Home Blog Page 89

The Mauricio Pochettino speech that changed trajectory of USMNT


SEATTLE — The score was tied. The crowd in Colorado was growing restless. Inside the United States men’s national team locker room on October 14, 2025 head coach Mauricio Pochettino had seen enough. 

Australia had spent the first 45 minutes doing what Australia does best — turning a soccer match into a street fight. Every challenge was aggressive. Every duel ended with two players on the ground. The Americans had the talent, but they weren’t imposing their will. They weren’t communicating. They weren’t pushing back.

“That is football!” Pochettino barked at his team at halftime. “If we want to compete and we are 1-1 because we have the quality, we need to show more quality in the next 45 minutes. Play together. If you make a mistake, I don’t care, but communicate and fight. They [Australia] come and they fight. When are we going to fix that? …The team is dead. You need to talk!”

That scene has since become part of U.S. soccer lore, and a turning point in the current iteration of the USMNT’s “golden era.”

Players remember the speech vividly. Not because Pochettino raised his voice at them for the first time since he was appointed manager in August of 2024. Not because he delivered some cinematic monologue. 

They remember it because it was true. And they had to stand up and look themselves in the mirror and decide who they wanted to be from that point forward. 

In the first half of that friendly against Australia, the Americans learned a hard lesson that many talented teams across all sports eventually face: skill alone does not survive against opponents determined to make every minute uncomfortable. 

And in that fiery halftime speech, Pochettino demanded more. He demanded passion. He demanded courage. 

And, according to midfielder Sebastian Berhalter, he demanded something that quickly spread throughout the squad. 

“We’re American. We don’t take s—t,” Berhalter recalled. “Even though he’s Argentinian, he has that mindset of, ‘Look, this is what we do. This is who we are. This is what America’s about.’ Even from an outside perspective, he showed us Americans what we’re about. He really drills that into us.”

Message received. 

Now, with less than 24 hours before the U.S. meets Australia again in Seattle with a place in the knockout rounds on the line, veteran team captain Tim Ream pointed to that halftime speech by Pochettino as a defining moment in the evolution of this team. 


USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino talks with reporters on June 18, 2026 in Seattle, a day before their World Cupo match against Australia.
USMNT head coach Mauricio Pochettino talks with reporters on June 18, 2026 in Seattle, a day before their World Cupo match against Australia. Getty Images

“The game in Colorado was fun,” Ream said smiling. “We were kind of feeling them out, feeling how aggressive they were. We know they’re a World Cup-quality team. From that game in Colorado, we’ve changed a lot. I think we’ve gotten a bit more aggressive as well.”

Pochettino agrees.

Asked Wednesday about the now-famous halftime speech, he described it as a necessary wake-up call.


Tim Weah (21) moves the ball up the field during their 2-1 comeback victory over Australia in a friendly match on Oct. 14, 2025.
Tim Weah (21) moves the ball up the field during their 2-1 comeback victory over Australia in a friendly match on Oct. 14, 2025. Getty Images

“When we arrived here 20 months ago, that was the start of the World Cup,” Pochettino said. “This speech helped and was a great opportunity for the coach to explain to the players what to expect on the pitch. It was a tough conversation, but I think it was necessary.”

He explained his reasoning from the player’s mindset. Comfort is dangerous and complacency is deadly. And World Cups are won by teams willing to be comfortable with the uncomfortable.

The challenge awaiting the Americans on Friday looks remarkably familiar. Australia’s towering back line resembles a wall of moving skyscrapers you’d find on a basketball court not on a soccer field. The Socceroos have several defenders well over six-feet tall, turning every aerial duel into a one-sided battle for survival. 


Every match of the FIFA World Cup will air on either FOX or FOX Sports 1. If you don’t have cable, you can take advantage of a DIRECTV free trial to stream it all.

Prefer to check out the action live and in person? Shop World Cup 2026 tickets on SeatGeek and make sure to use promo code NYPOST10 for $10 off purchases over $250 at checkout if you’re a first-time SeatGeek user.


But that might not even be their greatest strength. Their counterattack is deadly in transition.

Australia’s 2-0 victory over a heavily-favored Turkey side in their opening match offered a warning to everyone in the tournament. One long ball and a burst of speed from Nestory Irankunda is all it takes.

Pochettino knows the trap.

“We will try to press,” he said. “But we know that Australia will try long passes. We have to respect that. We need to put pressure on them, but also be careful about their defensive transition.”

That lesson was first delivered eight months ago inside a locker room in Colorado.

