Category: Sports

  • What is at stake at under-pressure Red Bull?

    What is at stake at under-pressure Red Bull?

    Red Bull might have won the world drivers’ title for the fourth year in a row with Max Verstappen last year, but they head into the new season under conspicuous pressure.

    They have lost their design guru, following Adrian Newey’s move to Aston Martin, rivals are circling around Verstappen, and over the second half of last year, Red Bull had only the third fastest car in Formula 1.

    So what is at stake for Red Bull as they head into the final year of F1’s current regulations?

    What happened to Red Bull last year?

    Verstappen’s fourth title was founded on the points advantage he built in a brief period of dominance at the start of the year, and an outstanding performance from the Dutchman for the remainder of the season.

    From the sixth race of the season in Miami, the car no longer retained the massive advantage over the rest of the field it had enjoyed in the first five races, or the two preceding years.

    Yes, it ended the year as on average the fastest car in qualifying – by 0.052 seconds over the McLaren. But take the numbers from Miami onwards and the McLaren was faster by 0.053secs. Over the second half the season, the McLaren was faster by 0.142secs and Red Bull were also slower than Ferrari – by 0.008secs.

    Had McLaren started the season in a stronger position, therefore, Verstappen’s championship would have been a lot harder to win.

    Red Bull’s issue was that a fundamental balance disconnect became more apparent as they tried to add performance to their car. They struggled to solve their mid-corner, slow-speed understeer without creating oversteer in the fast corners.

    Newey said: “Already through the very last stages of ’23, the car was starting to become more difficult to drive,” Newey said. “Max could handle it. Checo (Sergio Perez) couldn’t.

    “That carried into the first part of ’24, but the car was still quick enough to be able to cope with it.

    “It’s something I was starting to become concerned about, but not many other people in the organisation seemed to be very concerned about it.

    “And from what I can see from the outside, but I don’t know… the guys at Red Bull, this is no criticism, but I think they just – perhaps through lack of experience – kept going in that same (development) direction. And the problem became more and more acute, to the point that even Max found it difficult to drive.”

    Red Bull believe they lost ground because they did not exploit aero-elasticity of front wings as much as McLaren, Mercedes and later Ferrari.

    This method of construction enables teams to build the carbon-fibre in their front-wing in such a way as to have the elements flex downwards at high speed, reducing downforce and therefore oversteer, but have them move back into optimum downforce mode at slower speeds.

    New rules for this season limit the flexibility of wings – at the rear from the first race, and at the front from the Spanish Grand Prix in June.

    The question is whether this was the sole issue Red Bull faced, and whether they can catch up the ground McLaren and Ferrari made last year, and whatever development progress their rivals have made over the winter.

    How will they cope without Newey?

    Newey’s departure came in the wake of allegations of sexual harassment and coercive, controlling behaviour made against team principal Christian Horner by a female employee.

    Horner has always denied the allegations and was cleared by two separate Red Bull internal investigations. But they unsettled Newey, and added to the disquiet Red Bull’s design chief was already feeling about internal politics within the engineering team.

    There was a disagreement as to who was primarily responsible for Red Bull’s recent success. Newey felt technical director Pierre Wache was unfairly pushing for credit – and Horner backed him publicly. Whereas Newey saw the 2022 car and fundamental concept Red Bull followed for F1’s current regulations as very much his.

    The 2025 car will inevitably be an evolution of the 2024 design, given that this is the final year of a set of technical regulations and there is massive change coming for next year. Nevertheless, Newey’s departure gives Wache and the rest of the design team a chance to prove themselves out of Newey’s shadow.

    It is a chance for Red Bull to prove a point, but it could go either way.

    Red Bull motorsport adviser Helmut Marko has already been quoted saying that he believed the team were slower to get on top of their problems in 2024 than they would have been had Newey still been involved.

    If they cannot return to having the best car, then there will be a major spotlight on Red Bull and serious questions being asked.

    Could Verstappen leave?

    The pressure on Red Bull is all the greater because of the potential ramifications of this year on Verstappen’s future.

    The Dutchman, 27, is under contract to Red Bull until the end of 2028, but his deal has performance clauses in it – the details of which are not known publicly. That means that if Red Bull don’t produce a competitive, winning car, Verstappen could leave.

