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2026 FIFA World Cup ticket lottery opens, plagued by long waits and frustrated fans


“The first of several 2026 World Cup ticket sales ‘phases’ opened Wednesday with a lottery exclusive to customers of a top-tier FIFA sponsor, Visa — and, for some eager fans, with a lengthy wait or error messages. After years of anticipation and confusion, beginning at 11 a.m. ET, fans could finally log on to FIFA’s website and apply for access to tickets to the tournament, which begins next June in the United States, Canada and Mexico. There was, in theory, no urgency — no preference in the random draw will be given to the earliest applicants, FIFA has said. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Best of the Rest XI: Picking the strongest team outside the ‘Big Six’

“This summer, the traditional ‘Big Six’ clubs signed more players from the rest of the Premier League than in any of the previous 15 seasons. As Oliver Kay explained, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, and Tottenham Hotspur bought a combined 11 players from the ‘other’ 14 clubs. As recently as the 2021-22 season, those six clubs only signed three from the other Premier League teams. A big reason for this is the purchasing power advantage these clubs enjoy, especially since the Premier League introduced its profit and sustainability rules (PSR). The ‘Big Six’ clubs do not always occupy the top-six spots in the league — Tottenham and Manchester United actually finished in the bottom six last season — but their commercial and matchday revenues are on a different level. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

England (including Wales), 2nd Division: 2025–26 EFL Championship

“The map shows the average attendance of the 24 clubs of the 2025-26 EFL Championship (England/2nd division). The clubs’ badges are arranged around the coast of Britain, in grouped boxes. They are grouped by Counties or Regions. The circles-with-club-badges represent each club’s home league average attendance for 2024-25 – the larger the circle, the higher the club’s attendance last season. Each circle-with-badge points to the club’s home-venue location. That home-venue location is listed on the map, along with the club’s home-county or home-region. …”
billsports
W – 2025–26 EFL Championship

Aston Villa, the only team in England’s top seven divisions without a goal

“Aston Villa’s goal of the month for August was simple. They decided not to bother with it at all because, for only the second time in their history, Villa failed to score in their first three league fixtures. They are the only team out of 162 that make up England’s top seven leagues (Premier League down to the National League North and South) yet to hit the back of the net. A big caveat here is that they have played only three league matches, whereas some teams in lower leagues have played more than double that number. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Alternative Premier League Table: No 4 – Comparing team starts with corresponding 2024-25 fixtures


“Welcome to the fourth edition of The Alternative Premier League Table, where each Thursday, Anantaajith Raghuraman analyses the entire division through a specific lens. After looking how each team deals with taking penalties last time, this week we’re looking at each team’s start to 2025-26, comparing it with how they performed in the same fixtures in 2024-25. This article is long but detailed, so either settle down and enjoy it all — or search for the team you want to read about. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Barcelona’s Camp Nou chaos leaves the Spanish champions without a home. What’s next?

“Barcelona’s Camp Nou return has been delayed again, with the club now having to play their first home match of the season at the 6,000-capacity stadium next to their training ground. On Tuesday evening, just five days before their La Liga fixture against Valencia on Sunday, the Catalan club confirmed the game will be hosted at the Estadi Johan Cruyff, which is where their reserve and women’s teams play. But we still do not know where Barca intend to play their other home games over this season. Can they really get back to the Camp Nou? Is returning to Montjuic an option? Might they even stay at the Johan Cruyff? Here is the latest on what we’re hearing, informed by sources at La Liga, Barcelona and the Barcelona city council — who all requested to speak anonymously to protect relationships. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

James Horncastle’s Serie A Briefing: Italian football’s Armani code and Gattuso’s new style

“An early memory of visiting Milan involves walking through arrivals at Malpensa and being confronted by Andriy Shevchenko. Our meeting, then at least, was in portrait rather than in person. Shevchenko was the face, the masculine muse, of a monochrome Armani campaign. The poster showed him standing against a wall, pinstripe suit loosely buttoned at the lapel, his silhouette cast on marble tile. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Every Premier League club’s origin story: Armaments, class, and a St Bernard dog


“Origin stories are everywhere. Every single successful film franchise seems to have at least one instalment where we go back to the beginning, to tell the tale of why the main character is the way they are. Some are pretty tenuous: in Kenneth Branagh’s recent adaptation of Death On The Nile, there was an origin story for Hercule Poirot’s moustache. In that spirit, we thought we would tell the tales of how all 20 of the 2025-26 Premier League teams came into existence. Their origins include churches, factories, local council decrees, cricket clubs, rugby clubs, ‘bandy and shinty’ clubs, more than one from the ashes of a team that didn’t quite make it, and many because the young lads involved just needed something to do in the winter. The stories involve skullduggery, under-the-counter deals, Victorian fascinations with wholesome pursuits, hands across the class divide, meetings in pubs, a club formed because its founder had a stadium but no team, another claiming to be the oldest club in the world, teachers, William Shakespeare, a man called Charles Daft, and more dogs than you might imagine. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Chelsea at Stamford Bridge in 1909-10, four years after forming

Tottenham Hotspur: How would a takeover work and what could it cost?

