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Wolves agree deal to sign Trippier

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Wolves agree deal to sign Trippier

Wolves have agreed a deal to sign former Newcastle defender Kieran Trippier.The 35-year-old has said yes to a two-year deal plus the option of a third with the newly-relegated Championship side.Trippier is a free agent following four years at Newcastle.Confirmation of the deal is pending a medical, which will take place when Trippier returns from a family holiday next week.Wolves fended off competition from a host of clubs on the continent to land the former England international.Wolves boss Rob Edwards sees Trippier as a leader who can help them back to the Premier League at the first time of asking.Trippier joined Newcastle in January 2022 from Atletico Madrid, and was part of the team that won the Carabao Cup last year. He made 160 appearances for the Magpies in all competitions.Stream the Premier League with no contractHe announced he was leaving St James' Park in early April, and Eddie Howe also paid tribute to the defender ahead of his departure.He said: "He's definitely deserving of recognition. I think the decision to come here in the first place needs to be celebrated because he's gone from a team that was hugely successful in Spain into a team that's fighting relegation in the Premier League."He took it on [the challenge of staying in the Premier League] and I'm so pleased for him that it was rewarded because there's no guarantee that was going to be the case."The team stayed up and then never looked back. It was strange because probably a lot of people forget that he got injured and didn't really contribute on the pitch as he would have wanted initially in our fight against relegation."It was more the next season where he then played an unbelievable part in our run to the Champions League. We only lost, I think, four games that season... That's probably my biggest memory of him."Then along with the cup final win where I thought he was magnificent that day. Absolutely gigantic performance and he got the feeling of lifting the cup with Bruno [Guimaraes] and Jamaal [Lascelles]."

Sky SportsFri, 29 May 2026
Source: Sky Sports
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Trippier verbally agrees to Wolves move after Newcastle exit

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Trippier verbally agrees to Wolves move after Newcastle exit

Wolves are close to signing former England international Kieran Trippier. The 35-year-old has verbally agreed to move to Molineux on a free transfer after his departure from Newcastle.He is expected to sign a two-year deal, with the option of a further 12 months, to become Rob Edwards' first summer signing.Trippier is leaving Newcastle at the end of his contract this summer having spent four-and-a-half years at St James' Park, making 160 appearances and scoring four goals.He helped them win the Carabao Cup in 2025, the Magpies' first silverware since 1955.Right-back Trippier won La Liga with Atletico Madrid in 2020-21 and was a Champions League runner up in 2019 with Tottenham.He won 54 England caps, scoring in the 2018 World Cup semi final and starting the Euro 2020 final, before retiring from international duty in 2024.Wolves are rebuilding after finishing bottom of the Premier League and have targeted more experience, with homegrown signings the priority.The club's hierarchy recognise they did not have enough experience or players who understood the club's culture.Wolves, who won just three top flight games to end their eight-year stay in the division, have no room in their squad for any non-homegrown players before further departures.Goalkeeper Jose Sa and forward Hwang Hee-chan are expected to leave along with midfielder Ladislav Krejci but Mateus Mane is due to stay at Molineux after a breakthrough season.

BBC SportFri, 29 May 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Liverpool unveil new memorial to Heysel Stadium tragedy on 41st anniversary

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Liverpool unveil new memorial to Heysel Stadium tragedy on 41st anniversary

