New details emerged Monday in the arrest of Atlanta Falcons defensive end James Pearce Jr.
Pearce was arrested outside of Miami last week and is facing several felony charges, including two counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, aggravated stalking and fleeing or eluding police. Pearce was involved in a domestic dispute with his WNBA girlfriend, Doral police said.
Atlanta Falcons linebacker James Pearce Jr. (27) warms up prior to the game against the New England Patriots at Gillette Stadium on Nov. 2, 2025.(Brian Fluharty/Imagn Images)
He posted $20,500 bond on Sunday and was released from the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Facility. He was ordered to stay away from his girlfriend.
Pearce allegedly crashed his vehicle into another car being driven by his girlfriend and struck a police officer while he tried to flee law enforcement, ESPN reported, citing a criminal complaint from the Miami-Dade County state attorney’s office.
The alleged victim told police that she noticed Pearce was following her in a white luxury vehicle and when she stopped at a red light, the NFL player tried to open her vehicle. The victim said she started to drive toward the Doral Police Department, while Pearce allegedly followed her. As she got closer to the station, she said Pearce cut her off and collided with her head on.
Atlanta Falcons linebacker James Pearce Jr. (27) against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium on Dec. 21, 2025.(Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images)
Doral police officers responded to the scene, according to ESPN. An officer reportedly pulled a gun on Pearce to try to force him to get on the ground and end the incident, but he allegedly got back into his car and drove away. He allegedly struck an officer as he drove away.
Pearce later crashed his vehicle and was accused of resisting arrest.
“We look forward to working with the State Attorney’s Office in fully investigating this case and uncovering the truth,” Pearce’s lawyers told ESPN. “Mr. Pearce maintains his innocence and urges the public to understand that while allegations have the power to shape a narrative, that it is hardly the full, complete story. We look forward to vigorously defending our Client and remain confident that he will continue contributing positively to both his team and the community he serves so well.”
The Falcons said they were “gathering more information” about the incident, but face the decision of whether to keep him rostered as the official start of the 2026 NFL season is weeks away.
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Atlanta Falcons linebacker James Pearce Jr. (27) is interviewed after an NFL football game against the New Orleans Saints, on Jan. 4, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Danny Karnik, File)
ESPN’s Bill Connelly released his annual SP+ rankings as Spring Practice gets underway across the country.
The Pac-12 got a great piece of news heading into its first full year.
On today’s episode of Locked On College Football, I look at the pending quarterback battles in Chapel Hill (UNC) and Tempe (ASU).
Will the Sun Devils’ long-term outlook be as good as it seems for Kenny Dillingham?
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Tulane made the 12-team Playoff last year and lost Jon Sumrall to Florida.
Is Will Hall the right hire to keep the Green Wave in the national CFP landscape?
00:00 Pac-12 ranked best by metrics 04:17 Conference rankings and coaching impacts 07:05 Mountain West team rankings 14:38 Quarterback struggles and transfers 19:50 Arizona State quarterback depth plan 23:49 Tulane’s playoff chances 28:26 Tulane’s football program outlook
Nigeria are set to qualify for the 2026 FIFA World Cup in dramatic fashion, despite Democratic Republic of the Congo securing a 1-0 win over Jamaica in the intercontinental play-off final.
DR Congo had ended a 52-year wait for World Cup qualification after Axel Tuanzebe scored the winning goal in extra time. However, that result may now be overturned following an expected decision from FIFA.
Reports suggest that fresh evidence has emerged regarding the use of ineligible players by DR Congo during the CAF play-off stage.
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The development is linked to recent changes within Confederation of African Football, where a former secretary general from Congo resigned and was replaced by a Nigerian official. The new leadership reportedly made key documents available to the Nigeria Football Federation.
FIFA is said to be reviewing the documents, which are believed to provide strong proof in the case. A final decision is expected today, April 1 2026 and it would see Nigeria take DR Congo’s place at the World Cup.
Thank you for reading to the end. This report is powered by April Fools Day. NO 2026 FIFA WORLD CUP FOR THE SUPER EAGLES.
ATLANTA – Eighteen months and 24 matches after Mauricio Pochettino was named the head coach of the U.S. men’s national team, the group is now barrelling towards the looming deadline that is the much-anticipated World Cup ahead of what many hope will be a groundbreaking showing on home soil.
Pochettino’s stamp on the team has become increasingly clear by the game, even as he conducted a rigorous experimentation period. Scores of players have earned caps under the head coach, many breaking into a core group and giving the team a new look in the process. Pochettino has also introduced a variety of tactical styles, spending last fall working with three center backs before transitioning back to a four-person defense in March’s matches against Belgium and Portugal. By the time the World Cup approaches, the team will have a tactical variety that should, theoretically, position them to solve a wide range of problems.
