simply: “It’s football. You have to take it on the chin.”
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» Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s action
Arsenal’s title tilt is built on solid defence, Chelsea miss Cole Palmer and what happened to clampdown on shirt-pulling?
“One-nil to the Arsenal” may not be thrilling but it is certainly effective. Sunday’s victory over Crystal Palace was Mikel Arteta’s side’s third by that margin in nine Premier League games. Last season, Arsenal managed that result five times in the league, while also drawing 1-1 in seven matches. Clean sheets in just half of those might have made for an intriguing title race. For all the noise surrounding Arsenal’s attacking talent, their defence is just as vital. It is their solidity at that end of the pitch that will probably lead them to glory, with three goals conceded in nine top-flight games so far. Sunday also marked a century of games across all competitions since they have conceded more than twice. The last to put three past David Raya? Luton – remember them? – back in December 2023. Sam Dalling
Match report: Arsenal 1-0 Crystal Palace
Match report: Aston Villa 1-0 Man City
Match report: Brentford 3-2 Liverpool
Match report: Manchester United 4-2 Brighton
Match report: Everton 0-3 Tottenham
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» Lens began the season fearing the worst. Now they’re beating the elite | Luke Entwistle
Will Still kept Lens competitive last season despite losing key players. They’re climbing even higher under Pierre Sage
By Get French Football News
When the Lens president, Joseph Oughourlian, set out the club’s “No 1 objective” before the season, he did not mention European qualification, a points target or even a cup run. The task at hand was to “rediscover financial solidity”. Sporting ambitions have taken a backseat role at Lens since Oughourlian announced the introduction of austerity measures in the summer of 2024. His words have been mirrored in the club’s actions.
Since running Paris Saint-Germain close for the title in the 2022-23 season, when they finished one point behind the eventual champions, the Lens squad has been decimated. First, it was Seko Fofana and Loïs Openda; then it was Abdukodir Khusanov, Elye Wahi, Brice Samba and Kevin Danso; and this summer it was Neil El-Aynaoui, Andy Diouf and Facundo Medina.
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» Juventus sack manager Igor Tudor after miserable eight-game winless run
Juventus have sacked their head coach, Igor Tudor, after failing to win their last eight matches in all competitions, the Serie A club said on Monday.
“Juventus FC announces that it has today relieved Igor Tudor of his duties as coach of the men’s first team, along with his staff,” the Italian club said in a statement, a day after their 1-0 defeat to Lazio. Massimo Brambilla, head coach of the reserve team, will temporarily take over as the first team manager, the club added.
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» Mikel Arteta values Arsenal victory over Palace ‘more than any other this season’
Mikel Arteta hailed Arsenal’s 1-0 victory over Crystal Palace as the most valuable of the season after seeing his side open up a four-point lead at the Premier League’s summit.
In what was a nervous Sunday afternoon at the Emirates Stadium, Eberechi Eze’s powerful first-half shot against his former club proved to be the winner. With Liverpool slipping to a fourth straight league defeat at Brentford on Saturday, Arsenal finished the weekend seven points clear of the defending champions.
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» Arsenal move four points clear at top as Eze strike sees off Crystal Palace
It had to be him. It could only be him, really. Eberechi Eze would not have wished his first Premier League goal for Arsenal to come against Crystal Palace. Somewhat because they are his former employer, a club he holds dear. But, frankly, more so that it has taken a while to arrive.
However, Eze’s timing was impeccable. With Liverpool’s fourth consecutive league defeat coming at Brentford on Saturday night, Arsenal were presented an opening. Opportunities such as this simply must not be missed if a first league title since 2003‑04 is to be won. There was a gap to be extended.
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» Pep Guardiola sure Manchester City ‘still alive’ after latest loss at Aston Villa
Pep Guardiola said it was too early for Manchester City to fret about Arsenal’s superb start to the Premier League season, and that his team were alive in their pursuit of reclaiming the title despite a 1-0 defeat at Aston Villa on Sunday.
City trail Arsenal by six points after nine games but Guardiola is relaxed about the gap. “We have to try to close [it], Arsenal have been solid for many years, this time the concern is how we can improve – better, better, better – and to be close,” the City manager said.
