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» England boss Thomas Tuchel gives Marcus Rashford 'world class' warning in strong message
Marcus Rashford has scored just one England goal under Thomas Tuchel with the Three Lions boss telling the Barcelona star how to improve
» Florian Wirtz's 'biggest issue' at Liverpool highlighted after £116m transfer
Florian Wirtz has struggled to show his best form for Liverpool since his big-money move from Bayer Leverkusen in the summer, and Danny Murphy has spoken out on his time at Anfield so far
» FA Cup first round draw in full as EFL and Non-League clubs discover opponents
The FA Cup first-round draw took place ahead of Worthing's clash with Forest Green Rovers with League One and League Two clubs joining Non-League sides in the draw
» Paul Gascoigne slams Premier League stars who have 'everything on a plate for them'
Former Newcastle, Spurs and Everton midfielder Paul Gascoigne only watched last week's England game because "Star Trek wasn’t on"
» Gary Neville and David Beckham oversee massive change after Salford City announcement
Salford City will play in orange next season after supporters voted to change the club's colours back from red, which was introduced when the 'Class of 92' took over
» Roy Keane backed for sensational return to management as part of Man Utd reunion
Roy Keane could be a success if he took charge of the Republic of Ireland, according to one of his Manchester United team-mates who believes he should link up with another Red Devils ace
» FA Cup first round draw as Luton Town and EFL rivals learn their opponents
The first round proper of the 2025/26 FA Cup will get underway in just over a fortnight, and this is the stage at which the first EFL clubs will take their place in the draw.
» Champions League set for another new shake up with World Cup plan for winners
The Champions League is set for another major shake-up at the start of the 27/28 season, with one of the changes seeing the European champions given a standalone fixture
» Arsenal injury latest and return dates after fresh setback - Odegaard, Hincapie, Jesus
Arsenal will be without Martin Odegaard until after November's international break, with the Gunners captain suffering a knee injury before the clash with West Ham
» Marcus Rashford points finger at Man Utd over problem he had for 'very long time'
Marcus Rashford is thriving since his move to Barcelona and has spoken of his desire to produce his best consistently after leaving Manchester United on loan
» Newcastle United seek FIFA compensation amid little known rule after major injury set-back
Newcastle United have reportedly made an approach to FIFA as they look to recoup some of the money they are paying Yoane Wissa while he is side-lined through injury.
» Ryan Reynolds' foul-mouthed Wrexham comment speaks volumes on Hollywood owners' impact
Ryan Reynolds has spoken proudly of how Wrexham AFC and the city itself have been transformed since the Deadpool star bought the club with fellow actor Rob Mac in 2021
» Mario Balotelli slams "desire" of Italy as they risk missing THIRD World Cup in a row
Victory over Israel on Tuesday should secure second place behind Norway but the Italians have failed to reach the last two World Cups after losing playoffs
» Every Arsenal game Martin Odegaard could miss as injury timeline emerges
Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard has sustained a knee injury and will be out of action for up to six weeks, meaning he will miss a number of games for the Premier League leaders
» England legend retires after 88 caps as announcement made
Millie Bright has announced her retirement from international football after 88 caps for her country
» Xavi to Man Utd point made amid Ruben Amorim sack pressure - 'He will be tempted'
Xavi has been linked with the Manchester United job as Ruben Amorim continues to come under pressure at Old Trafford - and Gaizka Mendieta has had his say on the situation.
» Zinedine Zidane given clear Man Utd advice as statement issued on new job
Manchester United have been linked with Zinedine Zidane on more than one occasion but the Frenchman has been instructed to look elsewhere if he's planning a return to management
» Ruben Amorim can silence Gary Neville and Wayne Rooney with one thing at Man Utd
Ruben Amorim is under pressure following his team's slow start to the season, with the Manchester United boss facing criticism for his style of play and refusal to change his tactics
» Joey Barton tears into Wayne Rooney over Man Utd title theory - 'Complete nonsense'
Former Queens Park Rangers and Manchester City star Joey Barton has rubbished Wayne Rooney's theory over the final weekend, which decided the Premier League title race in 2012
» Sunday League team full of ex-Premier League stars steamrolling all opposition
Veteran league players in Cheshire are set for a big shock when they come up against one club littered with Premier League stars
» Man Utd star 'doesn't know how we'll play each game' as he speaks out on formation issues
Tactical decisions are causing confusion for one Manchester United star
» Ex-Arsenal star Jack Wilshere reveals Mikel Arteta's advice before taking Luton job
Jack Wilshere has been unveiled as the new boss of League One club Luton Town aged 33, marking his first full-time managerial position after working in Arsenal's academy and at Norwich City
» Jurgen Klopp disagrees with Jamie Carragher on Florian Wirtz after Liverpool demand
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has backed Florian Wirtz to come good at Anfield and has told fans to stop worrying about the German international's form in the Premier League
» Managing Crystal Palace – Wharton pens Man Utd deal as Guehi denied Liverpool move again
Crystal Palace have reached a crossroads in their history, where a couple of key decisions in the right places could propel the Eagles to heights they've never seen before
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» Wales v Belgium: World Cup 2026 qualifying – live

In other World Cup qualification news …

The teams are out at the Cardiff City Stadium. The anthems are belted out, Wales fans in their bucket hats, Belgium supporters with the devil horns on their heads. Ben Davies, holding his young son, looks about as emotional as I have seen as the camera pans across the players.

