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Sports

Man City youngster who left Arsenal and Man United says Blues can do ‘what no one else can do’

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Manchester City are looking to defend their Under-21 title with another victory over Manchester United. The young Blues won a derby on their way to play-off glory last season and have a semi-final tonight with their eyes set on successive finals.

Hoping to be in Ben Wilkinson’s starting XI at the Joie Stadium will be centre-back Harrison Parker. The 19-year-old moved to City in 2023 straight from United, having joined Old Trafford after his early years in Arsenal’s academy.

It is quite the list of clubs to already have on his CV as a teenager and Parker’s move to City was one of those rare academy transfers that makes its own headlines. Since arriving at the City Football Academy though, it has been anything but straightforward.

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Parker describes it as a ‘shock to the system’ when he arrived, not least because he was injured when he arrived and had to recover from that before he could be in the best shape to learn new things. The competition for a position has also been fierce. Last year Jahmai Simpson-Pusey became the first centre-back to win the Premier League 2 Player of the Year award and his partnership with Max Alleyne was the foundation of the City Under-21 team that went on to lift the trophy.

This season, Stephen Mfuni has followed those two out of the door on loan and Parker has been one of the reasons that 17-year-old Kaden Braithwaite – who made his senior debut in 2024 – has spent the majority of his campaign playing for the Under-18s.

Youth football is tough and rarely linear, with academy players needing to be hardened mentally for the rough that inevitably comes with the smooth. As difficult as it was for Parker getting a different kind of education at City, he has started to build a good rhythm this year and is confident that City have set him up to follow in the footsteps of the centre-backs in front of him that have already started their journeys in senior football.

“It’s been tough. Coming from two big clubs to another big club is hard and you want it to all go smooth, but it’s part of football. You learn a lot of things and it’s only going to help my career in the long term,” he told the Manchester Evening News.

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“Just the way that City play football, it adapts you for men’s football. It’s a totally different way. I think going to a different team you’d have to change it again because that’s what the manager wants but even being with the first team you learn so much each day. You’re with the best players in the world and it’s great.

“I think City is massively different from everyone. They’ve just got such a style of play that no one else can do. That’s why a lot of academy players from here have gone on to have such great careers because technically they’re ready for men’s football.”

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Sports

Zaheer Khan criticises RCB stars for key difference in 9-run loss vs LSG in IPL 2026

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Former Indian pacer Zaheer Khan believes the Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) duo of Devdutt Padikkal and Rajat Patidar could have attacked more in the powerplay of the IPL 2026 clash against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) on May 7. Chasing 213 in 19 overs for victory, RCB lost their openers inside the first two overs with the score on only nine.

As a result, Padikkal and Patidar played it safe in the rest of the powerplay, reaching only 40 after 5.4 overs. Despite upping the ante in the rest of the run chase, RCB suffered a nine-run defeat.

Talking about RCB’s run-chase in the loss to LSG, Zaheer said on Cricbuzz (2:45):

“With the kind of form Padikkal and Patidar are in, they could have done better in the powerplay. Because once you have such a powerplay, you are always behind in the run chase. They tried to catch up but they were always behind by 10 or 15 runs. But everything has to go your way once you are so much behind.”

He added:

“Wickets in the powerplay made the difference. It usually makes a difference of 10 to 15 runs. And the final margin of this match is a reminder of that. On the other hand, LSG lost no wickets with Mitchell Marsh playing brilliantly. That was the difference. That powerplay was a must for LSG to have the belief that they can win. You look at the final margin of nine runs and RCB’s powerplay with the bat, and that’s the game right there.”

While Padikkal fell for 34 off 25 balls, Patidar overcame a slow start to finish with 61 off 31 deliveries.

“The right call was made” – Zaheer Khan on Digvesh Rathi bowling the final over

Zaheer Khan backed LSG skipper Rishabh Pant for trusting leg-spinner Digvesh Rathi to bowl the last over with RCB needing 20 runs to win. The 26-year-old had conceded 41 off his first three overs but came up trumps under pressure, giving away only nine runs off the final over.

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“Though Shahbaz was having a good day and Digvesh a bad day, the right call was made. If he gets it right, it’s not easy to hit Digvesh consistently. It’s not easy for him to go for a 20-run over. 20 was a good cushion for him to bowl. Romario is also a designated finisher, so he usually bats against the seamers,” said Zaheer (via the aforementioned source).

The win helped LSG keep their slim playoff hopes alive with a third victory in 10 outings.