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Player Ratings and Match Highlights

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Manchester United cruised to a 4-1 win over Wolves at Molineux to move into sixth in the Premier League table. Unsurprisingly for a team which had lost the previous eight games, Wolves looked devoid of confidence. Man United’s opening goal came after Andre held onto possession for too long and then, under pressure, played the ball into the path of Matheus Cunha. The former Wolves man squared for Bruno Fernandes to eventually score.

Cunha then had one cleared off the line by Gomes. Yet still, Manchester United weren’t able to control the game, and, to the delight of Wolves fans, the home side got their first goal in more than 500 minutes of football, when Jean-Ricner Bellegarde struck unchallenged on the penalty spot to level. Wolves undid all their hard work when their keeper Sam Johnstone came racing out of his goal. Diogo Dalot had the easy task of laying the ball onto Bryan Mbeumo to put United back into the lead. Mason Mount made it three with a well taken volley from a Fernandes through ball. By this point, Wolves once again looked rudderless. By the time Fernandes tucked away a penalty, Wolves fans were starting to leave the stadium.

Wolves v Man Utd Match Statistics

Wolves

Statistic

Man Utd

35%

Possession (%)

65%

6

Shots

27

2

Shots on target

10

1

Corners

9

4

Saves

1

3

Yellow Cards

1

Match Highlights

Wolves Player Ratings

Jhon Arias GK: Sam Johnstone – 6/10

Did well to deny Diogo Dalot and Bryan Mbeumo in the early stages and was generally kept busy by the nervous defence ahead of him, but made a bad error at the start of the second-half to gift United a goal.

DF: Yerson Mosquera – 6/10

Scrappy at times, but was buoyed by the Wolves equaliser.

DF: Emmanuel Agbadou – 5/10

Did what he could, but it wasn’t enough.

DF: Toti Gomes – 7/10

Forced to make several last-ditch challenges as Wolves held on for dear life at times. Made a crucial goal line clearance from Cunha.

RM: Ki-Jana Hoever – 6/10

A slow start for the wide man as Wolves looked like a rabbit in the headlights, but settled down after half an hour or so.

CM: Jean-Ricner Bellegarde – 7/10

Was on hand to get Wolves a huge confidence booster with a well-taken equaliser.

CM: Andre – 5/10

Involved in a real calamity when he held onto the ball too long in a vulnerable area and passed it straight to Matheus Cunha, which led to Wolves going a goal down, but dug deep to improve.

CM: Ladislav Krejcí – 5/10

A real struggle for the midfielder amidst a fanbase at breaking point.

LM: David Moller Wolfe – 5/10

Not able to influence the game in any real way as Wolves huffed and puffed but blew nothing down.

CF: Jorgen Strand Larsen – 3/10

As for so much of the season, the striker was virtually starved of any meaningful service. When Wolves did get the ball in dangerous areas he didn’t make the right run.

CF: Jhon Arias – 4/10

Played in the manner one would expect a striker would in a team that just cannot get a win.

SUB: Fer Lopez – 5/10

Brought on with Wolves lagging at 3-1 and wasn’t able to change the outcome.

SUB: Tolu Arokodare – 5/10

Given a run out but not a pleasant experience in front of a frustrated fan base.

SUB: Hugo Bueno – 5/10

Difficult situation whereby he was given minutes, but in a team devoid of any belief.

SUB: Mateus Mane – 5/10

May have preferred to have stayed on the bench in hindsight.

SUB: Jackson Tchatchoua – N/A

Brought on too late to be given a rating.

Manchester United Player Ratings

Bryan Mbeumo GK: Senne Lammens – 6/10

Untroubled for large periods of the game, so difficult to judge the goalkeeper.

DF: Noussair Mazraoui – 5/10

Despite having very little to do, he was unable to dominate the penalty area at crucial times.

