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Can UCLA make a run for it in Big Ten debut? Five things to watch against Indiana

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Can UCLA make a run for it in Big Ten debut? Five things to watch against Indiana

Hawaii’s Pofele Ashlock hurdles UCLA’s Carson Schwesinger during the second half of the Bruins’ win at the Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex on Aug. 31 in Honolulu.

(Darryl Oumi / Getty Images)

UCLA’s defense held the Rainbow Warriors to three points and 100 yards in the second half to spark a comeback, but what does it mean?

Answers could be forthcoming against an Indiana offense that has rolled up 108 points in two games, including a 77-3 shellacking of Western Illinois in which it set school records for points and total yards (701).

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“I mean, any time you score 77 points,” Bruins linebacker Carson Schwesinger said, “it’s a dynamic offense.”

The Hoosiers are experienced at key positions, featuring a sixth-year quarterback in Kurtis Rourke and a seventh-year running back in Ty Son Lawton. They’re also incredibly balanced, averaging 278.5 yards rushing per game and 279 yards passing.

The Bruins seem to think that the solution to stopping the latter is stopping the former.

“If they’re getting four, five or six yards per carry,” UCLA edge rusher Jacob Busic said, “we’re not going to be able to rush the passer, they’re going to just keep running it all day.”

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Three games in is too early to trust the Premier League table… or is it?

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Three games in is too early to trust the Premier League table… or is it?

Nothing heralds the beginning of autumn more than people stating that it is “too early to look at the league table”. Listen to some and you might be convinced there was once a glorious era when those interested in football didn’t even glance at the standings until eight, 10, maybe even 12 games in.

The truth is that, even back in September 1888, when league football as a concept was only a week old, publications were printing the tables (albeit without the number of points won, as that detail had not been invented yet). Similarly, in the 1980s and 1990s, the BBC’s Ceefax news service and ITV equivalent Teletext happily displayed league tables to UK viewers after one round of games, because that was the point of that particular page. Seeing your team top of the pile after a surprise 5-0 opening-day win is a joyful sight, no matter what decade you are operating in.

Where anti-early-table campaigners may have a point is when it comes to extrapolating how a season will go, based on the nascent standings.

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Clubs have been crowned champions after starting badly, and Carlisle United won the first three games in 1974-75, their only year in the top flight, and finished last. But equally, in some seasons you can get a grasp of how things are going to turn out after only three games.

As the graph below shows, 2023-24 was one of those, with a 0.8 correlation between the table after three weeks in late August and its final form in the middle of May.

So, with a mere 7.9 per cent of the 2024-25 Premier League season completed, we asked some of our club writers how much they think the table reflects their club’s prospects for the rest of it.


Manchester City: Top of the league with a 100 per cent record and the leading scorers after three games. Is a fifth successive title inevitable?

Sam Lee: Whenever Pep Guardiola has been asked about City’s performance after these opening three games, he has not focused on many, if any, technical details or the actual quality of their displays, but the amount of commitment the players have shown in specific circumstances, such as defending throw-ins and tracking back. Those, he says, are signs that they have not dropped their motivation after winning the title for a fourth year in a row.

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We examined Man City’s streak of 49 successful throw-ins. For fun.

Stuff like that will probably give the biggest indication of their levels this season, because their quality is not in doubt, but whether they actually win the league again or not is another thing entirely. Arsenal and Liverpool have missed out by the tiniest of margins in recent years, and that can even happen to City when races are so tight. But it seems that, come the end of the season, they “will be there”, as Guardiola likes to say.


Liverpool (second): Maximum points, with the division’s best defence. That’s a mirror of 2018-19. Will the rest of 2024-25 pan out in the same way? And if so, is that a decent first season for head coach Arne Slot?

Gregg Evans: Let’s not get carried away, like last season when everything looked so sweet in the early months of the campaign. Granted, this has been a decent start under Slot and, if there’s one major difference, it’s the amount of control Liverpool are starting to find in games. They appear to be better equipped to go ahead and then hold onto a lead — the issue at times was conceding the first goal so often — so that’s a good sign.

Yet to get anywhere near their 2018-19 points tally of 97, which incredibly wasn’t enough to win the title as City got 98, there needs to be a significant change in the treatment room. Liverpool didn’t fall out of last season’s title race in March and April because the players weren’t good enough, they slipped away when injuries started to bite and levels dropped on the back of rushed returns by first-team faces.

