
Ten Hag makes successful debut after Bayer Leverkusen wins 4-0 in German Cup
Patrik Schick, Brazilian wing back Arthur, debutant Christian Kofane and Álex Grimaldo all scored, but they assumed control only after Großaspach captain Volkan Celikwas was sent off in the 66th with two bookings in as many minutes.

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Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Chelsea must build on Club World Cup glory to thrive in new Premier League campaign
The message from Enzo Maresca was clear: don't think we've done anything yet, because we haven't. The football Chelsea produced in pre-season wins over Bayer Leverkusen and AC Milan was breathtaking at times — a marked improvement on last season, and a continuation of their free-flowing state at the Club World Cup. Maresca rather burst that bubble, though, urging caution against reading too much into those games. 'If you remember our pre-season in the USA last season, we played seven games and lost six of them,' he said. 'Pre-season, they are not real games.' While that is not strictly true — they are real games — the Italian's point stands. Chelsea are in a good place after winning the Conference League, becoming world champions, and looking so exciting pre-season, but they cannot cash that in as exchange for Premier League points. Maresca is right to urge caution against talking as though the season is already going well. His team looked like Premier League title contenders until as late as December last season, and if he believes what he keeps saying — that Chelsea are a better team now than they were then — the proof will be in the pudding: in hitting the ground running and putting together a strong string of results. The additions of impressive signings such as Joao Pedro, who looks at home already, and Jamie Gittens mean Chelsea's squad looks in greater shape than it did a year ago. Liam Delap and Estevao Willian have also made promising starts to life at Stamford Bridge. There are other reasons to be positive about how Chelsea could fare this season, which begins with the visit of Crystal Palace on Sunday. Chiefly, a youthful squad is another year older, another year more experienced. Those who are not newbies know precisely what Maresca wants from them and how to compete at the highest level. They are, after all, world champions now. The manager is also clearer in his ideals, and more certain of who he wants to play where and how. He spoke in his press conference on Friday in great detail about why a new centre-back is needed, and why those currently available to him will not suit the role that now needs filling following Levi Colwill's serious knee injury. A youthful squad is another year older, another year more experienced. New signings in attack should help relieve the burden that Cole Palmer felt in attack for much of last term. His goal drought between January and May was not compensated for by others, and never felt likely to be. Perhaps this season the load will be more fairly shared. Chelsea must be wary, though, not only of the increased threat from the free-spending champions Liverpool, three-time runners-up hellbent on winning one (Arsenal) and a rejuvenated Manchester City, but also of their own limitations. Theirs has been the shortest pre-season campaign of any of the 20 Premier League clubs, their preparations for the new season operating on a totally delayed timescale due to their success in the Club World Cup. It is a season that offers more promise than any prior campaign under the Clearlake Capital and Todd Boehly ownership. What started as a barmy project is now paying dividends. If they can start well, keep up, avoid burnout, and get better as the campaign unravels, this has the makings of a very fine season indeed for Chelsea.
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
- Yahoo
How to watch Manchester United vs Arsenal: TV channel and live stream for Premier League today
Manchester United host last season's Premier League runners-up, Arsenal, in a blockbuster clash to kick off the new campaign. The Red Devils could line up their new £200m attacking trio of Bryan Mbeumo, Matheus Cunha, and Benjamin Sesko, as manager Amorim looks to reverse last season's disappointing 15th-place finish. Last season, this fixture ended in a 1-1 draw, with Bruno Fernandes giving United the lead before Declan Rice equalised for Arsenal. Arsenal, meanwhile, appear set to deploy their new number nine, Victor Gyokeres, who has been tipped to help push the Gunners over the line and finally secure the elusive Premier League title. Mikel Arteta has also strengthened his squad with several new signings and could hand debuts to Martin Zubimendi and Noni Madueke from the start. A victory for Arteta's side would serve as a strong statement of intent, as a quick start in the season could position Arsenal perfectly for a sustained title challenge. After ending pre-season with a 3-0 win over Athletic Club, they should be able to carry plenty of momentum into the match. Here's everything you need to know about how to watch this one unfold... How to watch Manchester United vs Arsenal TV channel: In the UK, the game will be televised on Sky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports Premier League, with coverage starting at 4pm BST ahead of a 4.30pm kick-off. Live stream: Sky customers can access the match on Sky Go and on the Sky Sports app, while it is also available via Now TV's Sports membership. Live coverage: You can follow all the action with Standard Sport's LIVE blog, with expert analysis from Simon Collings at the ground!