Back then, Pochettino was trying to wake up a team he called “dead.”

On Friday night in Seattle, we’ll find out just how much of that message still echoes through the American locker room.



Source link

Labour’s Andy Burnham wins special election, setting up showdown to lead Britain


LONDON — Labour’s Andy Burnham, the current mayor of Greater Manchester, has won a special election for a seat in Parliament that puts him in a position to challenge embattled Prime Minister Keir Starmer for leadership of the country.

Burnham decisively won the seat of Makerfield in northwest England over Rob Kenyon of the anti-immigration party Reform UK.

The victory announced early Friday cements the status of Burnham, a 56-year-old politician nicknamed the King of the North, as the top contender to replace Starmer as leader of the Labour Party and the country. Burnham won almost 55% of the 45,510 votes counted, over 9,000 more than Kenyon.

Burnham’s victory speech left no doubt that he wants to lead the country, and not just be one of the more than 400 Labour lawmakers in the 650-seat House of Commons.

“Everyone knows that politics isn’t working,” he said. “Everyone can feel that the country isn’t where it should be. Tonight could, just could, be the turning point.”

Starmer, who has previously maintained he will fight any leadership challenge, took to social media to congratulate Burnham. “Voters chose Labour’s campaign of hope and optimism over division and hate,” the prime minister wrote on X.

Burnham has led Manchester since 2017, overseeing rapid regeneration for the city where the Industrial Revolution was forged. He is pledging to repeat his signature brand of “Manchesterism” on a national scale.

Burnham said he would work to ensure that “the name Makerfield is forever synonymous with bringing about the change this country needs.”

He said Labour had “a final chance to change” and win back voters’ trust.

“But it is a chance now, from this result tonight, to build a new politics based on unity and hope, turning away from the path that takes us to a divided, dark politics of the kind we see in the United States,” he said.

Starmer’s popularity has cratered since he led the center-left Labour Party to a landslide election victory in July 2024.

He has struggled to deliver promised economic growth, repair tattered public services and ease the cost of living, and been hamstrung by repeated missteps, including his decision to appoint Peter Mandelson, a scandal-tarnished friend of Jeffrey Epstein, as the U.K. ambassador to the United States.

Labour is losing liberal voters to the growing Green Party, and facing a rising Reform UK, which consistently leads in nationwide opinion polls. The Nigel Farage -led party has rapidly gained ground in post-industrial northern England areas like Makerfield, some 200 miles (320 kilometers) northwest of London.

A dismal performance by Labour in May’s local elections spurred scores of lawmakers to demand Starmer’s resignation. He has refused to budge, but senior colleagues are trying to force a change.

Wes Streeting resigned as health secretary in May, saying that “where we need vision, we have a vacuum.” Streeting has said he will run in a leadership contest if there is one.

Then Josh Simons, the Labour lawmaker for Makerfield, stepped down to trigger a special election and give Burnham the chance to return to Parliament.

Britain’s parliamentary system allows governing parties to change leaders midterm, with the winner becoming prime minister without the need for a national election. Under Labour rules, a lawmaker can challenge the leader if they have backing from a fifth of the party’s House of Commons lawmakers — a number that stands at 81.

The victorious Burnham will head to London to be sworn in as a lawmaker as soon as Monday. He’s likely to seek a meeting with Starmer to argue that the prime minister should exit gracefully and set a timetable for his departure.

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said Burnham and Starmer would in the next few days have to “have a conversation about what comes next.”

Labour lawmaker Louise Haigh, a Burnham ally, said Starmer should “do what’s best for both the country and the Labour Party” and “consider an orderly and managed transition.”

“Andy won’t be doing anything rash or hasty,” she told Sky News. “I’m really hopeful the prime minister and Andy can come to an agreement.”

Starmer has so far insisted he has no intention of leaving his post.

“I will fight if there’s a challenge,” he said at the G7 summit in France this week. “We won a significant general election result in 2024, with a mandate to bring about change. I’m not going to walk away from that.”

Starmer suggested that he could offer Burnham a Cabinet post, telling Sky News on Wednesday that “I want him to have a big role in government.” Allies of Burnham indicated that he wasn’t interested.

Despite his stubborn determination, Starmer could be forced out if several members of the Cabinet tell him the game is up and quit, or threaten to quit, in protest.

There could then be a leadership contest, or a coronation, depending on whether other potential candidates think Burnham has an unassailable lead.

Rob Ford, professor of political science at the University of Manchester, said “the pressure on Starmer will be very hard to resist” now that Burnham is back in Parliament.

