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Kenya’s national coach wants to woo Cologne attacker Maina

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Several professionals active in Germany are in the sights of the Kenyan association. National coach Benni McCarthy wants to court one Cologne player in particular.

Next year, Kenya will host the Africa Cup together with Uganda and Tanzania – and may be looking to strengthen its squad with players from Germany. National coach Benni McCarthy, who once played professionally in England and Portugal, wants to recruit Cologne’s left winger Linton Maina in the coming months.

The 26-year-old is the son of a Kenyan, but only played for the DFB’s youth teams from the U16s to the U20s. McCarthy now wants to explore the possibility of having Maina play for Kenya in the future. The South African in the service of the East African country wants to travel to Germany soon – also to convince Maina to play for the country of his father’s birth.

In addition to Maina, Chemwor and Gitau are also in his sights

Maina is not the only professional McCarthy wants to recruit, however. Talented striker Sadiki Chemwor, currently still playing for Bayern Youth and under contract with Eintracht Frankfurt from July, is also on the Kenyan list, as is attacker Andre Gitau. The 19-year-old also has US citizenship and currently plays for Mainz 05’s second team.

McCarthy’s efforts to attract professionals active in Europe are intended to put Kenya in a better position for the Africa Cup in the summer of 2027. Kenya recently failed to qualify for the Africa Cup and the World Cup on several occasions. Now Kenya is set to host – and wants to break new ground to do so.

Freak-out in front of the referee’s booth: DFB punishes Ginter

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After the Bundesliga match against FC Bayern, Freiburg defender Matthias Ginter had an outburst in front of the referee’s booth. The central defender has now been punished for this by the DFB.

Two goals conceded in a long stoppage time, three points late to none at all: For SC Freiburg, last Saturday’s Bundesliga match against FC Bayern offered plenty of potential for frustration. In the case of Matthias Ginter, this was vented directly afterwards in the stadium catacombs. The central defender has now been fined by the DFB for his outburst in front of the referee’s booth.

As the association announced on Wednesday afternoon, the 32-year-old was sentenced to a fine of 15,000 euros by the DFB sports court in individual proceedings for unsportsmanlike conduct. The DFB Control Committee had previously brought charges against Freiburg’s leading player.

After the referee team led by referee Daniel Siebert had already entered the dressing room, Ginter “suddenly” shouted outside the dressing room and kicked the door from the outside. The words “You always tell us off” were clearly audible in the corridors. The centre-back has since reportedly apologized to the referee. Ginter has already agreed to the verdict, making it legally binding.

Freiburg’s frustration was mainly directed at the long stoppage time of eight minutes imposed by the referees. Coach Julian Schuster had expressed his surprise at this after the final whistle and added: “Then the eight minutes were up, you can blow the whistle and everything is fine – and you don’t have to let it go.” Lennart Karl then made it 3:2 shortly after the eight minutes had elapsed. The corner kick decision before Munich made it 2:2 also stirred up Freiburg’s emotions.

However, from a neutral, objective point of view, there was no blatant disadvantage for Freiburg.

Captain Christian Günter also stood in front of the referee’s booth alongside Ginter. However, the left-back had his emotions under control and told Siebert that he would come over for an exchange when he had calmed down. That’s what happened – and Günter avoided Ginter’s penalty as a result.

Where is Rexhbecaj moving to? Werder and Gladbach are close

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Elvis Rexhbecaj has played 210 Bundesliga games for Wolfsburg, Cologne, Bochum and Augsburg so far. The 28-year-old will leave FCA in the summer – and could remain in the Bundesliga. According to information, several first division clubs are courting the midfielder.

Four years end in around three months. Elvis Rexhbecaj joined FC Augsburg in 2022, since when the 28-year-old has played 115 competitive matches (six goals) for the club. The midfielder’s contract ends in the summer and he will move on a free transfer. Where to? A decision is imminent, various clubs are trying to attract the Kosovan international.

