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Before Sanju Samson’s 97 in Kolkata: How 15 balls reignited India’s T20 World Cup campaign | Cricket News
Sanju Samson dropped to his knees and looked up at the sky in gratitude and relief, perhaps thanking the cricketing gods at the ‘Garden of Eden’ in Kolkata, after steering India to the T20 World Cup semifinals with a five-wicket win over West Indies in what was a virtual quarter-final for both teams.India captain Suryakumar Yadav doffed his cap in honour of Sanju, after the right-handed batter played a career-defining unbeaten 97 off 50 balls on Sunday.While Sanju’s 97 in Kolkata will be remembered, his short-lived but significant innings against Zimbabwe three days prior had brought momentum to India’s T20 World Cup campaign.In the five matches before Sanju returned to the playing XI against Zimbabwe, India won four but there were clear concerns in the batting, and everyone could see it.
Trouble in top-order
India played without Samson in four out of those five matches, and their highest opening partnership in those games was 8 runs. In the only match that Sanju played, against Namibia (when Abhishek was out due to illness), Samson and Ishan Kishan had an opening stand of 25 runs in 12 balls.Apart from Ishan’s knocks against Pakistan (77 off 40) and Namibia (61 off 24), India’s top four, including Surya and Tilak Varma, were also facing a strike-rate problem in those matches, as the table below shows.
Indian top-order batters’ strike-rate in the first 5 matches of T20 World Cup
Openers not providing a good start, and the middle order struggling to score runs quickly, was a double trouble for defending champions India. This was largely due to India’s batters struggling against off-spin in the tournament.With six left-handers in the top eight, India essentially invited themself to be attacked by off-spinners. And oppositions’ Erasmus, Aghas, Ayubs, and Dutts obliged.During the group stage, India faced more off-spin than any other team — 102 deliveries. Among the 13 teams that faced at least six overs of off-spin, only Nepal (5.25) and Oman (5.42) scored at a slower rate than India’s 6.23 runs per over.India’s trouble against off-spin bowling was first exposed by Gerhard Erasmus, when the Namibian skipper took four wickets, three of them left-handers, in the group-stage match. Pakistan took the cue, and their captain, Salman Ali Agha, a part-time off-spinner, took the new ball and dismissed India’s opener Abhishek Sharma caught on duck at mid-on. The trend continued in India’s last group-stage match against the Netherlands as off-spinner Aryan Dutt came to bowl the first over. He first bowled Abhishek Sharma for another duck, his third in as many matches in the tournament by then, and then sent his partner Ishan Kishan back to the dugout in the fifth over.

It is worth noting that Abhishek had not previously shown vulnerability against off-spin; in fact, he has a career strike rate of 171.1 against off-spinners in powerplay in T20Is. However, given the slow nature of the pitches in the tournament, as compared to the IPL and T20 bilaterals India played at home in the last two years, he seemed to be out of his comfort zone against them and fell to off-spin twice in the three group-stage matches.Meanwhile, Abhishek’s opening partner Ishan Kishan, does face trouble against the off-spinners. In all T20Is, Kishan has scored against off-spinners at a mere 76.9 strike rate in the first six overs. That hasn’t changed in the T20 World Cup, despite him being in the form of his life; the southpaw has scored at just 115.8 strike rate against off-spin in the powerplay, his lowest against all kinds of bowling.In comparison, Sanju Samson has a strike-rate of 188.2 against off-spinners in the powerplay in T20Is.
‘Matlab Abhishek ki jagah khilau?’
By the end of the group stage, it was clear that India’s two left-handed openers had a difficult match-up against off-spin.It was evident that South Africa will use their off-spin options if Ishan and Abhishek open the innings for India in their first Super 8 clash. India captain Suryakumar Yadav was asked in the pre-match press conference whether India would look to bring back right-handed Sanju Samson vs South Africa in the top order to counter the off-spin threat? To which he replied, “Matlab Abhishek ki jagah khilau? (Should I play him instead of Abhishek?)”, “matlab Tilak ki jagah khilau? (You mean in place of Tilak?).“Suryakumar Yadav was seen smiling sarcastically while replying to the journalist as if the suggestion was out of context.But the story repeated, as predicted, and South Africa captain Aiden Markram himself came to bowl with the new ball and dismissed opener Ishan Kishan for a duck. India lost the match by 76 runs, which left them in a do-or-die situation.
How fortunes changed for India?
