Connect with us

Sports

Southampton Spygate: Is spying as common in Germany as Tonda Eckert says?

Southampton Spygate: Is spying as common in Germany as Tonda Eckert says?


When describing his past experiences of spying in Germany and Italy, where he worked as assistant manager to Patrick Vieira at Genoa, Eckert said: “I don’t want to say this to excuse anything we have done, I just want to give you context of the football world I grew up in.”

Indeed, the Southampton scandal is not the first spying case in which teams Eckert has worked for have been accused, though the level of his involvement in those previous incidents is unclear.

In 2015 the German newsper Kicker reported that Cologne – where Eckert was working as a youth coach – had sent an analyst to spy on Hamburg during a warm-weather training camp in Dubai.

And at the 2014 World Cup, suspicion fell on Germany when France manager Didier Deschamps said he had to stop a private training session because a drone was flying overhead. Eckert worked as an analyst for the team.

“We don’t want any intrusion into our privacy but it’s hard to fight this these days,” Deschamps said.

The reason it is hard to ascertain to what extent spying has been a part of Eckert’s development is he has conducted no media interviews since the scandal broke.

He fell foul of the EFL’s rule outlawing watching opponents train within 72 hours of a match. Had the staff member gone days earlier, as Eckert had originally asked, they would have esced sanction on a technicality.

“The whole thing was stupid and ill-conceived,” says Steve Grant, co-host of the Total Saints podcast.

“But it is a very British thing to clutch our pearls at the concept of fair play [regarding spying] while being hpy for our centre-forward to dive in the penalty area.”

Eckert’s claim that he was unaware of the EFL’s rules has also come in for criticism, given he previously spent a year and a half working as assistant manager at Barnsley in League One.

“There is definitely a cultural difference between Germany and England,” Hatchard adds.

“But for somebody who is so detail-oriented in his coaching, I am staggered that Eckert didn’t take the time to think, ‘right, I know this hpens more often in Germany, but can I really do it here?’

“Once you’re the main guy it’s pretty unforgivable to not think about the gravity of what he was doing, how it would be perceived, and what the consequences may be.”

Continue Reading

Sports

What is Infantinos legacy as FIFA president: reformer, or ringleader?

What is Infantinos legacy as FIFA president: reformer, or ringleader?


GIANNI INFANTINO CELEBRATED HIS ELECTION as FIFA president in February 2016 by buying beers for journalists in the bar of a hotel in Cardiff, Wales. After the previous regime of Sepp Blatter had been brought down by bribery and corruption, Infantino was soccer’s new man of the people: proachable, engaging and ready to restore the game’s reputation.

Ten years on, the Swiss-Italian lawyer is the most powerful man in the game.

He earns $6 million a year, and has world leaders — including U.S. President Donald Trump, Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia and President Vladimir Putin of Russia — on speed dial. He flies on a jet provided by the state of Qatar, and when he returned to Cardiff earlier this year for the annual International Football Association Board (IFAB) summit at the luxury Vale of Glamorgan resort, a decade on from that celebratory night at the bar, Infantino stayed next door at the 17th-century Hensol Castle.

Either by accident or design, Infantino’s lodgings only served to emphasize the reality of the 56-year-old now being an emperor of all he surveys.


USMNT at the 2026 World Cup: Fixtures, squad, injuries, more
Who are the best U21 players at this summer’s World Cup?
– Borden: What you missed in soccer since 2022 World Cup


SINCE 2016, he has twice been re-elected unopposed as FIFA president, in 2019 and 2023, and having served notice of intention to stand again in 2027, it is expected that he will retain his post without challenge. FIFA statutes rule that a president cannot serve more than three four-year terms — theoretically 12 years. But having replaced Blatter outside the usual election cycle in 2016, Infantino has been allowed to discount his initial three-year period and therefore start his 12-year period in 2019.

Sources told ESPN that Infantino will not attempt to stand for a fourth term — and therefore amend FIFA’s constitution — in 2031, primarily due to the draining effects of crisscrossing the globe in a role that is, according to a source close to Infantino, “exhausting.”

Despite generating controversy for pearing to cozy up to powerful world leaders, including his unilateral decision in December 2025 to create the FIFA Peace Prize for Trump, there is minimal open criticism of Infantino within the game. When ESPN proached a leading national football association to ask whether it would speak about Infantino defending FIFA’s hugely expensive World Cup ticketing scheme for the 2026 tournament, the response was swift and clear: “Ha, we won’t be doing that!”

