Claudio Braga and Stephen Kingsley were on target as resurgent Hearts won 2-0 away to misfiring Falkirk to move six points clear at the top of the William Hill Premiership.
Tag: transfers
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Australia v England scorecard
Scorecard: Australia vs England, first Ashes Test
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New Zealand v England scorecard
New Zealand v England – third ODI: live scorecard and commentary
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New Zealand v England scorecard
New Zealand v England – second ODI: live scorecard and commentary
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Steph Curry exclusive: Golden State Warriors superstar opens up on free agency in 2027 and preparing for the 2025/26 season
Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry speaks exclusively to Sky Sports to discuss 2027 free agency
Golden State Warriors superstar Steph Curry has opened up on his plans for free agency in 2027 after admitting situations change “really fast” in the NBA.
The prospect of Curry, a two-time league MVP and 11-time All-Star, playing for any franchise other than The Dubs is a strange one.
After being drafted with the seventh overall pick in 2009, Curry has gone on to revolutionise the game of basketball, helping himself to four championships, one finals MVP and the NBA record for most three-pointers made with 4,058 to add to his overall tally of 25,386 points.
All while wearing No 30 for the Warriors.
- 4 x NBA champion
- 2 x NBA MVP
- 2022 NBA Finals MVP
- 11 x NBA All-Star
- 2 x NBA All-Star MVP
- 11 x All-NBA Team selection
- 2024 NBA Clutch Player of the Year
- 2 x NBA Three-Point Content champion
- Most three-pointers made in NBA history
Curry signed a one-year extension with the team in 2024, worth a reported £47.5m ($62.6m) and ending growing speculation around his future in the process, keeping him in San Francisco until 2027.
Two years from now, when that deal expires, the greatest shooter of all time will be 39.
After averaging just under 25 points, six assists, and over four rebounds in his 16th season, as well as longevity being more prominent than ever in the league, it is clear to see that his time in the NBA is far from over.
But could the next chapter in his illustrious career lie away from Chase Center? Do not rule it out.
“What I have learned about this league is that things change really fast,” Curry told Sky Sports while discussing Underrated Golf, a programme set up by the point guard to break down barriers to entry and increase diversity in the game of golf.
Underrated Golf is an initiative led by Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry to create a pathway into the sport for young athletes from underrepresented communities.
The programme aims to break down barriers in the game of golf to give prospects a level playing field, in a bid to create a more inclusive and accessible environment for young golfers.
“What you might feel like in two years from now could be totally different. I try to stay in the moment as much as possible; it’s not the glitziest answer but it allows me to enjoy what is happening now.
“I do want to play for only one team, let’s keep that pretty clear. Being at the Warriors has been unbelievable and I feel blessed to have only played for one franchise and to have accomplished what we have.
“So if I could have the best of both worlds and continue to be championship relevant over the next couple of years, that would be great but this league is wild. You kind of just stay in the moment.”
Despite a decision on his future looming as we approach 2027, Curry’s full focus remains on securing more success with the team he holds so dear to his heart in the upcoming 2025/26 season.
The arrival of six-time All-Star Jimmy Butler in February has shown early signs of promise after the Warriors reached the Western Conference semi-finals last time out, only to be denied the opportunity to show their title-winning credentials following a Grade 1 hamstring strain for Curry in game one against the Minnesota Timberwolves.
A 4-1 defeat in the series would follow but heading into 2025/26, the roster has been bolstered by a new two-year deal for Jonathan Kuminga, as well as the arrival of 2024 NBA champion Al Horford,to run alongside long-term teammate Draymond Green in the frontcourt.
Golden State Warriors forward Jimmy Butler (left) Stephen Curry (centre) and forward Draymond Green (right)
With Curry now back to full fitness and fresh depth surrounding him, the intentions from the Warriors have been clear from pre-season.
The Dubs are 3-1 in games Curry has featured in, beating the Los Angeles Lakers and the Portland Trail Blazers twice, with attention now turning to the season opener against the Lakers on October 21, live on Sky Sports.
When asked what aspects of the game still motivate a player who has already achieved so much in the sport as we approach a new 82-game season, Curry added: “I talk about championships, and that drive – it allows every part of the journey to matter.
