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‘I thought – gosh, he’s going to be some player’: the making of England’s Declan Rice

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‘I thought – gosh, he’s going to be some player’: the making of England’s Declan Rice

Rejected by Chelsea, honed by West Ham and a league winner at Arsenal, the midfielder has plenty from his footballing journey wishing him well at the World CupThree years ago Declan Rice was the star guest at a Soho House event about the power of effective leadership. Tickets were in hot demand and Rice, who was due to play a European semi-final for West Ham two days later, could not understand why so many people were interested in what he had to say.The audience was packed with marketing directors and CEOs, all eager to hear the England midfielder speak. To Rice, though, it just seemed weird. Why him? What made him so special? The answer lay in his everyman appeal. It was because of his ability to form connections with everyone he comes across. It was because Rice, who goes into the World Cup fresh from winning the Premier League with Arsenal, would be a leader in any setting. More than anything, it was because England’s new vice-captain is authentic, genuine and always ready to charm, no matter if the 27-year-old is speaking to a room of high-powered executives or heading back to his old school to spend an afternoon with a group of awestruck kids.Perhaps this world-class footballer’s superpower is to be both normal and extraordinary. “He’s hardly changed,” Stephen Willmore, Rice’s old PE teacher, says. The stories are positive no matter who tells them. A seven-year-old Rice was part of Chelsea’s academy when he started at Grey Court school in Ham, south-west London. There was no arrogance, though. Rice still captained the school football team. Harry Kane is not going anywhere any time soon but the expectation is that Rice will take over from England’s captain one day.“He never missed a game for us,” Willmore says. “If we had to change the kick-off times he would always want to play for the school and then go to training with Chelsea afterwards. He was a leader already. Even though he was so young he was hugely respected for the fact that he always wanted to play for the school team.“He didn’t hold back. He would play for us and go straight off to training, but he would give his all within that time with us. He was charismatic. He had a great personality. We’d go on away journeys in the minibus and he would be the central figure. He was just a really nice young man who’s carried on in that way. I still see that Declan you see now.”Rice does not use a traditional agent. He leans heavily on his two older brothers, his father and a handful of close friends. Rice has never lost touch with his roots and is still in touch with his old schoolmates. He was a good student and loved his sport. He liked tennis and cross country running. On the football pitch, he was a driving force from midfield. He passed well and dominated. At Chelsea, though, standards were high. Rice, who comes from a family of Chelsea fans, faced dejection when released from his boyhood club at the age of 14.“That shock of my dad telling me, I just burst into tears,” Rice said in 2019. He had to be resilient. Rice had an immediate offer to join West Ham. The east London club had tracked him since he was nine and could not believe their luck when Chelsea let the youngster go.Academy staff had never seen a better trialist at West Ham. Rice had gone through a growth spurt and his physique needed attention, but offering him a deal was the right call. Staff trusted him. Rice was the type of person who would tell the coaches if another boy was struggling emotionally.That speaks volumes for his character given that joining West Ham meant Rice had to cross London and leave the family home in Kingston. He comes from a tightknit family and had to get over his homesickness. “His mum and dad were always really supportive,” Willmore says. “He had really nice parents.”The path was never straightforward. There were times when West Ham’s youth coaches were divided over whether to keep Rice. But his development continued, he was handed his first-team debut by Slaven Bilic in May 2017 and he caught the eye of senior players when he joined training.Mark Noble, West Ham’s former captain, remembers Rice stepping out of defence to “hit a diagonal ball out to the left wing with a lovely bit of fade on it”. Noble suspected Rice would take his place in midfield one day. Rice was a teenager but his attitude set him apart.“We played Rubin Kazan in pre-season,” Aaron Cresswell, the former West Ham left-back, says of a July 2016 friendly. “Dec gives the ball away and the lad went on and scored. But his reaction just told me what he was like. It wasn’t like his head was down and he didn’t want the ball. It was: ‘Fine, give me the ball, I’m going to show you what I’ve got.’ I thought: ‘Gosh, he’s going to be some player.’”Cresswell talks fondly of a “cocky little kid” who could hold his own in the first-team dressing room. “He could speak to anyone. And when the going gets tough, he’s first to put his chest out and carry the team. In the latter part of his West Ham career he certainly pulled us through games, whether it was making that last-ditch tackle or dragging a team up the pitch.”Leadership came naturally to Rice. He was not afraid to lay into older players. He even spoke his mind to West Ham’s then manager, David Moyes. “If he felt something needed to be said, he’d say it,” Cresswell says. “He was brilliant in and around the place. Everyone loved him.”A key part of Rice’s character is his ability to stay professional while not taking life too seriously. There is a story about him winding up Joe Hart when the former England goalkeeper was on loan at West Ham during the 2017-18 season.