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Lessons from Man United’s victory at Arsenal; Real Madrid win ugly; more

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Lessons from Man United’s victory at Arsenal; Real Madrid win ugly; more


What a weekend! Europe’s top five leagues had a number of big games, and they delivered plenty to talk about. How about Manchester United, shocking Premier League leaders Arsenal and winning 3-2 at the Emirates to open the door for the chasing pack in the title race? (And what a start for Michael Carrick as United’s stand-in boss, with wins over Man City and the Gunners in his first two games at the helm…)

In LaLiga, Real Madrid swapped flair for pragmatism to get a big win on the road against a strong Villarreal side, and Juventus showed their class in Serie A with a big victory over struggling Napoli that puts them back in touch with the top four. Plus there was more panic for Liverpool, as they lost at Bournemouth with a last-gasp goal that bumped them out of the top four.

Elsewhere, we got talking points galore from Bayern Munich (who lost another game), Chelsea (who keep winning, this time thanks to Estevao), Barcelona (who won, but really miss Pedri), Atletico Madrid (what’s happened to Julián Álvarez?), Milan (who snuck a victory over Roma), Tottenham (is Thomas Frank on the brink?) and much, much more.

It’s Monday morning, so what better time for some musings? Let’s get into it.


Ogden: Is the Premier League title race wide open again?
VAR Review: Breaking down PL’s biggest calls of the weekend
Lindop: Liverpool’s inconsistencies continue to hold them back



Manchester United logoAt this stage, it’s about selling for Arsenal and Man United

As in selling ideas, which is what coaches, leaders and bosses do all the time anyway: they get buy-in from the folks they look after. And the message from Gunners boss Mikel Arteta and his opposite number Michael Carrick ought to be the same after the 3-2 United win at the Emirates: Keep doing what you’re doing.

From United’s perspective, it’s evident there’s a feel-good factor and a lightness to the side after Ruben Amorim’s departure. How much of that is just a “new boss” effect and how much is value-add from Carrick is hard to judge, but clearly, maintaining this working environment matters going forward. Probably more than what happens on the pitch, in fact, because this setup — with Matheus Cunha and Benjamin Sesko, £130-odd million of recently arrived strikers, on the bench — is not a long-term option that makes sense. Nor is three shots on target and a cumulative xG of 0.71 something to write home about. Even if you’re not a numbers person, the fact that two goals were low-probability wonder strikes and the other was a gift from Martín Zubimendi should remind you how long the road back is football-wise.

And that’s OK. Carrick has had two games, and he’s not the permanent coach anyway. Results matter because finishing in the Champions League spots matters (a lot). But in terms of the future, what you’re looking for is a drama-free environment where players are happy and productive, where they can perform and where — crucially — the club can evaluate them and better understand where and if they fit in under whoever leads them next season (which, of course, is TBD). And that’s exactly what Carrick is offering right now, which, frankly, is a lot.

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Frank Leboeuf: This performance was like the 90’s Man United

The ESPN ‘FC TV’ crew react to Manchester United’s 3-2 victory over Arsenal in the Premier League.

Across the way, the worst thing Arteta could do is ratchet up the second-guessing. Recognize the facts: a home defeat, Man City (and Villa) four points back, an uninspired attacking performance. But you can’t change the first two facts; all you can do is use them to learn how to affect the third fact.

If you do, you might realize, there’s not much you can tweak here and even less that you should tweak. Yes, it would be great if Martin Odegaard and Bukayo Saka were spraying passes, scoring goals and dishing out the ball to get assists at the level they were at before. They’re on pace for a combined 18 goal involvements (goals+assists) this season. Compare it to 2024-25 (27), 2023-24 (43) or 2022-23 (47), and it’s an evident design. But the counter to that is Arsenal are playing a different brand of football this year and they’re in first place, which they weren’t in past seasons.

There’s a yin to the yang there. Arsenal’s defensive solidity has been critical to their success this year. So have Arteta’s attacking rotations, which should yield even more benefits later in the season. Fiddle with those to get your best players (and, yes, those two — along with Declan Rice — are Arsenal’s best players) better numbers, and you risk losing what got you where you are.

There’s also a Viktor Gyökeres issue and, no, it’s not that stat you’ve probably been reading about how Premier League winners usually have double-digit goal scorers up front and the big Swede is on pace to end up with just eight. That part is not important as long as the team as a whole are scoring, which Arsenal are. It’s more the fact that he’s adapting to a new league and getting a totally different sort of service that he was getting at Sporting last year. It takes time to adjust, and I say this as someone who is not a Gyokeres guy at all. (Regular readers will know I’m “Team Havertz” all the way.)