India’s next Super 8 match was against Zimbabwe in Chennai, and in came Sanju Samson back in the playing XI. He opened the innings with Abhishek and provided India a brisk opening stand of 48 runs. More importantly, with Sanju as an opener, India succeeded in keeping the off-spinner away from the new ball. By the time Sanju was dismissed in the fourth over, India were 48, and Abhishek Sharma was set at the crease. Sanju scored 24 off 15 balls and fulfilled the task brilliantly that he was entrusted with, and was lauded by head coach Gautam Gambhir and support staff after his dismissal. Sanju’s presence did wonders for India in the match. Opener Abhishek Sharma, who had scored just 15 runs before that in the tournament, including three ducks, came back to form and scored a half-century. India scored 256 in the first innings and crushed Zimbabwe by 72 runs. India finally had a convincing win in the tournament, and a campaign that once seemed on the verge of derailment found its momentum. Sanju Samson had turned it around through his 15-ball 24-run knock.Against West Indies on Sunday, India chased down their highest-ever target (196) in Men’s T20 World Cup history, bettering their previous record of 173 against South Africa in 2014.Sanju Samson’s 97 in the chase was the second-highest score for India at the men’s T20 World Cup, behind only Suresh Raina’s 101 against South Africa in 2010. It was the highest for India in a chase at the T20 World Cup, bettering Virat Kohli’s 82 not out against Australia in 2016 and Pakistan in 2022.India captain Suryakumar Yadav, who just a few days ago questioned “kiski jagah khilau?”, bowed down to Samson in appreciation.The 97 in Kolkata will be remembered. It secured the semifinal spot and will sit high among India’s best T20 World Cup knocks. But it was Samson’s 15-ball 24 against Zimbabwe in Chennai that brought India’s T20 World Cup campaign to life, and they are now looking like the formidable side that they are, going into the semi-final.
Sports
Ligue 1: Title race tightens as Lyon win away at Paris Saint-Germain – Sports
Paris Saint-Germain lost (2-1) to Lyon and now see Lens closing in on them at the top of the table. Lyon can still hope to qualify directly for the Champions League.
In Germany, Bayern Munich have won the league title for the 35th time. In England, Manchester City are closing the gap on Arsenal. In tennis, Arthur Fils has won his first title since 2024. The OKC Thunder have made a perfect start to their NBA play-off campaign.
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Players the Vikings Could Realistically Trade for During the Draft
Sometimes, NFL teams waddle into the draft, and their plans get shredded when other teams draft their preferred targets. This forces trades to become an option, and if that happens to the Minnesota Vikings later this week, here are a handful of targets for the occasion.
Four names. One event. Trade buzz never sleeps.
Consider the following a realistic trade board for the Vikings during the draft — players who are gettable and fit Minnesota’s roster needs. They’re ranked in ascending order (No. 1 = the most logical fit).
Scenarios That Could Push Minnesota toward a Trade
What if Trader Rob does the thing?
4. Keon Coleman | WR, BUF
The Buffalo Bills owner openly trashed Coleman in front of the media a few months ago, a bizarre situation that didn’t need to unfold. Buffalo later tried to walk back the anti-Coleman fodder, but his legitimacy as an NFL wide receiver was exposed.
NFL.com Eric Edholm wrote about Coleman’s status this week, “The Bills have already made moves at receiver, trading for DJ Moore and signing Trent Sherfield, among others. They have several returners set to come back, including leading receiver Khalil Shakir, Josh Palmer and the promising Tyrell Shavers.”
“Buffalo also has readily scouted draft prospects at receiver. There are multiple unsigned free agents from last year’s roster, as well, such as Brandin Cooks, Gabe Davis and Curtis Samuel. Beane and the Bills aren’t guaranteeing anything for Coleman this season — and certainly not a starting spot — but they’re leaving the door ajar for his trajectory to change.”
The man needs a fresh start, especially after the Bills traded for Moore. If the Bills draft another rookie wideout, Coleman could be traded to the highest bidder. Why not the Vikings?
Approximate Trade Price: 4th or 5th Rounder
3. Trey Benson | RB, ARI
The Cardinals re-upped with James Conner this offseason, in addition to signing free-agent tailback Tyler Allgeier. Benson has battled injuries since turning pro in 2024; his career trajectory is not all that glowing.
He also won’t get an RB1’s workload in Arizona. Truth be told, he could be the RB3 by September. Benson looked decent last year before his season-ending injury. The 3rd-Round pick from two years ago will turn 24 this summer.
A change of scenery could do the body good.
Approximate Trade Price: 5th-Rounder
2. Brandon Aiyuk | WR, 49ers
As the draft approaches, the Vikings have three wide receivers — Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, and Tai Felton — poised to contribute meaningfully on offense. However, this number seems thin, especially considering Felton remains unproven after a quiet rookie season.
An over-reliance on Jefferson and Addison could become problematic if injuries or underperformance occur.
Jalen Nailor’s departure to Las Vegas on a three-year, $35 million deal (which the Vikings declined to match) creates an opportunity. The Vikings could pursue a veteran receiver — perhaps a high-profile name like Stefon Diggs, Tyreek Hill, or Deebo Samuel (DeAndre Hopkins is a less likely option). Alternatively, they could draft a player expected to make an immediate impact. Of course, Felton could also emerge as a reliable option if he develops as hoped.
