For a team failing on all fronts, Tottenham Hotspur succeeded in one thing. They put the mad into Madrid. In the meltdown in the Metropolitano, Spurs appeared to knock themselves out of the Champions League in 22 strange, shocking minutes. An hour later, Dominic Solanke’s goal provided a glimmer of hope amid the humiliation. There may be a sliver of a chance the craziest part is still to come.
Because, as Tottenham lost six consecutive games for the first time in their history, they could be grateful they leave Spain only beaten 5-2. They seemed to turn up in the wrong boots, with the wrong goalkeeper and the wrong manager.
They gifted Atletico Madrid an assortment of ridiculous goals, the first three each sillier than the last, the fifth with a hole where their defence was supposed to be. A side with a capacity for slip-ups took it literally, losing their balance, the ball, their dignity and, probably, their place in the Champions League. Their latest manager may lose his job.
This was a harrowing night for the hapless Antonin Kinsky, a horrible one for the hopeless Igor Tudor. The biggest selection decision of his brief reign will surely be destined to be remembered as the worst. By the time Atletico went 4-0 up in the 22nd minute, Kinsky had already gone, his unexpected appearance so painful he met with sympathetic applause from the home fans.
Advertisement
Antonin Kinsky had a night to forget in the Spanish capital (PA Wire)
Ludicrously, Tudor said: “We started good.” He was referring to the first two or three minutes, but this was Spurs’ most shambolic start to a game since they went 5-0 down to Newcastle in 21 minutes three years ago. That was Cristian Stellini’s last match in charge. Another interim could face a similar fate. This particular Tudor, like two of the wives of a historical namesake, may be bound for the chop.
The Premier League should dictate his fate but the Europa League winners, the side who finished fourth in the Champions League group stage, began by embarrassing themselves on the continental stage. A side with five clean sheets in their previous six Champions League games were four down a quarter of the way into this.
Sadly for the reserve goalkeeper, his display is destined for infamy; like Loris Karius after the 2018 Champions League final, he may take a long time to recover. Kinsky only touched the ball five times. Two led directly to goals.
Kinsky’s calamitous cameo was over within 17 minutes. Injuries apart, has a goalkeeper has ever been substituted sooner? Yet the essential fault lay with Tudor. He dropped Guglielmo Vicario for his deputy, who had not played since October, and soon had to swap them back.
Advertisement
Antonin Kinsky was comforted by his Tottenham teammates as he was substituted (PA Wire)
Kinsky felt like collateral damage for managerial ineptitude. Opting to remove him may have been necessary, but it was heartless. Opting to pick him was clueless.
“It was, for me, the right decision,” Tudor nevertheless claimed. It was scarcely a comment to add to his credibility.
“Unfortunately it happened in this big game, these mistakes,” continued the Croatian. Removing Kinsky “was necessary to preserve the guy, to preserve the team”. Vicario, who made a fine save from Ademola Lookman, coped admirably in the circumstances.
Advertisement
But Tudor looked brutal, ignoring Kinsky as he walked past him. The compassion came instead from Cristian Romero, Kevin Danso and Pedro Porro, who commiserated with the goalkeeper on his way off the pitch, and substitutes Dominic Solanke, Conor Gallagher and Joao Palhinha, who followed him into the dressing room to console him. There, Tudor reported, he apologised to the team.
Julian Alvarez scored twice as Atletico ran rampant (Getty)
Kinsky’s 13th Tottenham appearance was unlucky for him and them. He fell over while attempting to pass the ball out, skewing it instead to Lookman. He fed Julian Alvarez who found Marcos Llorente to sidefoot in the sixth-minute opener.
Then it was Micky van de Ven’s turn. Fresh from his red card against Crystal Palace, the Dutchman made another awful error. Rather than meeting Pape Matar Sarr’s pass, Van de Ven tumbled to the turf, allowing Antoine Griezmann to stroll through and score.
Advertisement
The third was still more nonsensical. Van de Ven was the next to pass back, ill-advisedly, as Kinsky scuffed his touch straight to Alvarez. Kinsky had his head on the ground in disappointment even before the striker had walked the ball over the line.
After he departed, Vicario conceded after five minutes, albeit following a brilliant save to spare Sarr an own goal, only for Robin Le Normand to force in the rebound. Spurs’ fifth was a second for Alvarez, justifying Diego Simeone’s decision to pick him ahead of Alexander Sorloth.
