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Germany fire SEVEN past World Cup debutants Curacao

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Germany fire SEVEN past World Cup debutants Curacao

Germany made a confident start to their World Cup campaign with a 7-1 win over tournament debutants Curacao in Group E.Felix Nmecha opened the scoring just six minutes in, but Germany were stunned when Livano Comenencia levelled with Curacao's first ever World Cup goal.It was a jubilant moment for a nation with a total population of 160,000 who have become the smallest to ever reach and score at the World Cup.However, a Nico Schlotterbeck header and Havertz penalty soon restored Germany's advantage before half-time.Just over a minute into the second half, Jamal Musiala slotted the ball into the far corner from Joshua Kimmich's threaded pass before Germany struck again in the 68th minute when Florian Wirtz's pass was flicked by Denis Undav to Nathaniel Brown, who hooked a volley into the bottom corner.A comfortable display saw further goals in the second half from Undav and Havertz as Germany wrapped up three points in their first Group E game.6: GOAL! Nmecha settles any early nerves against the minnows with a quality curling strike21: GOAL! Comenencia makes history for Curacao by scoring their first ever World Cup goal38: GOAL! Schlotterbeck heads Germany back in front45+1: GOAL! Havertz opens his account for the World Cup from penalty spot47: GOAL! Musiala tucks away a fantastic finish from the angle after Kimmich pass68: GOAL! Brown appears up the pitch from left-back to volley home78: GOAL! Undav comes off the bench to make it 6-187: GOAL! Havertz races away and clips home to seal the comfortable victoryThis was a difficult game to assess because on the face of it that was emphatic from Germany and there were some superb finishes but they also looked a little vulnerable at the back.Would a better team than Curacao expose those frailties? Maybe we will find out as this tournament progresses. But Germany's attacking prowess has sent a message.Wirtz was dictating matters in the final third, flanked by the direct running of Musiala and Sane. Germany have an excellent balance in attack.For now, it is a big win for Julian Nagelsmann's side on what was a historic day, nevertheless, for Curacao.

Sky SportsSun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: Sky Sports
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Curaçao enjoy their moment but Havertz and ruthless Germany show no mercy

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Curaçao enjoy their moment but Havertz and ruthless Germany show no mercy

