Sports
The next generation of entertainers: 15 young stars lighting up Europe
At this point, Bayern Munich should understand better than any club that if Plan A doesn’t work out, there’s no need to panic. Just get on with your business. That might be true for Plan B and Plan C, too.
In the summer of 2024, after firing Thomas Tuchel, it felt like Bayern got turned down by roughly 27 candidates before settling on Vincent Kompany, who had just been sacked after leading Burnley to relegation. In the summer of 2025, their transfer plans went awry as well when Bundesliga stars like Florian Wirtz (Liverpool) and Nick Woltemade (Newcastle United) chose the Premier League over the German giants. Instead of landing either or both approaching-their-prime talents, they spent big on veteran Luis Díaz, brought Nicolas Jackson in on loan, and elected to give a precocious 17-year-old named Lennart Karl a bit of playing time.
So having experienced many public failures over multiple summers, Bayern are about a quarter of the way through 2025-26 and are in their best run of form in five years, with 14 wins from 14 games in all competitions. At this moment, at least, Karl has as many combined goals and assists in 290 minutes in all competitions (three) as Wirtz has in 934 with Liverpool.
Karl also became Bayern’s youngest UEFA Champions League scorer with a lovely, composed strike in last week’s pummeling of Club Brugge, and on Saturday he followed that up with something even more outrageous against Borussia Mönchengladbach.
17-YEAR-OLD LENNART KARL BECAME BAYERN’S YOUNGEST-EVER UCL GOALSCORER MIDWEEK AND THEN SCORES AN INSANE GOAL TODAY!
WHAT A TALENT 🔥 pic.twitter.com/4fwu0noPCs
— ESPN FC (@ESPNFC) October 25, 2025
For as much oxygen as transfers and transfer rumors occupy in the general soccer ecosystem, the most enjoyable stories often come out of nowhere. And this sport offers an endless well of fun, young talent waiting for an opportunity to spring up and entertain us.
So here’s a list of my 15 favorite 21-and-under men’s players doing exciting things in this young season. Some were indeed the subjects of heavy transfer rumors and reporting, but others seemingly appeared out of the blue.
(Note: We’ll limit this list to players who entered the season having played under 2,000 minutes in the Big Five leagues. You don’t need me to tell you that someone like Lamine Yamal is awesome. You already know that.)
– Olley: Nwaneri returns to spotlight, seizes chance to shine for Arsenal
– Cristiano Ronaldo’s race to 1,000 goals: When will he get there?
– O’Hanlon: Why we already know Arsenal will win the Premier League
Estêvão, Chelsea / Brazil
Age: 18
Key stats (all competitions): 475 minutes, two goals from 22 shot attempts (3.8 xG), one assist (1.5 xA) from eight chances created, 56 progressive carries, 46 1v1 attempts
The whole “major club signs exciting Brazilian teenager” thing often doesn’t pay off; Endrick‘s current travails at Real Madrid are illustrating that pretty well at the moment. The competition level is higher, the defenders are bigger, and you struggle to find your way before getting repeatedly loaned out.
Statistically, Estêvão was always a little different than other up-and-comers. He had 13 league goals and nine assists in his age-17 season with Palmeiras and quickly proved that he could rack up the shot volume despite being just 5-foot-9 and 137 pounds. Chelsea head coach Enzo Maresca has smartly eased him in at Stamford Bridge, with seven substitute appearances and five starts (and only one full 90-minute appearance) thus far — and the approach is paying off. He leads the team in shot attempts, high-quality shots (worth over 0.2 xG), 1v1 attempts and 1v1s in the box, and he’s only played 44% of Chelsea’s minutes.
Oh, and he already has a signature moment, too:
Estêvão is a lightning bolt for a team that can otherwise be a little too stolid in attack at times. He’s an absolute delight, and based on his xG figures, his finishing has prevented him from enjoying even more of a breakout.