It’s simple: keep the players fit and fresh, and Slot’s side have a great chance of finishing second, or one place higher.

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Arsenal (fourth): Two points dropped at home in the third game of the season, just like in 2023-24. That draw with Fulham, technically, cost them the title. Will 2024-25 be different?

Art de Roche: The main difference between last season and this one was supposed to be that Arsenal would be more settled. Mikel Arteta’s starting line-up did not evolve much with this summer’s transfer business, which has allowed some players to pick up where they left off, but the past two weeks have been tough.

New signing Mikel Merino suffered a shoulder injury in his first training session, Declan Rice was sent off against Brighton & Hove Albion and Martin Odegaard was forced off with injury playing for Norway on Monday night. While Rice will return from suspension after Sunday’s north London derby, it means Arsenal will miss the entirety of what was meant to be their first-choice midfield for at least one game. And that just increases the importance of negotiating an extremely tricky opening to the season, with a visit to Manchester City to come next Sunday.


Will Odegaard’s ankle injury undermine Arsenal’s title bid? (Mateusz Slodkowski/Getty Images)

Despite being two points off Guardiola’s side at this point last year, Arsenal still took the title race to the season’s final day. How they fare away to Tottenham Hotspur and then City in the next 10 days may determine their ceiling for 2024-25, so going into those matches with belief in each other and the system will be essential.


Newcastle United: They are fifth. Finishing there would be progress (and possibly bring Champions League qualification). Job done?

Chris Waugh: If you offered that as a final position to most Newcastle fans now, surely a decent proportion of them would take it following a turbulent summer in which the first XI simply was not strengthened and the Marc Guehi saga came to define their window. Performance-wise in these early games, Newcastle have yet to resemble an Eddie Howe outfit; there has been a lack of intensity and energy in their game. On the ball, they have been frustratingly wasteful, with a passing accuracy rate of just 73.96 per cent — the lowest in the Premier League.

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But there are two ways of evaluating Newcastle’s start.

The pessimistic one is that they have been extremely lucky. There is an argument they have deserved to lose all three of their opening fixtures given the balance of play and, if they continue to labour in this way, results will turn against them.


Howe has guided Newcastle to their best start since 2011-12 (Serena Taylor/Newcastle United via Getty Images)

However, the more optimistic one, which this correspondent tends to subscribe to, is that Newcastle are unbeaten, are off to their best start in a league season under Howe and have accumulated their highest number of points after three games of a top-flight campaign since 2011-12. They are yet to really get going and, once fitness levels are boosted and now that everyone inside the club can refocus with the transfer window having closed, they will improve and have a strong platform from which to build.

The club’s stated target is securing European football for 2025-26, but fifth place would still represent quite the achievement, given the lack of fresh faces.


Aston Villa: Seventh right now — that’s where Newcastle finished after being in the Champions League disrupted their 2023-24 season. Will Villa do better than that, or not?

Jacob Tanswell: Villa had injuries last season, too. And still finished fourth. They were not a team that used excuses, nor did they let an intense schedule balancing domestic and European football allow minds to become tired. In the end, they ground out Champions League qualification and that type of staying power will be needed.

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Unai Emery’s side have started pretty well with two wins and one defeat — the latter coming against Arsenal in a game that could have gone either way. Villa will be aiming for a top-six finish provided injuries do not derail their hopes. Emery’s background in balancing European competitions with consistency in the league will be relied upon but a relative rejuvenation of the squad over the summer should keep it fresh.


Villa’s only defeat came to Arsenal – a game decided by fine margins (Clive Mason/Getty Images)

Tottenham (10th): Good going forward, susceptible at the back, sat in mid-table. Which of those elements will change between now and the end of the season?

Jay Harris: Spurs were the protagonists in the biggest transfer of the summer, committing £65million ($84.9m) to sign striker Dominic Solanke — but he picked up an ankle injury on his debut in the opener against Leicester City and has missed the two games since. When Solanke is up and running, head coach Ange Postecoglou will be confident his side can show a ruthlessness in front of goal that was missing in their 2-1 away defeat against Newcastle. Centre-back Micky van de Ven was unavailable at St James’ Park too, so when Spurs have their full-strength XI available they should quickly start climbing the table.


