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UCL talking points: Matchday 8’s must-see games, Man City’s struggles, more

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We’re racing fast towards the end of the UEFA Champions League league phase, and the scramble for positions is really starting to heat up.

Arsenal sit pretty atop the standings with an unblemished record after sailing past Internazionale but below that? That’s where it really gets interesting.

Tottenham Hotspur are in a gravity-defying fifth spot, while Manchester City‘s shock loss to Bodø/Glimt leaves them out of the Top 8. Then there are some big clubs — hello Napoli — in danger of being eliminated entirely.

With just one round of matches left for teams on the bubble to punch their tickets to the knockout phase, read on as ESPN experts Rob Dawson, Sam Tighe, Julien Laurens and Gab Marcotti offer their thoughts on Matchday 7.


View the full UEFA Champions League table
How each team can qualify for 2025-26 Champions League knockouts
– Lindop: If Liverpool want to be successful, all roads lead through Szoboszlai


Champions League logoQ1. OK, with one game left to advance, which club faces the biggest do-or-die fixture in MD8 considering the table?

Laurens: As we said last year, one of the great things about this new Champions League format with a 36-team league phase is that it should give us a great MD8 every year, with suspense, jeopardy, sexy permutations and a lot at stake. It was the case last year, and it will be the same again next week. And for me, the biggest do-or-die fixture is without a doubt Napoli vs. Chelsea.

Pitting Antonio Conte and the Italian champions against his former club for a place in the knockout playoffs, it would be a humiliation for Scott McTominay & Co. to finish outside of the Top 24. An absolute disgrace. They have 90 minutes to play and three points needed, or they will be the laughingstock of European football. Equally, the Blues will also need something from the game to guarantee a Top 8 finish and avoid the extra two games that they’d have if they were dropped into the playoff round. The Diego Maradona Stadium will be full of tension and pressure, especially for the home side.

Another thing to remember: When the new format of the competition was announced, many said that it would be boring because with 24 teams to go through, all the big clubs would make it. Not sure about that this year…

Tighe: Paris Saint-Germain and Newcastle United are sixth and seventh in the table after seven games. They share the fourth-best goal difference in the competition so far (+10) and are effectively sitting pretty. But they play each other on the final matchday, in Paris, and the reality is that the loser will get dumped into the playoffs. If they draw, they’ll probably both slip in — Chelsea, Barcelona, and Manchester City are just some of the teams that could leapfrog them in that situation.

Now, as last season proves, slipping down into that playoff mire isn’t necessarily terminal: PSG did so, beat Brest 10-0 on aggregate and used it as a bounceboard to go on and win the whole thing.

But adding games to the schedule is not a good plan, and for Newcastle in particular, it could prove really damaging to their ability to manage the load.

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Do teams understand how to play against PSG now?

The ESPN ‘FC TV’ crew react to Sporting CP’s 2-1 victory of Paris Saint Germain in the UEFA Champions League.

Marcotti: It’s hardly do-or-die for City, PSG or Newcastle, is it? More like do or play an additional two matches. Boo-hoo. My heart bleeds for you. So, I’m going to choose Jose Mourinho’s Benfica vs. Real Madrid (heck, it may be the last time we get to talk about him in a Champions League contest this season). Mourinho’s side were beaten at Juventus, but it might have been a different story if not for Vangelis Pavlidis‘ slipping when taking his penalty and falling on his backside?

The upshot? They need a bunch of other results to go their way AND they need to win in the Bernabéu. No matter. Mourinho won many times at the Bernabéu before (OK, mostly while managing Real Madrid, but still…) and, against this star-crossed version of Madrid, who’s to say he can’t summon up enough of the old black magic to spring the improbable, if not the impossible?

Dawson: Man City vs. Galatasaray. City will make it to the knockout rounds whatever happens, but they’ll have bad memories of what can happen if you don’t finish in the Top 8. Last season, they were forced into a playoff with Real Madrid and were comfortably dumped out. Pep Guardiola won’t want to risk a repeat.

They should beat Galatasaray at the Etihad, but then they should have beaten Bayer Leverkusen and Bodø/Glimt. Marc Guéhi is likely to come in for his City debut against Wolverhampton Wanderers in the Premier League on Saturday. However, the England defender won’t be eligible to face Galatasaray and with Josko Gvardiol and Rúben Dias still sidelined, it’s likely to mean Guardiola will have to go back to Abdukodir Khusanov and Max Alleyne at center back. It was a nervy time for City against Club Brugge on Matchday 8 last season and it may well be again against Galatasaray.


Manchester City logoQ2. Speaking of Manchester City, they seem to be imploding on multiple fronts, losing ground to Arsenal in the Premier League and taking a weakened side to the Arctic Circle in MD7 where they were comprehensively beaten by Bodø/Glimt. Antoine Semenyo and Guéhi have arrived to reinforce things, but is that enough for Guardiola to work his way out of this jam?

