Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Will Magee and David Tindall

Mejbri banned for spitting at Leeds fans, Merino may keep place as Arsenal striker – as it happened

Burnley’s Hannibal Mejbri
Burnley’s Hannibal Mejbri has been handed a four-match ban. Photograph: Scott Heppell/Reuters

With the World Cup draw looming into view, it’s time for me to wrap up here. Here’s one last plug of our live coverage of Infantinofest (or should that be Trumpfest?) in Washington DC. Comes with a warning for anyone with a sycophancy allergy. That includes me, which is why I’m off for a cup of tea.

Our latest guide to the weekend’s Guardian sport action has landed. Check out our full slate of live coverage here:

Howe will give Tonali 'every chance to be fit' for Burnley

Good news for Newcastle, it seems: according to Eddie Howe, Sandro Tonali is in contention to play against Burnley tomorrow after being withdrawn at half-time in the 2-2 draw with Tottenham. “He’s had a scan and we don’t think it’s too bad,” said Howe. “We’ll give him every chance to declare himself fit. It was a knock very similar to the one Joelinton suffered, a dead leg type feeling.

“Sandro felt it was concerning enough to get scanned but we’ll see how he is today and we’ll give him every chance to be fit.”

Howe also suggested that Yoane Wissa could be in line to make his long-awaited Newcastle debut, having picked up a knee injury on international duty with DR Congo in September soon after sealing a £55m move to St James’ Park. “We did an 11 v 11 game, sort of for him, on Wednesday, which was good and more minutes for him. [It was] round about half an hour, he did well. So far he’s come through everything.

“We still have training today and we’ll make a decision as to whether he’s ready to not just be fit, but fit to make a difference, and fit to perform to his high standards.”

Updated

Looking for a couple of features to read before the World Cup draw / festival of nonsense gets under way? Look no further.

Marc Skinner, the Manchester United Women manager, says they will look to bring in a replacement in the January transfer window to cover for Celin Bizet, who has announced she is pregnant.

Skinner, whose side are third in the WSL and will now be without the Norway winger for the rest of the campaign, expressed his joy at the news, saying: “Congratulations to [her husband] Aron and Celin. To bring a little life into the world is the greatest of adventures.

“We will miss her – hopefully we will be able to do some work in the transfer window to help support the squad in that area.”

So excited for this weekend’s Premier League action that you can’t wait for the actual lineups? Here are our predicted lineups instead, to keep you going.

After his manager’s cautiously optimistic take earlier, Dominik Szoboszlai has also been talking up Liverpool’s ability to shore up their shaky form. “That is what we are trying to do, to get back to winning ways. That is what we are working on every day, trust me,” he said.

“When you wake up in the morning, your head is like: ‘Let’s find a solution to win on the weekend or during the week.’

“We want to be as smooth as possible but sometimes it doesn’t work, sometimes [opponents] find a solution to play against us and find out how they can hurt us: play long balls, win second balls, getting dirty, crosses, set-pieces, long throw-ins, whatever.

“That is what we have to find solutions and answers for. Everything has to change a little bit and then it’s going to be all right.

“It doesn’t work out as well as we would like. That’s football. That’s why we love football. Sometimes it is hard, but hard times make you stronger.”

Updated

In more Scottish football news, Danny Röhl, the Rangers manager, has suggested it’s “not impossible” for his side to catch Hearts and Celtic, who play each other on Sunday.

Hearts, the league leaders, and Celtic, second on goal difference with a game in hand, have 32 points apiece, nine more than fourth-place Rangers. Motherwell, in third, and Rangers both have 23 points, though Röhl’s side also have a game in hand.

“If we win tomorrow [at Kilmarnock], we will be just six points behind [the top two] … the two teams ahead of us have to play against each other and not both can win,” said Röhl.

“And then we have all the games in our hand. It is a long way but it’s not impossible.”

Updated

Ruesha Littlejohn, the Crystal Palace Women midfielder, has been handed a five-match ban for violent conduct.