DF: Ayden Heaven – 5/10

Had a nervy start, on one occasion taking the ball off of his goalkeeper’s foot, but was thankful that Wolves offered little going forward.

DF: Luke Shaw – 5/10

Simply not able to lead the back line to a clean sheet, would not have been happy to see Bellegarde unmarked before making it 1-1.

RM: Amad Diallo – 5/10

Simply not involved anyway near enough on the flank, doesn’t look like someone who can play in a wide position that requires him to track back.

CM: Casemiro – 5/10

Capable on the ball, which is just as well, because, once again, this was a showcase for the Brazilian’s inability to run.

CM: Bruno Fernandes – 8/10

Was the benefactor of a serious error by Wolves to give Manchester United the lead. Always looking to make things happen.

LM: Diogo Dalot – 6/10

Really ought to have given the visitors the lead, but was denied by the Wolves keeper Sam Johnstone, but delivered some good balls into the box.

AM: Bryan Mbeumo – 7/10

Had a few early strikes on goal and eventually got on the scoresheet when the Wolves keeper Johnstone came charging out of his goal.

AM: Mason Mount – 6/10

Just not involved anywhere near enough in the game for a Manchester United attack facing a team without a win in the first-half, but took his goal well in the second half.

CF: Matheus Cunha – 7/10

Found the telling ball to find Fernandes to give United the lead. Although he almost made a mess of that and was unfortunate to have an effort cleared off of the line. Some nice touches.

SUB: Leny Yoro – 5/10

Brought on with the game all but won, so tricky to properly assess the defender.

SUB: Lisandro Martínez – 5/10

Given a late run out, United fans would have been glad to see him back in action at a time when there was no danger in the game.

SUB: Kobbie Mainoo – 5/10

Given a late run out, much to the delight of the United fans.

SUB: Joshua Zirkzee – 5/10

Brought on too late in a game that was already won.

SUB: Patrick Dorgu – 5/10

The match was all but over when he came on.

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Virgil van Dijk Slammed For Comments After Netherlands’ World Cup Exit v Morocco

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The Netherlands crashed out of the 2026 World Cup on Monday evening as they suffered an agonising penalty shootout defeat to reigning AFCON champions, Morocco.

Ronald Koeman’s side were one of the most impressive teams at the tournament in the group stage, scoring 10 goals and going unbeaten across their three matches.

Despite finishing top of Group F, they were handed a very tricky last 32 tie against Morocco.

The Netherlands looked like they were going to go through when Cody Gakpo gave them the lead with 18 minutes remaining. However, Oranje couldn’t hang on as Issa Diop’s goal in stoppage-time restored parity.

The match went to a penalty shootout and the Netherlands crashed out after Justin Kluivert, Quinten Timber and Crysencio Summerville were unable to score their spot-kicks.

Virgil van Dijk in action for the Netherlands at the World Cup Pawel Andrachiewicz/PressFocus via Reuters

The Netherlands, despite being so impressive in the group stage, decided to play a completely different way against Morocco. Instead of playing a free-flowing, attacking style of football, Koeman’s side decided to defend deep and let Morocco have the majority of the ball.

That style of play limited the Netherlands to 30% and just three shots on target. Ultimately, it didn’t play off as the Netherlands crashed out of the competition.

Liverpool star Virgil van Dijk, who played the full match but did not take a spot-kick, is adamant that the game plan worked. He told NOS just after the game, per vi.nl: “[It’s] Very difficult to analyze it now.

“An intense match. I think we were well organized defensively. They basically couldn’t find the open man between the lines. So the game plan worked, of course. I think we scored a good goal. Ultimately, in injury time, you get pushed back. Then it goes to penalties; unfortunately, we get knocked out.

“If you look at almost all the big teams at the World Cup: they also just drop back and they also wait for the right moment to apply pressure. We trained hard on this for two days; at times it went well. Of course, there are always things that can be improved, but anyway: that doesn’t help us right now.”

