Sports
Gyökeres brace lifts Arsenal, pressures Manchester City
Arsenal supporters had almost forgotten what it was like to win without their nerves being shredded. They were reacquainted with the feeling on an occasion when everything felt right from the start and got better and better. It was all over by half-time, Arsenal three goals to the good and the Emirates Stadium purring over a virtuoso Bukayo Saka performance.
The England winger had not been himself before he was forced to take time out at the end of March to rest an achilles problem – and one or two others aches. He was back in the starting XI here and the bang he produced could be heard in Manchester. City do not play until Monday night. They will kick off at Everton six points behind Arsenal at the top, albeit having played two games fewer. Arsenal have turned up the heat inexorably.
It looked as though Saka was immune to the pressure on his club, which has been such a feature of the season and the last few months, especially. When did Arsenal last win in the league with a degree of comfort? It was the 4-1 at Tottenham on 21 February.
| Pos | Team | P | GD | Pts |
| 1 | Arsenal | 35 | 41 | 76 |
| 2 | Man City | 33 | 37 | 70 |
| 3 | Man Utd | 34 | 14 | 61 |
| 4 | Liverpool | 34 | 13 | 58 |
| 5 | Aston Villa | 34 | 5 | 58 |
Saka made the opening goal for Viktor Gyökeres in the ninth minute, he scored the second himself and he was involved at the beginning of the move for No 3, which was headed home by Gyökeres for his 21st goal of the season in all competitions. Saka set the tone, he calmed and inspired everyone in red, teammates and fans alike. He did not reappear for the second half; it was safe to say his work was done. It was the most devastating of cameos.
Arsenal have looked jaded of late; anxious. Short of creativity and goals. This was a game to restore the collective belief and the plus-three in the goal difference column was very welcome, too. The 22-year wait for the title has pushed the boundaries of obsession. Arsenal can feel it edging closer.
The noise at the outset had been really something; the nervous energy of the Arsenal crowd morphing into tremendous encouragement and their team made the dream start. The breakthrough was all about Saka. When Arsenal isolated him against Raúl Jiménez after working a free-kick short and coming over to the right, the alarm bells rang for Fulham.
Viktor Gyökeres rises highest to score Arsenal’s third. Photograph: Mark Leech/Offside/Getty Images
Saka went back and then he made his move, jinking up the outside, tying Jiménez in a knot. It was as if the Fulham striker had been freeze-framed; completely taken out of the game. Saka’s low cross was a beauty and Gyökeres, having timed his run, had a tap-in.
Arsenal had gone 1-0 up through Eberechi Eze in exactly the same minute of last Saturday’s game here against Newcastle. It was the prompt for them to sink back, the anxiety to grip. There was a different feel about this occasion. Arsenal were so much more proactive, their tempo was high. They wanted a second goal before the interval and they chased it with conviction. They would get it and then some.
It helped having Saka in this kind of mood. He bristled with assurance on the ball, he was terrifying for everyone in Fulham white. There was a certainty about him when he picked up possession and trained his sights forward. Eze was dangerous in the pockets, Leandro Trossard was very good off the left and it was just an excellent day for Gyökeres.
Arsenal were not disheartened when Gabriel Magalhães was denied at close quarters by Bernd Leno after a Saka corner. Or when the Fulham goalkeeper saved smartly from Gyökeres, Saka dragging the rebound wide. Or when Riccardo Calafiori, who was back after injury, had a goal ruled out for offside in the 27th minute following a Trossard cross. They simply dug deeper, pushed harder. They could feel it was going to be their day. They made it that way.
Saka’s goal for 2-0 was a whipped finish inside Leno’s near post after Gyökeres held up an Eze pass up the inside right and laid it off. Did Leno anticipate a trademark Saka curler for the other corner? Maybe. But this is the thing with Saka. He can hurt you either way.
Arsenal turned the screw and it was 3-0 when Trossard motored up the inside left and hung up a cross for Gyökeres, who looped a fine header home. The move had been sparked when Gabriel stepped up to release Trossard. Before that, it had been Saka retaining the ball with supreme confidence and playing it inside.
Arteta made five changes to the team he sent out at Atlético Madrid on Wednesday in the Champions League semi-final first leg; a high number by his standards. His Atlético counterpart, Diego Simeone, made 11 for his team’s trip to Valencia earlier on Saturday – before Tuesday night’s second leg here. Atlético have little to play for in La Liga. They are fourth and will probably finish there.

