Unchanged PBKS opt to bat; DC hand IPL debut to Madhav Tiwari

Karun Nair missed out with Sameer Rizvi taking his place

ESPNcricinfo staff08-May-20253:21

Why have DC struggled to win powerplays?

Toss: Punjab Kings opt to bat vs Delhi Capitals
Punjab Kings (PBKS) captain Shreyas Iyer chose to bat first in Dharamsala against Delhi Capitals (DC), in IPL 2025, with plenty at stake for both sides. He wanted to bat since the ground would be wet at the start of the game. The toss took place 75 minutes late at 8.15pm with a drizzle welcoming both teams.While Punjab Kings opted for the same batting XI for the fixture, DC made one change with legspinner Vipraj Nigam being left out for Madhav Tiwari. Tiwari is a 21-year-old allrounder who bats right-handed and bowls right-arm medium pace for Madhya Pradesh.The other change was Sameer Rizvi replacing Karun Nair. Nair’s had a forgettable time in the six games following his 89 against Mumbai Indians (MI).”The team is in high spirits and everyone is stepping up at the right time,” Shreyas said. “On top of the world to be honest, the way things are panning out.”Axar Patel said DC would’ve liked to field first since chasing with some rain around could be advantageous.”We’ve spoken about how we’ve been in a competitive position despite playing some poor games,” Axar said. “We’ve been speaking about the positives.”PBKS would have their playoff spot secured with a victory. Delhi Capitals need wins in all three remaining games to be assured of qualification, although they could still qualify if they go down tonight.Delhi Capitals bowling-first XI: Faf du Plessis, KL Rahul (wk), Abishek Porel, Sameer Rizvi, Axar Patel (capt), Tristan Stubbs, Madhav Tiwari, Mitchell Starc, Dushmantha Chameera, Kuldeep Yadav, T NatarajanDC bench: Ashutosh Sharma, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Mukesh Kumar, Vipraj Nigam, Tripurna VijayPunjab Kings batting-first XI: Priyansh Arya, Prabhsimran Singh, Josh Inglis, Shreyas Iyer (capt), Nehal Wadhera, Shashank Singh, Marcus Stoinis, Azmatullah Omarzai, Marco Jansen, Yuzvendra Chahal, Arshdeep SinghPBKS bench: Vijaykumar Vyshak, Harpreet Brar, Suryansh Shedge, Pravin Dubey, Yash Thakur

Injury puts Josh Hazlewood's return in doubt if IPL resumes

There are questions over whether Australia and South Africa players can return with their WTC final scheduled to begin on June 11 at Lord’s

Shashank Kishore11-May-20252:12

What makes Hazlewood such an improved T20 bowler?

As the BCCI plans to try and resume IPL 2025, questions remain over whether a number of Australia and South Africa players will return for the remainder of the season, with the World Test Championship (WTC) final due to begin on June 11 at Lord’s.The IPL was suspended on May 9 for one week following escalation in cross-border tension between India and Pakistan, but the announcement of a ceasefire on May 10 evening raised the possibility of the league resuming soon.”The BCCI is closely monitoring the evolving situation and developments, and will take a call on IPL resumption after consulting all stakeholders and the concerned government authorities,” BCCI secretary Devajit Saikia said. “In the next days, we will begin consultations with the franchises, broadcasters, sponsors and state associations slated to host the remaining matches… Given the importance of IPL at this juncture, it will also be prudent and necessary to take the nod of the government of India before finalising the time for its restart. BCCI will duly announce the date of IPL restart once the whole process is over in due course of time.”Thirteen league matches – including the one that was abandoned mid-way in the first innings – remain in the league phase of IPL 2025 before the four playoff fixtures. The final was scheduled to be held in Kolkata on May 25.Once the IPL was suspended temporarily on Friday, several overseas players and coaching staff left India in the next 24 hours, and a challenge facing all teams is to get them back if the BCCI decides to resume the tournament in the next week.There are doubts over whether Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s Josh Hazlewood will return; a shoulder niggle had ruled him out of RCB’s previous home fixture against Chennai Super Kings (CSK) on May 3. He was a doubtful starter for RCB’s next match against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) on May 9 before the tournament was suspended, and he may have missed the remainder of the season even if the tournament had not been interrupted.Hazlewood had said earlier in the season that he had continued a rehab programme during IPL 2025, having returned to fitness from a calf injury and side strain that forced him to miss parts of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy (December-January), the Test tour to Sri Lanka, and the Champions Trophy (February-March).ESPNcricinfo understands Cricket Australia (CA) isn’t concerned by his injury and he is expected to be picked in the Test squad that will have a conditioning camp in the UK in the first week of June ahead of the WTC final.Australia’s Test captain Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Travis Head will also have decisions to make on returning to India should the IPL resume, keeping in mind the WTC final. While Cummins and Head have just three league games remaining with Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) already out of contention for the playoffs, Starc’s team – Delhi Capitals (DC) – are still in the race in fifth place at the moment. Starc was among a large contingent of players who travelled by road and train from Dharamsala to Delhi after the match between Punjab Kings (PBKS) and DC was abandoned on May 8.Almost all of the New Zealand players, apart from Mitchell Santner and Bevon Jacobs, have returned home from the IPL too. Santner and Jacobs, who play for Mumbai Indians (MI), agreed to a request to stay on, according to Health Mills, chief of the New Zealand Cricket Players Association, on RNZ Sport.The participation of South Africa’s players for the remainder of the IPL – should it resume – will be decided at a Cricket South Africa board meeting on Sunday. As of now, the NOCs to players had been issued until May 25, with the board stating that safety and security of players was non-negotiable.South Africa are scheduled to play Zimbabwe in a warm-up fixture in the first week of June as part of their build-up to the WTC final.

