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Digital Trends
2 days ago
- Sport
- Digital Trends
Premier League 2025/26: todos los partidos, cómo, cuándo y dónde ver
Este viernes 15 de agosto arranca el campeonato local de fútbol más internacional de todos y posiblemente el mejor del mundo, la Premier League inglesa 2025/26, que tendrá a los grandes animadores de siempre, más a los jugadores más valiosos del planeta. Serán 380 partidos en la temporada completa, con horarios de inicio de los partidos de fin de semana y festivos a las 15:00 hora del Reino Unido (10:00 ET), mientras que para los partidos entre semana es a las 19:45 (14;45 ET). Premier League 2025/26: Equipos participantes, entrenadores y jugadores Equipo Entrenador Once Tipo (posiciones y jugadores clave) Arsenal Mikel Arteta Leno (portero), White, Saliba, Gabriel, Zinchenko, Saka, Ødegaard, Lokonga, Fábio Vieira, Martinelli, Guendouzi Aston Villa Unai Emery Martínez (P), Cash, Mings, Dijk, Targett, Luiz, McGinn, Nakamba, Traoré, Watkins, El Ghazi Bournemouth Andoni Iraola Travers (P), Stacey, Mepham, Semenyo, Arter, Billing, Solanke, Stanislas, Lerma, Cédric, Brooks Brentford Keith Andrews Raya (P), Henry, Mbeumo, Janelt, Pinnock, Onyeka, Dasilva, Baptiste, Toney, Norgaard, Niasse Brighton & Hove Albion Fabian Hürzeler Sánchez (P), Dunk, Webster, White, Gross, Lallana, March, Mac Allister, Trossard, Mitoma, Welbeck Burnley Scott Parker Pope (P), Bardsley, Mee, Tarkowski, Pieters, Brownhill, Weghorst, Brady, McNeil, Vydra, Browning Chelsea Enzo Maresca Kepa (P), James, Silva, Koulibaly, Chilwell, Rice, Gallagher, Sterling, Fofana, Mount, Nkunku Crystal Palace Oliver Glasner Guaita (P), Ward, Andersen, Tomkins, van Aanholt, McArthur, Vieira, Gallagher, Eze, Zaha, Mateta Everton David Moyes Pickford (P), Coleman, Keane, Godfrey, Mykolenko, Iwobi, Doucouré, Gordon, Gray, Calvert-Lewin, Bowen Fulham Marco Silva Areola (P), Tete, Adarabioyo, Ream, Ayling, Reed, Mitrovic, Reed, Robinson, Alphonse, Pereira Leeds United Daniel Farke Meslier (P), Ayling, Cooper, Llorente, Dallas, Phillips, Klich, Costa, Raphinha, Bamford, Rodrigo Liverpool Arne Slot Alisson (P), Alexander-Arnold, Van Dijk, Matip, Robertson, Henderson, Fabinho, Thiago, Salah, Diaz, Diaz Manchester City Pep Guardiola Ederson (P), Walker, Dias, Stones, Cancelo, De Bruyne, Rodri, Bernardo, Foden, Haaland, Alvarez Manchester United Rúben Amorim De Gea (P), Dalot, Varane, Martinez, Shaw, Casemiro, Eriksen, Fernandes, Sancho, Rashford, Martial Newcastle United Eddie Howe Pope (P), Trippier, Schär, Botman, Krafth, Joelinton, Longstaff, Saint-Maximin, Almirón, Wilson, Isak Nottingham Forest Nuno Espírito Santo Henderson (P), Gibbs, Murillo, Milenkovic, Murphy, Louser, Yates, Gibbs, Clarke, Johnson, Brereton Sunderland Régis Le Bris Lewis (P), Valentine, Doherty, Vinagre, Coleman, O'Nions, McGeady, Doyle, McGeady, Stewart, Paxton Tottenham Hotspur Thomas Frank Lloris (P), Romero, Sanchez, Dier, Perisic, Hojbjerg, Skipp, Kulusevski, Son, Kane, Richarlison West Ham United Graham Potter Fabianski (P), Cresswell, Dawson, Ogbonna, Coufal, Rice, Soucek, Fornals, Scamacca, Bowen, Antonio Wolverhampton Wanderers Vítor Pereira Ruddy (P), Kilman, Coady, Saiss, Vinagre, Neves, Moutinho, Podence, Traoré, Jiménez, Hwang Fixture completo temporada 2025/26 Jornada (Matchweek) Fecha(s) y Partidos (Solo enfrentamientos) 1 Liverpool v AFC Bournemouth (15 Aug) Aston Villa v Newcastle Brighton v Fulham Sunderland v West Ham Tottenham v Burnley Wolves v Manchester City Chelsea v Crystal Palace Nottingham Forest v Brentford Manchester United v Arsenal Leeds United v Everton 2 West Ham v Chelsea Manchester City v Tottenham Bournemouth v Wolves Brentford v Aston Villa Burnley v Sunderland Arsenal v Leeds United Crystal Palace v Nottingham Forest Everton v Brighton Fulham v Manchester United Newcastle United v Liverpool 3 Aston Villa v Crystal Palace Chelsea v Fulham Sunderland v Brentford Tottenham v Bournemouth Wolves v Everton Manchester United v Burnley Leeds United v Newcastle United Brighton v Manchester City Nottingham Forest v West Ham United Liverpool v Arsenal 4 Arsenal v Nottingham Forest Bournemouth v Brighton Crystal Palace