Atletico raced to a 4-1 lead inside half an hour before Alvarez added a fifth in the second time (AFP via Getty Images)
Seconds after Jan Oblak made a brilliant save from Richarlison’s header, the magnificent Griezmann released Alvarez with a majestic touch. With Porro in distant pursuit, the Argentinian ran from inside his own half to angle a shot beyond Vicario.
Advertisement
Perhaps Spurs’ night was summed up in injury time when Romero and Palhinha headed each other, leading to fears each is concussed. “It looks like everything is against us,” lamented Tudor. “Incredible things.”
His Atleti counterpart had less to bemoan but could still have regrets. “It is true that all the things played in our favour in the first 20 minutes,” said Simeone. Thereafter, his side were insufficiently ruthless. As Spurs showed verve in attack, they were far less watertight at the back than the Simeone sides of old. “We could have dealt [better] with the two goals they scored,” said the Atletico manager.
Porro squeezed in a low shot to reduce the deficit. Romero headed against the outside of the post. And as the blunders became contagious, after Oblak’s poor pass, Solanke fired a shot into the roof of the net. A triumphant comeback next week went from impossible to merely improbable.
Benn had spent his entire career with Matchroom up to that point, dating back to 2016, going through many highs and lows during that decade, including infamous failed drugs tests, and two epic fights with Chris Eubank Jr last year.
Advertisement
He returns to action when he faces Regis Prograis in a 150-catchweight bout on the Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov card on April 11, where he will receive a reported purse of 15 million dollars.
It is because of that figure why heavyweight contender Chisora has no issues with Benn leaving Hearn, telling Playbook Boxing that his countryman has done the right thing.
“We both know the saying, if you want loyal, you buy a what? A dog. I’m not loyal. Nobody’s loyal when somebody comes and say ‘you know what? I’m gonna give you this much money. Come with me.’
“Let’s not try and make it like what this young man did was so bad. He did good business. If he turned it down, you guys will be like ‘oh, you’re a fool. Why you turn it down for? Oh you’re loyal to Eddie.’ Nah, f**k that, man.”
The late, great architect Mike Strantz never hewed to convention. So it’s only fitting that a side project spawned by his most iconoclastic creation skips a few conventions of its own.
At Tobacco Road Golf Course in the North Carolina Sandhills, owner Mark Stewart has announced construction of the Matchbox, a 12-hole par-3 course that will thread through the trees near the 12th and 13th fairways of Strantz’s wondrous funhouse of a layout. Like its big sibling, the new course will sit on family land that once served as a gravel mining site, its spoil piles and sandy ridges providing the unruly raw material for Strantz’s imagination when the main course opened in 1998.
Short courses are everywhere these days, sprouting up at resorts and daily-fee facilities across the country. But Tobacco Road has put a twist on the trend.
The Matchbox will be built with synthetic turf blended into the natural landscape, allowing for more consistent conditions without having to clear the tree canopy for sunlight. It will also feature a mix of real-sand and faux bunkers.
Advertisement
Stewart, who spoke to GOLF by phone Tuesday, said the approach fits with the out-of-the-box thinking Strantz brought to the original course. “I think he’d be thrilled,” Stewart said. “It goes along with his whole maverick approach.”
The Matchbox is being designed by Carlton Marshall Golf Design, whose principals, Justin Carlton and Chris Marshall, specialize in synthetic-turf projects. Another key player is Mark White, a former Strantz apprentice and one of Tobacco Road’s original shapers.
Strantz himself died of cancer at 50 in 2005, but not before blazing a distinctive path. An Ohio native, he cut his teeth under Tom Fazio and then lit out on his own, earning acclaim for his first solo project, Caledonia Golf & Fish Club in South Carolina, as well as for its neighbor, True Blue. Tobacco Road came next. A wild statement piece, the course perplexed some critics but attracted a huge faction of admirers. Over time, the latter camp has only grown, and Tobacco Road has emerged as a Sandhills must-play, a quirky complement to the region’s more classical designs.
Part of the Matchbox routing will play along a pond that even many Tobacco Road regulars might not know exists. Stewart said that he and Strantz had discussed having a par-3 play over it during the original design process, but it didn’t make the final routing.
