Recent reports have suggested that a deal for Fabio Wardley to face Daniel Dubois in May is done, but Tyson Fury has his reservations and has advised fight fans to be curb their enthusiasm.
It made the 31-year-old knockout artist the United Kingdom’s 11th heavyweight world champion, but Wardley is keen to truly validate his position as a worthy titleholder with a strong first defence.
Advertisement
He has been on the lookout for an opponent that would allow him to prove his quality and he seems to have found the perfect dance partner – Britain’s 10th heavyweight world champion, Daniel Dubois.
“I’ll tell you what I find funny, I’ve seen it all over the internet today that Wardley vs Dubois is done, it’s in every media outlet, it’s everywhere except from the actual promoter of both fighters, Frank Warren at Queensberry, so until they put it out it’s not confirmed, believe that!
“Everybody has rushed to get a scoop on inside info apart from the confirmation being from the actual promoter of these fighters, Frank Warren. Until Frank says it’s on, it’s not on.”
It is understood that Wardley and Dubois will collide on Saturday, May 9, at the Co-op Live Arena in Manchester, in what will be the seventh all-British heavyweight world title contest in boxing history.
Advertisement
Fury, meanwhile, returns in April against Arslanbek Makhmudov, and may well target the winner should he come through as expected.
Jan 15, 2023; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Vikings fans cheer during the second quarter of a wild card game against the New York Giants at U.S. Bank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-USA TODAY Sports.
Because of the five-game winning streak to finish the season, the Minnesota Vikings won’t be in reach of the elite prospects in April’s Draft. Instead, they hold pick number 18. An aggressive trade-up could suddenly put Ohio State’s Caleb Downs within striking distance, whose skill set should surely intrigue the decision-makers in the Twin Cities.
Bleacher Report’s Brent Sobleski named his top landing spots for the elite talent in this year’s draft class, and he views the Vikings as the best destination for Downs.
He explained, “Caleb Downs is the No. 1 overall prospect in the 2026 NFL draft regardless of position, though his role does create quite the conundrum when it comes to teams considering him in this year’s top 10. Downs is every bit worthy of hearing his name called among the Nos. 3-5 selections, but the safety could benefit greatly from a draft-day slide.”
Vikings fans remember 2022 when Kyle Hamilton had comparable buzz entering draft season. He was available when the Vikings were on the clock with pick 12, but they traded out of there. Hamilton was selected at 14 by Baltimore.
Similar to Hamilton, Downs is viewed as a premier talent in the draft. The safety position isn’t viewed as valuable as edge rusher or cornerback, for example, which is why Downs could still slide into Minnesota’s draft range.
Sobleski added, “With Harrison Smith’s expected retirement announcement, the Minnesota Vikings will have a major hole to fill in their secondary after losing a defensive leader and playmaker. Downs is the top-rated prospect because he’s capable of doing everything within a defensive scheme, including serving as the primary voice to ensure everyone is aligned properly and understands their assignments.”
Indeed, safety is a need for the Vikings. Harrison Smith is expected to retire, though even if he doesn’t, a successor needs to arrive in the Twin Cities sooner rather than later. Other safeties under contract are versatile Joshua Metellus and rotational players Theo Jackson and Jay Ward. Jackson was a starter in Week 1, but was replaced later in the season by Ward.
Advertisement
“The Vikings employ the league’s most aggressive and complicated defensive scheme, and Downs has the skill set not only to contribute but also thrive,” Sobleski noted. “Coordinator Brian Flores can weaponize the multifunctional defensive back, with the potential for Downs to turn into a NFL Defensive Player of the Year candidate over time.”
Flores’ scheme is aggressive and layered, but instinctive and versatile players tend to thrive within it.
In three seasons (one at Alabama followed by two at Ohio State), he appeared in 44 games, logging 257 tackles, 16 tackles for loss, 1.5 sacks, and 6 interceptions.
“Downs can play both safety spots, function at a high level in Cover 2, drop down into the box and cover the slot. He’s considered an elite talent for a reason. Even as a possible top-10 pick, he’s not guaranteed the proper usage to become the caliber of difference-maker that he is. Maybe the Vikings make a play to move up and ensure the organization acquires the ultimate chess piece for its scheme,” Sobleski concluded.
