Should the Players Championship become golf’s fifth major?
That’s the question the PGA Tour not-so-subtly wants you asking.
The Tour released a provocative new Players promo video on Thursday afternoon during late-window coverage of the WM Phoenix Open that felt like an exercise in subliminal messaging.
Seems like the PGA Tour wants the “5th major” debate back on.
The Players Championship just dropped this new ad. Should get you fired up for TPC Sawgrass — but it’s the half-second at the end that’s going to raise eyebrows:
The opening shot — an upside-down reflection of J.J. Spaun — serves as a callback to last year’s dramatic, splashy Players finish, where Spaun made an inspired charge before his hopes ended in arguably golf’s most famous lake.
Next there’s Sepp Straka gazing at TPC Sawgrass’ iconic island-green 17th. (Why Straka? I’m not exactly sure, but my best guess is his was the steeliest stare the Tour had on file.)
Advertisement
Then recent big-name Players champs tick past, Scottie Scheffler (who won in 2023 and 2024) and then Rory McIlroy (2019 and 2025) and then Justin Thomas (2021), the three most recent in-good-standing tournament winners who are also three of golf’s most popular stars (you won’t be shocked to hear that 2022 champ Cameron Smith, now of LIV Golf, does not make an appearance).
The shots are desaturated, overcast, moody, dramatic. A voice drifts over the scenes.
I can’t get you out of my head
Suddenly you’re underwater, then halfway out, then rising into the sky. The island green appears before you, and the stadium around it. There are a lot of people there.
Advertisement
There’s Corey Conners. There’s a ball in the water. There’s Tony Finau. Another splash. There’s a player in anguish, and then another. There’s Collin Morikawa, so agonized he’s taken off his hat. Another splash. A hole-in-one from Shane Lowry. (Remember that?) A grin from Brooks Koepka. (Remember him?) A leap from Ryan Moore. (His days as one of the faces of the Tour may be numbered.) Then, boom. Uppercut fist-pump from Tiger Woods, punctuating the iconic “Better-than-most” moment.
And then comes the tagline.
MARCH IS GOING TO BE MAJOR
It’s barely on screen; blink and you could just about miss it. But the message seems pretty clear.
Advertisement
The Players being described as “major” is, at the very least, a strong suggestion. Greenlighting this particular tagline does not happen by accident — especially not for a PGA Tour under new CEO Brian Rolapp, who has started his first full season on offense. In recent weeks, the Tour has recruited multiple players back from LIV and pushed forward plans to reimagine the schedule under the guidance of visionaries like Tiger Woods and Theo Epstein. The latest development is only a piece of marketing material, but it suggests something bigger: Rolapp is ratcheting up the size of the Tour’s visionboard, and in the process, testing the limits of his newfound momentum.
The Players-as-fifth-major discussion is not new. It certainly predates my arrival in the world of golf media. Based on conversations with smart people, the Tour has vacillated on the seriousness of the “major” moniker many times over the years.
Still, it’s easy to see why the Tour would want the Players to become a major. By most objective measures, the PGA Tour is the strongest and wealthiest Tour in the world — but if we’re judging by ownership of golf’s most important events (the majors), it comes up empty. The PGA Tour does not own the Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open, the Open Championship or even the Ryder Cup. I doubt Rolapp is particularly pleased about that structure. I doubt the Tour’s private-equity partners are, either. They would like to own all four majors. At the very least, they’d like to own one.
And so here we are, with the Tour using its marketing material to test the waters of the major championship discussion again. Is this a trial balloon — or the beginning of an organized campaign? It appears we’re about to find out.
Advertisement
Update: I emailed the Tour asking for comment on the new ad. Just as we were publishing this story, they sent over the following statement. The second sentence seems…suggestive:
“Fans and players have long discussed THE PLAYERS Championship’s status as a major. We understand that is not for us to decide. Ultimately it is up to our sport and its fans to recognize what the professionals who play the game already know.”
In the meantime, it’s worth running through five questions on what a theoretical Players-as-fifth-major would mean.
