Sports
Cristiano Ronaldo reiterates desire to reach 1,000 goals before retiring
Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo has reiterated his desire to reach 1,000 career goals before he calls time on his playing career.
The Al Nassr forward scored the 956th goal of his career in his side’s 3-0 win over Al Okhdood on Saturday and holds the title for the most goals in international football with 141 in 223 games for Portugal.
The 40-year old has two years left on his deal at Al Nassr and will lead Portugal into the 2026 World Cup and has once again made clear he has no intentions of stopping there.
“It’s hard to continue playing, but I am motivated. My passion is high and I want to continue,” Ronaldo said after being named the Best Middle East Player at the Globe Soccer Awards in Dubai on Sunday.
“My passion is high and I want to continue. It doesn’t matter where I play, whether in the Middle East or Europe. I always enjoy playing football and I want to keep going.
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“You know what my goal is. I want to win trophies and I want to reach that number [1,000 goals] that you all know. I will reach the number for sure, if no injuries.”
After his strike against Al Okhdood, Ronaldo reached 40 goals for the calendar year for the third consecutive year and for the 14th time in his career.
He has scored 12 in 10 Saudi Pro League games so far this term, equaling a personal record from his time at Juventus, and will be in action as Al Nassr travel to Al Ettifaq on Tuesday.
Sports
Duke star Cam Boozer says he suffered fractures around eye
INDIANAPOLIS — Duke star freshman Cameron Boozer, a projected top-five pick in the 2026 NBA draft, said he suffered multiple fractures around one of his eyes during his team’s loss to UConn in the Elite Eight.
Boozer did not offer specifics about the injury but said he decided against surgery only two months before the NBA draft.
“I have a couple of fractures, but I’m all good,” Boozer said as he accepted The Associated Press and United States Basketball Writers Association player of the year awards. “I’m just going through the healing process. It hurt in the game, but I wish the outcome would have been better, but that’s not really what I’m here to focus on. We had a great year. Like I said, it’s an individual award, but I wouldn’t be here without my teammates and my coaches.”
During Duke’s 73-72 loss to UConn on March 29 — decided on Braylon Mullins‘ 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds to play — Boozer took an elbow to the face as he drove to the rim on 7-foot-1 center Eric Reibe. Soon after the play, Boozer’s right eye began to swell and a Duke trainer applied a soda can to his face while he sat on the bench.
Depending on its severity, the eye injury could impact Boozer’s standing in the NBA draft. He is one of the most decorated players in college basketball history, but he has faced scrutiny about whether he has the next-level physical tools to compete against bigger, stronger and more athletic players in the NBA.
The 6-9, 250-pound forward said he is ready to “win” in the NBA, no matter where he’s picked.
“I think I’m just a winning player, all-around player. I think I impact the game in so many different ways,” Boozer said. “And I think my competitiveness translates to any level. I think any team who takes a chance on me is going to be very happy with the results they get from it.”
Boozer admitted that he had a lot of emotions accepting awards in Indianapolis, the site of this year’s Final Four, a week after his team had been eliminated by the Huskies, who will face Michigan in the national title game Monday night. But those emotions were secondary to his feelings after his twin brother, Cayden Boozer, faced backlash on social media following his turnover that preceded Mullins’ game-winning shot in the loss.
“First of all, I’d like to say it’s definitely nasty, but that’s not the reason, that one play is not the reason we lost,” Cameron Boozer said. “But just being there for him, obviously it’s tough. It’s going to be hard for anyone to go through that. There is not really that much I can say to make him feel better. We’re all hurting as a team, but we’re going to get through it together. We’re a super-connected group. It’s definitely a hard moment, but he’s a tough guy. We’re all tough. It’s going to make us so much better going forward. So it’s something you’ve got to take on a chin and learn and grow from.”
Sports
Islanders fire head coach Patrick Roy with four games left in the season amid playoff race
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The New York Islanders have fired head coach Patrick Roy despite being in a tight playoff race.
Islanders GM Mathieu Darche announced the change from Roy to Peter DeBoer, who was fired by the Dallas Stars in June 2025.
The move comes with just four games left in the regular season for the Islanders, who sit on a four-game losing streak entering Sunday. And the streak comes with seven losses in their last 10 games.
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Head coach Patrick Roy of the New York Islanders manages bench duties during the first period against the Montreal Canadiens at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Quebec, on March 21, 2026. (Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images)
As the NHL standings sit entering Sunday, the Islanders, who were once comfortably in position to reach the Stanley Cup Playoffs, sit third in the Metropolitan division with 89 points, which would give them a slot if the season ended today.
However, the Philadelphia Flyers (88 points) and Columbus Blue Jackets (88) are gunning for that third and final divisional spot in the few games remaining. As a result, the Islanders are making the surprise change in hopes DeBoer can get them into the playoffs over the next week.
HOCKEY OFFICIALS REJECT CANADIAN COACH’S COMPLAINTS OF 3-ON-3 OVERTIME RULES AFTER OLYMPIC LOSS
Roy’s exit comes after a loss where the Carolina Hurricanes, who already secured a playoff spot, out shot them 40-16 in a 4-3 loss for New York.
