Sports
World women’s curling takeaways: Canada’s experience looms large on Day 1
A lot has changed since Kerri Einarson’s team wore the Maple Leaf while playing at the 2021 world women’s curling championship in Calgary.
Karlee Burgess is now Einarson’s lead instead of Briane Harris. And Canada has been back on top of the podium at the event for the last two seasons thanks to Rachel Homan and her teammates.
But most importantly, this time in Calgary, there are fans to cheer Einarson and Team Canada on throughout the week.
In 2021, while the event was hosted at the the WinSport Event Centre, nobody was allowed into the building to watch due to COVID-19.
The tournament wasn’t great for Einarson. She just barely made the playoffs with a 7-6 record and was eliminated in the qualification game. It was just the eighth time in 42 years Canada didn’t earn a medal. Einarson wore the Maple Leaf again in 2022 and 2023, winning bronze in both events.
However, in 2026, it already feels like Einarson has a very good chance for a different outcome.
With the packed stands cheering Einarson on during the opening day at the 47th edition of the tournament, Canada was able to pick up commanding wins over Sweden and the USA.
Canada’s experience pays dividends
It’s hard to believe after watching Canada play on Saturday that Einarson and her teammates Val Sweeting, Shannon Birchard and Burgess didn’t play a legit game since the Scotties Tournament of Hearts final six weeks ago.
Now, obviously they practised a lot and even played two-on-two against each other during that time, but that’s not what helped them adapt right away to the ice and the environment of the women’s worlds.
The experience factor, something Einarson will have an advantage over a lot of teams this week, loomed large
In both her games on Saturday, she faced rookie skips.
First, it was Sweden’s Isabella Wrana. After the Swedes jumped out to a 2-0 lead, the Canadians didn’t panic, but instead settled into the match and read what the ice was doing to really let the game come to them.
By the sixth end, Einarson and her team were able to apply pressure to Wrana, forcing a steal of two that gave Canada a 5-3 lead. From there Canada played great, situational curling, understanding the scoreboard to earn the 7-5 victory.
At least for Sweden, Wrana didn’t look helpless on the big stage.
That can’t be said in the second match for the U.S., unfortunately.
After the rookie squadron of Americans led by skip Delaney Strouse didn’t play in the first draw, their first game had to be against a home team feeling good about themselves.
Einarson went to work and used her knowledge from the first game to make even better shots against the Americans.
Her best came in the fourth end. Because the ice was similar to the first draw, Einarson was able to trust what she was seeing and made a nice soft-weight hit through a tight port to score three and take a 4-1 lead. Einarson went on to win 11-3.
Get ready to learn new names this week
Sweden’s Wrana and the U.S.’s Strouse weren’t the only skips making their debuts on Saturday. For nearly half the field, this is their first world championship.
There are six rookie skips in total. Scotland’s Fay Henderson, Norway’s Torild Bjornstad, Switzerland’s Xenia Schwaller and Australia’s Helen Williams, who is leading the country’s first-ever appearance at the women’s worlds, are the others.
All six lost their opening draw on Saturday, but Schwaller became the first rookie to win at the event with a 6-5 victory over China in the night draw.
For Wrana and Schwaller, playing against the other top teams in the world won’t be something new as they compete in the Grand Slam of Curling, but this stage will be different.
In the other four cases, it will certainly be a big challenge, but it doesn’t mean they can’t pull off some crazy upsets.
Canada’s next game will be against China on Sunday at 4 p.m. ET / 2 p.m. MT.
Sports
“That my friend is wrong” – Jamie Redknapp can’t believe what he saw from Chelsea ace in Newcastle defeat
Jamie Redknapp has blasted Wesley Fofana following Chelsea’s defeat to Newcastle at Stamford Bridge on Saturday evening.
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The Blues failed to respond after their defeat to PSG, as they slipped to a 1-0 loss, with Anthony Gordon scoring the only goal of the game.
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It was a huge blow for Chelsea in their hopes of securing a top five finish, and it was quite frankly an awful showing with Liam Rosenior’s side booed off.
Jamie Redknapp not impressed with Wesley Fofana
Surprisingly Rosenior only made two changes to the side with Alejandro Garnacho coming in for the suspended Pedro Neto, and Robert Sanchez returning in goal.
