Salah Penalty Seals Victory for Premier League Leader Liverpool against Wolverhampton

Football - Premier League - Liverpool v Wolverhampton Wanderers - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 16, 2025 Liverpool's Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring their second goal. (Reuters)
Football - Premier League - Liverpool v Wolverhampton Wanderers - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 16, 2025 Liverpool's Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring their second goal. (Reuters)
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Salah Penalty Seals Victory for Premier League Leader Liverpool against Wolverhampton

Football - Premier League - Liverpool v Wolverhampton Wanderers - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 16, 2025 Liverpool's Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring their second goal. (Reuters)
Football - Premier League - Liverpool v Wolverhampton Wanderers - Anfield, Liverpool, Britain - February 16, 2025 Liverpool's Mohamed Salah celebrates scoring their second goal. (Reuters)

Liverpool restored its seven-point lead at the top of the Premier League with a 2-1 win against Wolverhampton on Sunday.

But Arne Slot's team had to hold off a fightback from relegation-threatened Wolves at Anfield, which included a brilliant long-range goal from Matheus Cunha.

First-half strikes from Luis Diaz and Mohamed Salah secured the win for Liverpool and ensured it maintained its advantage over second-placed Arsenal.

Liverpool failed to register a single shot on target after the break as Wolves dominated the chances.

Diaz bundled the ball over the line from close range in the 15th minute to give the home team the lead. And Salah doubled the advantage from the penalty spot in the 37th after Diaz was brought down.

It was the Egypt international's 28th goal of an outstanding season.

But if the home crowd was expecting a routine victory against Wolves, it was anything but.

Cunha's drag-back and curled finish from around 20 yards (meters) in the 67th came after a sustained period of pressure from the visitors.

Before that Marshall Munetsi was denied when through on goal — it took a crucial block in front of goal from Jarell Quansah to prevent him from converting late on.



Courtois ‘Proud’ as Sun Sets on Belgium’s ‘Golden Generation’

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 – Quarter-final - Spain v Belgium - Los Angeles Stadium, Inglewood, California, US - July 10, 2026 Belgium's Thibaut Courtois looks dejected as he applauds fans after the match following their elimination from the World Cup. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 – Quarter-final - Spain v Belgium - Los Angeles Stadium, Inglewood, California, US - July 10, 2026 Belgium's Thibaut Courtois looks dejected as he applauds fans after the match following their elimination from the World Cup. (Reuters)
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Courtois ‘Proud’ as Sun Sets on Belgium’s ‘Golden Generation’

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 – Quarter-final - Spain v Belgium - Los Angeles Stadium, Inglewood, California, US - July 10, 2026 Belgium's Thibaut Courtois looks dejected as he applauds fans after the match following their elimination from the World Cup. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 – Quarter-final - Spain v Belgium - Los Angeles Stadium, Inglewood, California, US - July 10, 2026 Belgium's Thibaut Courtois looks dejected as he applauds fans after the match following their elimination from the World Cup. (Reuters)

Thibaut Courtois said he was proud of Belgium's fabled "Golden Generation" on Friday as their final shot at winning a major title ended in a World Cup quarter-final defeat to Spain.

Courtois was forced to watch from the bench as the sun set on the World Cup careers of veteran team-mates such as Kevin De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku at the SoFi Stadium.

Real Madrid goalkeeper Courtois, 34, De Bruyne, 35, and Lukaku, 33, were part of the lavishly talented crop of Belgian players that rose to the pinnacle of FIFA's rankings for multiple years at different times over the past decade.

But a gifted player pool that also included Eden Hazard, Vincent Kompany and Marouane Fellaini came up short in major tournaments, with their best performance a third-place finish at the 2018 World Cup.

Friday's agonizing 2-1 loss, which followed a blunder by substitute goalkeeper Senne Lammens after Courtois came off injured in the 71st minute, marked a familiar story for Belgium.

"To be a golden generation you have to win some gold and then you can be called that," one commentator has said of the Red Devils.

But talking to journalists after the loss Courtois was adamant that Belgium's old guard could look back at their tournament record with pride, pointing out that in several cases, notably the 2018 World Cup and 2021 European Championship, they had been eliminated by the eventual winners.

"In the big tournaments, almost always we have done well," Courtois said.

"We're very proud of of everything we did till now. Obviously we get a a lot of criticism like 'The golden generation never won anything, and so on.'

"But we are Belgium. We're not England. We're not Spain. We're not France. We are a small country of not even 12 million people that in big tournaments is showing amazing things.

