Connect with us

Social Media

Watch Bills first

Fans had to wait for three-and-a-half hours to see who the Buffalo Bills would select in the 2025 NFL draft, but it was worth the wait. At No. 30 overall, the Bills added Kentucky cornerback Maxwell Hairston. He was already a big name after running a 4.28 in the 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine, but […]

Published

on

Watch Bills first

Fans had to wait for three-and-a-half hours to see who the Buffalo Bills would select in the 2025 NFL draft, but it was worth the wait.

At No. 30 overall, the Bills added Kentucky cornerback Maxwell Hairston. He was already a big name after running a 4.28 in the 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine, but Hairston became even more likable on Thursday night.

MORE: NFL sets schedule release date for Bills’ final season at Highmark Stadium

Dressed in arguably the best suit out of every prospect, Hairston was seen hyping up every single player who was selected ahead of him. He enthusiastically shook their hands, and handed out hugs, while showing true excitement for every colleague who just saw their dream come true.

Once he was on the stage, that joy continued to pour out. He was ecstatic to grab the Buffalo jersey with his name on it, and couldn’t stop smiling when being interviewed. Hairston was even proud of how well his handshake with Roger Goodell went.

Hairston is more than just a ball of energy. He’s a player who recorded six interceptions over the past two seasons. Five of those were in 2023 and included two pick-sixes. He should be able to start across from Christian Benford early in his career, giving the Bills a solid starting duo at cornerback.

Kentucky Wildcats cornerback Maxwell Hairston is selected by the Buffalo Bills in the first round of the 2025 NFL Draft

Kentucky Wildcats cornerback Maxwell Hairston is selected by the Buffalo Bills in the first round of the 2025 NFL Draft / Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

—  Enjoy free coverage of the Bills from Buffalo Bills on SI  —

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Social Media

A video of Mike Conti of Westminster goes viral

AI-assisted summaryA video of a dad failing to show off his track skills to his college athlete son went viral.The video gained millions of views across various social media platforms.The family hopes the video’s popularity will raise awareness for Tedy’s Team, a charity supporting stroke and heart disease victims.The dad in the video is a […]

Published

on

A video of Mike Conti of Westminster goes viral


AI-assisted summaryA video of a dad failing to show off his track skills to his college athlete son went viral.The video gained millions of views across various social media platforms.The family hopes the video’s popularity will raise awareness for Tedy’s Team, a charity supporting stroke and heart disease victims.The dad in the video is a marathon runner raising money for Tedy’s Team.Want to know what happens when a 48-year-old dad tries to show off his three-decades-old track skills to his 19-year-old son, who is a college track athlete? It gets caught on video and goes viral.

The video of Mike Conti’s failure to keep up with his track star son has gone viral, with millions of people watching it on Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and ESPN.

The Conti family’s video has over 3.6 million views on TikTok through the House of Highlights account, nearly 4 million on Twitter through the Disrespectful Truck account, and over 41,000 likes and 46,000 reshares on Mike and Sarah’s Instagram.

Sarah and Mike Conti said it's hard to get the whole family together but when they do they usually play board games or grab food at their favorite place, Wachusett Brewing Company in Westminster.

Sarah Conti, the mother of four and wife of Mike Conti, said the family went to the track field at Overlook Middle School in Westminster so her eldest son, Shane, could give some pointers to her youngest son, Ben.

“Shane runs track in college, and Ben started track on his middle school team, so he wanted to give him lessons,” she said. “But then Mike started to do that dad thing where he wanted to show that he still got it to his track star son.”

Sarah said she started recording when Mike got on the track, but didn’t think anything of it. She said she posted the video on their Instagram to show friends and family, but it seemed that dozens of thousands of people viewed the video overnight. Sarah said the comments kept rolling in.

“The video is super short, and it’s just me falling over, not even being able to start sprinting, and we all thought it was funny,” Mike said. “We posted on Instagram, thinking our friends and family could also get a kick out of it.”

“A lot of people were concerned that Mike hurt himself, but many of the comments were people who said they could relate,” Sarah said. “I think it is something a lot of parents can relate to.”

Soon after, a popular social media sports account called House of Highlights contacted them to ask permission to share the video on their TikTok account. Sarah said that at the same time, ESPN also reached out to them to ask permission to broadcast the video on their channel.

