Connacht Rugby v Munster Rugby, BKT United Rugby Championship, Saturday 9 May, 7:45pm, Dexcom Stadium. Live on TG4 and Premier Sports.
There are league matches, there are interpros, and then there are nights like this.
A sold-out Dexcom Stadium. Two rounds left. Connacht chasing the top eight. Munster trying to protect their playoff position. A handicap line with Connacht slight favourites at -2. And eighty minutes in Galway that could shape both provinces’ seasons.
This is not just another Connacht v Munster fixture. This is a match with edge, consequence and genuine jeopardy.
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The URC Table Leaves No Room For Error
Munster arrive in Galway fifth in the URC table on 51 points after 16 matches, with ten wins and six defeats. Connacht sit ninth on 44 points, with eight wins and eight defeats.
That gap may look healthy enough on paper, but the table is brutally tight. Munster are only one point ahead of Cardiff, two ahead of the Bulls and four ahead of Ulster. Connacht are outside the playoff places, but still very much alive.
The remaining fixtures sharpen the stakes even further.
Connacht: Munster at home, then Edinburgh away.
Munster: Connacht away, then Lions at home.
That is a significant difference. Edinburgh may only have pride to play for by the final round, while the Lions could still be chasing a top-four finish when they travel to Thomond Park. That makes Saturday night feel close to must-win territory for Connacht.
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Connacht Have Found Form At Exactly The Right Time
Connacht’s recent URC form tells the story of a side that has finally found rhythm, identity and belief.
Date
Opposition
Venue
Result
Score
28 February 2026
Glasgow Warriors
Dexcom Stadium
Won
15-10
13 March 2026
Scarlets
Dexcom Stadium
Won
31-14
20 March 2026
Ulster
Affidea Stadium
Won
26-19
28 March 2026
Ospreys
Dexcom Stadium
Won
21-14
18 April 2026
DHL Stormers
DHL Stadium
Won
33-24
25 April 2026
Lions
Ellis Park
Lost
21-33
The 33-21 defeat to the Lions ended Connacht’s six-game winning run in the URC, but it did little to kill the momentum. The win away to the Stormers was a major statement and has kept the westerners firmly in the playoff conversation.
Just as importantly, Connacht have won their last four matches at Dexcom Stadium in all competitions since Leinster beat them 34-23 in January. Galway has become a hard place to go again.
Munster’s Form Is Strong, But The Road Questions Remain
Munster’s recent form is harder to read. They come into this game after back-to-back URC wins over Benetton and Ulster, but their away record has been a concern.
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Date
Opposition
Venue
Result
Score
30 January 2026
Glasgow Warriors
Scotstoun Stadium
Lost
22-31
28 February 2026
Zebre Parma
Thomond Park
Won
21-7
21 March 2026
Sharks
Kings Park
Lost
0-45
28 March 2026
Bulls
Loftus Versfeld
Lost
31-34
18 April 2026
Benetton Rugby
Stadio Monigo
Won
45-15
25 April 2026
Ulster
Thomond Park
Won
41-14
Munster’s 45-15 win over Benetton in Treviso ended a run of six consecutive defeats on the road in all competitions. That matters. One away win does not automatically erase the deeper trend, especially when the next away assignment is Connacht in a packed Dexcom Stadium.
Beirne, Carbery And Kleyn Absences Are Massive
Munster are without Tadhg Beirne, Joe Carbery and Jean Kleyn, and that is a huge blow. Those three are not merely important players. They are central to Munster’s physical identity.
The Munster team has been named for Saturday’s URC Round 17 clash against Connacht at Dexcom Stadium (7.45pm, live on TG4 & Premier Sports).
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There are five changes to the side that beat Ulster at Thomond Park two weeks ago.
Mike Haley returns from a groin injury to start at full-back with Dan Kelly also slotting into the backline.
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Fineen Wycherley has recovered from a knee injury to start in the pack along with Michael Ala’alatoa and Edwin Edogbo.
Replacement Alex Kendellen will make his 100th appearance at the age of just 25 having made his Munster debut as an Academy player in March 2021.
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Haley, Shane Daly and Andrew Smith are named in the back three with Kelly and Alex Nankivell starting together in midfield.
