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Why England fans shouldn’t panic about their World Cup hopes after a dismal international break

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There have been some big feelings in recent days, feelings of consternation, even outrage, at England’s two Wembley performances. Change the players. Sack the manager. Delete England as a sporting entity. If Harry Kane isn’t fit, do they even bother going through the motions of drawing 1-1 with Croatia and muddling past Ghana, only to be knocked out in the last-16 by the first good team they run into?

At which point, perhaps it is worth taking stock for a moment. It is unlikely any of Thomas Tuchel’s starters against Uruguay will play a significant role at the World Cup. The line-up to face Japan was stronger but only a handful of those will start in North America. Six key players were missing. The football was drab and uninspiring, but none of this was entirely representative of who England will be in the summer.

The stark reality is that for several of England’s leading lights, this international break was just that, a break, from the rigours of club football which are more gruelling than ever. Tuchel called up 35 players, and almost an entire XI pulled out with injury.

“I see fatigue, clearly,” the England manager said after Tuesday’s 1-0 defeat by Japan, referring to the players on the pitch and the wider squad. “This is not an excuse but just an explanation.”

Harry Kane was reduced to a watching brief after sustaining an issue in training (Bradley Collyer/PA)
Harry Kane was reduced to a watching brief after sustaining an issue in training (Bradley Collyer/PA) (PA Wire)

In that sense, perhaps this international window did serve a purpose. About a dozen players went on holiday. Another batch took their first two-week break all season in order to give niggling injuries a chance. This was a rare and much-needed window to heal.

Declan Rice could have played, Tuchel suggested, but it wasn’t worth the risk. Jude Bellingham was the same. “[Rice] feels a discomfort since quite a while,” the manager explained. “He’s been playing through it [for Arsenal] and he’s just now on the edge where he thinks, ‘Does this make sense, what I’m doing here, to push through with 70 per cent and push myself and push myself?’”

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Perhaps the dropouts did a disservice to representing England, to wearing the shirt, to putting on a show for 80,000 ticket holders at Wembley. But it points to the truth about where international friendlies are, in March, among the priorities for overworked players in title races and with Champions League quarter-finals afoot.

These results won’t dictate the future. England have disappointed in March before, only to come good in the summer. They lost to Brazil and drew with Belgium in 2024 before reaching the European Championship final. Even last year under Tuchel, England bounced back from a dispiriting defeat by Senegal in June with a perfect set of wins through September, October and November.

Thomas Tuchel consoles his players after a 1-0 defeat by Japan
Thomas Tuchel consoles his players after a 1-0 defeat by Japan (The FA via Getty Images)

Tuchel defended his players and took responsibility for the poor displays. But he insisted his belief in achieving the bold goal he set for himself when he took the England job – “to put a second star on the shirt” – remains intact.

“We will not start doubting now. I knew before how complicated this camp can be because I know the level of fatigue that the players are in and the level of minutes that they’ve played.

“We tried to build a football team in three days against Uruguay,” Tuchel laughed. “And it did not look so bad even if it was for you guys and for the fans not the nicest watch. But I’m not so sure that you can play spectacular football against Uruguay or spectacular football against Japan, non-stop. Because it’s difficult. They are just good football teams.

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“We also gave [key] players a break so that they come fresh [for Japan] and we can play, maybe, with actually the strongest squad. But it was absolutely not possible because we lost so many players throughout the camp.

“We will not let go of our dream, not let go of the question ‘Why not?’. Now the most important thing is that the players reintegrate with their clubs, have a good end to the season, and then we have them in pre-camp [for the World Cup] and prepare them properly.”

Thomas Tuchel’s makeshift side were disjointed at Wembley (John Walton/PA)
Thomas Tuchel’s makeshift side were disjointed at Wembley (John Walton/PA) (PA Wire)

England will convene earlier than most teams in North America when they get together for the camp in Florida, which will feature warm-up games against New Zealand and Costa Rica.

“They will get a week off, the guys who are not involved in the Champions League final, and then we will go very early to the US to prepare us for the heat and the humidity,” Tuchel explained. “We will have an early camp that allows us a good mix between free time and also family-friends time, and football, to arrive with excitement when the tournament starts.

“The season is a long, long season this year for the players, because some of them come from the Club World Cup, and it will not end in May. It will end, hopefully, in the middle of July.”

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A perfect qualifying campaign has already been largely forgotten and these friendlies will soon be too. Perhaps Tuchel’s job this past week was simply to help his players survive until June, about recovery more than results. The task of building a coherent football team can wait. Shape and balance and relationships can be perfected in what will be a long summer. Fine-tuning a winning team can take a couple of games, as Argentina showed in 2022 when they lost their opening game to Saudi Arabia.

Fifteen months into the Tuchel project, his real task is only just beginning.

