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  • ‘Stuff of dreams’: Inside fairytale rise of PL ‘disruptors’… and the unlikely hero at its centre

    ‘Stuff of dreams’: Inside fairytale rise of PL ‘disruptors’… and the unlikely hero at its centre

    Nottingham Forest and Bournemouth battling the powerhouses for a Champions League place. No one predicted that.

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    There is only a third of the Premier League season remaining and the race for the top four has arguably never been more intriguing.

    Liverpool appears set to have one hand on the title, eight points clear of second-placed Arsenal, who have a game in hand, but the next rung down is where things get fascinating.

    Nottingham Forest third, Manchester City fourth and Bournemouth fifth.

    The latter jumped into the top five after Forest, Chelsea, Aston Villa and Newcastle all dropped points last weekend.

    Forest have won 14, drawn five and lost six, while Bournemouth have won 12, drawn seven and lost six.

    It reads like a Forest or Cherries fan plugging away on Football Manager for hours to get their team to dizzying heights, but supporters in England’s midlands and on the south coast better stop pinching themselves.

    They are not dreaming. This is real.

    The struggles of regular top six clubs Manchester United and Tottenham, along with Champions League Round of 16 bound Villa slipping in the league, presented opportunities, and Forest and Bournemouth have snatched them with both hands.

    The Forest story is famous.

    A powerhouse decades ago with back-to-back European Cup victories in 1979 and 1980 under legendary manager Brian Clough.

    A year before their first continental breakthrough, Forest won the English top flight and they were runners-up the season after.

    But following relegation from the Premier League in 1999, they fell into the football abyss.

    Forest did not return to the Premier League until 2022 and barely avoided relegation by finishing 16th and 17th in their first two seasons back in the top tier.

    Bournemouth were promoted from the Championship in the same season as Forest and initially found themselves in the bottom half of the table too.

    A 12th place finish last season was preceded by coming 15th in their prior campaign.

    Unlike Forest, however, Bournemouth is not a club with a rich pedigree.

    Its first season in the Premier League came under now Newcastle boss Eddie Howe in 2015/16 and a ninth-place finish in their second season was the club’s best result in the top flight.

    Years of mediocrity did not show too many hints of a breakout campaign in Bournemouth’s case, nor a stunning revival in Forest’s case.

    But the dream of Champions League nights at the City Ground or the Vitality Stadium is alive and well, and this how they have put themselves in the hunt for midweek action against the best clubs in Europe.

    Here is how they did it.

    FOREST’S KIWI FRONTMAN

    Like Forest’s, Chris Wood’s story is a fairytale.

    The 33-year-old captain of the New Zealand national team has remarkably played for 12 different clubs in England.

    He even went through a three-year period where he was sent out on loan six times by West Bromwich Albion.

    Wood bounced around the various tiers of English football after moving to the UK as a 16-year-old to chase his dreams, and now the Forest talisman is a bonified star.

    NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND – AUGUST 17: Chris Wood of Nottingham Forest celebrates scoring his team’s first goal during the Premier League match between Nottingham Forest FC and AFC Bournemouth at City Ground on August 17, 2024 in Nottingham, England. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    The six-foot three striker is third in the golden boot race.

    He has netted 18 goals so far this campaign, highlighted by a hat-trick in Forest’s 7-0 rout of Brighton earlier this month, to only sit behind Mohamed Salah (24) and Erling Haaland (19).

    It is his best Premier League season, and he still has 13 more opportunities to add to his tally.

    “When they talk about Mo Salah and Erling Haaland – they mention Chris Wood in the same breath – you can’t compete with that,” Wood’s high school coach former New Zealand international Mike Groom told Sky Sports.

    “It’s theatrical, it’s magical, it’s the stuff of dreams and kids’ dreams are fuelled by those images and that exposure.

    “We’re still a rugby-playing country, but Chris is single-handedly beginning to change that.”

    Wood’s height automatically makes him an aerial threat as a target man, he has scored six headed goals this season, the most in the league, but his finishing is still underrated.

    In fact, it is lethal.

    Wood has had 28 shots on target for the season, and scoring 18 of them makes him the most effective of any of the Premier League’s top strikers in front of goal.

    New Zealand’s record goal scorer, who is also nearing the record for most appearances for his country, has also endeared himself to football fans because he is not blessed with all the attributes of the likes of Salah and Haaland.

    The biggest difference is pace.

    Wood is not a quick player, and the fact he lacks speed seemingly contradicts the fact that Forest prefers to play counterattacking football.

    But he makes it work by timing his runs perfectly and seizing big moments.

    In some ways, it makes little sense but so has his entire football journey.

    “It’s definitely exceeded what I dreamt of when I was a kid and hopefully, I’ve got a lot more I can achieve to make it an even better dream,” Wood told Sky Sports.

    “I want to keep the path open for New Zealanders to hopefully make it into the Premier League one day – I want to grow that generation of new kids wanting to play football and wanting to dream of doing the best they can and ending up in the biggest league.”

    BOURNEMOUTH CREATE CHAOS

    Bournemouth’s blueprint in attack is not dissimilar to Forest’s.

    The two sides are comfortably the Premier League leaders for playing fast and direct football.

    They sit back and defend resolutely, and when they win the ball back, they are off to the races.

    Once the ball is in their attacking half, they press high and try to force turnovers in dangerous areas.