Tighe: It was frankly astonishing to watch Man City cut to ribbons by Bodø/Glimt. They looked like scoring every time they attacked — a well-worn cliché, but on this occasion absolutely true. The surface is artificial and the weather shocking, sure, but the entire club operates on a budget worth about one tenth of Erling Haaland‘s market value alone.

Most concerning of all was the horror performance of Rodri, who was bypassed over and over again in midfield, eventually leading him to commit two yellow-card challenges in the space of a minute. Neither Guéhi or Semenyo can fix that particular area of the pitch, although the former could bring more organisation to a defensive line that currently lacks it, and cannot always rely on what’s in front of them to block the worst of it. Semenyo’s work rate and pressing could also help, but he can’t help in Europe until February at the earliest.

Dawson: Man City aren’t playing well, but Guardiola won’t be panicking just yet. The team is in a difficult moment after poor performances against Manchester United and Bodø/Glimt. They’re damaging defeats for different reasons, but the problems aren’t terminal.

Guardiola has been forced into pairing Khusanov and Alleyne at center back in the absence of Gvardiol and Dias. Alleyne was playing in the Championship as recently as New Year’s Day; to that end, Guéhi solves a big issue and Dias will be back soon. Rodri’s form is troublesome, but Nico González has been much better this season and shouldn’t be too far away from making his return from injury.

Despite losing in Norway, City are still going to reach the knockout rounds of the Champions League, are well-positioned to reach the Carabao Cup final, have a relatively soft FA Cup fourth tie against Salford City and are still just about in the Premier League title race. Yes, it looks bad on paper, but it’s still far too early to write them off.

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Burnley: Why are the Man City players refunding the fans?

ESPN’s Craig Burley doesn’t believe the Manchester City players should be refunding the fans after their 3-1 defeat to Bodø/Glimt in the UEFA Champions League.

Laurens: After what we saw against Man United on Saturday, there was no real surprise to see City struggling even more in the grueling Arctic Circle conditions, on a plastic pitch, and against a good team much fresher than them: Bodø/Glimt’s last official game was six weeks ago.

Guardiola is obviously aware of his team’s current issues and there are many, from Rodri’s disastrous form, injuries everywhere, Phil Foden‘s disappearance, Haaland’s worst career form (one goal on penalty in his last eight games in all competitions), and a far too passive press combined with a silly high defensive line. Plus there’s the collective struggle to defend in transition, an aging Bernardo Silva (he was suspended on Tuesday), and a crucial imbalance tactically!

Good luck to Pep in trying to sort out all of those problems. This is as bad a Man City team as we have seen since … October 2024, the last time they endured such a frustrating run of form.

Marcotti: Rob is correct that Pep won’t be panicking (weirdly, panicking rarely helps) and that the situation is still open (yes, they can still win the Quadruple … though I wouldn’t bet the mortgage on it). But the issues are evident and, as Juls writes, go beyond the Bodø/Glimt defeat, which was a classic “trap” game.

Guéhi helps because he’s probably better than any central defender on City’s books (except Gvardiol, maybe), but it still means hitting the ground running by moving from a back-three to a back-four in mid-season. That’s not always easy to do, especially in a congested schedule. Semenyo is a live body who does many things well, though I’m not sure he moves the needle straight away. And then there’s the elephant (OK, large Norwegian) in the room and his poor form.

To me the biggest issue is tactical and one of identity. If, as the in-the-knows tell me, former Liverpool assistant coach Pep Lijnders was brought in to help the other Pep turn this into more of a press-oriented side, I think it’s fair to question what they’ve been doing since training camp. A month ago, the Athletic ranked Premier League teams by PPDA (passes per defensive action) which is a measure of pressing intensity. City were 16th, sandwiched between Everton and Burnley. It feels to me they haven’t fully embraced the pressing identity but also aren’t quite ready to go back to being a purely possession side that makes their superior talent win games. That’s something Guardiola needs to sort out in training.


Barcelona logoReal Madrid logoQ3. Barça keep leaking goals — six in their last four games, including two bad concessions at Slavia Prague — while Madrid’s fans continued to voice their displeasure at Vinícius Júnior and Jude Bellingham despite the big win over AS Monaco. Which Spanish team is best-placed to win it or make the deepest run?

Marcotti: It may seem counterintuitive since Barcelona came within a whisker of reaching the final last season and Real Madrid have replaced their manager and are a bit of a dumpster fire in terms of morale, but I’m picking Madrid here. And, no, it’s not because of the big win over Monaco (who came into the game having lost seven of their last eight). Rather because they have the key ingredients for Champions League success. An outstanding goalkeeper in Thibaut Courtois, an outstanding goalscorer in Kylian Mbappé and, of course, the weight of history.