“Tottenham Hotspur has been the club where everything changes but its owners. For all that managers and players come and go, ENIC has held power for almost a quarter of a century. No Premier League owner has lasted longer. The front-facing leader had always been Daniel Levy but his sudden removal as the club’s chairman last Thursday has invited instability and expressions of interest from would-be buyers. The Lewis family, majority shareholders of ENIC, maintain they have no wish to sell but the noise around a fresh start has rarely been louder. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

England 2 Andorra 0: Anderson best of the bunch as Tuchel’s team fail to set pulses racing

“England made it four wins from four in their 2026 World Cup qualifying group, but it was far from convincing stuff. There was a fresher look to Thomas Tuchel’s starting XI, with the likes of Bukayo Saka, Phil Foden and Cole Palmer all out injured, but despite maintaining complete control of the match and never looking in any danger of dropping points, there was little to get the Villa Park crowd off their seats. A first-half own goal and a second half Declan Rice header were enough to preserve their five-point lead at the top of Group K, as they prepare to travel to Serbia — the biggest threat to their qualification hopes — on Tuesday. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian – Watching Andorra: like a month made up entirely of Tuesday afternoons

No man born in 1976 played for England – and what else birth years tell us about football

“One of the charming aspects of following foreign football is realising that certain concepts are expressed in different ways to how it’s done in your own country. And one of these, for those of us accustomed to British conventions but who follow the game in continental Europe, is the simple passage of time. So whereas you’re generally more likely to find the 24-hour clock on the continent — a kick-off time might be listed at “19h” — it is somehow also more common for their television scoreboards to display a clock counting up from 00:00 at the start of the second half, rather than the 45:00 we’d be accustomed to in Britain. Similarly, if you read — for example — La Gazzetta dello Sport in Italy, you won’t read goals recorded as being scored in the 65th minute in its pages, but instead in the 20th minute of the second half. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

‘Action’ from an 1878 game between England and Scotland

World Cup qualifying: Mbappé sees off Ukraine as Gattuso’s Italy find form

France struck early through Michael Olise and sealed the points with a late Kylian Mbappé breakaway to open their World Cup qualifying campaign with a 2-0 victory over Ukraine in Wroclaw, Poland. Mbappé’s 82nd-minute strike, set up by his Real Madrid teammate Aurélien Tchouaméni at the end of a rapid counterattack, took the forward to 51 international goals, drawing him level with Thierry Henry in second place on France’s all-time scoring list behind Olivier Giroud, who has scored 57. … Italy opened Gennaro Gattuso’s reign as coach with a 5-0 home win over Estonia in World Cup qualifying, wasting chances for almost an hour before exploding in the final stages of the second half to turn dominance into a rout. …”
Guardian

World Cup qualifying: Germany shocked in Slovakia, but Northern Ireland win

Slovakia celebrate their second goal in the shock 2-0 win over Germany.
Germany, four times the champions, suffered their first away loss in a World Cup qualifier after their shock 2-0 defeat by hosts Slovakia in Bratislava on Thursday in Group A. The Germans, who have set a goal of winning the 2026 World Cup, had never before lost a World Cup qualifier on the road in 52 matches, and they have now lost their last three consecutive games, after defeats by Portugal and France in the Nations League in June.  … Poland’s Aston Villa full-back Matty Cash fired home a late equaliser to ensure his side held the Netherlands to a 1-1 draw in Rotterdam, a major boost to their hopes and a dent to Dutch ambitions. A thunderous right-footed shot from the English-born defender in the 80th minute was as much as Poland deserved after a strong second-half performance, having been a goal down at half-time. …”
Guardian

The Kroenkes at Arsenal: The rise of Josh, transfer investment, and fan sentiment

“As the final whistle went at Old Trafford after Arsenal kicked off their Premier League campaign with a victory over Manchester United, Josh Kroenke left his seat in the directors’ box and headed for the dressing room. Having made the trip from the United States, Josh was in Manchester to watch Arsenal’s first match of the season, something he does annually, and stayed on to watch their 5-0 win against Leeds United the following weekend at the Emirates Stadium. But after congratulating the players and manager Mikel Arteta at Old Trafford — it is not unusual for Josh to venture into the dressing room following a game — attention soon turned to planning and strategy meetings. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Booting the ball out from kick-off is a worrying trend – this rule change would curb it

“In 1991, England travelled to Poland for their final qualification match for Euro 92. It was a crucial contest: the winners would qualify for the tournament, with a draw favouring England. Considering the importance of the game, it was a surprise that England manager Graham Taylor handed debuts to two players: Queens Park Rangers winger Andy Sinton and Crystal Palace midfielder Andy Gray. The latter was given an unusual role for the game’s opening moments. With David Platt and Gary Lineker taking the kick-off, Gray was instructed to stand just behind them and launch a diagonal ball downfield towards the corner flag, and out for a Poland throw-in.  …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

Grading each Premier League club on their summer transfer business

“The transfer window is over. Over 150 senior players have been signed by Premier League clubs. Others have moved on to the continent. Much like every year, a club’s transfer window will likely be judged a success or a failure based on the season that follows — that big-money striker who fires his new side into the Champions League or the huge (and unresolved) hole in defence that means a club slips into a relegation scrap. But with the window having just closed, we asked The Athletic’s club reporters for their view on how it panned out for their side, and what grade they would give the club’s window. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Evolution not revolution: The impact of squad churn on Premier League performance

“It is easy to get swept up by the excitement of a busy transfer window, the promise that a crop of talented reinforcements will rejuvenate and transform a side’s fortunes. Premier League clubs spent record sums chasing that promise this summer, but as tantalising as big-name arrivals and sweeping changes can be, can too much be disruptive? We have a recent case study: Liverpool were the biggest spenders in the summer 2025 window, but that came after a 2024-25 season in which they had barely added to their ranks at all. The result? A Premier League title in Arne Slot’s first campaign in charge. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Brazil won the 1970 World Cup: Pele’s return, a fearsome front five – but ‘an incompetent goalkeeper’


“… Mexico was a controversial choice as World Cup host in 1970, primarily because it was widely expected that the heat and altitude would result in poor football. Instead, Brazil turned on the style to become, almost without question, the most celebrated World Cup-winning side in history. It helped that the World Cup was now televised around the world — and for the first time, in colour. … Brazil triumphed amid a period of political turbulence back home, with a military dictatorship in place since 1964. ‘We had a fantastic side and everyone expected us to win, which gave me the shakes,’ Pele later said. ‘I was very nervous and under a lot of pressure. Maybe people have forgotten, but the political situation in Brazil was not good and we felt that we simply had to win the title. Thank God we were able to do it.’ And they did it in style. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Introducing The Soccer 100: A celebration of the greatest players in the sport’s history


“… In the summer of 1981, six years old and bitten hard by the football bug, I used my pocket money to buy a book from a rummage sale. I never knew the book’s title. By the time I got my hands on it, it had lost its cover. But turning its dog-eared pages, causing its spine to creak horribly, felt like entering another world. Besides a chronicle of every World Cup from 1930 to 1974, it contained a list of the greatest players of all time. It was dominated by British players, some of them familiar, but sprinkled among them were exotic names I had never seen before, legendary players from far-off lands. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Johan Cruyff

James Horncastle’s Serie A Briefing: Napoli’s box-office finale, a Mussolini moment and Helen Mirren at Lecce

“… Champagne Papi has been in Lombardy on his ‘$ome $pecial $hows 4 UK EU’ tour. He, in turn, missed Venezia, the team the Canadian hitmaker invested in, playing in Serie B. An away day in Castellammare di Stabia, hometown of Fabio Quagliarella down by the bay of Naples, either didn’t appeal or clashed with his schedule. Drake, as it happened, didn’t miss much. Venezia’s goalkeeper Filip Stankovic, son of Dejan, was the undisputed man of the match. Kitted out in a goalkeeper jersey designed by Drake’s Nike-adjacent clothing line, Nocta, the print is ugly enough to be fodder in a Kendrick Lamar diss track. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Bundesliga briefing: Why Ten Hag was sacked after two league games, and Werder Bremen’s bet on youth


“Welcome to the second Bundesliga briefing of the season. And it might be the last for Erik ten Hag, who was dismissed on Mondayafter just three competitive games in charge. From the outside, that must sound ludicrously harsh, even if Leverkusen were winless across those matches, losing to Hoffenheim and throwing away a 3-1 lead (with a man advantage) to draw 3-3 in Bremen on Saturday afternoon. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

How Liverpool defeated Arsenal by eventually showing more ambition in attack


“Liverpool’s 1-0 win over Arsenal, a contest between last season’s top two — and, judging from Manchester City’s poor start to the campaign, probably this season’s top two as well — was a classic of the genre. Not ‘classic’ because it was a memorable encounter, but ‘classic’ because matches between the two title contenders are often like this: tight, cagey and disappointingly defensive. Those titanic encounters between Pep Guardiola’s City and Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool, which seemed to regularly finish 2-2, were the exception to the rule. For long periods, Arsenal and Liverpool seemed to be playing out a dull goalless draw. It was a track stand of a football match, ahead of 35 further Premier League fixtures. But, put simply, the game was eventually won by the side that did more to win it. Fortune favours the brave. …”
NY Times/Athletic – Michael Cox
NY Times/Athletic – Breaking down Dominik Szoboszlai’s awesome free kick: ‘The pace, trajectory and movement is ridiculous’
NY Times/Athletic – Liverpool 1 Arsenal 0: Incredible Szoboszlai free kick from distance wins it at Anfield
YouTube: EVERY Angle of Unstoppable Dominik Szoboszlai Free-Kick! | Liverpool vs Arsenal