Ian Rush among those from Liverpool and Juventus at ceremonyNew Anfield Road monument replaces original plaqueLiverpool have unveiled a new memorial on the 41st anniversary of the Heysel Stadium tragedy to the 39 fans who died.Representatives from Juventus, Liverpool’s opponents in the 1985 European Cup final, attended the unveiling ceremony at Anfield on Friday along with the Liverpool ambassador Ian Rush and the chief executive, Billy Hogan. Entitled Forever Bound, the memorial is in a more prominent location behind the Anfield Road Stand and replaces the original plaque on the wall of the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand, which was felt to be inadequate.The sculpture features a Juventus scarf and a Liverpool scarf entwined in bronze, a dedication to the date and location of the tragedy and the names of the 39 supporters who died at Heysel – 32 from Italy, four from Belgium, two from France and one from Northern Ireland. The idea for the two scarves, symbolising solidarity between the two clubs and a bond formed by grief, came from photographs of the aftermath of the disaster that showed fan memorabilia strewn across the Heysel terraces. Italian marble was used for the memorial, which was proposed last year by the Liverpool supporters’ board and the supporters’ union Spirit of Shankly.Rush, who played in the 1985 European Cup final and later joined Juventus, said: “Today is a deeply moving moment. It’s hard to believe over 40 years have passed since Heysel but the memory of that day never fades. This new memorial means a great deal to all of us. The thought and respect that has gone into Forever Bound is something I’m incredibly proud of and I hope it brings comfort to those still affected by this tragedy.”Hogan was part of a Liverpool delegation that attended the unveiling of Juventus’s new memorial to the victims of Heysel in Turin last year. Liverpool’s CEO said of Forever Bound: “This memorial is a symbol of shared remembrance, of unity and the bond formed between Liverpool and Juventus. We are honoured to welcome our friends from Juventus to Anfield today and we stand together in solidarity and memory of the 39 supporters who tragically lost their lives at Heysel. This is a moment for all of us to pause and reflect and to commit once again to ensuring that their memory lives on.”

Andy HunterFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Wilson and Cabango out of Wales' friendlies squad

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Wilson and Cabango out of Wales' friendlies squad

Fulham forward Harry Wilson has pulled out of Wales' friendlies against Ghana and Romania next month, along with defender Ben Cabango of Swansea City.Wilson, 29, has been Wales' outstanding performer under Craig Bellamy and 12 of his 17 career international goals have come in the past three years.The former Liverpool and Bournemouth player is out of contract with Fulham this summer and has been linked with a move to several other Premier League clubs, including Aston Villa, Everton and Leeds United.Cabango, 25, an unused substitute in Wales' World Cup play-off defeat against Bosnia-Herzegovina in March, played 47 games for Swansea this season.Uncapped duo Cameron Congreve and Ollie Bostock have been called up as replacements.Swansea winger Congreve, 22, spent the season on loan at Dundee while attacking midfielder Bostock, 19, of West Bromwich Albion has two Wales Under-21 caps.Wales host Ghana, one of England's World Cup group opponents, at Cardiff City Stadium on Tuesday, 2 June, before facing Romania in Bucharest the following Saturday.Roberts and Davies return from injury for WalesTottenham Hotspur defender Davies, who turned 33 last month, has not played since sustaining the injury, which required surgery, while playing for his club in January.Burnley right-back Roberts has been absent since injuring himself during Wales' World Cup qualifying defeat by Belgium in June 2025.The 30-year-old was forced off with a groin injury in Brussels, before damaging his Achilles after returning to Burnley, ruling him out of the entire 2025-26 season.Having featured for the Clarets' Under-21s earlier this month, Roberts returned to the first-team matchday squad for the first time this campaign on Sunday as he was an unused substitute for the Premier League draw with fellow relegated side Wolves.There is also a return from injury for centre-back Chris Mepham but midfielders Jordan James and Rubin Colwill as well as forwards Liam Cullen and Mark Harris miss out with minor injuries.What information do we collect from this quiz?Wales squadGoalkeepers: Karl Darlow (Leeds United), Danny Ward (Wrexham), Tom King (Everton)Defenders: Jay DaSilva (Coventry City), Rhys Norrington-Davies (Queens Park Rangers - on loan from Sheffield United), Ben Davies (Tottenham Hotspur), Dylan Lawlor (Cardiff City), Joe Rodon (Leeds United), Chris Mepham (West Bromwich Albion), Neco Williams (Nottingham Forest), Ronan Kpakio (Cardiff City), Connor Roberts (Burnley)Midfielders: Ethan Ampadu (Leeds United), Josh Sheehan (Bolton Wanderers), Joel Colwill (Cardiff City), Kai Andrews (Hibernian - on loan from Coventry City), Sorba Thomas (Stoke City), Lewis Koumas (Hull City - on loan from Liverpool), David Brooks (Bournemouth), Cameron Congreve (Dundee - on loan from Swansea City), Ollie Bostock (West Bromwich Albion)Forwards: Nathan Broadhead (Wrexham), Brennan Johnson (Crystal Palace), Kieffer Moore (Wrexham), Dan James (Leeds United), Isaak Davies (Cardiff City)

BBC SportFri, 29 May 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Bristol City edging towards Skubala appointment

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Bristol City edging towards Skubala appointment

