FIFA has announced new rules requiring all teams in its women’s tournaments to have a female head coach or assistant coach. The decision was made at a council meeting on Thursday and is being described as a major step for women in football.
The rules will apply to all youth and senior tournaments, national team competitions, and club competitions. They will take effect at the Under-20 Women’s World Cup in Poland this September. The regulations will also be used at the second women’s Champions Cup, the 2027 World Cup in Brazil, and the first women’s Club World Cup in 2028.
FIFA said the initiative is part of its wider plan “to ensure that the rapid growth of the women’s game is matched by an increased representation of women in technical and leadership roles.”
Advertisement
Despite the growth of women’s football, coaching roles are still mostly held by men. At the 2023 Women’s World Cup, only 12 of the 32 head coaches were women.
“There are simply not enough women in coaching today,” said Jill Ellis, FIFA’s chief football officer and former head coach of the United States women’s national team. “We must do more to accelerate change by creating clearer pathways, expanding opportunities, and increasing the visibility of women on our sidelines. The new FIFA regulations, combined with development programmes, are an important investment in both the current and future generation of female coaches.”
Under the new rules, teams must have at least two female staff on the bench, which can include the mandatory coach. Teams will also be required to have at least one woman on their medical staff.
Ademola Lookman has shared his excitement ahead of a big UEFA Champions League quarter-final clash between Atlético Madrid and Barcelona.
It was a tough night for Atlético, who lost 3-2 to Tottenham Hotspur in London, but still did enough over the two legs to move into the next round. The Spanish side showed strong character to stay in the tie despite the defeat.
After Randal Kolo Muani opened the scoring, Julián Álvarez equalised with a fine finish following a good pass from Lookman. The Nigerian forward continues to impress, with eight goal contributions since joining the club during the winter transfer window.
Advertisement
Speaking after the match, Lookman admitted it was not an easy contest, as expected in a competition of this level. He said the team were pleased to qualify and believes there are positives to take from the performance.
He also praised the team’s calm approach after falling behind, saying they stayed focused, kept pushing, and were able to create chances which helped them remain in control of the tie.
The match was also special for Lookman, who returned to London, the city where he was born. He described it as a nice feeling but stressed that reaching the next round was the most important thing.
Advertisement
Attention now turns to a big quarter-final meeting with Barcelona. Lookman expects a difficult game and said the team must prepare well. He added that the focus remains on taking matches one at a time as they continue their campaign.
The winner of the tie between Atlético Madrid and Barcelona will face either Arsenal or Sporting CP in the semi-finals.
“The size, layout, and positioning of the banner in the stadium shall be submitted by the Israel Football Association to Fifa at the latest 15 days before each match for approval,” said Fifa in a statement.
It has also ordered the IFA to “invest one third of the fine … towards the implementation of a comprehensive plan to ensure action against discrimination and to prevent repeated incidents”.
Fifa added “the decision remains subject to a potential appeal” by the IFA.
The PFA also accused the IFA of “allowing inclusion of football teams located on the territory of another association (Palestine) in its national league”.
Advertisement
On this, Fifa said it “should take no action given that … the final legal status of the West Bank remains an unresolved and highly complex matter under public international law”.
Meanwhile, the Palestine FA said its national team’s friendly matches against Mauritania and Benin in Morocco later this month have been cancelled because of the conflict in the Middle East.
Jake Guentzel, Darren Raddysh, Yanni Gourde and Brandon Hagel also scored for the Lightning (42-21-4).
Andrei Vasilevskiy, who picked up his league-leading 32nd win of the year, made 19 saves for Tampa Bay.
Liam Ohgren and Linus Karlsson replied for Vancouver (21-39-8).
Kevin Lankinen made 24 saves for the last-place Canucks.
Advertisement
The Lightning were 0-for-1 on the power play, while the Canucks went 0-for-2.
Guentzel opened the scoring late in the first period to become the third Lightning player to reach 30 goals this season, after Kucherov and Hagel.
After establishing position at the net front, Guentzel tipped a shot from the top of the zone by Charle-Edouard D’Astous over the glove of a screened Lankinen.
Less than a minute into the second, Raddysh made it 2-0 with a big one-timer. Gourde then added his ninth of the year, tipping in another Raddysh shot from the side of the net at 4:16. Kucherov then deflected the puck off the leg of Canucks defenceman and into the net for his 38th of the year at 5:31.