“Even in the off-season, how you prepare for the year, come in and try and build chemistry with your teammates and how you get through the emotional rollercoaster of an 82-game season.
“All of that is built into being at your peak come playoff time in April.
Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry during the pre-season game against the Los Angeles Clippers
“Individual accolades take care of themselves. When you win, everybody is rewarded. As long as I’m taking care of championship motivation, everything else takes care of itself. Whether you win or not, you just lay it all out there.
“We have a brand new team again. We’ll all try and stay healthy and try and get to the finish line. That’s our goal.”
The Warriors have won seven championships in total across their 78-year history, with Curry leading them to more than half of that total.
If the franchise is to add an eighth banner to the rafters in 2026, their point guard will be the man to lead them there.
His powers at the highest level are showing no signs are waning, with the 37-year-old looking to replicate the successes of the likes of LeBron James and Kevin Durant by “redefining” what it is to be playing at a high level towards the latter stages of their respective careers.
“I feel like I’ve got some good basketball ahead of me. I’m trying to redefine what it is to be playing at a high level at this age,” said Curry when the question of his timeline leading the roster was posed.
“I still love the work that goes into it and playing the game; hopefully, that will carry me. I don’t want to put any limits on it.”
Watch the Golden State Warriors against the Los Angeles Lakers live on Sky Sports + on October 21, tip-off 3am UK time.
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World Athletics Championships: Team GB target top-eight finish in Tokyo, while new ‘sex test’ is introduced in world first
Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson is in good form going into the World Athletics Championships
The world’s best athletes will take to the track and field this weekend when the World Athletics Championships get under way in Tokyo from September 13-21.
Many of the stars who shone at Paris 2024 will be there, including Britain’s 800m Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson and USA’s 100m Olympic champion Noah Lyles.
One of the major talking points away from the sport has been the introduction of a mandatory SRY or sex test for athletes who intend to compete in female categories.
All athletes in female category take new ‘sex test’
World Athletics, led by their President Seb Coe, have taken an unambiguous stance for several years when it comes to talking about and defining new rules around the sensitive issues of the protection of female categories, transgender and DSD (Difference of Sexual Development).
They became the first global sporting federation to announce they would introduce a mandatory, once-in-a-lifetime gene test, known as an SRY Test earlier this year.
The test identifies the Y chromosome which causes male characteristics to develop. If an athlete returns a negative result, they are eligible to compete in female categories at world ranking events, including these World Championships.
Coe told Sky Sports he expected every athlete required to take an SRY Test will have done so by the time track and field events get under way in Tokyo, including all French athletes.
In France, the process has been complicated by French law where the SRY gene test is illegal in France due to a 1994 law banning DNA testing for non-medical, non-judicial purposes to protect family integrity, so French athletes have had to undertake the SRY test by travelling outside of France.
Coe confirmed that while it is World Athletics’ stated aim to have all athletes tested by the start of the World Championships next month, the results do not have to be known due to the tight time frame.
For athletes whose national federation hasn’t been able to offer an SRY test yet, World Athletics will step in and offer the test at holding camps in Japan used by athletes prior to competing in Tokyo.
“By and large, the process has gone pretty smoothly, but it’s not been without its challenges,” Coe said. “The vast majority have been pretty straightforward and we’ve (World Athletics) made a contribution of about US$100 per test.”
How important are championships for Coe?
Very.
He has transformed the athletics governing body since his election in Beijing in 2015 from the tarnished old IAAF to the new World Athletics.
He’s serving his third and final term as president and while no doubt still pondering his defeat in March’s International Olympic Committee (IOC) presidency election to Kirsty Coventry, his first love has always been track and field, and during his term as president he has tackled controversial issues like banning Russia and bringing in updated rules on gender eligibility.
While those issues can be divisive, the progress of time has shown that many, if not most, sporting federations have followed athletics’ lead by watching and then following.
It’s interesting to note that the new IOC President, whom he lost out to, is preparing the IOC to greater understand and perhaps even lead on gender eligibility and protections for female sports stars.
He also wants athletics firmly in the position of the world’s second most popular sport behind football by showing off packed out stadia in Tokyo.