The 49ers should probably just release Aiyuk and call it good; the relationship has been strained for over a year. If they insist on a trade, the Vikings, needing a WR3, make sense as a landing spot. It would give the offense an ungodly amount of firepower from head to toe.
Approximate Trade Price: 6th-Rounder
1. Jerry Jeudy | WR, Browns
In Cleveland’s current format, it does not maximize Jeudy’s skillset. He banked just over 600 receiving yards last year, meaning he’s just K.J. Osborn with 1st-Round draft stock. Of course, Jeudy thrived with Jameis Winston, but Winston isn’t the Browns quarterback anymore.
Cleveland may leave the draft with a rookie receiver or two. It’s probably time to start fresh.
Last Word on Sports‘ Anthony Palacio noted last month, “The veteran is still under a three-year extension for $58 million, which keeps him locked in with the Browns through the 2027 regular season. However, that could obviously change during night 1 of the NFL Draft, and the Browns could get some extra draft capital to rebuild a new offense for Sanders or Watson.”
“Jeudy should be under a microscope along with other possible receivers that could become available in this year’s draft. The receiver hasn’t been able to find a stable long-term home in his previous tenure in Denver, but could finally find that with these teams.”
It should be noted that trading Jeudy will be easier financially for the Browns after June 1st, but on the whole, trades are more frequent in the draft than in the summer.
Minnesota’s offense would get quite fancy with Kyler Murray, Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, Jerry Jeudy, and a rookie running back from the draft.
Approximate Trade Price: 5th-Rounder
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Wembanyama drops 35 points in playoff debut as Spurs roll past Trail Blazers
Wembanyama’s 21 first-half points set an NBA record for the most in the opening half of an NBA playoff debut since the league’s play-by-play era began in 1997. His 35 total points set a Spurs franchise record for the most in a playoff debut, surpassing Tim Duncan’s 32 in 1998.
“It is obviously different, but we’ve been really good in the regular season,” Wembanyama said. “So, we have no reason to act differently or do anything different.”
Game 2 is Tuesday night in San Antonio before the series heads to Portland for Games 3 and 4.
Stephon Castle and De’Aaron Fox each added 17 points and combined for 15 assists for San Antonio.
Deni Avdija had 30 points and 10 rebounds to lead Portland, which beat Phoenix 114-110 in Tuesday’s play-in game to earn the No. 7 seed.
Scoot Henderson, the No. 3 pick in the 2023 draft behind Wembanyama and Charlotte’s Brandon Miller, added 18 points.
The Spurs responded to the Trail Blazers’ physicality while holding them to 10-for-38 shooting on 3-pointers and had a 45-38 rebounding advantage.
“The Spurs put you in tough positions,” Portland coach Tiago Splitter said. “Against them, you’ve got to shoot the ball well from 3s. We didn’t. We’ve got to shoot the ball better.”
The Spurs and the sell-out crowd — which included Duncan and former teammate and fellow Hall of Famer David Robinson sitting together courtside — at the Frost Bank Center were primed for the franchise’s first playoff game since 2019. The six-season postseason drought came immediately after San Antonio won five NBA championships while appearing in a league-tying 22 straight postseasons.
Spurs fans are again dreaming big — and it’s because of their 7-foot-4 post player from France who is a finalist for the NBA’s MVP and Defensive Player of the Year awards.
Wembanyama’s highlights included dribbling behind his back to avoid Avdija at halfcourt, backing him down to the top of the key, spinning around him and running free to the rim for a two-handed dunk midway through the first quarter.
San Antonio clamped down defensively to regain their double-digit lead in the third quarter, with Devin Vassell blocking Donovan Clingan and Jrue Holiday while scoring eight straight points.
“That’s what we’ve talked about, just not giving up on the play,” Vassell said. “Every possession matters, whether it’s the first possession in the first quarter or the last possession in the fourth quarter. Play to the whistle.”
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Fantasy Baseball Week 5 Preview: Top 10 sleeper pitchers feature Mick Abel, Reid Detmers

You’ll find more strikeout sources than volume plays on the waiver wire this week
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NBA playoff winners and losers: Victor Wembanyama dazzles in debut, No. 1 Pistons in trouble vs. Magic?
The 2026 NBA playoffs continued Sunday with four more Game 1s in the first round. The Celtics and Thunder — the last two NBA champs — opened things up with blowout wins over the 76ers and Suns, respectively. The third game of the day brought the biggest upset of the playoffs so far: the eighth-seeded Magic took Game 1 from the top-seeded Pistons in Detroit. The Spurs closed out the slate by pulling away from the Trail Blazers for a 13-point victory, and Victor Wembanyama had a memorable playoff debut.
Let’s start with Wemby as we break down the winners and losers of Sunday’s playoff action.
Winner: Victor Wembanyama’s playoff debut
In his first career playoff game, Wembanyama was magical. He went for 35 points (a Spurs record in a playoff debut, passing Tim Duncan’s 32 in 1998) on 13-of-21 shooting. He blocked a couple shots, and as always changed or deterred a bunch of others.