Lise Klaveness, the president of the Norwegian Football Federation (NFF), has been a rare voice in the sport to publicly condemn the Infantino regime, albeit indirectly, by saying the Peace Prize award to Trump was a “breach of FIFA’s own statutes of political neutrality, and there was a lack of legal process within FIFA.”

Sergio Marchi, the president of global players’ union FIFPRO, released a statement during last year’s FIFA Club World Cup titled “The Man Who Thinks He’s God” in which he accused Infantino of making the tournament “reminiscent of the ‘bread and circuses’ of Nero’s Rome.”

Marchi also said, “Infantino lives in his own world — the only thing that matters to him are these grand spectacles.”

But aside from Klaveness, soccer’s leading officials have chosen not to question or upset a man who drove the decisions to honor Trump at December’s World Cup draw in Washington, D.C., green-light the controversial ticket pricing for this summer’s tournament and confirm Saudi Arabia as host of the 2034 tournament.

Infantino announced the bidding process for 2034 on Oct. 4, 2023, and restricted submissions to those from the Asian and Oceania confederations, citing continental rotation. Australia had considered a bid but opted against challenging the Saudi submission, with Football Australia CEO James Johnson saying the rid submission process announced by Infantino “did catch us a little bit by surprise.” Saudi Arabia was announced as the sole bidder on Oct 31, 2023, with FIFA confirming it as the 2034 host in an extraordinary general congress on Dec. 11, 2024.

The limited criticism of Infantino within the game — a kind of soccer omerta — has been noted by Blatter, Infantino’s disgraced predecessor.

“We have 211 national associations and there is not one single association who is opposed to the work of the president [Infantino] who speaks only with heads of states,” Blatter told the Telegrh in December 2025.

Infantino celebrated 10 years as FIFA president in February: his anniversary was marked by a slick FIFA PR campaign including a specially designed “Infantino 10” logo, a 30-minute FIFA TV documentary, and congratulatory messages from officials, former players and coaches.

“Ten years as President. Ten years of progress,” the FIFA documentary declared. “From taking over in the darkest days of the organization’s history, to preparing for the biggest sporting event the world has ever seen. This is the story of Gianni Infantino’s decade at the helm of FIFA.”

play

2:26

Ogden explains the good and bad of Infantino’s FIFA presidency

But with controversy overshadowing this summer’s World Cup and Infantino’s role in many of the issues that have emerged, what is the real story of his 10 years as FIFA president?

Has he delivered on his election pledges, or is he a soccer version of P.T. Barnum: a salesman and a showman who has turned the World Cup, the biggest sporting event on the planet, into a circus reserved for the elite?


FIFA WAS MIRED IN SCANDAL when Infantino assumed the role of president in 2016.

A year earlier, an FBI investigation uncovered more than $150 million of bribes and kickbacks involving executives at the highest level of the organization, prompting Swiss police to raid Zurich’s opulent Baur au Lac Hotel in May 2015 and arrest seven senior FIFA executives following a request by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ).

Allegations relating to corrupt broadcasting and marketing deals, racketeering, money laundering and cash-for-votes during the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, which were awarded to Russia and Qatar respectively, all formed a 47-count DOJ indictment. Twelve FIFA officials ultimately pled guilty to a variety of charges, and the scandal led to the downfall of Blatter and his anticipated successor, UEFA president Michel Platini, who were both issued with an eight-year suspension from all soccer-related activity by FIFA in December 2015.

Blatter and Platini were found guilty of breaches surrounding a £1.3 million payment made to Platini in 2011. The FIFA ethics committee found both men to have demonstrated an “abusive execution” of their positions.

It is against this backdrop that Infantino was elected as president in February 2016, defeating Bahrain’s Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa by 115 votes to 88 with a campaign platform pledging to expand the number of countries participating in a World Cup, increase development funds and, crucially, in the wake of the Blatter era, to restore FIFA’s reputation.

Prior to his election, Infantino had been a low-profile administrator at UEFA, having joined the organization in August 2000, taking on the role of director of legal affairs and club licensing four years later. After being promoted to deputy general secretary in 2007, he became general secretary in 2009 — a role that saw him picking the balls from the pots for UEFA Champions League draws — and was Platini’s de facto deputy before his boss’s demise in the FIFA scandal led to Infantino being regarded as Europe’s best candidate to succeed Blatter.

