'Exactly what Matt Turner needed' – Alexi Lalas praises goalkeeper's clean sheet in New England Revolution return amid USMNT No. 1 battle

The analyst believes the American goalkeeper’s successful return to the Revolution could reignite his candidacy for the USMNT's No. 1 spot

  • Turner kept clean sheet in first match back with Revs
  • Lalas suggests Turner understands importance of club performances 
  • Notes other USMNT goalkeeper candidates haven't stepped up 

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    WHAT HAPPENED

    Former U.S. star Alexi Lalas praised Matt Turner’s clean sheet in New England’s 2-0 win over D.C. United, noting its significance as the USMNT’s starting goalkeeper spot remains unsettled. Turner, on loan from Olympique Lyon, made several key saves in his return to the Revolution.

    “Obviously the big story was Matt Turner back,” Lalas said on his State of the Union podcast. “I think he understands better than anybody that this is important and that he still is in the mix right now says a lot about the goalkeepers that haven't stepped up.

    “And I know Matt Freeze had a good summer, but I don't necessarily think he's the answer. And I think if Matt Turner plays and plays well, and he did play well the other night, obviously got a shutout, albeit against a D.C. United team that is not very good.”

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  • WHAT ALEXI LALAS SAID

    The analyst highlighted that while the Revolution aren’t in the best shape, if Turner keeps up his performances and plays consistently, he’ll eventually solidify his position as the USMNT’s No. 1.

    “But at this point, beggars can't be choosers, and New England has not been good,” Lalas added. “So, they got the 2-0 win. Matt Turner got the shutout. And I think that will, if he continues, lead to him being still with the incumbent and solidifying his position. And this is exactly what Matt Turner needed and maybe exactly what the New England Revolution needed going forward.”

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Despite Matt Freese doing well at the Gold Cup, the USMNT have no clear No. 1 goalkeeper with Matt Turner, Zack Steffen, Patrick Schulte and Chris Brady all in the mix for the position. However, many critics and fans believe that Turner and Steffen are the frontrunners for the position.

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    WHAT’S NEXT?

    Turner will focus on building consistency with New England as the MLS season progresses and will face LAFC on Aug. 16 before travelling to face Columbus Crew on Aug. 23.

Brighton confirm 72-year-old fan has passed away after being taken ill during clash with Fulham and pledge to support victim's family and affected supporters

Brighton have confirmed the death of a fan following their Premier League game with Fulham at Amex Stadium.

  • Brighton fan taken ill at Fulham game
  • Male supporter, 72, dies after match
  • Club pays respects & offers support
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to Brighton's website, a 72-year-old supporter was taken unwell in the east stand upper during the second half of their 1-1 draw on Saturday. Despite the best efforts of the emergency services and club staff, the fan died. The Sussex outfit have expressed their condolences to the victim's family and pledged to help those affected.

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    WHAT BRIGHTON SAID

    Club CEO Paul Barber said: "This was an incredibly sad end to the match this afternoon, and our deepest sympathies and condolences go out to the family and friends of the gentleman who lost his life. While the gentleman concerned is foremost in our minds, we are also aware that it was an emotional and distressing situation for staff and supporters in the direct vicinity. Over the coming days, we will ensure those affected are properly supported."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Brighton, whose staff placed privacy screens around the individual while the game was ongoing, said South East Coast Ambulance Service paramedics, St John’s Ambulance, Sussex Police, the club’s crowd doctor, and club stewards worked together to give the fan the best possible care, including prolonged CPR and the use of a defibrillator on the scene. 

    Club doctor and emergency medicine consultant Dr Rob Galloway added: "Firstly, I would like to convey my condolences and sympathies to the gentleman’s family and friends. It was a tragic outcome, but from an emergency response perspective, the medical care was exemplary, and the professionalism of club stewards and Sussex Police provided the medical team with the best possible working environment."

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Brighton, who said the fan had the highest chance of survival by being treated at the stadium instead of 'creating furrther possible complications' by moving him to hospital, added that any staff or supporters affected by this can contact Samaritans, YoungMinds, or Shout.

Eberechi Eze's heart chose Arsenal over Tottenham – but Crystal Palace hero should be wary of becoming the new Jack Grealish

The England international was set to join Thomas Frank's rebuild, but will instead link up with Mikel Arteta at the Emirates Stadium

At the age of 27, Eberechi Eze will finally play for a 'big six' club. He is set to swap south London for north, but not for the half that many had been expecting.

Tottenham had seemingly sewn up a deal with Crystal Palace, and the player himself was keen on becoming the new face of Thomas Frank's project. Alas, he will become an Arsenal player instead, returning to his boyhood club after first being released by the Gunners at the age of 13.

