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Fulham confirm Alvaro Arbeloa as new head coach on three-year deal

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Fulham have confirmed the appointment of Alvaro Arbeloa as their new head coach following the departure of Marco Silva.

The Athletic reported last month that Fulham were finalising a three-year deal for the former Real Madrid boss to replace Silva, who left the club after five years to join Benfica this summer.

The club had maintained that there were two leading candidates for the role in the days leading up to Arbeloa’s appointment, but the Spaniard will now take over and returns to the Premier League for the first time since leaving West Ham United as a player in 2017.

“It is a real honour for me to be embarking on this new stage at Fulham FC, the oldest club in London,” Arbeloa said. “I feel a great sense of responsibility and I’m deeply grateful to Mr. (Shahid) Khan and Tony Khan for the trust they have placed in me with Fulham in the Premier League.

“I am really looking forward to experiencing the atmosphere at Craven Cottage with Fulham fans and beginning pre-season with the players next week. I am sure we are going to enjoy an incredible journey together.”

Arbeloa replaced Xabi Alonso as Madrid’s head coach from January until the end of the season. He took over with the La Liga side four points behind rivals Barcelona, and that gap was extended to eight by the end of the season.

Arbeloa oversaw a shock Copa del Rey defeat at the last-16 stage to second division side Albacete and, despite eliminating Benfica and then Manchester City from the Champions League, Madrid were beaten by Bayern Munich in the quarter-finals.

Talks over Arbeloa’s appointment at Craven Cottage covered a range of topics including the Spaniard’s backroom staff and first-team squad planning.

Arbeloa’s coaching career began in Madrid’s youth system, and he went on to coach the Under-19 side before Real Madrid Castilla, where he spent the first half of the 2025-26 season before succeeding Alonso with the first team.

Arbeloa will face his predecessor Alonso in Fulham’s first Premier League game of the season, against Chelsea on August 24.

Former Fulham head coach Silva led the side to the Championship title in his debut season before stabilising them in the top-flight, finishing 10th, 13th, 11th and 11th in the last four seasons under the Portuguese coach. He has gone on to replace Jose Mourinho at Benfica, who has returned to Madrid.

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Switzerland hold nerve in penalty shootout to sink Colombia and reach World Cup quarter-finals

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The World Cup quarter-final line-up is complete.

Switzerland became the eighth, and final, nation to progress from the round of 16 as they booked a meeting with holders Argentina in Kansas City on Saturday. They defeated Colombia 4-3 in a tense penalty shootout, after a goalless draw; Gregor Kobel proving the hero with an exceptional save from Cucho Hernandez.

A scrappy, even game was dominated by two exceptional defences, and there were precious few chances worthy of the name as both teams wrestled with the weight of the occasion.

Our writers debate the big talking points in Vancouver.


How did the shootout drama unfold?

What the 120 minutes of normal football lacked in drama, the shootout more than made up for.

Juan Fernando Quintero and Granit Xhaka traded opening penalties before Colombia central defender Davinson Sanchez, given the right side of the goal to aim for by Kobel, clanged his shot against the crossbar. The ball bounced down onto the goal line but, crucially, was not over it.

Zeki Amdouni, off a short run-up, calmly placed the next penalty past Camilo Vargas to put Switzerland 2-1 up, before Jaminton Campaz’s low effort squirmed under Kobel.

Manuel Akanji stepped up with the chance to make it 3-2, but again, a centre-back smashed their penalty off target, this time way clear of the bar. We then remained at parity because Hernandez’s shot was brilliantly saved to his right by Kobel.

Cedric Itten went down the middle and scored for 3-2 to the Swiss, then Luis Dias made it 3-3, meaning Ruben Vargas had the chance to win it with Switzerland’s fifth and final penalty… and he sent his namesake the wrong way to spark delirious scenes of celebration.

It meant Colombia lost on penalties at the last-16 stage for their second World Cup appearance in a row, having done so against England in 2018.

Tim Spiers


Can Switzerland trouble Argentina in the quarter-finals?

Well, these teams certainly stopped each other during what was probably the worst match of the knockout phase so far, and one of the most uneventful of the whole tournament.

