1/31/26 Champs League Knockout Excitement, Carmel Coach Carla Baker to Enter Indiana Hall of Fame, US Ladies Win, Full TV Game Schedule

Long-time Carmel FC & Carmel High Coach & Referee Carla Baker joins Indiana Soccer Hall of Fame Announces Class of 2026

The Indiana Soccer Hall of Fame is proud to announce its newest 2-person class into the Hall of Fame. The 2026 Class includes Carla Baker and Mike Avery. The class will be inducted into the Indiana Soccer Hall of Fame on Saturday, February 28th, 2026, at the Renaissance Hotel – Carmel. Baker, who currently resides in Carmel and continues to coach high school soccer and referee youth games, started her career as a student-athlete goalkeeper in Hamilton, Ontario at McMaster University. Her performance in goal earned her a call up to the Canadian Women’s National team in 1987. She stared for them for 9 years, competing in the CONCACAF World Cup Qualifiers and eventually the 1995 FIFA World Cup. In all, she earned 29 caps for the Canadian Women’s National Team. After completing a professional career, she turned her sights to coaching, working at FIU; Cornell University; University of Notre Dame and the University of Iowa. While an assistant coach at the University of Notre Dame, the Irish went to 4 consecutive final fours; won a National Championship in 1995; were Runners-Up in 1994, 1996 and semi-finalist in 1997. As an assistant coach at Carmel High School, Baker won a state championship in 2018 and was a runner up in 2014 and 2025. As an assistant coach at Park Tudor High School, Baker helped coach her team to two state championships in 2022 and 2023 and a runner up in 2020. “Honestly, with all her experience and international accomplishments, we are so LUCKY to have her as a representative of soccer in our community – CHS & CFC, “stated Juergen Sommer, Director of Soccer Operations at Carmel FC Soccer. “She has such a professional approach to her work/craft, as well as managing our families when soccer goes sideways, which we’ve all dealt with over the year. Carla is irreplaceable and a foundational pillar within our club!” Personally I have been lucky to have coached or reffed on the same fields with Carla for over 15 years. Well deserved Award!

Huge Congrats to All the Carmel FC Coaches & Members Nominated to this Year’s IYSA Awards

Super proud of my fellow Carmel Coach & buddy Mark Stumpf. He so very deserves the honor. He was one of the original coaches for Carmel FC – joining me when we were still just Carmel Dad’s Rec Plus back in 2008. He coached the boys U14s while I coached the girls. Since then he has done so much for the club, coached 100’s of teams, run the Girls Academy, helped with Goalkeeper Training, organized tryouts, done tons of computer and technical stuff – his list of accomplishments – are too many to list. Bottom line – he has had a huge impact on soccer, Carmel FC and kids lives here in Carmel – and I am super proud to assist him in coaching the 2010 boys over the past few years. Good luck to everyone – but especially my buddy Mark Stumpf – no one in Indiana deserves it more.

Champions League Knockout Stage Games Set

Man was Wednesday fun and it all ended like this Benefica Goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin Header at the Buzzer beats Real Madrid 4-2 sends them to knockout stage vs Real Madrid again in Feb. Jose Mourinho’s Benfica were already winning 3-2 but needed to beat Real Madrid 4-2 to sneak ahead of Marseille (Tim Weah) and into the all-important 24th place in the final league table. Think it mattered? Listen to the Benefica Announcer. How can you not love this game?
Going into the 8th game and final day of the group stage only 2 teams had guaranteed themselves top 8 spots, 12 teams had a chance of climbing into the top 8. In the end Arsenal, Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Tottenham, Barceloa, Chelsea, Sporting and Man City grabbed top 8 slots – yes 5 EPL teams. While Inter Milan, Real Madrid, holders PSG, and Newcastle United all dropped out with losses or ties on the final day.

So let me start with it stinks that 16 games were being played at 1 time – as it is impossible to watch 16 games at once – though I darn sure tried during a late lunch Wed afternoon. Somehow I was able to watch about 6 games (the Americans) as I watched Juventus and Mckinney advance to the playoff round, while seeing American Malik Tillman score two goals but have it not be enough for PSV fell to and are out. Monaco slid thru as Bologun scored a goal (which was called back), and Tim Weah and Marseille were eliminated when Benfica scored the late winner. First legs of the Knockout stage start Feb 17/18, then Feb 24/25 we’ll have just 2 American’s to root on as McKinney (Juventus) face Galatasaray and Bolagun (Monaco) battle defending Champs PSG.

Coming home from Practice or Games at Badger Fieldhouse?  What better way to keep warm – than with the Best Brunswick Stew in the Midwest? Try out the Best BarBQ in Town right across the street (131st) from Northview Church on the corner of Hazelldell & 131st. RackZ BBQ. RackZ BBQ have THE BEST Brunswick Stew I have had in any place other than my Mema’s kitchen. So what is Brunswick Stew – its a tomato based stew with all the food left over – usually roasted Pork, Chicken, beef, along with potatoes, corn, butter beans, and other vegetables all finely chopped. Mention the Ole Ballcoach and get 20% off your meal. Call ahead at 317-688-7290  M-Th 11-8 pm, 11-9 Fri/Sat, 12-8 pm on Sunday.  Pick some up after practice – Its good eatin! You won’t be disappointed and tell ’em the Ole Ballcoach Sent You!   https://www.rackzbbqindy.com/

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US Ladies Win 2 Games & Crystal Dunn Retires

The US ladies won both games in this cycle as they beat Chile 5-0 Wed after a 6-0 win vs Paraguay over the weekend. (Highlights) Good to see Trinity Rodman score again – Emma Hayes celebrates goal with Trinity Rodman. Love our Women’s US Coach Watch this she is the BEST in the World!! Croix BethuneJameese Joseph and Emily Sams all scored their first international goals and the United States women’s national soccer team went on to defeat Chile 5-0 on Tuesday night. Sams was first time Captain and Woman of the Match! Emma Sears and Trinity Rodman also scored for the United States, which hasn’t conceded a goal in five matches.

I admit I was wrong- when they moved Dunn from forward to left back – I did not think
she was good enough. But she developed into 1 heck of a left back for the US while still
playing forward, winger and midfield for her NWSL team.

GAMES ON TV

Sat, Jan 31
10 am USA Leeds United (Aaronson) vs Arsenal
12:30 pm USA Chelsea vs West Ham
12:30 pm ESPN+ Hamburger (Damion Downs) vs Bayern Munich
12:30 pm ESPN+ Levante vs Atletico Madrid (Cardoso)
3 pm NBC Liverpool vs New Castle United
3:30 pm beIN sport Monaco (Balogun) vs Rennes
5 pm univision America vs Necaxa (Liga MX)
8 pm Uni Monterrey vs Tiajuana
Sun, Feb 1
8 am ESPNd,+ Rayo Vallencano vs Real Madrid
8:30 am ESPN+ PSV (Dest) vs Feyenoord
9 am USA Aston Villa vs Brendford
9 am Peacock Nottingham Forest vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
9 am NBCSN, Pea Man United vs Fulham (Jedi)
11:30 am NBCSN Tottenham vs Man City
2:45 pm Para + Juventus (Mckinney) vs Parma
Mon, Feb 2
2:45 pm USA Sunderland vs Burnley
2:45 pm Para+ Udinese vs Roma
Tues, feb 3
2:45 pm Para+ Bologna vs AC Milan (Pulisic)
3 pm Para+ Arsenal vs Chelsea (League cup)
9 pm FS2 Olimpia vs America (Concacaf Champs)
Wed, Feb 4
3 pm Para+ Man City vs New Castle United (League Cup)
3 pm Para+ Inter Milan vs Torino (Copa)
Thurs, Feb 5
3 pm PAra+ Atalanta (Musah) vs Juventus (McKinney) (Copa)
3 pm ESPN+ Real Bettis vs Atletico Madrid (Cardoso) Copa
Fri, Feb 6
2:30 pm ESPN+ Union Berlin vs Frankfurt
3 pm USA? Leeds United (Aaronson) vs Nottingham Forest
Sat, Feb 7
7:30 am USA Man United vs Tottenham
10 am Fulham (Jedi) vs Everton
12:30 pm MGladbach (Scaly, Reyna) vs Leverkusen (Tillman)
Sun Feb 8
7:30 am USA Liverpool vs Man City

Sun, Mar 1 She Believes Cup Starts
5 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Argentina
Wed, Mar 4 She Believes Cup
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Canada (Columbus, OH)
Sat, Mar 7 She Believes Cup
3:30 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Colombia
Sat, Mar 28
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Belgium
Tues, Mar 31
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Portugal
Sun, May 31
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Results that matter

Title impacting matches and head-to-head fixtures by jcksnftsnJan 31, 2026, 10:46 AM EST

Crystal Palace v Chelsea - Premier League

LONDON, ENGLAND – JANUARY 25: Chris Richards of Crystal Palace during the Premier League match between Crystal Palace and Chelsea at Selhurst Park on January 25, 2026 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Sebastian Frej/Getty Images)Getty Images There are a number of big matchups this weekend, including some battles with top of the table competition and head-to-head matches so let’s get to what you should be keeping an eye on this weekend.

Saturday

Werder Bremen v Borussia Monchengladbach – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Joe Scally started again last weekend as Borussia Monchengladbach fell to Stuttgart 3-0. Unfortunately, Gio Reyna has picked up another injury and missed the match. Gladbach have just one win and four points from their past six matches and they are in eleventh place, two points ahead of their hosts this weekend, Werder Bremen, who are in fifteenth, three points ahead of Mainz in the relegation playoff battle.

Augsburg v St. Pauli – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Noahkai Banks missed last weekend due to yellow card suspension as Augsburg pulled off a shocking 2-1 win over league leading Bayern Munich. Banks had started 13 straight matches so it will be interesting to see if he’s inserted right back into the lineup with Augsburg having won for the first time in six matches in his absence. Augsburg will be facing James Sands and St Pauli this weekend who are in the relegation zone as they have just seven points from their past dozen matches.

RB Leipzig v Mainz – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Lennard Maloney and Mainz have won two of three to pull themselves into the relegation playoff position though they are still three points back of safety. They face fourth place RB Leipzig this weekend who are coming off a 1-1 draw with fellow relegation candidate St. Pauli.

Eintracht Frankfurt v Bayer Leverkusen – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Malik Tillman scored a brace in Champions League play midweek as Bayer Leverkusen defeated Villarreal 3-0. Leverkusen also defeated Werder Bremen last weekend and are in sixth place in the Bundesliga standings.

Leeds United v Arsenal – 10a on USA Network: Brenden Aaronson and Leeds United drew with Everton last weekend and remain in sixteenth place in the Premier League table. They will face an Arsenal side that are leading the league but need to get back on track after a 3-2 loss to Manchester United last weekend.



Osasuna v Villarreal – 10:15a on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Alex Freeman has completed his move to join Villarreal though it would be surprising to seem him inserted into the lineup immediately for a side that is currently fourth in the La Liga standings and on track for a Champions League spot as they hold a seven point lead over fifth place Espanyol.

Paris v Olympique Marseille – 11a on beIN Sports: Tim Weah and Olympique Marseille are in third place in the Ligue 1 standings but fell 3-0 to Club Brugge midweek in Champions League action and were eliminated before the start of the knockout rounds as they finished with nine points through eight matches. They are eight points back of league leading Lens heading into their matchup with Paris FC who are in fourteenth place.

Hamburg v Bayern Munich – 12:30p on ESPN Select: Damion Downs has started three straight matches for Hamburg but is still looking for his first goal contribution and team win since moving to the Bundesliga. On Saturday, Hamburg will face Bayern Munich who should be heavy favorites but fell to Augsburg last weekend.

Levante v Atletico Madrid – 12:30p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Johnny Cardoso started the last two league matches for Atletico Madrid, both of which hiss team won, but he came off the bench in the two Champions League matches. Atletico fell to Bodo/Glimt on Wednesday as both teams advanced to the next round of the competition.

Monaco v Rennes – 3:05p on beIN sports: Folarin Balogun and Monaco also advanced in Champions League action though they settled for a scoreless draw with Juventus on Wednesday. In league play they have fallen to tenth place as they have failed to win in their past five matches. They will host sixth place Rennes on Saturday evening.

Sunday

PSV v Feyenoord – 8:30a on ESPN Select: Sergino Dest started and played the full 90’ as PSV fell to Bayern Munich 2-1 on Wednesday and failed to advance in Champions League play. It’s been a rough week for the club and for Dest who was pulled at halftime last weekend with his team down 2-1 to seventeenth place NAC Breda. PSV would come back in the second half to tie the match and pick up a point. This weekend they host second place Feyenoord who are still fourteen points back of the league leaders.

Manchester United v Fulham – 9a on NBCSN: Antonee Robinson and Fulham will take on a suddenly hot Manchester United side on Sunday morning. United have defeated Man City and Arsenal back-to-back and now sit in fourth place though they are still twelve points back of league leading Arsenal. For their part Fulham are coming off a 2-1 win over Brighton and have suffered defeat just once in the eight matches since Robinson returned. Fulham have gone from 15th back up to seventh place, just four points back of United.

Nottingham Forest v Crystal Palace – 9a on Peacock: Unfortunately, Chris Richards and Crystal Palace are headed in the opposite direction. They have fallen to fifteenth place following their 3-1 defeat to Chelsea last weekend though Richards at least scored a consolation goal. Palace will be facing a Forest side that have been gaining some confidence lately, coming off a win over Brentford last weekend in league play and a midweek 4-0 win over Ferencavaros in Europa League action.

Olympique Lyon v Lille – 9a on beIN Sports: Tanner Tessmann and Lyon defeated Metz 5-2 last weekend to maintain their fourth place position in Ligue 1 and will play host to fifth place Lille who they lead by four points in the league standings. Tessmann started last weekend and was a halftime sub midweek for Lyon as the team scored three second half goals to defeat PAOK Thessaloniki 4-2 in Europa League action.

Como v Atalanta – 9a on Paramount+: Yunus Musah did not appear last weekend in Atalanta’s 4-0 win over Parma in league play but did get the start midweek in Champions League action. Atalanta fell to Union Saint-Gilloise but it did not impact their position heading into the knockout rounds of the tournament.

Toulouse v Auxerre – 11:15a on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie started and picked up the assist on the opening goal of Toulouse’s 2-0 win over Brest last weekend. Toulouse remained in eighth place with the victory, they are just three points back of fifth place Lille for Europa League qualification. They face an Auxerre side that has just three wins in nineteen matches and need to nearly double their points to crawl out of the relegation spots.

Parama v Juventus – 2:45p on Paramount+: Weston McKennie and Juventus defeated third place Napoli last weekend to pull within a point of them in the Serie A standings for the fourth and final Champions League qualification position. McKennie started midweek as well as Juve played Monaco to a scoreless draw, a result that was good enough for the Italian’s to advance while Monaco was sent home.

Athletic Club v Real Sociedad – 3p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Pellegrino Matarazzo extended his dream start with Real Sociedad as the team knocked off Celta Vigo 3-1 last weekend. Sociedad were in sixteenth place when Matarazzo took over and they have moved up to eighth place heading into their matchup with Athletic Bilbao who are themselves in fourteenth place though just three points back of Sociedad.

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USA

USMNT defender Alex Freeman officially joins Villarreal CF
Ricardo Pepi and Antonee Robinson rumored to be transfer targets

Malik Tillman scored 2 for PSV Wed but they are knocked out of UCL

Ladies

Crystal Dunn announces retirement from professional soccer
USWNT vs. Chile, 2026 friendly: What we learned
USWNT close out January Camp with impressive win against Chile
Rodman, Hayes viral celebration caps off U.S. rout

USWNT to host Japan in trio of April friendlies
USWNT star Trinity Rodman’s record deal: Why it’s a boon for her, but NWSL worries linger


Champions League

Champions League talking points: Mourinho’s master class, biggest disappointments, best moments, more
Champions League playoff picks: Can Mourinho shock Madrid again?
Champions League playoff round draw: Newcastle to play Qarabag, Real Madrid face Benfica again – as it happened

Champions League recap: Grading all 36 teams, plus our Best XI of the League Phase
Arsenal’s Mikel Arteta: ‘I beg’ Premier League for squad rule change

Explained: Why Premier League is set to have a fifth team in Champions League next year
Napoli out, Madrid fall into playoff
Madrid handed Benfica, Jose rematch in UCL draw

Goalkeeping


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Champions League talking points: Mourinho’s master class, biggest disappointments, best moments, more

  • Multiple contributors

Jan 28, 2026, 08:09 PM ET ESPN

A frantic Wednesday night — 18 games all at once — wrapped the league phase of the UEFA Champions League, and we have much to talk about! Anatoliy Trubin‘s heroics will long in the memory for Benfica fans and neutrals alike — and probably Real Madrid supporters, too — after the goalkeeper scored a stoppage-time goal to seal the Portuguese side’s place in the knockout phase. Elsewhere, Arsenal completed a clean sweep, winning all eight of their league phase games, while Chelsea won 3-2 in Napoli — sealing the Blues a spot in the Top 8 and eliminating Antonio Conte’s side in the process. So, with the league phase complete and seedings set for Friday’s knockout playoff round draw, ESPN FC’s writers weigh in on the action so far and what’s still to come.


– UCL final matchday as it happened: Napoli out, Madrid fall into playoff
– Best Champions League tifos: Bob Marley, The Beatles, ‘Erling the Great’
– When is the Champions League knockout draw? Date, bracket, more


Q1. What a night! Real Madrid fell out of the Top 8 with a 4-2 defeat at Benfica, a result that launched the Portuguese side into the knockout playoffs. Was Jose Mourinho’s turnaround the most dramatic ending ever to a group stage since you started watching the Champions League?