It's another memorable chapter for Arsenal in their long history of making Tottenham's life a little bit more miserable. From winning the league twice at White Hart Lane to pinching Sol Campbell off them for nothing, there's nothing Gooners like more than giving their little brother at the other end of Seven Sisters Road a wedgie.

However, as much as Eze's decision to choose red over lilywhite is personal and a lifelong dream in the making, he should be wary of the pitfalls of heading to a place where he will be just another player rather than the star.

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    Cooling interest

    During June and July, Eze seemed to be one of Arsenal's priorities for the summer transfer window, despite them splashing the cash on various other positions. Once they had brought in Noni Madueke from Chelsea, that's when they appeared to ramp up their interest in the Palace man, which was a couple of weeks after they had first touched base with Eze's camp over a move to the Emirates Stadium.

    Yet that changed when Ethan Nwaneri, who had supposedly been umming-and-ahing over a new contract, put pen to paper on a long-term deal. The club's established beat reporters claimed Nwaneri's new role was going to be as a No.10 and understudy to Martin Odegaard, reducing the need to find an external solution, one that Eze would have provided.

    Arsenal wrapped up all six of their incomings thus far this summer by July 26, getting their core business done much earlier than many of their rivals. It was natural to assume that if Eze was ever that much of a priority, you imagine they would have pressed before they opened their Premier League campaign. That they were so blasé about Tottenham advancing their own interest suggested really were focusing on outgoings before any further incomings – Oleksandr Zinchenko, Jakub Kiwior, Albert Sambi Lokonga, Fabio Vieira and Reiss Nelson all missed Sunday's win at Manchester United despite not carrying an injury between them, such is the bloat of Mikel Arteta's squad right now.

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    Sense of inevitability

    Eze comes with a distinction that he feels both very Arsenal very Tottenham in terms of his style. Both clubs have long been associated with attacking philosophies, boasting players who are revered for their brilliance on the ball.

    Indeed, the Gunners and Spurs have already been in Eze's life. As mentioned, he comes from a family of Arsenal fans and was in their youth ranks, while he was recommended to Tottenham by former scout David Pleat prior to his switch to Palace. It's no surprise he has been perennially linked with the Lilywhites ever since.

    Beyond that, Spurs have close ties with Eze's CAA Base agency, with James Maddison, Pape Matar Sarr, Pedro Porro, Richarlison and Djed Spence all represented by the same group. Going back slightly further, Son Heung-min is also a client and was frequently seen in conversation with Eze at off-field events. When Ange Postecoglou was interested in adding the midfielder to his squad this time last summer, fans dug up clips of the two speaking at length after Tottenham had beaten Palace 3-1 in March 2024.

    With Son leaving in a similar blaze of glory, and with his famous No.7 shirt still to be filled, it felt like the stars were aligning for Eze to become Spurs' newest hero. He will end the summer, however, as their pantomime villain for generations to come.

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    Begrudging respect

    The paths of Frank and Eze have crossed as rivals before, with the Dane always showing an admiration from afar. They first came up against one another when in west London, Frank the boss of Brentford while Eze was breaking onto the scene with neighbours Queens Park Rangers.

    During an interview with Brentford fan podcast in 2019, Frank made a point about wanting to show more respect to players who have that bit of flair, and made a concerted effort to demonstrate his begrudging affection for a foe.

    "When the referees don't protect the game or the skilful players… If we were kicking down Eze from QPR, I would be angry," Frank said. "We need to protect the skilful players. Of course, we need to go to him, maybe take a yellow card, but if they don't protect those players, we don't protect the game. We enjoy to watch the best players doing fantastic things."

    Six years down the line, Frank played his part in trying to convince Eze to join forces with him, with several reports noting the pitch the manager made to construct a team in which they are aligned on vision. These attempts, ultimately, were in vain. Once more, Frank will have to convince his own supporters to be better than demanding the blood of their sworn nemesis.

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    Levy's legacy

    There is, and almost always has been, frustration from at least part of the Tottenham fanbase at Daniel Levy over his perceived reluctance to break the bank in the transfer market. Not to defend the Spurs chairman, but they have the fourth-highest net spend among Premier League teams over the last five years, making a loss of just over £525m.

    Tottenham's issue has tended to be their reluctance to match the wages of their rivals; Cristian Romero and James Maddison are believed to be the only players currently under contract on a six-figure weekly salary. They have swung and missed on various big-name players before, such as Paulo Dybala and Rivaldo, rarely enjoying the luxury of star power from within.