The World Championships take place in the 70,000 capacity Olympic Stadium where during the 2020 Olympics not one fan was able to watch the sport on offer due to a strict Covid-19 lockdown in Japan.
Many of the sessions during the nine days of competition are sell-outs and, according to Coe, no session will have fewer than 50,000 people in attendance.
Tokyo heat, humidity and typhoons
World Athletics deliberately scheduled the start of their marquee championships later than they would normally. Two years ago in Budapest, for example, the schedule ran during August.
High temperatures and humidity can be exceedingly high in Japan during the months of July and August, as many athletes who competed at the Tokyo Olympics four years ago will testify to.
The 2025 World Athletics Championships will be held at the National Stadium in Tokyo from September 13-21
However, heat mitigation measures will again be in place as Japan has experienced temperatures 2.36 Degrees Celsius above average between June and August, with local temperatures in Tokyo this week reaching 33 Degrees Celsius.
World Athletics president Seb Coe is of the belief that climate change is not temporary and is here to stay; at these championships, decisions on whether competition will go ahead will not be in the hands of local organisers, but World Athletics.
Information on drinks, ice baths and cooling techniques has been shared widely with athletes and their federations, while plenty of provision will be in place for spectators.
Tokyo and Japan, in general, is prone to typhoons at this time of year, indeed many British and Northern Irish athletes were confined to their hotel at their training camp for a few days due to a typhoon. If such a weather system hits Tokyo during the championships, it will again be a decision for World Athletics to make as to whether to postpone or cancel events.
Where could GB medals come from?
Great Britain and Northern Ireland haven’t been set a medal target, but a top-eight finish in the medal table is the challenge, with an expectation of several of their world-leading track stars to medal and all relay squads to medal.
So who are the stars? The women’s 800m final has been scheduled for the last session of the last day of the championships, as it’s been viewed as being a hot ticket in town. Two Brits could well end up on the podium, both friends and training partners coached by husband and wife duo Jenny Meadows and Trevor Painter – Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson and Georgia Hunter-Bell.
Hodgkinson was one of the stars of Paris last year, streaking home to become Olympic champion and, although she has suffered hamstring injuries this year, she has come back to racing in time and is running ferociously quickly.
While perhaps not quite the right time for a tilt at the 800m world record, if Hodgkinson feels it, she’ll go for it.
Elsewhere, medals could come in men’s middle distance, with 1500m runner Josh Kerr defending his world title he won in 2023.
His battles with Norway’s Jacob Ingebrigtsen have already become legendary, with the two not the best of pals. At the Paris Olympics, one of the two should have taken the gold medal, but their attention on one another allowed the USA’s Cole Hocker to shock them both and cross the line first.
George Mills, son of Danny – the former Leeds, Manchester City and England defender – is a serious contender for medals in the men’s 5000m. This season he’s beaten Sir Mo Farah’s long-standing British 5000m record and ran the second fastest 1500m by a Brit, so the 26-year-old is well warmed up.
Katarina Johnson-Thompson is always a threat at major championships, and at Tokyo she will defend the heptathlon world title she won two years ago. She was also crowned world champion in 2019, and took Olympic silver in Paris.
Dina Asher-Smith will make her seventh appearance at a World Championship and, while the competition is fierce in both the 100m and 200m, she is running quickly this season.
“I’m just really happy,” she told Sky Sports. “I think the other week in Zurich is testament to what kind of shape I’m in because, honestly, I knew that I’ve been in good shape for a very long time and I know that I’ve been putting together some great races in the past few months, but to run a 10.90!
!I was picking it out because I know I could have had faster in me that day, but still obviously I’m very happy.”
Could Dina Asher-Smith medal at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo?
Also very quick is Daryll Neita, who finished fourth in the women’s Olympic 100m final in Paris, narrowly missing out on a medal. She did, however, take home an Olympic Silver medal from the 4x100m women’s relay and in Tokyo it is expected that Great Britain and Northern Ireland medal in all five relay disciplines.
Individually, in the men’s sprint events (100m and 200m), Zharnel Hughes should at the very least make finals, as the qualified pilot has run sub-10 seconds in the 100m and sub-20 seconds in the 200m. With age, Hughes seems to get faster, as he broke both British 100m and 200m records in 2023, the same year he took his first ever global medal, a bronze at the last World Athletics Championships.
