Sport
6ft2in Arsenal star admits he feels ‘tiny’ in Mikel Arteta’s giant squad as he says ‘it’s like a basketball team’
AT Real Sociedad, Mikel Merino saw himself as a giant of a man.
But after joining Arsenal in the summer, the 6ft 2in Spanish midfielder feels like one of the smallest members of Mikel Arteta’s elite group of NBA-sized man mountains.
Merino, 28, laughed: “It is crazy. I am in the corridors of the training ground just walking, and back at my old club I used to be one of the tallest, so everyone was smaller than me.
“Now, I look around and everyone is taller than me. We look like a basketball team.”
In their 2-0 defeat at Bournemouth on Saturday, the Gunners’ starting XI had NINE players above six foot — with just 5ft 8in duo Raheem Sterling and Leandro Trossard below that mark.
Heading that lofty line-up was the 6ft 4in duo of William Saliba and Kai Havertz, along with fellow giants Merino, David Raya, Riccardo Calafiori, Gabriel, Ben White, Declan Rice and Thomas Partey.
Since taking charge nearly five years ago, boss Arteta has made it his mission to assemble a squad not only with technical ability but powerful physiques to match, in their quest for Premier League three-pointers.
In the tunnel before kick-off, this net-busting Arsenal team are a frightening prospect for rivals, even more so from set-pieces with their slam-dunk corner routines striking fear into defenders.
But these big guys sure can shift, much like the Harlem Globetrotters covering the pitch with a stunning combination of bulk, brains and beauty.
SunSport even understands Arteta shows basketball clips to members of his team to encourage them to use their size more efficiently, creating space with clever movement.
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Merino continued: “Football now has changed and you need a strong team. Physicality is key and we need to be the most complete team possible.
“You need the physical aspect, technical aspect, the tactical one, you need to be a total team to achieve big things as we want to do.
“It is not only about being tall and big, you need mentality. If you are tall and big but don’t go with the 100 per cent intention to win the ball, it’s just nothing.
“Set-pieces are a big part of the game and you can win or lose a lot because of that.
“We train a lot and have the physical advantage. But the main thing is the mentality and we have that.”
Merino arrived in North London for £27.4million from Sociedad with a reputation for dominating duels, winning 326 last term — the most in Europe’s top five leagues.
But after making his first Prem start against the Cherries — having recovered from a freak shoulder injury suffered in his first training session back in August — Merino says he is much more than just a midfield bruiser.
He said: “That is one of the reasons I am here, because I can be a threat in the opposite box. That is something I need to work on to get better at. I have a high ceiling.
“Of course, goals are not the main thing for a midfielder but if you can provide them it is going to be a whole different thing for you as a player.
“I have admired a lot of players — Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard, Cesc Fabregas, Patrick Vieira — all-round midfielders that are box-to-box, can score, can defend, win duels.
“Of course, in Spain we had Xavi, Andres Iniesta and that mentality of keeping the ball, dominating through short passes.”
Merino is coming off the back of what he describes as “the best summer”, one that “changed my life”, having won the Euros with Spain before earning a career-defining Arsenal switch.
The Osasuna academy star scored an extra-time winner in the quarter- finals to dump hosts Germany out and played his part in the final to break English hearts.
Add that to a German Cup win with Borussia Dortmund, a Copa del Rey title with Sociedad and European triumphs with Spain’s Under-19s and Under-21s, it is clear Merino brings a winning mentality to a talented Arsenal group that are young and hungry — but lacking silverware.
It seems then there is no better man to have on your side when it comes to ending a 20-year Prem drought, as well as trying to win the Champions League for the first time.
Ahead of their league-phase clash with Shakhtar Donetsk at the Emirates, Merino explained: “I’ve been lucky enough to win a lot of trophies in my career, I know the feeling.
“You cannot compare it with anything else. Knowing what this club is about and how big the Champions League is and winning trophies, winning the competition here would be amazing.
“The squad may not have the experience yet, it is a really young team, but luckily I have experiences of winning, when you have the moment of truth in the semis or final and to be able to keep that calmness.
