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What are USMNT’s biggest unanswered questions as World Cup nears?

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ATLANTA – Eighteen months and 24 matches after Mauricio Pochettino was named the head coach of the U.S. men’s national team, the group is now barrelling towards the looming deadline that is the much-anticipated World Cup ahead of what many hope will be a groundbreaking showing on home soil.

Pochettino’s stamp on the team has become increasingly clear by the game, even as he conducted a rigorous experimentation period. Scores of players have earned caps under the head coach, many breaking into a core group and giving the team a new look in the process. Pochettino has also introduced a variety of tactical styles, spending last fall working with three center backs before transitioning back to a four-person defense in March’s matches against Belgium and Portugal. By the time the World Cup approaches, the team will have a tactical variety that should, theoretically, position them to solve a wide range of problems.

With less than two months to go until Pochettino names his World Cup roster, questions of which players will make the cut are natural. They are not the only uncertainties, though, as the World Cup rapidly approaches — his team still does not look like the finished product, perhaps because Pochettino has insisted on trying as many things as possible before this summer’s tournament actually begins.

Here’s a look at the questions that went unanswered in the U.S.’ defeats to Belgium and Portugal in March.

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Are the USMNT error-prone in defense?

The USMNT have made tangible progress under Pochettino, most notably as a more dynamic team in attack with an emphasis on a high press and offense-minded wide players. They have done this while problems in the back persist, issues that were magnified in a 5-2 loss to Belgium on Saturday and a 2-0 defeat to Portugal on Tuesday. They have not kept a clean sheet since a 2-0 win over Japan in September and have just one in their last 12 matches.

The errors themselves are wide-ranging but ultimately costly, likely the result of several contributing factors. The USMNT are generally better with Chris Richards and Antonee Robinson on the pitch, though Pochettino said Tuesday that substitutions made in high volume sometimes lead to confusion. Other times, though, their attack-minded approach proves costly and gets in the way of their intentions.

“[We need to figure] out the little things that we can do that doesn’t leave us exposed in some situations if we do lose the ball,” Weston McKennie said post-match on Tuesday, “but also just having the confidence to finish the chances that we have early on because I do think our type of game that we play is very energetic and more high press but we want to be structured. If we’re not finishing chances, we want to be able to hold the game to a 0-0 type thing and not allow the opponents to score.”

Pochettino will need to strike a perfect balance between personnel and strategy to actually tighten things up in the back, maintaining his argument that the pre-World Cup training camp will provide the continuity he needs to actually drill his points home.

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Can Christian Pulisic return to goalscoring form?

Christian Pulisic may have started the season in scintillating form with AC Milan, but the goalscorer’s goals have dried up in recent months, raising questions about his confidence heading into the World Cup. He has not scored for Milan since Dec. 28, and his last goal for the USMNT came in Nov. 2024, the 27-year-old is set to enter the pre-World Cup training camp 18 months after the fact. Pulisic has grown increasingly frustrated as he waits for his next goal, a dry spell not uncommon amongst attackers but ill-timed with the World Cup less than three months away.

His form did not necessarily justify a start against Portugal, but Pochettino was intent on giving Pulisic minutes, hoping the time on the pitch would end the rut. The head coach even tinkered with the lineup to assist Pulisic as he attempted to end his goalscoring drought, pushing him closer to goal and playing him as a No. 9, a strategy that saw the forward take three shots and generate 0.27 expected goals in 45 minutes.

“I think he was very active and I think he [did] a good job,” Pochettino said. “I think he was involved in too many actions. Unlucky, a shame a little bit that he didn’t score with the opportunity that he has. It’s normal … Yes, he feels frustrated, but that is what we want, what we expect, but he was fighting, he was committed in the phases that we demand more, and then with the ball, he’s going to score because he has the quality. I am sure that he is going to come back to his club and in the moment he scores, he’s going to start to score again.”