Joe Root's magnificent 166* drives England to 309-run chase, and series win

Carty century and Joseph fiery four-for lead fight for gutsy Windies, as England’s sloppy display is rescued

Vithushan Ehantharajah01-Jun-2025England 312 for 7 (Root 166*, Jacks 49, Brook 47, Joseph 4-31) beat West Indies 308 (Carty 103, Hope 78, Rashid 4-63, Mahmood 3-37) by three wicketsEngland did not quite turn their back on Joe Root as a limited-overs batter, but certainly the schedule threatened to axe him from white-ball cricket.A couple of crises and a change of management later, here Root was in Cardiff, unfurling perhaps the best of his 18 ODI hundreds, a career-best 166 not out. His first 42 runs put him top of the pile of English run-scorers in the format, usurping Eoin Morgan’s tally of 6957, before the rest iced a chase of 309 to secure a series win over West Indies with a game to spare.This was Root’s second hundred in his eighth innings since returning to the 50-over format this year, ahead of an admittedly disastrous ICC Champions Trophy. Not only is he averaging 30 runs more than his overall average of 49.18, but his strike rate is also ten points higher. An immaculate straight drive, his 23rd boundary of a fever-dream knock, confirmed victory with three wickets and seven balls to spare.This second ODI did not, all told, seem befitting for Root’s historic brilliance. Mainly because, for the first half, it seemed to belong to West Indies – specifically Keacy Carty’s 103, the centrepiece of West Indies’ 308 all out. Skipper Shai Hope’s 78 at the end and Brandon King’s 59 up top were vital bookends.Keacy Carty marched through to his century•PA Photos/Getty Images

