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Premier League

1 player each Premier League club should sign this summer

It’s been little over two weeks since the English summer transfer window officially opened, but the early business conducted (or not conducted) already has fans brimming with optimism or in meltdown. With more than two months to go until the window shuts, we highlight one player who could boost each club’s expectations heading into the 2022-23 Premier League season.

Note: Estimated transfer values provided by transfermarkt.com.

Arsenal: Gabriel Jesus

Club: Manchester City | Position: Forward | Value: £45M

Jesus’ transfer to Arsenal is apparently done. The 25-year-old’s positional tweak at Manchester City last season – from a No. 9 to a wide forward – indicates the Brazilian isn’t a natural replacement for Alexandre Lacazette, but maybe Mikel Arteta doesn’t want that. Jesus would allow Arsenal’s front line to play with even more fluidity, confusing markers and continually seeking out weaknesses in opposition defenses. An attacking rotation of Jesus, Bukayo Saka, Gabriel Martinelli, and Emile Smith Rowe could make the Gunners one of the more watchable teams in the division, and Martin Odegaard and Fabio Vieira would relish creating chances behind those forwards.

Aston Villa: Conor Gallagher

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Club: Chelsea | Position: Midfielder | Value: £22.5M

Aston Villa haven’t lacked ambition with executive Christian Purslow running the show, so signing Gallagher isn’t as outlandish as it may seem to some. The midfielder, one of the darlings of English football after his productive season-long loan at Crystal Palace, racked up eight goals and five assists in all competitions last term. Gallagher’s work off the ball will also appeal to Steven Gerrard: The 22-year-old pressured an opponent who was receiving, carrying, or releasing the ball on 781 occasions last season, which is more than any other player.

Bournemouth: Nat Phillips

Club: Liverpool | Position: Center-back | Value: £7.2M

Phillips kept Gary Cahill out of the side during last season’s loan spell from Liverpool and should be ushered into Dean Court once more. His influence grew over the course of the campaign, and he displayed traditional defensive qualities by dominating in the air and never shying away from a challenge. Though it’d be good to see Phillips trust himself more with the ball at his feet – he often left that part of the game to his defensive partner Lloyd Kelly – the 25-year-old still has plenty of time to fine-tune his work at the back.

Brentford: Christian Eriksen

Jacques Feeney/Offside / Offside / Getty

Club: Unattached | Position: Attacking midfielder | Value: Free

Given Eriksen will have offers of European football elsewhere – Manchester United are reportedly pursuing the Dane – it may be difficult for Brentford to encourage him to sign another deal at the Community Stadium following his phenomenal impact over the second half of last season. Still, Eriksen enjoyed being back in London and is familiar with many figures at Brentford, including his former Denmark youth coach Thomas Frank and compatriots such as Christian Norgaard and Mathias Jensen.

Brighton & Hove Albion: Liam Delap

Club: Manchester City | Position: Striker | Value: £1.35M

Yes, conversations about Brighton’s pretty football not producing enough goals are tiresome, but they sadly ring true. Neal Maupay notched eight goals in each of his past two Premier League campaigns, and that simply isn’t good enough when attack-minded players such as Leandro Trossard and Alexis Mac Allister have improved greatly around him. In Delap, there’s a player who possesses Maupay’s physicality but has the potential to be much more prolific in front of goal. Injuries over the first half of last term disrupted his season, but he scored 24 goals in 20 appearances for Manchester City’s Elite Development Squad over the prior term.

Chelsea: Matthijs de Ligt

DeFodi Images / DeFodi Images / Getty

Club: Juventus | Position: Center-back | Value: £63M

Somehow, Chelsea have sold or lost Antonio Rudiger, Andreas Christensen, Fikayo Tomori, Marc Guehi, and Kurt Zouma from their backline over the past couple of years. Thiago Silva turns 38 in September. So it’s no surprise that purchasing a defender or two is the Blues’ most important task this summer. Signing De Ligt would be a huge statement of intent from the new owners, bringing incredible strength, excellent anticipation, and aerial prowess to the heart of Chelsea’s defense. He won’t be cheap, though.

