Away from the World Cup, here’s an astonishing story involving Everton that came out in the last hour or two. This is the largest financial penalty ever imposed on a Premier League club. increases the likelihood of more clubs taking legal action over profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) offences.
Here’s another bit of Argentina news: a security oversight accidentally leaked the passport details of every player in Lionel Scaloni’s squad that faced Iceland. according to Reuters.
The passport numbers, listed on the official team sheet, should have been blurred before being released to the media. the public. But in Alabama’s Jordan-Hare Stadium, they were circulated without redaction.
We mentioned earlier that Lionel Messi featured for Argentina overnight in their 3-0 friendly win over Iceland. as the 38-year-old quelled fears over his recent hamstring troubles. Messi scored a penalty after coming on as a substitute. looks like he will be fully fit when Argentina kick off their title defence with a Group J match against Algeria next Tuesday.
Messi looked in good spirits after the game as he spoke to Iceland’s Daniel Gudjohnsen. who surprised the Argentina superstar by informing him he was the son of Messi’s former Barcelona teammate, Eidur Gudjohnsen.
“He said to me, ‘Do you remember who I am?’” Messi told reporters after the game. “I was surprised at the time. Then he told me he was [Eidur] Gudjohnsen’s son. Honestly I didn’t remember, he was very little. I remember running into him when he was with his father at some training session.”
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The latest edition of our Full Story podcast is out: Samantha Lewis speaks to Nour Haydar about the impact the many problems could have on the world’s most-watched sporting event. as geopolitical disputes and allegations of corporate greed cast a shadow over the World Cup.
Here’s a good tale: Germany have flown in veteran groundskeeper Sebastian Breuning to water. maintain their World Cup training ground at North Carolina’s Wake Forest University amid high temperatures, German newspaper Bild said in a report.
Breuning, who has been the groundskeeping coordinator since 2022, was seen tending to the heavily-watered pitch with local staff after Tuesday’s training session amid hot. humid weather.
Speaking of a good kit gone bad, get a load of the new Newcastle United 2026-27 home shirt! Eeeeeeeeeessh! Definitely a novel idea from Adidas to turn one of the great English shirts into a barcode.
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You will notice that the shirt does not have a sponsor. although Newcastle are apparently working on that before the new Premier League season after the £25million-a-year deal with Sela came to an end.
Thanks Dom and hello world!
Let’s start with a freshly-launched team guide for the team with (historically) the greatest international home kit in the world.
Although the 2026 kit is poor, at best!
Right it’s time for Michael Butler to take the reins. Enjoy his company.
It’s actually hard to believe the World Cup is a mere 28 hours away from kicking off. It feels like a tournament that’s been forever on the horizon. much talked about – especially off the field – but, mercifully, the actual football is nearly under way. Qatar was similar, there was plenty of controversy. discussion off the pitch, but the action itself ended up being largely entertaining and watchable fare. Let’s hope the bloated number games of games doesn’t stop that being the case again this time around.
Here’s an interesting comment BTL. I’ve not seen too many predicting Brazil to end their 24-year World Cup drought (that’s a long time in Brazilian terms). there is an argument to be made, especially with Don Carlo at the wheel …
I fancy Brazil for this world cup. The squad isn't the best, but it has real quality in the key positions - 2 world class goalkeepers, 2 world class central defenders,. in Cunha, Raphinha and Vinicius they have some serious pace up front.
Plus - the kicker - Ancelotti. One the best ever - in terms of tactical nous and adaptability possibly the absolute best. He'll certainly be a huge advantage at the business end of the tournament.
Dark horse chat: It’s not Turkey. Repeat, it’s not Turkey.
Iran have threatened to halt their matches at the World Cup if unauthorised flags are displayed or slogans targeting the national team are chanted at stadiums. That’s according to reports in Iranian media, citing Sports Minister Ahmad Donyamali.
Iran opening their Group G campaign against New Zealand in Los Angeles on 15 June. They next face Belgium at the same venue on 21 June before taking on Egypt in Seattle on 26 June.