Advertisement
The holes themselves cut the profile of Tobacco Road’s Mini-Me, stitched onto a five-acre parcel with roughly 40 feet of elevation change. The 3rd will play as a blind 60-yard shot from an elevated tee. The 7th requires a 40-yard carry over a cove. The 9th is meant to channel the spirit of the big course’s in-your-face opening, playing through two large mounds.
Stewart said he’d had his eye on the par-3 parcel for more than 20 years, long contemplating what he might do with it. And the name he had in mind all along was never in doubt. The Matchbox nods to tobacco (matches for lighting), but also alludes to a golf match while winking at the intimate scale of a matchbox car. “I’ve had that name in mind for years,” he told GOLF.
Miami Heat star Bam Adebayo made NBA history on Tuesday night.
Adebayo scored 83 points, all while setting league marks for free throws made and attempted in a game for the Miami Heat in a 150-129 win over the Washington Wizards. It is the second-highest scoring game for a player ever, only to Wilt Chamberlain’s famed 100-point game.
“An absolutely surreal night,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra told reporters after the game.
Adebayo started with a 31-point first quarter. He was up to 43 at halftime, 62 by the end of the third quarter. And then came the fourth, when the milestones kept falling despite facing double-, triple- and what once appeared to be a quadruple-team from a Wizards defense that kept sending him to the foul line.
He finished 20 of 43 from the field, 36 of 43 from the foul line, 7 for 22 from 3-point range.
After the game, he was seen in tears while he hugged his mother, Marilyn Blount, before leaving the floor after the game.
Advertisement
“Welp won’t have the highest career high in the house anymore,” Adebayo’s girlfriend, four-time WNBA MVP A’ja Wilson, wrote on social media, “but at least it gives me something to go after.”
Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat celebrates during the fourth quarter of the game against the Washington Wizards at Kaseya Center on March 10, 2026, in Miami, Florida. (Megan Briggs/Getty Images)
The NBA’s previous best this season was 56, by Nikola Jokic for Denver against Minnesota on Christmas night. The last player to have 62 points through three quarters: one of Adebayo’s basketball heroes, Kobe Bryant, who had exactly that many through three quarters for the Los Angeles Lakers against Dallas on Dec. 20, 2005.
He wound up passing Bryant for single-game scoring as well. Bryant’s career-best was 81 — a game that was the second-best on the NBA scoring list for two decades.
Advertisement
Adebayo scored 31 points in the opening quarter against the Wizards, breaking the Heat record for points in any quarter — and tying the team record for points in a first half before the second quarter even started.
He finished the first half with 43 points, a team record for any half and two points better than his previous career high — for a full game, that is — of 41, set Jan. 23, 2021, against Brooklyn.
Adebayo’s season high entering Tuesday was 32. He matched that with a free throw with 5:53 left in the second quarter, breaking the Heat first-half scoring record.
Advertisement
Adebayo’s 43-point first half was the NBA’s second-best in at least the last 30 seasons — going back to the start of the digital play-by-play era that began in the 1996-97 season.
Jackson Thompson is a sports reporter for Fox News Digital covering critical political and cultural issues in sports, with an investigative lens. Jackson’s reporting has been cited in federal government actions related to the enforcement of Title IX, and in legacy media outlets including The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Associated Press and ESPN.com.
Australia granted asylum to five members of the Iranian women’s soccer team who were visiting the country for a tournament when the Iran war began, a government minister said Tuesday. The announcement followed days of urging by Iranian groups in Australia and by U.S. President Donald Trump for the Australian government to help the women, who had not spoken publicly about a wish to claim asylum. The team drew speculation and news coverage in Australia when players didn’t sing the Iranian anthem before their first match.
Early Tuesday, police officers transported five of the women from their hotel in Gold Coast, Australia, “to a safe location” after they made asylum requests. There, they met with Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke and the processing of their humanitarian visas was finalized.
“I don’t want to begin to imagine how difficult that decision is for each of the individual women, but certainly last night it was joy, it was relief,” said Burke, who posted photos to social media of the women smiling and clapping as he signed documents. “People were very excited about embarking on a life in Australia.”
Advertisement
The women granted asylum were happy for their names and pictures to be published, he said. Burke added that the players wanted to make clear that they were “not political activists.”