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» Millie Bright departs England stage long after her name entered list of greats

Chelsea defender played key role in Euro 2022 triumph and transformed how Lionesses viewed success

Only two footballers have had the honour of captaining England in a senior World Cup final: the late Bobby Moore and Millie Bright, who announced her international retirement on Monday. That alone ensures the 32-year-old’s Lionesses career will leave an indelible mark on English football. Her entry on to the list of England greats had been guaranteed a year earlier, though, as one of the key heroines of the summer of 2022.

When Leah Williamson prepared to raise the Euro 2022 trophy at Wembley after England’s victory against Germany had secured the Lionesses’ first major trophy, she chose to angle it slightly into the direction of the woman next to her, Bright, her vice-captain, so they could lift it together, acknowledging Bright’s major contribution. As the pair held aloft the 60cm-high trophy, weighing 6.7kg, Bright’s tattooed forearm was centre stage in front of the white fireworks erupting behind them in a colourful scene of euphoria.

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» Arsenal expect Martin Ødegaard to miss six weeks with knee injury
  • Captain could return for November’s north London derby

  • Eberechi Eze and Ethan Nwaneri to deputise

Arsenal expect Martin Ødegaard to miss another six weeks with the knee injury he sustained before the international break.

The Arsenal captain went down clutching his left knee after clashing with Crysencio Summerville in the first half of a 2-0 victory against West Ham that sent Mikel Arteta’s side top of the table. Ødegaard twice attempted to carry on after treatment before being replaced by Martín Zubimendi, and Arteta said the 26-year-old had left the ground with his knee in a brace.

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» Thomas Tuchel tells Marcus Rashford to push himself to the limit
  • ‘He can be one of the best in the world’

  • Head coach cautious over Bellingham

Thomas Tuchel believes Marcus Rashford can still become one of the best in the world, but the England head coach has warned he will end up with regrets unless he pushes himself to the limit and improves in the final third.

Tuchel, who also cautiously opened the door to Jude Bellingham being part of England’s leadership group if the midfielder returns to the squad, pulled no punches as he discussed Rashford’s development in the leadup to the World Cup qualifier against Latvia in Riga on Tuesday night. England’s head coach said potential is not enough and made clear that the challenge for the 27-year-old, who has 18 goals in 64 international appearances, is to become more consistent.

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» Cape Verde seal historic debut place at World Cup 2026 and deny Cameroon
  • Blue Sharks beat Eswatini 3-0 to top qualifying group

  • Cameroon second in Group D after draw with Angola

Cape Verde have booked their place as debutants at the 2026 World Cup after a 3-0 home victory over Eswatini secured top spot in their African qualifying group.

With a population of around 525,000, the tiny Atlantic island nation will become the second-smallest country by population to play at a men’s World Cup finals, behind only Iceland, who qualified in 2018.

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» Scotland’s priceless formula of winning games while being played off the park

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Having watched his Scotland players win their second match in four days at Hampden Park, guaranteeing themselves a Geopolitics World Cup playoff spot at the very least, Steve Clarke was in typically upbeat and buoyant mood after a record 72nd game in charge. “I’m really disappointed – really, really disappointed,” Clarke mithered, sounding as morose as it is possible for even the most relentlessly pessimistic Scotsman to be. “It’s possibly as disappointed as I’ve been over the whole 72 games. We just didn’t turn up. I don’t think we got anywhere near the levels we can reach and that was really disappointing.” For an almost comically dour man who appears to have hit upon the priceless formula of coaching a team to win matches in which they have been played off the park, Scotland’s manager could have been excused for cutting uncharacteristically loose and revelling in the fact that for the second game running, his side had ridden their luck and pulled off something of a smash-and-grab. His concerns, though, are nothing if not legitimate.

Re: Friday’s Football Daily. Young man, I’m pretty sure Brian Clough won two league titles, not one. And he was in the top one of candidates for the England job. England’s loss” – Kevin Quinn (and 1,056 others).

Just wanted to point out that the picture of Cloughie addressing a huge crowd while holding a football (Friday’s Memory Lane, full email edition) was to kick off the famous Shrove Tuesday football match in Ashbourne, Derbyshire. There may well have been Nottingham Forest fans present but that was incidental. I’m positive he would want you to get your facts right!” – Vaughan Wilkinson (and 1,056 others).

