Category: 6. Sports

  • Arsenal 5-0 Leeds (Aug 23, 2025) Game Analysis

    Arsenal 5-0 Leeds (Aug 23, 2025) Game Analysis

    Viktor Gyökeres fired home his first Arsenal goals in a thumping 5-0 Premier League victory over Leeds at the Emirates.

    Jurriën Timber opened the scoring from a corner after 34 minutes before Bukayo Saka doubled the home side’s advantage on the stroke of half-time.

    Gyökeres bounced back from missing a sitter in the opening period to score on his home debut three minutes into the second half and Timber then landed his brace shortly before the hour mark.

    Max Dowman, aged 15 years and 234 days, delivered an impressive second-half cameo from the bench when he became the second youngest player to represent Arsenal, and the teenager capped an eye-catching display by winning a penalty for his side in stoppage time, which Gyökeres duly converted.

    However, on a night of intent from Arsenal — following their unveiling of new signing Eberechi Eze — there were injury scares for both Saka and Martin Odgeaard.

    Odegaard fell on his right shoulder early on and never fully recovered, while Saka went down with an apparent hamstring problem in the second half.

    – Bukayo Saka subbed with apparent injury

    – Dowman makes debut, 2nd-youngest in club history

    – How did Arsenal beat Spurs to Eze, and why do they need him?

    Eze’s £68million transfer from Crystal Palace was confirmed 30 minutes before Saturday’s game and the England international was awarded a euphoric reception when he was presented to the crowd in the moments before kick-off.

    Eze took his seat in the director’s box alongside Arsenal’s managing director Richard Garlick, and watched a largely frustrating first 30 minutes for his new team-mates.

    But just as at Old Trafford six days ago, Arsenal’s breakthrough arrived from their opening corner — Declan Rice was the provider again when his inswinger was met by Timber.

    The Netherlands defender stole in front of Joe Rodon, arched his neck backwards and then got enough purchase on the ball to nestle his header into the bottom corner.

    Arsenal had not been at their best but as the first half drew to a close, they were two to the good.

    Martín Zubimendi won the ball high up the pitch and his pass found Timber, who then rolled in Saka.

    The Arsenal forward wasted no time in unleashing a shot at Lucas Perri and the Leeds goalkeeper was a bystander as the ball flew past his right shoulder and into the net.

    Gyökeres, who scored a remarkable 97 goals in 102 matches for Sporting Lisbon, fluffed a brilliant opportunity to open his Arsenal account in the first half when, unmarked and just eight yards out, he dragged his shot wide.

    But the Sweden international demonstrated why Arsenal splashed the cash on bringing him to the Emirates within three minutes of the second half.

    Viktor Gyökeres opened up his Arsenal account with a brace at The Emirates.

    Catherine Ivill – AMA/Getty Images


    Riccardo Calafiori found Arsenal’s new striker on the near touchline. Seven clinical touches followed as Gyökeres powered into the Leeds penalty area before thrashing a right-footed shot low and hard past Perri.

    After Odegaard was withdrawn in the first half, Saka was then replaced on 54 minutes after he went down nursing his left hamstring.

    Saka missed almost four months of last season following surgery on his other hamstring and he was in obvious discomfort as he walked off.

    A blow to Arsenal, the extent of which is unclear at this stage, but Timber raised the mood again inside the Emirates when he doubled his tally on 56 minutes.

    Leeds failed to deal with Timber’s header and the defender poked home from a matter of yards to land Arsenal’s 33rd goal from a corner since the start of last season — 13 more than any other team.

    Dowman, who became only the third player under the age of 16 to play in the Premier League when he was introduced in the 63rd minute, showed why he is so highly thought of with one mazy run, and two long-range efforts before he was upended by Anton Stach in the penalty area in stoppage time.

    Gyökeres converted the resulting spot-kick to afford Arsenal an early sight of the title summit.

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  • Napoli 2-0 Sassuolo (Aug 23, 2025) Game Analysis

    Napoli 2-0 Sassuolo (Aug 23, 2025) Game Analysis

    Napoli’s former Premier League players lit up Serie A on the opening day of the new season on Saturday.

    Kevin De Bruyne netted in his debut and Scott McTominay scored the opener as Antonio Conte’s team kicked off their Serie A title defence with a comfortable 2-0 win at Serie B champions Sassuolo.

    McTominay joined Napoli from Manchester United last year in a move that was so successful he ended up being named Serie A player of the year.

    Kevin De Bruyne celebrates with teammate Scott McTominay after scoring on his Serie A debut for Napoli.