Iranian state TV said the country’s football federation asked international soccer bodies to review what it called Trump’s “direct political interference in football,” warning such remarks could disrupt the 2026 World Cup, which begins in North America in June.
Naghmeh Danai said she was invited as a migration agent and member of the Iranian-Australian community to visit the women at a hotel Monday night and to reassure them about what was available to them in Australia.
“I told them that if you accept this offer, you will have a great future here. You will have more respect. You won’t be under a lot of suppression that you have been in your country. And they were thrilled,” Danai said.
Advertisement
“At the same time, it’s understandable that it was a very hard decision for them to make when they have family back home and when they just came here to compete,” Danai added.
The Iranian team arrived in Australia for the Women’s Asian Cup last month, before the Iran war began on Feb. 28. The team was knocked out of the tournament over the weekend and faced the prospect of returning to a country under bombardment. Iran’s head coach Marziyeh Jafari said Sunday the players “want to come back to Iran as soon as we can.”
An official squad list named 26 players, plus Jafari and other coaches. Burke said the offer of asylum was extended to all on the team.
A commotion erupted Tuesday afternoon outside the team’s hotel as members of the public knelt or lay in front of the team bus.
Advertisement
The protesters, some wearing red, white and green clothing or holding pre-Revolution Iranian flags, tried to prevent the bus from departing the hotel, but it was delayed by only minutes. Some chanted “Save our girls” and “Please act now.”
An Iranian-born protester who sat in front of the bus, Hadi Karimi, said the demonstrators had attempted to create more time for the team members to talk to Australian authorities.
“We haven’t slept,” Karimi said, referring to the time between the team’s last game and its departure. “We were there. That means it works. We did something.”
The women flew to Sydney Airport, where police evicted protesters from the international terminal before the team boarded an international flight to Kuala Lumpur, the Australian Broadcasting Corp. reported.
Advertisement
The ABC reported that Burke had confirmed more members of Iran’s delegation have sought asylum in Australia, without giving details.
Burke’s office did not immediately respond to the AP’s request for confirmation of the Iranians’ departure or comment on whether any additional women had opted to stay in Australia.
Burke was expected to provide an update Wednesday.
The home affairs minister didn’t detail what threats the players faced if they returned to Iran. During the tournament, the women mostly declined to comment on the situation at home, although Iran forward Sara Didar choked back tears in a news conference Wednesday as she shared their concerns for their families and all Iranians.
Advertisement
The Iranian team has drawn intense news coverage after the players’ silence during the anthem before an opening loss to South Korea last week was viewed by some as an act of resistance and others as a show of mourning. The team hasn’t clarified. Players later sang and saluted during the anthem before their remaining two matches.
“Australians have been moved by the plight of these brave women,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters. “They’re safe here and they should feel at home here.”
Australia’s announcement came after Trump on Monday in Washington called on Australia to grant asylum to any team member who wanted it. Earlier that day, Trump had lambasted Australia on social media, saying it was “making a terrible humanitarian mistake by allowing the … team to be forced back to Iran, where they will most likely be killed.” Trump added: “The U.S. will take them if you won’t.”
Less than two hours later, in another social media post, Trump praised Albanese, saying, “He’s on it! Five have already been taken care of, and the rest are on their way.”
Advertisement
Iran’s football federation said Trump’s comments were “baseless and unlawful” and urged global football authorities to intervene.
Iranian first Vice President Mohammad Reza Aref separately said: “Iran welcomes its children with open arms and the government guarantees their security.”
“No one has the right to interfere in the family affairs of the Iranian nation and play the role of a nanny who is kinder than a mother,” he added.
The president’s offer of asylum represented something of a change for Trump, whose administration has sought to limit the number of immigrants in the U.S. who can receive asylum for political purposes.
Advertisement
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
The Croatian, who replied “no comment” when asked if he deserved to remain in charge of Spurs, said he had never taken a goalkeeper off as early during his 15 years as a manager and said Kinsky apologised to the team for his mistakes.
The 22-year-old Czech was surprisingly selected ahead of usual first-choice Guglielmo Vicario, who was instead brought off the bench and conceded the last two goals in Atletico’s 5-2 win.
But Tudor claimed: “It was the right decision to pick him (Kinsky) before. Toni is a very good goalkeeper. Unfortunately what happened, happened. Afterwards it is easy to say it was not a right decision.
