Leicester Emerge From Chaos Ready to Write New Premier League Story

 New Leicester City signing Youri Tielemans pictured with manager Brendan Rodgers, joining up with his teammates during pre-season in Evian-les-Bains. Photograph: Plumb Images/Leicester City via Getty Images
New Leicester City signing Youri Tielemans pictured with manager Brendan Rodgers, joining up with his teammates during pre-season in Evian-les-Bains. Photograph: Plumb Images/Leicester City via Getty Images
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Leicester Emerge From Chaos Ready to Write New Premier League Story

 New Leicester City signing Youri Tielemans pictured with manager Brendan Rodgers, joining up with his teammates during pre-season in Evian-les-Bains. Photograph: Plumb Images/Leicester City via Getty Images
New Leicester City signing Youri Tielemans pictured with manager Brendan Rodgers, joining up with his teammates during pre-season in Evian-les-Bains. Photograph: Plumb Images/Leicester City via Getty Images

It says much about the way that Leicester City are operating these days that their transfer plans extend well beyond this window. Forward-thinking is at the heart of an active approach to recruitment that has seen Leicester bring in three new faces already and break their transfer record with the sort of signing that suggests the club who gave us one of the great sporting fairytales of modern times could be ready to ruffle a few feathers again.

Three years have passed since that incredible Premier League title success and, realistically, there was always going to be a tricky period of readjustment for everyone at Leicester. For a while the club were trying to find themselves again and, perhaps more than anything, work out where they belonged in football’s pecking order once the Champions League music had stopped playing and the memories of Andrea Bocelli bringing the house down at the King Power Stadium had started to fade.

In truth, it has been a little chaotic at times. Three managers were sacked in the space of two years and Leicester brought 23 players to the club in the three seasons that followed their 5,000-1 triumph. Across that period, Leicester finished 12th and ninth twice, which makes those campaigns sound a lot more serene than they were.

Now, though, there are clear signs of stability as well as renewed ambition and hunger, partly because of the appointments that have been made and the signings that have come in but also through a collective desire within the club to build on the legacy of their former owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, who was one of five people killed on that awful evening last October, when a helicopter crashed outside the King Power Stadium.

Aiyawatt, Vichai’s 33-year-old son, conducted himself with great dignity in the days, weeks and months that followed and he also vowed that he would do everything in his power to “carry on his [father’s] vision and dreams”.

Appointing Brendan Rodgers as manager in February and sanctioning the £40m signing of Youri Tielemans from Monaco this week is not a bad start.

Tielemans was a class act while on loan during the second half of last season and Aiyawatt, more commonly known as “Top”, was resolute in his determination to bring the Belgium international back on a permanent basis, backing Jon Rudkin, the director of football, even when Monaco were digging their heels in over the finances.

Aged 22 and prodigiously talented, Tielemans attracted interest from Manchester United this summer but they never made a formal offer and the midfielder was not going to wait around and find out whether that could change if players left Old Trafford or Ole Gunnar Solskjær missed out on other targets. Tielemans wanted to come to Leicester and made that clear.

Crucially, Leicester were decisive when they needed to be with Tielemans and the same has been true with the signings of Ayoze Pérez and James Justin. With both those transfers, clubs tried and failed to hijack the deals at the last minute, after Leicester had stolen a march.

Having an owner who is prepared to back the judgment of his manager and staff helps Leicester greatly in that respect and prevents them from being reactive in the market.

In the case of Pérez, who had been attracting interest from Valencia, Napoli and Monaco, Leicester had no intention of joining the queue and playing a game. They triggered the buyout clause straight away and by the time that Monaco made a late attempt to sign Pérez, who can play wide on the right or as a second striker, the Spaniard was at Leicester’s training ground and ready to complete a £30m transfer from Newcastle. Something similar happened with Crystal Palace and Justin, who was signed from Luton for an initial £6m and will start as understudy to Ricardo Pereira, the Portuguese right-back.

Identifying the right players as early as possible is key to a process that ultimately revolves around three key figures at Leicester: Rudkin, who has the trust of Top and acts as a conduit between the football side of the club and the owner; Lee Congerton, who was appointed head of senior recruitment in May after following Rodgers from Celtic; and the manager himself.

Rodgers knows the characteristics he is looking for in each position and the staff deliver accordingly. That includes Callum Smithson and José Fontes, a multilingual Portuguese who swapped investment banking for the football industry. Those two oversee the technical scouting operation and, while they may not get much of a mention outside of the club, they are highly respected within.

There is a collective drive at Leicester to discover, improve and recruit exciting young talent. Harvey Barnes, Hamza Choudhury, James Maddison and Demarai Gray are England Under-21 internationals. Tielemans (22), Justin (21) and Pérez (25), the three acquisitions so far this summer, are at an age where they have the potential to get better and better. Ben Chilwell, the England left-back, is 22; Pereira, the rampaging full-back on the opposite flank, is 25.

