England: The World Cup squad dilemmas facing Thomas Tuchel
Some of Tuchel’s biggest dilemmas have been in defence, where there have been injury and fitness issues.
Centre-back John Stones, in normal circumstances, would have been one of the first names on the England manager’s list.
When he accepted the job, Tuchel identified ctain Harry Kane, Declan Rice and Stones as the key members of his leadership group.
The German, during the opening months of his reign, would stay in regular contact with the trio via text message – assuring them of how important they were to his plans.
A fully fit Stones is a nailed-on starter for England this summer. But the 31-year-old has made just four Premier League starts this season.
Central defenders Marc Guehi and Ezri Konsa look certain to make the plane to North America, while Harry Maguire’s international recall in March will increase the Manchester United man’s hopes of a place.
Beyond that; Jarell Quansah’s versatility could count in his favour, while Trevoh Chalobah and Fikayo Tomori were both included in the squad for March’s friendlies against Uruguay and Jan – but face an uphill struggle to make the final 26.
Levi Colwill, who has only recently returned from a long-term cruciate knee ligament injury, was included in Tuchel’s extended 55-man party for the tournament but is unlikely to make the full squad.
At right-back, all eyes – as ever – will be on whether Trent Alexander-Arnold makes the cut. On the face of it, the Real Madrid man should fear the worst.
He wasn’t included in the squad for March’s internationals despite Tuchel selecting more than 30 players in total.
Last year, Tuchel said Quansah – a central defender – was ahead of him in the pecking order, so it doesn’t necessarily look good.
That said, Tuchel has issues at right-back. Reece James, who is expected to start the tournament as first choice in the position, has endured an injury disrupted campaign.
Tino Livramento would also usually be selected. But the Newcastle full-back hasn’t played since mid-ril because of a thigh injury.
The doubt over Livramento’s fitness, coupled with the expected exclusion of Arsenal’s Ben White – who is recovering from a serious knee injury – could yet open the door for Alexander-Arnold.
And with England anticipating the majority of the ball in their Group L matches against Croatia, Ghana and Panama, Alexander-Arnold’s strengths in possession may suit Tuchel’s side during the early stages of the tournament.
Tottenham’s Djed Spence could also be an option, having played four times under Tuchel.
Luke Shaw’s run into form has given Tuchel with a welcome headache as he finalises his squad. Nico O’Reilly’s outstanding form for Manchester City means he will almost certainly be selected, with Newcastle duo Dan Burn and Lewis Hall also hoping to get the nod.
Aston Villas Emi Martínez broke finger before UEL final win
May 20, 2026, 07:51 PM ET
Aston Villa goalkeeper Emiliano Martínez said he broke his finger while warming up for his team’s Europa League final against SC Freiburg in Istanbul on Wednesday.
parently, the injury didn’t affect the Argentina star as he kept a clean sheet and came up with several impressive saves helping Villa to a 3-0 win and a first trophy in 30 years.
“What we achieved tonight was beautiful. I feel proud and the feeling I keep growing match after match,” Martinez told ESPN after the game. “Today I broke my finger during warmups, but I didn’t see it as a bad thing. I’ve never broken a finger before and every time I tried to catch the ball, the finger would just slip away in the other direction.
“But, these are just things you have to go through.”
During warmups, Martinez stepped away to get treatment from the Villa medical staff and had his finger ted before returning to the field for kickoff.
Villa totally outclassed Freiburg and were three goals up inside of an hour through classy strikes from Youri Tielemans, Emiliano Buendía and Morgan Rogers and with Martinez in goal the Bundesliga side had no chance of getting back in the game.
“The truth is that the fans and the club are like family to me,” Martinez added. “Every time I step out to defend the Aston Villa goal, I do so with immense pride. Today, I tried to pour in all my experience, and all those training sessions that no one ever sees and finally bore fruit today.”
Martinez laughed off the injury after the match and it seems unlikely it will have any bearing on his participation with Argentina as they defend their World Cup title starting in June.
“I am overjoyed. Now, it’s time to celebrate with the lads,” Martinez said. “Something that this team hasn’t really had the chance to do in a long time. Then my focus will turn toward the World Cup”
Jaume Guardeno transferred to specialist neurological injury clinic after crash
Spanish cyclist Jaume Guardeno has been transferred to a clinic specialising in serious neurological injuries following a crash with a vehicle in March.