“It happened very rare things in my coaching 15 years, I never do that. It was necessary to preserve the guy, to preserve the team. Incredible situation.”
Advertisement
Kinsky gave the ball away for Atletico’s sixth-minute opener, scored by Marcos Llorente, and presented it straight to Julian Alvarez for their third goal.
Tudor denied that captain Cristian Romero told him to take Kinsky off and explained why he ignored the upset goalkeeper as he went off, adding: “We don’t need to comment. We don’t need to speak too much. I explained to Toni, also speaking after, that he is the right guy and a good goalkeeper. Unfortunately, it happened in this big game, these mistakes.”
Tudor said Kinsky was apologetic in the dressing room and accepted the decision to take him off.
Advertisement
Antonin Kinsky was comforted by his Tottenham team-mates as he left the pitch (PA Wire)
He added: “He was sorry. He made an excuse for the team. The team is with him. Me too. I was speaking with him. He understands the moment. He understands why he go out.”
Tudor has lost all four games since Tottenham appointed him and said he was not worried about being sacked.
“It is not a topic for me,” he said. “It is not about my job, it is about how to help the team. It will be always be about that.”
Spurs are waiting to discover if Romero and substitute Joao Palhinha are concussed after an injury-time clash of heads, which would rule them out of Sunday’s Premier League game against Liverpool.
Advertisement
“We will see,” Tudor said. “Sometimes it is difficult to explain. It looks like everything is against us. Incredible things.”
The stable of Tony and Calvin McEvoy relies on a grade reduction to trigger improved performances from Veight.
Last successful in the Group 1 George Ryder Stakes (1500m) at Rosehill close to two years ago, the Grunt-sired Group 1 winner has struggled since.
Post his latest Group 1 assignment, Veight lines up in Saturday’s $200,000 VOBIS Gold So Si Bon (1400m) at Caulfield.
In the 2024 spring Veight laboured, was gelded amid pneumonia troubles, then posted a lone 2025 appearance finishing bottom in the Group 1 Doomben 10,000.
Advertisement
Returned to spell, a paddock accident inflicted neck damage, halting spring aspirations.
Veight seemed on track for the McEvoys after opening with second in the Group 2 Australia Stakes (1200m) at Pakenham and bronze in the Group 3 Kevin Heffernan Stakes (1400m) at Caulfield on February 7, the five-year-old now primed.
The trainers were left puzzled however when he was beaten out of sight in the Futurity Stakes (1400m) at Caulfield February 21.
“We went over him thoroughly and he has no issues at all,” Calvin McEvoy said.
Advertisement
“The first two runs were good for the prep, but he had a tough run last time and put the white flag up early which was disappointing.
“We sent him back to Ballarat for a change of scenery and he’s down in grade on Saturday, so we’ll be looking for him to perform.”
Through 18 outings, Veight has tackled stakes races bar his February 2023 Pakenham maiden win and the ensuing Golden Eagle.
With 61kg declared for Saturday, Jackson Radley takes the mount claiming 3kg.
Advertisement
An apprentice will pilot Veight in competition for the initial time.
“I’m not sure what’s happened there, but we’re able to use his claim,” McEvoy said.
“He’s got 58 (kg), so he’s in pretty well in off his best form.
“I expect him to bounce back, but if he doesn’t bounce back he might be looking after himself a little bit.”
Advertisement
Secure the top betting sites for betting markets for the race in the VOBIS Gold So Si Bon at Caulfield.
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — It’s Players Championship week, and you know what that means: The collective gaze of golf fans zooms in on the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass and zooms in further to its 4,000-square-foot 17th green.
On Sunday, the tournament will be decided in part based on whether the best golfers in the world can find that green in regulation.
But first: How about Rob Gronkowski?
That’s the question posed by gambling giant and PGA Tour gambling partner FanDuel, which pays Gronkowski a fancy number to serve as a frontman in its marketing schemes. The future Hall-of-Fame tight end was out at Sawgrass Tuesday with a fleet of producers capturing content. If he hits the green, FanDuel will offer its users a share of $300,000 in Bonus Bets across its platform. This was multi-level modern marketing at its finest. Educating the public about an upcoming event, drawing them in with a person of influence, promising something (or at least a chance for something) in exchange for their attention. But also … asking them to pony up, too.