“There is still a long way to go to achieve that but I think we have the basics, the players, the mentality, and that has to be the ultimate goal.”
Arsenal player ratings vs Bournemouth
By Alex Crook
TEN-MAN Arsenal suffered their first defeat of the season as brilliant Bournemouth dealt them a South Coast setback.
The Gunners travelled to face Andoni Iraola’s men having won five and drawn three of their opening eight matches this term.
But their task was made a tricky one when William Saliba was shown a red card on the half-hour.
Ryan Christie brilliantly fired the hosts into a deserved lead following a well-worked set piece routine 20 minutes from time.
Justin Kluivert then sealed his side’s incredible 2-0 victory from the penalty spot on 79 minutes.
Here’s how SunSport rated each Gunners performer on the day.
DAVID RAYA – 5
Was lucky to get away with one poor pass out from the back early on. Made amends for another error by saving smartly with the legs to deny Marcus Tavernier after initially spilling a Semenyo cross-cum-shot before clumsily conceding the penalty.
BEN WHITE – 4
England outcast was back in the team after four games out, but did not look 100 per cent fit and found it tough going containing the lively Antoine Semenyo down the Bournemouth left in the first half and Dango Ouattara in the second.
WILLIAM SALIBA – 3
Usually calm and collected under pressure but paid the price for a rare moment of panic when he hauled down Bournemouth striker Evanilson to get himself sent off and will miss next weekend’s crunch clash at home to title rivals Liverpool as a result.
GABRIEL – 5
Given the captain’s armband in the absence of the stricken Bukayo Saka, but not at his commanding best, especially after losing centre-back partner Saliba. Did not really step up to the leadership plate.
RICCARDO CALAFIORI – 6
Did a better job containing Semenyo when Bournemouth’s dangerman switched wings at half-time than White did in the first half, but unable to have his usual influence going forward.
THOMAS PARTEY – 5
Back in his traditional central midfield berth after being used as an emergency right back in the 3-1 win over Southampton. Was second best up against Bournemouth’s impressive Lewis Cook.
DECLAN RICE – 5
Another of Arsenal’s international contingent who looked sluggish after the break from domestic duty. Struggled to impose himself on the game in midfield and unable to get forward as much as he usually does. Did his bit dropping into the back-line after Saliba’s dismissal.
RAHEEM STERLING – 4
Former England man was deployed on the right wing in place of the injured Bukayo Saka and gave the ball away a few times when in promising positions before being sacrificed after the Saliba red card.
MIKEL MERINO – 5
Finally able to make his full Premier League debut after an injury-affected start to his Arsenal career and showed some nice touches. Also fired into the side-netting with the visitors’ best first half opening.
LEANDRO TROSSARD – 4
Started the game well but sold Saliba short with a poor back pass that led to the red card and disappeared from the action after that before being subbed shortly after the half-hour mark.
KAI HAVERTZ – 5
The German cut an isolated figure up front, especially after Arsenal were reduced to ten men, but worked tirelessly for the team without ever looking like adding to his run of scoring in the previous four games in all competitions.
SUBSTITUTES
Jakub Kiwior (for Sterling, 37) – 4
Gabriel Martinelli (for Trossard, 64) – 5
Gabriel Jesus (for Kiwior, 81) – N/A
Ethan Nwaneri (for Merino, 81) – N/A
Sport
Sports announced for Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games
Track cycling and boxing are among the events that will be included in the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games, it has been revealed.
A stripped-back programme of 10 sports, announced on Tuesday, also includes athletics and swimming as mandatory – but badminton and hockey have been dropped.
The Games, last held in Glasgow in 2014 at a cost of over £540m, will be held across across four venues between 23 July and 2 August 2026.
Glasgow stepped in to host after the Australian state of Victoria pulled out because of rising costs.
A total of 3,000 of athletes from up to 74 Commonwealth nations and territories are expected to compete at the 2026 Games.
The event will also feature “fully integrated para-competitions” across six of the selected sports.
