Phil is an experienced sports journalist, editor and content creator with more than nine years of experience in the industry. This includes working for Football London, talkSPORT and Football Insider before returning to Give Me Sport in October 2025.
Mike Dean claims that Casemiro’s goal for Manchester United should not have stood, claiming that the assistant referee “guessed” his decision.
The Red Devils were facing Nottingham Forest at the City Ground on Saturday afternoon in a contest that sparked controversy as the Brazilian midfielder gave them the lead during the first half.
Planting a firm header past the goalkeeper to make it 1-0, the goal itself was steeped in chaos due to the decision to award a corner in the first place.
Man United’s Corner Chaos Works in Casemiro’s Favour
The decision to award Man United a corner was given after it was adjudged that Nicolo Savona had let the ball go out of play.
However, replays suggested that this was not the case, with the ball seemingly not crossing the line. Michael Dawson described the incident on Sky Sports’ Soccer Saturday, before Mike Dean delivered his expert opinion from an officiating point of view. Dean explained:
“The assistant referee is looking through the two posts and the player and can’t see it. I’ve looked at the replay of the first Arsenal goal too and that’s not out because it’s a guess.
“The assistant referee can’t see through the two posts and the goalkeeper, they just can’t. The ball is nowhere near out, it’s just a guess from the assistant referee.”
Despite the controversial nature of how the corner was awarded, Man United supporters wouldn’t have minded. That goal was Casemiro’s third of the season so far and his third goal contribution in just two games, with the Brazilian star enjoying something of a late-season resurgence.
The Red Devils came into the game with three wins in a row and hopes of making it four. However, Forest had other ideas as Morgan Gibbs-White and Savona netted early in the second half to give the hosts the lead.
For Sean Dyche and the Tricky Trees’ fans, those two efforts will no doubt be seen as justice after being left fuming by the first-half shenanigans.
Max Verstappen is comfortably one of the best drivers on the Formula 1 grid and is admired by fans, team principals, and his fellow drivers alike.
To be successful, there is a strong argument that you have to believe you are the best, and it is not unreasonable to suggest that Verstappen holds this opinion of himself.
He’s a four-time world champion with Red Bull with one of the most ruthless wheel-to-wheel driving styles on the grid, and he has gone toe-to-toe with some truly incredible drivers, including the seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.
That electric and daring 2021 season will never be forgotten, the seesawing of points between the two and the hard racing which culminated in shocking collisions, including Verstappen’s infamous 50G crash at Silverstone and their clash at Monza, when the Dutchman’s wheel ended up on the Brit’s head.
Hamilton has challenged the Dutchman, and while their fortunes have changed since 2021, the two have still been battling each other into 2026 with some fantastic overtakes in the Austrian Grand Prix reminiscent of their electric championship fight. At 41 years old, the Brit is showing no signs of bowing out of the sport as he searches for his coveted and record-breaking eighth championship, taking victory for the first time as a Ferrari driver in the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix.
With Verstappen’s prowess widely recognised, it does raise an interesting question: which of his contemporaries does he rank highly?
Who Max Verstappen ‘Really Rates’
Philippe Nanchino via Reuters
Speaking on the Race F1 podcast, Viaplay commentator Nelson Valkenburg believes that the 28-year-old only considers two current drivers to be genuine threats. Naturally, one of them is Hamilton, but the other is a little more eyebrow-raising and that person is Kimi Antonelli.
The 19-year-old Italian is the current championship leader with Mercedes, beating his more experienced teammate George Russell by 50 points as of the Austrian Grand Prix, with the Brit sitting in third behind Hamilton at present.
Verstappen could’ve made a lot of money if he agreed to the removal of the clause.
Antonelli has received comparisons to Verstappen’s younger self as the Dutchman became the youngest driver in the sport’s history to start a race and the youngest to ever win a race, aged 17 and 18 respectively. He is seen by many as Mercedes’ new protege following the departure of Hamilton, being hailed as a ‘generational talent’ in only his second season.
Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff has long been an admirer of Verstappen and there have been rumours simmering about a potential switch to the Silver Arrows. Speaking on the prospect of Verstappen and Antonelli leading the line for the German manufacturer, Valkenberg said: “There’s so much respect there. If I look at Verstappen there, I think there are two drivers on this grid that he really, really, really rates alongside himself, and that is Lewis [Hamilton] and Kimi [Antonelli].
Jakub Porzycki via Reuters
“The emergence of Antonelli and the realisation of what Toto Wolff saw earlier might keep Verstappen in F1 for longer than he initially anticipated. I think it tickles him completely. He’s dealt with Hamilton, but Hamilton is a little older.
“If I look at it from the outside, I see Verstappen thinking, ‘I have to be at my best with this kid’, and that’s a lot of fun. I think it has changed the equation a little bit for him.”
It remains to be seen whether Verstappen can master the new regulations, which he is an outspoken critic of, and brand the season with his own usual spark of brilliance. If there’s one thing that 2025 taught us, it’s this: Don’t write Verstappen out of the equation too soon.
Gilberto Mora is on track to be the breakout star of the 2026 World Cup as Mexico look to have a true wonderkid on their hands.
At just 17, he is already making waves. That includes becoming Mexico’s youngest ever starter at a World Cup and the second-youngest in history behind Pele to start a knockout game.
His burgeoning career is there for all to see; he was eye-catching in the knockout victory over Ecuador and the attacking midfielder clearly possesses a wealth of talent that is already translating to the big stage.
A horde of elite clubs in Europe are already eyeing a deal; having recently signed a new deal to keep him in Mexico until 2029, a reported release clause of €20million will spark considerable interest, but they will all have to wait until he turns 18 in October before any official deal can be struck.
Gilberto Mora’s Position & Style of Play
REUTERS/Pedro Nunes
Date of Birth:
14/10/2008
Position:
Attacking Midfield
Height:
1.68m
Preferred Foot:
Right
A right-footed attacking midfielder, Mora boasts all the traits that you would expect from a diminutive, creative player coupled with all the grit and desire that his country have displayed at the 2026 World Cup.
Interestingly, his heat maps from the U20 World Championships and Liga MX campaign illustrate someone who operates in the half spaces on the left of midfield. He has shown an ability to do so on either flank, but he often drifts inside, especially from the left, just as he did against Ecuador early in the game as he fired a wicked shot just past the post after cutting in.
At club level, he has been gifted the freedom to drift from central attacking areas to out onto the left and that same freedom was afforded in Javier Aguirre’s team, as his heat maps showcase a wide range of movement all over the pitch. Hailed by pundits and his club’s owner, he has already made a grand impression.
Former Mexican international and now FOX pundit, Alberto García Aspe, spoke after the Czech Republic game saying: “We kept saying we wanted to see more of him, and the truth is he proved he’s a star. The pass for the second goal was impressive.”
“He doesn’t train like a prospect, he trains like someone who already belongs here.”
Gilberto Mora’s Stats (Liga MX 2025/26)
Despite his age, he has already racked up 53 appearances for Club Tijuana. Across that time, he’s recorded 10 goals and three assists, featuring heavily in the first-half of the 2025/26 Liga MX Apertura campaign. However, he failed to feature much in the Clausura Liga MX part of the season due to physical overload and suffering pubalgia — the same ailment that troubled Lamine Yamal last season.
Yet, his figures in Liga MX demonstrate his quality. Clear figures such as six goals in 20 Apertura league appearances are the eye-catching numbers, but looking deeper, it illustrates a more unique profile. Not only did he outperform his expected goals by 1.38, his goal conversion rate was a clinical 23 per cent.
On top of that, he was fouled nearly two times per game, and recorded 88% passing accuracy in the Apertura with 18.9 passes per game that also included 0.9 key passes per game. Capable on the ball, his figures reflect his strong profile as an attacking midfielder that leaves plenty of room to grow and develop even further.
