Michael Carrick has won four of his five matches in charge of Manchester United, but Gary Neville and Roy Keane have been told they are wrong about what should happen next
Gary Neville and Roy Keane have been told they are wrong about Michael Carrick and they must remember that football is unpredictable. Keane last week poured cold water on suggestions that Carrick should be appointed Manchester United’s permanent head coach
The former Republic of Ireland international, who won numerous trophies during his time at Old Trafford, believes Carrick lacks sufficient ‘football knowledge’ to lead his old club to the Premier League title, insisting they must seek a different candidate for the permanent role.
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Neville backed Keane’s view and believes that United must ‘get the best’ in their head coach search, with Carrick possibly learning under a proven winner as an assistant, even though the former England international is unbeaten in his first five matches in charge, with the Reds in the Champions League qualification places.
However, former United forward Louis Saha has disagreed with his old team-mates, and he believes the pair have forgotten that football is unpredictable.
“Michael Carrick’s future is a decision for the board and definitely depends on the project,” he told CasinoHawks. “They’ve heard from the manager and others who are interested in the job.
“They know it’s a difficult one. What Carrick has done in the last five games is amazing because he has managed a transition. A lot of players were not fully confident or sure about how they were going to play, and it gelled very quickly. Everyone is on board now. It has changed.
“I think everyone is allowed to have their opinion, and that’s fine. Definitely, Roy and Gary are well placed to have those very strong feelings. I understand them, but I don’t agree.
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“I really feel like if someone is doing their best and obviously has to improve, he’s not an experienced manager, but an experienced manager can struggle there too.
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“Nobody has any guarantees, so it’s really hard for anybody to predict what’s going to happen. We know that there is a definitely different situation if you qualify for Europe or the Champions League; you have different challenges. It’s going to be a challenge for everyone, and even an experienced manager can struggle there.
“It’s just about having the right communication and the right tactics. We’ve seen that he’s able to learn very quickly. I am backing him up. Definitely, it doesn’t mean that he won’t face any challenges or won’t make any mistakes.
“Any experienced player knows that during a career, there are a lot of situations that you can’t predict. This is football. You may end up with the best tactics and still face a better opponent on the day. And everybody is going to criticise you.
“Very experienced players know that, but they tend to forget when they become pundits. They think that everything is very logical. No, it’s not. Football is very, very, very unpredictable.”
After meeting as students in Belfast, Michaela and John married in on 30 December 2010.
However, tragedy would strike just 12 days later when she visited the couple’s room in a luxury resort in Mauritius on her own after lunch, and she was discovered by John who raised the alarm.
In the aftermath, John, now 41, said there was shock, but there was also “anger” at how the authorities dealt with her death, and the lack of convictions that followed.
“I’ve never asked the question of, ‘why did this happen to me?’, I’ve always just felt so sorry for Michaela,” he said.
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“It’s only now that I’m able to talk about it quite logically. There’s still a hell of a lot of pain associated with it, but I accept that it’s always going to be the case.
“I know how intense it is to live with that pain, so I’ve been able to find a way to manage it.”
McAreavey, who featured for Down’s senior football panel and won an All-Ireland Intermediate title with his club Tullylish in 2010, admits that “moving on is a term that has never been comfortable for me”.
“I’ve said before about moving forward, and that just changes the reference around it.
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“You’ll never move on from something like that, you can’t just let that be. You have to find a way to move forward.
“I’m still heavily involved for trying to find justice for Michaela so it’s still a very active part of my life.”
Sweden has punched its ticket to the Olympic quarterfinals.
Gabriel Landeskog and Mika Zibanejad each scored and registered an assist to lead Sweden to a 5-1 win over Latvia in Tuesday’s qualification playoff round. The victory sends the Swedes to a quarterfinal date with the undefeated U.S. on Wednesday.
Despite finishing 2-1 in round-robin play, Sweden was bound for the play-in round due to goal differential — finishing behind Finland and Slovakia in the Group B tiebreaker.
But now, the stacked Tre Kronor squad will present an early test for the Americans in the win-or-go-home portion of the men’s Olympic tournament.
