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Bale forms new sports fund with club investment eyed

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Bale forms new sports fund with club investment eyed

2 CommentsGareth Bale has reiterated his desire to buy a football club after launching a new sports investment fund and has refused to rule out making a fresh move for Cardiff City.The former Real Madrid and Wales star was frustrated last summer when Bluebirds owner Vincent Tan rejected an offer from the investment group Bale was working with to take control of his hometown club.Bale, who retired from playing in January 2023, has now formed a sports fund with American private equity firm Juggernaut Capital, which plans to invest in teams and leagues in both men's and women's sports."It's about being patient, finding the right club, and the right path for us to take," Bale told US media organisation Front Office Sports."That doesn't mean Cardiff is off the table. But I think now we have a bit of time, and will look around."Bale more 'complete' than Ronaldo - CasemiroSince Bale's initial interest in Cardiff 12 months ago, the Bluebirds have won promotion back to the Championship under head coach Brian Barry-Murphy.Bale hung up his boots two months after featuring for Wales at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.Post-retirement, the Cardiff-born star has been a regular pundit on TV and has continued to pursue his hobby of playing golf.

BBC SportMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Palace appoint Sage as head coach on three-year deal

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Palace appoint Sage as head coach on three-year deal

56 CommentsCrystal Palace have appointed Lens manager Pierre Sage as their head coach on a three-year contract. The 47-year-old Frenchman replaces Oliver Glasner, who left the Eagles at the end of the 2025-26 season after two and a half years in charge.Sage joined Lens 12 months ago and became Ligue 1's manager of the year, leading Lens to a second-placed finish and the first Coupe de France triumph in the club's 120-year history.He previously spent 14 months as head coach of Lyon, initially on an interim basis, and guided them to Europa League qualification in 2024-25.Palace had been interested in former Bournemouth manager Andoni Iraola, now at Liverpool, with Frank Lampard, Kieran McKenna, and Sean Dyche also reportedly in the mix.Sage has big shoes to fill after Glasner, who said in January he would leave Palace this summer, won three trophies during his time in south London.The Austrian led the Eagles to the first major trophy in their history - the FA Cup in 2025 - and followed up by winning the Community Shield and Conference League last season.Their European triumph means Palace will play Europa League football in Sage's debut campaign.He will be joined at the club by Jamal Alioui, his assistant coach at Lens. Existing Palace coaches Paddy McCarthy and Andy Quy will stay on as part of Sage's backroom staff.Sage's Lens side were built on aggressive pressing and a willingness to attack quickly once they won the ball back.The Opta numbers show a team intent on regaining possession high up the pitch. Lens made 426 high turnovers during the 2025-26 season, frequently turning those moments into chances - producing 69 shots and seven goals.The focus was not just on winning the ball, but on doing it in areas where they could immediately threaten. That approach shapes how they attacked.Lens produced 65 direct attacks and 55 fast breaks last season, highlighting a clear preference for moving forward at speed rather than recycling possession.Their overall profile reflects that trade-off.Lens averaged 51.9% possession in 2025-26 - but their game was less about long spells on the ball and more about what happened the moment they won it back.It speaks to a deliberate strategy, rather than a lack of control.The result was the clear identity of a side less concerned about dominating the ball and more focused on controlling games through pressure, regains and rapid transitions.Latest Crystal Palace news, analysis and fan viewsAsk about Crystal Palace - what do you want to know?

BBC SportMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Crystal Palace confirm appointment of Pierre Sage as head coach

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Crystal Palace confirm appointment of Pierre Sage as head coach

Sage joins after winning Coupe de France with Lens‘We come here with a lot of ambition,’ Sage saysCrystal Palace have confirmed the appointment of Pierre Sage as their head coach. The 47-year-old led Lens to second in Ligue 1 and won the Coupe de France this season and became Palace’s top choice after Andoni Iraola joined Liverpool.Sage had one season in charge of Lens and his only previous top-level head coach’s role was with Lyon, where he spent 14 months until January 2025. He takes over at Palace from Oliver Glasner, the club’s most successful manager, who won the FA Cup and Conference League.Sage’s preference for a system similar to that employed by Glasner is believed to have been a major factor in Palace’s thinking. He has signed a three year contract.Sage said: “Oliver Glasner achieved some amazing things, and now I have to do the same. That’s why we come here with a lot of ambition. The dynamic here is really positive, and we are in this mindset too.”