Though they left 14 deliveries unused having been inserted by England, it didn’t seem to matter as West Indies’ attack took just nine deliveries to remove openers Jamie Smith and Ben Duckett for ducks – 2 for 2 – then had England 93 for 4 when Jos Buttler was also cleaned up. From that point on, it was Root at his absolute best, accompanied for the most part by Will Jacks. You might have described his 49 off 58 in a stand of 143 from 122 as “playing the Joe Root role”, had the man himself not been at the other end strumming 87 off 64. Root’s last 70 runs with Jacks came off just 45 balls, by the way.The catastrophic start to the chase added a layer of jeopardy to Root’s innings that he never felt. But it did mean more because of a West Indies outfit hell-bent on disavowing themselves from Thursday’s 238-run loss in the first ODI at Edgbaston. Smith nicked Jayden Seales behind for a duck after four legal deliveries, before Ben Duckett scythed a thick edge off Matthew Forde to deep third, his three-ball nought capping off a horrendous day that included two dropped catches and a missed run-out.Both Duckett’s chances would have nipped a second-wicket stand between Carty and Brandon King in the bud. It reached 141 but should not have made it to double figures, let alone out of the first powerplay, Duckett’s misses at second slip off Brydon Carse – the first diving to his right, the second tipped over the bar – came when King had 10, then 11. Duckett’s hat-trick of fielding botches was completed when, spoilt for choice, both King (55 not out) and Carty (57 not out) were stuck in the middle of the pitch. King ended up running to the far end, beating Duckett’s loopy underarm to wicketkeeper Buttler.The biggest error in the first innings, however, was Saqib Mahmood’s tame drop of Carty on 41, when Jacob Bethell was worked around the corner. He also might have been run out on 57 had the throw from midwicket been crisper after he had been sent back. Both of those gifts were reciprocated to Root, who could have been found short of his ground twice.The best chance was at the end of the second over when Root was dead in the water after Harry Brook called him through for a dodgy single, only for Roston Chase to miss from backward point. A tougher opportunity arose in the 11th over when, on 30, he had again given up. This time, King missed, albeit having made a brilliant stop at midwicket, followed by a throw at the non-striker’s end from the ground. But maybe the biggest grievance as far as West Indies were concerned was an lbw appeal at the end of the sixth over. Forde hit Root on the back leg and gave it the celebrappeal, only for the review to find the ball clipping the bails.Brook was also dropped on 30 – which he had made from just 16 deliveries – when Hope palmed a diving catch to his right after Seales had found the edge. England’s captain had just launched an assault on Forde, smashing three boundaries in a row – the first a towering boundary to the leg side – but fell short of fifty when flipping Alzarri Joseph’s bouncer to backward square leg. And though Joseph would then snare the former white-ball captain six deliveries later – Buttler playing on, undone by bounce – Root was well on his way.Shai Hope got an important half-century•PA Photos/Getty Images

Root then took 17 off what would prove to be the last over of Forde’s opening spell. And from then on, he managed the situation, calmly at first with Bethell and thereafter in a remarkable partnership with Jacks. Most spectacular of all was the acceleration from Root, despite Jacks’ game being far more suited to the pyrotechnics he produced.The key passage came with 135 needed from 18.2 overs, with Root on 77 from 82. After taking 16 deliveries to move to his hundred – a milestone he reached with a six over midwicket and a four swept around the corner off Gudakesh Motie – he then smashed 43 from his next 24 deliveries up to Jacks’ dismissal. He ramped, scooped and then charged Chase’s offies for boundaries in four balls, before Jacks was trapped in front to give Joseph an impressive 4 for 31.A gorgeous carve over extra cover off Forde then took Root past 150 for the first time in ODIs, from 129 deliveries, and thereafter it was only a matter of how, not when. A picture-perfect on-drive for four sealed the deal with seven balls to spare.Both teams had made a single change each from the first ODI; England swapped Matthew Potts for Jamie Overton (broken little finger), while West Indies erred for experience with Shimron Hetmyer moving into the XI at the expense of Amir Jangoo.Precocious Antigua batter Jewel Andrew was moved to open with Evin Lewis still missing with the groin injury that kept him out of the first ODI. It was the first time the 18-year-old had performed the role in his professional career, across all formats – and it did not last long. A hard length from Carse lifted into harder hands from Jewell, who was surprised by the bounce and fended it away on instinct, gifting a straightforward catch to Jacks at point for a five-ball duck.Carty’s binding of the innings began at this point, and the value of his stickability felt particularly crucial with the 58 shared with Hope. Their stand began when King found Carse at long-on off Rashid – the first of the legspinner’s 4 for 63. Nine overs later, a late dab through short third brought Carty’s 13th four off his 102nd delivery to take him to three figures. And while he was unable to launch from there, stumped off Jacks three balls after the milestone, Hope was now set.Nevertheless, West Indies lost their final eight wickets for 103. Saqib Mahmood removed Forde and Chase in consecutive balls before Motie took to Jacks. But Rashid’s two wickets in his final over shifted the onus even more so on Hope, who toed a simple catch to Brook to give Mahmood figures of 3 for 37.England’s target of 309 could have been 50 more with better choices throughout, and maybe 111 fewer had England taken their chances against Carty and King. Then again, Root would not have had the scope to unfurl his brilliance. Sometimes, the game works itself out.

Ligue 1 Team of the Season so far

PSG lead the table heading into the new year, but which players make our best XI for the 2017-18 season so far?