    Verstappen’s father Jos made it abundantly clear in 2024 that he was not happy about Horner remaining in charge, saying back at the first race of the season that the team risked breaking apart if Horner stayed on as boss.

    As Newey’s departure was followed by that of sporting director Jonathan Wheatley to Sauber/Audi, and head of strategy Will Courtenay’s decision to leave for McLaren – although Courtenay is currently being held to his contract – it could be argued that Jos Verstappen has a point.

    Relations between Horner and Verstappen Sr remain tense, even if an uneasy truce has developed in recent months.

    Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff has made no secret of the fact that he wants Verstappen in one of his cars as soon as he can get him.

    Verstappen could also have future options at Aston Martin, where Fernando Alonso’s contract expires at the end of 2026, and Ferrari, where both Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc are said to reach potential break points in their deals at the same time.

    The forthcoming 2026 regulations complicate things – the Verstappens may wish to wait and see how things pan out next year, given that both the chassis and engine rules are changing then.

    But if Red Bull are not competitive this year, the temptation to jump early may be significant.

    What’s going on with the Horner situation?

    Horner remains in situ, with the backing of Red Bull’s main shareholder Chalerm Yoovidhya. The Austrian side of the team is said to be less supportive.

    The allegations brought an internal power struggle at Red Bull out into the open, between the Thai and Austrian shareholders, and between Horner and Marko.

    Much as with Horner and Jos Verstappen, there is currently a truce. Will it hold?

    And it remains to be seen whether the complainant will take matters further legally.

    What about Verstappen’s team-mate?

    After two seasons of Sergio Perez struggling alongside Verstappen, Red Bull finally lost patience with the Mexican at the end of last year and paid him off.

    That decision was very expensive – it was made despite Horner deciding in the early summer last year to grant Perez a two-year contract extension to the end of 2026, when they could have signed Carlos Sainz instead.

    In Perez’s place, Red Bull have promoted New Zealander Liam Lawson.

    Horner acknowledges that being Verstappen’s team-mate is probably the toughest job in F1, and Red Bull are asking Lawson to come in and do better than Perez after a career that has so far spanned only 11 grands prix for Red Bull’s second team over two seasons.

    Can Lawson improve on Perez’s performance?

    Lawson put in some creditable and combative performances on his return last year, following Red Bull’s decision to drop Daniel Ricciardo from their Racing Bulls team. But on average he was slightly slower than team-mate Yuki Tsunoda in qualifying.

    There is no doubt that Perez’s failings last year cost the team dearly in the constructors’ championship.

    He finished last out of all the drivers from the top four teams, and failed to score a podium finish after the fifth race of the season in China. That was a major factor in Red Bull slumping to third in the teams’ title chase behind McLaren and Ferrari.

    But Perez’s average qualifying deficit to Verstappen was just over 0.4secs, which is better than Alex Albon managed in 2020 and Pierre Gasly in 2019 before each was dropped. And Albon and Gasly have gone on to produce impressive performances for their new teams, Williams and Alpine.

    Lawson will be under pressure to prove he is a step up from Perez, or the decision-making process of Red Bull management will come back under scrutiny.

  • Trial of Maradona’s medics to start four years after star’s death

    Four years after the death of Argentine football legend Diego Maradona, seven healthcare professionals will go on trial next week accused of negligence during his final days.

    More than 100 witnesses, including members of Maradona’s family and doctors who tended to him down the years, will take the stand over the course of the four-month trial, which starts Tuesday in the Buenos Aires suburb of San Isidro.

    The seven defendants risk between eight and 25 years in jail if convicted.

    – The facts –

    Diego Armando Maradona died on November 25, 2020 at the age of 60 while recovering from brain surgery for a blood clot, after decades battling cocaine and alcohol addictions.

    He was found dead in bed in a rented house in an exclusive Buenos Aires neighborhood where he was brought after being discharged from hospital two weeks after surgery.

    He was found to have died of a heart attack.

    The night nurse said he had seen some “warning signs” but had “received orders not to wake him up.”

    Maradona’s death, which came in the middle of the Covid-19 pandemic, plunged Argentina into deep mourning.