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» Matty Cash sinks Manchester City to maintain Aston Villa’s climb up the table
For Manchester City and Erling Haaland, another fruitless visit to Villa Park. It was not quite last season, when defeat here approaching Christmas was a ninth in a dozen matches, but it was equally painful.
With a minute of regular time to play, Haaland clattered into a post after meeting an inch-perfect cross by Omar Marmoush, having squeezed the ball over the Aston Villa goalline. But the assistant referee raised his flag and, as Haaland lay wincing, a check by the video assistant referee confirmed the goal would not stand. City departed this stadium empty‑handed for a third successive season.
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» Next Generation 2025: 60 of the best young talents in world football
From PSG’s Ibrahim Mbaye to Brazil’s next hope, we select some of the most talented players born in 2008. Check the progress of our classes of 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 … and go even further back. Here’s our Premier League class of 2025
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» Next Generation 2025: 20 of the best talents at Premier League clubs
We pick the best youngsters at each club born between 1 September 2008 and 31 August 2009, an age band known as first-year scholars. Check the progress of our classes of 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 … and go even further back. Here’s our 2025 world picks
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» ‘It’s what’s in your heart that counts’: Kenny Dalglish on his love for Liverpool and the long shadow of Hillsborough
The Liverpool legend is the subject of a new film directed by Asif Kapadia on the Scot’s remarkable career in football and connection with his adopted city
‘We got the bus and went down to Sheffield to visit the supporters who were in hospital,” Kenny Dalglish says as he remembers how he spent the Monday after the tragedy of Hillsborough in April 1989. “All the players were there so we split up and they walked into different wards to see people. We were trying to give them a wee bit of confidence or belief of anything that could help them. And there was a family around a young boy’s bed and he was unconscious.”
Sean Luckett was 20 years old and one of the thousands of fervent Liverpool supporters who had travelled to Hillsborough to support the team who Dalglish managed and had played for with such sublime talent since arriving from Celtic in 1977. Ninety-seven Liverpool fans eventually lost their lives after the unbearable crush during the club’s FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest.
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» Experimental England exposed by Brazil but Wiegman has no reason to panic | Sophie Downey
Defeat could be a blessing for Lionesses who have plenty of time to fix defensive frailties and mould cohesive team
England were brought back to earth with a small, if likely inconsequential, bump in the first match of their Homecoming Series as a 2-1 defeat by Brazil at the Etihad Stadium exposed the Lionesses’ defensive fragility. Brazil’s first-half goals were a reflection of England’s struggles with dealing with direct, transitional forward play as well as a consequence of their instability at the back and the fact they are missing key players.
England’s weakness in defence is nothing new – it has been evident on a relatively consistent basis over the last couple of years regardless of the personnel available. They have recorded one clean sheet in their last seven games, relying on their resilience, never-say-die attitude and wealth of attacking players. Unfortunately for them on this occasion, the last part was lacking despite the significant pressure the forward line applied once their opponents were reduced to 10 players, thanks to Angelina’s 21st-minute red card.
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» Lionel Messi just had the best season in MLS history. Does anyone care?
The Argentine has been as excellent as ever in his later years, but his presence and performance has yet to push MLS into the US mainstream
OK, show of hands. How many of you knew that Lionel Messi – a global superstar who has committed to spend his next three years in the United States – just completed the best individual season in Major League Soccer history?
Be honest.
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» Dejphon Chansiri and everything that has gone wrong at Sheffield Wednesday
What has happened, why has it happened and what happens now – and could a regulator have prevented this?
The owner of Sheffield Wednesday, Dejphon Chansiri, has placed the club into administration. He has done the same with the company that owns Hillsborough, Wednesday’s stadium. As a result, administrators have taken over the day-to-day running of one of England’s historic clubs, with a view to stabilising financial performance and, ultimately, finding a new owner. Going into administration is a measure of last resort for any struggling business and carries sanctions in English football. Sheffield Wednesday have been docked 12 points by the EFL, leaving them adrift at the bottom of the Championship on -6 points, 13 behind Blackburn Rovers, the next side in the table.
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» Sam Kerr back but without much of a bang after 725-day Australia absence | Joey Lynch
The Chelsea striker worked hard but failed to score in her first game for the Matildas since sustaining a knee injury
Perhaps Joe Montemurro is a fan of the O’Jays, or the Kinks, because the Matildas’ coach definitely didn’t waste any time in giving the people what they wanted when he picked his team to face Wales. There was to be no beating around the bush here, no carefully managed substitutions or reacting to the ebbs, flows and physicality of the game. For the first time in 725 days, Sam Kerr was going to play for Australia. And she was going to do so from the start.