Minnesota has been aggressive before. The front office moved up twice in the first round in 2024 — once to secure J.J. McCarthy and again to land Dallas Turner. If the board falls a certain way again, the phone could ring.
Advertisement
Ohio State defensive back Caleb Downs reacts during second-half action on Nov 29, 2025, at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor as the Buckeyes battled the Wolverines. Downs displayed emotion after a key defensive sequence while Ohio State attempted to counter Michigan’s late-game pressure. His presence and range remained central to the Buckeyes’ secondary throughout the rivalry matchup. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images.
Prospects like Downs rarely align with teams picking outside the top 10. When they do, it’s often because organizations hesitate over positional value. If Minnesota views him as more than “just a safety” — as a defensive centerpiece — the calculus changes entirely.
Giving up draft capital is always risky, particularly with an aging core. However, if it lands an elite player like Downs and he actually turns out to be a real successor for Harrison Smith, nobody will care about the cost.
Dallas Turner gives the Vikings one emerging defensive cornerstone. Adding another difference-maker like Downs could accelerate the unit’s long-term outlook.
WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman has insisted that Agit Kabayel “must” be next for Oleksandr Usyk, after the Ukrainian’s planned voluntary title defence.
However, Wilder has since been paired with Derek Chisora in a contest set for 4 April at London’s O2 Arena. And at last week’s press conference for that clash, Wilder’s manager Shelly Finkel said: “Look, Usyk came to us recently to fight. We didn’t know if that could happen, and we were on a trajectory to fight Chisora.”
Usyk’s manager Egis Klimas previously noted that Wilder, a former world heavyweight champion, was one of the biggest names from this generation that Usyk hadn’t fought. “And as well, it’s in the United States,” Klimas said of a prospective bout between Usyk, 38, and the American, 40.
Now, however, Usyk’s next move is unclear. In any case, Sulaiman has said the WBC (World Boxing Council) interim champion must be next for the southpaw after his voluntary fight.
Advertisement
Agit Kabayel holds the WBC interim belt, having won it with a stoppage of Zhilei Zhang last February, a result that gave way to a knockout of Damian Knyba last month.
Agit Kabayel (left) stopped Zhilei Zhang last February after climbing off the canvas (Getty Images)
“Kabayel was not available, because he had a fight scheduled in January,” Sulaiman told boxing analyst Chris Mannix. “So, [Usyk] requested a voluntary title defence, which is very customary.
“He was given that opportunity, and he must fight the interim champion next. That’s the ruling.”
Advertisement
Like Usyk, Kabayel is unbeaten, and the 33-year-old German has occupied a place on the periphery of the world heavyweight title scene for some time.
A few months into his run with the interim WBC belt, Kabayel saw Usyk defend the unified titles against IBF champion Daniel Dubois, whom Usyk stopped to become a two-time undisputed king at heavyweight. Usyk, who was previously undisputed at cruiserweight, also stopped Dubois in 2023.
Enjoy 185+ fights a year on DAZN, the Global Home of Boxing
Never miss a fight from top promoters. Watch on your devices anywhere, anytime.
However, there appears to be little interest in such a match-up, after Usyk outpointed Fury twice in 2024. Usyk handed the 37-year-old the first defeats of his career in their two bouts, winning their first clash by a close margin and their rematch more comfortably.
BYU wide receiver Parker Kingston was arrested and charged Tuesday with first-degree felony rape in Washington County, Utah. The Washington County attorney’s office said in a news release Wednesday that the charges stem from an alleged Feb. 23, 2025 incident in St. George, Utah.
Washington County Attorney Jerry Jaeger said the investigation began after the alleged victim, a then-20-year-old woman, went to the hospital and reported that she was sexually assaulted by Kingston.
“Detectives with the St. George Police Department then gathered digital and forensic evidence. They also conducted interviews with the parties involved and other witnesses. The information was then turned over to the Washington County Attorney’s Office for review,” the Washington County attorney’s office said in a news release.
Kingston, 21, is currently being held in jail without bail and is scheduled to appear in Utah’s 5th Judicial District Court on Friday.