“He did a shooting session with Joe,” Cresswell says. “Dec put it in the top corner. Joe came out and he tried to chip him. Dec said: ‘You won’t get that, son’ and Joe lost his head. He wanted to kill him. He chased him all around the training ground. I think he actually filled him in when he got hold of him. But Dec’s heart was in the right place. It was never crossing that line into arrogance. You need that little bit of character.”Rice soon moved out of central defence and into midfield. He was always destined for the top but his focus never dipped when he was about to leave West Ham. He drove them to the Conference League title in June 2023 and soon became the most expensive British player ever, joining Arsenal for £105m.Bayern Munich and the Manchester clubs were interested but Mikel Arteta wooed Rice with his footballing vision. Arteta said Rice could be Arsenal’s lighthouse – someone to guide and improve those around him. At Arsenal, though, Rice has become more than a facilitator. He was more defensive at West Ham but has become a No 8 under Arteta. With England he has more freedom thanks to the emergence of the metronomic Elliot Anderson. Rice’s increased attacking threat was evident when he made a box-crashing run during England’s 3-0 win in their friendly against Costa Rica on Wednesday, arriving late to open the scoring by converting a low cross from Anthony Gordon.“I don’t think a lot of people appreciate actually the ability he’s got with the ball,” Cresswell says. “You’re seeing it a lot more at Arsenal side. No disrespect to the West Ham team we had, but his game was kind of different. I remember getting slated a bit for this. I remember saying: ‘If he’s around better players he’ll naturally become a better player.’ He’s one of the best in the world in that position.”Cresswell talks about Rice’s set-piece deliveries, which were crucial to Arsenal winning the league, and his two spectacular free-kicks against Real Madrid in the 2024-25 Champions League quarter-finals. “That was the first time he’d scored a free-kick in his career,” Cresswell says. “I was thinking: impossible. I watched him take free-kicks all the time at West Ham. His ball strike … I was astonished.”The Madrid game felt like Rice announcing himself as a global superstar. He has 10 commercial partners and works with one charity. The interest in him is vast and varied. Rice has his serious face on when he works with fashion and beauty brands such as Burberry and L’Oréal; he can let loose when he did the “Rice, Rice baby” advert for Müller Rice.He can lift the mood by playing the joker and maintain standards by behaving as the consummate professional. He has an eclectic music taste and a deal with JBL headphones. He listens to Gunna and Lil Baby but also likes house music and Harry Styles. Golf is another passion. When Arsenal won the league, Rice was out celebrating until the early hours. There were clips on social media of him taking selfies with supporters on the street. Then, after a few hours’ sleep, it was off to play golf. “It’s how he relaxes,” a friend says. He plays off a handicap of six.The day job is demanding, after all. Rice has had near misses with England, losing the Euro 2020 and 2024 finals. He was involved in two of Arsenal’s three consecutive second-place finishes before they finally finished first. There were times when Rice wondered whether the big prizes would come. Friends told him it was better to be slow and steady; that consistency was always the aim and the wait would be worth it.Perhaps that was why the cameras caught Rice saying: “It’s not done” when Arsenal lost to Manchester City in the league in April. His faith in Arteta and his teammates would be vindicated. “He sometimes doesn’t need to have the armband,” Arteta said. “When he talks people listen.”Cresswell laughs at people on social media who reckon that Rice turns it on for the cameras. “I was at the Arsenal game a couple of weeks ago at West Ham and he’s still the same kid now,” he says. “I’ve got a little eight-year-old boy. Dec came in, gave him a shirt and signed it for him and took pictures with him. He’s never forgotten West Ham or the lads who’ve helped him develop. He’s got all the time in the world for everyone.”These days Rice has flowing locks and does lifestyle interviews about his hair care routine. Cresswell laughs when he thinks back to Rice’s teenage look. “He had a skinhead,” he says. “He looked like a little scally. But we’ve all been a little bit wet behind the ears. He’s a fully grown man now.”Rice, who is in line to win his 74th cap when England face Croatia in Group L on Wednesday, is a family man and a father. The boyish, playful streak persists, though. England have been gearing up for the World Cup by training in stifling conditions in Florida and Rice has laughed at pictures of his bright red face, saying he got a telling off from his mum for not using suncream.It is a disarming way for one of England’s most important players to talk. Rice, who switched allegiance from the Republic of Ireland in 2019, can do self-deprecating. He has that rare combination of being able to clown around without making his managers doubt his dedication.It is not a surprise that Thomas Tuchel has entrusted Rice with the responsibility of being Kane’s deputy. England will rely heavily on Rice’s drive and leadership this summer. The aim, as the head coach keeps saying, is to put a second star on the shirt. There will be plenty more talks on leadership if Rice gets his hands on the World Cup.

