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Iran-US talks in Muscat bought time, not a deal

The first round of Iran-US talks in Muscat produced no breakthrough. The next few weeks will determine whether they laid foundations or merely bought time before escalation.

When Iranian and American negotiators concluded several hours of talks in Muscat on February 6, publicly, neither side signalled any shift from its opening position. Iran insisted the discussions focus exclusively on the nuclear file. The United States arrived seeking a comprehensive framework that would also cover ballistic missiles, regional armed groups, and more broadly, issues Washington has raised publicly, including human rights concerns. Neither prevailed. Both agreed to meet again.

On the surface, this looks like a non-event. It was not.

The Muscat round was the first high-level diplomatic engagement between the two countries since the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities in June 2025, an escalation that Iran later said killed more than 1,000 people and involved strikes on three nuclear sites. That the two sides returned to the same palace near Muscat’s airport where previous rounds were held in 2025, and agreed to return again is significant.

But continuation is not progress. The distance between what happened in Muscat and what a deal requires remains vast.

Diplomacy conducted under military escort

The most striking feature of the Muscat round was not what was said, but who sat in the room. The American delegation was led by Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law. It also included, for the first time, Admiral Brad Cooper, the commander of US Central Command, in full dress uniform.

His presence at the negotiating table was not incidental. It was a signal. The USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group was operating in the Arabian Sea as the talks unfolded, and days earlier, US forces had shot down an Iranian drone that approached the carrier.

An Iranian diplomatic source told the Reuters news agency that Cooper’s presence “endangered” the talks. Another, quoted by Al-Araby TV, warned that “negotiations taking place under threat” could impose strategic costs rather than advance them. For Tehran, the message was unmistakable: This was diplomacy conducted in the shadow of force, not as an alternative to it.

Washington, for its part, sees this as leverage. President Trump, speaking on board Air Force One after the talks, described them as “very good” and said Iran wants a deal “very badly”, adding: “They know the consequences if they don’t. They don’t make a deal; the consequences are very steep.”

This is diplomacy framed as an ultimatum. It may create urgency. It is unlikely to create trust, and trust is what this process most desperately needs.

The structural problem

The US withdrew from the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) in 2018, despite international verification that Iran was meeting its obligations. That decision shattered Iranian confidence in the durability of US commitments. Tehran’s subsequent incremental breaches of the agreement, steadily increasing enrichment levels from 2019 onwards, weakened its credibility, in turn.

This mutual distrust is not a negotiating obstacle that can be resolved with creative diplomacy alone. It is the defining condition under which any agreement must be built. The US has the capacity to impose enormous economic and military costs on Iran. But power does not automatically produce compliance. For commitments to hold, Iran must believe concessions will bring relief rather than new demands. That belief has been badly damaged.

Consider the sequence of events surrounding the Muscat round itself. Hours after the talks concluded, the US State Department announced new sanctions targeting 14 shadow fleet vessels involved in transporting Iranian petroleum, alongside penalties on 15 entities and two individuals. The Treasury Department framed the action as part of the administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign. Whether preplanned or timed for effect, the message was clear: Washington intends to negotiate and squeeze simultaneously.

For Tehran, which has consistently demanded that sanctions relief be the starting point for progress, this sequencing confirms precisely the pattern it fears. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi identified this dynamic explicitly, telling Iranian state television that “the mistrust that has developed is a serious challenge facing the negotiations.”

What actually happened in Muscat

Beneath the competing narratives, the outlines of the substantive discussion have begun to emerge. Iran reportedly rejected a US demand for “zero enrichment”, a maximalist position it was never going to accept in a first meeting. The two sides instead discussed the dilution of Iran’s existing uranium stockpile, a more technical and potentially more productive avenue.

Meanwhile, Al Jazeera reported that diplomats from Egypt, Turkiye and Qatar had separately offered Iran a framework proposal: Halt enrichment for three years, transfer highly enriched uranium out of the country, and pledge not to initiate the use of ballistic missiles. Russia had reportedly signalled willingness to receive the uranium. Tehran has signalled both the enrichment halt and uranium transfer would be nonstarters.

Perhaps the most important development was the least visible. According to Axios, Witkoff and Kushner met directly with Araghchi during the talks, breaking from the strictly indirect format that Iran had demanded for most of last year’s rounds of negotiations. Iran had previously insisted on communicating with the US only through Omani intermediaries. Crossing that barrier, even partially, suggests both sides recognise the limits of indirect talks once bargaining becomes technical.