Rexhbecaj is reportedly spoiled for choice. Several clubs from Germany and abroad have contacted him, including the two Bundesliga clubs Borussia Mönchengladbach and Werder Bremen, according to reports.

Gladbach already made an early approach in winter

Borussia is said to have already made an approach to Rexhbecaj in the winter in case Rocco Reitz had moved to RB Leipzig ahead of schedule. Now the captain is leaving in the summer, and VfL’s interest in the Augsburg midfielder is unbroken. Werder Bremen have also reportedly thrown their hat into the ring, as have other clubs. The problem for both Gladbach and Werder is that there is still no certainty as to whether they will be in the Bundesliga next season.

Rexhbecaj is certainly looking for a club for the coming years, after spells at his training club VfL Wolfsburg and then 1. FC Köln, VfL Bochum and now Augsburg, he could end up at another Bundesliga club.

Bitter for him, helpful for the receiving club: Rexhbecaj can recharge his batteries during the summer break and start the job with his new employer well rested. The 28-year-old recently missed out on a place in the World Cup with Kosovo in the final stage of the play-offs, with coach Franco Foda’s team losing 1-0 to Turkey in the decisive match. The Augsburg player had played 90 minutes in the semi-final against Slovakia (4:3) and 80 minutes against the Turks. Rexhbecaj wrote on Instagram about the “most painful defeat of my career” and looked ahead: “It’s the start of something big.”

After resigning: Italian association boss Gravina names problems and has ideas

What the future holds for Italian soccer is still up in the air. However, the problems are obvious, as outgoing association president Gabriele Gravina made clear once again on his farewell tour.

The first victims of the recent soccer crisis in Italy, which has missed out on a World Cup for the third time in a row and has not even experienced a knockout round match at a World Cup since the 2006 World Cup final (knocked out in the group stage in 2010 and 2014), have been found. Head of delegation Gianluigi Buffon, coach Gennaro Gattuso and federation president Gabriele Gravina have resigned from their posts.

The FIGC (Federazione Italiana Giuoco Calcio) boss will remain in office until June 22 in order to make the transition smoother – and is clearly still taking his job seriously. The 72-year-old, who was appointed in 2018 and missed out on two World Cup tournaments as well as the surprising European Championship victory in England in 2021, has now published a review.

It looks at the current state of Italian soccer, its fragile foundations and possible levers for the future.

Italy playing slowly

Gravina’s report deals specifically with the lack of permeability in the Italian top flight. An obvious problem, as there are currently only four U-23 teams among the 20 Serie A representatives: Juve (since 2018), Atalanta (2023), Milan (2024) and Inter (2025). Gravina is even more specific here, criticizing the long-standing lack of investment in the youth sector and writing According to his analysis letter, Italy would only rank 49th “out of 50 leagues observed” when it comes to how many potentially eligible U-21 players for their own national team even get playing time at the top level – 1.9 percent..

But that’s not all: even high spending by clubs on foreign players does not match the quality that has long been demanded at the absolute top level. The document confirms that “Serie A is not among the top 10 leagues in terms of meters covered in a sprint” and that “the average ball speed (7.6 m/s) is significantly lower than the average in the Champions League (10.4) and the average in the other major European leagues (9.2).”

In the past, Gravina does not believe in the practice of anchoring Italian players in the teams by directive after crises. His statement: “Impossible.” After all, something like that would also violate EU and employment law.

In his final days before the end of his term of office on 22 June, the outgoing association boss now wants to put forward ideas or help identify levers to put soccer back on the right track in the country of the four-time world champions. From his point of view, for example, it is also essential to reform Serie A, B, C and D respectively. Gravina’s quote: “Without a unanimous willingness to put the common good above the preservation of individual positions and without a policy that creates the conditions and provides the necessary instruments for action, no individual can achieve a real and complete revival of Italian soccer.”

