Sports
The Briefing: Arsenal’s worrying start to 2025, a fix for the FA Cup and Walker’s legacy
Welcome to The Briefing, where every Monday during this season The Athletic will discuss three of the biggest questions to arise from the weekend’s football.
This was the FA Cup weekend when Plymouth Argyle celebrated jettisoning Wayne Rooney by beating Brentford, Manchester City made short work of Salford City, Newcastle United were given a scare by Bromley and Tottenham Hotspur needed extra time to beat National League side Tamworth.
Here we will ask if their defeat by Manchester United is the start of something really bad for Arsenal, whether there is a better way to financially reward the giant-killers and where Kyle Walker ranks in the list of Premier League right-backs.
How bad is this going to get for Arsenal?
Things are really not going to plan for Arsenal in 2025.
Sure, it started quite nicely with a 3-1 win at Brentford, but since then they were meek in drawing with Brighton & Hove Albion, embarrassingly impotent in losing the first leg of the Carabao Cup semi-final 2-0 to Newcastle, and then there was the loss on penalties to Manchester United in the FA Cup third round on Sunday.
They can’t even blame referees for this one, having been on the good side of most contentious decisions. Maybe we should be praising Manchester United for their stout performance in holding out for an hour with 10 men after Diogo Dalot’s red card, but it’s hard to ignore that Arsenal seem to be in quite the funk at the moment.
Bukayo Saka is out for who knows how long, as is his replacement Ethan Nwaneri, Ben White is injured too and Gabriel Jesus — just after it looked like he was coming into some sort of goalscoring form — was taken off on a stretcher having injured his knee.
Maybe even more worrying than that is barely any of their fit players seem in form. Martin Odegaard is out of sorts, Gabriel Martinelli too, Mikel Merino hasn’t really got started and we won’t dwell too much on Kai Havertz’s afternoon against United, for fear of kicking a man while he’s down.
The positive spin is that they have created plenty of chances in the past couple of games: 49 shots over 210 minutes for an xG of around 6.44. The negative spin is that it’s no good creating chances if you can’t take any of them.
After the game, manager Mikel Arteta conceded that, while his team dominated the ball and created plenty of chances, “There is an element that is about putting the ball in the back of the net”. Quite so.
Maybe the gloom is too much. They haven’t lost in the league since the start of November. If they beat Tottenham on Wednesday, they could be three points off the top of the table — should leaders Liverpool lose to Nottingham Forest the night before. They’re looking good for automatic qualification in the Champions League. Maybe it’s better not to be in the FA Cup, given the fixture issues it could create.
But the signs aren’t great at the moment. It’s happening in probably the worst possible month, too: the inadequacies of their summer transfer window and not recruiting a proper goalscorer are being laid bare, so the clamour to fix that and spend some money in this window will grow and grow. Alternatively, maybe it could be the best possible month because they could actually buy someone to fix the problem. But don’t hold your breath.
At the moment, it’s a relatively brief poor run. The fear is that it could turn into something much worse than that.
Does the structure of the FA Cup need to change?
When the 90 minutes were up, the instinct was to be delighted for Tamworth that they had held Tottenham to a 0-0 draw. An amazing result that would now be rewarded with a lucrative replay at the Premier League side’s stadium.
And then you remember that replays are no longer a thing in the FA Cup, and a Tamworth team that featured builders and clothes shop workers would have to play another 30 minutes against a team of elite professional athletes, bringing their chances of avoiding defeat down to near zero.
Tamworth had a chance to beat Tottenham with almost the last kick of the match before the game went to extra time (Cameron Smith – Danehouse/Getty Images)
It is worth pointing out we probably shouldn’t weep too much for Tamworth specifically, given that they benefitted from this exact structure in the second round, beating Burton Albion after extra time and penalties. But this is illustrative of a wider point.
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It feels less than ideal that replays have been eliminated in the name of easing workload, when Spurs went on both post and pre-season tours (to Australia, and Japan and South Korea respectively) in the summer.
Football finance expert Kieran Maguire estimated that a replay would have been worth £850,000 ($1million) to Tamworth, a club that has only recently been able to make their manager a full-time employee. Money that could be the lifeblood of a grassroots team has been sacrificed so the richest can top up their giant piles of cash with another few spoonfuls.