The net rippled and Curaçao’s bench exploded in every conceivable ­direction, their giddiness underpinned by a lucid awareness of the goal’s place in history. Livano Comenencia had just equalised against Germany and an island of 158,000 inhabitants, represented here by an accomplished group born almost entirely in the Netherlands, could revel disbelievingly in a moment it had dreamed of.Reality eventually bit, Julian Nagelsmann’s side declaring on seven and easily avoiding an embarrassment that would have outdone their group-stage exits in the previous two World Cups. They will surely reach the knockouts this time and could have made absolutely certain by adding several more. Nagelsmann will be pleased that threats emanated from across the pitch, half a dozen different scorers bearing testament to that, but it should go without saying that more accurate tests of strength await. Kai Havertz, rounding things off neatly late on with his second goal, will hope to be similarly efficient later on.Half of Curaçao’s population could occupy the vast, sheer stands of Houston’s stadium. The challenge was for their team not to be dwarfed but the noise from their 7,000-strong “blue wave”, a number of whom had travelled from the island on a day trip, told its own story before kick-off. The fact of being here, celebrated exuberantly at a launch party near the city’s midtown the previous night, was enough for most. Progressing from a daunting Group E would be an even greater achievement than the improbable act of qualifying.When a marauding Deveron Fonville was checked abruptly by Aleksandar Pavlovic in the opening moments it was clear Dick Advocaat, breaking a record himself as the tournament’s oldest ever coach, had not sent Curaçao to stand on ceremony. He had picked three forwards but with that came a risk of exposure. Germany had already probed down the left before Felix Nmecha, keeping an attack alive after Jamal Musiala’s shot had been blocked, exchanged passes with Florian Wirtz and took aim. His first-time strike from 16 yards, firm and curling, left the keeper Eloy Room standing.The floodgates seemed sure to open. Nmecha was quickly emboldened to shoot again, missing the far post by inches, and then Leroy Sané danced inside only to scrape wide. Nmecha and Wirtz both had further efforts before Curaçao could cross the halfway line meaningfully.Yet Comenencia’s moment of magic did not come entirely as a surprise. Curaçao had warmed into the game, Leandro Bacuna lofting over and Tahith Chong exhibiting some tidy footwork, when a rapid attack down the right was only half dealt with by Nico Schlotterbeck. Jürgen Locadia, seizing on the loose ball, had a shot blocked but Comenencia was not to be denied. He cracked a low shot past Neuer via a slight deflection and wrote an indelible entry in World Cup lore.Curaçao were coursing with adrenaline and momentum. It was almost immediately halted by the now standard three-minute hydration break, apparently still necessary in a closed-roof arena cooled to around 22 degrees, and instead of football a pulsating crowd was distracted by a Mariachi band performance from a stage in one of the corners. Who and what, exactly, did that irrelevance serve?In fairness it took Germany another 17 minutes to profit. Room reacted smartly to tip over a Schlotterbeck header, Comenencia then blocking from Pavlovic and Fonville denying Sané a certain goal. Curaçao were living a charmed life but could not get away with leaving Schlotterbeck completely unmarked to glance Nathaniel Brown’s right-sided corner past a helpless Room.Nagelsmann, the subject of pre-match mischief from a potentially jobseeking Jürgen Klopp, celebrated in relief. His team kept pressing and had breathing space by half time. Nmecha, bursting forward from midfield at every opportunity, was tripped in the box by Riechedly Bazoer and Havertz rolled the penalty in nonchalantly just before the whistle.The contest had been great fun while it lasted. It was definitively over 68 seconds after the resumption when Joshua Kimmich, given time and space to tuck inside, slid a pass down the inside right to greet a clever Musiala run. A sharp finish, chopped across Room from an angle, gave the scoreline a look to reflect Germany’s steady stream of chances.Then Brown raised the volume with a delightful goal, the impressive left-back steering in a deft volley after Deniz Undav’s flick. Undav, a substitute, quickly scored from close range shortly after Jearl Margaritha had come close for Curaçao. A deft dink from Havertz completed the rout but the blue wave had made its impression.

Nick Ames at Houston StadiumSun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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‘We’re the same as we were then’: bullish Spain confident of repeating Euros success

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‘We’re the same as we were then’: bullish Spain confident of repeating Euros success

