Chris Waller brings a formidable squad to the Scone two-day carnival, with particular excitement surrounding the comeback of Sun God.
The five-year-old joins up to 18 from the elite trainer’s stable for his seasonal debut in the Listed Luskin Star Stakes (1300m) on Saturday.
Having claimed three triumphs from 14 starts down under, the European recruit’s last win was at a mile on Randwick in February, delivering useful knowledge to his connections.
In England, Sun God succeeded at 2400m, but Waller assesses his optimal distances in Australia as shorter, supported by his racing record here.
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“Sun God, I’m looking forward to him resuming,” Waller said.
“Last ‘prep’, we learned that a mile sees him out. It will be interesting to see how he runs fresh, and he has drawn well.”
Sun God enters with a first-up success previously and barrier two in the full lineup of 16 alongside four emergencies.
The trainer’s other participant is the reliable Captain Furai, as Waterford eyes Friday’s Scone Cup (1600m) more than the sprint despite dual entries.
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“Captain Furai, he has a slightly tricky draw (barrier 10) but gee, he’s racing consistently,” Waller said.
“He needs luck from that draw, but he has trained on really well. He’ll be four weeks between runs so he’s nice and fresh.
“Waterford will most likely run in the Cup. That’s our preference.”
Differently, Chica Mojito is inclined towards Saturday’s Dark Jewel Classic (1400m), drawing 12 in that fillies and mares showcase against 18 for the Cup.
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According to Waller, getting breaks in running will decide outcomes on Saturday amid the 10 maxed-out fields.
“They’re big fields and it’s a good, fair track, but you need a bit of luck,” he said.
Notably, the Midway Handicap (1700m) will run with 15 of 16 possible horses.
Aaron Rai said he owes a first major victory that was beyond his “wildest imagination” to his wife and parents as the Englishman stunned the field to win the US PGA Championship.
The 31-year-old from Wolverhampton, who is the first English winner of the event since 1919 and only the fifth European to win it, fought off a stellar field at Aronimink Golf Club with moments of pure brilliance to shoot a closing 65 and win by three shots.
A brilliant eagle at the ninth ignited a round which was highlighted by a majestic 69-foot birdie on 17 as Rai evoked Philadelphia’s Rocky-style underdog spirit.
“To be stood here is definitely outside of my wildest imagination,” Rai said.
Rai is known for wearing two gloves and using covers on his irons due to his respect for what he has – harking back to the Titleist clubs his father bought him as a child, which he used to clean with a pin and baby oil.
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Born in Wolverhampton to working-class parents, he hailed the sacrifices they made to help his fledgling career.
“It’s probably hard for me to really express everything that I feel towards them,” Rai said.
“I think I’ll get way too emotional to speak. My dad was with me every day that I went to practice from the age of four, five years old. He actually quit his job and started to focus on my golf from a really young age.
“My mum has been absolutely incredible as well. She worked extremely long hours to just provide for the house really. I can’t put into words how much they’ve done in terms of the support, in terms of the care, in terms of love. I wouldn’t be here without them at all.”
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Rai is married to Gaurika Bishnoi, herself a professional golfer on the Ladies European Tour, who sat at the front as he spoke to the media with the Wanamaker Trophy alongside him.
“I wouldn’t be here without her. Both as a companion, as a friend, as someone I’m sharing my life with, but also as a real support system for my game,” Rai added.
“Her mindset, her advice, her thoughts, whether it’s technique or the way I’m holding myself is absolutely invaluable.”
Rai went into the final round in a group on four under par, alongside the likes of Jon Rahm and Ludvig Aberg, two back from leader Alex Smalley.
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With major champions Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele in a bunch just one behind and 21 players within four shots of the lead, it was a question of who could make their charge.
Justin Thomas shot 65 early on to set the clubhouse mark at five under as Smalley dropped back, but Rai was the man who found the answer, overcoming three early bogeys to pull clear and finish at nine under.
That left him three clear of Rahm and Smalley, while McIlroy was unable to find the final-round spark to carry him to back-to-back majors as he finished five adrift.
Rai is widely regarded as one of the nicest players in golf. Everyone who spoke in the wake of his victory pointed to his kindness and humility.
