Category: Sports

  • PSG 0 1 Liverpool

    PSG 0 1 Liverpool

    Liverpool completed one of the biggest smash and grabs in Champions League history to come away from their last-16 first leg against Paris St-Germain with a win.

    PSG completely dominated the game, with 27 shots, and Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson had to make nine saves.

    But the hosts could not find an opener – and the Reds scored with their second shot of the night in the 87th minute.

    Harvey Elliott netted with his first touch, after replacing Mohamed Salah, when he was picked out by Darwin Nunez.

    Luis Enrique’s side were shell shocked – and how they failed to score will go down as a mystery. Well, an Alisson-shaped mystery.

    PSG forwards Ousmane Dembele and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia in particular were unplayable at times.

    Kvaratskhelia had a fine goal in the first half rightly disallowed by the video assistant referee (VAR) for offside.

    The VAR again sided with Liverpool, more controversially, when Ibrahima Konate avoided a red card despite shoving Bradley Barcola over just outside the box.

    Liverpool will host the second leg next Tuesday.

    Reds boss Arne Slot has enjoyed a magnificent first season in English football with Liverpool losing just four games – and only one of those was with their first team in a match of significance.

    The Premier League leaders and Carabao Cup finalists are usually the team punishing the opposition but for the first time they were blown away – in every aspect bar the scoreline.

    Brazil goalkeeper Alisson was the reason they came away from the French capital still in the tie.

    He pulled off sensational saves to deny a host of PSG players including Dembele (twice), Kvaratskhelia (four times) and substitute Desire Doue (twice).

    The visitors had managed precisely one shot before the goal, Luis Diaz’s off-target effort in the 44th minute.

    But Elliott stunned the hosts 46 seconds after coming off the bench to replace top scorer Salah, who had a rare quiet night.

    Alisson played a long ball up to Nunez, who controlled the ball and picked out Elliott in space. Gianluigi Donnarumma got a touch to his first-time strike but could not stop it settling in the bottom corner.

    That goal now makes Liverpool favourites to set up a quarter-final tie with Aston Villa or Club Brugge.

    Since their big-money Qatari takeover in 2011, PSG have flattered to deceive in the Champions League.

    Just as it looks as if they are getting things together, it all goes wrong.

    This one felt like it was going to be different.

    The runaway Ligue 1 leaders had won their past 10 games and were unbeaten in 22 matches.

    Previous collapses had come from trying to fit star names and big egos into a team – including all of Kylian Mbappe, Neymar and Lionel Messi.

    But this was a different PSG, more of a team with fewer true household names.

    Dembele had scored 20 goals in his previous 14 matches. Some of his dribbles had the Reds defenders on toast, especially in the first half. Kvaratskhelia, a January signing from Napoli, was sublime when running with the ball too.

    The hosts felt as if they were winning everything on Wednesday, quicker to every ball, and ending up with 70% possession.

    Luis Enrique’s team will point to the red card Parisian Konate could have been shown in the first half too.

    But they were ultimately made to pay for not taking their chances – and now face a huge uphill task at Anfield in six days’ time.

  • Coldplay to pick 2026 World Cup final half-time acts

    Coldplay to pick 2026 World Cup final half-time acts

    The 2026 World Cup final will stage a Super Bowl-style half-time show for the first time, with Coldplay helping to pick a “list of artists” to perform.

    The tournament, which will be co-hosted by the USA, Canada and Mexico, concludes with the final on 19 July 2026 at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.

    Though pre-match performances at showpiece occasions such as the Champions League final have become commonplace, there has never been a half-time show at a World Cup final.

    Half-times in the regular NFL season last around 15 minutes but they are extended up to 30 minutes at the Super Bowl in order to accommodate a half-time show.

    Fifa president Gianni Infantino says Coldplay lead singer Chris Martin and band manager Phil Harvey will help to establish a set of artists to perform in the 15-minute break at next year’s final.

    “I can confirm the first ever half-time show at a Fifa World Cup final in New York New Jersey,” Infantino wrote on Instagram.