Oman’s framing was arguably the most honest assessment of the day. Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi described the talks as aimed at establishing “appropriate conditions for the resumption of diplomatic and technical negotiations”.

What the next few weeks will decide

Trump said a second round of talks would take place soon. Both sides indicated to Axios that further meetings were expected within days. The compressed timeline is notable. During last year’s rounds, weeks separated each session. The pace suggests Washington believes the diplomatic window is narrowing, and Tehran is at least willing to test that claim.

Several tests will show whether urgency produces substance or merely speed.

First, the scope question. The fundamental dispute over what the talks are about remains unresolved. Iran won the first procedural battle: The venue moved from Turkiye to Oman, regional observers were excluded, and Araghchi claims only nuclear issues were discussed. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said before the talks that the agenda needed to include “all those issues”. If the second round begins with the same fight over scope, it will signal that even the basics remain unsettled.

Second, Iran’s enrichment posture. Before the June 2025 war, Iran had been enriching uranium to 60 percent purity, a short technical step from weapons-grade. Tehran has said enrichment stopped following the strikes. But Iran has also conditioned International Atomic Energy Agency inspections of the bombed sites on new inspection arrangements, raising concerns among non-proliferation experts. Conversely, reports of enrichment resumption or acceleration would likely end the diplomatic track.

Third, the military environment. The US naval build-up in the Arabian Sea is not decorative. The drone shootdown near the Abraham Lincoln and Iran’s attempted interception of a US-flagged vessel in the Strait of Hormuz in the days before the talks show how quickly signalling can slide into miscalculation. Whether the carrier group is reinforced, maintained or gradually drawn down in the coming weeks will reveal more about Washington’s assessment of diplomacy than any press statement.

Fourth, the sanctions rhythm. The same-day announcement of shadow fleet sanctions establishes a pattern. If Washington continues to layer new economic penalties between rounds of talks, Tehran will treat it as evidence that diplomacy is performance rather than process.

Fifth, backchannel activity. The most consequential diplomacy over the next few weeks may not occur in formal settings. Oman, Qatar, Egypt and Turkiye have been working behind the scenes to sustain dialogue. If those intermediary contacts remain active, space for de-escalation persists. If they fall silent, the margin for error narrows.

A managed deadlock is not a strategy

The most probable short-term outcome remains neither breakthrough nor war, but a managed deadlock in which both sides maintain maximal public positions while avoiding steps that would make future talks impossible. In practice, this is a pause sustained by caution rather than a settlement anchored in confidence.

For the broader region, the distinction matters urgently. Gulf states have no interest in becoming staging grounds for escalation. Public statements across the region have consistently emphasised de-escalation, restraint and conflict avoidance. But regional actors can facilitate, host and encourage; they cannot impose terms on either Washington or Tehran.

The Muscat talks did not fail. Neither did they succeed. They established that a channel exists, that both sides are willing to use it, and that direct contact between senior officials is possible.

But a channel is not a plan. The absence of war is not the presence of a deal. The period between Muscat and whatever comes next is a window in which miscalculation remains close to the surface, sustained only by the assumption that both sides are reading each other’s signals correctly.

The next round of talks will not produce an agreement. But it may show whether the two sides are building a floor beneath the standoff or simply postponing the moment when that floor gives way.

Same old story for sorry Wales in Six Nations

Gareth Griffiths

BBC Sport Wales
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As despondent Welsh fans drove out of Twickenham on Saturday evening, they would not have learned too much from Wales’ 48-7 Six Nations hammering by England.

They already knew Welsh rugby was in turmoil and spiralling dangerously out of control.

They would have expected Steve Borthwick’s side to overpower Wales at the Allianz Stadium. That is, of course, exactly what happened as ruthless England ran in seven tries.

England have won their past 12 Test matches, while Wales have lost their previous 12 Six Nations internationals in a record stretching back to March 2023.

So these are two teams heading in different directions and at a significant speed.

Wales’ passion cannot be questioned, with the players demonstrating afterwards just how much they cared. Wing Josh Adams was close to tears and captain Dewi Lake was honest in his declaration that the side had let both themselves and the nation down.