With less than two months to go until Pochettino names his World Cup roster, questions of which players will make the cut are natural. They are not the only uncertainties, though, as the World Cup rapidly approaches — his team still does not look like the finished product, perhaps because Pochettino has insisted on trying as many things as possible before this summer’s tournament actually begins.
Here’s a look at the questions that went unanswered in the U.S.’ defeats to Belgium and Portugal in March.
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Are the USMNT error-prone in defense?
The USMNT have made tangible progress under Pochettino, most notably as a more dynamic team in attack with an emphasis on a high press and offense-minded wide players. They have done this while problems in the back persist, issues that were magnified in a 5-2 loss to Belgium on Saturday and a 2-0 defeat to Portugal on Tuesday. They have not kept a clean sheet since a 2-0 win over Japan in September and have just one in their last 12 matches.
The errors themselves are wide-ranging but ultimately costly, likely the result of several contributing factors. The USMNT are generally better with Chris Richards and Antonee Robinson on the pitch, though Pochettino said Tuesday that substitutions made in high volume sometimes lead to confusion. Other times, though, their attack-minded approach proves costly and gets in the way of their intentions.
“[We need to figure] out the little things that we can do that doesn’t leave us exposed in some situations if we do lose the ball,” Weston McKennie said post-match on Tuesday, “but also just having the confidence to finish the chances that we have early on because I do think our type of game that we play is very energetic and more high press but we want to be structured. If we’re not finishing chances, we want to be able to hold the game to a 0-0 type thing and not allow the opponents to score.”
Pochettino will need to strike a perfect balance between personnel and strategy to actually tighten things up in the back, maintaining his argument that the pre-World Cup training camp will provide the continuity he needs to actually drill his points home.
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Can Christian Pulisic return to goalscoring form?
Christian Pulisic may have started the season in scintillating form with AC Milan, but the goalscorer’s goals have dried up in recent months, raising questions about his confidence heading into the World Cup. He has not scored for Milan since Dec. 28, and his last goal for the USMNT came in Nov. 2024, the 27-year-old is set to enter the pre-World Cup training camp 18 months after the fact. Pulisic has grown increasingly frustrated as he waits for his next goal, a dry spell not uncommon amongst attackers but ill-timed with the World Cup less than three months away.
His form did not necessarily justify a start against Portugal, but Pochettino was intent on giving Pulisic minutes, hoping the time on the pitch would end the rut. The head coach even tinkered with the lineup to assist Pulisic as he attempted to end his goalscoring drought, pushing him closer to goal and playing him as a No. 9, a strategy that saw the forward take three shots and generate 0.27 expected goals in 45 minutes.
“I think he was very active and I think he [did] a good job,” Pochettino said. “I think he was involved in too many actions. Unlucky, a shame a little bit that he didn’t score with the opportunity that he has. It’s normal … Yes, he feels frustrated, but that is what we want, what we expect, but he was fighting, he was committed in the phases that we demand more, and then with the ball, he’s going to score because he has the quality. I am sure that he is going to come back to his club and in the moment he scores, he’s going to start to score again.”
If the problem persists, though, it is worth asking if Pulisic runs the risk of being dropped from the starting lineup for important World Cup games. For the first time in a long time, the U.S. have actual depth in terms of goal scorers — Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi are amongst the in-form players, while fringe players like Haji Wright and Patrick Agyemang will likely duke it out for a single spot in a nailbiter of a competition to make the World Cup squad. McKennie, too, has a newfound goalscoring ability that his coaches at club and country seem eager to exploit. Pulisic may still be the brightest of the bunch, but if the U.S. are in real need of goals and results this summer, Pochettino has no shortage of options available to him, and perhaps the platform to make a tough decision or two along the way.
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How many fringe players made their case in March?
The USMNT’s March friendlies were not exactly anything to write home about, in large part because there were opportunities for fringe players to make their case while more seasoned players missed out through injury. The results were mixed at best, only reinforcing the idea that the U.S. are one team with their mainstays, but a different one without.
Pepi was a likely World Cup participant, but left no doubt after playing an important role in Agyemang’s late goal against Belgium, while Agyemang joined him in impressing with some energy after it had otherwise been sucked out of the team. Johnny Cardoso, meanwhile, was effective in 45 minutes on Saturday and seems like the primary understudy to the oft-injured Tyler Adams. After that, the picture gets murkier.
Several of these players may still make the cut for the World Cup, but failed to make much of an impact in the March friendlies. Tanner Tessman, for example, was far from his best against Belgium despite using his experience as a center back at Lyon in a rare shift in that position with the national team, though Pochettino continues to value his versatility and soccer IQ. Center back Auston Trusty was solid against Portugal, but other players may have fallen behind in the depth chart. Joe Scally and Gio Reyna only played around a half hour each through two games, while Aidan Morris did not do enough to avoid the risk of missing a World Cup spot if Adams is fit.
USMNT’s World Cup timeline
Pre-tournament
May 26: roster reveal event in New York
May 27: World Cup training camp opens at the National Training Center in Fayetteville, Ga.
