Archive May 10, 2025

Donegal beat Armagh again in titanic Ulster battle

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Donegal retained the Ulster Football title by edging out All-Ireland champions Armagh in 2-23 to 0-28 after extra-time in another titanic struggle at Clones.

Unlike last year, their final meeting didn’t require penalties but this was another epic encounter between two well-matched teams.

Following the final whistle as the holders had been able to retain possession for the last minute of action before the hooter sounded, there was unsavoury scenes as a melee broke out after a track-suited member of the Armagh squad appeared to strike a Donegal player.

It took a minute or so for order to be restored before Donegal celebrations could begin following their 12th Anglo-Celt Cup triumph.

For Armagh, their wait for a first Ulster title since 2008 goes on although they showed last year that they were more than capable of regrouping from provincial final heartbreak for the All-Ireland series.

With Oisin Gallen hitting four first-half points from play, Donegal led 0-14 to 0-11 at half-time after having been seven ahead three minutes before the interval.

Armagh continued to claw into Donegal’s lead after the restart as they trimmed the margin to 0-16 to 0-15.

The defending champions appeared to have regained control as Hugh McFadden’s bundled goal was followed by three points which put them seven up once more.

However, Donegal only managed a solitary Jason McGee point in the closing 21 minutes of normal time as Oisin Conaty’s continuing brilliance and the introduction of Stefan Campbell helped reeled in their advantage.

Conaty’s sixth point from play in the closing 10 seconds of normal time meant extra-time after Donegal’s attempts to run down the clock had unravelled.

A Jarly Og Burns point put Armagh ahead for the first time after the action had resumed but the sides were still locked together at 0-25 to 1-22 after the first 10-minute period.

A Stefan Campbell score nudged Armagh ahead once more at the start of the second period of extra-time but after Rory Grugan missed a chance to extend their lead, Ciaran Moore then hammered Donegal’s second goal after being set up by Michael Langan.

A two-point free by Armagh keeper Ethan Rafferty levelled the contest once more but Niall O’Donnell’s 88th-minute point proved the winner before tempers flared after the final whistle.

More to follow.

Armagh: Ethan Rafferty; Paddy Burns, Barry McCambridge, Aidan Forker (capt); Ross McQuillan, Greg McCabe, Jarly Og Burns; Callum O’Neill, Ben Crealey; Darragh McMullan, Rory Grugan, Oisin Conaty; Tiernan Kelly, Andrew Murnin, Oisin O’Neill.

Subs: Blaine Hughes, Peter McGrane, Tomas McCormack, Connaire Mackin, Jason Duffy, Niall Grimley, Shane McPartlan, Cian McConville, Conor Turbitt, Stefan Campbell, Jemar Hall.

Donegal: Shaun Patton; Finbarr Roarty, Brendan McCole, Peadar Mogan; Ryan McHugh, Caolan McGonagle, Ciaran Moore; Ciaran Thompson, Michael Langan; Daire O Baoill, Hugh McFadden, Shane O’Donnell; Patrick McBrearty, Michael Murphy, Oisin Gallen.

Subs: Gavin Mulreany, Mark Curran, Odhran McFadden Ferry, Odhran Doherty, Aaron Doherty, Eoin McHugh, Jason McGee, Jamie Brennan, Conor O’Donnell, Niall O’Donnell, Stephen McMenamin.

Referee: Brendan Crawley (Kildare)

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Champions League race hots up as Man City slip & Villa win

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Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola says his side will have to “fight until the end” in the race to secure a Champions League spot after slipping up on Saturday.

City could have taken a huge step towards sealing a top-five spot, but drew 0-0 at rock bottom Southampton.

They are now only two points above Newcastle and Chelsea – who meet on Sunday – plus Aston Villa, who beat Bournemouth on Saturday evening.

Seventh-placed Nottingham Forest, who play relegated Leicester on Sunday, are four points behind City.

After the Saints draw, Guardiola said his side had three cup finals left – including next weekend’s actual FA Cup final against Crystal Palace.

“I didn’t expect differently from a month ago, that it’s a fight until the end,” he said.

City could find themselves outside the Champions League places before they play in the league again (against Bournemouth on Tuesday, 20 May) – because most of their rivals will have played once or twice before then.

Premier League table after Saturday, 10 May games

The race for eighth is just as tight

There will be nine Premier league teams competing in Europe next season – up from the usual seven – but things could change in the final weeks of the campaign.

Crystal Palace, who are 12th, would qualify for the Europa League if they win the FA Cup final.