    Massimo Paolone/LaPresse via AP


    And the 28-year-old picked up where he left off last season by scoring Napoli’s first goal of the new campaign in the 17th minute, peeling away from his marker to head Matteo Politano’s cross from the right into the top near corner.

    McTominay also sent a fierce effort crashing off the crossbar in first-half stoppage time, while Politano hit the post before Napoli doubled its lead in somewhat strange circumstances.

    De Bruyne whipped in a free kick from wide on the left — practically on the touchline — and it went over everyone in the area before bouncing on the ground and going into the far bottom corner.

    The 34-year-old De Bruyne, a two-time Premier League player of the season, joined Napoli in June on a free transfer after 10 years at Manchester City.

    Sassuolo ended the match with 10 men after midfielder Ismaël Koné was sent off following a second yellow card, with 11 minutes remaining.

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  • Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025: Francesca McGhie – the ballerina who became Scotland’s hero

    Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025: Francesca McGhie – the ballerina who became Scotland’s hero

    Rugby was not McGhie’s first love.

    Dancing was her passion, and her talents as a ballet and contemporary dancer earned her a place at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.

    That nimble footwork would serve her well in her ultimate calling as a rugby player, but it was not until 2018 that she took up the game as a 15-year-old.

    She joined Watsonians the following year and helped the club to the Premiership title in 2023.

    She received her first Scotland call-up that same year, announcing herself in the Test arena with a stunning solo try in the victory over Ireland, which led to a nomination for World Rugby’s Breakthrough Player of the Year award.

    McGhie has proved herself to be a player for the big occasion.

    She came up with a last-gasp match-winning try against Ireland in this year’s Six Nations, and her hat-trick against Wales took her international try-scoring record to 13 in 23 games.

    “When you put Fran McGhie in space, my God, what a finisher,” Scotland head coach Bryan Easson told BBC Scotland after Saturday’s win.

    “I’d said to her this morning she’ll get a couple of scores, but I said to her at half-time, ‘come on, that’s not enough’.

    “One-on-one, I don’t think there’s anybody better in the world. She’s a world-class finisher without a doubt.”

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  • Rivalries that have shaped the World Championships: men’s field | News | Tokyo 25

    Rivalries that have shaped the World Championships: men’s field | News | Tokyo 25

    With the World Athletics Championships Tokyo 25 fast approaching, the third installment of this four-part series revisits some of the most captivating head-to-head clashes that have shaped men’s field events over the years.

    Men’s long jump: Powell vs Lewis

    The 1991 World Championships in Tokyo will forever be remembered as the stage where Carl Lewis delivered what many regard as his finest all-around performance in athletics. Just five days before the men’s long jump final, he had stormed to a world record of 9.86 in the 100m, spearheading a US medal sweep. His next target was Bob Beamon’s mythical 8.90m leap from the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City.

    Lewis arrived in Tokyo on a decade-long winning streak of 65 consecutive victories – one of the sport’s longest ever – cementing his reputation as the world’s best long jumper. Yet the man best poised to challenge him was teammate Mike Powell, the Olympic silver medallist in 1988 and the world’s top-ranked jumper in 1990.

    Mike Powell jumps 8.95m to set a world record at the 1991 World Championships in Tokyo (© Getty Images)

    Lewis set the tone immediately, opening with 8.68m to break his championship record, then extending it to a wind-assisted 8.83m in round three. Powell managed 7.85m on his first attempt before improving to 8.54m on his second. His fourth effort looked enormous but was ruled a foul.

    Then came a jump for the ages. Lewis soared 8.91m (2.9m/s), though it was wind-assisted and therefore ineligible for a world record. His celebrations, however, were short-lived. Powell responded with the jump of his life – an 8.95m leap that not only dethroned Beamon as world record-holder after 23 years, but also stunned the athletics world.

    Lewis, unwilling to yield, struck back with a wind-legal personal best of 8.87m (-0.2m/s) in the fifth round, followed by another impressive 8.84m in his final attempt. Powell fouled his last jump, but his world record stood, earning him the gold medal. The US swept the podium, with Larry Myricks claiming bronze at 8.42m.

    The duel remains etched in history as arguably the greatest long jump competition ever staged – producing two of the top three wind-legal marks of all time. Powell would go on to retain his world title in Stuttgart in 1993.
     

    Men’s shot put: Crouser vs Kovacs vs Walsh

    Over the past decade, the men’s shot put has delivered some of the most electrifying rivalries at the World Championships, with Ryan Crouser, Joe Kovacs and Tom Walsh at the forefront. The 2015 edition in Beijing signaled a shift in the event’s hierarchy as USA’s Kovacs claimed his first world title with 21.93m, ahead of defending champion David Storl and O’Dayne Richards, while New Zealand’s Walsh narrowly missed the podium.

