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FIFA opens talks on rule requiring clubs to field at least one homegrown young player during matches  FIFA has opened talks on making it mandatory for all professional teams to field at least one homegrown young player throughout a match.The FIFA Council agreed late on Tuesday to work towards a formal plan within a year, following global consultation with stakeholders.The move is aimed at increasing playing opportunities for young players developed by clubs, especially at teams that usually rely on bought and imported talent.FIFA said it is targeting “a regulatory obligation that senior club teams are obliged to always have at least one homegrown player from the Under-20 or Under-21 category on the field of play.”Such a rule would be stricter than existing regulations in national and international club competitions, including the Champions League, which require a quota of homegrown and club-trained players in squad lists.ALSO READ: FIFA boosts cash payments for World Cup 2026However, those rules do not make it compulsory for clubs to select such players in their starting line-ups or use them during matches.Champions League rules require each squad to reserve at least eight places for “locally trained players” in a maximum squad of 25.A locally trained player is defined by Champions League organiser UEFA as one developed by the club itself or by another club in the same country for at least three full seasons between the ages of 15 and 21.Published on Apr 29, 2026  #FIFA #opens #talks #rule #requiring #clubs #field #homegrown #young #player #matches

FIFA opens talks on rule requiring clubs to field at least one homegrown young player during matches

FIFA has opened talks on making it mandatory for all professional teams to field at least one homegrown young player throughout a match.

The FIFA Council agreed late on Tuesday to work towards a formal plan within a year, following global consultation with stakeholders.

The move is aimed at increasing playing opportunities for young players developed by clubs, especially at teams that usually rely on bought and imported talent.

FIFA said it is targeting “a regulatory obligation that senior club teams are obliged to always have at least one homegrown player from the Under-20 or Under-21 category on the field of play.”

Such a rule would be stricter than existing regulations in national and international club competitions, including the Champions League, which require a quota of homegrown and club-trained players in squad lists.

ALSO READ: FIFA boosts cash payments for World Cup 2026

However, those rules do not make it compulsory for clubs to select such players in their starting line-ups or use them during matches.

Champions League rules require each squad to reserve at least eight places for “locally trained players” in a maximum squad of 25.

A locally trained player is defined by Champions League organiser UEFA as one developed by the club itself or by another club in the same country for at least three full seasons between the ages of 15 and 21.

Published on Apr 29, 2026

#FIFA #opens #talks #rule #requiring #clubs #field #homegrown #young #player #matches

FIFA has opened talks on making it mandatory for all professional teams to field at least one homegrown young player throughout a match.

The FIFA Council agreed late on Tuesday to work towards a formal plan within a year, following global consultation with stakeholders.

The move is aimed at increasing playing opportunities for young players developed by clubs, especially at teams that usually rely on bought and imported talent.

FIFA said it is targeting “a regulatory obligation that senior club teams are obliged to always have at least one homegrown player from the Under-20 or Under-21 category on the field of play.”

Such a rule would be stricter than existing regulations in national and international club competitions, including the Champions League, which require a quota of homegrown and club-trained players in squad lists.

ALSO READ: FIFA boosts cash payments for World Cup 2026

However, those rules do not make it compulsory for clubs to select such players in their starting line-ups or use them during matches.

Champions League rules require each squad to reserve at least eight places for “locally trained players” in a maximum squad of 25.

A locally trained player is defined by Champions League organiser UEFA as one developed by the club itself or by another club in the same country for at least three full seasons between the ages of 15 and 21.