Here he puts up a road block on Toumani Camara while hardly having to move, then spikes Jerami Grant’s shot without jumping.
The dude looks like he’s playing with kids. Honest to god, making plays like this at 7-foot-4 is the peak of basketball evolution. I don’t know how it can ever get any crazier than this.
Wemby also made five of his six 3-pointers. That is the second-most 3s made in a playoff debut in league history (trailing, as you probably could’ve guessed, the great Timothe Luwawu-Cabarrot and Voshon Lenard, each of whom cashed six triples in their playoff opener). Wembanyama hit a bunch of impressive 3s, but flow dribbling into a fading corner job is sick.
He also finished three alley-oop dunks, highlighting the outrageous gravity of his rim rolls. It’s the reason the Spurs led the league in corner 3-point attempts, because wing defenders are forced to sink down off of their shooters to at least marginally disrupt things like this.
It’s a total pick-you-poison situation. Even when multiple defenders collapse into the paint, all you have to do is toss the ball to the moon, and he’s the only one who can reach it.
Indeed, Wembanyama was the best player on the floor in San Antonio’s 111-98 Game 1 win. But it wasn’t the only playoff debut that went well for the Spurs, as second-year wing Stephon Castle finished with 17 points, seven rebounds and seven assists. Castle didn’t shoot it so efficiently, but he was everywhere in this game. The future is now for this Spurs team, and it is impossibly bright.
Loser: Detroit’s key role players
Cade Cunningham scored 39 points despite playing in just his fourth game since suffering a collapsed lung. He held up his end of the bargain for the Pistons. How’d everyone else do?
- Jalen Duren had eight points on four shots. He’s about to make an All-NBA team. He has to force his way into the offense more.
- Ausar Thompson played nine minutes and 33 seconds in the second half. His playing time was a point of concern in last year’s playoffs too. The Pistons don’t seem to believe they can score enough to keep him on the floor at a typical starter’s workload, and when he was playing in the first half, JB Bickerstaff didn’t trust him to guard Paolo Banchero. He’s going to be a First-Team All-Defense pick. Whether or not he gets that matchup more as the series progresses remains to be seen, but if he can’t stay on the floor, there’s nothing he can do to impact the game anyway.
- Daniss Jenkins filled in for Cunningham admirably while he was out with the collapsed lung. He shot 1-of-7 from the field in Game 1 and the Pistons lost his minutes by 11 points. If he can’t be Detroit’s secondary creator, their offense is in real trouble.
Cunningham can’t win this series singlehandedly, and even if he could, a far more difficult Cavaliers team is waiting in the next round. This was not the well-rounded group we watched all season. The Pistons need more out of the supporting cast in Game 2.
Winner: Orlando’s defense
The Magic made their all-In push for Desmond Bane on the logic that their back-to-back top-five defenses were championship ready, but their offense needed a boost. Well, one of the (many) reasons this regular season didn’t go as planned was defensive decline. A lot of that was due to injuries. Jonathan Isaac isn’t the low-minutes game-breaker he’s been the past two years, Jalen Suggs missed a lot of time early in the season, and Franz Wagner missed most of the middle of the year.
Isaac hasn’t played since March, but Wagner returned to the lineup on April 1. Not coincidentally, since he had a team-low 100.3 defensive rating thereafter, the Magic had the NBA’s top-ranked defense in April. They have since played three postseason games. In their first play-in game against Philadelphia, they allowed 96.6 points per 100 plays in the half-court, right around the top 10 in the regular season. And then they posted their fourth-best figure of the entire season (73.3) against the Hornets on Friday and their seventh-best figure of the season (81.2) on Sunday against the Pistons.
Orlando’s offense was atrocious against Philadelphia, bad against Charlotte and decent against Detroit. But the whole theory of this team was that “decent” could be good enough if the defense played this well. The Magic are peaking at the perfect time, and they’re the rare team that can actually match Detroit’s physicality. Without that advantage, the Magic have a chance to make this a pretty competitive series.
Winner: Jayson Tatum
Sunday’s Game 1 against the Sixers was the first time Jayson Tatum suited up for a playoff game since Game 4 of the second round against the New York Knicks last May, when he had to be carried off the floor after rupturing his Achilles tendon. He needed no time to reacclimate to the higher-intensity action. By the end of the first quarter, he had 10 points, seven rebounds and four assists, and had scored or assisted on more points (19) than the Sixers had as a team (18).
“Not too long ago, I wasn’t even sure if I was gonna be able to play this season, let alone get an opportunity to play in the playoffs,” Tatum said during his postgame interview on the ESPN broadcast. “Today was probably the most excited and relaxed and grateful I’ve been in my nine years of being in the playoffs. I’m just super happy to be able to be out here and play.”