Spanish media reported that the 23-year-old suffered a head injury after losing control of his bicycle when he hit a rock, which led to him colliding with a car.
Guardeno was taken to the intensive car unit (ICU) at the Tauli Hospital in Sabadell following the crash but has now been moved to a clinic in Barcelona which specialises in “neurorehabilitation and treatment of serious neurological injuries”.
“We continue to extend our full support and solidarity to Jaume, as well as to his family and friends, accompanying them in this difficult time,” his cycling team Caja Rural-Seguros RGA said in a statement.
“On behalf of the team and the family, we would like to express our sincere gratitude for the exceptional care received during the transfer in the Servimedic ambulance, as well as for all the care provided at the Parc Tauli Hospital in Sabadell.
“Special thanks to the HEMS helicopter emergency service; the critical and semi-critical care unit of the ICU, led by Doctors Andrey Rodriguez and Guillem Gruartmoner de Vera; and the entire neurosurgery and maxillofacial team.
How the Kansas Jayhawks became college baseballs unlikeliest powerhouse
THE UNLIKELIEST POWERHOUSE in college baseball features a lineup with eight junior college transfers and a ninth from Division II Minnesota Crookston. When Dan Fitzgerald arrived at the University of Kansas three years ago to take over a program defined by its perpetual mediocrity, he did not intend to build around the overlooked and underpreciated. It just came naturally.
From 2012 to 2016, when Fitzgerald was helping turn Dallas Btist into an implausible winner as recruiting coordinator, he called Jon Coyne every Monday between lunch with his wife and picking up his kids at school. Coyne was a Texas juco assistant during that time, and the conversations with Fitzgerald were information tsunamis, with Coyne a font of knowledge on the state of two-year college ball in Texas.
Fitzgerald, earlier than most, saw the coming evolution of baseball with clarity. Pitchers were throwing harder, and hitters needed physicality and maturity to keep pace, and as tantalizing as the idea of bringing in raw freshmen and developing them into productive upperclassmen was to Fitzgerald, winning now sounded better. It’s a philosophy that has rooted itself as much at KU as it did at DBU. There is nothing flashy about the Jayhawks, aside from the shine coming off their Big 12 regular-season championship trophy.
In a universe of seven-figure NIL deals, KU is the merriest band of juco bandits in college baseball. Of the team’s 34 players, 23 have played junior college ball. Survivors of 10-hour bus rides, armed with stories of cricket-filled sinks and the other joys juco ball brings, the Jayhawks enter the Big 12 tournament this week (Thursday at 3:30 p.m. ET, ESPNU) fresh off the school’s first conference title since 1949, intent on hosting an NCAA regional for the first time in program history.
The turnaround coincided with the arrival of Fitzgerald and his subsequent hiring of Coyne as recruiting coordinator to modernize a dusty program. Within months of coming to Lawrence in June 2022, they had booked the No. 1-ranked juco recruiting class in the country, according to Perfect Game. They did it again in 2023. And 2024. And once more last year. And now it is manifesting itself in a way long considered impossible in Lawrence.
“All we do is get up and think about where can we find good players and how we coach them,” Fitzgerald said. “So if there’s anything else in life that is needed of us — like, need me to hang something on the wall — probably not going to hpen. Certainly can’t wire anything electrically. This is literally all we do.”
What they do is different from every Power 4 team in the country — and, based on Fitzgerald’s background, not entirely surprising. Juco ball holds a special place in Fitzgerald’s heart. His first full-time coaching job was as an assistant at North Iowa Area Community College in 2003. He moved to Division II Flagler, where he spent two seasons before joining Des Moines Area Community College in 2007. He was named head coach a year after that and went 249-73 over the next five seasons.
Dallas Btist marked his first foray into Division I, and there he caught the eye of Jay Johnson, who two weeks after taking over as head coach at LSU in June 2021 poached Fitzgerald from DBU as his recruiting coordinator. Fitzgerald’s first group of commitments was headlined by Konnor Griffin, who today is starting shortstop for the Pittsburgh Pirates in what would have been his junior year in college. Between DBU and LSU, Fitzgerald’s persuasiveness earned him a reputation as college baseball’s Mariano Rivera-caliber closer.