It was the same backline which conceded five in midweek, and they were once again easily exposed as Tino Livramento played one simple ball through the middle of the pitch to Joe Willock.
Willock then played it across the goal for Gordon to tap home, but Fofana seemed to just give up when running back, something which Redknapp wasn’t impressed by.
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“Look, he’s got a head start and yet, [Gordon] catches up three yards on him,” he told Sky Sports.
“You can talk all you like about how the press was wrong, no. That, my friend, is wrong. Sprint.
“He doesn’t, because he doesn’t believe he’s going to pass it to him. Then he has the audacity to put his arms out, I don’t know what he’s complaining about.
“If you run, you stop the goal.”
Daniel Sturridge equally unimpressed
It wasn’t just Redknapp that took issue with Fofana, as former Blue Daniel Sturridge hit out at the centre back and accused him of a lack of desire.
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“That my friend is wrong” – Jamie Redknapp can’t believe what he saw from Chelsea ace in Newcastle defeat
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Liam Rosenior says Chelsea missed player who could have been the difference vs Newcastle
“We’re third in the league” – Liam Rosenior’s straw-clutching will not go down well with fans
“That’s it for me there,” he added.
“Anthony Gordon wants to score. Fofana isn’t prepared to do the same run on the defensive side of things.”
Check out the latest edition of Simon Phillips’ SPTC podcast here:
Sports
2026 Big Ten Tournament bracket, scores, schedule as Michigan, Purdue square off for conference title

Find the latest on the 2026 Big Ten Tournament, including the bracket, scores, schedule and more
Sports
Mikel Arteta refuses to be drawn on future involvement of Max Dowman
Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta refused to entertain speculation about future Max Dowman starts after the year 11 student became the youngest goalscorer in Premier League history in the 2-0 victory over Everton.
Arteta gambled when a hunch led him to introduce the teenager – 16 years and 73 days old when he was introduced in the 74th minute of a goalless stalemate at the Emirates Stadium – but it paid off when Dowman first made Viktor Gyokeres’ 89th-minute breakthrough with a cross before immortalising himself in the seventh minute of added time.
Dowman was a few years away from even being born when James Vaughan, the previous record-holder, netted the final goal in Everton’s 2005 4-0 victory over Crystal Palace at Goodison Park – where the opener was scored by none other than Arteta.
But asked if the schoolboy might have made an argument for starting, his grinning boss replied: “Let’s come down to earth today and enjoy the moment, because it was intense and it was worth it and we will see tomorrow.”
Jordan Pickford misread Dowman’s delivery in the build-up to Gyokeres’ goal, and was subsequently stranded after he was brought forward for a corner deep into stoppage-time.
Dowman broke from the edge of Arsenal’s 18-yard box to chase down the clearance before evading Everton’s remaining defenders, then sprinted up the pitch as the crowd rose in giddy anticipation of his inevitable low, empty-net finish.
“It was a phenomenal moment,” Arteta added. “We talked before the game to play with that relentless desire to win every action and have the conviction that we are going to find a way to do it, and the effort, the quality, the commitment of the players was sensational, and then it ended up in a manner that probably none of us expected.
“It was one of the best moments that we lived together at the Emirates.”
Manchester City’s draw at West Ham ensured Arsenal moved nine points clear of their closest title challengers.
Dowman, now also Arsenal’s youngest-ever goalscorer in any men’s competition, shattered Vaughan’s record by 197 days.
The Essex teenager signed a pre-contract agreement with the Gunners in January, the precursor to a professional deal when he turns 17 on December 31st.
He is the second-youngest Premier League player in history, debuting at 15 years, 235 days old in August 2025. Only his Arsenal team-mate, Ethan Nwaneri, was younger – by 54 days – when Arteta introduced him in their victory at Brentford in September 2022.
The Gunners boss said he was guided by a “gut feeling” that day, the same phrase he used to explain Dowman’s introduction on Saturday.
Despite the two-decade gap, David Moyes was the man in charge of Everton for both Vaughan and Dowman’s milestone matches.
The now 62-year-old once handed Wayne Rooney – who remains the Premier League’s fourth-youngest goalscorer – his debut at 16, but Moyes did not want to draw comparisons between Dowman and the youngest man to ever score a goal for England.