“At the time we were pretty hostile to Blatter and we assumed, like many others, that Platini would get the FIFA job,” Greg Dyke, chairman of the English Football Association between 2013 and 2016, told ESPN. “And of course he would’ve done until it all fell art in terms of the money between him and Blatter.

“So then it was wide-open, and Infantino, who we knew from his period as general secretary of UEFA, looked a good bet. We liked him as an individual, we thought he’d done a good job at UEFA, and therefore we supported him.

“My initial impression of him when he was doing the job was quite positive, but I’m not close enough to it to give you a rundown now. But I did think that the Peace Prize to the President of the United States was ridiculous and a big mistake.”

Sources told ESPN that Infantino’s decision to hand that award to Trump was “based on the situation at the time,” and that soccer executives and politicians “in many places” have directly told Infantino of their admiration for Trump’s intervention in helping resolve conflicts in countries such as Rwanda and Congo.

But while the Peace Prize and Infantino’s relish for courting the favor of powerful leaders have led to ridicule and condemnation — human rights campaigners FairSquare accused Infantino of an “egregious abuse of power” in an eight-page complaint about the Peace Prize, filed to FIFA last December — there are those within FIFA who regard their president as being an agent for significant change. Plenty of associations see him as someone who has delivered on his election promises.

According to FIFA, the distribution fund to its 211 member associations has grown eightfold during Infantino’s 10-year reign as president, with $5.1 billion invested into global football development. In 2016, FIFA reported an annual revenue of $502 million. Its last reported figures, in 2025, highlighted a growth to $2.66 billion, and it is projected to earn $9 billion in 2026 alone due to the men’s World Cup, which is the first edition with an expanded 48-team field.

Sources told ESPN that Infantino’s determination to eradicate the corruption and mispropriation of funds has led to some associations being visited by financial experts to deliver accounting lessons, warning that “every dollar must now be accounted for.”

“Gianni operates at the same intensity as a CEO of a major multinational,” a FIFA official who works directly with Infantino said. “He has an incredible attention to detail. Staff should never go underprepared to any meeting, as he will spot gs immediately.

“He is of the ‘get s— done’ mindset and takes his role very seriously. It is significant that the U.S. Attorney General and FBI director traveled personally to meet him in FIFA’s Miami offices. That speaks volumes about how the organization has changed under him in the past decade.”


SO WHO REALLY IS Gianni Vincenzo Infantino?

He is a man shed by his upbringing, raised in Switzerland as the son of Italian immigrants. He was a red-haired child and got teased about his pearance by locals; Infantino said his determination to drive soccer as a force for peace and togetherness was partly influenced by his own experience of prejudice, seeing signs in Switzerland that said, “No dogs, no Italians.”

Infantino studied law at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland, married a Lebanese woman and raised a family of four children. He speaks seven languages, including Arabic, and holds Swiss, Italian and Lebanese citizenship. He also has a jet-set lifestyle, operating out of FIFA’s offices in New York, Miami and Zurich, and often visiting different continents in the space of 24 hours. It is a way of living he has admitted is draining, also saying he has no idea which time zone his body clock adheres to.

An Inter Milan supporter, Infantino is a career bureaucrat who was in the right place at the right time to citalize when Blatter’s FIFA empire collsed and took Platini, Infantino’s boss at UEFA, down with it.

“He was a good No 2, but is not a good No 1,” Platini told the Guardian in January. “He worked very well at UEFA, but he has one problem: He likes the rich and powerful people, the ones with money. It’s his character. He was like that as a No 2, but back then he was not the boss.”

Platini’s remarks about attraction to wealth and power are regularly borne out by Infantino’s actions. His Instagram account — Infantino posts almost daily to his 4.1 million followers and has a personal photogrher — is littered with photogrhs of himself alongside world leaders, celebrities or famous former soccer players. Many of those luminaries receive birthday wishes from the FIFA president, especially if there is a photogrh of them playing alongside Infantino in one of the FIFA Legends games that take place at FIFA’s Zurich HQ, or at a stadium that is hosting a major tournament.

There are also plenty of pictures of Infantino at the White House, alongside Trump, with the World Cup trophy, the FIFA Peace Prize or the FIFA Club World Cup trophy prominent in the backdrop. For his part, Infantino is unologetic about the car showroom nature of FIFA’s biggest trophies being on display in the Oval Office.

“Gianni sees himself as a salesman for FIFA,” a source close to Infantino said. “When he was trying to generate interest in the Club World Cup [staged in the U.S. in 2025] and sell tickets, he believed that there was no better way to promote the competition than by having the trophy on the president’s desk.”

Infantino plied the same logic to FIFA renting office space at Trump Tower in New York in July 2025, despite the risk of accusations of cronyism.

“It made headlines, because it’s New York and it’s Trump Tower,” a source close to Infantino said. “Headlines create publicity, and if you’re trying to sell something, then you want headlines.”

FIFA told ESPN that the Trump Tower office is rented at a fair market rate, with the same plying to the artment in Doha, Qatar, that Infantino has used since prior to the 2022 Men’s World Cup in the country.

ESPN also contacted FIFA for clarity on the funding of the private jet donated by Qatar and who pays for fuel, maintenance and landing fees. “As we have consistently stated, FIFA has put in place rules which establish the framework for flights and travel by any FIFA official,” a statement read. “The FIFA President routinely travels around the world, together with relevant officials, on business and tournament-related matters and strives to visit member associations of FIFA whenever he can. Sometimes travel is organized on commercial (including low-cost) airlines and sometimes it is on private charter, depending on which is more efficient and cost-effective under the circumstances. FIFA expenses are published in our Annual Report and all travel is in line with FIFA’s regulations.”


Referee explains how How World Cup’s ‘least-known’ player gained 1m followers
World Cup squads: All 48 teams in full


INFANTINO’S CLOSENESS TO Trump and leaders in the Middle East led to him missing the start of FIFA Congress in Asuncion, Paraguay, in May 2025 due to his attendance at a world leaders summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. When he finally took to the stage in Asuncion, three hours late, a group of European association leaders — including UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin — walked out of the conference hall in protest at Infantino’s failure to arrive on time.

Infantino might enjoy creating headlines and generating publicity for whatever tournament he is promoting at the time, but he can also be clumsy and insensitive; he was criticized for taking selfies with former players at the funeral of Pelé in 2023. Often, the FIFA chief displays an inability to read a room. Or, perhs, he just ignores it altogether.

During ril’s FIFA Congress in Vancouver, British Columbia, Infantino’s attempt to force a public handshake between Israel FA vice president Basim Sheikh Suliman and Palestinian FA president Jibril Rajoub ended in embarrassment when Rajoub walked offstage in disgust, with Palestinian FA vice president Susan Shalabi describing Infantino’s stunt as “absurd.” When he wore a red Trump hat during a meeting of the U.S. president’s “Board of Peace” in February, Infantino was investigated — and eventually cleared — by the politically neutral International Olympic Committee, of which he is a member, for breaching neutrality regulations.

“Gianni just likes to please people,” a source close to Infantino told ESPN. “That’s why he wore the Trump hat. When he was in Mexico, he wore a sombrero for the same reason. There was nothing more to it.”

play

1:20

Nicol: Pulisic’s form key for USMNT’s World Cup momentum

In 2023, New Zealand police rejected FIFA’s request for Infantino to be given a motorcade while attending games in the country during the women’s World Cup, and the Canadian city of Vancouver was similarly dismissive of requests for a “level-four escort” — allowing his convoy to override red lights and deploy road blockages — during Infantino’s visit for FIFA Congress in ril.

Level-four protection is just one level down from the security afforded to the Pope and a level higher than that reserved for Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney. Despite his attempts to charm city officials into submission, Infantino’s requests were denied.

Infantino has accused the media of being “mean” by criticizing his actions — both his faux pas and his celebrity-chasing persona — but there have also been occasions, off camera and behind the scenes, when he has displayed compassion and a human touch. When American sports journalist Grant Wahl, a longtime critic of FIFA’s governance, died suddenly while attending a game at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, Infantino visited the hospital treating Wahl, spent time with his colleagues and helped facilitate his repatriation to the United States.

“[Infantino] is loyal to his workforce and asks after staff and their families,” a FIFA source said. “He has a loyal group around him.”


INFANTINO’S LEGACY WILL BE THE 2026 World Cup. Having promised to expand the tournament to 48 teams and transform FIFA’s finances, he might regard this summer as his crowning glory — an emperor surveying his empire, indifferent to the criticism raining down on his parade.

Infantino claimed last December that FIFA had received 5 million ticket requests from more than 200 countries for games at the tournament that will be hosted by three nations — the U.S., Mexico and Canada — for the first time. But the buildup to the summer event has seen excitement drowned out by a barrage of negative publicity.

