For the players contesting the Fifa World Cup final, half-time is usually a tightly managed 15-minute race against the clock.
There is little room for ceremony. Players must leave the field, recover physically, receive tactical instructions, undergo treatment, change equipment when required and return in time for the second half.
Advertisement
At MetLife Stadium on Sunday, that familiar routine could be disrupted by something unprecedented at a World Cup: a full-scale half-time performance staged on the pitch.
Fifa is targeting an interval of around 20 minutes for the final, with an 11-minute show curated by Coldplay frontman Chris Martin. The line-up is expected to include Justin Bieber, Shakira, BTS, Madonna, Burna Boy, conductor Gustavo Dudamel and the PS22 Chorus, along with characters from Sesame Street and The Muppets.
Advertisement
Fifa has described the performance as a “landmark celebration at the intersection of sport, music and global impact”.
Yet, behind the scale and spectacle lies an important sporting question: can football’s biggest match absorb an extended entertainment break without losing its rhythm?
Advertisement
The proposed interval would be only about five minutes longer than the standard break allowed under the Laws of the Game. But the challenge is not merely the duration of the performance. A stage must be erected on the pitch, the artists must perform, the equipment must be removed and the playing surface must be cleared before the teams can return.
In a match in which momentum, concentration and physical readiness could determine the world champion, those additional minutes may carry greater significance than they appear to on paper.
Advertisement
What do football’s rules say about half-time?
The International Football Association Board (Ifab), which writes the game’s laws, states that the half-time interval must not exceed 15 minutes.
Advertisement
The duration may be changed only with the referee’s permission.
That provision gives the match officials some flexibility, but an extension remains highly unusual in elite football. Players, coaching staff and match-day operations are all conditioned around the traditional 15-minute interval.
Advertisement
For the World Cup final, Fifa has said the performance itself will last 11 minutes but has not officially confirmed the total break. Multiple sources have indicated that organisers are working towards a restart within approximately 20 minutes.
That would require a tightly choreographed operation.
Advertisement
If the show uses all 11 minutes, only around nine minutes would remain for constructing and dismantling the stage, moving performers and equipment, checking the pitch and positioning both teams for the restart.
Any delay in one part of the operation could push the interval beyond the intended target.
Advertisement
How the World Cup final break compares
Event
Usual interval
Reported half-time duration
Entertainment format
Regular football match
Up to 15 minutes
15 minutes
No major on-field show
Fifa World Cup 2026 final
Up to 15 minutes under Ifab laws
Target of around 20 minutes
11-minute show on the pitch
2025 Club World Cup final
Up to 15 minutes ordinarily
Just over 24 minutes
Stage positioned in the stands
2024 Copa America final
Up to 15 minutes ordinarily
Around 26 minutes
Shakira performed during the interval
NFL regular-season match
13 minutes
13 minutes
Limited entertainment
Super Bowl
13 minutes ordinarily
Commonly 20-30 minutes
Large-scale on-field production
Why five extra minutes could matter
A five-minute extension may appear modest compared with the prolonged intervals seen in American football. The difference lies in how the two sports operate.
Advertisement
NFL players are accustomed to frequent stoppages, specialist substitutions and segmented periods of action. The Super Bowl’s extended half-time show has also become an established part of the event.
Football is built around two almost uninterrupted 45-minute periods. Players are trained to manage their effort across that continuous rhythm, with half-time serving as a brief reset rather than a prolonged intermission.
Advertisement
An extended pause could affect players in different ways.
A team controlling the match before half-time may feel that its momentum has been interrupted. A side under pressure could benefit from additional time to recover and reorganise. Players carrying minor injuries may welcome the longer treatment window, while others could find it harder to maintain physical sharpness.
Advertisement
Coaching staffs may have to introduce more detailed re-warm-up routines inside the dressing room or near the tunnel. Players are likely to remain active rather than seated for the entire interval, particularly if the restart is delayed beyond 20 minutes.
The challenge becomes greater because teams may not know exactly when they will be called back to the pitch. A normal half-time countdown is predictable. A live performance involving multiple artists and temporary infrastructure creates more variables.