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“I think a lot of that has come from my upbringing,” he said. “Golf was always a very big part of my life from a very young age, but my mum and my siblings were very fast to continue to reinforce the importance of just being a good person and trying to do the right things away from golf.”
Rai’s victory ended America’s 10-year grip on the event and he is the first English winner since the first champion, Jim Barnes.
“Extremely, extremely proud,” Rai said. “There’s a lot of incredible and historic English players over those hundred years who have gone on to achieve incredible things and had phenomenal careers.
“But to win this event and then to be the person that’s the first one to have won it in a long time from England is an amazing thing.”
The Hammers, who trail Tottenham by two points, could go down on Tuesday night if Spurs win at Chelsea, where even a draw would leave them on the brink ahead of their final game of the campaign at home to Leeds.
A section of the travelling support made their feelings abundantly clear on the final whistle, and Nuno had no problem with that.
He said: “It hurts a lot, of course. This is our job, this is our life, but the fans are right and today they show their anger and frustration and they have reasons to.
“It hurts, it hurts the boys, it hurts us, it hurts the club. That’s why this week we should finish the season with dignity and respect for the fans.
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“We should do better so we can show at the London Stadium to our fans a different performance and attitude in terms of the game.“Anything is possible. Let’s wait for Tuesday. Even though it’s difficult, we’re still alive. Let’s see. There’s some hope.
“But more than anything is respect. Let’s prepare ourselves and show a better performance. This is what our fans deserve.”
Vaibhav Sooryavanshi has continued to dominate IPL 2026 with his fearless batting at the top, producing explosive starts almost every time he walks out for Rajasthan Royals. The 15-year-old has not always converted those starts into big scores, but his impact in the Powerplay has consistently set the tone for RR’s innings. Sooryavanshi has now scored 486 runs in 12 matches this season, including one century and two half-centuries. His aggressive intent has regularly taken Rajasthan past 60 runs inside the first six overs, giving their middle order a strong platform to build on. He once again made a strong impact against Delhi Capitals, smashing 46 off just 21 balls as RR reached 75/1 at the end of the Powerplay in another high-tempo start. In the process, the 15-year-old opener went past Abhishek Sharma’s previous record of 42 sixes from IPL 2024 and now sits alone at the top with 43 maximums this season. The milestone further highlighted the fearless batting approach that has turned Sooryavanshi into one of the biggest stars of IPL 2026. Speaking during the broadcast, RR head coach Kumar Sangakkara praised the youngster’s intent and said the team is focused more on his impact than conversion rates. “Rather take 30 than not much on any day, especially the speed at which he gets them. Yes, he hasn’t continued as much as we would like or he would like. But I think the fact is that he’s hitting the ball well, he’s getting us those really quick-fire starts, and we have six to seven other batters who can then really continue the pressure and extend those partnerships,” Sangakkara said. He added that Sooryavanshi’s biggest strength is his natural approach to batting. “The most exciting thing is just how he looks at batting. He looks at it like all of us should as a 15-year-old, as a kid would. He loves it, he bats for long hours, and that’s the most exciting thing. He really reads the game as well, so it’s not just mindless hitting with him,” he said. Sangakkara also stressed that RR avoid overloading him with technical instruction. “He’s very curious, but I’m very careful not to have too long a chat with him. He just needs to relax and bat. If we do chat, it’s a lot about other things other than cricket. A few things here and there, but I just like to leave him alone to enjoy what he does,” he added. On preparation, Sangakkara revealed that conversations in the nets are more about reading situations than technical corrections. “In the nets, those are the things we really talk about. When he practices, we kind of have a chat with him about what the bowlers might do, and he has an idea of what they might do to him – the short ball, the swinging yorker. So we’ll practice those a little bit, but the more we tell him is just to commit. Whatever you do and you decide to do, you have to be 100% committed to that option,” he explained. When asked if he takes a mentoring or father-figure role, Sangakkara was clear that Sooryavanshi does not need that level of intervention. “No, no. He doesn’t need that at all. He’s a much better player than I would ever be, so he needs a little help but not too much,” he said.
INDIANAPOLIS — Caitlin Clark scored 21 points and had 10 assists and seven rebounds to lead the Indiana Fever to an 89-78 win over the Seattle Storm on Sunday night.
