×
Deadspin | NFL Draft Round 2: Ohio State DT Kayden McDonald lands with Texans  Apr 23, 2026; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Ohio State Buckeyes defensive tackle Kayden McDonald poses on the red carpet before the 2026 NFL Draft at Point State Park. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images   Defensive tackle Kayden McDonald was in Pittsburgh for the NFL draft on Thursday night, and the defensive tackle watched 15 of his peers make the walk from the backstage green room to the stage to be announced as first-round selections.  The only player left in that room when the 32-player round ended was McDonald.  McDonald returned to the scene Friday night, and he didn’t have to wait long. He heard his name called early in the second round when the Houston Texans chose him with the 36th overall pick, the fourth made on Friday.  The Ohio State product who was a consensus All-American last season had tears flowing during the entire walk toward the stage. He stopped for a second to tap the Texans display on the wall.  When he got to the stage, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and McDonald conducted a long embrace, and Goodell was doing a lot of talking.  In essence, the long wait was over for McDonald, who was one of seven Buckeyes drafted in the first two rounds.  “This is emotional,” McDowell said on the ESPN broadcast. “I know I’m supposed to be here. I’m just so blessed and thankful.”  The Texans traded with the Las Vegas Raiders to move up two spots on a night in which the second and third rounds were held. When the Raiders chose at No. 38, they tabbed safety Treydan Stukes of Arizona.  The second round had a heavy defensive flavor with 22 players on that side of the ball being selected.  There was also was an impact trade announced as the Minnesota Vikings sent veteran linebacker Jonathan Greenard to the Philadelphia Eagles for a third-round pick in this year’s draft and a third-rounder in 2027. The Eagles also received a seventh-rounder this year in the deal.  The San Francisco 49ers started off the festivities by selecting receiver De’Zhaun Stribling, who played for Ole Miss last season after spending two seasons apiece at Washington State (2021-22) and Oklahoma State (2023-24).  Two other wideouts went in the second round — Denzel Boston of Washington to the Cleveland Browns at No. 39 and Germie Bernard of Alabama to the Pittsburgh Steelers at No. 47.   Tennessee cornerback Colton Hood went 37th overall to the New York Giants. He was another player thought to be a possible first-rounder.  “Of course it was disappointing,” Hood said. “I know God does everything for a reason. He was probably preventing me from something or he had something better in store for me, and that being the Giants.  “I’m super excited to go into this next chapter of my life and will just go in there and give my best and give my all and be the best version of myself.”  Hood also played for Auburn (2023) and Colorado (2024) during his college career.  The Miami Dolphins appear to have made one of the best picks in the round by grabbing Texas Tech consensus All-America linebacker Jacob Rodriguez with the No. 43 pick.  Rodriguez was the face of the Red Raiders’ stunning season last year and loaded up on postseason awards, including the Bednarik Award as the nation’s top defender. He led the nation with seven forced fumbles and also intercepted four passes.  At No. 48, the Falcons tabbed Clemson cornerback Avieon Terrell, the younger brother of Atlanta’s A.J. Terrell, who is entering his seventh season as a starting corner for the Falcons.  The New York Jets chose cornerback D’Angelo Ponds of national champion Indiana with the 50th overall pick. The 5-foot-8 Ponds played his first season (2023) at James Madison before following coach Curt Cignetti to Indiana and becoming one of the Hoosiers’ top defensive players.  In the first round, four Buckeyes were selected: receiver Carnell Tate, (No. 4, Tennessee Titans); linebacker Arvell Reese (No. 5, Giants); linebacker Sonny Styles (No. 7, Washington Commanders) and safety Caleb Downs (No. 11, Dallas Cowboys).  After McDonald went in the second, tight end Max Klare (No. 61, Los Angeles Rams) and cornerback Davison Igbinosun (No. 62, Buffalo Bills) went back-to-back near the end of the round.  The Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks took TCU safety Bud Clark with the 64th and final pick of the second round.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #NFL #Draft #Ohio #State #Kayden #McDonald #lands #Texans