Injuries have given Postecoglou a slower start to the season than in 2023-24 (Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA/Getty Images)

The only problem is things might get worse before Postecoglou’s side see any improvement, as they face Arsenal, Brentford and Manchester United in the next three league games.

Last season, Tottenham roared out of the blocks with eight wins and two draws from the first 10 matches before fading. This one could end up being the opposite.


Chelsea (11th): A win, a draw and a defeat. Which will the club have more of by the end of the season?

Liam Twomey: The lesson of their first three Premier League games of 2024-25 is that Chelsea under new coach Enzo Maresca are, unsurprisingly, a work in progress. Losing at home to Manchester City on the opening weekend was expected, though the comfortable manner in which the champions held Maresca’s team at arm’s length that day even when without several of their key starters was dispiriting.

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One clinical four-goal half against Wolverhampton Wanderers masked the kind of chaotic game more associated with Mauricio Pochettino’s 2023-24 tenure. Chelsea were at their most convincing in the opening 45 minutes of their third match, against Crystal Palace, but lost control after the break and with it, two points.

Maresca’s squad has the talent to finish in the top four, but they are young, learning a new style of play and arguably remain a little unbalanced. Chelsea will win more than they lose, but there are going to be more mistakes along the way.


Chelsea have shown flashes of cohesion in their opening three games (Jacques Feeney/Offside/Offside via Getty Images)

The main priority for Maresca is to ensure the gap to whoever is in fourth place does not become insurmountable during these early weeks, as it soon did under Pochettino.


Manchester United (14th): Last season’s eighth-place finish was the club’s lowest since they came 13th in 1990. Could this squad feasibly finish in the bottom half?

Mark Critchley: Ask Erik ten Hag and he would tell you that his team finishing eighth was the freak result of an unrelenting injury crisis. But you could coherently argue United were lucky to end up that high — sort the final 2023-24 Premier League table by expected goal difference and United’s -12.5 puts them 15th. So yes, this squad are capable of a bottom-half finish, according to the underlying numbers at least.

Plenty has changed since last season, though. Five new signings filled every priority position targeted at the start of the summer window, Ten Hag’s backroom staff has been reshuffled and new co-owner INEOS’ key appointments to a reformed internal structure are in place.

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After Arne Slot debunked Erik ten Hag’s tactical setup on live TV, how worried should United fans be?

But on the evidence of United’s opening three games, plenty of familiar issues remain. So does Ten Hag. And with no sign of the injuries letting up either, an improvement on last season is hardly guaranteed.


United’s defence has some familiar-looking gaps in it (Nick Taylor/Liverpool FC/Liverpool FC via Getty Images)

Everton: Bottom after three games, again. Is another relegation battle inevitable or is this just what happens to Sean Dyche in August?

Patrick Boyland: Certainly part of this is just Dyche’s record in August. His teams are notoriously slow starters and he has the second-lowest win percentage (12 per cent) of anyone to manage more than 10 Premier League games in the first month of the season.

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Dyche will be backed – and will back himself – to turn Everton’s start around

Everton have looked undercooked heading into the new campaign, a raft of pre-season injuries and the injury absence of key defender Jarrad Branthwaite leaving them vulnerable to a sloppy start. Dyche’s apparent unwillingness to make changes to an underpowered first team and blood some of the new signings has not helped either.

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But a fourth successive relegation battle is not inevitable. There is over 92 per cent — 35 of the 38 games — of the season still to go, and there was enough in the first 87 minutes against Bournemouth last time out to suggest they can improve.

With tricky trips to Aston Villa and Leicester City coming in the first two matches after this international break, though, things could well get worse before they get better.

(Top photos: Getty Images)

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Alabama coach preps players for 'grizzly bears' as team heads to Wisconsin for big matchup

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Alabama coach preps players for 'grizzly bears' as team heads to Wisconsin for big matchup

The No. 4 Alabama Crimson Tide will hit the road to play the Wisconsin Badgers in one of the highly anticipated contests of the college football slate this weekend.

Crimson Tide wide receivers coach JaMarcus Shephard told reporters he is preparing his players for everything.

“Certainly they’re going to be big,” he said, via AL.com. “They’re going to be physical. They’re going to be coming down hill and hit. That’s just the brand of football they play. 

