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Arsenal make Saka best-paid player with new five-year deal

Sami Mokbel

Senior football correspondent
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England winger Bukayo Saka has signed a new five-year contract with Arsenal until 2031.

Sources have told BBC Sport that the agreement will make Saka the club’s best-paid player on wages in excess of £300,000 a week.

Talks over a new deal have been ongoing for nearly a year, with Saka verbally agreeing to commit his future to the club in January.

Saka signed his previous deal, which was due to expire in 2027, in 2023 but his renewal means the 24-year-old has committed his peak years to the Gunners.

The news comes as a major boost for the Gunners, as they battle on four fronts to win silverware for the first time since 2020.

The agreement is the latest example of Arsenal tying down their key players to long-term contracts as they look to keep their title-chasing squad together.

William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhaes, Ethan Nwaneri and Myles Lewis-Skelly all signed new long-term contracts in the summer.

Saka has scored seven goals in 33 appearances for the Gunners this term.

Mikel Arteta’s side are four points clear at the top of the Premier League and they will face Manchester City in the EFL Cup final in March.

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Analysis: Saka deal as important as any signing

Alex Howell

Arsenal reporter

The agreement with Saka is more important than the £250m outlay Arsenal made to bring in eight new players in the summer.

Saka’s importance on the pitch alongside his bond with supporters and his journey from the academy make his position impossible to replicate.

His new deal will see him stay at the club into the peak years of his career and – after several seasons with numbers that match elite wingers across the game – Arsenal will benefit from the progression he could still achieve.

The second half of this season is crucial for Saka as he looks to help Arsenal lift a major trophy for the first time since the FA Cup in 2020.

Mikel Arteta can rely on him and he is one of the reasons why the majority of Arsenal’s attacking play goes down the right – the side Saka plays on.

The winger is also set for an important summer with Thomas Tuchel’s England at the World Cup.

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‘We created fire’ – Forest boss Pereira on Marinakis reunion

Nick Mashiter

Football reporter
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“Pleasure to be here, back to the fight,” said Vitor Pereira with a smile.

Pereira was speaking to the media for the first time since signing an 18-month deal to become Nottingham Forest’s fourth manager of the season.

It is just 161 days since Nuno Espirito Santo was sacked, having fallen out with owner Evangelos Marinakis and global sporting director Edu.

Ange Postecoglou and Sean Dyche have since come and gone in a tempestuous season of struggle.

Now Forest, who are just one place above the relegation zone, have turned to former Wolves boss Pereira.

Keeping Marinakis’ faith, and winning players’ trust

Pereira is back in management just over three months after being sacked by Wolves, who at that point had taken just two points after 10 games.

He regrets not stepping down before the start of the season – first frustrated by what he perceived as the club moving too slowly to secure signings, then unhappy with the players they did deliver.

He still signed off on all the deals – pushing, in particular, for winger Jhon Arias, who was sold to Palmeiras earlier this month – but felt he never got his first choices.

There are parellels with Nuno’s exit from Forest – both were disillusioned with transfer business – but there should be no surprises or secrets between Pereira and Marinakis.

Pereira worked under the Forest owner at Olympiakos in 2015. It was only a six-month relationship, but still delivered a domestic double.

He left Olympiakos for Fenerbahce, who Forest face visit in the Europa League on Thursday, in the summer of 2015 – but reflects on that being a mistake as he jumped around clubs in a desire to make it to the Premier League.

One of his key tasks at Forest is to manage upwards, and understand the owner.

“He is ambitious. He wants to win. Emotional… I know him very well,” he said.

“I remember the energy and the fire we created. In Greece, there is a fire inside – they like to see the energy. He asked me to be myself. He liked the way when we worked together we won the league and cup.

“It was in the middle of the season and we created a good relationship. He trusts my work, I trust his personality. I think we need passion too.”

Marinakis had hoped Dyche would bring stability, but he failed to win over Forest’s expensively assembled squad.

Despite averaging nearly 1.5 points per game during his tenure, players were concerned about his training methods and focus on physicality and running.

Players’ opinions were canvassed after the defeat by Leeds earlier this month, and a number were summoned to see Marinakis following the 0-0 draw against Wolves on Wednesday.

Pereira has already spoken to his squad about the need for togetherness.

“If you buy the idea, it’s a good step,” he said. “If you don’t buy the idea of the manager, it’s a big problem – and you must also buy the personality.