If the problem persists, though, it is worth asking if Pulisic runs the risk of being dropped from the starting lineup for important World Cup games. For the first time in a long time, the U.S. have actual depth in terms of goal scorers — Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi are amongst the in-form players, while fringe players like Haji Wright and Patrick Agyemang will likely duke it out for a single spot in a nailbiter of a competition to make the World Cup squad. McKennie, too, has a newfound goalscoring ability that his coaches at club and country seem eager to exploit. Pulisic may still be the brightest of the bunch, but if the U.S. are in real need of goals and results this summer, Pochettino has no shortage of options available to him, and perhaps the platform to make a tough decision or two along the way.

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How many fringe players made their case in March?

The USMNT’s March friendlies were not exactly anything to write home about, in large part because there were opportunities for fringe players to make their case while more seasoned players missed out through injury. The results were mixed at best, only reinforcing the idea that the U.S. are one team with their mainstays, but a different one without.

Pepi was a likely World Cup participant, but left no doubt after playing an important role in Agyemang’s late goal against Belgium, while Agyemang joined him in impressing with some energy after it had otherwise been sucked out of the team. Johnny Cardoso, meanwhile, was effective in 45 minutes on Saturday and seems like the primary understudy to the oft-injured Tyler Adams. After that, the picture gets murkier.

Several of these players may still make the cut for the World Cup, but failed to make much of an impact in the March friendlies. Tanner Tessman, for example, was far from his best against Belgium despite using his experience as a center back at Lyon in a rare shift in that position with the national team, though Pochettino continues to value his versatility and soccer IQ. Center back Auston Trusty was solid against Portugal, but other players may have fallen behind in the depth chart. Joe Scally and Gio Reyna only played around a half hour each through two games, while Aidan Morris did not do enough to avoid the risk of missing a World Cup spot if Adams is fit.

USMNT’s World Cup timeline

Pre-tournament

  • May 26: roster reveal event in New York
  • May 27: World Cup training camp opens at the National Training Center in Fayetteville, Ga.
  • May 31: friendly against Senegal at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C.
  • June 6: friendly against Germany at Soldier Field in Chicago

Group stage schedule

  • June 12: USMNT vs. Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif.
  • June 19: USMNT vs. Australia at Lumen Field in Seattle
  • June 26: Turkiye vs. USMNT at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif.

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2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur Wednesday TV coverage

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The 2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur begins Wednesday morning with the first round at Champions Retreat in Georgia. Here’s everything you need to know to watch the tournament on Wednesday, including full Augusta National Women’s Amateur TV coverage, streaming info and Round 1 tee times.

How to watch ANWA on Wednesday

American amateur star Asterisk Talley is only 17 years old, but she’s already become a fixture at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. First, she finished 8th in her ANWA debut in 2024. Then last year, Talley came oh-so-close to claiming the title, finishing one shot short of 2025 ANWA champion Carla Bernat Escuder.

Now ranked No. 10 in the women’s world amateur ranking, Talley is hoping this week’s event sees her finally lift the tophy on Saturday at Augusta National.

But first, Talley and the rest of the 72-player field, which features two former Augusta National Women’s Amateur winners, have to contest the first and second rounds at Champions Retreat to earn the right to compete at Augusta this weekend.

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And the action gets started Wednesday morning with Round 1.

You can watch the first round of the Augusta National Women’s Amateur on TV via Golf Channel, which will air coverage beginning at 1:30 p.m. ET on Wednesday. You can also watch a live simulcast Golf Channel’s TV coverage via ANWA.com.

Below you will find everything you need to know to watch the first round of the 2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur.

How to watch on TV Wednesday

Golf Channel will air first-round TV coverage of the 2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur on Wednesday from 1:30-3:30 p.m. ET.

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How to stream online Wednesday

You can stream the first round of the 2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur via Peacock and ANWA.com, both of which will offer live simulcasts of Golf Channel’s Wednesday TV coverage.