Moyes said: “I wasn’t really looking at (Dowman), I was watching my own players.
“I don’t know enough about the boy, to be honest. I know plenty about Wayne. I could talk plenty about Wayne.
“But he looks like a talented boy, that’s for sure.”
Sports
Six Nations: France retain title after thriller against England – Sports
In a breathtaking showdown, France held on to their Six Nations crown after edging England 48–46 on Saturday at the Stade de France. Thomas Ramos drilled the winning penalty at the buzzer, while Louis Bielle-Biarrey etched his name into the record books, sealing a dramatic victory that gives Les Bleus back-to-back titles.
Elsewhere in sports news: In Ligue 1, Lens missed a golden opportunity to go top after falling 2-1 away to Lorient. Monaco, meanwhile, kept their momentum rolling with a fifth straight win, defeating Brest.
In the Premier League, Arsenal moved one step closer to the title. The Gunners beat 2-0 on Saturday, with 16-year-old Max Dowman (16 years, 73 days) becoming the youngest goalscorer in English top-flight history. Arsenal also benefited from Manchester City’s 1-1 draw with West Ham, allowing them to stretch their lead at the top.
In Spain, Real Madrid put on a show despite the absences of Kylian Mbappé, Jude Bellingham and Rodrygo. Los Blancos cruised to a 4-1 win over promoted Elche, piling pressure on league leaders Barcelona, who still sit one point clear ahead of Sunday’s clash with Sevilla.
In tennis, Carlos Alcaraz suffered his first defeat of the year. After 16 straight wins, the world number one was stopped by Daniil Medvedev in the semifinals of the Indian Wells Masters. The Russian will face Jannik Sinner in the final after the Italian defeated Alexander Zverev.
Sports
Guehi’s miss and Donnarumma’s mistake: Was this the night Man City handed Arsenal the Premier League title?
At the final whistle, Manchester City players slumped and crouched and sprawled on the pitch in disconsolate little piles, absorbing the enormity of the evening. Perhaps some of them were doing the maths. City are nine points behind Arsenal with a game in hand. They will meet one another at the Etihad next month. All is not lost. But here at the London Stadium, they wore the look of a team who had just been punched in the gut.
Of all the Arsenal players to shape the direction of this title race, not many would have guessed that a key protagonist would be a 16-year-old schoolboy who is yet to take his GCSEs. Even fewer would have suggested a giant Greek defender who played eight times for Arsenal a lifetime ago.
But about an hour after Max Dowman sunk Everton and became the Premier League’s youngest goalscorer in the process, a few miles across the city, West Ham’s centre-back Konstantinos Mavropanos thumped a header against the crossbar and down into the City goal. Arsenal found a late winner; City huffed and puffed but came away with a 1-1 draw that felt almost terminal.
It is not, of course. The season is still alive. But title races are not just about raw numbers. There is a feel to them, a sway, a momentum that comes and goes. And on this cold March night, all the energy was sucked into the red corner of north London.
It was apt that Mavropanos, a former Arsenal player, should hurt City’s cause. It felt apt too that his goal came from a corner, after so much discourse around the significance of set-pieces and how Arsenal exploit them. Jarrod Bowen’s delivery floated through the air and over the flying fist of Gianluigi Donnarumma, who should have punched it. Mavropanos met the ball with meaning.
What followed was a second-half onslaught. Pep Guardiola, who watched on from the stands under suspension, sent on a flurry of attacking substitutes. Rayan Cherki and Jeremy Doku brought spark off the bench; Phil Foden, too. Chances came and chances went. Cherki shot straight at goalkeeper Mads Hermansen. Tijjani Reijnders hit the crossbar from a wide-angle free-kick. Foden’s outstretched hallux missed the ball by inches with the goal gaping.
The game ended with another telling set-piece. Reijnders delivered a devilish corner and after the ball bounced around West Ham’s six-yard box it fell to the feet of Marc Guehi. An entire stadium winced and braced for the net to bulge, only to watch the ball take off into orbit. It was a slow-motion disaster, the sort of moment you could imagine set against the music from Titanic.
