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Introducing The Athletic’s Transfer Tiers, our expert view on the top transfers in each position

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Imagine you are in a recruitment meeting ahead of the summer transfer window.

Your club needs a striker. In front of you is the board of targets. There is a name at the top — and the list rolls on through possible alternatives.

This is the reality for teams planning their summer transfer business. Yes, every club has an ideal top target. But the market is not that simple. They might be unavailable. Other clubs might come in for them. Before you know it, the board changes and the targets shift.

The Athletic posed a simple question — could we, through the knowledge of experts from across European football, replicate the boards of goalkeepers, central defenders, full-backs, midfielders, attacking midfielders, wide forwards and forwards that will be under consideration at different clubs?

Welcome to our attempt — The Athletic’s Transfer Tiers.

Ahead of the summer, The Athletic built a long list of players who were likely to move or attract significant interest in the upcoming transfer window. We sorted them into seven positional categories, each roughly 20 players deep, before sending the completed pool of players to people who work within the football industry.

In total, nearly 40 experts responded to The Athletic’s questions. These included sporting and technical directors, coaches, scouts, intermediaries, analysts and, in a few instances, people with important local knowledge.

What we asked them to do was relatively simple. From the players available, in each position, select and rank three players they expect to be targeted by elite clubs (a Champions League contender), three more who they think will be prioritised by clubs from the level just below, and a further three who will be pursued by teams broadly defined as being part of the game’s wealthy middle-class.

Tier One is targeted at Champions League contenders (Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

The lines between those categories are blurred and hard to properly define. But to provide as much clarity as possible, Manchester City or Paris Saint-Germain would be considered Tier One; Aston Villa, Inter Milan and Borussia Dortmund belong in Tier Two, even if there are financial differences between them; and Brighton, Bayer Leverkusen — process-led clubs, essentially — would belong in Tier Three.

Rather than being an outright ranking of clubs, the Tier system really represents how these clubs think about the transfer market, how they have historically behaved, and where their ceilings — both in terms of wages and fees — have traditionally existed.

There are some caveats to be aware of.

First, it’s entirely possible that having missed an initial target, a Tier One club ends up signing a player from a Tier Two category, or vice versa. A simple way of thinking about this is that if you are on the board, you’re able to play a role in your position at any level in a top-five European league.

Secondly, certain players have been excluded. While every major club in Europe would surely be interested if, for instance, Lamine Yamal were to become available, there is next to no chance of him actually leaving Barcelona. There is always the possibility that something absurd might occur — the equivalent of Neymar’s 2017 move to Paris Saint-Germain, for instance — but that’s extremely unlikely. No sensible recruitment policy would be built around signing him this summer.

Players with long-term injuries have also been left out. For the sake of an example, Tottenham’s Cristian Romero appears because he is expected to recover from his knee injury within the next few weeks, but Xavi Simons was not, as his ACL injury will likely see him miss much of the rest of the year. No team is going to be considering Simons in the summer of 2026. That’s where the line is.

It is also worth saying that while teams who would fit into the Tier One category might be more selective about style than a team in Tier Three, ultimately, very few teams in Europe who know they have a clear gap in their squad would avoid making a signing if the style does not quite match up. Stylistic preferences can go out of the window in the heat of the moment.

And a last point: nobody we asked had any connection to the players or clubs involved. That was important. We wanted the answers to be dispassionate and analytical, rather than reflective of what anybody wanted to happen.

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How to watch the 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge: TV channel and streaming options for Round 1

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Watch the opening round on Thursday, May 28, as golfers take to the course at the 7,289-yard, par-70 Colonial Country Club for the 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, TX, looking to earn a share of a $9.9M purse. Ben Griffin is the defending champ at the tournament.

How to Watch the 2026 Charles Schwab Challenge

  • Venue: Colonial Country Club
  • Location: Fort Worth, TX
  • Par/Distance: Par 70/7,289 yards
  • Time: 8 a.m. ET
  • Streaming: Fubo (Stream now)
  • Watching in person? Get tickets on StubHub.