    Two years later in London, Walsh rose to the top, striking gold with 22.03m as Kovacs settled for silver. USA’s Crouser, the Rio 2016 Olympic champion, surprisingly finished sixth. But it was in Doha in 2019 that the rivalry peaked.

    In a contest hailed as the greatest in shot put history, Kovacs snatched victory with a lifetime best of 22.91m, edging Crouser (22.90m PB) and Walsh (22.90m area record) by a single centimetre. Darlan Romani’s 22.53m, good enough to win at any other championship, was relegated to fourth.

    Men's shot put podium at the IAAF World Athletics Championships Doha 2019 - silver medallist Ryan Crouser, champion Joe Kovacs and bronze medallist Tom Walsh

    Ryan Crouser, champion Joe Kovacs and Tom Walsh in Doha (© Getty Images)

    Oregon 2022 produced another milestone: a historic US medal sweep. Crouser claimed gold with a championship record of 22.94m, followed closely by Kovacs (22.89m) and Josh Awotunde (22.29m), the first time a single nation had swept the medals in World Championships shot put history. Walsh finished fourth, while Romani came fifth.

    Crouser then underlined his dominance in Budapest in 2023 with another championship record of 23.51m, the second-longest throw in history, as Leonardo Fabbri took silver and Kovacs earned his fifth world medal.

    As WCH Tokyo 25 approaches, Kovacs will be absent after finishing fourth at the US Championships, while Crouser’s participation remains uncertain as he manages injury – though he retains a bye as defending champion. Still, with Walsh, Awotunde, Romani and Fabbri in contention, the men’s shot put promises another unforgettable showdown.

    Men’s high jump: Barshim vs Tamberi

    The 2017 World Championships in London marked a coming of age for Mutaz Essa Barshim. The Olympic silver medallist was flawless through qualifying and into the final, clearing up to 2.32m without fault. At 2.35m, Barshim again soared over on his first attempt to secure gold – an upgrade from his fourth-place finish in Beijing in 2015.

    Two years later, competing at home in Doha, Barshim gave his fans further reason to celebrate. After a nervy moment at 2.33m, where he needed a last-gasp clearance, the Qatari found his rhythm. He was among the athletes who pushed the bar to 2.35m, clearing that with ease, and then he went higher still, clearing 2.37m to secure back-to-back world titles.

    The delayed Tokyo Olympics produced one of athletics’ most iconic moments. Barshim and Italy’s Gianmarco Tamberi were inseparable up to 2.37m but both failed at 2.39m. Rather than a jump-off, they chose to share the gold medal – an act of sportsmanship that captured hearts worldwide.

    Barshim added a third straight world crown in Oregon in 2022, clearing 2.37m ahead of Woo Sanghyeok and Andrii Protsenko. But in Budapest in 2023, it was Tamberi’s turn. The friendly rivalry between Tamberi and Barshim continued as they could not be separated up to 2.33m – both clearing 2.25m on their second attempts, before first-time clearances at 2.29m and 2.23m.

    Mutaz Barshim and Gianmarco Tamberi celebrate at the World Championships in Budapest in 2023

    Mutaz Barshim and Gianmarco Tamberi celebrate at the World Championships in Budapest in 2023 (© AFP / Getty Images)

    Tamberi cleared the next bar, 2.36m, on his first try, while Barshim’s competition came to an end at that point. JuVaughn Harrison managed that height on his second attempt and Tamberi was confirmed champion when they were both unable to go any higher.

    Yemi Galadima for World Athletics

     

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  • Arsenal – Leeds United – Match Report

    Arsenal – Leeds United – Match Report

    Viktor Gyokores marked his home debut with a brace as we ran riot against Leeds United to make it two wins from two at the start of the Premier League campaign.

    We found ourselves 2-0 ahead at the break thanks to a Jurrien Timber header and Bukayo Saka’s injury-time strike which took the game away from the visitors, and not long after the restart Gyokeres showed his pace and power to get himself off the mark in style.

    Timber then added his second and our fourth of the afternoon as our set-piece prowess came to the fore again, before in stoppage-time 15-year-old debutant Max Dowman won a penalty which Gyokeres hammered home.

    While Mikel Arteta would have been disappointed to see Martin Odegaard and Saka depart through injury, our impressive attacking display will have delighted him, especially with Eberechi Eze waiting in the wings.

    Two-up at the break

    The opening home game of the season is always a vibrant and colourful affair with a packed house excited to see their heroes in action, but the atmosphere was only boosted pre-match when Eze was presented to the crowd for the first time, moments after being announced as a Gunner.