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Beyond Landeskog and Zibanejad, Adrian Kempe, Filip Forsberg and William Nylander found the back of the net Tuesday against Latvia in a game Sweden never trailed.
Jacob Markstrom earned his second win of these Winter Games, previously starting Sweden’s victory over Slovakia in the round-robin.
Latvia’s lone goal in the game came from forward Eduards Tralmaks. The Latvians end the 2026 Olympics with a 1-3 overall record after beating Germany in round-robin play, but falling to the U.S. and Denmark.
Sweden-USA was the final quarterfinal matchup to be decided on Tuesday. Earlier in the day, Germany beat France, Switzerland beat Italy and Czechia beat Denmark to advance.
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The other three quarterfinals will see Germany versus Slovakia, Czechia versus Canada and Switzerland versus Finland on Wednesday.
Kim’s comeback is one of the most unlikely tales, and it’s one that has resonated deeply in the golf and larger sports landscape. A prodigious talent who set the golf world on fire in the late aughts, Kim was a superstar set to blossom. He won three times before the age of 25, was a Ryder Cup star at Valhalla and ascended to No. 6 in the world before an Achilles injury in 2012 saw him disappear from the professional golf world. Kim has said he dealt with multiple injuries and battled “dark demons” and addiction during his time away from the sport. He rarely thought about returning and only started playing golf again when his wife, Emily, showed interest in learning.
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For more than a decade, Kim was a mythical figure. His return was speculated on and hoped for, but he was never seen or heard from outside of the occasional unsubstantiated whispers that someone saw or heard he was working on his game. Kim only returned to the professional ranks in 2024 when he signed with LIV.
Kim, now 40, has said that it is a small miracle that he is still alive and he credited Emily and daughter Isabella with turning his life around. When he joined LIV, the game that once wowed everyone was a long way away. He talked about not knowing what modern golf technology was or how to use it. He looked like a man relearning the craft that once seemingly made him hover off the ground. There was little reason to believe he’d return to the winner’s circle. He struggled in his first two seasons on LIV and found himself relegated at the end of last season. But Kim has been adamant that he has been working hard behind the scenes. This is something he wanted. He earned his spot back via the LIV Promotions Event, which included making a birdie on the 36th hole to punch his ticket to the weekend, where he eventually finished third.
Two months later, the unlikely became reality.
On Sunday, at The Grange in Southern Australia, Kim’s 14-year journey — his trauma, his battle with his personal demons, his deferred dreams, his drive to climb back — all came flooding out as he ran away from two of the best players in the world.
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“I will say that that was all the lows that I went through in my life that I got to dig out of,” Kim said. “Every putt that went in, I felt the struggle, and I was overcoming it. It was therapeutic out there to fight through it and come out on top.”
Woods saw the kid who set professional golf on fire. The one he battled at Congressional. The one who beat Sergio Garcia in Ryder Cup singles and made 11 birdies in a single round at the Masters. But he is also the man that time and trauma have changed. There can be room for both.
Anthony Kim is no longer the brash, swaggering youngster. Time and struggle have changed him. But that Anthony Kim came back as he rolled in nearly every putt he looked at while outdueling Rahm and DeChambeau. Woods saw that Anthony Kim, but he also saw a man whose story has a universal lesson that should be celebrated.
“This kid hit it so good,” Woods said on Tuesday ahead of the Genesis Invitational. “He was on an unbelievable run when he won at Charlotte, and we played each other — against each other at Congressional. He played unbelievable at the 2008 Ryder Cup. He had so much natural talent. He could hit any shot he wanted.
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“Then to see him struggle in life and didn’t really want to play golf, didn’t really want to be part of golf, and for him to come all the way back and for him to win and to be as devoted as he is to his family, it’s a story in which — you just have to wrap your heart around it because of the struggles. We can all relate to struggles. We all struggle in life. The longer it goes, the more tough times you’ve had. But for him to fight through it and for Anthony to get to where he’s gotten to, from the low that he was in, is something that, as I said, you have to just wrap your heart around it.”