Advertisement
You see it everywhere in sports these days. Gambling, gambling, gambling. It’s a massive industry — $166 billion was wagered on sports in America in 2025 — and it’s legal (to varying degrees) in more than 35 states. Betting can also be a controversial, inflammatory corner of the sports world. Just this week, two MLS players received lifetime bans for their roles in corrupting game action. Numerous pro and collegiate basketball players have been indicted by the federal government for their roles in rigging outcomes for money. Similar controversy landed at the MLB’s doorstep with a pair of Cleveland Guardians pitchers last fall.
Golf hasn’t had that type of front-page scandal. At least not yet. And the PGA Tour is keen to keep it that way. But they also remain keen to lean in wherever they can to the mutually beneficial partnerships between sports leagues and gaming operators.
A recent development in the Tour’s balancing act has come in just the last few weeks. On Monday, DraftKings announced it would offer same-game parlays on golf events for the first time ever. It has often been proven that these multi-leg bets offer odds more tilted against bettors than normal, but they have nonetheless exploded in popularity thanks to a boosted reward at a tinier cost. That’s been very good for sportsbooks and occasionally very good for individuals, but it nets out as good business for the Tour. The timing ahead of the Tour’s biggest event seems like no coincidence.
“The reason we got into [gaming] was for engagement,” said Scott Warfield, the Tour’s VP of gaming. “If we can get people watching longer through this legalized activity, what that does to quarter-hour ratings, what that does to media deals, interest coming to attend events … That’s the lens through which we sort of judge success.”
On the other side of the coin, just two weeks ago the Tour issued new guidelines to its players on how to report gambling-related harassment, both in person or online. If a caddie hears too much from an overserved spectator, the Tour can do something about it. If an unsuccessful gambler in North Dakota goes after Chris Gotterup on Venmo, for instance, DraftKings can suspend (or ban) their account. The new measures are a proactive move, to be sure, but also an open acknowledgement of the ecosystem the Tour now swims in. Hey, you’re bound to deal with this stuff, but we’ll do everything we can to defend against it.
The Tour, like other sports leagues, understands that revenue and engagement will climb the more it leans into gambling. Hence the hard work to get same-game golf parlays ready for the Players Championship — and hard work to ready its technology for more markets, too. Three years ago, the Tour reworked its 20-year-old ShotLink system to eliminate nearly all room for human error. What started as tournament-long gambling opportunities in 2018 has progressed to thousands of individual-hole opportunities. Arriving in the next few years, Warfield believes, are every-shot opportunities. And why? Because each full-field event offers roughly 30,000 shots. Like a casino offering an array of table games, the Tour is interested in options. As is, the Tour has seen 30 to 35% annual gains in the golf betting handle. It’s a very popular gambling sport, particularly in the summer.
Golf has its specific advantages. One of those: It operates at a slower pace than some of its peers. The NBA shot clock is 24 seconds and the NFL play clock is 40 seconds, but golfers take minutes to walk between each shot and 15 minutes to play each hole, allowing plenty of time for both operators and bettors to take advantage.
Advertisement
But golf’s customs also make it vulnerable. Spectators are expected to stay silent when players are over their golf ball — but what if they don’t?
At the Waste Management Phoenix Open in February, YouTuber Jack Doherty purposefully tried disturbing Mackenzie Hughes while he stood over a shot in a fairway bunker thanks to a $100 dare. (Not even through an approved sportsbook, it’s worth noting.) Doherty unapologetically told on himself in a number of ways — posting video from the incident online — and earned a lifetime ban from the Tour in return. Not every punter would be so bold as to say, Hey, look! I did it.
And so the Tour is trying to keep pace. The league is so interested in preventative measures that is has begun training volunteers to stand in the middle of a crowd (rather than inside the ropes) to better identify perpetrators and bad behavior.
“You have to understand that we’re not immune to it,” says Andy Levinson, SVP of Tournament Administration at the Tour. “We’re not immune to the potential for corruption, we’re not immune to bad actors, all that. That exists and that threat is always gonna be there. So the first and foremost thing is — everything we do in this space is integrity first.”