Throw in the experience and quality of Jonny Evans, Kasper Schmeichel and Jamie Vardy and it is easy to make a case that Leicester have a genuine chance of breaking into the top six, especially now they have a manager in Rodgers who knows not only how to get the best out of players but also how to get them playing with a clear identity – something never apparent under his predecessor, Claude Puel.

The one curveball is Harry Maguire and it would be fair to say that Leicester’s prospects of reeling in Manchester United or Arsenal will be considerably stronger if they can hold on to the England international. That appears unlikely on the face of it, although Leicester are adamant that Maguire will depart only on their terms, which is believed to be for a fee in excess of the £75m that Southampton received for Virgil van Dijk.

If that valuation is met, Leicester have a decision to make as to whether they pursue a replacement or invest the money elsewhere in the squad, bearing in mind that they paid £19m for the Turkey international Çağlar Söyüncü and £13m for the Croat Filip Benkovic last summer, both of whom are centre-backs.

No matter how that Maguire saga plays out, though, it feel as if Leicester are in a good place again. There is a real buzz about the state-of-the-art training ground that will be ready to move into next summer, an ambitious manager with a proven track record of developing youngsters, an exciting group of players under his watch, and an owner committed to fulfilling the wishes of his late father. The next couple of seasons could be fun.

The Guardian Sport



Iran Football Team Pushes Back on Trump Comments, Says ‘No One Can Exclude’ It from the World Cup

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - FIFA World Cup 2026 Draw - John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC, US - December 5, 2025 Draw Assistant Shaquille O'Neal draws out Iran during the FIFA World Cup 2026. (Draw Pool via Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - FIFA World Cup 2026 Draw - John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC, US - December 5, 2025 Draw Assistant Shaquille O'Neal draws out Iran during the FIFA World Cup 2026. (Draw Pool via Reuters)
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Iran Football Team Pushes Back on Trump Comments, Says ‘No One Can Exclude’ It from the World Cup

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - FIFA World Cup 2026 Draw - John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC, US - December 5, 2025 Draw Assistant Shaquille O'Neal draws out Iran during the FIFA World Cup 2026. (Draw Pool via Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - FIFA World Cup 2026 Draw - John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC, US - December 5, 2025 Draw Assistant Shaquille O'Neal draws out Iran during the FIFA World Cup 2026. (Draw Pool via Reuters)

Pushing back on US President Donald Trump’s comments, Iran's national soccer team says “no one can exclude” it from playing in the men's World Cup in the United States.

Instead, a post on the team's official Instagram account Thursday suggested maybe the US team should be excluded after Trump indicated that the host country couldn't guarantee the safety of the Iranian players.

Trump wrote in a social media post Thursday that the Iranian team was welcome at the World Cup despite the ongoing war with Iran but that “I really don’t believe it is appropriate that they be there, for their own life and safety.”

Iran is set to play all three of its World Cup group games in the US, which is co-hosting the tournament with Mexico and Canada.

The regional war has put doubt on Iran’s ability to fulfil its World Cup entry, and sports minister Ahmad Donyamali told state TV this week the current circumstances meant it was not possible to play.

But the Iran team’s riposte on Instagram confirmed it still wants to participate, and pointed out that the tournament is run by FIFA — not Trump or the US.

“The World Cup is a historic and international event and its governing body is FIFA — not any individual, country,” the post said. “Certainly, no one can exclude Iran’s national team from the World Cup; the only country that could be excluded is one that merely carries the title of ‘host’ yet lacks the ability to provide security for the teams participating in this global event.”

Iran is scheduled to play in Inglewood, California, against New Zealand on June 15 and Belgium on June 21, before finishing group play in Seattle against Egypt on June 26.

Trump’s mixed messages on the subject include saying last week “I really don’t care” if Iran plays, then assuring FIFA President Gianni Infantino at the White House on Tuesday that Iran’s team was welcome.

Iran is a power in Asian football, ranked No. 20 in the world by FIFA and has qualified for its fourth straight World Cup edition.

Iran’s football federation has planned to use a tournament base camp in Arizona, at the Kino Sports Complex in Tucson.

Before the World Cup, Iranian soccer officials are due to attend FIFA's annual congress on April 30 in Vancouver. The Iranian federation was unable to attend meetings in Atlanta last week to help teams prepare for the 48-nation tournament.


