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Chelsea contact prospective candidates in search for new head coach

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Iraola, Alonso, Silva and Glasner are all out of work, or scheduled to be without a club, by the end of the season which means Chelsea will not be required to pay compensation.

Glasner is leaving Crystal Palace when his contract expires this summer and is understood to be open to staying in England.

Similarly, Iraola has confirmed he will depart Bournemouth at the end of the season.

The Spaniard is Crystal Palace‘s first-choice candidate to replace Glasner and the Eagles have already held extensive talks with Iraola.

However, Iraola is taking time to weigh up his future amid interest from Palace and Chelsea – while sources have also indicated the 43-year-old is open to going into next season without a club which would leave him available to take any mid-season vacancies.

Silva’s Fulham contract expires this summer but he has been offered a three-year deal by to stay.

The Portuguese is reported to have options abroad, while clubs in Saudi Arabia are also understood to be keen on Silva if he leaves Craven Cottage.

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Danny Rohl confident of Rangers future after board talks

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It will be another summer rebuild at Rangers with captain James Tavernier leaving after 11 years and multiple loan deals coming to an end.

Rohl says the club need more authority figures in the squad and believes he and the board are on the same page when it comes to the summer’s recruitment.

“The most important thing is it is what I have said many times, we have to take all the information and what we need into the new season,” he said.

“I think you can imagine, with Tav we lose the captain and it means for us, this is a big signal as well.

“We need new leaders, more leaders for the dressing room, to set our standards that we want on the training pitch, in difficult moments in the game.

“I think this is crucial. This is a great opportunity to work on this.

“Yesterday, conversations again with the club and you can really trust me, I’m very clear, especially also after the last three weeks, what we need to be top, top, top.”

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Donovan Mitchell, LeBron James and the ties that bind in Cavs’ quest for postseason glory

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CLEVELAND — Maybe it had to be this way. The Cavaliers have been chasing LeBron James’ ghost since he departed Cleveland a second time, so maybe it’s only right they finally get to go first for once.

The Cavs and the Los Angeles Lakers have been on the same track, playing on the same nights, throughout the conference semifinals. The series between the Cavaliers and Detroit Pistons has been the lead-in to the Lakers-Oklahoma City Thunder series throughout the NBA’s second round.

The Cavs have enjoyed a much better go of it than the Lakers, who were swept Tuesday in what was perhaps the final game of James’ brilliant career. The Cavs evened their series with the Pistons thanks to Donovan Mitchell’s historic second half in a 112-103 Game 4 victory that wasn’t really that close. Mitchell, James Harden and the Cavaliers are two wins from the Eastern Conference finals, which didn’t seem all that likely after two fairly clumsy losses on the road to start this series.

Cleveland will eventually have to win a game in Detroit to advance, but even tying this series 2-2 is noteworthy. This is the closest the Cavs have come to reaching a conference finals without James on the roster since 1992. They made it to this round in each of the last two seasons and were down 3-1 in both instances. Both years, the Cavs’ season ended in five games.

Mitchell’s incredible second half on Tuesday assured this series will go at least six games. He has admirably filled the leadership void within this organization following James’ departure, but hasn’t been able to match James’ postseason success. His 39-point eruption in the second half is something that not even James has accomplished. It tied a mark set by the Golden State Warriors’ Eric “Sleepy” Floyd in 1987 for the most points in a half of a postseason game.

“Incredible performance,” Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson said. “What a shift, right? Really struggled in the first half. Big-time second-half performance.”

The Cavs have needed the best version of Mitchell during these two home games to fight back in this series, and he has delivered. He shot 1 of 8 in the first half on Tuesday and seemed to struggle getting past defenders. Atkinson implored his team to start playing faster in the second half, and it loosened Detroit’s smothering defense while creating more driving lanes for Mitchell, who was the key reason why the Cavs scored the first 22 points of the third quarter to take control.

Detroit’s physical, half-court defense has caused problems for the Cavs (particularly Mitchell and Harden) at various points in this series. The solution was to play faster and create easy looks in transition before the Pistons could set their schemes. The result was Mitchell making more trips to the free-throw line (15) than the entire Pistons roster (12).

Both Atkinson and Mitchell were vocal early in this series about the disparity in free-throw shooting. Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff believes it had an impact.

“Ever since we came to Cleveland,” Bickerstaff said, “the whistle has changed.”

Bickerstaff will likely be fined for his comments, and he likely won’t care. He has never been shy about going after officials, dating back to his days as Cleveland’s coach, and it will be interesting to see if the whistle shifts back Detroit’s way as the series moves there Wednesday night.