Your news about the Faroes beating Montenegro 4-0 (Friday’s Football Daily, full email edition) included a picture of some puffins. Having had a close look at the picture I became convinced that these were not Faroese puffins but good old British ones. A quick search confirmed my suspicion: they are from Coquet Island in Northumberland. Is this lazy journalism – just find any old picture of puffins and use it regardless – or is it deliberate fake news? The provenance of puffins in these difficult times is a serious matter. We can’t be too careful” – Peter Holford.

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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» Why there is no such thing as a perfect football tactic | Jonathan Wilson

In this mailbag edition of his newsletter, Jonathan answers questions about the evolution of tactics, heat and World Cup outsiders

Do you believe playing styles are developing incrementally or cyclically? Will things naturally come back around, or is it more a matter of rock, paper, scissors where one style counters another for a short while, as the current style gets broadly adopted? – Paul

I dislike the term “cyclical” for tactics because it implies inevitability. Winter, spring, summer, autumn is a cycle; what happens in football tactics is not. When older ideas are repurposed for the modern age, they come with knowledge of what went before. So, to take an extreme example, when Pep Guardiola started fielding teams in a sort of 3-2-2-3 shape, it wasn’t the W-M used by Herbert Chapman in the late 1920s, because in the 100 years since, football has changed enormously: players are fitter, pitches are better, kit is better, we understand pressing, we have data and sophisticated analytical modelling.

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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» ‘A full-circle moment for me’: Jack Wilshere confirmed as Luton manager
  • Wilshere takes over club he was with at age of eight

  • Chris Powell is former Arsenal midfielder’s assistant

Jack Wilshere has been announced as the manager of Luton, giving the former Arsenal and England midfielder his first permanent role leading a team. The 33-year-old had two games in caretaker charge of Norwich at the end of last season but was overlooked for that job and the summer vacancy at Plymouth.

Wilshere takes over from Matt Bloomfield, who was sacked last week with Luton mid-table in League One. The club were in the Premier League in the 2023-24 season but have suffered back-to-back relegations.

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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 | 2020and look at the editions from further back

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» WSL talking points: Arsenal face dilemma and Blindkilde Brown gives Wiegman nudge

Everton continue to struggle at home, Leicester’s long wait for an away win goes on but Spurs can take pride in defeat

The disquiet over Kyra Cooney-Cross’s lack of action has grown louder by the week and her 27-minute cameo in Arsenal’s 1-0 defeat of Brighton fuelled her case for a start. The Australian midfielder impressed when she featured last season and there were high hopes for her going into this campaign, but four games glued to the bench have been followed by 54 minutes as a substitute across the following three matches. Brighton were, by their own admission, tiring towards the end of their 1-0 defeat and Cooney-Cross’s ball-carrying and front-foot approach caught the eye as the Gunners tried to extend their lead. “When there’s a drop-off [in] minute 60 or 75 and intensity goes down in games and space becomes bigger, the gamechangers can make a real impact, and that’s 100% what Kyra did,” said the Arsenal manager Renée Slegers. “She capitalised on the spaces and the fatigue and the opposition team and she plays with a lot of confidence and forward intent and she brings all her best qualities to life today, so I’m really pleased.” The preferred midfield trio this season has been Kim Little, Mariona Caldentey and Frida Maanum, with Victoria Pelova also featuring and Alessia Russo dropping into the 10 on occasion. It is hard to see where Cooney-Cross fits into the equation, but with Arsenal struggling to assert authority, change may not be a bad thing. Suzanne Wrack

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» Best goals, biggest gaffes: Premier League fans assess the season so far

The Guardian’s fans’ network on the opening stages of 2025-26: their toughest opponents, biggest setbacks and tips for the next manager sacked

Story so far Top of the table, looking down at our rivals, despite still not really firing on all cylinders … it’s early days, but we’re struggling to keep a lid on the excitement here. Having star turns such as Havertz, Madueke and now Ødegaard succumb to long-term injury is a reminder of the risk of being derailed, but it does feel like we’ve never been better equipped to cope with the slings and arrows. Arteta is still unwrapping his new toys and figuring out the best way to use them – can’t wait to see how the chemistry develops.

Bernard Azulay onlinegooner.com; @GoonerN5

Jonathan Pritchard

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» Como claim Serie A fixture in Australia is essential for ‘survival of the league’
  • Como insist relocating Milan game ‘not a matter of greed’

  • Italian side highlight gulf in revenues to Premier League

The Italian club Como have released a statement on their potential Serie A match against Milan in Australia, claiming that taking games abroad is about “ensuring survival” for the league.

Uefa has reluctantly given approval for the match – a home league fixture for Milan – to take place in Perth next February. In addition, Villarreal’s La Liga match against Barcelona in December is set to take place in Miami, Florida.

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» Uefa plans to relax multiclub ownership declaration rules after Crystal Palace furore
  • New rules give clubs longer to sort out MCO issues

  • Palace lost Europa League place despite Cas appeal

Uefa is planning to give clubs more time to resolve potential multiclub ownership (MCO) issues next season following the controversy that led to Crystal Palace being expelled last summer from the Europa League.