Ford said defeating Reform UK in Makerfield strengthens Burnham’s claim to be Labour’s biggest asset.

“The narrative he can bring is, ‘No one else could have won that seat. I won that. I bring something unique. I bring an ability to renew our appeal,’” Ford said.



Source link

Mississippi man fired after calling cops on dad who took daughters into women’s restroom



The Mississippi man who went viral for calling the cops on a dad helping his young daughters in a women’s restroom has lost his real estate gig.

A representative for Starkville-based Overstreet Properties said the man was an independent contractor and licensed realtor who was on a personal trip unrelated to the company when the incident occurred, TMZ reported.

After the confrontation exploded online, the agency decided to cut ties with him because his actions did not align with the company’s values.

A Mississippi man lost his real estate job after calling police on a dad who took his daughters into a women’s restroom. Tiktok/tylerbrodsky2

The fallout stems from an incident last weekend at an Alabama QuikTrip gas station, where Oklahoma dad Tyler Brodsky took his two young daughters into an empty women’s restroom while traveling home from Florida, saying he chose it over the “dirty” men’s room.

The man confronted Brodsky for being in the women’s restroom with his kids and called the police — an encounter Brodsky later posted to TikTok that has since racked up 24 million views.

“Overstreet Properties is aware of videos circulating on social media depicting conduct by a former independent contractor during a personal trip that was unrelated to the company,” Overstreet Properties said in a statement posted to social media.

“The conduct depicted in the video does not reflect the values of Overstreet Properties or the standards we expect of those who represent our organization. Our focus remains on providing quality service to our clients, partners, and community.

“The individual depicted in the video is no longer associated with Overstreet Properties.”

Overstreet Properties, where the man worked, said his conduct “does not reflect the values” of the company. Instagram/Overstreet Properties

Brodsky’s viral TikTok showed the angry customer berating him after his wife and “very ill” mother-in-law reported that a man was inside the women’s restroom.

“There is a man with two little girls using the women’s bathroom,” the customer complained to police over the phone. “He’s washing his hands with his daughters right now.”

The confrontation upset Brodsky’s daughters, who could be heard crying as the argument continued.

Tyler Brodsky said he took his daughters into the empty women’s restroom to avoid using the “dirty” men’s room. Tiktok/tylerbrodsky2
@tylerbrodsky2

Y’all make this man famous. We stopped at a QuikTrip on our road trip from Florida back to Oklahoma so my daughters could use the restroom. The women’s restroom was empty, so I took them in. I’d rather do that than bring two little girls into a men’s bathroom full of grown men and dirty stalls. This guy comes barging in yelling, scares my daughters, and somehow thinks THEY should’ve been in the men’s room instead. Am I wrong here? 🤷‍♂️ #GirlDad #RoadTrip #parenting #fyp #viral

♬ original sound – Tyler Brodsky

A female QuikTrip employee eventually stepped in, shut the restroom door on the customer and apologized to the family.

The customer also argued that the female employee should have taken the girls into the restroom instead, insisting Brodsky had “no business” being there.

In a follow-up video, Brodsky said three police officers responded to the gas station and quickly determined he had done nothing wrong.

“The officers let me know I was OK, I didn’t do anything wrong,” he said.

Brodsky’s TikTok of the incident has since racked up 24 million views. Tiktok/tylerbrodsky2

Brodsky added that officers ultimately asked the other man to leave the store. 

He also praised the responding officers and QuikTrip employees for how they treated his daughters after the ordeal.

“Hopefully it’ll bring attention to people that feel the need to berate a mom or dad trying to take care of their kids,” he said.





Source link

Brazil’s police targets a close ally of President Lula in sprawling fraud probe


RIO DE JANEIRO — RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Brazil’s federal police executed search and seizure warrants targeting a high-ranking senator and friend of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Thursday as part of a fraud and graft probe that has ensnared several politicians ahead of October’s general election.

Police are looking into suspicious payments to Sen. Jaques Wagner, the leader of Lula’s Workers’ Party in the Senate, as part of investigations into the shut down Banco Master and its disgraced former CEO, Daniel Vorcaro.

Wagner is the first major Lula ally to be hit by the sprawling scandal that has already engulfed presidential hopeful Sen. Flávio Bolsonaro, among others. The scandal is expected to loom large in the upcoming elections.

In a statement that did not name suspects, police said they were executing 18 search and seizure warrants in the states of Bahia and Sao Paulo and the Federal District for facts that may constitute the crimes of passive corruption, active corruption and money laundering.