    Slightly predating Levy and ENIC's arrival were the captures of Jurgen Klinsmann and David Ginola, while the likes of Luka Modric and Gareth Bale were bought as budding prospects rather than the finished articles they went on to become at Real Madrid. Tanguy Ndombele, Richarlison and Dominic Solanke, while all costing around £60m, were either not that famous on these shores or didn't come with the reputation of most players signed for that sort of money.

    Only two players have come close to the calibre and fanfare that Eze would have brought at the time of their arrival in the Levy tenure: Rafael van der Vaart in 2010 on deadline day, and Bale's return on loan in lockdown. The proposed acquisition of Eze was as close to an unprecedented transfer as there has been in this part of Tottenham's history; he will instead be remembered in the same breath as the Dybalas and Rivaldos.

Real Madrid player ratings vs Mallorca: Vinicius Jr and Arda Guler to the rescue – Los Blancos complete LaLiga comeback as Xabi Alonso's side see three goals ruled out

The Spanish giants were still short of their best, but good value for a narrow victory to continue their undefeated start

Arda Guler and Vinicius Jr scored back-to-back goals within 60 seconds as Real Madrid overcame an early scare to beat Mallorca, 2-1. Los Blancos were dominant throughout, but had a trio of efforts narrowly ruled out.

Madrid thought they had the lead early on when Kylian Mbappe raced through to turn Trent Alexander-Arnold's pass home, but the referee ruled his effort offside after a long VAR review. Mallorca responded in style, though, when veteran forward Vedat Muriqi headed home off a corner. Los Blancos equalized shortly before half time thanks to another piece of dead ball work. Alvaro Carreras floated a ball to Dean Huijsen at the far post, who nodded across to Guler to finish into an empty net. 

Less than a minute later, the home side were in the lead. Vinicius started and finished it with a weaving run, drop of the shoulder and calm finish into the bottom corner. It was almost three before half time, but Mbappe had another goal ruled out for a tight offside. They had another chalked off early in the second half, when the ball was adjudged to have stuck Guler's arm before he smashed home from close range. 

Los Blancos rotated heavily as the minutes waned, with Alonso toying with various combinations. Rodrygo enjoyed a bright cameo. Brahim Diaz made his case on the right. But it was otherwise a simple affair for Madrid, who were good value for the win. 

GOAL rates Real Madrid's players from the Santiago Bernabeu…

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    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Thibaut Courtois (7/10):

    Could do nothing about the Mallorca goal. Made a couple of nice saves, as ever. 

    Trent Alexander-Arnold (7/10):

    Pinged the ball around a bit. Unlucky not to get himself an assist after a tight offside. Made a crucial clearance to deny a goal. His best showing yet. 

    Eder Militao (7/10):

    Completed all but one of his passes. Covered for Alexander-Arnold when needed.

    Dean Huijsen (6/10):

    Assisted Madrid's equalizer. Excellent defensively for the first half, but very loose in the second. 

    Alvaro Carreras (7/10):

    Very solid once again. Moved the ball well, always made the correct decision, and held down his side. Hooked one off the line acrobatically. 

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    Midfield

    Aurelien Tchouameni (7/10):

    Launched a couple over when Madrid couldn't get anything going. A bit loose on the ball but positionally reliable.

    Arda Guler (8/10):

    Couldn't miss from close range to level the score. Found all sorts of clever angles and was influential throughout his time on the pitch. 

    Federico Valverde (7/10):

    Assisted the Madrid second. Never stopped running. A typically industrious performance. 

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    Attack

    Franco Mastantuono (5/10):

    A frustrating evening for the young Argentine, who was full of energy and effort, but lacking in quality.

    Kylian Mbappe (7/10):

    Very unlucky to have two goals ruled out in the first half. Lively and much more effective in his combination play. 

    Vinicius Jr (7/10):

    Really could have done with releasing the ball earlier on a few occasions. Scored a sublime individual goal. A much better 70 minutes. 

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    Subs & Manager

    Brahim Diaz (6/10):

    A bright cameo on the right. 

    Dani Carvajal (6/10):

    Brought on to shore things up defensively – which he did so. 

    Rodrygo (N/A):

    A few nice touches on the left. 

    Dani Ceballos (N/A):

    No time to make an impact.

    Gonzalo Garcia (N/A)

    No time to make an impact. 

    Xabi Alonso (7/10):

    Rotated again, bringing Alexander-Arnold back into the side. Madrid were better throughout, and deserved more than a 2-1 win, in truth. Three games, three wins.

Ex-Arsenal star urges boss Mikel Arteta to consider picking Ethan Nwaneri over captain Martin Odegaard

Arsenal Double winner Nigel Winterburn has urged boss Mikel Arteta to use Ethan Nwaneri at the heart of the Gunners' midfield instead of Martin Odegaard.

