Salah in Liverpool training but not expected to travel for Inter game

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Mohamed Salah is not expected to be in Liverpool’s squad to face Inter Milan, despite taking part in training on Monday.

In an explosive interview at the weekend the 33-year-old forward said he felt like he had been “thrown under the bus” by the Reds amid the side’s struggles this season, and that his relationship with head coach Arne Slot had broken down.

Salah was an unused substitute in Saturday’s 3-3 draw at Leeds United – the third straight game the Egypt international has started on the bench.

Monday’s training took place before Liverpool face Inter Milan in the Champions League on Tuesday, and Salah was involved while the session was open to the media.

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    • 7 hours ago
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Salah’s comments came after the Reds let a 2-0 lead slip in the draw at Leeds, with the Egypt international an unused substitute for the game.

The previous two games had seen Salah come on as a substitute in a 1-1 home draw at Sunderland, while he was left on the bench in a 2-0 win at West Ham.

His last start was in a 4-1 defeat by PSV Eindhoven at Anfield in a Champions League group game and his last goal came in a 2-0 win at Aston Villa on Saturday, 1 November.

Salah has scored five goals in 18 appearances in the Premier League and Champions League this season.

Overall, he has 250 goals in 420 Liverpool appearances and his 29 top-flight goals in the 2024-25 campaign helped the Anfield side win the Premier League title last season.

Salah, who joined Liverpool from Roma in 2017, signed a new two-year contract with the club in April.

BBC Sport pundit and former England striker Wayne Rooney believes Salah is “destroying his legacy” at the club and that Slot should not involve the player against Inter or in a home match against Brighton on Saturday.

The game against the Seagulls comes before Salah is scheduled to join up with Egypt for the Africa Cup of Nations.

“In my head, I’m going to enjoy that game because I don’t know what is going to happen now,” said Salah.

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Salah in Liverpool training but not expected to travel for Inter game

Getty Images

Mohamed Salah is not expected to be in Liverpool’s squad to face Inter Milan, despite taking part in training on Monday.

In an explosive interview at the weekend the 33-year-old forward said he felt like he had been “thrown under the bus” by the Reds amid the side’s struggles this season, and that his relationship with head coach Arne Slot had broken down.

Salah was an unused substitute in Saturday’s 3-3 draw at Leeds United – the third straight game the Egypt international has started on the bench.

Monday’s training took place before Liverpool face Inter Milan in the Champions League on Tuesday, and Salah was involved while the session was open to the media.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

    • 7 hours ago
    • 1 day ago
    • 17 hours ago

Salah’s comments came after the Reds let a 2-0 lead slip in the draw at Leeds, with the Egypt international an unused substitute for the game.

The previous two games had seen Salah come on as a substitute in a 1-1 home draw at Sunderland, while he was left on the bench in a 2-0 win at West Ham.

His last start was in a 4-1 defeat by PSV Eindhoven at Anfield in a Champions League group game and his last goal came in a 2-0 win at Aston Villa on Saturday, 1 November.

Salah has scored five goals in 18 appearances in the Premier League and Champions League this season.

Overall, he has 250 goals in 420 Liverpool appearances and his 29 top-flight goals in the 2024-25 campaign helped the Anfield side win the Premier League title last season.

Salah, who joined Liverpool from Roma in 2017, signed a new two-year contract with the club in April.

BBC Sport pundit and former England striker Wayne Rooney believes Salah is “destroying his legacy” at the club and that Slot should not involve the player against Inter or in a home match against Brighton on Saturday.

The game against the Seagulls comes before Salah is scheduled to join up with Egypt for the Africa Cup of Nations.

“In my head, I’m going to enjoy that game because I don’t know what is going to happen now,” said Salah.

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  • Liverpool
  • Premier League
  • Football

More on this story

  • Anfield
  • Ask Me Anything logo

Tim Westwood issues plea as he appears in court on sexual assault claims

Tim Westwood has pleaded not guilty to multiple charges – including rape and sexual assault.

At Southwark Crown Court on Monday, Westwood denied four counts of rape, nine counts of indecent assault and two counts of sexual assault. He pleaded not guilty to all charges against him.

The former broadcaster, who also appeared on Capital Xtra, wore a maroon shirt and black trousers for the hearing. He spoke only to confirm his name and enter his pleas. Westwood was granted bail with a condition not to contact the complainants. A provisional trial date for January 25, 2027, was set by the court.






Westwood spoke only to confirm his name and enter his not guilty pleas
(
PA)

Westwood, who lives in Westminster, is accused of offences against seven different women, some of whom were aged 17 at the time. He was charged in October this year with four counts of rape, nine counts of indecent assault and two counts of sexual assault.

The alleged incidents are believed to have taken place between 1993 and 2016. Westwood denies all allegations made against him. He previously said: “It’s all false allegations.” 

Police previously said that Westwood had allegedly indecently assaulted a 17-year-old girl in Fulham, west London, in 1983. He also faces allegations of indecently assaulting a woman in her 20s in the Vauxhall area of London in 1986.