    “This will be a historic moment for the Fifa World Cup and a show befitting the biggest sporting event in the world.”

    Rap artist Kendrick Lamar headlined this year’s Super Bowl half-time show in New Orleans, which drew record audience figures of 133.5m across the United States.

    The performance surpassed the long-standing record set by Michael Jackson in 1993.

    The likes of Rihanna, Beyonce and Lady Gaga have also performed in recent years, while Coldplay headlined in 2016.

    Between 25 to 30 minutes are allocated for Super Bowl half-time shows so that the various stages and equipment can be built and dismantled.

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  • PSG’s post-Mbappe era, no ‘clans’ and foreign stars’ French buy-in

    PSG’s post-Mbappe era, no ‘clans’ and foreign stars’ French buy-in

    Rarely in the past decade and a half of Qatari ownership have Paris St-Germain entered the spring with this kind of confidence.

    On Saturday evening, the runaway Ligue 1 leaders wasted little time in dismantling a Lille side who also had a midweek Champions League tie to look forward to, scoring four goals in what manager Luis Enrique would later call the team’s “best half of the season”.

    Victory against Les Dogues, who could only muster a consolation goal through Jonathan David 10 minutes from time, was more than simply a dress rehearsal before Liverpool’s visit to the French capital on Wednesday for the first leg of their last-16 tie.

    Lille, who have notably beaten both Real and Atletico Madrid in Europe this season, were swept aside as PSG continued their seemingly inevitable march towards completing an unbeaten campaign on home soil.

    The all-conquering form of a rejuvenated PSG would have seemed unlikely at the start of the season.

    While the post-Kylian Mbappe era arguably started midway through last season, given that the France captain was mostly spared for high-profile matches at that point, replacing his output and leading role remained the major uncertainty on the eve of the new campaign.

    That task was made all the more pressing by the absence of a centre-forward in name during most of the autumn.

    Portuguese international Goncalo Ramos was sidelined for three months with an ankle injury, while Randal Kolo Muani was progressively phased out of the team, eventually culminating in his loan move to Juventus this winter.

    Initially, it was Bradley Barcola, from the left wing, who took up the mantle by scoring 10 times in the first 11 league games of the campaign.

    Having carried over his goalscoring form to international duty amid Mbappe’s absence from Les Bleus, the 22-year-old was looking increasingly at ease in carrying the now-Real Madrid man’s responsibilities for club and country.

    His form only faintly translated to Champions League fixtures, though, as was the case for the rest of the team. Successive false-nine experiments, notably involving Kang-in Lee and Ousmane Dembele, were proving mostly ineffective as the team registered just one win in the first five European matchdays.

    The team’s league stage campaign, branded by Enrique “unjust” given the tough draw they faced, was stunted by an inability to capitalise on their dominance in possession in most matches.

    A disastrous early exit in January was an increasingly credible prospect, until the pieces of the Spaniard’s plan finally began to fall into place.

    The Parisians’ free-scoring run since January has included 18 goals in four European encounters, a figure admittedly inflated by Brest’s unfortunate collapse in their play-off tie.

    Leading the reversal in fortunes has been Dembele’s newly found confidence in front of goal, with the 27-year-old finally realising the potential of his talent.

    The France international, despite arguably being the face of the club with Mbappe gone, has scarcely been given any kind of preferential treatment.

    His reinvention has been all the more unlikely given what was an ostensibly fraught rapport with his manager only a few months ago.

    He was notably dropped for the trip to face Arsenal in October, for arriving late to training, a move which Enrique later branded more recently as “the best thing I’ve done to him”.

    After a needless sending off in the defeat by Bayern Munich, Dembele was again relegated to the bench for the following league games.

    Tensions were eventually appeased, though, as the former Barcelona player worked his way back into the team and claimed the unlikely false-nine role as his own.

    With 18 goals across all competitions since the turn of the year, the 27-year-old has scored more in two months than any single season of his to date.

