Category: Sports

  • World champion Dubois out of Parker fight with illness

    World champion Dubois out of Parker fight with illness

    Heavyweight Daniel Dubois’ world-title defence against Joseph Parker on Saturday is off after the champion fell ill two days before the fight.

    The Briton was being medically evaluated in Saudi Arabia and missed Thursday’s news conference, before being withdrawn later in the evening.

    Dubois, 27, was scheduled to make a second defence of his IBF title. There is no information on the nature of his illness.

    New Zealand’s Parker, 33, will instead fight Congolese Martin Bakole who has been drafted in as late-replacement.

    “If he is ill, I hope he gets better soon and I’m looking forward to Saturday and having a great show,” Parker said before learning of the replacement.

    Dubois has won 22 pro fights with two defeats. He won the ‘interim’ IBF title against Filip Hrgovic and was elevated to world champion when Oleksandr Usyk vacated the belt.

    The Londoner made a first defence of his belt by stopping Anthony Joshua in five rounds at Wembley Stadium in September.

    Parker has a record of 35 wins and three defeats. He held the WBO heavyweight title between 2015 and 2017.

    The highly-rated 33-year-old Bakole, who is based in Scotland, has lost once in 22 bouts with 16 knockouts.

    The contest is the chief support to the undisputed light-heavyweight fight between champion Artur Beterbiev and Dmitry Bivol.

    Also on the card, Briton Hamzah Sheeraz challenges Carlos Adames for the WBC middleweight title.

    Credible replacement but a huge blow for Dubois – analysis

    Parker attended Thursday’s news conference without Dubois

    Well, they do say expect the unexpected in heavyweight boxing.

    Rumours of Dubois’ illness began to circulate at 17:10 GMT. Warren did not even reference Dubois at an undercard news conference just after 18:00.

    But Dubois was a no-show an hour later at the main news conference. Warren said he was being assessed by doctors, while a deflated Parker insisted he would remain on the card.

    To sum up the craziness, as Parker left the stage he told BBC Radio 5 live he had heard no update on Dubois’ withdrawal and no other opponents had been mentioned.

    Minutes later, Bakole was being announced on social media as the replacement.

    Bakole is a highly credible opponent and the winner will likely get their title shot at some point – it’s a decent fight. But it’s not a world-title fight. For British interest, and Dubois especially, it is thoroughly disappointing.

    Illnesses happen and fighters pull out, but for it to happen so close to fight night is rare. In fact, it’s the second withdrawal in fight week of what was billed as the greatest card in the history of the sport.

    Of course, with the depth of this card, there is plenty still to look forward to – most notable is Beterbiev-Bivol II, two of the world’s greatest pound-for-

  • ‘They had biggest moment of their careers stolen’ – what next for Spain?

    ‘They had biggest moment of their careers stolen’ – what next for Spain?

    A total of 550 days after a kiss that shook Spanish and global football, Luis Rubiales has been found guilty of sexual assault.

    On Thursday, Spain’s High Court found that the former president of the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) kissed Jenni Hermoso without consent during the medal ceremony after Spain won the Women’s World Cup in August 2023.

    Rubiales, who has always maintained the kiss was consensual, was fined €10,800 (£8,942). He was also banned from going within a 200m radius of Hermoso and from communicating with her for one year.

    Rubiales was acquitted of coercion – for allegedly trying to pressure Hermoso into saying publicly that the kiss was consensual.

    “Such a conviction seemed unimaginable until four or five years ago,” Spanish football journalist Guillem Balague told the BBC Euro League’s podcast.

    “For that we must thank Jenni and her team-mates, who got the biggest sporting moment of their careers stolen from them.

    “Something good came out of that sad moment.”

    TodayPriceNG Sport explores the key issues in one of the darkest chapters in the history of women’s sport.

    How did we get here?

    Rubiales kissing one of the biggest stars in women’s football and the fallout that followed was the culmination of years of discontent behind the scenes.

    Jorge Vilda, Spain’s coach at the World Cup, was only the second person to manage La Roja since 1988.