In a proposed change to its regulations discussed with elite clubs at a meeting last week of the newly named European Football Clubs in Rome, Uefa is poised to relax the 1 March deadline, which Palace failed to meet last season in an oversight that led to the FA Cup winners losing their Europa League place to Nottingham Forest.

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» Nagelsmann sorry if ‘long ball’ Northern Ireland comments seen as disrespectful
  • German said O’Neill’s approach ‘isn’t easy on the eyes’

  • Three teams in Group A level on six points

The Germany manager, Julian Nagelsmann, has said he is “sorry” if Northern Ireland felt his comments about their style of play were disrespectful.

Nagelsmann caused a stir after Germany’s 3-1 World Cup qualifying win over Northern Ireland in Cologne last month when he said Michael O’Neill’s side play “a lot of long balls” with an approach that “isn’t particularly easy on the eyes”.

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» Rangers could turn to Röhl after Steven Gerrard rules out return as manager
  • Former Liverpool captain withdraws from talks

  • Danny Röhl held talks with Ibrox ownership last week

The former Sheffield Wednesday manager Danny Röhl is now the favourite to succeed Russell Martin at Rangers after Steven Gerrard dramatically withdrew from talks over the Ibrox post.

Gerrard, who had returned from the Middle East to meet with Ibrox officials in London, had been the overwhelming choice of the Rangers support. Those directors now face an even bigger challenge to win over a seriously disgruntled fan base. Rangers want a new manager in place before Dundee United visit Ibrox on Saturday.

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» McTominay and Adams strike as dismal Scotland edge out Belarus and seal playoff slot

Someone within Hampden Park had the temerity to blast Freed From Desire over the public address system at full time. A song reserved normally for euphoric moments only just drowned out the jeers which met a Scotland victory. People just want more and more? Too right they do.

With this win, Steve Clarke and his players edged closer to the World Cup finals tournament. It was just that a return to that scene for the first time since 1998 felt a million miles away as the Scots limped and laboured past Belarus. “We know we have got to be better, man,” Scott McTominay said. The Napoli midfielder was even more profound as he scored Scotland’s second; second word “me” and the first a rhyme with “duck”. McTominay’s lack of celebrations depicted perfectly Scotland’s messy night.

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» It can get worse: Blackpool’s latest defeat recalls Mick McCarthy meme

Optimistic in August under Steve Bruce, Blackpool are now managerless and 23rd in League One after Stockport’s win

The Mick McCarthy “it can” meme is known far and wide as social media shorthand for woeful underperformance, although the full context is not.

When McCarthy was infamously asked if a miserable run of one win in 17 games could continue and issued the deadpan response “it can”, he was the Blackpool manager struggling through his ill-fated 2023 spell.

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» Clive Tyldesley: ‘I’ve only been drunk twice and once was with the England women’s team’

Veteran commentator answers your questions on famous lines, favourite stadiums and being told ‘Not for me, Clive’

What is the best sporting accomplishment or achievement you have commentated on and did you ever harbour personal ambitions to be a professional in any sport? Tony Medlock

I was never good enough at any sport to kid myself that I had a career at elite level. My parents would have told you that from an early age any sporting ambitions I entertained were in the area I ended up in; describing and commentating on top-level sport. I always resist any grading of goals or players or matches because I have a belief that sport belongs in its moment. Sport creates memories – we can recall vividly where we were, who we were with, what we were thinking, when our team won a trophy or an athlete won an Olympic gold medal … or Shane Lowry sunk a putt to seal the Ryder Cup. Those moments are very personal, and the job of the commentator is to try to add something to the memory of those moments. And those moments are unique and should remain separate from one another.

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» A World Cup preying on Fomo: Fifa’s 2026 ticket scheme is a late-capitalist hellscape

Dynamic pricing, crypto detritus and corporate doublespeak have made the task of buying 2026 World Cup tickets a grim case study in the monetization of emotion

When the first tickets for the 2026 World Cup went on sale last week, millions of fans joined online queues only to discover what Gianni Infantino’s assurance that “the world will be welcome” really means. The cheapest face-value seat for next summer’s final, somewhere in the gods of New Jersey’s 82,500-seat MetLife Stadium where the players are specks and the football’s a rumor, comes at a cost of $2,030 (oxygen tank not included). Most upper-deck seats range from $2,790 to $4,210, according to customers who finally glimpsed the prices that had been closely guarded. The much-touted $60 tickets for group-stage games, propped up by Fifa as evidence of affordability, exist only as comically tiny green smudges on the edge of digital seating maps, little more than mirages of inclusivity.

Fifa had kept the costs under wraps until the very moment of sale, replacing the usual published table of price points with a digital lottery that decided who even got the chance to buy. Millions spent hours staring at a queue screen as algorithms determined their place in line. When access finally came for most, the lower-priced sections had already vanished, many presumably hoovered up by bots and bulk-buyers (and that’s before Fifa quietly raised the prices of at least nine matches after only one day of sales). The whole process resembled less a ticket release than a psyop to calibrate how much frustration and scarcity the public will tolerate.