“If you buy the idea and the person, you have an open mind to receive information and to work hard together, it’s possible to achieve what we want.

“Football is much more than tactical things. It’s about connecting with people specially doing that – to fight for a target together with commitment.

“It’s about connecting the supporters, with the team, club and city, to create the energy for everybody to believe in themselves, to create a good environment to work, and tactical ideas of course.

Twelve games left to beat the drop

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Pereira will be on familiar ground for Thursday’s Europa League play-off, having managed the Turkish side for 86 games over two spells.

Forest need an instant impact, and despite leaving Wolves in November after not winning a Premier League game since April, he proved there he can make a difference at a struggling club.

At Molineux, he won 12 of his 25 matches – drawing four and losing nine – after taking over when they were five points from safety in December 2024.

Wolves were 13 points behind Manchester United and 14 points adrift of Tottenham at that stage but finished level with the Red Devils and four points above Spurs – 17 clear of danger.

Champions Liverpool visit the City Ground on Sunday – and Forest’s three-point lead over West Ham in the final relegation spot could have disappeared by then as the Hammers face Bournemouth on Saturday.

Relegation was not in the thinking after a seventh-placed finish last season – and Pereira needs to start well.

He said: “I cannot change a lot in this moment of the season. It’s important the players feel they can help the team with their qualities. It’s important they express themselves.

“Passion is something which sleeps me with, wakes up with me. I came with intention to give everything for myself, my body and my soul to help the club. Together we can do it.”

If Forest survive, there will be celebrations – and while at Wolves Pereira coined the phrase ‘first the points, then the pints’, having drunk with fans after wins.

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How Robert Duvall became an unlikely Scottish football cult hero

Ciaran Varley

BBC Sport Journalist
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The Godfather, Apocalypse Now…A Shot at Glory.

Legendary Hollywood actor Robert Duvall will probably be remembered by most for his roles as mafia consigliere Tom Hagen in the first two editions of Francis Ford Coppola’s gangster trilogy or as Lieutenant Colonel William Kilgore in the same director’s 1979 Vietnam war epic.

However, among Scottish football circles, the veteran actor, who died on Monday aged 95, will also be remembered fondly for playing Gordon McLeod – a beleaguered Scottish football manager attempting to take lowly Kilnockie FC to Scottish Cup glory with the help of mercurial striker Jackie McQuillan, played by Rangers legend Ally McCoist.

While recording football drama A Shot at Glory in 1999 and 2000, which also starred Hollywood A-listers Michael Keaton and Brian Cox alongside Scottish football household names such as Owen Coyle, Didier Agathe and Derek Ferguson, Duvall immersed himself in the country’s football culture.

Indeed, the actor popped up at grounds across the country as he prepared for his role, as well as filming at a number of stadiums including former Dumbarton ground, Boghead Park, Kilmarnock’s Rugby Park, Queen of the South’s Palmerston Park and Hampden Park.

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Duvall’s passing was announced on Monday and was met with tributes from the likes of Al Pacino and Robert De Niro – who both starred alongside him in The Godfather – Adam Sandler and Oscar-winner Jamie Lee Curtis.

Alongside getting his flowers from the great and the good of Hollywood, A Shot at Glory co-star McCoist also spoke to TalkSport about his close relationship with Duvall.

“I was gutted,” said the former Rangers striker.

“The first thing you have got to say is what an innings. 95. But what a guy. What a man he was. When we did that film, A Shot at Glory, we filmed it all over Scotland and it was just so much fun.

“The lads that we did it with, a lot of them were pros, Airdrie and Raith Rovers a lot of the boys played with and he just became one of the boys.

“Whenever there was a break, he’d set up a heady tennis court and he’d just pull up a chair and he’d watch the boys playing heady tennis.

“He’d love the craic, he’d love all the patter. He used to take all the boys to dinner.”

Robert Duvall looks out from a Scottish football crowd at IbroxSNS

In A Shot at Glory, McCoist – who is Rangers’ leading all-time goal scorer – plays an ageing and temperamental former Celtic striker, McQuillan, who is brought in by Duvall’s character McLeod to improve Kilnockie’s fortunes despite fears about his temperament on and off the field.

Against the backdrop of the club’s American owners threatening to relocate the team to Dublin, McLeod and McQuillan lead the minnows to a Scottish Cup final against Rangers.