Van Dijk’s belief that the game plan worked has not gone down well with football fans. One said: “Tone deaf from someone of his caliber.” Another commented: “What major teams are dropping deep? The only teams dropping deep I’ve seen are the true underdogs without the quality.”

A third wrote: “Yes Virgil, gameplan succeeded greatly! Much success! Managed to get a draw after parking the bus for 90 minutes, conceding after going 1-0 up and then missing 3 pens. Good process!”

A fourth said: “What a clown”, while a fifth called the Liverpool star “Virgil Van Delusional.”

You scored

out of 20

Ronald Koeman Defends Defensive Tactics

Ronald Koeman Pro Shots/Sipa USA via Reuters Connect

Koeman has come under fire following the Netherlands’ defeat, with Zlatan Ibrahimovic blaming him for their exit. Despite the criticism, he is adamant that he was right to set up his side to play defensively.

He said after the match, per the Guardian: “You can think whatever you like but we gave away much less against a team that was stronger than [group stage opponents] Sweden and Tunisia. If I had to do it again I’d do it all the same way. As the Dutch coach when the equaliser is scored I am always going to be scolded for the fact I chose five defenders.

“But you criticise, which is your right. You watch from the sidelines, I’m here with the team and, once again, I’d do it again.”

Morocco will now play co-hosts Canada for a place in the quarter-final. The match will take place at Houston Stadium on Saturday, July 4.

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AI Names & Ranks 15 Greatest Heavyweight Boxers in History

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In today’s day and age, the boxing world has some fantastic competitors across multiple weight classes. However, it is, and has always been, the heavyweights that have drawn the most attention and money towards the sport over the years.

Boxers like Tyson Fury, Oleksandr Usyk, and Anthony Joshua are some of the biggest names in the sport today, and are establishing themselves as household names who will go down in the list of greats in boxing history. However, how do they compare to some of the greats, and do they make the cut just yet?

Well, according to AI, only two of them are worthy of making the top 15 list of greatest heavyweight boxers of all time. So without further ado, let’s see who is worthy of making said list.

15 greatest heavyweight boxers of all time ranked by AI (15-11)

Position

Boxer

Professional record

15.

Jack Dempsey

63-6-9

14.

Wladimir Klitschko

64-5

13.

Tyson Fury

35-2-1

12.

Jack Johnson

54-11-8 (4 NC)

11.

Sonny Liston

50-4

10

Rocky Marciano

Boxing record: 49-0

Rocky Marciano

Rocky Marciano is one of two members of this list to have gone his entire career undefeated. After defeating Joe Louis for his heavyweight championship, the only way was up for Marciano, who went on to retire with a career record of 49-0.

Of those 49 wins, he won 43 of them via knockout, and could stake a claim higher on this list. For only six fights to go the distance is quite remarkable, so it’s only right that the American lands in the top 10 on the list of greatest heavyweights in the sport’s history.

9

Mike Tyson

Boxing record: 50-7 (2 NC)

Mike Tyson Weigh-In Physique

Iron Mike Tyson takes home a record of 50 wins, with 44 of those coming via knockout, and seven losses to his name. The 58-year-old found himself going into a fight most recently in a situation where he was not the sole centre of attention. Both fighters were the subject of conversation for his meeting with Jake Paul, where the 29-year-old won via unanimous decision in what many blasted as a lacklustre event.

However, we cannot forget just how good Mike Tyson was back in his prime, and we mustn’t let the shambles that was the Jake Paul fight cast a shadow over his iconic and legendary career.

8

Evander Holyfield

Boxing record: 44-10-2 (1 NC)

Evander Holyfield

Evander Holyfield goes down as one man who made boxing history, but it’s not for actions of his own in the ring despite being an undisputed champion.