Captain Craig Casey and JJ Hanrahan start in the half-backs.
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Jeremy Loughman, Diarmuid Barron and Ala’alatoa pack down in the front row with Edogbo and Wycherley in the engine room.
Tom Ahern, John Hodnett and Gavin Coombes start in an unchanged back row.
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Lee Barron, Josh Wycherley and Conor Bartley provide the front row back-up as Jack O’Donoghue, Brian Gleeson and Kendellen complete the forward cover.
Ben O’Donovan and Seán O’Brien are the backline replacements.
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Unfortunately, the Munster A fixture against Connacht Eagles that was due to be played on Friday at Ennis RFC has been postponed.
Munster Rugby: Mike Haley; Shane Daly, Alex Nankivell, Dan Kelly, Andrew Smith; JJ Hanrahan, Craig Casey (C); Jeremy Loughman, Diarmuid Barron, Michael Ala’alatoa; Edwin Edogbo, Fineen Wycherley; Tom Ahern, John Hodnett, Gavin Coombes.
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Replacements: Lee Barron, Josh Wycherley, Conor Bartley, Jack O’Donoghue, Brian Gleeson, Ben O’Donovan, Seán O’Brien, Alex Kendellen.
Unavailable for selection this week:
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Michael Milne (calf)
Oli Jager (head)
Tadhg Beirne (knee)
Jean Kleyn (bicep)
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Tom Farrell (shoulder)
Calvin Nash (hamstring)
Jack Crowley (leg)
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Connacht Boosted By Returning Leaders
Connacht have their own injury issues, but there is positive news too. Josh Ioane has completed return-to-play protocols and is available for selection. David Hawkshaw and Academy centre Sean Walsh are due to integrate into training, while Caolin Blade and Dave Heffernan continue to be monitored.
Denis Buckley is unavailable, while Cathal Forde and Matthew Victory are both ruled out for the rest of the season. There are no updates on Temi Lasisi, Oisin Dowling, Oisin McCormack, Byron Ralston, Mack Hansen or Finn Treacy.
The likely return of Bundee Aki and Finlay Bealham after being held back from the South African trip is a major lift. Aki, in particular, feels central to this match. His battle with Alex Nankivell could set the tone for the entire night.
The McMillan Pressure Adds Another Layer
Munster head coach Clayton McMillan comes into this fixture under pressure, not simply because of the league table, but because of the wider uncertainty created by the reversal around bringing in Roger Randle next season.
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Munster are still well positioned, but Munster expectation is different. A poor finish to the regular season, particularly one involving an interpro defeat in Galway, would only sharpen the scrutiny.
That is what makes this such a fascinating coaching test. Munster need control, discipline and clarity. Connacht will want tempo, noise and emotional energy. If the game becomes loose, Connacht will fancy themselves. If Munster can slow it down, kick well and force Connacht to play from deep, they have enough experience to drag the match into their type of contest.
The Scoring Leaders
Connacht’s attacking threat has been spread, but Sean Jansen has been the standout try scorer this season.
Connacht Top Try Scorers
Tries
Sean Jansen
9
Matthew Devine
5
Paul Boyle
4
Connacht Top Points Scorers
Points
Sam Gilbert
72
Sean Naughton
55
Sean Jansen
45
Matthew Devine
25
Munster’s scoring profile is more forward-driven, with Alex Kendellen and John Hodnett leading their try chart.
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Munster Top Try Scorers
Tries
Alex Kendellen
5
John Hodnett
5
Brian Gleeson
4
Gavin Coombes
4
Munster Top Points Scorers
Points
Jack Crowley
64
Alex Kendellen
25
JJ Hanrahan
25
John Hodnett
25
The History Favours Munster, But Galway Has Shifted
The overall URC record between the provinces remains heavily in Munster’s favour. Munster have won 38 of their URC meetings with Connacht, while Connacht have won nine. There has been one draw.
Munster’s broader URC record is also far superior: 325 wins from 497 matches, a 65.39% win rate. Connacht’s URC record stands at 193 wins from 476, a 40.55% win rate.
But history will not make tackles on Saturday night.
Connacht’s only win in their last six meetings with Munster was a 22-9 victory at Dexcom Stadium on New Year’s Day 2024. However, Munster have lost on their last three visits to Galway. That recent Galway trend matters far more than the long-term numbers.