Tatum finished with 25 points, 11 rebounds, seven assists and two steals on 9 of 17 shooting. Sure, it was only the first round and the Sixers were overmatched, but Tatum’s performance was a great sign for both him and the Celtics. On a personal level, it’s incredible for him to hit these heights in the playoffs less than a year after a devastating injury. And for the Celtics, his showing will give them real confidence that they can make a deep playoff run in what was supposed to be a gap year. — Jack Maloney
Loser: Sixers fans
Nothing has really gone right for the 76ers over the last decade — no other team would lose their star player to an emergency appendectomy just before the playoffs — and Sunday’s 32-point loss was just the latest bit of misery. This was the fifth time that the Sixers have lost to the Celtics by 30-plus points in the playoffs — the most such defeats by any team against a single opponent.
Yes, this was only Game 1, but it sure seems as though the Celtics are going to eliminate the Sixers from the playoffs for the fourth time in the last nine seasons. If the Sixers do end up bowing out in Round 1, that will be three seasons without a playoff series victory and their Eastern Conference finals drought will extend to 25 seasons.
The Sixers have great fans who deserve better. — Jack Maloney
Winner: Jalen Williams
If there was a question about the Thunder leading into the postseason, it was what version of Jalen Williams they were getting. Their second All-Star from a season ago played just 33 uneven games during the regular season, and Oklahoma City seemingly treated him extremely cautiously over the 82-game grind to ensure he’d be fresh and healthy in the playoffs.
Well, that effort seems to have paid off. Williams looked like his old self in a standout all-around performance (22 points on 9-of-15 shooting, seven rebounds and six assists). He was a defensive menace, creating several turnovers and then turning them into buckets in transition, where he is at his most lethal. He made multiple 3s in a game for just the sixth time this season. He even did a bit of secondary creation during Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s bench minutes, the part of his game that might be the most vital for Oklahoma City when the later rounds arrive. The Thunder haven’t been at full strength all season, but with this version of Williams, they’ll be extraordinarily hard to beat. — Sam Quinn
Loser: Phoenix’s supporting cast
Devin Booker gave the Suns 23 reasonably efficient points, considering the circumstances. Jalen Green, through athleticism and tough shotmaking, managed to at least put 17 hard-fought points on the board. The rest of Phoenix’s roster scored 44 points on 15-of-50 (30%) shooting. Yikes.
Suns skepticism this season was centered largely on playoff upside. They remade their roster in the offseason on grit and hustle, and that won them a lot of regular-season games. But nobody else on this roster has any sort of star-level upside, and most are being asked to do too much to expect the Suns to win in the playoffs. Even Booker and Green combined for just three assists because Oklahoma City’s defense is so stout that they couldn’t create advantages for their weaker teammates off of their own scoring.
There just isn’t enough shot-creation here for the role players to get much of anything going against a defense as good as the Thunder’s. Booker and Green can still get their own points, and I suppose Dillon Brooks can too if he’s going to take 22 shots, but in an 84-point team performance, the Suns had no way to actually stress Oklahoma City enough to make life easier for everyone else. — Sam Quinn
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A Vikings Update that Could Give Fans Heartburn
Well, some folks won’t be pleased by this one even if it’s just some meaningless coach talk.
An odd Vikings update emerged when skipper Kevin O’Connell did an interview with Mike Florio and Chris Simms of Pro Football Talk a few weeks ago. The conversation covered a variety of topics, but the detour into a revelatory strategy adjustment may have caused listeners to perk up. Per O’Connell, the Vikings rediscovered how important it is to rally around a strong run game and dominant defense, an approach that fuelled the five-game winning streak to end the 2025 season.
A Vikings Update Some May Not Love
For good reason, the conversation around the Minnesota Vikings rests on the 2026 NFL Draft.
Minnesota sits atop nine draft picks and roughly thirty open roster spots. Adding a pile of young talent is needed to reinforce a top-heavy roster that’s getting older. Most think that a young defender is going to arrive at No. 18, but not everyone agrees. Few, if any, expect a trade up, but moving down has its merit for a team that’s aiming for quiet competence rather than flashy, high-upside risk.
Part of the reason why things feel so tense right now is because of the draft whiffs in recent years. Goodness, the main reason why Rob Brzezinski is the fill-in GM is since the former GM, Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, got canned for bungling the quarterback plan.
J.J. McCarthy was chosen at No. 10 in the 2024 NFL Draft. He did so after proving to be a very good college quarterback even as many insisted he got boosted by operating from within a loaded Michigan program. After all, Jim Harbaugh’s team had a fantastic ground game and defense, meaning McCarthy didn’t need to carry the weight of the world on his shoulders.
Kevin O’Connell may have missed the memo. Or, at least, he didn’t fully give credence to the approach until late in the season.
Check out what he had to say about that late-season winning streak and the strategic tweak that fuelled the victories. “We were able to apply some things to our overall toolbox of how we’re going to win games,” O’Connell said to Mike Florio and Chris Simms in late March. He goes on: “Maybe I don’t get invited to the smart guy table by playing a certain kind of style where we ran the football, we were not going to turn it over, and we’re going to play great defense. And we won five games in a row.”