  • Winterburn has heaped praise on Nwaneri
  • He 'offers something different'
  • Urged Arteta to consider using him 
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Winterburn has sung the praises of Gunners youngster Nwaneri and believes Arsenal should see him as a viable alternative for captain Martin Odegaard. The former Arsenal full-back has been highly-impressed with Nwaneri, in particular his passing and ability to go past players. Nwaneri replaced Odegaard in the 38th minute of the 5-0 win over Leeds after the Norwegian suffered a shoulder injury. 

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Nwaneri is a massive talent, and undoubtedly one who will shine for Arsenal, but Arteta knows Odegaard is his main man in midfield. The Arsenal boss points towards the vote he held with players and staff over who should be captain – and the result was 100% in favour of the Norway international. Arteta said: "By a mile, by 100 miles, everybody chose the same person which is Odegaard. Which is the most clear sign you can have is how they feel about who has to be their captain, to defend, improve and win the matches we want to win. I think there is no question about that."

  • WHAT WINTERBURN SAID

    Winterburn told The Metro: "When Nwaneri came on in Odegaard’s position, he played a slightly different role. When Odegaard plays, he has that really good link-up with Saka on the right side, but I liked seeing Nwaneri take up a different position and demand the ball more. He got on the ball a lot more, and his passing was excellent. He’s got that superb ability to go past a player in midfield as well if Arteta is looking for something different."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL?

    Nwaneri may have the chance to shine in the massive clash with Liverpool this weekend, depending on the severity of Odegaard's injury. But an indication that he will recover quickly has come from Norway, who have selected him for the forthcoming internationals.

'I finally feel free' – The long road of ACL recovery behind him, USMNT's Sergino Dest is determined to remind everyone of his skills, and meet the moment at the World Cup

EXCLUSIVE: As the USMNT prepare for a crucial run, the defender tells GOAL he expects to be a pillar – just as he once was

"When I'm at 100 percent, when my body feels right, I'm the best. I don't have to think about dribbling; I just know it. I know I'm going to pass you."

That's Sergino Dest at his most confident and, for those who know him, that's generally the space he occupies. Sitting in the team hotel ahead of his long-awaited U.S. men's national team return, Dest makes it abundantly clear that his faith in himself hasn't changed in the year and a half since he last wore a USMNT shirt.

So much around the national team has, of course, but not Dest. He has this belief, one that borders on irrational, that leaves him convinced that there isn't a person on this planet who can stop him from doing what he does best. Confidence, cockiness, swagger, faith – call it what you want. Dest has it.

Moments earlier, though, there's a brief moment of vulnerability, one that offers some insight not just into who Dest is, but what he's come back from. In that moment, he looks down at his leg, touches his kneecap and smiles. The scar is still there, a reminder of how quickly things can change – and how quickly confidence can crash down to earth with a thud.

Believe in yourself all you want but, sometimes, life has other plans.

This week, though, the 24-year-old fullback is officially back. The ACL injury that put him on the shelf for so long? That's finally behind him. Just as crucially, so are the mental and physical side effects that came with it. From the moment that the injury happened, Dest has, admittedly, struggled. He's only now starting to believe that he's finally back.

"You feel powerless, man," Dest tells GOAL. "It's like, you really want to help and you see all these players playing and you see sometimes that the results are not good. You know what you have to offer for the team, but you feel just powerless. Like, damn, man, I wish I could go out there because, in your head, you're fit. Then whenever you step, you realize, 'Oh, sh*t, I cannot help this team.' I'm just so happy that I'm back now."

The USMNT will be ecstatic. As the group prepares for this crucial run, Dest is expected to be a pillar, just as he once was. There's no player in the pool that can do what Dest does, no one who can replicate the talent he brings to a team. There's only one Sergino Dest, and he'll be the first to tell you it

Now, then, it's all about reminding anyone that may have forgotten.

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    The injury that changed it all

    For Dest, the hardest part wasn't the pain. It was the uncertainty. The former lasted just a few seconds, at least in the moment. The latter? Too a degree, it lingers to this day.

    On April 20, while training with PSV, Dest felt the pain. It lasted just 10 or 15 seconds, he recalls. There was an initial shock, but then relaxation. It wasn't unusual to him, he said. It didn't feel more or less painful than any of the other countless knocks he'd suffered throughout his career on the soccer field.

    "I thought, after three or four days, I'd be good again," Dest said. "Then, the doctors and officials were like, 'Nah, that's not gonna happen.' It felt so secretive, and I hate that. I hate it when the doctors aren't sure or they don't want to say what they think it is. Just tell me! I want to know!

    "Then, they told me the outcome, and it was nine months out. Now, I can finally understand what that meant. Nine months is a long time and, in the end, it wasn't even enough. I needed almost 12."