But it’s not quite that simple. First, the decision has been made and it’s not likely to be changed, so railing against it falls into the ‘old man shouts at cloud’ category. Second, fixture congestion is a genuine problem, and replays have gone in part because of the expansion of European competitions, which you can’t really blame the Football Association for. Third, extra time and penalties are often entertaining, as Arsenal vs Manchester United proved.
One way of fixing the problem is to change the structure of the FA Cup’s prize money. Tamworth will receive £25,000 for their third-round defeat, while their opponents pocket £115,000 for winning. Those amounts increase as the tournament progresses, so the team that wins the final in May gets £2m.
The winners do not need that amount of money. In the Premier League era, the FA Cup has been won by one of Manchester United, Manchester City, Arsenal, Chelsea or Liverpool on 28 out of 32 occasions. The last time a team from outside the top flight won it was in 1980. The prize money for the FA Cup is loose change for clubs that bring in north of £700m every year.
So why not spread the prize money out a little more evenly throughout the rounds. Even if you halved the amount for the winners, that’s an extra £1m into the pot for the minnows. Sure, it wouldn’t be £850,000, but it would be a more constructive use of the money.
Better yet, why not have some sort of reverse sliding scale, according to the status of the team that wins a game? Say, if you’re a Premier League team and you win a round you get £X, but if a Championship team wins the same game they get £X times two, down to a National League team who would get £X times five?
Sure, it’s not perfect and it would make budgeting tricky, but it would allow the big teams to get what they want — avoiding the indignity of having to play a much inferior team that they couldn’t beat for a second time — and distribute the money in football more usefully.
Modern football being the capitalist nightmare that it currently is, this will not happen. But it would be better for the game if it did.
Is Walker the Premier League’s greatest right-back?
If Kyle Walker has played his last game for Manchester City, it will represent a slightly odd exit for one of the key players in the most dominant team in Premier League history.
This isn’t the start of the break-up of the team that has won six of the past seven Premier League titles: Riyad Mahrez and Ilkay Gundogan left in 2023 (although a version of the latter has returned since), but Walker has been there since Pep Guardiola’s second season.
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His decline has been clear for a while and has been exposed on several occasions this season. Perhaps it would have been too much of an overhaul with Mahrez and Gundogan going that summer too but, in hindsight, it probably would have been better for all concerned if Walker’s mooted transfer to Bayern Munich had happened 18 months ago.
But that should not obscure what a sensational player he has been for City — and England — over most of the past eight years. He has undoubtedly been among the best right-backs the Premier League has ever seen, and you could make a decent argument that he’s the very best.
None of the other candidates — Gary Neville, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Paulo Ferreira, Cesar Azpilicueta, Pablo Zabaleta, insert your own choice here — had/have quite the same all-round skills, able to defend as effectively as they can attack.
While he has never quite had the tactical nous or technique to be the inverted full-back who moves into midfield, his pace and defensive skills meant he could cover for John Stones, or whoever Guardiola chose to fulfil that role. He could cover so much ground that in most games City could afford to play three at the back without losing a huge amount in defence: N’Golo Kante was frequently cited as effectively being two players in one for Leicester City and Chelsea in midfield, but Walker did a similar thing in defence.
Latterly, his uncertainty going forward has led to him looking like he has the yips when it comes to crossing, and losing a yard or two of pace has meant he has been burned rather embarrassingly more times than is comfortable. Timo Werner absolutely rinsing him in City’s 4-0 defeat by Tottenham earlier in the season springs to mind, but there are many other examples of how his tactical brain has not quite come to terms with his physical limitations.
Fulham’s Adama Traore sprinting past Walker earlier this season (Oli Scarff/AFP via Getty Images)
It does sometimes feel like people in England have not quite warmed to him: perhaps it is a corollary of playing for a broadly unpopular team; perhaps it is to do with his very public private life; perhaps people genuinely do not rate him. But we should not underestimate how good he has been.
It will be interesting to see how City adapt if Walker leaves, with AC Milan a possible destination. Prospective new signing Abdukodir Khusanov has been a centre-back to this point, but then again so was Josko Gvardiol. Does this mean Rico Lewis becomes a certain starter? Maybe Stones will be asked to fill in there. Perhaps Guardiola has some other tactical innovation up his sleeve.
But City will be saying goodbye to one of their defining players of this era. He will be missed.
Coming up
- The lengthy FA Cup third-round weekend continues on Monday in Bermondsey, south London, with a prospective upset: Championship also-rans Millwall host National League also-rans Dagenham and Redbridge. It’s sort of a London derby — unless you’re a London purist and don’t think Dagenham counts.