    His predecessor, Ignacio Quereda, was in post for nearly 27 years and was sacked only when his entire squad called for his dismissal after their poor performance at the 2015 World Cup. Several players had reportedly refused to play for the national team while he was in charge.

    In September 2022, less than a year before their World Cup win, Spain’s players led a ‘revolt’.

    The RFEF released a statement stating 15 players had submitted identical emails saying they would not play for Vilda unless “significant” concerns over their “emotional state” and “health” were addressed.

    ‘Las 15’ – as the players became known – denied claims they had asked for Vilda to be sacked, but tension followed amid reports of concern over training methods and inadequate game preparation.

    Only three of ‘Las 15’ were in the Spain squad for the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.

    Spain defied the odds to win the competition for the first time in their history – but then came the kiss.

    ‘Society is polarised – and trial reflected that’

    ‘It’s over’ – protests in support of Hermoso and against Rubiales took place in Spain

    David Menayo Ramos, a journalist at Marca, said the trial was broadcast on YouTube, reflecting what a huge moment it was in Spanish society.

    “The verdict is something that everyone is waiting for,” he told BBC Sport before the verdict was announced.

    “Society is polarised and the trial is a reflection of that.”

    It was an incident that went beyond football, with BBC News journalist Guy Hedgecoe describing it as “Spain’s ‘me too’ movement”.

    The phrase ‘se acabo’ – ‘it’s over’ – became the rallying call in Spain in the hours and days after the incident.

    Protests were held across the country. Fifa, the United Nations and countless players and clubs condemned Rubiales’ behaviour. And 81 one Spain players – including all 23 World Cup winners – said they would not play for the team again while Rubiales remained in charge.

    Rubiales initially said he would not resign, but stepped down three weeks after the incident. It was announced in May 2024 he would stand trial, and proceedings began in early February.

    “You can find flaws in the judgement, flaws that have left people with a bitter-sweet taste,” Balague said.

    “It still feels like those in power can get away with things.”

    ‘Players went through an ordeal’

    In her testimony earlier this month, Hermoso said the incident had “stained one of the happiest days of my life”.

    Speaking shortly before the verdict was announced, England and Chelsea defender Lucy Bronze, who played in the 2023 World Cup final, praised the bravery of Hermoso and her Spain team-mates.

    “I am good friends with a lot of the players involved around it. It’s been incredible that these players have had to go through that,” Bronze said during an England news conference.

    “Not only winning the World Cup and the media on the outside of it, but they are in the court case and speaking out. It’s incredibly brave of all the individuals and the team collectively.

    “They are fighting for change, not just in that court case but in their federation. I have been there last season at Barcelona – watching players go through the ordeal after the World Cup was challenging.

    “They are incredible people and unbelievable players as well. We stand by the Spanish players and we wish them the best.”

    Spain captain Irene Paredes, who testified in support of Hermoso, said she respected the court’s ruling, adding: “What I find somehow striking and strange is that there is no conviction for coercion”.

    Paredes added that this opinion reflected the views of the Spain locker room.

    What next for Rubiales?

    Rubiales has said he will appeal against the verdict.

    The court said prosecutors had requested a custodial sentence of two and a half years for Rubiales – one year for the kiss and 18 months for coercion.

    “He is not going to prison but he has always insisted he did nothing wrong,” Hedgecoe added.

    “During the trial he said maybe he got a little bit carried away during the medal ceremony and he wasn’t behaving in the way he should have done as an institutional figure, but he said there is a big difference between that and committing a crime.”

    Spain play Belgium in Valencia on Friday (kick-off 17:45 GMT) in their Women’s Nations League opener.

    England then host Spain at Wembley on Wednesday, 26 February (kick-off 20:00 GMT) as the sides meet for the first time since the 2023 World Cup final.

  • Root on a mission to bring more to England’s pot

    Root on a mission to bring more to England’s pot

    Amid troubled times we look to familiar comforts – that old blanket, your favourite food, Joe Root.

    England begin their Champions Trophy campaign against Australia on Saturday in a sticky spot, having lost four 50-over series in a row. They can at least take something from the fact their most successful batter is with them.

    “I never retired,” says Root, who returned for his first one-day internationals since the 2023 World Cup in India earlier this month.