As for the Cavs, this is what they envisioned by pairing Mitchell and Harden. It hasn’t always been pretty, but on nights when Harden’s handle is tight and Mitchell is getting to the basket, the Cavs are the better team in this series. The duo combined for 67 points, 11 assists and only three turnovers Monday, and the Pistons simply can’t match the Cavs’ scoring punch, particularly when Cade Cunningham is struggling as he has in this series. For all the matchup problems Cunningham can cause opponents, the Cavs seem to have the right combination of defenders to make life difficult on him.

As the league narrows its focus on turnovers and offensive rebounds as ways to create extra possessions, the Pistons have dominated the Cavs in both categories for most of the series. That’s why winning the turnover battle and essentially playing the Pistons to a draw on the offensive glass in Game 4 was so crucial.

Now it’s time for the Cavs to win on the road, something they’ve been unable to do throughout this postseason. Mitchell’s home numbers over the last few years are markedly better in the playoffs than on the road, and Harden looked like a different player in these two games at home compared to the fumbling, aging star who couldn’t stop turning the ball over in Detroit.

As for James, his season ended a few hours after the Cavs’ latest victory. He missed a contested floater in the lane, a shot he’s made hundreds of times, during the game’s final minute that would’ve given the Lakers the lead. What comes next for him remains to be seen. He was noncommittal on his future after the loss.

Behind Mitchell, Harden and Evan Mobley’s phenomenal defensive effort, the Cavs are very much alive in this series. Still chasing their ghosts, still seeking redemption for past failures.

Mitchell isn’t James, and neither is Harden. But together, they’re trying to get this franchise to places rarely seen over the last 30 years without him. Two more to go.

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Arsenal’s title turnabout, plus LeBron’s possible retirement

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The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic’s daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox.


Good morning! Avoid a sweep today. Coming up: 

  • 🫣 Arsenal’s drought nearly over
  • 👋 Bye, LeBron?
  • 😷 PWHL game postponed

While You Were Sleeping: Headline

Luke Hales / Getty Images

The Oklahoma City Thunder completed a sweep of the Los Angeles Lakers last night in their second-round series, a 115-110 matchup that was actually a great watch. The ending felt heavy, though, because there’s a distinct possibility it was the last time we’ll see LeBron James play an NBA game. 

We have no concrete reporting on that just yet, and James said he will, per usual, take his time in the offseason to decide his future. But man. What if that really was it? 

James is 41 years old and has played in a total of 1,924 games. Even a superhuman player would’ve been done years prior. Not James, who already has the greatest career we’ve ever seen. 

We’ll devote plenty of space to James when the time comes, whether that’s tomorrow or two years from now. 

Until then, the present: The Thunder are back in the Western Conference finals and look as scary as ever. And for the Lakers? The plan is to build around Luka Dončić and possibly trade for a star. We have a big deep dive on the entire scenario this morning

Elsewhere in playoff action last night, sorted by series status: 

  • 3-1: In the NHL, Colorado rebounded from its first loss of the playoffs with a 5-2 win in Minnesota, which was a nail-biter until the Avs’ final two empty-net goals. They’re one win away from the Western Conference final.
  • 2-2: Back in the NBA, the Cavaliers are now square with the top-seeded Pistons thanks to a 112-103 win in Cleveland. The Cavs used a 22-0 run in the third quarter, and Donovan Mitchell finished with 43. This is a battle, which means the Knicks will get plenty of rest. 

Let’s keep going:


Drought-enders: Arsenal’s (possible) titular 180

For an entire generation of soccer fans, both stateside and abroad, Arsenal has been the butt of a running joke. The big-moneyed Premier League club, forever talented, that could not resist a choke. The simple math is staggering: 

  • Arsenal has not won a Premier League title since the 2003-04 season. Multiple players born after that date have taken the pitch for the Gunners. Max Dowman, Arsenal’s young star, was born a full five years after that title.
  • Since then, the club has finished second in the standings five times. Four of those years saw third-place finishes. 

So, pain. This year presents an incredible opportunity to reverse the narrative twofold, though: Arsenal leads both the Premier League table — five points up on Manchester City with two matchweeks left — and will play for the Champions League title May 30 against Paris Saint-Germain, the defending champion. 

I went to Phil Hay for some insight: 

Can you explain in two sentences to, let’s say, an uninitiated audience what the last 20-plus years of Arsenal football have been like?