“We have informed Fifa that if unofficial flags are brought or slogans against the national team are chanted in the stadiums where Iran plays in the World Cup. the team manager will definitely be responsible for stopping the match,” Donyamali reportedly said on Tuesday. “We have been assured that no disruptive incidents will occur in the stadium during the match against Egypt.”
Iran and Egypt’s football associations had previously urged Fifa to prevent any LGBTQ+ Pride-related activities during their game in Seattle.
It’s quite a footballing quirk how often you get siblings who represent different international teams.
At the upcoming World Cup there are four examples of it… as well as Desiré. Guéla Doué (France and Ivory Coast respectively, see the latest Football Daily email for more – linked below), there is also Brian Brobbey (Netherlands) and half-brother Derrick Luckassen (Ghana), John Souttar (Scotland) and Harry Souttar (Australia) and Iñaki Williams (Ghana) and Nico Williams (Spain).
There are some brothers playing for the same nation, too, including Curaçao’s former EFL pair, the Bacuna brothers.
An email has landed from Ben Watson (presumably not. one): “One of my favourite World Cup moments is when we get to have a gander at a the official suits the [England] team will be wearing when they go over there. But absolutely nothing on that this year. Is that a Tuchel thing – enough with the frippery? “And while we’re at it, no song either, and precious little on the hotel they’re staying. What’s going on?”
It’s 2026, Ben. It’s all about asking them inane/viral questions on TikTok and jumping in a pool full of inflatables. Plus there’s been no good England song since Three Lions, really.
I found myself agreeing with Jacob Steinberg more than anyone else …
On who will win the World Cup, he wrote: “The conditions might suit Argentina. I think they’ll lose to Spain in the final – assuming that Luis de la Fuente’s wingers are on form
On the golden boot: “Kane is finally going into a tournament in top condition.”
And on the dark horses/surprise team of the tournament: “Ecuador have defenders who played in the Champions League, a midfield marshalled by Caicedo. are unbeaten in 18 games. They look awkward and might fancy themselves in these conditions.”
Nico Paz is also a nice shout for the possible breakout player of the tournament.
How about we delve a little deeper in our writers’ World Cup predictions? Why the devil not …
That is your lot from me today. I will be back on Friday, definitely not over-tired from having unnecessarily stayed up to watch South Korea v Czechia at an implausible time. Dominic Booth will be with you for the next stint.
One of my favourite moments of any World Cup. Guardian writers have put down their predictions for the tournament. They are being asked who will reach the final. win it, who will take home the golden boot, who will be breakthrough player, which teams they are most looking forward to watching and crucially, nobody asked me, so I can just sit smugly on my hands and laugh at them all when the tournament ends and say whatever happened would have been my pick. For what it’s worth, the consensus seems to be France, Spain or Argentina taking home the trophy.
I think we can guess who this guy would have picked …
The latest from our Moving the Goalposts newsletter has just hit the website. with Tom Garry writing that an exciting transfer window will only exacerbate women’s football’s wealth gap. Content warning: I did a CTRL+F to check it didn’t mention the trauma of Spain 4-0 England,. it doesn’t, so you are safe to read it.
UN rights chief Volker Türk has weighed in on the World Cup visa controversies – some of which I listed out here yesterday – including the refusal to admit Omar Artan. the referee who was bizarrely deemed a threat to national security by US officials.
Speaking in Geneva, AFP reports Türk said: “I really hope that there’s a massive re-think of how immigration enforcement is impacting human rights. human dignity, and that especially for the World Cup, there is a re-think of the policies that we have unfortunately seen prevailing, especially in the US”
Artan. meanwhile, if you hadn’t seen, has been given a hero’s welcome on his return to Somalia, vowing “I promise you, God willing, that I will attend the next one.”
Did you miss our World Cup trivia quiz yesterday? Never fear, it is over here …
For those of you who frequent Reddit, you can ask the Guardian’s US soccer reporting team all your questions about the US men’s national team. World Cup more generally on our Reddit AMA on r/ussoccer. The team will begin answering your questions live at 7pm BST / 2pm EST today on the Reddit AMA post here.