“So what I told our team at the end of the year is,” O’Connell further explained, “let’s not forget the fact that we just learned maybe some new ways to win.” Speaking prophetically, O’Connell then said that “maybe we’ll need to really call upon that […] late in December in a bad weather game” before saying that “those types of games still win.”
Folks, that’s a less-than-perfect answer.
In fairness, Kevin O’Connell is probably just doing Kevin O’Connell things: saying a ton of words within his relentlessly positive outlook. Still, though, that’s not a great response. Just tally up some of the hurdles that J.J. McCarthy was trying to clear last season:
- He was 22
- He was coming off a missed rookie season, robbing him of reps
- He battled early injury as a sophomore, too
- He was adjusting his mechanics during the season
- He was playing behind an injured o-line
Given all of these factors, shouldn’t the Vikings have been looking to play small ball all along? Why drop to 4-8 before arriving at the humbling truth that grinding out wins via the running game and defense is what this team needed?
Also befuddling is that the Vikings have publicly discussed the issue in the past. A much loved tradition in the Twin Cities is to arrive at the offseason, jump into press conferences, and then detail how more balance and physicality is upcoming. The team has even put its money where its mouth is, signing blocking/ground game specialists such as TE Josh Oliver, RG Will Fries, WR Trent Sherfield, and RB Jordan Mason.
Far too often, Kevin O’Connell’s old habit of passing close to 60% of the time comes roaring back.
The Vikings need to crush the event that’s going to take place this week. From Thursday, April 23rd until Saturday, April 25th, the NFL will work through its annual draft. Every team needs to do well, but Minnesota is feeling a particular urgency given the lacklustre efforts of recent years. Yet another disappointing season could result in Kevin O’Connell looking for work.
Somehow building out a roster that encourages a healthy balance between the run and the pass, the offense and the defense would go a long way in restoring the Minnesota Vikings.
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Godswill Akpabio United Reach Final After 4-3 Win Over Palm Syrup
Godswill Akpabio United FC secured a hardfought 4-3 victory over Palm Syrup FC to book a place in the final of the Akwa Ibom State FA Cup.
The semi-final clash, played at the Uyo Township Stadium on Sunday, lived up to expectations as both sides delivered an exciting and high-scoring contest.
Palm Syrup FC made a flying start, taking the lead inside the first minute through Nkebeteno Udosen. They doubled their advantage in the 16th minute when Jeremiah Akpan finished well to put his side firmly in control.
Godswill Akpabio United FC responded quickly. Emmanuel Joseph pulled one back in the 19th minute with a fine left-footed strike. However, Palm Syrup held on to their 2-1 lead going into the break.
After the restart, Godswill Akpabio United showed great determination and experience to turn the game around. Utipime Sunday levelled the score in the 52nd minute after racing through to beat the goalkeeper.
The comeback continued as former Palm Syrup player Solomon Akpan put Godswill Akpabio United ahead for the first time in the match. His goal sparked a response from Palm Syrup, who won a penalty in the 73rd minute. Nsisong Ekpo calmly converted to make it 3-3.
With the game heading towards a tense finish, Solomon Akpan struck again in the 80th minute. His looping effort beat the onrushing goalkeeper to seal a dramatic 4-3 win for Godswill Akpabio United FC.
The victory sends Godswill Akpabio United FC into the final of the competition for the first time in their history. They have also secured one of the two tickets to represent Akwa Ibom State at the national finals.
Godswill Akpabio United FC will now face the winner of the second semi-final between Akwa United FC and Heaven’s Race Academy.
The final of the 2026 Akwa Ibom State FA Cup is scheduled to take place on April 25, 2026.
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Canelo reflects on the reasons behind his loss to Terence Crawford: “A lot went wrong”
Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez suffered the third defeat of his career in 2025 – his first at super-middleweight – when Terence Crawford outpointed him over twelve rounds.
Despite his pound-for-pound credentials, many in the sport felt the move up in weight would be a step too far for Crawford, who had just one fight at 154lbs before signing to face Canelo at 168lbs.
On fight night, he did everything right and earned the nod on all three judges’ cards, with scores of 116-112, 115-113, and 115-113. Crawford became the undisputed super-middleweight world champion and cemented his legacy. He would retire just a couple of months later.
Though Alvarez will fight on and has his ring return booked for September this year, his comments on the defeat point to a fighter who, at 35 years old and with 532 rounds under his belt, is now feeling the effects of a long career.
Speaking on the Mr Versace podcast, the Mexican icon praised Crawford but said that his body was not responding in the way he wanted.
“A lot of things [went wrong]. My body [didn’t] respond the way I really wanted, because I wanted to be faster, and this and that, and then I didn’t recuperate my weight like I needed to. My legs felt a little bit tired, too. But he deserved all the credit. He made a better strategy than me, but I think I did well … It is what it is, you need to take the losses and learn from that and keep going.