Woeful Wales suffer first-half collapse

A dejected Dewi LakeHuw Evans Picture Agency

Wales have produced some woeful performances in a run of 22 Test defeats in 24 internationals since the end of 2023.

This dismal opening 40 minutes against England will take some beating though, as Wales equalled their worst half-time deficit of 29-0, the same score they trailed France in 1998.

“We want to be positive about this young Wales team,” former Wales fly-half Dan Biggar told ITV.

“There’s a new coaching group and staff but the level of performance in that first half was nowhere near the standard for international rugby.”

It was that performance, rather than the result, that most disappointed Biggar.

“We’re not saying Wales should be beating England or France because they are much better sides, but there’s a performance expectation that comes when you put on that red jersey,” he added.

“When you come to places like Twickenham the performance level has to be much better.

“There’s a way to lose and level of performance which Wales fell well short of in the first half.”

Former Wales scrum-half Richie Rees told the Scrum V podcast: “We didn’t fire a shot.

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Dire discipline hampers Wales

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At the heart of the first-half capitulation was the dire discipline that has plagued the Tandy era.

There were four yellow cards against England, with front-row duo Lake and Nicky Smith sin-binned within a minute of each other in the first half.

Cardiff centre Ben Thomas and Scarlets flanker Taine Plumtree were shown yellow cards in the second half as Wales were reduced to 13 players on two occasions.

“Playing against England with 15 men is hard enough, let alone playing the game with 13 men for 20 minutes,” said Tandy.

“We’re not a good enough team to have these big lapses. We’ve got to be more accurate and I’m bitterly disappointed.”

Wales conceded 10 penalties in the first 21 minutes, with 16 yielded in total. That was the most penalties conceded by Wales in a Test since 2009 when they gave away 18 against Ireland.

It has taken the total to 65 penalties in five matches under Tandy, with 10 yellow cards and one red issued.

Wales were under intense pressure but Rees believes some were avoidable.

“It is not possible to play international rugby and concede so many penalties,” said Rees.

Baptism of fire for Tandy

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It was always going to be a tough start for Tandy in his first job as an international head coach but his first Six Nations game in charge ended in devastation.

After taking over a side in the doldrums, Wales have now conceded 34 tries and 248 points in Tandy’s first five games in charge, which will hurt the former Scotland defence coach.

“I knew when we took the job, it was not going to click overnight,” said Tandy.

“We know where we’re at and it’s part of our journey but even though we’re 11th in the world, we expect more of ourselves.”

One aspect where Tandy could have more support from the WRU is his coaching staff, where he currently only has two permanent members in Matt Sherratt (attack) and Danny Wilson (forwards).

Tandy is an inexperienced national head coach, while Sherratt has been on the Test scene less than a year.

Temporary trio Duncan Jones (scrum), Rhys Patchell (kicking) and Dan Lydiate (defence) were brought in for a second campaign after being involved last autumn.

Welsh rugby shambles on and off the field

WRU chief executive Abi Tierney (left) and president Terry Cobner (right) sit above head coach Steve TandyHuw Evans Picture Agency

The latest heavy defeat has again divided opinion on how crisis-ridden Welsh rugby attempts to transform itself.

Welsh players are facing major off-field issues with the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) threatening to cut a professional men’s side and Ospreys under threat of disappearing as a top-tier team.

After another embarrassing display this weekend there are some calling for the WRU hierarchy to resign, while others point out the result emphasises why change is needed.

WRU board member and former Wales centre Jamie Roberts outlined the rationale.

“It’s a challenging time, there is a performance and financial problem facing the game in Wales,” Roberts told ITV.

“We made the decision in the best interests of the game in Wales to go to three teams. We want to see Welsh rugby thrive with club and national sides winning again.

“There are complexities how you get there and it’s challenging for fans with uncertainty, but we’re making the best decisions for the interests of the game in Wales medium to long-term.”

Lake refused to use the off-field uncertainty as an excuse for the England debacle but Rees says the problems must be causing concern.

“When people get certainty, you have a start point and we don’t have that at the moment,” said Rees.

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Cardiff crowd concerns as Louis Rees-Zammit set to stay at full-back

Louis Rees-Zammit, who has started four internationals for Wales at full-back, on his knees against EnglandHuw Evans Picture Agency

France arrive in Cardiff next Sunday with Wales searching for a first Six Nations home win in four years.

