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  • Whether you dislike or like it, you have to give Usain Bolt credit” – When Sha’Carri Richardson reflected on sprinting icon’s legacy

    Whether you dislike or like it, you have to give Usain Bolt credit” – When Sha’Carri Richardson reflected on sprinting icon’s legacy

     

     

    Sha’Carri Richardson once reflected on Usain Bolt’s legacy.

    Sha’Carri Richardson once reflected on the legacy of retired sprint icon Usain Bolt. She stated that Bolt was the greatest sprinter in history and deserved recognition.

     

    Via FloTrack, in a June 2021 interview, a journalist talked about her viral photo with Mondo Duplantis, where both were holding a document during their freshman year, which was from their first day at Louisiana State University (LSU). In the document, Richardson had named Bolt her favorite athlete.

     

    The journalist then asked her whether she had any other athletes she looked up to. Sha’Carri Richardson reacted, mentioning why she had chosen Bolt in the document. She added that people may have different opinions about him, but he deserves respect for his accomplishments:

     

    “I said that because of the fact that Usain Bolt is an athlete that puts himself on the track. Uh, whether you dislike it, whether you like it, in a day you have to be able to give this man his credit because he is the greatest sprinter in history.”

     

    Additionally, Richardson reflected on her close friendship with two-time Olympic champion pole vaulter Mondo Duplantis, calling him one of her favorite people, during the interview. To date, the 2023 100m world champion and Duplantis share a strong bond and are often seen together when they attend the same event or meeting.

     

    Three years later, Richardson made her Olympic debut at the 2024 Paris Olympics, where she had a successful campaign, collecting two medals.

     

     

    Sha’Carri Richardson opens up on emotional podium moment at Paris Olympics 2024

    Sha'Carri Richardson gets emotional on 4x100m relay podium at Paris Olympics. Credits –

    Sha’Carri Richardson gets emotional on 4x100m relay podium at Paris Olympics. Credits –

    Sha’Carri Richardson reflected on her emotional moment on the podium after winning gold in the women’s 4x100m relay, her first-ever Olympic gold, at the 2024 Paris Olympics. She detailed her emotional reaction in an interview with Refinery29.com in August 2024, following the quadrennial games, saying:

     

    “Getting emotional on the podium, that was not a plan, that was not scripted [laughs]. I would honestly say that moment was just a full circle moment, just embracing everything, not even including what had happened in the general moment to make it on the podium, but just embracing the entire journey of being just a human and growing, not even just as an athlete, but as a woman, as a spirit.”

    She further shared that this was only the beginning and believed greater progress awaited her. In addition to her gold medal victory in the team event, Richardson accomplished great success in the individual 100m event by winning a silver with a time of 10.87s in the finals.

     

     

  • Texas women make good on their opportunity, break South Carolina’s 57-game SEC winning streak in meeting of top-four programs – The Boston Globe

    Texas women make good on their opportunity, break South Carolina’s 57-game SEC winning streak in meeting of top-four programs – The Boston Globe

     

    Texas assistant coach Elana Lovato made a bold statement to head coach Vic Schaefer last month after the Longhorns were overwhelmed in a 17-point loss to South Carolina.

     

    “[She] looked at me and said, ‘We will beat them in a month,’ ” Schaefer said Sunday. “And that’s God’s honest truth.”

     

    The No. 4 Longhorns made the most of their national television game on Super Bowl Sunday and won their rematch with No. 2 South Carolina, 66-62, a victory that ended the Gamecocks’ 57-game winning streak in regular-season Southeastern Conference games dating to December 2021.

     

    The victory by the Longhorns forged a three-way tie atop the SEC standings with the Gamecocks and LSU, all at 10-1.

     

    South Carolina (22-2) had won 17 straight since losing to top-ranked UCLA on Nov. 24. The Gamecocks arrived with confidence and Dawn Staley sporting a Super Bowl sweatshirt in support of her hometown Philadelphia Eagles, who crushed the Chiefs later in the day in New Orleans for the NFL title.

     

     

    A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

     

    Texas’ Madison Booker scored 20 points and Rori Harmon hit two critical free throws in the final seconds to secure the Longhorns’ eighth straight win and 20th in a row at home since January 2024.

     

     

     

    Staley, per usual, was one to consider the bigger picture of her sport.

     

    “Great atmosphere,” Staley said. ”It’s great for women’s basketball, probably great for TV. Close game, great for our game. It’s just unfortunate somebody had to lose.”

     

    Texas (24-2) was never in the first game against South Carolina, shooting a season-low 28 percent. On Sunday, the Longhorns shot 44 percent. They outrebounded the Gamecocks, 42-35, outscored them, 40-26, in the paint and 19-12 in second-chance points.