Family hopes the seconds of fame bring awareness to Tedy’s Team

The 14-second video doesn’t show Mike Conti’s athletic side. He said he has run three marathons and will run his fourth this November at the TCS New York City Marathon on Tedy’s Team, promoting stroke and heart disease prevention and recovery awareness. The fundraising running group is named after former Patriots football player Tedy Bruschi, who suffered a stroke in 2005.

All the money collected by the runners will go to Tedy’s Team, which financially supports stroke victims and their families during recovery.

“I was never a long-distance runner, but during the pandemic, I picked it up and ran my first marathon in 2021,” he said. “I’m honored to run again on Tedy’s Team because my mother suffered a stroke and my dad died of a heart attack.”

Mike said he planned two fundraisers this upcoming summer to help him reach his goal of $10,000, but anyone can donate anytime at this link. One of the fundraisers will be a live music event at the Wachusett Brewery in Westminster. Mike said they will post information on Facebook closer to the date.

“I hope that after people view the video, they find the time to look into Tedy’s Team and donate any amount they can,” he said. “Again, I’m so honored to have the opportunity to represent Tedy’s Team and help other families who have gone or are going through something like this.”

Continue Reading

Social Media

High school baseball team goes viral with emotional send

A South Carolina high school’s send-off for graduating members of its baseball team proves there can, in fact, be crying in baseball. Legion Collegiate Academy in Rock Hill, South Carolina, recognized the senior year players on its baseball team earlier this month with a new-to-the-school tradition that is going viral. At a May 5 game, […]

Published

on

High school baseball team goes viral with emotional send

A South Carolina high school’s send-off for graduating members of its baseball team proves there can, in fact, be crying in baseball.

Legion Collegiate Academy in Rock Hill, South Carolina, recognized the senior year players on its baseball team earlier this month with a new-to-the-school tradition that is going viral.

At a May 5 game, the nine seniors on the team each took a turn at bat, receiving a pitch from their fathers on the pitcher’s mound.

As each player rounded the bases after their hit, a letter written to them by their parents was read aloud over the stadium’s PA system.

The baseball team at Legion Collegiate Academy in Rock Hill, South Carolina, offered an emotional send-off for its senior players on May 5, 2025.

Hannah Goetz

The emotional send-off was captured on video by WSOC-TV reporter Hannah Goetz, who shared it on TikTok, where the video has garnered 2 million views and counting.

“There was a lot of dust in everyone’s eyes after this game,” Goetz, whose cousin plays on the team, captioned the video.

Editor’s Picks

The school’s baseball coach, Hamilton Bennett, in his first year at Legion Collegiate Academy, told “Good Morning America” that he brought the tradition over from his previous school, where he saw it as a good way to get both families and players involved.

“One thing I learned from Collegiate is how important family truly is to everybody,” Bennett said in a live interview Friday on “GMA.” “We wanted to make sure to honor not only the young men but the families that get to send their young men off to the next chapter of their life, honor[ing] them and thanking them for the last four years and service with us.”

Will Bartnikowski, one of the school’s senior players, said he “broke down” as he rounded second base and the moment hit him. The teenager, who graduates high school on Friday, said the pitch from his dad was his “last ever,” as he is entering the U.S. Marine Corps and not playing college baseball.

Will Bartnikowski and his parents are pictured at his final high school baseball team on May 5, 2025.

Hannah Goetz

“It was really cool that my dad was the one to throw out the last pitch, because [as I] grew up, he was the one throwing to me,” Bartnikowski said on “GMA.” “But, running around the bases and just getting to hear about what my mom wrote about me in the letter, I really kind of just broke down around second base.”

Making the night even more memorable, Legion Collegiate Academy went onto win their game.

Continue Reading

Social Media

Former IU basketball player applies business degree to sports tech innovation

BLOOMINGTON— A former IU basketball player is putting his business degree to use and creating a platform to help other student athletes. Anthony Leal played for Hoosiers and graduated from the IU Kelley School of Business. His junior year, he came up with an idea to help athletes with NIL deals. “The final class of […]

Published

on

Former IU basketball player applies business degree to sports tech innovation

BLOOMINGTON— A former IU basketball player is putting his business degree to use and creating a platform to help other student athletes.

Anthony Leal played for Hoosiers and graduated from the IU Kelley School of Business. His junior year, he came up with an idea to help athletes with NIL deals.

“The final class of my entrepreneurship degree was to kind of try to start a business, so I started doing that and it started at just an NIL focused thing since NIL was so brand new so I started with that and realized you know there’s a lot bigger problem can be solved,” said Leal.

