Archive November 13, 2025

Meet the man who played in two games, in two countries… in one day

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The club versus country row often causes friction, but midfielder Soren Lerby once found a way to satisfy both.

He played for Denmark and Bayern Munich on the same day. In different countries.

In the afternoon of 13 November 1984 – exactly 40 years ago – Lerby lined up for his national team in Dublin for their final qualifier for the 1986 World Cup.

Bayern, meanwhile, had a last-16 German Cup match at Bochum later that evening.

Denmark only needed a point to reach the finals in Mexico, so Bayern’s then-general manager, and later president, Uli Hoeness suggested Lerby play in both games.

A fine attacking player who never wore shinpads, Lerby told BBC Sport. “He suggested, ‘can you not ask [Danish coach Sepp] Piontek to play for 45 minutes or maybe less? Then I’ll pick you up and we come with a private jet and you can play in the evening in Bochum’.

“I was not thinking it was too crazy because I was in the best shape of my life.”

In those days, managers were only allowed two substitutions per match and at half-time in Lansdowne Road it was 1-1, so Lerby played on.

“Uli Hoeness was on the sideline when I came out for the second half. He said, ‘what’s going on? The plane is waiting!’

Soren LerbyGetty Images

By the 57th minute, Michael Laudrup and John Sivebaek had put Denmark 3-1 up in a game they would win 4-1. A minute later, Lerby was off and the clock started ticking.

After a quick shower – against Hoeness’ wishes – they were off to the airport behind a police escort. The flight went to plan, too.

So far, so good – until the drive from Dusseldorf airport to Bochum’s stadium.

“The traffic was three, four kilometres because the stadium is in the city,” recalled the 67-year-old Lerby.

“So I had to jump out of the car and run four kilometres into the dressing room. That was a good warm-up.”

But Lerby would cool down on the bench because Bayern coach Udo Lattek had already named the starting line-up.

“I was very disappointed because I wanted to play from the beginning. But I came in at half-time and then there was extra time and the result was 2-2.”

Lerby scored in the replay, which Bayern won 2-0 and went on to lift the cup by beating Stuttgart in the final.

But as impressive as the accomplishment sounds, he never thought it was anything special.

“I remember that I was sitting in the bar after the match in Bochum,” added Lerby. “I took a beer and I was thinking ‘that was a good job’. But that was the only thing. I was not feeling like it was a big achievement.

“In our time, there was much chaos. We were many times in big trouble. You play for the national team and the club also has a match so you were not allowed to go [to the national team].”

Almost exactly two years later, Hoeness also persuaded Mark Hughes to play in another cup match for Bayern on the same day as he played for Wales in Czechoslovakia.

Whether the striker received a bonus for his efforts isn’t known, but it’s a point which Lerby may raise with Hoeness.

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‘We’re not Johnny’ – Prendergast forging own path

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Quilter Nations Series: Ireland v Australia

Venue: Aviva Stadium, Dublin Date: Saturday, 15 November Kick-off: 20:10 GMT

Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Sam Prendergast revealed the Fast & Furious films have been his go-to source of entertainment away from the rugby field recently.

An apt franchise, perhaps, for a player who has experienced an action-packed freshman year as an Irish international fly-half.

And given that Saturday’s game against Australia will mark exactly one year since Prendergast’s Ireland debut, the 22-year-old has been reflecting on the first stage of his Test journey.

“We had a good pre-season in Leinster, I took the first few weeks trying not to think about rugby and getting into a bit of training,” he said.

“I thought it was a good approach because I felt quite hungry coming into Leinster and then enjoyed the pre-season. The frustrating thing about that is it didn’t translate on the pitch to start the season off.

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Prendergast was propelled into senior international rugby last year without having started a Champions Cup game for Leinster.

He usurped Jack Crowley, who played every minute of Ireland’s triumphant 2024 Six Nations campaign, and remained in situ for much of this year’s championship against the backdrop of a lively fly-half debate between Irish rugby fans online.