The Robins have moved quickly for the 43-year-old after failing to convince Bournemouth assistant Tommy Elphick to join.Nothing has been signed yet but it is now expected Skubala will move to the Championship side.It will cost Bristol City over £1m in compensation with Skubala understood to have signed a new contract at Sincil Bank after initially missing out on the job to Elphick.Skubala won the League Managers' Association League One manager of the season after taking the club to the second tier for the first time in 65 years by winning the title.He is close with Bristol City sporting director James Ellis, only formally appointed at the Robins this month, with the pair having worked together in the Great Britain Universities setup.The former Leeds Under-21 boss was one of the leading contenders before the Robins initially chose Elphick, 38.The former Brighton and Aston Villa defender had positive talks and was impressed with the club and its personnel but decided against making the move on Wednesday.With Marco Rose replacing Andoni Iraola at the club, sources have told BBC Sport Elphick wants to assess his options further.Bristol City, who finished 12th in the Championship, are looking for a permanent manager after appointing former England boss Roy Hodgson as an interim replacement following Gerhard Struber's sacking in March.

BBC SportFri, 29 May 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Volpato makes Italy to Australia switch before World Cup

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Volpato makes Italy to Australia switch before World Cup

Former Italy under-21 international Cristian Volpato is switching allegiance to Australia before the Socceroos announce their squad for the 2026 Fifa World Cup on 1 June.The 22-year-old midfielder was born and raised in Sydney but holds dual citizenship after moving to Italy in 2020 to join Roma's youth system. He joined Serie A side Sassuolo in 2023 and has represented Italy at youth level.Having only represented Italy at youth level, Volapto meets one of five different sets of circumstances that make a player eligible to switch international allegiance.Volpato has been added to Australia's preliminary squad and will take part in a training camp in Los Angeles before manager Tony Popovic announces his 26-man squad on Monday.Volpato turned down the chance to represent Australia at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar because he wanted to focus on his club career in Italy and didn't want to make a "rushed decision" that could "risk being extremely premature".He said he was happy to "wait for Italy" after Popovic approached him earlier this year.After Italy failed to qualify for a third successive World Cup in March, manager Gennaro Gattuso and Italian FA (FIGC) president Gabriele Gravina left their positions. Both are yet to be replaced.Earlier this week Australia and Middlesbrough playmaker Riley McGree was ruled out of the tournament after suffering a hamstring injury during the Championship play-off final.Australia begin their World Cup campaign against Turkey on Sunday, 14 June (05:00 BST), before facing the United States and Paraguay.Everything you need to know about the World Cup

BBC SportFri, 29 May 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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Who will captain the US at the World Cup? ‘Your guess is as good as mine’

World Cup News

Who will captain the US at the World Cup? ‘Your guess is as good as mine’