Experience matters and so does having guys who’ve been there and done that. There’s not much separating the two, to be honest. But I can’t get past Barcelona’s defensive foibles. In past games it was the high line or just randomly losing opponents in the box (like at the weekend against Real Sociedad) this time, in the 4-2 win over Slavia, it was set pieces. Yes, Joan García can stand on his head, and, yes, Lamine Yamal and Raphinha can carry you, but as the competition wears on, you can’t just count on scoring three or four after spotting the opposition a couple of goals.

Dawson: It’s always hard to look beyond Real Madrid in the Champions League. Even in a turbulent season you wouldn’t bet against them. The LaLiga title will be decided by consistency. The Champions League is different. More so than in domestic games, European knockout ties are decided by moments. And the one thing Real Madrid have is big players who can create magic in big moments.

It’s not to say that Barcelona don’t have good players — of course they do. But there are tight and tense games in the latter rounds of the Champions League and sometimes you’re left needing a goal out of nothing. Real Madrid have more of that type of player than any other team in Europe, which is perhaps why they’ve had such a successful history in the competition.

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Can Barcelona cope if Pedri’s injury is long term?

The ESPN ‘FC TV’ crew react to Pedri coming off injured in Barcelona’s 4-2 victory over Slavia Prague in the UEFA Champions League.

Laurens: Barcelona for me. Their attacking powers are so good that they can really beat anyone on their day, whereas I don’t think it’s the case for Real Madrid. With the ball, this Barça team is so much better collectively than the Merengues. Of course, the defensive fragility and the high line make them vulnerable, especially in transitions but I still would not want to face them in the knockout stages. They find more balance going forward as well, especially if they have learnt from their mistakes from last season.

Tighe: I really want to stay true to my preseason Champions League winner pick in Barcelona, making this a 2-2 split between us … but I can’t do it. I’m just too spooked by Pedri‘s hamstrings! He pulled up again on Matchday 7, which is terrible news considering Barça may need to win next week to secure a Top 8 spot.

Watching this team with and without Pedri provides two completely different experiences. With him? they can beat anyone. Without him? They could actually lose to just about anyone. If his fitness was guaranteed, I’d be able to look past the defensive foibles that Gab mentions — but combined? It’s this competition’s old best pal, Real Madrid, who get the nod.


Premier Legaue logoQ4. Five English teams are in the Top 8, and that could be six by the end of the league phase. Is that a problem for UEFA? Is the Premier League’s dominance here to stay?

Dawson: Based purely on revenues, wage bills and transfer spending, the Champions League table looks the way it should be. The Super League exists, it just goes by a different name. It’s not always followed that Premier League clubs have been able to use their financial might to dominate in Europe. English clubs have won far fewer Champions League titles over the last 15 years than they should have done.

That said, potentially having six Premier League clubs in the Champions League Top 8 isn’t great for the competition. The whole point of the tournament is pitting clubs from different countries against each other. It would be a shame if, for example, it was an all-English lineup in the semifinals. If you want to watch that, you can see something similar right now with Manchester City, Newcastle, Arsenal and Chelsea facing off in two-legged ties to reach the Carabao Cup final.

Marcotti: Let’s leave the broad, over-arching conclusions once the league is over, shall we? Newcastle travel to PSG, who will be highly motivated, Tottenham go to Eintracht Frankfurt, who are a pile of turds right now, but hey, it’s Spurs (and, more seriously they have bigger fish to fry). Man City? I imagine they’ll win at home to Galatasaray and be just fine, but who knows? And before we get carried away, let’s also remind ourselves that three of the six Premier League teams (Newcastle, Chelsea and Manchester City) have as many points as Sporting CP and Atalanta, shall we?

But yeah, we don’t need the Champions League table to tell us that the Premier League is the best league in the world. And while it may seem as if it’s a poor season domestically because everybody is so far behind Arsenal in the English table, it could also be down to such a thing as strength in depth. As Rob points out, when you have more resources and more money than most and when you play tough, well-prepared (and well-resourced) opponents every week it will make you better.

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Do Arsenal have the best squad in Europe?

The ESPN ‘FC TV’ crew react to Arsenal’s 3-1 victory over Inter Milan in the UEFA Champions League.

Laurens: Surely nobody is surprised by this! Even if when the Premier League was having an average season, English clubs are still by far the best and strongest clubs in Europe. All six of them in the Top 8 really, if Manchester City were not all over the place. As exciting as MD8 will be next week, this has not a good Champions League campaign so far either. The level has not been great, which has also helped the English clubs to assert even more their domination. How far could they go? Could we have all six in the last 16? What about six out of eight in the quarterfinals if they avoid each other in the previous round? Four in four in the semis? An all-English final? Let’s see how dominant they can and will be.

Tighe: Clearly, as the guys point out, a league’s strength is typically linked to its spending power, and the Premier League blows everyone else out of the water. Perhaps the only thing that can trip the six English teams up is the fact that their week-to-week is so difficult and so draining (as the level of the 10th- or 15th-placed club is seemingly so high) that it burns them out before season’s end.

