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D-Day in Spygate – what happens next?

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The independent disciplinary commission has three people, with the chair usually being a King’s Counsel (KC). They sit with two side members who are lawyers, barristers or mediators.

It is expected to be a virtual hearing but it could take up to 24 hours for the verdict to be made public.

If guilty, options open to the independent disciplinary commission include a fine, a points deduction for next season or throwing Saints out of the play-offs.

Unlike, say, a profit and sustainability hearing, there is no framework or sliding scale of offence-to-sanction. This is completely new.

There is no direct precedent because no one has ever broken regulation 127.

The independent disciplinary commission will, in effect, be creating it – which adds further significance.

Whether spying is deemed enough for the panel to think it has a significant consequence over promotion will be key.

We have seen a spying case before, when Leeds United were found guilty of watching Derby training seven years ago.

Leeds were fined £200,000 but there are a couple of crucial differences.

Firstly, in 2019 there was no rule which outlawed watching the opposition train before a game. As a result, the EFL brought in regulation 127.

Then there is the timing. Leeds boss Marcelo Bielsa was caught sending a member of his staff to Derby’s training ground in the middle of January, hardly a crucial point of the season.

Saints stand accused of spying on their opponents before one of the most important games of the season, a play-off semi-final.

The argument is that a fine would be meaningless if Southampton beat Hull to earn promotion to the Premier League.

That would give the Saints a minimum £110m in broadcasting revenues.

Another option is a points penalty. This could be seen as a halfway house, whereby the independent disciplinary commission dodges the nuclear option of banishing Southampton from the play-offs but still applies a sporting sanction.

If Saints get promoted, the EFL would not be able to unilaterally apply the penalty in the top flight, but it can recommend to the Premier League board that the deduction is carried over.

Removing Southampton from the play-offs would most likely be achieved by giving Boro a default 3-0 win for the first leg, and therefore a 4-2 aggregate victory.

The independent disciplinary commission must find a punishment which is fair but also acts as a deterrent to any other club who might try to spy – especially before a game of such magnitude.

Saints head coach Tonda Eckert and his staff could also face Football Association disciplinary action, though the EFL process must conclude first.

The coaching staff do have questions to answer.

Who knew what, and when? Was there a live stream? Was it uploaded anywhere?

At the 2024 women’s Olympics, Canada were found guilty of spying on New Zealand using a drone.

Fifa docked six points from Canada while three members of the coaching staff, including the head coach, were banned from all football for a year.

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Mikel Arteta could have been Pep Guardiola’s successor. Instead, he’s built his own empire at Arsenal

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Mikel Arteta could have waited. For three-and-a-half years he worked under Pep Guardiola at Manchester City, learning so much, the ultimate football coaching apprenticeship. He called the experience “incredible”.

Back then, Guardiola felt Arteta might be the ideal successor when the time came, perhaps as early as the summer of 2021. Manchester City’s power-brokers held Guardiola’s ambitious young assistant in the same high regard. Arteta was less sure. Rather than wait for years in Manchester, he felt ready, by late 2019, to lead a team of his own — and one team in particular.

So yes, Arteta could have waited, as Guardiola’s heir apparent. But he chose a different path. By the time his former mentor coach was finally ready to move on, in May 2026, Arteta had built an empire of his own.

The Arsenal he walked into back then was a mess: a club trying to rediscover its identity after years of drift, a fractured fanbase, a dysfunctional squad. His first two years were spent battling to overcome mediocrity, a meek dressing room culture and corrosive situations involving his two star players, Mesut Ozil and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.

There were no quick fixes, no easy wins.

And look at Arsenal six-and-a-half years later. On the evening that Guardiola’s intentions finally became clear, Arteta’s team took another significant step towards the Premier League title. A 1-0 win over Burnley left them five points clear with one game to play. They will be Premier League champions for the first time since 2004 should they beat Crystal Palace on Sunday — or even sooner if Bournemouth do them a favour by taking points off City tonight.

Then, a week on Saturday, comes the Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain in Budapest.