    “I have never said I don’t want to play the format.”

    Root, sitting in England’s team hotel in Lahore, laughs when asked whether there was a crucial chat with captain Jos Buttler or coach Brendon McCullum to set his return in stone.

    “I don’t think there needs to be either really,” Root says. “I don’t think any player has a divine right for selection.”

    The Champions Trophy is one piece of silverware missing from England’s trophy cabinet. It also marks the start of the journey to the 2027 World Cup in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia.

    Root has said previously he would like to be involved in that tournament, which is expected to conclude a month before his 37th birthday. There, should they qualify, England will attempt to win back the trophy they won in 2019 but gave up disappointingly in 2023.

    “Obviously you’ve got perform, you’ve got to consistently go and do your job and offer something to the team and make sure you’re making it a better team, not holding it back,” Root says.

    “I’ve never been one to look too far ahead and try and say ‘I want to play until here or to then’. You’ve got to earn the right and you’ve got to keep putting into the pot.”

    To even consider he could ever hold England back sums up Root’s modesty.

    Whether as young prankster, captain or back-in-the-ranks experienced pro, no batter has put more runs into England’s pot across all formats than the Yorkshireman.

    Yet even Root has been unable to escape the issues that have dogged England’s batting in one-day internationals since their win in 2019.

    Starved of opportunity, he averages 29.92 across the five and a half years and has not made a century.

    At the World Cup in India he made three fifties but, like his team-mates, could not prevent England’s spiral.

    “Anyone that says at any stage of their career ‘I have got no regrets’, ‘I wouldn’t change anything’, I think they are lying,” says Root, who also made double figures in all three innings in India this month but returned a highest score of 69.

    “You would change certain things, but in terms of how I approach this tournament, no, not really. You know what’s happened has happened.”

    Root was speaking shortly after England trained for the first time since arriving in Lahore.

    He had two turns in the nets before he and fellow batter Harry Brook threw balls to each other on a strip of astroturf away from the rest of England’s group.

    It is why Root disagrees so strongly with the suggestion England did not train hard enough in India – claims made by his former international team-mate Kevin Pietersen.

    “They don’t come to training,” Root says. “They don’t see what we do and how we operate.”

    But Root would not argue that England have struggled to find rhythm in their 50-over batting.

    If Tests are about scoring as many runs as possible and T20s scoring as quickly as possible, ODIs sit somewhere in between.

    Supporters encourage Root to ‘just play like Joe Root’ in a bid to regain his top form. He would say it is not quite as simple.

    “I can’t think of any two innings that I have played that have been exactly the same,” he says.

    “I think the art of batting is assessing the conditions in front of you, managing the situation that you’re presented with and consistently making good decisions under pressure.”

    Root’s last ODI century came during a group-stage win over West Indies in the 2019 World Cup.

    That day Eoin Morgan went in the back, Jason Roy twinged a hamstring, Chris Woakes batted at number three and England still won by eight wickets with 16.5 overs to spare.

    Things have changed since.

    McCullum and Buttler are leading the new era while attempting to follow on from arguably England’s greatest cricketing side. It was never going to be easy.

    To some that constant comparison would weigh heavy.

    “I wouldn’t say it’s a negative,” Root, one of five surviving World Cup winners in this squad, says.

    “That team will have inspired a lot of this team. There’s a number of guys in this squad and in and around it that would have still been in school finishing their GCSEs or starting out on their journey as professional cricketers.”

    The reduction of international ODIs – Root played 89 matches between the 2015 and 2019 World Cups but only 31 matches since – and the downgrading of England’s domestic competition continues to push against their pursuit to return to the top.

    Root called for players to be given more regular opportunities in 2023 and while little has changed, he still thinks England can come again.

    “It’s just going to take something different,” he says.

    “There isn’t that opportunity to do that [play as regularly] nowadays but it doesn’t mean we can’t be as successful as that team.

    “There’s just different challenges that we’re going to have to overcome.

    “Can we find a way to speed that process up by having good, smart conversations and using our experience and share them so that when you get to the crunch moments within big games you get the team across the line?