It’s well documented that Newcastle struggle to maintain their intensity all the way until May, and of course both Chelsea and Manchester City competed deep into the Club World Cup last summer, potentially paving the way for them to fall flat physically before the campaign ends (are we seeing signs of that already? I suspect the answer is yes).

Even the stacked squad Arsenal have built could conceivably struggle to go all the way in four competitions. Who knows what the next few months has in store?


Liverpool logoAnd finally, a little look-in at Liverpool. Mohamed Salah has returned to the first-team squad after the Africa Cup of Nations — after his incendiary interview that made us all think he was leaving the club this winter — and the Reds picked up a 3-0 win at Marseille, but is there sufficient cause for celebration? And where does Salah — who had 28 touches in a fairly quiet 90 minutes — fit in this team both this season and beyond?

Marcotti: First of all “made us all think he was leaving the club this winter”? Speak for yourself! It can still happen, the window is open for another 10 days, but it’s funny how those zillionaire Saudi offers seem to be taken for granted, eh? I said at the time I wasn’t convinced he’d leave and, obviously, with Alexander Isak injured, I’m less convinced now.

As mentioned, there are 10 days left in the window, but if Salah’s mind was made up, he wouldn’t have started on Wednesday and Liverpool would be bringing in a replacement. If Salah doesn’t leave, the Reds can’t add anyone to the squad so, simply put, Arne Slot has to make it work. And I think he’ll try. Salah played 90 minutes in a different continent on Sunday and 90 minutes again against Marseille. To me that says Slot will find a way to make it work and, personally, I think this version of 4-box-2 (or whatever you want to call it) can be an effective way of using him (as I’ve argued before). It might not be with Salah starting every game, but he’ll be in the mix.

Dawson: It looks from the outside like an uneasy truce. Salah’s break at AFCON seems to have taken the sting out of the situation, which is good news for Slot in the short-term. Still, it will simmer under the surface for the rest of the season. For whatever reason, Salah isn’t as effective as he was last campaign, which means he’s at risk of being dropped for prolonged periods. It’s especially true while Slot tries to find a formula to bring some consistency back to performances and results.

It certainly feels like the beginning of the end of Salah’s career at Anfield. Slot can only manage the situation as best he can until the summer when Salah can be moved on. Salah isn’t a regular any more so, at times, it’s going to get awkward for the Dutchman, but he has to put the team first.

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Was Liverpool’s victory vs. Marseille their best performance of the season?

The ESPN ‘FC TV’ crew react to Liverpool’s dominant 3-0 victory over Marseille in the UEFA Champions League.

Tighe: My overriding feeling watching that game was that this is no longer “Salah’s team.” Even during the great Sadio Mané and Roberto Firmino era, it was still his; he was still the main man. But now it’s different. All season, Dominik Szoboszlai has been digging this team out of various sized holes, and Hugo Ekitike has consistently impressed with his overall play. All the good moments in this genuinely excellent win at the Vélodrome revolved around the Hungarian. He pulled rank and took the free kick that snuck under the wall and gave Liverpool the lead, and it was his incredible first-time flick that opened up the passage for the third goal.

In the end, we might look back on things and consider it somewhat healthy that the Reds weaned themselves off Salah while he was still in situ — rather than him abruptly departing last summer — but whether it’s worth the drama that’s unfolded in the process, I’m not so sure.

Laurens: I don’t think Salah fits in this team anymore. I was at the Vélodrome on Wednesday, and he may as well not have played. He missed a massive chance, one that he would have never squandered before, by making the wrong decision and he didn’t bring much to the team at all in or out of possession.

In this new Liverpool where control is key with the four midfielders: Florian Wirtz, Alexis Mac Allister, Ryan Gravenberch and Szoboszlai — there is no room for him really. Slot may as well have played Curtis Jones or Cody Gakpo instead of Salah. The Liverpool boss might give him another chance in Premier League against AFC Bournemouth on the weekend but, against a poor Marseille side, we didn’t see enough from the Egyptian to have earned it.



