Connect with us
DAPA Banner

Sports

Man City’s unlikely £50m hero sinks Southampton to win FA Cup semi-final and keep treble bid alive

Published

on

Manchester City are going to Wembley, again. City will return here on 16 May to meet either Chelsea or Leeds in what will be their fourth successive FA Cup final. If all goes to plan in these final weeks, in this strange crescendo of a season, it will be the second piece in a treble of trophies for Pep Guardiola’s side.

On a warm, hazy evening in London, City won this semi-final 2-1 but only after coming through an almighty scare against Southampton, who came desperately close to a memorable upset. Saints had soaked up waves of pressure before hitting City with a late suckerpunch when Finn Azaz spun and swept a beautifully arcing shot into the top corner of James Trafford’s goal.

Southampton’s half of the stadium went off, and anything that could be launched into the air went in the air: balloons, hats, scarves, limbs. But the elation didn’t last. Jeremy Doku’s deflected shot brought City level three minutes later, before Nico Gonzalez thundered in City’s winner from long range.

Nico Gonzalez celebrates scoring City's winning goal
Nico Gonzalez celebrates scoring City’s winning goal (Getty)

It was the right result on the balance of play and yet Southampton will go away feeling they had a famous win snatched away, in this place, in this year of all years, 50 years after Bobby Stokes’s goal beat Manchester United to win the 1976 FA Cup, the club’s only major trophy in 140 years.

Saints’ rearguard action was immaculate up to those final minutes. The captain Taylor Harwood-Bellis thwarted City with tackles and blocks, Caspar Jander spoiled their midfield patterns, Leo Scienza was excellent down the left and goalkeeper Daniel Peretz made a series of crucial saves.

In those brief moments when the score read 1-0, it felt like they really might make history rhyme half a century later. Southampton pushed this second-string City side right to the brink, so much so that Guardiola sent for Erling Haaland and Bernardo Silva from the bench.

Advertisement
Tonda Eckert directs from the touchline
Tonda Eckert directs from the touchline (PA)

Guardiola had taken a risk rotating out many of his best players. Southampton were the country’s in-form team coming into the game, on a 20-game unbeaten run under young German manager Tonda Eckert. They had knocked out Arsenal in the quarter-finals, and this semi-final had a sense of possibility right from the start.

Oddly, Saints stirred to life after 12 minutes when they scored a disallowed goal. Scienza was quite clearly offside, but this was one of those moments when the assistant doesn’t flag until the scorer is celebrating in the corner and fans at the far end of the stadium are embracing strangers around them in delirium.

Yet when they finally came back to Earth, it was as if Southampton – both players and fans – now felt unbridled belief. This is half the battle in these imbalanced games: City should beat a Championship team nine times out of 10, but if you can survive the first 20 minutes, if you can show a little ambition, if you can offer a threat, then slowly a confidence begins to rise to the surface and everyone inside the stadium can feel it.

A set-piece whistles past outstretched Southampton toes and fans gasp. Phil Foden has the ball pinched from his feet and they cheer. Rayan Ait-Nouri can’t keep a heavy pass in play and the south half of Wembley roars like their team have scored the opening goal.

Southampton fans made a lot of noise at Wembley
Southampton fans made a lot of noise at Wembley (Getty)

There were naturally some nervy moments to evade. Mateo Kovacic slalomed through Saints’ low block, but then did something a player who has played 13 minutes of Premier League football all season is likely to do when they enter the six-yard box for the first time in nine months, belting the ball as hard as he could without much thought. It blew away for a goal-kick and Kovacic gestured at his teammates like this was somehow their fault.

Omar Marmoush fired a low shot which Peretz repelled with his boots, and Foden wriggled into the area before being shut down as he tried to shoot. Southampton reached half-time all square but City’s pressure turned into an onslaught after the break. Marmoush jabbed over the bar from eight yards, then couldn’t get a touch on a low cross with the goal gaping, the sort of opportunity Haaland would have surely relished. On the touchline, Guardiola went apoplectic with his stand-in striker.

Advertisement

Saints sank deeper and deeper so that all 11 players were regularly inside their own box, which made sporadic attempts to counterattack all the more difficult. A goal was surely coming, and then it did: Saints strung some passes upfield where Azaz swivelled on the ball, 25 yards out, and bent a shot around Trafford’s diving hand.