New York Times
42 minutes ago
- New York Times
Match of the Day review: Same product, slightly different appearance, but it just felt right
The last time that Match of the Day had a new permanent presenter, Oasis were one of the biggest bands in the country, baggy jeans were fashionable, Arsenal had just finished runners-up in the Premier League and Sunderland were back in the top flight. So, as Mark Chapman will say later, the more things change, the more things stay the same. For 1999 and Gary Lineker, read 2025 and Chapman, Gabby Logan and Kelly Cates, a trio of new presenters who, appropriately for the modern game, will adopt a squad rotation system on hosting duties for Match of the Day's Saturday and Sunday shows (the MOTD 2 name has been dropped). Advertisement Lineker's departure after 26 years as presenter gave the BBC an ideal opportunity, if they wished, to revamp the country's longest-running football show. So what did we get from this exciting first edition of the new-look show? Did Chapman skydive into the studio? Was the running order decided live on air by Alan Shearer picking balls out of a bag while wearing Lineker's famous white pants from 2016? Well, no, it was basically exactly the same as before. They've rebadged it, you fool. Same name, same music, same studio, same format, just with a couple of new (ish) faces in host Chapman and newly-signed pundit Wayne Rooney, alongside Shearer. The intro even came straight from the Lineker playbook. 'Evening, the Premier League is back and Match of the Day is back,' Chapman began. 'Now you may have seen and heard that there is a big change to the show this season, and that is…Wayne Rooney has joined us as a regular pundit. 'Some things don't change, though…Alan is still here. And he is absolutely delighted that Sunderland are first up, back in the top flight and at home to West Ham, with Guy Mowbray.' A no-frills welcome which purportedly references the big Match of the Day news that everyone knows about, followed by a punchline that reveals something more minor has changed, and we're going to point that out instead. Everyone laugh, quick dig at Shearer, straight into the action. Textbook. Match of the Day is a show that embodies characteristics most other mainstream UK football shows don't; it's traditional, consistent, familiar and easy viewing. No sensationalism, no forced narratives and no melodramatic tribalism in sight. They could try to reinvent the wheel/ball with some deep tactical dives or contentious debates, but all that would do is alienate the core audience, and the show would probably become irrelevant. Advertisement That irrelevancy may come with the passing of time and the changing of habits from one generation to the next, but for now, Match of the Day remains the pillar of English football's TV schedule. Not that it hasn't evolved. Picking a show at random from Lineker's first season as host in early 2000, 47 minutes of a 70-minute show were dedicated to a relegation clash which finished Bradford City 3-2 Watford (25 minutes for that) and Aston Villa 0-0 Chelsea (22 minutes), with a bit of studio analysis from Alan Hansen and Trevor Brooking for both games. There were then brief highlights of the other six matches with no mention of those games in the studio, despite them including title-challengers Liverpool dropping points at home to Middlesbrough and struggling Newcastle losing at Wimbledon. The highlights have grown shorter, and the analysis longer, to adapt to an audience now armed with far more data and knowledge than they had in 1999. For most of the last decade, though, it has stayed pretty consistent, with patter you could set your watch by and quite easily write a script for… Lineker: 'Well, a great win for Chelsea and we have to start by talking about one man…forget Joao Pedro, this was more; 'Wow Pedro'….' Micah Richards: 'Hahaha yesssss, go on Gary.' Alan Shearer: 'You've been waiting to say that all day, by the way.' Lineker: (giggles) 'It was worth the wait. Anyway, talk to me about his goal Alan, you'd have been proud of that one.' Shearer: 'Absolutely, it was a great ball over the top, he's taken it in his stride and belted it in from long range, a fabulous strike. Although you wouldn't have scored it because it wasn't in the six-yard box (looks straight ahead with slight smirk and pursed lips awaiting Lineker's response).' Lineker: 'Haha, well yes, although I won quite a few trophies from that six-yard box, Al, unlike you (chuckles all round). Anyway! Moving swiftly on.' Advertisement The change of host, of cours,e changes the dynamic, but Chapman, who if he was nervous didn't show it in the slightest, has worked with Shearer many times before, and their rhythm felt natural. In fact, natural is the word to sum up Chapman, a host who like Artie Bucco could be described as warm and convivial, who rarely fails to ask piercing questions devoid of cliches and has a relaxed but authoratitive style. He is also fully aware of the futility of some of football's exhaustive traits, like here, when showing the league table after one match. It feels like he's on the side of the viewer, basically. He tees up Shearer and Rooney for analysis of Sunderland's wide players prising West Ham's defence apart, Tijani Reijnders running the show at Molineux (with some great examples of his movement), Spurs' incessant crosses, Fulham's players not appealing a penalty hard enough, Newcastle's pacey forwards and Liverpool's entertainers. The show hints at what might be a slightly newsier feel going forward, with Chapman saying a few words to camera on Eberechi Eze's prospective move to Spurs with a pointer to the BBC website for more information, and he twice preempts that the panel will discuss the future of Alexander Isak. During that segment, Rooney states three times that Isak has to go about things in the right way, while Shearer is far more to the point with: 'Someone is taking the liberty of saying I'm refusing to play, you just can't do that when you've got a three-year contract.' It's a decent enough debut from Rooney. There are too many 'erms' and quite a lot of repetition, but the knowledge and insight is clearly there, and he'll improve his delivery the more he does it. Shearer and Lineker's 'before and after' clips are unrecognisable in terms of how they project and convey themselves. Chapman keeps it light, he jokes that Jonathan Pearce could give a history lesson to more players after he tells Mohammed Kudus that Spurs fans love wingers and wide players, and later brings up a social media post of Shearer's: 'And Alan you tweeted last night why would you want to move to Anfield now to be (Hugo) Ekitike's understudy, I can't imagine why you did that.' More laughter. Advertisement And, well, that's pretty much it really. A fantastic opening day win for Sunderland, a perfect start to the season for Manchester City and a look back at Liverpool's Friday night thriller, all packaged up into 80 minutes. 'So from today's games, Sunderland were on first, but already Liverpool and Manchester City are up and running and both scored four, so I suppose you could say the more things change, the more things stay the same,' Chapman finishes. 'Gabby's here tomorrow, goodnight.' Yep, Logan on Sunday, Cates next week. We know exactly what we'll get. Same product, slightly different appearance, like when they changed Opal Fruits to Starburst. No big deal, it turns out. In a football world where trends come and go in months and the sport is desperate to evolve and keep pace with the next generation's demands, for a football institution like Match of the Day to stick to what it does best, well, it just feels right. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle