Amorim’s blunt approach will benefit Man Utd – De Ligt

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Matthijs de Ligt, a defender for Manchester United, believes Ruben Amorim’s direct approach will pay off long-term.

Amorim has won some of the most bleak games for United in his short time as manager, despite finding it difficult to win since he left Sporting in November.

He claimed that his team was “probably the worst in Manchester United history” following their 3-1 home defeat at Brighton in January.

He declared in the wake of Tottenham’s Europa League defeat that he would leave without discussing compensation if the club’s management or supporters decided otherwise.

Amorim’s players were called “chokers” after their shocking defeat by a South-East Asia select XI on a recent post-season tour of Asia, according to Amorim.

De Ligt, who led Ajax to the Champions League semi-finals in 2019, believes Amorim’s words are encouraging because of his nationality and the Dutch country’s reputation for blunt speaking.

“I understand that the media is shocked because this rarely occurs,” she said.

However, I believe you can also be relieved to finally hear someone speak out, express his opinions, and declare their views.

He speaks to me personally in particular, and I really appreciate that. I feel confident in him and confident in him, too.

United are suffering from their worst domestically since 1973-74.

Due to the Tottenham reverse, United missed out on European football and the financial benefits that come with it for the first time since English clubs returned to Uefa competition in 1990. As a result, United missed out on European football and the finances that come with it.

Amorim will be under a lot of pressure as the club prepares to launch its new campaign after only seven Premier League victories since leaving in November.

De Ligt believes that Amorim’s work with the first-team group will pay off.

He said, “I’ve worked with a lot of managers, and he’s one of the easiest to talk to as a player.”

He is very interested in details. Before signing new players, he first examines the culture, what needs to change, and what can be improved to improve. More of that will be available from the following season.

He claims that he wants to create a group of players who are fighting for one another and making the most of what they have.

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England’s Overton out of West Indies ODIs with broken finger

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Jamie Overton, a fast bowler, has a broken finger that prevents him from playing in England’s final two one-day internationals against West Indies.

During England’s 2-1 victory in the series opener at Edgbaston on Thursday, Overton broke his little finger while attempting to take a return catch.

The 31-year-old immediately departed the field for treatment, but he returned to take three wickets and then started bowling.

No replacements have been named for the squad, with Overton making his only change from the team that beat West Indies on Thursday, earning his 10th ODI cap and first since September.

The ODI squad also includes Luke Wood and Mark Potts.

After Mark Wood, Jofra Archer, and Gus Atkinson, Overton is the latest fast bowler to miss out injured.

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Spurs to complete £21m Danso signing

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Once the transfer window opens on Sunday, the club has confirmed that Tottenham Hotspur will make the permanent signing of defender Kevin Danso.

In February, Spurs signed Austrian centre-back Danso on loan from French side Lens, who will eventually sign for a fee of £21 million.

The 26-year-old made 10 Premier League starts last season and started as a late substitute when Spurs defeated Manchester United in the Europa League final.

When their contracts expire next month, Sergio Reguilon, Fraser Forster, and Alfie Whiteman will all resign, and Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg, the midfielder, will remain on permanent loan.

In a club statement, it read, “We thank Fraser, Sergio, Alfie, and Timo for their service,” the club read.

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Pritchard wins Euros gold with another world record

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Benjamin Pritchard of Great Britain, who won the European Championship on Saturday, set a new world record for the second time in three days.

On day one of the European Rowing Championships, the Paralympic champion set the PR1 men’s single scull record.

In the Plovdiv, Bulgaria, final, Pritchard won eight minutes, 47.88 seconds.

The 33-year-old Welshman then won his first European title in 8:40.38, winning in a time of 8:40.38.

The PR3 mixed double sculls final featured Samuel Murray and Annabel Caddick, who came second.

Valentin Luz and Kathrin Marchand from Germany won it in 6: 57.41, while the British pair finished in 7: 03.54.

Eleanor Brinkhoff and Megan Slabbert of Great Britain also won the women’s pair final.

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We get smacked in the face and rebound – NI boss Oxtoby

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We “reward well after a little smocking in the face” and do well.”

After being defeated by Poland by a score of 4-0 at home on Friday, head coach Tanya Oxtoby perfectly sums up Northern Ireland’s Nations League campaign.

Two things stand out in their five games so far: errors and resilience.

One cannot exist without the other, and while the former has plagued and cost them a number of games, the latter has given them hope for the future.

The two goals conceded in Gdansk in their opening game could have been avoided if we looked at errors first.

Emina Ekic’s solo run and finish came in the victory over Bosnia-Herzegovina after the defense of Northern Ireland had beaten her.

Ellie Mason and Rachel Dugdale both missed their clearance, so the less positive is said about Mihaela Ciolacu’s equalizer in the 1-1 draw in Romania.