After months of anticipation, the moment was here and the scene set for something special. Kerr had scored on her return for Chelsea, after all; why not now in her return to the national team fold, too?
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» Most teams struggle after selling their best players. Not Bournemouth
Bournemouth are third in the Premier League after selling Dean Huijsen, Milos Kerkez and Illia Zabarnyi for £150m
By WhoScored
Losing three of your four starting defenders and your goalkeeper in the same summer would send most mid-table clubs spiralling. For Bournemouth, it’s somehow become the launchpad for one of the most impressive starts in the Premier League. They sit third after eight games – not bad for a side that sold Dean Huijsen to Real Madrid, Milos Kerkez to Liverpool and Illia Zabarnyi to Paris Saint-Germain in deals worth a combined £150m, while Kepa Arrizabalaga’s loan from Chelsea came to an end.
The mastermind behind the success, Andoni Iraola, working with the Premier League’s 16th highest wage bill, has produced nothing short of a miracle at Bournemouth. It is easy to forget there were question marks over his arrival in the summer of 2023. Nine games without a win had Bournemouth fans glancing nervously at the table, and the doubts peaked when Gary O’Neil, the man he had replaced, returned to the Vitality with Wolves and left with a 2-1 win. “Nice to see some friendly faces,” O’Neil joked in the press room afterwards.
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» Bellingham scores clásico winner as Real Madrid pull clear of Barcelona
The clock in the Santiago Bernabéu showed 98:40 when Pedri picked up the ball on the edge of his area and went on the final run of an exhausting afternoon when so much happened that it was not just the players who struggled to keep up. Here was one last chance to salvage something, the Barcelona midfielder somehow hauling himself up the pitch in search of a final twist; instead, as he reached the other end, a tired touch and a desperate lunge saw him take out Aurélien Tchouaméni – the world upside down – and get sent off. And so the clásico was over, bar the shouting and the pushing.
There was plenty of that, players squaring up then and again when the final whistle went a few seconds later, Thibaut Courtois and Lamine Yamal confronting each other; so too Vinícius Júnior, who had stormed off when he was substituted, and Raphinha, who had not even played.
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» Jérôme Boateng pulls out of Bayern return after objections due to assault of former partner
The retired defender Jérôme Boateng has pulled out of a planned coaching internship at Bayern Munich after fans voiced their objection because of the 2014 World Cup winner being found guilty last year of assaulting his former partner.
The former Bayern and Germany centre-back, who played for the club between 2011 and 2021, had discussed a short internship with the head coach, Vincent Kompany. “Following the recent discussion regarding myself, I have decided to focus on my issues such as the A training license … that is where my focus is,” he said in a social media post addressed to Bayern and Kompany. “Your focus should be solely on the pitch and on extending this 13-match winning run.”
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» European football: Bayern’s lucky 13 as Kimmich breaks down 10-man Gladbach
Kimmich, Guerreiro and Karl capitalise on Castrop red
De Bruyne off injured after scoring as Napoli beat Inter
Bayern Munich needed more than an hour before breaking the resistance of Borussia Mönchengladbach, to earn a 3-0 victory over opponents who spent more than 75% of the game with 10 men. It was the Bundesliga leaders’ 13th win in 13 matches across all competitions this season.
Joshua Kimmich slotted in after 64 minutes and the substitute Raphaël Guerreiro added another five minutes later before the teenager Lennart Karl, who had scored in their Champions League win against Club Brugge on Wednesday, made it 3-0 in the 81st. Bayern have a maximum 24 points from eight league matches, five ahead of RB Leipzig, 6-0 winners at Augsburg.
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» For San Diego FC, a historic inaugural MLS season is equal parts philosophy and community
The Western Conference’s No 1 seed can become the second expansion team to win MLS Cup
As San Diego FC prepare for their first playoff appearance this Sunday, they do so with the deserved title of record breakers. The expansion club has earned the Western Conference’s No 1 seed and set records for most victories (19) and points (63) in a single season by an MLS expansion team. As a result, they will be at home for the remainder of the playoffs, and would host MLS Cup if they make it there and meet anyone other than Inter Miami, Cincinnati, or the Supporters’ Shield-winning Philadelphia Union.