Jacob Steinberg and David Hytner in Kansas CitySat, 13 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Injury deprived me of chance to play so I am going to the World Cup to support Brazil | Rodrygo

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Injury deprived me of chance to play so I am going to the World Cup to support Brazil | Rodrygo

Watching the squad presentation knowing I wasn’t in it was tough, but I have high hopes with Carlo Ancelotti in chargeI am travelling to the United States this week to watch some of the Seleção’s games at the World Cup. I’ll be continuing my daily treatment to recover from the knee injury I suffered in March and, during this routine, I’ll try to experience the competition in a different way. While Rodrygo, a boy from Osasco [a city in the state of São Paulo], recognises the privilege this represents, Rodrygo the player, who took part in the entire qualifying cycle, the Copa América and other matches, has feelings that are difficult to explain.Ever since our last World Cup game in 2022, when the Croatia goalkeeper Dominik Livakovic saved my penalty and we were eliminated at the quarter-final stage, returning to the tournament wearing the national team jersey has been a desire that has dominated my thoughts on many nights.The path we have gone down in these past four years has not been easy. All of us – players, coaches, staff, CBF (Brazilian Football Confederation) employees, and, of course, the fans – have faced numerous challenges. So to suffer an injury that ruled me out of the tournament just months before the squad was announced was a huge blow, taking away from me a dream to which I have dedicated my life.The injury – and learning the extent of it through the scans – brought immense sadness. The week of the actual surgery brought me suffering, sleepless nights, a lot of pain and the urge to vomit and faint. But soon an inner strength came, a certainty that life goes on and that I will recover and continue pursuing my World Cup dream.Also, one of the worst days of my life transformed into a huge wave of support from so many people. My faith strengthened me too, as did the unconditional presence of my family and the countless messages and conversations with important people in my life. There was incredible support from Real Madrid, calls from the CBF, the national team staff and the players. I am certain I will return stronger, dedicating myself as I have always done to achieve my goals.Being unable to play during the final part of Real Madrid’s season and not taking part at the World Cup with the Seleção is a feeling impossible to explain. Watching Real Madrid’s crucial matches on TV without being able to step on to the pitch and give my all for the club left a bitter taste. And watching the World Cup squad announcement without the expectation of hearing my name called by Carlo Ancelotti was tough.On the other hand, the joy I have felt wearing the Real Madrid and Brazil shirts is also pretty impossible to put into words. Even with this setback, I believe I still have incredible experiences ahead of me and that I once again can bring joy to those who support me, whether that is for club or country. I am only 25 years old and still have many important dreams to pursue. And I know that, to do that, I need to be strong, as I’ve always been in other decisive moments of my life. The Seleção Brasileira is synonymous with pride. I feel proud to be Brazilian and to always support a team that represents our culture as something beautiful, magical, joyful, united and hardworking. Wearing the Seleção Brasileira shirt is a sensation that is difficult to describe.It’s a pride that comes from the boy in Osasco who wore a replica jersey and dreamed of being a professional player. And a dream, when lived in reality, ends up being shared with everyone who is part of my life and who likes me: family, friends, the team around me, fans and teammates.My first national team game in a stadium was as a fan, Brazil beating Paraguay in a World Cup qualifier at the Arena Corinthians on 28 March 2017 (goals by Neymar, Coutinho and Marcelo). Previously, we hadn’t been able to afford to go to a national team game. I went with my father and the atmosphere was so special, a different energy, with all the club fans cheering for the same team. It’s a moment when we all share the same colours.When the time came for me to wear the shirt, I could feel the affection of the fans – and that made me go back in time and remember the sensations I had felt when I watched the team on TV. We always want to see the national team win titles, but I realised that the people’s love for the team doesn’t depend only on that. People want to be a part of it, to receive a wave, a photo, a hug. They want to see the bus passing by and show that they are together. All of Brazil wants the Seleção in their city. I’ve always had a very beautiful reception in Belém, Brasília, Cuiabá, São Paulo, Curitiba, Rio de Janeiro … it doesn’t matter which region it is.I’m going to the US to follow the team closely and maybe meet my teammates and the staff to bring positive energy. Above all, I am going as a fan of the Brazilian national team. When the game kicks off, I will get nervous, be focused on the game, watching the patterns of play and wanting Brazil to score goals. And, when they score, there will be a mixture of happiness and relief because I know that the whole country expects the Seleção to win the whole tournament.The World Cup involves much more than just what happens on the pitch. It demands total concentration, daily dedication, collaboration before, during and after games, and support from everyone involved. And I’m sure the Seleção possesses all the elements of this package. Above all, we trust Ancelotti.The entire football community knows his history of winning titles but I want to emphasise that this group of players can also count on Ancelotti the human being, someone who helped me when I faced enormous challenges and who supported me in the most difficult moments. He’s a special guy. He knows how to lead in the difficult environment of elite football and knows what he is doing in charge of the Seleção. Let the World Cup begin.