Katie Sadleir, chief executive of the Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF), said: “The Games promise to be a truly immersive festival of sport and celebration of culture and diversity that inspires athletes and sports – with a fan experience more accessible than ever before.”
First Minister John Swinney said the event is an exciting opportunity for the people of Scotland.
He said: “While Glasgow 2026 will look quite different to previous Games, we can, and we must, use this as an opportunity to work collaboratively to ensure that this new concept brings a strong and sustainable future for the games.”
What sports are included?
The CGF said the a number of factors, including “universality of participation and quality of competition” as well as local appeal were considered when deciding what sports to include.
The last time the Games were in Glasgow, 17 sports were contested – this time they will feature 10 sports:
- Athletics and para-athletics (track and field only)
- Swimming and para-swimming
- Artistic gymnastics
- Track cycling and para-track cycling
- Netball
- Weightlifting and para-powerlifting
- Boxing
- Judo
- Bowls and para-bowls
- 3×3 basketball and 3×3 wheelchair basketball
Organisers said they understand that fans and athletes of sports not included will be “incredibly disappointed” but that these games will not influence future inclusion.
Some sports such as cycling and gymnastics have had their disciplines slimmed down.
The cycling programme for Glasgow 2014 included mountain biking and road races but this time athletes will only compete on the track.
In gymnastics, there is no room for any rhythmic events, with only artistic gymnastics being included.
There will also be no diving competitions.
Hockey has been dropped from the programme despite a national hockey centre being built for the last Glasgow Games.
There will be no road-based events such as the triathlon or marathon on the programme – these were previously free for spectators to attend in 2014.
Rugby sevens, which was previously hosted at Ibrox Stadium is also out and there will be no racquet sports at all.
The event will feature an opening and closing ceremony and there will be some form of King’s baton relay before the Games.
An estimated 500,000 tickets will go on sale for the various events, with the Games expected to be worth £150m to Glasgow.
The CGF confirmed putting on the Games is expected to cost approximately £114m.
It will pay £100m towards the bill, with £2.3m coming from Commonwealth Games Australia – who pulled out of hosting the event – as well as £2.3m from the UK government.
The balance will come from commercial revenue such as ticket sales, broadcast rights, commercial sponsorship and merchandise.
The four venues which will be used during the event will be the Emirates Arena, Tollcross International Swimming Centre, the Scottish Events Campus and Scotstoun stadium.
Organisers said these venues were “operationally viable and economically valuable”.
They confirmed that Scotstoun will only host the athletics, while the Scottish Event Campus and Emirates Arena will host multiple sports.
It has not been decided exactly which sports will take place in which venues.
No additional venues will be built to keep costs low, but some upgrades such as temporary seating will be made at the four venues.
Athletes and officials will stay in “existing accommodation across the city”.
The future of the games at stake
Analysis by Chris McLaughlin, BBC Scotland sports news correspondent
Organisers have spent the past few weeks in talks with sporting bodies and delivering the news to some that they must sit this one out.
It’ll be a bitter blow to some and a surprise to others.
Badminton and hockey could feel particularly aggrieved, given the profile of both sports on the Commonwealth stage, but it’s an indication of the hard decisions that have been taken, and those to come.
The biggest crowd pleasers remain and, in general, there is a plan but by usual standards, it is still a very rough one.
The big pitch that eventually convinced a sceptical Scottish government, and an even more sceptical Glasgow City Council to get on board, now has to be made to fill the key posts that will drive Glasgow 2026 over the line.
Only those used to working to very tight deadlines and even tighter budgets, need apply.
The official rubber stamping and announcement of the sport programme is a big milestone and the first look at what people can expect from this new look event.
Can it really be a blueprint for the future of this troubled event?
The reputation of the city as a host city for elite sporting spectacles and the very future of the Commonwealth Games is at stake.
Sport
Novak Djokovic admits he’s still haunted by ‘worst thing anyone can experience’ that gives him ‘chills’ 25 years on
NOVAK DJOKOVIC has revealed he is still haunted by growing up in war-torn Serbia.
The 24-time Grand Slam champion has enjoyed an illustrious career over the last 21 years.