Brentford, Brighton, Bournemouth, and to a lesser extent Fulham, are all vying for eighth spot which might be enough.

The Bees are in eighth, above Albion on goal difference, two points ahead of the Cherries and four clear of the Cottagers.

Brentford boss Thomas Frank, after a 1-0 win at Ipswich, told BBC Sport: “We have got the momentum which is important.

“We are close to finishing eighth which would be the best position ever in the league. We are laser focused on what we can do. We have given very little away but still created a lot.

“We just need to push and enjoy it, the next two games, and then reset our target.”

What does the data say?

Statisticians Opta give Arsenal a 99.7% chance of qualifying for the Champions League.

They give a 91.2% chance for City, 69.4% for Newcastle and 67.9% for Chelsea.

Who do the contenders have left to play?

Liverpool: Arsenal (H); Brighton (A); Crystal Palace (H)

Arsenal: Liverpool (A); Newcastle (H); Southampton (A)

Manchester City: Bournemouth (H); Fulham (A)

Newcastle: Chelsea (H); Arsenal (A); Everton (H)

Chelsea: Newcastle (A); Manchester United (H); Nottingham Forest (A)

Aston Villa: Tottenham (H); Manchester United (A)

Nottingham Forest: Leicester (H); West Ham (A); Chelsea (H)

Brentford: Fulham (H); Wolves (A)

Brighton: Liverpool (H); Tottenham (A)

Bournemouth: Manchester City (A); Leicester (H)

What information do we collect from this quiz?

How many teams will qualify for the Champions League?

There will be nine English teams in European competitions next season – with six in the Champions League.

England got an extra spot because of their teams’ performances in Europe this season – and another one because of the make-up of the Europa League final.

Manchester United and Tottenham meet in the final on Wednesday, 28 May in Bilbao – with the winner guaranteed a Champions League spot.

How many teams could qualify for the Europa League?

A maximum of three Premier League teams could be competing in the Europa League next season.

The team who finish sixth and the FA Cup winners are the two currently due to get a spot.

However, if the cup winners have already secured a European place, it will then go to the next highest placed side who have not qualified for Europe.

A third place could be awarded if Chelsea win the Conference League and fail to qualify for the Champions League.

The Blues face Real Betis in the final on Wednesday, 21 May in Wroclaw.

What about the Conference League?

A graphic showing there will be a third Europa League spot awarded if Chelsea win the Conference League and fail to qualify for the Champions League

There would usually be one Conference League place awarded to a Premier League team.

As things stand that will go to Carabao Cup winners Newcastle, but that could change if Eddie Howe’s side qualify for the Champions League or the Europa League (so finish in the top six at least).

In that scenario seventh spot would be a Conference League place if Crystal Palace win the FA Cup.

If Manchester City win the FA Cup and qualify for Europe through the league, then the team in eighth place will head into the Conference League.

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  • Premier League
  • Football

Guardiola to ‘fight until end’ – the race for Europe

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Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola says his side will have to “fight until the end” in the race to secure a Champions League spot after slipping up on Saturday.

City could have taken a huge step towards sealing a top-five spot, but drew 0-0 at rock bottom Southampton.

They are now only two points above Newcastle and Chelsea – who meet on Sunday – plus Aston Villa, who beat Bournemouth on Saturday evening.

Seventh-placed Nottingham Forest, who play relegated Leicester on Sunday, are four points behind City.

After the Saints draw, Guardiola said his side had three cup finals left – including next weekend’s actual FA Cup final against Crystal Palace.

“I didn’t expect differently from a month ago, that it’s a fight until the end,” he said.

City could find themselves outside the Champions League places before they play in the league again (against Bournemouth on Tuesday, 20 May) – because most of their rivals will have played once or twice before then.

Only champions Liverpool have sealed a Champions League place so far but second-placed Arsenal, who visit Anfield on Sunday, will hope to soon join them.

There will be nine Premier league teams competing in Europe next season – up from the usual seven – but things could change in the final weeks of the campaign.

Crystal Palace, who are 12th, would qualify for the Europa League if they win the FA Cup final.

Brentford, Brighton, Bournemouth, and to a lesser extent Fulham, are all vying for eighth spot which might be enough.

The Bees are in eighth, above Albion on goal difference, two points ahead of the Cherries and four clear of the Cottagers.

Brentford boss Thomas Frank, after a 1-0 win at Ipswich, told BBC Sport: “We have got the momentum which is important.

“We are close to finishing eighth which would be the best position ever in the league. We are laser focused on what we can do. We have given very little away but still created a lot.

“We just need to push and enjoy it, the next two games, and then reset our target.”

