Ten horses have been removed from contention at the latest Grand National scratchings stage leaving 34 runners for the showdown at Aintree on 11 April
The latest scratchings stage of the Grand National has arrived with 10 horses now out of the running. This leaves a current field of 34 set to compete in the Aintree showdown.
National Hunt enthusiasts will soon flock to the Liverpool course as the historic £1million National is less than a month away. The demanding four-mile, two-and-a-half furlong race sees the sport’s top staying chasers tackle 30 fences.
Prior to Tuesday, three horses had been withdrawn. Dan Skelton’s Gold Cup contender Grey Dawning was pulled, as was Olly Murphy’s Bet365 Gold Cup champion Resplendent Grey. Mouse Morris also scratched Gentlemansgame.
Now, an additional seven horses have been removed. These include Gordon Elliott’s entries Western Fold, Croke Park, Better Days Ahead and Search For Glory.
Ben Pauling has also withdrawn Handstands and Pic Roc, whilst Anthony Honeyball has taken out Leave of Absence.
Advertisement
This leaves a final field of 34, led by Willie Mullins’ pair of 2024 winner I Am Maximus and Bobbyjo Chase victor Grangeclare West. The latter finished third last year.
It’s worth noting that many of the current 34 contenders could withdraw in the coming weeks leaving others to get in, with some choosing to participate in the Irish National on 6 April instead. Oscars Brother is currently leading that market.
One of the top British prospects could be Welsh and Irish National winner Haiti Couleurs. Rebecca Curtis’s gelding last competed in the Gold Cup at Cheltenham, but his trainer has indicated he will be aimed at Aintree if all goes well.
Advertisement
Earlier this month, she stated: “I’m excited to run him in the National now, hopefully, if everyone agrees. Where else do you go with him? That is his forte, National-type races, that’s where he’s done well.
“If he shows me that he’s fit and well in the next few weeks there’s no reason not to go. Plenty of horses run at Cheltenham and then Aintree.
“It’s not a lot different to what we did last year when he ran at Cheltenham and then in the Irish National, that was similar timing. The fences are not that big anymore are they so that’s the plan if he trains well the next few weeks, I don’t see why not.”
Advertisement
The 34 horses currently set to compete in the Grand National
Several members of the Super Eagles have begun arriving at the team’s training base in Turkey as preparations gather pace for the upcoming international friendly matches later this month.
Among the first group of players to report to camp are Fulham midfielder Alex Iwobi, Hull City defender Semi Ajayi, and Lazio midfielder Fisayo Dele-Bashiru. The trio are part of an initial batch of players who touched down as camp officially opened on Tuesday.
Nigeria are scheduled to face Iran and Jordan in friendly fixtures aimed at helping the coaching crew assess the squad and test new ideas. Although the team will not be involved in the next World Cup, the matches are expected to provide valuable opportunities for tactical adjustments and player evaluation.
Advertisement
According to updates from the team’s media office, a number of players had already checked into the camp at the Bellis Deluce Hotel in Antalya by Monday.
The early arrivals include Fisayo Dele-Bashiru, Alex Iwobi, Emmanuel Oluwasegun, Yira Sor, Paul Onuachu, Philip Otele, Semi Ajayi, Moses Simon, Francis Uzoho, Bruno Onyemaechi, Bright Osayi-Samuel, Frank Onyeka, and Adebayo Adeleye.
More players are still expected to join the squad, with Samuel Chukwueze and Maduka Okoye among those scheduled to arrive on Wednesday.
Advertisement
With camp gradually filling up, attention now shifts to full training sessions as the Super Eagles intensify preparations for the international fixtures.
The Blues slipped to a 3-1 defeat but had two goals controversially disallowed, with VAR upholding both decisions.
Arsenal were 2-0 up through goals from Stina Blackstenius and Chloe Kelly when Veerle Buurman converted Sandy Baltimore’s free-kick at the far post, but she was penalised for a light shove on Laia Codina.