Advertisement
Ohgren spoiled Vasilevskiy’s shutout bid with 7:54 remaining in the second, putting a low shot past the Tampa goalie for his seventh goal of the year.
In the third, Karlsson batted the puck over an outstretched Valisevskiy for his 13th of the year. Twenty-two seconds later, Cirelli restored the Lightning’s three-goal edge, then Hagel rounded out the scoring with his 32nd, with 9:25 remaining.
Canucks: Vancouver allowed six goals or more for the ninth time this season. With assists on both Canucks goals, Rossi extended his point streak to four games (nine points). Aatu Raty played in his 100th career NHL game.
Lightning: Won 6-2 for the second-straight game on their current road trip. Raddysh’s 18 goals are the third-most ever in a single season by a Lightning defenceman. Tampa Bay is a perfect 8-for-8 on the penalty kill over the last four games.
Advertisement
Raddysh, Gourde and Kucherov scored their goals in the span of four minutes 42 seconds, with the latter two coming on consecutive shots.
Kucherov’s three-point night moved him into sole possession of second place in the NHL scoring race. With 114 points, he’s one point behind league leader Connor McDavid (115).
Welcome to our PGA Tour gambling-tips column, featuring picks from GOLF.com’s expert prognosticator Brady Kannon. A seasoned golf bettor and commentator, Kannon is a regular guest on SportsGrid, a syndicated audio network devoted to sports and sport betting, and is a golf betting analyst for CBS Sportsline. You can follow him on X at @LasVegasGolfer, and you can read his early picks below for the Masters, which gets underway on April 9th in Augusta, Ga.
Let the madness begin! The NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament and the Masters is really a match made in heaven, isn’t it? For roughly the next 25 days, two of the biggest events in all of sport will dominate the headlines, viewership, content … the entire media landscape! And what a wonderful thing that is.
I began betting College Basketball futures back in December. The first bet I made this year “to win the Masters” was in early February. For several years now in my golf handicapping process, I have used the Hawaii events and the American Express in La Quinta, Calif., as a “pre-season” of sorts, getting a feel for the players, their form, the new faces, and assessing everything involved with the new golf year. With the Plantation Course at Kapalua being such a strong pointer toward success at Augusta National, I have often made my first Masters bets during or after that tournament, the Sentry, but of course, that event was cancelled this year due to drought-like conditions in northwest Maui.
There are a couple of other strong indicators on the West Coast Swing that can be predictive of Masters success. In addition to Kapalua, the connection between winners at Riviera Country Club (Genesis Invitational) and the Masters is widely known and is an extensive list. The Genesis winner this year, Jacob Bridgeman, is down to anywhere from 60 to 70-1 to slide on a green jacket on the second Sunday in April. I did not make a play on Bridgeman after that victory, nor did I back Rory McIlroy to defend his Masters title after he finished runner-up in Los Angeles. I did make some early bets, however, on a few guys that finished top 15 at Riviera. We’ll get to that shortly.
In addition to specific golf courses that can provide us with some clues, strong performance, top-10 finishes, and tournament wins are a common thread that we see on the early season resumes of most Masters winners. It is not surprising that current form is a bit of a qualification. It is not often that a player who is struggling suddenly finds their game and wins a major championship.
My first play though took place a few weeks ago during the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. Two-time winner in Phoenix, former Masters champion, and recent winner at both Riviera and Kapalua, Hideki Matsuyama was my first “to win the Masters” bet of 2026 at 39-1, which I found here in Las Vegas at Circa Sports. After seeing how the 2021 Masters champ got off to a great start in Phoenix, I pulled the trigger. I did the same thing last year after he won at Kapalua but unfortunately, he cooled off and ended up finishing 21st at the 2025 Masters four months later. Since finishing runner-up in Phoenix, Matsuyama has cooled off again but the game remains very strong. The struggles have come off the tee but the wide fairways at Augusta National can often minimize those issues. I still don’t mind a play on Matsuyama at 30-1 or better.