Why Jose Mourinho was sacked: Champions League exit and attitude towards Fenerbahce

“There was something quite poignant in Jose Mourinho and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, two of the managers who ultimately tried and failed to make sense of the post-Sir Alex Ferguson Manchester United, both being sacked by Istanbul clubs within 12 hours of each other. Besiktas dispensed with Solskjaer late on Thursday evening, then on Friday morning Fenerbahce announced they had ‘parted ways’ with Mourinho, after 14 months in charge and with the earth suitably scorched and smouldering behind him. In some respects, Mourinho’s departure was a surprise. Fenerbahce had stuck with him after a trophyless first season in charge, so the expectation was that if they were going to make a change, it would have been earlier in the summer. The dressing room was surprised: they had returned from a Champions League qualifier against Benfica on Wednesday and were expecting Mourinho to take charge of training on Friday and their game against Genclerbirligi this weekend. But in other ways, it wasn’t a shock. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

‘Battle of infirm not Old Firm as Celtic & Rangers limp into derby’

“More a meeting of the infirm than a battle of the Old Firm, Rangers and Celtic arrive almost apologetically to their biggest domestic game of the season so far, the bunfight at the Not OK Corral of Ibrox on Sunday. Rangers and Celtic have their own bespoke version of Newton’s Law – when one is up the other must be down – but that’s not the case this time. For once, there is equilibrium. It won’t last, but following their European humiliations during the week, they are for now in the horrors together, side by side. Their supporters enraged, their respective boards under siege, it’s hard to remember a time when both clubs were in such a grim place at the same time. …”
BBC

Manchester United are importing a sinister US tactic: Public money for stadiums


Aug 19 2025. “In March, Manchester United officially unveiled images and plans for a new 100,000-seater stadium to replace their aging home, Old Trafford. While the grandiosity of the circus-tent-like structure attracted widespread attention, something else did, too: as part of this project, United are planning to secure land not by paying for it themselves – but by having the UK government do it for them. In order to clear the site that the club wants to use, a rail freight hub will need to be moved to out near St Helens, between Manchester and Liverpool. The cost of moving the hub is estimated to be between £200m and 300m ($270-405m), but that may be an optimistic appraisal; in the past, the project budget was estimated at closer to £1bn ($1.35bn). …”
Guardian
YouTube: ‘No public money’ for proposed new Man Utd stadium says Mayor of Manchester

The Champions League: All 36 teams ranked and reviewed

“It is just 90 days since Paris Saint-Germain claimed their first Champions League with a 5-0 thrashing of Inter… and now the draw for the 2025-26 edition is upon us. Plenty has changed in the interim. Managers have come and gone, hundreds of millions have been spent (and that’s just at Liverpool) and Chelsea have somehow become world champions despite not even being part of Europe’s elite competition last season. So, with the Champions League line-up for this year’s tournament now complete ahead of today’s draw in Nyon, how do we assess each of them? This is our definitive — but also entirely subjective, and extremely debatable — ranking. ….”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Transfer DealSheet: Latest on Man Utd, Arsenal, Liverpool, Real Madrid and more

“Welcome to the 13th edition of The Athletic’s Transfer DealSheet for the summer 2025 transfer window. Our team of dedicated writers, including David Ornstein, will take you inside the market to explain the deals being worked on. The transfer window is open and will run until September 1. The information found within this article has been gathered according to The Athletic’s sourcing guidelines. Unless stated, our reporters have spoken to more than one person briefed on each deal before offering the clubs involved the opportunity to comment. Their responses, when they were given, have been included. We aim to bring you analysis you can trust about what is happening at Europe’s leading clubs and the latest information we’re hearing from across the market. This year, The Athletic’s football finance writer, Chris Weatherspoon, will be adding to our analysis of the transfer market. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Why Liverpool’s ‘Italian’ method of defending free kicks seems to be more effective

“In an era when football is criticised for its tactical homogeneity, an interesting debate has arisen around the idea of defending a crossed free kick. It had become the accepted approach to use a high defensive line, keeping opponents away from the box and leaving space in front of the goalkeeper. But in recent years, particularly in Italy, an alternative has emerged. In Serie A, it’s common for teams to sit deep, often in two separate lines, and then come forward and attack the ball. Historically, the Dutch approach to football is very different from the Italian one, particularly in terms of defensive lines. Whereas Italian football is renowned for deep defending, Dutch coaches want their sides to push up. …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

Why is London so appealing to new arrivals to the Premier League?