Former Celtic midfielder Didier Agathe was cast as a Rangers player and Owen Coyle, who played for several Scottish clubs as a striker, appears in the Kilnockie FC squad.

And in 1999, while filming for the movie took place, Duvall appeared as a studio pundit alongside McCoist on BBC Scotland’s Sportscene for the Old Firm Scottish Cup Final. Giving his prediction, the Hollywood actor sat on the fence.

“I’m kind of neutral,” he told presenter, Dougie Donnelly.

“It would be wonderful if Rangers won the treble. I just have a feeling that Rangers better be ready because the Celtics are out for revenge.”

Rangers won the game 1-0 to deny their city neighbours a single title in what was a painful season for the Bhoys.

During the same appearance, he revealed that he had also been at Hampden Park the previous year to watch Hearts beat Rangers 2-1 in the Scottish Cup final.

In 2012, Duvall again showed split loyalties. Appearing at the Etihad Stadium for the Manchester derby alongside Jack Reacher co-star Tom Cruise, the Hollywood great revealed that he had named a dog after former Celtic forward, Jimmy Johnstone.

Johnstone, nicknamed ‘Jinky’ for his dribbling, was one of Celtic’s ‘Lisbon Lions’ team who famously won the European Cup in 1967.

“I can safely say the greatest character I ever met in my life, and I’ve met a lot, was ‘wee’ Jimmy Johnstone,” he told Sky Sports.

“I named a dog after him.”

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Tinubu’s Presence Added Glamour To Argungu Festival – Kebbi Deputy Gov

The Kebbi State Government has applauded President Bola Tinubu, 78 traditional rulers, and other eminent stakeholders for the successful hosting of the Argungu Fishing Festival.

The Deputy Governor, Umar Tafida, who served as Chairman of the Main Organizing Committee for the 61st Argungu International Fishing and Cultural Festival, made this known at a press briefing to appraise the support received during the event.

Tafida insisted that the physical presence of President Tinubu added glamour and prestige to the historic occasion.

READ ALSO: [PHOTOS] 59kg Catch Crowns Rich Heritage, Colours Of Argungu Fishing Festival

Fishermen attempt to catch fish in the Mata Fada river during the Argungu Fishing and Cultural Festival in Argungu Town, Kebbi State, in northwest Nigeria, on February 14, 2026. (Photo by TOYIN ADEDOKUN / AFP)

“Let me use this opportunity to sincerely appreciate the physical presence of Mr. President, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, at the grand finale of the 61st Argungu International Fishing and Cultural Festival,” he said

According to him, his presence added more glamour and made it a beautiful event.

He said, “Equally, we commend the support of His Excellency, the Kebbi State Governor, Dr. Nasir Idris, for his unwavering support throughout the activities of the festival. His Excellency was present at various events and ensured that everything went according to plan.

“Our Governor allowed the Main Organizing Committee and all the sub-committees to execute their assigned tasks, which contributed significantly to the success of the festival.

“We are most grateful to all the governors, ministers, and the 78 emirs who physically attended the festival. They truly made us proud before the international community.”

READ ALSO: We’ll Win Battle Against Banditry, Terrorism, Tinubu Assures Nigerians

An official holds a fish caught during the Argungu Fishing and Cultural Festival in Argungu Town, Kebbi State, in northwest Nigeria, on February 14, 2026. (Photo by TOYIN ADEDOKUN / AFP)

Proceedings In Senate Stalled Over Motion To Rescind Clause In Electoral Act 

Proceedings in the Senate have been momentarily stalled as lawmakers began clause-by-clause consideration of the Electoral Act, 2022 (Repeal and Re-Enactment) Bill 2026, following a motion to rescind the earlier amendment.

The motion to rescind the bill was formally seconded on Tuesday, paving the way for the upper chamber to dissolve into the committee of the whole for detailed reconsideration and reenactment of the proposed legislation.

During the session, the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, reeled out the clauses one after the other for deliberation. However, the process stalled when at clause 60, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe (ADC/Abia South) raised a point of order, drawing immediate attention on the floor.

Following the intervention, murmurs spread across the chamber as lawmakers began speaking in small groups and approaching the Senate President’s desk for consultations.

The session immediately moved into a closed-door session.