“BYU became aware today of the arrest of Parker Kingston,” BYU athletics said in a statement. “The university takes any allegation very seriously, and will cooperate with law enforcement. Due to federal and university privacy laws and practices for students, the university will not be able to provide additional comment.”
Kingston finished the 2025 season as BYU’s top pass catcher with 66 catches for 924 yards and five touchdowns. He announced Jan. 2 that he intended to return to BYU for his final college season.
Advertisement
Kingston’s arrest comes less than a year after quarterback Jake Retzlaff was accused of sex assault in a civil lawsuit. The case was later dismissed, but Retzlaff left BYU because he was facing a seven-game suspension for violating the university’s honor code. He later transferred to Tulane.
The 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am kicks off Thursday with the first round at Pebble Beach and Spyglass Hill in California. Here’s everything you need to know to watch the tournament on Thursday, including full AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am TV coverage, streaming details and Round 1 tee times.
How to watch AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Thursday
By his own standards, Scottie Scheffler had a rough week at the WM Phoenix Open, a tournament he’s won twice previously. By anyone else’s standards, the World No. 1 had a great week.
Now Scheffler is on the Monterrey Peninsula to try and accomplish something he’s never done: win a tournament at Pebble Beach. But he’ll face stiff competition at this year’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the PGA Tour’s first Signature Event of the season.
Advertisement
Defending champion Rory McIlroy is making his 2026 Tour debut on Thursday.
You can watch the first round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on TV via Golf Channel beginning at 3 p.m. ET on Thursday. PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ will provide exclusive streaming coverage starting Thursday at 11:45 a.m. ET, as well as featured group and featured hole coverage all day long.
Below you will find everything you need to know to watch the first round of the 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Get ESPN+
With an ESPN+ subscription, you gain access to PGA Tour Live, where you can stream the best PGA Tour events live from wherever you want.
How to watch on TV Thursday
Golf Channel will provide first-round TV coverage of the 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Thursday from 3-7 p.m. ET.
Advertisement
How to stream online Thursday
You can stream the first round of the 2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am via PGA Tour Live on ESPN+, which will offer streaming coverage starting at 11:45 a.m. ET on Thursday in addition to featured group and hole coverage.
NEWSLETTER
Sign up for GOLF’s Top Stories Newsletter!
Get the latest golf news and our most-read stories delivered to your inbox daily!
2026 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am Round 1 tee times (ET)
Pebble Beach – Tee No. 1
11:45 a.m. – Pierceson Coody and Hank Plain/Ryo Hisatsune and Edward Herlihy 11:58 a.m. – Si Woo Kim and Dan Rose/J.J. Spaun and Pat Battle 12:11 p.m. – Corey Conners and Jake Owen/Sam Burns and Charles Kelley 12:24 p.m. – Ben Griffin and Matt Horner/Shane Lowry and Jamie Sahara 12:37 p.m. – Aldrich Potgieter and Fred Perpall/Kurt Kitayama and Jin Roy Ryu 12:50 p.m. – Denny McCarthy and Nathaniel Taylor/Stephan Jaeger and Derek Larson 1:03 p.m. – Viktor Hovland and Bryce Currie/Akshay Bhatia and Guru Gowrappan 1:16 p.m. – Chris Gotterup and Murray Demo/Wyndham Clark and Anthony Noto 1:29 p.m. – Scottie Scheffler and David Abeles/Hideki Matsuyama and Brian Ferris 1:42 p.m. – Tom Hoge and Ping Duan/Sahith Theegala and Shantanu Narayen
Pebble Beach – Tee No. 10
Advertisement