Leal was just starting his college career when in 2021 NIL came into play and athletes could capitalize on their name, image, and likeness.

“It was so new, and for me personally, my own NIL I tried to do as many deals as I could and raise as much as I could and try and save and do it for a good cause,” said Leal.

Leal did show that good can come out of NIL. He chose to pay off his sister’s student loans as a Christmas gift and a video of it went viral.

“I had athletes from all around the country reaching out to me asking for advice. Basically asking me to help them do the same thing I was doing,” said Leal.

“I think if you learn one thing about Anthony he’s usually on the cutting edge of applying his business experience to being an athlete and how he can monetize that and be a business and a brand,” said Jay Townsend, one of Leal’s business partners.

Leal teamed up with Townsend and Nate Ebel, both IU graduates, to co-found Motion Sports Inc. It’s a technology platform for college athletic departments putting team management, compliance, and NIL deals all in one place.

“It’s everything a college athletic department needs for how to function and manage the day to day,” said Ebel.

Ebel and Townsend helped Leal expand the app beyond just NIL. The money side of the platform is still developing as the House vs NCAA Settlement play outs, which could create revenue sharing.

“That gives the athletic department the opportunity to directly pay students athletes from a university bank account,” said Townsend.

Right now Motion Sports has deals with five athletic departments. The goal is to help them operate more efficiently and with everything in one place.

“We don’t think they should be spending lots of hours in the day to day of what the new revenue sharing looks like or what the new academic requirements are or how many hours you can spend on a practice field. We want to have their back on that,” said Townsend.

Continue Reading

Social Media

How Tottenham celebrated Europa League triumph

Ange Postecoglou stepped onto a small stage in a function room at Hotel Carlton in Bilbao, where Tottenham Hotspur hosted their post-Europa League final celebrations. He waited momentarily for the crowd of players, staff, family and friends to settle before putting his hand up and saying, “I’m used to people listening when I talk,” jolting […]

Published

on

How Tottenham celebrated Europa League triumph

Ange Postecoglou stepped onto a small stage in a function room at Hotel Carlton in Bilbao, where Tottenham Hotspur hosted their post-Europa League final celebrations.

He waited momentarily for the crowd of players, staff, family and friends to settle before putting his hand up and saying, “I’m used to people listening when I talk,” jolting the group into silence.

Advertisement

“I made family a big theme for us as a group this year,” he said. “How important family is. These boys, I’m so proud of them. And the staff. They’ve been the best family I could ever be associated with, but more importantly, it’s how everyone in this room has helped these boys become champions.

“They truly deserve it. They’re outstanding people, not just outstanding players. I couldn’t be prouder to be their manager. I want everyone to enjoy tonight and what it means because you all, every single one of you, deserve it from the bottom of my heart. I’ve never been prouder to be a manager of a football club, manager of these players, and the people with them.”

Postecoglou’s ability to build a family unit in the face of constant turmoil this season was central to their success on the night. Dominic Solanke, even on his last legs, exemplified the collective buy-in, charging around the pitch in the dying minutes to protect their lead.

The Australian’s speech was not just an opportunity to reflect on the 1-0 win over Manchester United or ending the 17-year trophy drought, but to celebrate their persistence and dedication in a season that the injury crises or Premier League failures could have easily derailed.


Postecoglou has created a family environment within his squad (Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

En route to winning the Asian Cup in 2015 with Australia — the nation’s first major trophy — Postecoglou asked the players to gather around the jersey and reflect in front of their team-mates on what playing for their national team meant to them. A stirring speech before Australia’s narrow 3-2 defeat to Germany in the 2017 Confederations Cup often goes viral on social media, drawing comparisons to Al Pacino’s famous Inch by Inch scene in Any Given Sunday.

This time, he arranged a meeting with the squad and played a video of their loved ones wishing them good luck before the final. In typical fashion, it had a rousing effect on his players.

Advertisement

“The message (in the dressing room) was just to do our things, to play for us, for our fans and especially for our fans who were here to support us in the stands,” goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario told journalists in the post-match mixed zone. “It was very emotional and I think in the back of our minds, they played a big part of the game tonight.

“It was at the hotel. We had the preparation of the game as well as this brilliant video. My mum and my dad (spoke in my video). They were here celebrating with me on the pitch. They said just to fight for this badge, to fight for Tottenham Hotspur, and to make them happy.”