Advertisement
A World Cup first, but not Fifa’s first experiment
The final will be the first World Cup match to feature a formal half-time show, but Fifa tested the concept at the 2025 Club World Cup final between Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain.
Advertisement
That match was also held at MetLife Stadium.
Tems, J Balvin and Doja Cat performed during an interval that lasted slightly more than 24 minutes. Importantly, the stage was positioned high in the stands rather than on the playing surface.
Advertisement
That reduced the logistical burden around the pitch. There was no need to build and remove a major platform from the field before the players could return.
The World Cup final plan is more ambitious.
Advertisement
By placing the stage on the pitch, Fifa can create a more visually powerful performance for the stadium audience and global television coverage. It also introduces concerns around construction time, equipment movement and the condition of the playing surface.
MetLife Stadium’s previous experience gives organisers a useful operational template, but the stakes will be considerably higher. The Club World Cup final was a major match; the World Cup final is the most watched and scrutinised fixture in international football.
Advertisement
A delay that might have been treated as a novelty during the earlier tournament could become a source of controversy if either finalist feels the interruption affected the match.
Shakira performing during 2026 Fifa World Cup 2026. Photo: AP | PTI
Advertisement
What happened during Shakira’s Copa America show?
The most relevant football precedent came during the 2024 Copa America final between Argentina and Colombia at Hard Rock Stadium.
Advertisement
Shakira performed at half-time, extending the interval to around 26 minutes before the second half began.
The decision attracted attention because the tournament had otherwise enforced the standard interval. Coaches and players were required to wait significantly longer than usual, and the extended pause became part of the discussion surrounding the final.
Advertisement
The incident demonstrated the central challenge of combining football with a major entertainment production: the advertised length of the musical performance does not represent the full interruption.
Artists must enter and leave, sound and lighting systems must be positioned, the stage must be prepared and the pitch must be cleared. Even a tightly produced show can add several minutes beyond its running time.
Advertisement
The Copa America final also showed that football authorities are willing to alter established match routines for commercial and entertainment purposes during showpiece events.
Fifa’s reported 20-minute target suggests it wants to avoid a repeat of the longer Copa America delay. Whether that target is realistic will depend on how quickly the temporary stage can be assembled and removed.
Advertisement
Why the Super Bowl model cannot simply be copied
The Super Bowl has made the half-time show one of the most valuable entertainment slots in global broadcasting.
Advertisement
Its performances routinely involve elaborate staging, complex lighting, large groups of dancers and headline artists. NFL players commonly remain off the field for between 20 and 30 minutes during the show, far longer than the strict 13-minute interval used during the regular season.
But the extended break is expected.
Advertisement
Teams know before the match that the interval will be prolonged. Coaches build it into their preparation, while players conduct structured warm-ups before returning.
The football World Cup has no such tradition.
Advertisement
The players in Sunday’s final will have spent their careers treating the half-time interval as a short tactical and recovery window. Even with advance warning, the change presents an unfamiliar competitive condition in the most important match of their lives.
There is also a difference in playing surfaces. A football pitch must remain clear and consistent for a game involving continuous ball movement. Temporary platforms, equipment and large production teams must be removed without damaging the turf or leaving debris.
Advertisement
The Super Bowl shows that an extended interval can become an accepted part of a major sporting event. It does not prove that the same format can be inserted into football without consequences.
Advertisement
Can the performance fit into 20 minutes?
The planned 11-minute performance leaves organisers with a demanding timetable.
Advertisement
The stage must be moved into position immediately after the first-half whistle. Performers and technical personnel must enter, the show must begin on schedule and all equipment must be removed quickly afterwards.
The process must also account for television requirements, safety checks and communication between match officials, broadcasters and the two teams.
Advertisement
A delay of only two or three minutes at any stage could stretch the break closer to the 24-minute interval seen at the Club World Cup final.
Fifa’s task is further complicated by the size of the announced line-up. Bringing together global pop stars, musicians, a children’s chorus and television characters within an 11-minute production will require rapid transitions.
Advertisement
The show may use pre-positioned elements or a compact stage design to save time. Even then, taking the structure off the field may be more difficult than bringing it on.
The referee will ultimately need confirmation that the pitch is safe and both teams are ready before restarting the game.
Advertisement
Will one team benefit more?