“There is no doubting the sizeable and growing divide between London and much of the rest of England. A recent report found London wages were 33 per cent higher than the national average and as high as 68 per cent more than in Burnley, a town in the north-west of the country. Higher living standards, higher productivity levels and more business start-ups were also cited in the report as examples of the divide. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Bundesliga briefing: Leverkusen and Ten Hag concerns, a VAR oddity and a fabulous tifo

“The Bundesliga is back and this season it will have its own weekly column, which will focus on major stories on the pitch, but also from German football as a whole — the terraces, the culture and, because it’s Germany, the governance too. On Matchday 1, Bayern Munich thumped RB Leipzig 6-0, Borussia Dortmund let a late lead slip against St. Pauli, drawing 3-3 at the Millerntor, and Koln celebrated their return to the top flight with a 90th-minute winner in Mainz. Not such good news for Bayer Leverkusen, though. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Howe, Hughes, friendship and fallout – and the fight for Alexander Isak

“Electric is how Eddie Howe describes the atmosphere he expects at St James’ Park tonight. First home game of the season, Bank Holiday Monday, under the floodlights and Newcastle United will have the pent-up emotions of a city behind them: their frustration unleashed not upon Alexander Isak this time, but Liverpool. All summer long a sense of indignation has brewed and bubbled on Tyneside. This could be the night it boils over. Isak’s actions — spurning Newcastle and their supporters’ adoration, turning his back on his manager and team-mates as he agitates for a transfer — have caused anger. Liverpool, whom Isak is set on joining, will feel the brunt of that resentment. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Why Marseille showed Adrien Rabiot and Jonathan Rowe the door: ‘An incident of extreme violence’


“Even by the historically volatile standards of Marseille, the brief statement posted on the club’s website shortly before 6:30pm local time on Tuesday came as a bolt from the blue. ‘Olympique de Marseille announces that Adrien Rabiot and Jonathan Rowe have been placed on the transfer list by the club,’ the statement read. ‘This decision was taken due to unacceptable behaviour in the dressing room after the match against Stade Rennais FC, in agreement with the technical staff and in accordance with the club’s internal code of conduct. The decision was communicated to the two players by the club on Monday.’ …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Multi-club ownership in the spotlight after European sanctions hit hard

Crystal Palace fans protested against Uefa after being demoted from the Europa League
“Uefa is facing pressure to push back its deadline for separating ownership structures after a turbulent summer in which a handful of clubs, including Crystal Palace, were denied access to European competitions due to multi-club ownership rule-breaches. It is understood that a number of smaller sides within multi-club operations will lobby Uefa to put back the 1 March date by which they must demonstrate compliance with the regulations. …”
Guardian

How Barcelona play: Pedri’s line-breaking passes, that offside trap and how will Rashford change things?

“In his first year in charge, Hansi Flick turned a Barcelona side struggling to find their identity into the ultimate entertainers. Barca won La Liga, the Copa del Rey and the Supercopa de Espana and also reached the Champions League semi-finals for the first time in six years, scoring 174 goals across 60 matches. Along with the intricate passing sequences they have traditionally been known for, the Catalans embraced directness and verticality, becoming one of Europe’s best counter-attacking sides. Here, The Athletic break down how this Barcelona side play the game. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Serie A, Europe’s maddest league, is back – after a mind-blowing summer

“When Martin Scorsese saw Fellini’s for the first time he was a student at New York University. Upon returning home, he tried to sketch his favourite scenes from memory and then set about thinking what the film was about. ‘Then you realise you don’t have to because it’s very simple really,’ Scorsese explained. Dreams. Memory. ‘It’s total fantasy.’ There’s nothing to get. Don’t try to understand. Let it wash over you in all its beauty and absurdity. Following Serie A is similar. The main plot points — who will win the scudetto, qualify for the Champions League, suffer relegation — often feel secondary to the elaborate, often mind-blowing set pieces that happen simultaneously. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

South American soccer game abandoned after violent clashes, a handgun attack and excrement thrown

“Chilean president Gabriel Boric has criticised the “evident irresponsibility” of CONMEBOL, the governing body of South American soccer, after violent clashes between rival fans caused a Copa Sudamericana match on Wednesday to be abandoned. The second leg of the last-16 tie between Argentine side Independiente and Universidad de Chile in Buenos Aires was abandoned in the 48th minute due to security concerns after rival fans clashed in the stands. The visiting Universidad de Chile supporters were situated in the tier above Independiente home fans, with local media reporting the trouble started before half time as rocks, toilets, sinks, seats, pieces of masonry, excrement, and stun grenades were thrown between rival fans. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Indian Super League crisis: A delayed season, wages on hold and widespread fear

“At first, it was just a short delay to the start of pre-season training. Players at the clubs of the Indian Super League (ISL) were assured that there was nothing to be worried about, just some administrative issues with the country’s top-flight league that needed to be ironed out.  It was when another two weeks were added to the delay that concerns started to grow. Communication was minimal. Players were baffled about what the problem was. Eventually, in early July, it was announced that the 2025-26 ISL season was to be put on hold, with no return date in sight. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

New signings aren’t always the solution. Maybe unhappy managers should try coaching?