It was Clark’s 11th game with at least 20 points and 10 assists, the most in WNBA history. Kelsey Mitchell and reserve Sophie Cunningham added 17 points apiece for Indiana (2-2), which won its first at home after two losses.
Indiana was without All-Star Aliyah Boston, who missed her first game in her four years as a pro. She had played in 275 consecutive games, including her four years at South Carolina. Boston left Indiana’s previous game with a lower right leg injury and is listed day to day.
Natisha Hiedeman scored 19 points to lead the Storm (1-3). Flau’jae Johnson added 14, reserve Zia Cook had 13 and Jade Melbourne 12.
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The Fever had a 15-0 run in the first quarter and led by as many as 17 points before leading 32-19 after one quarter. The Storm cut the deficit to nine before Indiana took a 55-44 lead at the half.
Clark had 17 at the break.
Despite holding Clark to two free throws in the third quarter — and those came with less than a second to go — the Storm were outscored 22-14 to trail 77-58.
The lead reached 20 in the fourth quarter as the Fever took advantage of Seattle’s lack of interior defense for a 50-30 advantage in points in the paint and held the Storm’s front court players to 17 points.
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Storm: Head home for two games against Connecticut, the only team they have beaten, beginning Wednesday.
Fever: Faces Portland on Wednesday in the third game of a four-game homestand.
There are two types of NBA MVPs, at least with the benefit of historical hindsight. There are the guys, and there are the guys between the guys. Some MVPs get trophies. Some get eras.
There’s a collective agreement among most basketball observers, at least with the benefit of hindsight, that players like Michael Jordan, LeBron James and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar probably should have more MVP trophies. Each had an undisputed decade-long reign as the NBA’s best player. Whether it was voter fatigue or down years or narratives or baseball sabbaticals, none of them were honored to the extent that they probably should have been. They frankly didn’t need to be. Their legacies were bigger than a single, contextual award.
The MVP award doesn’t function the same way for all winners. For the Karl Malones, Derrick Roses and Bob McAdoos of the world, the award is a peak. It is an acknowledgment of a moment in time in which they touched immortality, even if they didn’t quite grab it. When we talk about Steve Nash, the MVP awards are the first things that come up, and the second, even if it’s reductive and unfair, is the notion that Nash winning those trophies at the peak of Kobe Bryant’s and Tim Duncan’s powers is a bit of an oddity.
When we talk about Magic Johnson, the MVPs are a footnote. There’s no need to define him by a trophy because it was simply understood that the NBA, for a time, belonged to him, and the trophies are just a manifestation of what we understood implicitly. That’s how MVPs tend to function in all-time conversations. They’re table stakes for the sort of historical company players like this are trying to keep. You have to have them, but having them in and of itself does not punch a ticket into the pantheon.
Nikola Jokić straddles that line. In truth, we’ll probably look back on the period between 2019 and 2025 as the parity era, but Jokić was, by near total consensus, its best player. We all think we know what’s coming next. If Victor Wembanyama stays healthy, it feels as though the unquestioned dominion that Jordan and James once held over the league for sustained periods is suddenly back on the table. At some point soon, Wembanyama is probably going to be the league’s best player, and if he does the things we think he can once he’s there, the next era of NBA history will almost certainly belong to him.
Just having the trophies puts Gilgeous-Alexander in incredible company. He’s now the 14th player to win consecutive MVPs, joining Nash, Malone, Johnson, Jordan, James, Abdul-Jabbar, Duncan, Jokić, Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, Larry Bird, Stephen Curry and Giannis Antetokounmpo.
The numbers that generated those trophies are just as impressive. Only Curry and Antetokounmpo have ever posted higher effective field goal percentages in 30-point-per-game seasons than Gilgeous-Alexander did. Only Jordan ever won MVP at guard committing fewer turnovers per possession, and remember, he was a shooting guard while Gilgeous-Alexander is a point guard. Only one player, Luka Dončić, scored more total points than Gilgeous-Alexander this season. But 39 players touched the ball more times than he did.