RodrygoSat, 13 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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USA bulldoze Paraguay as co-hosts romp to victory in World Cup opener

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USA bulldoze Paraguay as co-hosts romp to victory in World Cup opener

Across the parking lot from Los Angeles Stadium sits the Forum. In the 1980s, it served as the stage for one of American sports’ most enthralling entertainment outfits, the Los Angeles Lakers. Opening their campaign at the 2026 World Cup in front of 70,492 fans, the US men’s national team embraced the Lakers’ Showtime ethos.The US began their campaign with aplomb, playing Paraguay off the pitch in a 4-1 win.A day earlier, Mauricio Pochettino had preached quiet confidence. There was no need for a fiery pep talk for a group that has long aspired to impress at this home World Cup. Citing advice from a member of Argentina’s victorious 1986 World Cup side, Pochettino said his players needed to play with joy and focus.He got exactly what he asked for in a dazzling first half.The US created their own luck by taking the initiative from the opening whistle. Christian Pulisic and Malik Tillman seemed to be in a competition to see who could nutmeg the most opponents, baiting two Paraguay defenders into yellow cards. The opening goal came in less than 10 minutes. Tim Ream fizzed a ball along the back to Alex Freeman, who played a well-weighted ball up the channel for Weston McKennie. The Juventus midfielder scampered upfield, getting the ball to Pulisic as both players advanced on the box. Pulisic squared the ball for McKennie, whose shot caromed off Damián Bobadilla and tumbled into the net.Past versions of the US often took their foot off the gas after scoring at World Cups. On Friday, this group of players kept pouring on the pressure. On his World Cup debut, Folarin Balogun bagged a brilliant 20-minute double. In the 31st minute, he finished off a cross from Pulisic. His second came with the final kick of the first half: he ran on to a ball up the channel from Tillman and, after some nimble work to bypass Gustavo Gómez, he placed a shot into the top corner.Pulisic was taken off at half-time, although the move appeared to be due to caution rather than injury. Evidently, Pochettino saw no sense in subjecting the team’s star player to petty shin-kicks as Paraguay scrapped to get back into the game. Paraguay improved after the break, monitoring Balogun’s movement and tightening ranks to close down the half-spaces that were often available to the US in the opening 45 minutes.Eventually, Paraguay were able to pull a goal back. In the 73rd minute, the US were caught out of position after a restart by goalkeeper Orlando Gill. Tyler Adams’s attempted clearance found Miguel Almirón just outside the box, and he quickly prodded the ball to Julio Enciso. From there, Enciso played the ball into substitute Maurício’s stride, and the Palmeiras winger ushered his shot beyond Matt Freese.It was a consolation for Paraguay as well as a reminder that this US team have faults. There were holes for Paraguay to exploit across the defence and some concerns about Freese’s reluctance to leave his line. The US’s next opponents, Australia and Turkey, will most likely test Freese’s instincts more, and the defense will need to be sharp, even if they hold a healthy lead.But those are problems for another day. Since the US were announced as co-hosts for this World Cup, every move by a US international has been viewed in the context of this summer’s tournament. Rather than buckle under the pressure, on Friday this team played with a determination to prove they belong at this tournament.It’s hardly a show if you don’t hit the high notes at the end. With Paraguay trying to preserve their goal difference, Gio Reyna – who entered as a late substitute – placed the ball beyond Gill with the outside of his boot.This World Cup cycle was seldom pretty, but it was all mere prelude. These are the bright lights under which this US team have prepared to play – and for 45 minutes, they didn’t flub a single line.

