This article was originally published in a 2025 issue of GOLF Magazine.
WHAT’S YOUR BIGGEST WEAKNESS?
It’s my last question of the day for Ludvig Åberg and likely the least original. We’re sitting in the grill room in the clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., home course of the PGA Tour and home to its most talented young star, who has recently relocated to Northeast Florida.
I’ve spent much of the day shadowing Åberg, the 25-year-old Swede and World No. 5, watching him hit balls and take photos, first for his clothing sponsor, Adidas, and then for GOLF, while peppering him with questions in between. We’re still weeks away from Åberg winning the biggest title of his young career, a statement, come-from-behind victory at this year’s Genesis Invitational that proved his competitive fire and calm under pressure. But now that our time together is running out, it occurs to me that I’m missing a key insight into Åberg, a requirement to make any character compelling: his flaw.
Advertisement
Åberg can’t think of one.
I offer suggestions. Bad temper. Sweet tooth. Trash TV habit. “I mean, I think we all have weaknesses,” he says, charitably but unconvincingly. The rest of us, maybe, I counter. Then there’s a long, drawn-out silence.
It’s a credit to Åberg (pronounced Oh-berg) that he considers the question earnestly. He lingers so long in thought that I have time to gaze out the window, catch a glimpse of roof tile, come to the realization that this place—this red-domed, 80,000-square-foot Mediterranean-style behemoth of a clubhouse charging $800 green fees to play the island-green golf course—is the polar opposite of the minimalist golfing culture in which Åberg learned the game. But he’s adaptable. His game travels, from small-town Sweden to Lubbock to Augusta and beyond. That’s among his many strengths. As for a weakness?
“Yeah, that’s a great question,” he says.
Advertisement
IF IT FEELS LIKE ÅBERG IS STILL NEW on the scene, that’s because he is. Two years ago at this time, he was still a student at Texas Tech. Let’s get specific: In May 2023, he won the NCAA Norman Regional in his penultimate college start and just three months later won the Omega European Masters in just his second DP World Tour event as a pro. The DP win doubled as audition; the very next week he was selected for the European Ryder Cup team, a bold but inspired choice by captain Luke Donald. It would mark the first time someone had suited up for a Ryder Cup before he’d competed in a major.
“I think he’s a generational player,” Donald explained at the time. “If he wasn’t going to play this one, he was going to play the next eight Ryder Cups. That’s how good I think he is.”
That Ryder Cup week at Marco Simone, just outside of Rome, was Åberg’s introduction to a curious golfing public. Who was this six-foot-three Swede with the athletic move and air of mystery? He hit it far. He hit it close. And he didn’t say any more than he had to. Most of the American team had never seen him play, never mind tried to beat him, but on Saturday morning he delivered a performance to remember. Åberg and Viktor Hovland were put up against the American A-squad of Scottie Scheffler and Brooks Koepka. Less than two hours later, the Team U.S.A. stars walked off the course bewildered, having been handed a 9-and-7 beatdown, the widest margin in Ryder Cup history.
“Ludvig’s a stud,” said Hovland. “He doesn’t miss a shot.”
Advertisement
Åberg headed stateside after a victorious Ryder Cup debut and stayed hot through the end of the 2023 PGA Tour season. He finished T2 in Mississippi, T13 in Vegas and T10 in Mexico before winning the final event on the schedule, the RSM Classic, with a preposterous 61-61 weekend. It was a fitting capstone to a wild debut. “I still pinch myself in the morning when I wake up to realize that this is what I do for a job,” Åberg said at the post-tournament presser. “It’s been so much fun.”
He started 2024 where he’d left off: top 10 at Torrey Pines, runner-up at Pebble, top 10 at the Players. By the time Åberg arrived at the Masters, a course hostile to first-timers, there were only 10 players in the field with shorter odds. By week’s end? He’d beaten everybody except Scheffler. It was the best result by a Masters rookie since 1979. And it left the golf world with two questions: Who is this guy and where did he come from?
Ludvig Åberg at TPC Sawgrass.
Chris McEniry
Chris McEniry
BACK AT SAWGRASS, Åberg says that it’s impossible to tackle the first question without answering the second. The where and the who are intertwined. He’s the product of a specific system, of a specific coach, of a specific school and school of thought—even if it seems counterintuitive that one of the best golfers in the world grew up in a cold-weather country.