The calamitous state of Welsh rugby means the WRU are struggling to sell out their three home games this year, with thousands of tickets still available for next weekend.

Tandy hopes Wales will receive the usual home backing.

“The fans have been amazing support for the team,” said Tandy.

“We know what it means to the boys to play in the Principality Stadium and the fans give them huge belief.”

Whether the Wales head coach will make changes remains to be seen as he balances reacting to an underwhelming display and the need to develop a settled side.

He says there would be no “knee-jerk reaction” and full-back Louis Rees-Zammit appears to have done enough to keep the number 15 jersey.

The former NFL triallist was making his first Six Nations appearance for almost three years and is settling into a new position after switching from the wing.

After a shaky start where he had an early kick charged down, Rees-Zammit settled down and produced one searing second-half break.

“He did well in his first start at 15 in a while for us,” said Tandy.

“In Test match rugby, there’s not much space but I thought he adapted with the aerial battles.

“He’s a big man and lit the game up in moments. It’s looking how we can get more of those moments.”

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The new top-flight Canadian club inspired by Athletic Bilbao

Nathan Edwards

BBC Sport journalist
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Rocco Placentino stood in front of Supra du Quebec’s players, coaches and club management ready to deliver a speech before the club’s first ever training session.

As the club’s co-founder and president tried to find the words, he became emotional looking at what had been created and what was staring back at him.

Former Canada international Placentino saw a group of players and coaches all born or raised in Quebec, Canada.

They had been brought together, inspired by Bilbao’s Athletic Club, to help put the only French-speaking province in Canada on the footballing landscape.

“It’s done with local pride, local players, local staff, local upper management and local partnerships,” said Placentino of Supra, who continue their pre-season preparation on Sunday before competing in the Canadian Premier League.

Rocco PlacentinoSupra du Quebec

A ‘melting pot’ of Quebec

Placentino was raised in Montreal and played for Quebec’s other professional football team, Major League Soccer side CF Montreal, as well as having spells in Italy’s second and third divisions.

While Montreal throw their scouting net across the world to be competitive, FC Supra are focusing on local players who may have overlooked.

They want to give other players from Quebec the chance to try and emulate Canadian internationals such as Saussolo’s Ismael Kone and Nice’s Moise Bombito.

Bombito was born in Montreal, while Kone moved to the city from the Ivory Coast aged seven, and their journeys highlight the rich cultural mix and football obsession found in Quebec.

“The objective is to have a local pride program in the Canadian Premier League, a team that could furnish players that are local and multicultural,” said Placentino.

“I look at countries like Belgium and Iceland. If they’re able to build players and sell them worldwide to become phenom footballers, why can’t we do it in Quebec?

“A lot of players would fall through the cracks here and miss out on opportunities to shine and to be exposed at a higher level.

“All we need to do is take these ballers, put them in an environment that is very professional but also keeping that DNA of being street ballers.”

A unique touch showcasing Supra’s pride in their province is having the Quebec flag printed on their kits.

Paul Desbaillets, Supra’s chief branding officer, says the aim was to bring Quebec’s unique character to life.

“There’s always been a history of Quebec versus Canada,” he said.

“What makes us so proud exactly at this club is that here is more proof of why this province is so spectacular. We are a complete mix of French, Italian, British, Moroccan, Persian and Asian.

David Choiniere poses in Supra du Quebec's new home shirt inside a football storeSupra du Quebec

Embracing Supra’s original club

Supra du Quebec may be a new club, that are yet to play a competitive game, but the idea of the club colours and name all stemmed from one of Montreal’s first football teams.

Supra Montreal only operated between 1988 and 1992, but provided the environment for a six-year-old Placentino to form some of his earliest footballing memories.

“I remember going to games with my father and watching players that were mainly local players playing for Supra Montreal,” he said.

“I loved the colours. I loved the blue, white, and red.

“And I said, ‘You know what? I want to relive that experience as now a founder of this club and bring back that local pride and that Quebec feeling’. We wanted to relive it and modernise it the best way we could.”

Along with the colours and name, there is a more personal link between the two clubs through one of their new players, Alessandro Biello.

What makes the 19-year-old’s signing so special is that his dad, Mauro, played for the original Supra and captained Placentino while they played together at CF Montreal.

“When we signed [Alessandro] Biello every box was checked in terms of what we were looking for,” said Placentino.