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» Denver Summit’s Nick Cushing on building an NWSL club from scratch

Former Manchester City coach is tasked with shaping expansion team but still has Champions League dream

More than 15,000 people have paid a deposit for a season ticket at Denver Summit FC despite the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) expansion club having only three players and yet to play a match. So the sense of responsibility that comes with the task of building a team the state of Colorado can be proud is one staff there are acutely aware of.

Principally, that mission has been assigned to Nick Cushing, the former Manchester City women’s and New York City men’s team head coach, who was hired as Denver’s first head coach in August, six months before they embark on their first NWSL campaign, when the division expands to 16 sides in February. It is not hard to see the logic behind the choice; the Englishman was in charge of City when they were new to an expanded Women’s Super League in 2014, with new signings such as Steph Houghton, Jill Scott and Toni Duggan. They went on to win a League Cup in their first top-flight season and the league title in 2016.

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» Martín Zubimendi: ‘I have to adapt but Arsenal signed me because they like what I do’

From replacing Rodri in the Euro 2024 final to leaving his hometown club, the calm Spain midfielder is taking everything in his stride

Mikel Arteta knew and so did Win. Dogs just do. “Well, of course,” Martín Zubimendi says, cracking up. The July day he walked through the doors at the Arsenal training centre, the club’s resident chocolate labrador – a therapy dog the head coach had brought in to bring the kind of calm wanted from the new signing too – was the first to welcome him. “It was lovely. I arrived with my parents, my agent, a small group, and she came straight to me, sat by me, rolled on the floor at my feet; that was very nice.”

It was also the way he would have wanted it, part of the plan. “She’s a bit like yours,” the sporting director, Andrea Berta, offered as Win lent against the midfielder’s legs. Zubimendi’s dog, Lea, hadn’t made it to London – he’s hoping she will soon – but this was a good start. There was a letter from Mikel Merino and a video call from Martin Ødegaard, teammates at Real Sociedad, yet no friendlier face than this. That can help when you’re departing the city you were born in and the club where you have been since you were 12.

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» Long throw-in pioneer Dave Challinor salutes return of successful launch

The original throw-in specialist analyses how Premier League teams are reaping the rewards from set pieces

‘You are always looking for a super-strength,” says Dave Challinor. The Stockport manager has a tactics board in front him at the club’s training ground, offering a potential cure to the pain he inflicted on opponents for years. Long throws are back in fashion and causing panic across the Premier League as coaches once again see the merit in chaotic scenes.

Brentford are becoming the masters of the long throw under Keith Andrews, specifically via the arms of Michael Kayode, but face stiff competition, with numbers on the rise across the top flight. Missiles are being launched from touchlines to consistently great effect, bringing with them a headache for defenders and an extra weapon for attackers. Last season there was an average of 1.5 per game in the Premier League; that has risen to 3.7 this campaign. There have already been six goals as a direct result of long throws, compared with 15 in the entirety of last season. Bournemouth, Crystal Palace, Tottenham, Newcastle and Sunderland have joined Brentford as the most regular users of the long throw.

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» ‘Its mediocrity has grown on me’: time almost up for intimate stopgap stadium Messi calls home

The club will finally begin playing in Miami next season. For local fans near Chase Stadium there are mixed emotions

From an abandoned and derelict symbol of failed efforts to establish professional football in south Florida, to the arena where Lionel Messi has dazzled MLS while attracting visitors from around the globe. It has been a unique journey for the site where Fort Lauderdale’s Lockhart Stadium once stood.

“Even after all these years it’s so funny to me that Lionel Messi, one of the most famous faces in the history of mankind, is not only playing for our club but playing in this stadium that was abandoned,” said Nico Abad, a member of The Siege supporters’ group and a native of Broward County, where Chase Stadium stands on the former site of Lockhart. “It’s where kids would go to do doughnuts and to smoke and drink.”

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» Nestory Irankunda steals victory for Socceroos in fiery friendly against Canada
  • Australia snatch 1-0 win from 2026 World Cup co-host in Montreal

  • Paul Izzo keeps out Les Rouges after teenager pinches goal in 71st minute

Teenage sensation Nestory Irankunda has scored his second goal in two matches, while goalkeeper Paul Izzo starred to deliver the Socceroos a fiery 1-0 win over Canada.

After surviving a dour first half dominated by Canada, the Socceroos came to life with the introduction of second-half substitutes Jordy Bos, Lewis Miller and Patrick Yazbek, before Watford star Irankunda netted in the 71st minute.