The effect of an extended break may depend on the first-half score and pattern.
Advertisement
A team leading comfortably could use the additional time to recover and reinforce its defensive plan. It could also lose the intensity that allowed it to dominate.
A side trailing at half-time would gain extra minutes for tactical adjustments, treatment and emotional recovery. Coaches could analyse the opposition’s structure in greater detail and communicate more changes than the standard interval allows.
Advertisement
The longer pause may therefore act as an unintended competitive variable.
Suppose one finalist finishes the first half applying sustained pressure. The show could interrupt that momentum and allow the opponent to reset. Conversely, a team physically exhausted by pressing may receive a valuable recovery period.
Advertisement
Neither effect would automatically make the format unfair because both sides would receive the same interval. Yet equal time does not necessarily produce an equal sporting impact.
Football’s momentum is shaped by circumstances. The state of the match at the interval will determine whether the extra minutes feel like an advantage or an obstacle.
Advertisement
The commercial logic behind the spectacle
The planned show reflects Fifa’s effort to turn the World Cup final into an entertainment event extending beyond the match itself.
Advertisement
Coldplay’s Martin has curated a line-up designed to reach audiences across continents and musical genres. The inclusion of Bieber, Shakira, BTS, Madonna and Burna Boy gives the programme enormous global appeal.
The event is being produced by Global Citizen. Artists are reportedly not receiving performance fees.
Advertisement
The show is also tied to the Global Citizen Education Fund, which aims to raise $100 million to expand access to education and football opportunities for children worldwide.
This gives the ceremony a philanthropic purpose alongside its commercial and broadcasting value.
Advertisement
For Fifa, the attraction is clear. The Super Bowl has demonstrated how a half-time performance can become a cultural event in its own right, drawing viewers who may not otherwise watch the match.
The risk is that the entertainment becomes more intrusive than complementary.
Advertisement
A test that could reshape future World Cups
Sunday’s half-time show will be judged on two separate standards.
Advertisement
As an entertainment production, it will be measured by its scale, performances and global audience. As part of a football match, it will be assessed by whether the second half begins smoothly and whether players or coaches feel the extended interval affected the contest.
A 20-minute break completed without operational problems could encourage Fifa to repeat the concept at future tournaments.
Advertisement
A prolonged delay, damaged pitch or visible loss of player readiness could strengthen arguments that football’s traditional interval should remain untouched.
The governing body is trying to insert a Super Bowl-style spectacle into a sport whose rhythm has developed around a short and predictable break.
Advertisement
That collision between tradition and entertainment will play out on the biggest possible stage.
The artists will have 11 minutes to deliver the show. Fifa may have only a few additional minutes to prove that the World Cup final can accommodate it without changing the match itself.
LIVERPOOL, England — Liverpool midfielder Dominik Szoboszlai agreed to a new five-year contract on Friday.
Szoboszlai has played for Liverpool since 2023 after joining from Leipzig. The Hungary captain still had two years on his former deal before signing the extension to stay at Anfield through 2031.
The 25-year-old Szoboszlai helped Liverpool win the Premier League in 2025. In his three seasons, he has made 147 appearances across all competitions, scoring 28 times.
He was a bright spot in a subpar season for Liverpool last season, scoring 13 goals and delivering 12 assists in 53 appearances. His team, however, finished fifth at 25 points behind champion Arsenal, leading to the firing of coach Arne Slot.
Advertisement
He will now form part of the rebuild under new coach Andoni Iraola.
Those successes raised hopes that Hodgkinson would be able to break Czech athlete Jarmila Kratochvilova’s record time of one minute and 53.28 seconds, set in Munich in 1983.
The Briton improved her national record to 1:54.33 in Stockholm in early June but suffered a shock defeat by Switzerland’s Audrey Werro, who ran the third fastest 800m in history to win the race.
Advertisement
Two weeks later, Hodgkinson pulled out of the 400m final at the UK Athletics Championships in tears after feeling “a little hamstring twinge” moments before the race.
After Werro improved her best time to 1:53.80 in Paris, Hodgkinson looked to kick-start her season at the Diamond League meeting in Eugene.