     

    “It took tremendous toughness to win that game,” Schaefer said. “They earned it. I don’t have to tell you how good that team is we played today. In my mind, they’re the number one team in the country. And I mean no disrespect to UCLA.”

     

    Booker converted just 3 of 19 shots during the loss at South Carolina. She shot better in the rematch against South Carolina’s tough defense, hitting 7 of 22 shots, and grabbing 11 rebounds, including a critical one late in the game.

     

     

     

    “It’s my job to rebound,” Booker said. “I should be down there.”

     

    Booker, a sophomore, is not just Texas’ best player, she’s the most versatile. A natural small forward, the 6-foot-1 Booker moved to point guard last season, replacing Harmon after she sustained a season-ending knee injury. Texas recently lost starting power forward Aaliyah Moore to a knee injury, and Booker has asserted herself more as a rebounder.

     

    “She was a beast on the boards,” Staley said.

     

    Texas centers Taylor Jones and Kyla Oldacre combined for 24 points and 12 rebounds.

     

    “That’s my two-headed monster,” Schaefer said.

     

    Schaefer proudly put them on display for a national audience.

     

    “It makes me really happy to be a part of that,” Harmon said. “The history and just this movement with women’s basketball. To be able to have this game, like a little pre [Super Bowl] game. I think that’s so cool.”

     

    Did the NBA trade deadline actually move the needle?

    4:33

     

    WATCH: Celtics beat reporter Adam Himmelsbach evaluates if any team around the league did enough to beat Boston in June.

  • As DJ Lagway enters Year 2 at Florida, can Billy Napier the ‘OC’ cash in on championship potential

    As DJ Lagway enters Year 2 at Florida, can Billy Napier the ‘OC’ cash in on championship potential

     

    Has morning dawned on a new era of winning for Billy Napier’s Florida Gators?

     

    At a program mired in mediocrity for much of this decade, there are inklings of hope everywhere.

     

    Florida closed the 2024 season on a heater, winning its final 4 games, including 2 impressive wins over a ranked LSU and top-10 Ole Miss team in November. The Gators parlayed on-field success into a strong recruiting finish, dragging a class that ranked in the 50s in late October to 8th in the 247 Composite last week, after 4-star Tennessee corner commit Onis Konanbanny flipped and signed with Florida on Wednesday morning.

     

    A season after losing 2 of the program’s best players in the transfer portal after a 5-7 season, the Gators excelled at player retention this winter, utilizing a revamped, effective NIL collective to bring back All-American center Jake Slaughter, All-SEC offensive tackle Austin Barber, wide receiver Tre Wilson III, and key defensive line fixtures Caleb Banks and Tyreak Sapp.

     

    The Gators’ defense, much maligned for the better part of 2 coaching regimes, returns the bulk of its production from the first unit in Gainesville to finish in the top 50 in yards allowed per play (42nd) and top 25 in SP+ defensive efficiency (23rd) since 2019, when Dan Mullen’s 11-win Orange Bowl ranked in the top 10 in both categories. There are lingering questions on the edge, and unproven pieces at wide receiver, but even allowing for those, this will be Napier’s most talented roster yet in Gainesville.

     

    But the Gators have returned quality players and production before, and that hasn’t always stopped the losses from piling up over the past few seasons, greying the beautiful red of the bricks and green of the palm and pines that dot the University of Florida’s majestic campus.

     

     

    A consensus Freshman All-American selection at the most important position in sports, Lagway gives the Gators the type of talent that changes a program’s ceiling.

     

    The College Football Playoff era is filled with stories of quarterbacks who changed the trajectory and ceiling of programs and coaching staffs stuck in the mud or just short of the summit, from Deshaun Watson and Trevor Lawrence redefining what was possible at Clemson to Joe Burrow making a national champion out of Ed Orgeron at LSU.

     

    Florida fans know what a championship quarterback looks like.

     

    There are 3 statutes in front of The Swamp that honor 3 Heisman winning quarterbacks, and another quarterback, Rex Grossman, won an SEC Championship and an AP Player of the Year award.

     

     

    Florida went 6-0 in games Lagway started and finished a season ago, and the Gators led Georgia when he left the game with an injury before halftime. Florida ultimately lost to Georgia for the 4th consecutive season, falling 34-20 after Carson Beck led the Bulldogs to 2 touchdowns in the game’s final 5 minutes.

     

    Lagway finished his freshman season with 1,915 yards passing and 12 touchdown passes. In the process, he was 2nd in yards per attempt (10) and second in average depth of target (11.8) behind only Jaxson Dart of Ole Miss (10 yards per attempt, average depth of target 11.9). Among SEC starters returning in 2025, Lagway’s big-time throw percentage of 8.8% is nearly 3% higher than any other returning starter (Diego Pavia is 2nd, at 5.9%).

