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Watford boss Gracia resigns after three months

Watford head coach Javi Gracia has resigned after just over three months in the job following their 2-0 defeat by Swansea City.

Gracia, who only returned for a second spell at Vicarage Road in October, called for a meeting with club owner Gino Pozzo following Saturday’s loss, saying the team were in a “very difficult moment”.

“We retain the belief Javi was the right man to lead the club towards its push for promotion, but Javi felt he no longer had the motivation and was not the right man to continue coaching this exciting group of young players,” a club statement said.

“We respect his decision and accept his wish to leave Vicarage Road with immediate effect.”

Gracia departs with Watford in 10th place in the Championship, four points adrift of the top six and with an away trip to third placed Hull City on Tuesday.

The 55-year-old Spaniard led Watford to 11th in the Premier League and an FA Cup final during his first spell in charge, but oversaw just 21 games in his second stint at the club.

He returned to Vicarage Road following the short reign of Paulo Pezzolano and enjoyed a good start, winning eight and losing just three of his first 16 matches in charge.

But results have taken a turn for the worse since the start of January and Gracia called time on his tenure after the defeat against Swansea left the Hornets without a win in four games.

Folowing that loss, Gracia stated he was unhappy with the state of the team and also hinted he was unhappy with a lack of activity in the January transfer window.

An exit ‘that has been brewing’ – analysis

BBC 3CR sports editor Geoff Doyle:

This has been brewing since the beginning of January when the transfer window opened. Gracia was hoping for some experienced, senior players to add to his squad. He didn’t get them and his frustration has been building.

It’s coincided with a run of four league games without a win which came off the back of four wins in a row at the end of December. At the same time injuries have kicked in and there have been some squad players Gracia simply didn’t rate.

He’s indicated that he has been let down although having been at Vicarage Road before he must have known what he was letting himself in for.

Where does this leave Watford? Where it always does – looking to find a good head coach who can work with the club and the trading model it follows.

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Bartley becomes Livingston boss as Martindale moves upstairs

Marvin Bartley has taken over as Livingston manager with David Martindale moving to a new role as sporting director at the Scottish Premiership bottom club.

Martindale moves upstairs after five years as manager, with the club winless in 24 games and six points adrift at the foot of the table.

The West Lothian’s sole league victory this season came in August and Martindale is now replaced by his assistant Bartley following Saturday’s 2-0 home loss to Motherwell.

Livingston’s run of 22 games without a league victory is only matched by one top-flight team this century – Hamilton in the 2010-11 season.

Bartley’s only previous managerial experience came in a 16-month spell with Queen of the South in League One, when he won 25 of his 61 matches in charge.

Martindale’s exit comes less than 24 hours after he told BBC Scotland he did not “fear for his job” and expressed his desire to stay.

In the club statement confirming the managerial changes, Martindale, 51, said: “I have to take accountability for this terrible run we have been on.

“This season has proven incredibly difficult for a number of reasons and I fully understand that change was necessary at the club.

“I believe Marvin, supported by the staff and players at the club, has the squad and ability to keep us in the league, but I know how big a job that will be.

“I will be here to offer any support I can going forward, but I am also conscious that there has to be a clear divide between my new role and the first-team footballing department.

“This changing room has more than enough within it to start putting points on the board. I ask that we collectively show immediate and positive support for Marvin and the players for what will be another massive game on Wednesday night.”

Martindale, who initially joined Livingston as a volunteer in 2014, was the Premiership’s longest-serving manager, having taken permanent charge in December 2020 after a spell as caretaker boss.

He guided the club to a top-six finish in his first season and only narrowly missed out on the top half in the two campaigns that followed.

After suffering relegation in the 2023-24 season, Martindale brought Livingston straight back up through the play-offs last term and won their first cup in eight years with victory over Queen’s Park in the SPFL Trust Trophy final.

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    • 18 June 2023
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Wolves accept Palace’s reduced £48m offer for Strand Larsen

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Wolves have accepted a reduced offer worth £48m for striker Jorgen Strand Larsen from Crystal Palace.