Arteta talked after the match about how it’s a game of small margins and how Arsenal’s performance “made them even smaller.” Against United, that’s pretty much what happened, and they paid the price. But it’s not a reason for him to go in another direction midseason.


Real Madrid logoReal Madrid go blue collar to get it done

As always, you need to separate the result from the performance. The former was, well, huge. It’s a big 2-0 road win against a side that were threatening to be a direct opponent. Had this gone the other way, Villarreal would have been four points back with a game in hand and whatever goodwill was generated in the 6-1 Champions League drubbing of Monaco would have evaporated. Villagers with pitchforks and torches would be gathering outside the Bernabéu. But it didn’t, and the upshot is Alvaro Arbeloa & Co. are one point out of first place in LaLiga. And that matters… until the next setback, anyway.

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Are the Real Madrid players happier under Álvaro Arbeloa?

The ESPN ‘FC TV’ crew react to Real Madrid’s 2-0 victory over Villarreal in LaLiga.

Performance-wise, the purists might stick up their nose. Both goals came from — who else? — Kylian Mbappé and both were gift-wrapped: Pape Gueye not sorting out his feet for the first one, Alfonso Pedraza mistiming his tackle and giving away the garbage-time penalty for the second. Take those out of the mix, and Real Madrid’s xG is a pedestrian 0.73. And at the other end, Dani Parejo conjured up two clear-cut chances for Gerard Moreno, both squandered.

Maybe so, but there are several reasons to give Madrid a pass on style points. One is that while both played midweek, Villarreal — essentially eliminated long ago from the Champions League — were able to rest nine guys, Madrid were not. Another is that you’re still playing a top three LaLiga side away from home: Not everything will come easy. And, perhaps most importantly, it looked as if they were working far harder — especially off the ball — than in previous games. There was a defensive intensity, led by Jude Bellingham, and a humility that simply wasn’t there in recent outings.

Will it last? Is this an actual blueprint that can take them where they want (need) to be? I don’t know. But it makes for a nice change.


Liverpool logoOn the pitch and off, Liverpool are hurting themselves

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Could Arne Slot really be replaced this season?

The pressure mounts for Arne Slot after Liverpool suffer a last minute defeat to Bournemouth.

Amine Adli‘s buzzer-beating goal means Liverpool left Bournemouth empty-handed on Saturday after a 3-2 defeat. Combine it with Sunday’s results (wins for Chelsea and Manchester United) and they tumble to sixth in the table, two points ahead of, ahem, Fulham. Conceding a goal like that, after a goal-mouth scramble, with the last kick of the game is going to hurt. But it shouldn’t take away from how you got there, because the simple fact is that Liverpool deserved to lose this game.

Two shots on target from open play is not an acceptable return. Individual mistakes — like Virgil van Dijk’s, which led to Evanilson‘s opener — can happen. Collective brain farts — like playing for seven minutes a man down because they couldn’t put the ball out of play, which would have allowed Wataru Endo to come on for the injured Joe Gomez — cannot happen. Not at this level.

There are issues up front and issues at the back and Slot’s solution — packing more and more midfielders into the team — is not a long-term option. The 4-2-2-2 formation can work as something more than a way of shoe-horning Mohamed Salah into the side — so much for the knee-jerk brigade who assured us he was definitely off to Saudi Arabia, eh? — but it has to be worked on. Otherwise you get what we had for stretches of the first half: Dominik Szoboszlai, Salah and Jeremie Frimpong all in the same space, getting into each other’s way.

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Nicol: This was Virgil van Dijk’s worst performance for Liverpool

ESPN’s Steve Nicol believes Virgil van Dijk played his worst game for Liverpool during their 3-2 defeat to AFC Bournemouth.

Off the pitch, things need to be sorted too. As I’ve been banging on about all season, they were down a top center back when the window closed (and, presumably, they agreed, since they tried to sign Marc Guéhi). Since then, they lost another center back (Giovanni Leoni) and right back (Conor Bradley) for the rest of the season. They’re three defenders down. And what do they do? Nothing, other than toy with the idea of letting another defender go (Andy Robertson, who was linked with Spurs), though thankfully it looks like he’s staying).

Liverpool’s recruitment guys are too smart not to realize this. Maybe there’s a good reason for the inactivity to date, but they had better do something between now and the end of the transfer window, in five days’ time.