Kim’s comeback resonates with Woods because so much of what Anthony Kim said Sunday, soaked in celebratory sparkling water, sounded like what Woods said after he won the 2019 Masters to complete one of the greatest comebacks in sports history.
Their struggles are different. And yet their messages were the same as were their motivations.
“Don’t f—ing quit,” Kim said on Sunday about his message to people he wants to inspire. “That’s it. Don’t f—ing quit.”
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“You never give up,” Woods said in 2019 at the winner’s press conference at Augusta National. “That’s a given. You always fight. Just giving up’s never in the equation.
“Just keep fighting. That’s just part of the deal. We wake up every morning, and there’s always challenges in front of us, and keep fighting and keep getting through.”
There was Kim on Sunday, sharing his winning moment with Emily and Isabella, explaining how his daughter, who was born prematurely, changed everything.
“I will tell her that before she came into this world that I didn’t feel any purpose in my life,” Kim said. “Whether you have a lot of money, whether you have a lot of success in your life, you still can feel lonely and feel like the world is against you, and that’s in your own mind because I had a lot of people rooting for me. Obviously you saw out there how many people were rooting for me. I just want her to know that no matter how bad your day is, if you keep fighting, you never lose.”
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In 2019, wearing his fifth green jacket, Woods, who at one point questioned if he’d be able to play again due to debilitating back issues, credited his daughter, Sam, and son, Charlie, for getting him back to the top of the mountain.
“It means the world to me. Their love and their support, I just can’t say enough how much that meant to me throughout my struggles when I really just had a hard time moving around,” Woods said. “Just their infectiousness of happiness; you know, I was going through a tough time physically. There was a lot of times when I really couldn’t move, and so that in itself is difficult. Just to have them there, and then now to have them see their Pops win, just like my Pops saw me win here, it’s pretty special.”
A lifetime ago, Tiger Woods was on top of the golf world, and it appeared as though Anthony Kim was rising to meet him. A combination of back injuries and personal issues led to Woods going 11 years between majors, at times only teeing it up a handful of times each season. Injuries forced Kim to step away, and a battle with addiction and his inner demons kept him away, causing him to hang up his spikes for over a decade and almost permanently ending his career.
There was a time when both of their best moments lived only on YouTube. Their legends kept alive by a blend of nostalgia, mystique and an inherent human desire to hope that the horizon offers more.
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But struggles, no matter how they are defined, don’t have to be final. The wilderness can end. Better days can be ahead. Pain can heal.
So, Tiger Woods made the ground shake one final time at Augusta National. Almost seven years later, on the other side of the world and on a Tour that didn’t exist when Woods last summited the mountain, Anthony Kim won again. Where and how it happened is a different story that offers context to Kim’s story.
But as Woods can attest, the climb is the important part. That’s what makes the final step meaningful. That’s what made Sunday in Australia resonate.
Without wishing to get too ahead of himself, Ryan Garcia has named one matchup he would be ‘really interested’ in pursuing after his next fight.
The 27-year-old must first take care of business against Mario Barrios – which is no foregone conclusion – this Saturday, when the two welterweights collide at Las Vegas’ T-Mobile Arena.
Entering their showdown as the defending WBC world champion, Barrios comes off back-to-back draws – against Abel Ramos and Manny Pacquiao – while having previously lost to Gervonta Davis and Keith Thurman.
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His reign as a champion at 147lbs has therefore been somewhat underwhelming, with many even believing that Pacquiao, aged 46, deserved to edge their encounter in July.
But while he is yet to cement himself as the best in his division, who most would consider to be Devin Haney, Barrios is nonetheless an all-action volume puncher who typically fights at a ferocious pace.
Garcia, meanwhile, is also a man with a point to prove, especially after suffering a points defeat to Rolando Romero in May.
At the same time, though, the American appears eager to mix it with the very best in his sport, naming pound-for-pound star Shakur Stevenson as a potential opponent after his clash with Barrios.