Charles Schwab Challenge odds

  • Ludvig Aberg: +800
  • Russell Henley: +1800
  • Justin Thomas: +2000
  • Ben Griffin: +2200
  • Rickie Fowler: +2200
  • J.J. Spaun: +2500
  • Robert MacIntyre: +2500
  • Hideki Matsuyama: +3000
  • Alex Smalley: +3300
  • Akshay Bhatia: +3300
  • Keith Mitchell: +3500
  • Keegan Bradley: +4000
  • Harry Hall: +4000
  • Pierceson Coody: +4000
  • Sungjae Im: +4000
  • Ryo Hisatsune: +4000
  • Gary Woodland: +4500
  • Max Greyserman: +5000
  • Tony Finau: +5000
  • Bud Cauley: +5000
  • Davis Thompson: +5500
  • Michael Thorbjornsen: +5500
  • McClure Meissner: +6000
  • Matt McCarty: +6000
  • Eric Cole: +6600

Odds provided by BetMGM.

Charles Schwab Challenge Notable Pairings & Tee Times

  • 9:06 a.m. ET, Hole 10: Justin Thomas, Sungjae Im, Russell Henley
  • 8:55 a.m. ET, Hole 10: Robert MacIntyre, Alex Smalley, Hideki Matsuyama
  • 1:24 p.m. ET, Hole 1: Ludvig Aberg, J.J. Spaun, Gary Woodland
  • 1:13 p.m. ET, Hole 1: Rickie Fowler, Ben Griffin, Tom Hoge
  • 9:28 a.m. ET, Hole 1: McClure Meissner, Austin Eckroat, Pierceson Coody
  • 1:35 p.m. ET, Hole 10: Davis Thompson, Michael Brennan, Matt McCarty
  • 1:57 p.m. ET, Hole 1: Keith Mitchell, John Keefer, Patrick Rodgers
  • 1:35 p.m. ET, Hole 1: Tony Finau, Brandt Snedeker, Akshay Bhatia
  • 1:46 p.m. ET, Hole 1: Michael Kim, Sahith Theegala, Taylor Moore
  • 1:02 p.m. ET, Hole 1: Doug Ghim, Ben Kohles, Richard Hoey

This watch guide was created using technology provided by Data Skrive.

Betting/odds, ticketing and streaming links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

Photo: Hector Vivas, Maddie Meyer / Getty Images

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Canadiens vs. Hurricanes Game 4: Key takeaways from Carolina’s emphatic win

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MONTREAL — In two of the last three postseasons, the Carolina Hurricanes had short stays in the Eastern Conference final.
They’re one game away from another — and they’re enjoying this one a bit more.

Carolina beat the Montreal Canadiens 4-0 in Game 4 at the Bell Centre on Wednesday, pushing their series lead to 3-1 and moving within one victory of a matchup with the Vegas Golden Knights in the Stanley Cup Final.

A three-goal first period on Wednesday fueled the Hurricanes, who turned the territorial dominance they’d established in Games 2 and 3 into a multi-goal lead against a desperate opponent. The early advantage allowed them to tighten the screws even more against the Canadiens, whose first shot of the game didn’t come until more than eight minutes after puck drop.

By the end of the period, Carolina held a 3-0 lead and a 12-5 edge in shots, and the gap only increased as the game progressed; Carolina finished the game with 43 shots to the Canadiens’ 18 and didn’t log one in the third period until 2:53 remained.

It might have been the strongest single game of the postseason for the Hurricanes, who swept the Ottawa Senators and Philadelphia Flyers before dropping Game 1 to Montreal by a score of 6-2. They’ve charged back since, putting themselves 60 minutes from their first Eastern Conference title since 2026. They’ve lost in this round three times since, including in four games to the Florida Panthers in 2023 and five games last year.

Carolina’s first-period goal scorers were Sebastian Aho, Jordan Staal and Logan Stankoven. Andrei Svechnikov added an empty better. Nikolaj Ehlers assisted on Aho and Staal’s goals, and goaltender Frederik Andersen made 18 saves.