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» Nolberto Solano: ‘I would like to play like Klopp but you need to be realistic’

The former Newcastle and Peru winger became Pakistan’s head coach in July and he tells Tusdiq Din he enjoys the challenge of making the team more competitive

Nolberto Solano has become accustomed to firsts. He was the first Peruvian to feature in the Premier League after he joined Newcastle in 1998, and the first to play in an FA Cup final the following year. In April 2001 he became the first Premier League player to be sent off by Mike Dean. Now, in the latest stop on a peripatetic coaching journey, the 50-year-old is hoping to lead Pakistan’s men to their first Asian Cup.

After taking the lesser trodden path from Lima to Lahore, Solano faces crucial back-to-back qualifiers for the 2027 tournament against Afghanistan, beginning at home on Thursday. Then, in November and March, come visits from Syria and Myanmar, who won the reverse fixtures. Solano, who replaced the Englishman Stephen Constantine as Pakistan’s head coach in July, is clear on his ambitions.

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» ‘Sensationally damning’: Malaysian football rocked by naturalisation scandal

Seven national-team players, including one from La Liga, have been suspended by Fifa over claims of cheating

There hasn’t been that much to smile about for Malaysian football fans in recent years, so there was real jubilation among the 60,000 home spectators upon the final whistle in Kuala Lumpur on on 10 June. A 4-0 win over regional rivals Vietnam not just kept the Harimau Malaya (Malayan Tigers) on course for the 2027 Asian Cup but well and truly confirmed they were dining back at the top table in southeast Asia. Four months later, they are still the talk of the region of 650 million people, but not in a good way.

The story starts, as it does increasingly in Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) football these days, with naturalisation. In January, the crown prince of Johor, Tunku Ismail Sultan Ibrahim, the owner of Johor Darul Ta’zim football club, and former president of the Football Association of Malaysia (FAM), wrote on social media: “We have identified 6-7 heritage players … and hope the Malaysian government could assist in the process of obtaining Malaysian passports in order for them to play in the Asian Cup 2027 qualifiers.”

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» Bellingham must accept Tuchel’s collective structure or risk England exile | Jacob Steinberg

Manager learned at PSG to ignore star power in pursuit of a winning formula that prioritises brotherhood

Thomas Tuchel once stood on the touchline at Anfield, watching in disbelief as his self-indulgent Paris Saint-Germain players refused to put in the hard yards against Jürgen Klopp’s Liverpool. “Guys, what is this?” he said, but there was never going to be a reaction from individuals with too much power and not enough respect for the basic concepts of teamwork.

Intensity? Tracking back? Not for us, thanks. Too many wanted to do their own thing and it ground Tuchel down in the end. The German is a coach who wants structure, identity, sacrifice and energy. At PSG, though, he saw how individualism can bring a dressing room down. How could Tuchel make his mark when he had players who would moan if a teammate looked at them the wrong way?

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» Aston Villa must stop crying foul and focus on the Europa League instead | Jonathan Wilson

There is no grand PSR conspiracy against Unai Emery’s side. They should be challenging Newcastle or Tottenham for fifth

Four wins in a row and suddenly life does not seem so bad for Aston Villa. They are up into mid-table and if a 2-0 victory over Feyenoord in the Europa League will not quite live in the memory in the way last season’s games against Bayern Munich, Juventus and Paris Saint-Germain do, a return to Rotterdam at least evoked the glory days of 1982.

It will be a while yet before the frustration at missing out on the Champions League fades, but there does now seem to be a gathering recognition that Villa have a decent chance of winning the Europa League, potentially adding Istanbul’s Besiktas Park to De Kuip as a venue where they have won a European trophy.

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» Flag alert! Gary Neville may not be Orwell but he is a very English type of patriot | Barney Ronay

An easy target for accusations of luxury hypocrisy, Neville has at least tried to address an issue that has everything to do with aggressively flag-draped and militarised modern sport

“At the far end of the food counter a group of men were pledging allegiance to the flag, with trays balanced in one hand, in order to be allowed to take seats at the table. A group that had arrived earlier was singing The Star-Spangled Banner in order that they might use the salt and pepper and ketchup there.”

Welcome to our own Glorious Loyalty Oath Crusade, another real-time demonstration of the fact every satirical absurdity described in Catch-22 has become, yeah, pretty much totally plausible. The nation is now fully hostage to bad actors and phoney rage. And as ever football must act as a key amplifier of all this, a public echo chamber for the anxieties of what we must, out of a sense of duty, still call the real world.

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» Liverpool go to work and Diogo Jota is not there. Why wouldn’t that affect them? | Max Rushden

We know so little about players’ personal feelings. It means everyone’s analysis of the game is fundamentally superficial

A couple of weeks ago, Liverpool were on course to win the Premier League for the second season running and probably the Champions League too. After Manchester City briefly won the title on the opening day when Tijjani Reijnders tore Wolves apart, the Reds’ run of winning without being that good made it feel inevitable. Winning when not at your best is, after all, a sign (™) of a title-winning side, Clive.

But then Liverpool continued playing not particularly well and started losing. At the same time the perennially second-placed high-performance cowards Arsenal have an excellent defence and at least two very good players in every position. Arise Sir Mikel.