    “I think we’ve got the right players that are able to do that and we’ve certainly got the talent.”

  • Governors pledge collaboration with legislature on reforms, policy implementations

    The Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) has reaffirmed its commitment to collaborating with state Houses of Assembly to advance governance reforms and ensure effective policy implementation at the sub-national level.

    The forum disclosed this in a communique signed by its chairman, Gov. AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq of Kwara, on Thursday, after its meeting on Wednesday night.

    AbdulRazaq said the forum engaged with the Conference of Speakers of State Legislatures of Nigeria (COSLON) to discuss key issues.

    This, he said, included strengthening synergy between COSLON and the NGF and ensuring subnational perspectives were well represented in the ongoing constitutional review process.

    “COLSON also informed the forum of their partnership with Development Finance Institution to digitise the state houses of assembly.

    “This is aimed at enhancing legislative efficiency and transparency.”

    He also said the governors engaged with the U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria, Richard Mills Jr.

    AbdulRazaq said that Mills shared his vision for a renewed and dynamic partnership between Nigeria and the U.S.

    He noted that while highlighting a shift from a donor-recipient model to one of mutual collaboration, Mills underscored the importance of fostering economic opportunities for Nigerians.

    “The ambassador outlined four key priorities that would guide U.S. engagement with Nigeria, including enhancing trade and improving the business environment to attract investments and drive economic growth.

    “Promoting transparency and accountability in governance to strengthen institutions and supporting subnational governments to bolster development at the state level.

    Related News
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    Champions League Round of 16 draw: Date, start time, qualified teams, fixtures

    “Also establishing sustainable, Nigeria-led health programmes to ensure long-term impact and resilience.

    “The governors welcomed the renewed approach and emphasised the critical role of states in driving economic and social development.

    “The forum looked forward to deepening cooperation with the U.S. on those shared priorities,” AbdulRazaq stated.

    He said the forum also received a briefing from the Minister of Women Affairs on the Nigeria For Women Project (NFWP) Scale-Up, expanding nationwide from its initial six-state implementation.

    The project aimed to support women’s economic empowerment through Women Affinity Groups, livelihood grants, and capacity-building initiatives, contributing to the goal of lifting 100 million Nigerians out of poverty. (NAN)

  • Champions League Round of 16 draw: Date, time, qualified teams, fixtures

    Champions League Round of 16 draw: Date, time, qualified teams, fixtures

    The inaugural Champions League knockout play-offs have concluded, setting the stage for the much-anticipated round of 16 draw.

    When is the Champions League Round of 16 Draw?

    The draw will take place on Friday, February 21, at 11 AM (UK time); 12PM (Nigeria time).

    Teams Qualified for the Round of 16

    The top eight teams from the league phase automatically secured their spots in the round of 16. These teams are:

    Liverpool
    Barcelona
    Arsenal
    Inter Milan
    Atletico Madrid
    Bayer Leverkusen
    Lille
    Aston Villa

    They will be joined by the eight winners from the knockout play-offs:

    Bayern Munich
    Benfica
    Club Brugge
    Feyenoord
    Borussia Dortmund
    Paris Saint-Germain (PSG)
    Real Madrid
    PSV Eindhoven
    How Does the Last-16 Draw Work?

    The draw follows a structured bracket system, with potential opponents for the last 16, quarter-finals, and semi-finals pre-determined based on teams’ final league positions.

    The top eight clubs are grouped into four seeded pairs according to their league phase rankings:

    1st vs 2nd
    3rd vs 4th
    5th vs 6th
    7th vs 8th

    Each seeded pair is drawn against one of the knockout play-off winners. Four bowls will be used in the draw:

    One for seeded teams
    One for knockout play-off winners
    Two for bracket allocation

    Teams will be placed into the bracket systematically, ensuring a balanced knockout phase.