“Don’t go in the winter,” he warns, when asked to describe his native Sweden. “It’s cold. It’s dark. Nobody wants to leave their house.”
Advertisement
But in the summer? Here, Åberg sounds ready to join the tourism bureau.
“It’s a beautiful country,” he says. “It doesn’t get too hot, like certain parts of America. It’s just so nice. We have daylight ’til midnight, and everyone’s barbecuing and hanging outside. And because there’s only a few weeks a year where it’s actually nice outside, everyone takes full advantage.”
Åberg was born on Halloween in 1999 in Eslov, a town of 20,000 in southeast Sweden, which he describes with a loving shrug—when he was a kid, it was voted the most boring city in Sweden. No matter—it had plenty of room for handball and soccer, and it was home to Eslovs Golfklubb, where his dad teed it up and eventually Ludvig did too.
He describes Swedes as pleasant if standoffish. “They’re very nice, very kind, but they’re also very private. You wouldn’t see people just, like, randomly talking on a bus.”
Advertisement
Is he that way? “Deep down I am,” he says. “But I’ve gotten a little less that way as the years pass.”
Still, he found community in a golf culture he describes as open, accessible and rather un-American. “I think we have one private club in all of Sweden,” he says. “Golf is a lot cheaper than it is [in the U.S.], so there’s a lot more availability. You don’t necessarily have to belong to a club; you can show up with your friends and pay and still go play. There’s a culture of playing and of walking. We don’t really do carts at all. And I’d say, in general, there’s less of a drinking culture in Sweden. Over here, it’s a lot more cocktails while you play.”
Everything in moderation. That’s a theme.
Åberg’s father, Johan, who sells parts for construction vehicles, was the family’s resident golf nut, but his mother, Mia, a paralegal, spotted her son’s talent and drive early on. When other six- and seven-year-olds were goofing off at early clinics, Ludvig was focused on the task at hand. But, in the years that followed, no one in his life turned any one dial too far.
Advertisement
He played several other sports; soccer was his favorite. But he loved golf and got good at it. To their credit, he says, Sweden’s high school golf academies view multisport athletes favorably.
“You [develop] more coordination from multiple sports,” Åberg says. “Also, there’s the team aspect. When you’re 10, being in a locker room after you’ve lost is a pretty big lesson to learn.”
That partly explains how a tall, lanky, athletic, teenage Åberg was accepted at Filbornaskolan, a sports academy and boarding school in the coastal city of Helsingborg. And that, he says, is when everything began to change.
Ludvig Åberg at TPC Sawgrass.
Chris McEniry
Advertisement
THE WEEK BEFORE ÅBERG MADE his Ryder Cup debut, five other Swedes represented Team Europe at the Solheim Cup. Åberg knew the two highest-ranked players, Maja Stark and Linn Grant, well. They were in his eight-person class at Filbornaskolan. That’s right—three of the eight, future PGA and LPGA tour stars.
How is that possible? Hans Larsson is the man to ask. He’s been coaching golf at the school for more than two decades and oversees a program that has produced more than its share of pros. The school is selective across the board; in the golf program, a typical year will feature eight total players, four male and four female, chosen from close to 100 applicants. What makes the staff ’s approach different, Larsson says, is its big-picture approach. That’s why Åberg calls Larsson a “performance coach” rather than a swing coach. And that’s why, nearly a decade after they first met, Larsson remains his close confidant.
“We’re not just telling them, ‘This is what you should do,’ ” Larsson, phoning from Sweden, says of his students. “We’re obsessed with ‘This is why you should do it.’ I think that relates to all parts of life: nutrition, training, body movement, golf skills.” By Åberg’s recall, their program “didn’t really do high school tournaments.” That’s unthinkable to the American sporting mind; we crown national champions from age six, and the very idea of competitive junior golf conjures images of stressed-out teens grinding for life-or-death pars. But despite running an elite golf program, Larsson’s focus is rarely on cutthroat competition.
“Our kids compete at an early age,” he says, “but we try to focus on what you can learn through competing rather than just the lowest score. The Swedish system, both at our school and on the national team, is quite focused on educating and getting the players a base of knowledge in order to perform at the next level.”