Published on Apr 29, 2026

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#FIFA #opens #talks #rule #requiring #clubs #field #homegrown #young #player #matches

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Deadspin | Pete Alonso, Orioles determined to heat up vs. Astros <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28834460.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28834460.jpg" alt="MLB: Houston Astros at Baltimore Orioles" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Apr 28, 2026; Baltimore, Maryland, USA; Baltimore Orioles infielder Pete Alonso (25) celebrates after hitting a two-run home run in the fifth inning against the Houston Astros at Oriole Park at Camden Yards. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>The Baltimore Orioles would like for first baseman Pete Alonso to get untracked.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>They hope to see more signs of that Wednesday night against the visiting Houston Astros after the slugger unleashed an opposite-field home run in a 5-3 Baltimore victory Tuesday in the series opener.</p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>Alonso, a big free-agent prize for the Orioles in the offseason, is batting only .198 with four homers and 12 RBIs this season.</p> </section><section id="section-4"> <p>“I think my swing feels good,” he said. “Just need to get a ball or two to find some grass or maybe a seat.”</p> </section><section id="section-5"> <p>Alonso put one in the seats over the right-field fence in the fifth inning Tuesday. Every time he homers, it’s a signal that he could be on the verge of a breakout.</p> </section><section id="section-6"> <p>“His defense right now has been better than advertised,” Orioles manager Craig Albernaz said. “It’s been elite for us at first base. So it’s just on the offensive side of the ball, and he’s close. You can see it in the box, you can see it in his work. So I think once he kind of gets in that groove, it’s going to be dangerous.”</p> </section><section id="section-7"> <p>Alonso said it’s clear that the best is still to come from the Orioles, who halted a two-game skid on Tuesday.</p> </section><section id="section-8"> <p>“I think from the group largely, there’s been a lot of great individual performances, but I think from a lineup perspective, not everyone’s got going,” Alonso said. “I think once everyone kind of gets going, we start getting on the same page clicking, we’re going to put some runs up, which is going to alleviate some of the stress for the pitching staff.”</p> </section><br/><section id="section-9"> <p>Right-hander Chris Bassitt (1-2, 6.75 ERA) will be Baltimore’s starting pitcher for the middle game of the three-game series with the Astros. He gained his first victory of the season last Wednesday despite giving up five runs in 5 1/3 innings in an 8-6 win at Kansas City. The Orioles have won in his past three starts.</p> </section> <section id="section-10"> <p>Bassitt has made 16 career starts vs. Houston, recording a 5-6 record and 4.32 ERA in 89 2/3 innings. That marks the most innings he has logged against any opponent in his 12-year big-league career.</p> </section><section id="section-11"> <p>The Astros have the worst record in the American League and are dealing with injuries that have altered the available roster.</p> </section><section id="section-12"> <p>“It’s unfortunate that we have to go through this again,” Houston manager Joe Espada said. “But we find ourselves in a spot that we know we have been here before. … We have a roster now that I feel good about. Putting these guys in the best position to have some success is the most important thing while we get the rest of the guys back.”</p> </section><section id="section-13"> <p>Houston’s starting pitcher on Wednesday will be right-hander Peter Lambert (1-1, 3.27 ERA), who’s coming off last Wednesday’s six shutout innings in a 2-0 victory at Cleveland. He’ll face the Orioles for the first time.</p> </section><section id="section-14"> <p>Espada said the Astros will have infielder Jeremy Pena back with the team Wednesday, but he won’t be activated to play. Instead, he’ll continue rehab work for a hamstring strain.</p> </section><section id="section-15"> <p>Outfielder Colton Cowser hasn’t been in Baltimore’s lineup for four straight games, but Albernaz said part of that is because of Leody Taveras’ production.</p> </section><section id="section-16"> <p>“It’s nothing about Cowser,” Albernaz said. </p> </section><section id="section-17"> <p>Taveras is batting .286 this season, with two homers and 15 RBIs.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-18"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section> </div> #Deadspin #Pete #Alonso #Orioles #determined #heat #Astros