However, having started wins over England, Scotland and Wales, he was dropped following a dismal 42-27 defeat by France that ultimately wrecked Ireland’s bid for a third successive title.

Prendergast missed out on the British and Irish Lions squad and was unable to wrest the Ireland jersey away from Crowley for the All Blacks defeat in Chicago a fortnight ago and last week’s win over Japan.

“If either of us are getting bogged down by the rotation over the last year, I suppose it’s selfish, as in we’d both say we’re being selfish,” said Prendergast, who admitted he was “disappointed” with his performance off the bench against New Zealand.

“I think we both agree it’s important to stay positive and try to contribute to the team as best we can.

Jack Crowley and Sam Prendergast pictured during Ireland's loss to New ZealandGetty Images

Prendergast and Crowley are working under legendary Ireland fly-half Johnny Sexton, who is with the Irish Rugby Football Union [IRFU] full-time after helping head coach Andy Farrell on a part-time basis last year.

Comparisons to Sexton are to be expected, but 11-cap Prendergast insists trying to imitate the former World Rugby Player of the Year is not the way forward for the current crop of Irish fly-halves.

“Johnny played for Ireland and Leinster for so long, I don’t think it’s going to work if we’re all trying to be like Johnny, because we’re not Johnny.

Fly-half rotation makes Wallabies hard to predict

Carter Gordon Getty Images

With the exception of Ciaran Frawley’s 29-minute cameo against Portugal in the summer, Ireland’s fly-half rotation has been restricted to Prendergast and Crowley.

That is in stark contrast to the Wallabies, who have fielded seven players in the position in 2025.

Following an injury to Noah Lolesio, Ben Donaldson, Tom Lynagh, James O’Connor, Tane Edmed and Hamish Stewart all had run-outs at 10 under Joe Schmidt before the code-crossing Carter Gordon returned for last weekend’s loss to Italy.

It was Gordon’s first Test since the 2023 Rugby World Cup after a spell with Gold Coast Titans in the National Rugby League, and the turbulent fly-half situation makes Australia harder to figure out for Prendergast.

“Carter Gordon’s just back from rugby league and I know he took a risk going to rugby league and it maybe didn’t work out because of injury.

“But I think it was a cool move for him and I’d say he learnt a lot and is coming back with a fresh perspective.

“It makes it a little bit harder but out-halves know the more you can play the better you can become from learning week on week.

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The great number nine decline – where have England’s strikers gone?

And then there was one.

Thomas Tuchel’s latest squad has laid bare the current dearth of English centre-forwards, with Harry Kane the only out-and-out striker in the 25-man group.

Admittedly that is partly down to injury, with Tuchel explaining Ollie Watkins has been rested to manage an ongoing issue, while Dominic Solanke has been sidelined since August and Liam Delap is only just back in action for Chelsea after two months out.

We should not forget that some more versatile forwards have been selected, too. Marcus Rashford, Jarrod Bowen, Phil Foden and Anthony Gordon may not be traditional number nines but they could be asked to play through the middle against Serbia and Albania this week.

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Kane has been prolific in the Bundesliga with Bayern Munich this season – but just eight English strikers have appeared in the Premier League in the current campaign and 22-year-old Delap is the only one under the age of 26.

Behind Delap, there does not appear to be a new generation waiting for its chance, either.

England Under-21s went to last summer’s European Championship without a recognised striker and their latest squad includes only one, Manchester City’s Divin Mubama, 21, who is yet to score in the Premier League and is currently on loan at Championship side Stoke.

Fewer games, and different systems

There are some English strikers out there, but when you look at their stats, they are not exactly encouraging.

Danny Welbeck, who turns 35 at the end of the month, and 33-year-old Callum Wilson are the only ones who have scored more than one goal in the Premier League this season.

Of those under consideration by Tuchel who play further afield, Ivan Toney is the most prolific in the current campaign with 11 goals in 15 games for Saudi Pro League side Al-Ahli, whom he joined in 2024.