Can Uzun, Eintracht Frankfurt / Turkey
Age: 19
Key stats (all competitions): 834 minutes, six goals from 32 shots (2.4 xG), four assists (2.6 xA) from 14 chances created, 59 progressive carries, 61 progressive passes
Granted, it might have helped Eintracht if the next awesome young talent they developed had been a defender of some sort — even while allowing only one combined goal to St. Pauli and Borussia Dortmund over the last week, they’ve still allowed 28 goals in their last 10 matches — but you take what you can get, and Uzun has been a delight. The 19-year-old hit a wall recently in terms of goal contributions, but since he’s far more of an attacking midfielder than a forward and rarely touches the ball in the box, goals shouldn’t be one of his most important stats.

Still, in his first season as a main contributor, he currently ranks in his team’s top three in goals, shot attempts, assists, chances created, duels and fouls suffered.
Uzun makes things happen.
Franco Mastantuono, Real Madrid / Argentina
Age: 18
Key stats (all competitions): 599 minutes, one goal from 26 shots (3.0 xG), zero assists (1.2 xA) from eight chances, 49 1v1 attempts, 17 fouls suffered (seven in the attacking third)
Like Estêvão and Uzun, Mastantuono’s main job is to try stuff and attack defenders. He’s 10th on his team in minutes but third in shots and 1v1 attempts, and he’s a willing contributor in defense as well — only left back Álvaro Carreras has blocked more passes — which is incredibly welcome on a team that features two famous attackers who contribute almost nothing in that regard.
Expectations were high for Mastantuono after he contributed four goals and six assists before his 18th birthday in parts of two seasons with River Plate. His finishing has been rather Estêvão-esque — one goal from shots worth 3.0 xG — but he’s playing his role well and carving out a niche on a star-laden squad.
Senny Mayulu, Paris Saint-Germain / France
Age: 19
Key stats (all competitions): 627 minutes, two goals from 16 shots (2.0 xG), one assist (1.1 xA) from nine chances, 58% success rate on 73 ground duels
Warren Zaïre-Emery, also 19, has played way too much ball to make this list, but PSG still don’t lack for other thrilling youngsters. (Hell, the only reason I didn’t put 17-year-old right winger Ibrahim Mbaye on the list was because I’m trying to spread the love around.)
Mayulu scored the last goal in PSG’s historic 5-0 romp over Internazionale in last season’s Champions League final, and in mostly 60-minute midfield shifts this season, he’s been tasked with running at defenses and handing the ball over to attackers in the attacking third. He’s good at it, and he’s also quite good at teleporting into high-quality positions in the box.

While others on this list are mostly firing away from long range, four of Mayulu’s 15 shots have been worth at least 0.2 xG. Only Bradley Barcola and Gonçalo Ramos have attempted more high-quality shots for PSG this season.
Valentín Barco, Strasbourg / Argentina
Age: 21
Key stats (all competitions): 1,061 minutes, three assists (3.1 xA) from 20 chances created, 84 progressive carries, 85 progressive passes, 37 fouls suffered, 71 ball recoveries
On a Strasbourg team that started with just two losses in its first 12 matches, Barco currently ranks first in chances created, touches, 1v1 attempts, fouls suffered, total duels, ground duels won, blocked crosses and ball recoveries and second in progressive carries, interceptions and all defensive interventions. He spends a little over half his time in central midfield while dabbling at everything from left wing to left back to defensive midfield to center back.
Wherever he is, he’s the most important player besides, perhaps, leading goal-scorer Joaquín Panichelli.
Barco seemed like a can’t-miss prospect when he moved from Boca Juniors to Brighton & Hove Albion, but he evidently needed one more change of scenery to start unlocking his potential. Well, it’s unlocked.
Noah Sadiki, Sunderland / DR Congo
Age: 20
Key stats (all competitions): 802 minutes, 54 progressive carries, 28 progressive passes, 14 fouls suffered, 12 blocked passes, 14 interceptions, 25 ball recoveries
This list is loaded with Make Stuff Happen™ guys, and Sadiki is already one of the best in the Premier League in that regard. After serving as an excellent ball progressor and chaos agent for Union St.-Gilloise‘s Belgian title-winning team last season, Sadiki is playing a similar role alongside Granit Xhaka in the midfield of a Sunderland side that is overachieving spectacularly in 2025-26.
Sadiki pushes the ball up the pitch and draws contact in attack (first on the team in fouls suffered), and he obstructs every passing lane in defense (first in blocked passes and interceptions). With this work-rate, he is a perfect complement for Xhaka, allowing the veteran to focus on things like “being a progressive passing machine” and “once again providing the greatest veteran leadership in the sport.”