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Inside the Orlando Magic’s Quest To Shock the NBA Against Detroit Pistons | Deadspin.com <div id="section-1"> <p>The underdog has universal appeal because it represents all of us.</p><p>Undersized and beating the odds. The common citizen saving the world. The unassuming hero.</p><p>A No. 8 seed taking down a No. 1 in a playoff series is <a href="https://deadspin.com/what-prediction-markets-are-telling-us-about-nba-playoffs-in-the-east/" target="_blank">long shot gold</a>. Or at least it should be.</p><p>The Orlando Magic are poised to join the underdog hall of fame this week in their first-round playoff series <a href="https://deadspin.com/jb-bickerstaff-is-one-loss-away-from-being-exposed-as-a-phony/" target="_blank">against the Detroit Pistons.</a></p><p>At No. 8 and the lowest seed in the Eastern Conference, Orlando earned an official playoff spot only after a loss and then a victory in the play-in tournament. Now they have the top-seeded Pistons on the ropes with a 3-1 series lead.</p><p>Just eight games over .500 in the regular season, the Magic can now boot a 60-win team from the playoff field.</p><p>And yet the rags-to-riches tale does not seem to be captivating a nation like it should.</p><p>Don’t expect anybody to crank up the “Hoosiers” clips before what could be a decisive Game 5 on Wednesday. This isn’t even “The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh.”</p><p>Only six No. 8 seeds have ever won a first-round series against a No. 1 in NBA playoff history. Perhaps the most famous was in 1994 when the Denver Nuggets got past the Seattle SuperSonics in a best-of-five opening round.</p><p>The sight of Nuggets center Dikembe Mutombo lying on the court and holding the basketball aloft — part laughter, part tears — is the picture of playoff upsets.</p><p>In 1999, the New York Knicks under Jeff Van Gundy knocked off the Miami Heat in another five-game thriller.</p><p>Other first-round conquerors, all in seven-game series, include the 2007 Golden State Warriors over the Dallas Mavericks; the 2011 Memphis Grizzlies over the San Antonio Spurs; the 2012 Philadelphia 76ers over the Chicago Bulls; the 2023 Heat over the Milwaukee Bucks.</p><p>Perhaps it has happened too often to stir the senses.</p><p>Or maybe it’s that the top seed in this case was sort of the underdog of the regular season that rose to new heights. The Pistons had just ended a five-season playoff drought last year when they were dumped in the first round.</p><p>That 2025 playoff appearance came after they were a brutal 14-68 one season earlier. They had averaged just shy of 19 wins per season over the previous five campaigns.</p><p>This Pistons-Magic series is void of a proper villain.</p><p>In Orlando, though, there is nothing Mickey Mouse about it.</p><p>The Magic have been eliminated in the first round the last six times they have made the playoffs. They have not won a series since making the Eastern Conference finals in 2010 under Stan Van Gundy.</p><p>Orlando looked ready to turn a corner when Franz Wagner and Jalen Suggs arrived before the 2021-22 season. They seemed well on their way when Paolo Banchero joined one season later.</p><p>They added Desmond Bane this season in an eye-opening deal that <a href="https://www.nba.com/news/magic-grizzlies-trade-bane-caldwell-pope" target="_blank">cost four unprotected first-round draft pick</a>s and a 2029 draft pick swap. Bane ended up delivering 20.1 points per game in the regular season while providing veteran leadership. In the playoffs, he is scoring 19.0 points while shooting 44.1% from 3-point range.</p><p>After Wagner missed 48 games during the regular season with an ankle injury, he has scored 16.8 points in the playoffs. Banchero has scored 21.0 points with 8.8 rebounds and 6.3 assists in the playoffs.</p><p>If the Magic can get past the Pistons, they look like they also have a chance against the Cleveland Cavaliers or Toronto Raptors in the next round.</p><p>If the Magic move deeper into the playoffs, maybe then they can move the masses then. It is a small world after all.</p> </div> #Orlando #Magics #Quest #Shock #NBA #Detroit #Pistons #Deadspin.com

Carla Leite called for the iso.

Dribbling out the clock, the 5’9 guard shooed away her teammates with confidence. The only thing standing between the 22-year-old and the Barclays Center basket?

Stewart is an elite defender — one of the WNBA’s most consistent. She’s also 6’4. But that didn’t matter. Leite, a 17.3% career three-point shooter in the WNBA, pulled up for three.