1. Who decides the majors, anyway?
Oh boy, good question. The short version: Some golfers and some writers. It was murky for a while, but it’s been a mostly settled discussion for decades.
Advertisement
There was a time, pre-Masters, in which the U.S. and British Amateurs were considered majors. In 1930, just four years before Augusta National’s first invitational tournament, Bobby Jones won those two plus the U.S. Open and Open Championship and was considered a grand-slam winner.
The modern Grand Slam, per our in-house expert Michael Bamberger, had its roots in the 1930s but didn’t become a “thing” until 1960, when Arnold Palmer and his preferred sportswriter, Bob Drum, decided on the four events during a flight to St. Andrews … or so the story goes. There were other top players involved in choosing the majors, and other top sportswriters, too (I type, wistfully, imagining this power), but the power to make such pronouncements was derived primarily from the rise of golf on TV, which elevated stars like Palmer and Jack Nicklaus into authority figures. Of course, that leaves a deep irony in the formation of the modern slam: The majors are each 90-plus years old, but the Grand Slam may not yet be 70.
There was still some murkiness around the Grand Slam the ’60s and ’70s, when it was unclear whether Nicklaus should count his 1959 and 1961 U.S. Amateur titles as majors. But eventually a common vernacular emerged around the four big events: the Masters, the PGA, the U.S. Open, and the Open Championship. Horse racing has its Triple Crown, and golf has its Grand Slam, an epic foursome of tournaments stretching from the beginning of spring through the end of summer.
The majors are “official” in certain ways; they’re referenced in handbooks, Hall-of-Fame criteria, media guides, Wikipedia pages and the like. But there’s also no organization or individual in charge of amending their definition. It’s a funny thing to think about. They’re the majors because we all agree that they are.
Advertisement
If the Players isn’t a major, what is it?
The Players isn’t a major and hasn’t been a major — but it is the next best thing: the second line in the counting stats of PGA Tour players. Justin Thomas has two majors plus a Players. Rory McIlroy has five majors plus two Players. Yes, this is a bit bulky. Rolapp’s quest is for “simplicity,” and this could be simplified. But it’s also the way things are; the Players is the PGA Tour’s biggest event … but it’s not a major.
It is worth emphasizing just how good the Players has become. It’s not just No. 17; TPC Sawgrass is a terrific tournament venue. I’ve written that it’s the Florida Masters; we return every year to a familiar, iconic venue with famous hazards, big-time champions, and highlight-reel moments. Sub out Rae’s Creek for the island green, and sub out Augusta’s historic manor clubhouse for the towering Ponte Vedra palace, you get the idea. The crowds are terrific, it’s the event in town, the broadcast feels big and it seems to get bigger every year.
What’s the case for the Players as a major?
I guess I sort of just made that case. Iconic venue, memorable moments, 50-plus years of history, big-time winners, a massive purse, elevated TV coverage, enormous crowds. It’s objectively one of the best tournaments on the golf calendar.
About the biggest thing working against the Players as a major is its field. The majors have gained strength in the 2020s because they’ve served as the only mutual meeting ground for stars from the PGA Tour and LIV. In some ways, it could be argued that what makes a major in 2026 is that all the best players are in attendance. Currently, the Tour only welcomes Tour players to compete in the Players.
Advertisement
But there’s an intriguing potential subplot here. This is pure speculation, but if the Players wanted to achieve major status, could it create an eligibility category for top LIV players and serve as a crossover event transcending tour rivalry? I dunno. But it does seem like you’d need to open up the field in some way to seriously enter the conversation.
What’s the case against the Players as a major?
There was a quote, some years ago, from John Feinstein on Golf Channel: “When you go to Denny’s and order the Grand Slam, they don’t give you five things, do they?”
You get the idea. A grand slam means four wins in tennis, a grand slam means four runs in baseball, a Grand Slam means four things at Denny’s. In golf, the Grand Slam means four events.