It follows an incident in November’s League Cup meeting with Leicester City, when the Republic of Ireland international was sent off after throwing Wales’s Hannah Cain to the ground by grabbing her neck.

She was initially given the standard three-match ban but the Football Association argued this was insufficient, which Littlejohn denied, and an independent regulatory commission has decided an extended five-game ban is appropriate.

Updated

Thanks, and hello again. I’ll be seeing it out from here. Any thoughts on today’s goings-on? Feel free to drop me an email.

Updated

Time to hand the baton over to Will Magee once more. I’m off to work out World Cup draw permutations. I think England will get Norway.

Updated

The UK government has frozen the financial assets of a key member of Morecambe FC’s ownership group after he was accused of supporting a terrorist organisation in India. Morecambe say they have ceased relations with Gurpreet Singh Rehal, previously described as the head of communications and director of marketing for the club’s owner, Panjab Warriors.

The Treasury said in a statement on Thursday that it had assessed that Rehal was “promoting and encouraging, carrying out recruitment activities for, [and] providing financial services to” the Sikh separatist militant group Babbar Khalsa, which is proscribed in the UK.

Wilfried Nancy, the new Celtic manager, has promised his players he will give them every chance to impress before finalising his January transfer plans. The Frenchman has six matches before the window opens and has arrived in Glasgow with an open mind.

Brendan Rodgers’s second reign ended amid tensions with the board over transfer strategy and execution but Nancy’s immediate focus will be on the players who are already here.

“First of all, I’m going to have to assess the team and to know them a little bit better,” said Nancy, who kicks off with a game against the Scottish Premiership leaders, Hearts, on Sunday.

“I know them as a player because I’ve watched them in games. Now this is about knowing them as a person, and after that we’ll see what is the best for the team. I like to take my time. I know that I don’t have a lot of time but the idea is to be coherent, programming the profile that we need.

“Obviously they anticipate different stuff already, it’s totally normal. We have to be ahead, if we are not ahead we’re going to be in trouble. So it doesn’t change. But I stop everything, because let me see what we have and, after that, we will adjust.”

Recriminations over slow summer recruitment and Champions League qualification failure remain ongoing between fans and the board, and Nancy is well aware of the demands.

“This club is a club with passion and we play also for the fans, so it’s totally normal that if we don’t play well that they can say something,” the 48-year-old said. “But the idea is also to please them and to give them emotion.

“I am a coach. The idea is to bring joy, with the way we’re going to play and the results that we’re going to have. This is the only thing that I can control. After that, I cannot do anything. I’m aware about this but the idea is to connect.”

Nancy stressed the “passion” he experienced in his early interactions with fans, and added: “I’m really pleased with that because my job is not a normal job, with a lot of humility.

“The life we have, it’s unbelievable. But at the same time, we know that there is a lot of pressure. But pressure is part of our life. I was really pleased to see people welcome me, everywhere. I hope that they’re going to stay like that!

“Before I came here, I knew that the demand was high, and I knew that everybody talked about winning. But I don’t know a competitor who likes to lose. I know that if I don’t do a good job, maybe after five games, or 10 games, it’s going to be like that. Carlo Ancelotti is one of the most titled coaches and he’s been fired, so I don’t have an issue with that because this is part of our job.

“My job is to be clear, to maximise our chance to win, and to find a way to be consistent, and obviously the outcome is to win trophies. But the outcome, I cannot control that. I control what we do every day on the pitch.”

Nancy talked about implementing a “proactive” style of play but also being “disgusting to play against” when his team defends. But he added: “They already did a good job before I came, so the idea is just to add a few nuances.”

PA Media

Updated

Mejbri handed four-match ban and fine

Burnley’s Hannibal Mejbri has been handed a four-match ban and £15,000 fine for misconduct in October’s game against Leeds.

An FA statement said: “An independent Regulatory Commission has sanctioned Burnley’s Hannibal Mejbri for misconduct during their Premier League match against Leeds on 18 October.

“It was alleged that the player acted in breach of the Laws of the Game and/or in an improper manner and/or used abusive and/or indecent behaviour by spitting at or in the direction of Leeds United supporters around the 67th minute.