    Roared on by a full house, we started well with Odegaard in the thick of the action on his 200th Arsenal appearance and he shot into the side netting early on, before some excellent pressing from a Leeds goal-kick led to Martin Zubimendi nudging the ball into Gyokeres’ path, but the striker stabbed wide.

    Having won the man of the match award in our win at Manchester United six days earlier, David Raya was again required to be on top form in the 20th minute when he instinctively pushed over a Pascal Struijk header from the visitors’ first corner of the evening.

    However, on 34 minutes we had our first opportunity from a flag kick, and yet again we made it count. Declan Rice whipped it into a crowded box and Timber watched it all the way before guiding the delivery into the far corner, leaving Lucas Perri in the Whites goal with no chance.

    From that point onwards, Leeds’ 14-game wait for a win on our turf never looked like ending on this particular day, even when Odegaard’s double-century ended prematurely as he was forced off with a shoulder problem. Saka took over the captaincy duties – and in first half stoppage-time he led by example by grabbing our second.

    Once again our pressing caused Leeds issues and Rice nicked the ball off a defender, allowing Zubimendi to slip it to Timber. He then played a precise pass into the path of Saka, who thrashed the ball past a static Perri to get off the mark for the campaign and hand us a nice cushion going into the break.

    Gyokeres’ golden moment

    The feel-good factor was bouncing around Emirates Stadium during half-time, and it reached new heights two minutes after the restart when the moment everyone inside our home wanted to see happened.

    Riccardo Calafiori lofted a ball into the left channel for Gyokeres to latch on to, and he began to charge towards the box. Struijk backed off and allowed him into the area, and after nudging the ball past the Leeds defender he arrowed it into the bottom corner to open his Gunners account in style.

    There was another injury blow though when Saka pulled up heading towards goal and was forced off on 52 minutes, but that disappointment was tempered somewhat when we grabbed another goal three minutes later.

    Rice sent another corner into the box and Timber saw his header blocked, but after Leeds failed to clear, the Dutchman had a second chance to score and duly nudged the ball over the line to complete an unlikely brace, with a VAR check confirming the decision.

    Dowman debuts

    With the result in the bag, Mikel Arteta opted to hand Max Dowman his first-team debut aged 15 years and 235 days old, becoming the third youngest player in Premier League history after Nwaneri and Leicester City’s Jeremy Monga.

    The winger showed no sign of nerves and he twice went close to getting on the scoresheet firstly skillfully collecting a pass on the right flank, dribbling inside and letting fly but saw the ball dip into the North Bank, and then when a free-kick bounced into his path, he fizzed it back toward goal and again was just off target.

    However, in stoppage-time, Dowman’s pace and trickery saw him draw a foul from Anton Stach and Jarred Gillett pointed to the spot, allowing Gyokeres to power home the penalty to cap a fine evening’s work.

    The winning margin put us top of the fledgling league table, and while it matters little in August, it means we head to Anfield next weekend to face the reigning champions Liverpool with plenty of wind in our sails.

    What’s next

    We’re back in action next Sunday when we head to Anfield to take on the reigning champions Liverpool, before heading into the first international break of 2025/26. 

    Copyright 2025 The Arsenal Football Club Limited. Permission to use quotations from this article is granted subject to appropriate credit being given to www.arsenal.com as the source.

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  • Schell shocks Fiji with six second-half scores

    Schell shocks Fiji with six second-half scores



    YORK - Julia Schell scored second-half tries to help Canada to a convincing win against Fiji at the York Community Stadium on Sunday to leave her team top of Group B after the first round of games.

    YORK - Julia Schell scored six - yes, six - second-half tries to help Canada to a 65-7 win against Fiji at the York Community Stadium on Sunday to leave her team top of Group B after the first round of games.

    More to follow.

     

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  • US Open 2025: Venus Williams says playing in New York never ‘gets old’

    US Open 2025: Venus Williams says playing in New York never ‘gets old’

    Two-time champion Venus Williams says the love for her “job” is why she is back playing at the US Open at the age of 45.

    At the start of this year, many wondered when the veteran American would announce her retirement.

    Now she is set to grace her home Grand Slam tournament for a record-extending 25th time when she plays Czech 11th seed Karolina Muchova on Monday.

    “It is super thrilling to be back. It does not get old – it just gets more exciting,” said the seven-time major winner.

    Earlier this season, Williams became officially considered an inactive player, having gone a whole year without competing.

    Then, out of nowhere as the eyes of the tennis world were trained on Wimbledon, she announced she was ready to play at the Washington Open.

    The former world number one won her first-round match on her first appearance in 16 months, before going out in round two.