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    Ciprian Tatarusanu (Nantes)

    Since he was signed by Claudio Ranieri in the summer, the Romania international goalkeeper has enjoyed a terrific spell in Ligue 1 and has rapidly established himself as a mainstay of Nantes’ side, which has been based around a formidable defence.

    No goalkeeper who has played at least 10 matches this season has a higher save percentage than the former Fiorentina shot-stopper’s of 75.81.

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    Dani Alves (PSG)

    He may be 34 now, but the former Barcelona man showed last term as he helped Juventus reach the final of the Champions League that he is still one of the best performers in the world in his role, and he has done well to see off the challenge of Thomas Meunier to start regularly for PSG.

    He has been an excellent performer in Ligue 1, though he has played only 13 times as his minutes are managed due to his aging legs. He has three assists to his credit, but it is his winning mentality that PSG hope to profit from in the second half of the campaign.

  • Nordi Mukuele (Montpellier)

    It is little surprise that clubs are starting to turn their attention to the 20-year-old, who arrived a year ago from Laval. His versatility has been impressive but he has adapted to Michel Der Zakarian’s five-man defensive line impressively, helping Montpellier to the best defensive record in France, with only 13 goals conceded in 19 games.

    The youngster has benefitted immensely from playing alongside veteran Hilton in the Montpellier rearguard, but he has shown immense potential.

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  • Marquinhos (PSG)

    The Brazilian is maturing into the world-class centre-back that PSG hoped when they signed him from Roma in 2013, with the 23-year-old having established himself as a vital member of their starting XI this season. 

    He has been named as third captain of the club – a responsibility that he has revelled in – while he has won 70% of his duels in Ligue 1 this season, the best record in terms of outfielders who have played more than half of the games thus far.

Alexis or Pogba, De Gea or Lukaku? Ranking Manchester United’s best-paid players

The Red Devils have been fairly liberal in handing out huge contracts in recent years, but who sits where in their list of highest salaries?

Manchester United caused a real stir in January when snapping up from Alexis Sanchez from Arsenal. Far beyond the Chilean being recruited from a Premier League rival midway through the season, the biggest bone of contention appeared to be his British-record salary of £350,000 per week.

Such is the fascination in the money being spent by football clubs in the modern era, supporters have taken an increased interest in players' wages as well as the outlays made to selling clubs in the transfer market.

And United have led the way in splashing out on playing contracts over the course of the Premier League era, signing themselves up to the five biggest deals in English history over the last five years, most recently with Sanchez.

But who gets what in the current United squad? Below,  Goal  goes through the Old Trafford pay-grades, listing the estimated weekly salary of the top-ranked Red Devils in terms of salary.

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    THE LOWEST-PAID: Scott McTominay – £20,000

    Young midfielder Scott McTominay has caused a stir in recent weeks by earning a first-team spot at the expense of Paul Pogba among others, but United's faith in him had already been proven in the autumn when they signed him to a new long-term deal which saw his salary rise to £20,000 a week.

    He currently remains the club's lowest-paid first-team squad member though, with Marcus Rashford's similar basic wage topped up by a string of bonuses which push his take-home pay towards the £50,000 mark.

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    13. Marouane Fellaini – £80,000

    Marouane Fellaini looks set to leave Manchester United in the summer, with his refusal to sign a new Old Trafford deal thus far leaving him four months shy of free-agent status.

    The Belgian could command a higher salary than his current £80,000 weekly pay elsewhere as a result, with United unable to command a transfer fee once his current contract runs out at the end of June.

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    12. Michael Carrick – £80,000

    Club captain Michael Carrick is the old statesman of Old Trafford these days, and is set to retire in the summer to take up a coaching role under Jose Mourinho.

    In the meantime he will continue to earn £80,000 a week on the pitch and, while that's a drop on his previous wage in light of his decreasing involvement at first-team level, Carrick couldn't be more well thought of around Carrington.

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  • 11. Chris Smalling – £80,000

    Former Fulham defender Chris Smalling has lost his England place in recent months, with his performances at club level with United failing to convince national boss Gareth Southgate of his continued quality.

    But he remains a valuable member of the Old Trafford ranks despite some fluctuating form, and his £80,000 take-home wage is set to keep rolling in until 2020.