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A former Uvalde schools police officer who was among the first to respond to the mass shooting at a Texas elementary school has been acquitted of criminal charges that he failed his duty to confront the gunman

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A former police officer was acquitted Wednesday evening of charges he failed in his duties to confront the gunman at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, during the critical opening minutes of what would become one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history.Jurors deliberated for more than seven hours before finding former Uvalde schools police officer Adrian Gonzalez, 52, not guilty in the first trial over the hesitant law enforcement response to the attack that killed 19 children and two teachers at Robb Elementary School on May 24, 2022.Flanked by his lawyers, Gonzales appeared to be fighting back tears after the verdict was read out in court.The trial was a rare case in the U.S. of an officer facing criminal charges on accusations of failing to stop a crime and protect lives. Gonzales had faced the possibility of up to two years in prison if he had been convicted.The nearly three-week trial included emotional testimony from teachers who were shot and survived. Prosecutors had argued in laying out their case that Gonzales abandoned his training and did nothing to stop or interrupt the teenage gunman before he entered the school.At least 370 law enforcement officers ultimately rushed to the school, where 77 minutes passed before a tactical team finally entered the classroom to confront and kill the gunman. Gonzales was one of just two officers indicted, angering some victims’ families who had said they wanted more officers held accountable for the law enforcement response.Gonzales had been charged with 29 counts of child abandonment and endangerment — each count representing the 19 students who were killed and 10 others who were injured.During the trial, jurors heard a medical examiner describe the fatal wounds to the children, some of whom were shot more than a dozen times. Several parents of victims described sending their children to school for an awards ceremony and the panic that ensued as the attack unfolded.Gonzales’ lawyers argued he arrived upon a chaotic scene of rifle shots echoing on school grounds and never saw the gunman before the attacker went inside the school. They also insisted that three other officers who arrived seconds later had a better chance to stop the gunman.They argued to jurors that Gonzales risked his life when he joined a group of five officers who tried to reach the classroom before they were driven back by rifle fire. Defense attorneys also said Gonzales helped evacuate children from other classrooms before the gunman was killed.Gonzales and former Uvalde schools Police Chief Pete Arredondo are the only two responding officers that day to face charges. Arredondo’s trial has not yet been set.Gonzales’ trial was tightly focused on his actions in the early moments of the attack, but prosecutors also presented the graphic and emotional testimony as the result of police failures.State and federal reviews of the shooting cited cascading problems in law enforcement training, communication, leadership and technology, and questioned why officers waited so long.Prosecutors faced a high bar to win a conviction. Juries are often reluctant to convict law enforcement officers for inaction, as seen after the Parkland, Florida, school massacre in 2018. A sheriff’s deputy was acquitted by a jury after being charged with failing to confront the shooter in that attack — the first such prosecution in the U.S. for an on-campus shooting.

A former police officer was acquitted Wednesday evening of charges he failed in his duties to confront the gunman at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, during the critical opening minutes of what would become one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history.

Jurors deliberated for more than seven hours before finding former Uvalde schools police officer Adrian Gonzalez, 52, not guilty in the first trial over the hesitant law enforcement response to the attack that killed 19 children and two teachers at Robb Elementary School on May 24, 2022.

Flanked by his lawyers, Gonzales appeared to be fighting back tears after the verdict was read out in court.

The trial was a rare case in the U.S. of an officer facing criminal charges on accusations of failing to stop a crime and protect lives. Gonzales had faced the possibility of up to two years in prison if he had been convicted.

The nearly three-week trial included emotional testimony from teachers who were shot and survived. Prosecutors had argued in laying out their case that Gonzales abandoned his training and did nothing to stop or interrupt the teenage gunman before he entered the school.

At least 370 law enforcement officers ultimately rushed to the school, where 77 minutes passed before a tactical team finally entered the classroom to confront and kill the gunman. Gonzales was one of just two officers indicted, angering some victims’ families who had said they wanted more officers held accountable for the law enforcement response.

Gonzales had been charged with 29 counts of child abandonment and endangerment — each count representing the 19 students who were killed and 10 others who were injured.

During the trial, jurors heard a medical examiner describe the fatal wounds to the children, some of whom were shot more than a dozen times. Several parents of victims described sending their children to school for an awards ceremony and the panic that ensued as the attack unfolded.

Gonzales’ lawyers argued he arrived upon a chaotic scene of rifle shots echoing on school grounds and never saw the gunman before the attacker went inside the school. They also insisted that three other officers who arrived seconds later had a better chance to stop the gunman.

They argued to jurors that Gonzales risked his life when he joined a group of five officers who tried to reach the classroom before they were driven back by rifle fire. Defense attorneys also said Gonzales helped evacuate children from other classrooms before the gunman was killed.

Gonzales and former Uvalde schools Police Chief Pete Arredondo are the only two responding officers that day to face charges. Arredondo’s trial has not yet been set.

Gonzales’ trial was tightly focused on his actions in the early moments of the attack, but prosecutors also presented the graphic and emotional testimony as the result of police failures.

State and federal reviews of the shooting cited cascading problems in law enforcement training, communication, leadership and technology, and questioned why officers waited so long.

Prosecutors faced a high bar to win a conviction. Juries are often reluctant to convict law enforcement officers for inaction, as seen after the Parkland, Florida, school massacre in 2018. A sheriff’s deputy was acquitted by a jury after being charged with failing to confront the shooter in that attack — the first such prosecution in the U.S. for an on-campus shooting.