The frustration has several strands; there’s the exorbitant cost of match tickets and predatory “dynamic pricing” in the resale market, vastly inflated travel fees in major cities, unprecedented restrictions on parking at venues. Furthermore, several participating countries are navigating uncertainty and anxiety over the ability of their fans to travel to the U.S. due to the Trump administration’s visa bans on 39 nations, including World Cup qualifiers Haiti, Iran, Ivory Coast and Senegal in January.

Infantino boasted in May that “25% of the group stage tickets can be bought for less than $300,” adding that “You cannot go to watch a U.S. college game — not even speaking about a top professional game of a certain level — for less than $300. And this is the World Cup.

“We have to look at the market. We are in the market in which entertainment is the most developed in the world. So we have to ply market rates.”

The cheest tickets initially offered for the USMNT’s opening game against Paraguay in Los Angeles on June 12 were priced at $1,200 within FIFA’s dynamic ticket pricing scheme — an algorithm that adjusts prices based on event demand — prompting Trump to question the cost of attending the game.

“I did not know that number,” ⁠Trump told the New York Post. “I would certainly like to be there, but I wouldn’t pay it, to be honest with you.”

Sources told ESPN that FIFA’s use of the dynamic pricing system reflects the culture of ticket buying for sports and entertainment in the U.S., but it is pricing regular fans from across the globe out of the market.

“I blame Oasis and Taylor Swift for giving FIFA the idea of dynamic pricing,” Hamish Husband, spokesman for the Tartan Army, the Scotland fans group, told ESPN. “We’re not naïve, we know how the game is going now in terms of ticket prices, but we have worked out it will cost between £5,000-£10,000 [$6,750-$13,514] for Scotland supporters to travel to and attend games in the group stage.

“You have possibly two generations of young Scots who have no memory of our last World Cup in 1998, so there is an incredible clamor for tickets, despite the cost. We believe we have a right to go to a game and we will overcome any obstacles, but we are hoping that the dynamic pricing will see tickets become much cheer in the days leading up to the games.”

But it is not just match tickets that are threatening to drain supporters’ bank accounts. Parking spaces at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, are being sold for $175 each, while round-trip train tickets from Boston to the stadium are on sale for $80 — four times higher than the $20 fee for other events at the stadium, including New England Patriots games.

“Some of our supporters have hired school buses in Boston to get us to games,” Husband said. “That’s an example of how we will do everything possible to overcome the obstacles in our way.”

In New York/New Jersey, a train from Manhattan to MetLife Stadium — which will host the World Cup final — usually costs $12.90 for a return ticket. Local authorities ramped the cost up to $150 for World Cup games earlier this year, but have since reduced that to $98 following widespread complaints, still a huge markup on regular prices.

Last week, Infantino used his Instagram account to announce a scheme of buses for fans in New York to travel to MetLife for $20, but tickets must be booked in advance subject to availability. The transport costs are beyond FIFA’s remit and are the responsibility of the host city, but nonetheless, the organization has been criticized for failing to contribute funds to cities to help cover costs of security and additional transport.

“Our administration inherited an agreement where FIFA is providing $0 for transportation to the World Cup. Zero,” New Jersey governor Mikie Sherrill said in ril. “That leaves New Jersey Transit with a $48 million bill to safely get 40,000 fans to and from every game.

“At the same time, FIFA is making $11 billion off of this World Cup, and charging fans up to $10,000 for a single ticket for the final. I won’t stick New Jersey commuters for that tab for years to come — that’s not fair.”

In response, FIFA said, “FIFA is not aware of any other major event previously held at NYNJ Stadium, including other major sports, global concert tours, etc., where organizers were required to pay for fan transportation.”

A report by Fortune in May highlighted that 80% of hotels surveyed reported that bookings in World Cup cities were below expectations, with the tournament described as a “nonevent” in some cities.

For Infantino, the World Cup simply can’t be a nonevent. If the tournament begins with empty seats in stadiums and athy among supporters, it will be a failure attributed solely to him.

Infantino is somebody who talks about investing in the game, of wanting to build pitches for children in Gaza and redistributing soccer’s wealth to grow the “beautiful game” in every corner of the globe. But the man who bought beers in a Cardiff bar 10 years ago now rubs shoulders with presidents and princes, works out of an office in one of New York’s most prestigious addresses, and clocks up air miles in a Qatari jet while soccer supporters scre together their savings and rent school buses to watch games at the World Cup.

If he winds down the window in his chauffeur-driven limousine while being sped to games, he might just see those fans whose “beautiful game” he controls.