May 31: friendly against Senegal at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C.
June 6: friendly against Germany at Soldier Field in Chicago
Group stage schedule
June 12: USMNT vs. Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif.
June 19: USMNT vs. Australia at Lumen Field in Seattle
June 26: Turkiye vs. USMNT at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif.
Golf star Tiger Woods said on Tuesday that he was stepping away to seek treatment and focus on his health after he was arrested on charges of driving under influence (DUI) following his rollover car crash in Florida last week.
“I know and understand the seriousness of the situation I find myself in today,” he said in a statement published on social media platform X.
“I am stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health. This is necessary in order for me to prioritize my well-being and work toward lasting recovery.”
Tiger Woods pleads not guilty
Woods was driving his Land Rover last Friday when it clipped a pickup truck and rolled over on its side near his Jupiter Island home.
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No injuries were reported in the incident but the 50-year-old golfer was forced to exit his vehicle from the passenger’s side door.
Officers at the scene assessed him to be impaired and found two opioid pain pills in his pocket.
Woods was charged with suspicion of misdemeanor DUI with property damage and refusing to submit to a lawful test.
He did not submit to urine tests after a breathalyzer test showed no alcohol in his system.
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He was released on bail later that night.
Earlier on Tuesday, the online court docket for Martin County showed that Woods had entered a written plea of not guilty and was planning to waive his April 23 arraignment hearing.
Woods is a 15-time major champion and is touted as the greatest golfer of his generation.
Woods was driving his Land Rover last Friday when it clipped a pickup truck and rolled over on its side near his Jupiter Island homeImage: Martin County Sheriff’s Office/dpa/picture alliance
No Masters for Tiger Woods — again
Woods’ decision to take time away means he would miss the Masters — where is a five-time champion — for a second consecutive year.
Fans were hoping to see the pro-golfer tee it up at the tournament taking place from April 9 to 12.
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Last week saw Woods making a return to competitive golf at the indoor TGL Finals, which combines elements of simulated golf with traditional play.
Woods said in his Tuesday statement that he was committed to taking the time needed to return in a “healthier, stronger, and more focused place, both personally and professionally.”
This would be the second time the golfer has taken a leave of absence after a car crash.
In 2009, his car rammed into a fire hydrant and tree outside his home near Orlando. He then announced a break to work on being a better person.
During his field sobriety test on Friday, officers noticed Woods — who had compression sock over his right knee — limping, an accident report from the Martin County Sheriff’s Office said.
Woods explained he had undergone over 20 surgeries on his right leg and his ankle seizes up while walking, the report said.
As per the report, Woods told authorities that he was looking down at his phone and switching radio stations and did not realize the truck in front of him had slowed down.
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Authorities also said that he was observed to be lethargic, slow, “sweating profusely,” with bloodshot eyes, pupils that were “extremely dilated” and was hiccuping during questioning.
Italy made heartbreaking history on Tuesday night, as they missed their third straight World Cup bid following a loss to Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Italy is now the first World Cup-winning team to miss three consecutive tournaments following the penalty-kick shootout loss in the European playoffs.
The nation was once a soccer powerhouse, winning it all four times with its most recent in 2006. But recent years have not been kind to the Italian squad, and they were feeling the pain of the loss after the match.
Pio Esposito of Italy disappointment during the FIFA World Cup 2026 European Qualifiers KO play-offs match between Bosnia & Herzegovina and Italy at Stadion Bilino Polje on March 31, 2026 in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina.(Image Photo Agency)
“We still don’t believe it – that we’re out and that it happened in this manner,” Italy’s Leonardo Spinazzola said to reporters, per the New York Post. “It’s upsetting for everyone. For us, for our families and for all the kids who have never seen Italy at a World Cup.”
After 90 minutes and extra time, both nations were stuck in a 1-1 tie, and the penalty shootout was needed to determine a winner. Italy eventually fell to Bosnia and Herzegovina, 4-1, in the shootout, as Esmir Bajraktarevic secured the victory with the final goal.
It didn’t help that Italy was playing with just 10 men on the field after Alessandro Bastoni received a red card before halftime. Bosnia and Herzegovina used the man advantage to tie the game in the 79th minute, as Haris Tabakovic scored the equalizer.
Italy’s defender Alessandro Bastoni receives a red card from the referee during the FIFA World Cup 2026 European qualification final football match between Bosnia-Herzegovina and Italy at the Bilino-Polje stadium in Zenica on March 31, 2026.(Elvis BARUKCIC / AFP)
Moise Kean was able to strike first for Italy in the 15th minute, giving them the momentum they were searching for coming into the match. However, they were never able to rally in the end.
While Italy remains one of only three nations to ever win the World Cup four times in history, they can’t seem to find what it takes to get to the tournament.
In 2018, Italy fell at the hands of Sweden, while North Macedonia shocked them in 2022 in the qualifiers.