“Football quite often shows that it isn’t aware of its own absurdity, and a prime example of that came last week when Enzo Maresca was discussing Levi Colwill’s knee injury. Colwill is likely to miss most of the season after rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament, which given he started 35 league games in the 2024-25 campaign, is enough to put a wrinkle in anyone’s plans. Maresca’s immediate solution was to suggest that Todd Boehly further loosened the already pretty loose Chelsea purse strings and furnish him with a new signing to plug the gap. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Liverpool’s new defensive fragility was exposed by four Bournemouth chances

“Two late goals from Liverpool in the opening fixture of their Premier League campaign papered over some very big defensive cracks. Federico Chiesa’s first league goal for the club, scored on 88 minutes in front of the Kop, and a strike from Mohamed Salah six minutes later snatched back a win at home against Bournemouth on Friday that Arne Slot’s side had threatened to surrender. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
YouTube: Extended Highlights: Liverpool 4-2 Bournemouth | Ekitike, Gakpo, Chiesa, Gakpo

Tijjani Reijnders: The story behind one of the best Premier League debuts

“C’est la vie is the motto Tijjani Reijnders lives by, the one that inspired his trademark shoulder-shrug celebration he performed on his debut for Manchester City. That’s life and, yes, this — running football matches — is what I do. Deal with it. The Premier League certainly got the message. He played a key role in all of City’s goals in their 4-0 away win against Wolves: orchestrating the first, scoring the second, assisting the third and doing the leg work for the fourth to rank among the best debuts the division has ever seen. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Man Utd 0 Arsenal 1: Analysing Arsenal’s ‘new’ set piece, Amorim’s goalkeeper problem, watching Gyokeres and Sesko

“Arsenal began their attempt to go one better in the Premier League title race this season with a 1-0 win over Manchester United at Old Trafford thanks to a ‘new’ set-piece routine. Avram Glazer was in attendance at Old Trafford and saw the team he co-owns line up without fit-again goalkeeper Andre Onana and striker Rasmus Hojlund, who The Athletic revealed has been told he faces a challenge to get minutes under Amorim. For Arsenal, 15-year-old midfielder Max Dowman travelled with the team but was not in the matchday squad. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Federico Chiesa finally has his moment in a Liverpool shirt after a year of waiting


“Federico Chiesa earned cult hero status during his maiden campaign at Liverpool. Supporters admired his positivity and commitment, and how he always seemed to be in the thick of the celebrations even when his involvement had been minimal. The song dedicated to him to the tune of Sway by Dean Martin caught on and became one of the anthems of the season as Arne Slot’s side celebrated Premier League title glory. But the reality was that his highlights reel was short and not particularly sweet. He clocked up just 104 minutes of top-flight action last season across six appearances. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Liverpool 4 Bournemouth 2 – Chiesa the supersub, Semenyo reports racist abuse, scores twice
Guardian: Hugo Ekitiké makes another good impression but there is a lot of work for Arne Slot to do – Jonathan Wilson

What’s new in the Premier League in 2025-26?

“Have you missed football? Probably not, because it never really stopped. But if you were struggling, fear not, because the Premier League is back. Three hundred and eighty matches, 282 days, 20 teams, endless grumbling about VARs, and almost certainly a new officiating debate that none of us have dreamed up yet are waiting just around the corner, all starting when reigning champions Liverpool host Bournemouth on Friday at 8pm BST/3pm EST. Leeds United, Burnley, and Sunderland are up from the Championship, there are new faces on the pitch and in the technical areas, and, as always, there are a host of minor tweaks, too. This, then, is what you need to know for the new Premier League season. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Another Premier League season dawns – with only silence regarding Manchester City charges

“Richard Masters sat down in a low armchair and awaited the barrage. The Premier League CEO has been doing the rounds on the eve of the new season and on each occasion has been assailed by the same opening question. The Premier League’s legal battle with Manchester City is unresolved. There has been absolute silence in this calendar year. Can anyone, and especially the Premier League’s most powerful figure, explain what is going on? …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Every Premier League club’s strongest starting XI

“As the new season gets under way, the 20 Premier League managers will be grappling with key selection decisions that could make the difference between a good or bad start to the campaign. So to help them, The Athletic’s dedicated club correspondents and experts have picked their own strongest XI — and justified the reasoning behind it. So without further delay, here they are. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

What football thinks of Newcastle’s summer: ‘Shopping in the wrong market’, naivety or a lot of bad luck?