“The work ethic, bleeding for the colours, bleeding for the city, playing in front of his family and friends, having that drive to do well with the Supra, so that maybe one day he could be sold to a team in Europe.

Rejecting 150 offers and gaining international interest

Quebec is home to roughly nine million people. To represent FC Supra a player or coach has to have been born, raised or have a deep connection to the state.

This transfer policy is similar to Athletic Club’s Basque-only approach, with Placentino hoping to visit the Spanish side to understand how growing a club using this transfer policy is possible.

The Supra president has already discovered some positives and negatives to running a policy like this, with the former Canada international having to reject more than 150 offers from players who had no connection to Quebec.

But despite a focus on growing local talent, there has also been interest from athletes who have moved away from Quebec to all corners of the globe but are keen to get involved with Supra.

“There are players who play in Guatemala, in Finland, in Iceland, in Sweden, in Malta that are all Quebec-based players and are saying, ‘I want to come home’,” explained Placentino.

“They can’t wait to come home and when you hear that, I get goosebumps.”

This feelings of the players, coaches and management are shared by Placentino, which is why the club’s motto is so poignant.

How Ekitike has already become a Liverpool cult hero

Aadam Patel

Liverpool reporter
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Umir Irfan

Football tactics correspondent

As Hugo Ekitike walked off to the adulation of the Anfield crowd last Saturday and took his seat on the bench, Alexander Isak simply patted his Liverpool team-mate’s hair from behind. A finisher recognises a finisher.

Isak’s chance will certainly come again, but while the record £125m summer signing is sidelined with a broken leg, all he can do is watch and admire his fellow forward. So far, there is plenty to admire.

It is testament to the way Ekitike has adapted to life in the Premier League that no-one has suggested Liverpool have missed or need Sweden international Isak back in a hurry.

The numbers alone are impressive – 15 goals and four assists in all competitions since his £79m move from Eintracht Frankfurt in the summer.

When the 23-year-old netted in the FA Cup last month, he became only the second Liverpool player to score in five different competitions during their debut campaign, alongside Kenny Dalglish. Talk about good company.

Yet beyond the numbers is a dynamic forward who has serious pace, reads the game intelligently, can link up well and above all, can finish.

In recent weeks, Ekitike has been compared to Fernando Torres, arguably one of the best finishers Liverpool have had in the 21st century, and received high praise from Alan Shearer and Wayne Rooney.

Shearer described Ekitike’s second goal against Newcastle as “world class”, while Rooney said the Frenchman was “one of, if not the best signing in the Premier League” this season.

“He’s the type of player I like to watch. He’s not a number nine, he’s not a number 10. He drifts out wide, gets on the ball, brings players into the game and he can score goals. He’s got a bit of everything really,” added Manchester United’s record goalscorer on his podcast.

What makes Ekitike so impressive is the range of scenarios he thrives in due to his expansive skillset. An unusual toe-poked finish for that goal against Newcastle sparked conversation, but it’s a deliberate tool he has in his locker.

In a behind-the-scenes training video from July, Ekitike scored in an identical manner. For both goals, his shooting leg barely swings back, which prevents keepers from being able to read the kind of shot he will take.

Screengrab from a behind-the-scenes training video showing Ekitike scoring with a toe-poke against Tsimikas and Alisson.Liverpool FC

It was back in January 2025 when Liverpool first got in contact with Ekitike’s camp, with boss Arne Slot speaking directly to the frontman at the end of last season.

Liverpool genuinely believed he could develop into one of Europe’s top forwards, with the data playing a key role in convincing them to push ahead with a deal.

Since the 2020-21 season, the period where they have the strongest and most detailed tracking data, the top under-23 strikers in their assessment were Erling Haaland, Kylian Mbappe, Isak and Ekitike.

Newcastle came close to signing him in the summer, but Ekitike’s heart was set on Liverpool. By all accounts, he has settled into life on Merseyside rapidly, moving into the house that was previously occupied by Luis Diaz.

Instagram dumps are a talking point between most of the Liverpool squad off the pitch and Ekitike is already a fan favourite, with the content of his dumps the talk of social media.

The posts on His “Finsta” account – which is essentially a second Instagram account that takes followers behind the scenes – tend to go viral. At its core is a man entirely comfortable in being his own self.

