Jude Bellingham left out of England squad by coach Tuchel. Phil Foden also missing

Jude Bellingham left out of England squad by coach Tuchel. Phil Foden also missing
Tuchel said there was “no message, no hidden agenda” behind his comment, which was made in a radio interview the day after a 3-1 loss to Senegal in a friendly in June. (AFP)
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Updated 23 min 34 sec ago

Jude Bellingham left out of England squad by coach Tuchel. Phil Foden also missing

Jude Bellingham left out of England squad by coach Tuchel. Phil Foden also missing
  • Jude Bellingham has been left out of England’s squad for upcoming games against Wales and Latvia just two days after being named as the national team’s player of the year
  • he Real Madrid midfielder has recently returned after around two months out following shoulder surgery

LONDON: Jude Bellingham was left out of England’s squad on Friday for upcoming games against Wales and Latvia, two days after being named as the national team’s player of the year.
The Real Madrid midfielder has recently returned after around two months out following shoulder surgery, featuring in the Spanish champion’s last four games in all competitions.
However, Bellingham wasn’t included in a 24-man squad selected by head coach Thomas Tuchel that also saw fellow attacking midfielder Phil Foden, who has rediscovered his form at Manchester City, left out.
Bellingham, one of the most high-profile players in world soccer, is the big omission, though. On Wednesday, he was named England Player of the Year for the 2024-25 campaign after coming up with some big moments during the run to the European Championship final last year — notably a late equalizer with an overhead kick against Slovakia in the last 16.
In August, Tuchel said he apologized to Bellingham for saying the midfielder’s behavior “can be a bit repulsive.”
Tuchel said there was “no message, no hidden agenda” behind his comment, which was made in a radio interview the day after a 3-1 loss to Senegal in a friendly in June.
England plays Wales in a friendly on Thursday and a World Cup qualifier in Latvia five days later


Knicks’ Josh Hart ejected, injured in Abu Dhabi opener

Knicks’ Josh Hart ejected, injured in Abu Dhabi opener
Updated 3 min 57 sec ago

Knicks’ Josh Hart ejected, injured in Abu Dhabi opener

Knicks’ Josh Hart ejected, injured in Abu Dhabi opener
  • Hart, who is wearing a split on his right ring finger following surgery, came down with a rebound and landed awkwardly trying to avoid a tie-up with 76ers

Josh Hart was injured and ejected on the same play in the Knicks’ exhibition win over the Philadelphia 76ers in Abu Dhabi on Thursday.
Hart, who is wearing a split on his right ring finger following surgery, came down with a rebound and landed awkwardly trying to avoid a tie-up with 76ers forward Kennedy Chandler and went to the ground in pain in front of the 76ers bench.
After grabbing his third rebound of the game in seven minutes of court time, Hart went to the floor and fired the ball across the court and into the stands, prompting referees to eject him from the game.
“I didn’t see him go down,” new Knicks coach Mike Brown said. “I saw him down and he looked like he was in considerable pain when he was down. He’s day-to- day. We’ll see how he feels tomorrow.”
The Knicks won the game 99-84. The teams will play again Saturday (11 a.m. ET).
Brown said the Knicks will list Hart’s injury as “lower back soreness.”
The Knicks reiterated the injury is not considered serious.


World champion Marquez crashes twice in Indonesia MotoGP practice

World champion Marquez crashes twice in Indonesia MotoGP practice
Updated 03 October 2025

World champion Marquez crashes twice in Indonesia MotoGP practice

World champion Marquez crashes twice in Indonesia MotoGP practice
  • Newly crowned world champion Marc Marquez fell twice on Friday in a crash-filled practice for the Indonesia MotoGP as Marco Bezzecchi clocked a blistering fastest time