Then, on Friday night, Ewa Pajor, who was skillful, burst into Ewa Pajor’s path to score the opener, Jackie Burns gave her a second, and Northern Ireland failed to clear their lines, allowing Paulina Tomasiak to score a third before half-time.

However, Oxtoby’s side have shown resilience in the face of setbacks.

They fought back in Gdansk, beat Bosnia, and put on their best campaign performance to defeat Romania 1-0 at home.

In Tuesday’s crucial game against Bosnia in Zenica, Oxtoby hopes her team can reestablish their resilience reserves. A victory would earn NI a promotion play-off spot.

They’re not the same mistakes, they say.

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The Australian, who emphasized that “they’re not all the same mistakes,” was careful to avoid getting too deeply into the error theme throughout the campaign.

There are individual errors and group errors throughout the entire campaign, she said, so it’s difficult to categorize them all. Learning from these mistakes is key, she said.

An unsettled backline, which has been involved in all five of the team’s previous games, may be one of the manager’s contributing factors to the high volume of mistakes.

Laura Rafferty has missed her last three games with an injury, which Oxtoby has acknowledged is “50-50” in terms of whether the Rangers defender is fit for the game in Zenica.

Northern Ireland must “park” the victory of Poland.

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After fixing Friday night’s errors, the focus will shift to Tuesday’s game in Zenica, where a win would place Northern Ireland in second place, secure that crucial play-off spot, and bring an improvement over their previous Nations League performance.

Captain Simone Magill repeatedly mentioned the need to “park” the outcome despite saying that NI are “hurting” after the loss to Poland.

At the start of this campaign, “we were very clear about what we wanted to achieve,” she said, adding that the decision is still very much in our hands.

That doesn’t change for us despite the results of Friday. This is where we want to be after a lot of traveling.

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‘Martin or Ancelotti just one of the questions Rangers can’t get wrong’

Davide Ancelotti, the son of the great Carlo, was viewed as the front-runner for the majority of the week in the race to become Rangers’ new manager.

The bookmakers shortened him to odds-on. Ancelotti was the preferred choice, according to Spanish opinion. A source closer to the scene in Glasgow supported that view on Thursday night.

On Friday, the vibe appeared to flip in Russell Martin’s favour. Although Martin appears to be a slight favorite at the moment, caution is advised because this object is fluid and adaptable from night to day.

Other names have flitted all over the landscape. Brian Priske, the former Feyenoord manager, Francesco Farioli, previously of Ajax. All characters who are respected. Steven Gerrard received a lot of praise right away, but a source close to the decision-making claims that Gerrard never emerged as the frontrunner he was touted to be.

Martin is the surprise. He did a fantastic interview and, according to a source, “gave the board a lot of thought.”

Martin versus Ancelotti. You’d struggle to find two candidates with such different backstories. Under his father, Vincelotti worked as a coach for Real Madrid, Napoli, Bayern Munich, and Everton. Martin, who he took over as manager of MK Dons, Swansea, and Southampton last season before losing his job in December, was briefly a Rangers player during a torrid era.

Ancelotti has had a safe, stable and apparently glamorous upbringing. Martin has made a powerful speech about how his father lost the family home as a result of his gambling addiction, how his grandfather physically abused his mother, and how domestic violence in his youth passed from his grandfather to his father.

In November 2023, he told the Sunday Times, “I look back and realize things that I thought were normal,” and then realize they were not.

Martin would be a tougher sell to Rangers supporters. His admiration for Barcelona, Manchester City, and Spain’s possession football drives his coaching.

He won the play-offs to advance to the Premier League for Southampton (they defeated Leeds United in the final, whose chairman Paraag Marathe is now the vice-chairman of Rangers under the new administration announced on Friday), but his name doesn’t appear to be causing people’s hearts on the Broomloan Road.

Andrew Cavenagh (the new Rangers chairman and the senior figure in the takeover), Marathe (new Rangers vice-chair, chairman of Leeds and president of San Francisco 49ers Enterprises), Gretar Steinsson (a technical director at Leeds and now a significant influence at Ibrox), sporting director Kevin Thelwell and chief executive Patrick Stewart are the key people in the appointment.

Can Rangers get it right this time around? Change is everywhere.

From Alastair Johnston to Craig Whyte, from Malcolm Murray to Sandy Easdale and onwards to David Somers, Dave King, Douglas Park and beyond, Rangers are now on their 13th chairman since David Murray packed it in for good almost 16 years ago.

Fraser Thornton, who hasn’t been in the position since mid-December last year, has been replaced by Cavenagh. However, Thornton continues to be a member of an unrecognisable board.

For a decade and more, Rangers have gone through any amount of chairmen, chief executives and managers. At Ibrox, there isn’t enough wall space to picture everyone. Not many of them, in Rangers’ eyes, merit being pictured.