“Hannibal Mejbri subsequently admitted the charge, and the Regulatory Commission imposed a four-match suspension and £15,000 fine following a hearing.

“The Regulatory Commission’s written reasons for its decisions will be published in due course.”

World Cup draw news. I’ve pinched this from our sister blog but it’s worth mentioning to those fully committed to this one for the time being. So… the draw itself will start at 5.55pm UK time/12.55pm ET. It will be groups ONLY. Cities and kick-off times will be announced on Saturday at 5pm UK time/Midday ET.

Your Friday edition of Football Daily has hit the shelves. Includes the sad coda of the Premier League’s greatest fairytale plus a very competitive heat in our prizeless letter o’ the day. Read here!

Here’s a fun fact ahead of this weekend’s Premier League games. If you ignore the first five matches – stay with me here – then between Matchweek 6 and Matchweek 14, Villa have taken more points than Arsenal.

Yes, Villa have 24 points from those nine games, with Arsenal on 23 and Manchester City on 21. Liverpool would be 17th on this cherry-picked form table with just seven points!

Thanks Will. Just a couple of hours until the start of the World Cup draw. “Start” doing a lot of heavy lifting there.

Updated

Right, I’m going to hand back to David Tindall for a little while. If you don’t already have two tabs on the go, don’t forget to check out our live coverage of the World Cup draw.

While Martínez may not be fit to face his former club, Emery still seems to be in a bullish mood. “We are very happy how we are progressing, how we are competing, how we are on points,” he said. “We now really have a huge opportunity for tomorrow. Arsenal are the best team until now and of course the favourites to win this trophy in the Premier League because they are competing fantastically and playing fantastic.

“Tomorrow is really a huge test, collectively and individually, [and] for me as a coach as well. I am delighted to have this opportunity to play tomorrow against Arsenal, with the level they have and with the level we have achieved over the last month.”

Unai Emery is up next and, having missed Aston Villa’s 4-3 win against Brighton in midweek, Emiliano Martínez is a doubt for the visit of Arsenal tomorrow. “We train this afternoon and he didn’t train yesterday,” said Emery. “It’s very important for him how these past few hours [went], if he is feeling better. Until the last moment I don’t know if he is going to be available or not for tomorrow.”

Iraola has also addressed criticism directed at Marcus Tavernier, who made a frustrated gesture towards the home fans at the Vitality Stadium during the defeat to Everton. “We’ve discussed it with him,” said the Bournemouth manager. “I think the first thing is that he knows, and he admits, and he’s aware that he made a mistake. You can never complain against the supporters, but I have the advantage that I know Tav.

“I think there is a part where this shows that he’s passionate, he cares, he’s frustrated. He’s always available to push, and I have seen that about his character, that he’s the first one who wants to win and is competitive. But it’s true that he made a mistake, and he knows it, and I’m sure it’s not going to happen again.”

More injury news: Andoni Iraola has suggested it will be “difficult” for Veljko Milosavljevic to feature against Chelsea. The teenage Serbia centre-back played the full game as Bournemouth lost 1-0 to Everton on Tuesday, but he seems to be having trouble with his knee.

Here’s an interesting piece from earlier in the day, in case you missed it. Billy Munday has been talking to Scott Davies, the player-manager of Slough Town, about his recovery from a gambling addiction, the vulnerabilities of young players and how he has rebuilt his career in the game as a coach.

Moyes has reserved high praise for Sean Dyche, his Nottingham Forest counterpart, who returns to Everton this weekend for the first time since being dismissed by the Merseyside club in January. “There will be lots of people able to tell you more about Everton over the last four or five years than myself, but, from afar, it looked as if he steered the ship – which was in big trouble, which was sinking – and he has done a great job making sure they were still in the Premier League,” said Moyes.

“I hope we never have to go back to where Sean had the team, had the situation round the club, but I thought he done a brilliant job in keeping them going. At that time there was always a lot of negativity from the media, the supporters were feeling it, everybody’s feeling it, so as a manager you are carrying that through and I thought he did a really brilliant job.”