Finn Azaz, left, celebrates scoring Southampton's goal
Finn Azaz, left, celebrates scoring Southampton’s goal (Getty)

But soon Doku was shimmying on the edge of the box and his low shot took a deflection off James Bree’s thigh past Peretz into the far corner. It was a cruel way to concede but a fair reward for City’s relentless pressure through the second half.

City went in for the kill and when the ball rolled out to Gonzalez, 30 yards from goal, he arrowed home a magnificent winner. And perhaps therein lies the difference: Southampton battled gamely all evening, and then a £50m player City barely use smashed the ball into the top corner.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Sports

London Marathon 2027 ballot: How can I enter next year’s race?

Published

on

The ballot for the 2027 London Marathon is already open ahead of next year’s race.

An incredible 1,133,813 people entered the ballot for this year’s marathon, a new world record, shattering last year’s total of 840,318. It represents a 36% increase year on year and nearly double the applications for the 2024 race (578,304).

The ballot for next year’s event opened on Friday 24 April and is open for one week, until 4pm (BST) on Friday 1 May. The results will be announced in early July.

There is the prospect that next year’s event could take place over two days. As it stands, the race will take place on Sunday 25 April, 2027. However, there could be a one-off two-day event, taking place on Saturday 24 April, 2027, as well. Hugh Brasher, chief executive of London Marathon Events, said: “Entering the 2027 TCS London Marathon ballot could be the first step towards becoming part of something truly life changing.”

Here’s everything you need to know about how to enter:

Advertisement

How can I enter next year’s race?

You can secure a place in the 2027 London Marathon by entering the ballot via the official website.

The ballot opened at 9am (BST) on Friday 24 April and closes at 4pm (BST) on Friday 1 May. The results are compeltely random and will be announced at the start of July.

A two-day marathon event, over the weekend of 24-25 April 2027, is being explored. Should permission be granted for an event on the Saturday as well as the usual Sunday, applicants will be entered for both days, significantly increasing their chances of success.

Advertisement

The cost of a place in the London Marathon for successful UK participants is £79.99. You do not have to pay your entry fee at the ballot, but UK residents can opt to donate their entry fee to the London Marathon Foundation no matter the outcome of the ballot.

You will receive a confirmation email when you apply and you’ll also receive a payment receipt, if you have donated your entry fee. The results of the ballot will be emailed to all entrants in July.

Your entry fee, should you get a place through the ballot, is reduced from £79.99 to £49.99. If you live in the UK and didn’t opt to donate your entry fee when applying, you’ll need to pay the full entry fee of £79.99.

If you don’t get a place in the main ballot, you are automatically entered into a second ballot and that will at least double the chance of getting a place through that second draw. If you are successful in either ballot, your entry is prepaid and confirmed.

Advertisement
The London Marathon could take place over two days in 2027
The London Marathon could take place over two days in 2027 (PA)

If you are unsuccessful in both ballots, you’ll receive a free hydrartion vest worth over £100, as consolation.

The ballot is performed at random, while alternative options include applying for a charity place while you wait for the results of the ballot – if you end up gaining a ballot place and a charity place, you can return your place to the charity and still raise funds for them as an own-place runner.

When is the 2026 London Marathon?

The 2026 London Marathon is on Sunday 26 April.

Next yeat’s event is set for Sunday 25 April, with the potential for an additional day on Saturday 24 April, 2027.

Advertisement

What time does it start?

8.50am – Elite wheelchair men’s and women’s races.

9.05am – Elite women’s race.

9.35am – Elite men’s race followed by mass start.

Advertisement
The wheelchair races are the first to get underway at the London Marathon
The wheelchair races are the first to get underway at the London Marathon (Zac Goodwin/PA Wire)

How can I watch it?

Viewers in the United Kingdom will be able to watch the London Marathon live on the BBC, with extensive television coverage and online streaming available via the BBC iPlayer and BBC Sport website.

What is the weather forecast?

Sunny temperatures are expected on Sunday, around 15C, with a gentle breeze, with conditions expected to be cooler than last year’s toasty (at least for April) 21C marathon-day peak temperature.

What is the route?

Advertisement
The London Marathon route
The London Marathon route (Supplied)

The London Marathon tends to follow a largely unchanged route since it was first run in 1981. Covering 26.2 miles, the course begins in Greenwich, dropping down from the high point of the race to follow a largely flat course, first heading east to Woolwich before doubling back on itself and follow the Thames to Bermondsey.