While Tottenham have often left injured players at home to continue their rehabilitation in the Europa League knockout rounds, a full complement travelled to Bilbao. The squad arrived together at San Mames in slim, blue suits and white T-shirts provided by luxury Italian fashion house Kiton, the club’s official formalwear partner since 2023.

But as the final whistle blew, there was a brief opportunity to celebrate on the pitch for the likes of Dejan Kulusevski, James Maddison, Lucas Bergvall and even Will Lankshear, who spent the second half of the season on loan at West Bromwich Albion. They had to ditch the suits and change into more familiar attire.

To collect a medal on the pitch, UEFA requires all players to dress in that team’s kit. The group bent the rules slightly, donning standard white Nike sports socks instead of the longer football-specific variations, while a cast on Kulusevski’s leg meant he could only wear the shirt.

Maddison later told British broadcaster TNT Sports he “didn’t want to do a John Terry when he went with the full kit and the shin pads”, referring to when the former Chelsea captain went onto the pitch to lift the Champions League trophy in 2012 after missing the final through suspension.

Brennan Johnson, who scored the only goal of the evening, was the first player to be interviewed on the pitch by TNT. Draped in a Welsh flag, Johnson, who deactivated his social media accounts last September due to the online abuse, spoke from the heart.

“This season hasn’t been good at all,” Johnson said. “Not one of us players right now cares about that. This is what it’s all about. This club hadn’t won a trophy for 17 years. It means so much. All of the fans get battered. We get battered for not winning a trophy, not winning anything.

Advertisement

“Ever since I came here, it has been, ‘Tottenham are a good team, but can never get it done’. We got it done.”

When asked whether he thinks Postecoglou should be Tottenham’s head coach into next season, he said, “If there’s ever a time for a mic drop, I think it’s now. I’ll be looking forward to his interview.” Postecoglou later conceded their league form was “terrible” and “unacceptable” but reiterated his desire to stay in north London.

As the Spurs players celebrated together in front of their supporters and family, with Micky van de Ven going into the stands and Richarlison banging a drum in the crowd, Archie Gray took a moment to console his opponents. After giving the United players a guard of honour on their way to pick up their runners-up medals, Postecoglou led Spurs onto the podium, passing UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin as well as Spurs chairman Daniel Levy and United minority co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe.

The interaction between Levy and most players was short and respectful, but Maddison pulled Tottenham’s chairman in for a hug as he passed through. Postecoglou was the first person to step onto the podium and initially hung back before Pedro Porro and Vicario pushed him into the middle of the group. As captain, Son Heung-min went up last and lifted the trophy, a moment he believes cements his legend status at the club.

In the aftermath, Son pulled back his fringe to reveal bruising to his head, sustained while lifting the trophy. “I lift, somebody push me and my head hit the trophy,” Son told club media.

Several players, including Son, did not receive a medal on the pitch as UEFA underestimated the amount needed due to “an unexpected discrepancy in the player count, as more team members — including injured players — participated in the ceremony than initially anticipated”. That small group later received their medals in the dressing room, where the celebrations reached another level.

Yves Bissouma, who has reignited his career in recent weeks playing in a double pivot alongside Rodrigo Bentancur, went live on Instagram, showing the players eating pizza, dancing and shooting gold confetti cannons. Bissouma filmed Wilson Odobert, wrapped in a France flag, holding the trophy and dancing to Afro Trap Pt. 3 by Guinean-French rapper MHD, a song in which every line of the chorus ends with “Champions League”, the tournament Tottenham qualified for next season by winning Europe’s secondary competition. He was less enthusiastic when Natasha Bedingfield’s Unwritten was played by the dressing-room DJ.

Advertisement

While Oscar-winning film director and Spurs fan Bong Joon Ho celebrated the win by lifting a bottle of whisky on a live stream, beer, champagne — both alcoholic and non-alcoholic — and other drinks were passed around the dressing room. Djed Spence re-created his picture from Nottingham Forest’s play-off final triumph in 2022, lying beside the trophy and biting a cigar.

The group stayed in the stadium for hours after kick-off, with players walking between the dressing room and the pitch and taking group and individual pictures with the trophy. Tottenham posted a video of several players lined up on their social channels while the Champions League anthem played in the background. Mikey Moore lifted his hands to the sky, Maddison did the sign of the cross, while Gray licked his lips, mimicking the video of Brazilian icon Ronaldinho doing the same thing while playing for Milan.

