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Everton Rub Salt In Chelsea Wounds As Champions League Race Tightens

Chelsea’s hopes of Champions League qualification suffered another damaging blow as Everton stormed to a 3-0 win on Saturday to compound a miserable week for Liam Rosenior’s men.
Dumped out of the Champions League 8-2 on aggregate by holders Paris Saint-Germain on Tuesday, the Blues have now lost four consecutive games to put Rosenior under pressure just over two months into his reign.

Beto struck twice for the Toffees as they surged into contention for a top-five finish, before Iliman Ndiaye rounded off Everton’s best win so far at their new home.

Only two points now separate the sides as Chelsea remain in sixth, while Everton climb to seventh.

A place in the top five will almost certainly guarantee Champions League football next season due to the strong performance of English sides in European competitions this season.

But Chelsea’s chances are fading fast with a tough run-in after the upcoming international break with Manchester City, Manchester United and Liverpool to come in their remaining seven games.

READ ALSO: Clinical PSG Bury Chelsea To Reach Champions League Quarter-Finals

James Garner celebrated his first ever call-up to the England squad with a brilliant pass that allowed Beto to beat Sanchez for the opening goal on 33 minutes.

Moments later Jordan Pickford proved the value of a top goalkeeper with a stunning save to tip over Enzo Fernandez’s blistering strike.

Worse was to come for Sanchez after the break when he allowed Beto’s fiercely struck shot to slip between his legs just after the hour mark.

Beto even played a part in his side’s third as he bullied the Chelsea defence to head Pickford’s long ball into the path of Ndiaye.

The Senegal international wriggled into the box before blasting into the top corner to this time give Sanchez no chance.

Everton have struggled to settle into their new 53,000 capacity stadium.

But for the first time they have won back-to-back home league games this season to climb within three points of neighbours Liverpool.

Abdulrahman Mohammed-Led PDP Inaugurates Committees For National Convention

The Abdulrahman Mohammed-led Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on Saturday inaugurated over 20 committees for the party’s national convention slated for March 29 and 30.

They include the screening, accreditation, publicity, transport and logistics, medical, and security committees.



The event, which was held in Abuja, was attended by party chieftains, including Mohammed, the party’s National Secretary, Samuel Anyanwu; the National Organising Secretary, Umar Bature; former governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom; Senator Natasha Uduaghan-Akpoti, among several others.

The committees are expected to ensure that the planned convention is executed smoothly, and substantive leadership of the party is elected to pilot the affairs of the party into the 2027 general elections and beyond.

According to the Mohammed-led caretaker committee, the party is organising the planned convention on the strength of the latest judgment of the appeal court, which invalidated the Taminu Turaki-led national convention in Ibadan, Oyo State, last year.

Anyanwu (right) and other PDP leaders at the party’s inauguration of committees for the forthcoming national convention in Abuja on March 21, 2026.

READ ALSO: Chaos Rocks Taraba PDP Congress As Two State Chairmen Emerge

PDP has been embroiled in a leadership crisis that has led to the exodus of members from the party.

PDP leaders at the party’s inauguration of committees for the forthcoming national convention in Abuja on March 21, 2026.

The party — which held sway in Nigeria from 1999 until 2015 — was factionalised by the struggle shortly after it lost the 2023 presidential election.

PDP members at the party’s inauguration of committees for the forthcoming national convention in Abuja on March 21, 2026.

While a faction backs the Governor of Oyo State, Seyi Makinde, the other faction is loyal to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike.

Already, many PDP members — including some governors — have left the party due to the internal crisis, amid concerns that it could force the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to disqualify the party from presenting candidates in the 2027 elections.

Nine governors have left the party since it lost the 2023 presidential election.

They include the governors of Adamawa, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Delta, Osun, Plateau, Rivers, Taraba, and Zamfara states.

PDP members at the party’s inauguration of committees for the forthcoming national convention in Abuja on March 21, 2026.

‘Tears and grief’: Mother’s Day in Gaza marked by mourning

While much of the Middle East celebrated Mother’s Day with flowers and gifts this weekend, in Gaza, the occasion served as a painful reminder of precious lives lost.

Sitting in her tent in Gaza City on Saturday, Em Rami Dawwas remembered the three sons she lost in Israeli attacks, two of whose bodies are still being withheld by the authorities.

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“I miss my sons on Mother’s Day. They used to bring me gifts, flowers, sweets, and ask me about my needs. They were the light of my life,” she said, sitting among boxes filled with their clothes, which she cannot bring herself to throw away.

Palestinian children have borne the brunt of Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza that began in October 2023, with UNICEF estimating in October last year that 64,000 children have been killed and wounded in Israeli attacks.

Reporting from among the tents in Gaza City, Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary said Dawwas kept the photos of her sons under her pillow, looking at them every day, “as if holding on will keep their memory alive”.

Many mothers spend the day in graveyards, sitting in the only place they can feel close to their dead children, said Khoudary.

‘I just wanted to make her happy’

Maram Ahmed faced a second Mother’s Day without her mother, who she lost in an Israeli air attack that killed her entire family. Her mother was her closest friend, said Khoudary.