    It makes for exciting games to watch, and Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola has been heaped with praise this season for his tactics.

    “I sometimes value much more a player carrying the ball and forcing things to happen,” Iraola said in an interview with The Independent.

    “We have to prepare [positional] patterns, but we cannot just prioritise them. If you can see that you don’t have a teammate ahead, forget about the pattern, just drive the ball and try to force things to happen. I want him to attack first.”

    Meanwhile premierleague.com’s Alex Keble summed up the essence of their play as “disruption”.

    “High risk, high reward: that’s the mentality of Iraola and his team, whether in hounding the ball with an all-action and full-pitch press or piercing opposition lines with sharp vertical football and attacking overloads,” Keble said.

    “Perhaps the best word to encapsulate their tactical approach is “disruption”.

    “Disrupt the other team’s play with furious pressing, and disrupt the expected rhythms of your own attack with improvisations and surges forward in high numbers.”

    That philosophy has brought out the best in Justin Kluivert, who has scored 11 goals so far this campaign, four more than last season.

    The Dutchman has really found his groove in the Premier League in recent times.

    He was player of the month in January for scoring five goals and recording two assists in four appearances, of which Bournemouth won three and drew one.

    The highlight of his season so far was a hat-trick, and an assist, in a 4-1 away win against Newcastle who were previously unbeaten in nine matches before that January fixture.

    BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND – JANUARY 25: Justin Kluivert of Bournemouth celebrates after scoring to make it 1-0 during the Premier League match between AFC Bournemouth and Nottingham Forest FC at Vitality Stadium on January 25, 2025 in Bournemouth, England. (Photo by Robin Jones – AFC Bournemouth/AFC Bournemouth via Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    That victory was followed up by a 5-0 victory against Forest, where Kluivert contributed a goal and an assist to help end Forest’s eight-game unbeaten run.

    Knocking off several in-form teams led to Iraola taking home manager of the month, and David Brooks’ stunning volley against Everton made it a clean sweep of the awards by winning goal of the month.

    All of that came amid a length injury list, including strikers Evanilson and Enes Unal.

    But Kluivert’s breakout combined with the superb form of fellow attackers Dango Ouattara and Antoine Semenyo, who have scored seven goals apiece this season, has prevented injuries from being an excuse.

    No matter who is on the sidelines, once Bournemouth wins the ball back there are simply too many runners for opponents to attack.

    Remarkably, one would expect such a style of play to make them vulnerable at the back.

    But Iraola’s side do not play a high line, and they have the equal-third best defensive record in the league, alongside Forest, conceding 29 goals so far. Only Arsenal and Liverpool have been stingier at the back.

    They key has been the centre back pairing of Dean Huijsen and Illia Zabarnyi, a combination Iraola landed on during the season.

    In the 13 games they have started together, Bournemouth have lost once, to Liverpool.

    Zabaryni is the rock that has played every minute this season, while 19-year-old Huijsen has been a revelation.

    “Huijsen is undoubtedly the star of the two,” Keble wrote.

    “Signed from Juventus for around £15 million last summer, his strength in the air, composure in possession, and – crucially – assertive front-foot style have catapulted Bournemouth to new heights.”

    LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND – FEBRUARY 08: Dean Huijsen of Bournemouth looks on during the Emirates FA Cup Fourth Round match between Everton and AFC Bournemouth at Goodison Park on February 08, 2025 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Chris Brunskill/Fantasista/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    FOREST’S ELITE DEFENCE

    ESPN’s Bruce Schoenfeld summed up Forest’s defensive brilliance in writing that manager Nuno Espirito Santo’s “football has hardly changed even though instead of a relegation battle, he has European qualification in his sights”.

    Forest defends like their life depends on it.

    They have comfortably made more clearances than any other team, including the equal most amount of clearances off the line.

    They are level with Liverpool for the most number of clean sheets with ten.

    Goalkeeper Matz Sels has punched away the aerial more than anyone else.

    They are desperate.

    And they are bringing an enormous amount of pride to the club’s greats.

    “I haven’t watched a better pairing at the back than Murillo and Nikola Milenkovic in my 50 years of watching Forest,” former England and Forest midfielder Steve Hodge said on BBC Radio last month.

    “I really mean that – pound for pound what they are as footballers and as a pair,” he added. “They have everything. As a pair, they complement each other perfectly and they both seem to be calm characters even under severe pressure.”

    Nikola Milenkovic of Nottingham Forest celebrates victory during the Premier League match between Nottingham Forest and Brighton and Hove Albion at the City Ground in Nottingham, England, on February 1, 2025. (Photo by MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Milenkovic joined from Fiorentina last summer and the 31-year-old Serbian is in many pundits’ team of the season so far.

    He is an old-fashioned, no-nonsense centre back whose heading ability has led to him scoring two goals as well as clearing many attacking threats.

    But in the coming games, Forest face arguably the biggest defensive test of the season.

    Away at Newcastle, home to Arsenal and home to Manchester City are their next three league games.

    They passed with flying colours earlier in the season, defeating Liverpool at Anfield and taking a point from them at home.

    That shows that there is little to doubt that Forest’s steeliness will remain.

    BOURNEMOUTH’S EXCELLENT ROAD RECORD

    A major part of Bournemouth’s success has been their impressive away record.