Crystal Palace: Cheick Doucoure

Club: Lens | Position: Defensive midfielder | Value: £13.5M

Doucoure has occasionally appeared in Lens’ backline, but he’s at his best at the base of midfield. Patrick Vieira’s side was blessed with progressive players last term, but Crystal Palace could improve on the likes of Jeffrey Schlupp (usually a wide player) and Cheikhou Kouyate (aged 32 and maybe on his way out this summer) in the No. 6 role. The positional sense and overall intelligence of Doucoure, 22, placed him fifth for total interceptions in Ligue 1 last season. His strength and dribbling ability also make him difficult to knock off the ball.

Everton: Georginio Wijnaldum

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Club: Paris Saint-Germain | Position: Midfielder | Value: £16.2M

Tottenham Hotspur’s Harry Winks has been linked with Everton for much of this summer, but there’d be less risk in trying to structure a loan deal for Wijnaldum. The midfielder didn’t make a huge impression last season at Paris Saint-Germain, but his composure, decision-making, and anticipation are still at a high level. The toughest aspects of arranging a temporary deal for Wijnaldum would be getting PSG to accept a low loan fee and persuading the player to join Everton after he enjoyed five successful campaigns with Liverpool.

Fulham: Kevin Mbabu

Club: Wolfsburg | Position: Right-back | Value: £8.1M

Fulham need to recruit at right-back after Neco Williams’ loan expired. Kenny Tete is strong from a defensive standpoint, but manager Marco Silva brought in Williams last season because he prefers more attacking impetus from his full-backs. Mbabu could be an affordable option, offers physicality that’ll be important when the Cottagers are often second-best in games, and attempted a similar amount of dribbles per 90 minutes as Bayern Munich’s Leroy Sane in the 2021-22 Bundesliga campaign. Newcastle United gave up on Mbabu too early when they sold him in 2017.

Leeds United: Tyler Adams

Matthew Ashton – AMA / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Club: RB Leipzig | Position: Midfielder | Value: £15.3M

Leeds have been linked with moves for attack-minded players like Club Brugge’s Charles De Ketelaere, PSV Eindhoven’s Cody Gakpo, and FC Porto’s Otavio, but Kalvin Phillips’ expected transfer to Manchester City should prompt a shift in the West Yorkshire club’s priorities. Adams played for Jesse Marsch at the New York Red Bulls and RB Leipzig and would complement Marc Roca, another summer arrival at Elland Road, in central midfield. The American manager already signed Brenden Aaronson and Rasmus Kristensen, both of whom worked under him at Red Bull Salzburg. Adams is also just 23, so has plenty of room to improve.

Leicester City: Nathan Collins

Club: Burnley | Position: Center-back | Value: £9M

Given Leicester’s awful luck with injuries over the past year, you can forgive Brendan Rodgers for wanting to trust the players who were meant to build on their FA Cup triumph in 2021. After all, last summer marked the first offseason since 2015 that the Foxes didn’t lose a key player to a Premier League rival. Nevertheless, the busy treatment room did expose Rodgers’ lack of center-back quality beyond Wesley Fofana and the aging Jonny Evans. Collins is just 21 but can reasonably claim to be better than Caglar Soyuncu, Jannik Vestergaard, and Daniel Amartey at the back.

Liverpool: Otavio

Quality Sport Images / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Club: FC Porto | Position: Attacking midfielder, winger | Value: £27M

Aside from perhaps one or two signings to strengthen the club’s youth contingent, Liverpool’s summer business is likely over. But the departures of Divock Origi and Takumi Minamino, plus the stiffening legs of James Milner and Jordan Henderson, put the Reds at risk of being ruinously exposed by a few injuries. Otavio, Porto’s versatile attacking midfielder, could help address that concern while ensuring Harvey Elliott continues to develop as a No. 8 rather than in the wide attacking role he played during a loan stint at Blackburn Rovers.

Manchester City: Marc Cucurella

Club: Brighton & Hove Albion | Position: Left-back | Value: £25.2M

The two left-backs Manchester City have signed over the past five years are Angelino and the disgraced Benjamin Mendy. Over that period, No. 6 Fabian Delph, attacking midfielder Oleksandr Zinchenko, and right-back Joao Cancelo have covered the position. However, bringing in Cucurella wouldn’t simply be a case of making up the numbers. The Spaniard was destined to be a success at Brighton, but the ease with which he took to Premier League football was beyond anything anybody could have imagined. He won both the fans’ and players’ versions of the Seagulls’ Player of the Season award off the back of his energetic displays down the left.