    Who Could British Teams Face in the Last 16?
    Liverpool (1st seed) vs PSG (15th) or Benfica (16th)
    Arsenal (3rd seed) vs PSV (14th) or Feyenoord (19th)
    Aston Villa (8th seed) vs Borussia Dortmund (10th) or Club Brugge (24th)
    Champions League Knockout Play-Off Results

    First Legs (February 11-12):

    Brest 0-3 PSG
    Juventus 2-1 PSV Eindhoven
    Man City 2-3 Real Madrid
    Sporting Lisbon 0-3 Borussia Dortmund
    Club Brugge 2-1 Atalanta
    Celtic 1-2 Bayern Munich
    Feyenoord 1-0 AC Milan
    Monaco 0-1 Benfica

    Second Legs (February 18-19)

    AC Milan 1-1 Feyenoord (agg 1-2)
    Atalanta 1-3 Club Brugge (agg 2-5)
    Bayern Munich 1-1 Celtic (agg 3-2)
    Benfica 3-3 Monaco (agg 4-3)
    Borussia Dortmund 0-0 Sporting Lisbon (agg 3-0)
    PSG 7-0 Brest (agg 10-0)
    PSV Eindhoven 3-1 Juventus (agg 4-3)
    Real Madrid 3-1 Man City (agg 6-3)
    Champions League Knockout Stage Schedule
    Round of 16: March 4/5 & March 11/12
    Quarter-finals: April 8/9 & April 15/16
    Semi-finals: April 29/30 & May 6/7
    Final: May 31 (Allianz Arena, Munich)

    With the draw set to determine the next phase of the competition, excitement is building as teams prepare for the road to the Champions League final.

  • Latham and Young tons help New Zealand hammer Pakistan

    Latham and Young tons help New Zealand hammer Pakistan

    ICC Champions Trophy Group A, Karachi

    New Zealand 320-5 (50 overs): Latham 118* (104), Young 107 (113); Naseem 2-63

    Pakistan 260 (47.2 overs): Khushdil 69 (49), Babar 64 (90); O’Rourke 3-47

    New Zealand won by 60 runs

    Scorecard

    Centuries from Tom Latham and Will Young set New Zealand on their way to a convincing 60-run win over hosts Pakistan in the opening game of the Champions Trophy.

    The Black Caps were put in to bat in Karachi and, despite losing three early wickets, kept their composure in a superbly-paced innings to post 320-5.

    Opener Young, only playing because of an injury to Rachin Ravindra, set the tone on his way to a 107-ball century, and put on 118 with Latham for the fourth wicket.

    Test skipper Latham pushed on to complete his own hundred from 95 balls and after sharing a stand of 125 with Glenn Phillips (61 off 39 balls), eventually finished unbeaten on 118 from 104 balls.

    Pakistan’s chase only really kicked into gear once the game was lost.

    After a painfully slow start, Phillips’ stunning one-handed catch at backward point to dismiss Muhammad Rizwan left them 22-2 at the end of the powerplay.

    The required rate was just shy of 10 an over by the time Salman Ali Agha came in and showed some intent, but his 42 from 28 balls only kept it at that mark – and once he was dismissed it soon began to rise again.

    Babar Azam, who had been kept quiet early in his innings, briefly tried to pick up where Agha left off but fell to Mitchell Santner for 64 before Khushdil Shah gave the locals a glimmer of hope with a counter-attacking 69 from 49.

    He holed out off Will O’Rourke, who claimed 3-47, and the defending champions were bowled out for 260 in the 48th over.

    Latham scores New Zealand’s second century

    Twin tons help Black Caps find perfect tempo

    Young slams first century in Champions Trophy

    Another global tournament is upon us and, once again, New Zealand provided a reminder they are not to be underestimated.

    It has been 29 long years since Pakistan last hosted an ICC event but while it was a moment to savour and enjoy, it was the Black Caps left celebrating at the end – victory ensured with a minimum of fuss.

    They lost the toss, were put in and quickly lost three of their top four – including talisman Kane Williamson, caught behind after a beauty from Naseem Shah, for one – but there was no sense of panic.

    Young just continued to bat as he had from the start, calmly rotating the strike and punishing the bad balls in a knock that screamed sensible cricket.

    There was more attacking intent from Latham late in the innings but through the middle overs, he was happy to follow Young’s lead.

    This was not the T20 approach stretched over 50 overs as seems to have become the strategy employed by others but an almost old-fashioned ODI innings based around steady scoring through the middle overs, wickets in hand and a barnstorming final 10 overs.