11:45 a.m. – Joe Highsmith and Phillip McCrorie/Alex Smalley and BJ Jenkins 11:58 a.m. – Emiliano Grillo and Michael Xie/Michael Kim and Thomas Laffont 12:11 p.m. – Maverick McNealy and Chris Solomon/Russell Henley and Ted Fike 12:24 p.m. – Jacob Bridgeman and Stephen Reyes/Sepp Straka and Chris Reyes 12:37 p.m. – Max McGreevy and David Beam/Matti Schmid and Patrick Hamill 12:50 p.m. – Max Greyserman and David Solomon/Billy Horschel and Ron DeSantis 1:03 p.m. – Brian Harman and Bill Rogers/Rickie Fowler and Condoleezza Rice 1:16 p.m. – Andrew Novak and Philippe Lafont/Patrick Cantlay and Egon Durban 1:29 p.m. – Bud Cauley and Charlie Allen/Kevin Yu and David Hudson 1:42 p.m. – JT Poston and Lee Styslinger/Adam Schenk and Rob Light
Spyglass Hill – Tee No. 1
11:45 a.m. – Aaron Rai and Paul Salem/Min Woo Lee and Stu Francis 11:58 a.m. – Chris Kirk and David Kohler/Sami Valimaki and Donald Harrison 12:11 p.m. – Steven Fisk and Pat Monahan/Jake Knapp and Todd Wagner 12:24 p.m. – Jhonattan Vegas and Andrew Wilson/Nick Taylor and Greg Penner 12:37 p.m. – Brian Campbell and Kris Galashan/Sam Stevens and Jerry Tarde 12:50 p.m. – Michael Thorbjornsen and Jerry Yang/Nico Echavarria and Pau Gasol 1:03 p.m. – Cameron Young and Kelly Grier/Jason Day and Joe Kernen 1:16 p.m. – Harris English and Ralph LaRossa/Lucas Glover and Greg Henslee 1:29 p.m. – Harry Hall and Nikesh Arora/Keegan Bradley and Mary Meeker 1:42 p.m. – Taylor Pendrith and Barry Sternlicht/Rico Hoey and Jeff Paraschac
Spyglass Hill – Tee No. 10
Advertisement
11:45 a.m. – Alex Noren and Ernesto Bertarelli/Matt McCarty and Johno Harris 11:58 a.m. – Robert MacIntyre and Heidi Ueberroth/Tommy Fleetwood and Greg Johnson 12:11 p.m. – Xander Schauffele and Robert Isom/Jordan Spieth and Bob Sternfels 12:24 p.m. – Rory McIlroy and Jeff Rhodes/Ryan Fox and James Dunne 12:37 p.m. – Marco Penge and Julie Frist/Daniel Berger and Harris Barton 12:50 p.m. – Keith Mitchell and Travis Kelce/Mackenzie Hughes and Alex Smith 1:03 p.m. – Matt Fitzpatrick and Doug Mackenzie/Tony Finau and Ryan Smith 1:16 p.m. – Justin Rose and George Roberts/Patrick Rodgers and Chuck Schwab 1:29 p.m. – Collin Morikawa and Geoff Yang/Ludvig Aberg and Tom Nelson 1:42 p.m. – Ryan Gerard and Annesley MacFarlane/Garrick Higgo and Steve Young
Technology-led refurbished laptop platform Edify has announced Indian cricketer Ravi Bishnoi as its brand ambassador and angel investor, marking a significant step in the company’s expansion journey. Founded in 2023 and backed by Prime Venture Partners and Beenext, the startup has already served more than 50,000 customers across India and recorded 5x growth over the past year. It is now targeting $10 million in annual recurring revenue by the end of the next financial year.
The partnership signals Edify’s intent to accelerate brand-building efforts as demand for affordable, high-performance computing continues to grow across the country.
Tapping into an $11 Billion Opportunity
Advertisement
India’s secondary electronics market is estimated to be worth $11 billion, yet much of it remains unorganised. Refurbished laptops are often sold through offline grey-market channels with minimal quality assurance, creating hesitation among buyers.
Edify aims to formalise this space by positioning itself as a technology-first certification layer. Through enterprise asset sourcing, AI-led diagnostics, and transparent grading systems, the company seeks to shift refurbished purchases from being purely price-driven decisions to trusted, brand-led choices.
Advertisement
Laptop penetration in India remains low, with only about 9% of households owning a computer. Edify estimates that nearly 220 million households are still awaiting their first laptop, underlining a vast affordability gap that certified refurbished platforms are now working to bridge.
Technology at the Core
Advertisement
At the heart of Edify’s operations is a proprietary intelligence stack featuring automated testing, predictive procurement, and workflow optimisation. Each device undergoes a multi-stage certification process powered by data-driven diagnostics, ensuring consistent quality at scale while maintaining strong unit economics.