v Sunderland Everton v Aston Villa Fulham v Leeds United Newcastle United v Wolves West Ham United v Tottenham Hotspur Brentford v Chelsea Burnley v Liverpool Manchester City v Manchester United 5 Liverpool v Everton Bournemouth v Newcastle United Arsenal v Manchester City Brighton v Tottenham Hotspur Burnley v Nottingham Forest West Ham v Crystal Palace Wolves v Leeds United Manchester United v Chelsea Fulham v Brentford Sunderland v Aston Villa 6 Brentford v Manchester United Aston Villa v Fulham Chelsea v Brighton Crystal Palace v Liverpool Leeds United v Bournemouth Manchester City v Burnley Nottingham Forest v Sunderland Tottenham v Wolves Newcastle v Arsenal Everton v West Ham United 7 Bournemouth v Fulham Arsenal v West Ham United Aston Villa v Burnley Brentford v Manchester City Chelsea v Liverpool Everton v Crystal Palace Leeds United v Tottenham Hotspur Manchester United v Sunderland Newcastle United v Nottingham Forest Wolves v Brighton 8 Brighton v Newcastle United Burnley v Leeds United Crystal Palace v Bournemouth Fulham v Arsenal Liverpool v Manchester United Manchester City v Everton Nottingham Forest v Chelsea Sunderland v Wolves Tottenham v Aston Villa West Ham v Brentford 9 Bournemouth v Nottingham Forest Arsenal v Crystal Palace Aston Villa v Manchester City Brentford v Liverpool Chelsea v Sunderland Everton v Tottenham Leeds United v West Ham United Manchester United v Brighton Newcastle United v Fulham Wolves v Burnley 10 Brighton v Leeds United Burnley v Arsenal Crystal Palace v Brentford Fulham v Wolves Liverpool v Aston Villa Man City v Bournemouth Nottingham Forest v Manchester United Sunderland v Everton Tottenham v Chelsea West Ham v Newcastle 11 Aston Villa v Bournemouth Brentford v Newcastle Chelsea v Wolves Crystal Palace v Brighton Everton v Fulham Man City v Liverpool Nott'm Forest v Leeds Sunderland v Arsenal Tottenham v Man United West Ham v Burnley 12 Bournemouth v West Ham Arsenal v Tottenham Brighton v Brentford Burnley v Chelsea Fulham v Sunderland Leeds United v Aston Villa Liverpool v Nottingham Forest Manchester United v Everton Newcastle v Manchester City Wolves v Crystal Palace 13 Aston Villa v Wolves Brentford v Burnley Chelsea v Arsenal Crystal Palace v Man United Everton v Newcastle Man City v Leeds United Nott'm Forest v Brighton Sunderland v Bournemouth Tottenham v Fulham West Ham v Liverpool 14 Bournemouth v Everton Arsenal v Brentford Brighton v Aston Villa Burnley v Crystal Palace Fulham v Manchester City Leeds United v Chelsea Liverpool v Sunderland Man United v West Ham United Newcastle v Tottenham Hotspur Wolves v Nottingham Forest 15 Bournemouth v Chelsea Aston Villa v Arsenal Brighton v West Ham United Everton v Nottingham Forest Fulham v Crystal Palace Leeds v Liverpool Man City v Sunderland Newcastle v Burnley Tottenham v Brentford Wolves v Manchester United 16 Arsenal v Wolves Brentford v Leeds United Burnley v Fulham Chelsea v Everton Crystal Palace v Manchester City Liverpool v Brighton Man United v Bournemouth Nott'm Forest v Tottenham Sunderland v Newcastle United West Ham v Aston Villa 17 Bournemouth v Burnley Aston Villa v Manchester United Brighton v Sunderland Everton v Arsenal Fulham v Nottingham Forest Leeds v Crystal Palace Man City v West Ham Newcastle v Chelsea Tottenham v Liverpool Wolves v Brentford 18 Arsenal v Brighton Brentford v Bournemouth Burnley v Everton Chelsea v Aston Villa Crystal Palace v Tottenham Liverpool v Wolves Man United v Newcastle Nottingham Forest v Man City Sunderland v Leeds United West Ham v Fulham 19 Arsenal v Aston Villa Brentford v Tottenham Hotspur Burnley v Newcastle United Chelsea v Bournemouth Crystal Palace v Fulham Liverpool v Leeds United Man United v Wolves Nott'm Forest v Everton Sunderland v Man City West Ham v Brighton 20 Bournemouth v Arsenal Aston Villa v Nottingham Forest Brighton v Burnley Everton v Brentford Fulham v Liverpool Leeds v Manchester United Man City v Chelsea Newcastle v Crystal Palace Tottenham v Sunderland Wolves v West Ham 21 Bournemouth v Tottenham Arsenal v Liverpool Brentford v Sunderland Burnley v Manchester United Crystal Palace v Aston Villa Everton v Wolves Fulham v Chelsea Man City v Brighton