The LPGA added a fifth major last decade. I’d argue that has only served to muddy the waters as to the important tournaments on their schedule. Five majors is one too many.
Advertisement
Here’s where I’ve landed: I’m fine with the Players being a major in the abstract — but I’m not okay with five majors. Whether via a duel or a hostile takeover, the Players has to demote another major to elevate itself.
What would happen if it became a major?
We’d need to do some serious arithmetic, for one thing. Nicklaus won three Players, so he’d suddenly have 21 majors. Woods won two of ’em, so he’d be up to 17 total majors but even further behind Jack.
Fred Couples would jump from one major to three, as would Steve Elkington, as would Hal Sutton, as would Davis Love III. I’m guessing we’d have their votes.
Perhaps the biggest change would be among those whose current major total is zero. Matt Kuchar would suddenly be a major champ. So would Rickie Fowler. And Si Woo Kim. And K.J. Choi.
Advertisement
Scottie Scheffler would suddenly have six majors. Rory McIlroy would suddenly have seven. On the other hand, Ben Hogan and Gene Sarazen would see their major totals hold, as neither player overlapped with the Players. Cross-generational scorekeeping is tough. Apples and featheries.
I imagine we’ll hear more from the Tour in the coming weeks. I imagine we’ll hear from Rolapp himself at the Players itself. I’m curious what he’ll have to say — and whether the M-word is part of it.
The NHL Department of Player Safety announced announced on Sunday that New York Islanders forward Bo Horvat had been fined $2,500 for his unsportsmanlike conduct towards San Jose Sharks’ William Eklund during their 2-1 win on Saturday at SAP Center on the road.
The incident occurred with less than four minutes to play in the third period. Horvat skated towards the Sharks bench, let go of his stick and flicked Eklund’s helmet aggressively before skating away. The interaction drew no response from Eklund, although Sharks’ Tyler Toffoli was seen getting agitated by Horvat’s actions.
Advertisement
Unfortunately for the Isles center, the NHL Department of Player Safety also didn’t take kindly to the incident. They gave a briefing about their judgment of the fine on Sunday, which read:
“New York Islanders forward Bo Horvat has been fined $2,500 for unsportsmanlike conduct against San Jose Sharks forward William Eklund at the San Jose bench during NHL Game No. 999 in San Jose on Saturday, March 7, the National Hockey League’s Department of Player Safety announced today.
“The incident occurred at 16:15 of the third period. The money goes to the Players’ Emergency Assistance Fund.”
Fans reacted on social media after the announcement. They felt that the league was too harsh on Horvat and the massive fine wasn’t warranted.
Here are a few reactions:
“(George) Parros is getting soft in his old age,” a fan said about the head of the NHL Department of Player Safety.
Parros is getting soft in his old age
Advertisement
“So players can’t joke around anymore??? What is this,” a fan questioned.
So players can’t joke around anymore ??? What is this
“$2500 for a little bench chat? NHL’s lost the plot,” a fan wrote.
$2500 for a little bench chat? NHL’s lost the plot
“Chirping someone on the bench is a fine ?? Lol,” a fan commented.
Chirping someone on the bench is a fine ?? Lol
“Cross checks to the face are accepted but a helmet flip is a fine??” another fan questioned.
Cross checks to the face are accepted but a helmet flip is a fine??
Advertisement
“Bruh this is literally human nature, grow up NHL,” a fan added.
Bruh this is literally human nature, grow up @NHL
Both Horvat and Eklund are key players on their respective lineups. Horvat has scored 27 goals in 50 games for the club and is eight goals away from a career high for a season. Eklund is the No.7 overall pick from the 2021 NHL Draft. He has 148 points in his career with 38 coming this season.
Macklin Celebrini shies away from commenting on Matthew Barzal hit
Many fans contested on social media that instead of Horvat, Isles’ Matthew Barzal should have been penalized for a huge hit on Sharks forward Macklin Celebrini a few moments before his incident occurred in the third period. While traversing towards the puck that was in possession of the Islanders, Celebrini took a hit from Barzal and looked shaken up.