     

    Certainly, Lagway has room for improvement. His interceptions (9) need to decrease. The completion percentage, sitting at a good, not great, 60%, needs to increase. But there simply aren’t many humans on the planet that can make throws like this one:

     

     

    A great quarterback changes everything, unlocking a window to a championship world that may otherwise stay shut.

     

    With Lagway on campus, Florida’s championship window is open.

     

    That leaves Napier 2 years to get it right. Two years before Roger Goodell walks onto a stage and announces, “With the __________ pick in the NFL Draft, (someone that we all hope isn’t the New York Jets) select DJ Lagway, quarterback, University of Florida.”

     

    A 2-year window that will define whether Florida is a championship program again or left wondering how they squandered the best quarterback talent to grace their campus since Tim Tebow graduated after the 2009 season.

     

    Is Napier up to the challenge of capitalizing on that window?

     

    Winning the recruiting battle for Lagway was step one, and the job Napier and quarterbacks coach Ryan O’Hara did preparing him to start as a true freshman, a byproduct of a season-ending injury to Graham Mertz that put Lagway ahead of schedule on Napier’s original development plan, was an impressive step two. For Lagway and Florida to take the next step, though, might require more than just player development. It might require a better offensive scheme.

     

    That’s where everything comes back to Billy Napier.

     

    Despite an overwhelming body of evidence in college football that head coaches who also serve as primary play-callers may limit a team’s ceiling, Napier continues to call the ball plays at Florida.

     

     

     

    Last season, the Gators finished 37th in SP+ offensive efficiency, just a 1-spot improvement from 2023. For those unfamiliar, SP+ efficiency measures how effective an offense is adjusted for tempo and strength of opponent. It’s about as comprehensive a measurement of the effectiveness of an offense as exists.

     

    Florida’s success rate metrics (how often a play gains a successful amount of yardage, given down and distance) are similar even over his 3 seasons at Florida. Florida’s success rate in 2024 was 41.3%, which ranked 12th in the SEC. That was a 1.1% improvement over 2023’s 40.2%, but both numbers ranked in the bottom half of the SEC.

     

    The big difference for Florida in 2024, outside of defensive improvement, was the added explosiveness.

     

    With Lagway behind center, the Gators produced 49 pass plays of 20 yards or more (a 6 completion jump from 2023) and 23 pass plays of 30 yards or more (a 9 completion jump from 2023). The result was an offense with a higher ceiling, even if overall productivity remained about the same.

     

    Does the data suggest a flaw in Napier’s scheme?

     

    SDS spoke to multiple SEC defensive coaches, all of whom prepared a defense to play Florida this season. Each coach was granted anonymity to speak freely about Napier’s scheme and play-calling ability. The conversations paint a mixed picture, with freely offered praise interspersed among terse criticism.

     

    Each of the coaches SDS spoke with, for example, praised Napier’s run concepts.

     

    “(Napier) does a nice job in the run game. They are multiple, both in their concepts and personnel groupings. It’s about the quality up front with their run game. There aren’t scheme issues. It’s tough to prepare for,” one SEC defensive coordinator told SDS.

     

    “They have a host of zone concepts that they disguise variations in and make it hard on you,” a longtime SEC defensive assistant echoed. “They are well-coached on the offensive line, too. That group was far better by the end of the year than they were in September. You don’t usually see a team improve that much on the line of scrimmage. That’s good coaching.”

     

    Napier’s passing game concepts, though, left plenty to be desired.

     

    “We had situations where they were in their “11” personnel, and our safety called route trees pre-snap. They are predictable in that grouping. They are better in their “12” personnel stuff, but they weren’t hard to scheme for us in the passing game,” another SEC coordinator told SDS.

     

    “They need DJ Lagway, right? You don’t watch them on film and go, ‘Hey, look how open Florida’s receivers are.’ They need a big-time guy like DJ to make elite throws,” echoed another SEC coordinator.

     

     

    Florida’s passing game in “11” personnel, for example, ranked 14th in the SEC in success rate, but 5th in explosive pass percentage. In other words, Lagway’s ability to make monster throws offset a schematic decision that failed more often than it succeeded.

     

    Is Lagway’s abundance of talent enough to offset Florida’s schematic flaws in the pass game? Perhaps.

     

    More concerning, at least to some, might be Napier’s situational play-calling.

     

    Decisions like running a jet sweep to get 6 inches at Tennessee in a tight game in 2024 or running a double reverse behind a spotty offensive line against a fast FSU defense in 2023, allowing for a monster loss that helped flip momentum towards the Seminoles, linger with more than the Florida fan base.

     

    “I think situationally they can make some bizarre decisions. They fall in love with the same route on 3rd down. They overthink a run against Tennessee when they have a big quarterback and an All-American center. That stuff turns a football game. Everyone is good. You can’t give away possessions,” one coordinator told SDS.