Charlotte FC’s Tim Ream appears to be in pole position to lead the US on the field this summer, but there are many factors to considerIf you want to get US men’s national team head coach Mauricio Pochettino started, just use one word: leadership.The former Tottenham Hotspur manager is famously well-studied on the subject and there are no shortage of clips of him waxing poetic about it. He’s led players over hot coals, or had them press their neck up against the tip of an arrow and lean into it until it shatters. Ask Mauricio Pochettino about leadership and the words he’ll sprinkle into his answers will overlap heavily with late-night self-help ads, his sentences dotted with words like aura, bravery and self-determination. “I don’t want to spend too much time on this,” Pochettino said, laughing, when asked by the Guardian in March about his leadership style. He then spent roughly a third of his press conference unpacking his views. “Leadership is not something you can buy in a supermarket.”Pochettino’s job, of course, is to lead from the sidelines, and to be among the public-facing faces of the program. But on the field, leadership is largely the job of his captain. And ahead of the 2026 World Cup, there’s been no official announcement of who that will be.“Your guess is as good as mine, honestly,” said midfielder Tyler Adams, who captained the US at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. “I [couldn’t] care less. It’s a privilege and an honor, anybody that gets to wear the armband. But what I represent, how I lead, I think anybody that plays with me knows that I’m a leader, whether I’m wearing the armband or not. It is what it is.”Pochettino has rotated the captaincy throughout his tenure, handing the armband most recently to Christian Pulisic and Chris Richards in friendlies against Portugal and Belgium this March. But 38-year-old Charlotte FC defender Tim Ream has served as captain most often – 16 times out of Pochettino’s 23 games in charge.“He has the experience, he knows what it means to play in Europe and travel here (to play with the national team),” said Pochettino. “He has the values and the humanity and character to have the capacity to help the team day to day. In a national team you don’t need to do too much. You need to do the right things. Sometimes you need to say one word and sometimes you need to not talk, if you want to be a good leader.”Aside from Ream, relatively few of the US’s World Cup squad regularly serve as captain for their club team – and the few that do mostly play in MLS. Miles Robinson is often FC Cincinnati’s captain when fit, while Cristian Roldan is practically synonymous with the leadership of the Seattle Sounders. A handful of others have worn the armband for their clubs, but more occasionally: Alejandro Zendejas at Club América, Auston Trusty at Celtic, Antonee Robinson at Fulham, Weston McKennie at Juventus and goalkeeper Matt Turner with the New England Revolution.“Of course it’s important, who is captain,” said former USMNT attacker Jozy Altidore, who captained the US during a handful of World Cup qualifiers and friendlies. “You’re first one out of the tunnel, it’s very important especially in a home World Cup. But when I see this group I see a bunch of leaders. Maybe they didn’t start that way but now they’re most certainly leaders, in terms of how they’ve played at their clubs, how they’ve developed as young men … I think when you have a World Cup team, you’d like to think the 26 guys you’ve selected are all team leaders.”For all of his success with the national team, Landon Donovan only captained the squad in roughly 10% of his appearances, thanks to his tenure largely overlapping with defender Carlos Bocanegra, the program’s all-time leader in captaincies. Donovan captained the LA Galaxy for two different stretches and famously gave up the armband to David Beckham when he arrived in 2007, reclaiming it two years later. Donovan is a veteran of three World Cups.“In those tournaments, it didn’t really matter who was wearing the armband,” Donovan told the Guardian on Thursday. “It really didn’t. Almost everyone on the field was wearing the armband for their club team. Whether it was Carlos, or Claudio (Reyna), or (Jeff) Agoos, it didn’t really matter because there were at least six or seven or eight guys who wore the armband for their club team or who were leaders with their club team. The difference with this team is there actually aren’t many of those players. If you just went through the roster and put together a potential lineup, [you have a few] but that’s kind of it, right? I do think there’s more importance this time in who the captain is. My guess would be that it’s Tim Ream.”Ream has shied away from specifically addressing the captaincy, calling himself just another “cog in the machine” in an interview during Fox’ roster reveal earlier this week. Yet he’s proven to be Pochettino’s most consistent choice. Should he see action this summer, as he almost inevitably will, he will become the oldest player in the history of the USMNT to appear at a World Cup, narrowly beating 1994 World Cup veteran Fernando Clavijo by a matter of months.His standing within the group – Ream is widely liked and respected – is another reason he seems the safe money in terms of the captaincy. And there are other considerations, as well. At World Cups, captains are usually the players called to accompany a team’s manager to pregame press conferences that tend to draw the largest crowds. And on the field, this summer’s tournament will be the first in which captains will be relied upon as the primary mode of communication with the referee. In both cases, keeping a cool head is key.Ream certainly has that. But Pochettino frequently proved full of surprises. It’s entirely possible that he throws the captaincy elsewhere, perhaps sensing a shift in energy.“Leadership is not to score three goals or save three penalties,” said Pochettino. “It’s to make cohesion. It’s to provide the tools to the group to find the dynamic, to be alive, to feel the energy, to create energy. At the moment, though, who leads the national team is who needs to lead in every single team or in every single club or national team.”“It is the coach,” said Pochettino, laughing. “Sorry.”

Pablo Iglesias Maurer in Fayetteville, GoergiaFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian WC
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‘Everything just clicked right there’: the moment that made Bukayo Saka

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‘Everything just clicked right there’: the moment that made Bukayo Saka