West Ham face imminent full-back shortage

Nuno has offered a medical update on West Ham’s injured players. “Crysencio [Summerville] hopefully returns soon,” he said. “We miss him.”

Of the left-back Oliver Scarles, he added: “He has a medical appointment on 8 December. We hope he is going to be cleared for full contact. He is training individually and does part of the session with the group but without contact.

“I hope he can join the team. We are going to need him because we lose our full-backs to Afcon.”

Aaron Wan-Bissaka will join up with DR Congo and El Hadji Malick Diouf with Senegal for the tournament in Morocco, which starts on 21 December.

Updated

David Moyes has some injury updates to share before Everton’s meeting with Nottingham Forest at Hill Dickinson Stadium tomorrow. Asked about Michael Keane’s fitness, he said: “We’re not sure yet if he is going to be right. He played against Newcastle with an injury and he just couldn’t quite make it. So I’m not sure yet if he’s going to make it or not.”

As for Séamus Coleman, who limped off with a hamstring injury in the battling win against Manchester United last week, there is no return date at present. “Séamus has pulled his hamstring so is going to be out for a little while. I don’t know exactly the timescale.”

Nuno has also spoken about the intense pressure on his side, who are 18th and two points from safety as things stand. “We cannot avoid it,” he said. “It is a reality. We have to face it. We are fighting for survival. We cannot hide it. The results of other teams we cannot control. It is up to us.”

Some quotes are coming through from Nuno Espírito Santo on Lucas Paquetá. The West Ham head coach has confirmed the Brazilian will return to face Brighton on Sunday after serving his suspension for the red card he received against Liverpool, adding: “It is in the past. I am positive it will not happen again because he personally admitted his mistake.

“We spoke about it in the dressing room. I am positive it is over and it will not be repeated.”

Updated

Guardiola says chaotic win at Fulham 'part of the process'

Pep Guardiola has reflected on Tuesday’s hectic 5-4 win at Fulham, a game which featured a second-half defensive horrorshow from Manchester City, who conceded three goals and came close to throwing away their victory.

“It is forgotten. In modern football, all clubs have to learn good things and bad things and think to the next one.

“Of course I’m concerned. I try to understand what happened to concede the goals and to be not as good as we were in the first half.

“I have high consideration for Marco [Silva] and Fulham since they were promoted. They came here when they were in the Championship in the Cup and played really well, and that year they were promoted.

“I know scoring five goals there is not easy but at the same time of course we see what happened to lose the good result and momentum. It’s part of the growth and the process, we have to accept it and tomorrow is another one.”

Updated

Jamie Jackson has the latest from Ruben Amorim, who, on being questioned about his trust in Manchester United’s academy, has pointed to his inclusion of Kobbie Mainoo (one start this season) in his match squads.

If you’d like to follow Fifa’s carnival of the grotesque more closely, John Brewin and Barry Glendenning are helming our dedicated live coverage of the World Cup draw in Washington DC. Will we get a moment to match Gianni Infantino’s spectacularly cringe “today I feel a migrant worker” speech? All bets are off.

Guardiola wants England to make 'last step' and win World Cup

As the conversation meanders to the imminent World Cup draw, Guardiola is asked to name his favourites to win the tournament. “The same ones. Everybody knows,” he says. “We will be in agreement about the candidates if we name the same four or five candidates. Everybody knows it.

“I would like England to be there. I don’t want to pretend to be too nice, but I have been here for many years and been part of the country. I would love Thomas [Tuchel] and the people to make the last step and do it.”

Guardiola has given a little more insight into when he expects Rodri to return, saying: “I do not know how long but he is at the stage where, in a few weeks, he will be ready.”

Manchester City travel to Spain next week to face Real Madrid in a heavyweight Champions League meeting. Asked whether Rodri will make the game at the Bernabéu, Guardiola says: “Ask me in Madrid.”

Rodri not available to face Sunderland

Guardiola has also confirmed that Rodri, who has been sidelined with a hamstring injury, will play no part against Sunderland tomorrow. He is, however, “getting better”, according to his manager.