Manchester United: Frenkie de Jong

Francesco Pecoraro / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Club: Barcelona | Position: Midfielder | Value: £54M

Declan Rice’s greater familiarity among English-based supporters would make him a surefire winner for the oft-agitated attendees at Old Trafford, but West Ham United boss David Moyes stated in April that his star midfielder won’t be allowed to leave for less than £150 million. So, United should focus their attention on 25-year-old Frenkie de Jong, who’s a more realistic capture given Barcelona’s financial troubles. He’s available for around €86 million (£74 million), according to The Guardian’s Fabrizio Romano, and would certainly improve a midfield that’s long leaned on the shaky foundation of Scott McTominay and Fred.

Newcastle United: Lloyd Kelly

Club: Bournemouth | Position: Center-back | Value: £10.8M

Eddie Howe signed Kelly during his time at Bournemouth, so he knows exactly what the defender could offer his Newcastle side. Firstly, the center-back provides options: He can fill in at left-back – an area where the Magpies are thin – and would be comfortable in three-man and four-man backlines. He’s also an accomplished instigator of swift attacks – he produced the second-most accurate long balls by an outfield player in the Championship last term – and has the pace and confidence to evade an opponent’s press.

Nottingham Forest: Neco Williams

James Williamson – AMA / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Club: Liverpool | Position: Right-back | Value: £7.2M

There’s been little evidence to suggest January signing Richie Laryea can sufficiently fill the boots of Djed Spence after the latter’s loan from Middlesbrough expired. With Nottingham Forest once again on the lookout for a player who can play both right-back and right wing-back, they should try to borrow Liverpool youngster Williams. The Welsh international, who spent the second half of last season at Fulham, can address the East Midlands club’s void and allow it to hold off on potentially spending a much larger sum on a permanent acquisition for at least another year.

Southampton: Sasa Kalajdzic

Club: Stuttgart | Position: Striker | Value: £22.5M

Southampton would face strong competition for Kalajdzic’s signature after the Austrian bagged 22 Bundesliga goals despite starting just 36 matches over the past two seasons. But the Saints should push hard for this move after Armando Broja returned to Chelsea following his loan spell and given Che Adams and Adam Armstrong combined for a paltry nine Premier League goals over the 2021-22 term. If Kalajdzic continues to improve the technical side of his game, he could help cover some of the goals lost when Danny Ings left for Aston Villa last summer.

Tottenham Hotspur: Djed Spence

Visionhaus / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Club: Middlesbrough | Position: Right-back | Value: £7.2M

The secret was out in January. Spence single-handedly subdued Martinelli and terrorized Nuno Tavares during Arsenal’s FA Cup visit to Nottingham Forest, forcing onlookers to ask one very simple question: How is a player of Spence’s quality on loan from Middlesbrough? Now he’s back on Teesside, and Boro want to cash in. The London-raised wing-back left his hometown when he was released by Fulham in 2018, and a return to the capital with Tottenham makes a lot of sense. He’s potentially a huge upgrade on both Emerson Royal and Matt Doherty.

West Ham United: Armando Broja

Club: Chelsea | Position: Forward | Value: £19.8M

David Moyes needs to find a marksman to inherit the No. 9 role from 32-year-old Michail Antonio, and Broja seems to fit the bill. For a player reared in the academies of Tottenham and Chelsea, Broja is surprisingly raw; he should learn how to use his 6-foot-3 frame more effectively when holding up the ball, and Ralph Hasenhuttl questioned his work ethic during the early months of his season-long loan at Southampton. But West Ham’s creative players, such as Jarrod Bowen and Pablo Fornals, could help the 20-year-old unlock his obvious potential at the London Stadium.

Wolverhampton Wanderers: Joao Moutinho

Nathan Stirk / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Club: Unattached | Position: Defensive midfielder | Value: Free

This is an admittedly boring pick, but a woeful final few months to the 2021-22 season make Wolves a decent outside bet for relegation in the upcoming campaign. Bruno Lage’s side, then, needs some stability and leadership to drag it through a potentially tough period. Moutinho, whose diligence alongside Ruben Neves never got the credit it deserves, was an excellent servant for Wolves before he was named on the club’s released list at the start of June. The club said it was in talks with Moutinho over a new contract then. It’s time to get it done.