Advertisement
Larsson has seen enough cautionary tales to fear the alternative. Kids who specialize early do get results early, he says—but then they often burn out faster, quit earlier, get injured more frequently or hit a ceiling.
“I would never tell them to stop playing another sport they love [to focus on] only golf, because I don’t think that’s good in any way,” he says. “I think it’s good [that they] do a lot of different things to prepare their mind and body. That’s better for your system in the long run, even if you don’t get the results as early.”
When Åberg arrived on campus at Filbornaskolan, his talent stood out. He just wasn’t particularly keen on practice. It’s not that he was anti-practice. He just didn’t really know how. But once Larsson pointed him in the correct direction, the train left the station full steam ahead. Turns out that Åberg had a superpower, and it wasn’t his swing speed. It was his ability to absorb information and commit wholeheartedly to a plan of action.
“We did this impact drill,” Larsson recalls, “and for the next two years, every time he hit a shot he did that drill. His current backswing drill he has done for four years, every swing. The things he does he has committed to over time. A lot of kids would try something, they’d go play, they might not play well and then they’d abandon that exercise. If there’s good reason to believe in it, Ludvig sticks to it.”
Advertisement
Åberg makes it sound like a natural progression. Once Larsson taught him how to practice, he implemented the regimen the way a computer might install a software update.
“I think I’ve always been disciplined,” he says. “I just didn’t know any better. And obviously that made me quite a bit better pretty quickly.”
Ludvig Åberg at TPC Sawgrass.
Chris McEniry
ONE WORD COMES UP AGAIN AND AGAIN as Åberg explains his approach: simple. Sometimes simple is Åberg obsessing over his fundamentals: the ball position, the grip, the setup. His swing hasn’t changed much in the decade he’s worked with Larsson. But mastering the little stuff goes a long way. When something is off, it’s usually a little thing. A simple thing.
Advertisement
Sometimes simple is Åberg describing things that, to mere mortals, are not simple at all. How does he go from hitting a baby fade to hitting one dead straight? “I like to keep it very simple, so it’s all just tweaks in my setup,” he says.
Other things become simple because Åberg takes action; he simplifies things for his future self. For instance, he and his caddie, Joe Skovron, meet two hours before every tee time to go over pin locations, wind and strategy.
“It just simplifies things,” Åberg says, “because when we do get to the golf course, it’s like, ‘No, this is what we said we were going to do.’ It takes away all these emotional decisions you make during a round.” Still sitting in the Sawgrass clubhouse, he gestures in the direction of Pete Dye’s Stadium Course.
“I know when I get to 12, I’m going to hit driver and I’m going to go for it,” he says, “and that just makes things easier, instead of standing on the tee box like, ‘Should I hit 4-iron?’”
Advertisement
In Åberg’s syntax, simple is synonymous with the clearest course of action. It makes the thinking the rest of us do look messy by comparison. Åberg’s swing looks simple too. That doesn’t mean you could easily adopt either as your own.
“No matter what I do today, I’m going to do the same thing tomorrow,” he says. “So, no matter if I win or I don’t win today, I’m still going to go out tomorrow and do the same thing.”
Einstein famously said that the definition of genius is taking the complex and making it simple—and he’d never even seen Ludvig Åberg hit a long iron.
THE EASY WAY OUT IS TO DISMISS ÅBERG as some kind of robotic cyborg. Some of his peers already have. But spend time with him on the range and you’ll see a creative mind at work, not a bot. He speaks with reverence about the nine-window drill he and Larsson have fine-tuned for years, a drill that requires hitting literally every kind of shot—with every club.
Advertisement
“I’ve been doing it with a 7-wood lately,” he says.
How do you even hit a low 7-wood? “Exactly,” he says, flashing his increasingly familiar, subtle grin.
Åberg still prefers playing to practicing, but at every step of the journey he has chosen to love the process. The thing he loves most about the game?
“That’s a massive question,” he says, before delivering his most expansive answer of the day.