Court documents signed by Supreme Court Justice André Mendonça on Wednesday and obtained by The Associated Press on Thursday – which cited the suspects – authorized the search.

Investigators found indications that the senator may have received undue economic benefits, including the purchase of a luxury apartment in Salvador, valued at around 2.45 million reais (approximately $470,000), the court documents said.

Investigators are also examining whether Wagner used his position in Congress to advance issues of interest to Banco Master, including payroll loans and deposit insurance rules, according to the court documents.

Police seized approximately $50,000 in Brasilia as part of Thursday’s operation. Local media reported that those funds were found at an address or addresses linked to Wagner.

Questioned on the funds in an interview with Brazil’s major broadcaster Band on Thursday, Wagner said he had nothing to hide and had never received money from anyone with ties to Banco Master.

Wagner also denied any significant dealings with Vorcaro, the former head of Banco Master who is currently in jail. “My relationship with Daniel Vorcaro is practically nonexistent… I met Daniel only twice,” he said.

In a statement late Thursday, Wagner’s press team denied having acted on behalf of Banco Master, said the cash seized was legally obtained, and that the apartment never formed part of the senator’s assets.

Brazil’s Central Bank shut down Banco Master, whose assets topped $16 billion, in November.

Vorcaro, who is at the center of the investigations, was arrested in March and has since tried to strike a plea bargain deal with authorities.

Brazil’s federal police estimates the bank’s total fraud at approximately 12 billion reais ($2.3 billion). The case remains under investigation by the country’s federal police and Supreme Court.

___

Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america



Source link

US military kills three ‘narco-terrorists’ in latest lethal strike on vessel in the Eastern Pacific



The US military carried out a lethal strike Thursday on a vessel it said was involved in drug trafficking in the Eastern Pacific, killing three men the command described as “narco-terrorists,” according to US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM).

“On June 18, at the direction of #SOUTHCOM commander Gen. Francis L. Donovan, Joint Task Force Southern Spear conducted a lethal kinetic strike on a vessel operated by Designated Terrorist Organizations,” SOUTHCOM said in a statement.

“Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific and was engaged in narco-trafficking operations,” the statement continued.

The military said three men it described as “narco-terrorists” were killed in the strike. SOUTHCOM did not say whether anyone survived.

No US military personnel were harmed, the command said.

SOUTHCOM also released a brief video showing a vessel speeding through the water before erupting in flames. Additional footage appeared to show debris floating in the aftermath of the strike.

The US military carried out a lethal strike on a vessel it said was involved in drug trafficking in the Eastern Pacific on June 18, 2026. U.S. Southern Command
Smoke rises after the kinetic strike on the suspected smuggling boat. U.S. Southern Command

SOUTHCOM did not identify the location of the operation beyond saying it occurred along known narcotics-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific.

The strike was the latest in a months-long campaign launched by the Trump administration aimed at dismantling cartel-linked trafficking networks.

According to The Associated Press, the latest operation brings the number of people killed in US military strikes targeting vessels since September to at least 211.

The action comes after SOUTHCOM said Tuesday that it carried out a strike in the Eastern Pacific that killed one person it described as a “narco-terrorist.” Two other individuals survived that attack, the military said.

Last week, President Donald Trump announced that SOUTHCOM had “delivered a swift and lethal kinetic strike” that killed Héctor Rusthenford Guerrero Flores, also known as Niño Guerrero, the alleged leader of Tren de Aragua.

The US Department of State had previously offered a reward of up to $5 million for information leading to the 42-year-old Venezuelan’s arrest or conviction.

The strike was the latest in a months-long campaign launched by the Trump administration aimed at dismantling cartel-linked trafficking networks. U.S. Southern Command

While the military has released videos and statements describing the targeted vessels as linked to designated terrorist organizations, it has generally not publicly released evidence identifying those killed or demonstrating that the vessels were carrying narcotics.

The campaign has drawn scrutiny from lawmakers, legal experts and human rights groups who have questioned the legal basis for using lethal military force against suspected traffickers outside a traditional battlefield.

The Eastern Pacific remains a key corridor for narcotics trafficking, with criminal organizations frequently using small vessels to move drugs toward North America.

SOUTHCOM has played a central role in the Trump administration’s expanded campaign against cartel-linked trafficking networks and transnational criminal organizations.

Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Source link

About 300 children and teachers evacuated or rescued after fire breaks out at a Tokyo school


TOKYO — A fire broke out at an elementary school in downtown Tokyo Friday, but all of about 300 students and teachers were evacuated or rescued, officials said.