There is already a real legacy here. Gilgeous-Alexander is practically breaking efficiency scales, generating a mind-boggling number of points per touch and shot while surrendering none of those points back through turnovers or poor defense. He is an absolute machine of consistency. He hasn’t scored fewer than 20 points in a game for almost two full regular seasons. There was a sense of disappointment when the Thunder didn’t seriously pursue the all-time wins record this season, but that undersold just how historically dominant they’ve been. Gilgeous-Alexander was the best player on a team that won 132 games across two seasons. Only Jordan and Curry have ever done that.
All of that is great and absolutely meaningful, but legacies are a bit like jokes. They lose impact once you have to explain them. This is part of why Nash gets so frequently reduced to the MVPs. It’s simpler than explaining how someone who averaged 14.3 points per game for his career could be one of the greatest generators of team offense in MVP history. It’s easier to say “he won two MVPs” than to explain how he was the point guard for the NBA’s most efficient offense eight times in a 10-year span.
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Of course, Nash also gets reduced to the trophies because of what he lacks. He never won a championship. Gilgeous-Alexander already has one. He could retire tomorrow as something like a top-30 player in NBA history, and if he just maintains his rough statistical profile with no more MVPs or titles, he’ll climb even higher. He’s passed Nash. He’s going to pass most of the “guy between the guys” MVPs.
But something about Gilgeous-Alexander’s title run a season ago didn’t quite land with the satisfying authority an all-timer’s first championship usually does. Maybe it was Tyrese Haliburton‘s torn Achilles tendon. Maybe it was his postseason efficiency dip or how loaded his team was or the fact that he’s still not especially popular among casual fans relative to what he’s accomplished. But there wasn’t an obvious baton-passing last spring. When CBS Sports ranked the top 100 players in the NBA before the season, Jokić retained his No. 1 spot. ESPN, Bleacher Report and most other publications to engage in the exercise came to that conclusion as well.
Jokić won’t be passing the baton this spring either. He dropped it on the floor in Minnesota. One way or another, someone else is picking it up in the next month, and if that person is Wembanyama, well, odds are he’s not letting go of it for a long, long time.
Conveniently enough, Wembanyama and Gilgeous-Alexander are about to face each other in the Western Conference finals. The notion of meaningful legacy stakes for a series between a 27-year-old and a 22-year-old seems almost laughable on paper. Gilgeous-Alexander may not even be halfway through his career. He has nothing left to prove as an individual player. We’re talking about someone who is already drawing statistical comparisons to Jordan and Curry.
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But Jordan got an era, and Curry at least shared part of one with James. If there is going to be a Shai Gilgeous-Alexander era, it probably needs to happen now, before Wembanyama reaches whatever terrifying peak he’s destined for. And if it isn’t now, that probably nudges Gilgeous-Alexander’s historical regard into that slightly less meaningful pool of MVP winners. It makes him the guy between Jokić’s run and Wembanyama’s inevitable ascent.
He’s better than the Malones and the Roses and the McAdoos and the Nashes of the world. He’s good enough for the inner circle of MVP winners. But history isn’t known for its kindness and neither are basketball fans. The easy comparison here, though he never won an MVP, would be Isiah Thomas. He took down both Johnson and Bird, effectively ending their reign atop the league, and won consecutive championships. He’s remembered today primarily as a foil for Jordan, the one he needed to beat before he could become, well, Michael Jordan. It’s never been terribly fair, but these conversations usually aren’t.
Yet it adds an undeniable layer of drama to what was already one of the most anticipated playoff series in recent memory, especially since Wembanyama openly campaigned for the MVP award. He’s going to spend the next seven games trying to force Gilgeous-Alexander to validate a trophy he thinks should belong to him. The playoffs aren’t supposed to seep into MVP discourse, but they undeniably shape how they’re remembered.
Most of those “guys between the guys” winners are in that group because they lost to the guys, or worse, they lost to someone else. Joel Embiid‘s 2023 MVP is the most recent example of this phenomenon. Jokić spent the whole year hearing about what a historical crisis it would be to give him a third consecutive MVP before he won a championship… only to win the championship while the MVP, Embiid, blew a 3-2 second-round lead to Boston. The playoffs don’t determine who wins MVP, but they’re very often the determining factor in how those MVPs are remembered.