    Throughout that lost year, Dest watched as the world went on without him. PSV won the title, capping off a season that he had been such a big part of. The club, despite his injury, signed him permanently in a show of faith that he would get back to his best. Meanwhile, the USMNT plunged into chaos. The Copa America went off the rails, Gregg Berhalter was fired, Mauricio Pochettino was brought in and a new era began – all as Dest watched from his couch.

    He finally returned on the club level in the spring and was actually able to play a vital role for PSV down the stretch. With Dest's return providing a much-needed lift, PSV stormed back to win the Eredivisie in the season's final weeks, capping the season by making it back-to-back league crowns.

    "I was so happy that it went like that," he says. "Not with the team, but the outside world, it feels like you will be forgotten quickly, especially when you don't play for a while. It's like, 'He WAS so good' but they're not looking at you anymore, just the players playing currently. That's something I noticed and it was strange for me."

    Dest, though, wasn't the player he had been until just recently. Down the stretch with PSV, he was still playing with training wheels, unable to really run in the way he wanted. He was also dealing with another issue, as a previously unannounced hamstring injury prevented him from really taking off. It's part of the reason why he, ultimately, was left off the Gold Cup roster this summer after initially joining the USMNT in Chicago ahead of the tournament.

    "I never expected to get injured like that but, in the end, I accepted it," he says. "Then, even when I was back with the national team, I got sent home again because I wasn't strong enough. That was so disappointing because I wanted to play. But I had to admit that I wasn't ready at that time. It would have been dangerous for me to play or to reinjure myself after that, so I got it. I was just so motivated.

    "I honestly didn't start feeling like myself until a couple of days ago… within the last three or four days, I don't feel it anymore. I finally feel free."

    That freedom has restored his confidence, and that confidence has translated into huge early-season performances.

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    Back to himself

    "It feels, I guess you could say, nostalgic."

    That's Dest on dribbling, the thing that might just bring him the most joy in life. The good news is that, if that's true, there's been a lot of joy recently because Dest sure has done a lot of it.

    Through PSV's first five games of the season, four in the league and one Supercup, Dest has been impossible to handle. Against Go Ahead Eagles, he scored a late winner while leading all players in chances created. He scored again a week later in the Eredivisie season opener against Sparta Rotterdam.

    Then, against FC Twente, Dest was determined to embarrass everyone in his path, dribbling past seven opponents while also winning the most duels of any player on the field. Then there was the assist against Groningen, too. The Eredivisie has largely been Dest's playground. That's how he likes it.

    "Whenever I have the ball and I go up against these guys, I know I'm going past you and then I'm going past you, too," he says. "I feel confident. Everyone can defend me, sure, but I'm going to go by them anyway. I love those moments. It reminds me of being a kid. It reminds me of those YouTube videos of my idols. Ronaldinho, Ronaldo, Robinho, Neymar, Adriano – the Brazilian squad. Those were my favorite players, those skill players.

    "I feel like passing a player is the most beautiful thing you can do in this sport. To do that with flair, that's what everyone enjoys watching."

    So much of that is physical. Pace, technique, timing, movement – all things that Dest had to rebuild if he wanted to experience that joy again. He might argue, though, that the most important work of his time off went into reshaping his mindset and how he used it to rebuild his body.

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    Changes in mindset

    When you're injured, all you have is time. It's one of the things professional athletes, in particular, struggle with. They go from a life that is regimented and controlled to one with – beyond rehab – seemingly nothing to do. 

    "I just had a lot of friends come over to chill," Dest said of his recovery. "I played a lot of PlayStation because I couldn't really walk. COD Zombies, FIFA, Spider-Man, GTA, everything. Face-timing with people was big, too. Once I was able to walk again, I was training every day. I'd go to the training center every day, then go home and watch movies. I went to Barcelona because I have a house there, and I spent five weeks there just training."

    He approach was to embrace the reality, and make the most of the circumstances.

    "I got some new hobbies," he said. "Normally, you wouldn't have time to do things, so it is nice to sometimes make your vision bigger and take advantage of what the world has to offer. I'm not glad it happened, but I had to accept it. You just have to be able to accept things. You cannot change it anymore. All I could really do was look forward. All you can do is try to enjoy life, but in a different way."

    That applies to his professional pathway, too. Dest began to rethink his career, wondering what he could have done differently. Nothing, of course, could have prevented his ACL from tearing. What he could do, though, is change his approach to the game so that, when he did return, the situation – and his control of it – might be different.

    "What can I do differently now? What am I lacking?," he said. "The thing I could have always done better was consistency. It was a long road, and I did a lot of stuff, but, at the moment, I'm really consistent in what I do. I'm doing extra training, and I'm really consistent with it. I feel like I'm seeing progression, from preseason to now. I'm getting there. 