Holyfield boasts victories over names like George Foreman and even Mike Tyson, with one of his victories becoming one of the most infamous boxing moments ever as Iron Mike bit his ear, taking a chunk out of it in the process. A run of defeats when past his peak harmed his chances at ranking higher on the list, with Holyfield scoring 29 knockouts, finishing with a record of 44-10-2.

7

Lennox Lewis

Boxing record: 41-2-1

Lennox Lewis in training

Lennox Lewis was an astounding combination of a man who could be agile and light on his feet while standing six feet and five inches tall. Lewis won gold at the 1988 Olympics and boasted an impressive statistic of beating every man he had ever faced in the ring, including Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield.

The 58-year-old has differed from some of the greats of his time as he has never been swayed by the temptation to return for one last dance the way some of the greats from his era have. Before Oleksandr Usyk achieved it by beating Tyson Fury, Lewis was the last undisputed heavyweight champion of the boxing division, which happened way back in 1999.

6

Joe Frazier

Boxing record: 32-4-1

The year 1971 saw Joe Frazier compete in what many labelled as the ‘Fight of the Century’ when he met Muhammad Ali at Madison Square Garden. Until he met George Foreman in Jamaica, Frazier had been on an unprecedented streak of 29 fights where he claimed victory, but results soon began to drop following that defeat.

Boasting an impressive record of wins, the heavyweight only won three of his final seven fights, losing three and drawing his final meeting with Floyd Cummings.

5

George Foreman

Boxing record: 76-5

George Foreman

George Foreman has managed to be the face of more than just boxing, being the marketing face of the Foreman Grill. However, he was part of one of boxing’s most legendary nights, known as the “Rumble in the Jungle.”

After a 10-year hiatus from the sport, he returned with an astounding accomplishment of 24 straight victories, 22 of which came through knockout. Sadly, however, his career ended in defeat when he lost to Shannon Briggs in 1997 by majority decision. That doesn’t take away from the fact, though, he was incredibly 40-0 heading into the huge fight with Muhammad Ali, which he lost via knockout.

4

Oleksandr Usyk

Boxing record: 25-0

Oleksandr Usyk

Ahead of his apparent final-ever fight in a truly illustrious career, Oleksandr Usyk comes in at fourth, according to AI.

After dominating the cruiserweight division and unifying all the belts in the process, the Ukrainian decided to follow in the footsteps of legends before him and move up to heavyweight, where he then went on to dominate and unify all the belts once again.


Lennox Lewis, Muhammad Ali, Oleksandr Usyk


Gareth A Davies Ranks His Top 10 Heavyweights of All Time – No Tyson Fury

The well respected boxing journalist has not included either Tyson Fury or Wladimir Klitschko in his top 10.

Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua, Derek Chisora, Daniel Dubois have all shared the ring with Usyk at heavyweight and all have fallen to The Cat.

With just one fight left, likely to be Deontay Wilder or even MMA’s Jon Jones, Usyk has already cemented himself as one of the true heavyweight greats.

3

Larry Holmes

Boxing record: 69-6

Larry Holmes fighting

Larry Holmes may have felt some pressure on his shoulders with the expectations placed on him to emerge in the world of boxing. Holmes was once a training partner of the great Muhammad Ali, and his sparring sessions must have come in handy as his skill gets him on this list, too.

His crowning achievement comes through his 19 consecutive title fight victories over seven years. Just like Foreman, he also built up an incredible unbeaten run, heading into his fight with Michael Spinks with a record of 48-0. However, what followed was three straight defeats, two to Spinks and one to Mike Tyson. He did then recover and win six in a row before losing to Evander Holyfield. His last fight came in 2002, which was a victory against Eric Esch.

2

Joe Louis

Boxing record: 66-3

Joe Louis

Joe Louis goes down in the sport’s history as not only one of the greatest ever heavyweights to lace up a pair of gloves, but also one of the hardest punchers to ever take up the sport.