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That’s where Gilgeous-Alexander now sits. He has his two trophies. Now he’s playing for an era, and getting one means holding off the Martian giant in San Antonio for at least one more year.
Real Madrid fans are unhappy with Kylian Mbappé’s performance in the 1-0 win over Sevilla. Many believe that the Frenchman has not been good enough and Alvaro Arbeloa was right about him.
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray (1) scrambles away from pressure during second-quarter action against the Seattle Seahawks at CenturyLink Field in Seattle on Dec. 22, 2019. Murray used his mobility to extend plays throughout the NFC West matchup as Arizona battled Seattle during the closing weeks of the rookie quarterback’s first NFL season. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports.
Earlier in the day on Sunday, we laid out the case for J.J. McCarthy as the Minnesota Vikings’ QB1 in 2026. You can read that here. The team claims it will hold a real training camp battle between McCarthy and Kyler Murray, so now it’s time to make the case for Murray.
The pressure on McCarthy changed dramatically.
Murray is the heavy frontrunner to prevail — a -1,000 moneyline — and here’s why.
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Minnesota Suddenly Has a Real QB Competition
Do you think Murray will take down McCarthy at training camp?
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray (1) surveys the field during first-half action against the Los Angeles Rams on Nov. 26, 2023, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. Murray’s mobility and playmaking remained central to Arizona’s offensive identity as the Cardinals battled an NFC West rival during the late-season divisional matchup in front of the home crowd. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports.
Vikings Have Murray for One Year; McCarthy for Three More
If the Vikings are in the mood, they totally own McCarthy’s rights through the end of 2028. They can play him for every snap; they can park him on the bench for three more years.
With Murray, he has one pivotal season before testing the free-agent market next March. Based on his track record, Murray deserves an audition to see if the Vikings are tailor-made for his skill set. Minnesota has one chance to try this — in 2026.
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If Murray doesn’t work out, well, McCarthy will be ready and waiting as an option in 2027.
Something to Prove
Arizona drafted Kyler first overall in 2019, just a year after squandering a first-round pick on Josh Rosen. Murray was immediately seen as a franchise reset. For seven seasons, he capably held the Cardinals’ QB1 job, making the franchise appear legitimate at the sport’s most crucial position, yet he ultimately secured zero playoff wins.
The significant 2026 offseason brought a cleanout. Arizona fired Jonathan Gannon, hired Mike LaFleur, and decided their next chapter would begin without Murray. With virtually no trade leverage, the Cardinals released him in March, opting for Jacoby Brissett and Carson Beck as their new quarterback solution. It remains astonishing: a former No. 1 pick, still in his prime, pushed out while his former team still pays him to play for someone else.
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Minnesota emerged as the obvious landing spot. The Vikings needed genuine quarterback competition for McCarthy, and Murray sought a fresh start in a better football environment.
His childhood fandom for the Vikings only made the fit feel more natural after Arizona cut him. And the price tag was nearly irresistible: one year, $1.3 million, with the Cardinals still shouldering most of the cost.
Arizona may have treated him as a bust, but the Cardinals have hardly been a quarterback factory or a beacon of NFL success. Beyond rare exceptions like Larry Fitzgerald and Kurt Warner, the franchise has often failed to maximize the potential of its stars.
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray (1) takes the field against the San Francisco 49ers during the regular-season finale on Jan. 5, 2025, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. The matchup closed out Arizona’s campaign and marked another divisional showdown for Murray as the Cardinals evaluated their roster and offensive direction heading into the offseason. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images.
So, perhaps Murray is damaged goods. Or perhaps he’s simply the latest reminder that one team’s discarded problem can become another team’s bargain treasure. Murray will do everything in his power to make the Cardinals look like morons for dropping him, including slicing and dicing opponents as a member of the Vikings.
Speed, Arm Strength, Accuracy, Experience Clear JJM
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Kyler Murray is faster than J.J. McCarthy. Kyler Murray has a stronger arm than J.J. McCarthy. Kyler Murray is more accurate than J.J. McCarthy. Kyler Murray is the fifth-most accurate quarterback in NFL history. Kyler Murray has more experience than J.J. McCarthy.