Deadspin | NFL Draft Round 2: Ohio State DT Kayden McDonald lands with Texans
Deadspin | NFL Draft Round 2: Ohio State DT Kayden McDonald lands with Texans  Apr 23, 2026; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Ohio State Buckeyes defensive tackle Kayden McDonald poses on the red carpet before the 2026 NFL Draft at Point State Park. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images   Defensive tackle Kayden McDonald was in Pittsburgh for the NFL draft on Thursday night, and the defensive tackle watched 15 of his peers make the walk from the backstage green room to the stage to be announced as first-round selections.  The only player left in that room when the 32-player round ended was McDonald.  McDonald returned to the scene Friday night, and he didn’t have to wait long. He heard his name called early in the second round when the Houston Texans chose him with the 36th overall pick, the fourth made on Friday.  The Ohio State product who was a consensus All-American last season had tears flowing during the entire walk toward the stage. He stopped for a second to tap the Texans display on the wall.  When he got to the stage, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and McDonald conducted a long embrace, and Goodell was doing a lot of talking.  In essence, the long wait was over for McDonald, who was one of seven Buckeyes drafted in the first two rounds.  “This is emotional,” McDowell said on the ESPN broadcast. “I know I’m supposed to be here. I’m just so blessed and thankful.”  The Texans traded with the Las Vegas Raiders to move up two spots on a night in which the second and third rounds were held. When the Raiders chose at No. 38, they tabbed safety Treydan Stukes of Arizona.  The second round had a heavy defensive flavor with 22 players on that side of the ball being selected.  There was also was an impact trade announced as the Minnesota Vikings sent veteran linebacker Jonathan Greenard to the Philadelphia Eagles for a third-round pick in this year’s draft and a third-rounder in 2027. The Eagles also received a seventh-rounder this year in the deal.  The San Francisco 49ers started off the festivities by selecting receiver De’Zhaun Stribling, who played for Ole Miss last season after spending two seasons apiece at Washington State (2021-22) and Oklahoma State (2023-24).  Two other wideouts went in the second round — Denzel Boston of Washington to the Cleveland Browns at No. 39 and Germie Bernard of Alabama to the Pittsburgh Steelers at No. 47.   Tennessee cornerback Colton Hood went 37th overall to the New York Giants. He was another player thought to be a possible first-rounder.  “Of course it was disappointing,” Hood said. “I know God does everything for a reason. He was probably preventing me from something or he had something better in store for me, and that being the Giants.  “I’m super excited to go into this next chapter of my life and will just go in there and give my best and give my all and be the best version of myself.”  Hood also played for Auburn (2023) and Colorado (2024) during his college career.  The Miami Dolphins appear to have made one of the best picks in the round by grabbing Texas Tech consensus All-America linebacker Jacob Rodriguez with the No. 43 pick.  Rodriguez was the face of the Red Raiders’ stunning season last year and loaded up on postseason awards, including the Bednarik Award as the nation’s top defender. He led the nation with seven forced fumbles and also intercepted four passes.  At No. 48, the Falcons tabbed Clemson cornerback Avieon Terrell, the younger brother of Atlanta’s A.J. Terrell, who is entering his seventh season as a starting corner for the Falcons.  The New York Jets chose cornerback D’Angelo Ponds of national champion Indiana with the 50th overall pick. The 5-foot-8 Ponds played his first season (2023) at James Madison before following coach Curt Cignetti to Indiana and becoming one of the Hoosiers’ top defensive players.  In the first round, four Buckeyes were selected: receiver Carnell Tate, (No. 4, Tennessee Titans); linebacker Arvell Reese (No. 5, Giants); linebacker Sonny Styles (No. 7, Washington Commanders) and safety Caleb Downs (No. 11, Dallas Cowboys).  After McDonald went in the second, tight end Max Klare (No. 61, Los Angeles Rams) and cornerback Davison Igbinosun (No. 62, Buffalo Bills) went back-to-back near the end of the round.  The Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks took TCU safety Bud Clark with the 64th and final pick of the second round.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #NFL #Draft #Ohio #State #Kayden #McDonald #lands #TexansApr 23, 2026; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Ohio State Buckeyes defensive tackle Kayden McDonald poses on the red carpet before the 2026 NFL Draft at Point State Park. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Defensive tackle Kayden McDonald was in Pittsburgh for the NFL draft on Thursday night, and the defensive tackle watched 15 of his peers make the walk from the backstage green room to the stage to be announced as first-round selections.

The only player left in that room when the 32-player round ended was McDonald.

McDonald returned to the scene Friday night, and he didn’t have to wait long. He heard his name called early in the second round when the Houston Texans chose him with the 36th overall pick, the fourth made on Friday.

The Ohio State product who was a consensus All-American last season had tears flowing during the entire walk toward the stage. He stopped for a second to tap the Texans display on the wall.

When he got to the stage, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and McDonald conducted a long embrace, and Goodell was doing a lot of talking.