Juventus logoJuventus’s upward surge continues against depleted Napoli

Sunday’s 3-0 win over Napoli continued to leave folks with egg on their face. People who slammed Jonathan David (who continues to excel), people who thought Manuel Locatelli was just a hacker (some might say that list once include Juve coach Luciano Spalletti himself) and people who didn’t think Spalletti was the right choice as manager (I’m in that category, though still not sold long-term).

The good news is that Juve go from strength to strength defensively (Bremer‘s return helps tremendously), individual players are growing (not just David, but Khéphren Thuram and Weston McKennie too) and Kenan Yildiz once again asserted himself as one of the most exciting young players in Europe. They are one point out of third place, have bought into the Spalletti Therapy and, on the pitch at least, it’s making them healthy again.

That said, you need to grade this on a curve because Napoli are the walking wounded right now. With half a dozen starters out, plus Romelu Lukaku and Sam Beukema only fit enough for the bench, just as Napoli were getting back into the game at 1-0 down, Juan Jesus gifted Juventus a second goal which meant it’s lights out. Throw in the fact that Napoli, understandably, were looking ahead to that decisive Champions League clash with Chelsea in midweek, and you don’t want to get overly carried away.

Still, Juve’s resurgence suggests the issue wasn’t lack of talent pre-Spalletti, it was the wrong coaches in the wrong place.


Quick hits

10. Ethan Nwaneri lands with a bang in Marseille: Arsenal’s decision to send him on loan was undoubtedly the right one. He’s a huge talent, one they’ve committed to with a contract through 2030, but minutes have been hard to come by this season and he was playing substantially less than last year, which isn’t great at age 18. Where some might have had some reservations was with the destination. On the plus side, you get a progressive, attack-minded coach in Marseille with Roberto De Zerbi; on the minus, you’re joining a volatile club with a ton of fan pressure, which might not be the best place to develop.

De Zerbi obviously had few reservations, chucking him straight into the mix against league-leading Lens at the Velodrome, just a few days after their Champions League humiliation at the hands of Liverpool. Sink or swim. And he soared, scoring a peach of a long-distance goal with confidence and class. The ever-under appreciated Amine Gouiri bagged the other two and Marseille (who initially rested Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Mason Greenwood) rolled to a 3-1 win.

Good news for PSG who had played (and won) on Friday, but from a l’OM perspective, it was confirmation that they got over the Liverpool hangover very quickly.

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Should Man United be looking at Unai Emery as a potential manager option?

ESPN’s Dan Thomas and Janusz Michallik react to Aston Villa’s 2-0 victory over Newcastle in the Premier League.

9. Do not adjust your device, as Aston Villa are really just four points off the top: It was another game that could have gone the other way, but instead broke Aston Villa’s way. In ordinary circumstances, we’d be taking about variance and randomness, but Villa’s 2-0 win away to Newcastle marked the umpteenth time the metrics said the opposition deserved it more and yet came up empty-handed. And that kinda makes me think the metrics just aren’t built to measure what Unai Emery does.

Sure, sniff all you like about how Sandro Tonali was unlucky early on, while Emi Buendia scored on an improbable 0.05 xG screamer. But Emery pulls stuff like this out of his backsides most weeks, and he does it in very tough conditions, against a backdrop of injuries and departures. (I know a Villa fan who insists Boubacar Kamara and John McGinn are their two most important players … OK, both were out at St James’ Park and they didn’t miss a beat.) Other than Emi Martinez, who is a world champion, how many of these guys made a quantum leap forward since they started working with Emery? Probably more than those at any other club, with any other coach. That’s why what he’s doing is so special.

8. Atletico down Mallorca as Julian Alvarez’s drought continues: There was plenty for Diego Simeone to cheer in the 3-0 win over Mallorca. They dealt with Vedat Muriqi well, Pablo Barrios continues to grow, the much-criticized Thiago Almada got on the scoresheet and, of course, the win puts them back into third. Most of all, they’ve metabolized the fact that unlike the glory days of yesteryear, when they’re a goal up they need to continue attacking and, while the other two goals came late, they did just that and looked comfortable doing so.

On the flip side, Alvarez has to be an issue at this point. His last league goal from open play came all the way back in September. Away from home, in all competitions, he has scored twice in 14 appearances and his current drought, in all competitions, extends all the way back to Dec. 9. Diego Simeone, as he should, continues to defend him. At some point though, maybe a break is called for, especially since Atleti have shown they can leave Alexander Sorloth up front on his own have enough wingers and attacking midfielders to keep him well supplied.