In non-World Cup news. PA reports Newcastle have completed their first summer signing after landing Reims goalkeeper Ewen Jaouen on a long-term deal. Meanwhile. French forward Amadou Ba-Sy has been announced as Hearts ’ fourth new signing of the summer, no doubt enticed by how exciting the climax of last season was in Scotland, which I managed to watch in an Irish pub in Vienna, as you do.
Good afternoon (or morning or evening depending on where you are reading), I’m delighted to confirm that the Guardian transfer window is open. I’ve been able to go on loan to the sport desk again for the World Cup. Slightly less delighted about most of the group stage matches being at unsociable hours in the UK,. you can’t have everything.
Daniel Gallan has written for us about his memories of the last time South Africa. Mexico opened a World Cup, which he was watching at a fan park on the beach in Durban. Some guys have all the luck. When Siphiwe Tshabalala opened the scoring, Daniel recalls “In Soccer City, on the Durban beach, in townships, suburbs, shebeens. lounges, the country lost its mind. I remember leaping into the arms of strangers, staring into their faces for confirmation that this was real.”
Let’s hope we get some more lovely memories like this over the coming one billion matches in the 2026 tournament …
And on that retro bombshell, I’ll hand you over to your friend. mine Martin Belam, who’ll guide you through the early afternoon.
On This Day In World Cup History: 1990 – Careca was a decent player wasn’t he?
Manchester United release Sancho, Bissouma leaves Spurs. Jadon Sancho has a prominent role in Dear England of course, around the 2021 Euros,. five years on there are no surprises that his departure from Manchester United has been confirmed as various Premier League clubs announce their released lists. United have also confirmed that Casemiro and Tyrell Malacia were leaving.
Elsewhere Spurs have relased Yves Bissouma, the midfielder having dropped down the pecking order in the past year. Tottenham have given a new contract to the defender Ben Davies, as reported earlier.
Further to the Dear England ruminations an hour or so ago, Michael Hogan has assembled a handy guide to the best telly. film to get you in the mood for the World Cup. Particular shouts for This is England 86, The Game Of Their Lives. An Evening With Gary Lineker, written at a time when football and theatre were very much estranged culturally.
The USA now,. Jeff Rueter has profiled the London-raised Folarin Balogun, who is set to be a focal point for the co-hosts:
double quotation mark Some strikers are gregarious personalities who ensure attention even when they struggle. Folarin Balogun prefers to speak softly and maintain a healthy goalscoring record. The 24-year-old has still been making himself known to his country of birth – he was born in New York but raised in London – after committing to the US over England. Nigeria. This past season. he finished fourth in Ligue 1 scoring with 13 goals, priming him for an emergent World Cup on home soil.
Balogun’s recruitment was closely monitored by US fans, desperate for a dependable goalscorer.
“What we would say in England is how sharp he is,” the USMNT captain, Tim Ream, said. “Just with his movement: left, right, being able to hold the ball up. bring other players in, and then his movement in behind and getting himself in the goalscoring positions is something that we’ve been crying out for for a long time with the team and this group. He’s probably the most annoying striker for me to have to deal with in training because he is so quick with his movements, physically strong. able to seemingly glide past people.”
Just a brief catch-up on some competitive football last night – England’s 3-0 win over Ukraine in their final Women’s World Cup qualifier. It wasn’t enough for the Lionesses to avoid the playoffs though. as group leaders Spain hammered Iceland to seal automatic qualification for Brazil 2027.
A dip into some BTL commentary now. Here’s Jacknimrod10:
double quotation mark Could anyone imagine having an actual conversation with Gianni Infantino? The guy seems to be living in some parallel world completely different from real football fans. If he really believed the guff he spouts, he would have intervened in this ref situation. He’s just made himself even more despised. If life was a film. he would be the first corporate fluffer to get troughed by the escaped T-Rex in Jurassic Park 2026.