During the postgame interviews he walked away when asked about Barzal’s conduct.
Advertisement
The Sharks are locked in battle for the Western Conference Wild Card spots. They are trailing the Seattle Kraken, who hold the second spot, by a point after Sunday.
Matchday 29 of the Nigeria Premier Football League (NPFL) produced several surprising outcomes as teams fought hard for points with the season entering its crucial stage.
One of the biggest shocks came at the Muhammadu Dikko Stadium where Kwara United stunned hosts Katsina United with a 2–1 away victory. The important win boosted Kwara United’s hopes of escaping the relegation zone.
In Enugu, Rangers International delivered one of the most outstanding performances of the round as they overwhelmed league leaders Remo Stars 4–1 at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Stadium.
Advertisement
Kenneth Igboke gave Rangers an early lead in the fourth minute before Chidozie Iwundu quickly added the second goal four minutes later. Remo Stars responded just before the break when Franck Kingue reduced the deficit in stoppage time of the first half.
However, Rangers remained in full control after the restart. Wisdom Ebirim extended the lead in the 62nd minute, while Igboke grabbed his second goal deep into stoppage time to complete an impressive victory for the Flying Antelopes.
At Umuahia, Abia Warriors defeated Shooting Stars 2–0 with striker Emeka Obioma scoring both goals in the 18th and 55th minutes.
Advertisement
Former champions Rivers United also enjoyed a comfortable afternoon after beating Bendel Insurance 3–1 to keep their title ambitions alive.
Nasarawa United claimed a narrow 1–0 win over Ikorodu City thanks to Bright Amadi’s late strike in the 83rd minute.
Plateau United produced a dominant display as they defeated Niger Tornadoes 3–0 in Jos. Temitope Vincent opened the scoring in the seventh minute, Isaiah Sunday added the second before halftime, and Nenrot Silas sealed the victory in stoppage time.
Sunshine Stars secured a 2–1 win against Enyimba in Akure. Qudus Olayinola converted a penalty in the 71st minute before Latti Yusuf added another goal five minutes later. Enyimba managed a late consolation through Chidera Michael from the penalty spot.
Advertisement
Khalifat FC also picked up a slim 1–0 victory over Bayelsa United with Uchechukwu Onuoha scoring the decisive goal just before halftime.
In Kano, experienced forward Ahmed Musa scored the only goal in the 57th minute to help Kano Pillars defeat Barau FC 1–0 in the Kano derby.
Earlier, Wikki Tourists began life under new coach Evans Ogenyi with a 2–1 comeback victory against El-Kanemi Warriors, a result that slightly improved their chances of moving away from the relegation zone.
With only a few rounds left before the end of the season, the latest results have intensified both the title race and the battle to avoid relegation in the NPFL.
Advertisement
NPFL Matchday 29 Results
Wikki Tourists 2–1 El-Kanemi Warriors
Katsina United 1–2 Kwara United
Abia Warriors 2–0 Shooting Stars
Kano Pillars 1–0 Barau FC
Kun Khalifat 1–0 Bayelsa United
Nasarawa United 1–0 Ikorodu City
Plateau United 3–0 Niger Tornadoes
Rangers International 4–1 Remo Stars
Rivers United 3–1 Bendel Insurance
Warri Wolves 2–1 Enyimba FC
The results have added more excitement to the closing stages of the NPFL season as clubs continue their push for the title, continental qualification places, and survival in the top flight.
Arapaho, the defending Sydney Cup winner, is expected to forgo the majority of Sydney’s 2026 autumn carnival owing to a premature setback in his prep.
The veteran nine-year-old dealt with a foot abscess that held off his re-entry, leading to his opening barrier trial at Randwick on Thursday.
Rachel King, his consistent jockey, has a deep rapport with the Bjorn Baker-prepared gelding she rode to Sydney Cup victory, insisting the horse’s mindset is superb post the small delay.
“He looks as fresh and well as ever,” King said.
