Posted on Leave a comment

Mohamed Salah blamed for Liverpool and Florian Wirtz's struggles – Paper talk and football gossip – Sky Sports

                                     <a href="/football"                                             class="sdc-site-localnav__header-title" data-role="nav-header"                                             aria-controls="sdc-site-localnav-body" aria-expanded="false">                                             <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewbox="0 0 34 34" class="sdc-site-localnav__icon">                                                 <path                                                     d="M6.02 12.67c.01.194.087.362.247.525l.188.192L16.52 23.45c.188.19.44.294.706.294s.518-.104.707-.293l10.135-10.134.123-.126c.162-.163.24-.332.248-.53.006-.173-.155-.438-.442-.725-.187-.187-.386-.368-.59-.537-.05-.04-.096-.078-.138-.11l-.496.495-9.193 9.193-.355.354-.354-.354-9.197-9.198-.484-.484c-.043.033-.09.07-.14.112-.204.168-.402.348-.59.536-.285.288-.446.553-.44.727z" />                                             </svg>Football                                         </a>                                     <br>Latest from Thursday's newspapers as it is claimed Bukayo Saka is close to agreeing a contract extension with Arsenal and German publication Bild accuses Mohamed Salah of being the reason for Liverpool and, in particular, Florian Wirtz's struggles this season<br>Wednesday 19 November 2025 23:55, UK<br>The top stories and transfer rumours from Thursday's newspapers...<br>Manchester United are facing competition from Inter for Borussia Dortmund forward Karim Adeyemi - Bild.<br>Manchester City are monitoring Bournemouth's Antoine Semenyo ahead of the January transfer window - <em>Mail Sport</em>.<br>Nathan Ake is one of the Manchester City players weighing up their futures ahead of the January transfer window - <em>Mail Sport</em>.<br>Tottenham are actively looking for a world-class goalkeeper to take over from Guglielmo Vicario - <em>Mail Sport</em>.<br>Back Pages is a review of the sports headlines from the national newspapers, every Monday to Friday, live on Sky Sports News from 10.30pm. <br> <br> Missed the show? Catch up on the latest news with the Back Pages podcast. <br>Manchester City are expected to open talks with Phil Foden soon - <em>Mail Sport</em>.<br>Mohamed Salah is being blamed for Liverpool and especially Florian Wirtz's struggles this season - <em>Bild</em>.<br>               Stream Sky Sports with NOW             <br>               Download the Sky Sports app             <br>               Transfer Centre LIVE!             <br>               Get Sky Sports on WhatsApp             <br>Bukayo Saka is in the final stage of agreeing a contract extension with Arsenal until 2030 - <em>RMC Sport</em>.<br>Former Australia fast-bowling great Glenn McGrath has been dropped by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on the eve of the first Test in Perth over his links to a major betting company - <em>The Times</em>.<br>The Australia legends Adam Gilchrist and Damien Fleming are among those who have criticised the decision to allocate the famous Bay 13 of the Melbourne Cricket Ground to England fans for the Boxing Day Ashes Test - <em>The Times</em>.<br>England's Ashes cricketers are avoiding eating duck Down Under - fearing it will mean they score nothing - <em>The Sun</em>.<br>Super 6 are starting the season by guaranteeing a £1,000,000 winner! Play for free. <br>                             <a href="/" class="svg-logo site-footer__site-logo">                                 <img class="svg-logo__image" alt="Sky Sports" src="https://e0.365dm.com/tvlogos/channels/Sky-Sports-Logo.svg" onerror="this.onerror=null;this.src='https://e0.365dm.com/tvlogos/channels/Sky-Sports-Logo.png'">                             </a>                             © 2025 Sky UK                         <br><br><a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMi4wFBVV95cUxQNE5LMklvN0oyTzhyMXNBQkUtdU9KU19GblppUmMzVGNLbmJqbDRkSDE4Tk9oUVBXaFZfSU9SaVg2bEU3bU5kYkpFRGo3d2t4NHhOOC1IS2NyNzdFZVVrWHprSW0zMDlhR3diOW5DeU9NckhveHlRQk5xV0FrQ2hIR2lGSFJMSHJVYUxZZDROT3V2ck8tMXBQbEN4VHNZcVZ6TUFONldyVXRMeWdxZ08wN19sMlVqSExCdzNUMU50bklXcGJOeHJ3OGlxRUQtUTZIbEtTOHpjM0VnRHNvU0UydWNjTQ?oc=5">source</a>
Posted on Leave a comment