Arteta salutes the Arsenal crowd after his side’s win against Burnley  (Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

At the end, after their final home game of the season, Arteta and his players congregated on the pitch before the traditional lap of appreciation. When the microphone was passed to him, he stood there, hands in pocket, looking uncharacteristically content as the supporters sang his name. His voice faltering, he called it “an absolute joy to witness the transformation” of the Emirates Stadium “into the most beautiful place to play our football”.

And it is true: whatever happens next, the change in mood here, since the unhappy final years of Arsene Wenger’s tenure and the brief Unai Emery period, really has been remarkable.

“Beautiful” was an interesting choice of word; if this Arsenal side are to be champions, they will not receive the same plaudits for artistic merit that Wenger’s great teams did. They will be, by some distance, the lowest-scoring champions since Leicester City in 2015-16.

Their only goal last night came, like so many others, from a set piece, Kai Havertz rising highest to head home a Bukayo Saka corner. They were the dominant team, particularly in the first half, but it was one of only three shots on target. Stylistically, Arteta’s Arsenal have more in common with Jose Mourinho’s great Chelsea teams of the mid-2000s than the free-flowing style of Guardiola’s Manchester City or indeed Wenger’s Arsenal.

The beauty lies in the tale of their rebirth. It is no Leicester-style underdog story, but the revival of a failing institution has been painstaking. Arteta will point not just to the turnover in players and the evolution in playing style but to the way he and his staff have transformed the culture of the team. So many coaches at big clubs lose their way after a promising start. With Arteta at Arsenal, like Jurgen Klopp at Liverpool, an upward trajectory has been maintained year after year.

There was a point, early in his Arsenal tenure, at which Arteta’s name started to crop up again in relation to any future vacancy at Manchester City. Had Guardiola departed in the summer of 2021, which at one stage appeared probable, Arteta’s candidacy would have been welcomed at the very least; he would have been an unlikely choice in the eyes of many, but then again, similar could be said of former Chelsea coach Enzo Maresca, another former Guardiola assistant, in 2026.

The difference is not only that Arteta was so emotionally invested in the Arsenal project, but that, unlike Maresca at Chelsea, he has built a team whose ambitions have grown with his own. Perhaps there would also have been a question of compatibility — Arteta’s philosophy has evolved into something far more pragmatic over the last two years — but, from an early stage, long before his team started battling Manchester City for Premier League titles, he has been “all-in” at Arsenal.

Arteta has shown patience and dedication to turn Arsenal’s fortunes around (Stephen Pond/Getty Images)

There has always been an intrigue to the Guardiola-Arteta narrative arc, that whole sorcerer vs apprentice thing. After victory in the 2020 FA Cup semi-final, Arteta’s team lost their next eight meetings with Manchester City in all competitions, conceding 21 goals in the process, and a certain characterisation of Arsenal — flimsy, fragile, weak — took an even tighter hold. Then came a turnaround, three wins and three draws in the next six meetings, and it began to feel as if Arteta had his old mentor’s number, to the point that the two recent Manchester City wins, in the Carabao Cup final and the subsequent Premier League clash, felt like an unexpected turn in the tide.

After victory over an impressive stubborn Burnley, Arteta was asked for his response to the news that Guardiola is preparing to leave Manchester. “I cannot comment on that,” he told reporters. “I think the day that he makes his decision to stay or leave, then we can comment.”

But to the rest of us — and perhaps not least to Arsenal’s supporters — the news of Guardiola’s expected departure adds to a sense of opportunity among Manchester City’s rivals. And whereas other clubs are in varying states of transition, Arsenal appear well-positioned to keep thriving in a post-Guardiola Premier League landscape.

Arsenal appear well-positioned to keep thriving in a post-Guardiola Premier League (Julian Finney/Getty Images)

That might sound premature when, under Arteta, they are yet to add to the FA Cup he won in his first year in the job. But finally, after a series of near-misses, Arsenal are one win from being champions of England, one win from being champions of Europe. The latter still looks a tall order, given they will face the might and majesty of PSG, but that long-awaited Premier League title is now so close they can almost touch it.

When Arteta was asked afterwards whether he planned to watch City’s game at Bournemouth, he said he would, but he was unsure now long he would be able to sit through it, knowing what was at stake. Would he be a Bournemouth supporter for the night? “The biggest ever,” he said with a smile. “For Andoni (Iraola) and the players, and all the people who are supporters of Bournemouth, I think we all are. We know that means tomorrow they get our support.”