Advertisement
“He’s pulling his way around like a two-year-old every day. He’s like Peter Pan, he doesn’t get older.”
Yet to race beyond a midfield finish in the Melbourne Cup, Arapaho boasted two prior runs this time last year.
King accepts the time fixing the foot will compress his Sydney autumn slate, but remains positive about Queensland prospects.
“He might miss some of these main races at carnival time, but we’ve got Brisbane as well. There is no rush,” she said.
Advertisement
“He might end up being more at the back end of the carnival here, and then Brisbane.”
Returning to Sydney mere weeks after a prosperous Japan campaign—marred by a snow-postponed card—King hit stride immediately.
Toplight was steering Darlinghurst, half to elite Forever Young.
“I got to ride Forever Young’s little sister. She won earlier in the day, and he won on the Saturday night, so that was cool, getting to ride horses like that,” King said.
Advertisement
“I ended up with sixteen winners in a month and a couple of stakes winners.
There were two weekends where I rode five winners each weekend, so it was another successful trip.”
She notched a brace at Warwick Farm Wednesday, escalating to Midway Handicap victory with Zenmaster at Randwick Saturday. Dive into racing betting markets for the autumn action.
Excitement boiled over in the mounting yard post Berkeley Square’s December Ballarat Cup (2000m) repeat win, but victory on Monday might spark outright bedlam for the six-year-old.
Advertisement
“It would be good to go back and do it again, especially for his owners who are Adelaide based,” O’Sullivan said.
“Some haven’t seen race for a little while.”
The mission for Berkeley Square looms large.
Assigned 59.5kg, it tops the weights of Hyperno (1978) and Gallic (2007) by 1.5kg in victories since 1973’s metric shift.
Advertisement
Benefiting him is the 53kg minimum, a 3kg hike since Bohemiath’s early-2000s win, despite Gallic’s success from 53kg.
Berkeley Square booked his Adelaide slot carrying 61.5kg to the line over 2500m at Flemington on February 14, with Luke Nolen retained for Monday.
“It was a good ride,” O’Sullivan said.
“He looked after the horse and made sure he ran the trip out with the view of going up to two miles.
Advertisement
“I’ve got no problems with the trip. I think he can do whatever we want him to do.
“He’s never done that and you want to see it, but it won’t be easy with the weight, but he is a big bugger, and he has the form on the board.
“He is a Group 2 winner and has done a lot more than some of the others in the race.”
Since that Flemington effort, progress has been trouble-free, sharpened by routine gallops for Berkeley Square.
Advertisement
“I’m happy with where he’s at and we’ve just got to get him over there safely and he’ll be right to go,” O’Sullivan said.
Every team in the World Baseball Classic (WBC) has its own unique celebrations for home runs, whether it’s a special jacket from the Dominican Republic or coordinated handshakes with Team USA.
But Team Italy might have the best one of all – the players take an espresso shot, which is made from a machine that sits right in the dugout.
Dante Nori of the Italy celebrates in the dugout after hitting a home run in the seventh inning against Brazil during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool B game between Brazil and Italy at Daikin Park on March 7, 2026 in Houston, Texas.(Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images)
The machine sits toward the end of the dugout, but players and coaches can get their quick caffeine fix. And it isn’t anything new from this group.
During the 2023 WBC, there was a Nespresso machine in the dugout, and it worked out for the team. They made it out of their group stage for just the second time ever in the tournament.
So, why not bring it back?
Advertisement
First baseman Vinnie Pasquantino, who stars for the Kansas City Royals, seems to be the ring leader with the machine when a player goes yard, too. After making the player who hit the home run an espresso shot, he gives them a kiss on both cheeks – a traditional sign of affection by Italians.
“In Italy, we drink coffee about 20 times a day,” manager Francisco Cervelli, who used to catch in the big leagues, said, via MLB.com. “It’s a tradition. You’re walking down the road. You see a coffee spot, get some coffee. Then you chitchat, and then keep walking and do the same thing all over and over again. That’s how Italy is.”