Advertisement
The Tour’s “Integrity Program,” as it is aptly named, spells out all kinds of regulations for not just players, but anyone who could naturally gain access to inside information. Their agents, caddies, coaches, even their wives, mothers and fathers. Board members, tournament volunteers, even Tour employees cutting video clips for social media are not allowed to bet on golf. The stipulations of the program are both specific — gambling on elite amateur events is off-limits, too — and also purposefully vague to cast a wide net against potential infractions.
Not every element of the Tour’s gambling ops mimic the work of other leagues, especially given the shifting landscape. As an organization, the Tour is letting the prediction market fracas develop, “and not be a first-mover,” Warfield said. (Tour pros can accept sponsorships from gambling companies but not prediction markets, according to the Player Handbook.) The Tour also does not produce injury reports like the kind that other leagues have made mandatory. “It’s really, really complicated to do,” Levinson said. “And in golf, you can be injured all year [and still play].”
Nonetheless, Levinson and Warfield take pride of the proactive role the Tour has taken in lobbying legislators in cities and states across the country to get their part of the gambling world right. It’s an inexact science to squeeze all they can from the business opportunity while also defending its product from bad actors. They’ve partnered with Genius Sports to monitor all betting markets and also reached a deal with IC360, the same company recently tasked with monitoring officials in the upcoming March Madness.
“Not a lot of folks have two different integrity monitoring partners,” Warfield pointed out.
Manchester City return to the Champions League tonight when they face Real Madrid in the first leg of their round of 16 tie.
Manchester City turn their attention to the Champions League tonight when they face Real Madrid at the Bernabeu. City have already faced Los Blancos this season and won 2-1 thanks to Nico O’Reilly and Erling Haaland’s goals.
City will hope to secure a positive result tonight before returning to the Etihad Stadium next week. The Blues made changes on Saturday night with this game in mind, so we can expect plenty of alterations in Madrid.
Advertisement
Gianluigi Donnarumma will return ahead of James Trafford while Marc Guehi should make his Champions League debut alongside Ruben Dias. Matheus Nunes did feature at St James’ Park but should retain his spot having made the right-back position his own. Rayan Ait-Nouri is also likely to return despite Nathan Ake’s solid performance at Newcastle.
Get MEN Premium now for just £1 HERE – or get involved in our City WhatsApp group by clicking HERE. You can also join our City Facebook page by clicking HERE and don’t miss out on our brilliant selection of newsletters HERE.
Having avoided a ban on Monday, Rodri will start in defensive midfield. In front of him is where difficult decisions need to be made. Antoine Semenyo has been in brilliant form and should also make his Champions League debut.
Captain Bernardo Silva will return to the starting XI. Nico O’Reilly should be given the nod, despite a quiet game against Newcastle. Starting against the Magpies shouldn’t deter Guardiola from picking him.
Advertisement
Buy Carabao Cup Final VIP tickets
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
The Carabao Cup Final will see Arsenal v Manchester City at London’s Wembley Stadium this March.
Savinho played well at Newcastle, as did City’s hero in the north east, Omar Marmoush. Rayan Cherki has been singled out for praise recently, too. But Jeremy Doku could be favoured. The Belgian offers City speed and directness – two qualities needed if they want to catch Real on the counter.
Advertisement
Leading the line will be Haaland. Marmoush will feel hard done by, but the Norwegian was rested so he could come back for this game. There is no way he does not start if fit.
City predicted XI vs Real Madrid: Donnarumma; Nunes, Dias, Guehi, Ait-Nouri; Rodri; Semenyo, Bernardo, O’Reilly, Doku; Haaland
The former Juventus manager made the decision to start substitute goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky for the first leg at the Metropolitano, though his choice quickly backfired as the 22-year-old made an early mistake to gift the hosts the opener before a slip a few minutes later allowed Julian Alvarez to tap in the third.
Tudor then decided to withdraw Kinsky within 17 minutes, replacing him with usual starter Guigliemo Vicario, though the damage was already done and Spurs went on to concede two more, leaving them with a mountain to climb if they want to overturn the deficit and make the quarter-finals next week.
After the match, TNT Sports pundits Joe Hart and Steve McManaman questioned Tudor’s decision-making, suggesting that the manager has now “almost decided his own fate”.
Advertisement
The decision to start and then withdraw Antonin Kinsky drew plenty of criticism (AFP via Getty Images)
“He was brought in for an immediate bounce, immediate reaction,” said McManaman after the full-time whistle.