     

    Another praised Napier’s roster rebuild at Florida, but questioned whether you can still do it all in this era of college football.

     

    “There’s so much on a head coach’s plate now, from NIL to the portal to the bigger staffs you manage to recruiting boards,” a longtime SEC assistant told SDS. “It’s hard to do it all, you know? They have built a roster that can start to win there. Billy is a fantastic recruiter. A great person. He doesn’t need to do everything. Sometimes as coaches the hardest thing we do is letting someone else help.”

     

    As Florida enters Year 1 of the remaining 2-year Lagway window, Napier will continue to be the primary play-caller.

     

    In an exclusive interview with the outstanding Florida football podcast Gators Breakdown, Napier told host David Waters that he believes continuing as Florida’s primary play-caller is in the program’s best interest.

     

    “I think the big thing is that it helps us as from an identity standpoint as a team,” Napier said. “You’re a part of the inner workings, from an installation script standpoint and then how gameday goes.”

     

    Napier’s reluctance to give up putting his imprint on the offensive game plan does not mean, in his view, that he hasn’t relinquished some control, as he told Gators Breakdown.

     

    “Look, I think the big thing is and we’ve been fortunate — is that we have a really good offensive staff. You know, you think about the position coaches that we have. I was really pleased with Russ Callaway and the more responsibility that he took on this year from a leadership standpoint. Russ did a great job running the unit meetings. He did a good job organizing the staff. And certainly, you know, in that coordinator type role as an exceptional young coach, that was where I think we took a step forward.”

     

    Napier pointed to other staff members, including quarterbacks coach O’Hara, highly regarded in national coaching circles, and said he deferred more to other coaches than ever last season, especially as Florida stormed to wins in its final 4 games to finish with 8 wins, the program’s highest total since 2020.

     

    “There are things that as a head coach, you know, things that maybe I used to do, I thought those guys did a great job taking some of that off my plate. And I think in general that helped us be more productive down the stretch.”

     

    Will Napier’s increased deference to staff make Florida productive enough to cash in on Lagway’s elite talent?

     

     

    Right now, for what it’s worth, Vegas doesn’t seem convinced, pegging Florida’s over-under win total at 6.5 for 2025, which would be a step back from the 7-win regular season in 2024, despite the likely sophomore progression from Lagway.

     

    If that happens, would Napier even be coaching Lagway in 2026?

     

    Maybe. Perhaps winning that recruiting battle earned Napier the right to see it through to the end.

     

    Then again, at some point you must take the next step forward.

     

    Rome wasn’t built in a day, but it was worked on every day.

     

    If Napier can’t build Florida into Rome with Lagway, will he ever?

     

     

  • Usain Bolt Finally Breaks Silence on $12.8 Million Fraud Case That Wiped Out His Retirement Funds

    Usain Bolt Finally Breaks Silence on $12.8 Million Fraud Case That Wiped Out His Retirement Funds

     

    Track star and new Bolt pitchman Usain Bolt looks on during a press conference about the new Bolt Mobility scooter outside of New York City Hall, March 12, 2019 in New York City.

    Electric scooters are still not street-legal in New York City, but transportation advocates and lobbyists are encouraging the push toward legalization and regulation. Bolt, a Miami-based startup, joins a crowded field of competitors in the United States, including Bird Scooters, Lime Scooters and Lift Scooters.

    “So it’s been one year now; still have a fight to fight.” Usain Bolt promised in an Instagram post last year. No, it wasn’t about his legendary track battle. The retired athlete is long away from trying his feet in the professional track and field realm. However, his fresh fight was to get his retirement fund back.

     

     

    In late 2022, he discovered that he had suffered a considerable loss of over $12.7 million in his account at the Jamaican private investment firm Stocks and Securities Limited (SSL). The revelation from the sprinter shook the entire Jamaican banking sector, leading the Jamaican government to initiate a formal inquiry into the extensive fraud scheme. But since then, Bolt has yet to have a positive update on the matter.

     

    All this duration, however, Usain Bolt did not share any detailed look at the matter with the general populace. From time to time, he shared only a few cryptic posts through his social media handles. One such came on January 10, this year: “Twelve Million, Seven Hundred Fifty-Eight Thousand, One Hundred Eighty-One dollars and Seventy-Four Cents.” Obviously, it was about the amount of money he lost in the scam. But anything from his mouth would have added a certain perspective to the matter. Isn’t it? Well, the wait is over.

     

     

     

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    On February 8, the Instagram handle of The Fix Productions shared a clip. The clip displayed Usain Bolt, revealing a bit about the financial scam issue. Those were a few words, though, but enough to make a buildup. Such as? In the clip, the eight-time Olympic champion said, “Now, at some point, I have to start saying something.