However, competing with both knees strapped after a heavy fall in training, she finished in second place behind world champion Lilian Odira.
Asked if the record attempt was still her target on Saturday, Hodgkinson said: “I haven’t missed any training. I feel quite good. I’m just taking the pressure off myself because I don’t have anything to prove. I don’t need to chase anything just because anybody else wants it to be done.
Advertisement
“I’m in really good shape and in a really good place. I think fast times come from great races. If that’s Saturday then great, if it’s in a few weeks or next year, I don’t care.”
She will face tough competition in Ethiopia’s Olympic silver medallist Tsige Duguma and Dutch star Femke Broeders-Bol, who has made rapid strides since moving up from 400m to 800m this season and recorded a time of 1:55.60 in Paris.
However, training partner and world silver medallist Georgia Hunter Bell has pulled out of the meet because of a heavy cold.
Rising British star Phoebe Gill, who reached the Olympic semi-finals in Paris aged 17, will make her Diamond League debut having battled back from an injury that ruled her out of the 2025 outdoor season.
Kobbie Mainoo has been told to make the ultimate refusal at the World Cup
As England prepares for its third-place World Cup clash against France on Saturday, Manchester United icon Nicky Butt is advising Kobbie Mainoo to take a stand.
However, Butt believes Mainoo should reject an appearance. The former United midfielder has publicly questioned Tuchel’s management of the youngster during the North American tournament, suggesting the prolonged benching points to deeper, unresolved issues behind the scenes.
Get MEN Premium now for just £1 HERE – or get involved in our United WhatsApp group by clicking HERE. You can also join our United Facebook page by clicking HERE and don’t miss out on our brilliant selection of newsletters HERE.
With Mainoo so far failing to add to his 14 international caps this summer, Butt said: “I do not know what is going on there, there’s something not quite right with it. Now they’re going to play the bomb squad in the stupid third-place game. I’d just refuse to play if I was Kobbie Mainoo. I’d say I was injured. It’s a nonsense game, especially when you’ve been treated like that.
“He’s not played a minute of football, now to go and start this pointless jumped-up friendly and potentially get injured for the whole season… no.” Beyond his frustration with Tuchel’s handling of Mainoo, Butt believes the German should face the sack for the way England crashed out in the semi-finals.
Advertisement
He explained: “There’s no way he [Tuchel] can stay on. Not a cat in hell’s chance after that. If he stays on, John McDermott [the FA’s technical director] needs to be sacked as well. There’s no way you can keep him now. He’s not a Sir Bobby Robson or Kevin Keegan, someone that the nation loves.
“You’re talking about a manager that’s come in and played negative football, crazy negative football, in the semi-final against a beatable Argentina team. And it shouldn’t really matter, but people will go against him because he’s German as well, so he’s going to have a nightmare.
“He’s an unbelievable club manager, so just let him go. He won’t want to stay. He might say he does, but deep down he’ll be thinking, ‘pay up, I’m out of here’. If we were nine months down the line, I’d definitely be going for Pep Guardiola.
Advertisement
“But Pep can’t leave Man City a month ago, saying he needs a rest from football, and then go straight back in. He can’t do that.” Butt also named Newcastle boss Eddie Howe and United States national team manager Mauricio Pochettino as potential candidates to replace Tuchel.
He said: “Eddie Howe would be brilliant. I’d love him to go in, it’d be great. Mauricio Pochettino’s got an unbelievable relationship with John McDermott and he picks it. When McDermott was the academy manager at Tottenham, Pochettino was the manager, and they had a really, really good relationship.
Sky Sports, HBO Max, Netflix and Disney+ with Ultimate TV package
Advertisement
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.
Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.
“I was in and around it with the Manchester United academy, we would do training camps there so I’ve seen it first hand. I wouldn’t be surprised if that happened and I wouldn’t be against it at all. He’s a very, very good manager.
“A likeable person, plays good football everywhere he goes. But we all said the same about Tuchel, yet when they go into that England dynamic, they just change, it’s crazy. I can’t put my finger on why.”
Thousands of Man United fans upgraded their matchday last season. This is how they did it.
Advertisement
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
Official premium experiences at Old Trafford are available now for the 26/27 Premier League season. Make it easier than ever to turn a regular fixture into something genuinely unforgettable.