Premier League table after Saturday, 10 May games

What do Opta say?

Statisticians Opta give Arsenal a 99.7% chance of qualifying for the Champions League.

They give a 91.2% chance for City, 69.4% hope for Newcastle and 67.9% for Chelsea.

Who do the contenders have left to play?

Liverpool: Arsenal (H); Brighton (A); Crystal Palace (H)

Arsenal: Liverpool (A); Newcastle (H); Southampton (A)

Manchester City: Bournemouth (H); Fulham (A)

Newcastle: Chelsea (H); Arsenal (A); Everton (H)

Chelsea: Newcastle (A); Manchester United (H); Nottingham Forest (A)

Aston Villa: Tottenham (H); Manchester United (A)

Nottingham Forest: Leicester (H); West Ham (A); Chelsea (H)

Brentford: Fulham (H); Wolves (A)

Brighton: Liverpool (H); Tottenham (A)

Bournemouth: Manchester City (A); Leicester (H)

What information do we collect from this quiz?

How many teams will qualify for the Champions League?

There will be nine English teams in European competitions next season – with six in the Champions League.

England got an extra spot because of their teams’ performances in Europe this season – and another one because of the make-up of the Europa League final.

Manchester United and Tottenham meet in the final on Wednesday, 28 May in Bilbao – with the winner guaranteed a Champions League spot.

How many teams could qualify for the Europa League?

A maximum of three Premier League teams could be competing in the Europa League next season.

The team who finish sixth and the FA Cup winners are the two currently due to get a spot.

However, if the cup winners have already secured a European place, it will then go to the next highest placed side who have not qualified for Europe.

A third place could be awarded if Chelsea win the Conference League and fail to qualify for the Champions League.

The Blues face Real Betis in the final on Wednesday, 21 May in Wroclaw.

What about the Conference League?

A graphic showing there will be a third Europa League spot awarded if Chelsea win the Conference League and fail to qualify for the Champions League

There would usually be one Conference League place awarded to a Premier League team.

As things stand that will go to Carabao Cup winners Newcastle, but that could change if Eddie Howe’s side qualify for the Champions League or the Europa League (so finish in the top six at least).

In that scenario seventh spot would be a Conference League place if Crystal Palace win the FA Cup.

If Manchester City win the FA Cup and qualify for Europe through the league, then the team in eighth place will head into the Conference League.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Football

Insecurity: Northern Governors Throw Weight Behind State Police

In a significant move, the Northern States Governors’ Forum, comprising the governors of the 19 Northern states, has officially endorsed the establishment of state police.

The endorsement was formalized in a communique released at the conclusion of their joint meeting on Saturday at the Sir Kashim Ibrahim House in Kaduna.

The governors articulated their support for state police as a crucial step towards decentralizing security management and more effectively confronting prevailing security issues.

Furthermore, the forum called upon the National Assembly to accelerate the legislative process for enacting the necessary framework for state police.

“We reiterated our support for the creation of the State Police and called on the National Assembly to expedite action on the enactment of the legal framework for its take-off,” said Governor Muhammadu Yahaya, the Chairman of the Forum and Gombe Governor.

Persecondnews recalls that the North has been plagued by various security challenges, including banditry, kidnapping, and terrorism.

The governors acknowledged the critical role of non-partisan cooperation, collaboration, and peer review in effectively addressing these challenges.

It stated: “After exhaustive deliberations on matters of regional interest, particularly security, the Forum released the following communique.

“The forum resolved to support the creation of state police and expedite action on the legal framework

“Set up inter-state platforms to coordinate surveillance on joint borders

Increase support for federal security forces; Strengthen local initiatives to combat security challenges.”

The governors also commended President Bola Tinubu for his sustained commitment to addressing security challenges and infrastructural deficits in Northern Nigeria.

Lightning beat Rhinos to move top of Super League

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Loughborough Lightning regained top spot in the Netball Super League with an assured 71-59 win at home to second-bottom Leeds Rhinos.

Vic Burgess’ side are aiming to clinch a third consecutive title and looked to be warming to the task in this fifth straight victory.

Just one point separated the two sides going into the final five minutes of the second quarter before Lightning turned the screw in the ‘super shot’ period, outscoring Rhinos by nine points to two.

They moved further ahead after the break, ending the third quarter leading 54-39 at the Sir David Wallace Arena.

And while the visitors worked hard to reduce that deficit in the closing stages, Lightning always looked capable of capitalising on their greater shooting accuracy.

They finished with an 86% success rate, compared with Rhinos’ 82%, landing six more goals (46-43) and three more in the ‘super shot’ period (11-8).