MLS Week 13 Power Rankings: Timbers surge, Dallas stumbling

The Portland Timbers are about to unveil their revamped Providence Park, but before doing so they added another win in a surge that has them looking very dangerous heading into the summer.

The Timbers trounced the Philadelphia Union to improve their record to 4-1-1 in their past six, a blistering pace boosted by the recent arrival of Brian Fernandez. Saturday's victory helped them jump five spots in the latest Goal MLS Power Rankings.

Real Salt Lake is another Western Conference team on the rise, after downing Atlanta United on a last-minute Jefferson Savarino winner to make it three straight victories for Mike Petke's squad.

It's been a rough stretch for Ohio teams, with FC Cincinnati and the Columbus Crew a combined 2-15 since April 13, The Crew fell to the Colorado Rapids in Week 13, while FC Cincinnati wasted an encouraging performance thanks to some heroic goalkeeping from New York Red Bulls netminder Luis Robles.

That loss has dropped FC Cincinnati to the very bottom of the latest Goal Power Rankings, in part because of Colorado's second straight victory, which helped the Rapids climb out of the basement for the first time in two months.

Here are Goal's MLS Power Rankings after week 13 action:

  • 1FC Cincinnati (3-9-2)

    You can point to the spells of encouraging soccer Cincinnati played against the Red Bulls in Saturday's 1-0 loss, but the fact remains the expansion side failed to convert chances, and paid the price. The real challenge for this inconsistent bunch will be to play well again, on the road against a surging Colorado Rapids side.

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  • 2Colorado Rapids (2-9-2)

    Back-to-back wins have the Rapids feeling good, and also has the firing of head coach Anthony Hudson looking like a wise decision. Conor Casey isn't likely to keep the job, bit he has done well as interim head coach. The Rapids will have to beat a tough Philadelphia Union side on the road to keep the winning ways going, but their home match against FC Cincinnati on Saturday will be a better opportunity for the Rapids' next win.

  • 3Columbus Crew (5-9-1)

    The Crew lost their eight in nine matches, leaving head coach Caleb Porter with no choice but to step forward and shoulder the blame for his team's total collapse. Defensive injuries haven't helped matters, but even they don't explain away the team's current funk. Up next is another tough challenge against NYCFC.

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  • 4New England Revolution (3-8-4)

    The Bruce Arena era hasn't formally begun yet, but the fact that the Revs are unbeaten since replacing Brad Friedel as head coach is telling. The New England defense has shown particular improvement, allowing just two goals in three matches. Winning on the road against the Galaxy is a tall order, but Arena should take full advantage of the upcoming Gold Cup break to get a better sense of the squad he is inheriting.

Ghana player ratings vs Nigeria: Baba and Afena-Gyan impress as Ayew disappoints

Goal assesses the performances of the Black Stars in their 2022 World Cup qualifying duel against the Super Eagles at Kumasi's Baba Yara Sports Stadi…

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    Joseph Wollacott – 7/10

    Was not only unusually very composed between the sticks but pulled off some decent saves to deny Nigeria in the first half, particularly Moses Simon’s goal-bound shot.

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    Denis Odoi – 7/10

    On his debut for the Black Stars, the former Belgium international looked unnerved by the occasion, keeping Simon at bay, and making offensive runs when required.

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    Gideon Mensah – 7/10

    That he kept Samuel Chukwueze quite all through the game highlights his fine defensive performance at left-back.

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    Daniel Amartey – 7.5/10

    It was a strong display as commander-in-chief of Ghana’s backline from the Leicester City man. Communicated well with his central defensive partner, organised his unit well and put a tight clip on Nigeria dangerman Victor Osimhen.

Salah's still the King! Liverpool winners, losers and ratings as Gomez silences Haaland and Milner rolls back the years in Man City win

Liverpool's Egyptian King was the hero as Jurgen Klopp's side recorded a priceless 1-0 win over Manchester City at Anfield

Mohamed Salah still has the magic, Liverpool still have the minerals and the Premier League’s hottest rivalry is alive and kicking. What an afternoon this was at Anfield. Manchester City’s unbeaten start to the campaign is over, after Jurgen Klopp’s much-criticised Reds delivered a performance to ignite their season and send their supporters into raptures.