Lionel Messi has already won the World Cup, but the Argentina captain added another chapter to his astonishing career on Wednesday, inspiring his team to victory in their semi-final against England.
The defending champions were up against it, trailing to Anthony Gordon’s goal until the 85th minute in Atlanta before Messi worked his magic.
This time the tournament’s all-time leading marksman did not score. But he teed up Enzo Fernandez for the equaliser and delivered the cross for Lautaro Martinez to head in the winner, sealing a 2-1 victory.
“These are special feelings. I think the squad could feel it and this was a game the Argentine people really wanted to win, and so did we,” Messi, 39, said after facing England for the first time in his career.
Advertisement
“This is still a special fixture.”
He was not quite able to emulate Diego Maradona, who scored two iconic goals in Argentina’s 1986 World Cup quarter-final win over England.
But he will settle for the two assists, and he has already emulated his legendary predecessor by winning the trophy four years ago in Qatar.
Now, after Argentina maintained their incredible record of never having lost a World Cup semi-final, Messi will appear in a second straight final, and a third overall.
The South Americans are aiming to become the first team to retain the World Cup since Brazil in 1962, and Messi, the sole survivor from the side that lost to Germany in 2014, will become just the second player after Brazilian great Cafu to appear in three finals.
“It is crazy to be playing in back-to-back finals,” he said.
Argentina had already staged a stunning late comeback to beat Egypt 3-2 in the same Atlanta stadium in the last 16, and they smelled blood as England sat deeper and deeper after going ahead.
Advertisement
“Once again we managed to do the job when things were looking bad. We never stopped believing,” said Messi, who has now played a record 33 World Cup games across six different tournaments.
For long spells on Wednesday his influence was limited, but that has often been the way with Messi and he was still able to drag his team to victory.
“I felt like for large parts of the game, we dealt with him really well. But as always with the most dangerous players in the world, when they have the ball in the final third, they can create something,” said England captain Harry Kane.
“He’s done that again today. He’s obviously one of the best players ever for a reason.”
Advertisement
Spanish reunion
Messi is arguably the greatest of all, and there may no longer be an argument if Argentina successfully defend their title in Sunday’s final against Spain.
Pele and Maradona only played in two World Cup finals while Maradona won the trophy just once.
Messi is also the all-time top scorer in World Cup history with 21 goals, although Kylian Mbappé is just one behind and plays Saturday against England in the third-place play-off.
He could easily have bowed out of international football after 2022, when Argentina defeated France in the final.
Advertisement
But he appears to have been saving himself for this World Cup in recent years, removing himself from the intensity of European football and acclimatising to American conditions with Inter Miami.
While Cristiano Ronaldo‘s ongoing presence in the Portugal team may have held them back, Messi remains almost as influential as ever.
“He is just the leader and key player in any team in which he plays,” said England coach Thomas Tuchel.
Now he gets his chance to play Spain in a competitive game for the first time, and the identity of the opposition makes the occasion even more special.
Advertisement
Messi moved to Barcelona with his family at the age of 13 and stayed for two decades, before leaving in 2021 for Paris Saint-Germain.
He has a Spanish passport and may one day settle down again in Castelldefels, just down the coast from Barcelona.
But before Messi thinks about that, he wants to douse Spain’s dreams.
Devin Haney is yet to step into the ring this year but is looking to prove that he is one of boxing’s pound-for-pound stars with a fight date looming, and now he has revealed the four men whom he believes warrant a place on boxing’s ‘Mount Rushmore’.
Despite those rumours, Haney could instead take on WBO mandatory challenger Keyshawn Davis in his next outing, before potential clashes with Stevenson and Garcia in 2027.
Advertisement
As Haney looks to achieve greatness of his own, the Californian told Inside The Ring the four legends that he would place on boxing’s ‘Mount Rushmore’.
“My Mount Rushmore of fighters are Floyd [Mayweather] because he changed the game, his defence, he just brought a whole different vibe to the sport of boxing.
“My next is Sugar Ray [Leonard] because he was just a killer in the ring, he had the offence and the defence, his defence was his offence, he was just Sugar Ray.