Now, they’re aiming for more history – to become the first expansion side to win MLS Cup since 1998 when the Chicago Fire achieved it against DC United.
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» Grandees River Plate all at sea and banking on new president with a familiar name | Jonathan Wilson
With their election looming, the Argentinian club hope stable leadership can reverse worst form in four decades
Stefano Di Carlo was two months old when, in 1989, his grandfather, Titi, became the president of River Plate, taking over after the resignation of Hugo Santilli. He was seven months old when, that December, his grandfather narrowly lost the presidential election. He was three years old when his grandfather took him to his first River Plate game.
Titi Di Carlo remained a senior figure at the club and was on the board when he went to a Copa Libertadores quarter-final against Banfield with the 16-year-old Stefano. The first leg had finished 1-1.
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» Save the entire 1987 QPR squad to the cloud: my mental Rolodex is too full of past players | Max Rushden
Stunning goals by Eli Kroupi and Loum Tchaouna mean they are forcing their way into my brain at the expense of Ian Juryeff
I managed to watch last Saturday’s Match of the Day without knowing the scores. It really is one of life’s enduring thrills. So the first time I’d seen or heard of Loum Tchaouna was when he picked up the ball in the 68th minute at Turf Moor, looked around a bit and thought: “Sod it, I’ll just whack it from here.” And how! What a brilliant way to introduce himself to my brain – which was perhaps not his ultimate goal; in this instance a goal was very much his ultimate goal.
By the time of this last-on-MOTD wonderstrike, I’d obviously spent the previous hour watching various other footballers at work – most of them pretty familiar. The odd one did require a cursory Google. Who is Eli Kroupi? Who are all these Chelsea players? Do they really have the same sized squad as all the other teams? If I was cloning footballers in a laboratory and slipping them into the Champions League squad, I’d call them Reggie Walsh.
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» Welbeck’s career revival can put him back on England’s World Cup radar
Brighton forward is playing the best football of his career at 34 and Thomas Tuchel could have a vacancy next summer
Age appears no barrier for Thomas Tuchel’s England. An 18-month contract as a one-shot deal – North America or bust – little need to plan for the future. Any legacy is bound up in the success or failure of Mission 2026, hence the expected presence of “good tourist” Jordan Henderson, 36 less than a week after the World Cup kicks off.
Though Harry Kane is immovable, undroppable, there may yet be a vacancy for an athletic, intelligent, hard-working forward, capable of linking play and leading the press, should Ollie Watkins or Dominic Solanke falter. Anyone meeting the demands of modern forward play: apply within.
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» If Tebas had only listened he might have got his La Liga game abroad | Sid Lowe
In an embarrassing climbdown, the game in Miami is off with the league having alienated the players and even Villarreal, the club that was on its side
If there is a moment that defined La Liga’s fourth failed attempt to play in Miami, an image to explain why everything went wrong, it may have been the moment it was all over. On Tuesday night, Spanish television broadcast reaction to the news from the Estadio de la Ceràmica, live and unfiltered.
Cameras caught someone else who felt dismissed and disrespected, treated as if they didn’t count. This time it was someone who was supposed to be on the league’s side, but now appeared as a portrait of poor planning and poorer communication, a lack of consideration that pushed the project to collapse.
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» David Squires on … The Damned Forest
Our cartoonist looks back at the doomed and very short reign of Ange Postecoglou at the City Ground
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» Sean Dyche is a pragmatic choice for Forest and can bring quiet to the chaos | Will Unwin
Manager inherits a group of players that suits him and has a track record of creating camaraderie in his squads
Sean Dyche was often spotted at the City Ground while out of work. The Nottingham Forest job has been of interest to him for a long time, and not only because he lives close by. The circumstances in which the role has become available are not ideal for an incoming head coach but his appointment is the pragmatic choice in ludicrous circumstances.
Ange Postecoglou was never the right man, inheriting a squad that did not suit his style and did not adapt quickly enough, though it did not help that he told the players their previous achievements meant nothing. His tenure will go down in history for all the wrong reasons. Dyche, on the other hand, has plenty of respect for what Forest achieved under Nuno Espírito Santo and is far more aligned with that conservatism than with what was witnessed under Postecoglou.