Vinnie Pasquantino of Team Italy holds up an espresso shot during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool B game presented by Capital One between Team Brazil and Team Italy at Daikin Park on Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Houston, Texas.(Rob Tringali/WBCI/MLB)
Cervelli, who became Italy’s manager in January 2025, said that the espresso machine “goes everywhere with us,” and he learned that with the European Baseball Championship last year as well.
“It’s something normal. We got it on the bus. We’ve had it in the dugout, everywhere.”
Advertisement
Whether superstition or not, Italy has seen early success in Houston’s Pool B, which also features Team USA. They are 2-0 in the tournament thus far, defeating Brazil, 8-0, and taking down Great Britain, 7-4, on Sunday.
Dante Nori of Team Italy drinks an espresso shot in the dugout after hitting a home run in the eighth inning during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool B game presented by Capital One between Team Brazil and Team Italy at Daikin Park on Saturday, March 7, 2026, in Houston, Texas.(Rob Tringali/WBCI/MLB )
Every Sunday brings something different. One week there’s tears in the eyes of the champion. The next there’s flushed cheeks and sorrow words from the runner-up. This week brought the first playoff at the Arnold Palmer Invitational in nearly 30 years. And with it, a reminder:
This whole season has been telling us something. And Akshay Bhatia was watching closely enough to remind us once he made the winning putt.
“This game is so crazy,” he told Cara Banks just minutes after his win. “It’s been crazy for these last couple weeks, watching [Jacob] Bridgeman win and then watching Nico [Echavarria] win, and so you just never know what can happen in this game.”
If you only tune in on Sundays, that’s been the story of the year, no? You just never know. That’s all we’ve seen recently! The Bridgeman character he’s referring to nearly bungled a lead on the back nine at the Genesis Invitational two weeks ago, having started the day six shots ahead. (He somewhat calmly parred the last to win by one.) The Nico character he’s referring to was last week’s winner by way of a Shane Lowry collapse. Lowry held a three-shot lead with three to play before rinsed multiple shots in the water. You just never know.
Advertisement
Bhatia was never leading this week’s tournament alone until that final putt dropped. Daniel Berger, the runner-up, was trying to lead wire-to-wire, which had never been done at the legendary tournament. The 32-year-old Floridian had a five-shot lead through 36 holes. Then a one-shot lead through 54. And then suddenly, a three-shot lead with just six to play. He was on cruise control, but you just never know.
Chris Gotterup had one-half of a hole to play at the WM Phoenix Open last month, sitting two shots back with an expected win probability of 0.7%. (That is, win once or twice in 200 tries.) It was Super Bowl Sunday so maybe you weren’t watching, or maybe you were focused on making an appetizer, or commuting to the football watch party … as Gotterup stunted on those odds, made birdie from the rough, squeezed into a playoff and poured in a 40-footer to win. You just never know.
Maybe that’s what Bhatia was thinking while playing the par-5 16th hole, on which he hit perhaps the best 6-iron of his life to a tap-in eagle, moving to one back. It’s likely the shot he’ll remember most from this tournament, given how it took three steely pars after to raise the trophy.
Advertisement
He did, at the very least, admit to thinking about that mentality when he turned to the back nine. Bhatia had played the front in two over, bogeying the 9th. He was five back of Berger at that point and pissed off.
“So I went to 10 tee very angry,” he said after, while wearing the red cardigan that API winner’s receive. “That was the first time I really showed some frustration. But I told [my caddie, Joe Greiner] you know, we shot 4-under yesterday on this side, let’s just try and do that again. And you just never know in this game.”
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola spoke about the improvement he has seen in his side in the last three matches.
Pep Guardiola is starting to believe that Manchester City are capable of competing for 90 minutes after being impressed in their last three performances. The Blues have been plagued all season by problems in the second half of matches that have led to dropped points in the Premier League and Champions League.