    Tens of thousands of people queued to bid farewell to him as his body lay in state in the presidential palace.

    – The accused –

    Neurosurgeon Leopoldo Luque, psychiatrist Agustina Cosachov, psychologist Carlos Diaz, medical coordinator Nancy Forlini, nursing coordinator Mariano Perroni, doctor Pedro Pablo Di Spagna and nurse Ricardo Almiro will all stand trial next week.

    Another nurse, Gisela Dahiana Madrid, asked to be tried by jury separately.

    Her trial is set for July.

    – The charges –

    Prosecutors have accused the medical professionals of providing “reckless” and “deficient” home treatment to Maradona, alleging he was abandoned to his fate for a “prolonged, agonizing period” before his death.

    A panel of 20 medical experts convened by Argentina’s public prosecutor concluded in 2021 that Maradona “would have had a better chance of survival” with adequate treatment in an appropriate medical facility.

    The investigating magistrate in the case said each of the accused played a role in the events.

    – The defense –

    The accused all deny any responsibility in the star’s death.

    Vadim Mischanchuk, lawyer for the psychiatrist Cosachov, said he was very optimistic of an acquittal given that his client was in charge of Maradona’s mental rather than physical health.

    Maradona’s family claim that leaked audio and text messages show that the star’s health was in imminent danger, Mario Baudry, a lawyer for Maradona’s son Dieguito, said.

    He said that the messages showed the medical team’s strategy was to try to ensure that Diego’s daughters did not intervene “because if they did, they (the medical staff) would lose their money.”

    – His final resting place –

    Maradona is immortalized in countless murals, statues and exhibitions across Argentina, as well as in the tattoos sported by his legions of fans.

    He will also soon have a mausoleum on a 1,000-square-metre site in the heart of Buenos Aires.

    “We want our father to be close to the love of the people,” his daughter Dalma Maradona said in a video presentation of the site, which is expected to receive up to a million visitors a year and will be free of charge for Argentines.

  • Bayern’s Neuer sidelined after costly celebration

    Bayern’s Neuer sidelined after costly celebration

    Bayern Munich captain Manuel Neuer is set for a stint on the sidelines after tearing his calf muscle during a celebration in Wednesday’s 3-0 Champions League win over Bayer Leverkusen.

    Neuer was seen limping and was subbed out in the second half of the last 16 first leg tie just after Jamal Musiala put Bayern 2-0 up.

    Neuer’s substitution brought debutant Jonas Urbig from the bench.

    Bayern issued a statement on Thursday confirming the 38-year-old’s injury, saying Neuer “would be out for the time being”.

    “It happened while celebrating,” Bayern coach Vincent Kompany said after the match, adding “that’s a shame for us”.

    The veteran goalkeeper, who recently extended his deal at Bayern until 2025, missed almost a full year with a broken leg from a skiing accident from December 2022 until October 2023.

    Urbig, 21, arrived from Cologne in the winter. Despite making his debut on the big stage on Wednesday, Urbig was largely untested as Bayern dominated the first leg against the defending German champions.

    Bayern, who sit eight points clear in the league with 10 games remaining, travel to Leverkusen for the return Champions League leg next week in a dominant position.

  • Lyon owner backs Fonseca as coach despite nine-month ban

    Lyon owner backs Fonseca as coach despite nine-month ban

    Lyon’s American owner John Textor has given his full support to Paulo Fonseca despite the manager’s nine-month ban for confronting a referee, assuring the Portuguese “you are the right man for Lyon”.

    Former AC Milan boss Fonseca has paid a heavy price for his altercation with Benoit Millot during his side’s 2-1 win over Brest in Ligue 1 on Sunday when he touched heads with the match official.

    The French League’s disciplinary commission on Wednesday banned him from the dugout and the referee’s changing room until November.

    To compound his plight he has also been banned from entering his own team’s changing rooms until mid-September.

    It was not the ideal birthday present on the day Fonseca turned 52.

    The massive setback just weeks after he replaced Pierre Sage as manager inevitably cast doubt on his future at Lyon.

    But Textor was quick to dispel any notion it could spell an early exit from the club placed sixth in Ligue 1.

    “Happy Birthday Paulo! I stand with you today and always,” Textor posted on social media after the commission’s ruling was made public.