“[Trainer Eddy Reynoso] told me everything, and I tried, but my body didn’t respond. I had cramps in my legs. It didn’t respond the way I really wanted. We learn from that and we move forward. I know what mistakes I made in the fight and in the camp too. That’s what boxing is about. A winner doesn’t mean you win every time. You need to learn from everything.”
Canelo is set to go straight back into championship contention this year, with a return confirmed at 168lbs and billed as a world title fight. Though the plans are still being finalised, Christian Mbilli, who now holds the WBC belt, is the frontrunner.
Whether or not camp goes better this time remains to be seen, though Canelo should at least be refreshed in one department, having undergone successful elbow surgery on a long-standing injury.
Sports
Curtis Mead, Keibert Ruiz help Nationals tame Giants
Apr 19, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Nationals first baseman Curtis Mead (45) rounds the bases after hitting a two run home run against the San Francisco Giants during the fifth inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images Curtis Mead hit a two-run homer, Keibert Ruiz had two hits and the Nationals beat the San Francisco Giants 3-0 in Washington on Sunday to avoid a series sweep.
Andrew Alvarez (1-0), called up earlier in the day from Triple-A Rochester, pitched 4 1/3 scoreless innings for the win, allowing three hits and striking out five without a walk.
PJ Poulin opened for Washington and was replaced by Miles Mikolas with two outs and two on in the first. Mikolas, who began the day with an 11.49 ERA, pitched four scoreless innings while allowing four hits in his best outing of the young season.
Rafael Devers and Drew Gilbert had two hits each for the Giants, who had won three straight, but went 0-for-11 with runners in scoring position.
San Francisco’s Robbie Ray (2-3) gave up three runs on seven hits over six innings. He struck out seven and walked one.
The Giants put runner on first and second with two outs in each of the first two innings but did not score.
The Nationals got an infield single and a walk to open the third inning but couldn’t cash in. Curtis Mead hit a blooper to shallow left field that dropped, but Keibert Ruiz briefly broke back towards second and was thrown out at third. Brady House flied to the warning track in center and CJ Abrams flied out.
Washington took a 3-0 lead in the fifth. Nasim Nunez reached on a bunt single and stole second. Ruiz hit shot to left center and Heliot Ramas made a diving effort but couldn’t come up with it. Nunez scored and Mead lined the first pitch he saw from Ray out to left for a two-run homer.
The first two Giants reached base in the eighth inning on an error and a single, but Casey Schmitt grounded into a double play and pinch hitter Jerar Encarnacion struck out.
–Field Level Media
Sports
USMNT roundup: Red-hot Folarin Balogun chasing Ligue 1 history as Americans’ World Cup form takes shape
Strikers are a streaky bunch. When they’re scoring regularly, swelling with confidence and demanding the ball, it does not seem to matter who is marking them or whether they’ve been invisible most of the match. A goal surely is coming.
Less than two months before the World Cup, Folarin Balogun is feeling it.
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The U.S.’ undeniable No. 1 striker failed to score in the run of play Sunday but converted the tying penalty kick early in the second half of Monaco’s 2-2 draw with Auxerre.
The scoring haul is staggering: Eight consecutive Ligue 1 matches and 10 goals in the past 10 Monaco games across all competitions.
His Ligue 1 streak is tied for the second longest this century, trailing only Sonny Anderson’s 11 for Lyon in 2001. His 12 goals are tied for fourth on the league scoring chart.
The 24-year-old also scored five times in the Champions League and once in the Coupe de France for 18 overall — his most productive campaign since posting 22 for Reims in 2022-23.
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As every striker knows, though, form can be fleeting. Before beginning his scoring tear, Balogun went eight matches across all competitions without a goal.
With 10 goals in his last 10 Monaco games and a historic eight-match Ligue 1 scoring streak, Folarin Balogun is peaking at the perfect time.
(VALERY HACHE via Getty Images)
U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino is counting on Balogun remaining hot though the end of Monaco’s season and hitting the ground running when World Cup training camp opens May 27 in the Atlanta area.
It’s a far cry from the 2022 tournament in Qatar, where an unsettled situation led to Gregg Berhalter starting Josh Sargent twice and Haji Wright and Jesus Ferreira once apiece.
Balogun did not score for the U.S last month as a starter against Belgium and a sub against Portugal. He did strike in each of his three starts in the fall (vs. Japan, Ecuador and Paraguay), and he has eight international goals in 25 appearances since committing to the U.S. three years ago. (He previously played for the English under-21s.)
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Balogun’s surge comes as Wright has gone without a goal in five straight for Coventry City after scoring six in his previous five matches. (He still leads the club with 17 overall.) Derby County’s Patrick Agyemang (10 goals) is sidelined after rupturing an Achilles tendon on April 6, while PSV Eindhoven’s Ricardo Pepi (14) was off this weekend.