Sunderland are overachieving against their xG figures in a way that is almost certainly unsustainable, and regression is probable, but they also genuinely outplayed Chelsea late in last weekend’s 2-1 upset at Stamford Bridge. There’s some magic to this team, and the Sadiki-Xhaka combo is a major reason why.
Myles Lewis-Skelly, Arsenal / England
Age: 19
Key stats (all competitions): 445 minutes, three assists (0.6 xA) from five chances created, 20 progressive carries, 25 progressive passes, 16 fouls suffered (four in the attacking third)
Because Arsenal head coach Mikel Arteta is distributing minutes to so many guys within a ridiculously deep squad — including 15-year-old Max Dowman, who could have made this list despite playing only 125 minutes thus far — it’s hard to get a complete read on Lewis-Skelly’s capabilities. But his per-90 stats are great, and moments like his assist against Atlético Madrid in last week’s Champions League blowout certainly give us a pretty good hint.
Ho hum: just casually dribbling around and through four Atleti defenders and perfectly cueing up a first-timer from Gabriel Martinelli against one of the most celebrated defenses in Europe. No big deal.
Lennart Karl, Bayern Munich / Germany
Age: 17
Key stats (all competitions): 303 minutes, two goals from 16 shots (1.9 xG), one assist (0.8 xA) from four chances created, 31 progressive carries, 18 1v1 attempts, seven fouls suffered
Take it away, Tor-Kristian Karlsen:
“Excellent at playing between the defensive lines, his low center of gravity — he measures at just under 5-foot-6 — gives him the balance and agility to navigate short spaces. Meanwhile, an explosive first step makes him elusive in crowded areas, often allowing him to slip away from defenders before they’ve had the chance to get settled. […] In the short term, Bayern seem intent on rotating Karl through multiple attacking roles: as a right-sided inside-forward, a narrow No. 10, and occasionally a left-sided option to encourage his two-footed development. Each role offers a different challenge, but will help refining abilities such as acceleration, composure, flexibility, game intelligence and creative risk-taking.”
Karl is versatile, and he’s incredibly unique in stature and skill set. It might be easier for a young guy to find a role by fitting into a certain box, and Karl most certainly doesn’t, but he’s a fascinating prospect.
Assan Ouédraogo, RB Leipzig / Germany
Age: 19
Key stats (all competitions): 333 minutes, two goals (2.1 xG) from nine shots, three assists (0.8 xA) from six chances created, nine fouls suffered, 71.9% success rate from 32 duels, 50.0% aerial success rate
Ouédraogo scored the title-winning penalty for Germany at the Under-17 Euros in 2023, and he became Schalke 04‘s youngest ever goal-scorer, putting the ball in the net on his professional debut at age 17 in 2023-24. At a Paul Pogba-esque 6-foot-3, 185 pounds, he’s looked the part all along, and after barely playing in his first season at RB Leipzig, it appears he has the lay of the land.
Ouédraogo has started RBL’s last five matches, and they’ve taken 13 points in those five as he’s made four goal contributions. He’s doing a little bit of everything, from clearances to short-range goals, and RBL is reestablishing a pretty high level after last season’s disappointing campaign.

Leopold Querfeld, Union Berlin / Austria
Age: 21
Key stats (all competitions): 930 minutes, two goals (0.7 xG) from 10 shots, seven chances created (0.5 xA), 45 progressive carries, 43 progressive passes, 63.2% success rate from 57 aerial duels, 163 defensive interventions
There aren’t many defenders on this list both because defensive stats are less sexy and, well, there aren’t loads of teenage defenders in the top leagues. It’s a lot easier to break guys in with hustle-and-try-stuff roles up front.
Still, Querfeld’s an interesting prospect. He put in over 1,700 Bundesliga minutes last season and therefore barely qualified here, but even before that he logged over 4,300 minutes for Rapid Vienna in Austria. He’s a certified Big Dude, standing 6-foot-3, manning the middle of Union’s three-man back line and winning about 60% of his aerials.
Union are back to doing Union things this season, absorbing pressure, playing physically (and committing lots of fouls), counterattacking and winning the set-piece battle. It says a lot that Querfeld has been asked to man such an important position in that regard. He even scored a goal in the DFB Pokal.