    “You made a mistake, your apology was sincere and your punishment is clearly too severe.

    “You are the right man for Lyon and we shall persevere.”

    In their ruling the French League’s disciplinary commission said that “by throwing himself at the referee and shouting at him (Fonseca) displayed an intimidating and threatening attitude”.

    Lyon criticised “the extreme severity of the sanction” and said they were contemplating “all possible remedies”.

    The former multiple French champions are in action on Thursday in the Europa League with Fonseca in the dugout as his ban only extends to domestic competitions.

    The ruling against Fonseca comes a week after Marseille president Pablo Longoria was banned for 15 matches for alleging “corruption” in refereeing in the aftermath of his side’s 3-0 loss at Auxerre.

    Sebastien Deneux, the head of the French league’s disciplinary commission, said he regretted that “once again a major figure in Ligue 1 has demonstrated such behaviour”.

    “Mr Fonseca is a coach in Ligue 1, he is above all a teacher, and it goes without saying this attitude is completely incompatible with his duties,” he added.

  • Former Sevilla, Man City striker Negredo retires

    Former Sevilla, Man City striker Negredo retires

    Spanish striker Alvaro Negredo announced his retirement from football on Thursday.

    “Thanks, football,” he said in a video posted on social media of him hanging up a pair of boots on a hook.

    The former Sevilla, Manchester City and Valencia forward, 39, has been without a club since the end of last season when he helped Real Valladolid earn promotion to La Liga.

    Negredo won the Premier League and League Cup with Man City after arriving for the 2013-14 season, before leaving on loan to Valencia.

    The striker was part of the Spanish squad which won Euro 2012, playing twice at the tournament.

    Negredo also spent time in Turkey with Besiktas, as well as with Middlesbrough in the Premier League, among other teams, netting 290 goals in 755 appearances at club level and 10 for Spain in 21 games.

  • Bayern’s Neuer sidelined after costly celebration

    Bayern’s Neuer sidelined after costly celebration

    Bayern Munich captain Manuel Neuer is set for a stint on the sidelines after tearing his calf muscle during a celebration in Wednesday’s 3-0 Champions League win over Bayer Leverkusen.

    Neuer was seen limping and was subbed out in the second half of the last 16 first leg tie just after Jamal Musiala put Bayern 2-0 up.

    Neuer’s substitution brought debutant Jonas Urbig from the bench.

    Bayern issued a statement on Thursday confirming the 38-year-old’s injury, saying Neuer “would be out for the time being.”

    “It happened while celebrating,” Bayern coach Vincent Kompany said after the match, adding, “That’s a shame for us.”

    The veteran goalkeeper, who recently extended his deal at Bayern until 2025, missed almost a full year with a broken leg from a skiing accident from December 2022 until October 2023.

    Urbig, 21, arrived from Cologne in the winter. Despite making his debut on the big stage on Wednesday, Urbig was largely untested as Bayern dominated the first leg against the defending German champions.

    Bayern, who sit eight points clear in the league with 10 games remaining, travel to Leverkusen for the return Champions League leg next week in a dominant position.

  • FIFA ranking: Super Falcons retain global position, remain 1st in Africa

    FIFA ranking: Super Falcons retain global position, remain 1st in Africa

    Nigeria’s senior women’s football team, the Super Falcons, have held on to their 36th position in the latest FIFA global rankings, according to the list released on Thursday, March 6, 2025.

    The Super Falcons also remain the top-ranked women’s football team in Africa, underscoring their dominance on the continent.

    South Africa, Morocco, Zambia, and Ghana are the other countries in the top five.

    Top 10 teams in the world, according to the latest FIFA ranking

    United States of America

    Spain

    Germany

    England

    Japan

    Sweden

    Canada

    Brazil

    Korea DPR

    Netherlands

  • Handball: U-23, U-18 teams begin training ahead of international tourneys

    Handball: U-23, U-18 teams begin training ahead of international tourneys

    Nigeria’s U-23 and U-18 men’s handball teams have begun intensive preparatory camps ahead of two top international handball championships.