    "I feel like I still need to build some more power, and that's what I'm going to do. I feel like, six months from now, after the winter break, I will really be ready. I will be so, so strong."

    The timeline, then, aligns with what's to come. With a World Cup around the corner, Dest is ready to meet the moment.

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    Living the dream

    During his time in Qatar, Dest could often be found on the rooftop of the team hotel. People around him would be drinking, celebrating, and watching games. Dest, meanwhile, was there to watch. He was also there to breathe. No phone in hand, not too many pictures, just memories.

    "I was just living in that moment," Dest says. "I would just sit there, drink my water, and watch these people enjoy life. They'd have flags and stuff, watching games, and I remember being like, 'This is it.' I just enjoyed that moment so much. I wanted to see everything and enjoy everything. I was living the dream. I had a big room with a balcony and, in the afternoon, you could just open the window and hear the sound of life. That's what I miss most about it."

    Next summer, of course, will be different. A World Cup across North America will be vastly different than the one in Qatar, but the feeling remains. There's nothing like a World Cup. Dest knows that, having now lived through one.

    Heading towards this one, Dest is more important than ever for the USMNT. Throughout his absence, the USMNT has never quite been able to replicate what Dest brings. They've been able to plug that hole at right-back, but never replicate it. It's why his return seemingly comes at the perfect time.

    With a few camps still on the calendar, there's still breathing room between now and the World Cup as the U.S. looks to reintegrate one of its most important players. That process is the one Dest has been dreaming about all this time. From the moment that ACL went pop in April 2024, Dest has been focused on what is now suddenly ahead of him.

    He was once blessed, and then cursed, with seemingly infinite time. Now, it is starting to run out on the road to 2026. The fullback, of course, is confident, no doubt about that. This all may not have happened for a reason, but it has still prepared him in some ways. The belief never wavered and, having navigated this, it probably never will.

    That's Sergino Dest.

    "I'm just really happy to be back," he says. "It's nice to be able to play and show my qualities because, last time they saw me, I wasn't fit. It's so different when you're not even able to really stabilize on one leg. In these training sessions, I think I've shown what I can do. I'll show them even more in the games, too. Everyone knows how much talent I have and everyone knows how much I can do for this team. 

    "I think everyone's happy I'm back. Same for me, man. Same for me."

Melbourne Stars' endless struggle

With several players misfiring and a few released for national duty, Melbourne Stars have lurched from one defeat to another this season