    Now I have to be careful because now you’re looking at everybody sideways.” “Sideways,” how? Perhaps Bolt pointed his fingers at the Jamaican government bodies by that comment. Also, this could be the reason why he has always been measured in his words while speaking about the fraud issue. Example? Again, his cryptic social media posts.

     

     

    One such came on X on October 2 last year. In the post, Bolt wrote, “Broken words not broken records [watch emoji].” The fans quickly spotted the meaning hidden in the wordplay. According to them, it was about the broken promises made by the Jamaican authorities to him to come to a positive solution. Since 2023, Jamaica’s Financial Services Commission (FSC) has been taking a key interest in the issue. The authority even took the reins of the kingpin of the fraud, Stock and Securities Limited (SSL), the Kingston-based investment firm.

     

     

    But standing in February 2025, the former Olympian has yet to get his money back. In the shared clip, he shed light on that part, saying, “This happens to me; I’m gonna have two years and we can’t see back a dime.” Yes, arguably the greatest track and field athlete is a human after all. He also feels the pain in the same way as others. But the pertinent question is, is there any chance to come to a solution?

     

    The government body still remains hopeful

    Usain Bolt is not financially broken. The fund he lost was part of his retirement plan. Losing it worked as a ‘damper’ for him. But it doesn’t mean that he would settle himself in a corner, digesting the fraud that landed almost 200 individuals in far worse conditions. At first, he had faith in the authorities. Right now, it might be compromised. That’s why he wants to share his takes on everything publicly. However, what is FSC’s submission on the matter?

     

    In September last year, Keron Burrell, executive director of FSC, shared a few things on the matter. In his interaction with Caribbean Life, Burrell displayed nothing but hope. He in fact, said, “The FSC remains resolute in its mission to facilitate the fair treatment of SSL investors. This vigilant oversight is crucial to ensuring that SSL meets its obligations to clients in a timely and transparent manner, in alignment with the legal and regulatory framework established by the Securities Act.

    The commission assures all stakeholders that it is dedicated to maintaining transparency and accountability throughout this process and will provide further updates as necessary.” Guessing how Usain accepted those words is not difficult. Now, the eyes will be on the coming days in his further comments.

     

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  • Dortmund’s season is spiralling out of control after own goals on and off pitch | Andy Brassell

    Dortmund’s season is spiralling out of control after own goals on and off pitch | Andy Brassell

     

     

    Niko Kovac faces a tough task after BVB’s Waldemar Anton and Serhou Guirassy aided their former club Stuttgart

     

    It had to be him. Waldemar Anton can’t have relished changing ends at half-time on Saturday. The performance of Borussia Dortmund’s big summer purchase had already captured the defender’s time so far in Nord-Rhine Westphalia in microcosm, as his blind backpass led to former teammate Deniz Undav going one-on-one with Gregor Kobel. Only a swift intervention from Emre Can prevented Anton’s error from leading to a Stuttgart goal.

     

    When BVB moved from defending the Südtribune in the second period, it became even more uncomfortable for Anton. He was that bit physically closer to the away Stuttgart fans in the north-eastern corner of Signal Iduna Park and their jeers and boos became more audible.

    They had been furious when the Uzbek-born centre-back had left, not so long after Anton had extended his contract and spoken of his pride at becoming Stuttgart’s captain. If the move north had come with a hefty bump in pay and status for Anton, it has so far been far from a resounding success and in a game in which Stuttgart created little of substance, his next inadvertent intervention felt almost inevitable.

     

    Eric García (right) is joined by Jules Koundé as he celebrates after scoring Barcelona’s fourth goal.

    European football: Barça close in on leaders after thrashing Sevilla Read more

    Five minutes into the second half Chris Führich crossed from the right and Anton slid to block, but the ball skewed from his challenge and inside Kobel’s near post, giving Stuttgart the lead. In that corner the travelling fans, on their way to enjoying their fifth straight win over Dortmund, revelled in their former captain’s discomfort.

     

    There was worse to come for Anton, and for Dortmund. Ten minutes later the ball dropped in Dortmund’s penalty area at the feet at Serhou Guirassy, who like Anton made a lucrative move from last season’s Bundesliga runners-up to BVB.

    The striker had time to clear but took too long, was dispossessed and eventually Jamie Leweling found a pass for Jeff Chabot of all people – Anton’s replacement – to rattle in his first Stuttgart goal, which turned out to be the winner after Julian Brandt later pulled one back for the hosts. Months after Stuttgart were faced with the prospect of rebuilding without the two totems of their epochal season, Anton’s and Guirassy’s new club is tasked with a far more daunting reconstruction project.