For West Ham, it is a point that draws them level with Tottenham and one clear of Nottingham Forest, out of the relegation zone for the first time in a long time. They will not relish the idea of helping Arsenal to the title, but if this was a point towards the cause of survival – perhaps survival at the expense of Spurs – then it was a precious one.
It has been a strange season for City, who started back in August with a 4-0 win over Wolves using players like Oscar Bobb and Nico Gonzalez and John Stones, a line-up like something from a fever dream. Only three of those XI started here at West Ham seven months later: Haaland, Bernardo Silva and Rayan Ait-Nouri. You might say only two, given Haaland is not the same striker now as late-summer Haaland or even autumnal Haaland who plundered goals every weekend.
Guardiola’s team has evolved in real time, transitioning mid-season through different personnel, different formations, different iterations of Haaland. And ultimately, at least up to this point, they have simply not been as good as Arsenal. Not at the ugly stuff: crushing counter-attacks, defending as a unit, set-pieces, game management, s***housery. Not at the pretty stuff, either, at least not over the past three months.
Guardiola admitted as much after the game. “We are good at a lot of things,” he said. “But not as good as we were.”
This game encapsulated much of City’s troubles, particularly against low-block teams. West Ham deployed a giant claret curtain across Hermansen’s goal, billowing out towards the ball and back again as City desperately tried to pierce a hole.
This is what Nuno Espirito Santo brings, of course. Five at the back, and five in midfield too when they don’t have the ball. When City advanced towards the final third, the distance between West Ham’s centre-backs and Bowen must have been no more than 20 yards.
“There was no other way,” Nuno said. “Heroic from our boys. We have a long way to go, we have hard work in front of us.”
It made for punishingly dull viewing, initially at least. Nuno’s reluctance to yield an inch combined with Guardiola’s distaste for passes longer than 10 yards meant for a game played in busy burrows and crowded cul-de-sacs. Erling Haaland occasionally made a useful run into the channel but City’s midfielders routinely ignored him.
City eventually broke through when Bernardo Silva shanked a cross which drifted perfectly over Hermansen’s head into the far corner of the goal. He could have claimed to have meant it, but could clearly be seen mouthing “pass” to the City bench while wearing a sheepish grin.
Mavropanos soon levelled, in no small part down to Donnarumma’s miscalculation. The goalkeeper has a penchant for the spectacular and his shot-stopping has been eye-catching at times this season, but data models consistently mark him down on a raft of other metrics such as distribution and, tellingly, command of his six-yard box.
So City had no choice but to throw everything at West Ham, just as Arsenal had launched an assault on Everton in the dying throes at the Emirates. Where one succeeded, the other failed. And it is in those telling minutes, on those fine details, that a title can be won and lost.
Sports
How Max Dowman galvanised Arsenal’s title charge – and what next for history-making teenager
As the Arsenal players got into an ecstatic dressing room, the man of the match wasn’t there. Goalscorer Viktor Gyokeres even came in carrying his award.
That is all because Max Dowman isn’t actually the man of the match but the boy of the match, since he’s still… just a child. Premier League rules mean he’s not actually allowed change in the same dressing room as adults. He has to go around near the referees’ room.
Maybe it also serves as another little way to keep a mere 16-year-old centred after such a moment, too, but nobody who knows the Dowmans says he needs that. His parents are said to still ground him for misbehaving, and are conscious of keeping the obvious confidence that comes with such ability in check.
There were of course among many people at Arsenal in tears after Dowman scored that crucial clinching goal against Everton. As was openly being said in the dressing room by many staff, they’d known him since he was small. You might quip that wasn’t that long ago, but it also speaks to the speed of his development.
And here he was, at 16 years and 73 days, becoming the youngest goalscorer in Premier League history.
Mikel Arteta is often criticised for a conservatism, but he still went for football’s classic roll of the dice when it was really required: the impetuousness of youth. Sir Alex Ferguson is the manager who has become most associated with that gamble over the history of the Premier League, due to everything from the “class of 92” to throwing on a 17-year-old Federico Macheda in a similar title game against Aston Villa. His logic was always clear: “if you give people an opportunity to succeed, it is amazing how much they will surprise you.”