Gravina recognizes too many egos

At the end of the day, replacing the resigned Gattuso with preferred candidate Antonio Conte (currently at SSC Napoli) would not help either. In the end, this could only prove to be a drop in the ocean; far more intervention is needed – for example, in his view, more emphasis has been placed on technique than tactics in the youth game for some time now: “If we really want the best for Italian soccer as an entire sporting movement, we need to clarify the actual responsibilities of the association, the leagues and the public institutions. Too many inaccuracies and sometimes outright lies fuel the search for a main culprit and, above all, spread misconceptions.“

In his view, there is also a clear difference between this and funding projects in terms of ”environmental sustainability, youth and school projects, development and training programs for the national youth teams” – these things are controlled from a single source, namely the state as the head. In soccer, however, Gravina believes that “the interests of the various players overlap to such an extent that they practically paralyze the system”. In the spirit of: Many cooks spoil the broth.

Furious comeback not rewarded: Alba fails to reach CL quarter-finals

Alba Berlin’s Champions League journey ends in the quarter-finals. The Bundesliga club suffered a dramatic defeat against defending champions Unicaja Malaga after extra time. Before that, a furious comeback led by Jack Kayil had succeeded in the fourth round.

The game began as fiercely contested as the first encounter had ended, with Alba getting off to the better start. Roberts stretched the home side’s lead to 9:3 midway through the first period. The Albatrosses benefited in particular from the many turnovers by the Spanish club in this phase of the game.

Nothing changed in the second half. Malaga remained unusually pale in offense, while Berlin was only able to capitalize moderately. Despite hitting just 3/19 threes in the first half, Duarte (13, 6/10) was able to cut the deficit to -2 before the break (36:34).

Kayil leads Alba’s furious comeback

The German club took revenge for that immediately after the break, which Duarte opened with a successful bucket from downtown. The Spaniards’ spell now seemed to be broken and their offense was much more fluid. And things were also going well from downtown. Kendrick Perry (11, 4/11) drained three threes in succession for Alba. The visitors went into the final quarter (49:60) with a lead of +11.

And Alba failed to muster a comeback there for a long time. Instead, Malaga picked up where it had left off and raced 16 points ahead at one stage.

The turning point came from Jack Kayil of all people, who had had a pitch-black evening up to then, but now produced what was probably one of his best performances in a Berlin jersey. Kayil scored nine points in the ensuing 19:3 run by Berlin, including the final five to equalize. It became dramatic in the final seconds when Kayil drew free throws with his side trailing by two points, missed the first and then deliberately missed the second. However, the teenager grabbed his own rebound and made another free throw. This time, they were enough to equalize and force overtime.

Berlin too unimaginative in overtime

The visitors seemed to have woken up from their deep slumber. Tillie drained a three just twelve seconds after the restart and Kayil replied with a difficult shot from deep mid-range. Apart from the 19-year-old, however, little went Berlin’s way and so Unicaja pulled away again. However, Bean’s (8, 3/6) sign of life was too little and came too late.

As a result, Alba Berlin was eliminated early despite putting up a great fight twice against the defending champions. Alongside Rytas Vilnius, Unicaja Malaga is the second of a total of four teams to have booked their ticket for the Final Four in Badalona. This will be held from May 7 to 9.

“Unusual”: Coulthard criticizes Verstappen’s reporter ejection

Max Verstappen kicked a journalist out of the media round in Japan – David Coulthard is surprised at the FIA’s lack of reaction

Ex-Formula 1 driver David Coulthard is surprised that the FIA has not imposed any sanctions on Max Verstappen. The four-time world champion had thrown a British journalist out of a media round at the Japanese Grand Prix.

The incident in Suzuka occurred during a press conference in the Red Bull hospitality area. Verstappen simply refused to start the lap until the reporter in question had left the room. The Dutchman’s frustration apparently stemmed from an exchange of blows at the 2025 season finale in Abu Dhabi, when Verstappen lost the world title by just two points to Lando Norris.