Jeff Rueter at Los Angeles StadiumSat, 13 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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England’s World Cup boots stolen before first training session in Kansas City

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England’s World Cup boots stolen before first training session in Kansas City

Equipment stolen during transportation from FloridaFA will liaise with police in bid to retrieve match bootsEngland have been the victims of a security breakdown after the team’s match boots were stolen before their first World Cup training session in Kansas City.The theft is understood to have taken place while equipment was being transported from the squad’s pre-tournament base in Florida to their training camp at Swope Soccer Village in Missouri. Boots belonging to England’s star players were understood to be among the stolen items, along with official tournament balls and training equipment.Thomas Tuchel’s side will train at their base for the first time on Saturday afternoon. The Football Association declined to comment when approached by the Guardian. It will have to liaise with local police as they attempt to retrieve the equipment.England face Croatia in their opening Group L game in Dallas on Wednesday. The FA has meticulous plans in place as Tuchel attempts to lead the men’s side to their first piece of silverware since 1966, but the incident presents staff with a headache.There were positive vibes during England’s acclimatisation camp in the heat of West Palm Beach, Florida. England won friendlies against New Zealand in Tampa and Costa Rica in Orlando.The performance in the latter was hugely encouraging and featured an eye-catching display from Jude Bellingham, who has boosted his chances of starting over Morgan Rogers at No 10 against Croatia. Bukayo Saka is in a race to prove his fitness after struggling with an achilles problem while Ezri Konsa and John Stones could keep Marc Guéhi out in central defence.

Jacob Steinberg in Kansas CitySat, 13 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Socceroos begin World Cup adventure with underdog status left behind | Jack Snape

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Socceroos begin World Cup adventure with underdog status left behind | Jack Snape

In a super-sized edition that makes Australia a middle power their young squad can budget for four matches at the tournament with the hope of moreThe selections, the sessions, the sweat left steaming on the Oakland grass. These are all now behind the Socceroos, as they fly to Vancouver to begin an adventure that comes around just once every four years.Australia’s best men’s footballers are back again at the World Cup, this time in a super-sized edition that makes a nation that was once a football underdog a middle power.The Socceroos are one of 48 teams at the tournament spread across the United States, Canada and Mexico, in an expansion that has drawn criticism for experimenting with the tried and true 32-nation format established at France 1998.It is now more than 20 years since the Socceroos missed qualification for a World Cup. Australia joined the Asian confederation two decades ago to mitigate their exposure to do-or-die play-offs that had handed only heartbreak against Argentina, Iran and Uruguay. It has also changed expectations, amending the country’s football culture.If hope is the currency of football, the old days delivered Australian fans endless riches. To lose a painful qualifier, and then watch a World Cup six months later and wonder how far one’s nation might have gone – all the time, hope growing for the next – was an experience shared by football’s outsiders across the world.Today, however, followers of the Socceroos have little in common with wide-eyed supporters from Curaçao or Cape Verde – nations who will compete at the World Cup in 2026 for the first time alongside Jordan and Uzbekistan.Australia’s aspiration will be met at this tournament by opportunity. The Socceroos were handed a favourable draw by avoiding any giants in their group. They were also given a marquee match against co-hosts the US, the soccer-off between two proud, sporting countries who prefer football’s alternative name to denote its secondary status.The larger format has changed the dynamic for teams, like Australia, once on the World Cup periphery. Now they are entitled to budget for four matches at the tournament instead of three. The introduction of a round of 32 essentially creates a knockout elimination in 2026 with the same number of participants as the group stage in previous tournaments.The qualification of eight of the 12 groups’ third-placed teams in 2026 means the Socceroos should expect to progress out of Group D, despite the challenge posed by Turkey, the US and Paraguay.Indeed, elimination at the first stage would be a backward step for this Socceroos team given the round of 16 exit in Qatar, where they pushed eventual champions Argentina in a narrow knockout loss.The team flies from Oakland to Vancouver on Friday local time ahead of the match against Turkey the following day, an opponent widely seen as the toughest in the group. It is the last step in a World Cup journey that began all the way back in November 2023, when the Socceroos walloped Bangladesh 7-0.That night at AAMI Park goal scorers included Jamie Maclaren, Mitch Duke and Brandon Borrello, all forwards ultimately overlooked when Popovic finalised his squad two weeks ago.The Socceroos at this tournament are instead brimming with young talent, including 17 debutants in the 26-player squad. Led by defenders Alessandro Circati, Jordy Bos and Lucas Herrington, and forwards Mo Toure and Nestory Irankuna, the next generation gives hope that Australia might emerge as a genuine threat at the World Cup in coming years.Rather than look ahead to 2030 or 2034, however, this tournament is ripe for the taking. Injury clouds hang over key players on each group rival: influential Turkey winger Kenan Yildiz, standout US defender Chris Richards and Paraguay playmaker Julio Enciso.Coach Tony Popovic enjoys support in the Socceroos dressing room, having won 10 of 18 matches since taking over from Graham Arnold in 2024. That record secured him a contract extension on the eve of the World Cup, which keeps him in the role until at least the Asian Cup in January next year.Back home there will be a healthy television audience, given kick-off times in Canada and the US make for convenient weekend watch parties. Expect Federation Square in Melbourne, and other live sites around the country, to be heaving.Yes, there will be consternation about the right of the US to host a global event given Donald Trump’s decision to send military into Venezuela and missiles into Iran, let alone his record domestically. Teeth will grate at the so-called hydration breaks, which may or may not coincide with advertising. Fans will gripe about dynamic ticket pricing, like many of Fifa’s decisions. Eyes will roll at on-field play acting.Eventually, though, the charm of the World Cup will soak through. Socceroos veteran Aziz Behich said it best, just as his third and almost certainly final World Cup got under way. “I still get butterflies, like I did the first time around in Russia [in 2018],” the 35-year-old said. “That’s why I’m still here.”