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Where The Game Will Be Won
The first key area is the breakdown. Without Beirne, Munster lose their most disruptive presence over the ball. That gives Connacht a real opportunity to play quicker than Munster would like.
The second is the lineout and maul. Munster traditionally use those areas to build pressure, win penalties and squeeze territory. Without Beirne and Kleyn, that platform becomes less imposing.
The third is the emotional temperature of the game. Connacht need to use the sold-out crowd without becoming frantic. Their best rugby comes when they play with tempo but not panic. Munster, meanwhile, must survive the early storm and make Connacht work for every metre.
The fourth is Crowley’s control. If he dictates territory, Munster can win. If Connacht get after him and force hurried exits, the home crowd will smell blood.
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Prediction: Connacht By 8
Munster have the pedigree, the playoff experience and enough quality to make this uncomfortable for Connacht. But the injury profile is hard to ignore.
No Tadhg Beirne. No Jean Kleyn. No Oli Jager. No Calvin Nash. No Tom Farrell.
That is a serious amount of power, leadership and quality missing for an away interpro in Galway.
Connacht, by contrast, look like a side peaking at the right time. Their home form is strong, Aki and Bealham should bring serious authority back into the team, and the crowd will be worth a few points if the game is tight late on.
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This feels like a night where Connacht’s urgency, freshness and home momentum should be enough.
Bo Levi Mitchell has a long memory that served him well on Thursday.
The Hamilton Tiger-Cats quarterback remembered last season’s trip to Winnipeg in September that ended with an embarrassing 40-3 loss.
The 14-year veteran decided to try to do something about it for Thursday night’s Blue Bombers’ home opener and it seemed to spark a 37-27 Ticats’ victory.
“I could see it the entire week of practice, I could see it on the travel — things were different, guys were locked in,” Mitchell said.
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“I switched up literally everything that I do, like my routine I’ve done it for 14, 15 years. Superstition-wise, I’m like I’m changing everything.”
That included not going to the casino on game day. Instead, he went to a steakhouse and paid the bill for a number of his teammates. Instead of taking a ride share to Princess Auto Stadium with a couple of players, he jumped on the team bus.
“Just trying to change things up, change up the juju,” Mitchell said.
He ended up completing 19 of 24 pass attempts for 287 yards with three touchdowns — two to Kiondre Smith — and no interceptions. He even had a 15-yard run to keep a drive alive that ended with a TD toss to Max Mang.
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“Got five yards in and my legs gave out,” Mitchell joked. “I would have loved to throw the ball for a touchdown, but it feels good on a second-and-long any time you can get a first down as a quarterback, especially as a 36-year-old guy, it felt good to help the team there.”
The Ticats were coming off an overtime loss to Montreal and moved to 1-1, the first time the team hasn’t opened a season 0-2 since 2019.
Winnipeg (1-1) was playing in front of a 15th consecutive capacity crowd of 32,343 in a game that featured on-and-off downpours.
Hamilton also got a touchdown off a quarterback sneak from backup Jake Dolegala. Marc Liegghio was good on field goals from 53, 46 and 23 yards and hit four converts.
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“I thought Bo was amazing under the conditions, against a really good defence,” Ticats head coach Scott Milanovich said.
“The big run on second-and-14, I think ended with a touchdown if I remember correctly. We needed every point we could get tonight, so I thought Bo played a hell of a game.”
Winnipeg squeezed the score 34-27 with 2:12 remaining in the game, but the Ticats put in backup quarterback Tre Ford for the first snap and he peeled off 23-yard run.
Mitchell then led the offence down the field for a Liegghio 23-yarder to seal the victory with 35 seconds left on the clock.
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Bombers quarterback Zach Collaros was 28-of-35 passing for 421 yards, two TDs and one interception.
“You know what, offensively we just left points on the field,” Collaros said of his huge yardage that didn’t come with a victory.
“Obviously, it starts with me turning the football over there in the second quarter, going into halftime. You can’t do that. That’s at least three points for us.”
Receivers Nic Demski and Ontaria Wilson scored for Winnipeg and backup quarterback Bryce Perkins plunged over the goal line. Sergio Castillo connected on field goals from 19 and 45 yards, but missed from 43 yards out. He made three converts.