It’s a poser isn’t it? I mean he’s obviously not stupid – he’s worked his way up Fifa’s ladder with consummate nous –. he seems incapable of critical thought. A case study in how far blind power worship, blind following-the-money, can lead an unremarkable and uncharismatic man.
Forgive me the brief switch of sport but Chuck D – Chuck D! – has made his Guardian Sport debut:
A couple more nuggets of club news: Casemiro’s departure from Manchester United, long trailed, has been confirmed. As has Ben Davies’s 12-month contract extension at Tottenham.
The US isn’t the only World Cup host where politics. football are colliding messily, albeit that they’re being handled more sensitively. There have been protests in Mexico. where a demonstration blocked an avenue leading to Mexico City’s Azteca Stadium for hours on Tuesday, AFP reports.
Teacher protests in the capital have been ongoing. thousands took part in Tuesday’s protest, which was led by a breakaway group of the CNTE union following a week of demonstrations that President Claudia Sheinbaum has called a “provocation.” “As if to say, ’Look at how bad the situation is in Mexico,’” she told a press conference.
A police blockade prevented the demonstrators from reaching the Azteca Stadium. which will host the World Cup opening match on Thursday. With thousands of officers deployed. concrete barriers set up around the venue, protesters rallied on the street for around three hours before dispersing.
Mexico City’s security chief Pablo Vazquez said in a statement that the movement had been peaceful.
Sheinbaum said earlier. the opening match was “guaranteed,” though the left-leaning leader again ruled out using police to repress the demonstrations.
Her government has favoured dialogue with the protesting teachers, but to no avail. “We’re going to continue our struggle,” said protester Austreberto Flores.
The CNTE teachers union has been on strike since last week to demand a salary raise. the reversal of a pension law – which the government considers unfeasible.
The teachers have also set up camp near the World Cup fan zone in Mexico City’s Zocalo square.
The teachers have called for demonstrations on Thursday that will also include families of so-called “disappeared” people. who are alleged to have been killed or kidnapped by Mexican authorities or criminal gangs.
Thomas Tuchel told last night’s presser that he was giving his team afternoons off. time with families, to create the kind of relaxed atmosphere with which he is not always perhaps readily associated. I finally finished watching Dear England last night,. it immediately prompted thoughts about the cultural gear change from Gareth Southgate to Tuchel. Also, even allowing for a playright’s creative licence, it’s striking how impressive and admirable Harry Kane comes across. The whole thing – angst, hysteria and all – is a decent appetite-whetter for this tournament anyway.
Good to see Paul Gascoigne out and about. The totemic Italia 90 star was on Good Morning Britain this morning talking about England’s prospects. the importance of team spirit, as PA Media reports:
“You want 11 captains on the pitch. when you are playing in a game like that, at a World Cup, you cannot afford to carry anyone,” Gascoigne said. “Everyone has to be on the ball and the team spirit is important.
“The players that didn’t play [om 1990], they were right behind the team, so our team spirit was unbelievable. The most important thing is team spirit because that goes a long way.”
When asked what he would say to the current squad, the 59-year-old added: “Enjoy it. Because you just never know it could be your last World Cup.”
More on the referee Omar Artan. Morgan Ofori preaches it.
double quotation mark So what does Fifa do about a World Cup in. the influence of Donald Trump – a man its leaders so publicly sought to cultivate – begins to affect the very architecture of their showpiece event? What does the organisation’s head. Gianni Infantino, however busy he may be organising absurd baubles for Trump or fighting legal threats from his own predecessor, say or do in moments like this?
He does what he is doing: he effectively shrugs. counts the dollars, measures the prestige growth and pretends all is well while the house catches fire. He seeks African expansion while willingly throwing certain nations under the bus for the prestige of a US World Cup. The Fifa he leads chooses complicity over courage.
How are you scheduling your middle of the night viewing, if you’re in Europe? Anyone who’s ever watched a Premier League live feed in a bar at 2am in Melbourne knows. following the game from Australia can be a body-clock wrecker. So Christopher Knaus from Guardian Australia has compiled this handy guide:
double quotation mark This is the lot of us longsuffering Australian football fans. Football and sleep deprivation walk hand-in-hand in this country. The waking weekend hours are a haze and Mondays are four-coffee days. We gamble so much more on that 90 minutes. A scoreless stalemate takes on new levels of frustration when you know it’s going to leave you functionally impaired for 24 hours.