The journalist, Giles Richards from the Guardian, had asked Verstappen about a collision with George Russell earlier in the season that had affected his position in the standings. “You’re forgetting all the other things that happened in my season. The only thing you mention is Barcelona. I knew that was coming,” responded Verstappen at the time, annoyed.

“You’re grinning so stupidly at me now. I don’t know. Yes, it’s part of racing in the end. You learn something new. The championship consists of 24 laps. I also got a lot of early Christmas presents in the second half of the year, so you could also question that.”

Coulthard: “Unusual to send someone out of the room”

In the latest edition of the Up To Speed podcast, Coulthard now categorized Verstappen’s action. “Well, the way I see it, it’s probably not something Max will feel good about in hindsight. Because although he’s absolutely right that he doesn’t have to answer the question, it’s unusual to send someone out of the room in that environment,” said the Scot.

“And I’m actually a little surprised that the FIA hasn’t taken a stance on this. I haven’t seen anything about a warning. Because basically, if he used the word ‘shit’ there, he would get a fine.“

Coulthard draws parallels with his own active time: ”I can only compare it with my time as a racing driver. I obviously never won the world championships that Max has, but I was definitely subjected to criticism from various journalists as well.”

Criticism is hard not to take personally

At the same time, Coulthard admits that a driver has to develop a thick skin: “It’s very difficult not to take it personally. I’m sure you don’t look at the comments on social media, because there are those who love you and those who just don’t like you – that’s just the way it is.”

“I’ve certainly come in for criticism. And there was always an undertone – let’s say when they questioned my qualifying performance. That was a legitimate question, but of course it wasn’t easy to be asked the same question over and over again,“ recalls the former Red Bull driver.

”Some journalists were very derogatory. And it’s their right as journalists to say what they see. But it’s hard not to take it personally. No driver is exempt from this.”

The example of Andrea Kimi Antonelli

Coulthard also looks at the current generation: “At the moment, Kimi Antonelli is receiving nothing but praise. Everything. Everyone loves him. His mother will certainly be collecting newspaper cuttings, if that’s still how it’s done today. But as sure as he’s being praised right now, he’ll be criticized at some point in the future – especially if he makes mistakes.“

Finally, Coulthard recalls a very specific criticism from his career: ”I remember a journalist writing: ‘David has an amazing ability to talk about an incident as if he hadn’t even been driving the car at the time’. That really shocked me because he obviously thought I was just making excuses all the time.”

“I didn’t see it that way at the time. But maybe I was also too defensive. I spoke to that journalist, we made peace and put it behind us. But it’s hard to take this public criticism.”

Lewis Hamilton: Wild drift clip fires up the rumor mill

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Spectacular drifts and a world star in the cockpit – Lewis Hamilton’s latest clip from Japan generates millions of clicks – the finale has the rumor mill buzzing

Seven-time Formula 1 world champion Lewis Hamilton is causing a sensation online: the Briton has landed a viral hit with the eagerly awaited continuation of his “Tokyo Drift” series.

Filmed in the run-up to the 2026 Japanese Grand Prix, the Formula 1 star took to the wheel of a legendary Ferrari F40 to make the streets of Tokyo unsafe. He was flanked by two real cult cars: A Nissan Skyline R34 – a faithful replica of the silver-blue bullet driven by film character Brian O’Conner (Paul Walker) from “2 Fast 2 Furious”, including blue underbody lighting – and a VeilSide Mazda RX-7 from the sequel “Tokyo Drift”.

Donuts in Daikoku: Hamilton lets the V8 scream

Hamilton follows on from his earlier Tokyo Drift videos, which got him into a lot of trouble with a car rental company in 2022 because the high-speed driving maneuvers were not approved. In the latest clip, Hamilton lets the screaming twin-turbo V8 of the F40 whip through the street canyons, drifts spectacularly and lets off some serious rubber while spinning donuts in the famous Daikoku parking lot in Yokohama.

The finale of the video has it all: the camera moves through the thick tire smoke of the donuts towards the passenger window. Sitting there is none other than reality TV icon Kim Kardashian, who has long been rumored to be in a relationship with the Brit. She looks into the camera and says simply: “This is insane”.