Christian Kofane, Bayer Leverkusen / Cameroon
Age: 19
Key stats (all competitions): 558 minutes, four goals (4.4 xG) from 20 shots, 10 chances created (0.5 xA)
Bayer Leverkusen are working through an up-and-down campaign in their first season after the departure of manager Xabi Alonso, chief creator Wirtz and others. But the 6-foot-2 Kofane, who scored eight goals with Albacete in the Spanish second division last year, is providing bright moments already.
Kofane is a Haaland-model striker, meaning he’s in for shots and goals and not a ton of other things — per 90 minutes, he’s averaging just 25.9 touches but 3.2 shots, 35% of which are worth at least 0.2 xG. Those aren’t Erling Haaland levels, but they’re intriguing for a teenager playing in a top-flight league for the first time. He scored Leverkusen’s go-ahead goal against PSV in the Champions League, and he’s started the last five matches for new manager Kasper Hjulmand. It’s been a very bright start.
Adrián Liso, Getafe (on loan from Real Zaragoza) / Spain
Age: 20
Key stats (all competitions): 634 minutes, three goals (1.0 xG) from 12 shots, two assists (1.2 xA) from two chances created, 23 progressive carries, six fouls won in the attacking third, 22 ball recoveries
Outside of Barcelona and Real Madrid, there haven’t been a ton of high-impact youngsters in LaLiga early this season, but Liso, a second-division standout for Real Zaragoza, got loaned up to a first-division club and was immediately named LaLiga’s under-23 player of the month in August. Getafe have scored only 10 goals in 10 league matches, but he has three of them, and he’s assisted two others. And on a team loaded with 30-and-over veterans, he and 20-year-old midfielder Mario Martín are putting in some serious hustle time.
Geovany Quenda, Sporting CP / Portugal
Age: 18
Key stats (all competitions): 722 minutes, two goals (1.8 xG) from 15 shots, four assists (2.5 xA) from 18 chances created, 19 fouls suffered, 54.2% success rate on 83 ground duels, 46 ball recoveries
Of the 16 players with at least 250 minutes for Sporting this season, only three are under 24 years old, and only one is under 21: Quenda, who’s racing up and down the right touchline and providing all the young energy he can for a veteran squad.
Quenda is starting about half the time, but while he’s eighth on the team in minutes, he’s second in assists and fouls suffered and fourth in goals and shots on goal. He’s also won 64% of his tackles, and he’s third on the team in ball recoveries. He had a goal and an assist in Sporting’s Champions League-opening win over Kairat Almaty, too.
Quenda, who has agreed a €52 million move to Chelsea in 2026, is a boundless runner with a creative streak in attack — that’s a pretty great combination.
Antoine Mendy, Nice / Senegal
Age: 21
Key statistics (all competitions): 1,022 minutes, 204 defensive interventions, 30 blocked passes and shots, 70.7% success rate on 41 aerial attempts, 80 progressive carries, 50 progressive passes
I was tempted to put Mendy’s 19-year-old center-back companion Juma Bah on here, too, as the two have both been asked to hold the fort quite a bit for a decent but offensively challenged team. But we’ll go with Mendy here; the 21-year-old converted attacker has battled through a run of injuries to play at a really high level this season. (He’s learned under ageless defender Dante at Nice, too.)
Mendy has made the second-most defensive interventions in all of Ligue 1 — a hint of just how much duress the Nice backline has faced, but also a sign of sureness on Mendy’s part — and he’s dynamite in the air. His odds of making the Senegal squad for next year’s World Cup are pretty good.
Joane Gadou, RB Salzburg / France
Age: 18
Key stats (UEFA competitions): 630 minutes, 90 defensive interventions, 94 progressive carries, progressive passes
Playing defense for Salzburg is a unique sort of stress test: you’re going to learn all about possession play and proper buildup from the back, and you’re going to have to put out all sorts of fires in transition. Gadou is holding his own. The 6-foot-4 center back has played every minute of Salzburg’s UEFA season, and he’s averaging nearly 13 defensive interventions per 90 minutes and leading the team in blocked crosses and shots. He’s also leading in progressive carries and is second in progressive passes.