Replicating that at Kansas was an entirely different story. Power 4 teams historically have not constructed their rosters around juco players, typically signing one or two a year. With a limited NIL budget and facilities that don’t stack up to what other top-tier teams offer, Kansas would zag where everyone else zigged. Fitzgerald understood that only special sorts of freshmen warrant significant playing time, so if he wanted to win, he would lean into more mature players that prioritized at-bats and innings and winning over money and perks.
It’s how, last year, it landed first baseman Brady Ballinger. Unrecruited out of a Las Vegas high school, Ballinger enrolled at the College of Southern Nevada, he said, because “it was that or go to a trade school.” Kansas was the only team to seriously court Ballinger, seeing swing tweaks that might unlock his production. Almost immediately Kansas coaches asked the 6-foot-2, 225-pound Ballinger to move his hand position and add a leg kick to improve his timing, then start trying to hit the ball in the air more. In 58 games as the Jayhawks’ first baseman last year, Ballinger hit .353/.490/.670 with 16 home runs, 56 RBIs and 71 runs, and today he serves as Kansas’ cleanup hitter.
“Fitz is really good at bringing guys in and on Day 1 he’s going to tell you exactly what he’s going to expect of you,” Ballinger said. “There’s no surprises. Everything’s pretty upfront: ‘Here’s what’s going to hpen, here’s how everything’s going to go and you’re either on board or we’re going to leave you behind.’ And his coaching style really helps with juco players just trying to acclimate.”
KU becoming a haven for the best juco players makes sense considering the success of two-year colleges in the state. Johnson County Community College has been the best juco team in the country this season, winning 41 games in a row at one point. Dozens of players in the Kansas Jayhawk Community College Conference are set to play Division I ball next year — including Cowley County catcher Holden Groebl at Kansas.
Fitzgerald and Coyne don’t limit their juco recruiting to a small radius, of course. They regularly land players from legacy juco programs such as LSU Eunice, from which they plucked their leadoff hitter and best player this season, shortstop Tyson LeBlanc. The depth of Coyne’s research into the players he recruits runs deep, and he got a leg up on others by avoiding a common mistake: mispronouncing LeBlanc’s last name. (It is pronounced Luh-BLAHn, with the C silent and the N soft.) LeBlanc noticed. He also noticed that KU gathered video and player- data and used it to give a comprehensive assessment of his game, including a player comparison to former San Diego Padres shortstop Khalil Greene, whose power-first game indeed resembles LeBlanc’s.
He committed soon after his in-person visit, leaving behind Eunice, where, he said, “the baseball field is paradise and then the outskirts are crawfish fields, drive-through daiquiri shops and Walmart. We have a Tractor Supply. One Mexican restaurant that’s the hotspot. If you’ve got 10 bucks in your bank account, that’s where you’re spending your 10 bucks.” Lawrence felt like Valhalla comparatively.
And that, as much as anything, is what Fitzgerald and Coyne love about juco players. It’s not just that they’re preciative of the amenities. It’s that they’ve proved they can excel in trying situations. At Eunice, LeBlanc said, the team didn’t have an athletic trainer his freshman year, so players did their own cupping thery and electrical nerve stimulation. There’s a level of self-sufficiency and purpose with them helping to lessen the stigma bigger programs have with juco transfers.
It’s how a team that was picked to finish fifth in the Big 12 and doesn’t necessarily have the statistics of a first-place unit wins a championship. Other programs can go wild in the transfer portal. Kansas will hpily do what it knows best and keep winning.
Success compounds in college baseball, especially when the foundational players find themselves in professional ball. LeBlanc and Ballinger are expected to be drafted this July. Others could be as well. And consistent years of drafted players take the penciling of a narrative — a program on the upswing — and etch it in ink.
It’s starting to dry now, to firmly lock in KU as a force to be reckoned with in college baseball. Like UConn has done with Division III standouts, the Jayhawks’ identity is rooted in their willingness to tread where other programs are too proud or pompous. It’s a formula, and it works, and by now Kansas knows how to navigate the potential pitfalls.
“Everyone on your team is all of a sudden good when you get to a level like the Big 12 where you look up and say, ‘Holy buckets, every at-bat that I have in the fall is against the best guy that I faced last year,'” Fitzgerald said. “When you do that, you really start to get an preciation for how many good baseball players there are.”