The Islanders are not the only NHL team making a change at head coach with just days left in the regular season. The Vegas Golden Knights axed Bruce Cassidy from his role, hiring veteran coach John Tortorella on an interim basis last week.

Patrick Roy coaches the New York Islanders during a game against the New Jersey Devils at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., on Feb. 5, 2026. (Rich Graessle/NHLI)
Like the Islanders, the Golden Knights (86) have the third and final position in their division, though the race is a bit more comfortable for Vegas with a five-point lead over the Los Angeles Kings.
But, while Tortorella is an interim move for Vegas, the Islanders are keeping DeBoer intact heading into the 2026-27 campaign.
DeBoer has been head coach of five different franchises over his extensive coaching career. He owns a career 662-447-152 record in 1,261 games with the Florida Panthers, New Jersey Devils, San Jose Sharks, Golden Knights and the Stars, who he led for the past three seasons before his firing.

Head coach Patrick Roy of the New York Islanders looks on during a game against the Philadelphia Flyers at UBS Arena in Elmont, N.Y., on April 3, 2026. (Steven Ryan/NHLI)
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DeBoer wasn’t with a team this season, but he’s stepping up for the opportunity to help turn the tides on Long Island, as the Islanders hope to make the playoffs after missing out the previous two seasons.
While DeBoer hasn’t coached this season, he was a part of Jon Cooper’s Team Canada staff for the Milan Cortina Olympics earlier this year.
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Sports
With Messi goal, Inter Miami open new stadium with dream moment
For months, Inter Miami advertised Nu Stadium with one simple message: “We’re coming home.'” On Saturday, in a 2-2 draw with Austin FC that was the first official game at the stadium, the club finally made good on its promise the only way it knows how.
The arena was covered with pink lights before the match, while a tifo in the stands read “Aquí empieza una nueva eraqui,” meaning “Today starts a new era.” In the center of the pitch, Lionel Messi got the game underway and within 10 minutes, he scored the club’s first goal there in front of a stand that bears his name.
“To see this stadium come to life after years and years of trying to get this stadium up and running in Miami, is something that’s very special,” club co-owner and founder David Beckham said.
“I came to America and the MLS 20 years ago, and I made a lot of promises. Twelve years ago, I made a lot of promises again, announcing that I was coming to Miami. Today, it’s just a dream come true for us… Today I stand in our new home, we are champions of MLS and have the best player in the history of the game playing in Miami.”
It has been a long time coming for everyone involved with Inter Miami, but particularly for Beckham. His dream to build a Miami Dade-based stadium began in 2014, moments after MLS commissioner Don Garber officially awarded Beckham the expansion franchise. He envisioned a waterfront destination based in the heart of the city to build a 20,000-30,000-seater stadium.
Beckham’s first bid targeted land next to the Kaseya Center, the Miami Heat’s home, with views of Biscayne Bay and Downtown, but his initial efforts were quickly shut down by the city, forcing him to unsuccessfully chase leads in Little Havana and Overtown.
By 2018, Jorge and Jose Mas, founders of the Miami-based construction and engineering company MasTec, joined Inter Miami’s ownership and the search for a venue.
With no lease agreement in sight and the team’s MLS debut fast approaching, the new ownership group decided to remodel Lockhart Stadium in Fort Lauderdale as a temporary solution. After an almost $100 million facelift that included a training facility, several practice fields and a redone 20-000 seat stadium, Inter Miami prepared to debut at the then-newly named DRV PNK stadium.
But the push for a permanent home never stopped.
Beckham and the Mas brothers began conversations for the site of the Melreese golf course in 2018 after 60% of voters approved the referendum that authorized the city to negotiate and execute a 99-year lease. It then took another four years to be officially approved, but Beckham and the Mas brothers finally secured the site they craved.
“This is a dream come true,” club co-owner Jorge Mas said. “This has been a stadium that was born from a dream, which was to create a first-class stadium in my hometown to celebrate football. Miami is today a capital of the world, and it will be the capital of football, especially with our club, with our captain, Leo Messi.”
On the field, Austin FC spoiled the party early on as winger Guilherme Biro scored the first official goal at Nu Stadium in the sixth minute. That was until Messi got proceedings back on track with a well-weighted header. For the first time, but certainly not the last, the entire stadium chanted Messi’s name.
Beckham and Mas got their dream moment, but not the dream finish: It wouldn’t end without further setback: winger Jayden Nelson restored Austin’s early in the second half. It wasn’t until the final minutes of the game that a goal from Miami striker Luis Suárez, who converted at the back post from a corner, managed to salvage a point.
Suarez is one of the best players of his generation, but he has struggled with osteoarthritis in recent seasons and hadn’t scored in a competitive game since Oct. 11, 2025. His strike, then, came at just the right time. He could have had a winner moments later, too: Messi fired a free-kick at goal as the game ticked towards stoppage-time, and the ball bounced off the post before Suarez nodded it home. However, he was ruled offside, and the goal was disallowed.
A draw wasn’t the ideal start that Miami had in mind, but, like the rest of the Miami Freedom Park sports complex surrounding Nu Stadium, this team is a work in progress. “I believed in Miami, and Miami believes in us,” Beckham said.
For now, Miami will continue to seek its first victory in a city and a stadium they can finally call home.
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