Jarrod Kimber at MCG16-Jan-2018Glenn Maxwell gestures to the crowd to make some noise. They don’t. The seagulls at the MCG are making the loudest noise.Melbourne Stars usually lose players at this time of year to the national side. This year the Stars have four former Australian players. Ben Hilfenhaus has been left out for the younger bowlers while Scott Boland, who has played three games, has an economy rate of 11.5. Rob Quiney usually smashes the ball in the Powerplay, but he’s the third-choice opener this season, and has failed in the two games he has played. And then there is the left-arm spinner Michael Beer, who has had some good games and some poor ones, but he’s not the reason for the Stars’ defeats. Of the former Australian players, Beer is the only one who should be playing.Then the Stars have lost two players to the Australian team. Marcus Stoinis averages nearly 45 with the bat but has leaked 10.62 runs an over in the BBL. His absence has left the batting struggling, but has perhaps made the bowling stronger. Adam Zampa has bowled economically, but has taken only two wickets in five games.James Faulkner’s true bowling economy (where you consider the runs conceded by the bowler in relation to the average runs conceded for that over number), over the last three years, is about par. But he has taken five wickets in 15 games. In that time, he has averaged over 50 with the bat for the Stars with a strike-rate of 108. For every over he’s out in the middle, his true economy rate means the Stars lose two runs an over. And this form is not new; he has averaged 49 and struck at 106 for three seasons. Of the 324 batsmen who have made over 500 T20 runs in the last three years, Faulkner has the third-worst boundary rate: he hits one every 9.83 balls.The big signing for the Stars this season was Ben Dunk. He had scored 364 runs in eight innings last season, but in this season he has scored only 66 runs in seven innings. You don’t need advanced statistics to show he’s struggled. Peter Handscomb has made 64 runs at less than a run a ball this season, and he’s also the fourth-worst boundary hitter in T20s.Maxwell’s numbers this season look good on paper: he has 214 runs in seven innings at an average of 36 and a strike-rate of 148.61. But usually, he comes in during the middle overs, when that strike-rate is exceptional. This season he’s not been as impactful as he has had to bat in the Powerplay with the top three not making enough runs. You want him to shine like a crazy diamond. Instead, he’s been more of a backbone player battling away after top-order failures.Luke Wright as an overseas signing is a great pick, if he bowls. If he doesn’t, he’s a good pick. He hasn’t been bowling for the Stars since 2013-14. Over the last three years, Wright has averaged 30.73, and struck at 137.54 with the bat. His true strike rate is about par. It’s not the numbers of an overseas player. And this year he’s made far fewer runs and batted way more slowly. On Tuesday night, Wright got struck in the head more times than he hit boundaries.Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesKevin Pietersen, despite all but retiring mid-tournament, has done better than Wright. Even if at times he has moves with the athleticism of a man ten years retired, he’s not worth any runs in the field. He’s averaging 28 at a strike-rate of 135.48, which for him is well down in both columns. His quality still occasionally shines through, but he’s a player who likes the big moments, the clutch games, and all the sport clichés you can fire at him. The Stars haven’t had many such moments since he came back from seeing his family at Christmas.Evan Gulbis would be a handy player in certain situations, but he doesn’t make enough runs, and he doesn’t take enough wickets. And he seems like a bits-and-pieces player in what is moving towards being a sport for people with specific skills. You want him to be a back-up player, but he simply has to play to cover the gaps of bat and ball.John Hastings was not long ago one of the better players in T20 cricket. His slower ball made batsmen look silly. His bounce troubled them at the start, and as a hitter he was good for one or two fast innings a year. At his best he was a great death bowler. This season he’s made 22 runs from 22 balls. He has picked up five wickets at 8.97 an over, a run more than his career economy rate in T20s. His true economy is also one run more an over than you’d expect the average player to cough up. This has been Hasting’s first year as the Stars’ captain. He had missed the entire last season because of injury. The two seasons before that he was taking wickets and going for almost a run less an over.The two back-up wristspinners are promising, but not perfect. Liam Bowe looks talented, but a little overawed, while Daniel Fallins looks confident but very raw. Jackson Coleman and Daniel Worrall have bowled well from limited opportunities, and at the very least are something to hope for next year, but neither are saviours. That’s all the players the Stars have used this year.And it’s not like this was an excellent Sydney Sixers team tonight. If the Stars are the worst team this season, the Sixers are the second worst. It was the Sixers who almost stuffed up a chase against the also pretty poor Sydney Thunder team on Saturday. Most teams try to break the chase, but the Sixers didn’t even bother bending it. With eight wickets in hand, they left it to the last ball. They then flew to Melbourne and won with eight wickets and 29 balls to spare.Twice this season at their home ground, they’ve talked about how tricky the pitch is to bat on, before the opposition scored at 2.1 and 2.75 an over quicker. They made tactical blunders in their opening games. They’re the slowest batting team (7.6) and the second-worst bowling team (8.5).The last ball tonight was mis-hit in the air. Dunk ran after it, dived and fell. He was nowhere near the ball and there was no real reason to dive. It’s been that kind of season for the Stars.

'Catastrophic' – Bayern Munich players slammed for jetting off to Ibiza for party as Harry Kane and Co. continue Bundesliga title celebrations

Bayern Munich stars have been criticised for partying in Ibiza before the Bundesliga 2024-25 season has been completed.

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  • Bayern stars jetted off to Ibiza
  • Harry Kane and Co celebrating Bundesliga title win
  • Criticised for partying before season's end
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Bavarian club reclaimed the Bundesliga title after defending champions Bayer Leverkusen were held to a 2-2 draw by SC Freiburg on May 4. Harry and Co then celebrated their title win at Allianz Arena last weekend after beating Borussia Monchengladbach 2-0.

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    The Bayern stars had initially planned to celebrate in Ibiza once it was mathematically confirmed that they had secured the title, but sporting director Max Eberl banned the trip. The club subsequently reversed the decision after the title had been secured and the players jetted off to Ibiza as manager Vincent Kompany granted his squad two days off. The celebration has been heavily criticised by Bayern star Dietmar Hamann as the German claims that it has dented the club's image.

  • WHAT HAS BEEN SAID

    Speaking on the show, Hamann said: "If that was forbidden last week, then I'm not even going to ask at the championship celebrations. Why should he say yes now? The image Bayern are currently presenting is catastrophic. It's about the integrity of the competition – and they have not upheld it."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR BAYERN MUNICH?

    Kompany's men will play their final game of the 2024-25 campaign on Saturday as they take on Hoffenheim away from home.