There are plenty. The best get drafted out of high school. The tier after that commits in hopes of forging that same path three years down the road. And then there are the 99.9%, the thousands who have excellence within and simply take a more tortuous path to find it — the overlooked and underpreciated. Or, as they’re otherwise known, the exact sorts of players the University of Kansas would love to have.
A quick nod to some of those who do not make the list. Udo Lattek won all three European trophies with different clubs – a European Cup at Bayern Munich, Uefa Cup with Borussia Monchengladbach and Cup Winners’ Cup with Barcelona.
Sven-Goran Eriksson led Gothenburg to a Uefa Cup, won a Cup Winners’ Cup with Lazio and lost European and Uefa Cup finals with Benfica.
Raymond Goethals lifted the Champions League with Marseille in 1993, having lost the final two years earlier, and led Anderlecht to Cup Winners’ Cup success in 1978 a year after finishing runners-up to Hamburg. He also lost a final with Standard Liege.
Then there’s Jurgen Klopp, Champions League winner in 2019 and three-time runner-up. And, of course, heavy-hitting omissions in Brian Clough, who clinched successive European Cups with Nottingham Forest, and Celtic great Jock Stein, the first British manager to win the continent’s top trophy and beaten finalist in 1970.
NBA coaching carousel: Firings, hirings, whats next for each job
The Milwaukee Bucks became the first team to fill its vacancy, hiring Taylor Jenkins as the new head coach. He replaces Doc Rivers, who exited the role after the regular season.
Let’s examine the positions currently available, the pros and cons of each situation and who could step in this offseason.
Open jobs
2025-26 record: 26-56 (missed postseason) Previous coach: Jason Kidd (mutually parted ways May 19) Lead executive: Masai Ujiri (hired May 2026)
Why this job is open: When Ujiri held his introductory news conference, he made it clear there was going to be a top-down look at every single part of the organization. Moving on from Kidd is Ujiri following through on that — and an indication that this organization will be completely reshed in Ujiri’s image going forward. Team owner Patrick Dumont is not going to spare any expense doing so, as few other owners in the league would greenlight this sort of expenditure. Kidd has four years and more than $40 million remaining on his contract, sources told ESPN’s Tim MacMahon.
Positives of the job: This begins and ends with Cooper Flagg. Yes, there is other talent on the roster and a couple of first-round picks to work with this summer. But Flagg has a chance to be a true difference-making talent. He has the positional size and skill set on the wing that make him one of the most malleable stars in the NBA — presenting the Mavericks with flexibility in building out a contending roster around him. Flagg is an ideal building block who makes this an intriguing job all by himself.
Negatives of the job: For starters, there are the teams located a few hours’ drive north (the Oklahoma City Thunder) and southwest (the San Antonio Spurs) that will likely pose a persistent threat for the next decade. Dallas also has burned through its first-round picks for the next several years, and both Kyrie Irving‘s age (34) and Dereck Lively II‘s injuries make it tough to rely on either of them being long-term building blocks alongside Flagg.
Orlando Magic
2025-26 record: 45-37 (lost in first round) Previous coach: Jamahl Mosley (fired May 4) Lead executive: Jeff Weltman (hired May 2017)
Why this job is open: When Orlando acquired guard Desmond Bane last summer, the expectation was a major step forward and a top-four seed in the East. Instead, a season full of dispointments followed. Magic once again landed in the play-in tournament as the 8-seed, then suffered a first-round collse after leading the top-seeded Detroit Pistons 3-1.
Positives of the job: Talent. And for that reason, the Magic will be as attractive as any job opening this summer. Between Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner, Jalen Suggs, Anthony Black, Bane and the rest of Orlando’s roster, a new coach would believe that, with some tweaks to the offense and improved consistency, this team could attempt to fulfill this year’s promise next season.
Negatives of the job: This roster is expensive, with the Magic headed for the second ron as currently constructed. That’s not a path play-in teams tend to take, and this franchise hasn’t expressed much willingness to enter that spending territory — which could mean more changes are coming.
Portland Trail Blazers
2025-26 record: 42-40 (lost in first round) Previous coach: Chauncey Billups (on leave), Tiago Splitter (coached this season on an interim basis) Lead executive: Joe Cronin (hired December 2021)
Why this job is open: The Trail Blazers job has been in flux ever since Billups was arrested as part of an FBI investigation into an illegal betting scheme back in October. While Splitter did a commendable job on an interim basis throughout the season, after losing to the San Antonio Spurs in the first round Portland is conducting a full search for a long-term replacement.