James Olley: Funnily enough, the most dramatic endings to the group stage aren’t really something that live in the memory. This competition is about knockout moments, trophy-winning moments. Real Madrid now have to play two extra games as heavy favorites and Benfica scrape into a playoff. That latter development was undeniably a dramatic moment, certainly in the way it came about, and the competition is better for having a character like Mourinho in it for a little longer. Napoli’s topsy-turvy game against Chelsea was also fun. But don’t let one enjoyable night in front of the TV mask the weeks and weeks of diluted nonsense it took to get to this point. And the teams who won’t be seeded in the knockout rounds are Borussia DortmundOlympiacosClub BruggeGalatasarayAS MonacoFK QarabagBodo/Glimt and Benfica. Bodo getting this far is a good story but does anyone really expect any major upsets in this extra playoff round? So what was the point again?

Julien Laurens: I don’t want to ever hear again that this format of the competition is not good! I don’t want anyone to moan again about it. This was brilliant drama again, as we expected at the start of the night. There was always going to be some drama! It could have been at PSG-Newcastle or at another game, but it had to be Mourinho and Benfica! Who else? The narrative was there for it: Mourinho against his former club with the opportunity to knock them out of the Top 8. He sent Trubin up for the free kick which was never a free kick! The delivery was perfect and Thibaut Courtois, who made some big saves before, couldn’t save the header. The only thing that this can come close to is the Francesco Acerbi goal for Inter Milan in the semifinals last season against Barcelona. That’s why we love football so much!

Beth Lindop: I mean, how can you not love football, eh? There are few greater sights in football than a goalkeeper scoring a goal and for this one to be so significant in terms of keeping Benfica’s Champions League dreams alive makes it all the more special. It’s hard to remember a more dramatic climax so early in the competition and for advocates of the new format, it’s further evidence that the extra games are worth the pay-off. Plus, who doesn’t want to see more Mourinho touchline antics? Absolutely box office.

Gab Marcotti: Hell yes! Because it’s freaking Jose Mourinho against his old club! Because Benfica had lost their first four games in the group stage! Because it’s freaking Real Madrid! Because they had lost three of four games in all competitions prior to this one! Because they needed a raft of results elsewhere to go their way for this to even be a possibility! Because they actually battered Real Madrid (2.99 to 1.50 xG)! Because the goal came deep in injury time with the last touch of the game! Because the goal scorer, Trubin, is a freaking goalkeeper! Because Trubin didn’t appear to realize they needed a fourth and seemed to be time-wasting seconds before his goal! Because it’s Mourinho!

Mark Ogden: What an ending! It was only missing a Mourinho sprint down the touchline, but you can’t have everything. And credit must go to Mourinho because, with seven minutes of stoppage-time played, he ordered Trubin forward for the last-ditch free kick. Trubin headed home for an incredible goal to seal Benfica’s playoff spot. The best part of this story is that Real Madrid will now face Benfica or Bodo/Glimt in the playoffs. Let’s just hope it’s Benfica so we can have the prospect of Mourinho getting under Real’s skin yet again.

Sam Tighe: I can’t think of anything that matches that. The Real Madrid meltdown (two red cards), the fact the goalkeeper scored, the fact it was Mourinho … that was outrageous. The best comparison I can even try to offer is Pierre-Emile Højbjerg’s 95th-minute winner for Tottenham Hotspur against Marseille in 2022, which saw them qualify for the knockouts. But come on. Højberg is not a goalkeeper, so it’s significantly less novel than the utter madness we just watched.

Rob Dawson: In terms of drama, it doesn’t get much better than a goalkeeper scoring in the 98th minute to seal a place in the Champions League knockout rounds. Goalkeeper Jimmy Glass is still a famous name in the U.K. after he scored a last-minute goal which saved Carlisle United from relegation and kept them in the Football League in 1999. It’s likely that the name Trubin will never be forgotten in Lisbon.

Alex Kirkland: It was an incredible, head-spinning few minutes, with Real Madrid all of a sudden out of the Top 8, and Benfica progressing, with Mourinho in tears as he headed down the tunnel after the final whistle. It’s hard to think of a group stage climax that came close. The most memorable turnaround featuring a Spanish team in recent years was probably Atlético Madrid, who had been bottom of their group before they went to FC Porto and won 3-1 in December 2021, with two of their goals coming in added time. But even that can’t compare to this. Real Madrid were famously never eliminated in the group stage in the old UCL format. Now, for two years in a row, they’ve been forced into the playoffs.

Sam Marsden: For all the above reasons, it was obviously amazing. Very little can beat a last-minute goal from a goalkeeper. How it will be remembered will depend on what comes next, which I think we all hope will be another dose of Mourinho vs. Alvaro Arbeloa. It’s unlikely Benfica would beat Madrid over two legs (surely not?) but we all need Part II after the remarkable scenes we witness in Lisbon. Football gods, do your thing.

Are Arsenal favourites to win the Champions League?

Alejandro Moreno and Steve Nicol debate who should be favorites to win the Champions League.


Q2. Who/what has been the biggest disappointment of the league phase?

Dawson: It has to be Napoli. Antonio Conte will argue that Italian clubs aren’t working with the same budget as the European heavyweights — particularly in the Premier League — but the reigning Serie A champions shouldn’t anywhere near the bottom of a 36-team table. Losing 6-2 at PSV Eindhoven and failing to beat Eintracht Frankfurt at home are poor results. Conte has an impressive record in domestic football, but for whatever reason he’s never seemed able to replicate it in the Champions League.

Olley: I’d have to pick the league phase format itself. The second year of this Swiss model has reinforced my view of the first: the importance of matches between big teams are diluted, the extra two matches add nothing but an unnecessary increase on player workload, and the televisual feast of Matchday 8 comes at too high a price of sterile build-up. It is the European Super League by not-so-stealth design. Giving the top two home advantage in the knockout rounds is merely an incentive to make a flawed system have more meaning, and there is an argument it overtly compromises the purity of knockout football — which the last-16 stage onwards always was.

Ogden: I completely agree with James on this. The league phase may have heavyweight clashes on each matchday, but the games don’t really mean anything because the giants know they’ll qualify anyway. Ok, you might argue that was always the case in the old group phase, but we did see some super-clubs — Manchester UnitedBarcelona — crash into the UEFA Europa League in recent years, as there was more jeopardy and clubs knew they had less margin for error. This league phase has been a long preamble toward a somewhat inevitable conclusion.

Tighe: Sorry James, and sorry Mark … I remain a big fan of this new format. There’s enough peril involved across the first eight games and I cannot get on board with the idea that some of these games “don’t matter” — they absolutely do. That’s why dropped points in the first three or four weeks are likely to scupper your chances of finishing in the Top 8, as this first phase has effectively become a quest to stay perfect. The stakes start high and stay there. Last year JuventusAC Milan and Manchester City dropped into the playoffs, then paid the price. This year, Real MadridInternazionale, Paris Saint-Germain, Atlético Madrid, Borussia Dortmund and Juve (again) risk the same. I am willing to die on this hill: the league phase is good!

Are Chelsea more entertaining to watch under Liam Rosenior?

Frank Leboeuf reacts to Chelsea’s 3-2 win over Napoli in the Champions League.

Marcotti: I kind of feel I need to address more than one issue here. The biggest disappointment has to be Villarreal. Their table looks worse than it should because after the Dortmund shellacking left them with one point from five games, they took their foot off the gas, which is understandable. But still, this is an embarrassment for a side that are fourth in LaLiga. Even with a stretched squad, you expected more.

As for the format, I like it, because it encourages attacking, less speculative football. In that sense, it’s definitely more entertaining. The “jeopardy” argument is a valid one, but I think it’s because the seedings are pretty meaningless (other than finishing top eight). There’s an easy fix, albeit one that only me and UEFA general secretary Theo Theodoridis like, which is why it won’t happen: Let the top seed choose their opponent for the knockouts. Then second seed picks next, and on down from there. Not only would it add a layer of drama, but it would make games far more meaningful.

Last year, Liverpool won the group stage. What was their reward (other than missing out on the playoff round)? Paris Saint-Germain in the Round of 16. Some reward!

Kirkland: I agree with Gab, it’s Villarreal. One point! For one of the best teams in Spain! Embarrassing is the word. It’s been the kind of campaign that makes you think: what’s the point of working so hard, all season, to qualify for the Champions League if you’re going to perform like this? Whatever the circumstances or mitigating factors — like prioritizing LaLiga, and some tough fixtures in Europe — there’s really no excuse. Lose to Tottenham Hotspur, Man City, Dortmund, sure. But Pafos and F.C. København? I really rate Marcelino Garcia Toral as a coach, but he has some serious questions to answer.

Marsden: Yeah, I’ve got to go with Villarreal here too. For a team from Europe’s top five leagues — and it doesn’t matter which of those we are talking about — to not win a single game is pretty pitiful. Defeats to Pafos and at home to København were probably the lows of Villarreal’s campaign, but there is no shortage of moments to pick from. What makes their results even more surprising is that, until recently, they were keeping pace with Barcelona and Real Madrid at the top of LaLiga. One point from eight games is not a good look for the Spanish top flight.

Lindop: When it comes to biggest disappointment, I’m going to go for Inter Milan. Last season’s finalists will likely still qualify for the round of 16 but, considering they’re five points clear at the top of Serie A, I think they’ve been a little bit underwhelming. Now, that might sound harsh considering they’ve won four of their eight games, but they failed to really assert themselves in either of their home matches against Liverpool and Arsenal, and they were beaten away at Atlético Madrid. They haven’t shown they’re ready to make the next step as far as winning the competition is concerned.

Laurens: I like this format a lot, I did last year and I still do. In terms of disappointment, I agree on both Napoli and Villarreal too. How can you be fourth in LaLiga and second-bottom in the Champions League at the same time? For many of us, Villarreal were one of the teams to watch as a surprise package; instead, they’ve been a laughingstock! For Napoli, Conte has always struggled in the Champions League, so it’s unsurprising to see his team not doing well this year. Eintracht Frankfurt have been a shambles too, so have Ajax Amsterdam.

Klinsmann: Musiala’s return is huge for Bayern Munich

Jürgen Klinsmann praises Jamal Musiala after he scored on his first start since returning from injury in Bayern’s 2-1 win vs. PSV.


Q3. Arsenal and Bayern Munich are clearly the front-runners to win it all based on their dominance in the league phase. Is there any other team that comes close and can win it all?

Dawson: Real Madrid. It’s been a turbulent season with the noise around Vinícius Júnior and the departure of Xabi Alonso, but it’s still a team packed full of special players. Often, Champions League knockout ties are decided by moments, and Real Madrid have the type of attackers who produce them time and time again. Then there’s the weight of history. It’s something that’s impossible to quantify, but there’s something about Real Madrid in the Champions League. Despite their problems, they’re a team that no one will want to face in March and April.

Ogden: Arsenal and Bayern are the favorites now, but it means nothing because the slate is wiped clean at the start of the knockout rounds. The League Phase is basically a glorified preseason campaign, and now the real action begins. So, feel free to mock, but I’m tipping Liverpool and PSG to reach the final if they avoid each other along the way. Put all of your league phase stats and form guides in the bin because it’s a completely different tournament when it’s two-legged ties and sudden death. PSG will come good, and Liverpool too: we’ve all seen how Anfield can propel Liverpool to remarkable results.

Tighe: Mark’s right: The league phase isn’t a great indicator of what’s to come. You need only look at PSG here, who last season sprang to life at the turn of the year and suddenly became an unstoppable force. Tipping a team here isn’t easy, as there’s plenty of reasons to downgrade most team’s chances (Barcelona have Pedri‘s dodgy hamstrings, Liverpool are too open, Real Madrid are too combustible), so I’ll be super boring and choose … the reigning champs, PSG, again.

Lindop: I do have a weird feeling about Liverpool this season. Now, I may well end up with egg on my face as they’ve been pretty terrible at times in the Premier League this term, but for the most part, the Champions League has provided some respite, with Real Madrid, Inter Milan and Atlético Madrid among the opponents they’ve already vanquished. With less of a focus on set pieces and physicality in Europe, Arne Slot’s side are better equipped for success. They have a lot of talented individuals and will fancy themselves to beat anyone in a knockout tie at Anfield.

The fact that they won’t be involved in a title race in the spring could also work in their favor, too.

Burley: Barcelona’s attack will be a huge threat in UCL knockouts

Craig Burley reacts to Barcelona’s 4-1 win over Copenhagen in the Champions League.

Olley: Barcelona. The Premier League has produced three of the past six winners and that undermines the argument I’m about to make … but the intensity of English football can often catch up with teams who reach the latter stages of the competition. Three games a week for months on end, with no winter break, plus the intensity of a title race — which may now exist after Arsenal’s recent form — may all be factors. Barcelona look more stable than Real Madrid, although I see Rob’s argument about their pedigree and individual quality being a threat to anyone. We may all feel stupid ignoring last season’s champions, PSG, too.

Marcotti: They’re kind of two different questions. Being the third best team right now and being the third favorite are two different things. Heck, if Arsenal get embroiled in an energy-sapping title race, they might not be the favorites. A lot can happen in a few months. For me, Barcelona are the third best team right now (with all their foibles). Third-favorites to win, well, I’m not going to discount Real Madrid, simply because of pedigree, Kylian Mbappé and Thibaut Courtois. I am slightly surprised how gung-ho everybody is about Paris Saint-Germain. Compared to last season, they downgraded their goalkeeper (at least, short-term), Marquinhos is a year older and they’ve already lost to MarseilleParis FCAS Monaco, Bayern (at home!) and Sporting CP this season.

Kirkland: I’ve got big doubts about both Barcelona and Real Madrid. Barça’s defense is weak. No clean sheets in the Champions League this season, with 14 goals conceded, is not good enough. They conceded three goals at Club Brugge, and two at Slavia Prague. I’m not sure they can be relied upon in the latter stages. And yes, Madrid have Mbappé, Courtois and an improving Vini Jr, but they’re not particularly strong at the back either, or in midfield. Just look at how many chances they gave up to Benfica on Wednesday. I’d look to Liverpool or PSG.

Laurens: There is no way this current PSG team can win it again. Going back to back is hard enough if you keep your level at the same height from one season to the next, but it’s even harder if your level drops! This team is the shadow of the team that walked over Europe’s best last season, so rule them out! I still think that another Premier League team would be third favorite. My money would be on Liverpool and Manchester City. I know they have issues so far this season, but they are also capable on their day, with their key players, to beat anyone else.

Marsden: Forget the top two, because holders PSG still have to be the favorites for me. The league phase is increasingly relevant, and home advantage in the second leg through to a potential final will be huge for Arsenal and Bayern, but the key is who peaks in spring, not winter. A demanding Premier League campaign may count against Arsenal later in the competition, and while Lens are pushing PSG hard, Luis Enrique’s side should be able to better balance European football. Bayern’s commanding Bundesliga lead could help them stay fresh for the Champions League’s latter phases well.


Q4. Who/what was your favorite moment/goal/player of the league phase, and why?

Tighe: I’ll probably never stop mentioning it: I was in the stadium for Micky van de Ven‘s outrageous solo goal for Tottenham vs. F.C. København. It’s the best goal I’ve ever seen live. He picked the ball up on the edge of his own box, started running and just kept going. He beat five, arguably six, players and lashed it in. Not only was it a ridiculous individual feat, but that stadium really hasn’t seen too many positive moments this season, so I’d count myself as even more fortunate on account of that.

Marcotti: I’m going to go a bit left field here. It’s week one of the Champions League, Kairat Almaty, debutants in the competition, traveling away to Sporting CP. Their first-choice keeper got injured in the qualifying round against Celtic to get them into the league phase. Their second-choice keeper got injured four days earlier, in a league game, so 18-year-old Sherhan Kalmurza has to make his first-ever start as a professional.

After 21 minutes, Sporting get a penalty. Kalmurza bounces up and down in the goalmouth. Morten Hjulmand takes the spot-kick and Kalmurza’s kick save denies him the goal! It didn’t last. Sporting scored four and a week later, he conceded five at home to Real Madrid. But no matter. Thanks to an 18-year-old debutant, until the 44th minute (when Sporting took the lead), you believed in fairy tales.

Dawson: I’m going for Jens Petter Hauge’s goal for Bodo/Glimt against Manchester City. It’s obviously not a moment Pep Guardiola will remember fondly, but for the Bodo/Glimt fans packed into the stadium that night, it’s something they’ll never forget. It was a superb effort, with Hauge feinting away from Rodri with a clever step-over before guiding his shot into the top corner; Gianluigi Donnarumma could only watch the ball fly past as he sank to his knees. What a goal, and what a night for Bodo/Glimt.

Kirkland: For Real Madrid, two individual performances stand out. Mbappé’s four-goal haul at Olympiacos — including a seven-minute hat trick — and Vinícius‘ display against Monaco in Matchday 7. Madrid haven’t been convincing overall, but Mbappé, as the competition’s top scorer so far, has delivered. Also, it felt like so long since we’d seen Vini performing at this level, with this kind of intensity and energy, creating three goals and then scoring a brilliant solo effort himself.

Burley: Man City won’t come close to winning the Champions League

Craig Burley believes Manchester City’s defence isn’t good enough for Pep Guardiola’s side to win the Champions League.