    The Cherries have won six, drawn four and lost three of their matches on the road this season, including going unbeaten in their last seven away games.

    That streak has included a pair of 2-2 draws against rivals for the European places Chelsea and Fulham, as well as the Newcastle win mentioned earlier.

    Their most recent away win was a 3-1 win against cellar dwellers Southampton in a south coast derby, and post-match Iraola identified fast starts as the reason for their away success.

    “I think it’s key, especially when you play away,” he said.

    “I think we are having good starts. I remember last games, Newcastle away, Everton the other day.

    “Even the two goals in 16 minutes, but in the first minute I think we had two corners for us.

    “It’s a good start and a message that we are coming here and we want to win this game and we are not happy with the 0-0 and we want things to happen quickly.

    “Also, I think they are a team that now is aggressive in the press. I think there were spaces behind them. There were spaces behind us.

    “The game could go very open and I’m happy, especially first half, I think we controlled the game very well.”

    Their ability to get results on the road will be severely tested later in the season as they visit Arsenal and Manchester City in the final four games of their campaign.

    They could be vital to their European hopes.

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  • ‘Club of my life’: Teenage wunderkind’s huge reveal… and the $1.6b price tag placed on him

    ‘Club of my life’: Teenage wunderkind’s huge reveal… and the $1.6b price tag placed on him

    Football’s hottest young talent is going nowhere, with Barcelona wunderkind Lamine Yamal saying he will sign a new contract with the Spanish giants soon.

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    The 17-year-old has pledged his long-term future to the Catalan club despite massive interest from French titans PSG and Barcelona being embroiled in financial controversy.

    Yamal burst onto the scene as a key cog of the Spanish side that won last year’s Euros.

    He became the youngest ever player to feature in the tournament at just 16, and the youngest ever goal scorer when he curled an absolute stunner into the top corner in the champion’s 2-1 semi-final win against France.

    His left-footed strike from outside the box also won goal of the tournament.

    More than a year earlier, he made his first team debut for Barcelona as a 15-year-old after coming up through the club’s academy, and the records have continued to tumble in club football.

    In October he became the youngest ever player to score in El Classico history as he found the back of the net in Barca’s 4-0 win against Real Madrid.

    He scored again on his return to the side from an ankle injury in their 2-0 Spanish Super Cup semi-final win against Athletic Bilbao on Wednesday to take his season tally to seven goals and 12 assists from 22 games.

    So, it’s clear to see why the Parisian club put forward an offer of €250 million for his services.

    Barca, of course, rejected it and they have done their best to make it near impossible for any rival to pry away from the Olympic Stadium and then their traditional home of the Nou Camp when renovations are complete in 2026.

    That is the year that Yamal’s current deal expires, and it includes a €1 billion release clause.

    If that was not enough to alleviate any concerns about him potentially leaving Barcelona, ESPN have reported that there is an agreement lined-up to extend his deal until at least 2030.

    “I don’t know when [the contract will be signed], but I believe it will be soon,” Yamal told CNN.

    “At the end of the day, Barça is the club of my life. I hope to renew my contract with them and to be with them for as long as possible.

    “I want to play in the Spanish league. I want to play for Barça, and yes, I will renew my contract. I will.”

    The teenager’s comments are music to the ears of Barcelona officials after Yamal’s teammate Raphinha suggested that a recent fiasco might discourage potential transfer targets from joining the club.

    Dani Olmo and Pau Victor were both unregistered on New Year’s Day after Barcelona missed a December 31 deadline to prove they are compliant with La Liga’s financial fair play rules.

    Both players travelled with the squad to Saudi Arabia for the Spanish Super Cup semi-final, but neither were eligible to play.

    Raphinha experienced similar issues when he joined the club in 2022.

    The Brazilian had to wait for Barcelona to sell club assets to register him with the Spanish league.

    “I think it could,” Raphinha said on Tuesday when asked if the situation could force players to avoid signing for Barcelona.

    “I can’t say otherwise because I would be lying and that’s not me, I don’t like lying or telling stories. The truth is that if I was at another club and seeing the situation Pau and Dani are in, maybe I would think twice if it was best to be here.”

    La Liga and the Spanish Football Federation confirmed in a joint statement that Barcelona are compliant with financial fair play regulations at present, but they cannot register Olmo or Victor this season.

    Barca are challenging the decision with an appeal to Spain’s highest sports court, and they have requested a temporary allowance for the players to play as a resolution to the issue is not expected soon.

    Regardless of what happens, Barcelona will be confident that Yamal’s commitment will outshine any reputational damage inflicted by the registration saga.

    Raphinha may be correct that players will think twice before joining the Spanish giants, but the club’s officials will be certain that the opportunity to play with the sport’s most exciting young talent, in an expanded Nou Camp once it’s completed, in the shirt worn by the likes of Lionel Messi, Johan Cruyff and Diego Maradona is too appealing.

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  • ‘Alien to me’: Trait that endeared Ange to Premier League now brings knives out — UK View

    ‘Alien to me’: Trait that endeared Ange to Premier League now brings knives out — UK View

    The knives are coming out, the vultures are circling and judgment day is coming for Ange Postecoglou, according to some in the British press, after Tottenham’s latest Premier League loss, a 4-3 home defeat to second-place Chelsea.