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Garcia expressed this desire during an interview with Nightcap, while also acknowledging that it would take a career-best performance to defeat Stevenson.
“I’m really interested in the Shakur fight – it gets me going – and those are the type of fights that [will bring] the best out of me.
“Definitely, he’s somebody I wanna look into after this fight [with Barrios].”
Stevenson became a four-division world champion after dethroning Teofimo Lopez last month and, since then, has insisted that any fighter wishing to face him at 147lbs would need to accept a rehydration clause. Garcia, however, claims he can make a catchweight of 144lbs, something that may have to be seen to be believed.
PSA Cardinals’ Dylan Mingo (2) shoots the ball during a game at Nike EYBL at the Memphis Sports & Events Center on Saturday, May 17, 2025.
Five-star guard Dylan Mingo announced his commitment to North Carolina’s 2026 recruiting class Tuesday on ESPN’s “First Take.”
The 6-foot-5 Mingo, from Long Island’s Lutheran High School, is No. 5 overall in the 247Sports composite rankings.
Mingo chose head coach Hubert Davis and the Tar Heels over Baylor and Penn State, where his older brother, Kayden Mingo, is a freshman.
He recently told 247 Sports that he has remained in contact with Tar Heels star Caleb Wilson since his campus visit.
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“He was very welcoming on my visit,” Mingo said. “It was fun to chill with him on my visit. He told me to come here if you want to go to the League, basically. When you do get there, take full accountability for what you are repping in North Carolina.”
Mingo is the second top-25 prospect in North Carolina’s 2026 class, joining 6-foot-7 forward Maximo Adams from Sierra Canyon in Chatsworth, Calif.
When the WSL enters its March international break, Liverpool captain Grace Fisk will be available for selection for England’s matches against Ukraine and Iceland. The Lionesses will take the pitch in their Women’s World Cup Qualifiers ahead of the tournament kick-off in Brazil in 2027.
Fisk received her first call-up back in 2020 for the She Believes Cup under Phil Neville, with the English defender having recently returned to football in the UK after a spell in the US.
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Prior to 2020 she had extensive experience with the English development teams, first appearing for her country at the U17 level.
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She has yet to achieve her first senior cap, however, and will hope to feature in the build-up to the 2027 competition and the tournament itself.
The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has granted 10 athletes from Russia and Belarus wildcard spots for the upcoming Winter Games in Italy from March 6-15.
The IPC on Tuesday told news agencies AFP and SID that the limited number of athletes would be allowed to compete under their own flags.
The athletes would be “treated like [those from] any other country,” the IPC told AFP.
This was conducted using Belarussian territory for military movements, giving Russia’s troops the shortest possible approach to Kyiv, in an original and failed attempt to rapidly seize the capital.
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At the last Winter Games, taking place in the immediate aftermath of the invasion, the two countries were subject to a blanket ban.
However, they were obliged to compete under the AIN or Individual Neutral Athletes flag and anthem, rather than being part of a formal Russian or Belarussian team or contributing to those countries’ medal tallies. Thirteen Russians and seven Belarussians are competing under these terms at the current Winter Olympics.
The IPC, meanwhile, elected to lift its suspension on Russian and Belarussian athletes at its general assembly last September, leading to Tuesday’s confirmation of the flags’ usage.
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Russia has been granted places in alpine skiing, cross-country skiing and snowboarding — split evenly among men and women — while Belarus’ four spots are all in cross-country skiing.
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Sports bodies split on how to handle Russia
Several other sporting bodies took decisions similar to the IOC after the invasion of Ukraine, but have been struggling to maintain them amid legal, political and public pressure.
Russia’s Olympic Committee chief has said that the Milan-Cortina Winter Games should be the last Olympics without a full Russian team, suggesting a return for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles was on the cards.
Attempts to ban Russian and Belarussian tennis stars from certain events, like Wimbledon 2022, proved the short-lived exception not the rule. In the end only restrictions on Davis Cup team competition endured.
World Atheltics canceled its ban on Russia and Belarus in 2023 and the international chess federation lifted its restrictions on Russian teams late last year.