LOMBOK: Newly crowned world champion Marc Marquez fell twice on Friday in a crash-filled practice for the Indonesia MotoGP as Marco Bezzecchi clocked a blistering fastest time.
Spanish great Marquez took a spill early on in the afternoon session, sliding off the track, before returning only to suffer a heavier crash after a wobble threw him off his Ducati.
The 32-year-old was able to recover but could only set the 11th-fastest time, leaving him out of the top 10 and dropping into the first round of qualifying on Saturday for the first time this season.
It was instead Aprilia’s Bezzecchi who set the standard in humid conditions at the Mandalika track on the resort island of Lombok.
The Italian, fourth in the overall standings, recorded a best time of 1min 29.24sec, 0.408sec ahead of Ducati’s Fermin Aldeguer and 0.424sec faster than KTM’s Pedro Acosta.
Marquez will be joined in Q1 by two-time world champion Francesco Bagnaia, third in the championship standings, who struggled to a 17th-fastest time.
Marquez, who has already set a single-season points record for a MotoGP rider, can still reach the second qualifying round if he finishes fastest or second-fastest in the first qualifying session.
His brother Alex, second in the overall standings, also went down in a painful crash but his bike bore the brunt of the damage. He sneaked into Q2 on Saturday with the 10th-fastest time.
A dramatic practice session also saw Johann Zarco and Enea Bastianini crash.
Honda’s Luca Marini topped the morning practice session, with Marc Marquez fifth.
The top 10 fastest riders in practice book their tickets for Saturday’s second qualifying session, which shapes the first four rows of the grid.
This group is then joined by the two fastest riders from the first qualifying session.
Qualifying determines the grid for both the sprint race on Saturday and the main event GP on Sunday afternoon, with a maximum 37 points available.


Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson ruled out until after international break

Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson ruled out until after international break
Updated 03 October 2025

Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson ruled out until after international break

Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson ruled out until after international break
  • Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker has been ruled out until after this month’s international break after injuring his hamstring in the Champions League defeat at Galatasaray

LIVERPOOL: Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson Becker has been ruled out until after this month’s international break after injuring his hamstring in the Champions League defeat at Galatasaray.
The Brazil international was replaced by Giorgi Mamardashvili in the 56th minute of the game in Istanbul — Liverpool’s second straight defeat after they started the season with seven successive wins in all competitions.
Manager Arne Slot confirmed on Friday his number one goalkeeper would not be fit to face Chelsea at Stamford Bridge this weekend.
“Alisson is not a part of the squad tomorrow and he’s not going to travel to Brazil as well for the national team,” he said.
Slot said it was difficult to put a timescale on when the goalkeeper, 33, would return.
“I would be surprised if he would be there in the first game after the international break, but from there on sometimes things can go a bit faster or a bit slower,” he added.
“It’s difficult to say the amount of days and weeks, but for the upcoming games he will not be part of us or the Brazil team.”
Slot said forward Hugo Ekitike, who also came off with an injury in the second half in Turkiye, would train on Friday and would be assessed.
Liverpool remain top of the Premier League despite last week’s 2-1 defeat at Crystal Palace — two points clear of second-placed Arsenal.


Alex Pereira attempts to retake title from Magomed Ankalaev at UFC 320

Alex Pereira attempts to retake title from Magomed Ankalaev at UFC 320
Updated 03 October 2025

Alex Pereira attempts to retake title from Magomed Ankalaev at UFC 320

Alex Pereira attempts to retake title from Magomed Ankalaev at UFC 320
  • At times, it became a common joke among fans and fighters about how visible Pereira was during his camp

LAS VEGAS: Before Alex Pereira’s loss to Magomed Ankalaev at UFC 313 in March, it looked as if the Brazilian knockout artist had given in to the temptations that come with being the sport’s most marketable fighter.
At times, it became a common joke among fans and fighters about how visible Pereira was during his camp.
At UFC 320 on Saturday, Pereira will get what could very well be the final chance in his storied career to reclaim the light heavyweight title belt. Since Ankalaev (20-1-1, 1 no contest) beat Pereira (12-3-0) earlier this year, some visible bad blood has festered between the fighters in their interactions.
With his reputation at risk and with a fighter who clearly irritates him holding the title he recently elevated to prominence, Pereira steps into the Saturday fight with a hunger that was missing in March. Even if Pereira, 38, blames it on injuries rather than the lifestyle he led in the months before the fight.
After the first bout, Pereira claimed he fought at just 40 percent of his usual capabilities. Ahead of the second matchup, he won’t reveal just how healthy he is, but he made it clear that it shouldn’t be used as an excuse this time around.
“I took this time off to rest, to take care of myself and to heal some injuries,” Pereira said. “I can tell you that I’m going to be very good in this fight. I can’t tell you an exact percentage, but I can tell you I’m going to be doing well.
“I don’t think (I feel a chip on my shoulder). Obviously, I’m here to win. We can’t control everything, but I’m here to win. In the last fight, I wasn’t able to show a lot. This time, I had time to really prepare, and I think I’m going to be able to show everything that I’ve improved and everything I’ve been learning.”
Ankalaev, on the other hand, hopes to wash his hands of the Pereira problem once and for all. Another win for the 33-year-old Russian sambo star would mark 15 consecutive fights without a loss.
Ankalaev’s only career UFC loss came during his debut against Paul Craig in 2018, and it taught him lessons that have made him nearly unbeatable since then. The defeat showed Ankalaev that staying calm is a superpower, and that demeanor proved crucial in his initial victory over Pereira.
“When it comes to my calmness, my calm demeanor, I think it comes from taking the lessons out of that one loss that I had at the very beginning of my career,” Ankalaev said. “I took a specific lesson out of that. I learned things I needed to find from that loss. From then on, I think the confidence comes from preparation and hard work.
“It’s something that every fighter develops as they go through their career. They find that calm in which they can operate during the fight. When it comes to being nervous in front of a certain fight, I can’t say that I’ve never been nervous or I’ve never been shaky. There were fights where, not that I was scared, but it was more responsibility that I felt going in. At this point, for this fight specifically, the reason for the calm is that I went through a really good camp.”
In the co-main event, Merab Dvalishvili (20-4-0) will defend his bantamweight title against Cory Sandhagen (18-5). Dvalishvili defeated Sean O’Malley for the belt at UFC 306 last September and in the rematch at UFC 316 in June, the latter being his 13th consecutive win. Sandhagen has won four of his past five bouts.