Was this the official relationship outing?

The video fueled the rumor mill, which has been swirling for months. After the duo were spotted together at a New Year’s Eve party in Aspen, at the Super Bowl and finally during Japan Week in Tokyo, Hamilton’s clip provides new fodder for speculation.

Although there has been no official confirmation from either side so far, fans are already treating the video as a “hard launch” – in other words, the deliberate public outing of their relationship.

17 million views: The web goes crazy

The fans’ reactions were not long in coming. “I don’t know what’s harder: the drifts or this hard launch,” commented one user. Others simply described the video as “iconic” or “epic”.

The figures speak for themselves: at the time of publication, the clip on Instagram already had 26.3 million views, 2.3 million likes and over 18,000 comments. Hamilton knows how to move the masses, and not just on the racetrack.</p

Michelin confirms: Ducati puts more stress on rear tire than Aprilia

The Ducati riders feel it, the data proves it – Now Michelin has also confirmed the weak point of the Desmosedici – Aprilia has the better bike

After the first three MotoGP race weekends in 2026, Ducati realized that they are currently lagging behind Aprilia. The riders named a specific aspect that makes it difficult for them to remain competitive over the race distance with the Desmosedici.

They described that with the Ducati you currently have to do “everything via the rear wheel”. The balance for the front wheel has to improve so that the riders can brake harder and carry more speed into the corner via the front wheel.

This is not such a big problem in qualifying with new, soft tires. The disadvantage mainly has an effect over the race distance, which is why Ducati had no chance against Aprilia’s pace in the first three Grands Prix on Sunday.

Michelin manager Piero Taramasso shares this analysis: “It’s true that Ducati puts a little more load on the rear tire. In this situation, vibrations also occur when the tire degrades. It is clear that they still have to find the right balance.“

”The gap to Aprilia is there at the moment, that is obvious,“ the Italian told Motorsport.com Italy on the basis of the Michelin analyses.

”In addition, Marquez is not yet at 100 percent physically,” Taramasso addresses another issue. “You can see that he is not riding freely. Perhaps the break before Jerez will help him to recover, and Ducati could also use it to find something on a technical level.”

Harder carcass not a decisive advantage for Aprilia

Especially after the first two races of the season in Thailand and Brazil, there were those who argued that the Aprilia advantage was due to the harder casing supplied by Michelin for these two circuits.

Taramasso, however, contradicts this theory: “I always thought that this was not the reason, because we have been offering the stiffer casing for several seasons. So everyone knows how to interpret it and how to work on the set-up. The riders have also got used to it.”

That’s why his conclusion after the race weekend in Austin was: “At the moment, Aprilia simply has a bit more at the level of the bike.” The progress was particularly evident in the lap times at the Circuit of The Americas.

A new track record was set in qualifying. The winning time in the sprint was ten seconds slower than the previous record, and the winning time in the Grand Prix was even 19 seconds faster. In other words, the average lap time was one second faster.

This was not expected in the winter, as 2026 was seen as a transitional season for 2027. Because the engineers were working intensively in the background on the motorcycles for the new technical regulations, no such progress was expected.

“I actually expected it a little,” says Taramasso with regard to the lap times, “because everyone certainly still had technical solutions in the drawer. And if they hadn’t used them this year, they would have come to nothing.“

”So, let’s say I expected to see quite different bikes, but maybe not that they would make such a big step.”

This is the last MotoGP season for Michelin before Pirelli arrives. From 2027, the French tire manufacturer will take over the Superbike World Championship.

McLaren: Second test for Formula 2 champion Leonardo Fornaroli

McLaren continues Formula 2 champion Leonardo Fornaroli’s development program and gives him a drive in the 2023 MCL60 at Silverstone

Formula 2 champion Leonardo Fornaroli was allowed to complete a second day of testing for world champion team McLaren on Tuesday. The Italian was at the wheel of a McLaren MCL60 from the 2023 Formula 1 season at Silverstone, where he completed a total of 393 kilometers over 68 laps.