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» ‘I’m here to learn’: Kendall intent on seizing surprise Lionesses chance
After eye-catching showings for Aston Villa, piano-playing psychology student is ready to step up for England duty
Lucia Kendall was watching TV, probably a drama, and missed Sarina Wiegman’s call. She wasn’t expecting it. Certainly not this soon. The 21-year-old joined Aston Villa from the WSL 2 club Southampton in the summer but her start in the top division has been so impressive that it has yielded a first senior England call-up for the friendlies against Brazil and Australia.
“It’s surreal really,” Kendall says at the team’s St George’s Park training base. “I don’t think it’s really sunk in. I’m just here to learn as much as possible. This team’s just gone and won back-to-back Euros so to be able to be in their environment is something I really didn’t think I’d get to do so soon.”
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» ‘I like to create chaos’: David Bentley back in spotlight for charity boxing bout with Jody Morris
Former England midfielder has always been a disruptor and says Saturday’s match will show his kids he can fight
David Bentley has never been one to turn down a challenge, even if it is to his detriment. In 2008, on England duty, he got roped into playing what was meant to be a lighthearted game with Jimmy Bullard, shouting “Postman Pat” at Fabio Capello in training, on account of the manager’s likeness to the children’s character. Capello – perhaps unsurprisingly – did not see the funny side and Bentley never played for England again.
Bentley has always been audacious. When coming through at Arsenal, he accidentally sat in the seat of the club captain, Patrick Vieira, in the canteen. When the Frenchman tapped the then teenager on the shoulder, ordering him to vacate the seat in front of the rest of the squad, Bentley refused as a matter of principle. “I wasn’t going to let anyone mug me off,” Bentley says. “If I was on the street, no chance. I’m not moving. There’s a hierarchy but I don’t know, I’m not having that. But I can feel his hand on my shoulder now.” He spent the next three months getting kicked in training by Vieira and excluded from nights out with the team.
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» On the plane or the sofa? How England’s 2026 World Cup squad is shaping up | Jacob Steinberg
More than half the 26 places appear to be locked down but big names are at risk with qualification secured and the tournament looming
Fresh from breaking Gordon Banks’s record for consecutive England clean sheets, Jordan Pickford remains the undisputed pick in goal. A miserly defensive record is a positive for Thomas Tuchel, even if the shutouts have come against poor sides. John Stones, such an elegant centre-back, is back in the team and will start at the World Cup if he stays fit. But who will partner him? Tuchel likes Ezri Konsa, whose versatility also makes him an option at right-back, and Marc Guéhi; big Dan Burn also looks established after making his international debut in March. It is more uncertain at left-back, but Reece James will play at right-back as long as his body does not let him down.
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» Brazil look to youth as they start 2027 World Cup buildup with Lionesses fixture
Today’s newsletter looks at the next World Cup hosts as they prepare to take on England and Italy with a squad with an average age of 24
The road to the 2027 World Cup is long and winding for all teams hoping to qualify – apart from the hosts, Brazil. Having won their ninth Copa América Femenina in the summer, their next major tournament will be the World Cup in 20 months.
That may seem like a long time but the head coach, Arthur Elias, is aware that every minute of preparation counts, starting with their friendlies against England in Manchester on Saturday and Italy in Parma on Tuesday.
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» Football Daily | El clásico is back with an English twist to a game thankfully on Spanish soil
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As October draws to a close and a relentless winter of football looms into view, the biggest domestic game of the season anywhere in Europe – and a contest that could decide a title race – is set to light up a gloomy Sunday afternoon. But after Scottish league leaders Hearts take on Celtic at midday [GMT! – Football Daily Ed], there’s also a decent-looking fixture in Spain. Yes, el clásico is back, this time with a hefty dose of existential angst.
Sadly, I mistakenly thought that nominative determinism would make a winner of me on my bet on Aston Villa’s opponents scoring first. Still, Come From Behind Eagles has a certain ring to it” – Richard Reisman.
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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» Ange Postecoglou and Nottingham Forest never made sense. So why did it happen?