“Obviously the experience has been taking me into finals and stuff like that,” he said. “I’ve always been one to be reckoned with when it comes to the championships. I’ve always been able to position myself into the finals at every major championship.
“Unfortunately, last year it didn’t get to happen due to injury, but I’m feeling confident and I’m looking forward to getting myself on that podium for sure. I’ll be giving it my very best, I’m filled with determination and I’m quite confident in my ability that I can always catch you at the very end.
“I’m trusting myself and trusting my speed. The work that I’ve put in leading up to this championship has been tremendous. It’s going to be great.”
While the British team is medal heavy on expectation from the track, also keep an eye on pole-vaulter Molly Caudery. She won the 2024 World Indoor title and won the Diamond League meeting in Doha in May.
The Cornishwoman is a huge talent was expected to challenge for the gold at the Olympics last year, but had a shocker and failed to even qualify for the final. The 25-year-old is determined to learn the mental lesson from a year ago.
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College Football Preview: Cruising the Commonwealth as Hokies, Cavaliers and Dukes look for stellar seasons – WTOP News
See how Virginia Tech, Virginia and James Madison are leveraging the transfer portal to reshape their rosters and boost competitiveness for the upcoming 2025 college football season.
Virginia Tech coach Brent Pry heads onto the field before the team’s NCAA college football game against Syracuse on Thursday, Oct. 26, 2023, in Blacksburg, Va. (AP Photo/Robert Simmons)(AP/Robert Simmons) In college football, success hinges on a simple formula: refresh, retain and reload. Since the start of this decade, the transfer portal has become a constant churn, and both quality and quantity are essential to staying competitive — regardless of your conference affiliation.
Virginia Tech, coming off a 6-7 season and 4-4 in the ACC, brought in 30 transfers this past offseason, and it’s more than just finding good players to elevate your team’s talent.
“It would not be fair to anybody on this team to bring a guy in that doesn’t fit our culture, isn’t going to get along, isn’t going to appreciate Virginia Tech,” coach Brent Pry told WTOP earlier this month. “We do a ton of background, we make a ton of phone calls, we do a lot of research to make sure that these guys fit us that way.”
While there are plenty of new parts that include wide receivers Cameron Seldon (Tennessee) and Donavon Greene (Wake Forest) plus running backs Terion Stewart (Bowling Green) and Braydon Bennett (Coastal Carolina), there is stability at quarterback with senior Kyron Drones returning for his third season as a starter.
“He had a lot of suitors, and could have gone places for more money,” Pry said. “But he wanted to be at Tech and be with the people here. The players, the staff. And the promise of a quarterback coach and a play-caller that would be more conducive to his skill set.”
Former Tulsa head coach Philip Montgomery steps in as offensive coordinator, while Sam Siefkes takes over as defensive coordinator after spending the last four seasons on NFL staffs. The Hokies return quite a bit of talent from a unit that ranked third in the ACC in scoring defense, but there will be more than a few challenges for both sides of the ball this fall.
“We have to find our identity on offense earlier and make sure our playmakers are getting the football,” Pry said. “We’ve got to defend the run. We’ve got to be stingy and make people one-dimensional.”
The season begins with a bang: They face No. 13 South Carolina in Atlanta week one and host a Vanderbilt team that beat them last year the following Saturday. For starters, the success of this team will hinge on how they finish. The Hokies went 0-5 in games decided by seven points or fewer last fall.
“We have to be more mentally and physically tough, we’ve got to finish games better. As coaches and players,” Pry said. “That’s been a big emphasis this offseason.”
Virginia (5-7, 3-5 ACC) begins their slate a little bit softer, hosting Coastal Carolina and William & Mary over the first three weekends. Head coach Tony Elliott brought in 31 transfers this year, including quarterback Chandler Morris who, while at North Texas last year, led the AAC in passing yards and touchdown passes.
“Chandler’s getting comfortable with the guys, and kind of pushing him to just do the little things from a leadership standpoint because fundamentally he’s really sound, he has a good command,” Elliott said. “Now it’s kind of like I told him, ‘You drive the ship, push the guys, the tempo, the little things, the gamesmanship.’”
