Nwaneri signs new long-term Arsenal deal

Getty Images

Arsenal teenager Ethan Nwaneri has signed a new five-year contract which will keep him at the Premier League club until the summer of 2030.

The 18-year-old’s previous deal had been set to expire in June 2026.

“It means everything to me, I’m so happy to have got it done. This is where I feel at home, and where I’m going to develop the best,” he said.

“I’m very excited. I see this as my first real season and part of a proper squad in the changing room. I’m so excited for what I can bring to the team and how I can help the team.

“I think I’ve actually become more direct over the past few years and I’ve added more goals, so I’m excited for what will come next.”

Nwaneri made headlines when he became the youngest player ever to appear in the Premier League aged 15 years and 181 days old against Brentford in September 2022.

And the attacking midfielder made 37 appearances and scored nine goals in all competitions during a breakthrough campaign for the Gunners last term.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Arsenal
  • Football

Nwaneri signs new long-term Arsenal deal

Getty Images

Arsenal teenager Ethan Nwaneri has signed a new five-year contract which will keep him at the Premier League club until the summer of 2030.

The 18-year-old’s previous deal had been set to expire in June 2026.

“It means everything to me, I’m so happy to have got it done. This is where I feel at home, and where I’m going to develop the best,” he said.

“I’m very excited. I see this as my first real season and part of a proper squad in the changing room. I’m so excited for what I can bring to the team and how I can help the team.

“I think I’ve actually become more direct over the past few years and I’ve added more goals, so I’m excited for what will come next.”

Nwaneri made headlines when he became the youngest player ever to appear in the Premier League aged 15 years and 181 days old against Brentford in September 2022.

And the attacking midfielder made 37 appearances and scored nine goals in all competitions during a breakthrough campaign for the Gunners last term.

Related topics

  • Premier League
  • Arsenal
  • Football

Gazza, family ties & grandad’s kiss from Clough – why we love our clubs

Why do we tie our fates to a particular football club?

It may be we were born close to the club’s stadium, that a parent passed the torch on, or perhaps because we became enamoured with a certain player as a child.

Or it could simply be that we were delighted when Brian Clough kissed our grandad’s head.

As part of a campaign called ‘My Club, My Passion’, Premier League fans have been sending stories to BBC Sport about how and why they fell in love with their team.

The story about Clough is just one example.

Danielle Sarver Coombs, researcher and co-writer of the Routledge Handbook of Sport Fans and Fandom, says the teams we support provide us with a shared identity.

“It becomes a way to find a kinship, a community that no matter where you are, you could find a pub with other fans of your team,” she said.

“In a world that’s increasingly lonely, this provides one way that we can have connection and the feeling that we’re part of something bigger.”

Forest – Clough kissed grandad’s head

My first Forest game was at Hillsborough with my grandad, a staunch Wednesday fan. Back in 1991 he turned up, said he used to work at the ground and asked if we could have a look around pre-match.

Then Forest turned up. Mr Clough jumped off the bus and I asked for his autograph.

He told me to come into the dressing room where I met all the players, then he posed for pictures and kissed my grandad on his bald head.

Everton – home games a ‘safe space’

Everton fan Harry with defender Seamus Coleman at Goodison Park

In our house, Everton means football. My son is selectively mute and autistic so it’s his safe space. No matter if we win, lose or draw Harry still calls the players his superheroes.

We sing all the Everton songs for seven hours on our way up to Liverpool and sometimes will be bouncing all the way back. Sometimes the car is very quiet on the way home.

Spurs – Lineker, Gazza and Italia ’90

A graphic image of Spurs fan Mikey in his Tottenham kit with Paul Gascoigne playing for England

As an eight-year-old after Italia ’90 and the heroics of Lineker and Gazza, there was only one team for me.

That was cemented in 1991 by that Gazza semi-final [when he scored in a 3-1 win against Arsenal] and, sadly, the last time we won the FA Cup.

Despite all the lows and those ‘Spursy’ moments, my heart has never wavered. Banishing years of torment in May [by winning the Europa League] was pure joy.