Gadou has already been linked to Bayern and other heavyweights, and it’s not hard to see why. But in the meantime, he’ll keep playing the game on the hardest difficulty level.
Sports
How Tua Tagovailoa’s benching impacts Dolphins’ future
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — With nothing material left to play for this season, the Miami Dolphins will see what they’ve got in Quinn Ewers.
The seventh-round rookie will start at quarterback in place of Tua Tagovailoa, who has possibly played his final game for the franchise that handed him a $212.1 million contract in 2024 — although Miami traveling along that path would be unprecedented in terms of its cost.
A complicated upcoming offseason for the Dolphins adds another wrinkle to news of Tua’s benching.
So, what does this mean for the Dolphins, Ewers, and coach Mike McDaniel’s future? Dolphins reporter Marcel Louis-Jacques, ESPN senior writers Jeremy Fowler and Dan Graziano, and draft analyst Matt Miller answer the most pressing questions.
Why now?
Because, flatly, he’s been one of the most ineffective quarterbacks in football over the past month and a half — despite the Dolphins winning five of their past seven games. Since Week 10, he ranks 30th in QBR and 24th in passing yards. While his play didn’t necessarily hurt the Dolphins during their four-game win streak entering Week 15, his performance against the Steelers was enough to influence McDaniel’s decision.
Through three quarters against Pittsburgh, Tagovailoa completed 6 of 10 passes for 65 yards and an interception that even McDaniel couldn’t defend.
“I think the Steelers had a good plan and early they knew where we were trying to attack,” McDaniel said of the play. “I think Tua lost sight of [the cornerback], which is a big deal. He didn’t see the hanging corner. He threw it to him out of the break. It’s not the ideal play, and matters were made worse by the throw to the opponent.”
Tagovailoa leads the NFL with a career-high 15 interceptions this season, and turning the ball over is one of McDaniel’s pet peeves. Combine that with the Dolphins’ mathematical elimination from playoff contention, and it made sense for the team to turn to the rookie — who’s been quietly impressing behind the scenes. — Louis-Jacques
What does this mean for Tua’s future with the team?
The benching means he’s, at best, a bridge quarterback for Miami next year and, at worst, a free agent looking to be a bridge for someone else.
Teams I’ve talked to in the aftermath of this consider Tagovailoa’s $54 million in guarantees immovable via trade unless the Dolphins cover a significant portion of the contract, and even that doesn’t guarantee him a market. The play was simply not good this year, and scouts saw a regressing player who was not as light on his feet as he was two years ago. Couple that issue with his concussion history and Tagovailoa could be a hard sell for a team evaluating him as a starter in 2026.
But the Dolphins are only as good as their options. If Ewers performs over these final three games, he will serve as both a starting option next year and a sunk cost for Miami because of his rookie contract. Miami and Tagovailoa could sell a reconciliation, assuming the quarterback rededicates himself to the job and Miami accepts that it’s stuck with him. But we saw this script with Russell Wilson — when a team’s done with a high-priced, underperforming veteran QB, keeping him around doesn’t make much sense. Miami appears poised to start over with a draft pick or a veteran quarterback signed or traded from elsewhere. — Fowler
Considering his contract, how difficult would it be for the Dolphins to move on from him?
Tagovailoa has $54 million in fully guaranteed compensation in 2026. That breaks down as a $39 million salary and a $15 million option bonus that needs to be exercised between the first and third days of the 2026 league year in March. Additionally, on the third day of the 2026 league year, $3 million of his $31 million 2027 salary becomes fully guaranteed. So if he’s on Miami’s roster as of 4 p.m. ET on March 13, the Dolphins will be on the hook for $57 million guaranteed.
If they were to release him prior to that date, they’d still have to pay him the $54 million in 2026 cash and would absorb $99.2 million in dead salary cap charges. (They could spread that out over two years if they designated him a post-June 1 release, but they’d still take $67.4 million in dead money charges on their 2026 cap and the remaining $31.8 million in 2027.) If they were to find a way to trade Tagovailoa before March 13, the acquiring team would become responsible for the $54 million in 2026 salary and bonuses, and the Dolphins’ dead-money charge would drop to $45.2 million. If they traded him after March 13, presumably they’d be on the hook for the $15 million option bonus, while the new team would take the $39 million salary; the Dolphins’ dead-money charge would be $60.2 million.
