Sports
Fans React to Footage of Chase DeMoor Boxing
Controversial influencer Andrew Tate sent shockwaves through social media on Thursday evening when he confirmed that he would be making his boxing debut on a Misfits card in December in Dubai. As part of the announcement, the 38-year-old was also confirmed as the new CEO of the promotion. Tate replaces Misfits co-founder, KSI, in the role and the Londoner has not taken his demotion well.
Before he found an audience of millions on social media, Tate was a four-time world champion kickboxer. He boasts an impressive record in the sport, consisting of 76 wins (32 knockouts), 9 losses and one draw.
However, he has never before fought under boxing rules, which meant that the news that Tate will receive an immediate shot at Misfits Heavyweight Champion, Chase DeMoor, came as a surprise to many.
‘The Cobra’ hasn’t competed professionally in any discipline since stopping Cosmin Lingurar in the second round of a kickboxing bout back in December 2020. Tate faces ongoing legal cases in the UK, US and Romania centred around alleged misogynistic behaviour, although he insists he is innocent of all charges against him.
Having relocated to Dubai with brother, Tristan, after being released from judicial monitoring in Romania, Tate maintains that his full focus is now on his clash with DeMoor on the 20th of December.
Jumping in to face a reigning heavyweight champion in your first-ever boxing match after five years of combat sports inactivity might seem like something of a stretch, but fans on social media seeing DeMoor compete for the first time believe that Tate knows exactly what he is doing by accepting the fight.
DeMoor is a former American football player who rose to fame on the Netflix series ‘Too Hot to Handle’. The 29-year-old has less than three years of boxing experience to his name and went 0-4 in his first four sanctioned bouts.
In the aftermath of the Tate fight announcement, footage of some of those contests has now begun to do the rounds of social media. To say that Chase looks out of his depth in some of the clips would be putting it mildly.
The vast majority of the footage is taken from his professional debut in November 2022, where he was stopped in the second record by Josh Brueckner. DeMoor was caught cleanly on the chin on multiple occasions and looked unsteady on his feet throughout.
A number of fans are convinced that Tate had been watching the footage before accepting his upcooming fight with DeMoor. One argued: “You didn’t think Tate would accept a fight with someone who could actually BEAT him did you? He’s all packaging and image.”
Another agreed: “If Tate even gets punched once in the face, it should be considered a loss.” A third poster chimed in: “This fight shouldn’t be allowed to be sanctioned,” with a fourth declaring: “Lol… easy money”.
In fairness to DeMoor, though, he has improved markedly in recent bouts and is currently riding a five-fight win streak. Among those victories was a November 2024 triumph over Kelz to raise the Misfits Heavyweight Championship. He has since successfully defended the gold by knocking out Tank Tolman in May.
Even though he has been out of the ring for five years, Tate is still likely to be the toughest test of DeMoor’s in-ring career. Just a few years shy of his 40th birthday, time will tell if Tate has what it takes to defeat the Misfits champion.
Sports
Liverpool Open Talks to Sign RB Leipzig’s Yan Diomande
Liverpool have opened talks to secure a new signing, with the Reds in a strong position to secure his signature, according to David Ornstein.
The Reds are preparing for a busy summer transfer window after a disappointing 2025/2026 season. They are set to enter a new era under Andoni Iraola, who has agreed a deal to take over from Arne Slot as manager, GIVEMESPORT understands.
Liverpool do have a task on their hands in the upcoming window, with a number of players already confirmed to be leaving the club.
Andy Robertson, Mohamed Salah, and Ibrahima Konate will all depart Anfield following the expiration of their contracts.
All three have been key players for Liverpool over the years, so it could be a busy few months for the Liverpool hierarchy.
Liverpool in Advanced Talks to Sign Blackburn Midfielder on Two-Year Deal
Liverpool are already busy in the summer window.
Liverpool Open Transfer Talks
According to Ornstein, Liverpool have now opened talks to sign RB Leipzig winger Yan Diomande, with their pursuit stepping up.
It’s claimed that contact has been made with the Bundesliga club, and Liverpool are in the strongest position to secure his signature despite Leipzig being unwilling to sell.
Diomande, who has been described as ‘outrageous’, also has interest from Paris Saint-Germain, but they are not currently as advanced as Liverpool.
The young winger could slot in and replace Mohamed Salah, but it’s going to be an expensive deal to do.
The report claims that it would take a bid in excess of £112 million for Leipzig to part ways.
Sports
Scotland’s record vs Brazil at the World Cup
When the draw was made for the 2026 World Cup in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, Scotland fans were handed a familiar name to contend with.
The Scots made it back to international football’s biggest stage for the first time in 28 years after beating Denmark 4-2 in their final qualifying match. It was a match they had little room for slip-ups in, with a loss or a draw meaning they’d have to win their way through further matches in the playoffs to secure qualification – something Denmark weren’t so lucky in getting through.
Brazil, the five-time world champions, are one of the most iconic footballing nations on the planet, and an opponent Scotland know all too well from their World Cup history.