Salah was the matchwinner, scoring superbly at the Kop End, 14 minutes from time, to settle a frenetic, absorbing and often bad-tempered contest, which saw Klopp shown a red card and Pep Guardiola livid after a Phil Foden goal was ruled out by the VAR at 0-0. The Manchester City boss also said he was targeted with coins thrown from the home fans, while Liverpool issued a statement afterwards condemning the 'vile chants' emanating from the away end on a fraught, needly afternoon.

But when the dust settles, Liverpool will reflect on a display that had all the hallmarks of their best ones under Klopp. They were intense, they were aggressive, they defended superbly and they took the big chance when it came. To a man, they were terrific.

They may not be able to live with City over the course of a full season – they remain 10 points behind in the Premier League table – but they can still cause anyone problems when they play like this. Guardiola knew that beforehand, and what followed served only to prove him correct.

Reports of the Reds death, it seems, have been greatly exaggerated.

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    The Winners

    Mohamed Salah:

    We should have known that Liverpool's star man would have the last word, shouldn't we? All the build up had centred on the goalscoring genius at the other end, but while Erling Haaland drew a blank – only his second of the season – Salah left Anfield wearing a beaming smile and with his name ringing out around this famous old stadium. The matchwinner on the big stage, yet again. What a goal it was, too. Credit Alisson Becker for the assist, the goalkeeper spearing a long kick up to the Egyptian, but Salah still had so much to do. He did it. First there was the strength, holding off Joao Cancelo as he does so often. Then the touch, spinning 360 degrees to run clear. Then the finish. He'd missed an earlier one at the same end, denied by Ederson's fingertips, but not this one. Unerring is the word. Then came the noise. Wow, the noise. A celebration fit for the occasion. A goal fit to win any contest, but especially one like this. There had been gasps when, just a few minutes before the goal, Salah's number had appeared on the fourth official's board. Substituted? Now? No chance. Klopp called his main man over, corrected the error and Salah stayed on. How glad Liverpool are that he did.

    Joe Gomez:

    If Salah was the matchwinner, the Man of the Match must surely go to Gomez, who delivered one of his best performances in a Liverpool shirt. With Ibrahima Konate injured, the England international was moved to centre-back to partner Virgil van Dijk, with James Milner asked to fill in at right back once more. Liverpool fans were terrified, but they shouldn't have worried. Milner was superb, using all of his experience and aggression against Phil Foden, while Gomez was imperious. The 25-year-old is not always the most aggressive defender, but he stood up here. He played on the front foot, he read the game superbly, he never lost his concentration once and he played some superb, line-breaking passes to get his side on the front. Alongside him, Van Dijk looked back to his best. The Dutchman loves playing alongside Gomez, and the hug they shared at the end was one of a job superbly done. Was Gareth Southgate watching? He should have been. England have a few centre-backs to choose from, but not many of them could have delivered a showing like this, in a game like this, against an opponent like this. Bravo, Joe.

    James Milner:

    When will football learn to respect its elders? At 36, Milner remains the oldest swinger in town, but he rolled back the years here, stepping up yet again for his club in their hour of need. Always a reluctant full-back, he's always a whole-hearted one too. He was given a hospital pass here, asked to go in cold against Foden and Co, five weeks after his last start, in the Champions League at Napoli, had turned into a nightmare. Not here. Here he was brave, he was aggressive and he used his experience as he has done so often. He stayed on his feet, he went in tight when he could and he kept his composure all afternoon long amid the maelstrom. Liverpool fans won't want to see him at right-back there too often in the future, and Milner won't want to be there himself, if truth be told, but the veteran can be proud of his efforts today. Age is nothing but a number.

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    The Losers

    Diogo Jota:

    It wouldn't have been a Liverpool game without an injury, would it, and sadly it looks as though Jota is the latest man to add to the Reds' growing casualty list. The Portugal international, who worked his socks off all afternoon and missed a glorious chance to give his side the lead at the back post from Salah's clipped cross, went down in stoppage time as Liverpool launched a counter-attack, and looks, at first glance, like he'll be facing a spell on the sidelines. He needed a stretcher, which will have everyone seriously worried. Liverpool have big games coming up, and there's a World Cup on the horizon too. Fingers crossed it's not as serious as it looked.