Last week, Liverpool posted a video with the caption ‘Hugo Hugs’, with Ekitike hugging one of the canteen staff that did the rounds.

In December, he asked a well-known football boot reseller to meet him at the club’s training ground, but when the reseller couldn’t access the premises, Ekitike asked him to follow his car to the nearby petrol station, where he then took pictures and signed autographs with fans. That’s the kind of guy he is.

An example of Hugo Ekitike's Instagram dumps@heesheki

On the pitch, Slot recognised his raw attributes from the outset and said Ekitike’s biggest improvement was his work-rate off the ball.

Some maverick attackers forego defensive work – excused by their great output further forward – but the former Reims and Paris St-Germain player has instead bought into his manager’s instructions, when the opposition builds out from the back.

Mohamed Salah would be asked to press high in previous seasons, on the left of a central defender, alongside the Liverpool striker, while Liverpool’s right-back or a midfielder would jump up to press the opposition left-back. This aggressive press helped Liverpool win the ball higher, but left them with fewer players deeper.

A screengrab for Liverpool's 4-1 win against Newcastle showing their out of possession tactics, with the wingers marking the full-backs and Ekitike pressing the central defenders.

A key focus has been working on his physical profile – a conversation that was initially tricky, with Slot admitting that, at times, Ekitike needed convincing.

One of those conversations involved Slot explaining that if he could help defend a set-piece, it would be easier to score because the opposition tend to be more open when it’s 0-0, rather than when Liverpool are trailing.

“Still, he needs to get stronger,” Slot insisted in December. “But he’s already become stronger. I don’t think he’s changed a lot with his offensive qualities – he’s fast, he can score, he’s got great footwork and dribbling skills. He has so much in his locker. I think he’s adjusted to the Premier League now. The biggest thing to improve is that, with his physique and how fast he is, he can become physically outstanding.”

Ekitike is now reaping the rewards in a similar manner to Florian Wirtz, with last summer’s signings going through individualised bulking programmes to prepare them for the physicality of two to three games a week at this level. The focus of that has been building muscle, durability and improving recovery between games and training.

As one Liverpool source said: “Both would see the improvements when they look in the mirror.”

Having both arrived from the Bundesliga, Liverpool’s attacking duo have also struck an ever-improving connection on the pitch too.

“It is so much fun to play with him (Ekitike) because he knows how you move on the pitch and how you link up with each other,” former Bayer Leverkusen star Wirtz told BBC Sport.

The concept of associative play refers to how well a player links up with his team-mates. Former Liverpool striker Roberto Firmino specialised in this, with Wirtz and Ekitike following suit, knitting together slick moves, often through diagonal passes or clever flicks.

Combining in this manner is a riskier approach but when it works, it has great upside. Quick small-space one-twos help break down stubborn defences but making this work consistently will come as their chemistry develops.

With Liverpool’s obvious difficulties against low blocks, using this part of Ekitike’s game will pay dividends as time passes.

Hugo Ekitike and Florian WirtzGetty Images

The way Ekitike is going, it will be a healthy selection dilemma for Slot once Isak returns from injury. There is certainly room for both forwards but right now, it’s hard to envisage Liverpool starting a game without Ekitike leading the line.

He has scored or assisted every 112 minutes in the Premier League this season, which is the best ratio by a Liverpool player in their first season at the club since Salah in 2017-18 – one every 70 minutes.

Against Manchester City at Anfield on Sunday, the Premier League’s top scorer in Erling Haaland will be at the other end.

“I think if I can add a little bit in my game it would be from his game,” Ekitike said in November, when asked about the prolific Norway international.

When BBC Sport sat down with Ekitike in October, he mentioned Whiplash and The Wolf of Wall Street as his two favourite films – two movies with themes of ambition and pursuit of greatness.

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  • Liverpool
  • Football

Dear Tomorrow: Inside Japan’s loneliness crisis

Struggling with loneliness, people in Japan use an online chat service for mental health support and social connection.

Loneliness is a growing epidemic worldwide, but in Japan, it has become particularly severe as the pressures of modern life increasingly isolate individuals from their communities.

A Place for You is a mental health hotline where dedicated volunteers provide critical support to thousands in need every day. Two people who are struggling to find meaning in their lives turn to the online chat service as they seek connection. As they become aware of their need for human bonds, they embark on a journey of healing and renewal.