Advertisement
“It’s so simple, but it’s so hard. It’s logical, but it’s hard. And you’re never going to be finished. You’re never going to figure it out. You can think you are, and maybe you think you’ve come a long way, but there’s so much more to learn. There’s always a better score out there, or a better shot. And trying to figure that out is what excites me. On a good day, you can come out to practice and there’s just so much you can do, y’know? It’s never, ‘Oh, I’m done with that.’ That’s what excites me.”
Given his penchant for strategic thinking, his low-key but unmistakable romanticism about the game and last year’s runner-up finish at the Masters, it’s no surprise that, as Åberg stares down his 2025 season, Georgia is on his mind. After all, beneath its luminously green exterior, Augusta National has a throwback minimalism at its core. The place is simple done right.
“There’s a lot of differences between Augusta and a normal tournament, but one thing is just so simple: the scoreboards,” Åberg says, referring to ANGC’s iconic, manually operated leaderboards. He remembers walking down No. 10 last year, when, in a dramatic moment in the final round, the leader- board changed, sending the gallery of patrons into a frenzy.
“I thought that was the coolest thing,” he says. “Nobody’s on their phone [getting] updated. It’s almost like you’re traveling back in time.”
Advertisement
AT LONG LAST, ÅBERG COMES UP WITH A FLAW.
“I used to be really poor at time management,” he says. “Double-booked every day, supposed to be in three places at the same time. I think I’ve gotten to practice that a lot more.”
Is it really a flaw if he’s already figured it out? Probably not, but at least it’s something. Besides, it’s a skill he’ll need to keep perfecting, like his setup or shot shapes of his 7-wood.
The messy, complex world is only going to want more of Ludvig Åberg.
Advertisement
Dylan Dethier welcomes your comments at dylan_dethier@golf.com.
A lot has changed since Kerri Einarson’s team wore the Maple Leaf while playing at the 2021 world women’s curling championship in Calgary.
Karlee Burgess is now Einarson’s lead instead of Briane Harris. And Canada has been back on top of the podium at the event for the last two seasons thanks to Rachel Homan and her teammates.
But most importantly, this time in Calgary, there are fans to cheer Einarson and Team Canada on throughout the week.
In 2021, while the event was hosted at the the WinSport Event Centre, nobody was allowed into the building to watch due to COVID-19.
Advertisement
The tournament wasn’t great for Einarson. She just barely made the playoffs with a 7-6 record and was eliminated in the qualification game. It was just the eighth time in 42 years Canada didn’t earn a medal. Einarson wore the Maple Leaf again in 2022 and 2023, winning bronze in both events.
However, in 2026, it already feels like Einarson has a very good chance for a different outcome.
With the packed stands cheering Einarson on during the opening day at the 47th edition of the tournament, Canada was able to pick up commanding wins over Sweden and the USA.
Canada’s experience pays dividends
Advertisement
It’s hard to believe after watching Canada play on Saturday that Einarson and her teammates Val Sweeting, Shannon Birchard and Burgess didn’t play a legit game since the Scotties Tournament of Hearts final six weeks ago.
Now, obviously they practised a lot and even played two-on-two against each other during that time, but that’s not what helped them adapt right away to the ice and the environment of the women’s worlds.
The experience factor, something Einarson will have an advantage over a lot of teams this week, loomed large
In both her games on Saturday, she faced rookie skips.
Advertisement
First, it was Sweden’s Isabella Wrana. After the Swedes jumped out to a 2-0 lead, the Canadians didn’t panic, but instead settled into the match and read what the ice was doing to really let the game come to them.
By the sixth end, Einarson and her team were able to apply pressure to Wrana, forcing a steal of two that gave Canada a 5-3 lead. From there Canada played great, situational curling, understanding the scoreboard to earn the 7-5 victory.
At least for Sweden, Wrana didn’t look helpless on the big stage.
That can’t be said in the second match for the U.S., unfortunately.
Advertisement
After the rookie squadron of Americans led by skip Delaney Strouse didn’t play in the first draw, their first game had to be against a home team feeling good about themselves.
Einarson went to work and used her knowledge from the first game to make even better shots against the Americans.
Her best came in the fourth end. Because the ice was similar to the first draw, Einarson was able to trust what she was seeing and made a nice soft-weight hit through a tight port to score three and take a 4-1 lead. Einarson went on to win 11-3.
Get ready to learn new names this week
Advertisement
Sweden’s Wrana and the U.S.’s Strouse weren’t the only skips making their debuts on Saturday. For nearly half the field, this is their first world championship.
There are six rookie skips in total. Scotland’s Fay Henderson, Norway’s Torild Bjornstad, Switzerland’s Xenia Schwaller and Australia’s Helen Williams, who is leading the country’s first-ever appearance at the women’s worlds, are the others.
All six lost their opening draw on Saturday, but Schwaller became the first rookie to win at the event with a 6-5 victory over China in the night draw.
For Wrana and Schwaller, playing against the other top teams in the world won’t be something new as they compete in the Grand Slam of Curling, but this stage will be different.
Advertisement
In the other four cases, it will certainly be a big challenge, but it doesn’t mean they can’t pull off some crazy upsets.
Canada’s next game will be against China on Sunday at 4 p.m. ET / 2 p.m. MT.
Andrade El Idolo once again channeled his inner charm while interacting with a female fan at ringside on AEW Collision this week. The latter’s identity has now been revealed on social media.
Ever since he returned to action in All Elite Wrestling earlier this year, Andrade has been in the form of his life. With his sights set on the AEW Men’s World Title, he racked up a number of impressive singles victories, including wins against former champions Swerve Strickland and Kenny Omega. Last month at Grand Slam Australia, he faced Adam Page for a shot at MJF’s “Triple B” at Revolution 2026, but unfortunately came up short against The Hangman.
Advertisement
El Idolo did end up on the pay-per-view card, however, as he answered Bandido’s challenge for a singles bout this Sunday. Ahead of that, on AEW Collision, the luchador battled Mascara Dorada one-on-one. Like he has been doing for a few weeks now, Andrade once again flirted and took a selfie with a female fan at ringside. The latter, a pro-wrestler named Simone Williams, has now taken to X/Twitter to share her photograph with the former WWE superstar.
“Collision looks wayyy hotter from this angle 😛 #[AllEliteWrestling]Collision,” said the caption.
Power Struggle Between Roman & Triple H? Check Here!
Williams is an Australian indie wrestler who started her career in 2018, and competes in promotions like Women of Wrestling, Santino Bros. Wrestling, Future Stars of Wrestling and more.
Match results for this week’s AEW Collision
Just a day ahead of Revolution 2026, All Elite Wrestling set up shop in the San Jose Civic arena in San Jose, CA for the March 14 edition of Saturday Night Collision. The episode presented six action-packed matches, the results of which have been listed out below:
Advertisement
Kevin Knight defeated El Clon
Mark Davis defeated Komander
The Triangle of Madness (Thekla, Julia Hart and Skye Blue) defeated Karisma, Tatevik and Viva Van
The Demand (Ricochet and GOA) defeated The Bang Bang Gang (Juice Robinson, Austin Gunn and Ace Austin)
Lena Kross defeated Mina Shirakawa
Andrade El Idolo defeated Mascara Dorada
Match card for this week’s Saturday Night Collision (Image via X @AEW)
It remains to be seen what Tony Khan and his team have planned for fans in LA at Revolution.
Why did you not like this content?
Advertisement
Was this article helpful?
Thank You for feedback
Read all the hottest WWE news from Sportskeeda by choosing us as your preferred source. Click HERE.
The Pakistan cricket team’s T20 World Cup 2026 debacle has once again triggered calls for sweeping changes within the setup. This cycle of upheaval after ICC events is nothing new for Pakistan cricket, where shifts in the board, management, or playing personnel often follow disappointing campaigns. While head coach Mike Hesson remains in charge for now, his position appears increasingly precarious. Former Pakistan cricketer Basit Ali, speaking on the Game Plan YouTube show, suggested that Hesson is not favoured by the advisors surrounding PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi.
“Mike Hesson is not in the good books. I am not talking about Mohsin Naqvi. I am talking about people who advise Naqvi. Hesson is not in their good books. The decision has to be taken by the chairman,” Basit remarked, hinting at possible friction behind the scenes.
The PCB recently strengthened its selection committee by including Misbah-ul-Haq and Sarfaraz Ahmed, both influential figures in Pakistan cricket. Basit Ali believes this development further undermines Hesson’s authority. “The winds that were blowing in favour of Mike Hesson have now changed. Misbah-ul-Haq and Sarfaraz Ahmed will never work under Mike Hesson. I am willing to give it in writing. Hesson can now forget that he will get to choose the 15 members of the squad,” he asserted.
Basit also questioned the rationale behind Hesson’s appointment, suggesting his selection was based largely on Pakistan Super League performances rather than international credentials. He emphasised that the upcoming third ODI against Bangladesh could prove decisive in determining Hesson’s future. “Why was he made the coach? You made him the coach based on his performance in the Pakistan Super League. Anyway, the third and final ODI against Bangladesh is very important for Hesson,” Basit added.
Advertisement
With Pakistan cricket once again at a crossroads, the coming weeks may decide whether Hesson continues or whether yet another reshuffle takes place. The recurring instability highlights a deeper issue within Pakistan cricket: the lack of long-term planning and trust in leadership. As history has shown, the aftermath of ICC tournaments often becomes the stage for dramatic changes, and 2026 appears to be no different.
The Indian women’s hockey team lost 0-2 against the higher-ranked England to finish runners-up in the FIH Hockey World Cup Qualifiers but still managed to qualify for this year’s mega-event, here on Saturday.
World No. 6 England scored through a penalty corner conversion by Grace Balsdon in the 13th minute before doubling their lead through a field strike from Elizabeth Neal in the 43rd minute.
The Indians, ranked ninth in the world, tried their heart and soul throughout the entire 60 minutes but failed to break the resolute English defence.
Besides champions England, runner-up India and Scotland, who defeated Italy 1-0, qualified from this event for the World Cup.
Advertisement
This edition of the World Cup will be jointly hosted by the Netherlands and Belgium from August 14 to 30 along side the men’s tournament.
India began the game on the front foot with Navneet Kaur helping her side earn a penalty corner within the opening two minutes.
However, her drag-flick from the resulting set piece was kept out by the England goalkeeper.
Advertisement
The hosts showed great discipline, maintaining a solid defensive shape while also making inroads on the end of the field.
However, England grew into the game towards the end of the first quarter, earning a penalty corner with two minutes to go.
Balsdon made the most of that opportunity, finding the back of the net with her drag-flick and scoring her fifth goal from a penalty corner in this tournament to give England the lead.
The second quarter began in a similar manner, with both the teams not giving much away in this engaging contest.
Advertisement
With eight circle penetrations in the first half, India were asking questions to the England defence but didn’t really test the rival goalkeeper, allowing the visitors to hold onto their one-goal advantage at half time.
With the lead, England controlled the tempo of the game by neatly working the ball and maintaining possession.
India had a few opportunities to pile on the pressure, but the visitors stood firm at the back.
England eventually doubled their lead courtesy Neal (43rd). The midfielder was fortunate as her effort deflected off an Indian defender before finding its way past Bichu Devi, giving the visitors a 2-0 lead at the end of the third quarter.
Advertisement
India continued to push forward in search of goals that would get them back into the game.
With the scoreline in their favour, England remained positive in their approach and ensured they don’t go into a shell to give the hosts an opportunity.
It was a free-flowing final quarter as India earned a penalty corner in the dying minutes. but they couldn’t find the back of the net.
Manchester United loanee Marcus Rashford has thrived during his spell at Barcelona
Manchester United are already planning for the transfer window as the Premier League season rumbles on. While Michael Carrick will be concentrating on his side’s crucial match against Aston Villa on Sunday, the recruitment team will be planning for the summer ahead.
Marcus Rashford’s future has been discussed throughout his fruitful loan spell at Barcelona. The England international has netted 10 goals and provided 13 assists for his new club, with the Catalan giants having the option to secure his move permanently for £26million.
Advertisement
The 28-year-old has also expressed his desire to stay at Camp Nou but finalising a move to Barcelona is reportedly complex. Meanwhile, concerns have been raised about Bryan Mbeumo’s recent form.
Get MEN Premium now for just £1 HERE – or get involved in our United WhatsApp group by clicking HERE. You can also join our United Facebook page by clicking HERE and don’t miss out on our brilliant selection of newsletters HERE.
The United striker made an immediate impact after joining from Brentford but has faltered in recent matches. Here, MEN Sport looks at some of the headlines surrounding Old Trafford.
Board get Marcus Rashford message
United and Barcelona are claimed to have held multiple discussions about Rashford’s future, with the Spanish outfit seeking to renegotiate the agreed £26m fee. Barcelona’s financial difficulties are well-known, even if Rashford’s value has increased since his return to form.
Advertisement
Talksport has reported that negotiations between the clubs have not progressed, with United unwilling to reduce their asking price or change the terms of the deal. Despite this impasse, manager Hansi Flick has made it clear to Barcelona’s board that keeping Rashford is a top priority.
The same report identifies Chelsea’s Pedro Neto and Real Betis winger Abde Ezzalzouli as potential backup options should the club fail to secure Rashford’s services. However, as the transfer window looms, Flick appears to have made his preference known.
Bryan Mbeumo concerns
Mbeumo has come under scrutiny following recent performances, despite being United’s top scorer with 10 goals across all competitions. The 26-year-old last found the back of the net against Tottenham Hotspur on February 7.
Advertisement
The ex-Brentford star has contributed three goals and two assists during Carrick’s eight-match tenure but lacklustre displays against Crystal Palace and Newcastle have drawn criticism. The Sun suggests that this dip in form could be attributed to fitness issues, given the two matches were only a few days apart.
Considering United’s early cup exits have resulted in a less congested fixture list, Mbeumo’s struggles could pose a more significant problem next season when the team are likely to be in European competition.
For now, the Cameroon international will be aiming to break his four-match goalless streak this weekend. United are currently level on points with Villa ahead of their clash at Old Trafford
Sky Sports discounted Premier League and EFL package
Advertisement
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
Sky has slashed the price of its Essential TV and Sky Sports bundle for the 2025/26 season, saving £336 and offering more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more.
Sky shows at least 215 live Premier League games each season, an increase of up to 100, plus Formula 1, darts, golf and more.
Edidiong Ezekiel during his home bow for Enyimba FC
Enyimba International FC have announced that fans will enjoy free entry when the team hosts Plateau United in their Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) match on Sunday in Aba.
The match will take place at the Enyimba International Stadium and kick off at 4:00 pm on March 15, 2026.
The club decided to open the gates to supporters after playing their last three home matches behind closed doors due to disciplinary sanctions.
Advertisement
The nine-time Nigerian champions are eager to reconnect with their fans as they continue their campaign in the NPFL this season.
Club officials have urged supporters to come out in large numbers to cheer the team and create a lively atmosphere at the stadium.
Enyimba, also known as the Aba Elephants, will hope that the return of their supporters will inspire them to secure a positive result against Plateau United.
Manchester City’s Premier League title ambitions were dealt a significant blow as Pep Guardiola’s side were held to a 1-1 draw at West Ham as Arsenal moved nine points clear
For the second game in succession Manchester City dropped points against a side fighting relegation.
The Blues have surrendered leads three times across those matches with Nottingham Forest and West Ham United. It has surely extinguished the title hopes. Arsenal are nine clear and although City have a game in hand and the Gunners have to come to the Etihad, the gap looks ominous and the Blues don’t quite look capable of reeling off victory after victory to capitalise if Mikel Arteta’s side do slip up.
Advertisement
City still have plenty to play for, even if glory in the Premier League and Champions League now looks set to elude them. The Blues are a week out from a Carabao Cup final that could yield silverware as well as offering a glimmer in the title race given the psychological questions a Wembley win would ask of Arsenal. Liverpool then visit in the FA Cup early next month. So plenty to still play for.
Get MEN Premium now for just £1 HERE – or get involved in our City WhatsApp group by clicking HERE. You can also join our City Facebook page by clicking HERE and don’t miss out on our brilliant selection of newsletters HERE.
But for Guardiola, he must now accept that this City side is not quite yet capable of scaling the heights of versions past. The incredibly high standards set during four title wins in a row are a barometer few can be judged by and to measure this new-look City against such incredible feats is understandable but perhaps unfair.
The progress from last season is clear; twelve months ago City would have snapped your hand off for the position they are now in. The Blues boss said on Friday that if his side dropped points against the Hammers then the title race would be over. He rowed back on that after the game, reiterating his belief and the desire within the squad to fight to the end.