Squad has evolved since 2024 but the European champions are happy to embrace the tag of tournament favouritesSpain knew, now everyone else does too. It was almost 1.30am on 15 July 2024 when Álvaro Morata, the captain who had lifted the Henry Delaunay trophy, headed down the slope and towards the team bus parked beneath the Olympic Stadium in Berlin. A European champion now, he came with a big black boombox, a small blue Euro 2024 wash bag, a mischievous look and a knowing grin. “Seems I have an eye for a player,” he said.Seems he did. A month earlier, when the mood was not so optimistic, Morata had been asked if Spain really had any world-class footballers, the kind that could win the Ballon d’Or and thus a major trophy. “Yes,” he replied and he had started naming them: Rodri, Pedri, Nico Williams, Lamine Yamal. Now, medal in his pocket, he left the naming to them. “You choose one,” he said. “Any one.” There were candidates everywhere. They were there in Berlin and, although Morata is no longer around, they are there in Chattanooga too.At Spain’s World Cup training base, over a little level crossing and through some woods, there is confidence. But then there always was. Players too, despite the external doubts that were dealt with in Germany. “All Rodri lacks is marketing,” Morata had insisted before the Euros and a few months later Rodri won the Ballon d’Or his captain believed he deserved before. The question may not be whether Lamine Yamal will follow but how often. Luis Enrique adds “Potter” to Pedri’s name. Fabián Ruiz has won two Champions Leagues in a row. If no one talks about Mikel Oyarzabal, especially not Mikel Oyarzabal, they should. And David Raya and Joan García were the season’s best keepers in England and Spain – and they’re the ones who won’t play.“Why can’t Spain win the World Cup?” the coach, Luis de la Fuente, says. Usually when the word favourite comes out, footballers run the other way. Spain’s players have embraced it. There are two reasons for that: one, because that’s just other people talking; and, two, because why not? “I don’t think we were favourites at the Euros and we won it,” Rodri says.Coming into the Euros, Spain’s players had felt the confidence they had on the inside and the confidence others did not have on the outside. In Oyarzabal’s words: “Maybe there was no crack, but look at it: we might not have had ‘names’ but we were convinced we had players who were top three in the world. And we were clear that while there were teams with very good individuals, as a group we were stronger. There were none like us. We heard the things people said, the fact they didn’t trust in us … and then people started climbing on board.”Everyone is fully on board now. Spain’s Euros was possibly the best there has been: no champion had won every game before, and they had defeated Croatia, Italy, Germany, France and England en route. They are unbeaten in 30 games. And if that number needs an asterisk – they were defeated on penalties in the 2025 Nations League final – it is unmatched. Here’s another number: asked to put a figure on how Spain feel on the eve of the first match in Atlanta, Mikel Merino went for 100%.Those numbers convince others; for Spain’s players, it comes more as confirmation. They’ve changed their minds, not us.Just before Spain’s squad left Las Rozas bound for the US, Oyarzabal was asked what differences he sees between this team now and the one that won the Euros. “Not much,” he replied. The striker does a lovely line in deadpan but there is something in that.There are differences, of course. One stands out particularly, its impact intangible and yet to be tested. Eight players have gone and they include Morata and Dani Carvajal. At Euro 2024 there was a kind of captaincy triumvirate, a leadership that was shared and complementary: Morata was empathy, humanity; Carvajal was competitiveness and character; Rodri was football. Something has been lost there and the Manchester City midfielder admits that he too will miss them.“Mora[ta], me, Carva[jal]: we had a great group, now I’m the only one left,” he says. “I’ll try to absorb what I learned from them. And others emerge [as leaders]: Unai [Simón], Oyarzabal, Ferran [Torres]. I don’t think it will change me a lot; I played that role before. But wearing the armband is a different story.”Yet there may be an argument that Spain are stronger than at Euro 2024. Rodri’s season has been built towards this World Cup after his knee injury and now, he says, he could not be better. Lamine Yamal, 16 in Germany, is two years older. After an injury of his own, the winger admitting “I was praying it was nothing” and missing Spain’s preparatory games, he is ready. Merino is ready too. Only Williams’ fitness is a concern. Oyarzabal has scored 13 in 11 games; he has also scored in every final he has played. Above all, though, there is a stability, an assuredness, a continuity.“The team is more or less the same, the same group,” Oyarzabal says. “Luis has coached almost all of us at youth level. If you’re no good on the pitch, it doesn’t mean much but it’s important that it’s a healthy, respectful group, that it’s nice to be here, good day to day. At the Euros, when no one said we were favourites, we won it. We’re the same as we were then: calm, confident.”And they are good on the pitch, just as they always were. Which doesn’t mean they will win but does mean they believe they can. The change is more about perception than players.Rodri makes the point that even the Spain team that won three tournaments in a row between 2008 and 2012 were “unknown” once, that they had to lift their first trophy to become “names”. Sometimes recognition is not the same as reality; this team too have their trophy, but they knew they could play. “We’re the same: we have the same excitement, the same belief, the same confidence, the same group, the same good atmosphere,” Merino says. “Maybe the perception from outside has changed but inside nothing has changed at all.”“The future is theirs,” De la Fuente insisted as his captain bounded past in Berlin. “I just hope they get me tickets to see it,” Morata said.