Change has been a constant part of Rangers over the past decade – and there’s more change now. significant change Five new American board members are joining, along with three new members leaving, as well as a new chairman and new vice-chairman. Thelwell, starts on Monday.

There will be a significant redesign of the football operations department under Thelwell and the new manager, along with the assistant manager. This will require a lot of work to be done on a failing sector. The Rangers’ training facility, Auchenhowie, needs to be gutted, according to a senior executive when describing the situation.

There will also be a squad re-build, or an attempt at one. Rangers need five brand-new first-team starters, strictly speaking. Six might be that. Some might argue they need more. While establishing a functioning player trading model, which is the new regime’s backbone, they need to find young gems for a small sum of money.

Andrew CavenaghSNS

The new Ibrox forces, adorned with stars and stripes

Cavenagh is portrayed as demure, unflashy, and unlikely to appear in the media all that often, if at all. He is, says somebody who knows him and the world he’s about to enter, “the complete opposite to Dave King. He won’t want to do interviews, he won’t want to be in front of the cameras, but this is his baby because he loves football.

According to the same person, Cavenagh, Marathe, or any other newcomers are unable to fully comprehend what they are getting themselves into.

The madness of football life in Glasgow has to be experienced. When things don’t go well, no one can explain to you how suffocating it can be.

Cavenagh is unfamiliar with running a football team, but the 49ers Enterprises group’s machinery can help. Marathe has been described as the driving force of the project, the razzmatazz to Cavenagh’s stoicism.

Since the acquisition of Elland Road by 49ers Enterprises by Marathe, a commercial and hard-working man, has transformed Leeds as chairman. There are some similarities between the Rangers he currently leads and the Leeds he became chairman of in the summer of 2023.

Leeds had just been relegated after three seasons in the Premier League. After the recently finished season, Rangers’ feeling of failure is comparable.

The first major decision made by Marathe and the 49ers’ leadership team was appointing a new manager. The same applies now. Daniel Farke and he had a hit. How will Rangers fans hope he can do the same thing in Glasgow.

The Leeds of 2023 had a disconnect between the fans and the club and that’s been the case for a while now at Rangers.

After years of disagreeable decisions made by other employees at Elland Road, Marathe and the 49ers group faced a significant challenge in terms of recruitment and player trading. The entire team had been rebuilt.

Georginio Rutter, Crysencio Summerville. For astonishing sums of money, Louis Sinisterra and Archie Gray were sold. More than £130 million in transfer fees were brought in by them between July 2024 and May 2025.

In came many of the driven characters who won the Championship in early May, some for chunky fees, others for nothing or half-nothing. It was incredibly wise management. Folks who are afraid have a right to be excited. Marathe and the 49ers group don’t just talk a good game. It is available for everyone to see thanks to them.

How far does £20m go when Celtic continue to accumulate cash?

The new owners’ commitment to investing £20 million into football operations only serves to bolster their position. There are various estimates of how much money they actually spent to acquire their 51% stake, but a source described it as “north of £60m.” Some have put it as high as £75m.

However, the $20 million has attracted the most attention. Is that accurate? Or is there more to come? A fan of Rangers might speculate that the new owners would hardly ever announce a budget that would be double or triple that amount in public out of concern that selling clubs would come along and make changes to their demands.

We can’t yet determine how much of the squad’s redo is actually going to be done until they can be quizzed, since none of the five Americans on the board will be moving to Glasgow, which will be fine as long as things go well there. What we do know is that player trading is utterly essential to what the new owners are hoping to do. Rangers should have a soft touch, for too long, in a ruthless manner.

Rangers have recently succeeded in lowering a former director’s claim that the pay bill is “out of control.”

Players who could have been sold for profit were not sold. Rangers questioned the necessity of a player-traded system, but he never actually took a position on it. This is thought to be going to change.

If there’s an appealing offer for Nico Raskin (probably the club’s most marketable player) then he’ll be gone, same with Cyriel Dessers or anybody else. The striker is still in the public eye.

The bottom line is that 20 million is small money; for Matt O’Riley, Celtic received more than that, but it matters how it is spent. What the new owners are attempting to do is what Celtic have been doing for years. Find potential, develop it, and monetize it. Repeat and rinse.

If there’s a war chest, they’re not talking about it. There is most likely common sense, prudence, and, if necessary, a long-haul project.

This doesn’t appear to be a quick fix. It doesn’t have the impression of an immediate threat to Celtic’s dominance and to be get anywhere the new board are going to have hit the bullseye in trading the way they’ve done at Leeds. That is a formidable task.

A clever and powerful Parkhead employee for years, however, frequently questioned what was going on “over the road” at Rangers, and the answer was “not a lot” with the exception of one title-winning season.

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