- Then there’s a bonus round of Premier League games, the highlight of which comes on Tuesday with what is, implausibly, a top-of-the-table clash between Nottingham Forest and Liverpool. Brentford host Manchester City, it’s Chelsea vs Bournemouth and West Ham United vs Fulham.
- There’s another lively affair on Wednesday: the north London derby between Arsenal and Tottenham. Elsewhere, David Moyes takes charge of his second first game as Everton manager, as they face Aston Villa, while Leicester play Crystal Palace and it’s Newcastle vs Wolves.
- And finally, on Thursday, Ipswich vs Brighton and Manchester United vs Southampton round off these midweek fixtures.
- And throughout the week, the transfer window continues: will Manchester City sign Omar Marmoush and Khusanov? Will Manchester United find someone who’ll take Marcus Rashford? Will Walker get his move? Will Arsenal sign a forward? The Athletic’s transfer live blog will be up and running throughout the week with news and information from all of our club writers and, of course, David Ornstein.
(Top photos: Getty Images)
Sports
Bryce Harper hits for cycle, Kyle Schwarber blasts three homers in Phillies blowout win over Mets
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The Phillies’ turnaround following the dismissal of manager Rob Thomson reached a new milestone when two of the franchise’s biggest stars delivered a historic performance.
Kyle Schwarber launched three home runs, including two in the third inning, while Bryce Harper completed the cycle to add yet another achievement to his accomplished career.
The offensive explosion powered Philadelphia to a 15-3 rout of the New York Mets on Saturday, as the Phillies continued their surge and received a signature performance from two of the game’s most recognizable stars.
Philadelphia Phillies’ Kyle Schwarber celebrates his home run with Bryce Harper during the third inning against the New York Mets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on June 20, 2026. (Chris Szagola/AP)
Schwarber’s first home run traveled 456 feet, while his second blast of the third inning measured 457 feet off Mets reliever Cionel Pérez.
He capped his night with a two-run homer in the seventh inning. Schwarber’s major league-leading home run total climbed to 28, and the performance marked the fifth three-homer game of his career.
Cristopher Sanchez allowed one earned run in six innings to lower his ERA to 1.80.
It’s his 23rd straight start at Citizens Bank Park in which he allowed two earned runs or fewer, the second-most such starts by a pitcher at the same ballpark in MLB history since 1913, trailing only Jacob deGrom’s 24 at Citi Field for the Mets from Sept. 9, 2019 to Aug. 31, 2022.
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Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber of the Philadelphia Phillies leave the field after defeating the New York Mets at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on June 20, 2026. (Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
Schwarber is the 67th player in major league history and second this season with multiple home runs in an inning, joining Houston’s Yordan Alvarez on June 12.
Schwarber is the fourth Phillies player to hit two home runs in an inning, along with Trea Turner (Aug. 19, 2023), Von Hayes (June 11, 1985) and Andy Seminick (June 2, 1949).
Philadelphia Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber hits a solo home run in the bottom of the third inning against the New York Mets at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on June 20, 2026. (Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)
Meanwhile, Harper hit a solo home run in the first inning, his 16th of the year. He doubled and singled in the third, then hit a two-run triple to the gap in left-center field in the fifth for his first career cycle and the 11th in Phillies history.
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The Phillies and Mets will wrap up their three-game series Sunday night, with first pitch set for 7:20 p.m. ET.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
2026 World Cup guide: Full TV schedule, game previews, results and standings
The 2026 FIFA World Cup is well into the second run of group play, with every team still eager to post wins and most looking to secure a place in the knockout stage.
Here’s everything you need to know about matches being played Sunday, Monday and Tuesday in the 48-team tournament across the U.S., Mexico and Canada (all times Pacific). Tuesday’s matches will conclude the first two games of group play for every team at the World Cup.
Sunday’s Group G matchups:
Belgium vs. Iran
Belgium’s Romelu Lukaku, right, is challenged by Egypt’s Ramy Rabia during a World Cup Group G match on June 15.
(Alex Grimm / Getty Images)
Where: SoFi Stadium
Time: noon
TV: FS1, Telemundo
The buzz: Iran twice rallied from deficits to draw with New Zealand in its first game, while Belgium, outplayed by Egypt in its opener, was lucky to escape with a point on an own goal early in the second half. Belgium’s aging golden generation of Romelu Lukaku, Kevin De Bruyne, Thibaut Courtois, Thomas Meunier and Axel Witsel is going to need to do much better if they hope to avoid another early World Cup exit.