Morris will throw to a blend of targets that are coming to the Cavaliers from UConn (Cameron Ross), Kent State (Trell Harris) and FAU (Jahmal Edrine). In addition to quality, quantity was sought from the transfer portal and recruiting class.
“As much as we’re talking about building competitive stamina, the body is going to slow down after about 100 snaps, so I think depth will help us be a little bit fresher,” Elliott said. “And you notice the teams that are really good in the fourth quarter, a lot of times it’s because they’ve got a lot of depth, and they can play guys. They’re the fresher team in the fourth quarter, and they can lean on people.”
While the schedule doesn’t include a team in the Preseason Top 25, Florida State and North Carolina could easily be ranked by the time UVA plays those schools. And don’t forget the season finale against a Virginia Tech team that the Cavaliers have beaten once since they became ACC foes.
James Madison (9-4, 4-4 Sun Belt) brought in 19 transfers this offseason after being purged last year by former coach Curt Cignetti (13 players went from JMU to Indiana). The Dukes, despite their talent drain, actually had an outside shot at a Sun Belt Conference title in mid-November; but losses in their last two regular season games delivered a bitter pill head coach Bob Chesney and company had to swallow in the offseason.
Picked to win the East, JMU boasts the one-two punch of quarterback Alonza Barnett III (2,598 yards and 26 touchdowns passing last fall) and running back George Pettaway (995 yards and 15 touchdowns rushing plus 24 receptions).
The defense returns six starters, including free safety Jacob Thomas (72 tackles, half of a sack, and three interceptions). But no longer on the roster are the team’s top two pass rushers as Eric O’Neill (13 sacks) transferred to Rutgers and Khair Manns (nine sacks) went pro.
Enter transfer Notre Dame transfer and Fairfax, Virginia-native Aiden Gobaira, who shined locally at Chantilly High School before injuries kept him on the shelf in South Bend. Maine transfer Xavier Holmes posted four sacks last year for the Black Bears.
The Dukes received votes in the Preseason AP Top 25 Poll. Their early test? A trip to Louisville in week two.
And the Cardinals will be ready for JMU after the Dukes put 70 on the board last September against North Carolina.
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David Preston
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West Indies v England scorecard
Latest score from Antigua as England begin their three-match ODI series against West Indies, with Liam Livingstone standing in as captain.
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(Sky Sports)
New Zealand Women 1st innings
Total
207 all out48.2 overs
Batting
Runs
Balls
4s
6s
SR-
Bates
c Jones b Dean
50
74
6
0
67.57 -
Bezuidenhout
lbw b Ecclestone
35
62
2
0
56.45 -
Kerr (c)
lbw b Cross
24
36
1
0
66.67 -
Plimmer
lbw b Cross
17
24
0
0
70.83 -
Green
c & b Bell
7
23
0
0
30.43 -
Halliday
c Jones b Dean
6
12
1
0
50.00 -
Gaze (wk)
b Bell
18
23
1
0
78.26 -
Rowe
c Knight b Sciver-Brunt
16
20
2
0
80.00 -
Kerr
b Bell
9
11
1
0
81.82 -
Tahuhu
c Wyatt b Dean
1
2
0
0
50.00 -
Jonas
not out
0
2
0
0
0.00
Fall of Wickets
Bowling
Overs
Maidens
Runs
Wickets
Econ-
Cross
10
3
24
2
2.40 -
Bell
9.2
0
41
3
4.39 -
Sciver-Brunt
10
0
44
1
4.40 -
Ecclestone
10
0
39
1
3.90 -
Dean
9
0
57
3
6.33
-
Bates
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(Sky Sports)
England 1st innings
Total
52015.2 overs
Batting
Runs
Balls
4s
6s
SR-
Crawley
not out
30
43
5
0
69.77 -
Duckett
not out
21
48
3
0
43.75
Yet to bat
- Pope
- Root
- Bairstow
- Stokes
- Foakes
- Hartley
- Wood
- Anderson
- Bashir
Bowling
Overs
Maidens
Runs
Wickets
Econ-
Bumrah
7
1
24
0
3.42 -
Siraj
7.2
1
23
0
3.13 -
Ashwin
1
0
4
0
4.00
-
Crawley
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U.S. Army nationwide job cuts lead to restructuring, transfers at Fort Liberty: ‘Spaces not faces’
FORT LIBERTY, N.C. (WTVD) — There are new details about how Fort Liberty will be impacted by major cuts in the U.S. Army.
