Sports
Afghanistan arrives in Islamabad to take on Pakistan in Asian Cup qualifier clash | The Express Tribune

The Afghanistan national football team is set to arrive in Islamabad on Wednesday night after a brief visa delay ahead of their AFC Asian Cup Saudi Arabia 2027 Qualifier against Pakistan, the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) said.
The Afghan squad will land at 7:00 pm local time from Dubai and will play against Pakistan on Thursday, October 9, at 2:00 pm at Jinnah Stadium, located within the Pakistan Sports Complex in the capital.
The team’s arrival was briefly delayed due to visa processing issues earlier this week, prompting concern that the qualifier could be affected. However, Pakistani authorities confirmed on Wednesday that all travel and entry formalities had been completed after coordination between the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Interior, and the Pakistan Football Federation.
PFF President Syed Mohsen Gilani expressed gratitude to the Government of Pakistan for ensuring smooth coordination and timely arrangements for the visiting team’s arrival and the hosting of the qualifier.
“We are thankful to the Government of Pakistan for their support and coordination in facilitating the arrival of the Afghanistan team,” Gilani said in a statement.
“I would also like to acknowledge and extend my sincere appreciation to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Interior, Pakistan Sports Board, and the Ministry of Inter-Provincial Coordination (IPC) for their full cooperation,” he added.
The qualifier marks an important fixture for both South Asian teams as they continue their campaign for a place in the AFC Asian Cup Saudi Arabia 2027.
Security and logistical arrangements have been finalised at Jinnah Stadium, with local fans expected to turn out in large numbers to support the national side.
Sports
The biting barb that spurred Chelsea Gray and the Aces