This shortage of number nines is not down to a sudden drop-off in numbers. Instead it’s a trend that has been going on for a while.

Last season, just three English strikers – Watkins (16), Delap (12) and Welbeck (10) scored 10 or more Premier League goals, the fewest ever.

It’s a far cry from the first season of the Premier League era in 1992-93, when 20 English strikers passed the 10-goal mark.

In recent years, however, what was already a steep decline has fallen off a cliff. Last season, only 67 goals were scored by English strikers, less than half the number in 2020-21.

Kane’s departure from Tottenham for Germany has played a part, of course, but he left for Bayern in 2023 and English strikers still scored 96 goals in 2023-24.

If anything, this campaign is shaping up to be even worse.

So far, English strikers have scored only 11 goals between them – and they are on course for a meagre total of 38 collectively, if they continue at their present rate.

That’s only four more than Andy Cole and Alan Shearer each scored as they topped the Premier League scoring charts 30 years ago.

The decline of English strikers is down to several factors according to BBC pundit Chris Sutton, who passed the 10-goal mark himself in four separate Premier League campaigns, including a 25-goal haul with Norwich in 1993-94, and an 18-goal season with Blackburn that saw him take a share of the Golden Boot in 1997-98.

One reason is a lack of appearances. From the table above, only Welbeck, Watkins and Calvert-Lewin have started more than three league games this season, while Nketiah, Solanke and Barnes have not started any.

“If you look back at the 1990s, players like Jurgen Klinsmann and Dennis Bergkamp started arriving from abroad but the overall number of foreign strikers was much lower,” Sutton explained.

“The number one striker of my era was Shearer but if you went through the teams, then there were so many brilliant English centre-forwards like Ian Wright, Les Ferdinand, Andy Cole, Teddy Sheringham, Robbie Fowler and David Hirst – you could add Stan Collymore and Dion Dublin to that list too.

“There was an unbelievable number of them, even before Michael Owen came through ahead of the 1998 World Cup, and all different types of striker too.

“One of the differences is that they were all playing every week, because how many English centre-forwards start for their clubs in the Premier League now? That’s down to the quality which the clubs can attract from elsewhere.

“Another change we’ve seen is in the way teams are set up. I am not saying everyone was a rigid 4-4-2 back in my day, because that’s nonsense, but far fewer sides play with two strikers now.

Did people stop wanting to be a striker?

Shearer, who formed the devastating ‘SAS’ partnership with Sutton to help Blackburn win the Premier League title in 1995, feels the tactical shifts we have seen over the past 10 to 15 years are the biggest reason for the current shortage of strikers.

“Because of the way kids have been training and the coaching they have had, no-one wants to play at centre-forward because you very rarely get a touch,” the former England captain told The Rest is Football podcast.

“Instead, coaches want a pass from the keeper, a pass to the side, then a pass into midfield… and then it goes back. As a centre-forward you are thinking ‘I am not getting involved’.

Blackburn Rovers strike partners Alan Shearer (left) and Chris Sutton celebrate with the Premier League trophy after being crowned champions in 1994-95Rex Features

Sutton agrees with his old strike partner and, although modern-day wide forwards like Rashford and Bukayo Saka are scoring more goals than old-school wingers ever did, he sees the current situation as “a massive problem”.

“Alan makes a good point about how everyone wants to mess around on the ball these days,” Sutton explained. “Everyone wants to be a creative player off the wide areas, or be a left-footer cutting in off the right wing. Those players can score goals too, but it is very different to having someone who can lead the line.”

Owen, who shared the Premier League Golden Boot with Sutton as an 18-year-old in 1997-98 and won the award outright the following year, feels he would not be considered as a striker if he emerged now.

“In today’s game, I think I would have been one of the wide players,” he told the Rio Ferdinand Presents podcast. “I don’t think I had the stature to occupy two defenders, so I guess I would have played on the left.