France
Defensive midfielder Tanner Tessmann came on in the 79th minute, helping Lyon secure a 2-1 upset at first-place Paris Saint-Germain and move into a tie with Lille for Ligue 1’s third and final automatic Champions League slot.
Right wing Tim Weah entered at the start of the second half for Olympique Marseille, which dropped a 2-0 decision at Lorient for its third loss in four matches. The club is two points out of the Champions League berth with four games left.
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Ahead of Tuesday’s rematch in the Coupe de France semifinal, center back Mark McKenzie served a red-card suspension during Toulouse’s 3-2 loss at second-place Lens.
Although Christian Pulisic is not a pure striker — he’s best as a secondary forward or wing — his scoring drought is concerning. After an unremarkable performance in AC Milan’s 1-0 win at Hellas Verona, the U.S. star has now gone 17 games without a goal for club and country in 2026.
In 2022, Pulisic was scoreless in 22-of-23 matches leading to the World Cup and didn’t hit the mark in the first two group matches before pocketing the winner against Iran.
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Returning from a yellow-card suspension, the multidimensional Weston McKennie started in central midfield and offered a wonderful assist early in the second half as Juventus defeated Bologna, 2-0. He has five goals and five assists in Serie A and four goals and one assist in the Champions League.
Wright entered in the 62nd minute of Coventry’s 1-1 draw at Blackburn, which secured promotion to the Premier League after 25 years in the second, third and fourth divisions.
Defensive midfielder Aidan Morris went 90 as fifth-place Middlesbrough earned a 2-2 draw at second-place Ipswich Town, keeping his club in the hunt for the second promotion berth and in excellent position to qualify for the four-team promotion playoff.
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In the Premier League, defensive midfielder Tyler Adams entered in the 65th minute of Bournemouth’s 2-1 win at Newcastle, extending the eighth-place Cherries’ unbeaten streak to 13 and tying them with Chelsea and Brentford on points for the last two berths in European competition next season.
Midfielder Brenden Aaronson (78 minutes) served a lovely assist on Leeds’ second goal during a 3-0 win over Wolverhampton. Next weekend, Leeds will face Chelsea in an FA Cup semifinal at Wembley.
Left back Antonee Robinson entered in the 81st minute of Fulham’s 0-0 draw at Brentford.
Center back Chris Richards and Crystal Palace — who on Thursday advanced to the UEFA Conference League semifinals — will host West Ham on Monday.
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Right wing back Joe Scally (90 minutes) scored in the seventh minute — his second of the Bundesliga season – but Mönchengladbach conceded a late equalizer and settled for a 1-1 draw with Mainz. U.S. teammate Gio Reyna entered in the 72nd.
Ahead of Wednesday’s cup semifinal against Bayern Munich, midfielder Malik Tillman was an 81st-minute sub in Bayer Leverkusen’s 2-1 loss to Augsburg.
Augsburg center back Noahkai Banks, who withdrew from U.S. consideration last month to weigh German options, remained on the bench for the fourth time in five matches.
In the Copa del Rey final — won by Real Sociedad in a shootout 4-3 following a 2-2 draw through 120 minutes — Atlético Madrid sub Johnny Cardoso missed a golden opportunity to score the winner in stoppage time of regulation by sending an angled shot wide of the open far corner.
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Right back Alex Freeman and Villarreal were off.
In a Scottish Cup semifinal, center back Auston Trusty played 120 minutes as Celtic pulled away from St. Mirren in extra time, 6-2, setting up the May 23 final against Dunfermline.
Eager to make a late impression after being left out of U.S. camp in March, Club América winger Alex Zendejas went the distance and was credited with an assist in a 2-1 victory over Toluca.
Major League Soccer
Defensive midfielder Cristian Roldan scored twice off corner kicks 15 minutes apart in the first half — on a header and a volley — as Seattle rolled past visiting St. Louis, 4-1.
Midfielder Diego Luna contributed a goal and assist in the first nine minutes of Real Salt Lake’s 4-2 home victory over San Diego.
On the eve of his 25th birthday, left wing Max Arfsten scored in the 25th minute of Columbus’ 2-1 loss at New England.
Midfielder Sebastian Berhalter went 74 minutes in league-leading Vancouver’s 3-0 win over Kansas City.
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Among the center backs, Tim Ream left at halftime of Charlotte’s 2-1 win at New York City with a groin issue that he first felt in the 30th minute; Cincinnati’s Miles Robinson returned from a groin injury that sidelined him during U.S. camp to play 64 minutes in a 3-3 draw with Chicago; and Vancouver’s Tristan Blackmon went 90 for Vancouver.
The top goalkeeping candidates started as usual, with NYC’s Matt Freese losing to Charlotte, New England’s Matt Turner winning against Columbus and Chicago’s Chris Brady drawing at Cincinnati.
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