“[Muhammad] Ali. Ali just stood for so much and he is ‘The Greatest’.
“Number four, this is hard, the fourth spot, I’ll go Sugar Ray Robinson. What he was doing back in those days, fighting so often and all of those fights that he won. He is just a legend, so I would say Sugar Ray Robinson.”
Advertisement
It’s hard to argue with that assessment, with Mayweather, Leonard, Ali and Robinson all widely regarded as some of the greatest of all time due to the elite achievements they have all managed inside the ring.
Santos debut, academy stars, senior returns – Who could play for Man United vs Wrexham – Manchester Evening News
Need to know
Manchester United take on Championship side Wrexham in their first pre-season fixture on Saturday
Manchester United midfielder Andrey Santos is among the 25-man squad travelling squad(Image: Ash Donelon/Manchester United via Getty Images)
Everything you need to know about the Manchester United travelling squad to face Wrexham:
United have named a 25-man squad for Saturday’s pre-season fixture against Wrexham in Helsinki.
Due to the World Cup, many senior players are unavailable for the game. This means only a handful of first-team players will be travelling to Finland.
Among the first-team players are Harry Maguire, Patrick Dorgu, Leny Yoro, Luke Shaw, Ayden Heaven, Mason Mount, Joshua Zirkzee and Bryan Mbeumo.
After signing on Monday, Andrey Santos has also been included in the squad and could make his debut.
Tom Heaton, Radek Vitek and Dermot Mee will be travelling too, but new signing Karl Darlow is absent. There are also places for some familiar academy players including Jack Fletcher, Tyler Fletcher, Toby Collyer, Shea Lacey and Chido Obi.
Other youngsters have been handed an opportunity to impress in the absence of their senior counterparts.
Jaydan Kamason is expected to gain minutes because United have no other right-backs available. Ethan Williams could also be handed an opportunity due to a similar lack of left-sided wingers.
The clash with Wrexham marks United’s first pre-season game. The Reds will also take on Rosenborg, Atletico Madrid, Paris Saint-Germain, Leeds and AC Milan.
Their first competitive game of the season is on August 22, at newly promoted Hull City. Read the full story here.
Recent years have featured no shortage of Vikings UDFA success stories. The 2026 season could involve more unheralded talents shining.
Rob Brzezinski was leading the Vikings’ front office when most of the UDFAs were added. Kwesi Adofo-Mensah had been fired but Nolan Teasley hadn’t yet been hired. Since the end of April, the front office has been undergoing an overhaul, resulting in some executives being shown the door. Teasley then brought in some unheralded talent of his own. Consider some of the most notable names ahead of camp competition (shout out to Over the Cap).
Vikings UDFA Talents to Know for Training Camp
Player No. 1 — Dillon Bell, WR/KR
Advertisement
Dec 6, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; Georgia Bulldogs wide receiver Dillon Bell (86) makes a catch to score a touchdown during the second quarter against the Alabama Crimson Tide during the 2025 SEC Championship game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images
The versatile weapon on offense really jumps off the field. He moves explosively and boasts nice size. Getting him to town meant guaranteeing a hearty $272,500 within his contract. Even better is that he appears capable of helping on specials. Almost feels like he’s favored to get onto the 53-man roster even if there’s no sure thing for an undrafted talent.
Player No. 2 — Brett Thorson, P
Dec 7, 2024; Atlanta, GA, USA; Georgia Bulldogs punter Brett Thorson (92) punts the ball to the Texas Longhorns during the first half in the 2024 SEC Championship game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images
The issue for Mr. Thorson has little to do with punting the football. In all likelihood, the rookie can do a better job of launching the football far down the field than veteran Johnny Hekker. Can he do a good enough job as a holder? Matt Daniels expressed plenty of optimism. Still, though, it’s tough to know if he can handle the pressure in major moments. The Vikings will try to find out.
Player No. 3 — Delby Lemieux, iOL
Dec 14, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Minnesota Vikings quarterback J.J. McCarthy (9) calls signals during the first half against the Dallas Cowboys at AT&T Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images
In Lemieux, the Vikings have a young lineman who appears to be quite smart and who performed well within a lower level of college football (he played for Dartmouth, an Ivy League school). Much remains unsettled for the interior of the offensive line once one looks past LG1 Donovan Jackson and RG1 Will Fries. Opportunity beckons.