“It wasn’t just the performance tonight, it was everything on the periphery. The peripheral nonsense on the goalkeepers, how he chose his team, his set-up,” explained the former Liverpool midfielder.
“At half-time he’s gone back to bringing on Solanke, who you thought should have played, Conor Gallagher, Xavi Simons, Palhinha, who would’ve been ideal for tonight. Every decision he’s made he’s gone against it at half-time. It was a surreal performance,” he added.
The pair questioned the Spurs boss further after he’d given his post-match interview, with both highlighting a lack of accountability and willingness to speak.
Advertisement
“We talk about Tottenham at the moment, they’re faceless. Who’s in charge of it?” asked Hart.
Tudor encouraged ‘less talking’ after the loss, and said everything was going against his side (AFP via Getty Images)
“How can the man who’s been put in charge to steer them in a better direction not want to speak. What sort of message is he sending there? Did he send a message to the fans, he didn’t acknowledge them in the stadium.
“To say that you’re not willing to speak…that’s your job, you’re the coach, it’s no surprise the club are under the cosh at the moment. You need someone standing up in front of the media, re-assuring everyone,” he added.
Advertisement
“He was spiky yesterday before the game. And again he hasn’t helped himself today, he should be there fronting up. He’s the one who needs to front up, he’s the one who’s getting paid,” agreed McManaman.
“When it’s bad, say it’s bad, apologise, say ‘I’m sorry’, and have this air of positivity. We understand it was bad luck today, and you’re right, Romero and Palhinha getting concussion [with a late clash of heads], everything is just piling up.
“But he knew that, he was brought in when they were in a dire position. The fact that he’s made them more dire is on him,” he added.
Spurs return to the Premier League relegation battle as they take on Liverpool at Anfield this weekend, before the second leg of their Champions League tie at home to Atletico next week, and a potential six-pointer after on 22 March as they host Nottingham Forest.
Eddie Howe will send his players into battle in Barcelona having told them they have shown they can mix it with Europe’s best.
The Magpies will head for the Nou Camp next Wednesday evening knowing they would have been doing so with a precious 1-0 advantage had Lamine Yamal not denied them victory with the final kick in the first leg of their last-16 tie at St James’ Park.
A 1-1 draw was scant reward for a fine performance against one of the very biggest names in European football and head coach Howe, who described the equaliser as “soft”, is confident they can make life intensely difficult for Hansi Flick’s men on their own pitch.
He said: “In the cold light of day when we wake up tomorrow, we’ll see the positives. The tie is very much alive, we played really well.
“We showed our qualities. We’ve been really competitive. The challenge is we need more on a consistent basis. We’ve showed we can play against the very best when we’re at our best.”
Advertisement
Yamal’s spot-kick in the sixth minute of stoppage time denied the Magpies a deserved victory on the night and left them very much alive, but with a major task on their hands if they are to progress.
Harvey Barnes’ 14th goal of the season had given the hosts an 86th-minute lead and seemingly a priceless advantage ahead of the return, but a famous victory was snatched from their grasp at the death.
Malick Thiaw’s challenge on substitute Dani Olmo prompted Italian referee Marco Guida to point to the spot, and Yamal duly obliged to leave Barca with the advantage when the sides reconvene in Spain.
Asked if he felt his team deserved more, Howe said: “Yes, we do.
Advertisement
“A really good performance from the team, very, very good in all phases, really. I thought we limited them with a really good defensive performance from the team and I thought we attacked really well too.
“Although we didn’t create an abundance of clear-cut chances, I thought there were chances all through the game for us.
“It was great to see us finally score and then the last attack of the game, the last kick of the game, it’s a tough one to take.”
Hansi Flick, whose men won 2-1 at St James’ in the first fixture of the group phase back in September, showed flashes of their brilliance and eventually emerged with something to show for their efforts.
Advertisement
However, they were under the cosh for long periods and were happy to leave on level terms.
Flick said: “If you had asked me before the game with a 1-1, I was always happy.
“With the ball, we made not a good game. We lost too many balls, easy mistakes and this is what Newcastle only wants. When they get the ball, the transition they make is good, they have a lot of dynamic, very fast players, so it was not easy.
“But at the end, what I appreciated a lot from my team is that we defended together, the performance in defence was really good today.”