Newcastle v Leeds United West Ham v Nottingham Forest 22 Aston Villa v Everton Brighton v Bournemouth Chelsea v Brentford Leeds v Fulham Liverpool v Burnley Man United v Manchester City Nottingham Forest v Arsenal Sunderland v Crystal Palace Tottenham v West Ham United Wolves v Newcastle 24 Aston Villa v Brentford Brighton v Everton Chelsea v West Ham United Leeds v Arsenal Liverpool v Newcastle United Man United v Fulham Nottingham Forest v Crystal Palace Sunderland v Burnley Tottenham v Manchester City Wolves v Bournemouth 25 Bournemouth v Aston Villa Arsenal v Sunderland Brighton v Crystal Palace Burnley v West Ham United Fulham v Everton Leeds v Nottingham Forest Liverpool v Manchester City Man United v Tottenham Hotspur Newcastle v Brentford Wolves v Chelsea 26 Aston Villa v Brighton Brentford v Arsenal Chelsea v Leeds United Crystal Palace v Burnley Everton v Bournemouth Man City v Fulham Nottingham Forest v Wolves Sunderland v Liverpool Tottenham v Newcastle United West Ham v Manchester United 27 Aston Villa v Leeds United Brentford v Brighton Chelsea v Burnley Crystal Palace v Wolves Everton v Manchester United Man City v Newcastle United Nott'm Forest v Liverpool Sunderland v Fulham Tottenham v Arsenal West Ham v Bournemouth 28 Bournemouth v Sunderland Arsenal v Chelsea Brighton v Nottingham Forest Burnley v Brentford Fulham v Tottenham Hotspur Leeds v Manchester City Liverpool v West Ham United Man United v Crystal Palace Newcastle v Everton Wolves v Aston Villa 29 Bournemouth v Brentford Aston Villa v Chelsea Brighton v Arsenal Everton v Burnley Fulham v West Ham United Leeds v Sunderland Man City v Nottingham Forest Newcastle v Manchester United Tottenham v Crystal Palace Wolves v Liverpool 30 Arsenal v Everton Brentford v Wolves Burnley v Bournemouth Chelsea v Newcastle United Crystal Palace v Leeds United Liverpool v Tottenham Hotspur Man United v Aston Villa Nott'm Forest v Fulham Sunderland v Brighton West Ham v Manchester City 32 Arsenal v Bournemouth Brentford v Everton Burnley v Brighton Chelsea v Man City Crystal Palace v Newcastle United Liverpool v Fulham Man United v Leeds United Nott'm Forest v Aston Villa Sunderland v Tottenham Hotspur West Ham v Wolves 33 Aston Villa v Sunderland Brentford v Fulham Chelsea v Manchester United Crystal Palace v West Ham United Everton v Liverpool Leeds v Wolves Man City v Arsenal Newcastle v Bournemouth Nott'm Forest v Burnley Tottenham v Brighton 36 Brighton v Wolves Burnley v Aston Villa Crystal Palace v Everton Fulham v Bournemouth Liverpool v Chelsea Man City v Brentford Nott'm Forest v Newcastle United Sunderland v Man United Tottenham v Leeds United West Ham v Arsenal 38 (Final) Brighton v Manchester United Burnley v Wolves Crystal Palace v Arsenal Fulham v Newcastle United Liverpool v Brentford Man City v Aston Villa Nott'm Forest v Bournemouth Sunderland v Chelsea Tottenham v Everton West Ham v Leeds United Dónde ver la Premier League 2025/26 Para ver la Premier League 2025-26 en España, puedes hacerlo a través de las siguientes plataformas: DAZN : Todos los partidos de la Premier League estarán disponibles en DAZN, el servicio de streaming de deporte más grande del mundo. 2 : Todos los partidos de la Premier League estarán disponibles en DAZN, el servicio de streaming de deporte más grande del mundo. Movistar Plus+: También emitirá todos los partidos de LaLiga, incluyendo la Premier League, a través de sus canales oficiales. En México: De cara a la temporada 25/26, TNT no será el único canal que transmita la liga inglesa, sino que también se une Fox Sports. De acuerdo a un comunicado brindado por la empresa, Fox transmitirá el 50% de los partidos de la temporada. De esta manera, TNT y MAX transmitirán 5 partidos por jornada, Caliente TV (de Fox Sports) 4 encuentros y Fox 1 partido. De esta manera, la Premier League se podrá disfrutar tanto en televisión como en streaming. En Estados Unidos: Televisión : Los partidos se transmitirán por Telemundo , NBC Sports , Universo y USA Network . : Los partidos se transmitirán por , , y . Streaming: Puedes ver los partidos en Fubo y Peacock, que ofrecen acceso a la mayoría de los encuentros. En el Cono Sur: En países como Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Perú se podrá seguir en ESPN en las señales de TV paga y en Disney+ en sus versiones normal y Premium.