    The victory over fellow American Peyton Stearns meant Williams became the oldest player to win a WTA Tour singles match in more than 21 years.

    Asked to describe the joy of being back playing, she said: “I love my job. So there’s the joy right there.”

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  • Asia Cup 2025: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh And….Check Full Squads, Captain, Schedule Of All Teams | News

    Asia Cup 2025: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh And….Check Full Squads, Captain, Schedule Of All Teams | News

    September 9 – Afghanistan vs Hong Kong China, Abu Dhabi

    September 10 – India vs UAE, Dubai

    September 11 – Bangladesh vs Hong Kong China, Abu Dhabi

    September 12 – Pakistan vs Oman, Dubai

    September 13 – Bangladesh vs Sri Lanka, Abu Dhabi

    September 14 – India vs Pakistan, Dubai

    September 15 – UAE vs Oman, Abu Dhabi

    September 15 – Sri Lanka vs Hong Kong China, Dubai

    September 16 – Bangladesh vs Afghanistan, Abu Dhabi

    September 17 – Pakistan vs UAE, Dubai

    September 18 – Sri Lanka vs Afghanistan, Abu Dhabi

    September 19 – India vs Oman, Abu Dhabi

    September 20 – B1 vs B2, Dubai

    September 21 – A1 vs A2, Dubai

    September 23 – A2 vs B1, Abu Dhabi

    September 24 – A1 vs B2, Dubai

    September 25 – A2 vs B2, Dubai

    September 26 – A1 vs B1, Dubai

    September 28 – Final, Dubai  (pic credit: Afghanistan Cricket Board)  

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  • Official: Barcelona starting lineup against Levante – Rashford, Casado in

    Official: Barcelona starting lineup against Levante – Rashford, Casado in

    FC Barcelona will look to make it two wins in two matches in the 2025/26 La Liga season when they take on UD Levante tonight.

    Ahead of kickoff at Ciutat de Valencia, Barcelona boss Hansi Flick has announced the starting lineup for the match with two major changes made.

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    The first big alteration comes in the attacking line, where new signing Marcus Rashford makes his first official start for the Blaugrana, coming in as the left-winger.

    This move sees Raphinha move into the central attacking midfield role, with Flick opting not to choose Dani Olmo or Fermin Lopez. Ferran Torres continues as the striker with Lamine Yamal on the right flank.

    Meanwhile, the second big change sees Marc Casado make his first appearance of the season after not being given any minutes in the opener against Mallorca.

    The Spanish midfielder replaces Frenkie de Jong, who has been left out of the squad following the birth of his second child this week. Pedri continues in his role in midfield, meaning Gavi is on the bench yet again.

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    There are no alterations at the back as Flick has gone with Eric Garcia as his right-back again, with Pau Cubarsi, Ronald Araujo, and Alejandro Balde completing the defensive unit in front of new signing Joan Garcia in goal.

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  • President tried to snag FIFA’s World Cup trophy for his Oval Office, snubbed by FIFA President

    President tried to snag FIFA’s World Cup trophy for his Oval Office, snubbed by FIFA President

    US President Donald Trump, 79, attempted to hold onto the FIFA World Cup trophy when it was being displayed in the Oval Office on Friday, but FIFA President Gianni Infantino denied saying that the Trophy must remain ready for the next tournament’s winners.

    GIANNI INFANTINO: “Since you are a winner, of course, you can as well touch it.”

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    Trump started insisting he is not giving it back, as everyone in the office burst into laughter. FIFA President Infantino, chuckling nervously, said that he can keep it but has to give it back to the next winner.

    TRUMP: “Seriously, it fits very well on the wall right over there. We’ll put it right below the angels.”

    He used the meeting to showcase his newly lavish, gold-heavy Oval Office décor—likened to a “cut-price Palace of Versailles”.

    Trump has previously taken possession of the FIFA Club World Trophy from Infantino it still sits at the Oval Office. As a result, the winning club, Chelsea, received a replica only.

    Trump still couldn’t stop obsessing over the historic trophy’s beauty. “I can’t tell you how much that gold costs—a lot of money. There’s nothing like gold, and there’s nothing like solid gold.”

    Still, Infantino presented Trump with an oversized cardboard version of the “first ticket” for next year’s tournament final, which will be hosted outside New York City. Gianni Infantino was at the White House to announce that Washington, D.C.’s Kennedy Centre will host the Final Draw for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. FIFA have also opened an office at the Trump Tower in New York City for the preparation of next year’s tournament.

    Infantino went on to praise the below-average US men’s soccer team, currently ranked at 15th, even behind Mexico. Infantino reluctantly said that the US team had a chance at winning the tournament.

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