I made my second bet that same week on another former Kapalua and Masters champion. A player who at the time, was red-hot, and that is Patrick Reed. I was able to get ahead of the game slightly, grabbing Reed at 46-1. Reed left the LIV circuit and has been playing quite a bit on the DP World Tour. He won twice and finished runner-up once in a span of three weeks between the end of January and beginning of February. I’m seeing his price now range from roughly 25 to 35-1. I believe 35 is still a solid number. Reed just recorded another top 10 finish earlier this month at the Joburg Open in South Africa. In seven Masters appearances since winning in 2018, Reed has no missed cuts and has finished top 10 four times.
Advertisement
I added two more plays in February with both players being Australians. Min Woo Lee (80-1) and Adam Scott (125-1). Scott of course, is a former Masters champion and Lee fits the mold for me as a big hitter with a fantastic short game. Lee’s lone PGA Tour victory came at Memorial Park in Houston, which can also be Augusta National-like in course set up and layout style. Both players have gotten off to excellent starts in 2026. Scott finished fourth at Riviera, a course where he’s won twice. He followed that up with an 11th-place finish at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. This year will mark the 25th time Scott has played the Masters. He’s only missed the cut one time since he won 13 years ago. I thought 125-1 was too high and lately I am seeing anywhere from 80 to 100-1 on the 45-year old.
This will be Lee’s fifth time playing the Masters. His best finish is 14th. He’s missed the cut one time and has also finished 22nd. Lee was 12th at Riviera this season, runner-up at Pebble Beach, and finished sixth at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
I currently have six plays in pocket. I may stand pat, but I am thinking if I do add anything, it will only be one more. It is very easy to accumulate Masters bets with the board being up and available for such an extended period of time but let’s remember, this is a smaller field and becoming overloaded on outrights can happen more quickly than with a typical 130-some player field. If you start to pick apart the Masters field, it feels like only 30 players or so really have a chance to win. It won’t likely be a debutant, with that not happening since 1979, and we can’t expect it to be one of the seniors or one of the amateurs. So again, six or seven futures is already a lot. We don’t want to get too carried away or it starts to impact potential profits greatly.
The final two plays I made were done earlier this month. Collin Morikawa (30-1) and Jordan Spieth (60-1). I played Morikawa when he was threatening at Bay Hill a few weeks ago, a place where he finished runner-up last season. Morikawa already checks the box of having a win to his credit this season, capturing the crown at Pebble Beach back in February. In six visits to Augusta, he hasn’t ever missed a cut. His last five finishes are as follows.. 14-3-10-5-18. Morikawa withdrew from The Players last week after experiencing pain in his back during a practice swing on just the second hole of the championship. I am confident he’ll be ready to go next month.
Advertisement
Like I was surprised by the price on Scott, I was pretty happy to find 60-1 on Spieth. I found this on March 8th at William Hill. I am now seeing odds between 35 and 45-1. Anything 40-1 or higher is good in my opinion. He was 12th at Riviera this season and followed that up with an 11th place finish at Bay Hill. At the time of writing, Spieth is off to a great start at the Valspar Championship. If that continues, his Masters odds will likely drop even further.
A six-pack it is for now for the Masters. As for cutting down the nets in Indianapolis on that Monday of Masters Week, I’m hoping that is either Gonzaga, Michigan State, Vanderbilt, Illinois, or Iowa State.
Galatasaray have confirmed that Victor Osimhen suffered a broken forearm during their UEFA Champions League match against Liverpool on Wednesday.
The Turkish side travelled to Anfield with a 1-0 advantage from the first leg and needed only a solid performance to qualify. However, things quickly went wrong when Osimhen picked up an injury early in the game.
Although he received treatment and returned to continue the match, the striker was clearly struggling. He could not move freely and was unable to play his usual strong attacking role. He was later taken off at half-time.
Advertisement
Without their key forward, Galatasaray were heavily beaten 4-0, ending their Champions League journey.
After the match, the club confirmed that Osimhen suffered a fracture in his right forearm. He has already been treated and his arm placed in a cast, while doctors will decide in the coming days if he needs surgery.
The club also revealed that Noa Lang picked up a serious cut on his thumb during the second half and will undergo an operation.
Advertisement
Osimhen is now expected to be out for several weeks, which is a big setback for Galatasaray as they continue their push for the league title and the domestic cup. Both the player and the club will be hoping he recovers quickly and returns before the end of the season.
Manchester City have Wembley on their mind as they prepare to face Arsenal in the Carabao Cup final on Sunday.