Player No. 4 — Triston Leigh, OL
Advertisement
Dec 21, 2024; Austin, Texas, USA; Clemson Tigers offensive lineman Tristan Leigh (71) against the Texas Longhorns during the CFP National playoff first round at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
The rookie lineman was a 5-star recruit going into college. He then had a modest career at Clemson. Where does he settle as an NFL player? Leigh boasts a great build and earned a beefy $262,500 in guaranteed money to become a Viking. Again, there’s room for someone to emerge along the interior for the Vikings.
Player No. 5 — Michael Briscoe, WR
Nov 30, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; The Seattle Seahawks players run out of the tunnel before the game against the Minnesota Vikings at Lumen Field. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images
The Vikings have a true battle taking place at receiver. Nobody is going to overcome the top trio of Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, and Jauan Jennings. After those three it could be a bloodbath. A ton of talent is going to jostle for what is a maximum of three open positions. Where Briscoe could emerge is due to being a Seattle UDFA add prior to joining the Vikings. He stands at 6’2″ and is 210 pounds. He’ll need to overcome some combo of Tai Felton, Myles Price, Bell, Jeshaun Jones, and several others.
Suncorp Stadium will play host to Sunday’s
Round 20 NRL game between Dolphins and
North Queensland Cowboys. The game kicks off at 4:05 pm with Dolphins heading into the game as favourites with the bookmakers. Continue reading for our in-depth preview of the Dolphins vs.
North Queensland Cowboys
game and give you our free tips and bets.
The Dolphins will be eager to respond after a disappointing defeat to Cronulla, although the result came with several key players unavailable. With a stronger squad returning, Redcliffe has the chance to quickly reset ahead of a crucial stretch in the finals race.
North Queensland has developed a habit of dragging opponents into high-scoring contests and possesses enough attacking strike to challenge any side. The Dolphins’ best football is built on control, discipline and defensive pressure rather than trying to match points. If they can avoid an open shootout, they’ll give themselves every chance, but the Cowboys remain a dangerous opponent capable of punishing lapses in concentration.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver on Thursday said that Indiana Fever star Caitlin Clark has become a “political football in this country.” Silver, speaking during the CNBC x Boardroom summit in New York City, also declined to answer when asked if a report that he persuaded WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert to suspend Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas for putting her fist on Clark’s throat was accurate.
During the Fever’s controversial loss to the Mercury on June 22, Clark was on the receiving end of what her coach Stephanie White called “two cheap shots.” The first was Thomas putting her first on Clark’s throat, the second was a landing space foul that jarred Clark’s back and ultimately led to a two-week absence.
No foul was called on the Thomas incident during the game, but the league retroactively assessed a Flagrant 2 and suspended Thomas for one game. The incident became a flash point, both inside and outside the WNBA, and Thomas was subsequently subjected to death threats and online abuse.
In the ensuing weeks, the WNBA’s officiating, particularly in regard to Clark, has been a constant topic of discussion. It flared up again in recent days due to a report from the Sports Business Journal that Engelbert was not planning to punish Thomas until Silver stepped in (a report that the WNBA has denied), and another controversial moment with Clark in the Fever’s loss to the Golden State Valkyries.
Advertisement
When Silver was on stage Thursday, he was asked directly about the report that he influenced the WNBA’s decision on the Thomas incident. Here are Silver’s full comments:
CNBC: The report says that effectively the WNBA was not necessarily going to penalize [Alyssa] Thomas, but that you stepped in and said that it had to happen
Silver: Let me give you a serious answer to that question. I think that ultimately the issues around Caitlin Clark are not largely about officiating. And that particular incident is not about whether a foul should have been called at the time of the game or whether that was ultimately a flagrant non-review.
I’ve come to know Caitlin really well. She’s an incredible player and also an incredible person. And she wants to focus on being the best player she can. And she’s become a bit of a political football in this country, and I think that’s incredibly unfair to her. I don’t think that issue is ultimately about officiating. It’s become political ping pong with her. She’s a young woman who’s trying to improve her game, focus on being the best player she can. And I don’t even think it’s fair to her that this has become a separate storyline about one foul — should it have been call in time or should it have been called a flagrant after the fact?