After racing to a 24-0 record, Louis would lose his first fight in 1936, before then going on a 14-year unbeaten streak to take his record to an incredible 58-1. Defeat to Ezzard Charles was then followed up by eight consecutive wins, before his final appearance in the ring took place in 1951. Ironically enough, his final fight in the sport came against the man featured before him on this list, Rocky Marciano, with the contest ending in defeat for Louis via TKO in the eighth round.

1

Muhammad Ali

Boxing record: 56-5

Muhammad Ali

Who else but this man to top this list? The words float like a butterfly sting like a bee rang true with so many in the world of boxing, and still do to this day.

Ali not only goes down as one of the greatest to ever compete in the world of boxing, but he goes down as one of the greatest sporting personalities. Facing off with some of the greatest in the sport, some of whom are on this list, was exactly how Ali made himself to be a name that would circulate for generations to come. No one likes boxing without liking Muhammad Ali.

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Jurgen Klopp Takes Arsenal Dig as Germany Have Goal Ruled Out v Paraguay

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Jurgen Klopp’s comments about Arsenal after Jonathan Tah had a goal controversially ruled out by VAR in Germany’s World Cup exit vs Paraguay have gone viral.

Germany were easily expected to overcome Paraguay in their last 32 tie at Boston Stadium.

However, despite having the lion’s share of possession in the first 45 minutes, it was the underdogs who took the lead just before half-time through Julio Enciso.

Germany needed to up their game in the second half, and it didn’t take long for them to restore parity as Arsenal’s Kai Havertz found the back of the net.

There were no further goals for the remainder of regulation time as the game went to extra-time. Jonathan Tah thought he had given his side the lead in the 103rd minute, only for his goal to be controversially ruled out.

The match went all the way to penalties, and it was the South American side who emerged victorious thanks to Jose Canale’s sudden death winner.

Germany's Jonathan Tah heads home vs Paraguay REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

The decision to rule out Tah’s goal was extremely controversial. Moments before Tah headed home, Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill briefly fell to ground following contact from Germany substitute Waldemar Anton.

Gill had got to his feet by the time the ball reached Tah, but he could not do anything to stop the Bayern Munich defender from finding the back of the net.

Fortunately for Paraguay, VAR deemed that Anton had committed a foul on Gill and disallowed the goal, leaving Germany incensed. Julian Nagelsmann in particular was outraged and was shown a yellow card for his protests.

Former Liverpool manager Klopp was covering the match as a pundit for Magneta TV, and he did not agree with the decision as he made reference to Premier League champions Arsenal. He said:

“If the goal is illegal, then Arsenal won’t be English champions. They’ve scored 60 percent of their goals that way. We win the game when the ball goes in. So, of course, this is brutal.”

He added: “There are worse things than defeats in sports. But there was only one goal, one dream, and that has been shattered. It was dramatic. There are 500,000 ways to win a football match. You just have to find one.”

You scored

out of 20

Alan Shearer Slams Officials

Germany's Jonathan Tah celebrates his goal vs Paraguay, which was later disallowed IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Winslow Townson

Alan Shearer slammed the decision and claimed that Gill had ‘conned’ the referee. He said, per the BBC: “I don’t agree with that decision at all. The keeper falls to the ground on a slight touch and it’s very soft. I thought it was a terrible decision.

“You have to understand it is a contact sport, the goalkeeper has conned the referee and the VAR. The way he went down was pathetic.”

Former Premier League assistant referee Darren Cann also believed the goal shouldn’t have been ruled out. Just before the decision was made, he said:

“This is soft, in my opinion. But judging by what we’ve seen in the tournament so far, it wouldn’t surprise me if they do rule it out. We’ve seen two or three goals ruled out for very small offences. This is hardly anything.

“It’s a small block on the goalkeeper, but for me, it’s not enough. I suspect they will be ruling this out. We feel this should not be disallowed.”

Paraguay will now take on either France or Sweden in the last 16 of the competition. The match will be played at Philadelphia Stadium on Saturday, July 4.

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