“On Mother’s Day, even if I didn’t have money, I would buy my mum a gift from my allowance, even if it was for less than a dollar. I just wanted to make her happy,” said the 14-year-old, sitting in her sparse tent.

“I feel so sad when I see other children with their mothers, but I don’t show it,” she said.

A report published by rights group Amnesty International this month highlighted the “brutal price” women and girls have paid during the war, which started in October 2023. Two years later, Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas agreed to a fragile “ceasefire” that the former has repeatedly violated.

“Amid Israel’s deliberate imposition of conditions of life calculated to bring about the physical destruction of Palestinians in Gaza, Palestinian women face compounded and life-threatening consequences,” said the report.

It cited ongoing mass displacement, the collapse of reproductive, maternal and neonatal healthcare, the interruption of treatment for chronic illness, heightened exposure to disease and unsafe and undignified living conditions faced by women, as well as “profound physical and mental harm”.

Since the October 2025 “ceasefire”, Israeli attacks have killed more than 650 Palestinians, many of them women and children, according to recent figures from the Ministry of Health.

How Jimenez thrives from stuttering penalty style

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Raul Jimenez has scored all 14 of the penalties he has taken in the Premier League.

And his latest followed a well-rehearsed routine to round off the scoring in Fulham’s 3-1 victory over relegation-threatened Burnley as he extended his own record for the best 100% conversion rate in the competition’s history.

It also provided the Mexico international with a poignant moment as he dropped to his knees and pointed to the sky with both hands to celebrate his first goal since the death of his father, which was announced by his country’s football federation on 13 March.

But while an emotional Jimenez was warmly embraced by his teammates, several Clarets players were directing their focus and ire towards referee Chris Kavanagh over the validity of his stuttering technique.

Speaking to BBC Match of the Day, Burnley boss Scott Parker said: “Initially I was questioning the actual penalty decision.

“But then someone said you can’t step back[wards] on a penalty so I was questioning that – that you can’t step back[wards] on the run-up. The fourth [official] told me that’s not the case and that you can do that.”

What is Jimenez’s style?

Raul Jimenez scores against BurnleyGetty Images

Placing the ball on the penalty spot, Jimenez takes around 10 paces backwards and stands with his hands on his hips.

After taking two or three steps to his left, he begins his run-up, stuttering on the way to the spot before stroking his effort into the back of the net.

It is a familiar method and since overtaking Yaya Toure, who scored 11 from 11 penalties – it is one that means he can lay a claim to being the best penalty taker in Premier League history.

“He knows how to do it and he’s top. He’s so cool, so precise and that is the reason why he has the record,” Fulham manager Marco Silva told BBC Match of the Day.

“We are confident that when we get these moments he will score. He never stops completely, the last move when he decides to go, he goes and doesn’t stop.”

In truth it is not anything that we have not seen before.

John Aldridge, for example, scored 17 and missed one for Liverpool and a considerable number of the 52 out of 55 penalties (94.5%) he scored over his club and international career with the Republic of Ireland, were from a staggered run-up.

Mexico legend Hugo Sanchez has previously suggested that he deserves some credit for inventing the technique which forces the goalkeeper to make the first move and often hands the taker the advantage in their one-to-one duel.

Although the technique has no English name, Portuguese‑speaking nations call it the ‘Paradinha’. This translates as ‘little stop’ and Brazil forward Neymar has even attempted to use it from a free-kick.

It also cleverly bypasses Fifa rules that prevent a full stop at the end of a run-up.

This style is a legal variation because his faints and stutters occur during the run-up rather than the point of contact.

BBC Sport’s Football issues correspondent, Dale Johnson, said: “The act of feinting in the run-up on a penalty was made famous during Pele’s time as a player.

“Football’s lawmakers banned it for a short while, but in the mid 1980s it was reversed and we’re at where we are today.

“A player is allowed to stop or feint during the run-up as they wish – as long as they do not do it directly before they kick the ball.

“It’s controversial because it gives the striker another advantage, but it’s completely legal in law

“The only time VAR has ordered a retake for feinting was February 2018, when Tottenham defeated Rochdale in a fifth-round FA Cup replay and Son Heung-min was also booked.”

In 2010, Fifa called the paradinha penalty ‘unsporting’ and changed the laws around it but it still appears that many are not sure of what is allowed or not in this situation.

“That’s for the referees to talk about. I don’t want to say it’s allowed or not allowed,” Silva added.

“When it’s the last moment that he goes to the ball he doesn’t stop and until there he is allowed to do what he does.

Best Premier League penalty takers

List provided by data analysts Opta, external from players to have taken 10 plus Premier League penalties.

Raul Jimenez – 100% scored (14/14)

Yaya Toure – 100% scored (11/11)

Matt le Tissier – 96.2% scored (25/26)

Danny Murphy – 94.7% scored (18/19)

Callum Wilson – 94.1% scored (16/17)

James Beattie – 94.1% scored (16/17)

Julian Dicks – 93.8% scored (15/16)

Cole Palmer – 92.9% scored (13/14)

Bukayo Saka – 92.3% scored (12/13)

What information do we collect from this quiz?