He will face trial in January, 2027


He will face trial in January, 2027
(
Getty Images)

He was also accused of raping and indecently assaulting a woman, aged between 17 and 18, between 1995 and 1996 in London. He’s also accused of raping and indecently assaulting a woman between the ages of 17 and 18 between 2000 and 2001, also in London.

Westwood was also accused of sexually assaulting another woman, aged in her 20s, in Stroud, Gloucestershire, in 2010. He also faces an allegation of assaulting a woman, believed to be in her 20s, in the Finchley area of London in 2016.

Andy Furphy, Detective Superintendent of the Metropolitan Police, said: “It takes courage to come forward and report allegations of this nature.

“The women who have done so have put their trust in us and we continue to provide them with all available support. Our investigation remains open and we’d encourage anyone who has been impacted by this case or anyone with information to come forward and speak with us.”

Westwood stepped down from his programme on Capital Xtra in April 2022. He also left Radio 1 and Radio 1 Xtra in 2013 – almost two decades after he joined the BBC.

He also presented the MTV UK programme, Pimp My Ride UK, which aired for three seasons between 2005 and 2007.

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LIV hope for rankings ‘solution’ by 2026 season

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LIV Golf chief executive Scott O’Neil is optimistic the tour will secure official world golf ranking points for players in 2026.

The breakaway tour, which launched in 2022, has been locked out of the OWGR because of its 54-hole, no-cut, closed-field model, but they believe gaining ranking points would be transformative.

It would automatically enable more LIV players to qualify for majors and remove one of the biggest remaining barriers between the league and the established golf ecosystem.

O’Neil has described ongoing talks with OWGR as encouraging.

“We are working very closely with [chairman] Trevor Immelman and the board of OWGR,” O’Neil, who replaced Greg Norman as LIV chief executive at the start of 2025, told BBC Sport NI.

“It’s likely that will have an impact at some point. We are having conversations with Trevor, who is doing an extraordinary and difficult job towards a solution that we hope to have in place by next season.

    • 6 days ago
    • 6 days ago
    • 18 November

The headline change which is set to help facilitate the rankings shift is the move from 54 to the more traditional 72-hole tournaments.

Whether this a concession or a calculated step toward legitimacy on its own terms remains to be seen, but O’Neil says the decision is also driven by commercial reality.

There are sponsors and broadcast partners who want more television air-time, while he believes the extra day of play will also create space for the concerts, DJs and fan experiences that have become a significant part of LIV events.

“Whatever we have to do to get more people invested in this great game, we’ll do it,” added O’Neil.

Despite the format change, the LIV name – which is 54 in Roman numerals – will remain.

“LIV is a brand,” O’Neil added, pointing out that the Roman numeral 54 originally symbolised a round of golf featuring a birdie on every one of the 18 holes, as much as the total number of holes in a tournament or players in the field.

Jon RahmGetty Images

O’Neil, who has more than 25 years experience managing global sports and entertainment brands, laid out a vision for LIV Golf that is in equal parts defiant and conciliatory.

His immediate priority is the league’s growth and global expansion, not reuniting men’s professional golf.

There is pragmatic openness to working with the rest of the sport, but seemingly without any desperation to force the full merger which was agreed by the PGA Tour, LIV and DP World Tour in 2023.

Negotiations are still ongoing two and a half years later despite an intervention by US President Donald Trump, but O’Neil argues that different leagues with different aims can co-exist and occasionally collaborate.

“The PGA Tour is a US-focused tour and they do an incredible job. I would say we’re a global tour,” said ONeil, who previously worked in the NBA & NHL.

“It’s very akin to Formula One and Indy Car. Indy Car is a wonder. I went to the Indianapolis 500 and it’s an incredible experience and event.

On the explosive question of reunification with the PGA Tour, O’Neil’s tone is measured but unambiguous. He says conversations with newly-appointed PGA Tour chief executive Brian Rolapp have only been preliminary and both have been focused on getting their own organisations in place.

“Yes I think we will need to create more playing experiences and opportunities with the PGA Tour,” continued O’Neil.

“I think there’s real opportunity, but I am focused on LIV Golf and taking the sport around the world. I think that we are all smart enough to figure out that we can also create bigger platforms to have some fun and grow this game together.

“I would say that if I were here for three years, I’d be thinking very differently. I think today what I’m looking at is a business with a strong foundation and incredible momentum and happy players, happy caddies and happy families of players.

Rory McIlroyGetty Images

Five-time major winner and PGA Tour player Rory McIlroy last month criticised LIV Golf’s “irrational spending” on huge player contracts saying that it makes a merger very difficult, and that LIV would have to keep spending to maintain its position.

O’Neil does not want to be drawn into a war of words with LIV’s most outspoken critic.

“Rory has had an extraordinary career and is an extraordinary player,” said O’Neil.