Liverpool – grandad’s ashes buried under Kop

A graphic image of a letter sent by Bill Shankly

Liverpool FC is in the blood – my DNA is in the ground.

Bill Shankly often spoke of there being one casket buried under the Kop – many ashes were scattered but only one casket buried. The ashes of my grandad, about a foot down in the goal in the Kop. Shankly would say the man under the Kop would head goals in and head them out, he referred to him as the invisible menace.

It’s something I’ve been hugely proud of, to know my DNA is in that ground. My roots are part of one of the things that makes Liverpool special and unique.

Manchester United – generations of fans

A graphic image of a grandma with her grandson

My dad was a lifelong supporter but died at the end of 1992, just before we won our first league title since 1967 (the year I was born). I was so gutted that he had waited so long and then missed it, but I started watching and taking an interest and basically got hooked.

Then my son got into football and he also supports Man Utd, which has been a great part of our bond over the years!

Brighton – a love for mavericks

A graphic image of a letter from Brighton manager Pat Seward, a picture of Julio Enciso and a Brighton team photo

I first watched Brighton in the 1963-64 season, on the “chicken run” at the Goldstone Ground. My first professional game and my team forever.

What excites me is the maverick who gets you out of your seat and when possession-based football takes a rest for a split second and something magical happens.

The epitome of a maverick in Brighton colours is Julio Enciso and his goal of the season in 2022-23 against Manchester City was such a moment.

The view from our reporters

BBC reporters Jonathan Buchan, Nizaar Kinsella and Mike Taylor shared their own stories about what makes them proud to support their clubs.

‘A journey that links generations’ – Jonathan Buchan

BBC Radio Leeds sports editor Buchan says he forced his dad, who wasn’t a football fan, to take him and a friend on a half-mile walk from their home in Wortley to Elland Road:

“Personally, I owe a lot to that trip – a lifelong passion, friendships lasting decades… oh, and my entire career.

“Listening to the away games on BBC Radio Leeds ultimately resulted in me ending up in the role I find myself in today.”

Chelsea supporters ‘relentless and demanding’ – Nizaar Kinsella

BBC Sport football news reporter Kinsella spoke of the “relentless and demanding” fans he has come to be familiar with over a decade of covering Chelsea:

“Blues fans travel in great numbers.

“Some of the supporters I could highlight include Cathy, who has not missed an away match for 47 years, Terry, who relocated from Japan to London purely to be close to the club, and Basil, described as a Chelsea Women superfan on the club’s own website – and one you can hear chanting loudly at Kingsmeadow matches.

“It is these people that make a matchday and enrich my role covering the club.”

Wolves fans are ‘a community’ – Mike Taylor

BBC Radio WM reporter Taylor praised the collective spirit at Molineux.

“Listening on the concourses, you are reminded that football clubs are so much more than scores and numbers.

“They are a community, drawn apparently at random from all classes and generations, united by one devotion.

Related topics

  • Nottingham Forest
  • Manchester United
  • Liverpool
  • Sunderland
  • Fulham
  • West Ham United
  • Brentford
  • Chelsea
  • Aston Villa
  • Brighton & Hove Albion
  • Burnley
  • Premier League
  • Manchester City
  • Crystal Palace
  • Tottenham Hotspur
  • Bournemouth
  • Arsenal
  • Everton
  • Newcastle United
  • Football
  • Wolverhampton Wanderers
  • Leeds United

The secret to a long healthy life?

Today on The Stream, five ‘Blue Zones’ host some of the healthiest, longest-living people. What’s behind their longevity?

Blue Zones are five diverse regions where people live longer and stay healthy into their 90s and 100s. Their secrets? Mostly plant-based diets, daily natural movement, strong social ties, and a clear sense of purpose. These simple, sustainable habits keep people active and resilient. As the modern world faces chronic illness and ageing populations, the Blue Zones offer practical lessons on how we might live longer, healthier, and more fulfilling lives.