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Michallik: Chelsea still need to improve defensively despite victory vs. Crystal Palace

ESPN’s Dan Thomas and Janusz Michallik react to Chelsea’s 3-1 victory over Crystal Palace in the Premier League.

7. Estevao shines, but questions linger for Chelsea: It’s now three wins on the spin for Blues manager Liam Rosenior after the 3-1 victory at Crystal Palace and they’re up to fifth place, which is important. We’ve also seen that Estevao is one of the top three or four 18-year-olds in the world. The combination of technical ability, athleticism, maturity and work ethic is uncommon at that age, especially for a guy who moved continents six months ago.

Rosenior was beaming outwardly, but inwardly he’s likely being more cautious. The Palace win needs to be graded on a curve: Oliver Glasner was grumbling, Marc Guehi left for Man City, Jean-Philippe Mateta is seeking a move, and they have injuries everywhere. This was a victory over a wounded opponent. The absence of Cole Palmer, and the fact that on a different day, Moisés Caicedo could have been sent off, are also things to think about. Those are your two best players and you need them on the pitch down the stretch. Still, they’re moving in the right direction, and that’s a lot to be said for a coach who, a month ago, was working at a different club in a different league.

6. Borussia Dortmund can be grown-ups after all: This was a trap game and given this club’s recent history, you sort of expected Nico Kovac’s crew to fall right into it. Union Berlin away can be a tough nut to crack, especially when sandwiched between a Champions League defeat at Tottenham and the crucial visit of Inter on Tuesday. They weren’t awful Spurs — Daniel Svensson being sent off after 24 minutes affected the game — but it still leaves a hangover. And while they were a goal up at halftime, they had also conceded some huge chances.

At the break you wondered if Kovac’s decision to rest Julian Brandt and Karim Adeyemi might come back to haunt him. Instead, Dortmund pretty much shut the door (giving up just one shot on target) and added to their total, scoring with Nico Schlotterbeck and Maxi Beier to round out the 3-0 win. It was the sort of performance that builds confidence and confirms them as the Bundesliga‘s Best of the Rest.

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Do Barcelona have the best attacking options in the world?

The ESPN ‘FC TV’ crew react to Barcelona beating Real Oviedo 3-0 in LaLiga.

5. Barcelona can afford to nap half the game vs. Oviedo: There’s a reason Barcelona are top and Oviedo are bottom. And there’s a reason Barça fans know it’s an entirely different team when Pedri — who is currently injured — isn’t out there. Hansi Flick’s side celebrated the return to the Camp Nou Sunday with a communal sleepwalk that covered the entire first half (one shot on target, five overall) and a good chunk of the second too. Nope, don’t let the two goals at the start of the second half fool you either: They were neat finishes from Dani Olmo and (especially) Raphinha, but they would never have happened without some grotesque Oviedo errors in the buildup. (The third? Nah, that was legit and spectacular from Lamine Yamal. Max respect.)

But the point stands. Without Pedri to turn on the light, Barça were in the dark, even against a side that haven’t won a game since September (no joke), relying instead on individual quality and opposition mistakes. It’s hard to play that way and be successful on a regular basis, unless you ratchet up the intensity and force errors. Against Oviedo, they needed to do that only occasionally. Against others, it’s likely to be a different story.

4. Referee blunder shouldn’t obscure the fact that Man City lasted only 45 minutes: The big talking point out of Manchester City‘s 2-0 win over Wolves is referee Farai Hallam. He was officiating his first Premier League game, he went to the VAR monitor and did not overturn his on-field call. (Points for showing personality: This almost never happens in the Premier League.) That’s the good news. The bad news is that in the view of many — including yours truly and, more importantly, Pep Guardiola — he should have, because he made a big mistake. Wolves fullback Yerson Mosquera has his arms way out by his side when Omar Marmoush flicks it back, and the ball hits him just above the elbow. Intent doesn’t matter; it’s not a natural position, and it should have been a penalty.

Did it impact the game? Nope. City were a goal up and they scored another before the break; all it meant was they won 2-0 instead of 3-0. More of a concern, I think, ought to be what we saw from them in the second half: just four shots, all off target for an xG of 0.18. Even the introduction of Erling Haaland, Phil Foden and Jérémy Doku (all initially rested) didn’t change much. It’s a marathon, not a sprint, and they did more than enough to win. It’s just that defending the lead and seeing games out doesn’t feel like this team’s strong suit either.

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Does Antoine Semenyo play with more freedom than other Man City players?