On their way back to the hotel, a topless Bissouma wheeled a speaker onto the coach, with Pape Matar Sarr following close behind. On the journey, the Mali international danced with Spence, Richarlison, Sarr and Odobert to Premier Gaou, a song by Francis Mercier and Magic System. Son sat at the front of the coach as it drove through the city, interacting with Spurs fans who cheered the team through.

Postecoglou arrived before the players and grinned from ear to ear as he interacted with family and friends. The players entered the conference room shortly after 2am, with the DJ welcoming them with Queen’s We Are The Champions.

Perhaps inspired by Freddie Mercury, Levy later stepped onto the stage and shouted, “We’re champions”, before addressing the crowd with a short speech: “Listen, this has been a very long time coming, 1984 was the last time we won a European cup.

“Tonight, we made history, and I want to thank Ange and all the coaching staff, all the players, you guys have gone down in history. Thank you very much. This is a magnificent achievement for the club that hopefully is going to get us on the road where we absolutely deserve to be, which is at the very top.”

The celebrations carried on late into the night, with Maddison getting onto the stage on several occasions to sing with various people, including comedian Michael McIntyre. Videos have since circulated on the club’s social media of a group, led by Maddison, singing Wonderwall.

Cristian Romero, who mumbled his way through the Oasis hit, made no mistake with his rendition of Campeones, Ole, Ole, Ole, a song he has sung several times in an Argentina shirt but never before at club level. Son jumped up and down to “Nice one, Sonny”, a reworked version of the song dedicated to former Spurs full-back Cyril Knowles, who was part of the UEFA Cup-winning side in 1972.

Advertisement

The party had the distinct Postecoglou “family” flavour, with rotational players like Moore and Sergio Reguilon still front and centre in the celebrations. The Spaniard even held a banner alongside Maddison with a picture of the manager holding the Europa League trophy with the now iconic, “I always win things in my second year” quote over it.


Reguilon and Maddison hold up the Postecoglou poster (Alex Pantling – UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images)

With a gold medal finally wrapped around his neck, Son and Spurs returned to England on Thursday afternoon with the trophy.

Friday’s parade, starting in Edmonton Green at 5.30pm BST (12.30pm ET) and finishing at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, will ensure the party lasts at least another day.

But memories of May 21, and the night that followed it, will live with that group forever.

(Top photo: Michael Steele/Getty Images)

Continue Reading

Social Media

Manchester United's new reality is going to hurt

It manifests first as pain. Brennan Johnson nipping in ahead of Luke Shaw to bundle in a cross from Pape Matar Sarr and thrust a dagger into Manchester United’s best-laid plans. In some nations, a goal scored close to half-time is described as “for the dressing room”; they transform the managerial team talk, force Xs […]

Published

on

Manchester United's new reality is going to hurt

It manifests first as pain. Brennan Johnson nipping in ahead of Luke Shaw to bundle in a cross from Pape Matar Sarr and thrust a dagger into Manchester United’s best-laid plans.

In some nations, a goal scored close to half-time is described as “for the dressing room”; they transform the managerial team talk, force Xs and Os to get scrubbed from whiteboards, put frighteners into substitutes yet to stretch their hamstrings properly. Johnson’s goal for Tottenham Hotspur against Manchester United in Wednesday’s Europa League final was in the 42nd minute, scruffy, opportunistic, but effective.

Advertisement

The pain is sharp at first, but turns into a dull throb over the second half. The ball doesn’t stick to United’s best players the way they want it to. The match refuses to settle into a rhythm that suits them. Coach Ruben Amorim waits until the 71st minute to make his first substitutions, and Joshua Zirkzee and Alejandro Garnacho offer a moderate attacking threat when they come on. Diogo Dalot arrives in the 85th minute, and Kobbie Mainoo — man of the match in last year’s FA Cup final win against Manchester City — enters the pitch even later, with only nine minutes of stoppage time to arrest the situation.

The painful scoreline hangs on the stadium screen: Tottenham Hotspur 1-0 Manchester United.

Amorim’s players try their best to change that, but there’s a horrible, awful, gnawing feeling emanating from one side of the San Mames stadium that it won’t be enough.

An estimated 80,000 football fans travelled to Bilbao for the Europa League final. A touch over 17,000 United supporters got tickets for the match and took the proverbial planes, trains and automobiles to be here to try to will their team to victory. Their players on the field are not matching their passion and energy, however. Time slows. Chances dry up.