This is not that complicated. Murray is the guy to lead the Vikings in 2026.
Minnesota doesn’t need Murray to conduct a career renaissance. He just needs to play like his healthy self. Those numbers would nibble at MVP consideration, so long as the squad had a winning record.
Murray Is Just a Better QB
One can study the pros and cons of Murray or McCarthy as the Vikings’ QB1 in September until they’re blue in the face, but it really boils down to this: in 2026, Murray is a better quarterback. McCarthy has done absolutely nothing since April 2024 to state a case that suggests he’s more productive than Murray. That may sound brutal, but it is the truth.
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Will Murray be better than McCarthy forever? Maybe. Maybe not. In the here and now, however, Murray has the more advanced skills and experience.
A close-up image captures the jersey details of Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray (1) during action against the Los Angeles Rams on Nov. 26, 2023, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. The photograph highlights the Cardinals’ uniform design and Murray’s recognizable No. 1 jersey during an NFC West rivalry matchup late in the regular season. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports.
Former NFLer Bart Scott said this week, “I think at the end of this season, I think we may say that Kyler Murray is the most talented quarterback within that division. You play here with Kevin O’Connell, with the weapons that he has, a tight end and TJ Hockenson, you have Justin Jefferson, you have Jordan Addison, go out and get a gritty guy like Jauan Jennings.”
“I think the sky’s the limit for Kyler Murray. When you’re doing all that, you’re going to have little Mandalorian running around here for 25 seconds with guys just one-on-one down the field.”
For a team that wants to win now, Murray is simply the smarter option. Head coach Kevin O’Connell can always pivot to McCarthy if Murray struggles.
Dustin Baker is a novelist and political scientist. His second novel, The Invaders , is out now. So is … More about Dustin Baker
It’s probably arguable that Tottenham have more riding on this than Chelsea. They need one point to be safe from the threat of relegation, following West Ham’s loss to Newcastle on Sunday.
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Chelsea could probably do with a win too to keep their hopes of European qualification alive, but the Blues may also simply want to get this season out of the way and move onto next season – with Xabi Alonso now confirmed as their next boss.
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Chelsea vs Tottenham Hotspur Head-to-Head and Key Numbers
If they want to claim that valuable point, Tottenham will absolutely need to buck a lengthy trend at Stamford Bridge. They almost always lose at Chelsea’s home ground, and have only claimed a solitary point in their last four visits there. The last time they won there was in 2018.
Chelsea will not have much time to prepare for this game, as they only played on Saturday in the FA Cup final, losing to Manchester City after a brave effort. With this in mind, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see interim boss Callum MacFarlane rest some key players here.
Tottenham last played just under a week ago, drawing with Leeds at home. The result felt like a disappointment at first, but given Leeds’ strong form, could now be considered a good point to claim – particularly after West Ham’s loss this weekend.
Chelsea are actually in the worst form in the entire Premier League right now. They’ve claimed just one point from their last seven matches, losing six in a row before drawing with Liverpool on May 9th. Moreover, this sequence has seen them score just two goals all told while conceding 15 in return.
While Tottenham are not out of danger just yet, they have improved drastically since the arrival of Roberto de Zerbi. They’re now unbeaten in four games – the first time they’ve managed this since September – and have taken the lead in all four of those matches.
Chelsea vs Tottenham Hotspur Prediction
History would suggest that Chelsea will defeat their London rivals as per usual here, making Tottenham sweat for their safety on the final day of the season.
However, there’s just nothing to suggest that the Blues are about to turn their slump around, while Tottenham have looked much improved under de Zerbi, particularly in terms of their pressing and counter-attacking.
Given Chelsea will likely come onto Spurs, rather than attempt to shut them out as Leeds did, the stylistic match may well favour the away side here.
Tottenham’s awful record at Stamford Bridge makes it impossible to predict a win for them here, but to see them claim the point they need to survive feels likely.
Prediction: Chelsea 1-1 Tottenham Hotspur
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Chelsea vs Tottenham Hotspur Betting Tips
Tip 1: Result – Draw.
Tip 2: Tottenham to score first – Yes (Tottenham have scored first in their last four matches).