Lauren James hauled Chelsea back into the tie with a sublime goal from 25 yards, before Alessia Russo spectacularly volleyed in Arsenal’s third.
Then, in stoppage time, Chelsea’s Kadeisha Buchanan bundled the ball home only to be pulled up for a foul on goalkeeper Anneke Borbe.
Advertisement
“About the officials, it’s really frustrating,” said Bompastor. “It’s always more difficult to complain about the referees when you lost the game, but to be honest, it’s not good enough.
“I think we need to really find solutions. I think when you are playing a quarter-final of the Champions League you need to respect more the women’s game.
“You need to respect more the players because they work hard every week to put a good performance on the pitch. And for sure, the first goal is a goal. I don’t see with VAR how you cannot allow that goal.
“We deserve the best referees so bring in the best. If it has to be from the men’s game, maybe. We have to make these decisions. We need to bring competence.”
Advertisement
Chelsea’s Kadeisha Buchanan was penalised for fouling Arsenal goalkeeper Anneke Borbe (John Walton/PA Wire)
Chelsea also hit the woodwork twice through Alyssa Thompson and James, but all is not lost as they came from two goals down to win in last season’s quarter-final against Manchester City.
Gunners boss Renee Slegers said: “It was a very tight game. It was a Champions League quarter-final, between two rivals, and it was a battle. We stayed calm and found solutions.
“For half-time I’m happy for the players. We’ll have to have a really good plan in place for the second leg.”
San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk (11) accelerates upfield after securing a catch, creating separation late in the game as the offense pushed for points at Levi’s Stadium, Sep 9, 2024, in Santa Clara, California, USA. Aiyuk’s ability after the catch remained a focal point against the Jets’ defense. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images.
Saying the words “Brandon Aiyuk” comes with a bad connotation in March 2026, but it doesn’t have to be that way forever. Before too long, the San Francisco 49ers will release or trade Aiyuk, and it’s not the worst idea for the Minnesota Vikings to investigate his asking price.
Aiyuk may be difficult to land, but Minnesota has a real reason to keep watching.
Aiyuk royally flamed out of San Francisco — well, he’s in the final stages of flaming out — and will look for a new opportunity in the near future.
Advertisement
Minnesota Has a Clear Incentive to Track Aiyuk’s Market
Yes, the Vikings should do the diligence on Aiyuk.
Sep 29, 2024; Santa Clara, California, USA; San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk (11) warms up before the game against the New England Patriots at Levi’s Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sergio Estrada-Imagn Images
Aiyuk Likely to Be Cut
Aiyuk is on the brink of a divorce with the San Francisco 49ers, bogged down in a he-said-he-said situation about what transpired after his injury in 2024.
Bleacher Report‘sKristopher Knox wrote about his inevitable roster cut fate on Sunday, “Most expected the 49ers to release Aiyuk at the start of the new league year on March 11. However, San Francisco may be trying to get something in return via a trade before releasing him outright — though the return would be minimal. If the 49ers haven’t found a trade partner by the end of draft weekend, Aiyuk will probably be a post-June 1 cut.”
Advertisement
“Releasing him before then would cost San Francisco $19.9 million in cap space, while releasing him after June 1 would save $1.3 million in 2026 cap room. What could AIyuk provide another receiver-needy team? That depends on how close he is to being 100 percent healthy. The 28-year-old racked up 1,342 yards and seven touchdowns on 75 receptions in his last full season.”
With his next team, Aiyuk will be a prime candidate for a redemption arc.
Vikings Need Another WR
The Vikings have three wide receivers who could be involved in the offense this September — and that’s not enough. Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, and Tai Felton are at the top of the ticket, and with Felton, no one really knows if he’ll blossom in 2026 because the Vikings refuse to use him on offense as a rookie.
Advertisement
Realistically, if one invokes doomsday planning, it’s just Jefferson and Addison.