Updated

Pep Guardiola has taken his seat in Manchester City’s no doubt very shiny press conference room, praising – in that subtext-heavy way only he can – this weekend’s opponents, Sunderland. “From my humble opinion, they deserve to be where they are,” he said. “Momentum can happen after a few games, but after 14 fixtures in the Premier League with these opponents? To be in that position, they deserve it.

“They have four or five or six things they constantly do well, otherwise they would not be where they are. In this league, it is impossible. It is a good challenge for us.”

Well, well, well. If it isn’t my old friend, the Friday football blog. Let’s start with some more chatter from Arne Slot on Alexander Isak. Andy Hunter has the lowdown:

A nice image as I hand you over to Will Magee for a few hours.

Back to the World Cup and some VAR news. Chair of Fifa’s referees, Pierluigi Collina, has said he would be in favour of the use of the video assistant referee system to determine whether corners have been correctly awarded at the World Cup next summer. A smart move or the next step on the road to a bloody robot reffing the, erm, 2050 World Cup on, erm, bloody Mars or somewhere?

Collina: “The main criteria is no delay. With corners, there is a physiological delay because when a corner is given, normally you wait until the two centre-backs come up. It normally takes 10-15 seconds to get the attackers ready. In these 10-15 seconds, if the corner kick is wrongly given … everybody has the evidence that the start of play is wrong and to me it’s difficult to understand if they have the possibility to see that [the decision is wrong] … why we have to hide our heads under the sand and hope that nothing happens on the corner kick which is taken?”

After the Jesse Lingard derby ended in a 1-1 draw at Old Trafford last night, an update from the man himself. His adventure in South Korea is over, he revealed on Instagram.

“After positive discussions with FC Seoul, we have mutually agreed that I will be leaving the club at the end of the 2025 season, with my final game on December 10th.

”This wasn’t an easy decision. My time in South Korea has been unbelievable - the football, the atmosphere, and the passion around this club have been top-class. The love, support and the appreciation you have shown towards me for these last 2 years has been truly amazing.

”Playing football here has been an unforgettable experience and one I will always value.

”I want to thank FC Seoul, my teammates, the staff, and everyone associated at the club for trusting me and welcoming me from day one. I’ll always be grateful for the opportunity to play for such a massive club.”

The former England international scored 18 goals in his 66 appearances for the K League club after joining on a free transfer in February 2024.

Arsenal have several players to assess ahead of the trip to Aston Villa. Mikel Arteta is hoping Declan Rice, Leandro Trossard, William Saliba and Cristhian Mosquera will all be available but won’t make any decisions just yet.

Trossard and Saliba have missed the last two matches through injury while Rice (calf) and Mosquera (ankle) were taken off in the win over Brentford.

Arteta said: “Well, let’s see. We have another training session in the afternoon. Every hour is going to be very important to see the availability of the players. After that, we’ll decide which ones.”

Asked about Trossard and Saliba, he said: “It is a matter of days with those two, for sure. After the training session, we’ll know more.”

And Mosquera? “That’s the more complicated one, but again, we have another test today to see where we are.”

Arteta says Merino may keep place as Arsenal striker

Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta says Mikel Merino could maintain his place as Arsenal’s central striker. The Spaniard has filled in due to injuries to Viktor Gyokeres, Kai Havertz and Gabriel Jesus and has shown his eye for goal this season by netting 11 times for club and country. That includes a hat-trick for Spain in the 6-0 win against Turkey and also strikes in the last two Premier League games: the 1-1 draw at Chelsea and the 2-0 home win over Brentford.

Asked if he could stay up front even if the main strikers are fit to return, Arteta said: “I think he has earned at least to be in the thinking behind it for the way he’s performing and the impact that he’s bringing to the team, so that’s a yes.”

Updated

Let’s get our Premier League hats back on with 10 things. Micky van de Ven may be key for Spurs, Yoane Wissa could make his Newcastle debut and Sean Dyche deserves a warm Everton welcome.