In essence, the long wait was over for McDonald, who was one of seven Buckeyes drafted in the first two rounds.

“This is emotional,” McDowell said on the ESPN broadcast. “I know I’m supposed to be here. I’m just so blessed and thankful.”

The Texans traded with the Las Vegas Raiders to move up two spots on a night in which the second and third rounds were held. When the Raiders chose at No. 38, they tabbed safety Treydan Stukes of Arizona.

The second round had a heavy defensive flavor with 22 players on that side of the ball being selected.

There was also was an impact trade announced as the Minnesota Vikings sent veteran linebacker Jonathan Greenard to the Philadelphia Eagles for a third-round pick in this year’s draft and a third-rounder in 2027. The Eagles also received a seventh-rounder this year in the deal.

The San Francisco 49ers started off the festivities by selecting receiver De’Zhaun Stribling, who played for Ole Miss last season after spending two seasons apiece at Washington State (2021-22) and Oklahoma State (2023-24).


Two other wideouts went in the second round — Denzel Boston of Washington to the Cleveland Browns at No. 39 and Germie Bernard of Alabama to the Pittsburgh Steelers at No. 47.

Tennessee cornerback Colton Hood went 37th overall to the New York Giants. He was another player thought to be a possible first-rounder.

“Of course it was disappointing,” Hood said. “I know God does everything for a reason. He was probably preventing me from something or he had something better in store for me, and that being the Giants.

“I’m super excited to go into this next chapter of my life and will just go in there and give my best and give my all and be the best version of myself.”

Hood also played for Auburn (2023) and Colorado (2024) during his college career.

The Miami Dolphins appear to have made one of the best picks in the round by grabbing Texas Tech consensus All-America linebacker Jacob Rodriguez with the No. 43 pick.

Rodriguez was the face of the Red Raiders’ stunning season last year and loaded up on postseason awards, including the Bednarik Award as the nation’s top defender. He led the nation with seven forced fumbles and also intercepted four passes.

At No. 48, the Falcons tabbed Clemson cornerback Avieon Terrell, the younger brother of Atlanta’s A.J. Terrell, who is entering his seventh season as a starting corner for the Falcons.

The New York Jets chose cornerback D’Angelo Ponds of national champion Indiana with the 50th overall pick. The 5-foot-8 Ponds played his first season (2023) at James Madison before following coach Curt Cignetti to Indiana and becoming one of the Hoosiers’ top defensive players.

In the first round, four Buckeyes were selected: receiver Carnell Tate, (No. 4, Tennessee Titans); linebacker Arvell Reese (No. 5, Giants); linebacker Sonny Styles (No. 7, Washington Commanders) and safety Caleb Downs (No. 11, Dallas Cowboys).

After McDonald went in the second, tight end Max Klare (No. 61, Los Angeles Rams) and cornerback Davison Igbinosun (No. 62, Buffalo Bills) went back-to-back near the end of the round.

The Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks took TCU safety Bud Clark with the 64th and final pick of the second round.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #NFL #Draft #Ohio #State #Kayden #McDonald #lands #Texans

Apr 23, 2026; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; Ohio State Buckeyes defensive tackle Kayden McDonald poses on the red carpet before the 2026 NFL Draft at Point State Park. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Defensive tackle Kayden McDonald was in Pittsburgh for the NFL draft on Thursday night, and the defensive tackle watched 15 of his peers make the walk from the backstage green room to the stage to be announced as first-round selections.

The only player left in that room when the 32-player round ended was McDonald.

McDonald returned to the scene Friday night, and he didn’t have to wait long. He heard his name called early in the second round when the Houston Texans chose him with the 36th overall pick, the fourth made on Friday.

The Ohio State product who was a consensus All-American last season had tears flowing during the entire walk toward the stage. He stopped for a second to tap the Texans display on the wall.

When he got to the stage, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and McDonald conducted a long embrace, and Goodell was doing a lot of talking.

In essence, the long wait was over for McDonald, who was one of seven Buckeyes drafted in the first two rounds.

“This is emotional,” McDowell said on the ESPN broadcast. “I know I’m supposed to be here. I’m just so blessed and thankful.”

The Texans traded with the Las Vegas Raiders to move up two spots on a night in which the second and third rounds were held. When the Raiders chose at No. 38, they tabbed safety Treydan Stukes of Arizona.

The second round had a heavy defensive flavor with 22 players on that side of the ball being selected.