Sid Lowe in ChattanoogaSun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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‘Why wouldn’t I?’: Eze would take England penalty despite Arsenal shootout miss

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‘Why wouldn’t I?’: Eze would take England penalty despite Arsenal shootout miss

Eze dismisses idea of changing spot-kick technique‘If there is a penalty to take I’ll be there again’Eberechi Eze says he will not let his missed penalty in the Champions League final stop him from stepping up in a shootout for England in the World Cup.The attacking midfielder sent his kick wide when Arsenal lost on penalties against Paris Saint-Germain in Budapest last month but he is determined not to let the disappointment define him and is confident in his technique. Eze, who also had softly-struck penalties saved for Crystal Palace in games against Liverpool and Newcastle last year, dismissed the idea that it is time to move away from his stuttering runup to the ball.“No, I think I have taken penalties for a long time and it’s part of the journey,” he said. “You have to continue to improve, find new ways to improve. I’m not going to stress too much about it because I know I’m in this position for a reason and all the training behind it.”Eze has a calm mentality and will not shy away from taking another penalty. “Football is full of everything and you have to try to accept everything as it is, to enjoy it as much as you can,” he said. “Playing in a Champions League final is where I want to be, it’s what I want to do.“We’ll go for it again next season and if there is a penalty to take then I’ll be there again. All the big players have missed big penalties, have experienced these type of moments. I’ve had messages from everyone to speak on those moments. For me it’s not something I wish never happened. I’m grateful it happened. I’m going to grow from it, learn from it and move forward.”There is no doubt that Eze would take a penalty for England in a knockout tie. “If called upon, for sure,” he said. “Why wouldn’t I take it?”England worked on improving their relationship with penalties during the Gareth Southgate era. They won a World Cup shootout for the first time when they knocked out Colombia in the last 16 in 2018 and they converted five nerveless kicks when they defeated Switzerland in their Euro 2024 quarter-final.However, Southgate’s hopes of helping England win silverware for the first time since 1966 were dashed when they lost the Euro 2020 final to Italy on penalties. The backlash on social media was extreme and Eze has looked at how Marcus Rashford and Bukayo Saka handled the experience of failing to score against Italy. Both forwards are in England’s squad in the US and Saka exorcised his demons by scoring in the shootout against Switzerland two years ago.“Honestly before even speaking to them, you can see the way big players carry themselves,” Eze said. “You step up, you do what you need to do. If you miss, you miss. If you score, you score. It’s having the mentality to keep going. That’s part of the journey.”The miss against PSG aside, not much has gone wrong for Eze during the past two years. He scored the winner for Palace when they beat Manchester City in the 2025 FA Cup final and he helped Arsenal win the Premier League after joining Mikel Arteta’s side last summer.“It’s important for a player’s confidence to have that under your belt, to experience winning,” Eze said. “It gives you a different level of confidence and a lot of players [in the squad] experiencing that is only going to help us here.”Eze is competing with Jude Bellingham and Morgan Rogers for the No 10 role. He is likely to be on the bench when England face Croatia in their opening match in Group L but he is ready to play anywhere across the frontline. “I think that’s the type of player I am, it’s not just one position I can play,” he said. “Wherever I’m called upon is where I will play. I’ll try to express myself and enjoy myself.”

Jacob Steinberg in Kansas CitySun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Porro signs new long-term Tottenham contract

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Porro signs new long-term Tottenham contract

49 CommentsTottenham right-back Pedro Porro has signed a new, long-term contract with the club. The length of the deal has not been disclosed by Spurs, but the contract is understood to run until 2031.Porro, 26, had two years remaining on the contract he signed when he joined Spurs on a permanent transfer from Sporting CP in the summer of 2023.Spurs had initially signed Porro on loan in January 2023 with an obligation to make the move permanent that summer for £40 million.The Spaniard has made 152 appearances for Spurs including 47 in all competitions last season, the most of anyone in Roberto De Zerbi's squad."During the past three-and-half years, he has made huge progress to become one of the best full-backs in the game, and the fact he is about to play in the World Cup for Spain is testament to that," said Spurs sporting director Johan Lange."His character, work ethic and quality are exactly what we look for when building a squad capable of competing at the highest level and we are delighted that he has chosen to continue his journey with the club."Spurs boss De Zerbi added: "As well as his technical quality, I also love his mentality. Every day he wants to work, to learn and to improve, and these are the characteristics that help players reach the highest level."He understands football in a very intelligent way, and brings energy, intensity and personality to the team."Porro is currently at the 2026 World Cup with Spain, who begin their group stage campaign on Monday against Cape Verde in Atlanta (17:00 BST).Spurs complete Senesi signing after Bournemouth exitTottenham defender Davies signs new one-year deal