Jack Snape in OaklandSat, 13 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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USA v Paraguay: World Cup 2026 – live

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USA v Paraguay: World Cup 2026 – live

There will be no rousing Hollywood pep talk from Mauricio Pochettino ahead of today’s USMNT World Cup opener. He and his players are trusting nearly two years of work since he took the helm – plus all of the reasons that got them into the sport in the first place.“The most important [thing] is not to be disconnected with your emotional relationship with the game,” Pochettino said. “They need to think tomorrow and play like they are a child – with no pressure, with no responsibility.”

Beau DureFri, 12 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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BBC kicks off World Cup broadcast battle in Salford and provides contrast to ITV’s celebrity slop

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BBC kicks off World Cup broadcast battle in Salford and provides contrast to ITV’s celebrity slop

Journalistic muscles were flexed with Ros Atkins factchecking real-world issues with production offering merits more achievable by working from homeMust a World Cup broadcast be on location? The BBC, for reasons of cost and environmental concerns, has rolled back to when tournaments were beamed back to the UK. Halcyon days of Brian Moore and Des Lynam accompanied by pundits in garish knitwear and beige furniture are long gone, if lamented. How to recapture their magic? Need it be a problem when the domestic market leader, Sky’s Monday Night Football, is broadcast from a business park near the M4?ITV had the first two games – Mexico v South Africa and South Korea v Czechia – but its Brooklyn views of Lower Manhattan may yet fall victim to elements accentuated by those environmental issues. It also asks one of the World Cup’s leading questions: how dialled in is the American public? The distracting activity taking place behind Gary Neville, Ian Wright and Roy Keane suggests a city carrying out business as usual even while hot takes are cooked on the veranda.The BBC’s opening broadcast, Canada against Bosnia and Herzegovina, on Friday night – begins with a montage. “Welcome back, we missed you,” says an American narrator, channelling the hospitality the US was formerly famous for. Over in Salford, Gabby Logan anchors before an LED backdrop of Toronto; this will alter according to the location of matches. Joining Wayne Rooney and Micah Richards, the latter cackling in self-deprecation after Logan digs him out for never having played in the tournament, is Olivier Giroud. The smouldering Frenchman, an actual World Cup winner, is full of bonhomie, if short on words. Unlike in Brooklyn, where ambient noise has caused problems, this quartet can hear each other perfectly.Richards is commuting to New York for his Netflix assignments with Gary Lineker’s Goalhanger collective and manages to sneak mention of the departed enfant terrible. “Same initials, different person,” says Logan, moving things swiftly along. Lineker’s recent comment that – had he worked for the BBC during the World Cup – he “would have been in Salford in a green box” had been unhelpful.Where ITV has opted for celebrity slop in the inexplicable inclusion of Man Vs Food’s Adam Richman, BBC journalistic muscles are flexed. Outside Source’s Ros Atkins fact-checks the real-world issues: Gianni Infantino’s Fifa, Trump, Iran, visas and ticket prices. “It’s not been a good look at all,” offers Richards, handed a hot potato but dealing skilfully enough with issues of inclusivity and cost. “We want to see the joy in everyone,” he concludes, diverting to Thursday’s scenes of Mexican celebration. Rooney, quiet on geopolitics, is happy to agree.An hour of preamble takes in visits to the Scotland and England camps, the latter mercifully brief when it has too often been the fall-back for broadcasters short on material. Next: Bosnian history, featuring this organ’s Jonathan Wilson discussing the nation’s 1992 independence referendum in geography-teacher tweed.By leaning into journalism and humanities, the BBC has chosen contrast with ITV’s star system, for whom Gabriel Clarke alone does the issue-led heavy lifting. Perhaps with good reason. Rooney’s and Richards’s research on Friday’s competing teams is quite obviously limited. “I’ve actually done American TV with him and he loves the game,” offers Richards of the Canada coach, Jesse Marsch. “It’s great for him,” shrugs Rooney on Luc de Fougerolles, the 20-year-old Canada defender.Rooney stays equally noncommittal when critiquing Michael Bublé, singing in an opening ceremony the BBC has decided to not bother showing: “So so, he’s obviously popular.” Logan wisely decides not to canvas opinions of Alanis Morissette’s Canadian national anthem before the game is handed into the safe hands of Steve Wilson and Stephen Warnock.Much BBC commentary will be done off-tube, though this commentary pairing is in Toronto, from where the iPlayer’s UHD service exposes a jarring number of empty seats for a host nation’s opener. Warnock asks: “Is that Ryan Reynolds?” The Wrexham co-owner is sat near Wayne’s World’s Mike Myers.At half-time, the other Wayne takes a back seat, the BBC’s podcast star in lieu of Lineker low on energy. Instead, Richards assumes centre stage, jollying along Giroud. “Set pieces are so important,” Richards declares, dissecting Bosnia’s first-half goal. After Canada snatch a deserved draw, Rooney disapproves of Marsch’s frenzied drinks-break pep talk but admits: “He’s given them energy.”The post-match appearance of Darren Cann, the former assistant referee, sets fire into the belly of Rooney at long last. “It’s not the first time we’ve disagreed,” he says. Logan, ever professional, dampens things down in the sign-off, during which Richards concludes: “How good is the World Cup?”The conclusion from the opening shots of the battle of the terrestrial broadcasters is that if ITV retains the more punchy pundits the BBC’s production can offer merits made more achievable by working from home.

John BrewinFri, 12 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Supersub Cyle Larin rescues point for Canada against Bosnia and Herzegovina

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Supersub Cyle Larin rescues point for Canada against Bosnia and Herzegovina