Continue Reading

Sports

Heather Knight: Never any doubt around her place in Englands World Cup side, says Charlotte Edwards

Heather Knight: Never any doubt around her place in Englands World Cup side, says Charlotte Edwards


Charlotte Edwards says there was never any doubt around Heather Knight’s place in England’s World Cup side as the former ctain returned to form in a series-clinching win in the third T20 against India.

Knight, 35, made a magnificent unbeaten 70 as England emphatically chased 181 to win the series 2-1, after she had endured a lean start to the summer.

In the five preceding T20s against New Zealand and India, Knight’s strike-rate had been the main cause for concern as she made scores of 19 (17), 25 (23), 18 (22), 21 (24) and 18 (14).

But under pressure in the series decider, Knight, who became England women’s most-cped cricketer last month, was at her fluent best with 10 fours in a 42-ball knock.

“It’s been quite interesting listening to some of the press this week,” head coach Edwards told BBC Sport.

“I think the more that people have been writing her off, the more I just knew she was going to put in a performance like this.

“I spoke to her after her record game [at Chelmsford] about her character and how that is one of her biggest attributes, and we saw that in abundance tonight.

“It was really lovely for her to have that performance going into the World Cup, but there were no doubts in our dressing room about Heather.”

Knight added 137 for the fourth wicket in a flawless stand with Alice Csey, who made 81 off 43. The pair toyed with India’s wilting bowlers throughout, with Knight reverse-sweeping and scoring cannily behind square while Csey struck beautifully straight down the ground.

It is easy to forget Csey is still only 21 years old, having burst on to the English cricket scene as a teenager, and it was a knock that has surely cemented her place in Edwards’ starting XI for the World Cup opener against Sri Lanka on 12 June.

Edwards said it was the best she had seen Csey play, and praised her work ethic over the winter.

“To play the way she did from that position [38-3], I couldn’t be prouder,” Edwards added.

“We spoke to her at the start of the winter about the areas we wanted her to work on and she has worked so, so hard. Now she’s bearing the fruits of that and there’s nothing more satisfying than to win a game of cricket for England in that manner.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Sources: Liverpool reach agreement to name Andoni Iraola new coach

Sources: Liverpool reach agreement to name Andoni Iraola new coach


Liverpool have reached an agreement to point Andoni Iraola as their new head coach, sources confirmed to ESPN.

Iraola is expected to be officially confirmed as Liverpool boss by the end of the week following positive discussions with sporting director Richard Hughes, who also pointed Iraola at AFC Bournemouth in 2023.


Premier League giants hit managerial reset button, but who will citalize?
Slot: Bond with Liverpool fans ‘beyond’ football

The Anfield hierarchy is targeting a more aggressive, front-footed brand of soccer following the departure of Arne Slot, who was dismissed on Saturday.

Iraola quickly became the leading candidate to replace the Dutchman on the basis of his impressive work at Bournemouth, which he led to a sixth-place finish last term.

Sources told ESPN that Iraola is set to sign a two-year deal, which aligns with his preference across his coaching career for signing short deals.

There has been speculation that Liverpool will turn to an ex-player to form part of the coaching staff next season, however sources told ESPN no such proaches have yet been made.

Iraola has already received backing from Liverpool great Steven Gerrard, who told TNT Sports: “I think he’s done a fabulous job at Bournemouth. I think his style would suit Liverpool.

“But let’s not beat around the bush. Liverpool Football Club is an attractive job for a lot of elite managers around the world.

“So I don’t think he’ll be the only name on the table. But because of the link to Bournemouth and the guys that have come from Bournemouth to Liverpool in terms of board level, they will know him very well.

“But then there’s other names out there as well that I’m sure will want that Liverpool job. It’s a huge job in world football.

“But potentially to answer your question, I think he should be in the conversation, yes.”

Slot was dismissed from his role after two seasons in charge at Anfield. The former Feyenoord boss led the Reds to the Premier League title in his first season at the club in 2024-25 but was unable to replicate that success this term, with the club finishing the campaign in fifth place.

Continue Reading

Sports

UK Athletics fined £350,000 over death of Paralympic shot putter at training facility

UK Athletics fined £350,000 over death of Paralympic shot putter at training facility


A judge at the Old Bailey has fined UK Athletics £350,000 with £44,000 in costs after hearing how a paralympic athlete died when equipment fell on him at a training ground in east London.

Shot-putter Abdullah Hayayei was killed when a metal cage collsed as he prepared for the World Para-athletics Championships in 2017.

He had previously represented the United Arab Emirates at the Rio Paralympics when he competed in the javelin and shot put.