"In 2018 (World Cup) I think we were playing the best football in that tournament. So there are things to be proud of.

"It's really easy to criticize and say, 'Yeah, you didn't win anything.' But look at all big names in in football. Not everyone has won a big tournament, and we always tried it. I think we can be proud."

While several members of the team who started on Friday are well into their 30s, Courtois is confident that Belgium will continue to produce young talent into the future.

"We have great youth academies that are working well... there's young talent coming up, and the guys that are younger now will get stronger the next years.

"And I'm hoping that for the Euros or the next World Cup, we'll get stronger. I think we have the spirit."


My Goals Don’t Matter if We Win World Cup, Says Yamal

Lamine Yamal #19 of Spain points at the bis scoreboard while his brother Keyne is on the screen after the 2-1 win during the FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-final match between Spain and Belgium at Los Angeles Stadium on July 10, 2026 in Inglewood, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
Lamine Yamal #19 of Spain points at the bis scoreboard while his brother Keyne is on the screen after the 2-1 win during the FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-final match between Spain and Belgium at Los Angeles Stadium on July 10, 2026 in Inglewood, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
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My Goals Don’t Matter if We Win World Cup, Says Yamal

Lamine Yamal #19 of Spain points at the bis scoreboard while his brother Keyne is on the screen after the 2-1 win during the FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-final match between Spain and Belgium at Los Angeles Stadium on July 10, 2026 in Inglewood, California. (Getty Images/AFP)
Lamine Yamal #19 of Spain points at the bis scoreboard while his brother Keyne is on the screen after the 2-1 win during the FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-final match between Spain and Belgium at Los Angeles Stadium on July 10, 2026 in Inglewood, California. (Getty Images/AFP)

Lamine Yamal said if Spain wins the World Cup nobody will care about his failure to score, after the teen superstar was again absent from the scoresheet in his side's 2-1 quarter-final win over Belgium on Friday.

At a tournament where stars like Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappe, Erling Haaland and Harry Kane have been prolific, 18-year-old Yamal has just one goal to date, in a 4-0 group win against Saudi Arabia.

"Obviously I want to score, but I don't go onto the pitch thinking about that. I do it thinking about helping the team," said Yamal.

"If we win the World Cup, no one will remember whether I scored goals... the important thing is winning," said the Barcelona star, after the victory in Los Angeles set up a semi-final clash with France.

"I know I can contribute even if I don't score. I know my movements draw in many opponents, so I do everything I can to help the team," he said.

Then just 16, Yamal was the breakout star of the Spanish team that won the European Championships two years ago.

He only scored once during that victorious campaign -- a stunning strike in a 2-1 semi-final win against France.

"There's an idea that I should be scoring more, like at the Euros, but we won the Euros with me scoring just one goal. And I have one goal here too, so I'm relaxed about it," he said, with a smile.

But Spain will be hoping Yamal, who turns 19 the day before the semi-final, can bag further goals if his side are to see off the free-scoring tournament favorites France.

"There are two possibilities -- either they reach three consecutive World Cup finals, or we beat them three times in a row. We'll see what happens," said Yamal.

"We aren't afraid at all."


Erling Haaland Is Norway’s World Cup Machine — and the Internet’s Favorite Meme

 A shirt depicting Norway striker Erling Haaland on sale at a store, as his performances at the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the buzz he has generated on social media drive demand for merchandise featuring his image, in Lima, Peru, July 10, 2026. (Reuters)
A shirt depicting Norway striker Erling Haaland on sale at a store, as his performances at the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the buzz he has generated on social media drive demand for merchandise featuring his image, in Lima, Peru, July 10, 2026. (Reuters)
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Erling Haaland Is Norway’s World Cup Machine — and the Internet’s Favorite Meme

 A shirt depicting Norway striker Erling Haaland on sale at a store, as his performances at the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the buzz he has generated on social media drive demand for merchandise featuring his image, in Lima, Peru, July 10, 2026. (Reuters)
A shirt depicting Norway striker Erling Haaland on sale at a store, as his performances at the 2026 FIFA World Cup and the buzz he has generated on social media drive demand for merchandise featuring his image, in Lima, Peru, July 10, 2026. (Reuters)

Erling Haaland stands at 6 feet, 5 inches, an intimidating force who can make fellow soccer players look tiny in stature and talent. Scoring seven goals across four World Cup matches entering Saturday, the Norwegian player has been described as a machine. But if you ask some loyal new fans, he’s also a favorite meme.

Haaland has become a social media phenomenon, with his own posts and memes from others turning even football novices into diehard fans.

