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Lincoln star Ethan Erhahon reveals team hid physio’s car in training ground prank and he was offered ‘scrap’ by fan

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Lincoln star Ethan Erhahon reveals team hid physio's car in training ground prank and he was offered 'scrap' by fan

ETHAN ERHAHON has already packed plenty into his career.

Only 23, the midfielder has played at three levels and been capped by Scotland in four age groups – up to Under-21s.

Ethan Erhahon has had some lively experiences down South

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Ethan Erhahon has had some lively experiences down South
The midfielder arrived at Lincoln from St Mirren in January 2023

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The midfielder arrived at Lincoln from St Mirren in January 2023Credit: Getty

But the former St Mirren star might play another decade and never encounter a wackier episode than the prank his Lincoln City team-mates pulled on the club physio.

That was a mischievous jape worthy of City’s nickname – The Imps.

In contrast, one experience with an opposition fan, who threatened more than just banter, could have turned out far nastier.

Here are some of the trials and tribulations of League One life seen by Erhahon – in his own words

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Best opponent?

Ronnie Edwards. Peterborough last season. He was really good.

We played against Peterborough and they liked to play it from the back, but we liked to get after them and he kept breaking and pressing stuff.

(Defender Edwards, 21, was named in the L1 team of the year – winning a £3million summer move to Southampton.)

Erhahon showed his good judgement with his choice of finest rival player

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Erhahon showed his good judgement with his choice of finest rival player

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Most difficult EFL fans?

I got a bit from Blackpool this season. Especially after the game, some fella offered me a scrap or something, so I’d probably say Blackpool, yeah.

Former Watford and Gillingham hero Andy Hessenthaler shares crazy EFL story after being attacked by the owner I What the EFL?!

I don’t know what he was doing, he was gesturing to me anyway, that he wanted me to come over to the barrier and give him a scrap or something.

Best away fans?

I’d say Portsmouth, for sure, they backed the team the whole way.

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Last season, missing out in the play-offs, coming down to the final day, and we obviously missed out by two points in the final day, Portsmouth beat us, that still kind of haunts me.

Maddest dressing room tale?

Last season’s end-of-season do was pretty crazy.

Ended up with some players till like five or six in the morning, all the boys had the ties round their head and the tops open and stuff, so, you know, might do the same again this year, hopefully, after we get promoted.

(Team-mates) took the physio’s car last year and drove it up the side of the pitch.

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There’s fields around here, so if you know the training ground, it looks like fields… drove it up the side of the pitch… took the keys and… didn’t have a clue where his car went!

So that’s probably one of the funniest moments I’ve ever had at a training ground, for sure.

Craziest transfer tale?

Don’t want to name players or agents, but I’ve heard a few stories!

One guy getting a haircut in the city he was going to play for – the team he was going to play for – and he ended up changing his mind after the haircut, coming out and saying to his agent he doesn’t want to go.

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I think it was Blackpool, maybe. Not a good barber, maybe, around there!

Dressing-room antics?

Probably something to do with the darts, maybe. The kit man plays, he always gets beat, so it’s always a funny moment when he’s in there getting beat, we’re all laughing at him and stuff.

Owner Harvey [Jabara] put a lot into the club, and they brought us all baseball gloves, signed, and with little Lincoln imps on them, so I’ve still got that up in my room.

It’s a nice gesture. I don’t play baseball, but it was certainly a nice gesture, and one that I’ll keep forever.

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Away-day dressing-room grumble!

I have to say probably in the [Bristol Street Motors] Trophy last week, Grimsby, away. The changing room’s a bit old-school, shall we say!

A bit small and stuff, so, I’d have to say Grimsby’s changing room.

Erhahon is hoping Lincoln go up to the Championship after they just missed out on reaching the League One play-offs last season

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Erhahon is hoping Lincoln go up to the Championship after they just missed out on reaching the League One play-offs last seasonCredit: Rex

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European Championship darts 2024 LIVE RESULTS: Humphries and Van Gerwen play today, Luke Littler crashes OUT – updates

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European Championship darts 2024 LIVE RESULTS: Humphries and Van Gerwen play today, Luke Littler crashes OUT - updates

Ice cold Gilding

Andrew Gilding put in a phenomenal performance to beat Luke Littler 6-4 on Friday night – despite suffering from a heavy cold.