    Pep Guardiola:

    Whatever you do, don't try to speak to Manchester City's manager tonight. Guardiola hates Anfield. A "bugger of a ground", he has called it in the past, and if you needed a reminder as to why he feels that way, then here it was. Even City, the great City. Erling Haaland's City, Kevin De Bruyne's City. Even they struggle when Anfield roars. Even they can't play the way they usually play. The champions were good for large spells, but nothing like their usual selves. They were rocked by Liverpool's speed and intensity, made mistakes they shouldn't have made, and got dragged into the theatre of the occasion. Guardiola certainly did. He was livid when Foden's goal was ruled out, turning to confront the Main Stand. It brought back memories of his meltdown here in 2019, although it was his opposite number, Klopp, who ended the game in the stands having been shown a red card. Back to the drawing board, it seems, for Pep. City have only won here once since 2003, and that came with an empty stadium. If that doesn't tell you something, nothing will.

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    Liverpool Ratings: Defence

    Alisson Becker (8/10):

    Safe hands when called upon, and another assist to add to his collection. The best in the business.

    James Milner (8/10):

    Given a hospital pass at right-back, he responded as Milner does; head down, get stuck in and play. He was superb against Foden. Not always winning the duel, but never exposed as we feared he might be, pre-match. A proper performance, from a proper player.

    Joe Gomez (9/10):

    Superb. As good a performance as he has ever delivered in a red shirt.

    Virgil van Dijk (8/10):

    Was back to his imperious best. Concentration levels immense, reading of the game top drawer and never once looked flustered.

    Andy Robertson (7/10):

    Brought aggression, concentration and energy, and nearly an opening goal in the first half. Played a big role in getting the crowd up, and though he had his work cut out against Cancelo and De Bruyne, he battled superbly.

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    Midfield

    Fabinho (7/10):

    Another who looked back to something like his level, after a dip in form. Front footed, alert and reliable on the ball.

    Thiago Alcantara (7/10):

    Showed courage to get on the ball and try to get his side playing. Sometimes that led to risks, but that's how he plays. He worked tirelessly.

France vs Netherlands: Where to watch the match online, live stream, TV channels & kick-off time

How to watch France vs Netherlands in the Euro 2024 qualification stage from the US as well as kick-off time and team news

France will take on the Netherlands in their EURO 2024 qualificationopener at the Stade de France on Friday.

💻 Watch France vs Netherlands live on Fubo in the U.S.

Both France and Netherlands' last international appearances were against Argentina at the 2022 World Cup. While France lost in the final, the Netherlands were knocked out of the tournament by La Albiceleste in the quarter-final.

Kylian Mbappe has been appointed as captain of the national side after long-standing skipper Hugo Lloris announced his retirement from international football after the World Cup.

The Netherlands side has also witnessed a change in personnel as Ronaldo Koeman has replaced Louis van Gaal at the helm.

GOAL brings you everything you need to know about how to watch the Euro 2024 qualifier fixture France vs Netherlands, plus team news, recent form and more.

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    Kick-off time

    Date:

    March 24, 2023

    Kick-off time:

    3.45pm ET

    Venue:

    Stade de France

    The game is scheduled for March 24, 2023 at Stade de France. It will kick off at 3.45pm ET in the US.

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    How to watch France vs Netherlands online – TV channels & live streams

    TV channels & streaming options

    Country TV channel Live stream
    U.S. Fox Sports Fubo

    In the U.S., the match can be watched on Fox Sports and can be streamed on Fubo.

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    Team news & squads

    France team news

    France coach Didier Deschamps will miss the services of Wesley Fofana and William Saliba, who have pulled out of the team due to injuries.

    Position Players
    Goalkeepers: Mike Maignan, Alphonse Areola, Brice Samba
    Defenders: Theo Hernandez, Jules Kounde, Benjamin Pavard, Wesley Fofana, Dayot Upamecano, Eduardo Camavinga, William Saliba, Ibrahima Konate
    Midfielders: Adrien Rabiot, Aurelien Tchouameni, Youssouf Fofana, Khephren Thuram, Jordan Veretout
    Forwards: Kylian Mbappe, Olivier Giroud, Antoine Griezmann, Moussa Diaby, Randal Kolo Muani, Kingsley Coman, Marcus Thuram

    Netherlands team news

    Frenkie de Jong and Steven Bergwijn have pulled out of the 25-man Netherlands squad due to injuries as Donyell Malen and Joey Veerman have replaced them in the group.