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» David Squires on … Nottingham Forest’s clash of the titans

Our cartoonist anticipates a battle royale between big men who never shy away from confrontation

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» Ratcliffe’s words will not save Amorim if he fails to remedy Manchester United’s flaws | Jamie Jackson

For all the co-owner’s promises of three-year spells, the head coach will not survive this season without real signs of a revival

The word from Manchester United insiders is that Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s headline-hogging declaration that three years is an apt timescale to judge Ruben Amorim is merely Sir Jim being Sir Jim, the self-made billionaire showing his anti-PR, maverick streak.

While the debate rages on TV, radio, social media, and in drinking parlours about the sagacity of his words, what Ratclifffe did not say or allude to intrigues as much.

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» The Scanlon brothers: from a Midlands primary football side to Gibraltar teammates

James is at Manchester United, Luca with Burnley and both are making a mark on the international stage as teenagers

It was almost a perfect night for the Scanlons when the 16-year-old Luca came on for his elder brother, James, to make his Gibraltar debut last month against the Faroe Islands, but there was a nagging problem. “I told him the night before not to play my position,” the older sibling jokes.

Only 57 days after Luca’s sweetest birthday, he became a full international. His plan was to be there to support James, alongside a plethora of other family members, but Gibraltar’s head coach, Scott Wiseman, invited him to train with men twice his age to see what he was about and saw enough to promote him from the under-21s. James is a right-footed winger who plays off the left and Luca is the opposite.

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» Club World Cup has left an injury trail that is damaging football. But will anyone listen? | Jacob Steinberg

Response to strained schedule has been more football than ever, and a danger that the best will have nothing left to give at the World Cup

Cole Palmer and Ousmane Dembélé looked great when they were photographed sitting on Top of the Rock on the eve of the Club World Cup final but it is not being wise after the event to suggest that both might have been better off spending their summer lying on sunbeds.

Top players struggling with fitness issues was foreseeable before the first edition of Fifa’s expanded tournament took place. “The worst idea ever,” was Jürgen Klopp’s take, citing concerns over the long-term impact of squeezing even more football into an ever expanding calendar. “Last year it was the Copa [América] and the European Championship, this year it’s the Club World Cup, next year it’s the World Cup. That means no recovery for the players involved.”

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» Air raids are the new trend as Premier League goes back to the future

Set pieces, long throws and generally getting it launched are back with a vengeance amid a notable tactical shift

To see a world in a grain of Wayne Rooney, an eternity in a robot‑voiced YouTube tactics clip. To find yourself submerged in a vast rolling wave of information in the course of only seven rounds of Premier League games.

As English football enters its latest international break it is a little startling to think we have had only 70 Premier League matches to this point, with 310 more still to go through the slog of autumn into spring. Seven rounds of games? Really? Is that all?

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» Tuchel takes aim at silence of the fans and helps answer a Cloughie what-if

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Not a lot of people know this, but Brian Clough never managed the England football team. Despite winning two Bigger Cups, two league titles and a few Milk Cups, Clough was overlooked for Big Job, largely because the prevailing blazers were terrified of his unyielding attitude regarding the administration of home truths. Clough as England manager is one of football’s great what-ifs. We’ll never know, no matter how many times it comes up on the Stick to Football podcast, but Thomas Tuchel is starting to give us a glimpse into what it might have been like.

I demand a stewards’ review of the decision on yesterday’s letter winner. Mr Davies’s ‘tale’ is ‘interesting’ but fails to stand up under scrutiny. The match in question attracted a crowd of only 18,629. The capacity of The Hawthorns in 1985 was just under double that figure. There was never a need to plan an ‘unauthorised entry’ for this game. Attendances were in steep decline in this decade. West Brom’s average gate in 1985-86 was 12,164; Villa’s was 15,237. The lock out one hour before kick off was never going to happen. Surely therefore a case of ‘false memory syndrome’ on the part of Mr Davies? Yours in the spirit of Noble Francis” – Richard Worrall.

If Big Sir Jim Ratcliffe has never been given a free lunch in 50 years in the corporate world (yesterday’s News, Bits and Bobs – full email edition) then he must be even more unpopular there than he is in football” – Ian Casson.

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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» ‘You’re like: who am I?’ Katie Chapman on the challenges and danger of football retirement

Former England international is taking part in Chelsea v Liverpool legends match that will raise money for ex-players in need of support

“I loved competing,” says the former England international Katie Chapman. “I loved the adrenaline of it. That’s whatI missed, the adrenaline and addiction to competing. I spent years trying to find that feeling again.

“I ran a couple of marathons and I did all sorts of things trying to hunt that feeling down, but I had to get it into my mind that I’m never going to have that feeling again in the same way. I had to teach myself to say: ‘Listen, you’re not going to get that back, so stop trying to find it.’ Once I got there, then I could move myself forward.”