CHELSEA GRAY HEARS A’ja Wilson talk. A lot. About trophies. About buckets. About blocks. About boards. But of the millions of words her outspoken teammate has uttered throughout their five seasons and two WNBA championships together as teammates on the Las Vegas Aces, 11 stand out to Gray.
She heard them in June, when nothing was going right for the Aces or Gray or Wilson. Las Vegas, among the preseason favorites to win the 2025 title, was hovering around (or below) .500, and Gray remembers Wilson calling her out.
“There’s no way I should ever have more assists than you,” Gray recalls Wilson telling her.
The words stung.
Through the end of June, the reigning WNBA MVP had out-assisted the “Point Gawd” in six games, and the Aces turned the calendar to July with an 8-8 record. At the time, the 32-year-old Gray, who has filled hours of video with flashy passes over the course of her career, averaged 4.3 assists.
“Our relationship is super honest and raw,” Gray said. “I’ve cried in front of her. She’s cried in front of me.”
From July through the end of the regular season, Gray averaged 7.1 assists, including a season-high 14 in an August game against Dallas when the Aces were in the middle of a 16-game winning streak. In the playoffs, Gray pushed that average up to 7.8, the highest postseason average in her career. She has had 10 assists in three of the Aces’ 10 postseason games so far.
Her response to Wilson’s challenge has helped guide the Aces to a 2-0 series lead over the Phoenix Mercury in the WNBA Finals, two wins away from their third championship in four years. Game 3 is Wednesday in Phoenix (8 ET, ESPN).
“It’s that kind of bond that we can have conversations in the middle of the game,” Gray said. “And we understand where we’re coming from.”
GRAY TAKES THE HANDOFF along the sideline and heads to an open spot. She sits down on the bench wielding a marker and a dry-erase board. It’s Game 1 of the Finals and the score is tied 23-23 with 8:49 left in the second quarter. Gray draws up the play she wants so her teammates can see her thoughts.
After the Aces’ 79-76 victory, Gray is quick to clarify that she isn’t using coach Becky Hammon’s personal board. Not even she is that bold. “They have two boards back there,” Gray said. The one she used doesn’t technically belong to Gray. She just happens to be the one who asks an assistant coach for it.
Gray started taking control of the board in huddles and timeouts from time to time when she came to Las Vegas in 2021 after spending her first six seasons in Connecticut and Los Angeles.
She already had built a reputation as a player with extraordinary vision and a high IQ, and she has only built on that since.
“When she takes the clipboard, everybody locks in,” said Aces guard Dana Evans, who had 21 points in the Game 1 win. “We know that she’s about to show valid points. She’s not doing it just to do it.”
For Gray, it’s about helping her teammates see what she or Hammon are talking about. It’s something she has done more frequently this year.
“They have to see it sometimes on the board rather than just saying it,” Gray said. “It’s made me a better player and a better leader, to be able to explain stuff. And people listen. It’s allowed our huddles to be a little bit tighter.”
Ceding some control to Gray is an easy decision for Hammon when the results are buckets. Hammon may call one out of bounds play, but if Gray sees something different, she’s empowered to make a different one.
That was the case during Game 3 of the Aces’ semifinal series against the Indiana Fever. With 3.6 seconds left in the third quarter, the referee handed Gray the ball to inbound from the sideline on their side of half court. Gray recognized that Jackie Young had leverage on her defender, who’d inadvertently given Young a free run to the basket. Young took off, and Gray launched the ball down the court. It dropped into Young’s hands in stride and she laid it in.
“My thing is, I always want them to have an aggressive nature,” Hammon said. “These possessions where it’s like they’re running routes over the top, that’s the kind of pace I want all the time. So when they do it without me saying it, I love it.”
GRAY SNAGS THE BALL out of the air and turns up court. The Aces lead by 17 midway through the fourth quarter of Game 2. As Gray trots toward the Aces’ basket, Young flanks her on the outside. Young gets a step ahead of Mercury guard Kahleah Copper and turns up the speed.
Gray sees the beginning of separation and turns her head away from Young as she drops a perfectly weighted bounce pass past Copper’s outstretched fingers. Young scoops up the ball in stride and lays it in for two of her 32 points on the day. The basket is Gray’s 10th assist, marking her second career Finals game with 10 points and 10 assists. Only three other players have multiple such games in their careers: Alyssa Thomas, Courtney Vandersloot and Sue Bird.
Gray finished with 10 points, 10 assists, 8 rebounds, 3 steals and 3 blocks in the Aces’ 91-78 Game 2 win.
“She does so many little things,” Hammon said Sunday. “Her passing is elite, but it’s all the other little things that she’s doing that really helped us win the basketball game.”
A year ago, Gray was working her way back from a fracture in her left foot suffered during the 2023 WNBA Finals. She lacked her usual mobility and power. She couldn’t get the separation she needed for her pinpoint passes, and she couldn’t get the lift she needed to hit her fadeaway jumper. The Aces lost to the eventual champion Liberty in the semifinals.
Gray experienced injuries at the end of her college career at Duke that bled into the beginning of her professional career. A right kneecap fracture sidelined her for the entirety of her 2014 rookie season with Connecticut. But until that foot fracture, she hadn’t been seriously injured as a pro, and she’d never returned midseason before.
She wasn’t herself physically last season, but Gray said that has changed this year. She said she’s in her best shape since the 2023 championship run.
“It really helps our team,” Gray said. “I’m able to play for longer stints at a high level both offensively and defensively.”
Gray, who will play in her 20th WNBA Finals game on Wednesday, the most among active players, is showing why she is the only pure point guard to ever win Finals MVP, which she did in 2022. She is shooting 45% from 3-point range this postseason, up from 37% during the regular season, and her best postseason percentage since that 2022 run. Her hands-on defense is creating additional opportunities and possessions. Gray averaged 1.4 steals in the regular season, but is averaging 2.2 steals in the postseason.
Mercury assistant Kristi Toliver knows how difficult it can be to slow down Gray. Toliver watched her development up close when Gray was the starting point guard in L.A. for the 2016 season, Gray’s first in a Sparks uniform.
“She’s fearless,” Toliver said. “She’s clutch and wants that moment. She wants that smoke.”
What Gray doesn’t want is another game where Wilson can point out her lack of production. If Gray were so inclined, she could rib the co-defensive player of the year about out-blocking her in Game 2. It is, after all, the kind of relationship they have. The kind of relationship champions have.
“She’s always going to be her true self, and it allows you to be your true self,” Wilson said. “I think that has always been our friendship and our bond. She’s calm through the storm. I’m so grateful for her to be our point guard.”
Sports
How Rams’ Puka Nacua uses team’s ‘Breakfast Club,’ veteran leadership to continue chasing greatness