Sodhi backs New Zealand's 'experienced heads' to bounce back from Sylhet Test loss

“The great success this team has had over the past decade has been being able to park these sort of things pretty quickly, whether it’s success or loss”

Mohammad Isam04-Dec-20232:52

Sodhi: ‘Bangladesh gave us a blueprint on what’s successful in these conditions’

New Zealand legspinner Ish Sodhi has backed the “experienced heads” in their side to bounce back from the defeat in the opening Test against Bangladesh. New Zealand went down by 150 runs in Sylhet, after which their captain Tim Southee felt they didn’t bowl consistently in the right areas for long enough.Sodhi, who was the last batter dismissed in Sylhet, said the home side’s impressive showing also gave New Zealand the “blueprint” to play in these conditions.”The great success this [New Zealand] team’s had over the past decade has been being able to park these sort of things pretty quickly, whether it’s success or loss,” Sodhi said. “That’s going to be tested though. It is never anything to take for granted. It is always hard to come back off the back of a loss. But with the experienced heads here, we’ve been there, we’ve done that. We know how to apply ourselves into the next games. Hopefully, that’s something that we can commit to really well and apply to this next game.”It is obviously tough to come out on the losing side in that first game in Sylhet, but I think as the Test progressed, we found a bit more rhythm. Obviously, I haven’t played Test cricket in a while, so it’s always going to be tough in these conditions. The way that Bangladesh played, they certainly outplayed us. But upon reflection, I think they gave us a blueprint on what’s successful in these conditions, and hopefully we can apply that to this next Test match.”Related

  • Bangladesh pull off quiet triumph at a time of major upheaval

  • Southee admits NZ bowlers 'did not apply pressure long enough'

  • Captain Shanto moulds Bangladesh in his forthright image

Bangladesh scored 310 and 338 in the first Test, totals that Southee felt were more than what New Zealand should have conceded. Sodhi also called for accuracy from the bowlers in their bid to draw level in the two-Test series.”It is about just working in partnerships and being a little bit more accurate,” Sodhi said. “That’s something hopefully we can come together as a bowling group over the next couple of days – discuss as a spin bowling group, seam bowling group, whatever that looks like, and try to make improvements. It’s always going to be challenging, not playing a lot of Test cricket over a long period of time, but when you come together, [it is about] how quickly you can adapt.”Sometimes you wish you could have adapted sooner in the last game, but we can’t sort of look back now. We’ve got to try to find all the learnings that we had in that last game and apply them to this one, and hopefully we can come out on the winning side.”Sodhi, who picked up three wickets in Sylhet, will return to Mirpur, the setting of his best ODI haul of 6 for 39 after scoring 35 off 39 balls with the bat against Bangladesh in September, for the second Test that starts Wednesday.”Going into conditions where you have had a bit of success, you always have a bit more confidence going into games like that,” he said. “It’ll just be about exposing the conditions as best as we can, figuring out whether it’s going to turn, or if it’s not, what that looks like for us in terms of attacking and defence. So I am really looking forward to the prospect of the second Test, but a couple of good hard days of practice beforehand.”

Sir Jim Ratcliffe takes top Man Utd staff on Icelandic fishing trip – but decides against inviting Ruben Amorim ahead of first pre-season friendly

Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe hosted top club officials on a unique Icelandic fishing retreat. Chief executive Omar Berrada and director of football Jason Wilcox joined Ratcliffe for strategic meetings in the wild – but head coach Ruben Amorim was asked to stay behind and prepare the squad for the Red Devils' pre-season friendly against Leeds United.

  • Ratcliffe hosts Icelandic retreat with Berrada & Wilcox
  • Amorim misses trip to focus on pre-season preparations
  • Man Utd face Leeds in Stockholm
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to , Ratcliffe invited Manchester United’s senior leadership, including Berrada and Wilcox, on a two-day fishing and strategy retreat in Iceland ahead of their pre-season clash with Leeds. The gathering included discussions on United’s long-term direction, held away from the traditional boardroom. Per the report, Amorim was initially considered but ultimately stayed in Manchester to oversee pre-season training.

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    Ratcliffe, a known fan of such off-site leadership retreats, is said to believe that relaxed environments encourage clearer decision-making. The Iceland trip follows a pattern of unconventional settings, including ski resorts, used to build INEOS' executive culture. It also underlines the hands-on approach Ratcliffe is bringing to his United project.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Ratcliffe is a passionate fly fisherman and has invested in Iceland’s Six Rivers Project to protect salmon populations. While business was front and centre, the trip also allowed Berrada and Wilcox to bond and align plans with Ratcliffe ahead of a crucial summer window. Amorim, meanwhile, remained at Carrington to lead the team’s final training session before flying out to Stockholm.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MAN UTD?

    United will face off against Leeds in Stockholm on Saturday afternoon, offering fans a first look at the Red Devils' squad this season. Meanwhile, Berrada and Wilcox will rejoin the squad after their Icelandic getaway.

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