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'It's not done' – Arsenal back up Rice's words with crucial win

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Superb Eze effort enough to give Arsenal win over Newcastle

Pictures of Declan Rice saying "it's not done" went viral in the aftermath of Arsenal's defeat by Manchester City last week – and the Gunners have proved him right by putting the pressure back on their rivals in the Premier League title race.

Eberechi Eze's excellent strike was enough to secure a crucial 1-0 win over Newcastle to move them three points clear of Manchester City in the opening exchanges of what, after the loss to Pep Guardiola's side last week, Mikel Arteta called "a new league".

And now it is advantage Arsenal after "game one".

"I'm really happy for the win," Arteta said. "We talked about game one and how important that was. We did the job.

"We had to do what was in our hands and we discussed that.

"Game one is in our hands, what we do and how we approach the game? Are we able to win it? We've done it, we wanted bigger margins, it's not been possible but we certainly have done the job."

City's win against Burnley in midweek saw Arsenal slip to second place for the first time since October, with the two teams level on points and goal difference but Guardiola's side going top by virtue of goals scored.

That put a huge amount of pressure on an Arsenal side who were coming into the game with Newcastle after back-to-back defeats for the first time this season. The relief of ending that run with victory was visible as players fell to the floor on hearing the final whistle.

And looking aheads to the four league games to go, Arteta said he was was ready to deal with the pressure of attemtping to end the club's 22-year wait for the title.

"I don't expect, after 22 years of not winning it, that it's going to be a path of roses and beautiful music around it," he said. "It's going to be like this and we are ready for it."

'Something clicked, something changed' after Man City defeat – Arteta

Arsenal would move six points clear of second-placed Manchester City if they beat Fulham in their home game next week, though City, who were in FA Cup semi-final action this weekend, would have two games in hand.

That is because Manchester City were playing in the FA Cup semi-final earlier on Saturday against Southampton and are not back in league action until Monday, 4 May when they play Everton.

Having that buffer of points built up by the time of City's next game at Everton on Monday 4 May would be a huge boost for Arteta's side given they went into this weekend off the top for the first time since October.

According to Opta, Arsenal have a 72.44% chance of lifting the Premier League trophy at the end of the season compared to the 27.56% chance of Manchester City.

"You can't question their fight. Arsenal have given absolutely everything on that pitch today," former Crystal Palace and Brighton striker Glenn Murray said on BBC Radio 5 Live.

"Another huge three points for Arsenal to keep them top of the league."

Arsenal are without a major trophy since the FA Cup triumph of 2020 which came in Arteta's first season in charge.

And captain Martin Odegaard said that the effort the players put in is because every member of the team is doing what they can to get over the line.

"It was tough, very intense, very physical," he told Sky Sports. "We did everything we could and we got the win, the most important thing was to bounce back with a win and get over the line with the three points."

But for Odegaard, who played the full 90 minutes, and the rest of the squad attention quickly switches to the Champions League semi-final against Atletico Madrid on Wednesday.

"This schedule is crazy," Odegaard added. "We just have to keep going. It is the end of the season, just leave everything out that we have inside, fight every single game and we just have to keep going.

"That's where we want to be but it is going to go all the way to the end. We are ready for it and we will fight every single day."

This was not a perfect Arsenal performance.

The Gunners had an xG of just 0.64 against Newcastle, their second-lowest in a Premier League game at Emirates Stadium this season. The lowest of 0.57 came in a 0-0 draw against Liverpool in January.

There were desperate scenes towards the end of the game as the Gunners did everything they could to defend their goal and they were almost punished late on when substitute Yoanne Wissa fired over from close range.

Kai Havertz went off in the first half with a "muscular" problem, while Eze also had to be withdrawn after the break with a similar problem but Arteta said he hoped the pair will be available for Wednesday.

The Gunners attack did not click once Viktor Gyokeres was brought on to replace Havertz – not that they were creating freely before the German's injury.

Instead, Arsenal needed a moment of magic from Eze to get them over the line.

Since the start of the 2022-23 season, Eze's 10 goals from outside the penalty area are more than any other player in the Premier League.

With at least six matches to go, the Gunners will have to juggle resources. As they tried to see out the match here, Arteta brought on Myles Lewis-Skelly in midfielder for Martin Zubimendi who had been suffering with illness.

Lewis-Skelly has mainly played for the first team at left back but came through the Gunners academy as a midfielder.

But with results the most important thing at this point of the campaign, Arteta is doing whatever he can to lead his side to silverware.