“Landing transfer targets at Newcastle United this summer has been a bit like trying to nail jelly to a wall. Last week, Benjamin Sesko became the latest player to turn them down, signing for Manchester United instead and joining a list that includes Hugo Ekitike, James Trafford and Joao Pedro. Newcastle made bids for all four players this summer and ended up missing out on each of them. They also tried and failed to sign Dean Huijsen, Bryan Mbeumo and Liam Delap. On top of that, Alexander Isak, the club’s talisman and biggest asset, is attempting to force through a move to Liverpool. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

A revolution is happening at Liverpool. It is unusual for them and a rarity for champions


“When Arne Slot eventually emerged from Liverpool’s dressing room after their final game of last season, a big smile on his face and celebratory songs still ringing in his ears, he was inevitably asked about how he planned to build on their Premier League title success. ‘Radical changes, you will probably not see,’ the Liverpool manager said. ‘That (radical change) would be a bit weird if you won the league.’ It was a response in keeping both with his own reputation and that of a club that has shown far more restraint in the transfer market than most of its rivals in recent years, both in the amount of money spent and the number of players signed. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

‘Cheat sheets’ in penalty shootouts: What’s on them, how ’keepers make theirs and why they can be controversial

“As Alexis Mac Allister stepped up to take Liverpool’s second penalty of the Community Shield shootout on Sunday, Crystal Palace goalkeeper Dean Henderson lingered by the post, water bottle in hand. His eyes flicked between Mac Allister, the referee, and the list of shooters taped to the bottle he was holding. Moments earlier, Mohamed Salah had blazed his attempt over the crossbar and Jean-Philippe Mateta had scored to give Palace the advantage. A save now could be decisive. Henderson glanced once more at his cheat sheet. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Premier League tactical trends to watch in 2025-26: Flying full-backs, counter-attacks, and the ‘Lavolpiana’

“Tactically, the Premier League is in a real state of flux. After four consecutive title-winning years with a distinct, possession and territory-based style, Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City were reduced to a third-place finish on 71 points in 2024-25 — their worst since Guardiola’s debut campaign of 2016-17. Meanwhile Liverpool cruised to the title in their first season post-Jurgen Klopp, with Arne Slot’s side developing a reputation for their flexibility and adaptability. They had 25 wins and only lost twice across the first 34 matches, by which point the trophy was theirs. Nottingham Forest showed European football can be earned with a throwback, defend-first and counter-attack strategy, while for the second season running all three promoted teams were relegated. So what might we expect from 2025-26? …”
NY Times/The Athletic

New additions have Liverpool looking rejuvenated in attack, and withered in defense – Jonathan Wilson

“It was the Community Shield, and that should not be forgotten. There isn’t anybody who has been watching English football for any period of time who hasn’t made the mistake of taking too seriously a conclusion drawn in the midst of the traditional curtain-raiser, giddy on the sight of Wembley in its pomp and the return of competitive club football from the summer wilderness. … They are learning a new system, the 4-3-3/4-2-3-1 hybrid of last season yielding to a 4-2-3-1. It’s not a huge shift but Wirtz, as the most advanced of the triangle of central players between the centre-backs and the centre-forward, is very much a forward, whereas Dominik Szoboszlai, who tended to be the most advanced of the central midfield triangle last season, is an attacking midfielder. …”
Guardian
Guardian – Premier League 2025-26 preview No 12: Liverpool

The Athletic’s Premier League predictions for 2025-26: Title winner, best signing and much more

“Will the return of Rodri propel Manchester City back to the top of the table? Is this the year Manchester United finally regain their status as a genuine Premier League power? How will a tragic summer affect Liverpool on the pitch? Can the promoted teams break the pattern of recent seasons and stay up? The 2025-26 season kicks off on Friday and what better way to start the week than by looking ahead to what might be in store over the coming months. We asked all of our writers to submit their predicted Premier League table — you can see that a little further down this article. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

How Arsenal play: Right-sided creativity, set-piece expertise, and the Gyokeres factor

“It’s now been over two decades since Arsenal were last crowned Premier League champions. Five FA Cup victories have eased the long wait in the years since, but an elusive 14th league title remains the priority in north London, with a third consecutive second-place finish under Mikel Arteta last season only fuelling their determination to go one better this time around. Arsenal’s recruitment drive this summer speaks to that ambition, having invested close to £200million into the squad, already the second-most lavish window in the club’s history. Martin Zubimendi was the first to arrive, one of Europe’s most coveted deep-lying midfielders, before the arrivals of Noni Madueke and, in particular, Viktor Gyokeres, began to hint at a change of approach at the top of the team — both bringing more direct dribbling and raw power to the front line. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Introducing The Athletic’s new player-style pizza charts