    While his talent has seldom been called into question, Dembele has, virtually overnight, managed to erase the erratic decision-making, which plagued the first decade of his career.

    “It’s a bit of everything. It’s down to my positioning, but also a change in mentality,” the forward told the Ligue 1 broadcaster on Saturday night.

    Dembele’s purple patch has also been aided by the team of young talents around him suddenly clicking into gear.

    The pivot away from buying established names hasn’t necessarily meant a decrease in activity in the transfer window, though.

    Last summer’s arrivals of teenagers Joao Neves and Doue, along with Ecuadorian centre-back Willian Pacho, did not come cheap, and Kvaratskhelia’s signing from Napoli cost the Parisians a reported 70m euros (£58m).

    Gone are the “clans” that divided past PSG squads, with Enrique now able to mould a team of young (and evidently willing) talents around his philosophy.

    Of those who started in last weekend’s hard-fought win in Lyon, only the 30-year-old Marquinhos was older than 26. Impressively, virtually all of the new arrivals from abroad have had little issue giving post-match interviews in French.

    Few in the team encapsulate the willingness to integrate and adapt according to the team’s needs better than Neves. The creative-minded midfielder, while standing out as part of a three-man block alongside the equally impressive Vitinha, has filled in more than serviceably at both right-back and left-back when called upon.

    The Benfica academy product, who has set up nine goals in all competitions this season, has displayed a technical ease in slicing through defences and evading pressure only rivalled by his compatriot.

    His assist for Dembele against Lille, setting up the Frenchman despite finding himself virtually face-to-face with goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier, was emblematic of his selfless, all-action displays since arriving.

    Not all of the summer recruits hit the ground running straight away. French youth international Doue had already established himself as one of the continent’s most promising talents even before joining from Rennes this summer, but a limited impact in his first few months in the capital drew increasing criticism over the necessity of his costly arrival.

    An impressive display against Salzburg in December, though, was the catalyst for Doue’s increased involvement and upturn in form.

    The 19-year-old was key in three of PSG’s four goals against Lille on Saturday, adding his name onto the scoresheet with a strike into the top corner.

    At ease both on the wing and further back in midfield, Doue has bounced back from an uncertain start to life in the capital.

    Barcola has also bounced back from a dip in form during the winter months, perhaps aided by the fact that the goalscoring burden is now shared across the frontline.

    The arrival of fierce competition in Kvaratskhelia in January also appears to have kick-started his output again, with his tally now standing at 17 goals and 11 assists this term.

    Sitting behind the team’s impressive firepower, though, is also a defence with new-found assurance. Goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma, for instance, has appeared increasingly reliable and comfortable with the ball at his feet, far from the high-profile errors of past European campaigns.

    Barring some rare lapses in concentration, the 23-year-old Pacho has adapted seamlessly to the physically demanding nature of Ligue 1 after joining from Eintracht Frankfurt.

    His composure and workrate in particular have complemented captain Marquinhos more effectively than the more experienced centre-backs PSG have signed over the past few years.

    Having mostly seen off domestic opposition since their upturn in form, Wednesday night’s game against Premier League leaders LIverpool will be the sternest test yet.

    “It could have been a Champions League final,” as the PSG manager noted on Saturday.

    The Asturian is right to view the tie as a clash of equals.

  • Marcus Smith dropped with Daly at 15 to face Italy

    Marcus Smith dropped with Daly at 15 to face Italy

    Men’s Six Nations: England v Italy

    Date: Sunday, 9 March Kick-off: 15:00 GMT Venue: Allianz Stadium, Twickenham

    Coverage: Live audio commentary via the BBC Sport website and app

    Elliot Daly will start ahead of Marcus Smith at full-back for England’s match against Italy on Sunday, with the Harlequins playmaker dropped to the bench.

    Fraser Dingwall, who won his last England cap more than a year ago, comes into centres alongside Ollie Lawrence, with Henry Slade left out of the matchday 23.