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📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/articles/c17v4j9pdz2o?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Why 'muted' England's dominance prompts concern

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England run riot against Wales to maintain 100% start

Another day, another emphatic win for England.

The Red Roses jamboree roared into Bristol, attracting a record crowd for their third consecutive match at this Six Nations and bringing with it a sea of white shirts, red cowgirl hats and rose-petal headwear galore. And, most importantly, tries.

Fresh from crossing 12 times against Scotland at Murrayfield last week, England scored another 10 tries in a 62-24 victory over Wales – a result that leaves John Mitchell's side top of the table with maximum points from three matches.

With a fifth consecutive Triple Crown secured, they remain on course for a record eighth straight Women's Six Nations title.

Impressive statistics. But attack coach Emily Scarratt told BBC Two the dressing room was a little "muted" after the game.

Yes, England won comfortably and without ever losing control to extend their record unbeaten run to 36 Tests, but this wasn't the steamrollering many expected, with Wales – to use Mitchell's word – "surprising" them.

The visitors scored four tries – including two in the final 10 minutes as England's concentration wandered – to pick up a valuable bonus point, and twice profited after bamboozling England with their line-out routine.

England were, at times, guilty of poor discipline – giving away nine penalties – and sloppy handling. Improvements will need to be made by the time they face title rivals France in round five.

"You're always in a Test match when you play a team like Wales," said Scarratt. "I thought they really brought it today and posed some different challenges for us, which is pretty awesome in our development.

"We still got a pretty good job done. There's a muted sense in the group, which is obviously a really good feeling when you put a score on like that."

But while Wales fired a couple of warning shots, this was another routine win for England and one that does little to assuage concerns the Six Nations is too predictable and their dominance may not benefit themselves and the game.

England sweep aside Wales to continue dominant run

England have won 37 consecutive Six Nations matches, with their most recent defeat against France in 2018. They haven't lost to another home nation since 2015, and both Scotland and Italy are yet to beat them in the six-team format.

During that run, they've scored an average of 53.4 points per match – conceding nine – and have kept teams to 10 points or under 26 times. Only six of their wins have been by a margin smaller than 20 points – all against France.

This year alone they've scored 179 points – including 27 tries – and conceded 43 despite missing more than a dozen players because of injury, pregnancy or retirement, producing a "rusty" performance against Ireland and leaving points unscored against Wales.

Provided France play their part with victories over Ireland and Scotland – and England produce the expected one-sided win over Italy – Mitchell's side will head to Bordeaux in round five for a fifth consecutive Grand Slam decider.

Even Les Bleues – England's closest challengers with a string of second-placed finishes and narrow defeats in 2023 (38-33) and 2025 (42-41) – have only beaten them twice in the past 10 editions.

Six Nations: Wales showing improvement says England coach Mitchell

The reason for the gulf is obvious: England's level of investment has left other nations playing catch-up.

They were the first of the six teams to introduce full-time professional contracts – doing so in 2019, two years after the restructure of the domestic competition required clubs to meet a number of on and off-field minimum standards to secure a franchise in the Premiership Women's Rugby (then known as the Premier 15s).

Speaking in the Telegraph, external this week, captain Meg Jones challenged other unions to match their investment to give her fellow players the resources "they deserve". Head coach Mitchell, meanwhile, is confident "somebody will come and get us at some point".

Speaking on BBC World Service's More than the Score podcast, former Scotland captain Lisa Martin said it would be five years before another team – most likely France or Ireland – beat England to the title,

"The Six Nations is so synonymous with rugby," said Martin. "But if it's constantly a thing of 'England will win it again and again', there's no jeopardy, there's no competition with regards to how matches will turn out, how the tournament will turn out.

"How long is it going to keep of interest to fans if they know what's going to happen?"

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/articles/cpvx9wjrxl3o?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Trophyless to treble? Man City's quest for more history

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FA Cup highlights: Manchester City v Southampton

Manchester City were in a state of turmoil this time last year, staring at a first trophyless season since 2017.

Just 12 months on, Pep Guardiola has reshaped and galvanised a side that now have a real chance of becoming just the second English team to claim a domestic treble of trophies.

The other side to achieve the feat? Guardiola's City in 2019.

The Spaniard's troops have already lifted the Carabao Cup at Wembley this season, remain in the Premier League title race and are now set to return to the national stadium on Saturday, 16 May after sealing a record fourth consecutive final appearance.

They did it the hard way, coming from behind with two late goals to edge past Championship high-flyers Southampton and avoid an embarrassing defeat.