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3 journalists killed in Israeli airstrike in Gaza, including cameraman who worked with CBS News

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An Israeli airstrike killed three journalists in Gaza on Wednesday, the territory’s civil defense agency said. One of those killed, Abed Shaat, had worked for years as a cameraman for CBS News and other outlets.

Officials identified the other two journalists killed as Mohammed Salah Qashta and Anas Ghneim, the Agence France-Presse news agency reported. Shaat had also contributed regularly to AFP, but the agency said he was not on assignment for them at the time. 

Civil defense officials said the three were killed in an Israeli airstrike in the Al-Zahra area, southwest of Gaza City.

The Israel Defense Forces released a statement saying troops “identified several suspects who operated a drone affiliated with Hamas in the central Gaza Strip, in a manner that posed a threat to their safety,” and then “struck the suspects who activated the drone.” The IDF said details of the incident are being reviewed.

According to an eyewitness, the journalists were using a drone to take images of aid distribution by the Egyptian Relief Committee in the Gaza Strip when a strike targeted a vehicle accompanying them, AFP reported.

The Egyptian aid group confirmed one of its vehicles was targeted by Israel in a strike that killed three people.

funeral procession for 3 journalists killed in Gaza

A crowd gathers for the funeral procession for journalists Enes Ganim, Abed Shaat and Muhammed Kashta in Khan Yunis, Gaza, on Jan. 21, 2026.

Abed Rahim Khatib/Anadolu via Getty Images


“A vehicle belonging to the Egyptian Committee was targeted during a humanitarian mission, resulting in the martyrdom of three individuals,” said Mohammed Mansour, a spokesman for the Egyptian Relief Committee in the Gaza Strip, adding that all vehicles belonging to the group “bear the committee’s logo.”

“The Israeli army criminally targeted this vehicle” when the individuals were filming the Netzarim camp, Mansour said.

Abed Shaat filed regularly for CBS News from the city of Khan Yunis during the war in Gaza, even sending video from the back of an ambulance on one occasion when he was wounded.

He was 30 years old and had gotten married just two weeks ago.

abed.jpg

Abed Shaat worked as a freelance cameraman for CBS News and other outlets in Gaza.

In an email to CBS News staff on Wednesday, colleagues in London remembered Shaat as “a brave journalist” who was “deeply loved by everyone who knew or worked with him.”

“His work was distinctive because of its technical prowess under the most unimaginable circumstances,” CBS News London producer Kamal Afzali said. He called Shaat “an eyewitness to extreme pain with the superhuman power to document it.”

After the ceasefire went into effect in October, Shaat went to work with the Egyptian Humanitarian Committee in the Gaza Strip, where he was responsible for photographing all humanitarian activities and relief operations on behalf of the committee.

The Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate condemned the strike as part of a “systematic and deliberate policy pursued by the Israeli occupation to intentionally target Palestinian journalists.”

Israeli forces have killed at least 466 Palestinians in Gaza since the ceasefire took effect, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.

The Israeli military said militants have killed three of its soldiers during the same period.

Gaza’s health ministry said another eight Palestinians were also killed in Israeli attacks in the territory on Wednesday, making it one of the deadliest days since the ceasefire began, the Associated Press reported.   



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Cross Canadian Ragweed’s Reunion Is a Smash Success

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Cross Canadian Ragweed have reunited unexpectedly after years apart, and fans are excited to see what happens next.

That’s the main reason Taste of Country has chosen the group as one of our RISERS: 2026 Artists to Watch.

Who Is Cross Canadian Ragweed??

Cross Canadian Ragweed is an alt-country and rock band that formed in Oklahoma in 1994, taking its name from the band members: Grady Cross (guitar), Cody Canada (lead guitar/vocals), Randy Ragsdale (drums) and Matt Wiedemann (bass).

Jeremy Plato replaced Wiedemann in 1998.

The group became one of the leading lights of the Americana and Red Dirt scene in Oklahoma and Texas during its run from 1994 until 2010.

Cross Canadian Ragweed reunited quite unexpectedly in 2024, announcing a series of high-profile shows in 2025.

What Are Cross Canadian Ragweed’s Top Songs?

“Sick and Tired” is one of Cross Canadian Ragweed’s top songs, along with “17” and “Dimebag,” a tribute to late Pantera guitarist “Dimebag” Darrell Abbott.

What Are Cross Canadian Ragweed’s Career Highlights?

Cross Canadian Ragweed has been on a tremendous roll since announcing their reunion.

The band teamed with Turnpike Troubadours for the Boys From Oklahoma reunion show at the Boone Pickens Stadium at OSU in Stillwater, Okla., in April of 2025. 

Fan response was so great that they ended up playing four shows, and the Mayor of Stillwater declared that week “Red Dirt Week” in the town.

Other shows in Waco, Colorado and more also sold out, giving the group a tremendously successful reunion.