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    Thirteen months ago, the Australian manager was serenaded by Spurs’ fans after being dismantled 4-1 at home by the same side, because they loved the commitment to ‘Angeball’ despite having two players sent off for most of the second half.

    Now, the attacking nature of Postecoglou’s tactics are not being so well-received.

    Tottenham were 2-0 up inside 11 minutes, but conceded the next four goals of the game as things unravelled.

    Centre back pairing Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven, who returned from a toe injury and a hamstring problem respectively, as well as winger Brennan Johnson, were forced off with injuries.

    Yves Bissouma and Pape Sarr gave away penalties with unnecessary challenges, and Cole Palmer slotted both of them home, the second with a cheeky Panenka-style dink to lob it over the diving Fraser Forster and rub salt into the wound.

    It was a comedy of errors, and Liverpool legend Jamie Carragher believes they are the sort of mistakes that could cost Postecoglou his job.

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    Speaking on Sky Sports, Carragher rejected the former Socceroos boss’ post-match comments praising his side, and said that if Postecoglou does not adapt, he will be shown the door.

    “Ange said how well they played. I can’t imagine any Liverpool manager I played for and we conceded four in a game would say in the interview we played well,” Carragher said.

    “If you play this way you’ll get the result like at Manchester City but you’d also get results like this one where you’re 2-0 up. I’ve never got my head around managers saying we play a ‘certain way and we will never change’ – I think it started with Pep Guardiola at Barcelona.

    “This idea that wherever they play, they will play their way. But that was the best team I’ve ever seen. Pep Guardiola then had to change his Man City team who were winning the leagues every season, putting centre-backs at full-back.

    “This idea that you can’t change is alien to me. The game-state dictates how you play, not all the time but if you go away to a tough away ground you shouldn’t play the same way as you do against a team at the bottom. There’s this idea of playing a pure game and the Tottenham fans signing ‘we’ve got our Tottenham back’ but you won’t win anything, you won’t challenge.

    “I wake up every morning hoping the sun is shining, so I can put some shorts and a T-shirt on but if it’s raining, you put your coat on. You can’t have this idea about playing one way, it won’t work. If it doesn’t change, he won’t be here next season.”

    Tottenham have won just once in their last seven games in all competitions, and that victory was a 4-0 romp of the reigning champions at the Etihad two weeks ago.

    Adding to the bizarre nature of their recent run is that despite sitting 11th on the Premier League table, Spurs have the fourth best goal difference behind the top three of Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal, and only Chelsea have scored more goals than them this season.

    Defensive frailties continually haunting them has meant that some are now turning their attention to what is going on in the minds of the club hierarchy.

    Chairman Daniel Levy declared three months into Postecolgou’s tenure that “we’ve got our Tottenham back” after dour years under the likes of Antonio Conte and Jose Mourinho, but that positivity now feels like a lifetime ago.

    “In the directors’ box chairman Daniel Levy looked down and his face said it all. It was even more taught than Van de Ven’s hamstring,” the Telegraph’s chief football correspondent, Jason Burt, wrote.

    “It is the manner of the defeats, and the ease with which they concede goals, that is killing them at present and surely putting Postecoglou’s job increasingly at risk.

    “There is, unfortunately, a soft underbelly and a flakiness that opponents are seizing on. Spurs lost a two-goal lead for the 11th time in the Premier League, four times more than any other side.”

    The problems at the back are also being compounded by issues in attack, particularly around their star goal-scorer Son Heung-min.

    Postecoglou returned the Korean to the starting front three, which also featured Dominic Solanke up front and Johnson on the opposing flank, after bringing him off the bench in the 1-0 loss at Bournemouth mid-week.

    Son has battled hamstring issues in recent months and has been out of sorts since coming back to the pitch.

    His rut was exemplified by an uncharacteristic miss during the second half, that proved to be costly and symbolic of his manager’s struggles.

    “At 2-2, Son Heung-min wasted a huge chance to lead, when the captain raced through on goal and steadied himself before whipping a shot wildly off target,” The Independent’s Lawrence Ostlere wrote.

    “One of the most deadly finishers in the Premier League looked bereft of confidence, like his team, and his tap-in at the death was not enough to make amends as Spurs went down 4-3. Postecoglou rued a “big moment” that slipped by.

    “Yet that sense of self-sabotage might also be levelled at the manager. Spurs played with typical abandon which produced moments of joyous football in the first half, but when the momentum of the game swung, Postecoglou failed to react. His midfield was inexplicably open, with the overrun Bissouma understandably drawn to Palmer, leaving the advancing Enzo Fernandez in wide-open space time and time again.

    “’Tottenham Hotspur, it’s happened again,’ sang the Chelsea fans, and there was a devastating simplicity to that refrain. It was losing to Chelsea, the team who have enjoyed more success than any other visiting this stadium; it was letting another lead slip away in a clichéd collapse; it was how they seemed to melt in the middle.”

    ESPN’s James Olley took a similar approach in saying that “this game is in danger of resembling a metaphor for Postecoglou’s time at Spurs”.

    “Start well, generate dizzying excitement, lose players to injury, look increasingly one-dimensional and end up defeated,” Olley wrote.

    Postecoglou was abused by fans in ugly scenes after the Bournemouth loss, he had a frosty exchange with a supporter following their 2-1 home defeat to newly promoted Ipswich Town last month, but despite the fans growing more restless, there was no boil over of emotions at the full-time whistle.