From there, the runners cut across London Bridge and turn right to take in Canary Wharf and London’s old Docklands, before a U-turn to track through central London, running along the Embankment until another right turn at Westminster Bridge towards St James’s Park.

The route takes in many famous London landmarks, from the Cutty Sark (mile six), Tower Bridge (mile 12), the Tower of London (mile 22) the London Eye and Big Ben (both mile 25) before its iconic finish line on The Mall near Buckingham Palace.

What is the prize money on offer?

The 2024 race was the first to offer equal prize money to the elite wheelchair races alongside their able-bodied counterparts.

Advertisement

The winners will receieve $55,000 (£40,700) each, the runner-up $30,000 (£22,200) and third-place $22,500 (£16,665).

There are also $150,000 (£111,000) bonuses on offer for running sub-2:02 for the men and sub-2:15 for the women, $125,000 (£92,600) for setting a new world record, and $25,000 (£18,500) up for grabs in the elite men’s and women’s races for a new course record.

A full prize money breakdown can be found here.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Sports

Geegees Mistruth clinches 2026 Robert Sangster Stakes in photo finish

Published

on

Jockey in purple and lime green silks rides a brown racehorse at full gallop on a grassy track, red Ladbrokes banners in the background; horse wears number 12 saddle cloth.

The move across to mainland tracks was a testing one for Geegees Mistruth, however the previous Tasmanian mare seized the greatest achievement yet by dominating the Group 1 Robert Sangster Stakes (1200m) at Morphettville over the weekend.

Trained initially by Stuart Gandy, Geegees Mistruth triumphed in stakes company twice as a juvenile and ran places in three Melbourne Group contests in the 2024 Spring.

She collected two further Group 3 wins before heading to Mark Walker’s Cranbourne base, where she placed four times in six efforts amid stretches of bad luck, redeeming herself with the slimmest Saturday victory.

With Jordan Childs providing a flawless ride, the $31 longshot powered past Bridal Waltz ($6.50) bang on the line for a nose verdict, a mere whisker clear of repeat Sangster winner Charm Stone ($6.50) in third.

Advertisement

Flying For Fun ($13) was a half-head adrift of Geegees Mistruth in fourth during the heart-stopping blanket finish, as assistant trainer Ben Gleeson hailed the long-awaited success for the promising four-year-old.

“Her journey this spring and the autumn just sums up racing. It’s a lot of lows, but when the highs happen, they’re worth it,” Gleeson said.

“This filly arrived in our care back in the spring, and she came over in great order. Stuart Gandy, who has done all the work with her as a young horse and done a wonderful job.

“We just sort of thought, God, when are we going to get some luck with her? At least we got her when it counted most.

Advertisement

“She just peeled off their backs and I thought, ‘Oh, here we go.’

“She very rarely changes legs, and you sort of saw her do it for the first time in a long time.

“Credit to Jordy – he got his hands down in her neck and got the head down when it counted.”

For Childs, it represented a second Group 1 conquest, echoing his first from eight years prior in the 2016 Blue Diamond Stakes.

Advertisement

“It’s been a long time between drinks,” Childs said.

“Written By in 2018, I’ve had quite a few placings in between in the big group ones, and I was sort of hoping my second one would come a bit sooner, but anyway, still very grateful for the ride and the connections.

“Once I presented her, she quickened up well, we were getting challenged by the other horses, and she was able to hold on.”

“I wasn’t sure (who won), and I was looking up the drone to see where it was going, and it was pretty close to me, but Zahra was there as well, so I wasn’t sure if it was me and him, and then he said that I won.

Advertisement

“Winning another group one, it’s great.”

Punters can find excellent online bookmakers offering markets on Robert Sangster Stakes contenders.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Former Team USA gymnast Jennifer Sey calls WHCA Dinner shooting ‘terrifying’

Published

on

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Former Team USA women’s gymnast Jennifer Sey was a guest at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in Washington, D.C., on Saturday when shots were fired.

Sey told Fox News Digital her reaction to the shooting in an exclusive statement.

“Terrifying. Should have been an amazing night. I came to celebrate free speech and those who believe in it. As I walked in and there were protesters I was scared for a moment and then I thought it’s ok. I was wrong,” she said, adding she was forced to hide “under table.”