    Position Players
    Goalkeepers: Jasper Cillessen, Mark Flekken, Bart Verbruggen
    Defenders: Nathan Ake, Daley Blind, Sven Botman, Matthijs de Ligt, Denzel Dumfries, Lutsharel Geertruida, Tyrell Malacia, Jurrien Timber, Virgil van Dijk
    Midfielders: Steven Berghuis, Frenkie de Jong, Marten de Roon, Davy Klaassen, Kenneth Taylor, Mats Wieffer, Georginio Wijnaldum
    Forwards: Steven Bergwijn, Brian Brobbey, Memphis Depay, Cody Gakpo, Xavi Simons, Wout Weghorst

    Head-to-head record

    Date Result Competition
    17 Nov, 2018 Netherlands 2-0 France UEFA Nations League
    10 Sep, 2018 France 2-1 Netherlands UEFA Nations League
    1 Sep, 2017 France 4-0 Netherlands 2018 World Cup Qualifiers
    11 Oct, 2016 Netherlands 0-1 France 2018 World Cup Qualifiers
    26 Mar, 2016 Netherlands 2-3 France Friendly

    Netherlands have defeated the former world champions just once in their last five meetings. Their only win came on November 18, 2018 during a group game of the UEFA Nations League.

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    Useful links

    • France team page

    • Netherlands team page

    • Live soccer on TV in the U.S.

    • Koeman claims Jeremie Frimpong can't defend

    • Mbappe CONFIRMED as new France captain

15 facts about Harry Maguire

Everything you need to know about England defender Harry Maguire.

Harry Maguire is an English professional footballer who currently plays as a central defender for both Manchester United and the England national team. He was born on March 5, 1993, in Sheffield, England.

The England international started his career at Sheffield United, joining the club's youth academy at the age of 11. He graduated through the club's youth system and made his senior debut in 2011. He became an integral part of the team and was voted the club's Player of the Year for three consecutive seasons while at Sheffield.

He later joined Hull City in 2014 before moving on to Leicester City on a five-year deal in the summer of 2017 for a fee of £17 million. He immediately became a key player for the Foxes and helped the team to reach the quarter-finals of the UEFA Champions League in his first season at the club.

His impressive performances in the Premier League earned him a big-money move to Manchester United. He immediately became a key player for Manchester United and was named the club's Player of the Year in his first season at the club. Maguire's leadership qualities have been highlighted by his appointment as Manchester United's captain for the 2020/21 season.

Maguire is known for his philanthropy and has been involved in several charitable initiatives throughout his career. He has also been vocal in his support of mental health awareness and has spoken openly about his own experiences with anxiety and depression.

Maguire is known for his physicality, aerial ability, and leadership qualities, which have made him a fan favourite at both the club and international levels.

Here are 15 interesting facts about Maguire that you absolutely need to know?

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    His first name isn't Harry

    Widely known as Harry Maguire in general public, it might come as a shock to you that his first name isn't actually Harry. His full name is Jacob Harry Maguire, but he likes to go with Harry.

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  • Very good at school

    With his on-field performances making waves, Maguire was not a slouch in the classroom either. His former deputy headteacher recalls him as being a very good student, academically speaking.

    His former teacher, Sue Cain, said: “He had his head screwed on even at that age. He did everything you asked him to do and he never questioned why. He was popular, and he was huge."

    “Even at a young age he was very tall but he has filled out since then too. He towered over the other teams. He got A* and A grades in his GCSEs."

    “I think he would have gone on to study business or maths and probably would have been an accountant. He was very capable academically.”

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    Excelled at multiple sports growing up

    Manchester United captain and England international Maguire played a wide variety of sports while growing up and did not focus solely on football until later on in his teenage years.

    He took part in cross country and credits it for developing his stamina. He also spent some time playing rugby which helped him with his “bravery, weaving in and out of players, helping with agility” and hockey which helped his “vision and passing”.

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  • Football runs in the family

    Maguire isn't the only footballer in his family. His two brothers, Joe and Laurence, are also footballers, with Laurence playing for Chesterfield in the National League while Joe plays for Northern Premier League side Gainsborough Trinity.

    Laurence was recently selected for the England C side, a team for under-23 players who are outside the football league.

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