He grew up in Serbia during the Yugoslav wars, with his homeland bombed by NATO – an experience Djokovic can never forget.
In an interview with La Nacion, he said: “It’s the fear of the unknown. Not knowing if the next bomb is going to hit your head.
“And so it was every day, the alarms, the sirens that woke us up every night when the planes were approaching.
“When I see these wars and everything that is happening… I lived through the war, my city was bombed day and night for two and a half months.
“It’s a horror. The worst thing anyone can experience. It’s the fear of the unknown.
“I saw dead people and now that I see wars in other parts of the world, I don’t understand.”
Djokovic, 37, also spoke about how the war helped him grow up fast, as his dad gave him responsibilities which included looking out for his brothers.
He continued: “I want to make it very clear – I don’t think anyone should suffer through war to develop mental strength, there are other ways to do it.
“For me, it was a very important part of my development and as a small child, I was forced to grow up. I had to take responsibility and share my father’s role because I was the eldest son and there was no time.
“My father spoke to me as an adult: ‘You have to do this, take your brothers there, go here.’ It was war.”
Sport
Larne v Shamrock Rovers: Tiernan Lynch says Larne cannot show Rovers ‘too much respect’
Larne qualified for the league phase of this competition thanks to a dramatic run through the qualifiers that saw them beat Ballkani on penalties before Andy Ryan’s hat-trick edged Lincoln Red Imps in a thrilling second leg.
The County Antrim side, who lost 3-0 to Molde in their opener last month, had league fixtures postponed during the period and are now working through the fixture backlog.
Saturday’s draw with Crusaders meant the side have won just four of nine domestic fixtures this season.
Meanwhile, thanks to the League of Ireland’s status as a summer league, Shamrock Rovers are embroiled in a tense conclusion to another title race, sat third with a pair of games to play but just two points behind leaders Shelbourne.
“It’s an experience we have to enjoy, have to embrace,” added Lynch.
“But also we have to make sure that the domestic league is our bread and butter. We know that from the 22 December, the Europa stuff is over and we can concentrate fully on our domestic league.
“There’s lots of things going on that we have to keep an eye on but we know what we want to do, we have a gameplan. Whether that works over the course of seven or eight months, I don’t know, but it’s something we’ve been working towards.”
Football
Are Sam Darnold, Minnesota Vikings being DISRESPECTED after narrow loss to Lions? | NFL on FOX Pod
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Sport
Paul Nicholls stable tour: Record-breaking horse ‘looks fantastic’ and yard legend ‘back to his best’ after wind op
IT would be wrong to say Britain’s 14-time champion trainer Paul Nicholls has mellowed as he enters his 34th season.
He’s been at this game a long time, but the competitive edge is still deeply engrained in him — and always will be.
But Nicholls, 62, is philosophical about losing his trainers’ crown for the first time in four years — with both Willie Mullins and his ‘apprentice’ Dan Skelton leapfrogging him in the standings in 2023-24.
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In large part, it hasn’t affected Nicholls as much as it maybe would have in the past because of the difficulties he and his team faced off the track during the last jumps campaign.
Not only did Nicholls have to come to terms with the passing of his landlord, long-time mentor and great friend Paul Barber.
But the Ditcheat yard was left devastated by the death of stable lad Keagan Kirkby, 25, who was tragically killed after a fall at a point-to-point in February.
Nicholls said: “It was a hard year — as hard a year as we’ve ever had off the track.
“Paul was a mentor to me, I’d speak to him virtually every day and he was the one who helped me break through at the start of my career.
“Then Keagan had his accident and that was very tough for all of us. It was difficult for the whole team to lose one of their mates far too young.
“It hit us hard and when you have to go through things like that it does put results on the track and the trainers championship into perspective.
“You know me, I want to win and compete at everything I do, but real life matters far more.”
Still, it was an unusual position that Nicholls found himself in at Sandown on April 27.
He had to watch on from afar as Mullins collected the championship trophy on the final day of the jumps season, becoming the first Irish-based trainer to win Britain’s title in 70 years.