Scialanga, Rosen lead NMU men’s soccer with 4 GLIAC awards – miningjournal.net

Nov 20, 2025
Northern Michigan University’s Alessandra Scialanga boots the ball downfield during a GLIAC game played against Purdue Northwest at the NMU Soccer Field in Marquette on Nov. 2. (Photo courtesy Cara Kamps)
MARQUETTE — Four men’s soccer players from Northern Michigan University have earned conference postseason honors, the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference announced last week.
Senior Alessandro Scialanga and junior Luca Rosen were named to the GLIAC First Team, while junior Asaf Kristal and sophomore Ian Weimer made the GLIAC Honorable Mention list.
Scialanga, a team captain from Sutri, Italy, was named as a defender on the conference First Team.
Known as the “heartbeat of the Wildcat defense,” according to an NMU Sports Information news release about the awards, he played all 90 minutes in the Wildcats’ first six games before being injured in late September.
Making what was termed a “miraculous” recovery and missing most of four games, he came back to play at least 84 minutes for the duration of the season, including all 110 minutes of the Wildcats’ shootout win over Purdue Northwest in the GLIAC Tournament quarterfinals.
In addition to his defensive skills and being NMU’s main player on set pieces, Scialanga scored a goal and had three assists during the season, including a pair of assists in the quarterfinal win.
Rosen was named to the GLIAC First Team as an “at-large” player after his first year at Northern following his transfer in the offseason from Northeast Community College in Nebraska.
A London, England, native, he had a slow start to the season but picked it up during the GLIAC campaign, leading the league for conference games in a majority of statistical categories, including his 68 shots — surpassing all others in the league by nearly 30 — 27 shots on goal, nine goals, four game-winning goals and 19 points.
Rosen was named GLIAC Offensive Player of the Week twice, the only forward to achieve that distinction.
Kristal, a native of Tel Aviv, Israel, also joined the Wildcats this season and set NMU season records for goalkeepers in saves, shutouts, wins and was on pace to break several more entering last weekend.
He led the GLIAC in shutouts, saves, saves per game and was second in goals allowed and goals-against-average, earning a GLIAC Defensive Player of the Week honor and blanking Saginaw Valley State for its first loss this season, following it up with consecutive double-digit save efforts.
Weimer, from Marietta, Ohio, exploded on the scene after playing sparingly as a freshman. He became an impact player for the Wildcats after not playing more than 23 minutes in each of the team’s first five games.
He finished second to Rosen on the team with six goals, 13 points and three game-winning goals, scoring the only goal in the 71st minute of NMU’s 1-0 win over SVSU in the GLIAC Tournament championship.
He was also named GLIAC Offensive Player of the Week in the regular season’s final week.
The regular-season champion Cardinals won three of the league’s six major awards — graduate student Eoin Farrell was named GLIAC Player of the Year, senior Kolja Thomas the Defensive Player of the Year and their staff the Coaching Staff of the Year.
Roosevelt graduate student Fynn Mewes was named Offensive Player of the Year, Wisconsin-Parkside junior Daniyal Rana the Goalkeeper of the Year and Davenport freshman Charlie Davis the Freshman of the Year.
Story contents based on Northern Michigan University Sports Information press release reviewing the awards. Journal Sports Editor Steve Brownlee’s email address is sbrownlee@miningjournal.net.
Today High school hockey Kingsford at Negaunee, 6 p.m. NMU events Women’s basketball: vs. St. Cloud …

Copyright © 2025 Ogden News Publishing of Michigan, Inc. | https://www.miningjournal.net | 249 W. Washington, Marquette, MI 49855 | 906-228-2500

source

Posted on Leave a comment

History on the line for Vikings in Prep Bowl – marshallindependent.com

Nov 20, 2025
Photo by Samantha Davis: Minneota running back Kellen Bradley (34) runs behind a block from Brock Fier during the Vikings’ Class A state football semifinal matchup against Mahnomen/Waubun on Saturday at US Bank Stadium in Minneapolis. The Vikings are returning to US Bank on Friday to take on Breckenridge in their fifth consecutive Prep Bowl appearance.
MINNEAPOLIS — Heading into their fifth consecutive Class A state football championship game appearance against Breckenridge on Friday, the Minneota Vikings are looking to do something no 11-player team has done before in Minnesota football history: claim four consecutive state titles. A win would give the Vikings their 11th state championship, tying them with Class 2A Caledonia and Class 6A Eden Prairie for the most in state history.
The elusive four-peat has been accomplished just twice before in Minnesota, both times at the 9-player level. Grand Meadow did it most recently, winning every season from 2013 to 2016, and Stephen-Argyle Central won five consecutive titles from 2003 through 2007.
“A three-peat doesn’t happen very often. Our program, we’ve had a three-peat before, they had a three-beat back in the 80s [from 1986-88], but this would be something that, even in our historic program, nobody’s ever accomplished,” Minneota head coach Chad Johnston said. “It would really kind of stamp this group in the history of our program in being able to accomplish something that’s so rare.”
Minneota headed into the season with the belief that it had the personnel needed to return to the state championship game, though they still needed things to fall into place and for kids to stay healthy and play up to their potential Johnston said, adding that he felt like the players consistently put themselves in a position to improve and help the team reach its latest milestone in a long list of accomplishments.
Regardless of the outcome, this year’s graduating class has made quite a mark on Class A football. None of the players on the team know what it’s like to fall short of the state championship game; heck, none of them know what it’s like to not win it all, entering with state titles in their freshman, sophomore and junior seasons.

Smooth sailing for the Vikings

Over the course of the last few seasons, the Vikings’ run to the state championship was largely uncontested. Minneota has won 45 consecutive games since its loss to Dawson-Boyd in October 2022, accumulating three state titles and four section titles during that run with the opportunity to claim a fourth state title on Friday.
Perhaps most remarkable is the way in which the Vikings won most of those games. After falling to the Blackjacks in 2022, Minneota only had one game decided by fewer than three possessions (a 28-27 win over Fillmore Central in the Class A semifinals). Over the following two seasons, the Vikings had a total of four games decided by fewer than 30 points: a pair of one-possession section championship wins over BOLD, a 42-28 regular-season win over BOLD and a 28-6 regular-season win over Canby.
That same dominance has carried over to this season; the Vikings head into the state championship match averaging 51 points per game while holding their opponents to an average of 7. Still, they’ve been tested more this year than they were the last two, completing a second-half comeback to earn a 37-30 win over Class 2A Eden Valley-Watkins in the second week of the season and surging ahead in the second quarter to defeat Mahnomen/Waubun in the Class A semifinals last week.
“We tell the kids all the time that you’re going to get tougher opponents the further you get into the season, and you just have to be prepared,” Johnston said. “That’s kind of one of the challenges, trying to get kids to understand that they can’t be complacent. They can’t think it’s going to be like some of those games that we had in the regular season we got to play. We had a good game against Mahnomen. We felt like we didn’t execute some aspects of the game, and those are things that we have to work on this week.”​

Looking back at the semifinals

While the Vikings didn’t execute in this year’s state semifinals relative to their own lofty standards, the performance that they put together is one that would be considered a season highlight for many teams. Kellen Bradley ran for 143 yards and a touchdown, pacing the Vikings to a 218-170 advantage on the ground, and Tristen Sussner ran for 45 yards and a pair of touchdowns at quarterback.
Easton Johnston also had a two-way impact in the win, scoring the game’s first touchdown and coming down with an interception on defense in the final minutes to ice the game with the lone turnover of the day.
Mahnomen had a strong and physical team, coach Johnston said, adding that he was proud of how his team’s offensive line, in particular, adjusted to the Thunderbirds’ three-man front to keep the ground game rolling.
No room for suspense
Each of the last three seasons, Minneota matched up with Springfield in the Prep Bowl, though hopes for a rematch this time around were put to bed when the Tigers were upset by Murray County Central in the Section 3A championship.
Over the course of Minneota’s three state title bouts with Springfield, Minneota consistently won the game well before the final whistle. After falling behind 13-10 in the first half of the 2022 state championship, a pair of touchdowns from Zack Fier helped Minneota score 21 unanswered points before settling for a 38-21 win.
Things didn’t get any better for Springfield over the next two seasons; Ryan Meagher tied the Prep Bowl record of five rushing touchdowns while going for 199 yards in the Vikings’ 43-22 win in the 2023 championship, and he broke the record a year later with six touchdowns and 290 rushing yards in a 70-20 win last year.
Meagher finished his career with a total of 562 yards and 12 touchdowns in the Prep Bowl over three appearances. After the game, the MSHSL’s John Millea wrote that there’s no category for career prep bowl records, but that his numbers remained very gaudy.
Stepping up into the gap
Bradley played a complementary role in the Vikings’ run game the last two seasons, finishing last season with 37 carries for 263 yards and three touchdowns after getting 21 carries for 98 yards and a pair of touchdowns as a sophomore.
Following the graduation of Meagher, a two-time Independent Player of the Year who averaged over 2,100 yards per season over his junior and senior seasons, the Vikings’ run game hasn’t lost a step; Minneota has averaged 249 rushing yards per game as a team this year, and Bradley has been at the core of that.
Bradley has averaged 120 rushing yards per game for a total of 1,437 yards despite receiving limited second-half action with the Vikings typically blowing out their opponents by halftime, and he’s found the end zone a total of 26 times between rushing and receiving touchdowns.
“He’s just taking that opportunity. Throughout the regular season, we didn’t need him as much for a while there, he was averaging about seven or eight carries per game and done by halftime,” coach Johnston said, adding that one of the bigger challenges for Bradley was when he found out that he was going to be carrying the ball about 20 times per game about 20 times per game starting with the section championship against Dawson-Boyd.
“He’s doing a great job of that. Now we need to do a better job offensively of getting our wing-backs involved. Some teams are really focused on trying to take them out of the game, and they’ve done a nice job on some of our stretch plays. We need to get those guys established and take some pressure off Kellen.”
The Vikings have seven other players with more than 150 rushing yards on the season, with Easton Johnston, DeVlaeminck and Sussner running for 10, six and five touchdowns, respectively.
​Bearing down for
Breckenridge

The past three seasons, the Vikings have had to prepare for a more pass-heavy offense in the state championship game against Springfield. Jakob Nachreiner threw for 3,119 yards with 40 touchdowns his freshman season in 2021 and threw for 3,431 yards and 55 touchdowns as a sophomore with the Tigers. Last year, Parker Kuehn passed for 2,408 yards with 32 touchdowns. This time around, the Vikings will be tasked with a more run-heavy offense in Breckenridge.
“You have to respect both parts of their game. Obviously, I think [Breckenridge’s] strong suit is their running game. They do have the ability to throw the ball, so you have to stay honest, but it’s going to be again about our guys doing their job up front,” coach Johnston said. “We have to try to control the line of scrimmage. We’ve been fortunate to be able to do that throughout the season, but we need to continue to do that so our interior guys can focus on the run game and, hopefully, our DBs [defensive backs] can keep their mindset on the passing game.”
David Erlandson has been at the focal point of the Cowboys’ rushing attack, which has produced 3,795 rushing yards and 50 touchdowns on the season.
As an individual, Erlandson has taken 166 carries for 1,871 yards and 24 touchdowns on the season, coming on 11.3 yards per carry. Quarterback Riley Kappes has also been a dangerous dual-threat, running for 730 yards on nine yards per carry with 12 touchdowns, as well as 1,428 passing yards with 20 touchdowns and just one interception on the year.
Trenches set up secondary
Minneota’s front seven has been one of the key components of its defensive dominance in recent years. That’s no different this year, as the Vikings have limited their opponents to 2.5 rushing yards per attempt with five touchdowns and two fumbles over the course of the season.
As a team, Minneota has amassed 81 tackles for loss with 32 sacks on the season, including 11 tackles for loss with six sacks from Kyson Arndt and 10 tackles for loss with seven sacks from Brock Fier. Randy Sorensen has also been a major contributor up front with a team-leading 82 total tackles, 36 of which were solo, and five sacks.
Still, the Vikings’ secondary in particular has stepped up and capitalized on that pressure up front this season. The Vikings had eight interceptions in 2021, 12 in 2022 and 23 last year. They’ve already surpassed that number this season, heading into the championship round with 25.
Joey Lacek and Ian Myhre have led the ball-hawking charge with five interceptions each this season, including a pick-6 for Myhre, while Easton Johnston, Bradley and Quinton Anderson have each come away with another three.
The Vikings’ ability to stop the run has been a major part of the secondary’s ability to focus on the pass game and force those turnovers rather than providing run support, coach Johnston said.
“If you can force a quarterback to make some ill-advised throws, then all of a sudden you might get them to throw a ball where a guy can easily pick it off. I think that’s been our case throughout the season,” coach Johnston said.
Don’t overlook the long ball
Sussner has also proven to be a solid quarterback for the Vikings’ ground-and-pound offense, throwing the ball for 1,508 yards with 24 touchdowns on an average of 10.8 yards per attempt.
Brock Fier has been one of the primary beneficiaries in the passing game, going for 597 yards and eight touchdowns at the tight end position in 11 games. The Vikings are going to look to continue to get him involved in the passing game as they head into the state championship, coach Johnston said.
“We’ve kind of struggled throwing the ball a little bit in the state tournament. We need to get that down, but I think you’ll see more of an impact,” coach Johnston said. “We’re going to try to use Brock’s speed on the defensive line, which we’ve done all season. He’s rotated a little bit, and he gets there in passing situations. He’s not a big kid [6-foot-1, 195 pounds], but he’s a quick kid. We’re trying to utilize him a bit more defensively to see if we can have his speed cause some disruption and some issues when those guys [Breckenridge] are trying to do their pulling and everything they do on offense.”

How to watch the game

Kickoff for Friday’s state championship game at US Bank Stadium in Minneapolis is slated for 10 a.m. Tickets for the game are available online at MSHSL.org/tickets, with general admission seating available for $16 and student tickets going for $10. Live stats are also available on the MSHSL website, while the game will be broadcast on 45Prep.
BURNSVILLE — Parker Knutson and Josiah Hedenstean each represented the Southwest Minnesota State University …
WINONA — After scoring the game’s first touchdown, the Southwest Minnesota State University football team …

Copyright © 2025 Ogden Newspapers of Minnesota, Inc. | https://www.marshallindependent.com | 508 W. Main St., Marshall, MN 56258 | 507-537-1551

source

Posted on Leave a comment

Heat's Norman Powell: Scores 25 points in win – CBS Sports

If not listed, please contact your TV provider.
Powell had 25 points (10-14 FG, 4-7 3Pt, 1-1 FT), six rebounds, three assists and one steal across 28 minutes during Wednesday’s 110-96 win over the Warriors.
Powell got off to a slow start in this one, as he struggled with foul trouble through the first half of action, but he came alive during the fourth quarter and dropped in 17 points during the final frame. Powell has been putting up All-Star caliber numbers this season with averages of 25.4 points, 4.0 rebounds, 2.4 assists, 3.3 triples and 1.2 steals per game, although the scoring will likely dip once Tyler Herro (ankle) gets back to the court and fully up to speed.
© 2004-2025 CBS Interactive. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
CBS Sports is a registered trademark of CBS Broadcasting Inc. Commissioner.com is a registered trademark of CBS Interactive Inc.
The content on this site is for entertainment purposes only and CBS Sports makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the information given or the outcome of any game or event. Odds subject to change. There is no gambling offered on this site. This site contains commercial content and CBS Sports may be compensated for the links provided on this site.
Images by Getty Images and Imagn

source

Posted on Leave a comment

Raptors' Immanuel Quickley: Comes alive in fourth quarter – CBS Sports

If not listed, please contact your TV provider.
Quickley posted 18 points (7-15 FG, 4-9 3Pt), six assists, five rebounds and three steals over 38 minutes during the Raptors‘ 121-112 win over the 76ers on Wednesday.
Quickley was quiet through the first three quarters of Wednesday’s game, but the sixth-year point guard caught fire in the fourth frame with 11 points, nine of which came from three-point range. He also matched a season high with three steals, and his plus-eight point differential was tied for second most on the Raptors behind Scottie Barnes (plus-14). Quickley has logged at least 15 points in seven of his last eight games, and for the month of November he has averaged 17.6 points, 5.6 assists, 5.3 rebounds and 1.2 steals over 32.4 minutes per game.
© 2004-2025 CBS Interactive. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
CBS Sports is a registered trademark of CBS Broadcasting Inc. Commissioner.com is a registered trademark of CBS Interactive Inc.
The content on this site is for entertainment purposes only and CBS Sports makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the information given or the outcome of any game or event. Odds subject to change. There is no gambling offered on this site. This site contains commercial content and CBS Sports may be compensated for the links provided on this site.
Images by Getty Images and Imagn

source

Posted on Leave a comment

Patriots' Joshua Farmer: Practices fully Wednesday – CBS Sports

If not listed, please contact your TV provider.
Farmer (ankle) was a full participant in New England’s practice Wednesday.
Farmer is healthy again after sitting out the Week 11 win over the Jets with an ankle injury. The 22-year-old is expected to resume his role as rotational defensive end during Sunday’s matchup versus the Bengals.
© 2004-2025 CBS Interactive. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
CBS Sports is a registered trademark of CBS Broadcasting Inc. Commissioner.com is a registered trademark of CBS Interactive Inc.
The content on this site is for entertainment purposes only and CBS Sports makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the information given or the outcome of any game or event. Odds subject to change. There is no gambling offered on this site. This site contains commercial content and CBS Sports may be compensated for the links provided on this site.
Images by Getty Images and Imagn

source