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Gianluigi Donnarumma of Italy reacts during the FIFA World Cup 2026 European Qualifiers KO play-offs match between Bosnia & Herzegovina and Italy at Stadion Bilino Polje on March 31, 2026 in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina.(Srdjan Stevanovic – UEFA)
Now, Bosnia and Herzegovina will try their luck in Group B when the World Cup kicks off, starting with a match against Canada. They will also face Qatar and Switzerland in the group stage.
Here we are in the last two months of the 2025-26 season.
The title race completely passed us by months ago, and unfortunately that has become standard procedure in the last few years. After the tremendous run of results in January had us thinking of a comfortable spot in the top four in Serie A, the crushing reality of February and, to some extent March, made us realize that today’s Juventus team is barely/merely good enough to hang around the outskirts of the fourth, fifth and sixth positions.
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Last month had a little bit of (almost) everything — dramatic comebacks, last-minute goals, crushing victories, penalty misses, and corto muso performances.
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Let’s get started.
Falling into the Europa League?
We started the month with a blockbuster 3-3 draw away at Roma. After a tight first half, the hosts took the lead just before the break when Brazilian wingback Wesley cut inside from the edge of the box and curled a lovely right-footed shot into the top corner and just past Mattia Perin’s fingertips. We equalized immediately after the break when Conceição scored with an incredible half volley that almost ripped the net in half.
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A 10-minute spell then turned the game firmly into Roma’s favor. Evan Ndicka barged his way past Andrea Cambiaso and volleyed home from Lorenzo Pellegrini’s corner kick. Then, the reborn Donyell Malen received an incredible pass from Manu Kone, beat the offside trap, and chipped the ball over Perin who was too slow to come off his line. (And I thought sweeper-keepers were overrated …) Jeremie Boga brought us back into the game when he scored with a tremendous volley after Edon Zhegrova’s deflected cross fell to him. His goal was the beginning of a great run of games he had in March.
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The game had a dramatic conclusion in the 93rd minute thanks to our beloved bricklayer Federico Gatti. Once again, Zhegrova was the catalyst as his cross from the free kick created havoc in the box. Gatti pounced (ha!) on the loose ball and smashed in the half volley to deny Roma the victory in a brilliant game of football.
We returned to winning ways with a big 4-0 home win against Pisa. Remarkably, all goals came in the second half and, curiously, after Spalletti switched to a 3-4-3 with Boga/Yildiz as a false 9. Cambiaso scored the first goal when he headed in from a great chipped cross from Yildiz. The second came quickly afterwards: Manuel Locatelli’s pinpoint shot hit the post and the rebound fell to Khephren Thuram who tapped the ball into an open goal.
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The goals kept coming. Yildiz collected a pass from Conceição, slipped past the defender, and blasted the ball into goal. Boga put the cherry on top with a goal in stoppage time after he received a perfect through ball from Locatelli, rounded the goalkeeper, and scored in the empty net: 4-0!
Boga continued his great month by scoring the game’s only goal in a tight 1-0 victory over Udinese. Kelly played a fantastic long ball to Yildiz, who charged into the box and crossed low to Boga. The Ivorian held his run excellently and, as a result, was in the perfect position for the easy tap-in. The Bianconeri controlled the rest of the game and probably should have scored more to put the game to bed, but in fairness Udinese posed such little offensive threat that the victory was never in doubt.
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The final game of the month against Sassuolo was the one that, in my eyes, ended our chances of qualifying for next season’s Champions League. Remarkably, goalkeeper Perin created the first goal when his excellent long outlet pass released Conceição on the counterattack. He dribbled his way into the box and squared the ball for Yildiz, who scored with a low, accurate shot.
As has happened time and time again this season, Juventus conceded from its first (and only!) shot on target. Sassuolo played a nice bit of one-touch passing on the edge of the box and the ball came to Berardi on the right wing. The winger squared the ball for Andrea Pinamonti who, after bullying Gleison Bremer of the ball in the buildup to the goal, ghosted past the Brazilian defender to poke the ball into goal from Berardi’s low cross. The Bianconeri won a very soft penalty after Jonathan David’s cross hit a defender’s arm, but goalkeeper Arijanet Muric caught Locatelli’s incredibly weak penalty kick. It ended 1-1 and we fell further behind in the race for Top 4.
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Juventus Women
Juventus Women opened the month with a solid 2-0 victory over Fiorentina in the first leg of the Coppa Italia semifinal. Chiara Beccari scored in the ninth minute thanks to a nice assist from Ana Capeta. The Portuguese forward then capped a match-winning performance with a goal in the 51st minute after latching onto Viola Calligaris’s great through ball and scoring with a shot at the near post.
It wasn’t a great month of results in the league, though.