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Premier League

Breaking down thrilling EPL title race with 10 games left

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One of the most intoxicating title races in Premier League history is, mercifully, ready to resume.

The quirks of the calendar – an FA Cup weekend succeeded by an agonizing international window – means the titanic tussle between Arsenal, Liverpool, and Manchester City will have been on hiatus for a full three weeks before it gets back underway on Sunday.

But there are no more impending interruptions. With 10 matches remaining for each title contender, we’re barreling toward a resolution to the type of three-way battle that’s exceedingly rare in England’s top flight. There’s never been a season in the Premier League era where three teams went into the final day with a chance to hoist the trophy. This could be it. The last time it happened was the 1971-72 campaign, when Derby County won an incredible four-team fight, narrowly beating Leeds United and, ominously, Liverpool and Man City to the crown. We’re overdue for that kind of drama.

That three sides have converged this way at all is, frankly, remarkable.

These are the three best teams in the country by an enormous margin. They’re the only ones with an expected goal difference per game of plus-1.0 or greater this season. The next best mark, surprisingly, belongs to Mauricio Pochettino’s erratic Chelsea team at plus-0.36. So, yeah, it’s not close.

The three of them are also on a tear and show no signs of slowing down. Arsenal have won all eight of their league games in 2024, scoring 33 goals in the process; Liverpool have collected 22 of a possible 27 points in that time; reigning champions Manchester City have racked up 23 of 27 points. They’ve combined for just one loss since the calendar flipped – Liverpool’s 3-1 defeat against Arsenal in early February.

The only sides that look capable of halting their progress are each other, which makes this weekend’s clash between Manchester City and Arsenal at the Etihad all the more significant.

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Each contender has a compelling reason for believing it’s “their” year.

Arsenal

Mikel Arteta’s men look far more assured and mature than last season when they set the pace for nearly the entire campaign, only to crumble down the stretch and relinquish their once sizeable advantage to Manchester City. Do-it-all superstar Declan Rice has been a transformative figure in midfield, while Kai Havertz, after an inauspicious start, is becoming an increasingly vital and consistent scoring threat. At least from the outside, there appears to be more self-belief within the Arsenal camp. Having learned from their experience in 2022-23, Arsenal won’t cede top spot so easily this time. It’ll need to be ripped from them.

Some may be inclined to dismiss their recent run because of their opponents. Yes, the Gunners have played some weak teams – Sheffield United! Burnley! Nottingham Forest! – but, for the most part, they aren’t just beating them; they’re blowing them away with a ruthlessness usually associated with title winners. For those still unconvinced, Sunday’s visit to the Etihad, where they were tossed aside like a rag doll in last season’s 4-1 loss, will be the ultimate litmus test to see if this team is ready to end the club’s 20-year title drought.

Liverpool

Jurgen Klopp’s persistent squad, already with the League Cup in tow, aims to send off their departing bench boss in style. Liverpool have been the most entertaining team of the trio this season. They create more chances than Arsenal and City and concede more opportunities. Darwin Nunez, the ultimate agent of chaos on a football pitch, is the perfect fit for a team with a habit of scoring late goals and delivering dramatic moments. Their title charge is built on more than just vibes, though.

Liverpool overwhelmed none other than City in their last league game before the international break but came away from the pulsating affair at Anfield with a 1-1 draw. City, usually self-confident and domineering in possession, simply held on against what Pep Guardiola dubbed a “tsunami” of pressure. There was obviously some added incentive at play, but Liverpool are built to go full speed regardless of the opposition. It’s in their nature under Klopp.

Manchester City

Despite not being at its vintage best this term, Guardiola’s accomplished crew remains the favorite in the eyes of many who, for good reason, simply refuse to pick against them. We’ve been conditioned to feel like City will inevitably be the last team standing because, well, they usually are. Five titles in the previous six seasons will have that effect on the collective psyche. However, Erling Haaland isn’t replicating his ferocious scoring pace from last season, and Kevin De Bruyne has been limited to six league starts. Also, outside of some electrifying Jeremy Doku performances, the summer signings haven’t exactly set the world alight. And yet, here they are, just one point off the top, showing the quiet confidence and tranquility that can only be obtained through winning experiences.

