Hurry up, Lionel! Inter Miami’s MLS winless streak hits 10 games as it blows a 2-1 lead and is held to tie by Wayne Rooney’s DC United ahead of Messi’s move
By Kate Mcgreavy For Dailymail.Com and Reuters
Published: | Updated:
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Lionel Messi’s arrival can’t come soon enough.
Inter Miami blew a 2-1 lead in its MLS match with Wayne Rooney’s DC United team on Saturday night, extending its winless streak to 10 games.
Taxi Fountas scored his sixth goal of the season and also contributed a crucial assist as DC twice rallied from a deficit to earn a 2-2 tie against visiting Miami
Nigel Robertha also scored only moments after entering the game for DC (8-9-6, 30 points), which earned a point despite conceding multiple goals for the fourth time in its last six games.
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Robertha’s late goal prevented Tata Martino from picking up a win in his managerial debut for Miami, which is winless in its last 10 but has drawn three in a row since Marino’s hiring was announced.
Inter Miami blew a 2-1 lead in its MLS match with Wayne Rooney ‘s DC United Saturday night
DC United forward Nigel Robertha scores the equalizer to earn a 2-2 tie at Audi Field
DC United forward Taxiarchis Fountas (11) celebrates after scoring the team’s first goal
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Fountas has now scored in back-to-back games, each time helping DC overcome a key absence.
This time it was team assists leader Mateusz Klich, who was out while serving a yellow card accumulation suspension.
Cremaschi and Allen each scored their first career professional goals for visiting Miami (5-13-3, 18 points).
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Drake Callender made seven saves for the visitors despite letting in two goals.
DC led 16-11 in total shots and 9-6 in efforts on target in a game where all the goals came after halftime.
After Cremaschi opened the scoring off a feed from Robert Taylor, Fountas answered by finishing off an excellent team goal.
Donovan Pines played a long ball down the left to find Yamil Asad, and Asad played a clever backheel pass to Cristian Dajome following the play.
DC United players celebrate after rallying twice from a deficit against Miami in league action
Miami appeared to confirm Messi’s arrival for July 16 after sending details to media on Friday
Dajome slotted a pass to his right, and Fountas curled a right-footed shot around the dive of Callender and inside the far-right post.
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Allen put Miami in front again only three minutes later when his free kick from the right fizzed through traffic and found the far-left corner.
D.C. went level for the second time in the 77th minute. This time Fountas played catalyst with a ball down the right to Ruan, who immediately drove in a cross from the corner.
Robertha met it at the back post with a one-time finish into an open goal, with Callender stranded at the other post.
Miami appeared to confirm Messi’s arrival for July 16, with the club teasing a ‘major unveiling event’ that night to reporters, the day before Saturday’s tie.
DC United midfielder Russell Canouse (6) is tackled by Inter Miami forward Josef Martinez (17)
Miami’s Martinez fires an effort towards goal during the team’s 2-2 tie in MLS on Saturday
The welcoming of the seven-time Ballon d’Or winner is set for 8pm ET, and will include ‘exciting entertainment, speeches on the pitch and more’ according to the club.
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Messi will likely be unveiled alongside former Barcelona teammate Sergio Busquets, who has also agreed to join Miami.
The club is also close to wrapping up a deal for longtime Barcelona left-back Jordi Alba, with the acquisition of the 34-year-old essentially a done deal, according to the Miami Herald.
On recent evidence, Miami needs Messi, at the very least, and fast.
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It’s do-or-die now for The Miami Hurricanes. Win and they are headed to Charlotte to face the SMU Mustangs for the Chance at hold the ACC Title for the first time since joining the conference in 2004.
First, they have to defeat one of the best offenses in the Atlantic Coast Conference in the Syracuse Orange led by Kyle McCord who is also on a mission of his own.