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Bombers receiver Tommy Nield led all receivers with eight catches for 126 yards.
Hamilton rookie American running back Larry Rountree III finished the game with 23 carries for 124 yards. Bombers veteran star Brady Oliveira was held to eight runs for 32 yards.
“I don’t think he took us by surprise,” Winnipeg head coach Mike O’Shea said of Rountree. “There’s no play design in defensive football that says we’re going to leave two gaps uncovered.
“So if it happens, if there’s a big space there, somebody’s not in the right gap. And then you compound it by missing a tackle, and those big yards are made.”
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Winnipeg led 10-7 after the first quarter and the Tiger-Cats had a 24-10 edge at halftime. It was 24-13 heading into the fourth.
Notes: Hamilton defensive back Jamal Peters was taken off the field on a stretcher almost nine minutes into the first quarter. He was tackling Nield and his helmet hit Nield’s knee. The Ticats announced on social media Peters was conscious and in good spirits on the way to hospital. Milanovich said he didn’t have update.
RALEIGH, N.C. — Eleven days ago, before this electrifying circus of a Stanley Cup Final began, Jordan Staal sat calmly in his.
He shared a slice of wisdom that is proving poignant if not downright prescient, now that the captain’s Carolina Hurricanes have systematically clawed their way within one win of a championship.
“Who does it better and who stays patient long enough in their game, I think, is the biggest thing,” Staal said.
The 37-year-old already understood that momentum swings and costly mistakes and bad penalties and tough injuries and questionable coaching calls would attempt to derail both powerhouses, to distract them from the task, to plant a morsel of doubt.
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“It’s a matter of imposing your will until they crack and call uncle,” Staal continued, before the puck dropped once. “The team that holds strong as long as they can and stays true to what they’re trying to do is going to have a better chance of winning.”
Well, with just two games or half that left in the NHL season, and leaving the city of Raleigh rocking with Thursday’s pivotal Game 5 comeback, the Canes look more able.
For the first time all post-season, the Vegas Golden Knights are showing hints they might crack — but they certainly aren’t crying quit.
“I’m gonna leave my clothes here, that’s for sure,” Vegas coach John Tortorella proclaimed, the Laundry Guarantee. “They’ll be in the hotel.”
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How much does it cost to FedEx a bundle of quarter-zips from North Carolina to the Strip?
Because if Game 6 looks anything like Game 5 — the most convincing 60 minutes by either side in a series decided by slivers — Game 7 will not be necessary.
“Lookin’ more and more like Hurricane hockey. And yet, we got to keep ridin’,” Staal said, following a 4-2 game win that he hopes leads into a 4-2 series win.
The well-conditioned home team was just a notch faster and a little more disciplined. They’ve suffered one less injury and are now dressing the better goalie. And their relentless pressure has led to at least four goals per night. Who cares if the production is by committee?
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“We want to be aggressive and tight. And when you’re tight like that, it doesn’t really give opponents a lot of time and space to make those plays, and you can… I don’t want to say catch them by surprise, but sometimes guys aren’t expecting players to be so tight,” defenceman Sean Walker said.
“Earlier in the playoffs, you saw us really dominate, take over games, and it really didn’t feel like the other teams were getting any chances at all. And tonight was pretty close to that. So, we’ll look to do that in Vegas.”
Coach Rod Brind’Amour has made a couple subtle but key adjustments — the right-wing flip of Jordan Martinook and Seth Jarvis sticks out — and formerly weak spots in the Canes’ game are gaining strength.
The power play, which struck twice Thursday, is humming. The second-period woes morphed into second-period encores of Petey Pablo. And don’t look now, but the previously chilly Andrei Svechnikov and Sebastian Aho are only getting hotter as the series deepens.
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First star Svechnikov admitted that he’s been putting a whack of pressure on himself lately. He’d mustered just two points through Games 1 and 4 and went shotless in two of those. He couldn’t even sleep the night before Game 5’s two-goal performance.
“This is biggest win in my life,” the streaky sniper said. “But thank God we won that game.
“We’ve got one more in us.”