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AC Milan beat the Bianconere 1-0 thanks to Thea Kyvag’s goal early in the second half, but the deciding moment came just a few minutes earlier in stoppage time of the first half. Kay-Lee de Sanders fouled Capeta in the box but goalkeeper Sandra Estevez saved Emma Stolen Godo’s penalty, resulting in a disappointing 1-0 loss. We followed that loss with a frustrating goalless draw against bottom-of-the-table Genoa.
Thankfully, Juve ended the month on a high note with a 2-1 victory over Fiorentina in the second leg of the Coppa Italia semifinal. Capeta ended a fantastic month with two goals in this game. The first was a wonderful curled shot from the edge of the box that went in off the post and the second a header from a corner kick. Iris Omarsdottir scored from a rebound after a corner kick resulted in Katla Tryggvadottir hitting the post. Juventus cruised to a 2-1 victory (4-1 on aggregate) over Fiorentina and will meet Roma (who else?) in the final!
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New starts with false 9s?
During the winter transfer window, the big story was Juventus’s attempt to get another striker, likely on a short-term deal. Dusan Vlahovic has since only recently returned from injury and still hasn’t extended his contract that expires in a few months, Arek Milik has risen from the dead after missing nearly two seasons due to injury, and Loïs Openda and Jonathan David haven’t worked out the way we thought they would.
Desperate times call for desperate measures, and Spalletti has tinkered accordingly to find a solution while his strikers find their purpose in life form. He has tried two solutions: playing Weston McKennie as a striker and playing a false nine. Remarkably, McKennie was actually quite good in that position — is it still a surprise that McKennie plays well everywhere on the pitch? — but we need him more urgently in other areas.
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The false 9 experiment began catastrophically when the attack was terrible in the first half of the first game against Napoli. But the experiment has caught fire recently as a combination of Yildiz and, more importantly, Boga have done quite well as false 9s. The Ivorian, in particular, seems to be a good fit for the position as he is faster and more physically dominant than the Turkish forward and more comfortable with his back to goal.
But as I mentioned earlier, Milik and Vlahovic are now (fully?) fit, which means that Spalletti has another problem on his hands: who do you play/drop? Boga is in fantastic form, Yildiz is the team’s top contributor in attack, and McKennie is one of the most important players in the team. Conceição is hot and cold, but we don’t have many players comfortable on the right wing.
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It’s an important question to ask because, despite having the third-best attack in the league, we are remarkably wasteful in attack. We have 12 shots per game compared to Inter’s 13 shots per game, but the league leaders have scored 14 goals more than us, highlighting the significant difference in the teams’ effectiveness in front of goal. To emphasize this even further, the two teams have essentially the same number of shots per target (185 for us, 184 for Inter).
So what is the new power ranking for the Bianconeri’s attackers? Let’s find out after the international break.
Lionel Messi was the subject of praise from fans after he gifted teammate Nicolas Otamendi a penalty during Argentina’s 5-0 win over Zambia on Tuesday. It was an emotional moment as the match was most likely Otamendi’s last game on Argentine soil, marking the end of an era for one of the country’s most committed defenders.
In a bid to head into the 2026 World Cup on a high, La Albiceleste started the game strongly and took the lead after four minutes through Julian Alvarez, with Messi providing the assist. Just before the break, Messi doubled the advantage following a one-touch move with Alexis Mac Allister.
Thanks for the submission!
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The lovely gesture came after Albert Kangwanda committed a foul on Thiago Almada three minutes into the second half. Rather than take the penalty, Messi signaled to Otamendi and handed the ball to him. The veteran defender seized the opportunity and sent the goalkeeper the wrong way to score his country’s third of the night and his eighth goal for the national team.
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Zambia’s woes were worsened as Dominik Chanda scored an own goal midway through the second half while Valentin Barco added the cherry on top in stoppage time.
While Argentina fans were thrilled with the convincing victory, some were drawn to Messi’s ‘selfless’ act and took to X to laud him for it.
One wrote:
“This is what a real leader looks like.”
Another tweeted:
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“This is one of the many reasons players love sharing the pitch with him ❤️”
A third poked fun at Lionel Messi’s archrival, Cristiano Ronaldo, saying the Portuguese would never do something like that.
“Ronaldo would NEVER do something like this in a million years lol,” they remarked.
“That’s why they adore and respect him,” another chimed in.
Otamendi, meanwhile couldn’t hold back his tears after being substituted in the 69th minute, hugging his teammates including Lionel Messi before leaving the pitch.
Lionel Messi reaches goal scoring milestone after scoring in Argentina’s 5-0 win over Zambia
In what was his likely last-ever home game with Argentina, Lionel Messi added another feather to his illustrious cap. His 43rd minute stunner against Zambia meant he has now scored against 40 different countries with Argentina, for 117 national team goals.
Messi is expected to retire from the national team after the World Cup, which is scheduled to take place in the United States, Canada and Mexico. However, he has yet to guarantee his presence at this competition this summer.
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The 38-year-old is currently Argentina’s most capped player and all-time leading scorer.