Presenter: Stefanie Dekker

Why have blue whales stopped singing? The mystery worrying scientists

Whale songs are far removed from the singing that humans are used to. Unlike our musical sounds, those produced by whales are a complex range of vocalisations that include groans, clicks and whistles and that can sound like anything from the mooing of a cow to the twitter of a bird. These vocalisations can be so powerful that they can be heard as far as 10km (6 miles) away, and can last for half an hour at a time.

But while they may not be exactly dancing material, whale songs are critical for communication: between males and females during mating, or among a school of whales migrating.

For researchers, these complex sounds are a window into whale behaviour, even if humans don’t yet know exactly how to decode them.

The frequency of songs and their intensity can signal various things: an abundance of food, for example. In recent studies, however, researchers have been alarmed to find that blue whales, the largest whales and, indeed, the largest mammals on Earth, have stopped singing at specific times.

Their eerie quietness, scientists say, is a signal that ocean life is changing fundamentally. The most recent study, conducted by scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California in the US and published in February, examined three types of whales. Researchers found that blue whales, in particular, have become more vulnerable to this change.

What have researchers found, and where?

At least two studies between 2016 and 2025 have found similar behaviour: blue whales have reduced their singing for stretches of time.

The first study, conducted in the sea waters between the islands of New Zealand between 2016 and 2018, was led by scientists from the Marine Mammal Institute at Oregon State University in the US. Over that period of time, researchers tracked specific blue whale vocalisations linked to feeding (called D-calls) and mating (called patterned songs).

Researchers used continuous recordings from underwater devices called hydrophones, which can log sounds over thousands of kilometres, and which were placed in the South Taranaki Bight – a known foraging spot for blue whales off the west coast of New Zealand.

They discovered that during some periods, particularly in the warmer months of spring and summer when whales usually fatten up, the frequency and intensity of sounds related to feeding activity dropped – suggesting a reduction in food sources. That decline was followed by reduced occurrences of patterned songs, signalling a dip in reproductive activity.

“When there are fewer feeding opportunities, they put less effort into reproduction,” lead researcher Dawn Barlow told reporters. The results of that study were published in the journal Ecology and Evolution in 2023.

Then, in a study published in the scientific journal PLOS One in February this year, researchers tracked baleen whale sounds in the California Current Ecosystem, the area in the North Pacific Ocean stretching from British Columbia to Baja California. Blue whales are a type of baleen whale, and the study focused on them, alongside their cousins, humpback whales and fin whales.

Over six years starting in 2015, the scientists found distinct patterns. Over the first two years, “times were tough for whales”, lead researcher John Ryan, of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California, noted in a press statement, as the whales, particularly blue whales, were found to be singing less. Over the next three years, however, all three whale species were back to singing more frequently, the study noted.

A blue whale
A blue whale swims in the waters of Long Beach, California, the US [Nick Ut/AP]

Why are blue whales singing less?

Both studies found one main reason for the reduction of whale song: food or, in this case, the lack of it.

It turns out that the research, conducted between 2015 and 2020, captured periods of extreme marine heatwave events that killed off krill, the small shrimp-like animals that blue whales feed on.

Those heatwaves are part of a looming environmental catastrophe scientists have been warning about: ongoing global warming marked by increases in global average temperatures, and caused by high-emission human activities, chief among them being the burning of fossil fuels.

Scientists say the world could soon reach a tipping point at which there will be irreversible change to the planet. Already, 2016, 2023 and 2024 have been recorded as the warmest years ever.

Why are food sources disappearing for whales?

Krill, which blue whales primarily feed on, are highly sensitive to heat and can all but vanish during heatwaves, the studies found. Their movement patterns also change drastically: instead of staying together, as they usually do, krill disperse when it is hot, making them harder for predators like blue whales to find.

Typically, when foraging, blue whales sing to others to signal that they have found swarms of krill. If there is no food to sing about, it makes sense that there will be no singing.

Heatwaves can also trigger harmful chemical changes in the oceans that encourage the growth of toxic algae, which causes poisoning and death to mammals in the oceans and sea birds, researchers have previously found, suggesting that blue whales are also at risk of being poisoned.

