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How one of Europe’s best defences has Motherwell in title mix

Charlotte Cohen

BBC Sport Scotland

At the start of the season, it would have seemed almost preposterous to suggest it. Motherwell are in the mix to challenge for the Scottish Premiership title.

Whether manager Jens Berthel Askou wishes to acknowledge it or not, some things are undeniable for the team now within a point of third-placed Celtic in the league.

Saturday’s 2-0 victory over Dundee United marked their fourth clean sheet in a row as they moved a point behind the defending champions.

In attack, they have the league’s top scorer in Tawanda Maswanhise, and in Elijah Just arguably one of the country’s top performers this term.

However, their success is built around their defence.

They’ve conceded just 18 goals in 28 league games, fewer than any other team in the division and one of the best defensive records in Europe.

Only Italian side Roma (16), Portuguese outfits Porto (8), Sporting (12) and Benfica (13) and Belgian side Union Saint-Gilloise (15) have conceded fewer goals across the continent’s top leagues.

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During Saturday’s game at Fir Park, Dundee United had seven shots, three on target, but couldn’t score against a Motherwell defence who won 10 tackles and made six interceptions.

United opted for a man-marking approach in an effort to limit their hosts, and Askou was delighted with how his side were able to control the game in attack and defence.

“The defensive discipline gave us full control of the game that was, at times, quite lively,” he said.

“Big credit to the boys for going out and being extremely disciplined for one another.

Askou plays down trophy talk

Motherwell defender Stephen O'Donnell, goalkeeper Calum Ward and manager Jens Berthel AskouSNS

Victory over Dundee United put Motherwell one point behind Celtic and three points off Rangers, before the Glasgow giants’ meeting at Ibrox on Sunday.

The Steelmen are 10 points off league leaders Hearts and have a game in hand.

Well have five games to play until the Scottish Premiership split. And that run is looking tricky.

They play their game in hand at Dundee next Saturday, before travelling to Celtic Park and then welcoming Hibernian. Their final two games before the split are a home game against Falkirk before a trip to Tynecastle to face Hearts.

Motherwell have already beaten Dundee, Celtic and Hibs this season but have also dropped points against all three. They’ve failed to beat Falkirk and Hearts but haven’t lost to either.

Motherwell's next five fixtures

Celtic play their game in hand away to Aberdeen on Wednesday and travel to face Dundee United after their meeting with Motherwell. Martin O’Neill’s side also play Dundee away and St Mirren at home before the split.

After Sunday, Rangers are away to St Mirren, at home to Aberdeen and Dundee United and then on the road against Falkirk.

But Motherwell’s Askou has again played down any suggestion his side are in the mix for the Premiership trophy.

“What we are in the mix for is for you to discuss,” he said.

“We had a game today, we had to attack, we did that well and got a clean sheet and three points.

“It was a good game for us in terms of playing against man-for-man pressure and it didn’t stop us today.”

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Warrington beat Wakefield to extend winning start

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Betfred Super League

Warrington Wolves (14) 27

Tries: Sipley, Hopoate, Smith, King Goals: Sneyd 5 Drop goal: Sneyd

Wakefield Trinity (2) 16

Warrington survived a strong Wakefield fightback in the second half to make it two wins from two in Super League.

The Wolves, who were coming off the back of a blank weekend because of Hull Kingston Rovers’ involvement in the World Club Challenge, seemed to have taken a firm grip on the game in the first half.

Tries from Toafofoa Sipley and Albert Hopoate, along with the reliable kicking of Marc Sneyd, had them 14-2 up at the break.

Trinity, who chalked up their first win of the season at Huddersfield last week, came back well as Jake Trueman brilliantly created tries for Max Jowitt and Jayden Myers.

Wire gave further evidence that they could make a fist of challenging for honours this season as Sneyd gave a kicking masterclass and they had the defensive resilience to hold firm as Trinity came good.

Wakefield had won the previous three meetings of these two, but they were soon in trouble as Sneyd slotted over a penalty and then video referee Chris Kendall overturned an on-field verdict of “no try” to give Sipley four points.

A few minutes later, Hopoate supported Danny Walker’s break to streak away for another try for 14-0.

Wire seemed to have made a costly error as they responded to strong Wakefield pressure right at the end of the half by committing repeat offences which saw Sipley sin-binned and Jowitt kick the resulting penalty to give his side a toe-hold.

That became a firmer platform early in the second half as Trinity made use of the extra man, Trueman slinging a fine pass over the top for Jowitt to score in the corner.

Sipley’s first act on returning to the field was a ruck infringement which led to Trueman coming up with an even better looping cut-out pass and Myers finished to cut the lead to just four points.