The 53-year-old has now set up a last-16 showdown with Ricardo ‘Pikachu’ Pietreczko.

He said: “I didn’t expect this, watching how Luke had played lately.

“I am always short of self-belief. I never expect to win a game.

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“Especially against Luke and especially as I had an awful cold as well. I am on the tailend of that. I felt awful coming up to this.

“I did say beforehand I wanted to cross him off the list. It was the third time I’d played him. So it’s third time lucky.”

Credit: Getty

Pikachu speaks

Ricardo ‘Pikachu’ Pietreczko reached the second round following a dramatic comeback win over Damon Heta.

The 30-year-old was roared on in Dortmund by 5,000 German fans as he recorded a 6-5 victory.

He told PDC: “Heta is a great sportsman.

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“I like to be behind my opponent [and fight back]. It’s all eyes on me now.”

Credit: Getty

Bully Boy hits back

Michael Smith romped into tomorrow’s last-16 thanks to a dominant 6-0 victory over good friend Dave Chisnall on Thursday.

And Bully Boy – who is facing a ranking slide after recent losses – is not concerned about his game going forward.

He said: “My game at the minute is my own fault from when I won the Worlds, taking virtually a full year out apart from stage events and yeah, I’m paying the price.

“In practice I feel like it’s back to the way it was, it’s back at its best, it’s just not showing on stage at the minute.

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“Who knows, it could be this weekend, it could be next week in the Grand Slam or best of all, it could be at the Worlds.”

He added: “You can take the money off my ranking but I don’t lose the titles.”

Credit: Getty

Second round draw

Sixteen players are through to tomorrow’s Round 2 after two nights of high-quality arrows.

There are some fantastic match-ups in here, with the best-of-19 leg matches getting underway at midday UK time and split across two sessions.

  • Ryan Searle vs Luke Woodhouse (12pm)
  • Dirk van Duijvenbode vs Daryl Gurney (1pm)
  • Michael Smith vs Ritchie Edhouse (2pm)
  • Mike De Decker vs Danny Noppert (3pm)
  • Michael van Gerwen vs Gary Anderson (6pm)
  • James Wade vs Jermaine Wattimena (7pm)
  • Luke Humphries vs Jonny Clayton (8pm)
  • Andrew Gilding vs Ricardo Pietreczko (9pm)
Credit: Getty

Not all-Wright on the night

Defending champ Peter Wright was torn apart at the oche then on social media – after the reigning champ’s whitewash loss to Jermaine Wattimena.

Snakebite wobbled to the tournament’s third-lowest average EVER as world No. 40 Jermaine Wattimena KO’d the two-time world king 6-0.

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The 54-year-old averaged just 74.81 and failed to achieve even one attempt at a checkout.

A scathing fan posted: “Up there with one of the worst performances I’ve seen by a so called top player.”

Credit: Getty

Round 1 complete

That’s your lot from Dortmund, with eight players making it safely through to the second round of this year’s European Championship.

Defending champion Peter Wright and Luke Littler are going home, while Luke Humphries looks in imperious form.

Here’s how the night unfolded in Dortmund:

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  • Danny Noppert 6-2 Joe Cullen
  • Chris Dobey 4-6 Jonny Clayton
  • Rob Cross 3-6 James Wade
  • Ricardo Pietreczko 6-5 Damon Heta
  • Peter Wright 0-6 Jermaine Wattimena
  • Luke Littler 4-6 Andrew Gilding
  • Luke Humphries 6-2 Nathan Aspinall
  • Josh Rock 1-6 Mike De Decker
Credit: Getty

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Yankees must move on after brutal World Series loss: ‘This is what defines character’

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Yankees must move on after brutal World Series loss: 'This is what defines character'


LOS ANGELES — Juan Soto walked out of the Yankees clubhouse with a scowl. Aaron Boone walked down the hallway with furrowed eyebrows and a look of irritation he couldn’t hide. Even Aaron Judge, who likes to throw in a small smile at the end of his responses no matter the day or the outcome of a game, struggled to really get there. The mood was set by their exceptional silence. The only sound made was that of the clubhouse attendants smacking cleats against a table to get all the dirt off. 