Olley: From the games I attended, Estevao’s performance against Barcelona was a memorable highlight. Lamine Yamal is obviously a phenomenal talent, and the game was billed as Estevao’s chance to show he could one day reach Yamal’s level: two 18-year-olds with the world at their feet. It felt an unfair framing given how much Yamal has already achieved in the game and yet, on the night, the Brazilian produced a magical display capped by a brilliant individual goal.

Lindop: Well, I’ve backed Liverpool to win the whole thing so I’m going to pick out Dominik Szoboszlai as my player of the league phase. The Hungary international has been the Reds’ best performer by some distance, with four goals and three assists in the Champions League so far. His pressure penalty to secure a victory away to Inter Milan and his clever free kick against Marseille were highlights. If Slot’s side do go all the way this term, you can bet that Szoboszlai will have something to do with it.

Ogden: It feels like a lifetime ago now, but Marcus Rashford‘s two goals for Barcelona against Newcastle United at St James’ Park on Matchday 1 were a real highlight — especially his stunning 20-yard strike. We’ve all seen Rashford have ups and downs during his time at Manchester United, and the ups included some great goals in big games — his performance against Eddie Howe’s side was a reminder of why he can still be a world-class player. Consistency has always been Rashford’s problem, but he owned the Champions League stage that night.

Marsden: It has to be Yamal’s goal against Club Brugge not just because it was a brilliant goal, slightly different to some of the other strikes we’ve seen so far, but because of how crazy the match was. Brugge led three times against Barça before eventually drawing 3-3 in a crazy game in Belgium. The Yamal goal, which made it 2-2, was superb. Grabbing the ball outside the box, he ghosted between two opponents and passed to Fermín López, who flicked it back to him, and then produced an outrageous finish with the outside of his boot.

Laurens: For me, it has to be Mbappé’s whole campaign so far. To score 12 goals in seven games is exceptional. There was his quadruple against Olympiacos, of course, but everything he has done so far in the competition has been amazing. He is on track to get close to his idol Cristiano Ronaldo‘s record of 17 goals in a Champions League campaign. To do it in a dysfunctional side like this current Real Madrid, still not at their best collectively, is even more remarkable.

A combined image showing action from some of the 18 Champions League matches played simultaneously on Wednesday to complete this season's league phase

Getty Images

Welcome to ‘Wild Wednesday’: Watching five minutes of all 18 Champions League games

By Tim SpiersJan. 29, 2026Updated Jan. 30, 2026The Athletic has live coverage of today’s Champions League knockout play-off draw.

When UEFA changed the format of the Champions League, it was for nights like this.

The Swiss model, now more famous than Swiss Cottage station on the London Tube network but not yet as famous as Swiss cheese, replaced the old eight groups of four model (less catchy) in 2024.

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The final day was pretty good last year, with 64 goals in the 18 games, but no big teams dropped out and the big will-they-won’t-they? of the night saw Paris Saint-Germain stroll past Stuttgart 4-1 to avoid an early elimination (wonder what happened to them).

While the new format has, fairly, been accused of having a lack of jeopardy, 17 of the 18 matches on this season’s edition had something riding on them, a dream scenario for the tournament organisers. This is Aleksander Ceferin on a stick, the UEFA bat symbol lit up in the night sky.

Going into the final round of matches in 2023 (the last year with the eight-groups-of-four model), 11 of the 32 teams had already qualified and nine were out of the competition.

Conversely, tonight (Wednesday), of the 36 teams, only six are either already through (Arsenal and Bayern Munich) or out (Villarreal, Kairat, Slavia Prague and Eintracht Frankfurt).

True to form, The Athleticas a year ago, want a dogsbody to watch all 18 matches in one night, so here we are. This better be good.

We’ll keep the format the same as last year, splitting the 18 games into five-minute chunks, because five x 18 = 90.

The order has been (mostly) carefully curated, with a couple of scene-setters at the top, some do-or-die games to finish, and then the likes of Marseille (who have scored four goals in the opening 15 minutes of matches) early on, with late scorers PSV (seven in the final 15 minutes of games) towards the end. And then in stoppage time we’ll go freestyle.

This is the order for the night…

  • 0-5 minutes: PSG vs Newcastle
  • 6-10: Club Brugge vs Marseille
  • 11-15: Arsenal vs Kairat
  • 16-20: Monaco vs Juventus
  • 21-25: Bayer Leverkusen vs Villarreal
  • 26-30: Pafos vs Slavia Prague
  • 31-35: Liverpool vs Qarabag
  • 36-40: Atletico Madrid vs Bodo/Glimt
  • 41-45: Manchester City vs Galatasaray
  • 46-50: Union Saint-Gilloise vs Atalanta
  • 51-55: Benfica vs Real Madrid
  • 56-60: Barcelona vs Copenhagen
  • 61-65: Eintracht Frankfurt vs Tottenham
  • 66-70: Athletic Club vs Sporting CP
  • 71-75: Borussia Dortmund vs Inter
  • 76-80: PSV vs Bayern Munich
  • 81-85: Ajax vs Olympiacos
  • 86-90: Napoli vs Chelsea

Of the 64 goals scored on last year’s ‘Wild Wednesday’, as no one has dubbed it, we witnessed five of them live, so hopefully we can top that tonight.

Right, we begin in Paris…


0-5 mins: PSG vs Newcastle

There are two mentions by the UK’s TNT Sports commentator Darren ‘Fletch’ Fletcher of Paris Fashion Week in the couple of minutes approaching kick-off (including “the pitch has replaced the catwalk”), which, to be honest, immediately makes us want to switch to another game already, but we shall persevere.

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The hosts go straight on the attack… and win a penalty! Inside 5o seconds! Blimey, we’re on for 18 goals at this rate.

VAR has stopped the game because the ball came off Sven Botman’s foot onto Bradley Barcola’s arm and then onto Lewis Miley’s arm. In 2026, that’s a penno, but co-commentator Steve McManaman strongly disagrees and pleads a defence for Miley that he’s no longer aware of where his limbs are: “He’s chasing back, he doesn’t know where his arm is. It’s ridiculous.”

Anyway, we’re chatting about the commentary because of the five minutes we watch PSG vs Newcastle, three minutes and seven seconds are taken up by that VAR check. Right, here’s the penalty… and it’s saved! Nick Pope brilliantly dives to block one-handed from Ousmane Dembele.

Video for UK readers

Ousmane Dembélé’s penalty is saved by Nick Pope in the Newcastle goal 🧤@tntsports & @discoveryplusUK pic.twitter.com/HQ94EwAyRD

— Football on TNT Sports (@footballontnt) January 28, 2026

Lovely stuff. What a night we’ve got in store here. Time to turn over.

Elsewhere: Copenhagen take a shock lead in Barcelona, while Athletic Club are ahead against Sporting and Arsenal and Club Brugge also score early, while Spurs have one ruled out.


6-10 mins: Club Brugge vs Marseille

We’re “in Bruges” to see quick starters Marseille score their customary early goal.

No, wait, co-commentator Andy Townsend is talking about limp goalkeeper wrists and a dream start for the home side… and now they’re showing a slow-motion replay of Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg shaking his head. Yep, the home side are in front already and we’ve missed it.

With Copenhagen winning in Barcelona, both the Danes and the Belgians are overtaking Marseille, who are down to 25th as things stand after six minutes.

Marseille look a bit forlorn, Leonardo Balerdi is so out of sorts he manages to tread on the ball and there are no shots for either team in our five minutes. Time to turn over.

Elsewhere: Vitinha puts PSG ahead, and there’s a second goal at the Emirates; Arsenal 1-1 Kairat.

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11-15 mins: Arsenal vs Kairat

Yep, it’s already one each here. Great. Eberechi Eze is playing for Arsenal, so this must be their reserve team.

Oh, and now apparently Club Brugge have scored again… with their goals in the fourth and 11th minutes infuriatingly placed either side of the five minutes we were watching events in Belgium. Is this going to be one of those nights?

Onward. The Emirates looks pretty full, and there’s a hefty roar from the away fans as Kairat cross the halfway line. Then Gabriel Martinelli tries to win successive headers in midfield in what feels like a scrappy game. Still, Kairat’s Dortmund-esque kit looks pretty swish, so there’s that.

The only shot we’ve seen so far tonight is the saved PSG penalty. And now we’ve got to switch over to Monaco… but here comes Kai Havertz cutting inside… and he’s scored with a second to spare! Lovely strike. No time for a replay, though, as we’re heading to the Mediterranean!

Kai Havertz scores for ArsenalMike Hewitt/Getty Images

Elsewhere: Erling Haaland’s first open-play goal this side of Christmas puts Manchester City ahead against Galatasaray.


16-20 mins: Monaco vs Juventus

Right, we’ve seen two shots in 15 minutes, with one of them being a goal and the other a penalty save, that’s an impressive excitement-per-shot ratio.

What can Monaco and Juventus give us? It’s 0-0, the Italians need to win to sneak into the top eight, while Monaco are 22nd, a point ahead of the team in 24th.

They’re showing replays of a disallowed Monaco goal: Folarin Balogun pushed a defender before finding the net and Monaco boss Sebastien Pocognoli still isn’t over it. He’s arguing and has been booked.

This is a huge game for Monaco, but unsurprisingly there are loads of empty seats. There’s not much going on, so the commentators have started talking about the Monaco team of 2003. Yep, nothing to see here.

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Elsewhere: Chelsea are winning in Naples through an Enzo Fernandez penalty and Pafos’ Vlad Dragomir has scored a 30-yard piledriver.


21-25 mins: Bayer Leverkusen vs Villarreal

And we arrive in Leverkusen to a free kick being lined up by the away team, who are officially the worst in the competition, 36th out of 36.

It’s 1-0 to Leverkusen but we are informed the home goalkeeper has had “nothing to do”. The free kick reaches former Chelsea defender Renato Veiga, who heads not far wide. That’s only the third attempt at goal we’ve seen so far.

A win guarantees a play-off spot for Leverkusen and they seem to be strolling to it. Malik Tillman, who scored that opener, sees a shot deflected wide by Veiga after a lovely flowing move.

Elsewhere: A second goal for Liverpool against Qarabag from Florian Wirtz.


26-30 mins: Pafos vs Slavia Prague

To Pafos! Where’s that? Cyprus, of course, where a few players are wearing short-sleeved shirts. No wonder, it’s a balmy 14C (57F) at what must be the hottest match of the night?

The action’s not too hot on the pitch, but the commentator is talking about a “spectacular, stunning goal that will be forever remembered in these parts”. Sure. Good. Glad we missed that one. Still waiting to see our fourth shot.

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Pafos seem pretty content to sit on their lead. We’re now being told about a Pafos player who is formerly of Udinese and Watford (doesn’t narrow it down much) and there’s nothing happening.

We’re not sad to be switching over.

Elsewhere: Rayan Cherki doubles City’s lead, while Athletic are 2-1 ahead against Sporting.


31-35 mins: Liverpool vs Qarabag

A graphic showing the scoreline and scorers is on screen as we head to Anfield. Wirtz has scored, another miraculous goal we’ve missed.

It’s pretty quiet on Merseyside. Qarabag are in possession with playmaker Montiel (not that one) apparently having provided a creative spark so far, but he makes no play at all while we’re watching.

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Liverpool, who’ve got a strong side out, go close when Andy Robertson flashes a drive over the bar. A rare shot for us.

Right, who’s going to step up? We ride for Spain.

Elsewhere: Kylian Mbappe has put Real Madrid ahead at Benfica, while Napoli have equalised.


36-40 mins: Atletico Madrid vs Bodo/Glimt

And they’re talking about Bodo/Glimt having just scored. Of course they are. How many black cats did we run over while driving under a ladder today?

It’s 1-1, and the Norwegians are right in the hunt for the top 24, despite having only won one match of their seven so far, with three draws keeping them in contention.

Atletico are dominating possession and it’s probably a bit too warm for the lads from the Arctic Circle at 7C (45F). Anyway, it’s a great atmosphere at the Metropolitano. Obviously, we don’t witness an attempt at goal.

Elsewhere: Benfica have equalised.


41-45 mins: Manchester City vs Galatasaray

So how are City’s unusual centre-back pairing of Abdukodir Khusanov and Nathan Ake getting on against Victor Osimhen?

Well it’s 2-0 to the hosts and in terms of noise the Etihad is the quietest stadium so far, not helped by the usually rowdy Turkish fans being silenced by the scoreline.

On TNT, co-commentator Robbie Savage is talking about the effectiveness of City’s 4-2-2-2 formation, with full-backs Matheus Nunes and Rayan Ait-Nouri giving them good width and, as if by magic, Ait-Nouri barges down the left with a piercing run and cuts back for Phil Foden… who blazes over from 12 yards.

At least we saw a shot.

Phil Foden missed a good chance for Manchester CityOli Scarff/AFP via Getty Images

In 45 minutes of football, and with 28 goals scored around the grounds, we’ve seen precisely one of them, and that was in the only one of tonight’s 18 matches that has nothing riding on it. The odds of being that bored are slim.

Elsewhere: Rasmus Hojlund puts Napoli 2-1 up against Chelsea, while Joe Willock equalises for Newcastle in Paris.

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46-50 mins: Union Saint-Gilloise vs Atalanta

One of the six goalless games so far is in Belgium, where Union Saint-Gilloise must win and hope, although at the moment not even victory will do as results are going against them. A goal for Atalanta at this point would take them into fifth place, but our presence from hundreds of miles away guarantees that won’t happen just yet.

Again, there are plenty of empty seats. Maybe they’re all at home watching five minutes of every Champions League match. Nope, they’re not weird.

Anyway, the highlight of our five minutes is a shot from Union Saint-Gilloise’s brilliantly-named Brazilian forward Guilherme Smith, saved by the equally-excellently-named Marco Sportiello.

Elsewhere: Randal Kolo Muani puts Spurs 1-0 up in Frankfurt, while Robert Lewandowski equalises for Barcelona.


51-55 mins: Barcelona vs Copenhagen

This was supposed to be the slot for Benfica vs Real Madrid but the players haven’t even appeared from the tunnel yet! What’s going on?! Abort, abort. We’re going to have to push it back to later and bring Barcelona’s game forward.

There are empty seats at the Camp Nou too, but for very different reasons, as the stadium remains only half-open post-redevelopment. And, of course, we’ve just missed a goal.

It’s a pretty open game with Barcelona pretty much hammering Copenhagen. Fermin Lopez goes close when he fires into the side netting and there’s one-touch play to salivate over involving him, Lamine Yamal and Dani Olmo. This is by far the best football we’ve seen tonight.

Elsewhere: Olympiacos have taken the lead away at Ajax in a winners-take-all match.


56-60 mins: Eintracht Frankfurt vs Tottenham

Right, it’s the 56th minute in Frankfurt, Spurs are either winning or their fans are foaming at the mouth and calling for Thomas Frank to be axed.

It’s the former! They’re playing alright and 1-0 up.

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Wilson Odobert does a nice little run and cross, which is blocked. This is possibly a decent game but, if it is, we’ve probably just watched the worst five minutes of it. Literally nothing to report.

Elsewhere: Jamal Musiala scores his first goal for Bayern Munich since breaking his left leg at the Club World Cup in July, while Glimt have scored again against Atletico.


61-65 mins: Athletic Club v Sporting CP

Athletic Club are 2-1 up and immediately we turn on to a chance for Sporting. This bodes well. Geny Catamo volleys into the ground and over the bar from close range.

Sporting are looking pretty good here and… hang on, it’s a goal! We have a football goal! And it is absolutely beautiful. About 30 Sporting fans (genuinely) in the away, er, row go mental.

Francisco Trincao, the former Wolves loanee, has three players around him 25 yards out and plays to Pedro Goncalves (another ex-Wolves boy), who returns the one-two and then Trincao tucks it past the ’keeper. Woof.

Francisco Trincao, left, celebrates scoring Sporting’s second goal with Geny CatamoAnder Gillenea/AFP via Getty Images

The hosts respond immediately with Gorka Guruzeta firing just wide. This is decent. Athletic are in 26th and heading out on goal difference as things stand. Shame we have to move on, really.

Elsewhere: Yamal puts Barcelona ahead, Joao Pedro equalises for Chelsea and Liverpool go 5-0 up.


66-70 mins: Borussia Dortmund vs Inter

“It does feel as if this game is finally breaking out into something entertaining.”

TNT commentator Jacqui Oatley welcomes us to Germany with some good news. It’s 0-0, but apparently getting better.

This game pits 16th against 13th, although if Inter can score they’ll rise into the top eight and dump defending champions PSG into next month’s play-offs.

Serhou Guirassy is subbed off to be replaced by Karim Adeyemi and honestly that is the most interesting thing to happen during a five-minute spell that’s so dull it could be used as a torture technique. Back to the status quo.

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Elsewhere: Two penalties: Raphinha extends Barcelona’s lead against Copenhagen and Ajax equalise against Olympiacos.


71-75 mins: PSV v Bayern Munich

In Eindhoven, Bayern Munich were already qualified for the round of 16 before kick-off and are 1-0 up, while PSV are down in 30th as things stand and heading out of the competition. One goal, though, will send them through on goal difference.

The first thing to notice is that Bayern’s away kit — black shirts with red shorts — is quite hideous. At least we’ve only got five minutes with it.

PSV may need a goal to stay in the Champions League but that doesn’t stop their Sergino Dest piddling around with a rabona cross into the box. Fair play, lad.

It feels like a good, attacking phase of the game, with Michael Olise driving one low across goal and 20-year-old defender Tom Bischof languidly sending a 60-yard pass to Luis Diaz. Bayern are a really lovely side.