2026 Augusta National Women’s Amateur Round 1 tee times for Wednesday (ET)

Tee No. 1

8:00 a.m. – Brooke Biermann, Ai Goto, Emily Odwin
8:12 a.m. – Rocio Tejedo, Catherine Rao, Charlotte Back
8:23 a.m. – Grace Kilcrease, Vanessa Borovilos, Yurina Hiroyoshi
8:35 a.m. – Huai-Chien Hsu, Catherine Park, Dianna Lee
8:46 a.m. – Nikki Oh, Raegan Denton, Elise Lee
8:58 a.m. – Seojin Park, Mackenzie Lee, Clarisa Temelo
9:09 a.m. – Prim Prachnakorn, Sara Brentcheneff, Chloe Kovelesky
9:21 a.m. – Amanda Sambach, Arianna Lau, Elizabeth Rudisill
9:32 a.m. – Marie Eline Madsen, Jasmine Koo, Camille Min-Gaultier
9:44 a.m. – Kiara Romero, Andrea Revuelta, Eila Galitsky
9:55 a.m. – Soomin Oh, Rianne Malixi, Megha Ganne
10:07 a.m. – Tsubasa Kajitani, Lily Reitter, Reagan Zibilski

Tee No. 10

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8:00 a.m. – Andie Smith, Eunseo Choi, Aira Nagasawa
8:12 a.m. – Paula Martin Sampedro, Maria Jose Marin, Anna Davis
8:23 a.m. – Patience Rhodes, Asterisk Talley, Aphrodite Deng
8:35 a.m. – Megan Streicher, Megan Propeck, Kary Hollenbaugh
8:46 a.m. – Avery Weed, Veronika Kedronova, Beth Coulter
8:58 a.m. – Louise Landgraf, Karen Tsuru, Katelyn Kong
9:09 a.m. – Bailey Shoemaker, Gyubeen Kim, Amelie Zalsman
9:21 a.m. – Anna Fang, Anna Iwanaga, Ava Merrill
9:32 a.m. – Ashley Yun, Macy Pate, Yunseo Yang
9:44 a.m. – Meja Örtengren, Cayetana Fernandez Garcia-Poggio, Farah O’Keefe
9:55 a.m. – Scarlett Schremmer, Lauren Kim, Yujie Liu
10:07 a.m. – Kyra Ly, Achiraya Sriwong, Kelly Xu

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Arslanbek Makhmudov’s trainer talks Tyson Fury preparation and ‘landing one big shot’

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Arslanbek Makhmudov has the chance to re-establish his reputation as a man to avoid in the heavyweight division as he takes on two-time world champion Tyson Fury next weekend. After a successful training camp, his coach Marc Ramsay believes the Russian is well prepared to pull off the upset.

An amateur standout with fearsome punching power, Makhmudov had been recognised as something of a divisional boogeyman throughout much of his professional career, with many heavyweight rivals unwilling to risk a fight with the Mozdok-born contender.

That changed in December 2023, when the previously overlooked Agit Kabayel produced a stunning stoppage win in Riyadh to hand Makhmudov his first career defeat. Makhmudov bounced back with another early finish, but was then halted by Guido Vianello in August 2024 – a loss which led many to question his standing in the division.

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Since then, Makhmudov has had a point to prove, looking to show that those defeats were setbacks rather than a sign of decline, and that he remains a dangerous contender at the top level.

Recent victories over Ricardo Brown (TKO 1) and Dave Allen (UD) are his only consecutive wins since suffering that first defeat and, ahead of a fight with Fury – who returns from a 16-month retirement – Makhmudov appears to have regained his confidence.

Speaking exclusively to Boxing News, head trainer Marc Ramsay admitted that the opportunity to face ‘The Gypsy King’ came as a surprise, but one that the 36-year-old simply had to take.

“Everything is going very good. We have had a very good training camp here in Montreal, lots of different sparring partners and a lot of challenges. To be honest, this is a fun fight for us, it is a fight that we didn’t expect at all.

“We are going there to challenge, we have no pressure, nothing to lose, just everything to gain. We can feel an atmosphere in the training camp, we are enjoying this moment.”

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“We have already fought good boxers, but after the last win with Arslanbek, we created a little bit of publicity. We didn’t expect a fight like this. They offered us the fight and it was a no-brainer for us – especially with the age of Arslanbek, we want to go and try for real.”