This one hurt. 

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“It’s a seven-game series. You’re going to lose tough ones,” Yankees first baseman Anthony Rizzo said. “We’ve lost tough ones in the past. This is what defines character. Yeah, it stings because of the magnitude. But I wouldn’t say anyone’s more pissed off than any other loss.”

The Yankees said all the right things, like they’d pick their heads up and get back at it on Saturday, but their miffed expressions told a different story after losing 6-3 to the Dodgers in the 10th inning of Game 1 of the World Series. You can’t blame them for being shocked or crestfallen; the stage was set for the Yankees to secure a win on the road right up until Freddie Freeman hit the first walk-off grand slam in World Series history off left-hander Nestor Cortes

[RELATED: Full coverage of the World Series]

Despite their defensive blunders and a curious early hook on Gerrit Cole, the Yankees were one out away from a Game 1 victory when Cortes’ second pitch in 37 days — a 92 mph fastball, low and inside, right where Freeman likes to barrel the ball — was pummeled halfway up the right-field pavilion at Dodger Stadium. Cortes’ first pitch got Shohei Ohtani to fly out in foul territory, where left fielder Alex Verdugo tumbled into and over the railing and made a spectacular catch for the second out of the 10th inning. The Yankees never got the chance to celebrate that gutsy play as Mookie Betts was intentionally walked to load the bases and a Freeman-induced nightmare immediately followed. 

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“Maybe just two or three inches higher,” Cortes said when asked where he wanted his fastball to Freeman. “I thought I got it to the inside part of the plate where I wanted to, but I didn’t get it up enough.”

Cortes spent the days leading up to Friday’s relief appearance convincing the Yankees that he belonged on the World Series roster. He missed the final week of the regular season, as well as New York’s first two rounds of the postseason, with an elbow flexor strain. There was a clear need for his left-handed arm on the pitching staff, and Cortes badly wanted to help his team win. Boone believed he could with the Dodgers’ two best left-handed hitters due up.

“The reality is, he’s been throwing the ball really well the last few weeks as he’s gotten ready for this,” Boone said of Cortes. “I knew with one out there, it’d be tough to double up Shohei, if Tim Hill gets him on the ground. And then Mookie behind him is a tough matchup there, so, felt convicted with Nestor in that spot.”

While Cortes did more damage than good in Game 1, he should get at least one more chance in the Series to atone for his mistake. After all, he was hardly the only Yankee to slip up. 

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Soto overran a Kiké Hernández liner in right field in the fifth inning, turning what should have been a double into a triple. The Dodgers promptly cashed in on Soto’s misplay by hitting a sacrifice fly and scoring Hernández from third for the first run of the game. In the eighth, Ohtani ripped a double with an exit velocity of 113 mph to right that Soto fielded off the wall. He double-pumped before getting the throw in to second, where Gleyber Torres couldn’t handle the scoop as the ball ricocheted off his glove and into no-man’s land near the mound. Ohtani advanced to third — Soto was charged with an error — and Mookie Betts promptly hit a sacrifice fly to tie the game at 2-2. 

Mistakes like that can’t happen at this point in the long season. 

“Every little thing from the game is an opportunity for the offense to get another run,” Torres said. “And yeah, Ohtani went to third and Mookie hit the fly to center and it was a tie game. I have to make an adjustment and if I get an opportunity to block the ball, just keep it in the front and make it a little more simple.”

The Yankees overcame gaffes on defense and Boone’s questionable decision to pull Cole — he had allowed just one run and four hitters to reach safely through six-plus innings and 88 pitches — to reach the bottom of the 10th inning with a 3-2 lead. Playoff hero Giancarlo Stanton slugged his fourth home run in his past four games; this one a two-run shot in the sixth that gave the Yankees a 2-1 lead. Stanton needs one more home run this October to become the first Yankee in franchise history to hit seven homers in a single postseason. 

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But Yankees triumphs that would have loomed large in Game 1 are now buried somewhere under the Dodgers’ dogpile at home plate.