A nice, flowing move involving Aleksandar Pavlovic, Harry Kane and Alphonso Davies ends with them winning a corner, but that’s time up for us.

Elsewhere: Union Saint-Gilloise are ahead against Atalanta.


76-80 mins: Ajax v Olympiacos

You can immediately feel the angst in Amsterdam. This is a must-win for both if they’re to avoid elimination, although Ajax’s horrendous goal difference (-12) means their prospects are slim.

It’s 1-1, and Olympiacos are also heading out because Benfica are beating Real Madrid and Athletic Club are drawing. If those scorelines change, a point could be enough, though. It’s tense.

Oh, apparently PSV have now just equalised. We were literally just there! Nice one, world!

Anyway, it’s Olympiacos, wearing a really dull grey kit, doing the pressing, with an over-hit cross nervously put behind by the Ajax defence for a corner. We’ve got 90 seconds before we need to switch…

No, wait, it’s a goal! Olympiacos are heading for the play-offs as nobody even bothers challenging Santiago Hezze (another great name) as he squeezes a header into the corner.

Santiago Hezze heads in for OlympiacosDean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images

The away team celebrate right in front of the Ajax fans, who take it really well and offer their congratulations, sending over a couple of drinks by way of a prize.

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Elsewhere: Dominic Solanke has put Spurs two up in Frankfurt and Club Brugge are now 3-0 ahead against Marseille.


81-85 mins: Napoli vs Chelsea

It’s amazing how just one second of a football match can tell you so much; it’s noisy and rowdy in Naples, Marc Cucurella is arguing with an official and you can immediately sense the tension and the intensity. It’s 2-2. Napoli are heading out on goal difference, Chelsea need to score again to finish in the top eight.

Romelu Lukaku is subbed on for his 800th career appearance to a huge ovation. Napoli need him. They’ve gone two up front.

But wait — what a move, what a goal! Chelsea! Oh wow, Joao Pedro that is quite something. He plays to Cole Palmer, spins and darts towards goal, and Palmer obliges with the return pass. Joao Pedro has Alejandro Garnacho to square to, but doesn’t need him and finishes with authority for (apparently) his second of the night. What a counter-attack that is.

Video for UK readers

Joao Pedro shoots gives Chelsea the lead to shoot them up in the table ⬆️

📺 @tntsports & @discoveryplusUK pic.twitter.com/XqB5thFF1b

— Football on TNT Sports (@footballontnt) January 28, 2026

Video for U.S. readers

João Pedro silences the Maradona as he bags his brace and puts Chelsea in front ✨ pic.twitter.com/LIt5cdePTq

— CBS Sports Golazo ⚽️ (@CBSSportsGolazo) January 28, 2026

Napoli are down to 30th in the table. Scott McTominay crashes a cross-shot into orbit. It’s all going wrong.

And now it’s flat, Antonio Conte looks pained. Five minutes ago it was frantic, now it’s disconsolate. And on we go again. Football.

Best thing missed elsewhere: Federico Dimarco puts Inter ahead in Dortmund with a brilliant free kick and Bayern are back in front against PSV thanks to Kane.


86-90 minutes: Benfica vs Real Madrid

We’re getting bonus time for our finale; there are 83 minutes on the clock due to the second half starting late. There are empty seats here, too, but that’s because of people abandoning their front-row seats due to what looks like torrential rain in Lisbon.

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More short sleeves. It’s 17C (63F). Oh, and this looks hot on the pitch too, it’s 3-2 to Benfica but somehow they’re still going out in 25th on goals scored, being level on points and goal difference with Marseille, who are being walloped 3-0 in Bruges, plus Glimt are improbably still winning against Atletico in Madrid. Real Madrid are heading through to the last 16 in eighth by the skin of their teeth, on goal difference.

Thibaut Courtois makes a save at the near post, then Mbappe sees a low shot blocked, then Andreas Schjelderup has a decent effort for Benfica… this is action, action, action.

Hang on, Sporting have gone 3-2 up in Bilbao, so Madrid are down into the play-off spots. This is 25th versus ninth now and both teams need to score to achieve their objective. And there are to be a minimum of five added minutes!

Right, Raul Asencio has just been sent off for a second booking, Madrid are really up against it.

Now it’s all gone a bit weird. Benfica need to score or they’re out, but Jose Mourinho is taking off their two goalscorers tonight and sending on Antonio Silva, a centre-back. This is madness. He’s not settling for the moral 3-2 victory, is he? Is their 5G not working? Someone fire up a short-wave radio and tell him the scores. Or send a carrier pigeon.

Every other game has finished, it’s literally next goal wins here, and 10-man Madrid are on the attack and Benfica just don’t seem bothered. Their goalkeeper goes to ground with the ball in his arms and then takes his time to release it. They genuinely haven’t a clue, have they?

Oh, this is carnage. Madrid’s Rodrygo has been sent off now, no idea why, but Benfica have a free kick. And now they seem to get it: the Benfica subs are all out of the dugout now, screaming at their team-mates. Whatever the word for ‘goal’ is in Portuguese (‘gol’), they’re shouting it. Where was this 10 minutes ago?

And the goalkeeper’s going up! Here we go…

OH MY GOD, IT’S A MIRACLE! The ’keeper has scored! Anatoliy Trubin!

Video for UK readers

THAT IS UNBELIEVABLE 🔥

Benfica goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin scores a 98th minute goal to keep Jose Mourinho’s Benfica in the competition 💥

📺 @tntsports & @discoveryplus pic.twitter.com/Vqtndh565T

— Football on TNT Sports (@footballontnt) January 28, 2026

Video for U.S. readers

GOALKEEPER ANATOLIY TRUBIN SCORES A 98TH MINUTE GOAL AGAINST REAL MADRID TO SAVE BENFICA’S #UCL SEASON WITH THE FINAL TOUCH OF THE MATCH! 😱

IMAGINE NOT LOVING FOOTBALL 🤯 pic.twitter.com/y0thIBEQb5

— CBS Sports Golazo ⚽️ (@CBSSportsGolazo) January 28, 2026

Mourinho’s down the touchline, Trubin’s done a knee slide, there’s a pile on! Fans going mad! Some aren’t celebrating because they’re recording it on their phones and literally what are you doing mate it’s safe to say this match is being recorded what’s happened to society just enjoy the moment but NEVER MIND THAT THE ’KEEPER HAS SCORED! Absolutely incredible.

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That is genuinely beyond belief. They were playing for time a minute earlier. And look at the replay — nine-man Madrid left two players up and had a one-man wall, so in the box it was eight Benfica players to their five. No wonder the ’keeper had a free header.

Best thing missed elsewhere: Were you not just reading? The bloody goalkeeper scored a 98th-minute winner to put Benfica into the play-offs!


Conclusions

There’s something to be said for this concept. And that something is, it’s madness.

After a bleak period of nine matches without a goal, plus barely a shot to speak of, patience (sort of) was rewarded with three goals in three games at the end, which was a reflection of the wider picture on the night.

There were 61 goals across the piece, which averages out as 3.4 goals per game. Having watched five goals live, plus a penalty save, two red cards and the greatest ending to a Champions League opening-stage match in history, well, we’ll take that. See you in a year.

The Champions League group phase has merits but it’s bloated. This is how to fix it -Commentary – NY Times

Real Madrid striker Kylian Mbappe looks dejected

Kylian Mbappe and Real Madrid must face the play-offs next month after finishing ninth in the Champions League’s 36-team table Jose Manuel Alvarez Rey/Getty Images

By Michael CoxJan. 29, 2026Updated Jan. 30, 2026The Athletic has live coverage of today’s Champions League knockout play-off draw.

As goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin headed home a stunning late goal to send Benfica into the Champions League knockout phase on goal difference, in one moment the competition’s new ‘Swiss League’ model felt worthy of celebration.

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Benfica were already winning 3-2 but needed to beat Real Madrid 4-2 to sneak ahead of Marseille and into the all-important 24th place in the final league table. This, in all probability, would not have happened in a traditional four-team group stage.

What unfolded in Lisbon on Wednesday were the final seconds of a rather bloated eight-matchday league phase which has, by and large, offered little drama in its second season. The new model has its merits; the old model did, too. The best solution might be a compromise.

The first issue to consider, when assessing the Champions League’s ‘new’ system, is that different people follow football matches in different ways. And there are two groups of people for whom the revised format is largely beneficial.

For supporters who watch every game their side play, there’s an obvious advantage to seeing them face eight opponents once each, rather than the same three twice. And increasingly, there’s a group of football fans who, in essence, don’t watch any matches at all — we’ve seen in recent years the advent of ‘Red Zone’ or ‘goals show’ type programmes, which cut from ground to ground chasing drama and benefit from the idea of constant, chaotic action.

Maybe there aren’t many of us left in the category we’ll call “People who just want to sit down and watch any match that looks promising, where they know what’s at stake”, and therefore these complaints might not be overwhelmingly relevant. But, personally speaking, almost none of the Champions League matches so far have felt genuinely important. There were some entertaining ones, and some good team performances, but the games also suffered from a lack of obvious meaning.

There’s no point over-glorifying the old group-stage format, though. In the modern era, where the gap between rich and poor clubs is enormous, there was a relative lack of tension throughout, and a raft of dead rubbers towards matchdays five and six. You could usually find at least one good game to watch in every round, but UEFA can’t be blamed for experimenting. And the ‘Swiss League’ was a hugely bold experiment; a format never used in any serious football competition before. So let’s be honest about its main benefits:

1. Clubs play a wider variety of opponents.

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2. There’s less chance of a team racing clear at the top, and having dead rubbers in their final fixtures(s).

3. There’s less chance of a side being disadvantaged by a difficult draw.

But there are also issues.

1. In a traditional group stage, results are important not merely because you are collecting points yourself, but because you are denying your rivals points. To a small extent that remains the case, of course, but when you have 35 opponents instead of three, the degree to which you influence their results is considerably less important. In essence, the old system created more ‘six-pointers’.

2. Going into the final round of matches with eight clubs on 13 points (three of them in the top eight, finishing in which means going through directly to the round of 16, and five of them in line for the play-offs that precede that stage) sounds exciting on paper. Working out the permutations of a final-day shootout can be quite enjoyable. But this is just so complex, with so many moving parts, that it becomes difficult to follow. Eighteen concurrent games crosses the threshold from ‘dramatic’ to ‘bewildering’, and the fact Benfica didn’t realise — until shortly before their late goal — that they actually needed to score should be a source of concern as well as amusement.What You Should Read NextWelcome to ‘Wild Wednesday’: Watching five minutes of all 18 Champions League gamesWe asked Tim Spiers to watch a bit of every game on ‘wild Wednesday’, the night Europe’s elite discovered their Champions League fates

3. There is no reason the league stage needs to be eight matches rather than the previous six — that’s simply two extra games for the sake of more revenue.

4. Similarly, the play-off round also seems largely unnecessary. Nobody ever suggested that going straight to the round of 16 was an issue. At a time of concern about fixture congestion, this feels like a major misstep, and is partly needed to create more key cut-off points in the bloated 36-team initial phase.

5. For all the seeding to ensure the teams all play a similar level of opposition across their eight fixtures, there remains something unsatisfactory about a league phase where you don’t play every other side in the division. That has, for nearly 150 years, been a fundamental part of what we consider ‘league football’: you play everyone else in your league.

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So is the solution not a hybrid of the two systems, the old group stage and the new league phase? In other words, rather than four-team groups, and rather than a rabble of 36 teams all in the same table, one big league that is essentially split into different mini-leagues.

By dividing the 36 in half — making two tables of 18 — you immediately have two ‘final days’, and in a world where the whole idea is creating extra televisual events, this would create a Tuesday and a Wednesday of drama, without anyone playing any extra matches. Besides, an 18-team league is more in keeping with the number we’re accustomed to — leagues do not, and probably should not, feature 36 sides. Maybe it goes against the general point of the Swiss model, but it would surely be easier to follow.

Ousmane Dembele’s PSG have failed to qualify automatically for the last 16 in successive Champions League campaignsFranco Arland/Getty Images

Alternatively, you could divide things in half again: four groups of nine. Teams would still play eight matches against eight different opponents, which is the main benefit of the current system (albeit you’d need nine matchdays, with each team having one rest day).

That would create a balance between the old and new formats, and the smaller groups would be easier to follow. The permutations would be clearer. There would be more tension attached to individual matches, because taking points away from your direct rivals would be more meaningful. The league would be more complete, as teams would play everyone else in their division.

Last season’s league phase felt relatively exciting because two of the favourites — Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain — struggled to reach the knockout stage. But this was surely an anomaly: it owed little to the competition’s setup, and the switch to eight matches rather than six offers less chance of surprises.

Year two is probably more typical of what the league phase will bring: lots of matches, none of which appear to mean a great deal, and then some brilliant last-ditch drama so we remember the format as an overall success.

Already, this way of operating a tournament seems to be catching on — the women’s Champions League has used a similar system this season (with only six matches), and the revamped Women’s League Cup in England will follow the format from 2026-27. That seems a little hasty.

The experiment of a new system has been worthwhile. But it should be considered something to learn from and improve upon, rather than the definitive end-point.

Michael Cox

By Michael Cox

Football Writer

1/23/26 USA Ladies Play Sat 5:30 pm, @ 2M Trinity Rodman becomes highest paid woman player at Washington, Champions League Group Stage wraps up Wed., Pulisic & AC Milan welcome Olympics, McKinney blows up, full TV Schedule

US Women vs Paraguay 5:30 pm Saturday TNT, HBO vs Chile 10 pm Tuesday TBS, HBO

A young USWNT will kick off in California on Saturday, as the world No. 2 takes on No. 46 Paraguay in the first of two January friendlies to open the 2027 World Cup qualifying year. “It’s really exciting to see the opportunity presented to a lot of players in this camp,” said midfielder Olivia Moultrie prior to Saturday’s match, which will pull from a 26-player USWNT January lineup that boasts an average age of just 24.1 years old. “It’s players that I’ve played with on youth teams, and just seeing kind of start coming into the league.” This month’s camp falls outside an official FIFA window, leaving the US without both European club players and Gotham FC’s squad as the 2025 NWSL champs prepare to contend in the first-ever FIFA Women’s Champions Cup in London next week. “There is no question we will keep — I hope — improving what we’re doing,” said USWNT manager Emma Hayes. “You don’t do that gradually, you don’t do that by changing things all of the time.” Additionally, Saturday’s match will honor two-time World Cup champion Christen Press with a pregame ceremony, after the star forward announced her pro soccer retirement at the end of last season. Really awesome to see Rodman will be on hand after signing her record breaking 2 million dollar deal with the Washington Spirit – great to see her stay home in the US for NWSL!

2026 January Training Camp Roster

GOALKEEPERS (3): Claudia Dickey (Seattle Reign FC; 6) Mandy McGlynn (Utah Royals; 4), Jordan Silkowitz (Bay FC; 0)
DEFENDERS (8): Jordyn Bugg (Seattle Reign FC; 5/0), Avery Patterson (Houston Dash; 9/1), Izzy Rodriguez (Kansas City Current; 1/1), Tara Rudd (Washington Spirit; 9/0), Emily Sams (Orlando Pride; 7/0), Gisele Thompson (Angel City FC; 4/0), Kennedy Wesley (San Diego Wave FC; 2/0), Kate Wiesner (Washington Spirit; 2/0)
MIDFIELDERS (8): Croix Bethune (Washington Spirit; 5/0), Hal Hershfelt (Washington Spirit; 3/0), Claire Hutton (Kansas City Current; 11/1), Riley Jackson (North Carolina Courage; 0/0), Lo’eau LaBonta (Kansas City Current; 4/0), Sally Menti (Seattle Reign FC; 0/0), Sam Meza (Seattle Reign FC; 2/0), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns FC; 11/5)
FORWARDS (7): Maddie Dahlien (Seattle Reign FC; 0/0), Jameese Joseph (Chicago Stars FC; 1/0), Trinity Rodman (Unattached; 47/11), Yazmeen Ryan (Houston Dash; 15/2), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville FC; 12/4), Ally Sentnor (Kansas City Current; 13/4), Reilyn Turner (Portland Thorns FC; 0/0)

USMNT’s Pulisic welcomes world to Milan for Winter Olympics

Click to see – Pulisic Welcomes Winter Olympics

The video kicks off with Zlatan singing Milan’s praises, before Pulisic gives Olympic attendees a quick guide to Milanese coffee etiquette. Modric is charged with capturing the San Siro stadium in oil paints (just before they go and knock it down) while Adrien Rabiot indulges in a fitting for a razor-sharp suit. Soo-Jeong Park from AC Milan’s women’s team also introduces a few local landmarks, notably the gothic splendor of the Duomo cathedral, before Ibra returns to sign off with a hearty “Benvenuti a casa nostra.”

Champions League Final Group Stage Games Wednesday 3 pm on Paramount Plus –

Wow some huge upsets last week as Man City was sliced and diced by Bodo/Glint in the Arctic Circle, Tottenham who is dismal in the EPL dominated Dortmund to move to 5th, Sporting scored twice to beat PSG in the last 20 minutes and Copenhagen puts Napoli on the edge of elimination with a 10 man win vs the Italians. Only Arsenal 1st and Bayern Munich 2nd are guaranteed in the Top 8 and a buy in the round of 16. 30 teams still have a chance at making the knockout stages. Here’s How Teams Can Advance. Grab your popcorn and 30 tv’s for Wed! Mckinney Scores Winner for Juventus again That’s 10 Champs League Goals -3 in his last 5 games. With his goal, McKennie now has 10 career Champions League finishes, putting him two behind USMNT teammate Christian Pulisic for most ever by an American player.