Guardian sportMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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In twilight of Messi’s career, Americans are gifted one last chance to witness his international magic

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In twilight of Messi’s career, Americans are gifted one last chance to witness his international magic

Argentinian’s legacy has no need for another World Cup but return allows hosts to witness his international curtain callIt’s a moment more iconic than any other in the 30-year history of Major League Soccer. Lionel Messi, then 36, standing over a free kick 30 yards from goal, days after completing a shock move to the United States. On that night in the summer of 2023, deep into the dying moments of his US debut, Inter Miami were in need of a miracle.With one brilliant stroke of his left foot, Messi delivered. His game-winning free kick, placed just out of reach of the opposing goalkeeper, was a work of art. It rolled back the years, reminiscent of the brilliance that had by then already solidified his stature as the greatest player in the history of the sport. Those in attendance who weren’t screaming were simply wide-eyed and slack jawed, in disbelief at what they’d seen.To many who were there that night, Messi’s mere presence in Major League Soccer was more surreal than what they’d just witnessed. The Argentina legend was of course a staple in the US by 2023 but he’d largely been kept at arm’s length. He was readily available on television, his genius almost always narrated by Ray Hudson’s hyperbolic prose, and Americans would occasionally visit with Messi in person as well, almost always in the form of a meaningless summer friendly every year or two.Now in the twilight of his career, Messi had shirked other leagues and offers and had come to the US to retire. What has followed has been a complicated yet unquestionably successful two-and-a-half years, with Miami winning their first league championship and solidifying themselves as the standard-bearers in MLS.A funny thing also happened along the way.When Messi joined up with Miami, he was months removed from his crowning achievement – winning the 2022 World Cup – and he’d suggested repeatedly that the tournament would be his final one. Up until that point, the only true, meaningful moment of Messi’s international career Americans had witnessed in person had been his brief retirement from the national team after the 2016 Copa América Centenario, when a tearful Messi broke down to the media after losing the final.Messi, of course, did return to the Albiceleste and offered Americans another chance to watch his magic on the international stage during the 2024 Copa América, which he won. Despite some frustrations, he also enjoyed his club football at Miami and his everyday life in the US tremendously. Slowly, it began to feel more and more possible he’d feature in his sixth World Cup this summer, and American fans began to realize they’d get an entirely unexpected chance to watch the diminutive forward’s international curtain call in person.Messi follows in the footsteps of Pelé, who came to the US in the mid-70s, and David Beckham, who did so three decades later. Unlike those two, Messi only ever came here to play football, not to proselytize the game to the American masses. He’s expanded his commercial footprint here, certainly, but Messi never needed to conquer American club soccer to do so. His face and name alone would have sufficed. His presence here at times feels more like a gift than anything else.Argentina are favored by few to repeat as champions this year, often thrown behind Spain, France and even England, at times, as contenders. He is approaching Miroslav Klose’s all-time World Cup goals record of 16 (Messi has 13) and could log his 200th international cap during the tournament. The appeal of watching Messi win another World Cup feels undeniable. It has little to do with his legacy. Any suggestion that Messi needs to win another title to solidify that feels genuinely farcical.He does feel well equipped to perform this summer, in no small part because his time in MLS has already exposed him to many of the stadiums he’ll play in and, more importantly, because he’s already grown accustomed to the absurdities of traveling thousands of miles between matches, as is frequently the case in the American top flight. He has been at ease in the US, telling reporters last week he is “savoring every moment” of his swan song with Argentina as the end approaches.The US is savoring every moment of Messi’s North American curtain call as well.Messi, put simply, is in extra time at this point, and winning another championship would only solidify his legend. Entirely unburdened, the Argentinian is playing his final World Cup free from the expectations that come with being a precocious wunderkind, in competition for the best player in the world, or a legend of the game looking for one last piece to balance his trophy cabinet. That sort of freedom can liberate and empower a player, but players of Messi’s ilk often need those expectations to continue to perform.How Messi responds this summer remains to be seen, but we will get our first glimpse at him on Tuesday evening in Kansas City, as his US denouement continues.