The England team that beat Germany 5-1 in 2001. Back Row (l-r) Sol Campbell, Emile Heskey, Rio Ferdinand, David Seaman and Michael Owen. Front Row (l-r): Nicky Barmby, Steven Gerrard, Paul Scholes, Gary Neville, David Beckham and Ashley ColeRex Features

‘We’ve got Kane, but then what?’

Playing with two strikers is not an option for Tuchel this week, at least not in the way Owen means.

“Just on numbers alone, the situation is incomparable to the 1990s,” Sutton added. “But when you actually list the players we had then, there was unbelievable depth of quality too and a lot of them didn’t really get a look in for England.

“Ferdinand only won 17 caps but he was phenomenal. Fowler, who only got a few more, was probably the most natural finisher you could ever see. But they were both behind Shearer because he was like a machine with the way he finished.”

Sutton only won one full cap, coming on as a substitute against Cameroon in November 1997, before falling out with then England boss Glenn Hoddle when he turned down a call-up to the England B team in February 1998.

“I can joke about how I messed things up with Hoddle but nowadays you would be rubbing your hands if you are a half-decent striker with a World Cup coming up,” he added. “We have got Kane, but then what?

The number nine shirt Harry Kane wore against Latvia in England's 5-0 win in Riga in October. Kane scored twice to clinch qualification for next summer's World CupGetty Images

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At least 37 people killed in Peru when bus crashes into ravine

At least 37 people have been killed in one of Peru’s worst bus accidents in years when a bus driving through the mountains of the Arequipa region hit another vehicle and plunged about 200 metres (650ft).

The bus was driving from a mining district towards the city of Arequipa about 12:30am [05:30 GMT] on Wednesday when it hit a pickup truck and drove off the highway, according to public broadcaster TV Peru.

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The bus was carrying at least 60 people at the time, and 36 were killed on impact, according to a local health official. One person later died at hospital, and 20 more passengers were injured.

The truck driver tested positive for alcohol, according to TV Peru.

Photos of the accident show the front of the pickup truck crumpled from the impact of what appears to be a head-on collision while the bus can be seen lying on its side and surrounded by debris strewn across rocky terrain.

Peru has a relatively high rate of road fatalities due to reckless driving and challenging road conditions, according to local authorities.

“This isn’t the first tragedy in the area. Years ago, another bus crashed in the same spot, killing 50 people,” regional health manager Walther Oporto told TV Peru.

Last year, Peru recorded more than 3,000 deaths in traffic accidents, according to The Associated Press.

The fatal bus crash in Arequipa follows similar incidents in July and August when two buses overturned, killing at least 28 people. In January, another bus crashed into a river in Peru, killing at least six people.

Lakers humiliated by OKC Thunder; Curry, Warriors rally to defeat Spurs

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 30 points and nine assists in three quarters as the Oklahoma City Thunder rolled past the Los Angeles Lakers 121-92.

Isaiah Joe added 21 points for the Thunder on Wednesday night, which improved their National Basketball Association (NBA) league best record to 12-1.

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Oklahoma City blew out one of their top Western Conference rivals for the second game. They beat the Golden State Warriors 126-102 on Tuesday night.

Los Angeles guard Luka Doncic was held to 19 points on 7-for-20 shooting. He was averaging 37.1 points coming into the game.

Oklahoma City’s Lu Dort, a defensive stopper who normally guards Doncic, was out with an upper right trapezius strain, but the Thunder got the job done anyway.

Austin Reaves, who was averaging 30.3 points, had 13 points on 4-for-12 shooting for the Lakers. Los Angeles had scored at least 116 points in every game this season, but they didn’t get close after shooting 40.3 percent from the field.

The Lakers played without LeBron James once again although for the first time this season he practised on Wednesday. He got some reps with the team’s G League affiliate earlier in the day in California.

Los Angeles could have used another star against Oklahoma City. The Thunder led 30-18 at the end of the first quarter, then held the Lakers without a field goal for nearly eight minutes to start the second. Los Angeles missed their first 11 shots of the quarter as Oklahoma City extended their advantage to 70-38 at halftime.