Mar 31, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) smiles after a dunk in the final minutes of the game against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images
Luka Doncic had 42 points and 12 assists, and LeBron James scored 14 points in his NBA-record 1,229th career win, powering the Los Angeles Lakers to a decisive 127-113 victory over the visiting Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday.
Los Angeles won for the 13th time in its last 14 games, clinching a playoff spot and the Pacific Division title earlier in the night when the Phoenix Suns lost. The Lakers sit third in the Western Conference, two games ahead of the Denver Nuggets.
James surpassed Hall of Fame center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the most combined regular season and playoff wins. The all-time scoring leader added five rebounds and six assists against the Cavaliers, with whom he spent 11 seasons over two stints.
Doncic returned from a one-game suspension to become the third-youngest player with 15,000 career points at 27 years, 31 days (James holds the mark at 25, 79). Jarrett Allen scored 18 points for the Cavaliers, who remained one game behind the third-place New York Knicks in the East. James Harden added 17 points.
Pistons 127, Raptors 116
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Jalen Duren scored 31 points and grabbed nine rebounds as host Detroit topped Toronto.
Daniss Jenkins supplied 21 points, five rebounds and five assists for Eastern Conference-leading Detroit, which won for the 10th time in 13 games. Duncan Robinson had 19 points, while Tobias Harris contributed 12 points, six assists and five rebounds.
RJ Barrett led Toronto with 24 points and pulled down six rebounds. Brandon Ingram scored 22 points, and Sandro Mamukelashvili had 16. Collin Murray-Boyles added 14 points with 10 rebounds for the Raptors.
Magic 115, Suns 111
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Desmond Bane scored 21 points and Jalen Suggs added 20 to help Orlando earn a victory over visiting Phoenix.
Paolo Banchero added 19 points, nine rebounds and eight assists while Wendell Carter Jr. had 15 points and 12 rebounds for the Magic, who had dropped seven of their previous eight.
Devin Booker poured in 34 points and Royce O’Neale contributed 14 for the Suns, who have lost seven of their past 10.
Hornets 117, Nets 86
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Brandon Miller scored 25 points in three quarters as Charlotte seized control early and rolled to a rout of Brooklyn in New York.
Miles Bridges added 19 points while also playing three quarters as the Hornets improved to 29-13 in the past 42 games and avoided a third straight loss.
Josh Minott posted 14 points as the Nets lost for the 11th time in 12 games and fell to 3-21 in their past 24.
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Rockets 111, Knicks 94
Kevin Durant scored a game-high 27 points, Reed Sheppard added 20 off the bench and Houston rolled to a victory over visiting New York.
Amen Thompson and Tari Eason tallied 17 points apiece for Houston, and Jabari Smith Jr. totaled 15 points. Alperen Sengun produced 13 points and 10 assists as the Rockets shot a robust 53.8% in their third straight win.
Karl-Anthony Towns paced the Knicks, who lost their third game in a row, with 22 points and eight rebounds. Josh Hart added 13 points, while Jalen Brunson shot 5-for-14 and scored 12 points.
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Bucks 123, Mavericks 99
Ryan Rollins scored 24 points and Kyle Kuzma added 20 to lead Milwaukee to dominant victory over visiting Dallas.
Rollins also dished nine assists and grabbed seven rebounds as the Bucks ended a four-game skid. AJ Green poured in 17 points off the bench.
Cooper Flagg logged 19 points on 6-for-19 shooting and grabbed 10 rebounds as the Mavericks lost for the seventh time in the past eight contests. Brandon Williams added 18 points.
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Trail Blazers 114, Clippers 104
Jrue Holiday scored 30 points and Deni Avdija recorded 28 points, 11 rebounds and eight assists as Portland scored a crucial win over Los Angeles in Inglewood, Calif.
Portland pulled within a half-game of Los Angeles for eighth place in the Western Conference, a spot that would require just one play-in win instead of two to reach the playoffs. The Blazers turned in an inspired performance, taking the lead late in the first quarter and never relinquishing it. Toumani Camara added 17 points and Scoot Henderson finished with 15.
Kawhi Leonard led the Clippers with 23 points and eight rebounds. Darius Garland added 20 points, Brook Lopez put up 18, John Collins had 17 and Jordan Miller contributed 16.
Bully, Kanye West’s first album post-apology, has received a 3.4 out of 10 rating from Pitchfork, which stated that the rapper returned to music as a “hollowed-out shell of his former self.” Bully, Ye’s highly anticipated album, created buzz online when it was released on March 28, 2026, as it marked his return to his roots as an artist following his antisemitism controversy and a full-length apology ad in The Wall Street Journal in January 2026.