💬 In short, a struggle to work out where they were going after the peak of the Arsene Wenger era, circa 2004. His football was so classy at its best, but he clung on to the job too long, and it’s only now — after five and a half years in the role — that manager Mikel Arteta looks like he’s cracked it (although in fairness, Arsenal went very close to the title in 2023 and 2024).

Wenger coached at Arsenal for nearly 22 years, a lifetime for any Premier League manager if you’ve paid any attention to the whims of EPL bosses. He won three Prem titles and seven FA Cups. He left in 2018 in what was a mutually terse separation. 

Arteta, by comparison, has been a fresh breath of higher standards. He’s just 44 and has led the Gunners to three straight second-place finishes in the last three seasons. He is, as we wrote earlier this month, Arsenal’s man, trophies or not.

Jacques Feeney / Offside via Getty Images

And he’s doing it in an era of European soccer where big-name clubs push their players to the limits of how many matches they can play, between club games, international responsibilities and the exhibition tour that screams cash grab. 

Back to Phil: 

To bring us to the sobering present: How impressive is it if Arsenal wins both the Premier League and Champions League titles in this era of overloaded schedules?

💬 Only two clubs have won both in the same year: Manchester United in 1999 and 2008, and Manchester City in 2023. It’s extraordinarily difficult, and it would be quite something if, after being criticised for his lack of trophies for so long, Arteta nails the two biggest in the space of a week.

We’ll know the Premier League fate in at most two weeks’ time. There’s no way Arsenal can choke, right?


News to Know

Bailey Hillesheim/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

PWHL playoff game postponed
Last night’s winner-takes-all Game 5 between the Montreal Victoire and the Minnesota Frost was postponed to tonight due to an illness, the league announced just hours before puck drop. The illness, which the league specified is not consistent with hantavirus, is contained within the Victoire roster, and sick players have been separated from the team. See more here.

Hardy shot at concert
Missouri star running back Ahmad Hardy is in stable condition after suffering a gunshot wound to the leg at a concert in Mississippi over the weekend, the team said in a statement. There is no timetable for the reigning SEC rushing leader’s return. Read our full story.

More news:

  • USMNT midfielder Johnny Cardoso will likely miss the World Cup after undergoing surgery on his ankle. A brutal blow for the Americans.
  • Free-agent tight end David Njoku signed with the Chargers. Could be fun.
  • The Mets still need a lot of help, so star prospect A.J. Ewing is on the way.
  • An arbitrator ruled against 18 Nebraska football players who fought an NIL decision. It’s a big deal.
  • The Cowboys and Giants will play the first “Sunday Night Football” game of the 2026 NFL season. Read more.

📰 Find more news here 24/7.


Watch Guide

📺 NHL: Second round
7 p.m. ET on ESPN
An incredible lineup tonight if we base that on the previous matchups. Sabres-Canadiens leads off at 7 p.m., with the Habs able to go up 3-1 with a home win. I think I now need to attend a playoff game in Montreal after watching Game 3. Golden Knights-Ducks follows at 9:30 p.m., and every game of that 2-2 series has been fantastic. Perfect night of hockey ahead. 

📺 NBA: Timberwolves at Spurs
8 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock
Our only NBA game tonight is a doozy. This series is tied 2-2 with some bad blood lingering after Victor Wembanyama’s ejection Sunday. Minnesota has been here before. Can this young San Antonio team survive its first must-win playoff scenario?

📺 MLB: Cubs at Braves
7:15 p.m. ET on TBS
If you need a break from hockey and hoops, watch this matchup of the best two teams in the NL and two of the top five teams in our latest MLB Power Rankings. Fun.

Get tickets to games like these here.


Pulse Picks

In 2026, when algorithms rule most of our sports media consumption, a woman in Brooklyn had a wild idea: to make a women’s sports magazine that would not exist on the internet. “Snatch” was born — and business is booming

Miles McBride may seem like a quiet, unassuming guy. But the Knicks’ 3-point sharpshooter is petty enough to get a tattoo on his leg to spite his brother. I loved this.  

Michael Jordan was supposed to be a big part of NBC’s basketball revival this year. The reality, as Andrew Marchand writes, fizzled

Daniel Dubois’ bloody win over Fabio Wardley on Saturday has been hailed as one of the best fights of the decade. It made our Sarah Shephard sick to her stomach

The 76ers’ playoff collapse leaves everyone in Philly really, really testy

Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: The latest NBA mock draft

Most-read on the website yesterday: The NHL mock draft we linked yesterday.

📫 That’s all for now! Say hello at thepulse@theathletic.com, check out our other newsletters and connect with me on Instagram for more.

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