“We had our chances there,” said Judge, who went 1 for 5, struck out three times and left two runners on while popping out to end the top of the ninth. “Kind of back and forth the whole game. We had our opportunities to put them away. We just weren’t able to do it. And they came up with a big clutch hit there at the end.”

The Yankees could’ve used more of those. They’ll now give the ball to Carlos Rodón for Game 2 on Saturday — with Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the bump for the Dodgers — hoping the lefty can carry them back to the Bronx with a series split. As Rizzo said, brutal losses can define a team’s character. The Yankees have at least one more day in L.A. to show who they are. 

Deesha Thosar is an MLB reporter for FOX Sports. She previously covered the Mets as a beat reporter for the New York Daily News. The daughter of Indian immigrants, Deesha grew up on Long Island and now lives in Queens. Follow her on Twitter at @DeeshaThosar.

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Croatia 1-1 Northern Ireland: ‘It has taken 13 years’ – Laura Rafferty reflects on 50th cap

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Croatia 1-1 Northern Ireland: 'It has taken 13 years' - Laura Rafferty reflects on 50th cap

Rafferty also conceded that it was difficult for her to imagine reaching such a milestone before Tanya Oxtoby was appointed, given that she had been in and out of Northern Ireland squads in the past.

“Football can work in weird and wonderful ways, I’m being given opportunities and I’m taking them, I give everything for my country,” she added.

The 28-year-old praised newly appointed Northern Ireland captain Simone Magill for passing on the captain’s armband as the Birmingham City striker wanted to mark Rafferty’s 50th cap by letting her lead the team out.

“It was probably tricky for her as she has just been announced as captain, but she had a word with me and told me she wanted me to wear it and I’m very grateful.

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“She made my day by saying that and the group made it really special, it was a night I won’t forget.”

Rafferty admitted that Northern Ireland had to “dig deep” to grind out a draw courtesy of a late own goal.

“The goal was scrappy, but it was a goal and I’m delighted for Casey Howe to come off the bench and make that happen.”

“We get to go home now, and we want to put in a performance and reach the next round.”

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She believes that the pitch was a contributing factor to the scrappy nature of the game.

“First half it wasn’t so bad but second half it was completely churned up, we managed it as much as we could it wasn’t the prettiest, but we got the result.”

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Motorsports

Waters leads a dominant 1-2 for Tickford

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Cameron Waters made a statement with a pole-to-flag Saturday win on the streets of the Gold Coast for the second year in succession in Supercars.

After taking a season-high sixth pole position, Waters won the start in his Tickford Racing Ford Mustang and built a lead of over five seconds before his first pitstop. For much of the middle stint he had team-mate Thomas Randle close behind, before he pulled away and went on to win by a convincing 9.41s.

“What a day, what a weekend so far. This thing has been an absolute rocketship all weekend,” he grinned after his fourth race win of the season.

“I got a really good start, I had a pretty cool race car and I just had to make the most of it. The car was bloody good and I don’t think we’ll be doing much to it [overnight].”

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Randle drove strongly to make it a Tickford 1-2, and at one stage was right under Waters’s wing, before settling back to ensure his second podium finish of the season.

“What a race! It was pretty crazy down at Turn 1 but I made it through,” said Randle after his team’s first 1-2 result since 2017.

“I was trying not to look in the mirrors, it [the gap to Broc Feeney] was flickering and then going back up. The pitstops were amazing.”

Triple Eight’s Feeney, who started fourth, was aided by a very short first pitstop and who, inevitably, dropped back to eighth after a necessarily longer second stop, but still emerged as the best of the Chevrolet Camaros. He snatched third place off Matt Payne with 10 laps remaining, and then chased Randle before settling for third.

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In Fourth place came Matt Payne, who started from the fifth row after he overshot a corner during his shootout lap. The Grove Racing Ford driver consolidated early and once he got into clean air, he was able to set rapid lap times.

Fresh from his Bathurst win, Brodie Kostecki gave Erebus Motorsport fifth place after starting from 10th on the grid after triggering a kerb sensor on his top 10 shootout lap. Sixth was David Reynolds, a deserved reward for the Team18 squad which essentially built a new Chevrolet after Reynolds’s significant Bathurst qualifying crash.