Arsenal’s former head of coaching recalls the words from Freddie Ljungberg that shaped the young winger’s careerJan van Loon remembers the moment well. As Arsenal’s head of coaching he was guiding Freddie Ljungberg’s first steps in management with the under-15s when Bukayo Saka joined the squad. Saka was regarded as one of the academy’s standout talents but Ljungberg soon concluded the youngster was in danger of not fulfilling his potential.Towards the end of 2016, Ljungberg delivered words to Saka that, according to Van Loon, have shaped the winger’s career. It was a one-on-one evaluation, typically held twice a year in the academy, but also in the room were Van Loon, a strength and conditioning coach and Saka’s father, Yomi.“Bukayo was sitting there feeling pretty confident because he was scoring goals and things were seemingly going well,” Van Loon says. “But Freddie said: ‘I’m actually not that satisfied, because you’ve got so much more in you. You need to take a good look at yourself. From now on, I want to see the real Bukayo. No more hiding in training or going through the motions. No, you’re the first one out there on the pitch and the last to leave it. You’re going to carry the team and take on a leadership role.’”Saka, Van Loon recalls, was taken aback. “He didn’t expect criticism, that he needed to do much more. But he quickly realised that Freddie was doing it out of respect. Freddie said: ‘I’m going to help you with this, I’ll support you, I believe in you.’ And very quickly it turned into something positive.”The conversation remains etched in Van Loon’s memory. “You have to picture it like this: Bukayo was sitting at the table and his dad was in a chair a few metres behind him. We looked them both in the eyes and his dad had a big smile, like: ‘Finally, someone who’s going to help my son get the most out of himself.’ Because he could see there was so much more in Bukayo.”Ljungberg twice won the Premier League with Arsenal, including as part of the Invincibles, and was a member of their team that lost the 2006 Champions League final. Twenty years on the club return to that stage against Paris Saint-Germain on Saturday and if Saka shines on the biggest stage, Van Loon will surely reflect again on that meeting between two of the club’s most celebrated forwards.“It was as if everything just clicked right there, like the pieces of a puzzle falling into place,” he says. “In that moment I felt something great is happening here. It was pure gold … Sometimes, in a player’s career, you can trace things back to one moment where he realises: ‘I can’t let the talent I’ve been given slip away. I have to put the work in now.’ Bukayo made that decision right there. He completely embraced that mindset, and he is still doing that today.“Up until that meeting, Saka wasn’t really standing out. In a way, it was almost too easy for him. Even at 50 or 60% of his ability, he could already be the best on the pitch. He became comfortable, he wasn’t being challenged. Freddie saw that.”Ljungberg left for Wolfsburg the following February and Van Loon took over the Swede’s team. “I hardly had to do anything because Bukayo was doing it all,” says a laughing Van Loon, who departed Arsenal later in 2017. “He was running the dressing room, organising the warm-up, making sure the intensity in training was right. If the work rate wasn’t there, he’d say: ‘Coach, do you have a second?’ He’d stop the session and tell the other players: ‘Right, now we’re going to work … You need to press harder …’ That’s when Bukayo really took off.”A year later Saka was playing for the under-23s, coached again by Ljungberg, and on a freezing night in Kyiv in November 2018 he made his first-team debut. Unai Emery selected him for a Europa League tie at Vorskla Poltava and Saka, aged 17, came on for the final quarter with No 87 on his back. It completed a path shaped by sacrifice – the hours spent honing his skills with his father and brother in the garden, the countless car trips to the Hale End academy with his dad.Within two years Saka had his first England cap, his smooth transition leaving a mark on Chris Powell, Gareth Southgate’s assistant. “I remember how seamless it was for him to fit into training and into the level of play, which was impressive for someone so young,” Powell says. “Playing for your country and being alongside the elite players can be overwhelming for some, but Bukayo has such a good temperament.”Not that Saka’s journey has been without adversity. Most devastatingly, he was one of three England players to miss a penalty in the Euro 2020 final shootout defeat by Italy. Powell made a point of consoling him on the pitch. “I have a son the same age and I just remember thinking: ‘That could have been my son standing there.’ I put my hand on his shoulder to show him he wasn’t alone.”Powell admits he was worried, though: “I thought he might not come back from it. Standing there with Saks on that Wembley pitch, it was in my head that there would be a backlash.”Unfortunately there was, with Saka, Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho, who also missed penalties, subjected to racial abuse online. Powell says support from Southgate and Arsenal, including from their manager, Mikel Arteta, was vital.“Not only did we get Bukayo back, but I think we got a better player back,” he says. “Sometimes you go through very difficult moments, but those experiences can help you in the end. He has been amazing since, which just shows you his strong mindset and mentality.“I think it’s been almost the making of him. Such a huge moment in his young fledgling career – but he overcame it. He has been taking penalties for Arsenal and England since, scoring massive goals like the one away at Real Madrid last season and producing other massive moments for them. It just shows the stature of a player who is still only 24.”Powell left the England setup after the 2022 World Cup but Saka went on to be coached there by Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink, who from March 2023 until after Euro 2024 worked primarily with the attacking players.“He listens, asks questions and takes on board what you tell him,” says Hasselbaink, who well remembers how Saka achieved redemption from the spot by flawlessly scoring a Euro 2024 quarter-final penalty in the victory over Switzerland. “He was asked and he wanted to take it,” Hasselbaink says. “We practised it many times in training and he looked sharp, full of confidence.”Hasselbaink had helped Saka and others focus on penalty routines. “For some, it’s important to start without a goalkeeper and focus purely on a corner and hitting the far corner, and then repeat that many times. What I also did was mark the middle of the goalpost with bright tape. That highlighted the area where the ball shouldn’t go, because that’s the height where it’s easiest for a keeper to save it. You either hit it hard and high into the corner, which carries some risk, or hard and low.”Hasselbaink admires Saka’s defensive diligence but urges him to focus on his attacking game when he faces PSG’s Nuno Mendes on Saturday. “With Mendes, the most important thing is to attack him, to keep him pinned back as much as possible,” the former Chelsea striker says. “Mendes will want to get forward as much as he can. It should be a very interesting duel.” Hasselbaink is confident Saka will shine: “In big matches,” he says, “ he always shows up.”Saka, 10 years on from that chat, has certainly made the most of his talent. “He constantly wants to keep improving, both as a footballer and in his behaviour as a role model for the youth,” Van Loon says. “He shows that hard work can pay off and that you can deal with setbacks.”