The former Tottenham manager made a rash Premier League return, and it will probably be his last
The weirdest aspect of Ange Postecoglou’s 40-day reign at Nottingham Forest was how inevitable it all felt. The only shock was that he was sacked on Saturday, within minutes of a 3-0 home defeat to Chelsea, rather than a day or two later. But by then, it was obvious this ill-starred adventure had run its course; perhaps it was kinder to everybody to bring it to an end. Forest, certainly, had to act quickly if they are to make the most of their first European campaign in three decades.
But why was such an obviously terrible appointment made in the first place? What was it that made the Nottingham Forest owner, Evangelos Marinakis, ever think that Postecoglou was the right man to succeed Nuno Espírito Santo? They met in July at an event staged by the Greek league to celebrate Postecoglou winning the Europa League with Tottenham, but was it really just that? That they got on well over a glass of wine?
This is an extract from Soccer with Jonathan Wilson, a weekly look from the Guardian US at the game in Europe and beyond. Subscribe for free here. Have a question for Jonathan? Email soccerwithjw@theguardian.com, and he’ll answer the best in a future edition.
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» France and new-look Spain well placed to progress to Nations League final
The duo face Germany and Sweden respectively in this week’s semi-finals and should each have enough to win
First leg: Friday, Düsseldorf, 4.45pm (all times BST). Second leg; Tuesday, Caen, 8.10pm
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» Arsenal’s perfect weekend and Liverpool thrown into crisis – Football Weekly
Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Sam Dalling and Dan Bardell as Arsenal extend their lead at the top of the Premier League to four points
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: a brilliant weekend for Arsenal who achieved a six-point swing in their favour as they beat Crystal Palace at home while Manchester City, Liverpool and Chelsea all lost.
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» Champions League review: A deluge of goals as youth rules for Barcelona and Bayern
This week’s action saw an astonishing 71 goals over two nights, with the Premier League responsible for many of them
• Barcelona’s youth system. Ahead of Sunday’s edition of El Clásico between Barcelona and Real Madrid, the two clubs won their midweek matches. Real Madrid’s opponents were Juventus, in the type of heavyweight clash the Champions League’s rejig into a 36-team group stage was supposed to throw up on a regular basis. Wednesday’s meeting fell short of classic encounters like 2003’s meeting of Madrid’s Luís Figo and Zinedine Zidane with Juve’s Pavel Nedvěd and Alessandro Del Piero. In 2025, Juventus are not the force of yore, though they made Madrid sweat. The sole goal came from Jude Bellingham, England’s great enigma.
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» The Knowledge | Twenty-eight days later: the fastest sackings in English football’s top tier
Plus: Austria’s full-house of goals and assists, more free-kick purple patches and seeing red after scoring a hat-trick
“Is Ange Postecoglou’s 40-day spell at Nottingham Forest the shortest for a full-time manager in the English top flight?” asks Donna Stevens.
Any Nottingham Forest manager aspires to emulate the achievements of Brian Clough at the City Ground, or at least pay some kind of success-based tribute. Alas, Ange Postecoglou’s spell at Forest was more reminiscent of Clough’s time at Leeds – short and sour.
Ron Futcher, Charlton 5-3 Barnsley, Division Two, March 1985
Futcher’s hat-trick put Barnsley 3-0 ahead; he was then sent off with the score 3-3 before Charlton completed a spectacular comeback.
Hristo Stoichkov, Atlético Madrid 1-4 Barcelona, La Liga, September 1992
Benni McCarthy, Porto 5-3 Santa Clara, Primeira Liga, April 2002
Marco Gabbiadini, Sunderland 4-0 Ipswich, Division Two, March 1989
Quite an achievement, this one – after 87 minutes Gabbiadini had scored only one goal. He added two more in the 88th and 89th before being sent off in the 90th for an alleged right-hander.
Chris Iwelumo, Preston 1-3 Wolves, Championship, September 2008
Hugo Almeida, Werder Bremen 3-0 St Pauli, Bundesliga, November 2010
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» Pitch Points: could Italy really miss another World Cup? And why has Wirtz started slowly at Liverpool?
The world of soccer throws up no shortage of questions on a regular basis. In today’s column, Graham Ruthven endeavors to answer three of them
By the time next summer’s World Cup kicks off, it’ll have been 12 years since Italy last played at the tournament they have won more times (four) than any other nation besides Brazil (five) and Germany (also four). The way things are going, the Azzurri’s 12-year wait for World Cup qualification could become a 16-year one at the very least.
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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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