The Hurricanes have the No. 1 offense in the country but with a questionable defense, it could be hard to say what makes of the Canes and their championship asperation. One step at a time for the Hurricanes however as they look to get some players back for the final game of the season in the likes of Elijah Alston and Damari Brown.
The the additon of those two players on the defensive side of the ball, the Hurricanes could push pass the Orange and the offense that stands in their way. They will try to do it led by Heisman hopeful quarterback Cam Ward and his gunslinging arm and litany of weapons surrounding him.
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Date: November 30
Time: 3:30 ET
TV: ESPN
Location: JMA Wireless Dome
Series: The Hurricanes lead the series 16-7 against the Orange.
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Last Matchup: The Hurricanes dominated on defense in a 27-19 victory where Syracuse QB Eric Dungey threw four interceptions. Canes QB Malik Rosier threw for 344 yards and two TDs.
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The Miami Dolphins will look to move their record to 5-6 when they face the New England Patriots at Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday.
The Dolphins are coming consecutive victories against the Los Angeles Rams and Las Vegas Raiders. The Patriots are 3-8 and coming off a Week 11 home loss against the Rams.
The Dolphins are looking for a second consecutive season sweep of the Patriots after winning at Gillette Stadium, 15-10, in Week 5.
Here are the five biggest storylines for this year’s Week 12 matchup.
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The biggest difference in this matchup from Week 5 is at quarterback where Tua Tagovailoa and Drake Maye have replaced Tyler “Snoop” Huntley and Jacoby Brissett. The Dolphins offense has been humming with Tagovailoa back in the lineup, and a big reason is the quarterback is playing the best football of his career. There’s no reason to think that run can’t continue against the Patriots.
The third overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft, Maye was put into the starting lineup the week after the Dolphins played at Gillette Stadium, and he has shown enough to have everybody in Patriots land excited about the future. While they got only two sacks, the Dolphins harassed Brissett throughout the Week 5 game, but now Maye has the mobility to turns those pressure into positive gains. At the very least, this should be a tougher matchup for the Dolphins defense.
The Dolphins were able to pull out a victory in that Week 5 game despite getting a late scare, but also because their running game kept producing. It hasn’t been great the past two weeks, but fullback Alec Ingold will be back in the lineup after sitting out with a calf injury and that could make a difference and bring back another performance like we saw in Week 5.
In the Patriots offense, the player to watch (besides Maye, obviously) is tight end Hunter Henry, particularly in light of the problems the Dolphins had with Brock Bowers last Sunday. Defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver has promised to do whatever it takes to keep Henry in check, and that certainly could include putting Jalen Ramsey on him if needed.
One reason the Dolphins almost lost the Week 5 matchup despite keeping the Patriots offense in check was a brutal performance by the special teams that included a blocked punt, missed field goal and botched snap on another field goal attempt. That they were able to survive those mistakes and still win was pretty remarkable, and the Dolphins shouldn’t tempt fate again.
As 2024 hurtles towards a close, the final major design event of the year is almost upon us. Design Miami will open the doors to its 20th edition from 4-8 December with a preview day on 3 December. What started as a modest gathering in 2005 during Art Basel Miami Beach has grown into a leading global fair with annual editions in Miami, Basel, Paris and, for the first time this year, Los Angeles.
The Miami iteration has helped to revitalise the city’s design district and continues to attract designers, collectors, and curators from around the world, all in search of high design with a side of winter sun.
What to see: Design Miami 2024 highlights
Curated by American curator and author Glenn Adamson, this year’s fair is centred around the theme Blue Sky, exploring bold and imaginative design that exceeds expectations. ‘Design is inherently a speculative venture,’ says Adamson, ‘and also a collective one – a shared framework of reference at a time of global interconnection. The theme presents an opportunity to celebrate Design Miami’s role as a platform for the 21st-century avant-garde – showcasing the very best in contemporary and historic design for two decades.’