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Paralympics: How athletes earn a living
Debate over politicization of sports, fairness of punishing athletes
The age-old debate over the “politicization” of sports came into sharp media focus last week at the Winter Olympics, but with a focus on Ukraine more than Russia.
The IOC had asked him not to wear it to honor restrictions over making political statements or protests during sporting competition proper. The IOC’s decision to insist on this rule led to considerable public backlash from Ukraine and elsewhere.
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The debate over whether professional sports should, or even can remain apolitical in nature is years old, as are discussions over whether it is fair to punish professional athletes — with their short-lived careers and limited opportunities for success — for the actions of their governments.
Six Olympic skiers joined by their parents, coaches and federation presidents came together on Sunday to advocate for more inclusion at the Winter Games. Representing Jamaica, Kenya, Eritrea, Madagascar, South Africa and Benin, the group gathered in Bormio, where the men’s alpine races are taking place this year.
Nepal’s Dipendra Singh Airee with batting partner Gulshan Jha (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)
Kushal Bhurtel’s blazing start and Dipendra Singh Airee’s unbeaten half-century powered Nepal to a morale-boosting seven-wicket victory over Scotland, ending a 12-year-long T20 World Cup winless streak in a dead-rubber Group C clash at the Wankhede Stadium on Tuesday. Nepal, who had last tasted World Cup success in 2014 against Afghanistan and the Netherlands, chased down Scotland’s 171 with 19.2 overs to spare. Airee’s rapid 50 off 23 balls, featuring three sixes and four fours, anchored the chase, while Bhurtel’s aggressive 43 laid the platform. Gulsan Jha contributed an unbeaten 24, including two towering sixes, sharing an unbroken 73-run partnership for the fourth wicket that sealed the result.
Suryakumar Yadav press conference: How SKY trolled India-Pakistan rivalry
Bhurtel had a narrow escape early on when Brad Currie spilled a return catch, and the opener capitalised immediately with a massive six over long-on. Nepal’s innings started cautiously under pressure, but Aasif Sheikh (33) and Bhurtel brought momentum with multiple boundaries, including sixes over fine leg and off Mark Watt. Scottish spinners later tightened the screws, claiming Bhurtel, Aasif, and skipper Rohit Paudel (16), but Airee’s late assault and Jha’s finishing touches ensured a win with four balls remaining. Earlier, Michael Jones carried Scotland to a competitive 170/7 with a 71-run blitz, featuring eight fours and three sixes. His 80-run opening stand with George Munsey was the backbone of the innings, though the rest of the batters failed to convert starts. Munsey managed 27 off 29 balls, falling frustrated to Sundeep Jora’s diving catch at long-on. Scotland suffered further setbacks with fielding lapses, including a dropped skier by Jora off McMullen, before Sompal Kami (3/25) cleaned up Jones with a brilliant one-handed return catch, wrapping up Scotland’s innings. In the end, Nepal signed off their World Cup campaign on a high note, delighting over 19,000 fans at the Wankhede with a dominant performance.
I recently took part in a preview of the MTG TMNT Universes Beyond set, and while many cards were inadvertently revealed through the Lorwyn Eclipsed Draft Set, there’s still plenty to talk about. As someone who grew up in the 80s, completely obsessed with the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles games, cartoon, and comics, seeing this come to life is something I’m very excited about. I get it, though, not everyone is into Universes Beyond, but that’s a different discussion, for a different day.
As one of the first sets of the year, it’s got a lot of pressure on it, especially after the incredible Lorwyn Eclipsed expansion. Today we’re going to highlight some of my favorite cards in the preview session for MTG TMNT, which I think could make a splash in both Standard and Commander.
MTG’s TMNT set offers some unbeatable flavor from the games, comics, and shows
TMNT is coming to MTG on March 6, 2027, and with it comes a wide assortment of cards, spanning the franchise’s rich history. You’ll see art that represents the original Image Comics, the various cartoons, and even the video games. Some of them are just fantastic representations of the rich history of the franchise in obvious, or sometimes subtle ways.