That spurred Wire into action after a drop in tempo and Sneyd’s boot took control as he chipped the ball out to Smith, playing first-class rugby for the first time, to score his first try, which Sneyd converted and then added a penalty to give his side breathing space.

Pratt then got on the end of a fine kick by Jack Sinfield to score in the corner and when Jowitt brilliantly nailed the tough conversion, the game was back in the balance.

Wakefield seemed certain to score as Myers streaked for the corner but 20-year-old full-back Cai Taylor-Wray, who wowed the crowd with his attacking prowess against St Helens, produced a magnificent tackle to bundle him into touch and retain the lead.

Warrington Wolves: Taylor-Wray; Thewlis, King, Hopoate, Smith; Williams, Sneyd; Yates, Walker, Byrne, Stone, Harrison, Currie.

Replacements: Sipley, Crowther, Philbin, Tanginoa.

Wakefield Trinity: Jowitt; Pratt, Scott, Hall, Myers; Sinfield, Trueman; McMeeken, Smoothy, Hamlin-Uele, Nikotemo, Vagana, Tevaga.

Replacements: Storton, Pitts, Faatili, Smith.

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Iran, US, Israel officials give civilians clashing directives as bombs drop

Tehran, Iran – Iranians are being directly addressed by leaders inside and outside the country after the United States and Israel launched attacks across Iran, prompting Tehran to respond with a wave of ongoing missile and drone attacks across the region.

“In light of the continued joint operations by the US and the Zionist regime against Tehran and several other major cities, if possible while remaining calm, please travel to other centres and cities where it is feasible for you to do so,” read a text message sent to the 10 million residents of Tehran by the government on Saturday afternoon.

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All outbound roads from the capital were heavily congested with traffic from the morning, shortly after the US and Israel began joint strikes that targeting more than 20 of Iran’s 32 provinces.

Inside Tehran, people also formed long queues in front of petrol stations, even as government authorities emphasised that they remain in control, saying that food and fuel supplies would not be a problem and that contingency plans were in motion.

Authorities also accommodated civilians trying to exit the city, including by setting up roadside refuelling stations. Many families were headed to three provinces to the north near the Caspian Sea, as they did during the 12-day war with Israel.

Last June, during the war, US President Donald Trump issued a direct warning telling all Tehran citizens to immediately evacuate.

But in a video message released shortly after the strikes began on Saturday, he urged the Iranian people to stay in their homes and wait for a suitable time to rise up and overthrow the theocratic establishment governing Iran since a 1979 Islamic revolution. He framed it as “probably your only chance for generations”.

Similar sentiments were echoed in separate video messages released by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iran’s Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the US-backed shah who was overthrown by clerics led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini during the revolution.

“Be vigilant and prepared so that at an appropriate time, which I will inform you precisely, you return to the streets for the final effort,” Pahlavi said.

This was in reference to nationwide protests that gripped Iran in January, during which thousands of civilians were killed, many on the nights of January 8 and 9.

TEHRAN, IRAN - FEBRUARY 28: Cars sit in traffic amid reports of widespread attacks in the country by the United States and Israel on February 28, 2026 in Tehran, Iran. After explosions were seen in the Iranian capital, the office of the Israeli Defense Minister issued a statement saying it had launched a preemptive strike against the country, followed by a statement from the U.S. president that they had launched combat operations. (Photo by Majid Saeedi/Getty Images)
Cars sit in traffic in Tehran on February 28, 2026 [Majid Saeedi/Getty Images]

Iranian authorities claim that civilians were killed by “terrorists” and “rioters” armed, funded and trained by the US and Israel. But the United Nations and international human rights organisations have blamed state forces for an unprecedented crackdown against peaceful protesters, and say tens of thousands have been incarcerated and some face execution.

Student protests also took place last week in Tehran and major cities, including the holy Shia city of Mashhad to the northeast and Shiraz to the south of Iran. A number of students were suspended, while others were arrested or summoned by intelligence authorities.

Universities and schools were declared closed after the strikes on Saturday until further notice, according to a directive by the Supreme National Security Council. Most had already been moved online until the end of the Iranian calendar year on March 20 in response to the unrest at other universities.

But dozens of people, many of them children, were killed after two schools were hit in southern Iran’s Minab and in Tehran.

State media showed paramilitary Basij members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) patrolling the streets of downtown Tehran on Saturday afternoon on motorcycles and vehicles and waving flags.

A similar gathering was recorded in Palestine Square, where pro-state groups shouted “Death to America” and “Death to Israel”.