The Independent
12-06-2025
- The Independent
Spanish overtakes French as most popular foreign language GCSE, figures suggest
Spanish has overtaken French as the most popular foreign language at GCSE, figures suggest. Provisional data for England shows exam entries for French GCSE this summer are down by 1.9%, from 130,650 last summer to 128,155 this year. GCSE entries for German have also fallen by 7.6% over the past year, from 35,110 to 32,430. But GCSE entries for Spanish have increased by 1.6%, from 129,935 in summer 2024 to 131,985 this summer, according to the latest Ofqual figures. The rising popularity of Spanish could be because pupils are more familiar with the language because of the popularity of Spain, the Balearics, and Canary Islands as holiday destinations, a school leaders' union has suggested. At A-level, entries for French and German are also down (by 8.3% and 6.8%), but entries for Spanish A-level are up by 1.4%. The overall number of entries for this summer's exams for both GCSEs and A-levels has decreased, according to the data published on Thursday. GCSE provisional entries have fallen by 0.6% from 5,811,595 in summer 2024 to 5,777,020 this summer. Meanwhile, A-level entries have decreased by 0.4% from 825,355 last summer to 821,875 this summer. The decrease for GCSE entries this summer is because of a drop in entries for subjects in the English Baccalaureate (EBacc) measure as well as non- EBacc subjects, England's exams regulator Ofqual said. The EBacc is a performance measure which aims to ensure pupils take English, maths, science, a humanities subject and a language at GCSE. GCSE entries for computing – an EBacc subject – have decreased by 4.7% on last year, while entries for history are down by 5.9% on last summer. In March, the interim report of the independent curriculum and assessment review said it will consider whether the EBacc remains 'effective'. The review suggested that the EBacc may 'constrain the choice of students' in school, and it could limit their access to vocational and arts subjects. The provisional figures also show GCSE entries for art and design subjects are down by 1.7% on last year, and GCSE entries for drama are down 1.5%. Pepe Di'Iasio, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), said: 'The rising popularity of Spanish as a choice for GCSE probably reflects the fact that many young people may be more familiar with the Spanish language, because of the popularity of Spain, the Balearics and Canary Islands as holiday destinations, than they are with French and German. 'That then tends to be reinforced by what friends and siblings are studying. 'The growing popularity of Spanish is really good news as there has been a long-term decline in modern foreign languages, but we do need to do more at a national level to boost language learning more generally.' Sarah Hannafin, head of policy at school leaders' union NAHT, said: 'It is hard to know for sure why entries have dropped in certain subjects – there is always some variability year on year. 'But one possibility is that with recruitment challenges really biting in schools, some simply don't have the teachers they need to offer courses in certain subjects. 'Teacher recruitment targets were missed in computing, chemistry, physics and modern foreign languages in the last couple of years, and these are among the subjects which experienced a fall in entries. 'This underlines the need for the Government to address head on the fundamental causes of the recruitment and retention crisis gripping schools, which ultimately affects students as well as increasingly stretched leaders and teachers.'


The Guardian
25-03-2025
- Sport
- The Guardian
The game that set Gary Lineker on the path to global superstardom