BBC SportSun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Real Madrid reach agreement for Chelsea's Cucurella

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Real Madrid reach agreement for Chelsea's Cucurella

Chelsea have agreed a deal to sell Marc Cucurella to Real Madrid.The 27-year-old is currently in the US with the Spain squad and will complete his move after the World Cup has concluded.Multiple clubs were interested in signing him but the former Barcelona full-back wanted to sign for Real Madrid. He had been linked with a return to Barca, as well as Atletico Madrid and Manchester City.The fee is £47.5m plus £4.3m in add-ons, with the potential to rise to £51.8m in total. Chelsea signed Cucurella from Brighton four years ago for £63m.It's already been very busy summer for incoming Real Madrid manager Jose Mourinho, who will officially start work at his new club next month. Deals for Ibrahima Konate, Denzel Dumfries and Bernardo Silva have already been secured.Cucurella made public comments criticising Chelsea's transfer policy and the decision to let Enzo Maresca leave at the start of the year.He is not considered one of Chelsea's "untouchable" players, which includes Cole Palmer and club captain Reece James.Stream the Premier League with no contractNetherlands defender Jorrel Hato, who joined from Ajax last summer for £37m, is now in contention to be Chelsea's first-choice left-back next season, although the club could also strengthen in that position.Cucurella's move to Real Madrid is totally separate from any possible move for midfielder Enzo Fernandez to the same club. Fernandez said in an interview back in April that he would welcome living in Madrid.Chelsea have very good relations with Real, but they would not let Fernandez leave for less than £120m. He arrived at Stamford Bridge from Benfica in 2023 for a fee of £106.8m.

Sky SportsSun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: Sky Sports
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Arbeloa, Mourinho, Silva trading places - with agent key to swaps

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Arbeloa, Mourinho, Silva trading places - with agent key to swaps