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» Sporting seek edge by tapping into new market: English footballers

Georgia Eaton-Collins and Ria Bose are making waves in Portugal having bought into the club’s ambitious vision

Sporting CP have a rich history of developing prodigious young talents, none more so than Cristiano Ronaldo, and the club’s philosophy is spreading to their successful women’s team.

Although Sporting have not broken the domestic dominance of Benfica, no more proof of their development success is needed than the case of Olivia Smith, who was plucked from Canada’s academy system and sold to Liverpool a year later for a club record fee. Now Sporting are expanding into a new market: English players.

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» Football Daily | Kevin Keegan, a Wembley toilet and why England fans should cherish this era

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Toilet humour has long been the safe haven of your Daily, and we are always mindful of notable bog-related stories and milestones, especially in relation to football. What a delight it was to learn that Big Website columnist Adrian Chiles has a West Brom-themed urinal in his house. Spare a thought for the Barnsley fan who took the rest room a little too literally, and was rescued from a deserted Oakwell after falling asleep on the loo at half-time during a 2015 defeat by Fleetwood. “He had no shoes on and had lost his mobile phone and his hat,” elaborated a Barnsley fire station spokesperson. And who can forget when, at the height of his fame at Manchester City, Mario Balotelli popped into a local college to use the facilities in 2012. “Balotelli parked his Bentley outside, then came in and was asking where the toilets were, then he went to the teachers’ staff room,” a student told the Manchester Evening News. “After that he was just walking round the campus like he owned the place.”

What’s in a name? There’s a poem by Dr Seuss called ‘Too Many Daves’. Have Blackpool suffered from Too Many Steves? Steve Bruce, plus assistants Steve Agnew and Steve Clemence have been shown through the door marked ‘Do One’. So is that the end of the club’s Steve obsession? Not quite! Steve Banks and Steve Dobbie remain to take care of the first team. Full Steve ahead!” – John Myles.

Now you have loosened the purse strings and awarded some merch, I have decided to put finger to keypad and make a pithy comment. Ange Postecoglou states that he picked fights in the school playground with kids he knew would beat him up. This masochistic tendency must account for his decision to join Nottingham Forest. As a lifelong Spurs supporter I will always be grateful for the second-season trophy but the only second-season trophy I can see him winning by the Trent, if he lasts that long, is the Championship and that would be some struggle under the present owner” – Stewart McGuinness.

I was never lucky enough to win a mug like Padhraig Higgins (yesterday’s Football Daily letters) and had I done so, I would probably have broken it by now. If you send me one, I promise to take better care of it than I would have had I won it earlier” – Skip Koblintz.

May I suggest that Padhraig contact Noble Francis for a replacement mug. I am sure his trophy cabinet will be overflowing with cups. He could even wrap it in a scarf when posting” – Callum Taylor.

I can’t compete with Noble Francis et al, so I’ll have to be pretty direct: please may I have a mug?” – Tim Wild.

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» Which footballers defied a manager’s tactics – and what were the results? | The Knowledge

Plus: the original long-throw specialists, an even earlier early-season pitch invasion and more

  • Mail us with your questions and answers

“It’s clear that regardless of personnel, Ruben Amorim will not shift from his 3-4-2-1 even if the pope were to force him,” notes Paul Vickers. “This got me thinking: has there ever been a case of players actively defying a manager’s instructions, not by downing tools and giving up, but by taking up self-devised, alternative tactics and positions that they consider better suited to their abilities and the needs of the team? And what was the outcome of any such defiant player self-management in terms of the immediate result and then the subsequent fate of the manager and the players?”

A cracking question, to which we’ve received plenty of answers, so let’s proceed directly to The Insubordination Files.

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» Real Madrid pull clear, Højlund in form and Bayern unbeaten – Football Weekly

Max Rushden is joined by Nicky Bandini, Lars Sivertsen and Sid Lowe to wrap up the major stories from around Europe

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; as Real Madrid pull three points clear at the top of La Liga, we ask how is Xabi Alonso settling in at the Bernabéu and how and where does Jude Bellingham fit in? Barcelona dropped to second after a surprise 4-1 defeat by Sevilla and the panel discusses the Uefa decision to allow domestic games to be played overseas.

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» The WSL title race bursts into life – Women’s Football Weekly

Faye Carruthers is joined by Suzy Wrack, Freddie Cardy and Marva Kreel to discuss the weekend’s WSL action. Plus debate over taking the knee, early kick‑offs and a Women’s Champions League preview

On today’s pod: a quarter of the way through the WSL season and the title race bursts into life. The panel asks whether Manchester City’s 3‑2 win over Arsenal is the clearest sign yet that Andrée Jeglertz’s side believe they can go all the way, and what Renée Slegers must do to arrest Arsenal’s faltering form.

Meanwhile, Chelsea’s perfect start was ended by Manchester United, but was it a missed opportunity for Marc Skinner’s side, and are they serious contenders for the title? The panel discusses Jess Park’s impact, Sonia Bompastor’s tinkering and why challengers still can’t quite get over the line against the champions.

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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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