And now. while we Australians find ourselves in a position of relative bliss, the shoe is, of course, very much on the other foot in the UK. This World Cup, held in Canada, Mexico and the US, has given England fans manageable group-stage fixtures. But Scotland fans are being hit with a 2am kick-off, right off the bat. Others are staring down the barrel of midnight and 3am starts. Forty-four of the 104 games are being played between midnight and 5am UK time.
So. I’m here to offer you the wisdom of football fans who were born on the wrong side of the planet. We’ve tried every approach you are now contemplating.
The World Cup referee who was denied entry to the United States arrived on Wednesday in Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, where he was received by a crowd of supporters. officials …
“I promise you. God willing, that I will attend the next one,” he said as hundreds of supporters at the airport waved the Somali flag. “I want the Somali public to take comfort in this and remain confident.”
A couple of items of club news: Benfica have confirmed the arrival of former Fulham gaffer Marco Silva on a two-year deal. Silva replaces José Mourinho, about whom probably more later, with Real Madrid set to formally announce the Portuguese’s return today. Ben Davies has signed a new Spurs deal,. Raul Jiménez has signed for Wolves for a second time, agreeing a two-year contract with the newly relegated club.
Some reading for you all to catch up on:
Jacob Steinberg on England’s need for attacking alternatives that aren’t built entirely around Harry Kane.
Our DR Congo and Uzbekistan team guides
Luke Entwistle’s interview with the hugely successful but not always greatly appreciated Didier Deschamps
And this week’s Knowledge, on repeat opening fixtures, the prominence of former Everton managers at World Cup 2026, and more.
England are gearing up for their final pre-tournament warmup. against Costa Rica in Orlando, with notes of caution being sounded about Bukayo Saka’s fitness. Thomas Tuchel said that while Saka’s fellow Arsenal late-arrivers Declan Rice, Eberechi Eze. Noni Madueke were pretty much up to speed, “Bukayo is just not there yet. Some things are missing … consecutive trainings. They took very good care of him [at Arsenal]. were very aware of it and we will do a little bit the same. He is at the moment not able to do every training session through the week and then play. He is still going to be managed”.
David Hytner has the full story:
Morning/evening/middle-of-the-night everyone. And welcome to Wednesday’s World Cup liveblog, with around 35 hours to go to the big kick-off. Excited? I kind of am, in spite of myself. Because yesterday was a pretty unedifying day, as some of the fears around the cruel politicisation of the tournament came to fruition, with the fallout from the barring of the Somali referee Omar Artan, members of Iran’s entourage being denied admission to the US. their ticket allocation being seemingly withdrawn, plus the earlier long detention on arrival of the Iraq striker Aymen Hussein. Fifa, normally so insistent on imposing full colonial demands on host countries, has acquiesced with all this.
But never mind, because Fifa overlord Gianni Infantino has been joshing about the US being invaded by friendly “barbarians”. Speaking at the tournament’s star-studded launch shindig in LA, the Fifa president quipped: “You will be invaded. You will be invaded by a horde of barbarians. But it’s happy barbarians, don’t worry.
“Men. women, children, grandparents, doesn’t matter, they will all have their faces colored with the colors of their countries,” he said. “They will just want to enjoy. have fun because that’s what we want to do with the World Cup – we want to unite the world.” Good luck with that.
Meanwhile, back in the real world Argentina beat Iceland 3-0 in Auburn, Alabama, in their final World Cup warmup. Lionel Messi came off the bench in the second half. scored his side’s second goal, from a penalty, as he continues to manage hamstring soreness. Valentin Barco had put Argentina ahead in the eighth minute,. Thiago Almeda wrapped things up with a third four minutes from time. Elsewhere, Iraq ’s final tune-up before their Group I campaign begins ended in a 2-0 loss to Venezuela.
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