The 18-track album included features from Travis Scott, Peso Pluma, CeeLo Green, and Don Toliver, among others. On April 1, 20206, Pitchfork published its review of Bully, giving it a meagre rating of 3.4 out of 10. The music publication called the project a “cheap hit of retro-Kanye—a copy of the classic spectacle.” It further suggested that the album was filled with “weak introspection and feeble, characterless music,” adding:
“Even at his bleakest moments of self-professed nitrous and porn addiction, when he was prohibited from seeing his children, he still knew how to make a song. Bully’s real curveball is the lack of Ye, even after he re-recorded it with human vocals. He’s on every track but also somehow none of them, making a case for redemption and not sounding very convinced by it himself.”
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Pitchfork’s rating of Bully seemed to draw divisive responses from netizens on X, with one user questioning:
“Are they rating the album or the person? Lmaooo.”
@Kurrco Are they rating the album or the person? Lmaooo
Several fans felt the publication was too harsh with its rating.
@Kurrco The record could have sonically excelled more but definitely not this rating. Today’s pseudo music intellectuals fr.
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@Kurrco Bully is good. It’s a 10/10 but we have these Moral clowns who think hating on his music makes them a better person. I mean a 59 score for DONDA? a 65 for YE? like no one should give a fuck what people think anymore.
@Kurrco This gotta be an April Fools joke right?
@Kurrco Nobody cares about “Pitchfork”
However, others claimed that the rating was deserved and even suggested it deserved to be rated lower.
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@Kurrco 3.4 checks out. album was lowk mid
@Kurrco Well deserved. album was absolute buns
@Kurrco I mean it was a 2\10
@Kurrco Kanye fans will never be objective and call an album he makes bad lol, they’ve never had to deal with getting poor music over and over again, not everything the guy makes is a masterpiece anymore but they keep acting as if it is.
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Meanwhile, Rolling Stone gave Bully 2.5 stars out of 5 in a review on March 31, stating the album felt “lifeless overall” and more like Ye’s “greatest-hits compilation.” The publication also addressed widespread rumors of the rapper using AI to create the album, writing:
“Whether or not Ye used AI to make Bully, the album nonetheless feels like decades of his music fed into a computer program.”
Kanye West’s Bullymade waves on Spotify despite critics’ underwhelming response, and topped Spotify’s top albums chart following its release on March 28, 2026. According to Rolling Stone, ten songs from the 18-track list have debuted on Spotify’s chart of top songs worldwide.
Gamma, which distributed the album, claimed that it drew approximately 50 million streams on the first day, making it the largest single-day total for a hip-hop artist on Spotify in 2026.
However, the album was not without its fair share of controversy, and its rollout was plagued by speculation that Kanye West had used AI. However, days before the album’s release, West took to X to release the album’s tracklist with the caption, “BULLY ON THE WAY NO AI.”
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Following the album’s release, English singer and record producer James Blake requested that Ye remove his production credit from the album in response to fans speculating that AI was used on the track This One Here. In a comment on his Vault social media platform, Blake suggested that the released version of the song did not align with his original version, writing:
“The way I pitched his vocals and constructed the track from his freestyle is partially there, majorly peppered with other newer vocal takes etc. But the spirit of my actual production is mostly absent other than that. My original version is a completely different production in spirit. Happy for the fans but I’ve asked to be taken off the producer credits for now as I don’t want to take credit for other people’s work and this version isn’t what I created with Ye.”
According to Billboard, he also clarified that his reasoning for wanting to remove his name from the production credit was “not personal,” adding that he had “hit a point where don’t want to be credited on music where I can’t affect the end result.”
In other news, Kanye West is scheduled to headline all three days of the Wireless Festival from July 10 to July 12 at Finsbury Park, London.
TORONTO – The Canadian men’s team showed plenty of attacking impetus, but ended up settling for a 0-0 draw against Tunisia on Tuesday to close out March’s international window.
Fresh off a 2-2 draw versus Iceland last week, Canada was hoping to end this month on a more positive note, only to be let down by a lack of finishing in front of goal against the African nation.
While it wasn’t quite the result that Jesse Marsch was after, the Canadian coach was still pleased with the tenacity and spirit that his side displayed as it inches closer towards co-hosting this summer’s FIFA World Cup.
“Guys are really willing to sacrifice themselves to do whatever to help the team be successful,” Marsch said. “It’s a pleasure to be their coach. We’ve got some tough decisions coming up over the next eight weeks, but I really like our team, I really like our chances.”
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Canada is 30th in the current FIFA world rankings, 14 spots above Tunisia, which will compete in its seventh World Cup this summer.
Here are three key takeaways from Canada’s draw against Tunisia:
Goals still hard to come by for Canada
Tuesday’s goal-less stalemate means Canada has recorded four clean sheets in its last five outings. Marsch’s men also are unbeaten in five games.
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While the defence is holding steady, the offence has had issues.
Canada has now failed to score from open play in six of its last seven matches – and has no goals from open play in the last four games at Toronto’s BMO Field, where it will open its World Cup campaign on June 12 versus. Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Bosnians stunned Italy in penalty kicks on Tuesday to qualify.