GAMES ON TV

Sat, Jan 24
7:30 am USA West Ham United vs Sunderland
9:30 am ESPN+ Bayern Munich vs Ausburg
9:30 am ESPN+ Leverkusen vs Werder Bremen
10 am USA Burnley vs Tottenham
10 am NBCSN Man City vs Wolverhampton
10 am Peacock Fulham (Jedi) vs Brighton
12:30 pm USA Bournemouth vs Liverpool
12:30 pm ESPN+ Union Berlin vs Athletic Club
3 pm ESPN+ Villarreal vs Real Madrid
5:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Paraguay
Sun, Jan 25
8 am ESPNd,+ Atletico Madrid (Cardoso) vs Mallorca
9 am USA Chelsea vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
9 am peacock New Castle vs Aston Villa
9:30 am ESPN+ MGladbach (Scalley, Reyna) vs Stuttgart
10:15 am ESPN+,D Barcelona vs Real Oviedo
11:30 am Peacock, Serius Arsenal vs Man United
12 pm Para + Juventus (Mckinney) vs Napoli
2″45 pm Para+ Roma vs AC Milan (Pulisic)
Mon, Jan 26
2:45 pm USA Everton vs Leeds United (Aaronson)
Tues, Jan 27
10 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Chile
Wed, Jan 28 — Champs League EVERYONE
3 pm Para+ Napoli vs Chelsea
3pm Para+, CBSSN Dortmand vs Inter Milan
3 pm Para+ Monaco (Weah) vs Juventus (Mckinney)
3 pm Para+ PSG vs Newcastle
Frankfurt vs Tottenham
Atletico (Cardosa) vs Glint
Man City vs Galatasaray
PSV vs Bayern Munich
Athletic Club s Sporting CP
Ajax vs Olympiakos P
Arsenal vs Qarabag
Barcelona vs Kobenhavn
Benefica vs Real Madrid
Club Brugge vs Marseille
Thurs, 1/29 Europa Para+ 3 pm
3 pm Para+ Celtic (Trusty)
Aston Villa vs Salzburg
Young Boys vs Lyonnais (Tessman)
Roma vs Stuttgart
Lille vs Freiburg
Nottingham Forest vs Ferencvaros
Porto vs Rangers

Sun, Mar 1 She Believes Cup Starts
5 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Argentina
Wed, Mar 4 She Believes Cup
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Canada (Columbus, OH)
Sat, Mar 7 She Believes Cup
3:30 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Colombia
Sat, Mar 28
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Belgium
Tues, Mar 31
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Portugal
Sun, May 31
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup

SMNT weekend viewing guide: Cold results

Results that matter by jcksnftsn an 23, 2026, 2:49 PM EST5Comments (All New)

Juventus v SL Benfica - UEFA Champions League 2025/26 League Phase MD7

NurPhoto via Getty Images

We have more head-to-head matchups this weekend, an American coach making his presence known in Spain, and stars in Italy vying for the top of the Serie A table. There’s all that and more in a packed USMNT weekend, so let’s get to it.

Friday

St. Pauli v Hamburg – 2:30p on ESPN Select: James Sands and St Pauli host Hamburg and Damion Downs on Friday afternoon. Sands scored his first Bundesliga goal for St. Pauli last weekend but they fell to Borussia Dortmund 3-2 while Downs has started his first two matches with Hamburg but has not yet found the scoresheet and his club is coming off a scoreless draw with Borussia Monchengladbach.

Saturday

Middlesbrough v Preston North End – 7:30a on CBSSN: Aidan Morris has started four straight matches for Middlesbrough who have won three straight and are in second place in the Championship, two points ahead of Ipswich town for direct promotion to the EPL. Middlesbrough host sixth place Preston North End who have a one point lead for the final promotion playoff spot.

Bayern Munich v Augsburg – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Noahkai Banks will be serving a one match suspension this weekend due to yellow card accumulation and will miss Augsburg’s matchup with Bayern Munich. Banks has been a starter for Augsburg since October but will miss the teams rematch with Bayern. Banks saw just a minute off the bench in the first matchup of the season, which Augsburg dropped 3-2.

Mainz v Wolfsburg – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Lennard Maloney and Mainz will host Kevin Paredes and Wolfsburg on Saturday. Maloney has come off the bench in three straight matches, seeing just spot minutes for 17th place Mainz. Meanwhile, Paredes is being worked back to fitness for twelfth place Wolfsburg, getting 45 min as a halftime substitute for the team last weekend in their 1-1 draw with Heidenheim.

Bayer Leverkusen v Werder Bremen – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Malik Tillman and Leverkusen fell to Hoffenheim last weekend, their second straight loss to an opponent competing for a top four finish in the Bundesliga. Leverkusen are in sixth place and will be facing a Werder Bremen side that is five points out of the relegation playoff position but played Leverkusen to a 3-3 draw in their first meeting of the season.

Fulham v Brighton and Hove Albion – 10a on Peacock: Antonee Robinson went the full 90’ last weekend as Fulham fell to Leeds 1-0, their first loss since Robinson returned to the lineup in December. Fulham are in eleventh place now, one point ahead of this weekend’s opponent, Brighton & Hove Albion who are coming off a 1-1 draw with Bournemouth.

Le Havre v Monaco – 1p on beIN Sports: Folarin Balogun and Monaco have dropped four straight matches, and seven of eight to fall from second place in Ligue 1 to ninth place, a nineteen point gap to their prior position, now held by PSG. They will be facing fourteenth place Le Havere, who are just four points behind them at this point. Monaco was also embarassed 6-1 by Real Madrid on Tuesday in Champions League play and need to find their confidence again.

PSV v NAC Breda – 2p on ESPN Select: Sergino Dest missed the past two matches for PSV, including Wednesday’s Champions League match against Newcastle which PSV lost 3-0. The Dutch side look to continue their march through the Eredivisie when they face seventeenth place NAC Breda who are looking like a relegation candidate though they played PSV close in their first matchup, falling 1-0.

Olympique Marseille v Lens – 3:05p on beIN Sports: Tim Weah scored for Marseille last weekend in the team’s 5-2 win over Angers in league play and went the full 90’ midweek in Champions League action though the team fell to Liverpool 3-0. They remain in third place in league play, eight points back of their opponent this weekend, league leading Lens.

Sunday

Atletico Madrid v Mallorca – 8a on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Johnny Cardoso got his first start since August last weekend in Atletico Madrid’s 1-0 win over Deportivo Alaves and then played 35’ off the bench midweek in the team’s 1-1 draw with Galatasaray in Champions League group play. Atleti are tied for third, eight points back of league leading Barcelona, heading into their matchup with Mallorca.

Crystal Palace v Chelsea – 9a on USA Network: Chris Richards was back in the starting lineup for Cyrstal Palace last weekend after missing the past four matches. Palace fell to Sunderland 2-1 and have now lost five of their past seven matches and haven’t won since early December, falling from fourth place down to thirteenth place in the table. six points back of their opponent this weekend, sixth place Chelsea.

Atalanta v Parma – 9a on Paramount+: Yunus Musah started last weekend and has played in the past seven league matches for Atalanta though he didn’t come off the bench on Wednesday in their Champions League loss to Athletic Club. Atlanta are in seventh place, ten points back of the top four and a return trip to Champions League action.

Borussia Monchengladbach v Stuttgart – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Joe Scally started and Gio Reyna played 21’ minutes off the bench in Borussia Monchengladbach’s scoreless draw with Hamburg last weekend. Gladbach will host fourth place Stuttgart on Sunday.

Brest v Toulouse – 11:15a on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie was not included in the squad last weekend as eight place Toulouse handled Nice 5-1. The team travels to tenth place Brest this weekend.

Metz v Olympique Lyon – 11:15a on beIN sports: Tanner Tessmann started Lyon’s 2-1 win over Brest last Sunday as well as their midweek 1-0 win over Young Boys in Europa League action. Lyon are within striking distance of a Champions League qualifying spot as they prepare to face last place Metz this Sunday.

Freiburg v Koln – 11:30a on ESPN Select: Kristoffer Lund was a halftime substitute for Koln last weekend as they defeated Mainz 2-1 to move into the top ten in the Bundesliga standings. This weekend they will face eighth place Freiburg who they trail by four points.

Juventus v Napoli – Noon on Paramount+: Weston McKennie scored again for Juventus in Champions League play on Wednesday in the teams 2-0 win over Benfica. It was McKennie’s third straight Champions League match with a goal. McKennie has also scored twice in league play in January for Juve, adding an assist as well. The team did suffer a shock loss to sixteenth place Cagliari last weekend, dropping to fifth place in the standings and four points back of this weekend’s opponent, Napoli.

Real Sociedad v Celta Vigo – 12:30p on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Pelegrino Matarazzo has picked up seven points from his first three matches with Real Sociedad, including a 2-1 win over league leading Barcelona last weekend. Sociedad moved into the top ten of the La Liga standings though they are still eight points back of seventh place Celta Vigo, who they face this weekend.

Roma v AC Milan – 2:45p on on Paramount+: Christian Pulisic is in a bit of a dry patch having failed to score in Milan’s past five matches. That doesn’t sound like an incredibly long stretch but it is the first time this season where he has gone more than one match without scoring a goal. Milan has still been able to find results over the period, they remain in second place in the Serie A table. They will have a difficult test this weekend as they visit fourth place Roma who’s twelve goals conceded leads the league through the first twenty-one matches.

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US Ladies

USWNT Kicks Off 2026 with Saturday Friendly Against Paraguay
2026 USWNT Friendly: Preview – USA vs. Paraguay
USWNT star Trinity Rodman’s record deal: Why it’s a boon for her, but NWSL worries linger
Hayes: Rodman contract a win for NWSL, USWNT
Hayes: Returning Rodman ready for ‘next steps’
Rodman contract saga ends with record Spirit deal
Emma Hayes with Donovan & Tim Howard
2026 USWNT Friendly: Scouting Paraguay
Trinity Rodman upended traditional soccer norms and now controls her destiny
Trinity Rodman becomes highest-paid women’s soccer player in the world
Trinity Rodman re-signs with Washington Spirit, smashing records


US Men

McKennie Goal Gives Juventus Win Over Benfica
Good news and bad news for Tyler Adams injury: U.S. midfielder tears his MCL
Watch: Rising American star Cavan Sullivan looks scary in new Man City training highlights

Richie Ledezma and Brian Gutierrez finalize switch to Mexico from the USMNT

World

Record Goals and Wins in Champions League Match Day 3
Champions League MD7: Arsenal still perfect; top-8 fight getting messy

Most-viewed soccer teams by state 2025: Liverpool and Arsenal battle for first place

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Champions League projections: Arsenal strong favourites for overall win, improving Liverpool up to third

The Arsenal players celebrate Gabriel Jesus' second goal against Inter on Tuesday

Arsenal celebrate Gabriel Jesus’ second goal in their 3-1 away win against Inter on Tuesday Marco Luzzani/Getty Images

By Anantaajith Raghuraman Jan. 22, 2026

We are down to next Wednesday’s final-day bonanza in the Champions League, with 18 simultaneous games to close out the initial league phase. Seven matchdays in, only Arsenal and Bayern Munich have guaranteed spots in the round of 16 in March. Third-placed Real Madrid and Juventus in 15th are separated by just three points, and with some of the teams in-between them playing each other in the final round of matches, expect the table to undergo a bewildering amount of change during Matchday 8.

Before Matchday 8

How teams stack up in the race for automatic qualification and the playoffs in the Champions LeagueCHANGE PROJECTIONS:Before Matchday 8 (Jan. 28)Before Matchday 7 (Jan. 20-21)Before Matchday 6 (Dec. 9-10)Before Matchday 5 (Nov. 25-26)Before Matchday 4 (Nov. 4-5)Before Matchday 3 (Oct. 21-22)Before Matchday 2 (Sept. 30-Oct. 1)Before Matchday 1 (Sept. 16-18)

TEAM
Arsenal21 pts24<1%<1%>99%31%
Bayern Munich18 pts19<1%<1%>99%17%
Liverpool15 pts18<1%5%95%8%
Barcelona13 pts16<1%20%80%8%
Real Madrid15 pts16<1%16%84%4%
Atletico Madrid13 pts15<1%51%49%2%
Tottenham Hotspur14 pts15<1%49%51%1%
Manchester City13 pts14<1%40%60%9%
Paris Saint-Germain13 pts14<1%46%54%6%
Chelsea13 pts14<1%63%37%4%
Newcastle United13 pts14<1%74%26%3%
Sporting CP13 pts14<1%63%37%1%
Atalanta13 pts14<1%87%13%<1%
Internazionale12 pts13<1%94%6%2%
Juventus12 pts13<1%93%7%<1%
Borussia Dortmund11 pts12<1%99%1%1%
Galatasaray10 pts11<1%>99%<1%<1%
Bayer Leverkusen9 pts108%92%<1%<1%
Olympique Marseille9 pts105%95%<1%<1%
Monaco9 pts1027%73%<1%<1%
Qarabağ10 pts10<1%>99%<1%<1%
Napoli8 pts949%51%<1%<1%
PSV8 pts945%55%<1%<1%
Olympiakos Piraeus8 pts943%57%<1%<1%
Athletic Club8 pts949%51%<1%<1%
Club Bruges7 pts858%42%<1%<1%
København8 pts889%11%<1%<1%
Benfica6 pts773%27%<1%<1%
Union Saint-Gilloise6 pts791%9%<1%<1%
Pafos6 pts781%19%<1%<1%
Bodø / Glimt6 pts788%12%<1%<1%
Ajax6 pts792%8%<1%<1%
Eintracht Frankfurt4 pts5>99%<1%<1%<1%
Slavia Praha3 pts4>99%<1%<1%<1%
Villarreal1 pt2>99%<1%<1%<1%
Kairat1 pt1>99%<1%<1%<1%

Each team plays eight matches in the new league phase, four at home and four away. They play eight different opponents, rather than facing the same teams home and away, as was the case in the previous format. The top eight sides in the league qualify automatically for the round of 16. Teams finishing from 9th to 24th in the league compete in a two-legged knock-out phase play-off, with the winner of each match-up advancing to the last 16 of the competition. Teams that finished 25th or lower in the league phase are eliminated from the competition. No teams drop down to the Europa League.

Methodology

Opta’s win prediction model estimates the probability of each match’s outcome (win, draw or loss) by using a combination of betting market odds and Opta’s team power rankings. The odds and rankings are based on historical and recent team performances and the competition in its entirety is simulated 10,000 times to produce a final projection for each side.

Credits

Editing: Duncan Alexander, Charlie Scott

Design and Development: Ryan Best, Elliot Jordan | Editing: Skye Gould, Marc Mazzoni, Laura Pelton

Illustration: Eamonn Dalton

Below, we will use our updated projections after Matchday 7 to look at the key teams and fixtures heading into those decisive games.

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Match of the week

Athletic Club’s chances of league-phase elimination stood at 82 per cent ahead of Matchday 7 after just one win in their first six matches. Conceding an opener to Atalanta’s Gianluca Scamacca on 16 minutes in Bergamo on Wednesday would not have helped their odds either.

But a spirited second-half comeback with three goals in 16 minutes from Gorka Guruzeta, Nico Serrano and Robert Navarro put them in control on hostile territory. Nikola Krstovic’s 88th-minute strike for the hosts was a mere consolation.

The win dropped the Bilbao club’s odds of elimination to 49 per cent, while their chances of making the knockout play-offs next month have risen to 51 per cent (from 18). As for Atalanta, they are one of eight teams on 13 points, but their odds of finishing in the top eight dropped drastically from 61 to 13 per cent after this loss.

Athletic host Sporting CP while the Italians travel to Belgium’s Union Saint-Gilloise on Matchday 8.

Athletic Club’s players celebrate in BergamoPiero Cruciatti/AFP via Getty Images


The favourites

After the first two rounds of the league phase, our projections hinted at eight contenders for this season’s title. They will all still be fancied in the knockout rounds, but Matchday 7 hurt the chances of three of those sides in particular.

Manchester City had a 13 per cent chance of a second European crown in four years halfway through the opening stage, with 10 points from four matches. However, their 3-1 loss at Bodo/Glimt on Tuesday — and the Norwegian hosts could have scored more — means they are the only one of the five Premier League representatives outside the top eight with a game to go.

City’s overall chances are still rated highly — the third-best at nine per cent — but they have seen their odds of finishing in the top eight drop from 90 per cent before the Glimt game to 60 per cent now. Visitors Galatasaray, who drew 1-1 with Atletico Madrid in Istanbul yesterday and defeated Liverpool there on Matchday 2 in September, will not be an easy final game.

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Defending European champions Paris Saint-Germain have once again had a wobbly league phase, after winning one of their first five matches last season and only finishing 15th. This time, they began with nine points out of nine but have had two losses and a draw in the four matches since. Tuesday’s 2-1 away defeat to a Luis Suarez-inspired (not the one you’re thinking of) Sporting CP meant PSG’s title odds dropped from 14 per cent before that trip to Lisbon to just six per cent. Their probability of a top-eight finish dropped from 84 to 54 per cent too, with a home match against Newcastle United, who are one spot behind them in seventh, to come on Matchday 8.