It may be one of the more unlikely managerial triangles but it looks set to be completed with Arbeloa nearing a move to west London.But how did it come about? It began, as it so often does, at the top of the chain.Recently re-elected Real Madrid president Florentino Perez decided to bring Jose Mourinho back to the Santiago Bernabeu from Benfica.That left Benfica searching for a manager and interim boss Alvaro Arbeloa without a role.Marco Silva's future had already been in doubt after being shortlisted by Chelsea. As a host of managerial vacancies opened up across Europe, he subsequently emerged as the primary target for the Portuguese club.Benfica secured their man despite Fulham offering a record contract to keep their manager of five years, with super-agent Jorge Mendes brokering deals for both moves.Represented by Best of You agent Oscar Ribot, it is understood Mendes recommended the former Liverpool and West Ham defender to the Cottagers, with a move now advanced and expected to go through.It highlights how Mendes, 60, has become a specialist in high-profile managerial appointments.The Portuguese has also been involved in Enzo Maresca's imminent move to Manchester City, while also working with Vitor Pereira, Unai Emery and Nuno Espirito Santo in the Premier League and Championship.This week another Mendes client was in the news. Cesar Peixoto, manager of Gil Vicente in Portugal, is set to take over from Rob Edwards as Wolves manager. Mendes' Gestifute agency has a close relationship with the Molineux club's owners Fosun.Arbeloa is best known in England for his impressive two-year spell at Liverpool as a player before returning to Real Madrid for a seven-year stint and ending his career with a single season at West Ham.He earned 56 caps for Spain and was part of arguably the greatest team in their history, which won two European Championships and the World Cup in consecutive tournaments between 2008 and 2012.Alonso and Arbeloa played together for seven consecutive years at club level and even longer with the national team.Mourinho signed the pair from Liverpool in the same summer both Cristiano Ronaldo and Kaka joined Real to help them compete with a dominant Barcelona side managed by Pep Guardiola.Such was the closeness of the two that they went on holiday and spent time together away from the pitch. One well-placed source in Spain said that one replacing the other in January was initially awkward.Alonso had struggled to convince dressing-room stars such as Kylian Mbappe to adapt to his modern style of management, involving high pressing and possession-based football, at Madrid.Arbeloa, who began his coaching career at under-14s level, was promoted to steady the ship after six months leading Castilla, Real Madrid's reserve team, who play in the third tier of Spanish football.Madrid's season ended with a second-place finish in the domestic league and elimination from the Champions League at the quarter-final stage.Now Alonso and Arbeloa are set to be neighbouring managers in their first seasons in the Premier League - Alonso at Chelsea and Arbeloa at Fulham, with just over a mile separating Stamford Bridge and Craven Cottage. It feels as though their careers are intertwined.BBC Sport ColumnistBy the time Arbeloa was promoted from Real Madrid Castilla - sitting fourth in their Primera RFEF group at the time - he had created a football identity of teams with personality and wanting to dominate.Yet at the first team, he says he couldn't simply be himself.As he put it: "I had to be the manager I had to be."So his time as first-team manager at Real Madrid may be no real reference for Fulham.At Castilla, his side was built around what he calls offensive joy - possession and pressing without the ball were the two pillars.Arbeloa was always willing to go more direct when a match demanded it.On paper it was a 4-3-3; in practice, one midfielder pushed on almost as a number 10, shifting the shape into a 4-2-3-1 with a clear reference point up front, and wide areas mattered enormously.Something was non-negotiable - intensity. Arbeloa's defensive model is built on relentless pressing - this was not a team that wanted to sit back and defend its own box, whatever else changes around it.Much of that thinking has roots in the dressing rooms he played in.At Liverpool, Rafa Benitez left him with the example of a coach obsessed with improving individual players, constantly talking to them, constantly correcting.Back at Real Madrid from 2009, Manuel Pellegrini showed him a coach who loved pace in the game, with the wings left free to exploit it.From Mourinho, who took charge at the Bernabeu during his playing days there, Arbeloa points to the way he led and demanded maximum effort every day, a meticulously prepared coach whose training was built entirely around his model of play.Carlo Ancelotti and Vicente del Bosque, the latter from his time with Spain, taught him something different again - that tactics alone aren't enough.As Arbeloa sees it, a coach who can't manage the group is "doomed to fail" - however sharp his ideas on the pitch.Latest Fulham news, analysis and fan viewsAsk about Fulham - what do you want to know?

BBC SportSun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Real Madrid agree to sign Chelsea defender Marc Cucurella in £52m deal

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Real Madrid agree to sign Chelsea defender Marc Cucurella in £52m deal

Spain left-back will complete transfer after World CupCucurella had spoken out against Chelsea hierarchyReal Madrid have reached a verbal agreement to sign Marc Cucurella from Chelsea in a package worth up to €60m (£52m).The Spain left-back, who is preparing to face Cape Verde in the World Cup, threw his future into doubt when he criticised the Chelsea hierarchy during the March international break. Cucurella said the team paid for “inexperience” when thrashed by Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League, and he raised misgivings over Enzo Maresca’s departure as head coach.A return to Spain has been on the cards and Cucurella has agreed to move on after four years at Stamford Bridge. Madrid have agreed to pay an initial €55m plus €5m in add-ons for the 27-year-old, who will complete the deal after the World Cup.Chelsea will regard this as the right time to cash in on Cucurella, who overcame a difficult start after joining from Brighton for £62m. They felt his level dipped after Christmas and were encouraged by the form of Cucurella’s deputy, the 20-year-old Netherlands left-back Jorrel Hato.Madrid, who are revamping their squad after two trophyless years, are moving quickly after appointing José Mourinho as their manager and have bolstered their defence with moves for the Netherlands right-back Denzel Dumfries and the former Liverpool centre-back Ibrahima Konaté. They have also agreed to sign the former Manchester City midfielder Bernardo Silva on a free transfer.It remains to be seen whether Madrid look to do further business with Chelsea by attempting to sign Enzo Fernández. The Argentina midfielder joined Cucurella in speaking out against the hierarchy towards the end of the season. Fernández has made little secret of his desire to join Madrid but Chelsea will look for more than £100m for the former Benfica midfielder.Chelsea, who missed out on qualification for Europe, will also be guided by the wishes of their new manager, Xabi Alonso. They are not under pressure to make sales but Fernández, unlike Cole Palmer and Moisés Caicedo, is not regarded as one of the club’s untouchables.