We may be two days out from the Carabao Cup final, but Manchester City already know one player who will be starting against Arsenal on Sunday. After beating Newcastle, Pep Guardiola confirmed James Trafford would be in goal against the Gunners. “He’s an extraordinary ‘keeper and I’m really pleased,” City’s head coach said.
“With the final, he’s going to play the first final of Carabao Cup for him and in FA Cup of course everything can happen.” It has been well documented how tough this season has been for Trafford. Arriving from Burnley under the impression he would eventually be the club’s first choice, the 23-year-old soon lost his spot to Gianluigi Donnarumma.
Advertisement
The Italian has barely put a foot wrong since arriving and that has left Trafford on the fringes. He has been consigned to FA Cup and Carabao Cup appearances. His only start in the Champions League ended in defeat to Bayer Leverkusen and Donnarumma returning for the remaining games in the competition.
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.
In the summer, Trafford will pursue an exit from City. The goalkeeper should be playing regular first-team football, but while Donnarumma remains in Manchester, Trafford will not get that at the Etihad Stadium. And this leaves City with a problem to solve.
Guardiola never stands in the way of a player looking for a fresh opportunity. But Trafford’s lack of game time puts a ceiling on the price City can demand for his services.
Advertisement
Trafford has spent the season sitting on the bench and, as a result, teams will feel they have an advantage in negotiations because he wants something City can’t provide.
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.
Advertisement
However, a brilliant performance in the Carabao Cup final could change the narrative. Suddenly, City could point to the final as an example of a player who is ready to step into any side and perform straightaway, rather than a player who could take time to get up to speed having spent so long playing second fiddle.
Newcastle were interested in Trafford last summer and the Magpies are likely to return at the end of the season.
Nick Pope’s time as Eddie Howe’s No.1 seems to be over and Trafford would be an improvement on Aaron Ramsdale. But performing well in a game of this magnitude will increase the interest and potentially launch a bidding war.
That would be the perfect scenario for City. Regardless of the score on Sunday, if Trafford performs, the Blues could add millions to Trafford’s price tag.
Following the unprecedented decision to strip Senegal of the Africa Cup of Nations title and hand it to Morocco, Mark Owen is pleased to welcome Eurosport’s Ruben Slagter. Not only is our guest troubled by the decision itself, but also the opacity of its timing and communication: the delayed ruling, coupled with its quiet release during a major European fixture, the Champions League, raises questions about institutional transparency and intent.
According to Slagter, this situation reflects deeper structural issues within football governance, where regulatory decisions are entangled with internal disagreements and political considerations.
For him, the lack of clarity surrounding both the process and the justification risks undermining trust. More broadly, he sees this episode as symptomatic of a fragile moment for African football, where progress in infrastructure and talent development is overshadowed by controversies that reinforce longstanding external criticisms.
YMCA member Austin Manengu works the keyboard as he plays a game of Fortnite during the unveiling of the new gaming lab at the Maplewood Family YMCA in Rochester Thursday, June 20, 2024. YMCA of Greater Rochester in partnership with Metro Sports & Entertainment Group will open two gaming labs for youth and teens this year.
Team Vitality, The MongolZ and Team Spirit finished off sweeps in their respective upper-bracket quarterfinals to open Group B play of the BLAST Open Spring on Thursday in Copenhagen, Denmark.
PARAVISION also won its opening match to remain in the winner’s bracket. 9z Team, MOUZ, Team Liquid and Ninjas in Pyjamas each lost their opening matches and will face elimination on Saturday.
The 16 teams in the $400,000 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive event were split into two groups of eight that will contest a pair of double-elimination brackets. The top three finishers in each bracket will advance to the six-team playoffs. All matches will be best-of-three until the best-of-five grand final on March 29.
The winning team will earn $150,000 along with three BLAST Frequent Flyer tokens.
Team Vitality cruised to a sweep of 9z Team with a 13-3 win on Overpass and a 13-5 victory on Nuke. Mathieu “ZywOo” Herbaut of France led the way for Vitality with a 37-15-22 kill-death-assist ratio.
Advertisement
The MongolZ took care of business against MOUZ, posting a 13-11 victory on Nuke followed by a 13-3 triumph on Inferno. For the all-Mongolian winners, Sodbayar “Techno” Munkhbold sparked the victory with a K-D-A ratio of 42-24-18.