The two sides have met at the tournament on four previous occasions, each one a chapter in a long-running story that’s featured some of the most legendary players both nations have ever produced. From the Brazilian sides packed with players like Zico, Socrates, Dunga and Ronaldo, to Scotland squads built around the likes of Billy Bremner, Kenny Dalglish, and John Collins.
10 Greatest Scottish Players in Football History [Ranked]
Scotland have produced some true icons of the game and the very best of them have been ranked.
Scotland return to the World Cup stage in Group C this summer. They’ll play Haiti, followed by a tough match-up against Morocco, before facing the Selecao for the fifth time at a World Cup in the last match of the group, one that might require them to take points from Carlo Ancelotti’s men in order to progress from the group stage for the first time ever.
Before that showdown in Miami on the 24th of June, here’s a look back at every time these two sides have met at a World Cup.
1
1974 – West Germany
Scotland 0-0 Brazil
Scotland’s first World Cup encounter with Brazil came in 1974, and it was a physical, tense affair that produced no goals but plenty of drama.
The match featured some of the great names of 1970s football, Jairzinho and Rivelino lining up for the world champions, with Billy Bremner, Kenny Dalglish, and Peter Lorimer representing the Scots, yet the game descended into a grinding battle rather than a showcase of talent. Scotland stood firm throughout and came away with a hard-fought point against the reigning world champions, drawing 0-0. The result left them well-placed to qualify from the group, but a 1-1 draw against Yugoslavia was ultimately not enough. Scotland went home having not lost a single game, the cruel victim of goal difference.
Scottish National Anthem: Flower of Scotland Lyrics, Video & Meaning Explained
Scotland will be back at the World Cup for the first time since 1998, with the national anthem set to be sung loud and proud in North America.
2
1982 – Spain
Scotland 1-4 Brazil
The 1982 meeting in Seville is one of the most memorable Scotland have ever played at a World Cup, for the most bittersweet of reasons.
David Narey‘s thunderous long-range strike gave Scotland a shock early lead, silencing a Brazilian side containing some of the finest attacking talent the game has ever seen. Zico, Socrates and Falcao were all in that squad, and they responded brilliantly. Zico levelled before half-time, and the floodgates opened in the second half with goals from Oscar, Eder, and a late Falcao strike completing a 4-1 win. Narey’s goal has passed into Scottish folklore, even though what happened after wasn’t quite as memorable.
3
1990 – Italy
Scotland 0-1 Brazil
Italia ’90 began in the worst way possible for Scotland, losing their opening group game to Costa Rica. They redeemed themselves with a 2-1 win over Sweden, meaning their final encounter with Brazil in Turin was a must-win.
It was a tight and tense match, with Scotland defending resolutely against a Brazilian side that included Romario and Dunga in their starting lineup. Scotland goalkeeper Jim Leighton made a series of important saves to keep his side in the contest, but when Muller came off the bench and capitalised on a parry from Leighton in the 81st minute, Scotland’s World Cup dream was effectively over. The 1-0 defeat, combined with Costa Rica’s win over Sweden elsewhere in the group, confirmed Scotland’s exit at the group stage yet again.
4
1998 – France
Scotland 1-2 Brazil
Scotland’s most recent World Cup meeting with Brazil, and arguably the most dramatic, came in the opening game of the 1998 tournament at the Stade de France.
Brazil, featuring Ronaldo, Roberto Carlos, and Rivaldo, were overwhelming favourites, but Scotland more than matched them for long periods. An early Brazilian goal was cancelled out by a composed John Collins penalty, and for a period Scotland dared to dream. It was not to be. A Tommy Boyd own goal sealed defeat for the Scots, with the ball deflecting cruelly off his chest from a saved Cafu shot. Scotland went on to be eliminated in the group stage with just a point, and it would be 28 years before they returned to a World Cup.
5
2026 – United States, Canada, Mexico
Scotland’s long-awaited return to the World Cup sees them drawn against Brazil once again, with the two sides set to meet in what will be the final group game for both nations.
Depending on how the earlier fixtures against Haiti and Morocco go, it could be a match with enormous implications for Scotland’s hopes of reaching the knockout rounds for the first time in their history. Both sides have stars of their own. Neymar, Vinicius Junior and co, as ever, come into the tournament as one of the favourites, while Andy Roberson, Scott McTominay and John McGinn will all be hoping that 28 years of Scottish pain can be put to rest.
Scotland’s record vs Brazil at the World Cup
|
Tournament |
Result |
Venue |
Scottish Goalscorer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
1974 World Cup |
Scotland 0-0 Brazil |
Frankfurt, Germany |
N/A |
|
1982 World Cup |
Scotland 1-4 Brazil |
Seville, Spain |
David Narey |
|
1990 World Cup |
Scotland 0-1 Brazil |
Turin, Italy |
N/A |
|
1990 World Cup |
Scotland 1-2 Brazil |
Paris, France |
John Collins |
The 10 Best World Cup Winning Teams (Ranked)
Spain 2010, France 1998 or Brazil 1970? Who comes out on top?