New Zealand vs. Egypt
New Zealand’s Callan Elliot, left, and Iran’s Mehdi Ghayedi battle for the ball during a World Cup Group G match on June 15.
(Andre Penner / Associated Press)
Where: BC Place, Vancouver
Time: 6 p.m.
TV: FS1, Telemundo
The buzz: One of these teams could make history since neither has ever won a World Cup game. New Zealand earned its first point in the World Cup since 2010 with a draw against Iran. The winner likely advances to the next round.
Sunday’s Group H matchups:
Spain vs. Saudi Arabia
Spain’s Mikel Oyarzabal, top, challenges for the ball during a draw with Cape Verde on June 15.
(Mattia Ozbot / Getty Images)
Where: Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta
Time: 9 a.m.
TV: Fox, Telemundo
The buzz: Both teams opened the World Cup with surprising results. Second-ranked Spain was unable to score in a draw with No. 67 Cape Verde. Saudi Arabia was 10 minutes away from upsetting Uruguay, only to settle for a tie. Spain desperately needs a win to get its World Cup back on track, while another good performance from Saudi Arabia — unbeaten in its last three games — would have the Arabian Falcons in position to reach the knockout stage.
Uruguay vs. Cape Verde
Cape Verde goalkeeper Vozinha holds the nation’s flag after a draw with Spain on June 15.
(Buda Mendes / Getty Images)
Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, Fla.
Time: 3 p.m.
TV: FS1, Telemundo
The buzz: With all four teams playing to draws in their openers, the group is wide open. That creates a rare opportunity for tournament debutant Cape Verde, the second-smallest country to qualify for a World Cup. Vozinha, Cape Verde’s goalkeeper, made seven saves to shut out Spain. If he can frustrate Uruguay the same way, Cape Verde could be through to the round of 32.
Monday’s Group J matchups:
Argentina vs. Austria
Argentina’s Lionel Messi reacts after scoring his third goal against Algeria at the World Cup on June 16.
(Charlie Riedel / Associated Press)
Where: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
Time: 10 a.m.
TV: Fox, Telemundo
The buzz: Argentina opened its World Cup title defense with a 3-0 win over Algeria on a hat trick from Lionel Messi. The Argentina captain, playing in his record sixth World Cup, is tied with Germany’s Miroslav Klose for the most career World Cup goals (16). Austria, meanwhile, would all but assure itself of a spot in the knockout round with a point.
Jordan vs. Algeria
Algeria’s Zineddine Belaïd kicks the ball during a World Cup loss to Argentina on June 16.
(Michael Steele / Getty Images)
Where: Levi’s Stadium, Santa Clara, Calif.
Time: 8 p.m.
TV: FS1, Telemundo
The buzz: Little was expected of Jordan, making its first appearance in the World Cup. And it delivered little in a 3-1 loss to Austria. But Algeria, ranked 28th in the world, entered the tournament with high hopes and one of African soccer’s most potent attacks. However, it had only one shot on goal in its loss to Argentina and needs a big rebound to avoid an early trip home.
Monday’s Group I matches:
France vs. Iraq
France’s Kylian Mbappé celebrates after scoring against Senegal on June 16.
(Adam Hunger / Ap Photo/adam Hunger)
Where: Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia
Time: 2 p.m.
TV: Fox, Telemundo
The buzz: Kylian Mbappé proved his fitness with a brace in France’s opening win over Senegal, giving him 14 World Cup goals, tied for fourth on the all-time list. He has a great chance to pad that total against an Iraq team that gave up four goals to Norway. Iraq still is looking for its first-ever World Cup point.
Norway vs. Senegal
Norway’s Erling Haaland celebrates after scoring against Iraq on June 16.
(Justin Setterfield / Getty Images)
Where: MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, N.J.
Time: 5 p.m.
TV: Fox, Telemundo
The buzz: Norway, playing in its first World Cup this century, made up for lost time with a 4-1 win in its opener, getting two goals from Erling Haaland. Norway probably will move on to the next round no matter what happens, but a point would lock down a spot. Senegal and Sadio Mané, on the other hand, desperately need a win.
Tuesday’s Group K matchups:
Portugal vs. Uzbekistan
Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo walks on the field during a match against the Democratic Republic of the Congo on June 17.