A quick diversion Down Under. A tale of dropped catches for England on day two.

Newcastle: New sporting director, Ross Wilson, has placed contract negotiations with the key defenders Tino Livramento and Sven Botman at the top of his ‘to do’ list at St James’ Park.

Wilson arrived from Nottingham Forest in October and was swiftly reassured to learn that, thanks to a previously secret extension, Newcastle’s outstanding Italy midfielder Sandro Tonali has a deal extending to 2029 and, potentially, 2030.

That has left the 41-year-old free to prioritise talks with the representatives of the much coveted Livramento and Botman. With the former’s agreement set to expire in 2027 and the latter’s a year later, Newcastle discussions have assumed a certain urgency.

“My first three or four days in the job was when I found that Sandro’s contract situation as significantly better than the one I was expecting,” said Wilson, who does not want to leave Newcastle in a position where leading players run their contracts down.

“But it’s no secret that we would want to extend Tino’s contract and we would want to extend Sven Botman’s contract too. Those discussions are ongoing. Some discussions are more difficult than others, but the desire would be to keep those players. Will they agree those contracts? At the moment, I think it’s too early to say.”

With Livramento, now an England right back, looming large on Pep Guardiola’s shopping list at Manchester City and Botman’s central defensive skills much admired across Europe, Newcastle know that, if fresh agreements cannot be reached, one or both players could soon need to be sold.

Eddie Howe will be without Botman at home to Burnley on Saturday and the Dutch defender is likely to be sidelined for at least another week as he waits for an injection in his back to exert the desired effect.

More positively, Newcastle’s manager hopes Yoane Wissa could make his long awaited debut against Scott Parker’s side. The former Brentford striker, a £55m summer transfer deadline day signing from Brentford, has been working his way back to fitness after sustaining a knee injury on international duty with DR Congo in early September.

Should he play, Wissa will hope to test the reflexes of Burnley’s former Newcastle goalkeeper, Martin Dubravka.

Meanwhile, in modern England… Enzo Maresca has argued that a lack of experience is not an issue at Chelsea, pointing out that Tosin Adarabioyo’s age did not stop the 28-year-old defender from playing poorly during a 3-1 defeat to Leeds United on Wednesday.

Maresca has the youngest team in the Premier League but he does not feel that mentality played a part in the setback at Elland Road. The head coach, who admitted that he regretted not starting Josh Acheampong against Leeds, made his case by singling out Tosin for criticism after Chelsea’s oldest player came into the XI and produced an error-strewn display in central defence.

“We always talk about experience when we drop points,” Maresca said. “When we beat Barcelona, we drew against Arsenal, no one was mentioning about experienced players. I understand that when we don’t win, we are always looking for the reason why, but I think the reason why we didn’t win against Leeds is not because of the experience, it’s because we were not good enough.

“Who is the oldest one for us in the pitch? Who was? Tosin. Did he play good? So, it’s not about experience. It’s about that 11 players, they were not good enough. I know that we are always looking for experience, but it was a bad game for all of us.”

Chelsea badly missed the suspended Moisés Caicedo against Leeds. The midfielder’s absence was compounded by Maresca, who made five changes from the 1-1 draw with Arsenal, resting Reece James, Pedro Neto and Wesley Fofana. However he defended his rotation policy, pointing out that he has to protect players such as James and Fofana from injury.

“Most of the rotation we do is because the other one cannot play,” the Italian said. “We have players that are, in this moment, not able to play every three days. And the reason why most of the rotation we have done in the past is for this, is for the reason why. When you pick 11 players and you win, everything is fine. When you pick 11 players and you don’t win, there is always a reason why.”

Maresca, who will still be without Caicedo when Chelsea visit Bournemouth on Saturday afternoon, indicated that he was not enjoying having to make so many changes because of the schedule.

“It’s the most difficult thing for me this season,” he said. “We need to make changes. We played two days ago, we came back yesterday afternoon. We have just one session this morning. Most of them cannot take part of the session because they need to recover. So we’re going to try to prepare in the best way tomorrow.”