    Young had reached his fourth ODI hundred and departed before the late onslaught but the Black Caps could hardly have planned for a better situation than Phillips striding to the crease with 12.4 overs remaining.

    While Latham moved through the gears to reach his eighth ODI ton, Phillips plundered three fours and four sixes in a typically destructive knock that capped a wonderfully paced New Zealand innings.

    By contrast, Pakistan failed to find the required balance in the chase as they started at a glacial pace and, ultimately, left themselves too much to do.

    Given the ease in which their lower order managed to clear the ropes as the innings progressed, Rizwan’s side will be ruing that slow start with their semi-final hopes already hanging by a thread.

    ‘Superman does it again!’ – Phillips makes outstanding catch

    ‘Score we got was well above par’ – reaction

    Pakistan captain Mohammad Rizwan: “They put a good target on the board – we didn’t expect 320.

    “The partnerships were crucial and we tried our best, but they played very smartly.

    “Every match is important for us. If you look at us being defending champions that’s extra pressure on us.”

    Player of the match, New Zealand’s Tom Latham: “Will Young played fantastically well and the longer we batted together, we went through the gears and increased the run-rate.

    “With these types of surfaces and boundaries you can make hay at the back end. Glenn Phillips played an exceptional hand and continued the momentum and the score we got was well above par.”

    When do Pakistan and New Zealand next play?

    Pakistan face India in their next game in Dubai on Sunday knowing that another defeat would likely end their chances of progressing from the group.

    Meanwhile, New Zealand are back in action on Monday when they take on Bangladesh in Rawalpindi.

    Who’s playing in Thursday’s Champions Trophy match?

    Two-time winners India begin their campaign against Bangladesh on Thursday.

    The Group A match will take place in Dubai after India told the International Cricket Council that they would not travel to Pakistan for the tournament amid ongoing political tensions between the two countries.

    Group B gets under way with South Africa taking on Afghanistan on Friday before England and Australia renew rivalries on Saturday.

  • Gatland ‘weighed down’ by criticism before Wales exit

    Gatland ‘weighed down’ by criticism before Wales exit

    Warren Gatland says he left his role as Wales head coach after being “weighed down” by criticism – including from his former players.

    Gatland left his role last week following a 22-15 Six Nations defeat in Italy, a result which extended Wales’ record losing streak to 14 Tests and saw them drop to an all-time low of 12th in rugby’s world rankings.

    Gatland, 61, says he felt before the game in Rome that defeat could bring an end to his second spell as Wales head coach if his side lost.

    “It was always a must-win game,” Gatland said in an interview with the Daily Telegraph., external

    “The Friday or the Saturday before the game, I made sort of a decision without thinking too much about it.

    “If we didn’t win that game, then I’d have to seriously consider my position. It would be the best time and the best thing for everyone to walk away.”

    Gatland was contracted with Wales until the 2027 World Cup, but left his post by “mutual consent” three days after defeat to Italy, which followed a humbling in France on the opening weekend of the Six Nations.

    Welsh Rugby Union chief executive Abi Tierney said both parties had agreed an immediate change was “in the best interests” of the Wales squad, with Cardiff head coach Matt Sherratt quickly installed as Gatland’s temporary replacement for the remainder of the Six Nations.

  • ‘A decade of mismanagement’ – Man Utd reveal revenue drop

    ‘A decade of mismanagement’ – Man Utd reveal revenue drop

    A Manchester United supporters’ group says fans must not “pay the price” for the club’s financial “mismanagement” after the Red Devils announced revenues decreased by 12% in the last financial quarter.

    The club announced on Wednesday that revenues had dropped to £198.7m for the final three months of 2024, down from £225.8m for the same period 12 months previously.

    Overall, the club made an operating profit of £3.1m – down from £27.5m over the same period in 2023 – after spending £14.5m on the sackings of Erik ten Hag and his coaching staff, including the £4.1m cost of hiring and then dismissing former sporting directorDan Ash worth within five months.

    The announcement comes against a backdrop of the club making over 200 redundancies and raising matchday ticket prices to £66 per game, with no concessions for children or pensioners.

