Islam Slimani, Coda
End-of-career profile of an AFCON hero the Premier League reduced to a punchline. The punchline says more about the Premier League.
Harry Kane has broken Gary Lineker's England World Cup scoring record during the 2026 group stage match against Panama. The signal comes on the same day multiple sources report he is likely to sign a contract extension at Bayern Munich, ending Barcelona's interest. The timing is notable. Lineker's record stood for 38 years.
Manchester City have agreed £116m with Nottingham Forest for Elliot Anderson. Club record fee. The England midfielder is undergoing a medical in the United States while on international duty. Jamie Carragher calls the partnership with Rodri formidable. Forest sell a 23-year-old all-rounder for more than City paid for anyone.
Joe Hart told BBC coverage that the Trionda ball used at this World Cup is behaving strangely on long shots. Both Mbappé and Messi have scored from distance with keepers looking flat-footed. Hart's theory: the ball is dipping or moving late in ways goalkeepers are not reading. Something is up with the equipment.
England drew 0-0 with Ghana. Wayne Rooney, on BBC co-commentary, said Declan Rice and Jude Bellingham need to slow the tempo when Ghana sits deep. The criticism is tactical: England have pace, but no structure for breaking compact defending. Bellingham rejected his man-of-the-match award afterward, saying nobody deserved it.
Carlo Ancelotti has named the same Brazil side that beat Haiti, except for injured Raphinha. Neymar is fit but starts on the bench. Ancelotti told L'Équipe that Neymar can play ninety minutes walking. The comment reads like permission, not praise.
Gary Neville told ITV that Cristiano Ronaldo scored twice against Uzbekistan because Joao Cancelo gave him the ball in the right positions. Portugal won 5-0. Ronaldo became the first player to score at six World Cups. Neville did not mention age, legacy, or whether Ronaldo is finished.
The Versailles appeal court confirmed Friday that Achraf Hakimi will stand trial on rape charges dating to 2023. He denies the allegation. Hours later he started for Morocco at the World Cup in Massachusetts. Scottish supporters whistled him every time he touched the ball.
Bernardo Silva signed for Real Madrid on a free transfer, two years to 2028. He left City when his contract expired. José Mourinho is the new Madrid manager. Silva is 31.
NOTE TO EDITOR (delete before publishing): FourFourTwo headline is strongly opinionated; verify if Martínez actually addressed Ronaldo's role post-match or if this is purely press analysis.
Portugal drew 1-1 with DR Congo in Houston. Cristiano Ronaldo struggled. The British press is calling him the weak link. That framing treats selection as Roberto Martínez's problem. It is not. Ronaldo is Portugal's most famous export and the press knows Martínez cannot bench him.
José Mourinho's first signing in his second Real Madrid spell will be Bernardo Silva. BBC reports the deal is close. Silva is 31, has won five Premier League titles and the Champions League. Madrid expect it finished soon.
Edin Dzeko is 40 years old. This is his final World Cup. Bosnia-Herzegovina drew 1-1 with Canada in the co-hosts' opener. The BBC ran a feature calling him underappreciated. That word has followed him his entire career. Survived war, scored goals across three leagues, lifted trophies. Still described as if the record needs defending.
Joe Cole has put a line on the record. England will reach a moment under pressure where the game needs taking by the scruff of the neck. That moment is structural. It arrives in every tournament. Cole, who played two World Cups, is naming what England have historically lacked: the player who assumes responsibility when the script stops working.
End-of-career profile of an AFCON hero the Premier League reduced to a punchline. The punchline says more about the Premier League.
How Egyptian media handles Mo Salah vs how Liverpool media handles him. Two entirely different people.
On second and third generation North African football viewing, and the complexity of split allegiance.
The 2014 World Cup cohort, reconsidered a decade later. The question isn't what went wrong. It's what the coverage got wrong.
An evolution piece. The first articles, revisited. Where the voice was finding itself. What sharpened.
Most coverage treated 2022 as a sports story. It wasn't. A retrospective reading from the right angle.
Published before kickoff. The tactical problem Morocco needs to solve, stated plainly.
A career reading that British football press never quite managed. What they saw as inconsistency was something else.
The structural reasons European media systematically undervalues the tournament, and what that reveals about which audiences are considered real.
Tactical preview. What Algeria need to control to avoid the kind of exit the group stage always threatens.
Gulf investment reshaped the transfer market years before the Saudi wave. Argued from inside the region, not from London's rear-view mirror.
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Independent football writing by Amer M.
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