There was also was an impact trade announced as the Minnesota Vikings sent veteran linebacker Jonathan Greenard to the Philadelphia Eagles for a third-round pick in this year’s draft and a third-rounder in 2027. The Eagles also received a seventh-rounder this year in the deal.

The San Francisco 49ers started off the festivities by selecting receiver De’Zhaun Stribling, who played for Ole Miss last season after spending two seasons apiece at Washington State (2021-22) and Oklahoma State (2023-24).

Two other wideouts went in the second round — Denzel Boston of Washington to the Cleveland Browns at No. 39 and Germie Bernard of Alabama to the Pittsburgh Steelers at No. 47.

Tennessee cornerback Colton Hood went 37th overall to the New York Giants. He was another player thought to be a possible first-rounder.

“Of course it was disappointing,” Hood said. “I know God does everything for a reason. He was probably preventing me from something or he had something better in store for me, and that being the Giants.

“I’m super excited to go into this next chapter of my life and will just go in there and give my best and give my all and be the best version of myself.”

Hood also played for Auburn (2023) and Colorado (2024) during his college career.

The Miami Dolphins appear to have made one of the best picks in the round by grabbing Texas Tech consensus All-America linebacker Jacob Rodriguez with the No. 43 pick.

Rodriguez was the face of the Red Raiders’ stunning season last year and loaded up on postseason awards, including the Bednarik Award as the nation’s top defender. He led the nation with seven forced fumbles and also intercepted four passes.

At No. 48, the Falcons tabbed Clemson cornerback Avieon Terrell, the younger brother of Atlanta’s A.J. Terrell, who is entering his seventh season as a starting corner for the Falcons.

The New York Jets chose cornerback D’Angelo Ponds of national champion Indiana with the 50th overall pick. The 5-foot-8 Ponds played his first season (2023) at James Madison before following coach Curt Cignetti to Indiana and becoming one of the Hoosiers’ top defensive players.

In the first round, four Buckeyes were selected: receiver Carnell Tate, (No. 4, Tennessee Titans); linebacker Arvell Reese (No. 5, Giants); linebacker Sonny Styles (No. 7, Washington Commanders) and safety Caleb Downs (No. 11, Dallas Cowboys).

After McDonald went in the second, tight end Max Klare (No. 61, Los Angeles Rams) and cornerback Davison Igbinosun (No. 62, Buffalo Bills) went back-to-back near the end of the round.

The Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks took TCU safety Bud Clark with the 64th and final pick of the second round.

–Field Level Media

Source link
#Deadspin #NFL #Draft #Ohio #State #Kayden #McDonald #lands #Texans

Deadspin | Timbers focused on present, not past disappointment vs. San Diego   Apr 18, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Portland Timbers forward Kristoffer Velde (99) controls the ball as Minnesota United FC defender Morris Duggan (23) defends  during the second half at Allianz Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images   The Portland Timbers will try to avoid focusing on vengeance for last season’s playoff exit on Saturday night when they visit a San Diego FC squad enduring the roughest stretch of the club’s two-year existence.  The Timbers (2-5-1, 7 points) were one of eight clubs that didn’t play on Wednesday.  That gave manager Phil Neville’s side a week to prepare for a San Diego side that eliminated Portland from the playoffs last season in a tightly contested first-round series.  But with Portland currently five points beneath the playoff line in the Western Conference, he hopes his squad can leave the emotion of that defeat behind.  “I don’t do revenge,” Neville said. “I think that’s very short-sighted. I think if you get clouded with that kind of emotion, you don’t have clarity of mind. … I think I see it as an opportunity rather than revenge, and I’m sure they do as well.”  Kristoffer Velde leads the Timbers with three goals, including the first in the Timbers’ 2-1 victory over LAFC two weekends ago.  Eight other players have each scored once for a side that has lost its first four away fixtures, including 2-0 at Minnesota last weekend.   San Diego (3-4-2, 11 points) enters having lost four straight in the league, one game more than its longest losing stretch in the club’s inaugural 2025 season.  Amid that dynamic, SDFC manager Mikey Varas agrees there won’t be much carryover from last postseason.  “Every season, the teams are a little bit different, so it’s all a fresh start,” Varas said. “The team is really hungry to continue making steps forward and get back to our best.”  Three of those four defeats have come on the road, with San Diego failing to score in two of those away fixtures.  San Diego has also seen a player sent off in four of its last five matches. Striker Amahl Pellegrino was dismissed in the 79th minute of Wednesday’s 1-0 loss at the Houston Dynamo and will serve his one-match suspension Saturday.  Marcus Ingvartsen leads San Diego with five league goals and Anders Dreyer has four.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Timbers #focused #present #disappointment #San #DiegoApr 18, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Portland Timbers forward Kristoffer Velde (99) controls the ball as Minnesota United FC defender Morris Duggan (23) defends during the second half at Allianz Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images

The Portland Timbers will try to avoid focusing on vengeance for last season’s playoff exit on Saturday night when they visit a San Diego FC squad enduring the roughest stretch of the club’s two-year existence.