If Svechnikov’s double-five-hole snipe — through the wickets of both defender Jeremy Lauzon, then Carter Hart — was sweet, Aho’s blade-to-tape-to-roof conversion was the cherry on top.
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“That’s the reason why Aho is one of the best players in the league, and why he’s been so successful for so long and in the playoffs,” Walker said. “And when he’s playing his game and doing things like that, it’s special to watch.”
Yes, the potholes in Carolina’s path to a parade are getting filled in, one by one. While new ones are popping up for the Golden Knights.
We’d be foolish to write either team off here, but Tortorella’s methodical bunch now has questions in net, up the middle, and on the penalty kill it used too often in Game 5.
The Knights will be better, rest assured.
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The thing that might crack them at the Fortress, though, is that the Hurricanes can taste it now. And they believe they, too, can improve.
“There’s still another level that we’re gonna need to get to,” Brind’Amour said, “to find that next one.”
If the Canes reach that gear, some five-star hotel in downtown Raleigh will get stuck with a bunch of metal-grey Golden Knights tracksuits in its lost and found.
• Hart’s Stanley Cup Final save percentage: .856.
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He’s the only goalie to give up at least four goals in each of the Final’s first five games.
Did Tortorella consider making a switch for the third period?
“Oh, for Christ,” the coach snapped. “That could be the stupidest question I’ve heard.”
Don’t expect Tortorella to tap to an ice-cold backup Adin Hill now; the Cup champ hasn’t played a hockey game since April 9. Hasn’t won a game since March.
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But Hart doesn’t frighten the Canes, and at 24 consecutive starts — with OTs added — his workload may be catching up with him.
• William Karlsson suffered an apparent left wrist/forearm injury when getting crunched into the board by Walker in the second period. He didn’t take another shift, and no update on his health was provided postgame.
First significant injury on either side. The score was 1-1 before Karlsson left, and Vegas’s centre depth couldn’t hang.
“Any time you can lay a hit on somebody, it’s going to take its toll and wear them down,” Walker said. “I’m just trying to do my part. We have a lot of guys that are really physical, and it’s a key to our success.”
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The captain became the first player since 1956 (Jean Beliveau) to score goals in each of the first five games of a Cup Final.
Maurice Richard (1951) and Cyclone Taylor (1918) are the only others to accomplish the feat. Throwback stat for a throwback performer.
“Yeah, it’s good company,” Staal allowed. “But I’m looking for wins.”
• A resplendently berobed Mike Commodore revving the siren and flailing his Sideshow Bob hairdo as nemesis Mike Babcock makes news during the Cup Final is something else:
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• Frederik Andersen hasn’t spoken publicly nor practised with his teammates since getting pulled midway through Game 3. He has hit the ice a couple times alone and is said to be healthy.
So necessary is the goalie’s break, AHLer Amir Miftakhov was recalled from the Chicago Wolves for this one — even though Carolina’s farm team is prepping to face the Toronto Marlies in the Calder Cup Finals, which begins Friday in Chicago.
Miftakhov, not Andersen, was reportedly Carolina’s Game 5 EBUG. Not to be forgotten here is Andersen’s grief over friend and agent Claude Lemieux’s sudden death.
The FIFA World Cup 2026 could not have hoped for a more dramatic start. Mexico beat South Africa 2-0 in the opening match, but it was not the co-hosts’ goalscorers who hogged the limelight. Brazilian referee Wilton Sampaio became the biggest trending topic on social media after the tournament opener, having shown a whopping three straight red cards during the game. The second game turned out to be a thriller, with three goals scored in the second half as South Korea came from behind to secure a 2-1 win.
Mexico 2-0 South Africa Highlights:
Mexico, the co-hosts of the tournament, scored two goals to secure a convincing win, but the game made headlines for an undisciplined performance from the players, which saw the referee issue three red cards. Julian Quinones scored the first goal of the World Cup in the ninth minute, booting a cross through the legs of South Africa goalkeeper Ronwen Williams. El Tri made it 2-0 midway through the second half when veteran Raul Jimenez delivered a header that found the back of the net.
South Africa’s Sphephelo Sithole and Themba Zwane, along with Mexico’s Cesar Montes, were sent off from the World Cup opener after receiving straight red cards.