And Nicholls starts the new season as the 3-1 outsider of ‘the big three’ to win the crown for a record-equalling 15th time.
He said: “You have to take defeat on the chin. In football the same team doesn’t win the league every year.
“Everything went right for Willie, he will admit that himself, he got the bounce of the ball last year in a lot of big races.
“I could see it happening from Cheltenham onwards and it felt like it was going to be a bit of a struggle to get over the line.
“I felt more for Dan who finished ahead of me but ended up being done in the final few weeks by Willie.
“As for us, we still had more winners than anyone else and nearly £3 million in prize-money.
“You’ll fry your head if you keep worrying about winning the championship too much.
“You go through cycles in this game, but I think we are developing a nice strong team.”
On paper it definitely looks that way, even if his squad lacks the incredible Grade 1 strength in depth of Mullins.
He has fan favourites like Bravemansgame, who could start out in the Charlie Hall Chase, and Pic D’Orhy, who will run at Ascot at the end of next month.
And there are exciting young horses like Regent’s Stroll and Teeshan, who flopped at Cheltenham but is an exciting novice hurdler, coming through.
And he also has the exciting Caldwell Potter to look forward to in the big Grade 1s.
Nicholls said: “We are going to take our time and be patient.
“Most of those we have run so far have needed the run which is fine as it is hard to keep them going right through the spring if you go too hard, too early.
“There are plenty of big days and, fingers crossed, we should have another successful season.”
STABLE STAR
BRAVEMANSGAME is still the stable big gun, despite an underwhelming season last term. The 2022 King George hero and former Gold Cup runner-up has had a breathing operation over the summer.
Nicholls says: “I think the Gold Cup left a mark on him but we have re-cauterised his pallet and, on his work at home, I think he is back to his best. The Charlie Hall is his first target but I wouldn’t be afraid to run him under a big weight in the Badger Beers if it came up very soft at Wetherby.”
FESTIVAL FANCY
REGENT’S STROLL looked an exciting prospect last season when winning a pair of bumpers, coasting home by five lengths on his final start at Newbury in March.
He will end up in one of the big novice hurdles at the Festival, all being well.
Nicholls says: “He looked very smart and let’s hope it works out that way over hurdles. The big target for him in the first half is the Challow at Newbury in December.”
MONEY MAKER
GINNY’S DESTINY was a star for the stable last season. He won three races last term, including a couple of big pots in handicaps at Cheltenham, and ended the year with fine seconds in Grade 1s at the Festival and Aintree.
Nicholls says: “I’m really looking forward to him this season. I’ve got a real soft spot for this horse. He is being aimed at the Paddy Power Gold Cup next month.”
STAR RECRUIT
CALDWELL POTTER was a Grade 1 winner for Gordon Elliott and will make his eagerly awaited debut for the stable this year.
Nicholls says: “He is coming along nicely and looks fantastic. He won’t be seen on a track until late November at the earliest. We are taking our time with him but it’s exciting to have a horse like him in the yard.”
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Sport
Double amputee Billy Monger prepares for Ironman World Championship
Monger, who is from Charlwood in Surrey, was a kart racer as a child before joining the F4 British Championship in 2016.
He has since forged a career in broadcasting, featuring in the BBC series Celebrity Race Across the World and completing Billy’s Big Challenge in 2021, where he walked, cycled and kayaked across Britain and raised more than £3m for Comic Relief.
Monger completed Ironman 70.3 Weymouth in six hours, 41 minutes and 41 seconds. That course consisted of a 1.9km swim off the coast of the Dorset town before a 90km ride, followed by 21.1km on foot.
This weekend, he will compete in the longer Ironman World Championship in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, aiming to be the youngest double amputee to complete the course.
Competitors are required to finish the course within 17 hours, and must reach target times for each part of the race.
“It’s a 3.8km ocean swim, 180km cycling exposed to cross winds, volcanic barren lava fields and then you run around for a marathon at the end,” he said.
“It’s going to be a hell of a challenge.”
Germany’s Laura Philipp won the women’s world championship in Nice last month, finishing eight minutes clear of Great Britain’s Kat Matthews in second.
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