The model reflects a broader evolution in re-commerce, where differentiation increasingly comes from software, data systems, and consumer trust rather than simple inventory aggregation.
Advertisement
Bishnoi’s Strategic Alignment
Ravi Bishnoi’s association extends beyond endorsement. By investing personally in the company, the cricketer aligns himself with Edify’s focus on digital inclusion and access.
Advertisement
Growing up in a small village near Jodhpur, Bishnoi’s journey resonates with Edify’s mission to democratise premium computing for students, creators, and young professionals.
Ashwini Purohit, Co-founder, Edify, said: “India doesn’t lack devices. It lacks trust and accessibility. Our goal has been to rebuild the refurbished category from the ground up with technology, transparency, and strong consumer experience. Ravi joining as both ambassador and investor signals that this shift is becoming mainstream.”
Advertisement
Ravi Bishnoi added: “Access to the right tools can change a person’s journey. Edify is making premium laptops accessible to people who need them most, and I’m excited to support that mission both as an ambassador and an investor.”
Expansion Plans Ahead
Advertisement
Looking forward, Edify plans to strengthen its footprint in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities, expand into adjacent computing categories, and build enterprise and fintech partnerships aimed at extending device lifecycles.
With corporate IT refresh cycles accelerating and millions of devices entering secondary markets annually, Edify believes India is on the cusp of an organised re-commerce transformation, one defined by AI-driven quality control, trusted branding, and capital-efficient supply chains
In anticipation of possible global racing, Chris Waller alongside Godolphin moved Beiwacht to Melbourne to acclimate to straight-track conditions.
The three-year-old colt targets the Group 1 Lightning Stakes (1000m) at Flemington on Saturday, matched against Godolphin stablemate Tentyris, handled by Anthony and Sam Freedman.
These Godolphin colts are both tabbed for the Group 1 Newmarket Handicap (1200m) at Flemington March 7, with overseas options including the June Royal Ascot meeting in Britain.
They previously dueled on the Flemington straight, Tentyris taking the Group 1 Coolmore Stud Stakes (1200m) in November as Beiwacht came home fourth.
Advertisement
Beiwacht‘s fourth came off a dominant score in September’s Group 1 Golden Rose (1400m) at Rosehill.
Trainer Chris Waller confirmed readiness, citing Ben Melham’s positive feedback from last week’s Flemington gallop, with the jockey aboard Saturday.
“Darren (Beadman) went down to watch it, and he gave us a glowing report,” Waller said.
“Everyone is happy.”
Advertisement
Waller emphasized the Melbourne races prep for trips abroad, yet the key focus with Godolphin is revitalizing the colt’s form.
“We need him in form and we need him used to straight racing,” Waller said.
“We will let him run his race, not worry too much about other things. We will get him into a good rhythm and let him find his pace he’s comfortable with.
“I think that’s what we have to do with him, he showed that in the Golden Rose. Let him use his speed but harness that speed, a little bit like Nature Strip.
Advertisement
“He’s not as free going, but we’ve just got to get it right.”
Waller replicated this strategy successfully with Home Affairs, Lightning Stakes winner after Coolmore Stud Stakes.
Nevertheless, Home Affairs couldn’t sustain momentum in 2022 Newmarket Handicap with 56kg, ninth place, before trailing at Royal Ascot in Group 1 Platinum Jubilee (1200m).
“To get him ready for the Newmarket, they need to have a run first so it might as well be up the straight,” Waller said.
“It could have been in the Eskimo Prince (in Sydney), but he’s won his Group 1, so I’ll keep him there and give him a chance the learn about straight racing.”
Feb 11, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Jazz forward/center Lauri Markkanen (23) drives into the basket around Sacramento Kings center Maxime Raynaud (42) during the second half at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Peter Creveling-Imagn Images
Jaren Jackson Jr. is fitting in well and making a solid first impression with the Utah Jazz.
The former NBA Defensive Player of the Year also has a solid offensive game, and he will look to record a 20-point performance for the fourth straight game with his new team when the Jazz battle the Portland Trail Blazers on Thursday night in Salt Lake City.
The clash will be the final one before the All-Star break for both teams.
Jackson might not want the time off as he has stood out since Utah acquired him from the Memphis Grizzlies as part of an eight-player trade early last week.