With Phil Foden leading the way and authoring arguably the best season of anyone in the league, City could become the first team in English history to win four consecutive top-flight titles.

Strength of schedule

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On paper, Arsenal have the most difficult fixture list.

Their remaining opponents average 41.8 points this season, roughly corresponding to ninth place in the table. Put another way, it would be the equivalent of playing Wolves (41 points) or Brighton (42) each week. It doesn’t help that many of Arsenal’s toughest matches are away from home. Coincidentally, they have upcoming trips to Brighton and Wolves, along with north London rivals Tottenham and Manchester United, following this weekend’s potentially decisive tilt at the Etihad. It’s tough.

Manchester City’s task is slightly more forgiving, as their remaining opponents average 40.7 points or 10th place.

Liverpool appear to have the most favorable schedule of the trophy chasers, with their opponents averaging 38.4 points, a tally representing the haul of a team in the bottom half of the table. While that’s better than the alternative, it’s not quite so simple for the Reds. On the back of a potentially draining Europa League quarterfinal second leg against Atalanta in mid-April – more on that soon – Klopp’s men have three away games in seven days against Fulham, Everton, and West Ham. In addition to battling their local nemesis, who could still be scrapping for survival at that point, Liverpool will also face a rambunctious Goodison crowd that would love nothing more than to play a critical role in stopping their hated rivals from winning another league crown.

Aston Villa and Spurs, meanwhile, stand out as common foes for all three title hopefuls. Sitting fourth and fifth, respectively, and engaged in their own fight to secure a Champions League place, they could play the role of kingmakers this spring.

European commitments

Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Balancing the mental and physical demands of domestic play with continental competition is a huge piece of this puzzle for all three teams. Midweek success can further galvanize a group, but taxing failures can cripple a team’s momentum at home.

Much like the domestic schedule, Liverpool seem to have an edge here. Arsenal and Manchester City will face European behemoths Bayern Munich and Real Madrid in a pair of mouthwatering Champions League quarterfinal ties beginning next month. However, Liverpool have a comparatively charitable Europa League encounter with Atalanta.

If they both advance, Arsenal and City will meet in the Champions League semifinals, an outcome that will surely be celebrated wildly on Merseyside.

How those games intermingle with the league schedule also matters. Liverpool play Crystal Palace and Fulham following their two matchups with the Italian outfit. After locking horns with Bayern, Arsenal have to contend with Aston Villa and Wolves. Manchester City, still active on three fronts as they seek a second consecutive treble, host lowly Luton after the first leg of their Real Madrid rematch and take on Chelsea in the FA Cup semifinals following the second leg.

Injury concerns

Simon Stacpoole/Offside / Offside / Getty

Liverpool have been plagued by injuries all season. Mohamed Salah, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Darwin Nunez, Diogo Jota, and Andy Robertson, among others, have missed varying amounts of time, though the bulk of that group is getting back to full fitness. Alisson Becker remains sidelined and might not return until mid-April. Defensive stalwart Virgil van Dijk is the only Liverpool player to garner over 2,000 league minutes this season, indicating how disruptive injuries have been for Klopp’s team. And yet, they persevere.

Five Manchester City players have cleared the 2,000-minute mark thus far, and a couple more are on the cusp. But the club was without De Bruyne for the entire first half of the season, while trips to the treatment room ravaged Jack Grealish’s year. City also got hit the hardest by the recent international break, with John Stones and Kyle Walker hurt on England duty and racing against time to recover for Sunday’s match versus Arsenal. Swiss defender Manuel Akanji is in the same boat, and Ederson’s return date from a thigh injury remains uncertain. Never shy about tweaking his lineup, Guardiola could be forced to tinker yet again.

Arsenal have been largely unscathed, with six players eclipsing 2,000 league minutes. William Saliba, whose absence last season played an outsize role in Arsenal’s capitulation, has been on the pitch for every second of league play in 2023-24. Gabriel Jesus has battled ailments all year, and Jurrien Timber suffered an ACL injury just 49 minutes into his Premier League debut in the season opener. But the Gunners will be hoping their relative good fortune on the injury front extends right through May, especially as it relates to Bukayo Saka, who pulled out of the England squad to nurse a minor muscular issue.