Except, very little about Dowman is surprising. It isn’t exactly heaping pressure on a 16-year-old to say he’s being talked of as potentially the best player in the world in a few years, since so many around Arsenal say all the time. They are perhaps careful not to say it directly to him, but the Leo Messi comparisons are seen as entirely fitting.
It means Arteta is now in the exquisite position of pleading “calma” about such a prospect – as he did when asked if Dowman would start against Bayer Leverkusen on Tuesday – and being thrillingly excited about his talent.
The Basque spoke about a “gut feeling” he’s had all week, but there’s more to it than that. Since the start of the season, Dowman has just been gliding past senior professionals in training. You could see it in the Everton game. He was beating players and opening the match in a way that Arsenal badly needed. It was the same with the ball in that finally flummoxed Jordan Pickford for Gyokeres’ goal. Direct, with purpose.
From that, Arteta had in the last few weeks apparently told his Arsenal-supporting father, Rob, that some changes might be required to Dowman’s school schedule at Brentwood. The question was obviously why. “Because there’s a title to win.”
They know he can carry it. Alongside his talent, Dowman’s football brain is described as “extraordinary”. Arteta’s tactical and pressing instructions are known to be highly complex, and it can take senior professionals months to properly internalise them. Dowman does it in seconds.
This could be seen in one of the elements that Arsenal figures were most raving about after the 2-0 win over Everton.
With the ball in the air after Pickford went up for that 96th-minute corner, and Vitaliy Mykolenko coming in try and win it and force that equaliser, Dowman did something else unexpected. In the space of a millisecond, he decided to strain his neck muscles to head the ball down so that it would go in the opposite direction of the full-back. Mykolenko was so surprised that he fell over, as Dowman ensured he was now pulsing away on his feet and at the right pace.
From there, with Pickford also racing back, many players would have opted to immediately seize the chance and try a long-range shot. Dowman also showed mature composure with that. Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall was still in his way but he was evaded like a cone in training. Then he was away.
One of the things now being said about the goal at Arsenal was that the opposition half he still had to run through, and the seconds that took, offered a fitting final build-up to a moment everyone now feels they will be looking back to in years’ time.
They could see it coming, they could feel it. People nearby heard Dowman’s family repeat: “go on Max, go on!” Then, the arrival.
It should be acknowledged that any such moment would be special for a young player, his family and his club, something they can now always treasure. At the same time, you just can’t overlook that this is considered all the more special because of what it might mean for the future.
There will be many excited questions about that. Thomas Tuchel is no doubt going to have to face a few at his England squad announcement on Friday, and whether Dowman can be taken to a World Cup.
It instinctively feels like it’s a bit too early… but then you could say that about so much with Dowman. Nothing about him is surprising. This is now more than a gut feeling.
A title challenge that had become a psychological challenge for Arsenal, where they were feeling all the angst of that 22-year wait, now involves one of the most invigorating themes in football. It’s the excitement of youth, and what might be possible for the future.
Sports
Wilyer Abreu’s HR carries Venezuela into WBC semis over Japan
Mar 14, 2026; Miami, FL, United States; Japan designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (16) rounds the bases after hitting a home run against Venezuela in the first inning during a quarterfinal game of the 2026 World Baseball Classic at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images Wilyer Abreu hit the go-ahead three-run homer in the sixth inning Saturday night for Venezuela, which eliminated defending champion Japan with an 8-5 win in the World Baseball Classic quarterfinals in Miami.
Venezuela, the runner-up in Pool D with a 3-1 record, will face Italy in Monday night’s semifinal. Italy outlasted Puerto Rico 8-6 in Houston earlier Saturday.
The winner of Venezuela-Italy will advance to Tuesday’s championship game against the winner of Sunday’s semifinal between the United States and the Dominican Republic.
Japan, which went 4-0 in Pool C play, was eliminated prior to the semifinals for the first time in six WBCs as its bid for a fourth title ended.
Abreu’s homer provided the biggest flourish in an entertaining game that began in historic fashion when Ronald Acuna Jr. and Shohei Ohtani each homered leading off the first.
Acuna Jr., the 2023 National League Most Valuable Player, and Ohtani, the two-time defending NL MVP who also won two MVPs in the American League, are the first pair of former MVPs to lead off the same game with homers.
