The New York Times – Sports:
Six days after spending more in a single transfer window than any club in history, Chelsea fired its coach, Thomas Tuchel.
The New York Times – Sports:
Six days after spending more in a single transfer window than any club in history, Chelsea fired its coach, Thomas Tuchel.
The New York Times – Sports:
English teams awash in cash broke records for players and prices this summer, proving again that they operate on a plane apart from their rivals.
The New York Times – Sports:
Europe’s richest competition offers the best of what soccer can deliver. But the World Cup still has something it can’t match.
The New York Times – Sports:
The problem at United is not, and never has been, a lack of money. It is the lack of a plan.
The New York Times – Sports:
The Glazer family isn’t soliciting bids for United. But selling a piece of the team could set the price for all of it.
The New York Times – Sports:
Fulham has made a habit of bouncing in and out of the world’s richest soccer competition in recent years. Is there a business model in being almost good enough?
The New York Times – Sports:
The World Cup will split seasons in two in much of the world, including the Premier League campaign that opens this weekend. What is revealed could be fascinating.
The New York Times – Sports:
The gesture, begun by players in 2020 as part of an effort to highlight racism, will continue but now only before certain matches.