READ MORE: Is Ben Gallaher Country’s Next Big Crossover Artist?

What’s Next for Cross Canadian Ragweed in 2026?

Cross Canadian Ragweed has another huge year planned on the live side in 2026.

They’ve added a second show at the Akins Ford Arena in Athens, Ga., in February, and they are also set to perform at the Houston Rodeo and Livestock show in March, joining Tim McGraw, Luke Bryan, Lizzo, Shaboozey, Pepe Aguilar, Red Clay Strays and Koe Wetzel.

There will also be a Boys From Oklahoma “Round 2” event in Stillwater at the Boone Pickens Stadium on April 11, 2026.

Wyatt Flores, Shane Smith & The Saints and The Great Divide will join Cross Canadian Ragweed on the bill.

For more information, please visit Cross Canadian Ragweed’s official website.

See the Most Played Country Song from the Year You Were Born

Who had the most played country song during the year you were born? This list is a fascinating time capsule of prevalent trends from every decade in American history. Scroll through to find your birth year and then click to listen. Some of these songs have been lost through the years, many of them for good reason!

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes

Most Popular Country Album From the Year You Were Born

Find out which country singer dominated on this list of the most popular albums from the year you were born or graduated high school.

This list is based on sales date from the Soundscan era (1991 to 2022) and total weeks spent atop Billboard‘s Hot Country Albums chart (1964-1990).

In 1999, Shania Twain‘s Come on Over album became the first to top the year-end chart in back-to-back years, but that feat has been done four times since, most recently in 2022. Which country album defined your childhood? Scroll down to find out.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes





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Energy & Utilities Roundup: Market Talk

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Find insight on oil futures, Halliburton and more in the latest Market Talks covering Energy and Utilities.



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Eric Bieniemy finalizing deal to return to Chiefs as offensive coordinator

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Fresh off the first losing season of the Andy Reid-Patrick Mahomes era, the Kansas City Chiefs are turning to a familiar face to help the team rebound in 2026. The Chiefs have agreed to terms with Eric Bieniemy to return as the team’s offensive coordinator, CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones reports

Bieniemy, who spent the 2025 season as the running backs coach of the Chicago Bears, is replacing Matt Nagy, whose contract is set to expire and has been interviewing for other jobs around the league. 

Bieniemy, 56, helped the Chiefs win two Super Bowls during his five-year run as the team’s offensive coordinator from 2018-22. During that time, the Chiefs boasted one of the NFL’s most potent offenses, led by Mahomes and tight end Travis Kelce. Kansas City continued to have success on offense even after former All-Pro receiver Tyreek Hill was traded to the Miami Dolphins after the 2021 season. 

Despite the Chiefs’ success over that span, Bieniemy did not receive any serious consideration for available head-coaching positions at that time. Because of that, he accepted a lateral move to the Washington Commanders in 2023, allowing him to call plays. He lasted just one year in Washington as the team struggled through a 4-13 season. 

Bieniemy then had a brief tenure as UCLA’s associate head coach and offensive coordinator before landing in Chicago as part of Ben Johnson’s initial staff. This season, the Bears finished third in the NFL in both rushing yards and third in average yards per carry as running backs D’Andre Swift and rookie Kyle Monangai respectively ran for 1,087 and 783 yards and a combined 14 touchdowns. 

A former NFL running back, Bieniemy spent five years as a running backs coach in the college ranks before serving the same role with the Minnesota Vikings in 2006. During that time, he worked closely with Adrian Peterson, who was named to four straight Pro Bowls during his time with Bieniemy. 

Bieniemy served as the Chiefs’ running backs coach for five years before being promoted to offensive coordinator in 2018, Mahomes’ first season as the team’s starting quarterback. That season, the Chiefs led the NFL in scoring while Mahomes threw a league-high 50 touchdowns. The Chiefs won their first of three Super Bowls over a five-year span the following season. 

There are several questions surrounding the Chiefs entering the offseason with Mahomes coming off a torn ACL and Kelce mulling retirement. At least one question has now been answered with Bieniemy back in place orchestrating the offense alongside Reid. 





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Winter storm to bring heavy snow and dangerous cold to New Mexico this weekend

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A significant winter storm is still forecast to move into New Mexico starting Friday, bringing widespread snowfall. The heaviest snow will be Saturday as bitterly cold air moves into the state. Another relatively quiet day of weather across New Mexico Wednesday. Temperatures are slightly cooler in northeast New Mexico this afternoon behind a weak cold […]



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‘Dior is back:’ Menswear turns a corner in Paris as Jonathan Anderson hones his vision

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PARIS — PARIS (AP) — Dior ’s menswear show arrived with a stripped-back set and a loud signal of confidence: neon-yellow wigs that read like a flag of authority planted in the Paris runway, after a couple of runway wobbles from their new designer.