The Las Vegas Raiders stole Jalen Nailor away in free agency two weeks ago, handing the speedster a deal worth $35 million over three years that the Vikings evidently could not afford. Therefore, without Nailor, Minnesota needs a replacement from free agency like Stefon Diggs, Tyreek Hill, Deebo Samuel, or DeAndre Hopkins — or it must draft a wide receiver or two that it plans to use right away in 2026. Otherwise, all signs point to grand elevation for Felton.
Or — the Vikings could sniff around Aiyuk.
SI.com‘s Jose Sanchez on the 49ers’ handling of Aiyuk: “At this point, all the 49ers are doing is looking petty by retaining Aiyuk. That likely is the case since they weren’t pleased he abandoned the team last season when they desperately needed him. Having Aiyuk would’ve elevated the offense so much.”
Advertisement
“Just imagine how impactful he would’ve been in the last two decimating defeats against the Seattle Seahawks. Being without a dominant wide receiver hurt the 49ers the most against the Seahawks. It’s why they went out and signed Mike Evans from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.”
The Plan for Life With or Without Jordan Addison?
That’s all assuming that Addison is in the house for the long haul, which some might consider a stretch. Minnesota has until May 1st, 2026, to exercise Addison’s fifth-year rookie option, and because Nailor left and the WR depth is so skimpy, most expect the Vikings to lock that in.
San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk (11) is introduced to the home crowd during pregame ceremonies, drawing energy from fans as players prepared for kickoff at Levi’s Stadium, Sep 9, 2024, in Santa Clara, California, USA. Aiyuk took the field with the offense set to face the New York Jets. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images.
Still, Addison is responsible for an array of bizarre transgressions since entering the NFL three years ago, arrested three times for various behaviors, including a “wet reckless” drunk-driving-adjacent charge in Los Angeles two summers ago. The NFL suspended him for three games for the crime.
Addison is not a beacon of dependability. Theoretically, if Minnesota knows that Addison won’t stick around beyond his rookie contract, forming a contingency plan involving Aiyuk, for example, isn’t the worst idea.
Advertisement
Probably an Affordable Deal
Aiyuk didn’t play in 2025 because of his torn ACL, and general mystery shrouded the 49ers’ handling of the injury and Aiyuk’s commitment to the recovery. But before the injury, Aiyuk logged 1,342 receiving yards and 7 touchdowns in 2023, along with 1,015 yards and 8 scores in 2022. He just turned 28 last week and has the volume gene when healthy and targeted in offense.
San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk (11) celebrates a touchdown reception by kicking the ball into the stands, energizing teammates and fans during second-half action at Nissan Stadium, Dec 23, 2021, in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. Aiyuk’s score helped fuel the 49ers’ offensive effort against the Tennessee Titans in a primetime matchup. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images.
Yet, because his career is at a low point, his next team won’t break the bank to give him a shot at redemption. He’ll likely sign somewhere for cheap.
At that price, why not the Vikings, the club with Kyler Murray, Jefferson, Addison, T.J. Hockenson, and head coach Kevin O’Connell scheming playmakers open on Sundays?
Celtic goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel has undergone the first of two planned shoulder surgeries as the veteran looks to salvage his playing career.
The 39-year-old Denmark number one revealed the extent of his injuries live on radio last week.
Now, writing on Instagram, Schmeichel announced: “First shoulder operation done, everything went well.
“Now full focus on recovery and preparing for the next one. Thanks for all the messages over the past few weeks, it means a lot.”
Advertisement
Schmeichel, who joined Celtic after leaving Anderlecht in 2024 but is out of contract this summer, faces up to a year in recovery.
Having received some criticism for his final performances for Celtic – he has not played since 22 February – the Dane revealed that he had been playing through the pain barrier for several months.
Interim manager Martin O’Neill admitted he was “surprised at the severity” of Schmeichel’s shoulder injury.
An Atlanta Falcons helmet rests on the field during second-half action, with players moving in the background as the game unfolds at Bank of America Stadium, Oct 13, 2024, in Charlotte, North Carolina, USA. The matchup against the Carolina Panthers carried divisional implications as both teams battled deep into the contest. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images.