The ESPN ‘FC TV’ crew react to Manchester City’s 2-0 victory over Wolverhampton Wanderers in the Premier League.

3. Derby defeat is Bayern’s first in the league in 10 months: Which, obviously, tells you there’s no need to panic or spot a dark trend. In fact, nobody other than Arsenal and, on Saturday, Augsburg have beaten Vincent Kompany’s side this season. Yet this doesn’t mean it’s not a teachable moment.

Bayern took the lead through Hiroki Ito and dominated the first half before falling 2-1, which tells you how important it is to put opponents away when you get the chance. Take Jonathan Tah out of the mix and the other four members of the back five (including keeper Jonas Urbig, who was at fault for the equalizer) had 18 starts between them this season: Chemistry matters. Lennart Karl was sub-par: when you’re 17, you’ll have your ups and downs so let him be a kid, especially now that Jamal Musiala is back. And, finally, it’s a derby and Augsburg are fighting to avoid relegation: Sometimes it’s worth remembering the other team also gets paid and can also lift their game.

2. Minimalist Milan get a draw at Roma, but is this progress? I’d suggest no. But sure, if you just look at the scoreline and the table, you’d conclude that Max Allegri was a genius. Park the bus in the first half, take the sting out of the game and nick a goal on a set piece. They might even have won it had it not been for a somewhat unlucky penalty conceded late on. But hey, a point against a direct opponent on the road, in a week that Napoli also lost, is a really good result. It keeps Roma at bay (four points back) and consolidates second place.

Except that reading is all wrong. It ignores the fact that it’s late January and, simply put, Milan — who, lest we forget, don’t have European football and therefore should have a built-in fitness advantage — shouldn’t be playing at two miles an hour and attempting a single shot in the first 45 minutes. Especially when that sort of approach doesn’t actually work. Sure, Roma didn’t score until the penalty, but Donyell Malen missed a hat trick of chances and “Magic” Mike Maignan performed a minor miracle on Zeki Çelik. If you want to go all-in, short-term, to win now, fine. But then go for it. The way they’re going, they’re building very little and will be back to square one in the summer. All the Milan talk means less space for Roma, which isn’t fair, but yeah, they were good. And they have a legitimate chance of being back in the Champions League.

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Is the end near for Thomas Frank and Tottenham?

Janusz Michalik questions how long Thomas Frank has left as Tottenham head coach after their 2-2 draw with Burnley.

1. Thomas Frank will likely pay, but Spurs’ issues go way beyond him: I have no idea if Spurs will fire their manager by the time you read this after they needed an injury time equalizer to avoid defeat at Burnley. Put your sensible, reasonable hat on and you’ll note that Tottenham hit the crossbar, forced some dandy saves out of Martin Dúbravka and likely deserved to win. But we’ve gone way past sense and reasoning. And if they were a little unlucky? Hey, it’s karma for the Borussia Dortmund sending off that paved the way to victory in the Champions League next week. (Plus, lest we forget, Burnley are second-from-bottom and haven’t beaten anyone since October.)

You might or might not think Frank is part of the problem. What’s evident is that it’s hard to see how he’s part of the solution. We saw nominally gifted defenders making craven blunders at the back (including Micky van de Ven, who was put on his backside not by vintage Neymar, but by Jaidon Anthony). We saw Yves Bissouma, who was mysteriously M.I.A. from the starting lineup since the Europa League final last season, picked in the first XI. We saw a team with a ton of the ball, and little idea how to use it. We get the injuries, the chaos, Daniel Levy’s departure, questionable recruitment and all that. But it looks like trial and error is his preferred solution to fix things, and that’s not a way forward. Not in this toxic environment.



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NCAA men’s tournament: Rick Pitino’s case for best men’s college basketball coach ever

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NCAA men’s tournament: Rick Pitino’s case for best men’s college basketball coach ever


This St. John’s team can’t shoot.

The Red Storm are 182nd nationally in field goal percentage (45.2) and 225th from 3-point range (33.2).

It doesn’t seem to matter. Rick Pitino’s team (30-6) has been opportunistic, physical and fearless in reaching the Sweet 16, where it will play Duke on Friday.

It is reminiscent of Pitino’s 2012-13 Louisville team that shot just 33.3% from behind the arc (216th nationally) yet won the national title. It’s a far cry, however, from his underdog 1987 Providence team, which reached the Final Four thanks to his then-revolutionary idea of prioritizing the newly created 3-pointer. Those Friars hit 42.2% of them.