Jacob SteinbergSun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: The Guardian
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How will Scotland approach Morocco game after opening win?

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How will Scotland approach Morocco game after opening win?

The Scottish sporting psyche demands that even in victory, the mind starts to drift forward to when and how it might all come crashing down.Scotland's nervy opening 1-0 World Cup win over Haiti threw up plenty of questions.Why were the Scots made to sweat by a side ranked 83 in the world?How would that level of performance hold up against the teams ranked seven and six - Morocco and Brazil, their next two opponents?Will the slender winning margin come back to bite when goal difference could be the key to reaching the knockout stages?Maybe, though, it is better to step back and remember the big picture.John McGinn's strike delivered Scotland's first World Cup win in 36 years, just their fifth overall and their first opening-match victory at the tournament in 44 years.Steve Clarke's side top Group C - for now at least - so perhaps this is a moment worth savouring.The 20-year-old who stole the show on Scotland's World Cup return"Scotland don't win a lot of games at the World Cup. In fact, Scotland don't play at many World Cups, so I think it's huge."It was a must-win in terms of hopes and aspirations of getting out of the group. It felt a wee bit all or nothing and you've still got two more games, so it's hugely positive."We have a real chance at getting out of the group. We've never seen a Scotland team do it, this could be the team to do it, and it all hinged on winning this game."It doesn't matter how we got it done, we got the job done and that's all that matters."The failure to add more goals against the lowest-ranked side in the competition is likely to gnaw away at those old enough to remember the World Cups of 1974, 1978 and 1982 when Scotland exited on goal difference.The flip side is the Scots are just one good performance away from making history by progressing to the knockout stages for the first time.With 32 of the 48 nations going through, a point against either Morocco or Brazil - who drew 1-1 on Saturday night - will almost certainly guarantee progress. Three points could well be enough if the goals against tally is low.Might that mean we see a more cautious approach in the next two games?Clarke went with two strikers against Haiti and former Scotland skipper Scott Brown expects one to drop out for the remaining Group C matches."I think [midfielder] Ryan Christie starts in both of them," he said. "I think we end up going back to one up front and we'd be a little bit more compact in the middle of the park."Ryan was fantastic when he came on. He'll keep the ball, gives you that extra bit of legs and he fights for you as well."Are we going to have as much possession, as many opportunities against Morocco and Brazil?"Neil McCann reckons a lone striker is the answer and suggests Lyndon Dykes is best suited to the role."He gets knock-downs, he holds it up for Scott McTominay and John McGinn to get beyond," McCann said.Another former Scotland winger, Pat Nevin, also expects a change of system, but reckons Clarke will opt for an extra central defender."A 4-4-2 doesn't suit us, the midfield is left completely wide open," he said."I think we need a back three. Morocco are so fluid and fast in attack. A back four against what they've got is difficult."Winning ugly was a theme in Scotland's qualification journey. The "jobby performances" - McGinn's words - in beating Greece and Belarus hardly set the pulses racing, but Scotland got what they needed from those games.They will have to improve against Morocco and Brazil, of course they will. Those sides will not be as erratic as Haiti if they get the same sort of opportunities in the final third.But the platform is there now. The nightmare scenario of a potentially fatal blow in game one has been avoided and Scotland are up and running.Clarke will be hoping his big players can show a bit more of their class than we saw in Boston, but he will take precious points in Group C in whatever form they come."We're the third best team in the group, that's just the way it is," said former Scotland midfielder Charlie Adam."We're going to need to be better with the ball, especially against Morocco."But we talk about resilience, good heart, we've got bundles of that, and we're going to need it for the next two games."Win ugly, draw ugly. Whatever it takes to crash through that World Cup glass ceiling.Everything you need to know about the World Cup

BBC SportSun, 14 Jun 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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