“History is about to be made,” the understandably giddy stadium announcer said in the seconds before kick-off and while this was not the perfect start, Canada will not forget Cyle Larin’s equaliser against Bosnia and Herzegovina in a hurry. Trailing to Jovo Lukic’s first international goal, the Southampton striker Larin stepped off the bench and pulled the co-hosts level with his first touch, lashing in 121 seconds after his entrance. A draw in their Group B opener already trumps their last World Cup outing, when they finished pointless in Qatar.Jesse Marsch’s side always looked capable of scoring, though Juventus’s Jonathan David missed a golden opportunity in the first half and a preposterous Sead Kolasinac block that saw the ball cannon on to the crossbar prevented Richie Laryea finding the net in the second. Bosnia, though, were always playing with fire, holding dear Lukic’s first-half header on his first competitive start for his country. It was a goal that tested the foundations of the south stand, where 7,000 temporary seats were erected to increase the stadium’s capacity, many of them occupied by Bosnia’s most ardent supporters.For the locals, a first World Cup game on Canadian soil represented an occasion they were always going to savour, regardless of result and long before the captain, Stephen Eustáquio, rolled the ball to Ismaël Koné at kick-off. By that point, it had been quite the show; Michael Bublé was smuggled on to the centre circle among the 48 flag bearers – the US flag was again booed in some quarters – before performing Bring It On Home to Me and, a few minutes later, Alanis Morissette took centre stage to sing Canada’s national anthem, Marsch, born in Wisconsin, singing every word. Oh, and there was a flypast from the The Snowbirds, the Canadian air force’s answer to the Red Arrows.There was plenty of early gusto from Canada, as expected, Liam Millar’s long throw causing Bosnia and Herzegovina a headache inside 45 seconds. Amar Memic, who started up front alongside Ermedin Demirovic with Edin Dzeko not at full fitness, passed up the first real chance a minute later, blazing over inside the area.Jonathan David, Canada’s biggest hitter in the absence of Alphonso Davies, missed a sitter on 17 minutes, leaving Marsch to contort in agony on the touchline. Marsch acknowledged his players could not afford to be overhyped but both of his full-backs, Laryea and Alistair Johnston, made hasty challenges, the latter booked for crudely wiping out Memic.Laryea’s poor challenge was the precursor to Bosnia’s opener. It stemmed from a seemingly training-ground corner routine, Kolasinac rising high at the front post to flick the ball closer to danger and Lukic glanced in a yard or two from the goalline. Cue delirium in the south stand, in the middle of which thousands of Bosnia’s supporters’ group BHFanaticos were stationed.The water break immediately afterwards provided Marsch with the chance to lighten the load on his players, though the sound of Whitney Houston blaring over the stadium speakers felt untimely.Marsch’s team selection was predictable, though in attack Villarreal’s Tani Oluwaseyi was preferred to the Southampton forward Larin. Oluwaseyi was guilty of spurning another big chance for Canada just after the half-hour, spooning over when presented with a clear sight of goal.Canada dominated possession, had more shots and three times as many touches in the opposition box, but had nothing to show for it at the interval. Eustáquio had spoken