Last week, the two clubs reached an agreement in principle over a £50m deal for the Norway international to move to Selhurst Park.

All that was left was for Palace to submit a written offer – and provided the bid was of the value discussed, Wolves would have accepted.

However, as BBC Sport revealed, the offer never arrived as Palace communicated their intention to walk away from the deal, which put the transfer in jeopardy.

Sources claim that Palace’s decision to pause final talks was down to reservations over the total cost of the deal, not concerns over the player.

The impasse in recent days has placed further doubt on the deal.

But with a little over 24 hours to go until the transfer window closes, Palace have now had a new offer accepted worth £43m plus an additional £5m in bonuses – a deal worth £2 less than their original verbal offer.

If the deal goes through, the door could open for Jean-Philippe Mateta to complete his protracted move to AC Milan.

Mateta wants to leave Selhurst Park with the Italian club leading the chase for his signature.

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Happy tennis, serious name – the making of Alcaraz

With his Australian Open triumph, the name of Carlos Alcaraz is now engraved on all four Grand Slam trophies.

There is just one thing you need to know.

“I don’t like being called Carlos,” he said in 2022.

“Honestly, Carlos seems too serious to me, like I’ve done something wrong. I like Carlitos or Charlie.”

Once a young prodigy who smashed racquets when things did not go his way, Alcaraz has secured a spot in the history books once again as the youngest man to complete the career Grand Slam.

He is the world number one, has seven major titles to his name and is one half of a potentially era-defining rivalry.

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Watching Alcaraz is, for the most part, like watching sunshine personified.

There is a carefree joy in his shot-making; the huge forehand that goes blasting through every surface, the drop shots and volleys that few would dare try.

Then there is Alcaraz himself. He runs around the court with a puppyish enthusiasm, a huge smile never far from his face. The sleeveless shirts, the cries of ‘vamos!’, the ill-advised buzzcut in New York all add to the theatre.

Alcaraz plays by the motto passed down to him by his grandfather – cabeza, corazon, cojones. Head, heart, balls. A reminder to be brave in the big moments, to truly go for what you want. It has served him well throughout his career.

Tennis, Alcaraz told Vogue in 2023, is in his blood. His great-uncle built the club in Murcia where generations of the family would play. His father, who played until he could no longer afford to, was a director there. Alcaraz’s siblings all play tennis, with eldest brother Alvaro acting as hitting partner and unofficial barber.

Given his first racquet aged four, Alcaraz spent much of his time there. His first coach, Kiko Navarro, told BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller that the young Alcaraz got angry a lot.

“When he was a child he broke a lot of racquets and I had to take him crying to the hotel or home,” he said in 2024, while Alcaraz described himself as “a bad loser”.

IMG agent Albert Molina watched an 11-year-old Alcaraz play a Futures tournament in Murcia. “You could already see his winning character, bravery and daring,” he told the ATP Tour website in 2021.

“He had such a variety that he would often get it wrong. In one point he would approach the net, open up angles, play a slice, a lob…”

It was Molina who would link Alcaraz up with a man who came to be ubiquitous in his early success. He invited Juan Carlos Ferrero, the Spanish former world number one who won the 2003 French Open, to watch him. Alcaraz played a tournament at Ferrero’s academy and, in Ferrero’s own words: “I saw something different.”

He told BBC Radio 5 Live in 2024: “You could see he was more dynamic than the other players. He wanted to be a professional and the parents and I talked about how he needed to go there [to Ferrero’s academy], sleep there and practise as the others players do.”

In 2018, Alcaraz moved to Villena to train under Ferrero, who had spent an underwhelming seven months coaching then world number four Alexander Zverev. Ferrero turned down other offers to become the youngster’s full-time coach. Alcaraz would come to regard Ferrero as a second father.

Some coaches would try to change Alcaraz’s natural game and reel in his tendency for the unorthodox. Ferrero did not. He wanted Alcaraz to “have joy on the court”, knowing that when Alcaraz felt his best, the tennis would follow.