A couple of years ago, ex-Minnesota Vikings passer Kirk Cousins signed with the Atlanta Falcons, but in 2026, and at a much smaller price tag, another former Vikings quarterback has followed suit: Trevor Siemian.
The Falcons added Siemian, bringing a familiar former Vikings passer into their evolving QB setup.
Siemian actually backed up Cousins in Minnesota eight years ago in Minnesota; now he’s in the mix behind Michael Penix Jr. and Tua Tagovailoa down in Atlanta.
Advertisement
Atlanta Adds Another Layer to Its QB Depth Chart
Do you remember Siemian?
Minnesota Vikings quarterback Trevor Siemian (3) stands at the line of scrimmage, calling signals and directing the offense during second-quarter action at U.S. Bank Stadium, Aug 18, 2018, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Siemian worked through pre-snap reads as Minnesota faced the Jacksonville Jaguars in preseason play. Mandatory Credit: Brace Hemmelgarn-USA TODAY Sports.
Siemian to Falcons
Siemian’s long NFL career continues. SBNation‘s David Choate wrote Tuesday, “Per NFL insider Jeremy Fowler, Trevor Siemian will be joining the Falcons as their new third quarterback. If Michael Penix Jr. isn’t healthy to begin the season, he’ll back up Tua Tagovailoa directly; either way, this is about getting experience insurance for the quarterback room.”
“You’re getting a player who you’re hoping can be a good teammate holding a clipboard and that you’d only have to install for a start or two in dire straits, instead of someone who will be counted on to start for half a season. In light of that, Siemian is a perfectly solid choice for QB3 who has the experience and track record to give the Falcons some confidence in an emergency.”
Advertisement
Siemian spent the last two seasons in Tennessee as a backup to Cam Ward (2025) and Will Levis (2024).
The Outlook as QB3
Like Carson Wentz in Minnesota — he re-upped with the Vikings last week — Siemian is firmly in the Falcons’ QB room as a QB3. There’s just no way he’ll dethrone Penix Jr. or Tagovailoa for the QB2 job, let alone QB1, and he may have to battle an eventual fourth quarterback to avoid the practice squad or an outright August release.
In other news, the Penix Jr. vs. Tagovailoa battle will steal all NFL headlines, assuming Penix Jr.’s knee is good to go by training camp or the preseason. The Falcons picked Penix Jr. in Round 1 two years ago and still have high hopes for his development, even if he regressed and got hurt as a sophomore in 2025.
Advertisement
Tagovailoa is no slouch, either. He led the NFL in passing yards as recently as two seasons ago. He could upset Penix Jr., and no one would bat an eye.
Tagovailoa said about the upcoming competition a couple of weeks ago, “If there’s no competition, I don’t think anyone’s getting better, in aspect of the field of work you’re in. I am excited to be able to compete against Penix, to compete with him, to be able to get to know my teammates on a personal level, knowing them from the outside in.”
“We have a lot of good football players on this team, so I’m excited to get to play with these guys and get the chance to throw the ball around, conversate with them. I think it’s going to be great.”
Siemian’s History
Advertisement
In 2018, Siemian served as the backup to the aforementioned Cousins and secured the QB2 role for the Vikings. Despite successfully holding off Kyle Sloter for the position during the preseason, Cousins’ consistent availability limited Siemian’s regular-season playing time. He didn’t see the field at all that year.
Chicago Bears quarterback Trevor Siemian (15) signals for a timeout during second-half action, reacting quickly as pressure mounted in a road matchup at MetLife Stadium, Nov 27, 2022, in East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA. Siemian managed the offense while facing the New York Jets defense in a tightly contested game. Mandatory Credit: Ed Mulholland-USA TODAY Sports.