“Even those with a moderate interest in data will have seen that player pizza charts are a staple visualisation in the world of football analytics. These graphics can be a valuable starting point in breaking down a player’s stylistic profile with a single glance, with this style of visualisation being a key theme at The Athletic over the years, from smarterscout pizza charts to team playstyle wheels. This summer, we have had a refresh. Allow us to present our player pizza charts 2.0 — all right, maybe the title could be catchier, but the visual is exciting. Here, we use Opta data (via FBref) to create some new metrics broken down into defence, possession, progression and attack across Europe’s top five leagues — the Premier League (England), Bundesliga (Germany), La Liga (Spain), Ligue 1 (France), and Serie A (Italy). …”
NY Times/The Athletic

1883 FA Cup final


“The 1883 FA Cup final was an association football match between Blackburn Olympicand Old Etonians on 31 March 1883 at Kennington Oval in London. It was the 12th final of the world’s oldest football competition, the Football Association Challenge Cup (commonly known as the FA Cup). Old Etonians were the holders of the Cup, having defeated Olympic’s local rivals, Blackburn Rovers, in the 1882 final. Blackburn Olympic had not previously progressed beyond the first round of the competition. Both teams had been victorious in six previous rounds to reach the final. Old Etonians took the lead in the first half with a goal from Harry Goodhart, but Alfred Matthews scored an equaliser for Blackburn and, with the scores level at the end of the regulation 90 minutes, the game went into extra time, during which Blackburn’s James Costley scored and Blackburn won the match 2–1. …”
Wikipedia
The Generation Cup: The “old boys” and the FA Cup
An engraving depicting the match, which appeared in the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News a week after the final.

What last season’s Premier League data can tell us about 2025-26

The modern football calendar rarely allows us to catch our breath, but at least the start of a new domestic season always sparks fresh excitement among supporters. New teams, new signings and new managers mean that there are plenty of easy narratives to unpack for the upcoming Premier League campaign, but can we zoom out a little further and predict what broader topics could pop up in 2025-26? Here, The Athletic thought it best to look back before looking forward, using some interesting data trends from 2024-25 to examine what tactical quirks might emerge in the upcoming season. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Liverpool and a long summer of grief

“In Liverpool, there is a point many wish to make. No, the local population is not hooked on grief, as loud and persistent critics have claimed over the years whenever the city has made headlines because of tragedy and other terrible reasons. There is no search for pity either, though a bit of empathy or basic understanding would be nice. What is clear is that nobody asked for this, and nobody is getting off on it. They wish these things hadn’t happened. But they keep happening. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

2025–26 Premier League, Attendance Map [2024-25 league figures].

“… The map shows the average attendance of the 20 clubs that comprise the 2025–26 Premier League. The main map [of England & Wales] shows the locations of 13 of the clubs; the Inset-map shows the locations of the 7 clubs that are based in Greater London. The larger the club’s average attendance from last season [2024-25], the larger their circle-and-badge are on the map(s). Each club’s home venue-name, and regional location, are also shown. Clubs are grouped by region (that is, by City or County). The location of Everton’s former home (Goodison Park) is shown, as well as the club’s new home on the docks of the River Mersey (Everton Stadium, aka Hill Dickinson Stadium). …”
billsportsmaps

Football Architects: Tom Byer, the American coach behind Japan’s technical revolution

“Tom Byer inhales, one of fewer than a dozen breaths which it feels like he takes over the course of a 90-minute interview, and, from his Tokyo living room, begins to outline his unique theory of player development. ‘When you can close the gap between the very best and the least developed, that’s where the magic happens,’ he says. ‘That’s what you see today in Japan. Our players are some of the most recruited players in the world right now. But the thing is, most people can’t explain why Japan have become so good. And that’s because they don’t understand grassroots football.’ …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

BBC debate is nostalgic reminder of English crisis never being far away

Graham Taylor argues with fourth official Markus Merk during England’s World Cup-qualifying defeat to Netherlands in October 1993. The match took place the night after the BBC’s On The Line was broadcast.
“Nostalgia for the 1990s remains heavy. Just look at all those stadiums and parks the Gallaghers are filling. Football from the late 20th century has a similar cachet. No video assistant referees, no sportswashing; just good, hard, honest, simple fare, when men were men and pressing was what you did to your Burton suit. If the past is a foreign country then a recent BBC Archive release is a primary source of a time when the continental import remained exotic and not the dominant division of labour. ‘Is English Football In Crisis?’ asks an edition of On The Line in October 1993, broadcast the night before Graham Taylor’s England played a key World Cup qualifier in Rotterdam. …”
Guardian (Video)