United needed to play perfect football to unlock a stubborn defence, but struggled to push past competency. There was no stoppage-time magic last night. The club’s historical prestige could not be parlayed into a better future. 

Then comes the shock of the final whistle and the sadness that swiftly follows. Catharsis for Tottenham’s fans and players. Heartbreak for everyone attached to United.

Garnacho slumps to the ground, devastated. Amad sits on the turf, where eventually he is consoled by team-mate Mason Mount. Zirkzee pulls his jersey over his head. The ‘Bilbao or Bust’ tightrope act finally spun off-balance. It ends in a bust. The biggest game of United’s season wandered away from this team in the key moments. 

Defeat in a final like this realigns time and space. It disorients and debilitates. United will be without European football of any kind next season. The last time that occurred was 2014-15, Louis van Gaal’s first season in charge. Before that, it was 1989-90 under Sir Alex Ferguson.

A club of United’s size and history require the added attraction of European competition to be their best, idealised selves; when you define yourselves as winners, you need as many opportunities as possible to show that to the world. Fans, players and coaching staff will now have to adjust to playing one game each week for much of next season.


There will be no European football for Manchester United fans to follow next season (David Ramos/Getty Images)

That may come with minor benefits — more time on the training pitch to finesse tactics and playing methods. But it also comes with significant drawbacks.

United will earn far less money in terms of matchday, broadcast and commercial revenue. The absence of Champions League football is going to make them less appealing when approaching possible signings in the summer. A precarious financial situation has been made worse. In the hyper-capitalist world of modern football, money is an accelerant — what is necessary to fix this club will not now arrive on the speediest of timelines. 

Advertisement

And so to the big questions.

Where do Manchester United go from here? And how long will it take before the club is good once again?

Amorim has said he has “nothing to show to the fans, so at this moment, it is a little bit of faith”. There have been glimmers of quality across his 41 matches in charge since being appointed in November, but there is a vast distance between where United are now and where they want to go. Their head coach doesn’t wish to change his approach, but said he will leave without conversations over compensation if fans and senior executives believe him to be ill-equipped for the job he’s been given. 

In his post-match interview, United and England defender Luke Shaw described the situation as “nowhere near good enough”.

“It’s going to be a very difficult process. Us as players, we’ve let a lot of people down, including Ruben,” Shaw said. “We’ve been nowhere-near good enough the whole season.

“A lot has to change. That’s why Ruben is 100 per cent the right person. He knows what is to be done, he will do everything to make that change and put Manchester United back at the top.”

Whatever decisions get made, it will be important for everyone to row in the same direction. Longstanding issues are best defeated through collective and consistent efforts.

It will take time for United to adjust to their new reality in the relative football wilderness. It will take time on top of that to find their way back from it. The best way out of a messy situation is — very often — to go through it. That will hurt, but it can also serve as a learning opportunity. There is no get-out-of-jail-free card this season, as there was with that FA Cup final in the previous one.

Senior executives have not moved from co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe’s opinion, given during a series of interviews in March. They believe Amorim is a good coach who can correct a bad situation. United fans have slowed their singing of Amorim’s name in a chant to the tune of Bonnie Tyler’s It’s a Heartache. They are understandably torn on whether to back a manager who has struggled to improve the squad he inherited.

Advertisement

Backing a head coach requires a financial investment, and in this case recruiting the players who can make Amorim’s 3-4-3 formation viable against Premier League opposition.

United need to strengthen their goalscoring options. They need to recruit targets who can match the physical intensity and technical quality of players at Champions League clubs. They need better options at wing-back. Some fans remain unconvinced about goalkeeper Andre Onana almost two full seasons in.

That is a long shopping list, made more difficult by the loss of revenues. But to back Amorim is to do more than to give him money. He is a struggling employee who requires many things to perform his job properly, including honesty from those above and around him.

The 40-year-old Portuguese wears his heart on his sleeve in press conferences — sometimes to his detriment. Club personnel other than him need to be willing to face questions and explain the blueprint for the future. Amorim has strengths that can be furthered with financial investment. He has weaknesses that can be reduced with a better structure.

How one creates that structure in a time of mass layoffs at the club is difficult. The attempts by Ratcliffe’s INEOS business empire to trim the perceived fat at United risk cutting into lean meat.