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Two Remaining Kidnapped Cocoa Farmers Regain Freedom, Suspects Arrested

The efforts of security agents, vigilantes, and community leaders have yielded results as the two remaining Cocoa farmers abducted from the Cocos Research Institute of Nigeria (CRIN) have regained freedom.

It was learnt that a combined security team’s coordinated approach helped secure the release of the remaining two farmers who were kidnapped during a visit to the CRIN in Ibadan on Saturday.

It was also learnt that police were able to secure the arrest of the three suspected kidnappers in connection with the incident, barely 24 hours after.

It was not clear if any ransom was paid for their release, but reports have it that their abductors made demands.

READ ALSO: Two Remaining Kidnapped Cocoa Farmers Regain Freedom, Suspects Arrested

However, the Chairman of the Oluyole Local Government, Akeem Olatunji, who actively assisted in the search, confirmed in a telephone conversation that all the victims have been released.

He added that their release was made possible through the concerted efforts of the combined team of the police, the Directorate of State Services, Western Security Network, code named Amotekun, and Oluyole local vigilance group.

He stated that the rescue team had handed over the victims to the police.

Olatunji added that the team was coordinated by the Security Adviser to the Oyo state governor, CP Fatai Owoseni (retd).

The local government boss thanked the team for their concerted efforts, even as he assured residents of the area of his willingness to always collaborate with the relevant security agencies.

Why McInnes thinks ‘huge underdogs’ Hearts will get stronger

Thomas Duncan

BBC Sport Scotland

Hearts head coach Derek McInnes believes his side “will get stronger” for the Scottish Premiership run-in after victory over Dundee ensured the leaders will go into the international break still top of the pile.

Oisin McEntee’s header secured victory and a fourth consecutive 1-0 home league win for McInnes’ side, while welcoming back captain Lawrence Shankland and key midfielder Cammy Devlin for the first time since January.

Celtic had moved four points closer to Hearts with those two players absent, with Rangers also narrowing the gap.

But having done enough to ensure they move into April leading the way McInnes believes returning players strengthen his hand for the final seven games.

“I actually think the belief that I’ve got in the team is even more than it’s ever been, because I know what’s coming behind it,” McInnes said.

“I know what’s coming back for Livingston.

“I’ve got [Tomas] Magnusson, [Harry] Milne and [Craig] Halkett back, and I should have [Stuart] Findlay and [Stephen] Kingsley back.

“I’ve got my captain back now for another couple of weeks training, I’ve got Cammy Devlin back, I’ve got Beni Baningime back. We will get stronger, and we’re going to need that strength.

“We’ve been tested of late but despite all that, we’re going to be top of the league in April.

Shankland enjoys impactful return

Before McEntee’s winner the biggest cheer of the day at Tynecastle was for Shankland coming on as a substitute in the 54th minute for Pierre Landry Kabore.

Despite missing six weeks, he is Hearts’ second-top scorer in the league this season with 11 and though he did not add to that against Dundee, his influence was clear.

He had more shots on goal than Kabore, and found the target more than Claudio Braga despite fewer minutes on the pitch.

He completed all seven of his passes into the final third and brought more composure to Hearts’ attack, allowing them to sustain pressure which eventually paid off.

Former Dundee striker Rory Loy pointed out on BBC Radio Scotland’s Sportsound Shankland’s return also brought more from Alexandros Kyziridis in the short time they were on together, with the Greek winger struggling a bit in his captain’s absence.

“In the 10-15 minutes they were on the park together, Kyziridis’ starting position was 10-15 yards higher up the pitch,” Loy said.

“He knows Shankland is going to win something. He set up the chance for Shankland when he turned and had the shot that was saved.

Lawrence Shankland's touch map against DundeeBBC Sport

Managers often like to play down the influence of individuals, preferring to focus on the team as a whole.

But after the game McInnes did the complete opposite when asked about Shankland.

“Part of it is the lift he gives everybody,” the Hearts head coach said.

“We all feel the same about Lawrence. Every Hearts supporter, all his team-mates, all the staff, we feel so much better when he’s there.

“He’s a huge influence on our team. He’s been a huge influence on things even when he’s been out, he’s been a proper captain.

McInnes sets set-piece target

What was also refreshing for the Hearts manager was the nature of their winning goal, with McEntee’s towering header coming from a lovely Marc Leonard free-kick.

Hearts and Rangers have led the way for set-piece goals in the Premiership this season.

However, the league leaders have been less effective in that area in the past six weeks or so, despite getting plenty of corners and free-kicks.

The recent absence of Findlay, who tops the charts for headed goals in the league, may be a factor, as well as Shankland.

McEntee has also been struggling with a shoulder injury, but at over 6ft tall, made a timely return to potency in the box, as he showed in the win away at Celtic December.

With most of his squad due back in time for the Livingston game on 5 April, McInnes is demanding a return to their old standards.

“We spoke yesterday at the team meeting about – can we be the best team at set-plays between now and the end of the season?

“We’re off to a good start. Delighted for Ross [Grant], my set-piece coach, because it’s not been easy when the finger is being pointed.

Hearts have scored 19 goals from set-pieces in the Scottish PremiershipBBC Sport

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