The Canadians fervently attacked in waves on Tuesday, putting Tunisia under constant pressure while carrying the bulk of play and enjoying a 6-2 edge in shots on target. Canada looked dangerous in attack, but the final product was often lacking. And if not for a pair of penalties converted by acting captain Jonathan David last week versus Iceland, Canada would have failed to score across this month’s pair of friendlies.
Yet, Marsch maintains the goals will come for Canada at the World Cup.
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“We would have liked to score more goals, but I think we were creating chances. We’re dangerous throughout games. We’re controlling matches. We’re playing against good opponents, so I’m not going to get negative or down on this group,” Marsch said.
“I know we have quality in the team, and I know that we can score goals. teams are defending harder against us; they’re taking us more seriously. They understand that when you come and play us, that it’s a talented group with a lot of speed and power. So, they know they have to be organized defensively and deep often and not give much away.”
Marcelo Flores shines in his first start
If anybody has used this international window to play his way onto the roster for the World Cup, it’s Marcelo Flores.
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Flores, a 22-year-old born in Georgetown, Ont., is a dual national who had been capped for Mexico but had his one-time international switch approved by FIFA in February. Flores plays for Tigres UANL in Liga MX, the Mexican first division.
He earned his first cap for Canada when he came off the bench in the 63rd minute for Ali Ahmed last week versus Iceland and did enough to earn his first start on Tuesday.
Flores was one of Canada’s best performers, his speed, quick feet and trickery on the ball down the left side and while drifting into the middle caused Tunisia problems all night.
Canada’s best attacking moments flowed through Flores, who routinely found open spaces to exploit via his dynamic movements with the ball, while also playing his teammates into dangerous scoring positions. The fearlessness with which he plays is something that Canada’s attack could use more of as it heads into the World Cup.
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“We have a lot of guys that are athletic and play with power, and he has a little something different. He’s clever, he’s quick, he moves around in the game. He can help see final plays. He did so many good things tonight, and now we’ve got to continue to work with his ability to understand how to see and play with the guys around him,” Marsch offered.
Liam Millar’s amazing defensive play
With no goals between the two sides, highlight-reel moments were few and far between. But Canadian winger Liam Millar managed to come up with an amazing defensive play that instantly went viral.
Canada was pressing for the opening goal late in the first half when a mistake by defender Joel Waterman deep inside Tunisia’s half allowed the visitors to launch a quick counterattack spearheaded by Elias Saad and Sayfallah Ltaief.
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Saad looked poised to score from a tight angle on a two-on-zero breakaway after rounding Canada goalkeeper Maxime Crépeau, only to be thwarted at the very last second by a sliding block from Millar, who made a lung-busting recovery run from deep inside of his half to deny the visitors a sure goal.
Millar furiously pumped his first after making the stellar defensive play, while Marsch emphatically celebrated on the sideline as if Millar had scored the game’s opening goal. Millar’s amazing hustle to track back exemplifies the spirit with which Jesse Marsch wants to see his side play.
“We talk about having 100 per cent recoveries; when we do get broken down in transition moments, that we have a team that sprints back and gives everything to defend our own goal. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a play like [that] and how far he ran. … You’d have to go back to where he started and where he ended to see how much he invested into protecting our goal. An amazing play and a defining play for what we’re trying to be,” Marsch said.
Another defensive injury for Canada
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Canada’s depth at the back was tested during this international window and a defensive injury crisis appears to have deepened.
Alistair Johnston and Moïse Bombito were involved in this Canadian camp but only as training players as they are still regaining their fitness from long-term injuries. Missing from the team altogether due to injuries were fullback Alphonso Davies, and defenders Alfie Jones, Zorhan Bassong and Jamie Knight-Lebel. Youngster Luc de Fougerolles was in camp but didn’t play as he was dealing with an ankle injury, while fellow centre back Derek Cornelius saw limited minutes across the two games as he’s just coming back from a muscle injury.
This month’s games offered a chance for centre back Ralph Priso to step up in a big way. Priso, 23, has impressed for the Vancouver Whitecaps ever since last season when he was converted from a midfielder into a central defender, with many pundits believing he’s shown enough to earn a call-up for this summer’s World Cup.
Priso earned his first official cap against Iceland when he came off the bench and Marsch trusted him enough to start him against Tunisia. Priso started off on the right foot, displaying genuine intelligence in his positioning before a hamstring injury knocked him out of the game after only 26 minutes.
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“We’re hopeful it’s not too bad. Maybe a couple weeks would be the best-case scenario,” Marsch said when asked about the prognosis on Priso.
Editor’s note
John Molinaro is one of the leading soccer journalists in Canada, having covered the game for over 27 years for several media outlets, including Sportsnet, CBC Sports and Sun Media. He is currently the editor-in-chief of TFC Republic, a website dedicated to in-depth coverage of Toronto FC and Canadian soccer.
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