“I’ve met him a couple of times, but I don’t know him so don’t really want to comment. All I will say is I am working every day to create the greatest sports league in the world.

“We have players who are committed and our players commit to a different level of travel.”

When pushed on whether there would be further significant spending on player contracts O’Neil said: “I only have an 11-month view. I wasn’t here when they had to do what they had to do to set LIV up, I wasn’t here when some of the madness in the ecosystem was happening.

“I only know from the first day of January when I showed up, I have hired a business team that I would argue is second to none in terms of commercial acumen. So I like what we do and how we do it.

Related topics

  • Golf
  • Northern Ireland Sport

LIV hope for rankings ‘solution’ by 2026 season

Getty Images

LIV Golf chief executive Scott O’Neil is optimistic the tour will secure official world golf ranking points for players in 2026.

The breakaway tour, which launched in 2022, has been locked out of the OWGR because of its 54-hole, no-cut, closed-field model, but they believe gaining ranking points would be transformative.

It would automatically enable more LIV players to qualify for majors and remove one of the biggest remaining barriers between the league and the established golf ecosystem.

O’Neil has described ongoing talks with OWGR as encouraging.

“We are working very closely with [chairman] Trevor Immelman and the board of OWGR,” O’Neil, who replaced Greg Norman as LIV chief executive at the start of 2025, told BBC Sport NI.

“It’s likely that will have an impact at some point. We are having conversations with Trevor, who is doing an extraordinary and difficult job towards a solution that we hope to have in place by next season.

    • 6 days ago
    • 6 days ago
    • 18 November

The headline change which is set to help facilitate the rankings shift is the move from 54 to the more traditional 72-hole tournaments.

Whether this a concession or a calculated step toward legitimacy on its own terms remains to be seen, but O’Neil says the decision is also driven by commercial reality.

There are sponsors and broadcast partners who want more television air-time, while he believes the extra day of play will also create space for the concerts, DJs and fan experiences that have become a significant part of LIV events.

“Whatever we have to do to get more people invested in this great game, we’ll do it,” added O’Neil.

Despite the format change, the LIV name – which is 54 in Roman numerals – will remain.

“LIV is a brand,” O’Neil added, pointing out that the Roman numeral 54 originally symbolised a round of golf featuring a birdie on every one of the 18 holes, as much as the total number of holes in a tournament or players in the field.

Jon RahmGetty Images

O’Neil, who has more than 25 years experience managing global sports and entertainment brands, laid out a vision for LIV Golf that is in equal parts defiant and conciliatory.

His immediate priority is the league’s growth and global expansion, not reuniting men’s professional golf.

There is pragmatic openness to working with the rest of the sport, but seemingly without any desperation to force the full merger which was agreed by the PGA Tour, LIV and DP World Tour in 2023.

Negotiations are still ongoing two and a half years later despite an intervention by US President Donald Trump, but O’Neil argues that different leagues with different aims can co-exist and occasionally collaborate.

“The PGA Tour is a US-focused tour and they do an incredible job. I would say we’re a global tour,” said ONeil, who previously worked in the NBA & NHL.

“It’s very akin to Formula One and Indy Car. Indy Car is a wonder. I went to the Indianapolis 500 and it’s an incredible experience and event.

On the explosive question of reunification with the PGA Tour, O’Neil’s tone is measured but unambiguous. He says conversations with newly-appointed PGA Tour chief executive Brian Rolapp have only been preliminary and both have been focused on getting their own organisations in place.

“Yes I think we will need to create more playing experiences and opportunities with the PGA Tour,” continued O’Neil.

“I think there’s real opportunity, but I am focused on LIV Golf and taking the sport around the world. I think that we are all smart enough to figure out that we can also create bigger platforms to have some fun and grow this game together.

“I would say that if I were here for three years, I’d be thinking very differently. I think today what I’m looking at is a business with a strong foundation and incredible momentum and happy players, happy caddies and happy families of players.

Rory McIlroyGetty Images

Five-time major winner and PGA Tour player Rory McIlroy last month criticised LIV Golf’s “irrational spending” on huge player contracts saying that it makes a merger very difficult, and that LIV would have to keep spending to maintain its position.

O’Neil does not want to be drawn into a war of words with LIV’s most outspoken critic.

“Rory has had an extraordinary career and is an extraordinary player,” said O’Neil.

“I’ve met him a couple of times, but I don’t know him so don’t really want to comment. All I will say is I am working every day to create the greatest sports league in the world.

“We have players who are committed and our players commit to a different level of travel.”

When pushed on whether there would be further significant spending on player contracts O’Neil said: “I only have an 11-month view. I wasn’t here when they had to do what they had to do to set LIV up, I wasn’t here when some of the madness in the ecosystem was happening.

“I only know from the first day of January when I showed up, I have hired a business team that I would argue is second to none in terms of commercial acumen. So I like what we do and how we do it.

Related topics

  • Golf
  • Northern Ireland Sport