In 90 minutes, the combined xG (expected goals) figure of both sides was just 0.7, with neither ’keeper seriously tested. It was very 0-0 and extra time looked likely from about the 20-minute mark onwards, owing not just to a lack of individual brilliance in either attack (the injured Johan Manzambi was sorely missed for Switzerland) and also a lack of ambition, but primarily owing to the defensive organisation of the two sides.

Switzerland players celebrate their shootout victory (Luke Hales/Getty Images)

However, none of that means Switzerland can’t trouble Argentina in their quarter-final in Kansas City on Saturday (early Sunday UK time). Lionel Messi and company may have put six goals (three each) past Cape Verde and Egypt in knockout play so far, but they came perilously close to exiting this tournament in both matches, showing a defensive vulnerability neither team showed here.

Switzerland will look to exploit that via Breel Embolo and, they hope, Manzambi, provided he regains fitness. If they can again keep it tight at the back, they’ll have a chance. They’ll certainly be hard to beat.

Tim Spiers


How long can Rodriguez go on?

When James Rodriguez was substituted off in the 66th minute, thousands of Colombian fans in the crowd at Vancouver’s BC Place stadium stood — if they weren’t already doing so — and applauded.

Turning 35 later this week, Rodriguez is now at the stage of his international career when every time he walks off the field could be his farewell.

His numbers are remarkable.

Rodriguez first played for Colombia at senior level in 2011 and has since become arguably their best ever player. The attacking midfielder was making his 132nd appearance for his country here, adding to his lead in all-time caps. Only 19 men’s players in CONMEBOL, South America’s confederation, have represented their nation more often.

James Rodriguez could not break through for Colombia (Carl Recine/Getty Images)

There were moments in the first half here where Rodriguez looked like the player of old, with his ability to turn away from defenders and send precise balls forward. But as the minutes added up, such flashes grew dimmer. His legs looked tired and he became far less effective.

He is currently without a club side after departing Minnesota United of MLS in May, three months on from joining them.

You can make a strong case that a slowing Rodriguez should have made his last appearance for Colombia here. And that’s likely why the fans in Vancouver showed as much adoration as they did.

Joshua Kloke


Did Colombia have this World Cup’s best fans?

A lot of supporters from many different nations have covered miles and miles at the 2026 World Cup, but Colombia’s are genuinely going all over: they are the only country to play games in all three co-host nations, Mexico, Canada and the United States.

Colombia’s head coach Nestor Lorenzo was asked about those travel demands ahead of kick-off today.

“Of course, it’s not a good thing,” he said. “The whole time-change, weather-change, we play at high altitude or in humidity, and in dry weather too — we’re pretty much exposed to all sorts. The fact that the World Cup has been held in three countries, in one big continent, it could have happened to anybody. We just have to accept it.”

Colombia fans turned Vancouver yellow (David Ramos/Getty Images)

And the thousands following them have accepted it.

BC Place was a sea of yellow, as you knew it would be the night before the game when stacks of Colombia fans packed the streets outside the team hotel in the centre of the city, screaming for a glimpse of Luis Diaz (who obliged by appearing on an upstairs balcony to punch the air and wind everybody up even more) and company.

Colombia brought some quality football to this tournament — granted, today wasn’t much of an example of it — and brought colour, too. Don’t ever doubt that the sport is a religion there. And find a more devoted public if you can.

Phil Hay


Were Switzerland lucky not to concede a penalty?

This was a largely uncontroversial tie, but in the first period of extra time, there was a (relatively) big talking point.

Immediately following Quintero’s cross into the box, Swiss defender Miro Muheim attempted to stand up Colombia forward Campaz. The latter tumbled over Muheim’s right leg and tried to sell a possible penalty by lying on the floor clutching his thigh.

His motives were clear, as Muheim’s tackle was hardly nefarious.

Yes, the game needed some sort of spark, and yes, there was contact. But despite the pleas of the pro-Colombia crowd, referee Ivan Barton adjudged it to be nothing more than a collision.

And so the match continued at its plodding pace.