(Molly Darlington / Getty Images)
Where: NRG Stadium, Houston
Time: 10 a.m.
TV: Fox, Telemundo
The buzz: Cristiano Ronaldo entered this World Cup with visions of winning his first title. But he’ll go home early and empty-handed unless fifth-ranked Portugal improves on the listless performance it had in a draw with the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Uzbekistan, playing in its first World Cup, was not intimidated by the big stage, weathering a withering Colombia attack in a 3-1 loss. Expect it to bunker in again against Portugal.
Colombia vs. DR Congo
Yoane Wissa, left, celebrates with teammates after scoring for the Democratic Republic of the Congo against Portugal on June 17.
(Karen Warren / Associated Press)
Where: Estadio Akron, Zapopan, Mexico
Time: 7 p.m.
TV: FS1, Telemundo
The buzz: The Democratic Republic of the Congo’s only other World Cup appearance came in 1974, when the country was known as Zaire; it lost all three games and didn’t score a goal. It’s already done better with Yoane Wissa’s score in first-half stoppage time giving the team a point against Portugal. A win here and it’s through to the knockout phase. The same is true of Colombia, which got a 65th-minute goal from Luis Díaz and another from substitute Jáminton Campaz deep in stoppage time to beat stubborn Uzbekistan.
Tuesday’s Group L matchups:
England vs. Ghana
England’s Harry Kane celebrates after scoring against Croatia on June 17.
(Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press)
Where: Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Mass.
Time: 1 p.m.
TV: Fox, Telemundo
The buzz: England opened its World Cup with a surprisingly comfortable win over Croatia behind two goals from captain Harry Kane. But the Three Lions are only equal atop the table with Ghana, which got a goal deep in stoppage time from Caleb Yirenkyi to beat Panama. If there’s a winner here, it probably will decide the group. A point likely sends both teams through.
Panama vs. Croatia
Where: BMO Stadium, Toronto
Time: 4 p.m.
TV: Fox, Telemundo
Panama’s Ismael Díaz attempts a shot against Ghana on June 17.
(Kevin C. Cox / Getty Images)
The buzz: Croatia has played in two straight World Cup semifinals, but that streak is in jeopardy after a 4-2 loss to England. Panama outshot, outpassed and outpossessed Ghana in its first game but came away with nothing after conceding a goal in stoppage time, leaving the Central Americans still looking for their first World Cup win.
Sports
Jazz Chisholm explains why he still won’t wear a cup after fouling a pitch into his own groin
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Men around the country are still wincing from the sight of New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. fouling a pitch straight into his own groin.
It was bad enough that Chisholm had to leave the game, and it left many wondering why he wasn’t wearing a cup to protect himself.
Well, now we have an answer.
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New York Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. took a brutal shot to the groin on Thursday night. (Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images)
Yankees beat writer Gary Philips shared some quotes from Chisholm explaining why he wasn’t a cup guy before taking a foul ball to the cojones, and why he isn’t going to be a cup guy moving forward.
WEEKS AFTER BULLFIGHTER SUFFERED PERFORATED RECTUM, ANOTHER WAS GORED IN GROIN AND REQUIRED EMERGENCY SURGERY
Chisholm said that the pain level was a “million,” and that, “If you ever got hit in the testicles, you would know.”
Most males reading this just nodded at that statement.
But Chisholm revealed that despite cups being mandatory in the minor leagues, he still skipped them and will continue to because he trusts his own defensive abilities.
“I’ve never worn a cup,” he said. “I’ve never been hit in the balls. That was just unlucky.”
Now, there are times when I wonder why men don’t wear cups all the time just for some peace of mind (I feel that way about helmets too). You wouldn’t regret not wearing a cup until the moment you’re at a cookout and a rogue volleyball puts you in shambles.
But I also like that Chisholm trusts himself to react and protect the boys. I’ve always said that a fairly significant part of a man’s life is devoted to protecting his lower anatomy.
You’re ever vigilant, trying to steer clear of anything that could leave you doubled over on the ground, and spouting off every expletive you know and several others you didn’t realize you knew.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. says he’ll rely on his defensive abilities instead of wearing a cup moving forward. (David Richard-Imagn Images)
Waist-high branches, table corners, projectiles, bicycle seats, even a pet jumping in your lap when you’re not ready.
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Chisholm is self-aware enough to know where his self-preservation reflexes stand, and I respect that.
But if he takes another foul ball to the lower area of his body, he might want to start rethinking that stance on cups.
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