READ ALSO: Senate Moves To Reconsider Electoral Act Amendment

Before rescinding the Electoral Act, the Red Chamber raised concerns over the timing of the 2027 general elections and technical inconsistencies in the legislation.

Rising under Order 52(6) of the Senate Standing Orders, the Senate leader, Opeyemi Bamidele, moved the motion to reverse the earlier passage of the bill and return it to the Committee of the Whole for fresh deliberations.

He explained that the development follows the announcement by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) of a timetable fixing the 2027 general elections for February 2027, after consultations with the leadership of the National Assembly.

Bamidele stated that stakeholders had raised concerns that the proposed date conflicts with the provisions of the amended law, particularly the requirement that elections be scheduled not later than 360 days before the expiration of tenure.

He noted that upon critical review of the passed bill, the 360-day notice requirement prescribed in Clause 28 could result in the scheduling of the 2027 Presidential and National Assembly elections during the Ramadan period.

According to him, holding elections during Ramadan could negatively affect voter turnout, logistical coordination, stakeholder participation, and the overall inclusiveness and credibility of the electoral process.

The injustice in Chagos continues

President Donald Trump’s description earlier this month of the UK–Mauritius agreement on the sovereignty of the Chagos Islands as “an act of great stupidity”  briefly turned the world’s attention to the remote archipelago.

While most of the coverage and debate focused on the US military base on Diego Garcia island, little attention has been given to the sordid story of US and UK involvement in ongoing crimes against humanity against the islands’ Indigenous people – the Chagossians.

The Chagossians, whose island homeland is in the middle of the Indian Ocean, are largely descended from formerly enslaved East Africans. More than 60 years ago, US officials decided that the largest island, Diego Garcia, would be a suitable location for a remote military base.

The US saw the Chagossian population as a problem, as they wanted the island “clean” of inhabitants. Over the next decade, they secretly plotted with the UK – the colonial power governing Chagos – through a manufactured story based on racism and lies, to force the islanders from their home.

One US admiral, Elmo Zumwalt, said the islanders “absolutely must go”. To scare them into leaving, UK and US personnel gassed their dogs. From 1967 to 1973, the UK proceeded to force all the Chagossians – as many as 2,000 people – from all the islands, not only Diego Garcia. The US built and has now operated the Diego Garcia base for more than 50 years.

Today, the Chagossians live in exile, largely in the UK, Mauritius and the Seychelles. Many remain in poverty and have been prevented by the UK and US from returning to live in their homeland, even though generations have continued to campaign to do so. The islands, apart from the US military base, remain abandoned.

The story of US involvement in this forced displacement has been gradually uncovered, including through a congressional inquiry, the work of the academic David Vine, and the indefatigable struggle of generations of Chagossians to uncover the truth and return home. In 2023, Human Rights Watch found that the UK and US were responsible for crimes against humanity and had a duty to provide reparations – an opportunity to right their wrongs.

As a result, the US State Department for the first time acknowledged “regret” for what had happened to the Chagossians. Subsequently, the UK and Mauritius agreed in principle to a treaty to recognise Mauritian sovereignty over the islands, although the UK will maintain formal control of Diego Garcia island and the US military base will remain.

Forgotten in this settlement are the Chagossians. The treaty talks about historical wrongs, but the crimes are ongoing. The Chagossians are still prevented from returning home: Their islands – apart from the base – remain empty. Some Chagossians hope that the treaty will allow them to live on some of the islands, though this will depend on Mauritius fulfilling its obligations. The treaty itself provides no guarantee of their return and says nothing about the reparations owed to the Chagossians.

The US still appears opposed to Chagossians returning to Diego Garcia, even though the base occupies at most half the island. No Chagossian we’ve spoken to wants the base to close; instead, they would like the opportunity to work there. The US has kept a very low public profile in the negotiations – at least until President Trump’s comments – hiding behind the UK.

But the agreement’s terms make it clear that the US has been influencing the negotiations. The US “regret” for the treatment of the Chagossians has yet to translate into ensuring the Chagossians can return to Diego Garcia.

The treatment of the Chagossians is a crime in which the US has been implicated for more than 50 years, and to which Trump has inadvertently drawn attention. Having acknowledged regret, the US and UK governments should now ensure that their actions align with their obligations under international law, including working with Mauritius to enable the Chagossians to return to their homeland and providing appropriate reparations. Until that happens, the injustice remains unresolved.