Holders PSG suffered defeat against Sporting in Lisbon on TuesdayOctavio Passos/Getty Images

Inter have never ranked high for title odds, peaking at five per cent after winning their first three matches by a combined score of nine goals to nil. A 3-1 beatdown by visitors Arsenal on Tuesday in a game where they spurned chances but also could not keep up with the Premier League and Champions League leaders has seen that dip to two per cent. A return of three points from their past four matches, including three losses in a row, also means Inter now have a 94 per cent chance of landing in the play-offs, up from 26 per cent before Matchday 4.

Arsenal, who saw Gabriel Jesus (twice) and Viktor Gyokeres get on the scoresheet at San Siro, are now the outright favourites for the title per our projections, which now give them a 31 per cent chance of lifting the European Cup for the first time. That is an eight per cent increase from before Matchday 7 and nearly double the 16 per cent they were given before the competition began in September. Arsenal could become the first team to win all eight league-phase games in the new format introduced last season when they host Kazakhstan’s already-eliminated Kairat next week.

Top League Content

Bayern made a meal of a game they were expected to win comfortably, thanks to Union Saint-Gilloise’s spirited display in Munich. Kim Min-jae got sent off, Manuel Neuer had to make a couple of crucial saves and Harry Kane missed a penalty — though he still scored both goals in a 2-0 win. Our projections have taken notice, with Bayern’s title odds dropping by two percentage points to 17, but they are only behind Arsenal in this regard. A cross-border visit to inconsistent Dutch champions PSV awaits on Matchday 8.

Kane scored both goals as Bayern defeated USG on Wednesday to guarantee a top-two finishAdam Pretty/Getty Images

Alvaro Arbeloa’s Real Madrid tenure got its early statement victory, his side thrashing Monaco 6-1 at the Bernabeu with Kylian Mbappe (two), Vinicius Junior and Jude Bellingham all on the scoresheet. Despite the dysfunction surrounding them, Madrid are third on 15 points with a hop over the border into Portugal to play Benfica, under their iconic former manager Jose Mourinho, rounding out their league-phase schedule next week. Arbeloa played 122 times for Mourinho’s Madrid between 2010 and 2013.

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Despite their emphatic win, Madrid have only a four per cent chance of winning this season’s Champions League, half that of La Liga rivals Barcelona. Hansi Flick’s Catalans made hard work of their visit to Slavia Prague, with four well-taken goals in the icy Czech capital making up for some woeful set-piece defending and the loss of Pedri to a hamstring injury in the second half. Last night’s 4-2 win has led to more optimism in our projections, Barcelona now have an eight per cent chance of winning it all (up from seven per cent before the Slavia game) and an 80 per cent chance of finishing in the top eight, though they are currently ninth and tied on 13 points with seven other teams.

In their defence, a home fixture with FC Copenhagen, who have won twice and conceded 17 goals in their seven games, should be a formality.

Meanwhile, Liverpool’s 3-0 win at Marseille last night saw their title odds improve to eight per cent, third-best, having dropped to just three per cent after five rounds. They are still some distance off the competition-leading 20 per cent they were given after Matchday 1 but this latest success showed growing signs of cohesion and Arne Slot’s side now have a 95 per cent chance of finishing in the top eight, with a visit from Qarabag, upbeat after beating Eintracht Frankfurt 3-2 on Wednesday, wrapping things up on Matchday 8.


The contenders 

Chelsea huffed and puffed their way to a narrow 1-0 win at home to Pafos of Cyprus last night in new head coach Liam Rosenior’s Champions League debut. The performance could do with improvement, but their top-eight odds have now risen to 37 per cent (from 24 before the match), while their title odds have marginally risen from three per cent to four.

A visit to Napoli will be challenging, given Antonio Conte’s side, after being held to a 1-1 draw at 10-man Copenhagen on Tuesday, have a 49 per cent chance of a humiliating first-phase elimination. A draw could be enough to see the Serie A champions through to the play-offs, but it would require other results to all go their way.

Tottenham Hotspur, for all the negativity around them heading into Matchday 7, are fifth with 14 points after seeing off Borussia Dortmund 2-0 at home. Tuesday’s win nearly doubled their odds of a top-eight finish from 26 to 51 per cent, and they will be confident of securing a round-of-16 spot when they face more German opposition in eliminated Eintracht Frankfurt, who have only one win from their seven matches.

Their Champions League games have been a refuge for Spurs this seasonShaun Botterill/Getty Images

Atletico Madrid missed an opportunity yesterday to leapfrog teams in the table, drawing 1-1 with Galatasaray in Istanbul. Diego Simeone’s side have overcome a sluggish three-points-from-nine start to the league phase for the second season running, though, and have nearly equal chances of making the top eight (49 per cent) and finishing outside those spots (51 per cent). Their final game could prove tricky as they host Glimt fresh off their greatest-ever night in Europe.

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Newcastle United were comfortable 3-0 winners at home against PSV and boast the competition’s second-best defence behind Arsenal (two) with six goals conceded. At the other end, they are averaging more than two goals per game (16), with Anthony Gordon (six) and Harvey Barnes scoring 11 times between them.

Eddie Howe’s side have a 26 per cent chance of finishing in the top eight, though that will almost certainly require them to avoid defeat against PSG in Paris. A play-offs place may not be the worst outcome, though.


Surprise packages

Qarabag headline this group of clubs, with their 3-2 home win against Eintracht Frankfurt this week the latest chapter of a successful league phase which has now brought them 10 points. The Azerbaijani club were given just a 13 per cent chance of reaching the knockout stages before the competition began. That rose to 83 per cent after the first four matches and now, having beaten Frankfurt, they have a less than one per cent chance of league-phase elimination. It is an incredible story which began in the second qualifying round last July and is almost certain to continue beyond the trip to Anfield next week.

Sporting recorded arguably the biggest surprise of this season’s league phase with their win against champions PSG, which they can add to home successes over Marseille and Club Brugge. They are yet to win away from home, though, and Athletic Club in Bilbao will pose a stiff challenge. Coach Rui Borges’ side had just a seven per cent chance of making the top eight after their first four matches, which yielded seven points. Two wins in the three since (with the other match being a loss at Bayern) has seen that rise to 37 per cent.

Galatasaray were given a 45 per cent chance of league-phase elimination heading into the tournament. That dropped to 30 per cent after Matchday 2, when they beat visitors Liverpool 1-0. Following their 1-1 draw with Atletico this week, like Qarabag, the Istanbul side have less than a one per cent chance of elimination, so are virtually guaranteed a spot in next month’s play-offs regardless of what happens against Manchester City at the Etihad on Wednesday. They will be a challenging prospect for anyone in that round, too.

Galatasaray should now make the play-offs, despite a tricky-looking final-day trip to Manchester CityBurak Basturk/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images

Finally, our projections were down on Ajax before the season began, giving the Netherlands’ four-time European champions a 58 per cent chance of being eliminated before the knockouts. A run of five losses to begin their campaign, by a combined score of 15 goals to one, saw that figure rise to over 99 per cent.

But this league-phase format always gives you a second (or in their case, sixth) chance.

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Ajax have won their past two, defeating Qarabag 4-2 and Villarreal 2-1 on their own pitches to reduce their odds of an exit, albeit marginally, to 92 per cent. A win against Olympiacos, who are 24th with eight points, in Amsterdam and a series of other results going their way could now see them sneak into the play-offs.

It is a slim possibility but even keeping themselves in the mix via back-to-back away victories deserves credit.

Trinity Rodman’s new Spirit deal and what it means. Plus: Robertson to Tottenham?

Rodman warms up prior to Washington Spirit's NWSL match against Houston Dash

Rodman warms up prior to Washington Spirit’s NWSL match against Houston Dash Jamie Sabau/NWSL via Getty Images

By Phil Hay

Jan. 23, 2026Updated 7:25 am EST

The Athletic FC ⚽ is The Athletic’s daily football (or soccer, if you prefer) newsletter. Sign up to receive it directly to your inbox.


Hello! One of women’s football’s brightest stars is sticking with the NWSL. Her contract didn’t come cheap — but she’s worth it.

Coming up:

💰 Rodman’s $2m-a-year deal

🆕 Robertson to Spurs?

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Rodman retained: Spirit star brings saga to close with $2m-a-year deal to stay in NWSL

Jeff Dean/NWSL via Getty Images

It would be wrong to say that Trinity Rodman is bigger than the NWSL — but entirely fair to argue that the NWSL has no bigger player in it. Not for anybody would a league go so far in fighting to cling on to an individual footballer.

A competition’s prestige depends on the calibre of athlete in it, which explains why Major League Soccer has bent so far backwards in accommodating Lionel Messi. Messi is box office, the same as Rodman. Recruiting them and retaining them makes total business sense.

The NWSL ran the risk of losing Rodman ahead of the 2026 season and realised its profile would suffer if she upped sticks and continued her club career abroad. It would be worse again if the drain of talent from America to Europe or elsewhere became incessant. And so, concessions were made.

Late last year, not long after the NWSL championship game, Rodman’s contract at the Washington Spirit expired. For months, and in the knowledge that teams outside the NWSL could use the 23-year-old’s free agency to offer her more money than the Spirit, strings were pulled to manufacture a deal which Rodman was happy to accept. Yesterday, at a live event in Los Angeles, she signed it.

It’s great news for the Spirit and the league, both of whom threw everything at retaining the USWNT forward. It will be a relief for Rodman, who had been stuck in the renewal cycle for longer than she would have liked. This is what she’s negotiated:

  • The Spirit are handing Rodman a new three-year deal. That takes her through 2028, by which point she should be absolutely in her prime.
  • According to her agent, the contract is worth in excess of $2m (£1.5m) a year and makes her the highest-paid player in women’s football.
  • That’s a sharp increase on her previous four-year deal which, in its entirety, was worth $1.1m. She’s one of the world’s best, and she’s been highly valued ever since the Spirit made her the youngest player to be drafted in the NWSL at 18 in 2021.

“The league, all of us, all the governors and the league leadership, work very, very hard to ensure that we not only attract the best talent, but we keep them here,” said Spirit owner Michele Kang. They’ve gone out on a limb in preventing Rodman from slipping through their fingers.

Salary cap dispute

The NWSL’s established salary cap would not have allowed the Spirit to pay Rodman what she thought she was worth. It’s why this process dragged on. So to create some extra wiggle room, the NWSL effectively moved the goalposts.

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It created the High Impact Player rule (already nicknamed the ‘Rodman Rule’) which allowed NWSL teams to pay up to $1m above the wage cap to any footballer who met certain criteria. The league says it is thinking about the future of the competition as a whole — but it’s hardly coincidental that the new mechanism arrived when it did.

The NWSL Players Association isn’t happy. Last week, it filed a grievance over the High Impact Player rule, something the NWSL will have to address, though Rodman will get paid regardless of what happens. The scenario underlines a problem with salary caps: they’re created with the best of intentions, in the interests of financial stability or fair competition, but in the end, and in a sport as global as football, they’re prone to market forces. Last year, Alyssa Thompson and Naomi Girma left the United States for Chelsea for large fees. The NWSL seems acutely aware of Europe’s growing spending power.

“This is a monumental moment, not only for the Spirit, but for NWSL as well,” Kang said. They’re making no secret of it. The league wants the brightest and the best to be playing there — and while it might not win that war long term, it won the battle with Rodman.

Our head of global women’s soccer, Emily Olsen, gave us her take on yesterday’s big-money resolution:

“Everyone wants to ‘grow the game’, yet few agree how to do that. This contract is an inflection point after a battle between those investing millions to grow the business and those investing their lives and bodies. While many will want to take credit for Rodman staying in NWSL, you can’t overlook the role of the community.

“Her rookie season involved overcoming the challenges of a pandemic, an ugly ownership battle, and a coach being removed over allegations of emotional abuse. That year, the team won a championship. The players and the fans rallied around each other in a way that’s still visible. The end result is what happens when you use investment to pay the players and foster community on and off the field.”

📬 Love TAFC? Check out The Athletic’s other newsletters, including Full-Time, for women’s soccer.

Trinity Rodman, Washington Spirit agree on record three-year deal to keep USWNT star in NWSL

Trinity Rodman in a Washington Spirit uniform during an NWSL match

Jeff Dean / Getty Images

By Tamerra Griffin and Emily Olsen

Jan. 22, 2026Updated Jan. 23, 2026 4:22 am EST

U.S. women’s national team forward Trinity Rodman is staying with the Washington Spirit, signing a new three-year contract to stay with the team through 2028, the team announced on Thursday in a special event at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles.

Rodman’s new deal is set to make her the highest-paid women’s soccer player in the world, worth in excess of $2 million annually, according to her agent, Mike Senkowski of Upper 90 Sports Group.

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The forward’s previous four-year, $1.1 million extension signed in 2022 after her rookie season lapsed on Dec. 31, 2025.

On Thursday, Rodman signed her contract during the live event, flanked by Spirit owner Michele Kang, president of soccer operations Haley Carter and CEO Kim Stone in L.A., where the forward is training with the U.S. ahead of Saturday’s friendly against Paraguay.

“This is one of the biggest moments, for me personally, as well as for the Spirit. I flew all the way from London to be here today,” Kang, who also owns London City Lionesses in England and OL Lyonnes in France, said. “I can’t tell you how excited I am. I had to wait for this for a long time.”

The 23-year-old Rodman has spent her entire professional career with the Spirit. The team selected her second overall in the 2021 NWSL draft and made her the youngest player to be drafted (18) at the time. That same year, Rodman was named Rookie of the Year and the Spirit went on to win the NWSL championship. She provided the assist for Kelley O’Hara’s game-winning goal.

Before this current deal, the club had made Rodman a different multimillion-dollar offer that the NWSL rejected because it failed to honor the “spirit” of the league’s rules, according to sources who spoke with The Athletic at the time.

The NWSL’s rejection of that offer prompted the NWSL Players Association to file a grievance on Rodman’s behalf, the league denied that filing and now could head to arbitration with the union.What You Should Read NextTrinity Rodman negotiations explained: Why did NWSL reject the Spirit’s offer and what’s next?The Spirit and Trinity Rodman agreed to an offer. A league source says that deal had a buyout clause that circumvents the NWSL salary cap.

Rodman’s deal utilizes the new High Impact Player rule, which the league introduced on Dec. 23. The mechanism, colloquially known as the “Rodman Rule,” allows NWSL teams to spend up to $1 million above the salary cap on players who meet certain criteria, including USWNT minutes and appearances on various media lists. The NWSL insists the rule was created with the future of the league in mind, but with its timing — in the midst of the conversation about Rodman, one week before her free agency started — sources have said the player was a key factor in its creation. The rule does not take effect until July 1, but teams can start signing players to deals now.

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“The league, all of us, all the governors and the league leadership, work very, very hard to ensure that we not only attract the best talent, but we keep them here,” Kang said. “Trin’s contract certainly is benefiting from it. But it was not just for Trin. It’s much bigger than (one player). It’s for the league-wide efforts.”

Last week, the NWSL Players Association filed a formal grievance opposing the High Impact Player rule, arguing that it “circumvents the collective bargaining process” and should be rescinded. Players, through the union, also communicated their concern that the criteria “privileges a biased voting system that heavily favors European players” and does not account “for the high impact that Brazilian, African, and Japanese Players (sic) have had and will continue to have on NWSL.”

Washington is the first club to publicly announce signing a player to an HIP deal. Denver Summit general manager Curt Johnson, who signed U.S. captain Lindsey Heaps last week, said the expansion team is considering using the feature on Heaps.What You Should Read NextNWSL adds rule allowing stars to be paid $1m above cap despite players’ union oppositionThe High Impact Player rule was created in part as a way to try to keep Washington Spirit and U.S. forward Trinity Rodman in the league.

Rodman’s landmark move to stay narrowly avoids a foray into European soccer after what would have been a short but explosive career in the U.S. that included an NWSL Championship and Rookie of the Year award in 2021 and two finalist appearances. Her signing also concludes more than three months of tense back and forth between the NWSL, the Spirit, the NWSL Players’ Association (NWSLPA) and Rodman’s representation about her future; however, discussions over Rodman’s future at the club started as early as the start of 2025.

“This is a monumental moment, not only for the Spirit, but for NWSL as well. But personally, my involvement with this Spirit literally started with Trinity. I still remember the Draft Day,” Kang said. “I can’t think about Washington Spirit without her, and I hope she can’t think about her career without Washington Spirit.”

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The Spirit reached the NWSL Championship twice more in 2024 and 2025, losing to the Orlando Pride and Gotham FC, respectively. Overall, Rodman proved an irreplaceable force and a highly marketable icon. She amassed a total of 28 goals and 17 assists in 97 appearances across all competitions.

Rodman’s previous season with the Spirit was plagued by injuries: first a persistent back issue that kept her out of action for four months, and then a minor MCL strain that took a month to rehab. Despite her absences, she still scored five goals, including a game-winner in August upon her return from her back injury, and recorded two assists. She returned to the U.S. this week for her first camp under Emma Hayes since April 2025.

“It’s a monumental and game-changing moment right now,” Rodman said. “Everyone’s gonna have their different thoughts and opinions about it, but I’ve never really cared. That doesn’t change anything for me. I think I’ve always had a vision and kind of an idea of what I wanted my legacy to be and continue to be.

“This is just opening opportunities for American girls with dreams, and I am one, and was one of them. I’m just very grateful about that. And it’s perfect timing with the World Cup happening in the U.S., too.”