    Dingwall’s inclusion means five of the seven backs are from Northampton, with Alex Mitchell and Fin Smith continuing their half-back partnership.

    Jamie George starts at hooker as he becomes the seventh player to reach a century of caps for the England men’s team.

    Leicester scrum-half Jack van Poortvliet, who scored in England A’s win over Ireland’s second string last month, is preferred to Harry Randall as the scrum-half cover among the replacements.

    England have won all 31 of their previous meetings with Italy but took only a narrow 27-23 victory in Rome last year in the Six Nations.

    Head coach Steve Borthwick’s side lie third in the Six Nations table, one and four points respectively behind France and Ireland, who meet in Dublin on Saturday (14:15 GMT).

    England team to face Italy

    England: Daly; Freeman, Lawrence, Dingwall, Sleightholme; F Smith, Mitchell; Genge, George, Stuart, Itoje, Chessum, T Curry, Earl, Willis

    Replacements: Cowan-Dickie, Baxter, Heyes, Hill, Cunningham-South, B Curry, Van Poortvliet, M Smith

    Marcus Smith’s shift to the bench represents a dramatic downsizing of his role in just a few months.

    Initially afforded an opportunity by injury to George Ford, he started all three matches in England’s summer tour of Japan and New Zealand at fly-half and continued in the role throughout the autumn.

    However, he was shifted to a full-back role in the wake of England’s opening-round defeat, with England hoping he could combine his dangerous broken-field running from back field with the ability to step in as an additional playmaker alongside novice fly-half Fin Smith.

    Daly scored the decisive late try with a well-timed run in England’s wins over France and appeared off the bench again in the victory over Scotland, but has not started a match at full-back for England in four years.

  • Fifa to give $1bn as Europe nears Club World Cup deal

    Fifa to give $1bn as Europe nears Club World Cup deal

    Fifa are set to give more than $1bn revenue to clubs participating in the Club World Cup as the European Club Association (ECA), negotiating on behalf of clubs in Europe including Chelsea and Manchester City, closes in on a deal.

    Multiple sources have confirmed to BBC Sport that the 32 clubs involved, including 12 European clubs, will split what Fifa expect will be the biggest revenue ever for a club football tournament.

    It is partly based on the $1bn exclusive global TV deal agreed with sports streaming service DAZN in December.

    The inaugural tournament, taking place in the United States, begins on 14 June and finishes with the final in New Jersey on 13 July.

    On an individual club basis, those involved will receive a participation fee for entering the group stage and performance fees based on progression to later rounds.

    Multiple senior sources have explained that Fifa and the ECA are also in talks about bringing in substantial solidarity payments for non-participating clubs, which is expected to be followed by similar distributions for clubs in Africa, Asia and the Americas at a later date.

    Fifa and the ECA are yet to comment publicly about the negotiations.

    The ECA is expected to gain a higher revenue share than clubs from other continents because of the importance of their clubs to the competition, and because those members will be unable to play lucrative overseas pre-season tours.

    Chelsea, Manchester City, Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund, Paris St-Germain, Inter Milan, Juventus, Atletico Madrid, Benfica, Porto and FC Salzburg are all represented by the ECA.

    Real Madrid are not part of the ECA because of their ongoing support for a breakaway European Super League.

    The ECA has committed to supporting the Club World Cup until at least 2030 through a memorandum of understanding signed in 2023.

    Multiple sources from outside Europe have expressed their support both publicly and privately for the competition, although they remain in the dark about how much they will receive for participation.

    Fifa president Gianni Infantino said in December: “Whatever Fifa does, [it] has to be global.

    “[Fifa] has to involve the globe. [Fifa] has to give opportunities and chances to [everyone] all over the world, and the Club World Cup is doing exactly that.”

    Fifa, meanwhile, will not make a single dollar of profit from the tournament and says it will reinvest the entire $1bn into global club football.

    There will be a Fifa Council meeting to update members on the progress of the tournament, which will be hosted in 12 stadiums across 11 US cities during the month-long summer event.