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All-Defensive Team nod continues greatness trajectory for Raptors’ Scottie Barnes

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TORONTO — Time flies. 

It was only four years ago when a relatively fresh-faced Scottie Barnes told the NBA that he wanted to be an all-NBA defender. 

“I feel like that’s what I do best,” Barnes said after his second training camp as a pro, before the 2022-23 season. “That’s one thing I always pride myself on, trying to guard. That’s my goal.”

Given he’d been just as vocal about his goal of winning rookie-of-the-year honours and ended up taking home that trophy after the 2021-22 season, you can’t blame the guy for trying to speak his future into existence. 

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But stating goals isn’t as simple as achieving them. 

Barnes didn’t make the NBA’s All-Defensive team in his second season, the start of what were three successively ominous years as the Toronto Raptors failed to bridge the gap between the post-championship years with Barnes driving a new era alongside Fred VanVleet, OG Anunoby and Pascal Siakam. 

And he didn’t make the NBA’s All-Defensive team in his third or fourth seasons — an almost impossible task because the Raptors won 25 games (in 2023-24) and then 30 (in 2024-25) while undertaking a rebuild on the fly, trying to find a formula that could win with Barnes as a cornerstone. 

But the Raptors turned a corner this past season, winning 46 games, making the playoffs for the first time since Barnes’ rookie year and performing admirably during their first-round loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers, who are now in the Eastern Conference Finals. 

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And in related news, Barnes reached his goal: On Friday night, the fifth-year star became just the third Raptor in franchise history — Kawhi Leonard and Anunoby being the others — to be recognized as one of the NBA’s 10 best defenders.

Barnes got 42 first-team and 46 second-team votes and finished sixth overall in the voting conducted by a panel of media members. I had a ballot and gave Barnes a first-team vote. 

His ability, willingness and determination to take up any challenge Raptors head coach Darko Rajakovic could dial up for him became impossible to ignore as the Raptors finished the regular season (the NBA’s awards voting takes place before the playoffs) with the league’s fifth-best defensive rating, allowing just 112.1 points per game. Last season, the Raptors were 17th in defensive rating, the year before they were 25th.

On its face, it was a minor miracle. The only significant roster additions the Raptors made in the off-season were Brandon Ingram and Sandro Mamukelashvili — each important players, but neither considered ‘plus’ defenders. Fellow starters Immanuel Quickley and RJ Barrett were willing defenders, but neither are considered game-changers on that end. Jakob Poeltl — the Raptors starter with the best defensive acumen other than Barnes — played just 46 games and was not at his best in many of them as he dealt with back problems for most of the season. Even Collin Murray-Boyles, the rookie who teamed with Barnes in the Raptors’ best defensive lineups, played just 57 games and averaged only 21.9 minutes per game. 

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So how, exactly was the Raptors’ defensive renaissance happening? Credit Rajakovic and his coaching staff, and credit the Raptors for buying into being a high-effort, high-event defensive approach to generate the volume of turnovers the Raptors needed to ignite their offence, but none of it works without Barnes, who seamlessly morphed from off-ball menace to deep-in-the-paint rim protector to perimeter shutdown guy in the space of single games — even quarters — this season. 

There is plenty of data to support Barnes’ all-defence status. 

He was the only player in the NBA to rack up at least 100 steals (114) and 100 blocks (116) this season, the first to hit the double century in seven seasons. The Raptors were 4.3 points per 100 possessions better with Barnes on the floor and he was the common denominator across nearly all the best defensive lineups. Among players with at least 2,000 minutes, Barnes ranked seventh in defensive versatility and 14th in match-up difficulty, per craftednba.com

But the eye test was pretty convincing, too.

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“He’s impacting the game defensively more (than in the past), I feel like,” said Utah Jazz head coach Will Hardy late in the regular season. “Counting stats can be very misleading. We talk a lot about blocked shots, for example. There are some players in our league that people won’t go near, so they maybe don’t get as many blocks as they could because people see them and go, ‘I don’t want to do that.’ 

“I think Scottie’s become such a great all-around player. When you watch him on film, it’s hard to say, ‘Oh, this is the one thing he does that will change the game.’ He can affect it in a bunch of different ways. Consistency in terms of contributing to winning, sometimes it’s quiet. There are players in our league who produce very loud stats and that’s great, but Scottie is one of those guys where you coach against him or play against him and go, ‘Man, he had 14 and 12 but it felt like he was everywhere.’ That’s the great part about our sport: you still have to watch.”

And if you watched, Barnes was everywhere. There was a week in late March when Barnes was the primary defender on Cade Cunningham — the Detroit Pistons point guard who will almost surely earn first or second team All-NBA honours in the coming weeks — and two-time MVP Nikola Jokic, the hulking centre with the Denver Nuggets. 