In the more recent study in California, researchers found that in the first two years when whales were singing less frequently, there was also a reduction in other fish populations.

Are blue whales more vulnerable than other whales?

The second period of three years witnessed a resurgence of krill and the other fish, along with more whale singing. When krill again declined, blue whales again sang less frequently, while singing from humpback whales continued, the study noted.

“Compared to humpback whales, blue whales in the eastern North Pacific may be more vulnerable due to not only a smaller population size but also a less flexible foraging strategy,” Ryan, the lead author of the California study said in a statement.

“These findings can help scientists and resource managers predict how marine ecosystems and species will respond to climate change,” he added.

It is likely, both studies say, that blue whales need to spend more time and energy finding food when it is scarce, instead of singing.

krill
A mass of krill in the sea [Shutterstock]

Are other animals changing their sounds?

Studies have found that climate change is altering the sounds of several other species as well. Nature-related sounds, such as birdsong from certain species, could disappear altogether in some places as warming temperatures alter animal behaviour. For example, some animals might move permanently away from their traditional habitats.

Rochelle Humes talks ‘choosing partners wisely’ after cryptic Frankie Bridge post

Rochelle Humes has turned heads with a cryptic social media post about ‘choosing partners wisely’ as Frankie Bridge shared a cryptic comment of her own

Rochelle Humes posted a cryptic comment(Image: Aimee Rose McGhee/Dave Benett/Ge)

Rochelle Humes took to social media to share her own cryptic post following an eyebrow raising upload by her former Saturdays’ co-star Frankie Bridge

Rochelle, who has been holidaying with Myleene Klass’ ex husband, Graham Quinn, took to Instagram to share some musings. Wishing her fans ‘good morning’, Myleene shared a post that read: “Your spouse is your life’s co-founder.

“They’ll either invest in your dreams or bankrupt your confidence. Choose wisely,” she warned.

Earlier in the week, Rochelle and husband Marvin Humes were pictured enjoying a dinner and a night out with former bodyguard Graham who was previously married to Loose Women’s Myleene.

READ MORE: Diversity’s Jordan Banjo suffers swimming pool injury after admitting he can’t swimREAD MORE: Amanda Holden stuns in cut-out white bikini as she matches daughter Lexi, 19

Rochelle Humes Instagram post
Rochelle Humes shard a cryptic comment on social media(Image: Instagram)

In her Instagram upload at the time, Rochelle said: “72 hours in Ibiza..sun, sea, belly laughing, questionable dance moves and spicy margs that tasted better than our decisions. Our annual non negotiable child free trip with old friends who remind you who you are.

“Sore heads all round today but ironically my battery feels recharged! Just what I needed, Happy 13 my love @marvinhumes what a way to celebrate.”

This week Frankie took to TikTok to reveal her grudge with an unknown person. Sipping on a glass of wine, Frankie hit out: “You’re so quiet… Thanks, you said something five years ago and I’ve just realised you’re actually dead to me.”

Myleene Klass and Rochelle Humes
Myleene Klass and Rochelle Humes(Image: Dave Benett/Getty Images for Evian)

The uploads come after Hear’Say singer Myleene accused her ex of cheating on her with another female celebrity. And she doubled down on her claim, insisting: “I have the receipts.”

Following an interview with Paul C Brunson, Myleene told her Instagram followers that she had “found my voice and it’s clear, unapologetic and brutally honest”. She had opened up on the podcast chat about an alleged moment in which she she caught her ex-husband Graham cheating on her with a fellow celebrity during her own birthday party.

Speaking on the We Need To Talk podcast, she alleged: “I walked in on him with a famous person on my birthday on a balcony,” Myleene revealed. “I’m in my house, it’s my party. They weren’t having sex, but they were unzipping each other.”

Article continues below

In response to the betrayal, Myleene said, “I kicked everybody out of the party – including his mum and dad.” The celebrity involved wasn’t identified by Myleene, yet she mentioned that this woman was known for cultivating “a family brand.”