This is not the first time these playoffs the young Canadiens have had their season on the line; they won Game 7 twice in the first two rounds. But a 3-1 deficit is a challenge this group has not faced since the first round of last year’s playoffs, when they lost Game 4 on home ice to the Washington Capitals before losing Game 5 on the road, a game they also trailed 3-0 before finally losing 4-1.

It’s not the losing that should bother the Canadiens — the Hurricanes are an extremely difficult opponent — but the repetitive nature of the losses should be of some concern to this young team and their young coach Martin St. Louis, coaching his fourth career playoff series.

The one repetitive thing that is most encouraging for the Canadiens is the continued excellence of rookie goaltender Jakub Dobeš, who celebrated his 25th birthday with 39 saves, including stopping breakaways by Jackson Blake and Seth Jarvis.

Game 5 is at Lenovo Center in Raleigh, N.C. on Friday night.

Hurricanes dominate first with three quick goals

For the first time all series, the goals came in a big ol’ bunch for Carolina, as all three of the Hurricanes top centers tallied in a span of just 2:47 late in the first for their first three-goal lead of the series.

Sebastian Aho scored first on their second power play of the game, a questionable hooking call on Zack Bolduc that the Canes top unit made very short work of via a cross-ice one-timer with five minutes left in the opening frame.

Jordan Staal made it 2-0 a minute and change later by winning a big boy net-front battle with Josh Anderson to pound in his second of the playoffs and continue his line’s absolute dominance over the Canadiens.

Then Logan Stankoven recorded his first point of the series by capping off a 2-on-1 off a pass from Jackson Blake as the wheels started to come off for Montreal. Only 17:46 into the game, it was 3-0 — and the Canadiens had a massive hole to dig out of. — Mirtle 

Where was the Canadiens’ adjustment to Hurricanes forecheck?

The Canadiens registered their first shot on goal of the game at 8:07 of the first period, by which point the Hurricanes already had six.

Going back to the third period of Game 3, from the moment Noah Dobson was credited with a shot on goal at 10:06, the Canadiens registered one shot on goal in 32:57 of game time, or more than half a game’s worth.

But perhaps more important than the lack of shots in the first eight minutes is that, at least by our rudimentary count, the Canadiens already had seven failed zone exits by that point. That was really the story of the opening period for the home team, and has been the story of the series over the past three games.

The Canadiens’ inability to clear the puck from their own zone under the relentless Hurricanes forecheck was going to be the biggest adjustment we would see in Game 4. Or so we thought.

And nowhere was it more evident than on the Hurricanes’ second goal. It would be easy to look at Anderson’s inability to tie up Staal in front of the net as the main reason for that goal, but while the culprit would be correct, the moment would not be. That came several seconds earlier, when Anderson had the puck on his stick not far from the blue line in the defensive zone, took a moment to think about what to do with it, and in that moment the Hurricanes took it off his stick and went back to work in the offensive zone.

And just like that, the Canadiens issues in this series were summed up in one play, with a nice, pretty bow on it. — Basu

Score effects or a positive line shuffle?

Score effects are most definitely a real thing. A team that is up three goals will play differently as a result, and so will a team that is down three goals.

However, when St. Louis shuffled all four of his forward lines to start the second period, already down 3-0, and the Canadiens suddenly became far more dangerous, it was hard not to wonder why he began the game with the exact same line combinations as the previous three games.

Considering the Canadiens put 10 shots on goal in the second period alone after putting up 13 and 12 in the previous two games that each went to overtime, it is a fair question.

The speed of Alex Newhook next to Nick Suzuki and Cole Caufield gave that line a jolt, Zack Bolduc playing with Phillip Danault and Josh Anderson created a fast, physical line, and Juraj Slafkovský had a lot of success in the middle of the regular season playing left wing on a line with Ivan Demidov.

Perhaps the changes will bode well in Game 5 with their season on the line, but maybe Game 4 would have been different had the Canadiens either started this way, or in any different way from the previous two games that went so poorly for them.

However, the bump from the changes did not even carry over to the third period, let alone Game 5. With a little under seven minutes left in regulation and the Canadiens sitting on zero shots on goal in the period, the Bell Centre fans briefly chanted “Shoot the puck! Sooth the puck!” which, it should be clear, is not a great look, especially if this was the Canadiens’ final home game of the season. — Basu

Miller time

Wednesday wasn’t the first postseason game in which K’Andre Miller was the most attention-grabbing Hurricanes defenseman, but it might’ve been his best.

Miller earned a primary assist on Staal’s goal, Carolina’s second of the first period, by carrying the puck from the blue line to the goal line, going wide on Montreal’s Phillip Danault. That drew Dobeš’ attention away from the traffic in the crease — and Miller, with plenty of space between himself and Danault, appeared to deliberately bank the puck off Staal’s skate back toward the Canadiens net.

It was a slick play, the sort of thing Miller does with some degree of regularity, and it certainly came at a crucial moment for the Hurricanes, giving them a two-goal lead and setting them up to tighten the screws on Montreal. Miller’s shift-in, shift-out performance has been a bigger deal, though; his skating and reach are elite, and he’s used both to regularly erase scoring chances by all three of Carolina’s postseason opponents, including several by Montreal throughout Game 4. Carolina, of course, acquired him from the New York Rangers in the offseason for first- and second-round picks and defenseman Scott Morrow.

Miller, 26, flashed potential with the Rangers but also struggled at times, playing for three coaching staffs and frequently being deployed in matchup minutes with mismatched partners. In him, the Hurricanes saw a player who could thrive in their system, and he’s done just that. — Gentille

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College football kickoff times revealed in full for early weeks of season and Black Friday

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College football rivalries will air in unique viewing slots this fall as kickoff times and networks for the season’s first three weeks and special dates were unveiled Wednesday afternoon.

The Apple Cup, featuring Washington State at Washington, moved to Sunday, Sept. 6, and will kick off at 4 p.m. ET on NBC. The game serves as the curtain raiser to Wisconsin vs. Notre Dame at Green Bay’s Lambeau Field (7:30 p.m. ET). NBC also announced two other rivalry primetime matchups: Iowa State at Iowa in Week 2, while Minnesota travels to Wisconsin on Black Friday.

In Week 1, ESPN will show UCLA at California (10:30 p.m.) in a reunion of two former Pac-12 rivals. Yale at Harvard moves to Boston’s Fenway Park on Nov. 21, with ESPNU televising at 3:30 p.m. ET. On Halloween in Foxboro, Mass., Navy and Notre Dame meet for the 99th time. The game kicks off at noon ET on either ABC or ESPN.

ABC/ESPN and Fox released a few of the biggest games on their schedules earlier this month, including Oklahoma at Michigan (Noon ET, Fox) and Ohio State at Texas (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC) in Week 2, LSU at Ole Miss (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC) in Week 3 and Michigan at Ohio State (Noon ET, Fox) on Thanksgiving Saturday. ABC also unveiled its Black Friday lineup earlier this month.

Here are a few scheduling highlights:

Week 0 (Aug. 29)

ESPN will broadcast two international games, including TCU-North Carolina in an international game in Dublin (noon) and NC State-Virginia in Rio de Janeiro (3:30 p.m. ET).

NBC selected the Big Ten opener with San Jose State traveling to USC (3 p.m. ET). This was a late addition for the Trojans after negotiations with Notre Dame broke down. In a pivotal game featuring two of the top Group of 6 programs, Memphis travels to UNLV for a 10 p.m. ET kickoff on Fox.

Week 1 (Sept. 3-7)

Defending national champion Indiana picked up the first Big Noon Kickoff on Fox with its home game against North Texas. Fox also airs a battle between former Big East foes when Boston College travels to Cincinnati (3:30 p.m.). FS1 shows Matt Campbell’s debut as Penn State’s coach against Marshall at 3:30 p.m. Ohio State opens on BTN against Ball State (12:30 p.m. ET) as one of its two mandated games on the network the league partially owns.

ESPN already announced most of its schedule earlier this month, highlighted with ABC games East Carolina at Alabama (noon ET), Baylor vs. Auburn in Atlanta (3:30 p.m. ET) and Clemson at LSU (7:30 p.m. ET) on Saturday, Sept. 5, Louisville-Ole Miss in Nashville (7:30 p.m. ET) on Sunday, Sept. 6 and SMU at Florida State (7:30 p.m. ET) on Labor Day.

NBC airs the Kyle Whittingham debut in Ann Arbor with Western Michigan visiting Michigan (7:30 p.m. ET). CBS picks up Boise State at Oregon (3:30 p.m. ET).

In its inaugural season with the Pac-12, USA features one of the nation’s oldest rivalries with Wyoming traveling to Colorado State (6 p.m. ET).

Week 2 (Sept. 10-12)

With Fox showing Oklahoma at Michigan at noon ET, ABC chose Arizona State at Texas A&M in the same time slot with Oregon at Oklahoma State on ESPN. ABC will air Alabama at Kentucky (3:30 p.m. ET), followed by Ohio State at Texas (7:30 p.m. ET). ESPN scheduled Tennessee at Georgia Tech (7 p.m. ET) in primetime and wraps up the night with Arkansas at Utah (10:15 p.m. ET).

Fox showcases one of the Big 12’s most pivotal matchups when Arizona plays at BYU (3:30 p.m. ET). Both teams will likely be ranked. FS1 broadcasts a pair of power-conference crossovers with Wake Forest at Purdue (noon) and Duke at Illinois (3:30 p.m. ET). CBS chose an SEC-Big Ten matchup with Mississippi State traveling to Minnesota (3:30 p.m. ET).

Week 3 (Sept. 17-19)

League play picks up in the ACC and SEC, starting with Lane Kiffin’s return to Oxford, Miss., when LSU visits Ole Miss (7:30 p.m. ABC). Georgia at Arkansas (noon) kicks off Saturday on ABC, while Florida at Auburn lands in primetime on ESPN. In a return game from last year’s season-opening upset by Florida State, the Seminoles play at Alabama at 3:30 p.m. on ABC.

The ACC action kicks off early in primetime with Syracuse at Pittsburgh (Thursday) and Miami at Wake Forest (Friday). Bill Belichick and North Carolina travel to Clemson (noon). Virginia faces West Virginia in Charlotte (7:30 p.m. ET) on the ACC Network, and SMU at Louisville (3:30 p.m. ET) airs on either ESPN or ESPN2.

Kent State at Ohio State opens the day on Fox, while USC travels to Rutgers (3:30 p.m.) on CBS. Fox and FS1 will air Virginia Tech at Maryland and Colorado at Northwestern at 7:30 p.m. ET, but neither network has been designated. Purdue travels to UCLA for an after-dark kickoff (11 p.m.) on BTN.

Arizona State-Kansas kicks off at noon ET from Wembley Stadium in London with FS1 televising the Big 12 matchup.

NBC previously announced it will broadcast Michigan State at Notre Dame (7:30 p.m.), which allows for an adjustment of its Big Ten schedule. Instead of airing a Big Ten game earlier in the day, NBC opted to stream three games on Peacock in unusual time slots: Eastern Michigan at Wisconsin (12:30 p.m. ET), Southern Illinois at Illinois (2 p.m.) and Western Kentucky at Indiana (4 p.m.).

Thanksgiving weekend

The Big Ten’s Friday doubleheader opens at noon with Nebraska visiting Iowa on CBS. It’s the 16th consecutive season the border foes meet on Black Friday. For the second time in three years, Minnesota plays at Wisconsin on Black Friday.

As previously announced, ABC has a Black Friday tripleheader kicking off with Mississippi State at Ole Miss (Noon), then Florida at Florida State (3:30 p.m.), followed by Texas at Texas A&M (7:30 p.m.). ESPN also carries TCU at Texas Tech on Thanksgiving (8 p.m.).

West Virginia travels to Utah on Black Friday with a 9 p.m. ET kickoff on Fox.

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