Tamerra Griffin

Emily Olsen

By Tamerra Griffin and Emily Olsen

1/16/26 Happy New Year, USWNT play next Sat/Tues, Man Derby Sat, European Ax falls on Managers, Full TV Schedule

Hey Soccer Fans – it was a busy holiday season that had me on the road for the better part of 3 weeks so I am just back to getting the Ole Ballcoach in Gear for 2026. I will kick in some end of year stuff as we go over the next few weeks – but in the meantime – here are the games to watch – full TV schedule for the next week and where all the American’s will be playing across the globe. Hope you had a safe holiday and are ready for a Happy New Year!

Around the World of Soccer

Sad to see Ricardo Pepi break his right arm as he looks to be out a spell – hope he gets back in time for the World Cup. Pulisic is still on fire and stands 2nd in Serie A in goals at 8 despite playing just over half the minutes of the leaders. Chris Richards was justifyably named US Player of the Year for his success with Crystal Palace and solidifying a spot in the back with the US team. Now if only Trusty or Robinson or someone will step up alongside. Crazy to see all the firings in Europe first at Man U with Carrick in charge now, Chelsea with Liam Rosenior, Spalleti at Juve, then Real Madrid (Alonso was so hot with Leverkusen) has been replaced by Alvaro Arbeloa – just wow. Speaking of Carrick it would be huge if he could upset Man City in the Manchester Derby Sat 7:30 am at home. Wouldn’t that be great! Switching to the ladies it was great to see Rose Lavelle won the US Women’s Player of the Year (read below)– and also Great to see Lindsay Horan (Heaps now) is coming home to the US from Europe – check out this Video. I promise more content next week.

US Women’s Coach Emma Hayes names Roster for Jan 24 vs Paraguay & Jan 27 vs Chile Games

The roster features the return of forward Trinity Rodman, who played in just one USWNT match in 2025, a 2-0 victory over Brazil at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. In that match, she scored the game-winning goal. Rodman, 23, has the most caps (47) and goals (11) of anyone on the roster. The other 22 field players on the roster have a combined 17 international goals. As the January training camp falls outside a FIFA competition window, Hayes named a roster made up entirely of players from the National Women’s Soccer League, with Rodman currently unattached, including four first-time call-ups in forwards Maddie Dahlien (Seattle Reign FC) and Reilyn Turner (Portland Thorns FC) and midfielders Riley Jackson (North Carolina Courage) and Sally Menti (Seattle Reign FC). Dahlien and Jackson featured in all five U.S. U-23 WNT events in 2025 and were on the roster for the January 2025 Futures Camp in Florida.
2026 January Training Camp Roster

GOALKEEPERS (3): Claudia Dickey (Seattle Reign FC; 6) Mandy McGlynn (Utah Royals; 4), Jordan Silkowitz (Bay FC; 0)
DEFENDERS (8): Jordyn Bugg (Seattle Reign FC; 5/0), Avery Patterson (Houston Dash; 9/1), Izzy Rodriguez (Kansas City Current; 1/1), Tara Rudd (Washington Spirit; 9/0), Emily Sams (Orlando Pride; 7/0), Gisele Thompson (Angel City FC; 4/0), Kennedy Wesley (San Diego Wave FC; 2/0), Kate Wiesner (Washington Spirit; 2/0)
MIDFIELDERS (8): Croix Bethune (Washington Spirit; 5/0), Hal Hershfelt (Washington Spirit; 3/0), Claire Hutton (Kansas City Current; 11/1), Riley Jackson (North Carolina Courage; 0/0), Lo’eau LaBonta (Kansas City Current; 4/0), Sally Menti (Seattle Reign FC; 0/0), Sam Meza (Seattle Reign FC; 2/0), Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns FC; 11/5)
FORWARDS (7): Maddie Dahlien (Seattle Reign FC; 0/0), Jameese Joseph (Chicago Stars FC; 1/0), Trinity Rodman (Unattached; 47/11), Yazmeen Ryan (Houston Dash; 15/2), Emma Sears (Racing Louisville FC; 12/4), Ally Sentnor (Kansas City Current; 13/4), Reilyn Turner (Portland Thorns FC; 0/0)

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GAMES ON TV

Sat, 1/17
7:30 am Man United vs Man City
8 am ESPN+ REal MAdrid vs Levante
9 am Para+ Udinese vs Inter Milan
9:30 am ESPN+ MGladback (Reyna, Scalley) vs Hamburger
10 am USA Liverpool vs Burnley
10 am Peacock Leeds United (Aaronson) vs Fulham (Jedi)
10 am Peacock Sunderland vs Crystal Palace (Richards)
12:30 pm NBC Nottingham Forest vs Arsenal
12:30 pm ESPN+ RB Leipzig vs Bayern Munich
2:45 pm Para+ Cagliari vs Juventus (Mckinney)
Sun, Jan 18
9 am USA Wolverhampton vs New Castle
10:15 am ESPN+, Des Athletico (Cardosa) vs Alaves
11:30 am USA Aston Villa vs Everton
2:45 pm Para+ AC Milan (Pulisic) vs Lecce
3 pm ESPN+, Des Real Sociedad vs Barcelona
8 pm TUDN Pachuca vs America ( )
Mon, 1/19
3 pm USA Brighton vs Bournemouth
Tues, Jan 20- CHAMPS LEAGUE
12:45 pm CBSSN, Para+ Glint vs Man City
3 pm Uni, Para+, Real Madrid vs Monaco (Folagon)
3 pm Para+ Sporting CP vs PSG
3 pm Para+ Villarreal vs Ajax
Wed, Jan 21 Champs League
12:45 pm CBSSN, Para Galatasaray vs Atletico Madrid (Cardosa)
3 pm Para+ Juventus (Mckinney) vs Benefica
3 pm CBSSN New Castle United vs PSV (Dest)
3 pm Para Atalanta vs Athletic Club
3 pm Chelsea vs Paphos
3 pm Liverpool vs Marseille ()
Thurs, 1/22 Europa
12:45 pm Bologna vs Celtic (Trusty)
12:45 pm Para+ Fenerbache cs Aston Villa
12:45 pm Para+ Young Boys vs Lyonnais (Tessman)
3 pm CBSSN Roma vs Stuttgart
3 pm Para+ Celta Vigo vs Lille
3 pm Para+ Nottingham Forest vs Braga
3 pm Para+ Rangers vs Lodogorets
Sat, Jan 24
5:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Paraguay
Tues, Jan 27
10 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Chile
Sun, Mar 1 She Believes Cup Starts
5 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Argentina
Wed, Mar 4 She Believes Cup
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Canada (Columbus, OH)
Sat, Mar 7 She Believes Cup
3:30 pm TBS, HBO, Peacock USA Women vs Colombia
Sat, Mar 28
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Belgium
Tues, Mar 31
7 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Portugal
Sun, May 31
3:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Senegal
Sat, June 6
2:30 pm TNT, HBO, Peacock USA Men vs Germany in Chicago
Sat, June 12 WORLD CUP
9 pm Fox, Tele, Peacock USA Men vs Paraguay World Cup

USMNT weekend viewing guide: Full steam ahead

Head to head matchups in the EPL and Bundesliga Stars & Stripes

Fulham v Middlesbrough - Emirates FA Cup Third Round

Getty Images

There is a wealth of action on Saturday, including several head-to-head matchups.

Saturday

Coventry City v Leicester City – 7:30a on CBSSN: Haji Wright hasn’t scored since October and Coventry City are on a three match winless streak but the team still hold a six point lead in the English Championship heading into their matchup with twelfth place Leicester.

Wolfsburg v Heidenheim – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Kevin Paredes has come off the bench in Wolfsburg’s last two matches as he gets back to game fitness. Wolfsburg fell to Bayern Munich 8-1 in Paredes’s return but defeated St. Pauli 2-1 last weekend to move up to eleventh place in the table. They face last place Heidenheim this weekend.

Borussia Dortmund v St. Pauli – 9:30a on ESPN Select: James Sands and St. Pauli are tied with Mainz and Heidenheim on twelve points at the bottom of the Bundesliga table. They will face second place Borussia Dortmund on Saturday. Sands has started nearly every match for St. Pauli this season, missing just one due to concussion but St. Pauli’s results have been lacking with just three wins on the season and only one since mid-September.


Hamburger v Borussia Monchengladbach – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Gio Reyna did not make it off the bench midweek in Gladbach’s 5-1 loss to Hoffenheim and played just 5 minutes off the bench last wweekend in their 4-0 win over Augsburg. However, Joe Scally continues to see regular starts for the club who are currently in tenth place heading into their visit to fourteenth place Hamburg.

Hoffenheim v Bayer Leverkusen – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Cole Campbell was held out last weekend in his first match with Hoffenheim so we may be deprived of a USYNT v USMNT matchup this weekend as Hoffenheim host Malik Tillman and sixth place Leverkusen. Tillman picked up an assist last weekend but Leverkusen fell to Stuttgart 4-1 last Saturday to drop out of the top four.

Koln v Mainz – 9:30a on ESPN Select: Kristoffer Lund and twelfth place Koln face 16th place Mainz and Lennard Maloney on Saturday. Maloney has just six minutes in the last three matches for Mainz who have not been able to pull themselves out of relegation but are coming off a 2-1 win over Heidenheim. Meanwhile, Lund has played in thirteen straight for Koln who are winless in the past eight as they’ve slid down the table.

Sunderland v Crystal Palace – 10a on Peacock: Chris Richards has missed the last four league matches for Palace who are on a six match winless streak but he was on the field last weekend in Palace’s embarrassing 2-1 loss to sixth tier Macclesfield in the FA Cup. Palace have fallen to thirteenth place in the league table with their recent slide and will be facing tenth place Sunderland on Saturday.

Leeds United v Fulham – 10a on Peacock: Brenden Aaronson and sixteenth place will host Antonee Robinson and ninth place Fulham on Saturday. Aaronson has three goals in his last two matches for Leeds though they fell to Newcastle 4-3 despite his Brace ten days ago. On the other side, Robinson returned six matches ago and has started every match since with Fulham undefeated over that span with fourteen points as they’ve risen from fifteenth place to the top ten.

Toulouse v Nice – 1p on beIN Sports: Mark McKenzie and Toulouse defeated Angers in penalties to advance in the Coupe de France last weekend with McKenzie wearing the captains armband. McKenzie has started nearly every match for Toulouse who are in eighth place in the league standings.

Fortuna Sittard v PSV – 2p on ESPN Select: Ricardo Pepi broke his arm while scoring last weekend and is expected to miss about two months for recovery but Sergino Dest continues to start week in and week out for PSV who have won twelve straight matches and are now running away with the league title.

Cagliari v Juventus – 2:45p on Paramount+: Weston McKennie may be on the move this January as rumors are swirling about interest from the Premier league as well as elsewhere in Italy as reports are that he won’t be resigning with Juventus when his current contract expires in six months. In the meantime of course he continues to start for Juventus and scored and assisted last weekend in Juve’s 5-0 win over Cremonese. Juventus are in fourth place and will face sixteenth place Cagliari on Saturday.

Angers v Olympique Marseille – 3:05p on beIN Sports: Tim Weah has started five straight for Marseille who maintain their third place spot despite falling to Nantes last weekend. They are tied on points at fourth place Lille at this point with the top three automatically qualifying for the Champions League positions.

Sunday

Atletico Madrid v Deportivo Alaves – 10:15a on ESPN Deportes and ESPN Select: Johnny Cardoso saw 30’ off the bench last weekend and got the start midweek in Copa del Ray action but he has just two league appearances since August. Atletico drew with Real Sociedad last weekend and are in fourth place, three points back of third, and eleven back of league leading Barcelona.

Augsburg v Freiburg – 11:30a on ESPN Select: After starting the first five matches of the season on the bench Noahkai Banks has started 12 straight matches for Augsburg. It has not all been smooth sailing as Augsburg have just three wins in that time and are currently only three points ahead of the relegation zone but Banks has been getting key developmental minutes in the Bundesliga was still being just nineteen. Augsburg host ninth place Freiburg this weekend who are coming off a 2-0 loss to RB Leipzig.

Olympique Lyon v Brest – 2:45p on beIN Sports: After missing a few matches due to “dead leg” Tanner Tessmann came in off the bench in Lyon’s 3-1 win over Monaco last weekend and then started midweek in the teams Coupe de France victory over fellow Ligue 1 side Lille. Lyon remain in fifth place as they host eleventh place Brest on Sunday.

AC Milan v Lecce – 2:45p on Paramount+: Christian Pulisic received a rare day off on Thursday as AC Milan defeated Como 3-1 to keep pace with Inter at the top of the table, remaining three points back of the league leaders. On Sunday they will host Lecce who are three points ahead of Fiorentina for the final relegation spot.

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USA

US Soccer Male Player of the Year Chris Richards
USSC Young Male P of Y Ben Cremaschi
|USMNT’s Pepi suffers broken arm scoring for PSV
McKennie scores but David misses pen in Juventus draw with Lecce
USMNT’s Sargent banished to Norwich U21s amid transfer standoff

Hayes Names 26-Player USWNT Training Camp Roster For January Matches vs  Paraguay & Chile
SheBelieves Cup: U.S. to play Canada, Colombia
Rodman returns to USWNT for January friendlies
Midfielder Rose Lavelle Voted 2025 U.S. Soccer Female Player; Defender Lilly Reale Voted U.S. Soccer Young Female Player of the Year,
Five Best Moments from Christen Press’ Historic USWNT Career
Orlando Pride trade USWNT’s Sams to Angel City
USWNT captain Lindsey Heaps signs with Denver

World

Why did Man United, Chelsea, Real Madrid all sack their managers? It’s about culture
Michael Carrick won’t rule out long-term Man United stay

Carrick shrugs off criticism from ex-United players
Laurens’ weekend preview: Madrid’s redemption? Carrick’s debut

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Josh Sargent’s Norwich transfer saga: What we’re hearing about the wantaway USMNT striker

Norwich City striker Josh Sargent celebrates a goal

Sally Rawlins / Getty Images The Athletic By Paul Tenorio and Tom BogertJan. 15, 2026

U.S. men’s national team striker Josh Sargent has made it quite clear that he wants out of Norwich City, but the move he desires might not happen as soon as he hopes.MLS side Toronto FC has made an $18 million offer for the striker, who finished in the EFL Championship team of the season last year. But Norwich insists it is not going to part with the team’s starting forward in the middle of the season — and especially not as it attempts to fight its way out of the relegation zone.The transfer saga kicked off last weekend. Sargent messaged Norwich manager Philippe Clement ahead of Norwich’s FA Cup game against Walsall on Sunday to say he was not available for the game. After the game, Clement insisted Sargent would not move in this window.“He sent me a message to say that he was not available today because of transfer things that are in his head,” Clement said. “We need to speak about that this week inside the club.“The club has been really clear about that. We know which situation we are in. Him and his agent know the situation, so he will not leave in this transfer window.”Sources at the club backed their manager’s statement, saying that Sargent is not for sale.The MLS primary transfer window is open through March 26, meaning this saga could in theory extend into the spring. Toronto’s $18 million bid would be the third largest fee in MLS history, trailing Son Heung-min ($26.5 million) and Emmanuel Latte Lath ($22 million plus add-ons). Latte Lath came to Atlanta United from Middlesbrough, also in the Championship.While any potential final fee will be among the highest in MLS history, Norwich views it as below the market rate given the player’s output, pedigree, age and recent transfer interest.

Norwich City striker Josh Sargent reacts to a missed chance

Sargent’s season with Norwich City has been a mix of goals and frustrationStephen Pond / Getty Images

Sargent has scored 51 goals in the Championship over the last three-and-a-half seasons. The 25-year-old initially came to England from Werder Bremen, where the St. Louis native began his professional career.Sargent had the opportunity to return to Germany in the summer. Wolfsburg had a $28 million bid accepted by Norwich and personal terms were generally agreed. At the final stage, Sargent opted to stay at Norwich for personal reasons. Half a year later, with Norwich surprisingly locked in a relegation battle, the situation has changed.It’s not the first time Sargent has been close to a move across the Atlantic. In the summer of 2024, FC Cincinnati pushed hard for the American forward — its bid was north of $20 million — and personal terms would have been no issue, but Norwich demanded more than $25 million to even get its attention in negotiations.Norwich feels confident that it wouldn’t lose too much market value waiting for the summer window and, with the team in a susceptible position in the table and Sargent under contract through 2028, the club is set on avoiding a precedent by allowing a player to force a move. Saturday’s match at Wrexham will indicate whether his stance on playing for the club again has changed over the last week — and it could indicate that the game of chicken is now on between player and club.USMNT’s World Cup Roster PictureUSA World Cup roster battle exposes key questions for Mauricio PochettinoThe fight for World Cup roster spots will continue into 2026 for the USMNT

Norwich has added incentive to keep him as it digs out of a hole in the table. The club fired manager Liam Manning after starting the season with just two wins, two draws and 11 losses in the first 15 games. Clement was hired on Nov. 18, and the team is 4-4-3 since then, but remains in the drop zone with 24 points while having played at least one more match than the clubs it is chasing. (Sargent’s form has been rather the opposite: he started the season with six goals in his first five games in all competitions. Since then, he has scored just twice.)Nevertheless, Toronto has long identified Sargent as a top target this winter in its search for a designated player at the No. 9 position, the potential crown jewel of a rebuild and rebirth back to prominence in MLS after being one of the league’s defining teams in the late 2010s.The Canadian club, finally able to move forward into a new era, has rebuilt a broken locker room and trimmed a lot of fat from a bloated salary cap that included disastrous deals for Lorenzo Insigne and Federico Bernardeschi. The Italians departed in the summer, while several more bad contracts expired this winter to give Toronto further flexibility.The 2026 season was the light at the end of the tunnel after missing the playoffs five straight seasons, cycling through four permanent head coaches and two long stints under interim managers.