Pitino can win one way, or the other, or back again; from the Camelot of Kentucky to the late-career rehab of Iona College.

The years change, the teams change. The players, style of play, rules, roster construction, and even the cuts of his neatly tailored suits change.

One thing remains constant.

Pitino wins.

The case for Rick Pitino as the greatest college basketball coach of all time takes some contorting, but each year it gains credence. The 73-year-old coached his first game 50 years ago, in 1976 as an interim at Hawai’i. He now appears better than ever.

Pitino’s 915 victories, .743 winning percentage and two national titles will never compare numerically to, say, Mike Krzyzewski’s 1,202 victories, Adolph Rupp’s .822 win percentage or John Wooden’s 10 championships.

Part of that is by choice — Pitino spent eight seasons in the NBA, including six as head coach in New York and Boston. He also had various NCAA and personal scandals that made him a temporary pariah and, to some, permanently ruined his reputation.

His legacy will always be linked to scandal. He had that Louisville national title, along with 123 victories, “vacated” by the NCAA as a result of its investigation into allegations that a staffer provided escorts at on-campus parties for players and recruits. The program was also at the center of a federal fraud and bribery case involving Adidas.

For a stretch, he was essentially professionally exiled to Greece, where he coached pro ball for two seasons, winning a couple of titles there, too.

Outside the lines, Pitino is one thing. Inside them, though, is a different story. Had he just stayed at Kentucky in 1997 rather than jump to the Celtics — and kept his business in order (perhaps unlikely) — there is no telling what his career totals would be. UK was rolling, after all, winning another national title under Tubby Smith the season after Pitino left.

But he has always bounced around, rescuing six bottomed-out programs (Boston University, Providence, Kentucky, Louisville, Iona and St. John’s). In the season before his arrival, those teams were a combined 76-105 (.419).

No matter.

He led five of them back to the NCAA tournament within two seasons (or in UK’s situation, when a tournament ban concluded). At BU, it took four.

This isn’t to punish other great coaches who built national powers and then stuck with it. Maintaining a juggernaut isn’t simple and deserves credit. Yet, Pitino has proven it was him, not the institution, that made the difference.

Pitino has had talented players (especially the 1996 Kentucky national champions), but he has coached just three future NBA All-Stars — Donovan Mitchell, Jamal Mashburn and Antoine Walker.

This isn’t as impressive as Bob Knight, who won 902 games and three titles despite having just one player who would become an NBA all-star (Isiah Thomas), but it’s also not the Hall of Fame parade that Dean Smith (UNC), Krzyzewski (Duke) or Wooden (UCLA) had.

Pitino, a former New York point guard, is about basketball. He still conducts one-on-one development workouts. He still grinds game footage. He still finds the way to maximize what he has — sometimes with a full-court press, sometimes the old 2-3 zone he learned as an assistant under Jim Boeheim.

He still communicates, harshly but honestly, in a way, for example, that not only empowers current guard Dylan Darling to confidently call for the ball in the waning seconds of Sunday’s victory over Kansas, but allows Pitino to trust “Church Bells” — a nickname stemming from Pitino’s description of Darling’s, uh, fearlessness — to pull it off, even with his off hand.

Pitino’s career has bridged multiple eras; not just in style of play (he coached pre-shot clock and 3-point line), but style of pay. As an assistant at Hawai’i in the mid-1970s, the NCAA dinged him for giving players coupons to McDonald’s. Now, they can own a franchise.

Some of his best work has come recently.

He returned from his Greek purgatory to lead low-major Iona to two NCAAs in three seasons. At age 70, he took over St. John’s, and won consecutive Big East regular-season and tournament titles. Now, the Red Storm are in the Sweet 16 for the first time this century.

The players still listen. They still defend. They still hustle. They still believe.

They still win, even when they can’t shoot all that well.

That’s a pure college basketball coach, perhaps the best there has ever been.



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Cam Newton views adding 18th regular-season game as ‘good business,’ questions how preseason games will work

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Cam Newton views adding 18th regular-season game as ‘good business,’ questions how preseason games will work


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As the NFL continues to expand its reach and capitalizes on the ever-growing popularity of the sport both domestically and globally, talk of adding an 18th regular-season game has become more apparent. 

The NFL Players’ Association has said players “have no appetite for a regular-season 18th game,” while owners like New England Patriots’ Robert Kraft believes “every team will go 18” at some point sooner than later. 