Iranians forced into another internet blackout

The opening salvo in Tehran targeted the Pasteur neighbourhood in the downtown area, where government offices are located.

A satellite image and videos of the area showed that the compound housing the offices of the supreme leader was largely destroyed in the strikes. It was not immediately clear if Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was present at the time of the attack, but the foreign minister later told NBC News that Khamenei and President Masoud Pezeshkian were alive “as far as I know”.

Minutes after the start of the war, Iranian authorities began shutting down internet connections and mobile phone connections across multiple areas of Tehran. Some mobile connectivity was restored, but the internet shutdown was expanded across the country, with almost all traffic blocked and leaving only few proxy connections working to access the global internet.

The Islamic Republic had imposed an unprecedented 20-day total internet shutdown in January, and heavy state filtering was in place prior to the shutdown on Saturday.

Iranian authorities urged citizens on Saturday to only follow official state media, to report any suspicious activity, and to refrain from collaborating with “enemies” on pain of heavy punishment.

‘Diplomacy was betrayed by the Americans’: Iranian FM spokesman

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“This is the second time in less than a year that diplomacy was betrayed by the Americans.” An Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson slammed the United States for once again launching an attack against his country while negotiating with it.

Sir Alex, ‘unbelievable’ Braga & Tynecastle keep Hearts on course

Andy Campbell

BBC Sport Scotland

If you’re aiming to become the first team other than Celtic and Rangers to win a Scottish top-flight title in 41 years, you can do worse than invite the last man to achieve such a feat to come and see how you’re getting on.

Sir Alex Ferguson was the guest of honour as Hearts saw off the challenge of Aberdeen and moved seven points clear at the top of the Scottish Premiership with nine games to play.

It was Ferguson’s Aberdeen side that, in 1985, won the Scottish Premier Division before 40 seasons of Glasgow dominance, which began with Hearts’ heart-breaking final-day loss of the league to Celtic in 1986.

Indeed Ferguson, 84, was a player in his native Scotland when Hearts last won the top flight in 1960.

Hearts manager Derek McInnes, formerly in charge at Aberdeen, has previously spoken about his discussions with Ferguson this season. Whatever remarks have been exchanged, they’ve clearly worked up until now.

“We got him a nice bottle to take home with him but he opened it already,” McInnes said of former Manchester United and Scotland boss Ferguson.

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A 1-0 home win – their second on the bounce – may not look overly convincing but Hearts were good value for the three points and rarely looked in danger of conceding to Aberdeen.

Scorer Claudio Braga told BBC Scotland post-match: “With the stands behind us, the players gave everything and we just won.

“Now we’re getting to a point with maybe just a little bit more tension. We feel it from the stands a little bit. It’s normal.

“At the same time, we know we can do this. That goal probably gets the stands even more relieved of tension and behind us even more. They were amazing.”

Portuguese former Aalesunds forward Braga is emblematic of Hearts’ season – a relative unknown plucked from Norwegian football. He has scored 15 goals in 35 appearances.

Earlier in the season Greek Alexandros Kyziridis, signed from Slovakia’s Zemplin Michalovce, made headlines and, until recently, McInnes’ former Kilmarnock defender Stuart Findlay had been an ever present since his summer move.

McInnes singled Braga out for praise after the win against Aberdeen and also said “this week will good for him” as he the striker manages a groin issue and Hearts not in action again until 14 March.

Hearts manager Derek McInnes and details of Hearts' next four fixturesSNS

Challenges remain. Hearts will play high-flying Motherwell twice before the season’s end. They will likely travel to Celtic Park and Edinburgh rivals Hibernian’s Easter Road after the split and host Rangers, who beat them at Ibrox earlier this month.

‘Cannot see Hearts buckling’

Former Hearts player Ryan Stevenson was on punditry duty as part of BBC Radio Scotland’s Sportsound commentary and echoed Braga and McInnes’ sentiments.

“The atmosphere is unbelievable,” he said. “What you would give to be a player on that pitch just now,” he said.

And, afterwards, he proclaimed: “I think Hearts will win the league. I genuinely do.

“I cannot see Hearts buckling. I cannot see Hearts losing three or four games.

“I just can’t see Hearts losing the title now.”

Rangers are second, two points above Celtic, who have a game in hand. Those two teams meet at Ibrox on Sunday so, one way or another, Hearts’ seven-point advantage will be reduced by weekends’ end.

And Celtic travel to Aberdeen on Wednesday to play their game in hand.

Studio pundit, former Hearts player Michael Stewart, is similarly minded to Stevenson.

“I do think with every game that’s ticked off, there’s an extra level of pressure but equally I think there’s an extra level of belief. They almost counter each other.

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