None of this is even close to ideal, obviously, as it would leave Miami in a terrible cap situation and also without a quarterback. The Broncos took $80 million in dead-money charges (spread over two years) when they released Wilson in 2024, and they managed to make the playoffs last season and currently hold the 1-seed in the AFC playoff field for this season. So huge dead-money charges don’t necessarily kill a team’s chances. But one of the reasons it has worked for Denver is it found a first-round QB in Bo Nix who could play right away. — Graziano
McDaniel was tasked with maximizing Tua’s potential. What does this suggest about McDaniel’s future with the team?
He did. Tagovailoa was markedly improved in 2022 and led the NFL in passing yards the following season. But his durability concerns spilled over into his decision-making to a point where Tagovailoa appears hesitant to take risks with his body — which is understandable considering his concussion history.
McDaniel did not draft Tagovailoa, but he advocated for his extension with then-general manager Chris Grier, who was fired midseason. It would be interesting to see him develop another franchise quarterback. The results from his time with Teddy Bridgewater, Skylar Thompson and Tyler Huntley were mixed-to-underwhelming, but he gets another chance with Ewers for the next three weeks. — Louis-Jacques
What does Ewers’ predraft scouting report tell us about what we should expect from him?
Ewers was a three-year starter at Texas, and he threw 68 touchdown passes and 24 interceptions over his 37 career games. He was accurate when able to play from a clean pocket, and the touch and timing that he showed in Texas coach Steve Sarkisian’s offense will be perfect for what the Dolphins want to do with underneath and crossing routes designed to get wide receivers in space.
Ewers got into trouble when he had to move in the pocket to make plays or when dropping underneath coverage confused him after the snap. But when he gets into the right read pre-snap, he can carve up a defense — and that’s what the Dolphins will look to do to get him early success. — Miller
What do the Dolphins see in Ewers relative to the other backup, Zach Wilson?
The Dolphins know what Wilson is and didn’t bring him in to replace a healthy Tagovailoa. But Ewers was drafted as a developmental player who now has an opportunity to play valuable developmental reps.
With three weeks remaining in the season, there’s almost a win-win scenario approaching for Miami. If Ewers performs well, the Dolphins may have found a potential future starter. If he doesn’t and the team loses its next three games, it strengthens Miami’s draft position. — Louis-Jacques
What will the reaction be in the locker room?
Locker rooms typically know when it’s time for a change to be made. If Ewers puts the necessary work in, he could infuse some life into a Dolphins passing game that has lacked it over the past month.
Tagovailoa is a team captain but drew criticism from both inside and outside the locker room for his comments earlier in the season about his teammates’ attendance at player-led meetings. He has since apologized for his comments but was seen laughing with Steelers’ cornerback Jalen Ramsey minutes after the loss Monday night. It’s not clear whether that moment struck a nerve with Miami’s locker room, but it was a poor look after another disappointing performance. — Louis-Jacques
Sports
Gannon: Rules a factor in Cards’ woeful tackling
TEMPE, Ariz. — Arizona Cardinals coach Jonathan Gannon shared his displeasure with how he thinks the NFL’s collectively bargained rules prevent defensive players from becoming better tacklers.
With a number of missed tackles playing a factor in Sunday’s 40-20 loss to the Houston Texans, Gannon was asked Wednesday how Arizona practices tackling during the week. He responded that it’s a topic the Cardinals’ coaching staff was discussing this week.
“How the rules are set up, it’s hard to get better as a tackler being in the NFL, I’ll say that,” Gannon said.
While the data on missed tackles hasn’t been perfected, the Cardinals have allowed 40 rushes with at least 5 yards after first contact, the third most in the NFL. Arizona also is ranked 18th in yards allowed after contact per rush this season, according to ESPN Research.
Gannon said the Cardinals practice tackling drills in “some way, shape or form because that’s one of the top skills of any defense player.” However, he added that there’s “no drill you can do that can mimic a game.”
According to the NFL’s 2020 collective bargaining agreement, teams are allowed only 14 padded practices, but 11 of them have to take place during the first 11 weeks of the season. Contact is prohibited during the offseason, which includes OTAs and minicamp.