    The national U-23 men’s handball team under the tutelage of Solomon Yola and Adebayo Yekini are presently undergoing intensive training at Package B of the Moshood Abiola Stadium in Abuja ahead of the 5th IHF Emerging Nations Championship which will hold from March 11 to 16 in Vana, Bulgaria. The national U-18 team led by coaches Emeka Nnamani and Joshua Ayo, have also begun preparation at the Rowe Park Sports Center, Yaba, Lagos ahead of the IHF Trophy Intercontinental Phase which will be held in Pristina, Kosovo from March 12 to 16.

    The Nigeria U-18 handball team is the sole representative of Africa following their 38-26 victory over Guinea to be crowned champion of the Continental Phase in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in November 2024. They have been consistently ranked as one of the top teams of the IHF Men’s Trophy in the Youth Category with a second-placed finish in Pristina, Kosovo in 2019 and finishing third in San Jose, Costa Rica in 2023.

    The Nnamani-tutored team will begin their campaign against New Caledonia on Wednesday, March 12 and will also play Kosovo as well in the preliminary stage.

    For the U-23 team led by Yola, they will play the United States of America, Azerbaijan and the Republic of Moldova in Group B of the championship which will be held at the Palace of Sports and Culture in Vana, Bulgaria.

    Nigeria will begin their campaign against the United States of America on Tuesday, March 11 and will play Azerbaijan the next day and Moldova thereafter.

    The IHF Emerging Nations Championship is organised by the International Handball Federation for countries participating in the four-year plan of the European Handball Federation and some of the best-ranked countries that didn’t qualify for the World’s Men Handball Championship. Nigeria had previously participated in the 2019 edition in Georgia and the 2023 edition in Bulgaria. They finished second on both occasions.

    President of the Handball Federation of Nigeria, Samuel Ocheho, has reiterated the federation’s commitment to restoring Nigeria’s place in the global handball community.

    “We have always worked hard to ensure that we take our place back in the international handball community and it’s been an ongoing process all these years with physical dividends as shown in our successes in international competitions,” he said.

    “In our continued push to do so, we are to send two of our national teams to top international competitions which we know will improve the lot of sport in Nigeria despite the herculean tasks which involve massive finances to do so”.

    “But we are not deterred and we know that this is the way to go for us to be of reckoning once again in the international handball community.”

  • Okoye in fresh controversy over driving offence

    Okoye in fresh controversy over driving offence

    Super Eagles goalkeeper Maduka Okoye has found himself embroiled in yet another legal controversy, this time for a serious driving-related offence that further complicates his already turbulent professional and personal life.

    Italian authorities have reported catching the 25-year-old goalkeeper driving an unregistered vehicle without a valid driver’s licence or insurance. Authorities fined Okoye for the offence, adding to a growing list of off-field challenges that threaten to overshadow his sporting career.

    The latest incident comes at a particularly sensitive time for Okoye, who was recently named in Nigeria’s provisional squad for the upcoming FIFA World Cup qualifiers against Rwanda and Zimbabwe.

    The driving offence represents another significant setback for the Udinese goalkeeper, who has been struggling with a series of personal and professional controversies.

    The goalkeeper is currently under investigation for an alleged betting scandal related to a yellow card he received during a Serie A match against Lazio in March 2024. According to La Gazzetta dello Sport, betting agencies detected unusual gambling activities surrounding a booking Okoye received for time-wasting in the 64th minute of a match.

    The betting investigation has potentially serious consequences. If found guilty, Okoye could face a ban of up to four years under Article 24 of the Italian Code of Sports Justice, which strictly prohibits professional footballers from gambling on official events organised by FIGC, UEFA, and FIFA.

    Adding to his troubles, Okoye’s personal life has also been fraught with controversy.

    In September 2024, his relationship with Dutch model Jelicia Westhoff became a public spectacle when she accused him of disrespecting their relationship and her family. Although Westhoff later retracted her statements and apologised, unverified allegations of emotional and physical abuse emerged, which Okoye strongly denied.

    Since joining Udinese in 2023 following a disappointing spell at Watford, Okoye had established himself as the club’s first-choice goalkeeper before being sidelined by wrist surgery. The club has already signed Norwegian goalkeeper Egil Selvik as cover, indicating potential uncertainty about Okoye’s future.