Viktor Gyökeres pokes home to open the scoring. Photograph: Marc Atkins/Getty Images
Arteta’s most eye-catching decision was to play Myles Lewis-Skelly in midfield in place of Martín Zubimendi; the 19-year-old has never started an Arsenal game in midfield. He brought plenty of energy and that was the collective theme, really. Arsenal ran all over Fulham, who barely turned up. Marco Silva’s squad have been affected by a virus but they had to be better than this. Fulham have never won away against Arsenal; the run now stands at 33 matches.
Arteta was sufficiently relaxed to withdraw not only Saka but Declan Rice and Gyökeres in the 64th minute and the only question in a more pedestrian second half concerned whether Arsenal could score again. Gyökeres was denied by Leno in a one-on-one while Calafiori watched a header hit the Fulham goalkeeper on the head and come off the crossbar. Leno knew nothing about that. Arsenal know this was a serious statement.
The Guardian
Sports
Canada’s Ismaël Koné Leaves World Cup Match on Stretcher
A soccer player for Canada suffered a game-stopping injury in front of a home crowd during the team’s historic group stage victory at the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
During the Thursday, June 18 match between Canada and Qatar, Ismaël Koné, 24, was left speechless after opposing midfielder Assim Madibo went for the soccer ball and cracked Koné’s leg instead during the second half.
Multiple videos circulated on social media showing the moment Madibo, 29, went for the ball, knocking Koné to the ground in the process.
Though the sound in the stadium was too loud at BC Place in Vancouver to hear what was happening on the field, cameras zoomed in on the incident, showing Koné appearing to be shocked.
He covered his mouth and looked at his leg, which was visibly misaligned.
A nearby player from Qatar who was nearly involved in the collision walked over to Koné and signaled for help as others on the field quickly gathered around the fallen player.
“That tackle was nasty, Saliba’s face after his goal says it all. Did it for Kone❤️👏👏👏,” one person wrote. Another added, “Canada 🇨🇦 is behind you KONE! Wishing you a speedy recovery and now Canada is even more motivated to win!! Let’s go boys.”
Saliba, 22, replaced Koné after the in-game injury, and a VAR (video assistant referee) review resulted in Madibo being given a straight red card and ejected from the game for a dangerous play, ESPN reported.
Saliba scored just minutes after entering the game, helping Canada defeat Qatar 6-0. This was Canada’s first-ever tournament win and tied the mark for the biggest margin of victory for a World Cup host nation, reports ESPN.
In a postmatch news conference, Canada head coach Jesse Marsch said he hadn’t talked to Koné yet, but confirmed that the athlete was in the hospital, and that he would see him after the press conference.
“We’ll see exactly what we decide to do for him,” Marsch said, per ESPN. “His family is with him at the hospital, so his mother’s there and his family.”
He also said the injury was something they “could all hear.”
“So your heart goes out to him and everybody’s a little shaken by the whole experience because of the nature of the injury and also because Ismaël is a big part of the heart of our team. It will be a big loss for us. He’s been an amazing player in these last two games,” Marsch said.
Canada’s next match is against Switzerland on Wednesday, June 24.
People
Sports
Mbappé stunner leads France past Senegal scare
This was an ominous start from the World Cup favourites. A spluttering first-half performance gave way to a second period characterised by a combination of physical intensity and technical ability that few club sides, never mind nations, can match. Add a record-breaking double for Kylian Mbappé and some superlative playmaking from Michael Olise, and this was very much a job well done for France.
After Mbappé tucked away a superb Olise pass just after the hour, a match that had started as a keenly fought contest faded to a procession. When the captain crashed his second of the day past Édouard Mendy in a chaotic period of added time, he secured both victory and his place as France’s all-time leading scorer, a 58th goal for his country edging him ahead of Olivier Giroud.
This was all grist to the mill for Didier Deschamps, who denied having given his team a dressing-down after an error-strewn first half but did admit to “speaking my mind”. He said the key change in the second half was positional, as Olise moved more centrally to influence the play. But it was clear the players had also been encouraged, gently or otherwise, to raise their level.
“I am frank with my players, I tell them how things are,” Deschamps said. “We could have done much better on many levels in the first half. I wasn’t shouting or screaming, I’ve grown wiser with age, but my players do have to make the right decisions in defending and come into their own when attacking.”