He scored 22 points in 25 minutes in his Utah debut on Saturday in a road loss against the Orlando Magic. Two nights later, he again had 22 points in 25 minutes as the Jazz notched a road victory over the Miami Heat.
Advertisement
Jackson kept it going Wednesday with 23 points in 22 minutes as Utah walloped the visiting Sacramento Kings 121-93.
“Credit to my teammates,” Jackson said after the latest win. “It’s been a great week. It’s been crazy. They have made me feel welcome and comfortable. I’m glad to get a home game in. It was loud. It’s been great.”
Jackson, a two-time All-Star, is averaging 19.5 points in 48 games, the first 45 coming for the Grizzlies.
The Jazz acquired Jackson to team with Lauri Markkanen, a former All-Star who narrowly missed making the team this season. Markkanen is averaging a career-best 26.7 points in 41 games after scoring 19 against the Kings.
Advertisement
“He can do everything on the court,” Jackson said of Markkanen. “This fan base knows what he brings. I’m happy to be out there with him, and we’re going to keep doing it.”
Utah has won back-to-back games for the first time since late December. The Jazz lost 12 of 14 games before the wins over Miami and Sacramento.
The two victories came without standout guard Keyonte George (sprained right ankle), who has missed five of the past six games, the first three due to a sprained left ankle.
Advertisement
Meanwhile, the Trail Blazers are completing a quick two-game road trip.
Portland fell into 10th place in the Western Conference when it was blasted 133-109 by the Timberwolves on Wednesday in Minneapolis. Julius Randle had 41 points for Minnesota.
Jrue Holiday led Portland with 23 points while All-Star Deni Avdija managed just 11 points on 3-of-14 shooting. He missed all seven shots from behind the arc.
Avdija has struggled with lower back pain in recent weeks and is a candidate to be rested on the second end of the back-to-back.
Advertisement
Portland’s Shaedon Sharpe (left calf strain) will likely miss his fourth straight game.
Trail Blazers interim coach Tiago Splitter wasn’t pleased with the effort against Minnesota. Particularly disturbing was seeing his squad turn the ball over 26 times to match its season worst. The Timberwolves scored 43 points off the miscues.
“Of course, not a great game. We couldn’t get our rhythm,” Splitter said. “They did a tremendous job with their defense. We turned the ball over way too much. Can’t win a game like that.”
Portland might fare better Thursday as it is 2-0 against the Jazz this season. The Trail Blazers recorded a 136-134 win on Oct. 29 in Salt Lake City, and Portland led by as many as 32 points during a 137-117 home win over the Jazz on Jan. 5.
Advertisement
“We got to get better and we will,” Splitter said. “I think it was an off-game for everyone (Wednesday).
“We got to bounce back. We have another game (Thursday) night. We have to regroup and see who’s ready to play.”
Tyson Fury is aiming to become a three-time heavyweight world champion but there is one man looking to intervene and disrupt those plans by sending Fury into a more permanent retirement.
‘The Gypsy King’ has hung up the gloves on several occasions but, at the age of 37, th ere was a sense that his most recent retirement, off the back of consecutive defeats to Oleksandr Usyk, could have been his last.
However, it has now been confirmed that Fury will return to action in two months’ time, as he sets about his goals of becoming boxing’s fifth three-time ruler.
Speaking with Sky Sports, Camille Estephan, founder of Eye of the Tiger Promotions and promoter of Makhmudov, stated that his fighter’s goal is to send Fury into a ‘real retirement’.
“Our goal and objective is send him to retirement, this time for real!”
Of Makhmudov’s 19 wins inside of the distance, 17 have come within the first three rounds, meaning Fury will need to be prepared for an attempted early onslaught when he collides with the Mozdok-born underdog.
It is believed that Fury-Makhmudov will take place at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Saturday, April 11, after failed attempts to stage the event at Old Trafford.
Advertisement
The event will broadcasted live by Netflix at no additional cost to a standard subscription, with further details regarding the undercard expected imminently.
Nottingham Forest have dismissed head coach Sean Dyche, meaning Nigerian players Ola Aina and Taiwo Awoniyi will soon work under a new manager.