    What’s the view outside of Europe?

    The Confederation of African Football (CAF) is understood to be negotiating on behalf of the African club interest. Chairman of the African Club Association (ACA) and board member of the CAF Hersi A. Said told BBC Sport: “Africa is represented by four clubs Al-Ahly, Wydad AC, ES Tunis and Mamelodi Sundowns.

    “To start with, we are happy with four and we will push to get more clubs in the next editions. To be honest, we don’t have much information on TV rights or solidarity payments but we would love the same platform to discuss this. It would be ideal if the ACA was involved in these matters.”

    Representatives of multiple clubs in North America and Asia have been contacted and expressed a broadly positive view despite having little knowledge of negotiations around revenues.

  • Real Sociedad aim to increase Man United misery in Europa League

    Real Sociedad aim to increase Man United misery in Europa League

    Real Sociedad are hoping to forget their struggles this season and compound Premier League giants Manchester United’s when they meet on Thursday in the Europa League last 16.

    The Basque side host Ruben Amorim’s tormented Red Devils in San Sebastian before the second leg at Old Trafford next week.

    Real Sociedad suffered a 4-0 thumping at La Liga leaders Barcelona on Sunday, continuing a poor domestic campaign, although they were missing several regular starters and were reduced to 10 men early on.

    “It’s in the past now and we have to prepare as best as we can for the game on Thursday,” said coach Imanol Alguacil.

    Sitting ninth in La Liga the Europa League represents their best hope of silverware this season, as is also the case for United, who flunked out of the FA Cup on penalties against Fulham on Sunday.

    La Real are also in the Copa del Rey semi-finals but a 1-0 home defeat by Real Madrid in the first leg leaves them in a tough spot before the return in April.

    With the Europa League final taking place at the home of their bitter rivals Athletic Bilbao, Alguacil’s side have all the stimulus they need.

    “It motivates Athletic for sure, and us too,” said club spokesman Xabi Prieto at the group stage draw in August.

    Luka Sucic and Spain’s Euro 2024 final hero Mikel Oyarzabal should return after knocks to face Manchester United.

    Live-wire winger Takefusa Kubo missed the defeat at Barcelona through suspension and will be fresh for Thursday’s clash.

    After Aritz Elustondo’s early red card against Barcelona, Alguacil said he made decisions with the Man United Europa League tie in mind, including taking off key midfielder Martin Zubimendi at half-time, as he was suffering some discomfort.

    “I thought about minimising the risks and about Thursday’s game, knowing that it was very difficult to get anything positive (against Barca),” explained Alguacil.

    Real Sociedad failed to take a single shot to Barca’s 33 as they conserved energy by sitting deep, with the United match the priority.

    – ‘Make them run’ –

    Manchester United are unbeaten in the Europa League this season but the visit to the Reale Arena is arguably their toughest test in the competition yet.

    On top of United’s poor form, with two wins in their last six games, the under-pressure Amorim has a spate of injury worries to contend with.

    Exciting teenage striker Chido Obi is also ineligible for the Europa League, with the low-on-confidence Rasmus Hojlund set to start despite not scoring in his last 18 matches.

    “It’s going to be a tough one, a Spanish team that plays brilliant football, very, very good players up front, very (high) quality coming out from the back,” said United playmaker Bruno Fernandes.

    “We need to be fresh to run again because they will make us run, and then when we have the ball, we have to make them run, too.”

    Success in the Europa League also seems the only possible pathway to European football next season for Manchester United, 14th in the Premier League.

    Defeat would rack up the tension ahead of a planned protest on Sunday against the Glazer family, who are still the club’s majority owners.

    “The club is slowly dying before our eyes, on and off the pitch, and the blame lies squarely at the current ownership model,” said Steve Crompton, a spokesman for fan group The 1958.

    “The club is facing financial armageddon. Debt is the road to ruin.