Tip 3: Chelsea to score in the second half – Yes (Chelsea have scored in the second half in Tottenham’s last three visits to Stamford Bridge).
Nichole Searle believes the Carnival’s exit could pave the way for Tosen Water to secure a fitting success when proceedings resume at Morphettville’s Parks venue this Saturday.
The six-year-old mare is targeting an upgrade from her last two performances in the $65,000 Sportsbet Fast Form BM74 Handicap.
The Tosen Stardom progeny accepted for Flemington, but with husband Gary and daughter Brianna Callanan as partners, Searle prefers the Gawler-friendly option, considering the 1300-metre trip timely in prep.
Following her narrow second to Dobbinair in May 2’s $105,000 State Sprint Series Final, Tosen Water had posted what Searle called a tough-luck three-quarters-of-a-length defeat by Clarance on April 18.
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“She’s a super-consistent mare, she probably should have gone close two starts back had the horse inside her not rolled off the rail,” Searle said.
“So, she’s doing really well. Her work was really nice on Tuesday morning and she’s come through both those runs really well.
“It looks a nice race for her.”
Six triumphs from 34 career starts for Tosen Water, who had Teagan Voorham in recent races, yet Rochelle Milnes, last term’s top jockey, now rides as Voorham handles Sir Kingsford in the Listed Andrew Ramsden at Flemington.
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From gate eight in the 14-runner field, Milnes and the mare; Searle eyes the weekend rain forecast for Adelaide favourably.
“We’re going to get a lot of rain over the weekend apparently here, which will benefit her because she likes a wet track too,” she said.
“Barrier eight is probably a nice gate for her and Rochelle’s on her. Rochelle knows her well, she’s won on her and been placed, so fingers crossed she can keep her consistent form up.”
Tosen Water trades at $7 for the race, where Bouncing Beyond tops betting after Morphettville victory.
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Visit Australian betting sites to find the best markets on Tosen Water in the Sportsbet Fast Form BM74 Handicap.
All-conquering England recovered from a shaky start to beat France 43-28 in their Grand Slam decider on Sunday to secure a remarkable eighth successive Women’s Six Nations title and further underline their total dominance of the sport.
France started strongly and led 7-0 after 20 minutes but England seized control with four tries to lead 26-7 at halftime.
France reduced the lead to eight points with 20 minutes remaining but the world champions showed all their big-match experience to regain control and eventually run out comfortable winners.
England topped the standings with five bonus-point wins while France finished second for the seventh year in a row.
The victory stretched England’s world record winning run to 38 matches and is their 39th win in a row in the Six Nations where they last lost a match in 2018. They have won 99 of 103 games in the last 10 years and show no signs of easing up.
However, they came into Sunday’s game knowing that France would give them a stiff test, especially after they beat them by a point in the same fixture at Twickenham a year ago.
And, roared on by a French record crowd for the competition of 35,000, France were on top in the early stages and went ahead with a length-of-the-field try by Pauline Bourdon Sansus.
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However, they made too many errors to take further advantage of their pressure and England came roaring back in the second quarter.
Prop Sarah Bern got things moving with a pick-and-go try before Ellie Kildunne ran clear for the second. A smart finish by Jess Breach was followed by a simple second for an unmarked Kildunne as France’s defence was stretched to breaking point and the stunned crowd were left wondering how the home team trailed 26-7 at halftime.
After England added a penalty, France were on top early in the second half as a try for Anais Grando and a second for Bourdon Sansus closed the gap to eight points with 20 minutes to go.
However, England then put together a sparkling move that sent Breach in for her second and France’s faint hopes of a comeback disappeared when replacement scrumhalf Alexandra Chambon was sin-binned for a high tackle – not the first time their discipline has let them down in this fixture.
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Amy Cokayne bundled over for a sixth try – with the superb Zoe Harrison converting five of them – before a late home consolation for Rose Bernadou.
England top the standings on 28 points with five bonus-point wins and a three-point Grand Slam addition, while France have 21.
Earlier on Sunday Ireland thrashed Scotland 54-5, also in front of a record crowd in Dublin, to finish third on 15 points. Italy beat Wales 43-24 in Cardiff to take fourth on 12. Scotland ended with five points and Wales three after losing all five matches.
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