Siemian’s NFL career includes stints with the following teams:
Denver Broncos (2015–2017)
Minnesota Vikings (2018)
New York Jets (2019)
Tennessee Titans (2020)
New Orleans Saints (2020–2021)
Chicago Bears (2022)
Cincinnati Bengals (2023)
New York Jets (2023)
Tennessee Titans (2024–2025)
Atlanta Falcons (2026)
Siemian remains a recognizable name, primarily because of his tenure as the Broncos‘ starting quarterback following Peyton Manning’s retirement. Ten teams in 12 seasons indicate staying power, if only in hopscotch format.
All the Falcons’ FA Moves
The Falcons have fired up about 15 external and internal signings since the start of free agency two weeks ago:
Jake Bailey (P) DET → ATL
Cam Thomas (ED) CLE → ATL
Channing Tindall (LB) ARI → ATL
Samson Ebukam (ED) IND → ATL
Nick Folk (K) NYJ → ATL
Christian Harris (LB) HOU → ATL
Da’Shawn Hand (DL) LAC → ATL
Darnay Holmes (CB) LV → ATL
Austin Hooper (TE) NE → ATL
Corey Levin (C) TEN → ATL
LaCale London (DL) ATL → ATL
Azeez Ojulari (ED) PHI → ATL
Trevor Siemian (QB) TEN → ATL
Tua Tagovailoa (QB) LAC → ATL
Chris Williams (DL) CIN → ATL
Olamide Zaccheaus (WR) CHI → ATL
Minnesota Vikings quarterback Trevor Siemian (3) drops back in the pocket, scanning the field and preparing to throw during fourth-quarter action at U.S. Bank Stadium, Aug 24, 2018, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Siemian operated the offense late in the game as Minnesota faced the Seattle Seahawks in preseason competition. Mandatory Credit: Brad Rempel-USA TODAY Sports.
Here’s who left for other teams:
Tyler Allgeier (RB) ATL → ARI
Dee Alford (CB) ATL → BUF
Arnold Ebiketie (ED) ATL → PHI
Kaden Elliss (LB) ATL → NO
Felipe Franks (TE) ATL → CAR
Zane Gonzalez (K) ATL → MIA
Jovaughn Gwyn (C) ATL → BAL
Bradley Pinion (P) ATL → MIA
Darnell Mooney (WR) ATL → NYG
David Onyemata (DL) ATL → NYJ
Sam Roberts (DL) ATL → NYG
Kentavius Street (DL) ATL → CHI
Teagan Quitoriano (TE) ATL → ARI
Elijah Wilkinson (G) ATL → ARI
Cousins, a free agent, should sign somewhere before too long, and the rumor mill suggests the Las Vegas Raiders and Pittsburgh Steelers are viable landing spots.
Siemian will turn 35 in December. Sportsbooks expect the Falcons to win seven or eight games in 2026.
Minnesota Vikings guard Donovan Jackson takes part in position drills during minicamp, working through technique and conditioning sessions with coaches and teammates at the team facility, Jun 10, 2025, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. The rookie lineman focused on refining fundamentals as he pushed to carve out a role along the offensive front. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images.
In the 2025 NFL Draft, the Minnesota Vikings selected Ohio State guard Donovan Jackson, who mostly worked out as a rookie. At the time, many considered him a slight “reach” on the draftboard, and here’s a look at who’s in play if the Vikings follow the same pattern.
Last year’s Jackson template may offer a clue about Minnesota’s next first-round swing.
A Familiar Draft Reach Could Be in Play for Minnesota
What’s your preference for the Vikings’ draft pick?
Minnesota Vikings linebacker Bo Richter (98) and guard Donovan Jackson (74) celebrate with fans along the sideline following a road victory, sharing energy after the final whistle at AT&T Stadium, Dec 14, 2025, in Arlington, Texas, USA. The moment captured postgame enthusiasm as Minnesota wrapped up its matchup against the Dallas Cowboys. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images.