    “Sir Matt Busby would be turning in his grave at the current plight of one of the world’s greatest football institutions which is being brought to its knees and in many ways becoming a laughing stock.”

  • Japan women’s football pioneer Nagasato retires

    Japan women’s football pioneer Nagasato retires

    Women’s World Cup winner Yuki Nagasato, who made history with a brief spell playing for a men’s team, said she had given “every last drop” as the Japanese striker announced her retirement from football.

    The 37-year-old, part of the Japan team that lifted the World Cup in 2011, brought the curtain down on a 23-year career that saw her play in Germany, England, the United States, Australia and her home country.

    That included a loan stint in 2020 with her brother’s team Hayabusa Eleven, an amateur men’s side playing in a regional league in Japan.

    Nagasato said at the time the move was inspired by former US national team star Megan Rapinoe’s fight for equality, explaining that she “wanted to send a message to society”.

    Nagasato played four games for the team, scoring no goals.

    She said on social media that she was retiring with “a clear and peaceful mind”.

    “I have decided to close this chapter of my career,” she wrote.

    “I have given it my all and the final flame burned out — every last drop.”

    Nagasato made 132 appearances for Japan, scoring 58 goals to become her country’s second-highest goalscorer behind Homare Sawa.

    She won an Olympic silver medal with Japan in 2012 and the Champions League with German side Turbine Potsdam in 2010.

    She also played in Europe for Chelsea, Wolfsburg and Frankfurt, before moving to the US in 2017.

  • Millwall goalie faces extended ban for horror tackle on Mateta

    Millwall goalie faces extended ban for horror tackle on Mateta

    The Football Association has submitted an appeal to extend Millwall goalkeeper Liam Roberts’ three-match suspension following his reckless tackle on Crystal Palace’s Jean-Philippe Mateta.

    Roberts was sent off in the sixth minute of Millwall’s FA Cup defeat at Selhurst Park for serious foul play. His challenge left Mateta with a severe laceration that required 25 stitches.

    The FA submitted the appeal on Tuesday, arguing that the standard punishment is insufficient given the severity of the incident. Roberts has until Thursday to respond.

    A statement from the FA read: “The FA has submitted a claim seeking to increase Liam Roberts’ sanction following his sending off in the FA Cup tie between Millwall and Crystal Palace on Saturday, 1 March.

    The goalkeeper was sent off for serious foul play around the 6th minute. The FA claims that in the circumstances, the standard punishment for this offence is clearly insufficient.

    Liam Roberts has until Thursday, 6 March, to provide a response.”*

    If the claim is upheld, a Regulatory Commission will review the case and determine whether Roberts’ suspension should be extended.

    Mateta’s Injury and Reactions

    The challenge saw Roberts rushing out of his penalty area and colliding with Mateta, making contact with the striker’s head. The Frenchman received 10 minutes of on-field medical attention before being stretchered off wearing a neck brace and taken to the hospital. He has since been discharged.

    The severity of the tackle has drawn widespread criticism. Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish called it “the most reckless I’ve ever seen,” emphasizing that it endangered Mateta’s life.

    Former Premier League referee Dermot Gallagher also suggested that the FA may extend Roberts’ ban due to the dangerous nature of the challenge.

    Meanwhile, as Mateta was being treated on the pitch, some Millwall fans chanted, “Let him die, let him die.” The incident has been widely condemned, but the club is expected to avoid punishment as the chants do not violate existing regulations.

    In Millwall’s first match following the controversy, fans at The Den applauded in the eighth minute—the moment Roberts was sent off in Saturday’s game.

    FA Investigates Homophobic Chants

    The FA has also launched an investigation into potentially homophobic chants directed at Ben Chilwell, who is on loan at Crystal Palace from Chelsea. However, Millwall is not expected to face punishment for these chants unless they are found to have breached regulations.

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  • ‘I wasn’t trying to be disrespectful’ – Carragher speaks on AFCON controversy

    ‘I wasn’t trying to be disrespectful’ – Carragher speaks on AFCON controversy

    Former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher has clarified his remarks on the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON), insisting he never intended to be “ignorant or disrespectful” after his comments sparked backlash from African football legends.