Ramsay also noted a renewed sense of motivation in camp.

“The motivation is better. Arslanbek always has a good work ethic but you can feel that extra push from the team and from the boxer.”

This will be Makhmudov’s second fight on British soil in six months, having outpointed Allen over 12 rounds in Sheffield in October 2024 – the first time he had gone the distance.

Continuing, Ramsay highlighted that the fight with Allen was ideal preparation for this clash with Fury, allowing Makhmudov to experience being the away fighter and deal with a hostile and vocal UK crowd.

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“That Dave Allen fight was a really good experience and I found that as a coach myself. You can talk about the feeling of the crowd in the U.K., but you have to live it to understand exactly what it is and how passionate the fans are.

“To go there, to win there, to feel the atmosphere was fantastic. We understand that there is going to be a big crowd again, but it is about preparing the boxer mentally for those things.”

“[It was also] the first time reaching 12 rounds. We focused a lot on that in sparring during training camp. Even for 10-round fights in the past, we always prepare for 12.

“But to do that in the gym every day and to do it in competition are two different things and I am very happy that he has had that experience before we go into this kind of fight.”

Preparing for Tyson Fury, however, brings its own challenges. Standing at 6’9” with a unique style, the Brit is difficult to replicate in sparring, particularly given the uncertainty surrounding his form after a lengthy lay-off.

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Ramsay explained that the approach has been to break Fury down into individual attributes and replicate them collectively in camp.

“You cannot find sparring partners who are going to be that good – Fury is at the top of the division. What you need to do is isolate a little bit of the technique he brings, a little bit of the size, and with a couple of sparring partners you can work on those qualities. That is the way to prepare for this kind of challenge.

“He could be a little bit rusty, but we have to prepare for the best version of Tyson Fury that we have seen. We have looked at almost all of his fights as a professional and we expect him to show his quality.

“He already looks leaner than he did for his fights with Ngannou and Usyk, so I believe he will show up in good shape and we are prepared for him.”

Despite Fury reportedly training himself for his return, Ramsay has no issue with that approach.

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“I have no problem with that. A lot of people speak against it, but with the experience he has, he knows what he is doing.

“Sometimes we overanalyse the role of a coach. Of course, he will have people around him to help with certain things, but we are focused on what we are doing here in Montreal, not on what he is doing.”

For the fight itself, many believe Makhmudov’s best chance lies in his power, particularly early on. Seventeen of his 19 knockouts have come inside the opening three rounds, and Fury could be vulnerable before settling into the contest.

Ramsay, however, insists that Makhmudov’s power will be present throughout.

“Arslanbek can carry his power deep into the fight. He can generate it early, but also in rounds eight, nine, ten – it is not a problem.

“He has the experience to manage things round by round, but at some point we are looking to land that shot – and we have plenty of time to do it in a 12-round fight.”

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Team Makhmudov will travel to London this weekend as they prepare for the opportunity of a lifetime, hoping to make a major statement in the heavyweight division – and force further questions about Fury’s future in the sport.

Fury-Makhmudov takes place on Saturday, April 11 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, with Conor Benn vs Regis Prograis set to feature as co-main event on the Netflix-broadcast card.

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Watch: Rishabh Pant giggles after freak dismissal ends opening gamble in LSG vs DC | Cricket News

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Watch: Rishabh Pant giggles after freak dismissal ends opening gamble in LSG vs DC
Rishabh Pant dismissal in LSG vs DC (Screengrabs)

NEW DELHI: Lucknow Super Giants skipper Rishabh Pant endured a frustrating start to his opening experiment as Lucknow Super Giants took on Delhi Capitals in their first IPL 2026 clash on Wednesday, with a bizarre run-out cutting short his innings.The incident unfolded in the third over when Mukesh Kumar delivered a full ball that Mitchell Marsh struck firmly back towards the bowler. Mukesh got a fingertip to the ball in his follow-through, inadvertently deflecting it onto the stumps at the non-striker’s end.