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Featured from left to right: Turtles in Time, Ninja Teen, Turtles Forever, Slash, Reptile Rampager (Image via Wizards of the Coast)
Turtles in Time (Blue Sorcery): Return all creatures to their owners’ hands. Each player may shuffle their hand and graveyard into their library, then, each player who does draws seven cards. Exile this card.
Ninja Teen (Black Class): Level 1: Whenever a creature you control leaves the battlefield, each opponent loses 1 life. Level 2: Creatures you control get +1/+0 and have Menace. Level 3: Creature cards in your graveyard have Sneak 3B. You may cast creature spells from your graveyard using their Sneak abilities.
Turtles Forever (White Instant): Search your library and/or outside the game for exactly four legendary creature cards you own with different names, then reveal those cards. An opponent chooses two of them. Put the chosen cards into your hand and the rest into your library.
Slash, Reptile Rampager (Red Legendary Creature): Alliance: Whenever another creature you control enters, Slash deals 2 damage to each opponent. Whenever Slash attacks, create a 2/2 red Mutant creature token.
Turtles in Time represents one of the most iconic games in the franchise, and is also a powerful MTG card in its own right. All creatures return to their owners’ hands (bye bye, Tokens!), and then players can shuffle their hands/graveyards back in, for seven fresh cards. I’d love to see this be a reason you splash blue into a Chaos/Wheel of Fortune deck.
Ninja Teen features Karai, as the titular Ninja Teen, instead of the turtles, and that’s fine! It’s a great card, and feels more like the Foot Clan, anyway. That final power, where you can sneak creatures in from the graveyard is fantastic recursion, and it doesn’t appear to have any restrictions! What I mean by that, is those cards don’t get exiled when they die again.
Turtles Forever is a great way to tutor up your favorite legendary creatures from your sideboard or main deck, and it doesn’t have to be TMNT MTG cards either! You could grab Leonardo, Krang, and then Rhys the Evermore and Fire Lord Ozai. Whomever you want!
Slash, Reptile Rampager is an MTG card I wanted to highlight, because it’s subtle, and in the background, but his favorite palm tree, Binky is in the background of the card art. It’s also an excellent card that deals free damage whenever you bring in a creature, and triggers itself, simply by attacking.
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Left to Right: Leonardo Sewer Samurai, Donatello Mutant Mechanic, Michelangelo Improviser, Raphael Ninja Destroyer (Image via Wizards of the Coast)
Speaking of flavor, I also wanted to highlight the Kevin Eastman chase cards, because I’m a huge fan of the original comics. Kevin Eastman drew some brand-new, never-before-seen art for the turtles, which you can see above. They’re also printed with a stamp of his signature in gold.
The Ninja Teens (and their friends) are making a splash in the MTG TMNT set
Like the Spider-Man set, the MTG TMNT set will feature several versions of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and some of their villains. However, I don’t think it will be quite as overwhelming as the Spider-Man set felt.
Left to right: Don & Leo Problem Solvers, Raph & Mikey Troublemakers, Casey Jones Vigilante (Image via Wizards of the Coast)
Don & Leo, Problem Solvers (White/Blue Legendary Creature): During your End Step, exile up to one artifact and creature you control, then return to them to play under their owners’ control.
Raph & Mikey, Troublemakers (Red/Green Legendary Creature): Trample/Haste, whenever this card attacks, reveal cards from the top of your library until you reveal a creature. Put that into play tapped and attacking, and the rest on the bottom of your deck in a random order.
Casey Jones, Vigilante (Red Legendary Creature): When this card enters, draw three cards. At the beginning of your next upkeep, discard three cards at random.
I love Flicker mechanics in MTG, so Don & Leo, Problem Solvers might be the most likely Commander for me, other than Krang, Utrom Overlord from this TMNT set. You can flicker a creature and artifact each turn, to get lots of ETB triggers going.
Speaking of easy ways to get things done, Raph & Mikey, Troublemakers let you sneak creatures into play, and while their Mana Value is high, you can easily ramp them into play, and cheat out your biggest, baddest cards without having to put them back, or sacrifice them.