His domineering physical appearance coupled with his goofy online persona have contributed to the craze. Fans remark on his flowing blond mane, color-coordinated hair ties and playful posts like a Snapchat-filtered selfie in which he proclaimed Shrek his “twin.”

The contrast between his strength and skill on the field and his softer, looser online presence has also subjected him to the “babygirl” treatment online. That term is used frequently by fans of endearing male celebrities or characters who come across as sensitive, caring or vulnerable.

Haaland is emblematic of a broader embrace of football players as pop culture figures, driven in large part by how they present themselves off the pitch.

Quirky personality

Haaland is being catapulted into a fame even more intense than he had already known as the Premier League's top scorer. This moment boils down to the pairing of elite skills with quirky personality, Wilson said.

“Him being really, really talented — that’s the first pillar of it all. And then you find out that he’s 25 years old and he’s probably the most Gen Z athlete in the World Cup,” Sarah Wilson, a baseball content creator in New York, told The Associated Press, noting his use of Snapchat and goofy filters in photos online.

Many are thinking, “‘Wow, I love that guy, he’s hilarious. Now he’s my new favorite player,’ which is exactly what happened with me,” she added.

Haaland’s expressive reactions on the pitch and his unique appearance have spawned hundreds of memes. He’s leaned into this virality, posting cheeky selfies on Instagram, uploading long-form vlogs on YouTube and interacting with fans on his public Snapchat stories, often poking fun at himself.

After scoring two goals to knock out Brazil, he posted a smug selfie from the locker room with the caption, “Well well well.” When an Instagram video with nearly 100 million views likened his appearance to a green onion — its wiry roots standing in as his hair — Haaland responded in the comments with a side-eyeing dog GIF. When Google added a Viking row animation to his search results, Haaland wrote on X, “One thing to do today... search my name on Google,” with a winking emoji.

Haaland said in a team news conference on Thursday that he's enjoyed being embraced in the US.

“I think it’s a good thing because I like the Americans. I think they are kind of hilarious as well. They are funny. I like the way they are,” he said. “I think it's just good and honestly, on every single thing, the World Cup so far here has been amazing.”

Sports are a “cultural force,” one on par with politics, said Jeffrey Kassing, an Arizona State University professor who has studied fans' and athletes' social media use. It’s natural that Haaland has “crossed over” into non-football audiences, he said. A song from his youth has gone viral. A lookalike contest is in the offing. Even dogs are sporting blond wigs.

“There used to be a whole lot of gatekeeping that would happen with athletes; you would only ever hear from athletes maybe in an interview or in a press conference,” Kassing said.

Haaland is evidence of how players have much more control in shaping their image now, he added.

Fans also try to ‘shape the perception’ of their favorite players

Fans' access to athletes contributes to what is called a parasocial relationship, defined by one-way knowing, said Gayle Stever, a professor at Empire State University who has studied the dynamics between celebrities and fans for decades. Haaland’s fans feel like they know him on a personal level, but he doesn’t know the nearly 60 million people who follow him on Instagram alone.

The majority of parasocial relationships are “positive, healthy and normal,” Stever said. Only a small percentage of people take it to the extreme, she said.

Skyla Clarke, a 19-year-old sports management student in Brisbane, Australia — and lifelong football fan — says she's seen that uglier side rear its head; attacks on players after poor performances, and even unprovoked hate toward athletes’ wives and partners are not uncommon.

Haaland himself called AI-generated content of players a “bit scary.” But he noted in Norwegian that the attention on the team and its traditions — the rowing cheer, for example — is a sign of praise.

“Usually if it’s like that, it means that you’re doing something right, and that your country is doing something right,” Haaland said.

Even healthy parasocial dynamics can seem unusual to those uninitiated in internet culture. Haaland is not the only player whose persona has blown up on social media.

Fans have described feeling “maternal” toward Luka Modric — especially after Croatia’s elimination in the 40-year-old's final international game. Modric is a “special case” whose difficult upbringing amid Yugoslavia's dissolution plays into how fans characterize him online, Clarke said. Some will incorporate childhood photos of him into their content, creating “a deeper appreciation for him as a player,” she added. Clarke's TikTok video about Modric’s potential retirement reached hundreds of thousands of viewers in a matter of days.

Modric himself has a rather tame social media presence, especially compared with Haaland, but Kassing noted fans “take it upon themselves to try to shape the perception” of those with whom they develop a parasocial attachment. In Modric and Haaland’s cases, some do this by overlaying bows and hearts on their images.