Updated

And now the 1966 World Cup draw. A simpler time. “On July the 13th at Aston Villa, Birmingham, Spain will play the Argentine,” says Sir Stanley Rous, ticking it off with his pen.

The 1966 World Cup draw.

Sir Stanley, of course, was namechecked in Half Man Half Biscuit’s ‘Albert Hammond Bootleg’.

“Some man who introduced himself as Stanley Rous came in and left this Albert Hammond bootleg in the house”

Updated

And, 12 years on, here’s the second best World Cup draw – Alan Partridge and his signposts. “Shit, did you see that!”

The goalie has got football pie all over his shirt.

This is a great clip – chaos at the 1982 World Cup draw. Features Jimmy Hill, Tony Gubba, boos from the crowd, perplexed looks from Graeme Souness, Alan Hansen and Pat Jennings, a lottery cage that stops spinning and a broken ball. Barry Davies is your commentator.

Wait for Jimmy Hill’s punchline at the end.

Another World Cup draw email. Steven Grundy writes: “As a Scot, I still cannot believe that we are going to the World Cup! I am still waiting for the Danes to score in the 95th minute. The best draw we could get would probably be Canada, Australia, and Curaco. So... I can’t wait for us to get smashed by France, Uruguay and Italy (still to qualify, obviously).”

An email from David Estherby. “Wow that Ciao mascot [09.58] has just sent a pile of memories flooding back. 1990 was my first World Cup (I was 7 so Mexico 86 was missed due to [probably] being more interested in destroying various parts of the house/my parents’ mental health than watching football). the football was crap but I still think it was the best one in spectacle. Best mascot by a mile too. Lovely stuff.”

Let’s segue from Slot to a now former Liverpool player, goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher. The Brentford stopper has been speaking on the Ben Foster podcast, the Fozcast.

“[On how much of the Moneyball side of Brentford he sees] We see a little bit of it, with the goalkeeping coaches, where they are showing us our kicking, target areas, maybe the height of your call. When I’m practising kicking, I can get live feedback from the iPad. We’re using earphones in training – it might be a passing game, you put on big, noise-cancelling headphones. They play music or simulate crowd noise. Then you’ll do a passing drill. It’s to take one of your senses away, so you have to scan a bit more. They’re pushing boundaries in that kind of stuff.”

Caoimhin Kelleher on the Fozcast.

Slot was also asked about Alexander Isak’s lack of involvement in games. The stats show that the striker has averaged just 14 touches of the ball in the last three matches although he did score his first Premier League goal in the win over West Ham.

Slot likes his stats it seems. “No, it’s not ideal for me, but do you know how many he [Isak] had at Newcastle on average? Twenty-two. In this league, strikers don’t touch the ball that much but the few times they do touch it, it’s quite nice if they then finish it off. I have no clue what the stats of [Erling] Haaland are, but I wouldn’t be surprised – I have no clue – if he maybe doesn’t touch it 100 times a game, but he does score a lot. It’s more important for them to touch the ball in the right time than to touch it so many times. We have to make sure, because that’s a complete difference from Haaland and Alex that Haaland touches it much more in moments where it matters and there we have to improve. That’s clear and obvious – we and he as well.”

Updated

Slot: Liverpool aiming for 'top four' return

Arne Slot has been speaking ahead of Liverpool’s trip to Leeds on Saturday evening. The Reds will hope to make it seven points out of nine after following up a 2-0 win at West Ham with a 1-1 home draw against Sunderland. In truth, nine points would have been the expectation from these three games although Slot is putting a positive spin on events.

“Four points out of two games is different from the last two home games we’ve played, in which we lost both and conceded seven goals [3-0 v Nottingham Forest and 4-1 v PSV].

“In the last two games, we were one deflection away from keeping two clean sheets. That’s a step forward if you compare it to seven goals conceded in two games. We did not concede from a set-piece, which is also important, and we got two results.

“There are positives to take, but of course we are still not where we want to be. Let that be obvious and clear. It is definitely our aim to come back to the top four because we’re obviously not happy with the position we are in at the moment.”