Judge Richard Marks KC described Mr Hayayei’s death as “tragic, untimely and wholly avoidable.”

He also handed UKA’s former head of sport, 79-year-old Keith Davies, a 175-hour community service order after hearing how he was in charge of the equipment, which had been assembled with vital base plates missing.

The court heard how a strong gust of wind had collsed the cage and Mr Hayayei had died of head injuries after being hit by a heavy metal bar.

The athlete was a 36-year-old wheelchair user who lived with cerebral palsy.

The court heard from his widow Badriah, who said his death had left her coping alone with five young children.

UK Athletics had pleaded guilty to a charge of corporate manslaughter at an earlier hearing in February. Mr Davies pleaded guilty to a breach of health and safety law at the same hearing.

The investigation and legal process following Mr Hayayei’s death has taken nearly a decade to complete.

Police said their investigation had involved years of meticulous work by detectives which uncovered photos from around a dozen athletics events where the same cage had been used by the UK Athletics officials. They showed the restraints were not being used to secure the equipment.

Sentencing, Judge Marks said Mr Hayayei’s death was an accident which sooner or later was “waiting to hpen”.

Earlier in the hearing, Prosecutor John Price KC told the court that in the years following the incident, UKA attempted to blame the athlete’s death on Mr Davies, and even “tried to point the finger” at the Newham venue.

He described a statement later submitted by UKA as “a deeply unworthy document by a national sporting body and one of which it should be ashamed”.

Fining UKA, the judge agreed that it had been “most unattractive” but it was “a stance” that was adopted by their previous team of managers.

It had been disavowed by the current leaders of the organisation who had expressed “sincere regret”.

UKA, he said, is essentially “a club of passionate members” and was aimed at developing elite athletes and sport at a grassroots level.

He noted that the organisation had a turnover of £13.8m in 2025 with a projected loss of £400,000. He granted UKA six years to pay the fine in instalments.

In a statement, UK Athletics said it was “deeply sorry” and that “substantial changes” have been made around safety and governance.

“While nothing can undo what hpened, there has been a determined focus on learning from these events and ensuring stronger standards and safeguards are in place throughout athletics,” UK Athletics said.

“We respectfully accept the court’s decision today and remain committed to continuing that work with the seriousness and responsibility this case demands.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Transfer rumors, news: Barcelona to turn to Kane if Álvarez deal falls through

Transfer rumors, news: Barcelona to turn to Kane if Álvarez deal falls through


Barcelona could move for Bayern Munich striker Harry Kane if a deal for Atlético Madrid‘s Julián Álvarez falls through, while Arsenal, Chelsea, Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur are among the clubs keeping an eye on Manchester United forward Marcus Rashford. 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

Bayern Munich striker Harry Kane is emerging as a viable alternative for Barcelona if a move for Atlético Madrid’s Julián Álvarez falls through, as reported by Sport. A €65 million release clause in the England international’s contract has run out, but Bayern would be open to starting negotiations at €80 million. The 32-year-old would reportedly be interested in a move to Camp Nou and there have been inquiries with his representatives after Robert Lewandowski left as a free agent this summer.

Arsenal, Chelsea, Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur are among the clubs keeping an eye on developments regarding Manchester United forward Marcus Rashford, as reported by The Mirror. The 28-year-old’s future is uncertain due to a breakdown in communication between the Red Devils and Barcelona, who have an option to sign him for €30 million after his loan, but now want to re-negotiate after signing Newcastle United winger Anthony Gordon for an initial €70 million. However, Man United won’t accept any change to the deal and are considering turning their backs on the Blaugrana.

– Manchester United and Arsenal have asked for information on AC Milan winger Rafael Leão, as reported by Nicolo Schira. The 26-year-old is ready to leave the Rossoneri during the summer transfer window, despite his contract running until 2028 and a release clause of €175 million, and he would like to play in the Premier League. Even so, no offers have been made to sign the Portugal international yet.

– Barcelona and Atlético Madrid have both reached out about a possible move for Chelsea left back Marc Cucurella, as reported by The Athletic. Real Madrid are also looking for a left back and like the 27-year-old, but it is unclear if they will make a move or have the finances to. Any Barca transfer would depend on another defender leaving Camp Nou, while Cucurella is high on Atlético’s wishlist. The Spain international is willing to leave Stamford Bridge after a frustrating season where Chelsea finished 10th, but the Blues are relaxed because he has three years left on his contract.