In the closing seconds of the third quarter, Gilgeous-Alexander drove to the hoop, then fired a behind-the-back pass to Joe, who nailed a three-pointer as time expired in the period to give Oklahoma City a 100-64 lead.

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (#77) had 19 points in a losing effort [Alonzo Adams/Imagn Images via Reuters]

Curry scores season high as Warriors beat Spurs

Stephen Curry scored 46 points as the Warriors beat the San Antonio Spurs 125-120, overcoming triple doubles by Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle.

Jimmy Butler had 28 points and eight assists for Golden State, which had lost three of four. Moses Moody added 19 points.

Wembanyama had 31 points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists for his fourth career triple double. He had 38 points and 12 rebounds in a 121-117 victory at Chicago on Monday night.

Wembanyama and Castle became the first Spurs teammates to record triple doubles in the same game. Castle finished with 23 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists.

San Antonio suffered its first home loss this season. The Spurs had won three in a row overall.

Stephen Curry and Victor Wembanyama in action.
Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry drives around San Antonio Spurs centre Victor Wembanyama in San Antonio, Texas, on November 12, 2025 [Eric Gay/AP]

Curry explodes in second half

Curry scored 29 points in the second half as the Warriors outscored the Spurs 76-64 in the final two quarters.

His fourth three-pointer gave Golden State a 74-73 lead with five minutes left in the third quarter, their first lead since the opening minutes of the first.

Curry had 22 points in the third quarter, going 5-for-9 on three-pointers and making all nine of his free-throw attempts.

Golden State finished 32 for 36 on free throws while San Antonio was 14 for 16.

The Spurs had three alley-oop dunks in building a 16-point lead in the second quarter, and the 7-foot-4 (2.2-metre) Wembanyama didn’t throw any down although he did assist on one to Castle. Luke Kornet had the other two dunks on assists from Castle and Devin Vassell.

Wembanyama blocked Draymond Green’s 25ft (7.6-metre) three-point attempt early in the opening quarter, leaping from the free-throw line to get to the ball. The block extended Wembanyama’s streak to 96 straight games with at least one block.

Golden State improved to 1-1 on a six-game trip. San Antonio have four games remaining on their homestand.

Trump administration backs legal immunity for strikes in Caribbean: Report

United States President Donald Trump’s administration has drafted a legal opinion stating that US military personnel involved in military strikes off the coast of Latin America are immune from prosecution, The Washington Post and the Reuters news agency have reported.

The Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel provided the White House with the opinion on the issue of criminal liability for the strikes on vessels in the Caribbean, the outlets reported on Wednesday, citing multiple sources familiar with the matter.

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The strikes on alleged drug traffickers have come under intense scrutiny from Democrats, legal experts and even some Republicans since they began in September.

The US military has carried out at least 19 strikes on boats allegedly transporting drugs in the Caribbean and the Pacific, killing at least 76 people.

The White House claims the strikes are part of “a non-international armed conflict” against “narcoterrorists” and “unlawful combatants” with ties to Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro.

The Trump administration has not released evidence that the boats were carrying drugs.

The administration of former US President George W Bush coined the term “unlawful combatant” to deny certain enemies of the US protections under the Geneva Convention.

The term, which is not mentioned in the Convention, is controversial in international law and has been rejected by many human rights advocates and legal experts.

Washington’s actions have made even some of its closest allies uncomfortable.

On Tuesday, CNN reported that the UK had stopped sharing intelligence on drug trafficking operations with the US, though London and Washington have otherwise deep intelligence and defence ties.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said the same day that the strikes violated international law as he attended a minister-level meeting of the G7 in Canada.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed back on the criticism, telling reporters that none of the G7 members had raised the issue during the two-day summit, according to Reuters.

“I don’t think that the European Union gets to determine what international law is,” Rubio told reporters on Wednesday from a US airbase.

“They certainly don’t get to determine how the United States defends its national security.”

Rubio also denied the CNN report.

“Nothing has changed or happened that has impeded in any way our ability to do what we’re doing,” Rubio said.