Updated

Back to domestic matters and last night’s Premier League clash at Old Trafford. Despite looking absolutely woeful against Liverpool, West Ham managed to nick a point with a late equaliser against Manchester United. Ruben Amorim was pretty miffed it’s fair to say.

Ashes news. Quick plug for our other live blog. It was looking a bit grim for England but then two quick wickets! What a catch by Will Jacks! Rob Smyth has the details.

More World Cup draw content and Will Unwin has been looking at worst-case scenarios, the big misery guts. Then again, it would surely be massive fun for England to be grouped with Erling Haaland’s Norway.

Here’s England boss Thomas Tuchel talking about the prospect of being drawn against Scotland. Yes, such a group could happen.

“If it happens, it happens and we make the most of it. It will be a nice story. I have no wishes on opponents. I think if you wish for something and think you are superior, it’s close to arrogance and you don’t want to be arrogant. We want to respect everyone.”

More Tuchel pre-draw quotes here.

You’ll see the current crop of World Cup mascots at the top of the page. I’ll also list them below in case it changes. Anyways, this is a nice graphic. Personal favourites and the ones that have resonated are Willie (England 1966), Juanito (Mexico 1970), Naranjito (Spain 1982) and Ciao (Italy 1990).

The trio for 2026…

The Village People are playing at the World Cup draw today. Yep, I’ve even seen a full ‘Who are the Village People?’ Explainer piece on another website. We won’t go that far but I couldn’t help but wonder if any of the originals are performing. Turns out, founder Victor Willis – either the policeman or the naval officer – is still part of the line-up despite now being 74. Today’s current Village People are now a six-piece and, according to Wiki, there have been 21 previous members. This reminds me of a time I stayed in an Airbnb in Liverpool and the owner told me she was married to a former member of Kool & The Gang. This was very exciting news until finding out that about 1 in 8 people had also been in the band.

Our David Hytner is in Washington for the World Cup draw. And he has an important message in this analysis piece: amid all the hoopla, Friday’s event must be all about firing the starting gun on football’s biggest show.

As in every World Cup, there’ll be a clamour to coin a ‘Group of Death’. In theory, we could have one for 2026 comprising Argentina, Morocco, Italy and Norway.

But, remember kids, never rule out the least chilling member of the quartet. How about 2014 when Costa Rica won a Group D featuring England, Italy and Uruguay. Lest we forget, Roy Hodgson’s side were killed off after just two games.

It’s 188 days until World Cup 2026 but precisely zero days until the World Cup draw! Let’s start with the basics and this highly entertaining Explainer piece from Tom Lutz.

Before you go in depth, a quick note that the 12 groups for the World Cup will be formed by one team from each pot.

Pot 1: Canada, Mexico, USA, Spain, Argentina, France, England, Brazil, Portugal, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany.

Pot 2: Croatia, Morocco, Colombia, Uruguay, Switzerland, Japan, Senegal, Iran, South Korea, Ecuador, Austria, Australia.

Pot 3: Norway, Panama, Egypt, Algeria, Scotland, Paraguay, Tunisia, Côte d’Ivoire, Uzbekistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Africa.

Pot 4: Jordan, Cape Verde, Ghana, Curaçao, Haiti, New Zealand, four European playoff teams, two intercontinental playoff teams.

Updated

Preamble

It’s World Cup draw day! Beyond the overbloated nonsense and political posturing, this is still must-watch TV/radio/live blog as theoretical games we play on FIFA actually become wallchart reality. The whole shebang starts at around 5pm although it’ll be a while after that before any names are actually drawn.

Beyond that, just two days after the last one was completed, there’s another round of Premier League matches. This is Matchweek 15 and yet the table still looks a bit weird and unsettled. As The Anfield Wrap’s Phil Blundell wrote on X: “Really funny how the Premier League season is basically everyone bar Wolves fans, Arsenal fans and City fans going ‘how are we below them?’

Righty, while keeping one eye on the Ashes, keep the other one on here where we’ll have loads of team news, manager press conferences, World Cup draw buildup and much, much more!

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.