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South Korea 2-1 Czechia Highlights:
South Korea rallied for a 2-1 win over Czechia in Guadalajara, Mexico, with all three goals scored in an entertaining second half. Hwang In-beom emerged as the player of the match for the Koreans, scoring a goal and setting up another to earn his side a hard-fought victory.
Czechia captain Ladislav Krejci opened the scoring for his team in the 59th minute, before South Korea’s equaliser came as the clock hit the 67-minute mark. Hwang, who plays for Dutch club Feyenoord, then delivered a cross from the right flank for Oh Hyeon-gyu’s decisive strike in the 80th minute, sealing the win in a match played in front of hundreds of empty seats at the Guadalajara Stadium.
Donald Trump is set to be absent from the Los Angeles Stadium when USA begin their 2026 World Cup against Paraguay on Friday night.
The US are one of three co-hosts staging the tournament in North America alongside Mexico and Canada, and each nation’s opening game will feature its own opening ceremony.
State figureheads usually appear at their country’s first match of the tournament and Trump was expected to be in the stands. Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani attended Qatar’s opening game against Ecuador in 2022, and Vladimir Putin watched Russia’s first game of the 2018 World Cup against Saudi Arabia in Moscow.
But it has been widely reported that the US president will not attend, barring a late U-turn, instead leaving secretary of state Mark Rubio to travel from Washington with transport secretary Sean Duffy and secretary of homeland security Markwayne Mullin.
Trump will be at the White House on Saturday evening, however, to host a UFC event, dubbed UFC Freedom, in celebration of his 80th birthday and the USA’s 250th anniversary.
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Donald Trump salutes before the college football game between the US Army and Navy at the M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore last December (AFP/Getty)
His appearances have not always been welcomed. Trump was loudly booed at the NBA Finals last week after being shown on big screens. His vice-president, JD Vance, was booed at the Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Milan earlier this year.
The start of the tournament has been clouded in controversy around high ticket prices and America’s strict border controls. Fans from more than half the qualified countries need visas to enter the United States, adding cost and uncertainty for travellers already wary of tight border enforcement.
The Trump administration also denied a Somali referee entry over alleged links to “suspected members of terror organisations”.
Indian sports lost one of its most decorated servants on Thursday night as shooting coach and multiple Asian Games gold medal winner Jaspal Rana died due to a heart problem. Rana, who was also the coach of double Olympic medal-winner Manu Bhaker, died at a mere 49 years of age after battling cardiac complications. As the news of Rana’s death emerged, his Instagram bio came to the fore, leaving fans stunned by how much Rana was in sync with the reality of life. His Instagram bio became a major talking point on social media as fans and the sporting fraternity mourned his passing.
Rana’s Instagram bio read: “Jab mrityu nishchit ho, swayam ko achhe kaaran ke liye samarpit karna sarvottam hai (When death is certain, it is best to dedicate oneself to a good cause).”
In his own way, Rana highlighted that since death is an absolute certainty, wasting our limited time on trivial pursuits is meaningless. The most honourable way to live is to dedicate our lives to a noble cause that helps others and creates a lasting legacy.
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The shooting coach is survived by his wife, Reena Rana, daughter Devanshi, son Yuvraj, father Narayan Singh Rana, and his two siblings, Sushma Singh and Subhash Rana. According to National Rifle Association of India (NRAI) president Kalikesh Narayan Singh Deo, Rana breathed his last at a Delhi hospital on Thursday night. Sources said he died of complications related to the heart.
He recently underwent a medical procedure after falling ill during the Indian contingent’s return flight from the ISSF World Cup in Munich, Germany. Upon landing in New Delhi, he was immediately hospitalised and had a stent installed to clear a cardiac blockage. According to sources, despite initial reports of him being stable, his condition deteriorated.
Rana was serving as the high-performance coach for Indian pistol shooters. The former shooter, who was considered a maverick in Indian shooting circles for his outspoken demeanour and passion for the sport, was a prodigal talent and won his first national-level gold at just 12 years of age.
His international breakthroughs were the 25m gold medals at the 1994 Commonwealth and Asian Games.
In fact, the Asiad gold was India’s first in 16 years after Raja Randhir Singh opened the account in 1978. Randhir had passed away recently after battling age-related ailments.