But for all the focus on teams wanting or needing a favour from elsewhere at this stage of the campaign, at either end of the table, the reality is that every team needs to look after its own business. That is where Arsenal have excelled this season. It has rarely been pretty, but their consistency, week after week, has taken them to the brink.

Arteta celebrates with the Arsenal fans after their narrow win at West Ham earlier this month (Alex Pantling/Getty Images)

They have played 61 games in all competitions this season, losing just seven of them. That four of those defeats came in a trying four-week spell, between mid-March and mid-April, raised familiar questions about their mentality and their resilience. But their response has been perfect; in six games in all competitions since their 2-1 defeat at Manchester City, they have won five and drawn one, conceding just one goal — an Atletico Madrid penalty — in the process.

In that respect — 1-0, 1-1, 3-0, 1-0, 1-0, 1-0 — it has been the embodiment of the new Arsenal, which, in some ways, is so evocative of George Graham’s Arsenal in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Graham was at the Emirates Stadium to witness this victory. Like everyone else of an Arsenal persuasion, he must have fretted in the second half but relished the result when the final whistle came.

Now it is over to Manchester City, to see whether, three days after winning the FA Cup, they have enough left in the tank to end Bournemouth’s long unbeaten run and to take the Premier League title race to the wire. Arteta and Arsenal are braced for that likelihood — and the prospect of another nerve-shredding occasion at Crystal Palace on Sunday.

But after 22 years, what is another few days? Some things are worth waiting for.

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Challenge Cup final – Montpellier v Ulster: Bell hoping to ‘create some memories’

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Bell’s experience of playing for Ulster began with his introduction off the bench in a 61-7 thumping of Racing 92 in the Challenge Cup in December.

His time with the northern province will end against different French opposition in the same competition, with the result unlikely to be quite as clear-cut on this occasion.

Bell expects the front row battle to be pivotal to the outcome of the contest.

“It’s exciting. They have a few big international tight-heads and Jordan Uelese in the middle there, the Wallaby, so I know him pretty well.

“They’ll definitely be there or thereabouts and definitely be competing really hard for that, but we’re equally excited for that battle.

“As a rugby player, winning is the ultimate goal for the team. You lose together, you win together, and you do most things together all week.”

Bell, who missed his side’s semi-final victory over Exeter Chiefs with a foot injury, has described his time in Belfast as “probably the best experience” of his career.

He made the move to gain experience of playing abroad, expand his rugby horizons.

“There’s so much talent coming through Ulster Rugby and it’s really exciting. I’m just happy that I get to be a small part of that, especially with all the young front-rowers we have here at the club.

“It’s been great. We all learn off each other and it’s been an awesome experience.

“I guess the best thing about rugby is making those bonds, learning and getting better together.”

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Wembanyama erupts for 40-20 as Spurs survive Thunder in wild double-overtime playoff thriller: Live updates

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Victor Wembanyama had to take the court after Shai Gilgeous-Alexander won the MVP he wanted, and he made a bold declaration of now being considered the greatest player in basketball.

There is a long series ahead of us, but Wembanyama can puff his chest out proudly. He unequivocally made his case, ruling this game on both ends. He became the seventh player to have a 40-point, 20-rebound game in the conference finals or later (per Stathead) and he did it in a career-high 49 minutes.

He pushed himself beyond any limits he has tested before — and dominated.

The Spurs had a great game plan that they executed well for most of the night. In the first half, they let Wembanyama play zone and dared the Thunder’s weak links to make 3s. Alex Caruso had one of the greatest games of his career, but everyone else flopped.

The Thunder played better in the second half, and Gilgeous-Alexander was able to finally find his way to the rim — even when Wembanyama was doubling him.

But the Spurs’ playmaking to find shooters worked so well, while Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper stepped up well in De’Aaron Fox’s absence.

Their crunchtime offense had some major vulnerabilities but Wembanyama broke loose in the end and made some epic plays to win Game 1. It should be a long series, but Wembanyama showed that it’s gonna be his to rule.

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