Deschamps said he moved Olise inside, at the expense of Ousmane Dembelé (who was later substituted), because “I thought it would give us more connection”, adding: “The more Michael touches the ball the better it is. It created more danger.”
As for Mbappé he was, in his coach’s words, “ruthlessly efficient”. The 27-year-old is now the third highest goalscorer in World Cup history behind Ronaldo Nazario and Miroslav Klose, and was not immune from the mistakes that characterised the first half. But, Deschamps said: “If you want to miss the first half again and score two in the second half, that’s OK with me.”
Senegal should likely have held the lead at half time, with Mike Maignan saving well from Sadio Mané (and avoiding an inadvertent own goal after the ball deflected off his heel) before Ismaïla Sarr wasted a clear opportunity from 10 yards out. But when France re-emerged from the break they did so with a marked increase in intensity and, by the hour, the game had changed decisively.
France were now the dominant team and it felt as if a goal could arrive at any minute. So when Mbappé burst down the right and forced Mané into a sliding challenge inside the penalty area, there was a collective holding of the breath. While Alireza Faghani awarded a corner, video footage seemed to suggest a foul but, after the Iranian-Australian referee was directed towards the monitor, he chose not to change his mind to the surprise of almost everyone in the ground.
The decision, however unusual, did not affect the direction of this match as Olise and Mbappé continued to purr. Almost immediately the former burst through the middle of the pitch and slipped a ball beyond the Senegal defence which the latter just could not reach. No matter, because the next time the ball came to the Bayern player, some 30 yards out from goal, he bisected two lines of opposition defence with a visionary pass cutting right to left across the field. Coming left to right, meanwhile, was Mbappé. He beat everyone to the ball, turned back on himself and finished with consummate ease.
Dembelé was ultimately withdrawn for Bradley Barcola, a closer for club and country, who doubled the France lead with eight minutes to go when he ran on to another through ball, this time following assertive play by Adrien Rabiot, to slot past Mendy. Ibrahim Mbaye, on as a Senegal substitute, slammed a rising drive past Maignan in added time to alter momentarily the calculations before Mbappé struck again, a swerving dipping effort off the laces that Mendy should have dealt with better.
For Pape Thiaw, the Senegal head coach, this was a lesson in hitting your levels, but not a fatal one. His side will face Norway next, then Iraq, and qualification remains the aim. “When you look at the match overall, if we had been more efficient by half-time we would have led by one or two nil,” he said.
“In the second half France were more efficient than we were. We lost the ball easily on all their opportunities, and with the technical ability of the opponent we can’t allow that to happen. We have two matches to play to get six points.”
THE GUARDIAN
Sports
Messi makes World Cup history with Algeria stunner
Lionel Messi has spent years rewriting football’s record books and he added another remarkable chapter against Algeria. He has opened Argentina’s World Cup campaign scoring a banger.
In what was his 200th senior appearance for Argentina, Messi became the first player in history to feature in six different FIFA World Cups. The 39 year old already holds Argentina’s records for most appearances (200), most goals (118) and most assists (61), and he marked the historic occasion in typical fashion.
Argentina’s captain burst into space after a brilliant line breaking pass from Rodrigo De Paul. Spotting an opening, Messi unleashed a powerful effort from outside the box. Algeria goalkeeper Luca Zidane, son of French legend Zinedine Zidane, got both hands to the shot but could not keep it out as the ball squirmed into the net.
It was the perfect start to Messi’s sixth World Cup campaign and a reminder that his magic remains as potent as ever. Now he has become Argentina’s youngest and oldest goal scorer in the history of World Cup.
The goal was also significant from a statistical point of view. It was Messi’s 14th World Cup goal, extending his tally as Argentina’s all time leading scorer in the competition. It was also his fifth World Cup goal from outside the penalty area, drawing him level with Brazilian great Rivellino for the most such goals by any player since 1966.
The move itself showcased Messi’s footballing IQ. De Paul’s vision to break the lines, Messi’s intelligence to find space between defenders, and the confidence to shoot from distance all combined in one memorable moment. It was the fifth time two MLS players combined for a goal at the FIFA World Cup and the first for a team other than the USMNT.
A record breaking appearance. A landmark 200th cap. A goal from outside the box. Leo Messi, who else?
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