Joshua Kloke

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CB Bucknor among seven MLB umpires to retire at end of 2026 season: Source

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First-base umpire CB Bucknor makes the call during a game between the Boston Red Sox and the Cincinnati Reds.

Bucknor, 63, is one of six MLB umpires who started in 1999 and will take a buyout at the end of the year. Jeffrey Dean / MLB Photos via Getty Images

Seven of Major League Baseball’s 76 full-time umpires have accepted buyout offers and will retire at the end of the 2026 season.

The umpires include Lance Barksdale, who started in a full-time role in 2006, and six others who started in 1999: CB Bucknor, Laz Diaz, Andy Fletcher, Marvin Hudson, Brian O’Nora and Tony Randazzo.

The turnover, first reported earlier this week by USA Today’s Bob Nightengale, comes during the first season of the Automated Ball-Strike System, which highlights umpires’ calls in a more public way than ever before.

A person briefed directly on the buyout decisions confirmed the report and was granted anonymity to speak candidly about personnel matters. That person said the umpires made the decisions on their own, for physical or personal reasons, and some are bothered by the unfounded notion that the league is forcing them out.

Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Umpires Association both declined comment.

Bucknor, who turns 64 next month, drew scrutiny during the season’s opening series when ABS overturned six of his calls in a game between the Boston Red Sox and Cincinnati Reds. Two of those pitches came consecutively and would have been third strikes had they not been challenged.

On April 1, Bucknor left a game in Milwaukee after being struck in the facemask by a foul ball off the bat of the Tampa Bay Rays’ Nick Fortes on a 100.2-mph pitch from Brewers ace Jacob Misiorowski. He remains sidelined from the field and as of late May was still dealing with health effects from the incident.

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Phillies’ Jesus Luzardo named to National League All-Star roster as replacement

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CINCINNATI — Jesús Luzardo knew something was up when Phillies interim manager Don Mattingly called him into the visiting manager’s office at Great American Ball Park, but wasn’t sure what it was. Then Mattingly, alongside pitching coach Caleb Cotham and assistant Mark Lowy, told Luzardo he would be joining the National League All-Star team as a roster replacement for the Midsummer Classic in Philadelphia.

“It’s obviously an honor — first (All-Star nod) of my career,” Luzardo said Tuesday. “It’s been a good year as a team, too, fighting back from that start. So it’s a good note, but something to continue to build on.”

Luzardo, whom the Phillies gave a five-year $135 million contract extension in March, was named an NL pitching replacement along with Braxton Ashcraft and Riley O’Brien. The three pitchers will take the spots of Jacob Misiorowski, Paul Skenes and Max Meyer. Luzardo is the Phillies’ sixth All-Star player.

The Phillies lefty owns a 3.75 ERA in 103 1/3 innings this season, a figure he has been fighting to lower since an up-and-down start. His ERA  sat at 7.94 after four outings (20 earned runs in 22 2/3 IP) and did not fall below 5.00 until May 19, 10 starts into the season. But since the beginning of May, Luzardo has been one of the best lefties in the sport. His ERA since then (2.87) ranks fifth among qualified left-handed starters. His strikeouts since then (84) are second only to teammate Cristopher Sánchez, whom he will join on the NL pitching staff.

Luzardo’s addition to the staff underscores the Phillies’ rotation’s place among the best in the sport. Since May 1, Phillies starting pitchers have produced a 3.73 ERA — third-best in the NL — and pitched 328 innings — second-best in the league.

Zack Wheeler, who has a 2.36 ERA over 80 innings this season, has been a significant part of that. But Wheeler, who will pitch the day before the All-Star break, was not named to the original roster and is unlikely to be considered as a replacement because of his Sunday start. All three pitchers replaced were in line to start on Sunday.

Luzardo’s dreams of the All-Star Game began long before he was announced as a replacement. He remembered playing baseball in the street as a child, pretending he was playing in situations like the All-Star Game or Game 7 of the World Series. He said he is looking forward to everything about All-Star week.

“You grow up watching the All-Star Game and the festivities around it,” he said. “Hopefully, we have some guys in the Home Run Derby. If we do, that’ll be really fun to watch. And just being in a clubhouse with all the great players around the league and in front of the home crowd is also going to be very cool.”

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