Ratcliffe has spoken of making the club the most profitable in the world within three years. Chief executive Omar Berrada has told staff a league title is possible in 2028, to coincide with the 150th anniversary of United’s founding. Plans for a new stadium were unveiled with little detail on costings but with a goal to complete the build for the 2030-31 season.

These are all ambitious, lofty goals. They also run counter to each other. A perennially injured athlete does not tell the world they plan to run a marathon.

Advertisement

United’s short- to medium-term objectives need to focus on competency. They need to build tools and processes to guard against the complacency that has eroded the club’s brilliance since Ferguson’s 2013 retirement.

“But we’re Manchester United” is not a reasonable counter-argument when confronted with desperate situations. Belief that your institution is exempt from the hard, functional and often boring parts of the job leads to a slow decline. Footballers need to do warm-ups and cooldowns to maintain peak performance. Football clubs need to properly condition themselves for the seasons ahead, too.

Past midnight, hours after the full-time whistle, the celebrations, the press conferences and the exit of nearly every football fan — a San Mames employee took to the pitch with a leaf blower. For 30 minutes, he neatly arranged the gold ticker tape and glitter from the trophy lift into a small square, before co-workers came and swept it all away with dustpans and brooms. When the process was complete, the heavens opened and rain began to fall on the stadium, soaking those who remained. 

This was the last European party United will be invited to for a while. Those in charge of the club will have to find ways to turn the misery of last night’s defeat into brighter days in the future.

(Top photo: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

Continue Reading

Social Media

Designer Behind Taylor Swift's Iconic Looks Unveils Custom Leafs Jacket for Auston Matthews

Kristin Juszczyk, the wife of NFL player Kyle Jusczcyk, has carved out a niche for herself as a sports fashion designer. Her custom, one-of-a-kind creations for high-profile athletes and celebrities, and her creation process often go viral on social media. Her work has been making waves in American sports culture, especially through collaborations with NFL […]

Published

on

Designer Behind Taylor Swift's Iconic Looks Unveils Custom Leafs Jacket for Auston Matthews

https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=18NlTt_11I3pY9500

Kristin Juszczyk, the wife of NFL player Kyle Jusczcyk, has carved out a niche for herself as a sports fashion designer. Her custom, one-of-a-kind creations for high-profile athletes and celebrities, and her creation process often go viral on social media.

Her work has been making waves in American sports culture, especially through collaborations with NFL players and their partners.

Kristin Juszczyk Shwocases Process of Fashioning Custom Toronto Maple Leafs Jacket

Juszczyk shared an Instagram post highlighting the creation of a custom Toronto Maple Leafs jacket during the playoffs. She showcased her process in a short video clip. The jacket bears the name and number (34) of Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews.

“I had so much fun making this one of one @mapleleafs jacket! Who would you like to see in it!” Kristin wrote in the caption.

Jusczcyk’s post showed her designing, fabricating, and putting the finishing touches on the jacket. The post has garnered over 17,000 likes and hundreds of comments. The blue-and-black zip-up jacket has the team logo on the front as well.

Jusczcyk’s creations have also become popular among the partners of NFL players; Taylor Swift, Simone Biles, and Brittany Mahomes are some famous celebrity partners who have donned her custom clothes. The designer shot into the limelight in January 2024 when Swift wore a custom puffer jacket fashioned from her boyfriend Travis Kelce’s Kansas City Chiefs jersey to one of his games.

“She single-handedly changed my career. I feel like I owe her everything, truly,” Kristin said via Page Six. “It was such a pinch-me moment seeing her wear something of mine, and it just completely changed the trajectory of everything that I was doing. She opened up so many doors for me. And she looked amazing!”

Kristin also co-launched “Off Season”, a luxury sports fashion brand which draws inspiration from her NFL-themed designs, along with British entrepreneur Emma Grede, the NFL, and the Fanatics brand. The initial collection includes unisex vests, puffer jackets, and long coats highlighting different NFL teams.

Kristin’s latest design experiment with the Maple Leafs could open up new markets in the NHL for her brand.

The Maple Leafs and captain Auston Matthews, meanwhile, had a mixed 2024-25 season.

The Leafs finished on top of the Atlantic Division with 108 points in the regular season. However, their poor playoff form continued after they were eliminated by the Florida Panthers in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Second Round. The loss also extended their 56-season Stanley Cup drought. Matthews, who struggled with injuries throughout the season, could only score one goal in the crucial series against the Panthers.

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending