Jude Bellingham trained with his England teammates ahead of their friendly against Japan but manager Thomas Tuchel has confirmed the midfielder will not be risked, despite the imminent World Cup squad announcement.
The 22-year-old is working his way back from a hamstring issue that reduced him to tears in early February, and only returned to Real Madrid action as a late substitute eight days ago.
Tuchel had initially hoped Bellingham, included in March’s 35-man squad, could feature against Japan after missing Friday’s 1-1 draw with Uruguay.
However, despite good progress and participating in Monday’s session at Tottenham’s training complex, Tuchel will keep him as a spectator at Wembley once again.
Jude Bellingham has been training with England but is only just back from injury (Bradley Collyer/PA)
“I think it’s too much of a risk,” the England head coach told BBC Radio 5 Live. “So, the tendency is that he will not play.
“We have all gained from him being part of it. He was excellent in training, but he was involved as a neutral player. He was involved in not the whole 100 per cent of the training.
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“So, it looked very, very good but we’re still holding him back, to not take a risk.
“The injury is a muscle, it’s a very particular one, and we absolutely don’t want the re-injury in this moment of the season.
Jordan Henderson has trained away from the main group (Bradley Collyer/PA)
“And him as well, it was very good that he was in camp. He was excellent. But the tendency is that he won’t play.”
Bellingham was among 26 players that took part in Monday’s session at Spurs’ state-of-the-art training ground.
Jordan Henderson, who captained the side against Uruguay, followed his own programme indoors away from the main group.
The German coach picked an expanded 35-man squad for the final camp before making his World Cup selection, with the first wave of players joined by 11 established names on Friday.
Rice and Saka were among the late arrivals but, having watched the 1-1 draw with Uruguay at Wembley, were among five injury withdrawals the following day, along with Arsenal team-mate Noni Madueke.
Queensland Country Bank Stadium will play host to Friday’s
Round 8 NRL game between North Queensland Cowboys and
Cronulla Sharks. The game kicks off at 6:00 pm with Cronulla Sharks heading into the game as favourites with the bookmakers. Continue reading for our in-depth preview of the North Queensland Cowboys vs.
Cronulla Sharks
game and give you our free tips and bets.
North Queensland Cowboys vs Cronulla Sharks Preview
This shapes as one of the tighter contests of the round, with Cronulla’s dynamic spine set to test a Cowboys middle that has struggled under fatigue. Nicho Hynes and Braydon Trindall thrive when given momentum, and the Sharks’ ability to generate quick ruck speed could prove pivotal. North Queensland boast strike power of their own, but consistency remains an issue. Expect Cronulla to challenge late if they control possession.
North Queensland Cowboys vs Cronulla Sharks Teams
Cowboys team: 1. Scott Drinkwater 2. Braidon Burns 3. Jaxon Purdue 4. Tomas Chester 5. Murray Taulagi 6. Jake Clifford 7. Tom Dearden 8. Coen Hess 9. Reed Mahoney 10. Jason Taumalolo 11. Heilum Luki 12. Jeremiah Nanai 13. Reuben Cotter 14. Soni Luke 15. Sam McIntyre 16. Thomas Mikaele 17. Griffin Neame 18. Matthew Lodge 19. Kai O’Donnell 20. Zac Laybutt 21. Kaiden Lahrs 22. Robert Derby Sharks team: 1. William Kennedy 2. Mawene Hiroti 3. Siosifa Talakai 4. KL Iro 5. Samuel Stonestreet 6. Braydon Trindall 7. Nicho Hynes 8. Addin Fonua-Blake 9. Blayke Brailey 10. Toby Rudolf 11. Billy Burns 12. Teig Wilton 13. Jesse Colquhoun 14. Briton Nikora 15. Cameron McInnes 16. Oregon Kaufusi 17. Thomas Hazelton 18. Hohepa Puru 19. Tuku Hau Tapuha 20. Riley Jones 21. Riley Pollard 22. Sione Katoa
The final round of the 2026 NFL Draft has arrived. As teams are watching the round progress, team representatives are communicating interest to potential undrafted free agents, so they can lock up top targets once the final pick is made from Pittsburgh.
49ers quarterback Brock Purdy is probably the most famous recent example of a seventh-round pick going on to find NFL success, but every year is a new opportunity. Each selection is graded below, so perhaps the next Purdy is right around the corner.
Be sure to refresh this page throughout the weekend to get all the latest grades. If you want to do all that plus track the best available prospects and get access to every pick in the draft on one page, you can in our draft tracker. And follow along with each pick and every trade in our live blog.
Williams’ size and foot speed is worth Arizona exploring at this stage of the draft. They have taken multiple offensive linemen to give themselves several bites of the apple.
218. Cowboys: Anthony Smith, WR, East Carolina
Grade: B-
Smith popped up on the radar late, but has good size and production. The Cowboys will have one of the taller receiver rooms in the league between George Pickens, CeeDee Lamb and now Smith.
I really like Hall’s tape. He is an instinctual player who will play through the receiver, but he lacks the high-end traits that are often non-negotiables of the position. It is still a good value.
220. Bills: Toriano Pride Jr., CB, Missouri
Grade: B-
The Clemson transfer has four interceptions over the past two years. He is fast and physical relative to his size, but gives up a lot of cushion in zone coverage
221. Bengals: Jack Endries, TE, Texas
Grade: A
Endries looked better in 2024 playing with Fernando Mendoza than he did in 2025. It is surprising that he was still available in the seventh round. Cincinnati has played the board well.
222. Lions: Tyre West, DL, Tennessee
Grade: B+
West played on the end a lot this season in Tennessee’s defense, but will probably settle into a more traditional interior role as a pro. I really like the potential of this player if lined up inside and given freedom to get after the quarterback.
Kuwatch flies around the football field and will be a menace on special teams. Carolina has one of the most athletic linebacker rooms in the country.
228. Jets: VJ Payne, S, Kansas State
Grade: B-
Payne has great size and physicality. He will play downhill and set the tone in the new look Jets secondary.
229. Raiders: Brandon Cleveland, DL, NC State
Grade: A-
Las Vegas is getting plus value from Cleveland in the seventh round. He has NFL size and will hold his ground in the run game.
230. Steelers: Eli Heidenreich, RB, Navy
Grade: B+
Do not get hung up on the position listed next to Heidenreich’s name. He will run the ball. He will run routes and catch passes. Whatever the team needs, the Navy Midshipman will provide. It would not be a surprise if he became a special teams ace as well.
Onianwa showcased his versatility throughout his collegiate career. He transferred from Rice to Ohio State for his final season. His case to make the roster as a seventh-round pick is strengthened by that positional flexibility.
Arsenal FC returned to the top of the Premier League after a hard-fought 1–0 win over Newcastle United at the Emirates Stadium.
Mikel Arteta’s side had briefly dropped to second place during the week after Manchester City went top on goal difference following their win over Burnley.
Arsenal made a strong start and took the lead in the ninth minute through Eberechi Eze. From a short corner, Kai Havertz set up the England midfielder, who curled a fine shot into the top corner.
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Newcastle created chances of their own through William Osula, Bruno Guimarães and Sandro Tonali, but they could not find a way past Arsenal in the first half.
After the break, Newcastle pushed for an equaliser, with manager Eddie Howe bringing on Yoane Wissa and Harvey Barnes. However, Wissa missed a clear chance late on as the visitors suffered their fourth straight league defeat.
The win puts Arsenal three points clear at the top of the table, although they have played one game more than Manchester City.
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There was concern for Arsenal, however, as both Kai Havertz and Eze were forced off with injuries during the match.
Rivas lined the bases-loaded hit off Riley O’Brien (3-1), who had not allowed an earned run in 13 previous appearances this season.
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Matt Brash (2-0) pitched a scoreless eighth inning, and Andrés Muñoz pitched a scoreless ninth to earn his fifth save.
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Nathan Church homered twice and had four RBIs, JJ Wetherholt and Iván Herrera hit back-to-back home runs to leadoff the bottom of the first inning, and Pedro Pagés also homered for St. Louis.
Mitch Garver and Young hit back-to-back singles off JoJo Romero to leadoff the eighth inning, and Connor Joe stroked a pinch-hit, two-run single off O’Brien to tie the game at 9-all.
Church hit a two-run homer, his fourth of the season, to right-center field in the seventh inning to pull the Cardinals ahead 9-7 after hitting a solo shot to right field in the second.
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Bryan Woo allowed a career high-tying seven runs on nine hits including four home runs in three innings for Seattle.
Matthew Liberatore allowed five runs, all coming via home runs, in 3 1/3 innings for St. Louis.
Pagés, who had three hits including a third inning home run, was removed from the game with left hamstring tightness after legging out an infield single in the seventh inning.
Masyn Winn hit a game-tying RBI single down the right-field line in the fourth inning to extend his hitting streak to 10 games.
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Wilson hit his first career home run in the second inning to give Seattle a 4-2 lead.
Up next
Mariners RHP Emerson Hancock (2-1, 2.83 ERA) will face Cardinals RHP Michael McGreevy (1-2, 3.29) to wrap up their three-game series on Sunday.
Manchester City were struggling badly around this time last year, facing the possibility of ending the season without a trophy for the first time since 2017.
But just one year later, manager Pep Guardiola has rebuilt and inspired the team, putting them in a strong position to chase a domestic treble. If they achieve it, they would become only the second English side to do so, with the first being City themselves in 2019.
City have already won the Carabao Cup this season and are still in the race for the Premier League title. They have also booked a place in another FA Cup final at Wembley on Saturday, 16 May, making it a record fourth consecutive appearance.
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Their journey to the final was not easy. City had to come from behind, scoring two late goals to beat Southampton FC and avoid a surprise defeat.
Their recent FA Cup record has been mixed. They beat Manchester United in 2023 on their way to winning the Treble, but lost to the same rivals the following year and were also beaten by Crystal Palace last May.
When asked about the chances of winning another treble, Guardiola played it down.
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“Too far away,” he said. “Before the final [league] game against Aston Villa, after we will tell you if there is a chance, but at the moment is it far, far, far away.
“Now it is important that the players have three days off. I told them not to think about football and just rest. The season starts with five games and an FA Cup final. I would say the Premier League is almost gone, we are back to second, we will see how we arrive [at the end].”
Manchester City midfielder Phil Foden was withdrawn in the second half as the Blues beat Southampton 2-1 at Wembley Stadium.
Manchester City head coach Pep Guardiola insists it is only a matter of time until Phil Foden is back to his best following his substitution during the 2-1 victory over Southampton. Foden made his first start since March at Wembley but struggled to have an impact in the FA Cup semi-final.
With City struggling to make a breakthrough, Foden was substituted on 58 minutes with his replacement Savinho enjoying more joy down the right-hand side. The England international has not scored since December but Guardiola is adamant that Foden will return to his best.
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“Question of a little bit of time,” Guardiola said in his post-match press conference. “It was not easy in the first half for him because we were playing in the pockets and his position was being man-marked. For a full-back it is not easy to find him.
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“It is a question of time when he will be back.” When asked if he had faith in Foden, Guardiola simply replied: “Absolutely.” City’s win at Wembley ensured the Blues created history as they reached their fourth consecutive FA Cup final.
Reflecting on the win, Guardiola added: “Southampton were 19 [20] games unbeaten so I never thought that it would be easy. The energy that we had with Jeremy [Doku] and Savio, if they started they would not have this energy because Jeremy especially, when you play in three days, the risk to get injured is so massive and a lot of players deserved to play.
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“The first half was not bad, we did not concede much in the second half. We played at the level against Burnley but we arrived in the 18-yard box and we were not clinical enough and we had to wait for a holding midfielder to score an outstanding goal.
“How many times did Southampton cross the halfway in the second half? One. And what a goal. Football is unpredictable but big credit for how they defend and the way they play.”
Following his defeat in the Monte Carlo final against Jannik Sinner and his withdrawal from the Rome Masters 1000, the uncertainty surrounding two-time defending Paris Grand Slam champion Carlos Alcaraz’s participation in this year’s tournament has continued for several weeks. Ultimately, he has decided not to defend his title, citing an injury to his right wrist.
In France, Lens secured a dramatic draw against Brest. After narrowly avoiding a heavy defeat, RC Lens fought back in the last 30 minutes to secure a valuable point in the title race. However, they have given PSG the chance to extend their lead at the top of the table. The title race is also fierce in England, where Arsenal lost their way last week against Manchester City. The Londoners cannot afford any more slip-ups and are hosting Newcastle Saturday. In Spain, barring any surprises, Barça remain top, helped by another setback for Real Madrid.
But while the World No. 2 was racing out to a big lead at the year’s first major, several other big names packed up and left town on Friday after a disappointing showing.
That list starts with World No. 1 Jeeno Thitikul, who is still searching for her first major championship. That search will continue next month at the U.S. Women’s Open at Riviera Country Club.
“The questions, you have it for every time I lose in a major for sure. Thank you for reminding every week,” Thitikul said while laughing on Tuesday about her major championship search. “Obviously, I think it’s just another challenge of my career. I know what I have [under] my belt. Right now, at this age, I think I’ve accomplished a lot, but obviously, a major is the one that I feel the first time is always the hardest. And then if I need to prove to myself that I can do that.”
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Thitikul shot 74-74 over two days at Memorial Park to finish at 3 over and miss the cut by one.
Here are the big names to miss the cut in Houston:
Jeeno Thitikul
What she shot: 74-73 (+3)
Why it’s surprising: Thitikul is ranked No. 1 in the world and has already won this year in Thailand. She had never missed the cut in this event in five previous tries, although this year is the first time the championship is being held at Memorial Park.
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Lydia Ko
What she shot: 72-75 (+3)
Why it’s surprising: The three-time major champion made four bogeys in a seven-hole stretch on Friday to go out in 40. She fought hard on her final nine but couldn’t find another birdie to get on the right side of the cut line.
Rose Zhang
What she shot: 73-74 (+3)
Why it’s surprising: Zhang just finished up her degree at Stanford and is transitioning back to full-time professional golf, so the missed cut in itself isn’t surprising. But given how fast Zhang’s star rose when she arrived on the tour, it’s disappointing to see her miss the cut at the year’s first major. Next up, she’ll head to U.S. Women’s Open qualifying to try and earn a spot at Riviera.
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Lilia Vu
What she shot: 76-77 (+9)
Why it’s surprising: The past three Chevron Championship winners were grouped together for the first two rounds, and Korda beat Vu by 23 shots. It has been a rough stretch for Vu ever since her 2023 season, when she won two major titles. She continues to struggle off the tee.
Kiara Romero (a)
What she shot: 71-78 (+5)
Why it’s surprising: The World No. 1 amateur was near the top of the leaderboard as she got to the end of her first round. A couple of late bogeys saw her get in the house at 1 under, still very much in the championship mix. The Oregon product went out in the afternoon on Friday and hit just seven greens while also struggling with the flatstick. Romero seems primed for big things, but that won’t happen this weekend in Houston.
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Chizzy Iwai
What shot: 77-74 (+7)
Why it’s surprising: Chizzy Iwai has been playing good golf. She was in contention at last week’s JM Eagle LA Championship before finishing in a tie for seventh. But she struggled on approach this week, hitting just 15 of 36 greens over two days. She’ll stick around to watch her sister, Akie, who is tied for 31st entering the weekend.
Megha Ganne (a)
What she shot: 77-78 (+11)
Why it’s surprising: Ganne won the U.S. Women’s Amateur last summer and will be on the LPGA soon. Like Romero, she’s got the game to compete and win at the top level, but struggled on approach and with the putter in Houston. The Stanford product hit just 16 of 36 greens and needed 59 putts to get through two rounds.
Next week’s PGA Tour event, the Cadillac Championship, is just the latest in the Signature Event series — the limited-field, $20 million free-for-alls that 99% of pros desperately want to play in. And there’s good news for that super majority — technically, two sponsor exemptions have not yet been finalized.
Normally, by the Saturday prior, most Signature Event fields are set. You have the top 50 from the previous year, a handful of winners from this season, the 10 players not already in who have played best this year and five others who have played best recently. On top of that, as has become controversial, there are always four sponsor exemptions which, quietly, are not always decided until the last minute.
The reason is obvious: if a player can qualify on his own, it’s decidedly better optics for them and their game than using a sponsor exemption. For the sponsor, it’s a great scenario, too, because their list of choices is always longer than four. Any player from the sponsor’s unpublished priority ranking who plays their way in just allows Sponsor Choice No. 5 to join the field.
This actually happened for RBC and its post-Masters Heritage tournament. During Masters week, Max Homa was included as a sponsor exemption on the Tour’s internal field list until he played well enough at Augusta National that he qualified for the Heritage without needing a sponsor invite. It’s a win-win — Homa gets in, and RBC gets to invite another of its favorites. They went with Wyndham Clark, Tony Finau, Billy Horschel and Marco Penge — the order of which is not made public.