Prediction

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First, a disclaimer: Luck will play a pivotal role in determining which team is crowned on May 19. Injuries will continue to be a factor. There will almost certainly be contentious refereeing and VAR decisions that favor and oppose the title challengers. There will also be finishing variance, with players missing seemingly easy chances and converting more difficult opportunities.

Impossible to predict? No matter. We’re not going to let that stop us.

Considering their advantageous schedule, at home and in Europe, along with their improving squad health at just the right time and the inescapable feeling that this is a team of destiny determined to send their beloved manager out on a high, we’re going with Liverpool, who’ll collect 88 points to pip their rivals and again interrupt Manchester City’s run of domestic dominance.

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Premier League

Euro 2024 playoffs: Miraculous Ukraine comeback, big result for Wales

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Wales, Greece, and Poland registered statement wins Thursday, joining three other teams in next Tuesday’s playoff finals for the three remaining places at Euro 2024.

Ukraine staged an incredible late comeback against Bosnia and Herzegovina in its semifinal to keep its Euro dream alive.

The highest-placed team in FIFA’s rankings that’s no longer in contention to reach the tournament in Germany is 60th-placed Finland.

Here’s how the playoff semifinals across Path A, B, and C played out.

Path A

Mateusz Slodkowski / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Poland 5-1 Estonia

Estonia barely stood a chance. Down to 10 men as early as the 27th minute, the northern Europeans could only muster a consolation goal in a 5-1 loss to Poland. The Polish achieved the rout without Robert Lewandowski getting on the scoresheet and remain unbeaten in 21 Euro qualifiers at home, a magnificent run dating back to September 2006. Poland is trying to make up for a poor qualifying campaign in which it finished third in Group E, four points behind the Czech Republic and Albania. The country hasn’t missed the Euros since 2004.

Wales 4-1 Finland

The Red Wall might descend on Germany this summer. Wales’ raucous supporters have legitimate hopes of traveling to another major tournament after the Dragons scorched Finland without the retired Gareth Bale and with Aaron Ramsey, 33, on the bench after more injury problems. Teemu Pukki gave the visiting team some hope just before halftime following well-taken finishes from David Brooks and Neco Williams. But Wales needed just 73 seconds of the second period to restore its two-goal cushion via Brennan Johnson’s tap-in. Daniel James took advantage of a defensive error before rounding the goalkeeper in the 86th minute to give the host a resounding victory.

Playoff final: Wales vs. Poland, Tuesday 3:45 p.m. ET

Path B

David Balogh – UEFA / UEFA / Getty

Israel 1-4 Iceland

Iceland’s Albert Gudmundsson stole the show with an emphatic hat-trick against Israel on Thursday. His stunning free-kick into the top right corner canceled out Eran Zahavi’s opening goal for Israel, and he created a nice cushion for his country with a pair of markers in the final 10 minutes. Just before that, Zahavi blew an incredible opportunity to equalize the match at 2-2, missing a penalty awarded for handball against Iceland’s Gudmundur Thorarinsson. A red card to Israel’s Haim Revivo didn’t help the trailing side. Iceland is now a game away from making only its second-ever appearance at the Euros following its quarterfinal run in 2016.

Bosnia and Herzegovina 1-2 Ukraine

Ukraine scored twice with just minutes remaining in regulation to snatch what seemed to be a sure victory from Bosnia and Herzegovina on Thursday. Bosnia controlled play for most of the match and took the lead in the 56th minute when Mykola Matviyenko turned in Amar Dedic’s shot into his own net. But a colossal defensive lapse cost the Bosnians a chance to make it a record four countries from the former Yugoslavia at Euro 2024. Roman Yaremchuk came off the bench to equalize in the 85th minute and teed up Artem Dovbyk’s sensational winning header three minutes later to turn the playoff semifinal on its head. Ukraine now faces Iceland with a third consecutive Euro appearance at stake.

Playoff final: Ukraine vs. Iceland, Tuesday 3:45 p.m. ET

Path C

GIORGI ARJEVANIDZE / AFP / Getty

Georgia 2-0 Luxembourg

Two clever finishes from Budu Zivzivadze in Tbilisi assured Georgia of a place in Path C’s final – and all without the help of suspended talisman Khvicha Kvaratskhelia. But it wasn’t that simple for the host. Luxembourg thought it equalized during the second half, only for the goal to be eventually snatched away due to Maxime Chanot’s apparent foul 45 seconds earlier. Luxembourg’s Chanot was controversially sent off for denying a clear goal-scoring opportunity, and Zivzivadze effectively ended the match six minutes later with his second strike. Kvaratskhelia is available for the final.