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Angkrish Raghuvanshi focused only on team’s wins

Pant, who had backed up too far, was caught well short of his crease with no chance of recovery. Visibly disappointed, he walked off without waiting for the third umpire’s confirmation after scoring 7 off 9 balls.Watch:Pant’s early dismissal dealt a blow to LSG’s strategy, as the team had opted to promote him to the top in a bold tactical move. The wicket also validated Delhi’s decision to bowl first after Axar Patel won the toss, expecting assistance from the fresh surface.Earlier, Axar explained the call, citing potential help for bowlers in the powerplay despite data favouring teams batting first. Delhi fielded a balanced XI featuring the likes of KL Rahul, David Miller and Kuldeep Yadav, while LSG relied on a strong overseas core including Marsh, Nicholas Pooran and Anrich Nortje.Adding to the talking points, Arjun Tendulkar remained absent from both the playing XI and the bench despite being part of LSG’s squad this season.With Pant’s gamble backfiring early, the contest quickly tilted in Delhi’s favour in the opening exchanges.

LSG vs DC Playing XI

Lucknow Super Giants (Playing XI): Aiden Markram, Mitchell Marsh, Nicholas Pooran, Rishabh Pant(w/c), Ayush Badoni, Abdul Samad, Mukul Choudhary, Mohsin Khan, Mohammed Shami, Anrich Nortje, Prince YadavLucknow Super Giants Impact subs: Digvesh Rathi, Avesh Khan, Himmat Singh, Shahbaz Ahmed, Akshat RaghuvanshiDelhi Capitals (Playing XI): KL Rahul(w), Pathum Nissanka, Nitish Rana, Axar Patel(c), Tristan Stubbs, David Miller, Vipraj Nigam, Lungi Ngidi,Kuldeep Yadav, T Natarajan, Mukesh KumarDelhi Capitals Impact subs: Ashutosh Sharma, Auqib Nabi, Sameer Rizvi, Dushmantha Chameera, Karun Nair

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Wayne Rooney sheds light on issues with Bukayo Saka as Arsenal chase PL title

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Manchester United legend Wayne Rooney believes Arsenal star Bukayo Saka has been under immense pressure this season. He said that the winger has struggled, partially because of being the captain.

Saka has been a key player for the Gunners since graduating from their academy. The 24-year-old has made 305 senior appearances for them, scoring 79 goals and providing 78 assists. However, he’s struggled this season with nine goals and seven assists in 42 games.

Wayne Rooney believes it could be because Saka is under pressure to deliver Arsenal their first major trophy since 2020. He said on the BBC (h/t Metro):

“Do you know what? You need to look at the pressure on Bukayo Saka, especially as he’s been captain for a lot of the season with Martin Odegaard being injured. That pressure to win trophies, given where Arsenal have been, that can tally up and make it difficult for you.”

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“He has struggled this season but he’s a fantastic player and he’s been brilliant. He’s played a lot of games as well in his career. I think we all know there’s more there,” he added.

Odegaard has played 27 games across competitions for the Gunners this season, with Saka being the captain in his absence.


Pundit backs Arsenal star Bukayo Saka to start for England at 2026 FIFA World Cup

Bukayo Saka’s struggles this season have also translated to his performances at the international level. He has one goal and one assist in the last three games for England. He didn’t feature in their friendlies this month.

Hence, there is speculation about his place in Thomas Tuchel’s starting XI at the 2026 FIFA World Cup. However, Alan Smith believes the Arsenal man will beat competition on the right wing to start for the Three Lions, saying (h/t Metro):

“It’s not been the best, has it, for him? He’s set such high standards. But he’s always done well for England. He knows what it’s about. He’s got great tournament experience and he’s done well in tournaments.”

“So it would take a lot I think for Tuchel to drop him. Plus the fact he hasn’t really got anybody you’d say, oh no, he should be in ahead of him. Jarrod Bowen plays on the right. Noni Madueke, his clubmate. But I still think Saka’s in the box seat comfortably, really,” he added.

Overall, the Arsenal winger has scored 14 goals and provided nine assists in 48 games for England.

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