Behind Reynolds in seventh was Triple Eight’s Will Brown. The championship leader started from 11th on the grid after crashing out of the provisional qualifying session and, after swift repairs, understandably drove a circumspect race to take seventh.

Andre Heimgartner (Brad Jones Racing Chevrolet) was eighth ahead of Richie Stanaway, who started from the front row in the Grove Racing Ford and ran in second place in the early laps, before dropping back.

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The one driver who may have challenged Waters for the win was Walkinshaw Andretti United’s Chaz Mostert, who battled with a gearshift sensor problem which negated his flat-shift feature. During both his fuel stops it also slowed his Ford nearly to walking pace in the pitlane, costing him around five seconds in his first stop and 20 in his second. His consolation prize was 10th place.

One of the fastest of the Chevrolets and one who might have challenged for a podium was PremiAir Racing Camaro driver James Golding, who snatched third place from Stanaway on lap 11 and chased after the Fords. But a left-rear wheel nut got stuck at his first pitstop, dropping him out of the top 20. By the end of the race he recovered slightly but only to 16th place.

The results mean that Brown, who carried a 204 championship point lead over Feeney into the race, saw his advantage reduced to 171 points, 2634 to 2463. Mostert remains third on 2391 ahead of Waters (2224), Mayne (1779) and Golding (1775).

Sunday’s schedule will see the Supercars back on the 3km street circuit at 10:10am local time for qualifying, for the top 10 shootout at 12:35pm and on the grid for the 22nd race of the season over 85 laps at 3:15pm.

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‘What happened?’, asks Nicolas Jackson as Chelsea ace and Mo Salah SNUBBED from African Player of the Year shortlist

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'What happened?', asks Nicolas Jackson as Chelsea ace and Mo Salah SNUBBED from African Player of the Year shortlist

CHELSEA ace Nicolas Jackson addressed the controversial African Player of the Year shortlist that includes some major omissions, such as Liverpool superstar Mohamed Salah.

The Confederation of African Football released the list of players who are nominated for this year’s esteemed POTY award but sparked a heated debate.

Chelsea ace Nicolas Jackson fired back at the controversial African Player of the Year award shortlist

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Chelsea ace Nicolas Jackson fired back at the controversial African Player of the Year award shortlistCredit: Rex
Jackson and Liverpool superstar Mohamed Salah were both snubbed from the shortlist

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Jackson and Liverpool superstar Mohamed Salah were both snubbed from the shortlistCredit: Getty

The list includes Brighton‘s Simon Adingra, Rennes’ Amine Gouiri, Borussia Dortmund’s Serhou Guirassy, Paris Saint-Germain’s Achraf Hakimi, Atalanta’s Ademola Lookman, Marseille’s Chancel Mbemba, Al-Ain’s Soufiane Rahimi, Bayer Leverkusen’s Edmond Tapsoba, Al-Kholood’s William Troost-Ekong and Mamelodi Sundowns’ Ronwen Williams.

However, some big names were left out, such as West Ham‘s Mohammed Kudus, Real Madrid’s Brahim Diaz, Leverkusen’s Victor Boniface as well as Jackson and Salah.

The Chelsea ace was left baffled and took to social media to express his surprise.

Jackson posted on his Instagram story: “What happened?!”

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Salah, 32, stood out for Liverpool once more last season as he won the Carabao Cup and amassed a staggering 25 goals and 14 assists in 44 appearances across all competitions.

The Egypt international broke another record just an hour into the new season only two months ago as he recorded the most opening-day goals in Premier League history.

Senegalese star Jackson, 23, has been on fire for Chelsea this season with five goals and three assists in eight Prem matches.

Ghanaian ace Kudus already counts 16 goals in 55 matches for West Ham after only moving to east London a year ago.

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Boniface was among the brightest African stars last season as he played a key role in Leverkusen’s historic Bundesliga triumph, which saw them winning their first ever title undefeated.

The Nigeria international scored 21 goals and produced 10 assists in 34 matches for Xabi Alonso’s side last term.

Mo Salah appears to confirm Liverpool transfer exit live on Sky Sports after ripping Man Utd to shreds

And Moroccan star Diaz helped Real win LaLiga as well as the Champions League.

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But none of those exploits were enough to make the shortlist.

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