The Timbers (2-5-1, 7 points) were one of eight clubs that didn’t play on Wednesday.

That gave manager Phil Neville’s side a week to prepare for a San Diego side that eliminated Portland from the playoffs last season in a tightly contested first-round series.

But with Portland currently five points beneath the playoff line in the Western Conference, he hopes his squad can leave the emotion of that defeat behind.

“I don’t do revenge,” Neville said. “I think that’s very short-sighted. I think if you get clouded with that kind of emotion, you don’t have clarity of mind. … I think I see it as an opportunity rather than revenge, and I’m sure they do as well.”

Kristoffer Velde leads the Timbers with three goals, including the first in the Timbers’ 2-1 victory over LAFC two weekends ago.


Eight other players have each scored once for a side that has lost its first four away fixtures, including 2-0 at Minnesota last weekend.

San Diego (3-4-2, 11 points) enters having lost four straight in the league, one game more than its longest losing stretch in the club’s inaugural 2025 season.

Amid that dynamic, SDFC manager Mikey Varas agrees there won’t be much carryover from last postseason.

“Every season, the teams are a little bit different, so it’s all a fresh start,” Varas said. “The team is really hungry to continue making steps forward and get back to our best.”

Three of those four defeats have come on the road, with San Diego failing to score in two of those away fixtures.

San Diego has also seen a player sent off in four of its last five matches. Striker Amahl Pellegrino was dismissed in the 79th minute of Wednesday’s 1-0 loss at the Houston Dynamo and will serve his one-match suspension Saturday.

Marcus Ingvartsen leads San Diego with five league goals and Anders Dreyer has four.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Timbers #focused #present #disappointment #San #Diego">Deadspin | Timbers focused on present, not past disappointment vs. San Diego   Apr 18, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Portland Timbers forward Kristoffer Velde (99) controls the ball as Minnesota United FC defender Morris Duggan (23) defends  during the second half at Allianz Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images   The Portland Timbers will try to avoid focusing on vengeance for last season’s playoff exit on Saturday night when they visit a San Diego FC squad enduring the roughest stretch of the club’s two-year existence.  The Timbers (2-5-1, 7 points) were one of eight clubs that didn’t play on Wednesday.  That gave manager Phil Neville’s side a week to prepare for a San Diego side that eliminated Portland from the playoffs last season in a tightly contested first-round series.  But with Portland currently five points beneath the playoff line in the Western Conference, he hopes his squad can leave the emotion of that defeat behind.  “I don’t do revenge,” Neville said. “I think that’s very short-sighted. I think if you get clouded with that kind of emotion, you don’t have clarity of mind. … I think I see it as an opportunity rather than revenge, and I’m sure they do as well.”  Kristoffer Velde leads the Timbers with three goals, including the first in the Timbers’ 2-1 victory over LAFC two weekends ago.  Eight other players have each scored once for a side that has lost its first four away fixtures, including 2-0 at Minnesota last weekend.   San Diego (3-4-2, 11 points) enters having lost four straight in the league, one game more than its longest losing stretch in the club’s inaugural 2025 season.  Amid that dynamic, SDFC manager Mikey Varas agrees there won’t be much carryover from last postseason.  “Every season, the teams are a little bit different, so it’s all a fresh start,” Varas said. “The team is really hungry to continue making steps forward and get back to our best.”  Three of those four defeats have come on the road, with San Diego failing to score in two of those away fixtures.  San Diego has also seen a player sent off in four of its last five matches. Striker Amahl Pellegrino was dismissed in the 79th minute of Wednesday’s 1-0 loss at the Houston Dynamo and will serve his one-match suspension Saturday.  Marcus Ingvartsen leads San Diego with five league goals and Anders Dreyer has four.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Timbers #focused #present #disappointment #San #Diego

Manchester City beat Championship side Southampton 2-1 with ​a late goal from Nico ‌Gonzalez to book a place in ​an unprecedented fourth consecutive ⁠FA Cup final and keep alive its hopes of a domestic treble.