    United wrote to supporters in January to say “difficult” decisions would need to be taken as the club was “close” to breaching the Premier League’s profit and sustainability rules.

    The club did not deny reports that it is seeking to make further redundancies when approached by BBC Sport earlier this month.

    It is expected by United that the restructuring decisions will lead to savings of between £30m and £40m.

    “Fans should not pay the price for a problem that starts with our crippling debt interest payments and is exacerbated by a decade or more of mismanagement,” said Manchester United Supporters’ Trust in a statement.

    “It’s time to freeze ticket prices and allow everyone – players, management, owners and fans – to get behind United and restore this club to where it belongs.”

    Manchester United’s second quarter results

    Revenues down 12%, from £225.8m to £198.7m

    Broadcast revenue down 42%, from £106.4m to £61.6m

    Operating profit down 88.7%, from £27.5m to £3.1m

    Commercial revenue up 18.5%, from £71.8m to £85.1m

    £14.5m spent on sacking of Erik ten Hag and his coaching staff, including £4.1m on hiring then firing of former director Dan Ashworth

    Club debt up from £506.6m to £515.7m

    They owe £414m on transfer fees to other clubs

    ‘Winning Europa League has to be the focus’ – analysis

    Football finance expert Kieran Maguire pointed out that United have now paid more than £1bn in interest repayments on the debt used to finance the 2005 Glazer family takeover.

    He said the FA Cup win last season, which resulted in Europa League football, has “saved their bacon”, and that winning the Europa League this season “should be the focus” to bring Champions League football back to Old Trafford.

    Maguire said: “A good season in the Champions League can be worth far in excess of £100m. By the time you combine gate receipts, sponsor bonuses and the prize money available, the numbers involved are eye-watering.

    “Europa League should be the focus. Winning that competition will give them far more flexibility in 2025-26.”

    Background – United’s debt explained

    The main driver of United’s decrease in revenues was the drop in broadcast revenues.

    The club said this was down to United’s men’s first team playing in the Europa League compared to the Champions League in the 2023-24 season.

    Now led by Ruben Amorim, United sit a lowly 15th in the Premier League table but are through to the Europa League knockout stages, as well as the fifth round of the FA Cup.

    Overall, the club made a quarterly operating profit of £3.1m, which was down from £27.5m over the same period in 2023, but United said club debt increased from £506.6m to £515.7m because of “unfavourable” exchange rate changes.

    Included in the results is a £14.5m ‘exceptional item’ figure, made up of the £10.4m spent on sacking Ten Hag and his coaching staff in October and £4.1m for the departure of Ashworth in December.

    Commercial revenue was up 18.5% from £71.8m to £85.1m, as a result of the front-of-shirt partnership with Snapdragon.

    “We recognise the challenges in improving our men’s team’s league position and we are all working hard, collectively, to achieve that,” said Omar Berrada, United’s chief executive officer.

    Berrada said the club’s redevelopment of the training ground was “on track”.

    The £11m cost of appointing new head coach Amorim and his staff is not specifically mentioned in United’s latest financial results.

    United sources say that cost is being spread over their two-and-a-half-year contracts.

    The club paid the sum to activate Amorim’s release clause at Portuguese outfit Sporting while he was under contract and with the 2024-25 season under way.

    Sir Jim Ratcliffe, United’s co-owner, has a 28.94% stake in the club through his Ineos group.

    The British billionaire has sought a number of cost-cutting measures in order to help the club to comply with profit and sustainability rules.

    Under profit and sustainability rules (PSR), clubs can record a maximum loss of £105m over a three-year reporting period.

    United’s losses over the past five years total over £370m, but some costs – such as infrastructure costs, youth development and community spending – do not count towards PSR calculations.

    Since Ratcliffe’s investment was announced in December 2023, United have made about 250 staff redundant.

    The club made two men’s team signings in the January transfer window, with Patrick Dorgu arriving from Lecce and Ayden Heaven joining from Arsenal.

    Marcus Rashford, Antony and Tyrell Malacia all left United on loan.