In an annex of the Rodin Museum lined with curtain fabric, Jonathan Anderson — the 41-year-old Northern Irish designer celebrated for turning Loewe into one of luxury’s most admired labels and now serving as Dior’s creative director — pared the décor down to near-nothing.

On Wednesday, Anderson’s clothes finally carried the argument.

The stakes were visible in the room: Robert Pattinson, Lewis Hamilton and SZA were among the VIPs packed in close.

Then came the refrain: As one person in the front row put it: “Dior is back. It’s a good day for fashion.”

This show felt like authority.

Anderson’s Dior, at its weakest, has read like a montage of strong ideas still searching. Here, the principle was clear: tighten the story, sharpen the silhouettes, and ground the house in something firm.

The gender-bending came through, but it was not weightless.

It was anchored, literally, in masculine boots and small-heeled lace-ups.

It was a smart back-and-forth signature for the designer who garnered laudits at Loewe, and now seems to have found his groove again amid the heritage house’s weighty legacy.

The strongest argument came in outerwear.

Coats were sublime — the collection’s backbone in cut and stance.

He riffed, lightly but knowingly, on Dior’s most guarded code: the Bar jacket and the New Look line.

The nod was subtle: an ever-so-faint curve at the hip, a hint of structure, a memory of the house’s postwar hourglass without the old ceremony.

Dior is one of luxury goods conglomerate LVMH’s flagship houses, a pillar of the group’s fashion-and-leather-goods engine at a moment when luxury demand has been under pressure.

Across the sector, the terrain has turned harsher: rival luxury group Kering has been battling a prolonged slump at Gucci, with results showing steep sales declines that have weighed on the group.

And in Paris this week, Kering’s biggest runway names are absent from the official menswear and couture schedules — leaving the spotlight, and the scrutiny, on LVMH’s tentpoles.

After Dior’s first ever female designer Maria Grazia Chiuri ’s long run ended last year with increasingly mixed critical notices in some quarters, the company has placed an unusually large wager on Anderson — the first designer in Dior’s modern history to oversee women’s ready-to-wear, haute couture and menswear under a single creative hand.

Dior’s house notes cast the characters as modern-day flâneurs: an aristo-youth roaming Paris, jolted into new connections by couture history.

The brand pointed to Paul Poiret, a designer known for fluid forms and far-reaching references, and pitched the collection as contradiction made coherent: Dior formality with denim and parkas; tailoring with technical outerwear; old with new.

On the runway, those collisions worked best when treated as construction rather than mood.

Tailoring was slender and precise — elongated jackets, mercilessly shrunken blazers, tailcoats, cropped Bar jackets and lean trousers — while outerwear fused the pragmatic and the dramatic, with bombers flowing into brocade capes, balloon-back field jackets and cocooning coats.

The palette stayed somber, which only sharpened the punctuation marks: the shock of yellow hair, and glittering glam-rock epaulettes that suggested a designer in full command of his own drama.

Accessories reinforced the same strategy.

Lace-ups with small heels and loafers kept the body planted: blur the masculine-feminine line, but do not let the clothes drift.

The wigs shouted. The clothes did not need to.



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Metal Fans Unlikely To Cheat, Jazz Fans Are Boning Everyone According To A Study

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Jazz fans may want to keep whatever’s in their pants in check — according to a recent survey by affair website Victoria Milan, lovers of jazz are almost 10 times more likely to cheat than heavy metal fans.

The study (published by The Sun), which queried more than 6,500 people who admitted to affairs, also found that three-quarters of unfaithful men and women say they can’t stop thinking about their lover when hearing their favorite music.

Jazz topped the list of “seductive” genres, followed by salsa and pop, which were most likely to send respondents into sexual fantasy mode. All I’m hearing is “nobody wants to fuck to metal,” which is simply not true. Other genres ranked as follows in order of cheaters’ preference:

  1. Jazz: 19%
  2. Salsa: 14%
  3. Pop: 13%
  4. Country: 12%
  5. Rap: 9%
  6. Classical: 8%
  7. Blues: 6%
  8. Reggae: 5%
  9. Rock and Roll: 5%
  10. Electronica: 4%
  11. Indie: 3%
  12. Heavy Metal: 2%

Sigurd Vedal, boss of Victoria Milan, noted that music’s emotive power and ability to conjure memories play a major role in these temptations. “As long-term relationships progress, the excitement and passion slowly dies out and people start to look for that missing element outside their relationship,” he explained.

Vedal added that music often enhances intimate moments: “The song you listen to on your way to meet your lover, or the music playing while you’re intimate, becomes much more touching than the music you walked down the aisle to 10 years ago.”

Is this all probably an ad for Victoria Milan? Probably. Is it funny and make metal fans look good? Also yes, and that’s what’s most important here.

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Auto & Transport Roundup: Market Talk

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Find insight on United Airlines, European defense stocks and more in the latest Market Talks covering Auto and Transport.



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