    Many Tottenham fans on social media are pointing the finger at Levy and other off-field figures, while calling for Postecoglou to be afforded more time.

    Others want him gone, as is always the way with these things.

    But Postecoglou made a key move pre-game, in a pointed response to the events of the south coast days earlier.

    “Postecoglou had applauded the South Stand at length before kick-off, which felt significant after what had happened between him and the travelling Spurs fans at Bournemouth last Thursday. He needs them behind him,” The Guardian’s David Hytner wrote.

    “His team would make the dream start, two up after 11 minutes, and yet it never looked like lasting. There would be boos at the full-time whistle but no fan mutiny.”

    There is also no player revolt.

    Romero spoke with glowing praise of Postecoglou post-match, and expressed his belief that those on the pitch should be shouldering the responsibility for Tottenham’s recent run of poor results.

    “He’s a great coach. We saw it in the first season. In this second one we’ve suffered a lot of injuries,” Romero said.

    “Players should be the first one to be criticised, then if we lose 10 games, the staff can be changed.

    “We are very happy with this staff, me and my colleagues. We love how they work and the football they try to play.”

    Regardless of what the players or sections of the fan base believe, if more poor results come, more people will be baying for blood.

    Tottenham have four more matches before Christmas, and they could decide Postecoglou’s future.

    The Australian has always won a trophy in his second season charge, and it feels somewhat forgotten that he still has two live chances to keep that impressive streak alive, and deliver Spurs their first piece of silverware since 2008.

    On Friday morning Australian time, Postecoglou will travel north to Glasgow, to return to a scene of former glories.

    Tottenham will face Rangers, the biggest rivals of Postecoglou’s former club Celtic, at Ibrox Stadium in a key Europa League contest.

    Both sides sit on ten points after five matches, in eighth and ninth respectively, with the top eight after eight matches receiving a bye through to the Round of 16 in the new format.

    A week later, Spurs take on Manchester United in a Carabao Cup quarter-final at home.

    Either side of that clash is a trip to Southampton and a date with league leaders Liverpool.

    It is crunch time for Postecoglou.

    As the past fortnight since Tottenham’s demolition of Manchester City has shown, two weeks is a long time in football, and Postecoglou could be in the doghouse or the penthouse by Christmas Day.

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  • ‘I know where you live’: Former NBA coach loses it at host in stunning live TV meltdown

    ‘I know where you live’: Former NBA coach loses it at host in stunning live TV meltdown

    Basketball fans were left squirming as one of the most awkward interactions on live television unfolded in front of their eyes.

    NBA TV host Chris Miles came under fire from former NBA player and coach Sam Mitchell in a wild on-air meltdown.

    Average of 9 LIVE Regular Season games per week plus the best of the NBA Playoffs, including every game of the NBA Conference Finals & NBA Finals LIVE on ESPN, available via Kayo New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited time offer.

    Miles had initially asked Mitchell about Steve Kerr not receiving a gold medal at the Olympics during the summer.

    The Golden State Warriors coach led the USA men’s basketball team to glory in Paris earlier this year.

    Mitchell responded by joking: “I guess it just tells you (in) international (play) how they value coaches – not at all.”

    However, the former Toronto Raptors head coach was then on the receiving end from a little clip by Miles.

    “I’m surprised coaches get a pay check for this show. Maybe you should do this pro-bono, my friend,” he said.

    The jibe wasn’t well received and prompted Mitchell to launch into a fiery outburst as he hit back by claiming his salary was “pretty close” to pro-bono.

    He also accused Miles of “bragging” about his money and threatened to reveal his home address.

    The awkward moment went viral.Source: Supplied

    “Last time I looked at my check, it’s pretty close,” Mitchell hit back. “I’m taking donations. Won’t you come up on some of that money you got since you over there bragging about it?”

    “I’m sorry, did you rent your beach house out down in Florida during the Hurricane?

    “Do I need to go on and on about your town house over at Buckhead (in Atlanta)? You wanna call me out? I mean, come on … you screaming broke and hungry let’s just see it.

    “I know what you have and where you live, young fellow.”

    Miles sheepishly called Mitchell a “snitch”, only for him to quip back that he was in fact a “truth teller”.

    Finishing his outburst, he said: “You gotta stop messing with me on national TV … Do I need to give out the address? Because you’re not at home right now.”

    Mitchell clearly wasn’t finished as he later went out to read out an address as Miles attempted to throw to a break.

    Chris attempted to laugh it off.Source: Supplied
    Sam was not playing around.Source: Supplied

    Mitchell had a 17-year playing career before he turned to coaching and then ultimately becoming an analyst.

    During that time, he had spells with both the Minnesota Timberwolves and Indian Pacers.

    He won the NBA’s Coach of the Year Award in 2007 after leading the Toronto Raptors to their first playoff berth in five years.

    After signing a four-year contract with the team, Mitchell was relieved of his duties after less than one season.

    He could potentially find himself in search of a new role after his viral meltdown ahead of the 2024/25 NBA season.

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  • South East Melbourne Phoenix reportedly sack coach Mike Kelly after winless start to NBL season

    South East Melbourne Phoenix reportedly sack coach Mike Kelly after winless start to NBL season

    The South East Melbourne Phoenix have parted ways with coach Mike Kelly, effective immediately, after just 33 games.