Whilst it is a very small sample size, his World Cup figures across three games (South Africa, the Czech Republic and Ecuador) are hugely encouraging — his key passes have risen from 0.9 per game in the Apertura to 1.3 at the World Cup, his passing accuracy grew from 88% to 90% despite the significant jump in opposition quality, and he is producing a higher long ball percentage and more successful dribbles. Illustrating how he has risen to the level.
Gilberto Mora Liga MX Apertura 2025/26
Statistic
Figure
Appearances
20
Goals
6
Assists
1
Conversion Rate
23%
Key Passes Per Game
0.9
Passing Accuracy
88%
Fouled Per Game
1.9
*Figures from SofaScore
Who is Gilberto Mora similar to?
REUTERS/Raquel Cunha via Action Images
With his size and frame and creative ability, there are a number of past and current players he can be compared to. One comparison already made by ESPN Liga MX pundit Sebastian Abreu is that he resembles former Argentina attacker Pablo Aimar.
Furthermore, he suggested that if he continued on his current trajectory that he could match Luka Modrić‘s career, high praise indeed, but there is certainly a high ceiling for Mora to aspire to.
Andy Murray. Novak Djokovic. Rafael Nadal. Roger Federer. Four players who defined men’s tennis throughout the 21st century. They have amassed more than 300 career titles between them, including an incredible 69 Grand Slam crowns since the 2003 Australian Open.
Just three of those major titles belong to Murray, who can arguably count himself unfortunate to have competed in the same era as the other three, particularly Nadal and Federer. The Scot also had the difficult task of facing both players on their strongest surfaces – Nadal on clay and Federer on grass.
The rivalries shared between the quartet are widely regarded as some of the finest the sport has ever seen. In total, they faced one another 235 times, with 74 of those contests coming at Grand Slam tournaments. Their meetings included 33 Grand Slam finals and 26 semi-finals, more than any other group of four players in tennis history.
Murray eventually finished his career with three Grand Slam trophies to his name, lifting the US Open once and Wimbledon twice. However, he was frequently stopped in the latter stages of major tournaments by Federer and Nadal, and it’s reasonable to believe he would have collected significantly more titles had he not played during such a remarkable era.
Andy Murray’s Rivalry With Roger Federer & Rafael Nadal
Although Federer and Nadal enjoyed an evenly matched rivalry, Murray found it much harder to consistently challenge either player. He faced Nadal nine times on clay and managed just two victories, with both wins coming at the Madrid Open.
His head-to-head record against Federer on grass compares more favourably, although the pair only met three times on the surface. Murray claimed victory once, while Federer won the other two encounters.
Nadal has recently spoken about his rival and why he’s still playing professional tennis at the grand age of 39.
Federer came out on top in their biggest meeting on grass, defeating Murray in the 2012 Wimbledon final to lift the championship. Murray gained revenge only a few months, though, later by beating the Swiss star in the gold medal match at the London 2012 Olympic Games.
Their final meeting on grass arrived in the 2015 Wimbledon semi-finals. Federer defeated Murray in four sets before falling to Djokovic in the championship match.
Nadal earned the nickname ‘King of Clay’ after winning the French Open an extraordinary 14 times, accounting for more than half of his overall Grand Slam haul. Federer, meanwhile, established himself as the dominant force on Wimbledon’s grass courts, claiming eight singles titles, including five consecutive championships from 2003 to 2007.
Andy Murray’s Verdict on Federer on Grass vs Nadal on Clay
When asked whether facing Nadal on clay or Federer on grass represented the greater challenge, Murray gave a clear answer.
“I would say Nadal on clay is the hardest. Definitely.”
Interestingly, Nadal and Federer once played an exhibition match in 2007 on a specially designed court featuring clay on one side and grass on the other. Nadal edged the contest in a dramatic 12-10 tie-break, adding further weight to Murray’s view that the Spaniard was the tougher opponent on his preferred surface.