Pablo Iglesias Maurer in Kansas CityMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Tunisia sack head coach after heavy defeat in World Cup opener

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Tunisia sack head coach after heavy defeat in World Cup opener

Tunisia have announced that their head coach Sabri Lamouchi has been sacked after the 5-1 defeat to Sweden in their opening game of the 2026 World Cup.A statement released on the Tunisian FA Instagram read:"An agreement has been officially reached to dismiss coach Sabri Lamouch."Plans are under way ‌to appoint ‌Mondher Kebaier as the national team ‌coach [on an interim basis]."Tunisia play Japan in their second group game on Saturday before facing the Netherlands.World Cup 2026 fixture schedule - your day-by-day guideWorld Cup 2026 dates, venues and expanded format

Sky SportsMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: Sky Sports
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BBC or ITV? Inside how World Cup broadcast picks are made

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BBC or ITV? Inside how World Cup broadcast picks are made

With so many World Cup matches to watch it can be hard to keep up with the schedule and whether a game is on the BBC or ITV. You might also have wondered how broadcasters agree which matches they get to show in the first place.It's not an easy process for TV executives tasked with the job of working this out.In the UK, the BBC and ITV have screened football's global showpiece together since 1966. Two years ago they agreed a deal to share live coverage again in 2026 and 2030, ensuring the World Cup remained on free-to-air television.The two broadcasters split matches between them, including a shared final.But how is it decided who shows which matches? How does the process work?Executive producer Phil Bigwood knows exactly how things work behind the scenes. He's been part of the BBC's World Cup team for more than 20 years.The process - or 'split' as Bigwood calls it is simple: The BBC and ITV take it in turns to have the first pick and rotate it between tournaments - it's the same with the Euros.Back in December - when the World Cup draw was made - it was the BBC's turn to pick first. Once they'd picked their first match, ITV then chose theirs, and it went back and forth until all the matches had been allocated. Then both the BBC and ITV broadcast the final."We typically end up with an even split with the priority games like England, Scotland and the knockout matches having the highest value," Bigwood said in December."For this World Cup there are 91 picks in total and we get 10 minutes to make each one - although we don't always need that long."For the Euros in Berlin last year it took a few hours to get through, but this will take a lot longer. There's normally quite a lot of coffee drunk!"Before the split takes place, both sides have to do their homework.Following the draw broadcasters find out when and where the matches will be. The job then is to come up with a plan for which games take priority."We have a couple of days of conversations - at least - around what we would like to do and which way we might want to go," Bigwood says."In the BBC's case we've got other scheduling like Wimbledon to take into account - for ITV they've got their commercial considerations. You need to weigh all this up as part of your strategy."You plot through each match and you also have a day-by-day schedule. No broadcaster wants to end up in a situation where you have four live games on one day."There's lots to consider - covering matches involving the home nations is paramount and predicting who might face each other in the knockout stages is also key.Kick-off times need to be taken into account too. This tournament across the USA, Canada and Mexico has 13 different kick-off times, which adds an extra layer of complication."You have to weigh up how far you think a team might progress," Bigwood adds. "If there's a big team - say in England's group - do you go with that or something else? That's always the big conundrum."Once we've all agreed on what pick we want we'll then phone ITV and confirm it, they then have the next pick. We're not in the same room and we never know which way they're going to go."The plan both sides have in place has to be constantly tweaked - after all ITV might well pick one of the matches the BBC had their eyes on, and vice versa.Alongside the group games, both sides need to choose which picks they will have from the knockout rounds during the tournament. These will be some of the best games - but no-one yet knows what those matches will be."This is where a bit of guesswork comes in," says Bigwood."At Euro 2016 we anticipated that England could face France in a blockbuster quarter-final. But England lost to Iceland in the last 16 so we didn't get the game we wanted."The broadcasters also have to balance up a time slot with the appeal of a match."For example, at the Brazil World Cup there was one early-hours game that was due to be played in Manaus up in the Amazon," Bigwood says."We joked that it was going to be the last pick because we thought nobody would want that game."But it ended up being England v Italy and was one of the top BBC picks. Afterwards we were laughing - we thought it was the one game we were all trying to avoid!"With so many variables and unknowns a lot of the TV scheduling comes down to luck."If it goes to a penalty shootout then you're in the hands of 22 blokes on a field. You're just hoping your gambles pay off. But there's absolutely nothing you can do to control those knockout games. We'll always have things that don't work in our favour."Let's be honest, we could all sit here and do a lottery and predict every result through to the final but nobody's going to be right are they?"Despite the competition and the battle for ratings, do both sides get on? Are there any disagreements or heated exchanges during the split?"We've known the guys at ITV for many years. Some of them used to work at the BBC and we're friends with a lot of them - it's a partnership," Bigwood says."Both sides know what their priority games will be. We'll sometimes throw each other a curveball with a pick choice but it never gets heated or anything like that."Obviously it's for the benefit of everyone that both parties come away and are happy with what they've got."The split always takes place as close as possible to the draw - this is important so that broadcasters can start on the complicated logistics of covering so many games."After the split has been agreed and ratified we attend a world broadcaster meeting - that's when Fifa update everybody on the production plans."We get told everything from how visas and customs will work to where camera positions will be."Our BBC team then has to submit every booking that is required for all the games. That includes every car park pass we'll need, every camera position, every lines feed - literally everything - it's quite a lively time!"Then there are hotel bookings, flights and so on. This is undoubtedly the most difficult bit of the process."The BBC approached ITV for comment but they chose not to contribute.This article was originally published in December 2025.