    Kelly, Phoenix general manager of basketball operations Simon Mitchell and CEO Tommy Greer came to the decision at a meeting on Sunday after the team’s fifth-straight loss to start the 2024/25 NBL season at the hands of the Brisbane Bullets.

    Assistant Sam Mackinnon will take over as the team’s interim head coach.

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    The South East Melbourne Phoenix have reportedly parted ways with coach Mike Kelly (Photo by Daniel Pockett/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “While it hasn’t worked out the way I would’ve liked, I’m thankful to the players, fans, sponsors and the Phoenix for the opportunity,” Kelly said.

    “I truly believe in the playing group and wish them all the best moving forward.”

    Kelly was in his second season at the helm, with the Phoenix finishing 10th last campaign with an NBL-worst 10-18 record.

    “The team’s on-court performance is not meeting the club’s standards and expectations,” Mitchell said..

    “While we deeply respect, appreciate, and thank Mike for his hard work and dedication, we believe a change is necessary to move the team forward and deliver the success our fans, sponsors, and stakeholders deserve.”

    The Phoenix’s next game is a Round 5 matchup with Melbourne United next Sunday at John Cain Arena.

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  • ‘I would love to entertain playing for Team Australia’: NBA champion Kyrie Irving floats possibility of representing Australia

    ‘I would love to entertain playing for Team Australia’: NBA champion Kyrie Irving floats possibility of representing Australia

    Dallas Mavericks guard Kyrie Irving has floated the possibility of representing Australia at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

    The 32-year-old, who was born in Melbourne before relocating to the United States as an infant, represented Team USA at the 2014 FIBA World Cup and 2016 Olympics, winning gold on both occasions.

    However, the eight-time NBA All-Star was snubbed for this year’s Olympic campaign in Paris, with the United States winning gold in his absence.

    Speaking to The Athletic this week, Irving entertained the possibility of switching allegiances ahead of the next Olympics, albeit confessing it was unlikely.

    “I would love to entertain playing for Team Australia, man,” Irving said.

    “I don’t think it’s a strong, strong possibility at this point, depending on what the Olympic Committee does.

    “But as a competitor, I was born in Australia.

    “For me, it’s not a hard transition to make … I don’t want to fall into the trap of being let down or disappointed when I know that there are other opportunities out there for me.”

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    Irving, a former No. 1 pick at the NBA Draft, will be 36 when the Los Angeles Games commence, while both Team USA and FIBA would need to grant him a release to play for the Boomers.

    Last year, the 2016 NBA champion revealed that Team USA blocked him from representing Australia when he was a teenager.

    “I consider myself an international player even though I played on Team USA,” Irving said at the time.

    “A lot of my peers laugh at me when I bring it up and some fans may not agree, but I was born in Australia.

    “Team USA asked me to play for them when I was 17 or 18 … I wanted to play for Australia, but it just didn’t happen.

    “Coach K (Former Team USA coach Mike Krzyzewski) wasn’t going to let that happen either.”

    Kyrie Irving of the Dallas Mavericks. Photo by Maddie Meyer / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFPSource: AFP

    Meanwhile, Irving confessed he was disappointed to be left out for the Paris Olympics, especially considering he wasn’t given a chance to try out for the team.

    “I won’t say it was hurtful not to be able to try out, but it just was weird that we weren’t able to try out and get together as a group, because the USA team is not just 12 guys or 15 guys,” he continued.

    “I was playing on Team USA when I was 17, 18. I won three gold medals. I won when I was 18, when I was 22, and I won one when I was 24. So there is a pride thing there, and I have history.

    “There was such a great competitive pool that you can test yourself against because it’s the best in the world. It’s not every day you get a chance to go against (players of that caliber).”

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  • 20-year feud reignites over ‘white-anting’ claim; $83m fall guy in Utd ‘shambles’ — UK View

    20-year feud reignites over ‘white-anting’ claim; $83m fall guy in Utd ‘shambles’ — UK View

    A 3-0 loss to Tottenham at Old Trafford has sparked a brutal, public shaming of Manchester United and manager Erik ten Hag, who is now “running out of time” to save his job according to UK experts.

    The British media hasn’t missed in lambasting the Premier League giants and their beleaguered boss, who was taunted with chants of “you’re getting sacked in the morning” throughout second half.

    Manchester United now sits 13th on the Premier League standings with two wins in six games.

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    The club’s new football leadership team handed ten Hag an extension to his contract less than three months ago, but the Dutchman is under extreme, and increasingly mounting, pressure to hold his position.

    “(Ten Hag) is only one bad defeat away from a crisis and unforgiving scrutiny,” BBC reporter Phil McNulty claimed. “The 54-year-old is running out of time after a United performance that was as shambolic, incompetent and indisciplined as any he has presided over in his tenure.

    “This is a manager who is looking increasingly out of his depth … this felt very much like the end – if not now, then very soon.”

    Erik ten Hag, Manager of Manchester United. Photo by Carl Recine/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    But while a large portion of the blame has landed squarely at the feet of ten Hag, Arsenal legend Martin Keown floated a stunning theory that could rock the boat at Old Trafford.

    Keown, a long-time nemesis of Manchester United in the 1990s and early 2000s, singled out assistant Ruud van Nistelrooy, questioning whether he’s doing enough to support ten Hag.