City's recent finals in this competition are mixed, beating Manchester United in 2023 en route to claiming the ultimate Treble, but losing to their rivals the following year and being shocked by Crystal Palace last May.

"Too far away," said Guardiola when asked about the possibility of a treble. "Before the final [league] game against Aston Villa, after we will tell you if there is a chance, but at the moment is it far, far, far away.

"Now it is important that the players have three days off. I told them not to think about football and just rest. The season starts with five games and an FA Cup final. I would say the Premier League is almost gone, we are back to second, we will see how we arrive [at the end]."

'Unstoppable' Gonzalez strike gives Man City the lead against Southampton

This time last year, Liverpool were thrashing Tottenham to win the Premier League, and City were 18 points behind during a season in which they failed to win a major trophy.

Boss Guardiola had pointed out that his side did win the Community Shield but by his impeccable standards, the campaign had been a major disappointment.

City sealed qualification for the Champions League on the final day of the season, which proved to be high point, as further dismay followed in the Club World Cup in America.

Established stars such as Kevin de Bruyne, Ilkay Gundogan, Jack Grealish and Ederson were allowed to leave in the summer and there were questions marks over the rebuild with a cohort of younger players brought in.

Doubts only amplified with a sticky start featuring two defeats in their opening three games this season and then starting 2026 with three consecutive draws, but the new blood appears to be peaking at the right time and are hungry for more silverware.

They got a taste by lifting the Carabao Cup and they will be heavy favourites in the FA Cup final whether they face Chelsea or Leeds United, but regaining the Premier League may prove the toughest challenge.

City went top of the table on goals scored by edging to victory at Burnley on Wednesday but find themselves back in second and chasing Arsenal once more after the Gunners ground out a victory over Newcastle.

Guardiola has won six Premier League titles, five Carabao Cups and the FA Cup twice during his near-decade reign and remains in the hunt to land them all in a single season, as happened seven years ago.

The Spaniard said: "Six games – if we win we will be there, if we lose it is over. People ask to define [City], how many Champions Leagues? How many this and that? To define the club, five Carabao Cup [wins] and playing four FA Cup finals in a row.

"You can always have a bad afternoon, a bad day with injuries and you cannot be there. In the Premier League, always we were there. We are in the final again, we have time to prepare with our fans. Now it is easy because it has been a tough week mentally and physically."

Former City defender Micah Richards added on BBC One: "When it looked like Manchester City were down and out, they found it from somewhere and that is what champions do.

"I still see some frailties in City's game on transitions, but at this moment in the season it is all about big moments, and they are taking the big moments."

City were staring at being on the receiving end of one the of the great FA Cup semi-final upsets against Championship side Southampton before late goals from Jeremy Doku and Nico Gonzalez rescued the last-four tie.

The result means Guardiola has now won 45 of his 53 matches with City in the competition – his 85% win rate being the highest of any manager to have managed a significant number of games in the competition's history.

Match-winner Gonzalez told BBC One: "It has been a really important week for us. We are alive in the league and in another final. This will be my second FA Cup final and I hope we can win it."

Winger Doku, the first Belgian to score in an FA Cup semi-final since Eden Hazard in 2017, added: "Every time you reach the final you're like, 'wow, what a journey it has been'. Reaching the final again is unbelievable."

Guardiola added: "It's always nice to be here fighting against top teams. No team has made four finals in a row [before].

"It's extraordinary and hopefully we can arrive with a good momentum."

Starting with a trip to Everton on Monday, 4 May, City face a run of six games in the space of 21 days. That period will define whether Guardiola's men end the season in delight or disappointment.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/articles/c1d9v1qvpxqo?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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Woman and child die after getting into difficulty in water at London park

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A woman and child believed to be mother and son have died after getting into difficulty in water at a west London park.

The Metropolitan Police said despite the efforts of emergency services called to Elthorne Park in Ealing on Saturday, both were pronounced dead at the scene.

An investigation is under way and the police said "all initial indications are that the circumstances are not suspicious". Officers are working to identify the next of kin.

Det Supt Pete Thackray, from the West Area Command Unit, said: "This is a tragic incident in which a woman and her young child have lost their lives. Our thoughts are with their loved ones."

"I would also like to acknowledge the efforts of the first responders and members of the public who did their very best in an incredibly challenging situation.

"While an investigation into what took place is under way, all initial indications are that the circumstances are not suspicious."

The park leads on to the Grand Union Canal Walk and is bordered by the River Brent, a tributary of the River Thames.

📰 மூல செய்தி (Source): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c79j20z1377o?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

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