Jackson at No. 39 on the CBB Last Year
Minnesota held the 24th pick heading into the 2025 NFL Draft, and they picked a man ranked at No. 39 on the Consensus Big Board. After-the-fact reporting claimed the Houston Texans would’ve chosen Jackson at No. 25 — he’s from Houston, so there was a hometown angle — and the Texans needed interior offensive line help.
The Vikings basically proved that they’re comfortable whisking public-facing draftboards to the side in the interest of getting their man. For example, per the draft community, Minnesota might’ve been able to trade down and still get Jackson, though the public didn’t know about the Texans-Jackson stipulation.
Advertisement
This was the Consensus Big Board last year, men ranked from 24 to 40:
Kenneth Grant (DL, Michigan)
Grey Zabel (iOL, North Dakota State)
Josh Simmons (OT, Ohio State)
Derrick Harmon (DL, Oregon)
Tyler Booker (iOL, Alabama)
Donovan Ezeiruaku (EDGE, Boston College)
Nick Emmanwori (S, South Carolina)
Emeka Egbuka (WR, Ohio State)
James Pearce Jr. (EDGE, Tennessee)
Jaxson Dart (QB, Mississippi)
Maxwell Hairston (CB, Kentucky)
Josh Conerly Jr. (OT, Oregon)
Luther Burden (WR, Missouri)
TreVeyon Henderson (RB, Ohio State)
Trey Amos (CB, Mississippi)
Donovan Jackson (iOL, Ohio State)
Jalen Milroe (QB, Alabama)
Jackson climbed 15 spots when it was all said and done.
The Same Territory … This Year
Now, pretend the same situation arises — the Vikings swipe a player somewhat far removed from their organic draft pick.
That list would look like this in 2026 speak:
Advertisement
Emmanuel McNeil-Warren (S, Toledo)
Omar Cooper Jr. (WR, Indiana)
C.J. Allen (LB, Georgia)
T.J. Parker (EDGE, Clemson)
Denzel Boston (WR, Washington)
Kevin Concepcion (WR, Texas A&M)
Caleb Banks (DL, Florida)
Kayden McDonald (DL, Ohio State)
Cashius Howell (EDGE, Texas A&M)
Colton Hood (CB, Tennessee)
Zion Young (EDGE, Missouri)
Brandon Cisse (CB, South Carolina)
Lee Hunter (DL, Texas Tech)
Chris Johnson (CB, San Diego State)
Jacob Rodriguez (LB, Texas Tech)
Texas Tech defensive lineman Lee Hunter addresses reporters during a media session, discussing preparation and expectations ahead of the season at Big 12 Football Media Days, Jul 8, 2025, in Frisco, Texas, USA. Hunter fielded questions from assembled media as part of the conference’s annual preseason event at The Star. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images.
The translation? These are rookies who seem like a reach right now. Or might fit this lingo: “I like him, but the Vikings can trade down and still get him.” That was Jackson at this time last year, and he ultimately became a Viking at pick No. 25.
Who Makes the Most Sense?
Minnesota has more than one long-term roster need right now because of former general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah’s nauserating drafting habits. But from the list above, the players who might propel the Vikings to “reach” can be reasonably narrowed to this:
Emmanuel McNeil-Warren (S, Toledo)
Caleb Banks (DL, Florida)
Kayden McDonald (DL, Ohio State)
Colton Hood (CB, Tennessee)
Brandon Cisse (CB, South Carolina)
Lee Hunter (DL, Texas Tech)
Interim boss general manager Rob Brzezinski would basically see one of those names and fear that another team would swipe him, and with Minnesota’s draft board not necessarily aligning with the CBB, he could pounce.
Ohio State defensive lineman Kayden McDonald (98) celebrates a fumble recovery with teammates after forcing a turnover, reacting quickly during first-half action at Gies Memorial Stadium, Oct 11, 2025, in Champaign, Illinois, USA. The Buckeyes capitalized on the play against Illinois as momentum shifted following the defensive takeaway. Mandatory Credit: Adam Cairns-Columbus Dispatch.
