If you add Manchester United’s 13 years without a league title to Chelsea’s 9 years without a league title you get 22 and 22 is exactly the number of days since Arsenal won the Premier League title.
Fuel prices drop: EPRA announces a Sh0.22 decrease per litre of super petrol to Sh214.03 as well as Sh10 for diesel to Sh222.86 in Nairobi, the price of kerosene remains unchanged at Sh191.38 up to July 14.
Imagine winning a national championship with your boys in college and then getting together to win an NBA championship a few years later.
Just an insane story for the Nova Knicks
He was captain in the FA cup final we ended the 9yrs trophy drought,came back as manager to end the 22yrs EPL title drought and will be the one to win us our first UCL. He is an Arsenal legend.
Lille are asking for €70 million for Bouaddi because that's what they've been accustomed to. Yoro, Osimhen...
That's literally their base price.
I'm afraid Arsenal will just have to cave and fork out that money.
Or someone else will.
The best TP5 replacement.
A gem really!
Brighton paid around £2 million for a defender from a Dutch second-division club five years ago. Tottenham are now being asked to pay £70 million for him. That is a 40x return. It did not happen by accident.
Jan Paul Van Hecke was playing for NAC Breda in the Dutch second division when Brighton signed him in 2020. You could fit NAC Breda's ground inside Tottenham's three times over. Nobody at Spurs was watching.
Brighton sent him on loan twice, once to Heerenveen and once to Blackburn Rovers, then brought him back and turned him into one of the Premier League's best passing defenders. In 2024-25, he completed 379 progressive passes, those forward balls that cut through defensive lines, the second-highest total by any Brighton player in a Premier League season. He carries the ball forward better than 97 out of 100 centre-backs in Europe. Brighton's analysts say his profile sits closest to Marquinhos at PSG. Since becoming a starter, he's been part of 25 non-penalty Premier League goals. That ties him with Kyle Walker. Only Man City and Liverpool players rank above him.
Spurs need him because they finished 17th last season. A club that reached the 2019 Champions League final survived relegation on the final day by beating Everton 1-0 while West Ham went down. Their first genuine relegation battle in 49 years. A club in that position cannot spend the summer being patient.
Brighton have already rejected two bids, roughly £40 million and then £50 million. CEO Paul Barber confirmed both on talkSPORT. The price now sits around £70 million, potentially £81 million, which would make Van Hecke the fifth most expensive centre-back ever sold. Pay that and it becomes Tottenham's largest transfer in club history, past the £56 million they spent on Xavi Simons.
One more number: Van Hecke's contract expires in June 2027. Tottenham could wait 12 months and sign him for free. They cannot afford that patience after nearly going down.
Brighton ran this same model before: Caicedo, bought for £4 million from Ecuador and sold to Chelsea for £115 million; Cucurella, bought from Getafe for around £12 million and sold to Chelsea for £56 million; Mac Allister, bought for around £7 million and sold to Liverpool for £35 million. Find the overlooked player, develop them for a few years, sell to the club whose desperation sets the price.
Whatever Spurs pay will fund whoever Brighton have already spotted at a ground a third the size of their own.
After 22 years of being mocked for not winning the league title, it’s now been 22 days since Arsenal won the premier league title.
To put that into perspective, it’s been 3 weeks and 1 day.
1,000 New Yorkers won our lottery for affordable tickets to the World Cup.
Today, we celebrated in the stands for the first NY/NJ game of the tournament.
The beautiful game belongs to everyone.
🚨A new psychological study explains why Arsenal face disproportionate hostility from rival fans — and the findings point firmly away from the club itself.
Researchers found that when rival supporters experience frustration from their own team's underperformance, they redirect that negative energy toward Arsenal as a displacement mechanism, using criticism of the Gunners to protect their own footballing egos.
Arsenal's sustained success, dominant media presence, and confident style of play make them the primary target for what the study identifies as psychological projection rooted in relative deprivation.
Rival fans aren't angry at Arsenal — they're angry at their own clubs.