about the importance of not being overawed but they suffered from a little stage fright in big moments. “We don’t want for all the emotions to block us mentally or physically so that we can’t perform,” he said.Canada broadly carried on where they left off, plenty of promising moves fizzling out in the final phase. At the same time there was nothing more Laryea, who plays here for Toronto, could have done when Kolasinac made an extraordinary clearance eight minutes into the second half, intervening to divert his goal-bound shot on to the crossbar before Bosnia cleared the ball.Laryea’s sidefoot effort past Nikola Vasilj came at the end of an incisive Canada interchange. If that stung, more pain almost followed but Demirovic fluffed his lines when a deflection put him clear on goal. Bosnia were having to sustain lots of Canada pressure. Dzeko, in a warmup bib on the sidelines, recognised as much, waving his hands like windmills, encouraging his teammates to respawn.The chances kept coming for Canada. Nikola Katic headed off the line to thwart Oluwaseyi. A few minutes earlier a frustrated Marsch thumped a ball down on the touchline as another goalscoring opportunity eluded them. A triple substitution on the hour saw Marsch replenish his frontline, introducing Promise David, the highly rated Union Saint-Gilloise striker, Jacob Shaffelburg and Ali Ahmed.And then came Larin, in place of Oluwaseyi. Koné fed David, who located Larin with a flick. Larin made the finish look easy, swivelling inside the box and volleying past Vasilj.

Ben Fisher at Toronto StadiumFri, 12 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Thomas Partey out of Ghana’s World Cup opener after visa application to Canada refused

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Thomas Partey out of Ghana’s World Cup opener after visa application to Canada refused

Player had been due to play against Panama in TorontoThe Ghana defender Thomas Partey will miss their opening World Cup game against Panama after being refused a visa to Canada, where the game is being staged in Toronto.In a statement, Fifa said: “Fifa can confirm that player Thomas Partey will be unable to travel from Ghana’s team base camp in Boston, USA, to Canada for their first match against Panama on Wednesday, 17 June, as his visa application has been refused by the Canadian government.“Fifa is not involved in the immigration processes of host countries, including the adjudication of visas. As with previous Fifa events, the host government ultimately determines who receives a visa and is admitted into the country.”The former Arsenal midfielder, 32, now plays for Villareal in Spain.In 2025 Partey was charged in the UK with five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault relating to alleged incidents between 2021 and 2022.Partey pleaded not guilty to all those charges at Southwark crown court in September. In February of this year he faced two new counts of rape after another woman came forward to police. In April he pleaded not guilty to those two allegations of rape. A trial is due to take place in June 2027.His defence lawyer, Jenny Wiltshire, said: “Thomas Partey continues to deny all charges against him. He has cooperated with the police throughout.”After their match in Toronto, Ghana are due to play England in Boston on 23 June and Croatia in Philadelphia on 27 June.

Guardian sportFri, 12 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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