The club decided to part ways with Dyche after a poor run of results this season. Forest have struggled for form and are currently close to the relegation zone.
Dyche was appointed after Nuno Espirito Santo left the club last November following disagreements with the club owner. Although Dyche started well, the team later lost consistency and dropped points in many matches.
Advertisement
Forest confirmed his exit after their goalless draw against Wolverhampton Wanderers.
The coaching change could affect Aina and Awoniyi in different ways. Aina has been a regular starter at left-back and is expected to keep his place in the team.
Awoniyi, however, may face more competition. Injuries have affected his season, and other strikers are fighting for a place in the starting line-up. If he fails to impress the new coach, he could get fewer minutes on the pitch.
Advertisement
Nottingham Forest are expected to announce a new manager soon, and the Super Eagles duo will be hoping the new appointment improves their chances in the team.
Feb 7, 2026; East Lansing, Michigan, USA; Michigan State Spartans guard Jeremy Fears Jr. (1) shoots free throws in overtime while his teammates watch in their game against the Illinois Fighting Illini at Jack Breslin Student Events Center. Mandatory Credit: Dale Young-Imagn Images
Michigan State faces a tough road challenge when the No. 10 Spartans take on Wisconsin in a Big Ten Conference matchup Friday night in Madison, Wis.
Both the Spartans and Badgers are coming off overtime victories against nationally ranked Illinois.
Michigan State (20-4, 10-3 Big Ten) has been idle since an 85-82 OT win over the Fighting Illini on Saturday in East Lansing, Mich.
Wisconsin (17-7, 9-4) overcame a 12-point second-half deficit to rally for a 92-90 overtime victory at Illinois on Tuesday, bouncing back from a 78-77 OT loss at Indiana on Saturday.
“This league is not for the faint of heart,” Wisconsin coach Greg Gard said following the Illinois game. “As I told Brad (Underwood, the Illinois coach,) after the game, he’s got a heck of team, which I knew coming in, but we’re growing into a heck of a team, too.”
Advertisement
Michigan State overcame a nine-point deficit early in the second half to rally past Illinois. Jeremy Fears Jr. scored 22 of his game-high 26 points in the second half and overtime while adding 15 assists to pace the Spartans.
Jaxon Kohler added 11 points and a game-high 16 rebounds for Michigan State, which hit 20 of 23 free throws. The Spartans also had a 48-38 edge on the boards and a 22-0 advantage on fastbreak points.
“They had won 12 in a row, and we were limping,” Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. “That’s a better team right now, and yet, I thought we played better, and that’s why you play the games on this night. But just think, all the things we’re talking about, and it still took overtime.”
Advertisement
Michigan State, 8-2 away from East Lansing, scores an average of 79.1 points while allowing 65.6. The Spartans also significantly outrebound opponents by a whopping 13.1 per game, the second-best margin in the nation.
Fears averages 9.1 assists, tops in the nation, and 15.1 points per game. Kohler adds 12.8 points and 9.4 rebounds. Coen Carr contributed 11.4 points and Carson Cooper 10.0.
Wisconsin overcame a 68-56 deficit at Illinois in the final nine minutes, then scored the first eight points in overtime. John Blackwell hit the first of two free throws with 5.7 seconds left to make it 92-90, and Illinois missed a long 3-point attempt at the buzzer.
Nick Boyd had 25 points, Blackwell added 24 and Austin Rapp came off the bench for 18 in the victory. The Badgers had 16 3-pointers to improve to 14-2 when hitting 10 or more beyond the arc.
Advertisement
Wisconsin committed only four turnovers compared to Illinois’s 13, leading to a 23-6 advantage in points off miscues.
Wisconsin, which owns a 12-2 home record, is averaging 83.3 points scored and 75.8 allowed. The Badgers are 15-0 when they score at least 80 points.
The backcourt of Boyd and Blackwell went into the Illinois game as one of three high-major duos to both average at least 18.5 points.
Boyd averages 20.2 points and Blackwell 18.7. Nolan Winter adds 13.9 points and a team-high 8.9 rebounds with 11 double-doubles.
Advertisement
The recent series has been almost even, with Wisconsin winning six of the past 10. The Badgers won the latest meeting 77-74 in the semifinals of the 2025 Big Ten tournament.