The Army says the cuts involving 24,000 positions nationwide will “impact spaces but not faces” at Fort Liberty– meaning they plan to eliminate redundant positions but soldiers will not be let go.
A representative for Special Operations Command at Fort Liberty tells ABC11 this is a “massive transformation” for the Army, and says it’s the largest in 40 years.
The U.S. Army says positions are being cut to streamline its efforts. It also says it is upgrading its weapons systems and focusing on large-scale combat. The 18th Airborne says it will get newly repurposed units for air defense and indirect fire protection, and that its cavalry squadron is being eliminated. But those soldiers will get to transfer within the infantry brigade.
A statement from Col. Mary Ricks reads in part: “(S) service members are not being asked to leave and jobs are not being removed. This is a strategic decision to re-structure our formations, maximize lethality, and prepare us for the future fight.”
Meanwhile, Special Operations Command at Fort Liberty says almost 3,000 of the reductions nationwide will be Special Ops positions. But it’s still unclear how many of those cuts will be at Fort Liberty.
Colonel Mike Burns says in a statement: “For USASOC, our reductions prioritize unrealized growth, headquarters elements, and historically vacant or hard-to-fill positions. It’s important to note that the reductions are spaces and not faces. So, while some of those billets are here at Fort Liberty, there are no physical moves occurring.”
One veteran tells ABC11 that service members probably won’t be phased much by the changes.
“The soldiers are constantly moving anywhere from 2 to 3 to 4 years, anyway, to different units. So them being asked to move to another unit–if it’s within their job, that’s what they signed up to do. They’re here to support the U.S. Army,” says Retired Sergeant Major Antonio Underwood.
Army leaders say they’re working to have at least 470,000 active soldiers by 2029–almost 20,000 more than the Army has right now.
Copyright © 2024 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Monique John
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(Sky Sports)
India 1st innings
Total
396 all out112 overs
Batting
Runs
Balls
4s
6s
SR-
Jaiswal
c Bairstow b Anderson
209
290
19
7
72.07 -
Sharma (c)
c Pope b Bashir
14
41
0
0
34.15 -
Gill
c Foakes b Anderson
34
46
5
0
73.91 -
Iyer
c Foakes b Hartley
27
59
3
0
45.76 -
Patidar
b Ahmed
32
72
3
0
44.44 -
Patel
c Ahmed b Bashir
27
51
4
0
52.94 -
Bharat (wk)
c Bashir b Ahmed
17
23
2
1
73.91 -
Ashwin
c Foakes b Anderson
20
37
4
0
54.05 -
Yadav
not out
8
42
0
0
19.05 -
Bumrah
c Root b Ahmed
6
9
1
0
66.67 -
Mukesh Kumar
c Root b Bashir
0
3
0
0
0.00
Fall of Wickets
Bowling
Overs
Maidens
Runs
Wickets
Econ-
Anderson
25
4
47
3
1.88 -
Root
14
0
71
0
5.07 -
Hartley
18
2
74
1
4.11 -
Bashir
38
1
138
3
3.63 -
Ahmed
17
2
65
3
3.82
-
Jaiswal
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St Mirren 0-1 Rangers | Scottish Premiership highlights
Highlights of the Scottish Premiership match between St Mirren and Rangers.
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Cyrie Dessers puts Rangers ahead after superb assist from John Lundstram
Cyrie Dessers put Rangers in the lead against St. Mirren after a superb assist from John Lundstram.
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Hearts 3-2 Dundee | Scottish Premiership Highlights
Highlights from the Scottish Premiership match between Hearts and Dundee.
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Goal D Jota (79) Bournemouth 0 – 3 Liverpool
Diogo Jota gets his second goal of the game to all but confirm the three points for Liverpool.
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‘Back with a bang!’ | Ivan Toney announces return with exquisite free-kick
Ivan Toney announces his return by scoring a superb free-kick against Nottingham Forest.
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‘Oh my word!’ | Mohammed Kudus’ stunner gives Ghana lead over Egypt
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