Yahoo Sports‘ Nate Tice mock-drafted McDonald to Minnesota at No. 18 this week and explained, “There are a couple of interesting safety options, they could look to find the T.J. Hockenson replacement in Kenyon Sadiq, or they could add some tangible beef to their defensive line. Brian Flores is going to scheme pressures and big plays for his defense, but the Vikings could use someone to eat up blocks to let teammates fly to the football.”
“McDonald isn’t the sexiest prospect, but his ability to hold up against the run is his calling card, while also having light enough feet to be used on the twists and stunts that Flores loves so much. McDonald is basically the defensive version of the line of thinking that led to the Donovan Jackson selection last year at offensive guard: a tangible trench talent who can let the creative coaches be creative.”
The Favorites Otherwise
Advertisement
Back to reality, if the Vikings do not follow last year’s pattern, these are arguably the frontrunners to join the club with the 18th overall pick:
Jermod McCoy (CB, Tennessee)
Kenyon Sadiq (TE, Oregon)
Avieon Terrell (CB, Clemson)
Dillon Thieneman (S, Oregon)
Peter Woods (DT, Clemson)
In the last two weeks, since the NFL Combine, Thieneman has morphed into the Vikings’ almighty mock-draft darling.
Chris Waller, the trainer, and John Messara, the owner, made public on Tuesday their plan for Autumn Glow to challenge herself at a mid-distance journey for the first instance in her unblemished 11-start sequence, for the Queen Elizabeth Stakes scheduled April 11 on The Championships’ Day Two.
Consequently, the mare Autumn Glow will forego entry in the Group 1 $4m Doncaster Mile (1600m) at that venue a week before.
Monday saw Waller, Messara and star jockey James McDonald confer on potential races, ultimately converging on the Queen Elizabeth Stakes target for her.
In the George Ryder Stakes last Saturday, Autumn Glow unleashed her strongest performance to date, taking the prize by almost three lengths with plenty in reserve.
Advertisement
A Timeform score of 128 came her way, level with The Everest conqueror Ka Ying Rising as Australia’s highest racetrack rating this season, solidifying beliefs among her team that 2000m in the Queen Elizabeth Stakes is feasible.
“We’ve been very pleased with how she’s come through her impressive George Ryder Stakes victory,” Waller said.
“James McDonald and I have been particularly taken with her ability to relax in her races, along with her outstanding recovery post run.”
Messara explained Autumn Glow’s stellar showing in the Ryder sealed his view to pursue the Queen Elizabeth Stakes.
Advertisement
“I felt her win last Saturday was so dominant, she deserves the opportunity to go to 2000m – she wasn’t even blowing after the race and has pulled up so well,” Messara said.
“We looked at the Doncaster Mile carefully, it is a great race but it comes with the usual risks and a very big field.
“Plus it will be worthwhile finding out of Autumn Glow gets a strong 2000m as we have a race in the spring called the Cox Plate we want to consider.”
The announcement prompted TAB Fixed Odds to compress Autumn Glow’s price from $1.60 to $1.50 for Sydney’s autumn weight-for-age highlight.
Advertisement
Doncaster Mile odds shifted correspondingly, installing exciting three-year-old filly Sheza Alibi as the $2.10 frontrunner.
“With confirmation Autumn Glow will go to the Queen Elizabeth Stakes, she is into $1.50 now,” TAB’s Tim Ryan said.
“Pending further news on who else is going to the Queen Elizabeth, Autumn Glow will probably start even shorter.
“We had Autumn Glow at $3.50 for the Doncaster but now we know she isn’t going to run, Sheza Alibi has firmed from $2.30 to $2.10 favourite. The money for Sheza Alibi has been relentless.”
Advertisement
A Queen Elizabeth Stakes success would crown Autumn Glow, dubbed racing’s “Miss Invincible”, as Horse of the Year.
Mar 24, 2026; Mesa, Arizona, USA; Chicago Cubs outfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong against the New York Yankees during spring training at Sloan Park. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
A day after news broke that the Chicago Cubs and Pete Crow-Armstrong were finalizing a contract extension, multiple media outlets reported the specifics on Tuesday.