BBC SportMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Empty seat at World Cup for imprisoned French sports journalist

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Empty seat at World Cup for imprisoned French sports journalist

A seat is being left empty in the press box at every France game at the World Cup to highlight the case of a French sports journalist who is in prison in Algeria.Christophe Gleizes was sentenced in 2025 for seven years for supporting terrorism.French journalists' unions have called on Algeria to release Gleizes, who specialises in African football for the Paris-based So Foot magazine.On Monday, journalists held up scarves saying 'Free Gleizes' before France boss Didier Deschamps' news conference at the New Jersey New York Stadium to preview Tuesday's game with Senegal (20:00 BST).Gleizes' mother Sylvie has travelled to the World Cup to highlight her son's case.She told BBC Sport on Monday that his accreditation for the tournament was personally approved by Fifa president Gianni Infantino.She added that her son felt "cut off" from the world.As well as a seat in the press box, a chair in each France news conference is being left empty to highlight his case.Journalist Vincent Duluc, who works for French daily sports newspaper L'Equipe, asked a question to Deschamps on behalf of Gleizes about hydration breaks on Monday."I hope for his sake and his family's that he can be here as soon as possible and ask his questions himself," Deschamps replied.Everything you need to know about the World Cup

BBC SportMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Tunisia sack Sabri Lamouchi one game into World Cup after ⁠5-1 defeat by Sweden

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Tunisia sack Sabri Lamouchi one game into World Cup after ⁠5-1 defeat by Sweden

Move comes after thrashing in opening game in MexicoTunisia still to face Japan and Netherlands in Group FTunisia sacked their head coach, Sabri Lamouchi, on Monday after ⁠a 5-1 defeat by Sweden in their first World Cup game. The Tunisian ⁠football federation ⁠announced ​his dismissal on its Instagram account.“An agreement has been officially reached ⁠to dismiss coach Sabri Lamouchi,” the statement said. “Plans are under way ‌to appoint ‌Mondher Kebaier as the national team ‌coach [on an interim basis].”Tunisia will face Japan on Saturday in the same stadium in Guadalupe where they lost to Sweden before finishing ​their group games against the Netherlands in Kansas City.Lamouchi, 54, was hired in January and was ⁠already under fire after a 5-0 defeat by ​Belgium in a ​pre-tournament friendly ​in Brussels.The ‌Frenchman previously ​managed ​Côte d’Ivoire at the 2014 World Cup but failed to advance beyond the group stage in Brazil.

ReutersMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Gvardiol agrees new Man City deal until 2031

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Gvardiol agrees new Man City deal until 2031

Manchester City reporterPublished8 minutes agoCommentsDefender Josko Gvardiol has agreed a new contract at Manchester City until the summer of 2031, sources have told BBC Sport.The 24-year-old's current deal was set to expire in 2028 but the player is now set to remain at Etihad Stadium, ending speculation, external about a move to La Liga giants Real Madrid and Bundesliga champions Bayern Munich.BBC Sport reported last week that City were feeling positive in conversations around a new contract and that talks were progressing well.Gvardiol is currently preparing for the World Cup with Croatia and could come up against some of his City team-mates in their opening game against England on Wednesday (kick-off 21:00 BST).Gvardiol won City's player of the season award in 2024-25 but played only 25 games in all competitions last season as his campaign was disrupted for four months after sustaining a broken leg in January.Adept at playing centre-back or left-back, he returned to Premier League action in May by featuring in 58 minutes against Crystal Palace and the last 12 minutes in the final game of the season against Aston Villa.

BBC SportMon, 15 Jun 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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