     

    The symbolism of it was important because although this was another damaging result, it wasn’t really about this, but about everything that led Dortmund to this point. This was the first game in charge for Niko Kovac, Nuri Sahin’s replacement, who became the first BVB head coach not to win on his debut since Thomas Doll in March 2007. Kovac, like Doll, might privately wonder what he was reasonably expected to do on such short notice.

    His first steps in charge of his fourth Bundesliga club were broadly positive despite the result, with BVB looking more engaged, intense and compact. “We controlled the game,” Kovac told Sky. “We just had to score. We shouldn’t have left the pitch as losers.” Yet as so often in the recent past, a lack of poise at both ends of the field cost Dortmund.

     

    Niko Kovac watches on as Dortmund fell behind in the race for Champions League qualification.

    Niko Kovac watches on as Dortmund fell behind in the race for Champions League qualification. Photograph: Action Press/Shutterstock

    It is tempting to suggest that no clarity in the boardroom means precious little on the pitch. Kovac should have been the headline here but he was overshadowed not only by the misadventures of Anton and Guirassy but by the midweek exit of Sven Mislintat, the transfer guru whose presence has stoked discord almost from the moment he returned to the club for a second spell.

    The internal relief at Mislintat’s departure was made clear with BVB’s official statement last Thursday, 29 words of text that you would struggle to match for curtness.

     

    Those on-edge vibes will not end with Mislintat’s exit, as the ostentatious billboard advertising for controversial club sponsor Rheinmetall underlined. Six points behind Stuttgart with 13 games to go should not be fatal in itself to hopes of returning to the Champions League. But there is nothing in the ether to suggest BVB are capable of summoning the consistency to hunt their rivals down (and not just Stuttgart – Sunday’s win for RB Leipzig against St Pauli putting them into fourth, a further point ahead).

     

    Quick Guide

    Bundesliga results

    Show

    Bayern Munich 3-0 Werder Bremen

     

    Borussia Dortmund 1-2 Stuttgart

     

    Mainz 0-0 Augsburg

     

    Freiburg 1-0 Heidenheim

     

    Hoffenheim 0-4 Union Berlin

     

    Wolfsburg 0-0 Bayer Leverkusen

     

    Borussia Mönchengladbach 1-1 Eintracht Frankfurt

     

    Holstein Kiel 2-2 Bochum

     

    RB Leipzig 2-0 St Pauli

     

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    Stuttgart are a useful yardstick, though. This is also a huge club with a storied past that lived in administrative chaos for years, and is showing that reorganisation is a clear route to improved performance, whatever the budget.

    They get past the departure of key players because the approach, upstairs and downstairs (with the excellent Sebastian Hoeness on the bench) is consistent. Dortmund’s stars, be it Guirassy with his goals this season or Erling Haaland and Jude Bellingham in the recent past, merely paper over the cracks.

  • Happy Birthday my beautiful fiancé’ – Noah Lyles celebrates Junelle Bromfield on her 27th, pens romantic proud message

    Happy Birthday my beautiful fiancé’ – Noah Lyles celebrates Junelle Bromfield on her 27th, pens romantic proud message

     

    Noah Lyles and his fiancee Junelle Bromfield ©Junelle Bromfield Instagram

    Olympic champion Noah Lyles penned a heartwarming birthday message to his Jamaican fiancé Junelle Bromfield on social media.

    World’s fastest man Noah Lyles celebrated his Jamaican fianceé Junelle Bromfield in the most beautiful way as he penned a lovely message on her 27th birthday.

     

    The lovebirds who got engaged in October 2024, never cease to express their romantic sides when the need arises to public admiration.

     

     

    Track Power Couple Junelle Bromfield and Noah Lyles.

    In a dedicated post shared by Lyles on his Instagram page, the Olympic 100m champion showed slides of his and their best pictures together in the past year with the caption:

     

    Why Junelle Bromfield and Noah Lyles have a healthy relationship

    Why Junelle Bromfield and Noah Lyles have a healthy relationship

    “Happy Birthday my Beautiful Fiancé! 26 was definitely your year! You bought a house, a car, became a 2x Olympian, walked in a fashion show, started plans for your own business, and grew as a person. I’m so excited to see what this next year has for you!

     

     

    Bromfield never one to shy away from expressing her affection, left a sweet comment under the post.

     

    “Thank you my love ❤️ n we got engaged don’t forget that part 😂 I love you.”

     

    Noah Lyles and Junelle Bromfield

    Noah Lyles and Junelle Bromfield got engaged in October 2024. Noah Lyles and Junelle Bromfield

    Lyles has maintained an undefeated form to the start of the 2025 season with his last victory at the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix last weekend, while Bromfield is yet to run her first race of the year. Although there are rumours the Jamaican 400m queen is retiring from athletics soon.

  • Former Tulane Green Wave Football Standout Claims Super Bowl Ring

    Former Tulane Green Wave Football Standout Claims Super Bowl Ring

     

    One former Tulane Green Wave football star walked away from the big game in his hometown with a Super Bowl ring.