Casey Jones, Vigilante is for those red decks that just need more card draw. If you use all the cards in your hand though, you don’t have to discard three at random, on your next Upkeep, either! Just some food for thought.
Left to Right: Leonardo Cutting Edge, Donatello Mutant Mechanic, Michelangelo Improviser, Raphael Most Attitude (Image via Wizards of the Coast)
Leonardo, Cutting Edge (White Legendary Creature): Sneak W, Lifelink, whenever you gain life, put a +1/+1 counter on Leonardo.
Donatello, Mutant Mechanic (Blue Legendary Creature): Tap to put 3 +1/+1 counters on target artifact you control. It becomes a 0/0 Robot in addition to its other types. Do this only as a Sorcery. Whenever an artifact you control is put into a graveyard from the battlefield, if it had counters on it, put those on up to one target artifact or creature you control.
Michelangelo, Improviser (Green Legendary Creature): Sneak 2GG, whenever he deals combat damage to a player, you may put a creature card and/or land card from your hand onto the battlefield.
Raphael, Most Attitude (Red Legendary Creature): Menace, Alliance, Whenever Raphael attacks, until end of turn, you may play a card exiled with Raphael.
Leonardo, Cutting Edge just needs Trample, and he’d be amazing in any Soul Sisters deck. Not that would be hard to give to him, either. Donatello, Mutant Mechanic is going to turn those non-creature artifacts into some seriously powerful forces, and even has a built-in Ozolith ability, just for artifacts. Want to make sure your counters don’t go to waste? Bring him.
Michelangelo, Improviser is amazing for so many reasons. Cheating in wildly huge cards, and also lands at the same time? He doesn’t specify “Basic” Lands either, so you can cheat in your fetch lands, Triomes, Dual Lands, or any of your favorite, overpowered cards. Raphael, Most Attitude allows you to exile cards when another creature you control enters, and then you can play those, if he attacks. This TMNT MTG set is filled with both flavor, and some truly useful cards.
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The MTG TMNT expansion also features some of the most sinister villains in card form
What would this TMNT MTG set be without awesome, terrifyingly powerful villains? From the brain behind the operation itself, to the annoyingly strong Mousers, it’s a pretty great series of reveals for the bad guys. Especially if you have ways to cheat them into play.
Pictured: Krang Master Mind, Krang Utrom Warlord, Shredder’s Technique, Ravenous Robots (Image via Wizards of the Coast)
Krang, Master Mind (Blue Legendary Artifact Creature): Affinity for Artifacts. When it enters, if you have fewer than four cards in hand, draw cards equal to the difference. Gains +1/+0 for each other artifact you control.
Krang, Utrom Warlord (Colorless Legendary Artifact Creature): Flying/Trample/Indestructible/Haste, other artifact creatures you control have Flying, Trample, Indestructible, and Haste.
Shredder’s Technique (Black Sorcery): Sneak B, Destroy target creature or enchantment. If an enchantment was destroyed this way, you lose 2 Life.
Ravenous Robots (Red Artifact Creature): Whenever you cast an artifact spell, create a 1/1 colorless Robot artifact creature token. R, Tap this, creature tokens you control gain haste until end of turn.
Krang, Master Mind can come into play faster, thanks to Affinity for artifacts (costs 1 colorless less for each artifact you control), and potentially allows you to draw cards! Then it grows stronger for each artifact you have, which is another nice bonus. However, Krang, Utrom Warlord is just filth. Cheat that 9-drop into play to make your artifact creatures into indestructible combat machines.
I guess it’s time for me to make that colorless artifact Commander deck, huh? Ravenous Robots feels like it would settle in nicely with Slash, or other artifact decks. Churning out free value in the form of robot creature tokens, then giving them all haste and swinging in? Huge value! I’m here for it.
I’m far more excited about the TMNT MTG set, compared to some of the other Universes Beyond releases (with the obvious exception of Final Fantasy). There’s lots of powerful cards, great value, and a clear love of the IP it’s based on.
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