The center fielder reportedly is receiving a six-year, $115 million deal.
It’s quite a present one day before Crow-Armstrong’s 24th birthday on Wednesday.
Last season, Crow-Armstrong received his first All-Star selection, won a Gold Glove and ended up ninth in National League MVP voting.
Advertisement
In his third major league campaign, Crow-Armstrong got off to a great start in 2025, hitting .265/.302/.544 with 25 homers and 71 RBIs in 95 games before the All-Star break. He faltered in the second half, however, batting .216/.262/.372 with six homers and 24 RBIs in 62 games.
He ended the year at .247/.287/.481 with 31 homers and 95 RBIs. Crow-Armstrong also amassed 37 doubles and 35 stolen bases, becoming the first Cub with 30-plus doubles, homers and steals in the same season.
Crow-Armstrong, through 293 major league games, has a .240/.285/.437 batting line with 50 doubles, 10 triples, 41 homers, 143 RBIs and 64 steals.
Chosen by the Mets in the first round (19th overall) of the 2020 draft, Crow-Armstrong was sent to the Cubs in the July 2021 trade that moved infielder Javier Baez and right-hander Trevor Williams to New York.
Advertisement
The Cubs begin the season on Thursday at home against the Washington Nationals.
McDavid became the fifth player in Oilers history to reach 400 goals when he took a feed from Mattias Ekholm and Evan Bouchard and beat Karel Vejmelka with 7:53 left in the second period.
The go-ahead goal was his 40th of the season and put Edmonton in front 3-2. He scored his 401st goal on an empty-netter with 7.5 seconds remaining that also gave him his 1,200th point. McDavid also has 799 career assists.
Evan Bouchard had three assists to give him 82 points as he joined Cale Makar, Erik Karlsson and Roman Josi as the only NHL defencemen to record multiple 80-point seasons since 2005-06.
To complete the milestone-rich contest, Edmonton’s Ryan Nugent-Hopkins posted his 800th career NHL point with an assist in the first period on one of two goals by Roslovic. Matt Savoie scored a short-handed goal in the second.
Advertisement
Edmonton had 24 blocked shots and allowed just 18 shots on goal. Tristan Jarry made 16 saves.
The Oilers have won their last five games against the Mammoth and leapfrogged the Vegas Golden Knights (79-78 points) for second place in the Pacific Division as the playoff races heat up.
Alexander Kerfoot and Lawson Crouse scored for Utah. Vejmelka stopped 11 shots, but was replaced after the second period by Vitek Vanecek.
Utah’s André Tourigny coached his 400th career NHL game (164-191-45).
Advertisement
Mammoth forward Barrett Hayton left in the first period with an upper-body injury and didn’t return.
Oilers: Visit Vegas on Thursday night.
Mammoth: Host Washington on Thursday night to finish their four-game homestand.
1 min read Last Updated : Mar 20 2026 | 11:00 AM IST
Real Madrid goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois has torn a muscle in his upper right leg, jeopardizing his availability for a Champions League clash with Bayern Munich.
Courtois was substituted at halftime of Madrid’s Champions League game at Manchester City on Tuesday. Madrid won 2-1 and the round-of-16 tie by 5-1 on aggregate.
The club on Thursday did not say how long its top goalkeeper would be out. Andriy Lunin will take his place.
Advertisement
Madrid hosts Atletico Madrid in a La Liga derby on Sunday before an international break, when Courtois’ Belgium plays the United States in a friendly in Atlanta on March 28.
Belgium also plays Mexico in another World Cup warmup in Chicago on April 1.
Madrid then starts its Champions League quarterfinal against Bayern on April 7.
Advertisement
The 33-year-old Courtois has been a key part of Madrid’s most recent European successes, helping to win its 14th and 15th European Cups in 2022 and 2024.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
You must be logged in to post a comment Login