     

    Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Parry Nickerson (38) warms up before a game against the New England Patriots at Gillette Stadium.

    Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Parry Nickerson (38) warms up before a game against the New England Patriots at Gillette Stadium. / Eric Canha-Imagn Images

    :

    It’s been a huge week for the city of New Orleans, for the Tulane Green Wave and its former defensive standout, Parry Nickerson.

     

    The city hosted Super Bowl LIX and did a fantastic job. Tulane got plenty of great local and national publicity, especially as football coach Jon Sumrall was involved in plenty of the pre-game activities.

     

    As for Nickerson? Well, he won his first Super Bowl.

     

    Nickerson wasn’t in uniform for Sunday’s 40-22 Philadelphia Eagles victory over the Kansas City Chiefs at Caesars Superdome. He was on Philadelphia’s practice squad and was not elevated to the active roster before the game.

     

    But he still gets a ring, his first as a professional, even though he didn’t play in the game.

     

    The cornerback joined the Eagles earlier this season as a practice squad signing in October. Philadelphia signed him as a free agent in June and he was cut during the preseason.

     

    But he’s been fighting to be a part of a moment like this since he started his NFL career in 2018. He’s played for seven different teams, which started after he was a sixth-round pick in 2018 by the New York Jets and he made the team coming out of training camp.

     

    He played in all 16 games that season, starting two games. He finished the season with 21 combined tackles, 18 of which were solo, along with a tackle for loss.

     

    Since that season with the Jets, he’s played in regular-season games with four other NFL teams. He’s played in 30 career games with 33 total tackles (28 solo) with one pass defended.

     

    The week was not only pro football’s biggest game, but it was a homecoming for the 30-year-old New Orleans native. He played his high school football at West Jefferson High School in nearby Harvey. He played his college football at Tulane. Given his New Orleans roots, Nickerson got a lot of attention, especially during the media days earlier in the week.

     

    Nickerson overcame a career-threatening knee injury in his freshman year at Tulane to become a mainstay of the Green Wave defense. After coming back from the injury, he started 46 of his next 48 games, during which he intercepted 16 passes and deflected 31 more passes.

     

    In his senior season in 2017, he was a Jim Thorpe Award semifinalist who finished the season with 55 total tackles, two tackles for loss, six interceptions, and eight pass deflections as he earned all-Conference honors.

  • Nottingham Forest exile leaves manager gushing over ‘outstanding’ debut

    Nottingham Forest exile leaves manager gushing over ‘outstanding’ debut

     

     

     

    Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info

     

    Lewis O’Brien’s transfer deadline day switch to Swansea City ensured the midfielder would further extend his two-year absence from the Nottingham Forest first team.

     

    It also sealed his fourth loan move since his last Reds appearance, a 3-0 League Cup defeat to Manchester United in January 2023, and leaves him marooned on just 13 since he arrived from Huddersfield Town following promotion.

     

    However, he seems to be up and running for his latest club having made his Swans debut in Sunday’s 1-0 victory at Bristol City.

     

    The 26-year-old played the full 90 minutes in his first game since November when he was with MLS outfit Los Angeles FC and impressed head coach Luke Williams who praised his industry and drive.

     

    “His energy is just so evident, he competes for every single ball,” Williams said. “He has regularly outjumped an opponent who has got a few inches on him because he is determined.

     

    “He also showed a lot of quality on the ball, he is very unlucky not to have an assist when he played the pass for Jisung.

     

    “He breaks from midfield, he must have been exhausted at that point, but he makes the effort to challenge and get there, and then the cross is outstanding. It was such a positive performance for his first one.”

     

    O’Brien has also spent time on loan with Middlesbrough and DC United but could have a role to play for the South Wales side who parted company with long-term captain Matt Grimes in the window.

     

    Which of Forest’s loan players could still contribute at the City Ground? Have your say here

     

    Join our Nottingham Forest WhatsApp group and get the latest breaking news, interviews and opinion sent straight to your phone, plus matchday team news and live updates of all the action. Just click here and select ‘Join Community’ to get started. The only proviso is that you must have WhatsApp on your phone to participate. No one will be able to see your personal information and you will only receive messages from the NottinghamshireLive Reds writers.

     

    We will not spam your WhatsApp feed with constant messages, but you will receive updates from us daily with the latest Reds stories. If you later decide to opt out, just go to the name at the top of your screen and click ‘Exit Group’. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. If you are curious, you can click here to read our Privacy Notice.

  • Detroit Lions roster: Depth chart, pending free agents entering 2025 NFL offseason

    Detroit Lions roster: Depth chart, pending free agents entering 2025 NFL offseason

     

     

    The Detroit Lions are expected to retain the majority of their starting lineup for the 2025 season.