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This retelling matters for next week’s tournament, a newly created Signature Event at an old-time Tour course, Trump National Doral. Only Joel Dahmen and Max Greyserman are listed as sponsor exemptions at the moment — both worthy choices, neither of which will earn their way in at the last minute like Homa did, after missing this week’s cut at the Zurich Classic. They’ll be joined by two others, to be decided Sunday evening, a selection that isn’t finalized because … there are some big names on the verge of being an alternate, and there are fewer big-name players interested in playing, period.
Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele, Bob MacIntyre, Ludvig Aberg and Matt Fitzpatrick — all ranked in the world top 15 — will be skipping next week in Miami. (For McIlroy, it’ll be the second Signature Event skipped this season.) All together, it’s the most significant voluntary departure of talent any Signature Event has seen to date, and there’s an extremely obvious reason: most pros are okay playing three events in a row. But some definitely don’t want to play a major championship in that third week.
As ever with the PGA Tour’s Rubik’s Cube-scheduling dilemma, there isn’t one specific element to blame for this issue. And once you solve for one side of the cube — like finding a new, massive sponsor commitment. That’s a positive! — you can easily disrupt the other sides. In the simplest sense, the Cadillac Championship didn’t exist last year. When pros build their annual commitment list, this spot feels more like a surprise than anything else. It is also situated directly prior to another Signature Event, the Truist Championship at Quail Hollow, which sits directly prior to the PGA Championship in Philadelphia. It feels skippable if the other weeks don’t.
By and large, most top pros have settled on a schedule of 22 to 26 events. That way, they’re playing no more than half the calendar year. Brian Rolapp is painfully aware of this number, as are the billionaire investors of his product. Yasir Al-Rumayyan, one of the pro game’s biggest investors, is also very aware. Rory McIlroy bluntly told him that “26 weeks” maximum for top pros during a meeting a few years ago. A Tour that gets top pros to play 22 to 26 times can be a commercially great product, so long as those 22 to 26 events are … the same events. But that remains the quandary of the moment: which events fit in that 22- to 26-event schedule, and how do you place them throughout the January to August calendar so you can get McIlroy to show up as many times as possible. Sticking a Signature Event the week before a Signature Event that sits the week before a major is not in the Tour’s future. You can count on that.
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The distribution of these top events — “Track 1” events, as they’re likely to be called in the future — will not appease everyone, but until they are cemented into sensible places on the calendar, there will be trickle-down results like top pros voluntarily skipping. That is to say nothing of Texas-based players who want to play the two weeks following the PGA Championship, at the CJ Cup Byron Nelson and Charles Schwab Challenge. Scottie Scheffler will be defending his title at the former — and at the PGA Championship, too — but he is not in the field for the Truist Championship, another $20 million free-for-all the week before the PGA. Different pros have different priorities — we know that. But it has bred an intriguing reality: between the Masters and the PGA Championship, three Signature Events will have been played. McIlroy and Scheffler will have never competed against each other once.
One problem the PGA Tour needs to solve:
Three Signature Events between Masters and PGA Champ. ZERO featuring BOTH Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler.
Hilton Head: Rory OUT, Scottie IN Doral: Rory OUT, Scottie IN Quail Hollow: Rory IN, Scottie OUT
It can be dizzying to track who’s in and who’s out during this particularly signature time of the season, but the results of these fields — who wants in and when — coupled with the randomness of fan favorites hitting a rough patch, are what make schedule creation a fickle business. It’s what makes Brian Rolapp’s job particularly tricky at the moment, where sponsor involvement, course commitment and competitive structure are all a bit fluid. The status quo works in so many ways, but is largely dependent on star golfers showing up and playing like star golfers. Any week when that’s undercut by those golfers simply not showing up underscores it even more.
PHOENIX, AZ – MARCH 8: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns talks to the media after the game against the Charlotte Hornets on March 8, 2026 at PHX Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Kate Frese/NBAE via Getty Images)
Devin Booker has been fined $35,000 by the NBA for publicly criticising officiating following the Phoenix Suns Game 2 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder.
After the game, Booker spoke openly about the refereeing and did not hold back.
“In my 11 years, I haven’t called a ref out by name, but James was terrible tonight,” he said. “It’s bad for the sport, bad for the integrity of the sport. People are going to start viewing this as a WWE if they’re not held responsible.”
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Following an investigation that included interviews and video review, the league said there was no evidence of bias or misconduct by officials.
At the same time, the NBA confirmed that a technical foul called on Booker in the third quarter of that game was issued incorrectly and has now been rescinded.
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