The browbeaten striker looked forlornly to the floor, the whistles of derision ringing in his ears. The stadium may only have been partially full of travelling England fans but the seething frustration was unmistakable as their emotion poured on to the pitch. Lining the sparse terraces draped in union flags, the ragtag collection of supporters – many of them shirtless – got as close to the pitch as possible to spew their thoughts at their own players. England's raucous band of followers had proudly sung about backing their team 'over land and sea' only two hours earlier, but the tide had turned after what they'd witnessed. The excesses of earlier in the day were now in plain sight. The vitriol normally saved for rival fans and players was raining down on their own countrymen instead, like volleys of friendly fire. Nobody was spared. Least of all the normally sharp-shooting marksman whose run without scoring for his country had stretched to yet another match. He was pouring with sweat, white shirt and tight blue shorts drenched as a sign of his efforts, but Gary Lineker hadn't seen any fruits for his labours. Neither had his teammates, much to the ire of the England contingent in the stands. The next day's newspapers would describe the performance as a 'disaster', a 'disgrace', a 'day of shame'. England had been tepid. Toothless. Benign. Two matches into the 1986 World Cup and England had failed to win a game or even score a single goal. If that run stretched into a third match, then a talented squad would be on the next plane home. There, they'd be greeted by the ferocity they'd lacked so far in Mexico; an unforgiving crowd of fans would make their dissatisfaction known. If the several thousand angry supporters in Mexico were making their feelings heard, the millions more at home watching grainy images that proclaimed 'Inglaterra 0' for the second match running would be even louder. The postmortem had started even before Bobby Robson's men were dead and buried. If they got a win against Poland in England's final group game, they'd still progress to the last-16 of the competition, but listening to the pundits on TV, radio and in newspapers, you'd think that another underwhelming display was a foregone conclusion. Questions were coming and Lineker knew some of them would be about him. The striker had been in irresistible form domestically all season, but his latest blank in an England shirt had meant he'd now gone six international matches without a goal. How could a forward who had plundered 40 goals for Everton in the past season look so impotent when playing for his country? It wasn't an unusual phenomenon. In recent years, England had a series of forwards whose careers had followed a similar trend, scoring freely in the First Division but never quite cutting it when they stepped up. It was starting to look as though Lineker might be the latest cab off the rank, another goalscorer who couldn't hit the levels needed to succeed internationally. Perhaps it was time to go in a different direction. England's 0–0 draw with Morocco had been a low point. Lineker had tirelessly run the channels, fought for flick-ons from striker partner Mark Hateley, attempted to find pockets of space. There was no questioning his industry, but all he had to show for it was a first-half run into the box before being hustled to a tight angle away from goal and seeing his shot charged down by goalkeeper Badou Zaki. It had been a similar story in the tournament's opening match a few days earlier. A 1–0 defeat to Portugal had offered little in the way of goalscoring opportunities for Lineker. He'd toiled and scrambled, bumped and barged, but had cut a frustrated figure as the Portuguese stifled England's attacking efforts. When an opportunity did fall to the No 10, he squeezed his shot beneath the goalkeeper only to see the ball cleared by the desperate covering run of defender António Oliveira. The images of Lineker's hands on his head and resting on his hips, blowing out his cheeks, were becoming all too common. It's true that the Leicester-born striker had hardly been swimming in a conveyor belt of chances supplied from the players behind him, but his trend without scoring had stretched back longer than just England's disappointing start to the World Cup. He hadn't scored in the four games leading up to the tournament, meaning he hadn't netted since the previous year. That hat-trick against Turkey, paired with a brace against the USA a few months earlier, papered over the cracks of Lineker's early international efforts. Six goals in his opening 15 England matches was a respectable return, if not hugely prolific, but he'd only scored in three of those matches – failing to find the net on 12 occasions. It was all well and good adding to his numbers against the weaker nations, but he needed to show he was more than simply a flat-track bully. There were some pundits out there who thought Lineker should be one of a number of changes that Robson made to rescue his side's ailing Mexico '86 campaign. England's 1966 World Cup-winning manager Alf Ramsey was one of them, using his Daily Mirror column to call for a new-look frontline that 'would offer England a variation in their attacking ideas'. Being dropped at this stage of his career would be damaging for Lineker. So when the team was revealed for the crucial final group game with Poland, it was a relief for Lineker to hear his name still in the starting XI. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion His strike partner for those opening two matches, Hateley, had made way for Newcastle United's jinky creative Peter Beardsley, who – along with a handful of other changes, including Steve Hodge, Peter Reid and Trevor Steven – was expected to change the way England played. More speed and ingenuity should create a higher frequency of better chances for Lineker. As he stepped on to the Estadio Universitario pitch in Monterrey, Lineker must have been aware of how important the ensuing 90 minutes would be for his England career. The sense of occasion must have been huge, even if the setting itself wasn't. Those same supporters who had been bubbling with resentment against Morocco were back again, gathered together to make the most noise they could muster in the vast, open-aired stands – creating a monophonic sound that echoed around the partly empty space. England and Lineker couldn't afford for the unusual atmosphere to impact the performance on the pitch. If they failed to score again and the Three Lions crashed out of the World Cup without getting out of the groups, then the criticism would grow, and the striker's goal drought could be one of the reasons cited. A match against Poland was no gimme, though. On paper, the Eagles posed much stronger competition than Portugal and Morocco had in the previous two games. They'd finished third at the 1982 World Cup four years earlier, only losing to eventual winners Italy, and had topped their qualifying group to be one of the top six seeds for the tournament. After a win and a draw in their opening two matches in 1986, they only needed to avoid defeat to progress at England's expense. The allowance for error couldn't be thinner. A little over half an hour after that career-defining match with Poland kicked off, Lineker was surrounded by the whistles and cries of England fans once again. But this time, instead of staring down towards his feet, he was looking up to the heavens. Neck craning upwards, fists clenching in tight balls, face grimacing with joy. The Three Lions striker had just bagged the third of a first-half hat-trick, secured in a 24-minute blitz that left opponents Poland at the mercy of a goalscorer extraordinaire. Each finish, all from only a matter of yards out, was evidence of a poacher at the peak of his powers, capable of ghosting into the exact space the ball would drop, before ruthlessly dispatching it in a flash. While the relief of kickstarting England's laboured 1986 World Cup campaign was fuelling Lineker's unabashed celebrations, the significance of his treble was far greater than anyone could have realised at the time. The doubts that had existed less than an hour before had dissipated. A crucial career crossroads had been passed and would soon be a distant memory. The three goals he scored had great national significance in helping England to progress to the last 16 of the World Cup, but they'd prove to have even greater personal significance. This was the catalyst for Gary Lineker to become a global football icon. England's No 10 had just announced himself to the world. Gary Lineker: a Portrait of a Football Icon (Bloomsbury) is out now