“I always try to play happy tennis,” Alcaraz wrote in TNT’s Players Voice in 2023. “I consider myself a happy person off the court, so I try to play that way.”

However they defined it, it worked. He made his debut on the Challenger circuit – the rung below the main ATP Tour – as a 15-year-old in 2019. He hoovered up four titles and beat another notable teenage prodigy named Jannik Sinner in Alicante. He became the first player born in 2003 to win a match at that level.

Carlos Alcaraz reactsGetty Images

Alcaraz made his ATP Tour debut as a 16-year-old at the Rio Open. At 406th in the world, he was a massive underdog against compatriot and 41st-ranked Albert Ramos Vinolas. But there were glimpses, even then, of what Alcaraz would become.

The forehand was big, set up by the top-spin backhand. The approaches to the net were confident, the movement smooth, the ability to get the crowd behind him apparent even then. On show too were the lapses in concentration, none more egregious than a double fault in the second set that sent the match to a decider.

Alcaraz quickly found himself 3-0 down in the third. Momentum – and physicality – was with his more experienced opponent. But Alcaraz found the burst of energy that five years later would propel him to an astonishing French Open title. He saved three break points, reeled off five games a row and won the deciding tie-break to claim victory at 03:00 local time.

“I always have positive thoughts,” Alcaraz said afterwards. “I always think I can win, no matter who the opponent is.

“If you don’t think you can win, you shouldn’t go on the court.”

Breakthrough after breakthrough followed. He first gained attention at the 2021 US Open, with victory over Stefanos Tsitsipas making him the youngest man to beat a top-three player at a major. A year later, on his way to the Madrid title, he became the only man to beat Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic back-to-back on clay. The inevitable Slam triumph followed in New York, Alcaraz claiming the number one ranking to boot.

Carlos Alcaraz reacts after winning Wimbledon in 2023Getty Images

Alcaraz once said he feared tennis becoming an “obligation” – that it would one day become a grind, rather than a fight to be enjoyed.

Not all of Alcaraz’s career has been plain sailing. He was left in tears after losing the Olympic final to Djokovic in Paris in 2024 and smashed a racquet in a shock loss to Gael Monfils a month later. A grim run was capped by a listless second-round exit at the US Open weeks later.

When it is all working, Alcaraz’s tennis is a thing of beauty. The drop shots come seemingly out of nowhere and are particularly mesmeric on the clay, barely spinning over the net to send a pop of red dust up into the air. The shots he makes while running into the corners should not, by rights, be landing in. But they do, drawing gasps from the crowd.

When it is not quite clicking, it can look awful. Because of the carefree way Alcaraz plays, it can be misconstrued as him not caring. Alcaraz’s choices on the court can drive certain commentators to distraction. Why is he going for the volley when his opponent is there waiting? Why is he going for another highlight-reel winner when the safer choice is there?

But that is the way Alcaraz plays. That is his happy tennis. He does not play just for himself. He plays for the crowd, the fans, the moments that go viral on social media. He draws you in with the fist pumps, the point to the ear to make more noise, the ball zipping through the court faster than your eye can keep up with.

Carlos Alcaraz celebrates with the ball kids after winning the 2024 French OpenGetty Images

For childhood coach Navarro, he takes pride from Alcaraz’s behaviour. “How humble he is, that everyone loves around the world,” he said. “Nothing in him has changed since he was a child. I wanted him to be the same Carlitos and I feel very proud of it.”

Alcaraz’s practice sessions at Slams always draw a crowd – and that is the way he likes it. At Wimbledon, he opted to practise on the outside courts, rather than on the official practice site that is tucked away from spectators. People stood four rows deep, crowded around the stairs and hanging over the hoardings to catch a glimpse.

Those who had scrambled to get seats on were treated to the full Alcaraz show, the Spaniard laughing and joking with the crowd and trying out the occasional trick shot. There was a smile for everyone as, escorted by security, he walked through walls of fans around the grounds. Every “good luck Carlos” was greeted by a “thank you”.

Carlos Alcaraz in the crowd at WimbledonGetty Images

At the US Open, before his fourth-round match against Arthur Rinderknech, Alcaraz high-fived every person on the front row, and after his victory, signed every oversized tennis ball that was handed to him.

On court, he lives every moment. He laughs in disbelieving joy at his opponent’s shot-making. He will cup his ear to the crowd, urging them to make more noise, drawing them in all the time.

Alcaraz is popular with his peers and rivals. Facundo Bagnis described him as “an even better person than he is a player”, while legend Bjorn Borg said he was “surprised” by “what a great guy” he is. It could be down to the familiarity that Alcaraz keeps within his team. Ferrero was a constant in his life for years until their surprising split at the end of 2025 and his family are never far away.

After his quarter-final victory over Alex de Minaur in Melbourne, Alcaraz said some players had joked he could “play a football match with your team”. Brother, dad and uncle were all in his support box, along with his long-time agent and fitness coaches.

Carlos Alcaraz hugs his brother, Alvaro, after winning the 2025 US OpenGetty Images

His progress in Melbourne – a Slam at which he had never gone beyond the quarter-finals before – was serene. Backed by a tweaked serve, he did not drop a set until a gritty semi-final in which he was racked by full body cramps and taken to the limit by Zverev.

He was not the overwhelming crowd favourite in the final against Djokovic and was blasted off court in the first set. But Alcaraz showed real maturity to stay focused and turn the match around, ultimately overcoming the greatest men’s player of all time to achieve history.

More records and majors will undoubtedly come. But while he takes his work seriously, tennis will never be the defining thing in Alcaraz’s life.

“I want to sit at the table with the Big Three,” Alcaraz said in his Netflix documentary. But from what I’ve experienced, I’d choose happiness over massive success.

Carlos Alcaraz with his brother Alvaro and father Carlos in MelbourneGetty Images

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‘My son’ – Chelsea and Strasbourg in talks to swap defenders

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Chelsea are in talks to recall Mamadou Sarr from Strasbourg, with Aaron Anselmino expected to move in the opposite direction to the French club.

The proposed exchange of the two 20‑year‑old central defenders is set to take place between clubs under the same Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital ownership group, named BlueCo.

It comes amid a complicated end to Chelsea’s winter transfer window, with the club also in discussions over a substantial deal to sign Rennes defender Jeremy Jacquet.

Anselmino was recalled from his loan at Borussia Dortmund last week and was filmed in tears as he said goodbye to team‑mates in Germany.

Reports there said Dortmund were “incensed” and caught by surprise by Chelsea’s decision, which is understood to have been communicated three hours before a clause permitting a recall expired.

Dortmund said they “regretted” the sudden departure.

How Chelsea will strengthen defence

Sarr is expected to feature in Strasbourg’s home match against Paris St‑Germain on Sunday night, but it is likely to be his final appearance for the Alsace club.

Last January Chelsea completed their first permanent signing from Strasbourg since the two clubs came under the same BlueCo ownership, in a £12m deal.

Sarr made one substitute appearance for Chelsea as they won the Club World Cup in the summer before returning to Strasbourg on loan in August.

Recently appointed Chelsea head coach Liam Rosenior described Sarr as “my son”, with “scary” potential to become “world class” during his spell in charge of Strasbourg last season.

The defender’s expected return, after winning the Africa Cup of Nations as a starter for Senegal in January, is likely to provoke anger among Strasbourg supporters.

Protests from a minority of fans earlier in the season intensified when Rosenior left the club to replace Enzo Maresca, who had fallen out with senior figures at Chelsea and departed on New Year’s Day.

Chelsea’s defence has not performed at the level of their attack in the Premier League this season and they rank only 11th for expected goals (xG) against despite having conceded the joint-third fewest goals.

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Starmer’s visit to China was not a reset, but a new way forward

Diplomacy, much of the time, is about symbols rather than substance. And in the case of China, that can be particularly true.