The Tokyo Fire Department said the fire at the Takinogawa No. 3 Elementary School broke out near a music room on the top floor of the four-story building late morning Friday.

Firefighters rescued one teacher and several schoolchildren out of the building, with non-life-threatening injuries, the department said.

Television footage showed black smoke billowing out of windows on the fourth floor, as firefighters combated the fire at the scene. Dozens of fire engines were deployed.

All others inside the building when the fire broke out had evacuated to a nearby park on their own and no one was left behind, officials said.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.



Source link

Cambodian Supreme Court upholds incitement conviction of opposition politician in charged case


Cambodia’s Supreme Court has upheld the incitement conviction of prominent opposition politician Rong Chhun but suspended the remainder of his prison sentence, allowing him to remain free while barring him from politics for years

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Cambodia’s Supreme Court on Friday upheld the incitement conviction of a prominent opposition politician while suspending the remainder of his sentence, keeping him out of prison but unable to practice politics for years.

The decision against Rong Chhun, a top adviser to the Nation Power Party, was met with anger by supporters gathered outside the Supreme Court complex in Phnom Penh.

The 56-year-old had been found guilty last year of inciting social unrest after meeting with villagers displaced by government construction projects, in what was widely seen as one of many legal moves taken by the government of Prime Minister Hun Manet to stifle criticism.

Under the decision, Rong Chhun will be prohibited from any involvement in politics for five years, including voting or standing as a candidate, and will be banned from traveling abroad for three years, the remainder of his original four-year sentence, his attorney Em Chantha told reporters. He had also been free while his appeal was pending.

Supreme Court decisions are final, but Rong Chhun said he and his attorney would study the verdict in detail to decide whether there would be a chance to ask Cambodia’s King Norodom Sihamoni for a pardon.



Source link

About 100 Colombian guerrilla dissidents disarm under peace talks with government


BOGOTA, Colombia — About a hundred Colombian guerrilla dissidents on Thursday surrendered their weapons in a step toward their gradual reintegration into civilian life as part of a peace process with the government of President Gustavo Petro.

Dressed in military-style camouflage, the members of the National Coordinating Committee of the Bolivarian Army placed their weapons on a table during a formal ceremony in the department of Putumayo, which borders Ecuador. The group is a dissident faction of the defunct Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

Now disarmed, the dissidents will enter a temporary resettlement zone where the government intends to facilitate their gradual reintegration into civilian life. The government in a statement explained that they “will have their freedom restricted and will be under the control and supervision” of authorities.

“We laid down the iron rifle because we understand that words are a more powerful weapon,” dissident leader Geovany Andrés Rojas said as part of the ceremony. He made the remarks remotely from jail, where he is being held after being captured last year when the group was engaged in peace talks with the government.

His arrest took place in connection with an Interpol Red Notice for drug trafficking charges in the United States. Rojas on Thursday said his capture undermined the confidence of the rank and file but did not derail the dialogue process.

Petro, a former rebel leader and Colombia’s first progressive president, is negotiating with the dissident faction as part of his signature “total peace” policy, which has opened parallel peace negotiations with multiple armed groups. The effort has largely failed.

The dissident groups emerged from factions that did not accept the historic peace agreement signed a decade ago by the state and FARC, formerly Latin America’s oldest guerrilla group. The country is estimated to have 27,000 illegally armed group members, according to a 2025 report by the Ideas for Peace Foundation, a think tank focused on the internal conflict.

Last week, Petro established a monitoring mechanism for the temporary relocation zone and ordered the suspension of offensive military and special police operations to allow the dissidents to enter the designated area.



Source link

Thousands killed in US-Israeli war on Iran


In Iraq, more than 100 people have died, according to figures gathered by Al Jazeera and Agence France Presse. Of those, at least 80 were reported to be members of the paramilitary Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF), which is dominated by Iran-backed Shia militias, killed in US and Israeli strikes.



Source link

BBC Sport quiz: Who am I? Guess World Cup star footballer No 12


Welcome to our Who am I? game.

The rules are simple. Each day there’s a new footballer and the challenge is to guess who they are in as few attempts as possible.

After each wrong guess you unlock a new clue. Guess the answer after as few clues as possible to score more points.

Three is a good score, four or five points is exceptional.

So, take part and return for more tomorrow.

Today’s player and clues are set by BBC Sport’s Huzaifah Khan.

After more quizzes? Go to our dedicated Football Quizzes and Sports Quizzes pages and sign up for notifications to get the latest quizzes sent straight to your device.



Source link