– Real Madrid want to sign a right back this summer with Internazionale‘s Denzel Dumfries, Tottenham’s Pedro Porro and Sporting CP‘s Iván Fresneda among those being looked at, reports Fabrizio Romano. Elsewhere, Sport has suggested that Dumfries, who has a €25 million release clause that activates in July, was also mentioned informally during a meeting between Barcelona and his agent Ali Barat, although the 30-year-old isn’t a priority for the Blaugrana and a move would only be possible if Jules Koundé leaves. That is the case for any defensive signings due to Eric García‘s versatility.

play

1:58

Laurens: Konaté has to be on PSG’s list after Liverpool departure

OTHER RUMORS

– Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta wants to sign West Ham United midfielder Mateus Fernandes but the deal would cost £80 million. (Times)

– Atletico Madrid have enquired about Galatasaray striker Victor Osimhen, who is also a priority for Manchester United. (AS)

– Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain have both made enquiries about Arsenal winger Gabriel Martinelli. (TEAMtalk)

– Arsenal, Chelsea, Aston Villa and Como are all among the clubs interested in Ferran Torres amid doubts about the forward’s Barcelona future. (TEAMtalk)

– Paris Saint-Germain and RB Leipzig have held several meetings about signing Yan Diomande and the €100 million-rated winger has given his proval to join. (Footmercato)

– Massimiliano Allegri wants to take AC Milan midfielder Adrien Rabiot with him when he joins Noli, but the futures of Kevin De Bruyne and Andre-Frank Zambo Anguissa need to be sorted first. (Gazzetta dello Sport)

– Manchester City and Bayern Munich have both enquired about Chelsea right back Malo Gusto, having been alerted to the possibility that he could leave Stamford Bridge in the summer. (TEAMtalk)

– Manchester United winger Jadon Sancho is set for talks about a free transfer back to Borussia Dortmund following his loan at Aston Villa. (Football Insider)

Kang-in Lee and Goncalo Ramos both plan to leave Paris Saint-Germain to get more game time, with Atletico Madrid having asked about both months ago. (Fabrizio Romano)

– Chelsea have rejected proaches for defender Josh Acheampong from two Premier League clubs and others across Europe. (Fabrizio Romano)

– Newcastle United want Atalanta right back Marco Palestra but face competition from Manchester City, Arsenal and Internazionale. (Daily Mail)

– Bayern Munich have started talks with PSV Eindhoven winger Ismael Saibari after missing out on Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon to Barcelona. (Fabrizio Romano)

Jan Oblak‘s time at Atletico Madrid could come to an end, with the Saudi Pro League a possible option for the goalkeeper. (Marca)

– Getafe have asked for information on Spain striker Alvaro Morata, who could leave Como during the summer transfer window. (Nicolo Schira)

Continue Reading

Latest News

Video53 minutes ago

One killed and dozens injured in Iranian drone strikes on Kuwait airport. #BBCNews

Video1 hour ago

CBS' Bari Weiss addresses Scott Pelley's firing from '60 Minutes'

CBS News fired veteran “60 Minutes” correspondent Scott Pelley on Tuesday, one day after he sharply criticized the …

Video1 hour ago

Has the Iran war helped Netanyahu politically in Israel?

CNN's Tal Shalev reports on the impact of the US-Israel war with Iran on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's polling ahead...

Video1 hour ago

UK PM condemns disorder over Henry Nowak murder | BBC News

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has condemned protesters' attacks on police in Southampton over the handling of Henry Nowak's …

Video1 hour ago

Two arrests as 11 police officers hurt during Henry Nowak protests. #BBCNews

Video1 hour ago

What people get wrong about Ebola

CNN's Clarissa Ward breaks down what people get wrong about Ebola.

Video1 hour ago

Overnight strikes test the US-Iran ceasefire

In one of the biggest nights of strikes since the fragile US-Iran ceasefire began in April, Iran struck Kuwait's airport...

Video2 hours ago

How ‘Backrooms’ went from viral meme to box office hit

Horror movie "Backrooms" brings liminal spaces into the mainstream. But how did a viral meme become a box office hit?...

Video2 hours ago

Physician and TV presenter Dr Oz said Trump does medicals because “he likes the results”. #BBCNews

Video2 hours ago

Ceasefire deal in the balance as CNN team arrives in Iran

It's unclear whether negotiations between the US and Iran are active or not, as a CNN team makes its way...

Trending News

Join Our Newsletter

Stay updated with breaking news and exclusive content.