“Every single night, he gets the best match-up on the opposing team and he’s not shying away from that,” Raptors head coach Rajakovic said. “He prides himself on the defence end, and that’s a hard job … he’s going to be guarding point guards, wings, and five-man … he does a lot for us.”

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And while ‘clutch’ offence is a very well-understood aspect of elite NBA performance (‘clutch’ being defined as games within five points with five minutes left to play), Barnes proved himself with clutch defence, leading the NBA with nine ‘clutch’ blocks. Remarkably, four of them came in the final minute of games when the Raptors were up by four or less points to preserve wins, perhaps most memorably when Barnes rose up and blocked Oklahoma City star Chet Holmgren to preserve a two-point lead with 29 seconds left in a win over the Thunder on Jan. 25 and then against Phoenix Suns guard Jalen Green, up four with 43 seconds to play in a March 13 win. 

All of which was a warm-up for Barnes’ performance against Cleveland during the first round of the playoffs which — while not part of the consideration for the regular-season awards — only served to bolster his growing reputation as one of the NBA’s best game-plan wreckers, as he took turns bottling up Cavs big man Evan Mobley or star guards Donovan Mitchell and James Harden, all while leading the series in points, assists and blocked shots. 

“Scottie Barnes, man, he’s a dog,” Cavaliers guard and former Raptor Dennis Schröder told me after the series. “He’s an animal, that was like some Kawhi (Leonard) stuff.”

It’s high praise in Raptors lore, being compared to Leonard, whose two-way mastery lifted Toronto to the 2019 NBA championship. 

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Barnes isn’t there quite yet: Leonard was a two-time defensive player of the year by the time he joined the Raptors in his eighth season and had been recognized as an all-NBA defender four times. Not to mention his accomplishments offensively.

But perhaps the highest compliment that Barnes could earn at this stage of his career is that mentioning him and Leonard in the same sentence doesn’t seem outlandish. 

“I feel like I’ve been great defensively,” Barnes said after the regular season concluded. “For sure, I took it to another level. But we’re winning. I feel like once we’re winning, my name is going to be in those conversations (for all-defence and defensive player of the year). I feel like I’m great defensively, I help our team a lot and I’m one of the best defenders in the NBA, I take pride in that.”

As he should. He’ll need to build on this past season, and the Raptors will need to help him. 

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But Barnes has reached one significant goal. There’s no reason he can’t reach higher.

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NFL fans react as Donald Trump gets introduced by Giants QB

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New York Giants starting quarterback Jaxson Dart put himself in a complex position on Friday. After a solid rookie season, Dart brought hope to Giants fans, even though they only won four games in the 2025 season.

With free agency and the draft in the books, the Giants look like a potential candidate to contend in 2026, led by Dart and new coach John Harbaugh.

However, the relationship between the quarterback and the fans could get strained ahead of the upcoming season. On Friday, journalist Aaron Rupar shared a video of Dart introducing none other than Donald Trump before a New York rally.

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Plenty of fans reacted to the video to criticize the quarterback’s decision.

“Here we go, now Dart is the most hated football player in the world,” one fan said.

Here we go, now Dart is the most hated football player in the world 🤦‍♂️

“Never going to another Giants game they lost so much $$$$ after this clown went and sold his soul,” another fan said.

Never going to another Giants game they lost so much $$$$ after this clown 🤡 went and sold his soul

“As soon as you bring in politics I will be a JETS fan Inly wish Dart would read this,” another fan said.

As soon as you bring in politics I will be a JETS fan Inly wish Dart would read this

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The criticism didn’t stop there. Fans turned against Dart.

“As a Giants fan I am sick to my stomach,” one fan said.

“He got the Trump curse. Giants 0-16 season incoming,” another fan wrote.

“Added to the hate watch let’s go,” another fan added.

ALSO READ: Aqib Talib recalls Jaxson Dart using “N” word to question scrutiny for Shedeur Sanders amid Deion Sanders’ latest comments

ALSO READ: “Last year was the longest of my life”: Jaxson Dart makes feelings known on Giants’ change to OC Matt Nagy, HC John Harbaugh after rookie season

Jaxson Dart, New York Giants have renewed expectations for 2026 NFL season

After a disappointing start to the season by Russell Wilson, Brian Daboll replaced the quarterback with the rookie out of Ole Miss. Jaxson Dart played 14 games in 2026, going 216 of 339 for 2,272 yards and 15 touchdowns with five interceptions.

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He created a terrific duo with running back Cam Skattebo, although the fellow rookie saw his season cut short due to injury. Dart, Skattebo and wide receiver Malik Nabers are the future of the Giants.

After a productive offseason, they could compete against anybody in 2026. Matt Nagy will lead the offense from the sideline, which adds to the expectations.