Among the names in this year’s line-up are Design Miami stalwarts like bi-coastal US gallery The Future Perfect, alongside debutants such as London’s Lamb Gallery. Exhibited works run the gamut in terms of scale and origin, from bold sculptures that resemble oversized Ndebele jewellery to intricate Werregue side tables from Colombia. Here are the exhibitors on our hit list.
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1. The Future Perfect
In its largest booth to date, The Future Perfect will present nearly 100 new works from more than 20 emerging and established artists, including Chris Wolston, Lindsey Adelman (both among 50 top American creatives photographed by Inez & Vinoodh for Wallpaper* earlier in 2024), and Cody Hoyt. The exhibition also features six new artists making their Design Miami debut, including Anina Major, Laurids Gallée, and Olivia Cognet. Additionally, Indian designer Vikram Goyal will showcase his intricate metalwork for the first time in the US, bringing India’s rich artisanal history to South Beach.
Dates: 3-8 December 2024 Location: Design Miami, Miami Beach
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2. The 2024 Annual Design Commission: Nicole Nomsa Moyo
The Miami Design District, in collaboration with the Design Miami Curatorial Lab, has announced Nicole Nomsa Moyo as the recipient of the 2024 Design Commission. Moyo’s vibrant installation, Pearl Jam, is inspired by the intricate patterns of South Africa’s Ndebele tribe and will include interactive sculptures throughout the neighbourhood, including oversized pearls, deconstructable necklaces, and radiant earrings. The installation also honours the craftsmanship of Ndebele women who will handcraft over 1,000 ‘earrings’ using locally sourced materials.
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Dates: 1-9 December 2024 Location: Miami Design District
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3. Lasvit: ‘Herbarium’
Made from hundreds of suspended glass droplets, each featuring the form of a delicate plant, Herbarium is an immersive lighting installation by Czech glass company Lasvit, which will provide a little theatre at the fair. It is made from a new type of glass that incorporates repurposed waste, and users can adjust the colour of the light to create an ever-changing experience. Additionally, Lasvit will pay homage to postmodernist designer Borek Sipek, featuring pieces inspired by his legacy, alongside a mirror inspired by Miami’s sand.
Dates: 3-8 December 2024 Location: Design Miami, Miami Beach
4. Ralph Pucci: ‘Primal Mysteries’
Last year saw Ralph Pucci open a 10,000 sq ft gallery in Miami’s Wynwood. This year, he follows up with ‘Primal Mysteries’, his eponymous gallery’s first in-house collection in over a decade. The collection, which includes new lighting and tables, is inspired by figures from sculpture and painting, including Alberto Giacometti and Constantin Brâncuși, and is handcrafted from clay and plaster at Ralph Pucci’s Manhattan studio. The gallery will also showcase Marjorie Salvaterra’s surreal photographic work Sheila in Technicolor and new pieces by longtime collaborator, French designer Patrick Naggar.
Dates: 3-9 December 2024 Location: Ralph Pucci (Miami), 550 NW 28th St Miami, FL 33127
5. Southern Guild
Southern Guild will showcase the work of 12 leading African ceramic artists, presenting an exploration of the medium’s historical roots and its modern resurgence. The works on display include sculptures, vessels, and furniture by artists such as Andile Dyalvane, Michal Korycki, and Jabulile Nala, among others. These pieces highlight the intersection of tradition, technique, and symbolism within African culture and provide a compelling narrative on the evolving nature of ceramics in contemporary art.
Dates: 3-8 December 2024 Location: Convention Centre Drive and 19th Street, Miami Beach, Booth G28
6. Lexus and Crafting Plastics: ‘Liminal Cycles’
Located in the sculpture garden at Miami’s Institute of Contemporary Art, Liminal Cycles is an interactive installation by Lexus in collaboration with design and research studio Crafting Plastics. At its heart, are four environmentally responsive bioplastic sculptures that engage with viewers through sight, sound, smell, and touch, including a central sculpture inspired by the Lexus LF-ZC concept car that changes colour in response to UV levels. To accompany the installation, Lexus will debut a capsule collection of 26 limited-edition collectible design objects developed in collaboration with clean fragrance brand dilo.