Alabama Crimson Tide helmets after they beat the Georgia Bulldogs in the 2018 CFP national championship game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta Jan. 8, 2018. (John David Mercer/USA Today Sports)

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“Up in Wisconsin, it’s a little bit colder. It’s a little bit more burly. There’s a few more beards out there coming out of facemasks and what not. I told them, ‘Just be prepared to see a bunch of grizzly bears up there. We’ve got to be able to go out there and defeat the grizzly bears.”

Jalen Milroe throws a pass

Alabama quarterback Jalen Milroe throws the ball against South Florida during the first half of a game Sept. 7, 2024, in Tuscaloosa, Ala.  (AP Photo/Vasha Hunt)

PAC-12 REVIVAL: CONFERENCE IS POACHING FOUR TEAMS FROM MOUNTAIN WEST IN MASSIVE REALIGNMENT MOVE

It’s the first time Alabama will head to Madison, Wisconsin, to play the Badgers since 1928. There may have been more grizzly bears to face back then.

Alabama has the Kalen DeBoer era off to a solid start. The Crimson Tide made quick work of Western Kentucky and sputtered out of the gate against South Florida but eventually came away with the win.

Wisconsin is also 2-0 to start the year. Luke Fickell’s squad defeated Western Michigan and South Dakota.

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Tyler Van Dyke hands the ball off

Wisconsin quarterback Tyler Van Dyke (10) hands the ball off to running back Cade Yacamelli (25) during the second half of a game against South Dakota Sept. 7, 2024, in Madison, Wis.  (AP Photo/Andy Manis)

The two teams kick off Saturday afternoon on FOX at Noon ET.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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Australian hockey player banned for 12 months after allegedly buying cocaine during Olympics

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Australian hockey player banned for 12 months after allegedly buying cocaine during Olympics

Australian field hockey player Tom Craig has been suspended for 12 months after being arrested for allegedly buying cocaine during the Paris Olympics.

Hockey Australia has imposed the ban on the 29-year-old following an investigation by the governing body’s integrity unit. The second six months of the ban will be suspended if behavioural requirements are met.

The suspension will prevent Craig from competing in any match organised by Hockey Australia, but he will continue to have access to the governing body’s athlete support services.

A Hockey Australia statement read: “Following an investigation into the arrest involving National Men’s Hockey Team athlete Tom Craig at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, Hockey Australia’s Integrity Unit has imposed a 12-month suspension. Six months of this suspension will be served fully, with the remaining six months fully suspended, contingent upon meeting conduct and behavioural requirements.

“During the suspension, Craig will be prohibited from playing in any match, competition, or event at any level sanctioned or organised by Hockey Australia, including the upcoming Hockey One League and FIH Pro League seasons. Additionally, Craig is required to complete mandatory training and education programs as part of his sanction.

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“Craig will remain eligible for selection in the 2025 National Men’s Hockey Squad, which is expected to be announced at the end of the year. Tom has had access to all of the athlete support services under our program and he will continue to do so throughout his suspension. His welfare remains our priority.

“The sanction takes effect from Monday, 9 September 2024.”

The Australian National Olympic Committee said in a statement to Reuters last month that Craig was released without being charged but received a warning from a French judge following his arrest in Paris.

The alleged incident took place after Australia were eliminated by the Netherlands in the quarter-finals of the men’s Olympic field hockey tournament.

Before his release, the Paris prosecutor’s office told the BBC: “Police officers who witnessed a cocaine transaction at the foot of a building in the 9th arrondissement (of Paris), on the night of August 6th to 7th, apprehended the seller, born in December 2006, and the buyer, born in September 1995 in Australia and who is said to be a member of the Australian field hockey team.

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“Given the quantities of drugs seized from the seller, the investigation has been entrusted to the anti-narcotics police.”

Craig publicly apologised and took “full responsibility” for his actions following his release.

“I’d firstly like to apologise for what has occurred (over) the past 24 hours,” Craig said on August 7. “I made a terrible mistake. I take full responsibility for my actions.

“My actions are my own and by no way reflect the values of my family, my teammates, my friends, my sport and the Australian Olympic team. I’ve embarrassed you all, and I’m truly sorry.”

Craig was part of the Australia side that won silver at Tokyo 2020 and gold at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.

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(Ahmad Gharabli/AFP via Getty Images)

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