For former MVP quarterback Cam Newton, he’s taking a step back and viewing an 18th regular-season game from both sides. That assessment has him believing preseason games, which every team plays three before Week 1 of the regular season, will become even more diluted.  

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Cam Newton of team J Balvin looks on against team Druski during the Super Bowl LX Celebrity Flag football game on YouTube at Moscone Center South on Feb. 7, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)

“Man, it’s a lot on the body,” he told Fox News Digital about another regular-season game added to the schedule, while discussing his Iconic Saga Productions partnership with Offscript Worldwide. “If you really look at it, what’s happening is they’re devaluing preseason games as we know it to be, and they’re trying to put it on the back end. 

“Because, one thing we all know — and I say this with all due respect — America’s new game has been, for some time, American football. It’s just good business. The Super Bowl garners a global audience that no sporting event can attest to, especially domestically in the United States. So, they know, the more they give, the more they’re able to garner from difference audiences.”

So, as Newton sees this simply as “good business” for the NFL, he’s implying the league will once again drop a preseason game from a team’s schedule to add the 18th game. It’s what happened when the 17th regular-season game was added in 2021, as the preseason schedule was reduced from four to three games. 

BILLS STAR DION DAWKINS EXPLAINS HIS ‘COUNTER’ TO POTENTIAL NFL 18TH GAME: ‘CAREERS ARE ONLY GETTING SHORTER’

“I think, when you’re talking about the 18th game, it really comes down to if teams are going to really focus on preseason, or negate preseason altogether, just to get right into the regular season. That’s going to be interesting to kind of see,” Newton added.

While the NFLPA has pushed back at the potential of an 18th game, citing player safety as one of the main reasons behind keeping the schedule as is, others like Buffalo Bills left tackle Dion Dawkins see it as inevitable. 

“It’s going to happen either way,” he told Fox News Digital in a recent interview. 

“Then, 20 years later, guess what? We’re talking about a 19th, then we’ll be talking about a 20th.… Then it’s like, ‘Yeah, we are combat athletes all year long.’ But who knows,” Dawkins added. 

Cam Newton on 'First Take' panel

ESPN analyst Cam Newton is on the set of “First Take” on Feb. 6, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images)

For now, 17 games is what the NFL schedule will read in 2026. But, as Dawkins noted, who really knows? 

To Newton’s point, it’s simply good business as demand continues to skyrocket for the league as each season passes. 

EXPANDING CONTENT REACH WITH OFFSCRIPT

Newton may not be on the field any longer, but he remains tuned in with the NFL and every other sports moment through his content creation, most notably his “Funky Friday” and “4th & 1 with Cam Newton” shows as part of his Iconic Saga Productions. 

Newton and his production team announced a major partnership with Offscript Worldwide, a creator-owned ecosystem that connects culture-shaping brands and platforms under one roof, which includes REVOLT Sports and 3BlackDot. 

Offscript unveiled this new partnership at the 2026 IAB NewFronts, where they will begin collaborating with Newton’s independent production powerhouse, integrating his hit shows and amplifying the reach of athlete-driven storytelling for global brands. 

Cam Newton in February 2025

Cam Newton on radio row at the Super Bowl LIX media center on Feb. 7, 2025. (Kirby Lee/Imagn Images)

“When you really think about Offscript, it’s like the ecosystem that bridges so many different facets of our lives, from sports, to culture, to lifestyle and so many different things,” Newton explained. “That transition for me wasn’t foreign. Instead of training to be the best football player, or the best athlete. Now, I’m just training to be the best content creator I can possibly be. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“I just always want to be a beacon of the person, in a lot of ways, figured it out as I went. I’m just so thrilled that Offscript gives me and Iconic Saga the opportunity to continue to believe in our vision, and we’re not able to do these things without great partners like this.”

As this partnership kicks off, Newton will also be hitting the road for the “4th & 1 College Tailgate Experience,” visiting HBCU’s across the U.S. to celebrate their heritage and shine a national spotlight on student-athletes, academic programs, and the unique game-day culture that defines what it means to be an HBCU. 

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.





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Transfer rumors, news: Could Foden leave Man City this summer?

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Transfer rumors, news: Could Foden leave Man City this summer?


Phil Foden could reportedly leave Manchester City in the hunt for more first-team football, while Julián Álvarez‘s much-speculated exit from Atlético Madrid this summer may not come to fruition.

Join us for the latest transfer news and rumors from around the globe.