In this sense, what was important about British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s visit to China at the end of January was that it happened at all. In recent years, there have been plenty of tensions between the two countries: the accusations against two British citizens of spying for China, the delay in the approval for the new Chinese embassy in London, the trial against democracy activist Jimmy Lai, etc.

The fact that Starmer made the trip to Beijing – the first one for a British prime minister in eight years – indicated that the arguments in favour of doing it outweighed the negatives of it. What certainly tipped the balance was the increased intensity with which the US administration is now turning on its traditional allies.

The visit did not reset relations, but it revealed that the world has entered a new era of global power dynamics, which is already reflected in diplomacy.

On January 23, just a week before his trip to China, Starmer summoned up a rare display of public anger, condemning US President Donald Trump’s remarks about British troops in Afghanistan.

This made the visit to Beijing very different from those of previous British prime ministers. In the past, there had never been a question about the alignment between the United Kingdom and the United States.

The US and the UK were close allies for decades. They acted in close coordination on the wars in the Middle East since 2001, and on combatting global terrorism and other threats. They shared intelligence through the Five Eyes arrangement and worked together as permanent members of the United Nations Security Council.

On China, moments of disagreement were brief. In 2004, the UK and its European partners attempted to lift the arms embargo imposed by them and the US on China after the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, on the grounds that all the equipment they forbade was restricted perfectly well by other legislation. The then Bush administration strongly opposed this, and the idea was dropped.

More than a decade later, during the first Trump administration, it looked like Europe might seek to forge its own trade deal with China to compensate for steel and other tariffs placed on it by the US. But in 2018, that receded too as the European Union ironed out a deal with Washington. Part of that was not to grow closer to the Chinese in terms of trade.

The pandemic pushed the US and Europe further towards aligning with each other against China, which they regarded as partially creating the problem by not announcing the appearance of the virus soon enough. By 2023, therefore, the UK and the US were almost vying with each other to be more hawkish, with then-Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden declaring that the People’s Republic was Britain’s greatest “state-based threat”.

We are no longer in that world. Washington’s actions are raising fundamental questions about the alliance system around NATO and other security arrangements that it has sat at the heart of since the end of World War II.

We do not yet know the shape of the world we are heading into. It might take years for it to fully emerge. But for Starmer on his visit to Beijing, this shift meant he was talking to an interlocutor who is also trying to work out what the new situation means.

President Xi Jinping is not a security ally of the UK, but in the strange, topsy-turvy world we now inhabit, his administration is probably closer to the UK in terms of working out what to do about global warming or how to manage the risks of artificial intelligence (AI).

Both countries do not like the unpredictability of the current situation. They are all linked by having a problem with the US now, even if it is a different kind of problem.

This, of course, does not mean that a new kind of strategic alliance is in the making; there were no signs of that in the meeting. After all, culturally, politically and in terms of values, the UK and China disagree with each other too much for that to happen. This is regardless of Britain’s links with the US.

But that Starmer was able to announce restrictions on small engines that end up used in the boats bringing immigrants illegally across the seas around the UK was a telling sign of how, even in a deglobalising world, everything still connects, and that in a modest and indirect way, Britain needs to talk to China to address some aspects of what it sees as its own security priorities.

There were other announcements as well: the $15bn investment by British pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, the 30-day visa-free access to China for British citizens and the lifting of sanctions against some UK Parliament members.

The groundwork was also laid for deeper economic engagement, with some steps being taken to improve trade and facilitate UK business access to the Chinese market.

Longer term, this visit could also pave the way for engagement that recognises the rise of China as a technology power. In environmental science, AI, quantum computing – indeed, in almost every area – China is outpacing not just the UK, but almost everyone else. It is producing ideas and innovations in medicine, renewable energy, etc which matter to the UK for its own good.

A single four-day visit did not reset the relationship. There are still many issues between the two countries. But at least it has allowed the possibility – now that the political blockages have been cleared – to work out strategically how the UK and others in Europe navigate the new geopolitics where there are no eternal friends or enemies, and how they react to a world where, for the first time in recent history, China has innovations, technologies and ideas that they might need and want.