    The Lions will need to make decisions on pending free agents, including Levi Onwuzurike, Carlton Davis, and Kevin Zeitler.

    The new NFL season commences on March 12th with the opening of free agency.

    The Detroit Lions are slated to return most of their starters for the 2025 season.

     

    The Lions will be able to have continuity at most starting positions because most of their key players are under contract through 2025. The Lions repeated as NFC North champions in 2024 after setting a franchise record with 15 wins in the regular season but lost in the divisional round to the Washington Commanders.

     

    The Lions will have some decisions regarding pending free agents like defensive tackle Levi Onwuzurike, cornerback Carlton Davis and right guard Kevin Zeitler. The Lions have $46.8 million in available effective cap space, according to OverTheCap.com, but are projected to have far less money in 2026 because of contract extensions given out.

     

    Here’s a look at the Lions’ roster as it stands entering the offseason, including players signed to reserve contracts for when the rosters expand for summer workouts and their list of free agents. The new NFL season officially begins March 12, when free agency opens.

     

    Kalif Raymond.

    Tom Kennedy (reserve/future contract; practice squad).

    Ronnie Bell (reserve/future contract; practice squad).

    Offensive lineman

    Taylor Decker.

    Graham Glasgow.

    Frank Ragnow.

    Penei Sewell.

    Christian Mahogany.

    Colby Sorsdal.

    Giovanni Manu.

     

  • What Spain’s media are saying about Martin Zubimendi shows Arsenal fans why they should be excited about £51m transfer

    What Spain’s media are saying about Martin Zubimendi shows Arsenal fans why they should be excited about £51m transfer

     

    Amidst the misery surrounding Arsenal’s January transfer window, Mikel Arteta did make one move that should excite fans.

     

    The Gunners were unable to add a striker to their squad, despite pursuing the likes of Ollie Watkins, Matheus Cunha and Mathys Tel.

     

    Gabriel Martinelli is now out for over a month with a hamstring injury, meaning Arteta’s squad is seriously short of forward options.

     

    However, it does look as though the Emirates hierarchy have taken early steps to rebuild their ageing midfield department, as Arsenal are expected to sign Martin Zubimendi in the summer.

     

    The Spaniard is set to arrive once this season is done in a £51 million deal, replacing the departing Thomas Partey and Jorginho in Arteta’s ensemble.

     

    Martin Zubimendi of Real Sociedad reacts during the LaLiga EA Sports match between Real Sociedad and CA Osasuna at Reale Arena on February 10, 2024…

     

    Spanish media praise Martin Zubimendi’s performance against Real Sociedad

    With Zubimendi likely to end up in N5, Arsenal fans will be keeping a sharp eye on the midfielder’s exploits for Real Sociedad for the remainder of this campaign.

     

    The 26-year-old played the full 90 minutes as La Real saw off Espanyol in San Sebastian on Sunday.

     

    Goals from Sheraldo Becker and Brais Mendez cancelled out Javier Puado’s penalty, with Socieded climbing to seventh in La Liga as a result of the triumph.

    Zubimendi was praised by Spanish media for his display against the Catalan side.

     

    Mundo Deportivo wrote about the deep-lying playmaker: “The San Sebastian native dropped back considerably to play almost as a left centre-back with the ball. He headed in a corner in the first half and distributed the ball in the second.”

     

    Meanwhile, former Sociedad striker and now pundit Gica Craioveanu said on Spanish radio: “I’ve seen a very good Real Sociedad [against Espanyol].

     

    “It’s been a while since I’ve seen Zubimendi so sharp in managing the team and Sucic is showing what his true level is, it’s a shame he doesn’t do it more often.”

     

     

    Gunners fans will be delighted to hear that Zubimendi is performing well in Spain, as they look ahead to what he could bring to Arsenal next season.

     

    The number six completed 83% of his passes, six passes into the final third and made four recoveries in what was a complete performance on Sunday afternoon.

     

    Martin Zubimendi of Spain celebrates with a medal during the UEFA EURO 2024 final match between Spain and England at Olympiastadion on July 14, 202…

     

    How will Martin Zubimendi fit in at Arsenal?

    Thomas Partey is expected to leave Arsenal when his contract expires at the end of the season, while Jorginho is close to agreeing a deal with Flamengo which will see him join the Brazilian club in the summer.

     

    This likely means Zubimendi will directly replace one of these two, and is expected to partner Declan Rice and Martin Odegaard in a midfield trio.

     

    Stylistically, Zubimendi profiles similarly to Partey, boasting impressive defensive output, while his passing and press resistance standout as key attributes.

     

    While he’s unlikely to offer much in the final third, Zubimendi’s sole responsibility will be to progress the ball and prevent transitions in Arteta’s midfield.