    However, transfer activity in January is not included in the latest financial results as it falls outside the quarterly timeframe.

  • Venus Williams, 44, given wildcard for Indian Wells

    Venus Williams, 44, given wildcard for Indian Wells

    Former world number one Venus Williams has been given a wildcard for next month’s Indian Wells in what would be her first match for almost a year.

    The 44-year-old has slipped to 974th in the world and has not played a WTA Tour-level match since losing in the first round of the Miami Open last March.

    A seven-time Grand Slam champion, Williams has also not won a Tour-level match since August 2023.

    It will be her 10th appearance at Indian Wells – a tournament she boycotted for 15 years after her younger sister Serena was booed and heckled by fans during her win over Kim Clijsters in the 2001 final.

    The jeers appeared to be in response to Venus withdrawing injured from the semi-final between the siblings.

    Their father, Richard, later accused fans of racial abuse. Serena returned to the tournament in 2015, while Venus played the following year.

    Two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova, 34, has also been handed a wildcard after her announcement earlier this month that she would return to tennis following the birth of her first child in July.

    On the men’s side, Brazil’s 18-year-old rising star Joao Fonseca, who won his first ATP Tour title at the Argentina Open on Sunday, was granted a wildcard along with American 19-year-old Learner Tien, who reached the fourth round of January’s Australian Open.

  • Chelsea eager to land £70m Guehi – Thursday’s gossip

    Chelsea eager to land £70m Guehi – Thursday’s gossip

    Chelsea want to re-sign defender Marc Guehi in the summer, Martin Zubimendi – who turned down Liverpool – could be finally heading to the Premier League, while former Fulham winger Luis Boa Morte could be heading into management in England.

    Chelsea are determined to beat off competition from Premier League rivals to sign Crystal Palace’s £70m-rated England defender Marc Guehi. The 24-year-old joined Palace from Chelsea in 2021. (Mirror), external

    Meanwhile, Chelsea remain convinced they can sign Guehi in the summer despite their failed approach in January, while Ipswich Town’s English striker striker Liam Delap, 22, is also on their radar. (Sun), external

    Liverpool and Manchester City are both interested in Bayer Leverkusen’s right-sided player Jeremie Frimpong, who has a “gentlemen’s agreement” with his German club to listen to offers worth 40m euros (£33.1m). The Netherlands international, 24, was in City’s academy before moving to Celtic in 2019. (Teamtalk), external

    Arsenal are monitoring the situation of 22-year-old French striker Hugo Ekitike and could test Eintracht Frankfurt’s resolve with a bid in the summer. (Metro), external

    Meanwhile, the Gunners are optimistic of signing Real Sociedad and Spain midfielder Martin Zubimendi, 26, who decided to stay with his club rather than join Liverpool last summer. (Teamtalk), external

    Liverpool’s Republic of Ireland goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher, 26, remains a top target for Chelsea this summer, with the Blues prepared to pay up to £40m for the Reds’ second-choice stopper. (Football Insider)

    Barcelona’s 17-year-old Spain winger Lamine Yamal has played down reports of a move to Paris St-Germain – and says he loves Barca. (Mundo Deportivo – in Spanish), external

    Liverpool’s Colombia forward Luis Diaz, 28, wants to sign a new contract – even though his current deal still has two years to run. (TBR Football), external

    Barcelona could turn their attention to signing Diaz, who is a long-term target of the club and would be cheaper than signing Portugal winger Rafael Leao, 25, from AC Milan. (Sport – in Spanish), external

    Al-Ahli could launch a world record bid for Real Madrid’s Brazil forward Vinicius Junior. The Saudi Pro League side, which is the next of the clubs owned by the country’s Public Investment Fund to be allocated a marquee signing, would offer around 350m euros (£290m). (Teamtalk), external

    Leicester City and Crystal Palace are watching Midtjylland and Guinea-Bissau forward Franculino Dju, 20, who came through Benfica’s academy. (Bold – in Danish), external

    Former Fulham, Arsenal and West Ham winger Luis Boa Morte, currently head coach of the Guinea-Bissau national men’s team, is interested in the vacant manager’s job at Blackburn Rovers. (Sun), external