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Rana’s biggest moment as a shooter came in the 2006 Asian Games when he snared three gold medals and a silver in a sensational performance that included equalling the world record at the time.
With PTI Inputs
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It would be fitting if Ireland’s first win in the T20 World Cup came against the Scots given they denied the Irish a place in the tournament two years ago as they pulled off a shock victory to reach the tournament for the first time.
Lewis said there was “major heartbreak” in the Ireland camp after that sore defeat that forced the squad to have to watch the World Cup from home.
Ireland are in a better place now and come into the tournament off the back of a productive Tri-Nations series in Clontarf where they beat both Pakistan and the West Indies.
“The series was a great success, we’ve got the results behind us. Confidence is high and that’s exactly what you want going into a World Cup,” Lewis added.
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Lloyd Tennant’s side are ranked ninth in the world but are in a tough Group B which also has hosts England, holders New Zealand, Sri Lanka and West Indies alongside the Scots.
They will face all five sides with the top two in the group moving through to the semi-finals where they will face the top two from Group A.
Scotland won by 39 runs the last time the two sides met in Nepal in January and Lewis believes getting off to a good start in their first game is “massive” for Ireland in terms of momentum.
“There’s a big rivalry between us and them. They’ve probably got one up on us at the moment after beating us in Nepal. I think we’re looking good and we’re really excited for it.
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“They’ve got a new addition in Kirsty Gordon [a former England spinner] which is a boost for them.
“If we get the win, then you never know against England.”
NHL fans on social media reacted to John Tortorella’s fiery response when asked if he considered pulling Carter Hart for Adin Hill in the third period of Game 5.
The Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final on Thursday. The Canes now lead the series 3-2.
Carter Hart had another rough outing, allowing 4 goals on just 24 shots for a brutal .833 save percentage. He’s now allowed at least 4 goals in each of the first 5 games of the final, a tough stretch for the veteran.
When asked post-game if he considered switching to Adin Hill, Tortorella responded bluntly:
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“Oh Christ, that might be the stupidest question I’ve ever heard,” Tortorella said.
Here’s how fans on X (formerly called Twitter) reacted to John Tortorella’s response. One tweeted:
“If Torts wanted to make a goalie switch, this was probably the game to do it. I just don’t think that you can start a guy cold in a do-or-die game.”
Here are some of the other top reactions on X:
“Stupid for going to the goalie that got us our first cup? What?” a third fan wrote.”
“Torts It doesn’t matter anymore. Hart Needs a break. He has played way too many consecutive games and he is exhausted and tired. Hill has to come in. It doesn’t matter what you want. It’s what needs to happen. Hart isn’t in the zone ATM,” one X user opined.
“I do not have confidence Hill would be any better. However, to say that’s a stupid question seems like a really odd thing to say,” another chimed in.
“Well, he’s not signed past the playoffs!” added another.
Hurricanes move one step closer to Stanley Cup after Game 5 win over Golden Knights
Golden Knights vs Hurricanes Game 5 – Source: Imagn
On Thursday, the Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 in Game 5 at Lenovo Center. The Hurricanes lead the series 3-2 and are only a win away from clinching their second title.
Pavel Dorofeyev opened the scoring for the Golden Knights on the power play at 8:52 of the first period. Jordan Staal tied it 1-1 for the Hurricanes before heading into the second period.
Andrei Svechnikov increased the Hurricanes’ lead to 2-1 on the power play at 11:58 of the second period. Sebastian Aho increased the lead to 3-1 before heading into the third period.
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Svechnikov scored his second on the power play to make it 4-1 for the Hurricanes at 11:08 of the third frame. Dorofeyev scored his second for the final scoreline of 4-2. Game 6 returns to Vegas on Sunday.
Texas Tech’s Brendan Sorsby goes through warmups before the spring football game, Friday, April 17, 2026, at Jones AT&T Stadium.
With the Big 12 weighing how to handle the court-mandated eligibility of Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby, the office of Texas attorney general Ken Paxton warned the conference against sanctioning the Red Raiders.
The 15 Big 12 athletic directors excluding Texas Tech met Tuesday and unanimously expressed their opposition to Sorsby playing for the Red Raiders. The conference presidents met Thursday and a full board meeting is scheduled for Monday, with the Big 12 pondering how to proceed.