Positives of the job: There’s a pretty solid collection of talent in Portland, led by one of the season’s breakout players: forward Deni Avdija. Portland has a ton of long, rangy athletes around him — plus massive center Donovan Clingan protecting the rim — which allows the Trail Blazers the ability to create a compelling defensive mix.
Negatives of the job: There are real questions about what the ownership of Tom Dundon, who officially bought the team in ril, is going to look like. He has been open about cutting costs and Portland made several moves to shave money off expenditures in the time since he assumed control of the franchise. On top of that, Portland is not anywhere near the talent level of the top teams in the West, and the Blazers’ books are pretty full money-wise for the next couple of seasons — which is how long Avdija is on a below-market contract before he will become a free agent.
Why this job is open: After the season ended, ownership made it abundantly clear that if Donovan wanted, he would remain in the job. However, after a series of family situations he dealt with during the season and facing the prospect of a lengthy rebuild in Chicago, Donovan chose to step down from the job he has had since 2020, allowing the Bulls to move forward with a clean slate after firing Karnisovas two weeks earlier.
Positives of the job: A lot about Chicago’s situation should peal to potential coaches: a huge market, a giant fan base and ownership that has proven to be patient. There should be total alignment with the front office, given the new head of basketball operations is going to be hired before a head coach. And in a deep 2026 draft, Chicago will pick twice in the top 15.
Negatives of the job: There is a definitive lack of talent on the roster. Josh Giddey is a below-average starting point guard, while Matas Buzelis is an intriguing long-term player who might eventually be an above-average starter. Outside of that, this group will take significant time to develop into a true factor in the East. With lottery reform coming, that task could become even more difficult.
Positives of the job: There is talent here. Zion Williamson is coming off perhs his best, and certainly most available, season. Trey Murphy III and Herb Jones are quality two-way wings.
Negatives of the job: There are questions about the lack of overall funding into the franchise by ownership, with discussions ongoing over much-needed investment in the team’s arena. The decision to trade a 2026 lottery pick, plus a first-round pick last season, for Derik Queen looked worse as he fell out of the starting lineup down the stretch. There’s still a ton of money tied up for next season in Jordan Poole and for the next two seasons in Dejounte Murray, both of whom are questionable fits. Getting this team back into a playoff spot in the West won’t be easy.
What does the new coach bring? Discipline, accountability and a track record of getting teams to defend — all things that will help establish a new culture in New Orleans.
Mosley methodically built Orlando into a team that has made the playoffs in each of the past three seasons, helping to shepherd the young talent and consistently proving to be able to motivate players. The Pelicans have never made the postseason three consecutive times and haven’t made it in back-to-back seasons in almost 20 years. If Mosley can just repeat what he did in Orlando, the Pelicans will be thrilled with the hire.
Milwaukee Bucks
2025-26 record: 32-50 (missed postseason) New coach: Taylor Jenkins (finalizing deal) Previous coach: Doc Rivers (exited ril 12) Lead executive: Jon Horst (hired June 2017)
Positives of the job: In the event Giannis Antetokounmpo is still on the Bucks’ roster next season, it won’t hurt having one of the best players on the planet to build around. And if he’s not on the roster, that means he has been moved in a trade that could completely reshe both Milwaukee’s roster and asset sheet, giving Jenkins some intriguing options. Some lottery luck next month would certainly help.
Negatives of the job: The Bucks’ roadm is full of challenges. With the $20 million from waiving and stretching Damian Lillard‘s contract on the books for the next four seasons, plus a lack of draft cital because of the trade to acquire him, adding impact players to the roster will be difficult. If Antetokounmpo isn’t traded, it’s unlikely the Bucks fare any better next season amid the continuing saga.
What does the new coach bring? Jenkins won 250 games in five-plus seasons with the Memphis Grizzlies, getting fired with a handful of games remaining last season as the team went from rising power in the West to hitting a franchise reset in the wake of Ja Morant‘s on-and-off court issues. Jenkins has a proven track record of developing players, which will be critical as Milwaukee either rebuilds after an Antetokounmpo trade or re-tools with him still on the roster. Jenkins has familiarity with both Antetokounmpo and Horst after his one season with the Bucks on Mike Budenholzer‘s staff in 2018-19.