Max Verstappen has the momentum in the F1 title fight in Singapore as McLaren stumbles

Max Verstappen has the momentum in the F1 title fight in Singapore as McLaren stumbles
Updated 03 October 2025

Max Verstappen has the momentum in the F1 title fight in Singapore as McLaren stumbles

Max Verstappen has the momentum in the F1 title fight in Singapore as McLaren stumbles

It’s the one race on this year’s Formula 1 calendar that Max Verstappen has never won. It could be crucial to his chances of a series comeback.
Verstappen heads into this week’s Singapore Grand Prix with back-to-back wins which have made a fifth consecutive title go from near-impossible to merely unlikely.
Meanwhile, standings leader Oscar Piastri had an awful weekend at the last race in Azerbaijan, title rival Lando Norris couldn’t capitalize, and their McLaren team has started making mistakes at pit stops.
Verstappen is “genuinely a challenger,” Norris said Thursday. “A couple of weeks ago, they brought some upgrades, and it seems like that’s put them back on the same level as us.”
‘One crash... and it’s game on’
F1 drivers were challenged Thursday to estimate how likely it was Verstappen could pull off what would be a historic surge in the title fight. Norris was cautious — “there’s a chance, so more than zero” — but others suggested it’s already a real three-way title fight.
As he has done all season, Verstappen played down his title chances, saying he’s just taking things race by race and not thinking about the championship.
Verstappen is 69 points behind Piastri with seven races to go. That’s still a big gap but his recent form, combined with glaring errors at McLaren, suggests the momentum has swung.
“One crash between Lando and Oscar, and it’s game on,” said Williams’ Alex Albon, who put Verstappen’s chances at 15 percent.
Singapore’s stifling heat and twisty track are unlikely to favor a Red Bull car whose latest upgrades work best on high-speed circuits, predicted, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc said. He still gave Verstappen a 20 percent chance of being on top at the end of the season.
The hunter, not the hunted
There aren’t many firsts left in F1 for a driver like Verstappen, but he’s never really needed a late-season comeback before.
Verstappen’s first title in 2021 came down to a controversial last-lap call against Lewis Hamilton, but before that he had a modest lead for much of the season. His titles in 2022 and 2023 were displays of record-breaking dominance. Last year he was the front-runner and Norris the underdog.
There’s little doubt Verstappen has the mindset to chase the McLarens down. “We all know Max and how dangerous he is when there’s something to grab,” Haas driver Esteban Ocon said.
It’s a big shift from even a few months ago, when Red Bull was struggling and there was speculation over Verstappen’s future with the team. He eventually confirmed he’ll stay.
Verstappen seems more relaxed than ever, too.
He’s opened up about his family life with his baby daughter, Lily — a good sleeper, Verstappen told German broadcaster Sky — and he’s spending more time on his hobby.
Being a huge motorsports fan even by F1 standards, that hobby is GT3 sportscar racing in Germany, where Verstappen claimed his first win last week.