Gleyber Torres gave Venezuela the lead a second time with an RBI double in the second before Japan went ahead 5-2 in the third, when Teruaki Sato delivered a run-scoring double and Shota Morishita later followed with a three-run homer.
Morishita entered the game an inning earlier in place of Seiya Suzuki, who exited with a right knee injury after he was caught stealing in the first. Venezuela began its comeback in the fifth, when Maikel Garcia hit a two-run homer. Ezequiel Tovar and Torres opened the sixth with singles against losing pitcher Hiromi Itoh before Abreu unleashed a wild celebration by hitting a 409-foot homer to right.
Tovar added an insurance run in the eighth when he scored from second when Atsuki Taneichi’s pickoff throw sailed into centerfield.
Enmanuel De Jesus, Venezuela’s third pitcher, earned the win with 2 1/3 innings of one-hit ball. Daniel Palancia notched the save by striking out two in a perfect ninth that ended with Ohtani popping out.
Ranger Suarez started and the game for Venezuela and gave up all five runs in 2 2/3 innings. Los Angeles Dodgers ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto started for Japan and allowed two runs in four innings.
–Field Level Media
Sports
New Zealand vs South Africa 1st T20I LIVE Score Updates
NZ vs SA 1st T20I LIVE Cricket Scorecard Updates© AFP and Getty
New Zealand vs South Africa 1st T20I LIVE Updates: New Zealand take on South Africa in the first T20I of a five-match series in Mount Maunganui on Sunday. This is the first meeting between the two sides since the Black Caps outclassed the Proteas in the T20 World Cup 2026 semi-final 11 days earlier. However, New Zealand’s heroes from that match – the likes of Finn Allen, Tim Seifert and Rachin Ravindra – have been rested for the series. Mitchell Santner is leading them for the first three games of the series. South Africa too have rested several stars like regular captain Aiden Markram, David Miller and Kagiso Rabada. Keshav Maharaj is captaining the side. (Live Scorecard)
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Sports
Hassan Abdallah Confident as Warri Wolves Prepare for Crucial Away Clash Against Bayelsa United
Technical Adviser of Warri Wolves FC, Hassan Abdallah, has expressed strong optimism ahead of his side’s crucial NPFL26 Matchweek 30 encounter against Bayelsa United in Yenagoa.
The Seasiders will travel to the Samson Siasia Stadium on Sunday for what promises to be a fiercely contested derby, with both teams eager to secure valuable points in the ongoing league campaign.
Speaking during preparations for the encounter, Coach Abdallah assured his players and supporters that the team is well prepared for the challenge ahead. According to him, the level of preparation and the intensity of recent training sessions have positioned the squad for a positive result.
The gaffer noted that the players have undergone rigorous training in the days leading up to the fixture and are mentally ready for the task.
“We have worked very hard in training and the players understand what is expected of them. With the level of preparation we have put in, we are hopeful of getting a positive outcome on Sunday,” Abdallah said.
The former national youth coach also recalled the first leg meeting between the two sides earlier in the season. In that encounter, played on October 26, 2025 at the Southern Delta University Stadium in Ozoro, Warri Wolves scored an impressive 2-0 victory over Bayelsa United.
On that day, forward Igbunu Evwierhurhoma was the hero for the Seasiders, scoring a brace in the 16th minute and deep into stoppage time to seal all three points for Warri Wolves.
Abdallah stated that his team is determined to replicate a similar performance when both sides meet again in Yenagoa. Drawing confidence from the team’s recent improvement and their impressive display against Enyimba FC, the coach maintained that the squad is well positioned to compete strongly.
The Warri Wolves boss further revealed that a few adjustments have been made to the squad that defeated Bayelsa United in the first leg. However, he stressed that the team remains psychologically prepared and highly motivated to face their neighbours on Sunday.
While acknowledging that the clash will be a tough and fiercely contested battle, Abdallah remains optimistic that the Seasiders can emerge victorious at the Samson Siasia Stadium.
With confidence high within the camp, Warri Wolves will be hoping to secure another important result on the road as they continue their push in the NPFL26 campaign.
Warri Wolves FC Media
Sports
Can Jadon Sancho play against Manchester United for Aston Villa?

Aston Villa travel to Old Trafford on Sunday, putting Jadon Sancho on a collision course with parent club Manchester United
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