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The usual NFL player heads into his third season hoping for that “leap year,” one where that next step of production is taken to prove his worth for his squad, which ultimately results in a hopeful contract extension.
But there’s also the rare group of third-year players – those who are clearly NFL stars from the start – that franchises would love to keep aboard and continue to build around.
For the Los Angeles Rams, it’s wide receiver Puka Nacua, the NFL’s current leader in receptions (52) and receiving yards (588) through Week 5 of the 2025 campaign.
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Puka Nacua of the Los Angeles Rams runs downfield during the second half of an NFL football game against the San Francisco 49ers at SoFi Stadium on Oct. 02, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Brooke Sutton/Getty Images)
Nacua burst onto the scene in 2023, when he broke the all-time rookie receiving yards record with 1,486 after catching 105 passes from quarterback Matthew Stafford. He was just shy of 1,000 yards in 2024 after injuries kept him out for six games, but the third-year star out of BYU is once again in the elite category of receivers gracing the gridiron each week.
Nacua was a diamond in the rough when the Rams drafted him in the fifth round in 2023, but that diamond is shining bright in Los Angeles. And though he isn’t the typical third-year player hoping to take that leap, Nacua told Fox News Digital that he does have a similar mindset.
This is essentially the floor of what he wishes to do in the NFL.
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“One-hundred percent,” Nacua, who also discussed his new journey with Invisalign, said when asked if he feels like he’s just getting started. “I just think the opportunity I have, I’m blessed to be around great people. I’m blessed to start my career with Matthew Stafford and Cooper Kupp and Sean McVay. That’s NFL royalty right there, so the opportunity to get better every single day because of the people around me, it’s been such a confidence boost and such motivation in the offseason.
“There’s a statement to be made for myself in the improvement I can make each year, and it’s fun to be able to go out there and perform at the level we’re at right now, and to be on the same page as Matthew because I think our success – we’re on the same page right now and we have the ability to continue to get better.”
Nacua knows that without his rapport with Stafford, the stat lines and league records wouldn’t be jaw-dropping. He also mentioned Kupp, the new Seattle Seahawks receiver, who was traded this offseason mainly due to the emergence of Nacua as the team’s top receiver.
But part of Kupp’s legacy with the Rams still lives on in a fun meeting before practices during the week they like to call “The Breakfast Club.” Stafford and Kupp would meet in the early hours of each morning before game day to prepare for their next opponent. While there’s no formal invite, Nacua started to get involved in that during his rookie year, and now he’s the alpha receiver in the room alongside teammates and coaches.

Matthew Stafford and Puka Nacua of the Los Angeles Rams talk in the first quarter of a game against the Houston Texans at SoFi Stadium on Sept. 7, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Harry How/Getty Images)
“To be able to be there when Cooper’s there in the morning, to hear the understanding and the communication that went on between those two. Now, the standard that was set before me, I’m in the meetings now and I’m having that conversation with Matthew. It’s been so fun because as much as it is football, I think it is the conversations we have that aren’t about football. He’s a girl dad, he’s got four daughters, and I don’t know what that’s like. But the experience we have and conversations we have, I think it allows for trust and just being human beings. I know he sees the work and everybody on our team sees how he works. So, that gives you such a confidence to be like, ‘All right, I don’t want to let him down because I know the effort that he puts in.’”
And you can’t look at what Nacua’s doing this season without giving credit to his new receiver counterpart, Davante Adams. Like Stafford, he’s another girl dad who has put in blood, sweat and tears into this game and knows what it takes to stand out from the rest of the pack.
Nacua learned quickly what type of impact Adams would have on his game.
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“He’s got such a different mindset and mentality and the power that he moves with on the football field, you can feel it,” he said of Adams.
Nacua was used to being the first one to go during drills, but that quickly changed when Adams joined the fray.
“I asked him to be the number one guy who’s taking the first reps in all the drills because I could feel when he was going behind me,” Nacua said, laughing. “I’m running my routes and I’m like, ‘You, the ground is shaking behind me.’ I’m trying to watch his reps so I can learn. You watch him move and I was like, ‘I can feel the power, the urgency that he moves with on the football field.’ It’s something I’ve tried to incorporate in my game because, as a wide receiver, efficiency and power is something that I enjoy in the game of football. To be able to watch that, I knew I needed to add that into my game as well.”
Between breaking down film with Stafford and McVay and soaking in all that Kupp and Adams have been able to teach him simply by practicing and playing together, Nacua has developed into one of the game’s best at his position.
For Nacua, this is only just the start.

Puka Nacua of the Los Angeles Rams reacts during the second quarter against the Indianapolis Colts at SoFi Stadium on Sept. 28, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)
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LOOK GOOD, FEEL GOOD, PLAY GOOD
The line above is one that Nacua tries to live by on the field, even if he does enter his infamous “dark place” on game day.
But the Rams receiver refers to himself as a “big energy guy and a smiley guy off the field,” especially now that he has begun his Invisalign aligners at the start of the season. As he’s crushing it in the box score through five weeks, he revealed it’s been five weeks since he began wearing his aligners.
“I’m on schedule right now, we’re staying in tune, and they help me sleep good. They also give me so much confidence when I go out there on the field. I’m smiling. I like to be a big energy guy and a smiley guy off the field. But on the football field, I think it looks pretty good when I’m mean-mugging out there.”
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Sports
The Yankees were dead. Then Aaron Judge finally had his October moment.
Judge blasted an impossible three-run home run off the left field foul pole, extending New York’s season and conjuring images of old ghosts at Yankee Stadium.
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