Arthur RenardFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
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Cassap handed first Northern Ireland call-up

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Cassap handed first Northern Ireland call-up

Former England youth international Emily Cassap has been handed her first senior Northern Ireland call-up for June's World Cup qualifiers with Turkey and Switzerland.The 19-year-old, who can play in midfield and defence, changed allegiance to Northern Ireland earlier this year.Cassap, who helped England finish second at the Under-17 Women's Euros in 2024, has also represented Northern Ireland at Under-19 level.She spent the past season on loan at Middlesbrough from Sunderland, and is one of five changes in Michael McArdle's squad.Cliftonville defender Fi Morgan has been included for the first time since 2023, while Glentoran midfielder Mia Moore also returns.Goalkeeper Maddy Harvey-Clifford is back in the squad in place of the injured Abbie Smith, while Kelsie Burrows is named after being a late call-up for April's double-header with Malta.Versatile wide player Caragh Hamilton and experienced centre back Laura Rafferty are injured.Northern Ireland travel to Turkey on Friday, 5 June before their final group game at home to Switzerland on 9 June.McArdle's side have secured a play-off thanks to their double-header with Malta but will now look to retain their place in League B."Some of the changes are enforced," McArdle said."It's that stage of the season when leagues are coming to an end and if players have been carrying something during the season it can be a bit more difficult to manage at that point."McArdle also said the competition for places, not only in the team but in the wider squad, is "exciting"."It's a positive consequence of the transition we're in," he said."With a transition it brings opportunity and new faces, and that naturally brings competition."That's what we all want, and the players want it too, we all want the strongest squad we can possibly have."Goalkeepers: Jackie Burns (Bristol City), Lauren Perry (Montrose), Maddy Harvey-Clifford (Cliftonville.Defenders: Rebecca Holloway (Birmingham City), Rebecca McKenna (Birmingham City), Kelsie Burrows (Cliftonville), Fi Morgan (Cliftonville), Abi Sweetlove (Linfield), Natalie Johnson (Nottingham Forest), Ellie Mason (Charlton), Emily Cassap (Sunderland).Midfielders: Nadene Caldwell (Glentoran), Aimee Kerr (Glentoran), Mia Moore (Glentoran), Joely Andrews (Hearts), Keri Halliday (Hearts), Brenna McPartlan (Burnley), Megan Bell (Linfield), Danielle Maxwell (Cliftonville).Forwards: Lauren Wade (Hearts), Casey Howe (Nottingham Forest), Leyla McFarland (Durham), Cora Chambers (Linfield).

BBC SportFri, 29 May 2026
Source: BBC Sport
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