Southampton, ‌which upset Arsenal in the quarterfinals, looked poised to continue ‌its dream run when ‌Finn ⁠Azaz struck a gorgeous shot ⁠from distance in the 79th minute that James Trafford had little chance of ​stopping.

But in what ‌was a thrilling second half of the semifinal, Jeremy Doku wiped out Southampton’s lead four minutes ‌later when he worked the ​ball onto his right foot before unleashing a shot ⁠from the edge of the penalty area that deflected off James ‌Bree and into the net.

Gonzalez struck a rocket from 20 yards out in the 87th minute and City, which won the League Cup earlier this season and ‌is neck and neck with Arsenal ​at the top of the Premier League table, held on ⁠for victory in a breathless final ⁠few minutes.

City will meet the winner of Sunday’s semifinal ‌between Chelsea and Leeds United in the May 16 final ​at Wembley.

Published on Apr 26, 2026

#Man #City #fights #beat #Southampton #reach #fourth #straight #Cup #final">Man City fights back to beat Southampton and reach fourth straight FA Cup final  Manchester City beat Championship side Southampton 2-1 with ​a late goal from Nico ‌Gonzalez to book a place in ​an unprecedented fourth consecutive ⁠FA Cup final and keep alive its hopes of a domestic treble.Southampton, ‌which upset Arsenal in the quarterfinals, looked poised to continue ‌its dream run when ‌Finn ⁠Azaz struck a gorgeous shot ⁠from distance in the 79th minute that James Trafford had little chance of ​stopping.Two goals for @ManCity in five minutes and Nico González puts them ahead!📺 @BBCMOTD, @footballontnt and @SportsonMaxpic.twitter.com/nJcfQOiZKw— Emirates FA Cup (@EmiratesFACup) April 25, 2026But in what ‌was a thrilling second half of the semifinal, Jeremy Doku wiped out Southampton’s lead four minutes ‌later when he worked the ​ball onto his right foot before unleashing a shot ⁠from the edge of the penalty area that deflected off James ‌Bree and into the net.Gonzalez struck a rocket from 20 yards out in the 87th minute and City, which won the League Cup earlier this season and ‌is neck and neck with Arsenal ​at the top of the Premier League table, held on ⁠for victory in a breathless final ⁠few minutes.City will meet the winner of Sunday’s semifinal ‌between Chelsea and Leeds United in the May 16 final ​at Wembley.Published on Apr 26, 2026  #Man #City #fights #beat #Southampton #reach #fourth #straight #Cup #final

But in what ‌was a thrilling second half of the semifinal, Jeremy Doku wiped out Southampton’s lead four minutes ‌later when he worked the ​ball onto his right foot before unleashing a shot ⁠from the edge of the penalty area that deflected off James ‌Bree and into the net.

Gonzalez struck a rocket from 20 yards out in the 87th minute and City, which won the League Cup earlier this season and ‌is neck and neck with Arsenal ​at the top of the Premier League table, held on ⁠for victory in a breathless final ⁠few minutes.

City will meet the winner of Sunday’s semifinal ‌between Chelsea and Leeds United in the May 16 final ​at Wembley.

Published on Apr 26, 2026

#Man #City #fights #beat #Southampton #reach #fourth #straight #Cup #final">Man City fights back to beat Southampton and reach fourth straight FA Cup final

Manchester City beat Championship side Southampton 2-1 with ​a late goal from Nico ‌Gonzalez to book a place in ​an unprecedented fourth consecutive ⁠FA Cup final and keep alive its hopes of a domestic treble.

Southampton, ‌which upset Arsenal in the quarterfinals, looked poised to continue ‌its dream run when ‌Finn ⁠Azaz struck a gorgeous shot ⁠from distance in the 79th minute that James Trafford had little chance of ​stopping.

But in what ‌was a thrilling second half of the semifinal, Jeremy Doku wiped out Southampton’s lead four minutes ‌later when he worked the ​ball onto his right foot before unleashing a shot ⁠from the edge of the penalty area that deflected off James ‌Bree and into the net.

Gonzalez struck a rocket from 20 yards out in the 87th minute and City, which won the League Cup earlier this season and ‌is neck and neck with Arsenal ​at the top of the Premier League table, held on ⁠for victory in a breathless final ⁠few minutes.

City will meet the winner of Sunday’s semifinal ‌between Chelsea and Leeds United in the May 16 final ​at Wembley.

Published on Apr 26, 2026

#Man #City #fights #beat #Southampton #reach #fourth #straight #Cup #final

Post Comment