    Keown, who famously sparred with van Nistelrooy in a bitter rivalry during their Premier League careers, said on TalkSport: “Is he giving everything to this manager? This manager looks very lonely on the sideline.

    “Is Van Nistelrooy waiting to take over? Because it looks as if there’s going to be change taking place there.

    “Is everyone adding to the group? I’m not seeing that from Van Nistelrooy. Ten Hag is just sitting there, nothing going on, no conversation. Pep [Guardiola] goes back and speaks to the gurus next to him. Is everybody looking in the mirror at themselves giving their best?

    “It doesn’t look like the players are committed, it doesn’t look like the staff are particularly committed. It’s a lone man in the dugout.”

    Meanwhile, Manchester United’s defence also came under heavy scrutiny following the loss to Tottenham.

    “United were a shambles – a rabble,” McNulty continued. “From the first whistle, Spurs were all over United like a rash.

    “There was no shape to United. They lacked direction and leadership … at times they looked out of control.”

    Sky Sports’ Peter Smith claimed the team’s defence was “as leaky as the roof at Old Trafford”, also criticising ten Hag’s off-season signings.

    “They have shelled out over £600m on signings for Erik ten Hag, and the head coach can’t escape the fact that Sunday’s squad was very much the team he had built,” Smith wrote.

    The Guardian’s Jonathan Wilson continued: “If the first-half performance against Tottenham on Sunday wasn’t the worst under Ten Hag, it’s only because there are so many other candidates.

    “They were shapeless, demotivated, petulant and apparently entirely devoid of confidence.”

    Manchester United’s Dutch manager Erik ten Hag. Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFPSource: AFP

    Chief among those to be called out for the defensive efforts has been Matthijs de Ligt, ten Hag’s countryman who was signed for £43m (A$83m).

    Liverpool legend Jamie Carragher grilled de Ligt, saying that he was “completely out of position all the time” against Spurs.

    “I’ve noticed this a little bit with De Ligt and a lot of centre-backs,” Carragher said in analysing the goals on Sky Sports.

    “I don’t understand why they don’t fill the space and come over – I see this so much.”

    Nonetheless, it’s ten Hag who has ultimately copped the majority of the heat in the UK press since Sunday’s loss.

    ESPN’s Mark Ogden lashed ten Hag’s tendency to cast the blame elsewhere whenever Manchester United suffers defeat.

    “Erik ten Hag is out of excuses,” Ogden penned.

    “Selective memory is becoming a theme of Ten Hag’s increasingly predictable defence of his record as United manager. He has blamed injuries for a lack of consistency and bad results – every team suffers from injuries – and pointed to the two trophies he has won in two seasons … but that overlooks guiding the club to their worst-ever Premier League finish in 2023/24 and overseeing an array of humiliating defeats.

    “There is now a real possibility that Ten Hag is entering the final days of his reign as United manager.”

    Manchester United will next face Aston Villa away on Sunday.

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  • ‘He’s always hurt’: Doubts raised over 76ers’ monster $442m Embiid decision

    ‘He’s always hurt’: Doubts raised over 76ers’ monster $442m Embiid decision

    Joel Embiid has signed a contract extension with the Philadelphia 76ers, the team announced on Friday, with the Cameroon-born centre saying he wants to stay a Sixer his NBA entire career.

    Multiple reports said the deal was a maximum extension for three years and about $193 million ($283.8m AUD) that would keep him with the 76ers through the 2028-29 campaign.

    “Philadelphia is home. I want to be here for the rest of my career,” Embiid posted on his Instagram account.

    “I love this community and everything you’ve given me and my family. There is a lot more work to do. You guys deserve a championship and I think we’re just getting started!”

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    Embiid, the 2023 NBA Most Valuable Player, is a seven-footer (2.13m) and seven-time NBA All-Star who helped the United States win Olympic gold in Paris last month.

    The contract extension means Embiid’s existing deal now has five seasons left and is worth $442.65 million (AUD).

    That contract total is among the three richest in NBA history.

    The two-time NBA scoring champion, set to begin his ninth NBA campaign next month, said in a statement he wants to bring the 76ers their first NBA crown since 1983.

    “I started a Sixer and want to be right here for the rest of my career,” Embiid said.

    “I had no idea when I was drafted as a 20-year-old kid from Cameroon how lucky I was to be in Philadelphia.

    “Through all the ups and downs, this city and the fans have been everything and I am so grateful for how they’ve embraced me.

    “Philadelphia is home and it’s time to bring this community an NBA championship.”

    Embiid averaged a career-high 34.7 points, 11.0 rebounds and career-bests of 5.6 assists and 1.2 steals plus 1.7 blocked shots last season and had career-high accuracy from 3-point range and the free throw line.

    PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – JANUARY 16: Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts during the third quarter against the Denver Nuggets at the Wells Fargo Center on January 16, 2024 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “Joel has cemented himself as one of the greatest Sixers of all time and is well on his way to being one of the best players to ever play the game,” 76ers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey said.

    “We’re ecstatic that this extension keeps him and his family in Philadelphia for years to come.

    “He’s an elite two-way player with a combination of size, strength, and athleticism that this league has rarely, if ever, seen.

    “He’s integral to this franchise’s quest for another NBA championship and we’re honoured that he continues to choose this organisation as his NBA home.”