Transfers home page | Men’s winter grades | Women’s grades

TRENDING RUMORS

Manchester City attacking midfielder Phil Foden is ready to leave the club this summer. Football Insider reports that the 25-year-old has been frustrated by his limited playing time recently, and if an agreement over a new contract isn’t reached in the next months, he will look to move to a team in Europe, where several top clubs would be keen on him. Foden has been named on the bench by manager Pep Guardiola in four of his last five appearances across all competitions.

Atlético Madrid are preparing to ward off interest in forward Julián Álvarez from Arsenal and Barcelona by offering him a new contract, Marca reports. The LaLiga side are believed to be readying a €10 million-per-season proposal that would place the 26-year-old on the highest salary at the club, with plans to make him their “flagship” player and successor to Antoine Griezmann, who will leave for Orlando City at the end of the season. Alvarez has caught the attention of both Arsenal and Barça following his impressive form in the current campaign, but it is said that there is optimism among the Wanda Metropolitano hierarchy that he will sign an extension.

Chelsea are interested in AC Milan defender Strahinja Pavlovic, according to Corriere dello Sport. The Premier League club are reported to have already made contact with the 24-year-old’s representatives and are now monitoring his situation at the San Siro. It is expected that an offer worth at least €40 million would be required to get a deal over the line, with the Milan seeing him as a key figure among their squad. Pavlovic has scored four goals in 26 league matches this season, while he also starts regularly for Serbia at international level.

Manchester United are lining up a move at the end of the season for Newcastle midfielder Sandro Tonali, according to The Daily Mail. The 25-year-old is reported to be made United’s priority option amid plans to strengthen their midfield, while club captain Bruno Fernandes has also provided his approval of the proposed addition. Tonali, who has made 47 appearances across all competitions for the Magpies this season, has also previously been linked with Arsenal and Manchester City.

– Barcelona left-back Alejandro Balde is on the radar of Manchester City, Manchester United, and Aston Villa. Mundo Deportivo reports that all three Premier League clubs have made inquiries regarding a potential deal for the 22-year-old, and while he wants to stay put at Barça, they could be willing to consider moving him on if they receive a “substantial” offer. Balde, contracted at Spotify Camp Nou until the summer of 2028, is seen as Barça’s first choice starter on the left side of the defense.

ESPN EXCLUSIVES

– OL Lyonnes are close to convincing midfielder Caroline Weir to leave Real Madrid as a free agent this summer. Read

– Saudi Pro League side Al Ittihad have resumed work on a deal for Mohamed Salah after the Liverpool forward announced Tuesday that he will leave the club at the end of the season. According to a source, Al Qadsiah are the only other Saudi Arabian club with the finances and ambition to rival Al Ittihad. Read

– MLS clubs Inter Miami and LA Galaxy, along with Saudi Pro League side Al Ittihad, are interested in signing Manchester United midfielder Casemiro on a free transfer for next season. Read

– Barcelona are considering an attacking shake-up which would include listening to offers for forward Ferran Torres and the arrival of up to two new forwards. Read

OTHER RUMORS

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Could Liverpool sign Kvaratskhelia or Olise to replace Salah?

Craig Burley debates who Liverpool could sign to replace Mohamed Salah.

– Barcelona are looking at Osasuna winger Victor Munoz, but a deal could be difficult due to Real Madrid holding 50% of the playing rights on his contract that also includes a clause for them to sign him back. (Mundo Deportivo)

– Real Madrid are continuing to monitor Liverpool defender Ibrahima Konate. (AS)

– Manchester United remain interested in Nottingham Forest midfielder Elliot Anderson. (Mirror)

– Paris Saint-Germain winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia has no interest in leaving the Parc des Princes this summer amid links to Arsenal. (Daily Mail)

– Chelsea, Newcastle, and Brighton are battling to win the race to sign FC Koln forward Said El Mala. (TEAMtalk)

– Arsenal defender Myles Lewis-Skelly is on the radar of Manchester United. (Express)

– Liverpool could sign two wingers this summer as they also look to land a player for the left-flank while finding a Mohamed Salah successor. RB Leipzig’s Yan Diomande is under consideration. (Ben Jacobs)

– Several top Premier League and Bundesliga teams are keeping tabs on FC Augsburg defender Noahkai Banks. (Rudy Galetti)

– Inter Milan remain keen on Roma midfielder Manu Kone. (Gazzetta dello Sport)

– Liverpool are among multiple Premier League clubs interested in Sunderland defender Lutsharel Geertruida. (TEAMtalk)

– Everton manager David Moyes is keen to sign West Ham midfielder Tomas Soucek. (Football Insider)



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