Sports
How Much England Players Get Paid for Playing at the World Cup
The 2026 World Cup will become the most lucrative tournament in football history, with FIFA set to distribute a record £650 million across the competing nations, with £520 million set aside as dedicated prize money.
Everyone knows that England’s very best footballers are earning eye-watering sums at club level: Hundreds of thousands in wages per week, the image rights deals, the sponsorship arrangements and so on. But while the nation obsesses over what Harry Kane earns at Bayern Munich or what Jude Bellingham pockets at Real Madrid, the financial structure that governs international football is rarely put under the microscope.
How does pay actually work when a player pulls on an England shirt? What happens to the prize money FIFA hands out? Are the bonuses as generous as you might expect? And what do the players actually do with the money they earn from representing their country?
For a generation of English footballers whose combined weekly wage bill runs into the tens of millions, the answers are quite surprising:
Base Match Fees, Bonuses and How it Works
The FA doesn’t publicly disclose its player payment structure, but it’s understood that England players earn a base appearance fee of roughly £2,000 per game for representing the national side. That figure is, of course, dwarfed by what they earn week-to-week at their clubs, but the relatively modest amount is deliberate. Representing your country is treated as a matter of honour, not a payday.
The real money comes in the form of performance-related bonuses negotiated directly between the FA and the players’ group, and these scale significantly depending on how far England progress. For the 2026 tournament, reports from The Mirror suggest players could earn up to £500,000 each if England go all the way and lift the trophy in New Jersey on the 19th of July – not bad for five weeks’ work.
Thomas Tuchel, meanwhile, is said to be in line for a multi-million-pound bonus of his own if he delivers England’s first World Cup since 1966. FIFA pays prize money directly to the national federation rather than the players, so it’s the FA’s responsibility to distribute funds, covering staff costs, facilities and squad bonuses all from the same pot.
Commercial Rewards
Beyond official FA payments, a World Cup can be enormously valuable to players commercially. Brands and sponsors frequently hold back major advertising campaigns until the squad announcement is confirmed, at which point the chosen players see an immediate uplift in their market value and endorsement opportunities.
For household names like Harry Kane, Jude Bellingham and Declan Rice, tournament performances can trigger lucrative new deals or activation clauses already built into existing sponsorship contracts. A deep run, or an iconic moment in front of a global audience can be worth considerably more in commercial terms than any bonus the FA could provide.
Jude Bellingham Net Worth: Salary and Sponsorship Deals (2025)
The Real Madrid superstar is one of the highest-earning footballers in the world.
What England Players Got for the 2022 World Cup
Much like the 2026 World Cup, England players were reportedly in line for £500,000 apiece had they won the tournament in Qatar. It was a significant increase on the £215,000 on offer for the 2018 campaign in Russia. But 2018’s semi-final, their best finish at a World Cup since ‘66, was likely what prompted the FA to further incentivise their players.
England’s exit in the quarter-finals at the hands of France meant the full bonus pot went unclaimed, with the payments scaling down according to how far the team progresses.
Do England Players Donate Their Fees to Charity?
This is perhaps the least-known and most admirable aspect of England’s financial setup.
Since 2007, every England men’s player has donated their match fees in full to the England Footballers’ Foundation (EFF), rather than keeping the money personally. The tradition was established by a players’ committee that included David Beckham, Gary Neville and John Terry, and it has continued ever since.
England Rich List: Net Worth of Every Player in 26-Man World Cup 2026 Squad
How rich every player in England’s current squad is based on their net worth
By 2018, the collective total donated through the EFF had surpassed £5 million, distributed across causes including UNICEF, Help for Heroes, Cancer Research UK and The Bobby Moore Fund. When Kylian Mbappe received widespread praise during the 2018 World Cup for donating his match fees to charity, Neville was quick to point out on social media that England’s players had been doing exactly that for over a decade.
The EFF has since become one of football’s quieter but most consistent examples of collective generosity, a tradition that will continue in North America this summer, regardless of how far England go.
Useful World Cup links
x
-
Sports1 day agoFA to ‘Consider England Position’ on Thomas Partey 2026 World Cup Handshake
-
Sports24 hours agoSadio Mane: ‘Mo Salah Was Not Liverpool’s Best Finisher
-
Sports18 hours agoGilberto Silva Ranked Gerrard, Lampard and Scholes From Worst to Best
-
Metro2 days agoOgun is safe’ – Police debunk false banditry alert in Ifo, Ota
-
Sports1 day agoThe Reason Why Wales Players Pose For Bizarre Team Photos Before Matches
-
Sports2 days agoWhat Lionel Messi Said About Ousmane Dembele When They Were Barcelona Teammates
-
Sports2 days agoWhy Australia Wear Green And Gold In Sport
-
Sports2 days agoLiverpool Hold Talks to Sign PSG Star Iliya Zabarnyi