Leite smiled, knowing she had just iced the game. Thanks to her big triple, the Portland Fire led the New York Liberty by 6 points with 14.4 seconds to spare. Liberty guard Marine Johannes responded with a three-pointer of her own, but the game was out of reach.

The pull-up three was Leite’s second consecutive clutch basket in the final seconds of Monday night’s 81-74 Fire win over the Liberty. Twenty-five seconds earlier, Leite drove to the basket to give the Fire a 5-point lead with 40 seconds to play.

And, Monday wasn’t the first time she took over in the clutch, either.

Two weeks earlier, when the Fire pulled out the franchise’s first-ever win, Leite also stepped up down the stretch against the Liberty. She drove to the basket with 27.1 seconds to play, tying up the game against New York. A Sarah Ashlee Barker game-winner ended up securing that May 12th win.

Leite is having a strong all-around season. On Monday, she scored a team-high 18 points on 8-14 shooting; the Fire outscored the Liberty by 8 points in her 22 minutes on the floor.

Leite’s points, rebounds, and assists per game have all more than doubled; she averaged 7.2 points, 1.3 rebounds, and 2 assists per game, and has seen those numbers rise to 15 points, 2.8 rebounds, and 4.8 assists per game this season. Her efficiency has also risen; she averaged 38.7% in her rookie campaign and is shooting 5% better this year in Portland.

The Fire are 3-2 in the five games the sophomore guard has played.

Leite is far from the only reason why the Fire, one of two 2026 expansion teams, have begun the season 4-3. Bridget Carleton, the No. 1 overall pick in the expansion draft, is averaging 16.5 points per game, 10 more than she averaged last year as a role player on the Minnesota Lynx. Emily Engslter, Megan Gustafson, Nyadiew Puoch, and Luisa Geiselsoder have all been key contributors.

And, Ashlee Barker, who is averaging 10.3 points off the bench, has also been a monster in the clutch. In addition to her game-winner earlier in the month, Barker completed an and-one driving layup in the final minute of a crunch-time victory over the Connecticut Sun. In Monday’s win over the Liberty, she hit a go-ahead corner three to give the Fire a one-point edge with just under four minutes to spare. The Fire never trailed again.

But, Leite — left unprotected by the Golden State Valkyries after her rookie season — has been the primary scoring option in the clutch.

And, on Monday, she did it again.

#WNBA #clutchtime #superstar">The WNBA has a new clutch-time superstar  Carla Leite called for the iso.Dribbling out the clock, the 5’9 guard shooed away her teammates with confidence. The only thing standing between the 22-year-old and the Barclays Center basket?Stewart is an elite defender — one of the WNBA’s most consistent. She’s also 6’4. But that didn’t matter. Leite, a 17.3% career three-point shooter in the WNBA, pulled up for three.Leite smiled, knowing she had just iced the game. Thanks to her big triple, the Portland Fire led the New York Liberty by 6 points with 14.4 seconds to spare. Liberty guard Marine Johannes responded with a three-pointer of her own, but the game was out of reach.The pull-up three was Leite’s second consecutive clutch basket in the final seconds of Monday night’s 81-74 Fire win over the Liberty. Twenty-five seconds earlier, Leite drove to the basket to give the Fire a 5-point lead with 40 seconds to play.And, Monday wasn’t the first time she took over in the clutch, either.Two weeks earlier, when the Fire pulled out the franchise’s first-ever win, Leite also stepped up down the stretch against the Liberty. She drove to the basket with 27.1 seconds to play, tying up the game against New York. A Sarah Ashlee Barker game-winner ended up securing that May 12th win.Leite is having a strong all-around season. On Monday, she scored a team-high 18 points on 8-14 shooting; the Fire outscored the Liberty by 8 points in her 22 minutes on the floor.Leite’s points, rebounds, and assists per game have all more than doubled; she averaged 7.2 points, 1.3 rebounds, and 2 assists per game, and has seen those numbers rise to 15 points, 2.8 rebounds, and 4.8 assists per game this season. Her efficiency has also risen; she averaged 38.7% in her rookie campaign and is shooting 5% better this year in Portland.The Fire are 3-2 in the five games the sophomore guard has played.Leite is far from the only reason why the Fire, one of two 2026 expansion teams, have begun the season 4-3. Bridget Carleton, the No. 1 overall pick in the expansion draft, is averaging 16.5 points per game, 10 more than she averaged last year as a role player on the Minnesota Lynx. Emily Engslter, Megan Gustafson, Nyadiew Puoch, and Luisa Geiselsoder have all been key contributors.And, Ashlee Barker, who is averaging 10.3 points off the bench, has also been a monster in the clutch. In addition to her game-winner earlier in the month, Barker completed an and-one driving layup in the final minute of a crunch-time victory over the Connecticut Sun. In Monday’s win over the Liberty, she hit a go-ahead corner three to give the Fire a one-point edge with just under four minutes to spare. The Fire never trailed again.But, Leite — left unprotected by the Golden State Valkyries after her rookie season — has been the primary scoring option in the clutch.And, on Monday, she did it again.  #WNBA #clutchtime #superstar