The start of 2026 was particularly painful for City when injuries bit the hardest, with Chelsea and Brighton coming from behind to pick up draws at the Etihad and Spurs claiming a point at home from 2-0 down. However, Guardiola had been concerned about the issue from the opening day win at Wolves, and they lost a few weeks later to Brighton having led after an hour.
Advertisement
City dropped more points at home to Nottingham Forest in the last week, but Guardiola was happier with that second half despite conceding two goals (and scoring one). Added to the defensive resilience shown to shut out Leeds at Elland Road and the two goals scored to put the FA Cup fifth round tie beyond Newcastle at St James’ Park, the City manager reckons the squad is now strong enough to avoid dropping after half-time.
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.
“We fought and I’m happy because in the last three games our second half was quite similar in the first half and all the season we dropped a lot – otherwise we would be in an incredible position in the Premier League,” he said. “It’s because we didn’t have enough tools and players being available to do some changes, but Nico Gonzalez helped us a lot in the absence of Rodri and today he was back again. The partnership with Nico O’Reilly was outstanding, both physicality and have the ball – really good.”
Guardiola made ten changes for the win over Newcastle and that included first starts for wingers Savinho and Jeremy Doku after injury. City have moved to a more narrow 4-2-2-2 formation since Savinho’s injury and enjoyed some impressive performances and results in that shape – but having the wingers back gives Guardiola more options for different games that should also help City to maintain their form; it is now 11 games unbeaten since they lost to Bodo/Glimt in a game where the manager lamented his lack of wide players.
Advertisement
“We learned a lot because in the other way we played really good but we didn’t have these players and without that it is more difficult,” he said. “We took good results in the other shape but especially with the teams that I remember in Bodo and the other ones they are so narrow, bringing the ball to the wingers and having the ability to drop them and make turns and movements in behind, how good Matheus played in the pockets and the movements from Tijjani and Omar because in between the lines there are no spaces.
“Newcastle don’t allow spaces, Bodo/Glimt don’t have spaces, you have to attack from there and both was massive. Savinho was injured for more than two months and Jeremy was also injured for a long time and Omar, Antoine can do that but the rest are not proper wingers. Oscar Bobb was injured most of the time so they helped us a lot today, without wingers it would have been much more difficult.”
Find the best flights and hotels for Champions League games
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
Booking.com provides countless deals on flights and accommodation across Europe so Man City fans can follow the team on their Champions League campaign.
Whilst he may be a stranger to Wales, Govil is quick to point out his familiarity with franchise success.
His Washington Freedom side have won the most games in the three years of MLC, taking home the trophy in 2024 and finishing runners-up in 2025.
“I have a history of doing this, it’s not just the Washington Freedom. I had a professional badminton team in India and in the very first year we won the championship,” the Maryland-based entrepreneur said.
“Even business, I’ve taken over assets, which are really underperforming and turned it around.”
Advertisement
The secret to his success?
“It’s all about looking at a big picture, having the right components, and creating an environment which is very fertile towards success,” he explained.
Fire have already been busy trying to acquire the right components.
Salt, Chris Woakes, Marco Jansen and Rachin Ravindra have joined the men’s side as direct signings whilst Freya Kemp, Georgia Wareham and Georgia Voll have signed with the women’s team.
Advertisement
If Govil is to be successful in reversing the fortunes of his new franchise, the team’s performances on the field will need to mirror his own bold confidence.
The next step to building this team will come in this week’s inaugural auction.
As well as having the opportunity to build a competitive team Govil will have the chance to shine a light on Welsh talent and create an identity fans are more likely to subscribe to.
Then, comes the hope of bringing a history of success to a place that has not yet experienced it.
Match of the Day’s Ellen White and Glenn Murray dissect two brilliant headers in Port Vale’s 1-0 FA Cup win over Sunderland, including an Alan Shearer-inspired celebration from Vale hero Ben Waine.
Match of the Day’s Ellen White and Glenn Murray analyse why referee Jarred Gillett blew his whistle to deny Fulham a goal in their 1-0 FA Cup defeat to Southampton.