    Embiid, the third pick in the 2014 NBA Draft, has averaged 27.9 points, 11.2 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 1.7 blocked shots over 433 games with the Sixers.

    The 76ers have reached the playoffs in each of the past seven seasons but have not reached the Eastern Conference finals during the run.

    ESPN’s Pablo Torre says the 76ers made the right choice to extend Embiid despite the fact Philadelphia have never made the Eastern Conference finals in his eight-years in the ‘City of Brotherly Love’.

    “When it comes to what was the choice, I believe there was no choice,” Torre said on Pardon the Interruption.

    “I believe you stick with Joel Embiid and give him all of that money and the reason I say that is I think they have the best big three in the NBA – Embiid, Tyrese Maxey and Paul George.”

    PTI’s host Tony Kornheiser disagreed, thinking Embiid hasn’t gone close to delivering a title to Philly.

    “Am I convinced Joel Embiid will deliver a championship? No, and why should I?” Kornheiser said.

    “You’ve played there for eight years and you’ve never made the conference final. So now, you have Paul George, who is one of the least clutch players

    “If you ask me for the visual of Joel Embiid, it’s him laying on his back holding his leg because he’s always hurt. He averages 54 games a year.”

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  • Magic Johnson blasts Anthony Edwards over dig at 90s NBA players

    Magic Johnson blasts Anthony Edwards over dig at 90s NBA players

    Magic Johnson clapped back at Anthony Edwards in the best way after the Timberwolves star took a dig at NBA players from the 1980s and 90s.

    Edwards told the Wall Street Journal in a recent interview that he wasn’t too impressed with players from those eras of the game.

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    Well, Johnson was told about the comment by Stephen A. Smith while appearing at the Yaamava Resort & Casino with the ESPN personality, as the New York Post reports.

    That’s when Johnson fired back at Edwards.

    “I never respond to a guy who’s never won a championship,” Johnson told Smith and the audience, which drew laughter from the crowd.

    Magic didn’t hold back in his assessment of Anthony Edwards. (Photo by Meg Oliphant/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP)Source: AFP
    Edwards (right) won an Olympic gold medal in Paris alongside Steph Curry and Team USA. (Photo by Damien MEYER / AFP)Source: AFP

    “There’s not really anything to say. He didn’t win a college championship, I don’t know if he even won a high school championship.”

    Johnson is certainly an authority in the game, having won five NBA titles with the Lakers.

    And Edwards’ comments were enough to annoy some people in the basketball world, which seemingly included Johnson.

    Edwards had told the WSJ that outside of Michael Jordan, no one in that era had much skill.

    “I didn’t watch it back in the day so I can’t speak on it,” he said.

    Magic is one of the greatest players of all-time. Photo: ALLSPORT USASource: Getty Images
    Edwards and the Timberwolves reached the Western Conference Finals last season. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “They say it was tougher back then than it is now, but I don’t think anybody had skill back then.

    “(Michael Jordan) was the only one that really had skill, you know what I mean?

    “So that’s why when they saw Kobe (Bryant), they were like ‘oh, my God’. But now everybody has skill.”

    Edwards is coming off a season in which he averaged a career-high 25.9 points per game and helped the Timberwolves reach the Western Conference Finals.

    However, the Timberwolves star is still in search of his first NBA title.

    Edwards was part of the United States team that won gold at this month’s Paris Olympic Games.

    This article originally appeared in the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

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  • Patty Mills joins new NBA team in beloved Aussie’s $5m move

    Patty Mills joins new NBA team in beloved Aussie’s $5m move

    Aussie veteran Patty Mills will return to the NBA for a 16th season after reportedly signing with the Utah Jazz.

    ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reports Mills, 36, and the Jazz have agreed to a one-year, fully guaranteed $3.3 million deal (AUD $5M) for the 2024/25 season.

    It’ll see Mills reunite with coach Will Hardy, who shared six seasons together when Hardy was assistant with the San Antonio Spurs under Greg Poppovich from 2015 to 2021.

    Mills spent 10 seasons at the Spurs all up, playing in two NBA Finals and winning the 2014 championship in his most recognised run in the NBA.

    Mills last played for the Miami Heat (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images)Source: FOX SPORTS

    His role in the NBA has diminished in recent years including playing a combined 32 games for the Atlanta Hawks and Miami Heat last season — averaging 4.2 points and shooting under 40 per cent from three-point range for the first time in his career.

    But he remains a highly respected locker room veteran who can plug in and play minutes as a dangerous perimeter shooter with a scoring spark, while his leadership will be valuable to a youthful Jazz side.

    Mills, who was traded three times last off-season, joins his fifth NBA team after stops at the Portland Trail Blazers, Spurs, Brooklyn Nets, Hawks and Heat.

    He’s appeared in a total 892 regular season NBA games.

    Mills is coming off a productive Olympics (Photo by Christina Pahnke – sampics/Getty Images)Source: FOX SPORTS

    The beloved Aussie is coming off a productive Olympics campaign for the Boomers, which is expected to be his appearance for the green and gold.

    Having consistently ascended his game on the national stage, Mills was ranked second for the Boomers in scoring in Paris, averaging 16.5 points per game with 2.3 triples at 40.9 per cent shooting from the arc.

    It includes Mills putting up a game-high 26 points on 11-of-21 shooting in Australia’s 95-90 overtime loss to eventual bronze medallist Serbia in the quarterfinals.

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