Earlier this week, a district court judge in Texas granted Sorsby a temporary injunction, stopping the NCAA from ruling him ineligible. The NCAA had reached that decision after court documents filed by Sorsby’s legal team showed the quarterback placed at least 40 bets on the Indiana football team while a member of the program in 2022 and 2023. In all, he wagered about $90,000 over a four-year period. He entered an addiction treatment program on April 27.
Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark wrote in a statement on Thursday, “Shortly before the start of today’s Big 12 Executive Board meeting, the Conference received a letter from the Texas Attorney General’s office notifying the Conference of potential legal action from Texas Tech if the Conference pursues certain actions under its Bylaws. We are taking time with our legal counsel to understand the concerns of the state and will meet again with the full Board next week.
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“We moved forward with our Executive Board today in preparation for our full Board meeting on Monday. We had a good and informative discussion. Sentiment among the Executive Board was no different from what we heard from the ADs earlier this week.”
The NCAA went to the Court of Appeals for the Seventh District of Texas in Amarillo, Texas, earlier this week and asked for an “accelerated appeal” of the temporary injunction that restored Sorsby’s eligibility.
Raúl Jiménez could no longer hold back his emotions on the field and with tears in his eye, the Mexican player celebrated a goal that crowned his football comeback from five years ago.
Now 35 years old, the Fulham striker has played in his home country, Portugal, Spain and England, and is currently on his way to becoming his country’s all-time leading scorer.
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His goal in Thursday’s 2-0 win over South Africa was the 46th for his country in his 125th appearance, moving him joint second in Mexico’s list of goalscorers, behind only Javier Hernandez on 52.
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Above all, however, Jiménez is a man who has already fought for his life. In November 2020, he was knocked unconscious after a clash of heads with Arsenal defender David Luiz.
Jiménez, back then a Wolves player, had to be stretchered off and immediately taken to a hospital for severe head trauma. It was confirmed later that he had fractured his skull and he needed surgery soon after hospitalization, effectively ending his season.
In August 2021, he made his comeback and since then, he has been playing with a headband that protects his scar.
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Like in 2014 and 2018, he competed with Mexico at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. A World Cup goal, however, only came in June 2026 – and on home soil.
“I’m very happy and thrilled to be living this dream and to be standing here,” he said after the match. According to Mexican media reports, Jiménez dedicated his goal to his father, who had died in March at the age of 62.
Team-mate Julian Quinones, who scored Mexico’s opening goal, said: “We really congratulated him because he gives a lot to the team. Being part of a team is our pride and it’s wonderful he continues to add goals to his career as a player in our national team.”
England midfielder Jude Bellingham has stressed the importance of needing to “feel loved” as he looks to help them enjoy World Cup success this summer.
The tournament in North America got under way on Thursday as Mexico – hosts alongside USA and Canada – beat South Africa 2-0.
England’s tournament does not get under way until next Wednesday, when they take on Croatia in Arlington, Texas.
Bellingham was part of the England squad that reached the final of Euro 2024, where they were beaten by Spain.
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However, the national team – then managed by Gareth Southgate – were often accused of playing poorly in that tournament, with Bellingham saying previously he felt like a bit of a scapegoat for England’s failure to win that tournament.
Bellingham admitted something felt that the group were “not quite connected” during the Euros but has stressed there is a different feel around the camp now.
“At the Euros we got some things a little bit wrong off the pitch,” he said on England’s Lions’ Den show.
“I don’t feel like the group connected as well as it could have for a number of reasons. Expectation was part of it – we had done well in 2018 and done well in Qatar [for the 2022 World Cup] and when it came to that tournament we were seen as one of two or three teams that should win it.
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“We were not playing particularly well so even when we were winning you didn’t get the feeling you were as happy as you should be.
“There has to be that element of relentless and wanting to win but it is the nature of football that wins go out of the system quickly and we should hold on to that moment a little more.
“I think this time round having those experiences… and knowing, for example, that the guy who scores the winning goal in the World Cup final isn’t always the one you’d bet your house on so you’ve always got to be ready, everyone’s got to feel loved and feel a huge part of the team. The other thing is just to enjoy it.”
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