Colombia on Monday announced its 26-member squad for the FIFA World Cup 2026 with former Real Madrid star James Rodriguez making the cut for the tournament.

Bayern Munich forward Luis Diaz will headline Nestor Lorenzo’s side as it vies to clinch its first World Cup title. Defender Jhon Duran, who plays for Saudi side Al Nassr, was among the notable absentees.

Colombia did not qualify for the World Cup Finals in 2022 and was knocked out in the Round of 16 by England on penalties in 2018. It’s best finish came in the 2014 edition when it reached the quarterfinals and lost to Brazil.

In 2026, it has been pitted in Group K where it will face title contender Portugal, Uzbekistan, and DR Congo.

COLOMBIA FIFA WORLD CUP 2026 FULL SQUAD

Goalkeepers: C. Vargas, A. Montero, D. Ospina

Defenders: D. Sánchez, J. Lucumí, Y. Mina, W. Ditta, D. Muñoz, S. Arias, J. Mojica, D. Machado

Midfielders: J. Lerma, J. Portilla, R. Ríos, K. Castaño, G. Puerta, J. Arias, J. Carrascal, J. F. Quintero, J. Rodríguez

Forwards: L. Díaz, J. Campaz, A. Gómez, L. Suárez, J. Córdoba, J. Hernández

Published on May 25, 2026

#Colombia #announces #squad #FIFA #World #Cup #Full #list #players #confirmed">Colombia announces squad for FIFA World Cup 2026 — Full list of players confirmed  Colombia on Monday announced its 26-member squad for the FIFA World Cup 2026 with former Real Madrid star James Rodriguez making the cut for the tournament.Bayern Munich forward Luis Diaz will headline Nestor Lorenzo’s side as it vies to clinch its first World Cup title. Defender Jhon Duran, who plays for Saudi side Al Nassr, was among the notable absentees.Colombia did not qualify for the World Cup Finals in 2022 and was knocked out in the Round of 16 by England on penalties in 2018. It’s best finish came in the 2014 edition when it reached the quarterfinals and lost to Brazil.In 2026, it has been pitted in Group K where it will face title contender Portugal, Uzbekistan, and DR Congo.
COLOMBIA FIFA WORLD CUP 2026 FULL SQUAD

Goalkeepers: C. Vargas, A. Montero, D. Ospina

Defenders: D. Sánchez, J. Lucumí, Y. Mina, W. Ditta, D. Muñoz, S. Arias, J. Mojica, D. Machado

Midfielders: J. Lerma, J. Portilla, R. Ríos, K. Castaño, G. Puerta, J. Arias, J. Carrascal, J. F. Quintero, J. Rodríguez

Forwards: L. Díaz, J. Campaz, A. Gómez, L. Suárez, J. Córdoba, J. Hernández
Published on May 25, 2026  #Colombia #announces #squad #FIFA #World #Cup #Full #list #players #confirmed

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