Advertisement
But Guardiola’s side are not consistent enough to go the distance on four fronts, they are not slick enough to put teams to bed, and they are not quite all on the same page on the pitch to play with a freedom and a confidence that the door will be battered down if the knocking continues.
Make no mistake this City side is a very good outfit – but it’s not the outfit of old. As Rodri said after the game at the London Stadium: “The mistake we can make is to think we are the unbelievable team that we used to be. We are in a moment that we are in a process to come back.”
City might yet come back against Madrid, they might yet come back in the title race, but both feel a step too far just now.
Buy Carabao Cup Final VIP tickets
Advertisement
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
France edge out England with the last kick of the game in a sensational 13-try decider, to secure back-to-back Six Nations titles at the Stade de France.
A combination of blinkers and rapid reappearance has gifted Salty Pearl’s connections a major purse at Caulfield.
The Ciaron Maher operation was unconcerned about committing the filly to Saturday’s $500,000 VOBIS Platinum Guineas (1600m), mere days after she pursued Sass Appeal home in Flemington’s Stakes race.
Having aced a similar eight-day turnaround before, the Maher team delivered another standout performance.
John Allen guided the $2.05 elect, Salty Pearl, to a commanding 2-¾ length success ahead of $41 chance Silvasista, as Wetumpka ($61) trailed by an additional 1-½ lengths for third.
Advertisement
Jack Turnbull, the Maher stable’s National Assistant Trainer, credited the second-time blinkers for Salty Pearl’s smooth passage in the 1600m feature.
“She was always in control,” Turnbull said.
“The blinkers made her travel and she took John everywhere and when he asked her to poke into a hole at about the 450 (metres), she was there straight away.
That’s when you knew she was going to be there for a long way and in the straight they spanned wide and they were coming from everywhere, but her class shone through.
Advertisement
It’s the second time we’ve backed her up for a second victory.
We had to go back from the draw last start, and we thought her run was huge, but we were beaten by a classy filly.
She’s very consistent and building a fantastic record.”
Turnbull acknowledged the volume of starts Salty Pearl has notched in her three-year-old term to date.
Advertisement
Saturday’s race was start number 12, bringing win number three, with potential interstate targets on the table after she recuperates.
Nevertheless, extending beyond 1600m seems improbable, per Turnbull.
“You could have the Queen Of The Turf Stakes which would be the top of the tree otherwise if she was in the right frame of mind and physically OK, you could possibly look at a Carbine Club Stakes as well,” Turnbull said.
“We’re conscious of where we want to get to and what she has done, but it’s good options to have.
Advertisement
I think that’s her trip. Again, you could float the idea and try (a longer trip), but she’s very effective at this distance and I don’t think we need to change.”
Nigerian forward Ademola Lookman came off the bench as Atlético Madrid secured a hard-fought 1–0 victory over Getafe CF in their La Liga match on Saturday.
Lookman started the game among the substitutes after playing an important role in Atlético’s impressive 5–2 win over Tottenham Hotspur earlier in the week in the UEFA Champions League. Head coach Diego Simeone decided to manage the Nigerian’s minutes with another big European match coming up.
Atlético took the lead early in the match when defender Nahuel Molina scored in the eighth minute with a powerful long-range strike that flew into the top corner.
Advertisement
Lookman was introduced in the second half and quickly became involved in the attack. One of his first actions was a smart pass inside the box to Julián Álvarez, but a Getafe defender cleared the ball off the goal line to prevent a second goal.
The Nigerian also had a chance of his own when he fired a shot from outside the box, but the effort went wide.
During his time on the pitch, Lookman completed 11 passes, with nine of them accurate. He also registered one shot and created a clear chance for his teammates.
Advertisement
Getafe were reduced to ten men in the 55th minute after defender Abdel Abqar was sent off following a VAR review for a foul on Alexander Sørloth.
Despite the numerical advantage, Atlético could not add another goal, but they held on to claim an important victory which marked their 17th league win of the season.
The result moves Atlético two points ahead of Villarreal CF in the table.
Lookman and his teammates will now turn their attention back to the Champions League, where they face Tottenham again in the second leg of their round-of-16 tie next week.