When asked if he would like to see the rules changed, Gannon said he will not be lobbying for changes.
“The rules are the rules,” he said.
However, the lack of opportunities to tackle in practice limits skill development. Gannon compared the NFL’s rules to the PGA Tour telling Scottie Scheffler he can’t hit a wedge during the offseason.
“It’s set up how it’s set up, that’s fine,” Gannon said. “But to get better at a skill, you have to practice the skill. You practice skill, you can scale it, you can scale the tempo, you can scale how you do it, but to practice a skill, you need to practice the skill.
“And so it’s a conundrum I think all defensive guys face and there’s risk-reward to trying to practice it with it however you set things up. But you definitely have to be a good tackling defense to play good defense.”
Gannon laughed when it was brought up that the lack of opportunities to practice tackling was the product of rule changes. He said it’s a topic that is discussed every year by head coaches and defensive coaches, and impacts personnel decisions for some teams.
“A lot of people think [that if] you can’t practice it you better just acquire people that can tackle because you ain’t going to help them at all,” Gannon said. “That’s a thought process, too. To each their own. But it’s a challenge.”
Sports
Nigeria files complaint to FIFA over Congo DR
Nigeria are hoping to revive their hopes of appearing at the 2026 World Cup with complaint to FIFA over the use of up to nine ineligible players by Congo DR in their qualifying playoff last month.
The Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) join Cameroon, who had initially filed a similar complaint to FIFA about the eligibility of some of the players who were born in Europe but switched nationalities to represent Congo internationally.
– Nigeria’s ‘voodoo’ accusations were ‘nonsense’ – Ex-DRC coach
– What’s next for the DRC’s Leopards after bewitching their way past Nigeria?
The Super Eagles lost 4-3 on penalties to Congo DR in the final of the CAF Playoffs on Nov. 16, which meant the Congolese advanced to the FIFA intercontinental playoffs.
Congo DR have been drawn to play the winners of the semifinal between New Caledonia and Jamaica, with the victors in the final earning one of the final spots at next year’s World Cup in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
But the NFF are now challenging Congo DR’s use of several dual nationality players during the World Cup qualifying series, claiming they were ineligible on the basis of not being properly cleared to switch nationalities.
Reports have claimed that between six to nine players used by Congo DR during the qualifiers may have switched international allegiances, but may not have gone through the process of giving up their European passports in line with Congolese law before representing the country.
“The Congolese rules say you cannot have dual nationality,” NFF general secretary Mohammed Sanusi told reporters on Tuesday. “There are so many of them that have European passports, some of them French passports, some of them Dutch passports. The rules are very clear. We cannot say anything now but we have submitted our protest to FIFA.
“There are players that got theirs in just three months. So there is to us, what is considered as a breach of the regulation. That is why we took that decision.”
While the Congolese Constitution does not recognize dual citizenship, FIFA’s own regulations only require players to hold the passports of the representative country in order to be cleared to play for that country and it was on the basis of holding valid Congolese passports that FIFA cleared the players to play.
All the players involved hold Congolese passports, but Sanusi claims that FIFA were deceived into issuing those clearances.
“The FIFA rules are different from DR Congo rules, that is why FIFA cleared them,” he said. “FIFA regulations say once you have the passport of your country, you are eligible. As far as we are concerned, they are eligible that is why they are cleared by FIFA.
“But our contention is that FIFA was deceived into clearing them because it is not the responsibility of FIFA to make sure that the regulations of Congo are abided by. FIFA goes by its own regulations, and it was on the basis of what was presented to FIFA that they cleared them. But we are saying that it was fraudulent.”
FIFA has yet to respond to the complaint, but NFF officials told ESPN that the issue is being investigated by world football’s governing body and a decision is expected before the intercontinental playoffs in March.
It is unclear if this appeal will be successful, but if it is, it would provide the Super Eagles a pathway back into World Cup qualifying, their second in the same series.
During the previous round, South Africa were sanctioned for fielding an ineligible player and docked three points, but Nigeria failed to take advantage and ultimately finished second in the group behind Bafana Bafana.
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Fashion7 days agoTommy Hilfiger appoints Sergio Pérez as global menswear ambassador