    Speaking on Sky Sports after Liverpool’s 2-0 win over Manchester City, Carragher claimed that Mohamed Salah’s biggest challenge in the Ballon d’Or race was Egypt’s lack of global success and the lower recognition of AFCON.

    His remarks drew immediate criticism from African football icons, including Ahmed Elmohamady, Jay-Jay Okocha, John Mikel Obi, Emmanuel Adebayor, and Austin Eguavoen.

    Addressing the controversy on a broadcast after Tuesday’s Champions League matches, Carragher admitted that his wording was “clumsy” when he suggested Salah’s chances of winning the Ballon d’Or were slim because he was not competing in a “major tournament.”

    Clarifying his stance, Carragher explained that his point was based on historical Ballon d’Or voting patterns rather than a personal view on AFCON’s significance.

    “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 said.

    “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 Asian Games and Gold Cup don’t resonate with the people who vote for the award,” he explained.

    He acknowledged that the award has traditionally favored players excelling in European tournaments but reiterated his respect for African football.

  • Alcaraz chases third straight Indian Wells title

    Alcaraz chases third straight Indian Wells title

    Carlos Alcaraz will take a softly-softly approach as he vies to become just the third man to win three straight titles at Indian Wells, where he could find a member of that exclusive club, Novak Djokovic, standing in his way in the quarter-finals.

    “I will try not to think about it,” Alcaraz said of his bid to match the treble feat achieved by Djokovic in 2014, 2015 and 2016 and Roger Federer in 2004, ’05 and ’06.

    “I will try just to enjoy it,” Alcaraz told reporters Tuesday as he prepped for the elite ATP Masters 1000 tournament that starts Wednesday alongside a WTA 1000 tournament.

    “This tournament, every time that I come here, I enjoy so much practicing, playing. Everything for me here is so easy.

    “So I will try not to think about it, just flow and see how it’s going to be, the tournament. But it is something that for me would be great to achieve.”

    Alcaraz, coming off a quarter-final defeat in the Qatar Open, is seeded second behind Germany’s Alexander Zverev, who finished runner-up at the Australian Open to Italian world number one Jannik Sinner.

    Sinner last month accepted a belated three-month ban after testing positive a year ago for traces of banned Clostebol.

    The case initially saw him exonerated when authorities accepted his explanation that the drug entered his system when a physiotherapist using it to treat a wound gave him a massage.

    The World Anti-Doping Agency appealed, the case dragging on through Sinner’s triumph at the Australian Open this year.

    Alcaraz said Sinner’s absence doesn’t change his approach “at all”.

    “I mean, Jannik’s not playing, but there are a lot of the best players in the world (that) are playing here,” he said. “I think the draw is really open.

    “I’m just focused on my things, on myself, and I try to play good tennis here.”

    The Spaniard could face a formidable quarter-final test in Djokovic, who owns five Indian Wells titles overall.

    Serbian superstar Djokovic leads their career head-to-head 5-3, including a quarter-final triumph in four sets at the Australian Open.

    All 32 seeded players receive a first-round bye, and Djokovic could face a tricky second-round opener against Nick Kyrgios.

    The Australian, who fell to Djokovic in the 2022 Wimbledon final, will open against a qualifier.

    Top-seeded Zverev is chasing a first Indian Wells title while third-seeded American Taylor Fritz lifted the trophy in the California desert in 2022.

    Norway’s Casper Ruud is seeded fourth and Russian Daniil Medvedev — runner-up to Alcaraz the past two years — is seeded fifth.

    The first-round spotlight will be on wild card Joao Fonseca, the 18-year-old Brazilian who upset Andre Rublev at the Australian Open and lifted his first ATP title in Buenos Aires in February.

    Fonseca will open his campaign against Britain’s Jacob Fearnley, who has climbed from outside the top 500 in he world rankings this time last year to 81st.