The three points mean Lightning leapfrog former leaders London Pulse, who will be looking to wipe out the one-point deficit when they play their game in hand at fourth-placed London Mavericks on Sunday.

Cardiff Dragons' Elle McDonaldBen Lumley

On Friday, Cardiff Dragons claimed their first win of the Netball Super League season as they beat Birmingham Panthers on Friday.

Having started the campaign with seven consecutive losses, the Dragons overcame a narrow half-time deficit to secure a 61-57 victory at the Skydome Arena.

The Panthers led 34-32 at midway point and were still a point up at the end of the third quarter.

It was level at 57-57 with five minutes remaining but the Dragons edged ahead through goal attack Phillipa Yarranton and she added a super shot to extend the lead.

Goal shooter Georgia Rowe, who top-scored for the Dragons with 39 goals, wrapped up the win for the Super League’s last-place side.

The Panthers had a marginally better shooting success rate, 86% to the Dragons’ 85%, with Sigi Burger scoring 46 goals, but were outshot 67 to 55 by the visitors.

Fixtures and results

Friday, 9 May

Birmingham Panthers 57-61 Cardiff Dragons

Saturday, 10 May

Loughborough Lightning 71-59 Leeds Rhinos – watch the full match back on BBC iPlayer

Sunday, 11 May

Nottingham Forest v Manchester Thunder (16:00)

London Mavericks v London Pulse (16:00)

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  • Netball

Southampton troll Derby after avoiding unwanted record

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Southampton fans have had precious few moments to be happy about this season as they slumped to a pitiful relegation a full fortnight before Easter.

But their class of 2025 have at least avoided becoming an addition to a pub quiz question after moving past Derby County’s record Premier League low total of 11 points from 2007-08.

Southampton may have been up against it at the end of the 0-0 draw at home to Manchester City but held on to move to 12 points for the season.

Just generationally poor, instead of all-timers.

Goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale, no stranger to a relegation, was quiet for most of the game as Pep Guardiola’s side failed to move out of first gear to worry him.

But as the clock ticked towards added time he was called into action, tipping away a header from Ruben Dias and then beaten by Omar Marmoush’s dipping strike which bounced off the crossbar.

Saints marked the draw with a message to Derby on social media, saying “Sorry if we got your hopes up”.

And Ramsdale added: “Not one person outside our dressing room thought we could do anything today and rightly so. People thought we would get zero points for the rest of the season, it was down to us.

“Everyone knows it’s been a difficult season for us. The sun was shining, Man City threw everything at us. That one was for the fans.

“We’re not happy at all with how the season has gone but we are definitely happy with the fact we have managed to avoid that record.

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Not that City defender Dias was impressed.

“It’s frustrating,” he said. “In a moment like this, every point matters – and it is frustrating to play against a team like this.

Southampton on XSouthampton FC

‘What a bunch of losers’

BBC's Match of the Day showed Manchester City's attacking heat map against Southampton

You can rely on the Premier League to bring you back to earth with a bump.

And speaking on BBC Radio 5 Live’s 606 phone-in after the game, Premier League winner Chris Sutton was not impressed with the Saints’ celebrations.

He said: “I don’t mind the fans celebrating because they haven’t had much to celebrate, but the players on the full-time whistle? That is embarrassing, celebrating being the second-worst Premier League team of all time with 12 measly points. How low is your bar?

“Is it something to celebrate being the second-worst team? Watching players punch the air and celebrate, that is embarrassing. It is absolute amateur hour.

“It has been a disastrous season. If I am a Southampton fan I am excited, but if I am seeing my players celebrating I would be thinking ‘heaven help us for next season’. What a bunch of losers.”

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Interim manager Simon Rusk – Saints’ third boss of a sorry campaign – lost his last game as a full-time manager 2-1 at home to Barnet.

It’s a long way from the National League to shutting out Erling Haaland and Co, and Rusk believes the point against Guardiola could stand the Saints in good stead back in the Championship.

They won at Wembley in the play-off final last season and will be among the favourites to return in another year – despite their frugal top-flight points tally.

Rusk said: “I understood the importance of that record, but we were focusing on performances, improvement and environment.

“We were fighting for an immense amount of pride.

“We wanted to make it clear that we were aspiring to finish the season as strong as possible. We delivered that.

“With seven games to go I was confident we could take care of this points issue and that’s what happened.

“On day one of this job I spoke about moments in football. We are not getting carried away, we know it’s been a difficult year but hopefully the supporters go home really happy.”

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  • Premier League
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