Advertisement

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Jennifer Sey performing a split leap in gymnastics

Jennifer Sey, the 1986 U.S. national all-around gymnastics champion, performs a split leap during competition. (XX-XY Athletics/Jennifer Sey)

Jennifer Sey is a former elite gymnast best known for winning the 1986 USA Gymnastics National Championship. A seven-time member of the U.S. Women’s National Team, she achieved this top national title after recovering from a broken femur in 1985. Her accomplishments also included a third-place team finish at the International Mixed Pairs and a second-place team finish at the USA-URS Dual Meet in 1987.

Sey, who is also the founder of the activist sportswear brand XX-XY Athletics, has become a prominent activist in the “save women’s sports” and general conservative movement in recent years.

Jennifer Sey standing on a gym floor performing a split

Jennifer Sey founded XX-XY Athletics in March 2024 to emphasize the empirical truth of biology, she said. (XX-XY Athletics)

Chaos erupted at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner when gunshots were heard and President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump were rushed out of the Washington Hilton ballroom Saturday night.

Advertisement

Video from inside the event showed attendees diving under tables and taking cover as panic spread throughout the room.

Fox News’ John Roberts reported from the ballroom that shots were fired and that he had heard the suspected shooter was engaged by Secret Service.

POLICE INVESTIGATING USA CYCLING INCIDENT AFTER FOOTAGE OF ORGANIZERS’ INTERACTION WITH ACTIVIST GOES VIRAL

Fox News anchor Bret Baier said he also heard shots fired, but noted they did not appear to originate from inside the ballroom.

Advertisement

Sources told Fox News the individual never made it inside the ballroom, was taken into custody and removed from the scene.

President Trump was seen being quickly escorted out of the room by security, and White House officials tell Fox News Digital both he, the first lady and Karoline Leavitt are safe at this time.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

It remains unclear what prompted the incident.

Advertisement

Fox News Digital’s Jasmine Baehr contributed to this report.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Source link

Continue Reading

Sports

Carson Hocevar drops 4-word reaction to Cleetus McFarland’s runner-up finish at Talladega ARCA race

Published

on

Carson Hocevar has left a positive review for Cleetus McFarland’s top-5 ARCA finish at Talladega. The Spire Motorsports driver was captured supporting McFarland on Saturday afternoon’s Alabama Manufactured Housing 200.

Driving the No.30 Ford, McFarland began on the tenth row and two spots behind his YouTube collaborator, George Siciliano. The Nebraska native chased down the field and entered the top 10 with the guidance of his spotter, Kevin Hamlin.

The race’s first restart saw him battling for the lead with polesitter Giovanni Ruggiero, and a timely push from Daniel Dye made him the race leader. McFarland reached the front row once again during the final lap, but his tussle with Gus Dean opened the door for Andy Jankowiak to take the checkered flag.

Advertisement

Hocevar caught the action from the sidelines and was cheering for McFarland the whole way. Under a NASCAR post dedicated to McFarland’s result, the Cup Series driver wrote,

“Was fun to watch.”

Cleetus McFarland and Carson Hocevar have been friends for a while now. The two were last spotted in NASCAR’s promo for the 2026 season.

Saturday’s result marks Cleetus McFarland’s second top-5 ARCA finish this season. The 30-year-old logged a P4 result at Rockingham earlier. Notably, McFarland was denied approval to compete in the O’Reilly race at Talladega.

The sanctioning body wanted him to gain more experience in short tracks before making the jump to superspeedways. CEO Steve O’Donnell called it the right call on NASCAR’s part.

Advertisement

However, McFarland is cleared for all Truck Series races.


Cleetus McFarland gets emotional after Talladega top-5

Cleetus McFarland shared an emotional message after his runner-up result at Talladega. During his post-race interview, McFarland proclaimed that he ‘gained a lot of confidence’ and ‘learned a lot about drafting’.

“What an insane day of racing and the greatest race I’ve ever been a part of in my life right there…..honestly the most fun I’ve had with clothes on,” McFarland said.

“I did get a smidge emotional, because I was just like, when we were under caution, I was sitting there thinking, like, ‘Oh man, I’m at the front of the stamp pack’”, he added, “I know a lot of people are supporting me. And like, I just saw some guys with their sleeves cut off in the crowd; just like the third time we’ve gone by under costume, they were just like this. And I was like, man, so I’m so lucky, dude.”

Cleetus McFarland is slated for another ARCA race at Michigan International Speedway and an O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race at Nashville.

Fans can watch the Nashville race on CW. The 188-lap event is scheduled for Saturday, May 30, at 7:30 PM ET. The Michigan ARCA race is scheduled a week later on June 5.

Advertisement