Following its 2023 debut, India’s collectible design gallery æquõ returns to Design Miami with a curated collection that merges traditional Indian craftsmanship with contemporary design. Featuring designers like Mumbai-based Chamar Studio and Belgian Linde Freya Tangelder, æquo’s pieces embody the concept of balance, where designer and artisan are given equal status. This year’s show places particular focus on practices from Maharashtra, where materials are as much a part of the story as the design itself.
Dates: 3-8 December 2024 Location: Design Miami, Miami Beach
8. Sarah Myerscough Gallery: ‘Rest and Reflection’
The intimate relationship between humans and their bedrooms will be explored in Sarah Myerscough Gallery’s presentation at Design Miami. Featuring new works by Marc Fish, Tadeas Podracky, and others, the collection demonstrates how the design of personal spaces can foster emotional wellbeing and invites visitors to reconsider the role of the bedroom as a sanctuary for rest and solitude.
Dates: 3-8 December 2024 Location: Design Miami, Miami Beach
9. Theoreme Editions
Making its Design Miami debut, French gallery Theoreme Editions will showcase a collection that meditates on the emotive power of colour and material. Featuring works crafted from alluring and tactile materials, such as onyx, mohair, and translucent blue resin, the pieces examine how colour and texture can elicit emotional responses that transcend visual aesthetics.
Dates: December 3-8, 2024 Location: Design Miami, Miami Beach
10. Lamb Gallery: ‘Magnetic Midnight Maison’
Part of Curios – a platform dedicated to immersive exhibitions – London’s Lamb Gallery makes its Design Miami debut with ‘Magnetic Midnight Maison’, a collection of work by French Colombian designer Lucía Echavarría that blends Colombian artistry with Miami’s art deco palette.
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Dates: 3-8 December 2024 Location: Design Miami, Miami Beach
11. Meritalia: Le Edizioni del Pesce
Meritalia returns to Design Miami with ‘Le Edizioni del Pesce’, a tribute to the late and great Italian designer Gaetano Pesce, who died earlier in 2024 at the age of 84. Displayed as part of the fair’s Curio platform, Meritalia’s selection will include everything from umbrella racks and coat hangers, to mirrors and lamps that showcase Pesce’s unmistakable sculptural style and inventive approach to materials.
Dates: 3-8 December 2024 Location: Design Miami, Miami Beach
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12. Mindy Soloman Gallery: Jaime Hayon, ‘Bestial’
Spanish designer Jaime Hayon will reveal a previously unseen aspect of his oeuvre at Mindy Soloman Gallery – a series of fantastical large-scale paintings and sculptures. Featuring surreal creatures and strange flora realised in fibreglass, acrylic on canvas and Murano glass, the works explore the complex relationship between humankind and nature. ‘Bestial is an exploration of the wild side in all of us,’ says Hayon. ‘Each creature I’ve crafted is a piece of that raw, untamed spirit within us.’
Dates: 30 November 2024 – 18 January 2025 Location: Mindy Solomon Gallery, 848 NW 22nd Street, Miami, Florida
13. Alcova Miami
Alcova Miami returns for its second edition taking over the city’s pastel-hued River Inn hotel. Among the venue’s palms and vegetation, visitors will discover work by a host of international designers and collectives. Highlights include ‘Something Last’, an immersive show of monochromatic pieces, including handcrafted wood furniture, porcelain lighting, architectural ceramics and metal fixtures, curated by Los Angeles designer Jialun Xiong. LcD Textile will present ‘Metallic Ocean’, a textile installation crafted from semi-precious metal mesh handmade in Belgium, while Ukrainian brand Furn Object will showcase nature-inspired furniture and objects.
Dates: 3-8 December 2024 Location: River Inn, 118 SW South River Drive, Miami, Florida 33130