Team Spirit had to work a little more to earn the sweep, taking down Team Liquid 13-8 on Mirage and 13-11 on Ancient. Russian Danil “donk” Kryshkovets was the star for the winners, notching a K-D-A ratio of 55-31-24.
PARAVISION opened with a 13-11 win on Ancient, but Ninjas in Pyjamas pulled even on Mirage with a 13-6 victory. In the decisive third map, PARAVISION rebounded to close out the match 13-8 on Dust II.
For the all-Russian PARAVISION squad, Ivan “zweih” Gogin posted a team-high 45 kills along with 45 deaths, while teammate Andrey “BELCHONOKK” Yasinskiy notched a K-D-A ratio of 43-41-2.
Advertisement
Friday’s schedule:
FURIA vs. Aurora Gaming (Group A upper-bracket semifinal)
Natus Vincere vs. Team Falcons (Group A upper-bracket semifinal)
Advertisement
TYLOO vs. FaZe Clan (Group A lower-bracket quarterfinal)
B8 vs. NRG (Group A lower-bracket quarterfinal)
BLAST Open Spring prize pool (cash prize, BLAST Frequent Flyer tokens)
Iowa State Cyclones’ guard Jada Williams (8) shoots the ball over Southern Lady Jaguars forward DeMya Porter (24) during the third quarter on Nov. 5, 2025, at Hilton Coliseum, Ames.
Jaylia Reed scored 16 points and DeMya Carter contributed 15 on Thursday night as Southern went on a game-ending 14-2 run to subdue Samford 65-53 in an Women’s NCAA Tournament First Four matchup in Columbia, S.C.
The game was tied at 51 with 6:59 left after Carla Baguda hit a layup for the Bulldogs. But Reed canned a 3-pointer on the next possession, and the Jaguars never looked back. Samford went scoreless for 4:42 during the clinching spurt.
Jocelyn Tate added 10 for Southern (20-13), which shot just 39.7% from the field but made up for it by forcing 19 turnovers and converting those into 20 points. The Jaguars advance as a No. 16 seed to meet top-seeded South Carolina on Saturday in a Sacramento 4 Region game at Columbia.
Briana Rivera scored a game-high 16 points for the Bulldogs (16-19), who won eight of their previous 10 games, including all three in the Southern Conference tournament.
The No. 3 seed Gonzaga Bulldogs will try to kickstart another deep NCAA Tournament run when they face the No. 14 seed Kennesaw State owls in the first round of the Big Dance on Thursday night. Gonzaga won the West Coast Conference regular season and tournament titles in its final season in the conference. Kennesaw State had a mediocre regular season, but it won the Conference USA Tournament title to earn an automatic bid. These schools are meeting for the first time ever.
Tipoff from the Moda Center in Portland, Ore., is at 10 p.m. ET. The Bulldogs are 20.5-point favorites in the latest Gonzaga vs. Kennesaw State odds, with the over/under at 152.5, a 5-point drop since opening at 157.5. The Zags are at -5000 on the money line (risk $5,000 to win $100). Before making any Kennesaw State vs. Gonzaga picks, check out the men’s college basketball predictions and betting advice from the SportsLine Projection Model.
The SportsLine Projection Model simulates every college basketball game 10,000 times. It entered the 2026 NCAA Tournament on a sizzling 11-1 run on its top-rated over/under college basketball picks dating back to last season, and is on a 28-22 run on top-rated CBB side picks. Anyone following its college basketball betting advice at sportsbooks and on betting apps could have seen strong returns.
After 10,000 simulations of Gonzaga vs. Kennesaw State, SportsLine’s model is going Over on the total (152.5 points). Gonzaga’s Graham Ike has scored the most career points (2,531) of any active player, and he has scored 17.7 points per game in six career NCAA Tournament games. He is averaging 23.4 points across his last 13 games, and the model has him finishing with 25.4 points in this matchup.
Teammate Braden Huff is sidelined with a knee injury, but the model has guard Tyon Grant-Foster scoring 15.2 points. Kennesaw State led Conference USA in scoring (83.4) and second-chance points per game (14.7) this season. The model has these teams combining for 159 points, as the Over hits in 61.8% of simulations.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login