    With these mounting off-field issues, questions are increasingly being raised about Okoye’s focus and discipline. His return to the national team comes at a critical moment, with the goalkeeper having not played any games this year and facing multiple investigations and personal challenges.

  • Nigerians demand apology from Carragher for controversial AFCON statement

    Nigerian football fans have launched a fierce and uncompromising critique of Jamie Carragher, demanding a comprehensive and genuine apology for his controversial remarks dismissing the Africa Cup of Nations as “not a major tournament”.

    In a social media storm that has swept across multiple platforms, fans have unanimously rejected Carragher’s attempted explanation, branding it as insincere, inadequate, and disrespectful to African football.

    The controversy erupted following Carragher’s comments during a Champions League broadcast, where he suggested that Mohamed Salah’s Ballon d’Or prospects were limited because he was not competing in a “major tournament” – a direct reference to AFCON that has ignited widespread condemnation.

    Speaking on a broadcast show after Tuesday’s Champions League, Carragher acknowledged that his choice of words was poorly phrased.

    “What I would never want to be described as, as a pundit, would be ignorant or disrespectful. That was never my aim, whether that’s to a player, a club, a country, a continent, an international tournament, whatever that may be,” he stated.

    Carragher explained that his point was based on historical trends in Ballon d’Or voting rather than a personal opinion on AFCON’s significance.

    “Where I got it wrong was I was clumsy with my language in describing AFCON as not a major tournament. I was trying to explain the merits of Mo Salah winning the Ballon d’Or, and I feel that not just AFCON but also tournaments like the Asia Games and Gold Cup don’t resonate with the people who vote for the award,” he clarified.

    He further noted that Ballon d’Or voting has historically favoured competitions like the UEFA European Championship.

    “Sometimes we forget that the Ballon d’Or was originally the European Footballer of the Year award,” he said, adding that this could explain potential biases in voting patterns.

    Fans’ reactions were swift and unequivocal.

    Morola Oyedele minced no words, writing, “Mr Carragher, apologize properly and stop trying to sound politically correct.”

    Edison Ade echoed this sentiment, stating bluntly, “He is still standing his ground. You could have just apologised and kept it moving.”

    Nna Mmadu emphatically noted, “Not an apology uttered. He even doubled and tripled down.” @_Gida_ succinctly stated, “There’s no apology here,” a sentiment shared by multiple fans including Salim Balarabe, who asserted, “Is not an apology, this guy is still sticking to his statement.”

    Osasere Osayawe delivered a particularly pointed critique, challenging Carragher’s understanding of the tournament’s significance.

    “Still wrong in your statements. I thought you were a Brit and you understand English, apparently, you don’t,” he wrote on X.

    “What you should have said is that, in order of ranking or priority, maybe the Euros comes before the Afcon. That doesn’t mean it is not a major tournament.”

    Some fans expressed outright dismissal as Omolomo wrote, “Tell him he doesn’t matter to us, he’s a silly man. We are not accepting planned speech.”

    South African fan Ndlombango ka Tomase was even more direct.

    “He was short of saying ‘I apologise’… this phrase is difficult to come from his mouth. Jamie is a douchebag,” she wrote.

    The backlash reflects a broader narrative of disrespect towards African football. This perspective was powerfully articulated by former Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand, who highlighted the persistent undervaluation of the tournament.

    “It should be respected more than it is,” Ferdinand stated, criticising the media narrative that portrays AFCON as a “Mickey Mouse tournament”.

    Former Nigeria defender Azubuike Egwuekwe expressed his disbelief directly to The PUNCH when the controversy started last week.

    “How will he say that the Africa Cup of Nations is not a major tournament? It is the biggest competition in Africa. AFCON is just like their Euros,” he said.

    The numbers speak volumes. According to the Confederation of African Football, the 2024 AFCON shattered viewership records, reaching a staggering 2.2 billion viewers worldwide – significantly surpassing the Super Bowl’s 123.4 million viewers.

    As the 2025 AFCON approaches, set to take place in Morocco in December, the tournament stands poised to continue its growth in global prominence. The controversy surrounding Carragher’s comments has, perhaps inadvertently, sparked a crucial conversation about recognising African football’s true value on the world stage.