Bans Will Cost Mourinho 2 Games as Benfica Calls Punishment 'Unfair'

Benfica head coach José Mourinho (L) reacts during the Portuguese First League soccer match against FC Porto at Luz stadium in Lisbon, Portugal, 08 March 2026.  EPA/MIGUEL A. LOPES
Benfica head coach José Mourinho (L) reacts during the Portuguese First League soccer match against FC Porto at Luz stadium in Lisbon, Portugal, 08 March 2026. EPA/MIGUEL A. LOPES
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Bans Will Cost Mourinho 2 Games as Benfica Calls Punishment 'Unfair'

Benfica head coach José Mourinho (L) reacts during the Portuguese First League soccer match against FC Porto at Luz stadium in Lisbon, Portugal, 08 March 2026.  EPA/MIGUEL A. LOPES
Benfica head coach José Mourinho (L) reacts during the Portuguese First League soccer match against FC Porto at Luz stadium in Lisbon, Portugal, 08 March 2026. EPA/MIGUEL A. LOPES

Jose Mourinho is set to miss Benfica’s next two games as punishment for his red card and subsequent confrontation with a Porto assistant coach in last Sunday’s contentious “O Clássico."

The Portuguese soccer federation’s disciplinary council issued two decisions that effectively ban the 63-year-old Benfica manager from the team's next two matches.

Mourinho was handed a one-match ban for his red card late in Sunday's 2-2 draw. He received it for leaving his technical area and kicking a ball toward Porto’s substitutes’ bench in celebration of a goal. Mourinho said he had tried to kick it into the stands.

Mourinho, no stranger to controversy, also received an 11-day suspension for his exchange with Porto assistant coach Lucho Gonzalez, The Associated Press reported.

The one-game ban takes effect for Benfica's game Saturday at Arouca. The 11-day suspension would rule him out of the March 21 match against Vitoria.

Portuguese media noted that the punishments cannot be served concurrently.

Benfica said it will appeal Thursday night's rulings. It called Mourinho’s punishment “unfair and unjustified.”

The disciplinary council noted that Mourinho sparked the clash with Gonzalez by making a gesture with his index finger and thumb and repeatedly saying “you are small.” Gonzalez responded by calling Mourinho, who coached Porto to the Champions League title in 2004, “a traitor.”

Gonzalez received a one-game ban and an eight-day suspension.


Election Draws Spotlight as Barca Host Sevilla

 Barcelona's Lamine Yamal scores his side's first goal from the penalty spot during the Champions League round of 16 first leg soccer match between Newcastle United and Barcelona in Newcastle, England, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (AP)
Barcelona's Lamine Yamal scores his side's first goal from the penalty spot during the Champions League round of 16 first leg soccer match between Newcastle United and Barcelona in Newcastle, England, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (AP)
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Election Draws Spotlight as Barca Host Sevilla

 Barcelona's Lamine Yamal scores his side's first goal from the penalty spot during the Champions League round of 16 first leg soccer match between Newcastle United and Barcelona in Newcastle, England, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (AP)
Barcelona's Lamine Yamal scores his side's first goal from the penalty spot during the Champions League round of 16 first leg soccer match between Newcastle United and Barcelona in Newcastle, England, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (AP)

Barcelona welcome Sevilla on Sunday aiming to maintain their La Liga lead on Real Madrid, but the stakes are even higher off the field with the club's next president to be named that night.

Club members will vote for one of the two candidates, Joan Laporta or Victor Font, to determine the direction Barca head in the years to come.

Laporta, who resigned from his role as president a few weeks ago to begin his reelection campaign, is firm favorite to stay in charge.

Despite a year-long delay in doing so, Barcelona returned to their Camp Nou home a few months ago and on Sunday, the north stand will be opened for the first time.

The temporary capacity has been raised to nearly 63,000, with the end goal to host 105,000 once the top tier is finally completed.

Sevilla's visit comes in between Champions League last 16 ties against Newcastle, with Barca looking to build on this week's 1-1 away draw.

Having won a domestic treble last season but fallen just short in Europe, reaching the semi-finals, success in that competition is Barca's top objective this season. The Catalan giants have not won the Champions League since 2015.

As he did against Athletic Bilbao last weekend in La Liga, Hansi Flick may be inclined to rotate some of his squad to keep them fresh to face Newcastle, although injuries may limit his options.

One player on the way back is 21-year-old midfielder Gavi, who last played in August before suffering a knee injury. The once Real Betis youth player is hoping to be on the bench to face his former side's rivals.

Flick's team will also be out for revenge after Sevilla inflicted a heavy 4-1 defeat on them in October, their first of the league season.

Matias Almeyda's Sevilla are 14th, not completely safe from danger, and any points on the road at Camp Nou would be a bonus for them. They are unbeaten in five games but four of those have been draws.

Barcelona hold a four-point advantage on Los Blancos in second, which Alvaro Arbeloa's team will try to reduce on Saturday to intensify the title race.

Madrid, after thrashing Manchester City in the Champions League, host an Elche side in free-fall after a good start to the season, now sitting 17th and just one point above the drop zone.

One of the reasons Laporta is likely to retain his position is the performance of Flick's side since the German coach arrived in the summer of 2024.

Whether Barca shine or stumble against Sevilla on Sunday could influence some floating voters at the ballot boxes, with polls closing a few hours after the game.