For Fornaroli, who joined McLaren’s development program at the end of last season and will be an official reserve driver in 2026, it was his second outing in a McLaren Formula 1 car following a test at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in March.

As a result, his program was a little more advanced this time: Fornaroli drove both long runs and runs with little fuel, and both hard and soft tires were also tested.

“Another good day on the track,” he sums up. “It was fantastic to be back in the MCL60. Silverstone is one of my favorite tracks, so I’m grateful to McLaren for the opportunity to get back behind the wheel of a Formula 1 car there.”

“As it was my second test, the timetable was more advanced so I was able to try different set-ups and drive with different fuel loads, which further enhances my understanding of driving a Formula 1 car,” said the reigning Formula 2 champion.

“I’m very pleased with today and was able to improve on my test a few weeks ago by getting even more familiar with these machines.”

The 21-year-old will not have a regular race cockpit in the 2026 season, but will focus on his role as a reserve driver at McLaren. The Italian was on site in Japan and is a regular guest at the McLaren Technology Centre, where he works closely with the team and spends a lot of time in the simulator.

As part of his training in McLaren’s development program, Fornaroli will sit in the MCL60 in further planned tests at various circuits over the course of the year. “I’m looking forward to continuing the testing this year,” he says. “This is very important for my role as a McLaren reserve driver and for my development within the program.”

0:4 down – but then Zverev turns on the heat

The man from Hamburg is seemingly hopelessly behind. Then he achieves great things.

Alexander Zverev was audibly struggling, he looked helplessly at his father in the stands, but in the end he fought his way out of the hole he had dug for himself in the Monte Carlo clay. Back on his favorite surface, the tennis star stumbled badly, but avoided a surprising exit. Zverev won his first clay court appearance of the current season against Chile’s Cristian Garín 4:6, 6:4, 7:5 thanks to a strong comeback.

“My level wasn’t there at all, to be honest. It was my first clay court match in eleven months and I didn’t have much time to prepare,“ said Zverev, adding with relief: ”In the end, it’s important to win somehow.”

The Hamburg native, who had already trailed 0:4 and 2:5 in the deciding set, reached the last 16 of the Masters in his adopted home city for the eighth time after 2:50 hours. A duel with Zizou Bergs awaits him there on Thursday. Zverev, who has never made it past the semi-finals in Monaco, will need to improve his performance against the Belgian, who is ranked 47th in the world.

Zverev fights on dramatically

Expert Patrik Kühnen cheered on Sky: “Outstanding fighting performance from Alexander Zverev. You’ve only lost when you no longer believe in yourself. That’s not the case with him. He played a great match. Chapeau Alexander Zverev.”

Zverev once started playing tennis on clay courts, which is why he actually feels particularly comfortable on this surface – but despite the good omens, he struggled through the opening phase of the match. Numerous lapses in concentration disrupted his rhythm and the world number three made 21 avoidable errors in the first round.

At an inopportune moment, Zverev also lost his greatest strength. He literally invited his opponent in with a weak service game. Garin, who had won two of the last three matches against the favorite and once again really annoyed Zverev, made it 1:0.

After a toilet break, the Tokyo Olympic champion returned to the court and remembered what had made him strong recently. He put the world number 109 under pressure with an attacking game and solid groundstrokes. However, it remained a brief high: As Garín was now allowing himself too many mistakes, Zverev still managed to take the second set, but shortly afterwards he conceded the next two breaks.

Zverev grumbled about the stringing of his racket, struggled with the box – but he finally pulled himself together and fought his way back. After three breaks in a row, he shouted out his joy. Zverev will be able to get over his extremely bumpy start if things improve soon. The aim is to get rolling over the course of the tournament and reach his top form by the end of May at the latest. Then the French Open, the second Grand Slam of the year, is coming up.