Greece 5-0 Kazakhstan

Anastasios Bakasetas lashed home a penalty, Dimitrios Pelkas headed into the net’s roof, Fotis Ioannidis tapped in from close range, and Dimitrios Kourbelis added another header. And that was all before halftime. Kazakhstan’s impressive 2022-23 Nations League campaign and notable Euro 2024 qualifying wins over Denmark, Northern Ireland (twice), and Finland suddenly seemed ages ago, as Greece recorded its biggest halftime lead since October 1978 (5-0 against Finland). Aleksandr Marochkin’s embarrassing own goal in the 85th minute made Kazakhstan’s day even worse.

Playoff final: Georgia vs. Greece, Tuesday 1:00 p.m. ET

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Premier League

Look: Nike unveils beautiful kit selection for Euro 2024, Copa America

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Nike released a stunning batch of threads ahead of Euro 2024 and Copa America on Monday.

Days after Adidas launched its lineup for the summer’s top two tournaments, Nike followed suit with an array of colorful designs.

The U.S. manufacturer also announced redesigns for Canada and Poland, even though they’ve yet to qualify for their respective tournaments. The Canucks face Trinidad and Tobago in a one-off Copa America qualifier on Saturday, while Poland must navigate a four-team playoff to reach Euro 2024.

(All images courtesy of Nike)

Euro 2024

Croatia

Home

The square-shaped design that gives Croatia its unique look gets a slight upgrade. The home shirt features larger squares than ever before.

Away

Croatia’s away shirt plays on the national flag, with the traditional checkered pattern now on a slant.

England

Home

Influenced by England’s 1966 training gear, the home shirt has a classic feel with a rich blue collar and gorgeous trim along the cuffs.

Away

England embraces a deep purple hue for its away selection. The crest stands out with a contrasting off-white tint that makes the three lions pop.

France

Home

France’s home shirt may have the biggest crest of all of Nike’s offerings. The oversized rooster defines this shirt as much as the royal blue that’s made France’s kits a crowd-pleaser.

Away

The pinstripes mirror the colors of France’s national flag and span the width of the shirt in a simple, yet elegant design.

Netherlands

Home

Nike could’ve offered anything orange here, and it would’ve been perfect. But the Netherlands has something bolder and better to wear. The zig-zag pattern adds edge.

Away

The orange collar and cuffs pop alongside the three shades of blue Nike has chosen to create the abstract design on this work of art.

Poland

Home

Poland dedicates premium real estate on the country’s home shirt to its imposing crest.

Away

Poland’s away shirt is a daring choice. The graphic treatment adds texture, giving it a rugged feel while separating from the red tones of years past.

Portugal

Home

With possibly the best home shirt in Nike’s collection, Portugal leans heavily into its traditional red-and-green motif with a polo collar and thick cuffs. The logo sits prominently as well. A smash hit.

Away

Here’s another winner. Portugal’s away strip has a stunning textile imprint that gives off a cool summer vibe.

Turkey

Home

This is a menacing look. Turkey will look like a whirring red army with these imposing shirts.

Away

The classic red band returns to Turkey’s away uniform. Like the others, it features an oversized crest in the middle of the shirt.

Copa America

Brazil

Home

Nike goes big with Brazil’s crest and adds an intricate design to the same yellow hue the Selecao have used for decades.

Away

Brazil’s secondary strip feels like the beach. A horizontal wavy pattern covering the entire shirt mimics the country’s picturesque coastline.

Canada

Home

The only blemish in Nike’s lineup. Why is there a circle around the swoosh? And why are the shoulders so much darker than the body? None of it makes sense.

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The 13 pinstripes are supposed to represent the 10 provinces and three territories that make up Canada. Unfortunately, the rest of the shirt looks incomplete.

United States

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The United States men’s national team gets a classic home shirt with patriotic detailing along the color and sleeves.

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The gradient works perfectly with the red shorts the U.S. will wear at the Copa America.

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