Josh Sargent playing against Panama

Sargent’s goal drought with the USMNT stretches back to 2019Michael Owens / Getty Images

American attacker Djordje Mihailovic arrived in the summer for an $8 million cash trade from the Colorado Rapids. Ecuador international midfielder Jose Cifuentes soon followed. A permanent transfer for Canadian international winger Theo Corbeanu was sealed this winter after a strong debut season on loan, and then TFC added one of the marquee defensive free agents, Walker Zimmerman, to anchor the back line. Brazilian left back Matheus Pereira is the other key offseason signing.Adding a player of Sargent’s quality could build on this solid foundation and once again make TFC a contender in the Eastern Conference – but it’s not going to happen without Norwich’s sign-off, something that as of now is not going to materialize.For Sargent, the hope would be that a move to MLS might reignite his hopes of making the U.S.’s World Cup roster in the summer. Sargent has not scored for the U.S. since 2019. Even during his best runs of form with Norwich, the goals haven’t come. Sargent, in the meantime, has fallen behind Folarin Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, Haji Wright and potentially even fellow Championship striker Patrick Agyemang in the pecking order for Mauricio Pochettino’s squad.If Sargent, who started two games at the 2022 World Cup, wants a shot at making the 2026 team, he’ll need to be on the field banging in goals — whether in England with the Canaries or elsewhere.

Chris Richards named U.S. Soccer’s 2025 Male Player of the Year

USMNT center back Chris Richards celebrates a goal

Omar Vega / Getty Images

By Henry Bushnell Jan. 14, 2026

Chris Richards, who over the last year emerged as a mainstay for both Crystal Palace and the U.S. men’s national team, has been named U.S. Soccer’s 2025 Male Player of the Year. The 25-year-old defender won the annual award over USMNT teammates Malik Tillman, Alex Freeman, Max Arfsten and Matt Freese, the other finalists. Richards earned it based on his play for the national team, but also his achievements in England for Crystal Palace, which he helped to an FA Cup title – the club’s first major trophy in its multi-century history – and August’s Community Shield.Richards started 45 games for Palace in the calendar year, entrenching himself as the right-sided center back in coach Oliver Glasner’s back three. The Birmingham, Ala., native also started 11 games for the national team, captained the U.S. once and was the most consistent player throughout the Concacaf Gold Cup. He started all six games en route to the final, emerged as a leader and scored in that final — which the U.S. ultimately lost to Mexico, 2-1.Richards received 48.6 percent of a weighted vote, quite comfortably beating Tillman (21.7 percent) and Freeman (13), the two next closest in the running. The winner is chosen by a weighted combination of national team members, coaches, fans, media, former players, the U.S. Soccer board of directors, the U.S. Soccer Athletes’ Council, and pro league coaches and sporting directors.Richards was presented with the word of his honor on ESPN’s Pat McAfee Show, where he was an unsuspecting guest.“It means the world to me,” said Richards, who joins current U.S. teammates Christian Pulisic, Antonee Robinson, Tyler Adams, Weston McKennie and Zack Steffen as winners of the award. He’s the second consecutive defender to win it after Robinson, and he’s looking ahead to 2026 and this summer’s World Cup with bigger goals in mind.“As a defender people tend to say it’s a lot of pressure, but I think pressure builds diamonds,” Richards added. “That’s something that with this team, with this country – we’re Americans. We like to win, we like to scrap, we like to fight, and that’s definitely what we’re going to do in the summer and hopefully by the end of it we’re holding a big trophy.”By Henry Bushnell

Manchester United vs Manchester City: Tactical battles? Key players? Impact of derby atmosphere?

A split photograph of Bruno Fernandes of Manchester United and Antoine Semenyo of Manchester City

Bruno Fernandes and Antoine Semenyo are likely to be key figures in this weekend’s Manchester derby Carl Recine, Stu Forster/Getty Images

By Carl Anka and Sam Lee

Jan. 16, 2026 8:00 am EST

It is straight into the thick of it for Michael Carrick as Manchester United’s new interim head coach, as he finds himself charged with the task of besting Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City on Saturday.

On top of the removal of head coach Ruben Amorim, three underwhelming Premier League draws in a row and elimination from the FA Cup at the first hurdle leave United in desperate need of a performance to lift fans’ spirits. For City, a win at Old Trafford is necessary to keep the pressure on Premier League leaders Arsenal, before their trip to Nottingham Forest later in the day. Their own run of three consecutive league draws has cost them momentum (and points) in the title race.

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Ahead of the 198th Manchester derby, our United writer Carl Anka and City counterpart Sam Lee preview some of the big talking points.


How will your club handle the derby atmosphere?

Carl Anka: These are troubled times for Manchester United. This derby is the first of Michael Carrick’s 17 matches as interim head coach over the remainder of the season, as co-owner INEOS’ staff attempt a reboot following Ruben Amorim’s turbulent 14 months in charge. A divided fanbase alternates between apathy and anger, but it was interesting to hear that a protest is planned for the next home game, against Fulham on February 1, rather than this one.

This derby will bring many disparate sections of the fanbase together, if only to combat a familiar and common foe. Winning is the best cure for any ailing football club, and if Carrick can deliver a positive result and performance, then this four-month interregnum will be off to a good start.

This will be Michael Carrick’s first game in his new jobGeorge Wood/Getty Images

Sam Lee: The blueprint for these matches has always been ‘one thousand million passes’ from Pep Guardiola’s men, but the interesting thing about this season is that City do not really have players whose first thought is to keep the ball — or perhaps they try to, but not quite as well as required.

However, by looking at their intentions away to Real Madrid in December and against Newcastle at St James’ Park on Tuesday night in the Carabao Cup, they are clearly still trying to dominate the ball — you can tell by the number of times they pass backwards rather than bursting forwards.

City are still not as capable as they used to be at that, and the opposition do now get chances, but they are improving and one upside to having more attack-minded players is that they have several ways to thrive in an end-to-end game, if that is how it turns out.What You Should Read NextThe beauty of Rayan Cherki’s goal: Switch-flicks, a corta-luz, and ‘a classic Pep triangle’The move was carried out by City’s newest players, but it bore the hallmarks of previous teams under Guardiola


How do you expect the manager of your club to approach the game tactically?

Lee: If Guardiola can pick Bernardo Silva and Rodri in midfield, that will go a long way to dictating how the match will go.

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United have caused City plenty of problems with counter-attacks over the years and the priority will be to stop that happening on Saturday through controlled play, particularly in midfield, which means Bernardo and Rodri will be at the very heart of what the visitors try to do.What You Should Read NextHow Manchester City play: Direct build-up and quicker combinations, but is there too much fatigue?The Athletic’s series taking the tactical temperature at the Premier League’s ‘Big Six’ begins with a look at Pep Guardiola’s side

That said, there is huge potential for wingers — presumably Jeremy Doku on the left and Antoine Semenyo on the right — to burst forward into the box and try to make something happen, and whoever else plays in midfield — Phil Foden, Tijjani Reijnders or Rayan Cherki — will have big roles in helping to tie everything together.

Anka: We need to extrapolate things from Carrick’s three years as Middlesbrough manager to answer this one. He favoured a 4-2-3-1 shape that would become a 3-2-5 when attacking (one full-back getting forward, while the other tucked inside) and a compact 4-4-2 when defending.What You Should Read NextHow could Michael Carrick’s Manchester United play?Analysing Carrick’s tactics during his brief coaching career — and their similarity to Ruben Amorim’s United

Carrick likes his team to build possession steadily from the back, but also gives licence for his attacking players to express themselves in the final third. When it worked well for Middlesbrough in the second-tier Championship, it was thrilling. When the club lost their best players, though, it became slow and methodical to watch.

Recent Manchester derbies have seen City dominate possession and United try to win on the counter-attack. Carrick’s managerial career so far suggests he might want this team to play in a more expansive manner eventually, but this weekend he may stick with the blueprints that delivered derby success to more than one of his predecessors.

Play: Video

Which player is key for your club in this game?

Anka: Here, I typically write 150 words explaining the importance of Bruno Fernandes. Or 150 words explaining how I’ve grown tired of answering ‘Bruno Fernandes’ to this question, so instead will spotlight someone else.

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Let’s try to do both today. Fernandes remains the critical player around whom United’s many attackers orbit, but Saturday’s match may be defined by Casemiro. United’s standard of play has a nasty habit of cratering when the 33-year-old is unavailable. He’s their best defensive midfielder, able to turn defence into attack with a smart tackle and even smarter switch-pass out wide. The Brazilian is also one of the team’s top aerial options in both boxes during set pieces, too.

The remainder of United’s season will rest on how many minutes Casemiro and Fernandes manage in the remaining 17 games.

Lee: It is hard to choose between Rodri and Bernardo.

Bernardo understands what games like this need, Rodri is a top-level player and his physicality and ability to pick out the right vertical pass would be an amazing boost to a team who have learnt to play pretty well without him over the 16 months since that ACL knee injury against Arsenal.

Rodri will be integral to City if he playsShaun Botterill/Getty Images

You could look at Erling Haaland as the obvious goal threat, or young Max Alleyne, who has done brilliantly in defence and is facing another big test, and there could be a moment from any of them that decides the result.

But those two in the middle will have the biggest say on how the game itself looks.


Which opposing player is the biggest threat?

Anka: City’s victory over Newcastle in that Carabao Cup semi-final first leg earlier this week contained some ominous signs. The idea of Semenyo and Doku running at Diogo Dalot and Patrick Dorgu at Old Trafford on Saturday is frightening.

Lee: Marcus Rashford has been one of the most obvious thorns in City’s side whenever United have got a result in the derby recently, thanks to his pace on the break and finishing, but it is usually Fernandes who fires off those passes in behind.

No matter who has been the manager, United have been great at getting the ball into midfield, immediately playing the ball to Fernandes and offering him at least one runner in behind the defence. Even if not that particular route, Fernandes is always capable of creating something or scoring himself, so he is the obvious threat.What You Should Read NextHow does Antoine Semenyo fit in at Manchester City?He may not be a traditional Guardiola player but given City’s shift towards a more open, individualistic attacking style, the logic is clear


Match prediction?

Anka: I choose to believe United will do it. Carrick’s plucky side shock the league with an unexpected counter-attacking win. So, 2-1 to the home side. One goal from a set piece, one from a moment of quality against an unsettled City back line.

Lee: You can never be quite sure how these bigger away games will go this season, with them generally being more open and end-to-end than in recent years. Add in the change of manager at United, and things seem even more unpredictable. But City were impressive against Newcastle in midweek, and if they can add Rodri back into the mix, I think they have a great chance of winning — especially if Semenyo keeps adding an extra goal threat.

By Carl Anka and Sam Lee

Man Utd new manager bingo: What will Michael Carrick say – and how will he say it?

Michael Carrick holds a press conference during his previous spell as Manchester United's interim manager in 2021

Matthew Peters/Man Utd via Getty Images

By Nick Miller

Jan. 15, 2026

Yes, it’s that time again.

Manchester United are without a permanent manager, so they need a comfort blanket. And as we know, the only thing that seems to comfort Manchester United is someone with some connection to Sir Alex Ferguson taking over in some form of interim and/or caretaker fashion.

Since Ferguson retired, Ryan Giggs, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, Michael Carrick, Ruud van Nistelrooy and Darren Fletcher have all fulfilled the role as the man to make United feel safe again, for varying amounts of time and to varying degrees of success.

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Now it’s Carrick (again), who begins his second interim spell in the big chair — this time as the permanent interim rather than the interim-interim Fletcher. This actually mirrors the situation he was in the first time around, taking over after Solskjaer was sacked and before Ralf Rangnick arrived to complete the 2021-22 season. So this is technically a promotion for him.

Carrick will be introduced as Ruben Amorim’s temporary successor tomorrow (Friday), and certain words, phrases or themes are surely going to come up. Here are a few to listen out for…


‘The Manchester United way’

Is this the most talked about ‘way’ in football? And yet, it’s always been slightly tricky to pin down exactly what this idea means. A cynic might suggest it’s just ‘win games of football’, but listen out for talk of this fabled philosophy.

In fairness, the club’s caretaker managers of yore have tried to explain it. “It’s going to be a Manchester United philosophy,” roared Giggs, when he took over from David Moyes for the death rattle of the 2013-14 season. “Passion, speed, tempo, be brave, imagination. Work hard but, most of all, enjoy it. If you enjoy it, you can express yourself more.”

Ryan Giggs is a big proponent of the ‘Manchester United way’Andrew Yates/AFP via Getty Images

Solskjaer echoed this by saying he wanted his team to “play with courage, go out there and express your skills, take risks” and “when you’re at Manchester United, there are a set of demands”, while Van Nistelrooy said that his first team talk involved “telling them about what Manchester United is about and what it is to play at Old Trafford”.

The crucial point here is: no specifics. People can hold you to specifics. Keep it slightly vague, keep it vibes-based, keep it ‘Manchester United’.What You Should Read NextManchester United’s retrotopia dooms them to repeat the same mistakes again and againThe club’s sepia-tinted caretaker manager search underlines how it remains trapped by its illustrious past

‘This is Manchester United we’re talking about’

Now, this is something of a red herring. You could easily get sucked into the idea that the candidate will say variants of the immortal words “this is Manchester United Football Club we’re talking about”, usually delivered in that sort of incredulous tone which is intended to convey the full weight and significance of this august institution, which is so significant and august that you shouldn’t need to say anything else.

However, this is not generally the remit of the ex-player turned caretaker boss, and rather something that is usually confined to pundits on radio or TV, largely because there’s an element of exasperation to the words that emphasise what a mess United are in and how badly things have been managed. All of that said, it’s possible this phrase will make an appearance when Carrick sits down with the media on Friday, so keep an ear open for it.

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There is, however, always a quasi-religious element to how former players-turned-interims speak about Manchester United: it’s like the club is God, Ferguson is the Pope and they are the cardinals. So be alert for some reference to the club being all-consuming, an entity that is now a fundamental part of their being.

At Carrick’s first unveiling, he said “this club has been my life for a long time” and spoke about the “sacrifice” required to do the job, while Giggs said United “has been the biggest part of my life since I was 14”, which in fairness was less him bowing to the majesty of the place as a football institution and more a statement of fact.

‘A dream come true’

Forget their weddings or the birth of their kids, there’s no topping being appointed United manager.

“It’s an amazing honour to be able to lead a Manchester United team,” said Fletcher. “I don’t even think it’s in my wildest dreams that it was something that could potentially happen.” Giggs described it as “the proudest moment of my life”, while Solskjaer, upon getting the job permanently after doing so well as the interim, said: “You know when people say they’re taking their dream job — that’s more true for me than anyone.”

‘I’ve not thought about the permanent job’

It’s important to recognise that this is a short-term gig and you shouldn’t be presumptuous. At some point, you will be asked if you want to stay for longer than the initial proposed time period, but these questions must be played with a straight bat.

Fletcher insisted that “honestly, it’s not something I’ve thought about”, Carrick said first time round that his “thought process is preparing the team for tomorrow”, Van Nistelrooy kept repeating that he’d return to being an assistant when his spell was over (he didn’t: a month after his interim period was over, he was Leicester City manager) while Solskjaer said “it’s until the summer now, five or six months to just help out in the meantime while the club does the process to get the next (permanent) manager.” Which, of course, turned out to be him.What You Should Read NextMichael Carrick, the football manager: ‘I hate the word philosophy’The former Man Utd midfielder is no ideologue but has firm coaching convictions which he will hope to instil at his old club

A deferential reference to Sir Alex Ferguson

Hopefully, someone tomorrow asks Carrick if he’s going to use the manager’s parking space, something that Solskjaer reportedly didn’t do because he believed it still belonged to Ferguson. This was the peak of the Fergie deference scale — almost topped by Fletcher revealing he had asked for his former manager’s “blessing” to take caretaker control for two games — something all former United players (barring Roy Keane) are obliged to do.

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On the one hand, you get it: we might not have heard of most of these guys had it not been for Ferguson; he is their primary influence, their model of what a manager is. Why would you not lean on him for advice? On the other hand, it does become slightly embarrassing to watch these grown men essentially turn into small boys who have to ask Daddy for permission.

Darren Fletcher sought Sir Alex Ferguson’s ‘blessing’ ahead of his two-game spell in chargeOli Scarff/AFP via Getty Images

Anyway, speaking to him will almost certainly come up: Van Nistelrooy did so when he was asked to hold the fort post-Erik ten Hag; Solskjaer called Ferguson his “mentor”, who had “influenced me on everything” and that there was “no one to get better advice from”; Carrick was actually quite interesting on the Scot, saying he spoke to him “several times” before taking the job first time around, and that he deliberately tried not to get too close to his old boss during his playing days.

And then there was Fletcher, who said, remarkably: “I don’t like to make any major decisions without speaking to Sir Alex.”

‘I’m my own man’

While Ferguson will always be the United godhead, these are still men with pride and ego, so there also must be some attempt to make clear that they are an autonomous being; a real boy with his own mind.

“It’s going to be my philosophy,” declared Giggs, undermining himself slightly by describing that as a “Manchester United philosophy”, while Solskjaer referred to his “philosophy, principles, how we want to play,” and Carrick the first time round said, “I have it very clear in my mind how I want the team to play.”

Fletcher, who admittedly didn’t have a lot of scope to put his stamp on things because he only had two games, nevertheless said he hoped they looked “like a Manchester United team that represents a bit of me”.

By Nick Miller