That’s my response. People are allowed to think whatever they can, and whatever they want about our league, but there’s so much to celebrate around the WNBA. I was part of the group that wrote the original business plan 30 years ago, and where women’s sports has come — we missed our numbers for many years in the WNBA, but then it turned the corner. You’re now seeing off the chart valuations of WNBA teams. Joe and Clara Tsai have done an incredible job here in New York with the Liberty. Caitlin came along, brought an entirely new audience — and it began when she was still in college — to the game: young girls, women, men, across the board, people who never had been paying attention to women’s basketball. And then it became a rising tide. Because as we quickly all saw, it wasn’t just Caitlin. There’s enormous talent in this league.
Advertisement
But as I said, do we need to improve WNBA officiating? No doubt about it, but my day job is getting complaints about NBA officiating.
CNBC: But fair to say you stepped in?
Silver: I’m not going to comment on that, because I don’t think it’s fair to Caitlin, and to Cathy Engelbert either. I think that’s not the real issue here. What people are trying to make a larger issue around that — not as to whether that was a flagrant foul or not. Obviously, the league decided after the fact that not only should a foul have been called, but it was a flagrant foul.
Yes, we need to improve WNBA officiating, and there’s a lot of work to do on NBA officiating as well, but I really think there’s an opportunity to support Caitlin and say, let her be the best basketball player she can be.
Advertisement
During a press conference in Las Vegas for the NBA’s Summer League on Tuesday, Silver was non-committal when asked about Engelbert’s future, though he said he was “pleased” with the current state of the WNBA.
“I think Cathy continues to do a strong job building that league,” Silver said, noting that he didn’t want to speak for Engelbert. “We’ll have ongoing discussions about what the future looks like.”
Locals in Buenos Aires voiced support on Thursday for Argentine World Cup players who held up a banner asserting sovereignty over the Falkland Islands after their semi-final victory over England, even as Britain urged FIFA to investigate the incident.
Some players brandished a banner declaring “Las Malvinas Son Argentinas” (“The Falklands are Argentine”) after their 2-1 victory over England in Atlanta.
A Reuters photograph showed the white, homemade-looking banner initially waved by fans celebrating in the stadium’s front row. According to Argentine newspaper Clarin, midfielder Giovani Lo Celso approached the supporters and asked to borrow it.
Later photos showed him holding it up with centre-back Lisandro Martinez, while the players were singing and celebrating, facing their fans. It can later be seen lying on the grass.
Advertisement
FIFA’s Stadium Code of Conduct bans “banners, flags, flyers, apparel and other paraphernalia that are of a political, offensive, and/or discriminatory nature” inside stadiums.
It had not issued any public sanction as of Thursday and declined to comment when contacted by Reuters. Similar actions in the past by footballers have led to fines or match bans.
British business minister Peter Kyle told BBC Radio on Thursday that the incident must be formally investigated, stressing that politics must be kept separate from the World Cup.
Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey, in a public letter to FIFA President Gianni Infantino, said the act “directly insulted the people of the islands” and called for the players to be disqualified from participating in Sunday’s final.
Advertisement
The question of sovereignty over the South Atlantic British overseas territory, known to the British as the Falklands and to the Argentines as the Malvinas, has been a long-running sore in relations between the countries.
They fought a short conflict over the islands in 1982, in which 649 Argentine soldiers and 255 British combatants died.
Near a monument to the Argentine war dead in central Buenos Aires, locals Reuters spoke to were supportive of the team’s actions.
“For me, it is very important that players, as public figures, give their opinion, especially on issues that are so sensitive for us,” said 30-year-old Martin Aguirre.
Advertisement
“That is why we really appreciate the gestures by Licha (Martinez) and Giovani Lo Celso, because even though they know they could face a sanction or some kind of problem over this, they still raised that flag.”
Federico Schenone, 52, said it was not a political gesture but a “matter of history and legitimacy”.
Although he did not directly mention the banner, talisman Lionel Messi said after the game: “When you play a match of that magnitude, so many things come into play. History weighs on a game like that.”
You must be logged in to post a comment Login