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Thomas Tuchel's tour of the Americas continued with a workmanlike 1–0 win over New Zealand at the Raymond James Stadium in Tampa. Harry Kane nodded home in first-half stoppage time and that was the lot, the captain's header proving the only thing that separated two evenly matched sides in muggy Florida heat. Tuchel rotated heavily after the break and used 22 players in total — the first time an England head coach has done so since 2004 — as preparation for the World Cup ramps up. Build-up looked sharper than the finishing, but a clean sheet and a Kane goal will do nicely on a summer Saturday night.
At Lord's, Ollie Robinson bowled himself back into the conversation with a double-strike that left New Zealand reeling on 55 for 5 in pursuit of 254. Rain restricted Day 3 to just 9.4 overs, but in that short window Robinson found the edge twice in three deliveries to flip a tight match firmly England's way. Devon Conway remains the Kiwis' best hope on 19 not out alongside Tom Blundell, with New Zealand 36 for 3 overnight and still needing 199. England's first-innings 140 and second of 226 looked light when the tourists were rolled for 113, but the gap is now enough to make Sunday's first session decisive.
On the clay of Roland-Garros, Mirra Andreeva sealed her first Grand Slam title with a composed straight-sets win in the women's singles final on Saturday evening, the 19-year-old becoming the youngest French Open champion since Iga Świątek. Closer to home, Nat Sciver-Brunt came through 60 minutes with the bat in England's warm-up against Australia at Loughborough, easing fears over the calf strain that had kept her out of the New Zealand ODI series. The home skipper is now firmly on course to lead the side out against Sri Lanka at Edgbaston when the ICC Women's T20 World Cup opens on Friday.
The headline UK sport today is England v New Zealand, First Rothesay Test, day four at Lord's. Play is scheduled from with the weather forecast considerably brighter than Saturday's washout. New Zealand resume on 36 for 3, chasing 254 with seven wickets in hand. If Robinson and Atkinson get an early breakthrough, England can wrap it up before tea; if Conway and a recovering Mitchell dig in, the match runs into Monday.
UK racing centres on two meetings. Perth opens its first Sunday card of the year with the 26th running of the Perth Gold Cup as the feature, off at over two and a half miles on the round course. The Highland venue stages seven races from to . On the Sussex Downs, Goodwood hosts a seven-card Flat meeting headlined by the Listed Weatherbys/British EBF Agnes Keyser Fillies' Stakes at , with ground reported good to soft, soft in places after Saturday's rain. First race at Goodwood goes at .
Court Philippe-Chatrier hosts the men's singles final at Roland-Garros, with Alexander Zverev meeting Flavio Cobolli from no earlier than . The German world No. 2 is bidding for a maiden Grand Slam after two previous final defeats; the 24-year-old Italian arrives as the first home Roland-Garros finalist for Italy in the men's draw since 1976.
With the 2025-26 Premier League and EFL campaigns long since wrapped and the 2026-27 fixtures not released until , the football schedule is light. Attention turns to Republic of Ireland v Switzerland in Dublin (kick-off ) and a clutch of Nations League and friendly fixtures across Europe. The Premier League summer window opens on , with several deals already lined up to be announced that morning.
Selection: England to beat New Zealand at Lord's. Reasoning: With the Black Caps already 5 down and 199 short of their target, the maths is doing most of the work. England have won nine of the last ten Tests against New Zealand at this ground, the forecast is dry, and Robinson and Atkinson are both bowling with rhythm. Anything bigger than even money is value when only a rearguard from Conway can realistically deny the home side.
Selection: Zverev to beat Cobolli in the men's singles final. Reasoning: Cobolli is a deserving finalist but he has never beaten a Top 5 player on clay in five attempts and runs into the most consistent big-server of the past 12 months. Zverev's first-serve points-won figure in this fortnight (78%) is comfortably ahead of Cobolli's return numbers. The short price reflects the gap; we'd rather take Zverev straight up than chase set-betting at this level.
Selection: Light of Paris each-way in the Agnes Keyser Fillies' Stakes. Reasoning: Out of a German mare who won on heavy, her stride-data profile is tailor-made for the softening Goodwood ground after Saturday's 12mm of rain. Drawn handily and proven over the trip, she is overpriced against more fashionable rivals trained for a sounder surface. Take three places minimum where offered.
Selection: Hermetic to win at Goodwood. Reasoning: The Loughnane booking is the tell — the yard rarely chases a long-haul ride without a strong fancy. Hermetic was outpaced rather than outclassed at Newbury last time and steps up to a stamina test that should bring his late kick into play. Soft ground is a positive on pedigree.
Selection: England Women to lift the trophy on home soil. Reasoning: Sciver-Brunt's batting return through Saturday's warm-up removes the last serious doubt over the squad. Home conditions, the return from injury of Gibson and Kemp, and a kind group draw with Sri Lanka, Scotland and Ireland all point to England arriving in the knockouts with momentum. 9/4 ante-post about the host nation looks generous.
Sources at Old Trafford confirm INEOS will hand permanent head coach Michael Carrick a transfer budget of close to £200 million to drag United back into title contention. With Casemiro gone and Manuel Ugarte expected to follow, Iliman Ndiaye of Everton is now on a short list of forward targets, though David Moyes is digging in on his asking price. CEO Omar Berrada has also told Barcelona that United will not be held to ransom over Marcus Rashford, whose future continues to dominate the back pages.
Mikel Arteta's recruitment team have been handed a clear run at Bournemouth's 19-year-old striker Eli Junior Kroupi after Paris Saint-Germain pulled out, although the fee is expected to land near €100m. Less happily, the Gunners' pursuit of Eintracht Frankfurt left-back Nathaniel Brown has collapsed, with Bayern Munich already agreeing personal terms with the Germany international.
England Women head into the T20 World Cup with a near-clean bill of health. Captain Nat Sciver-Brunt batted without restriction in Saturday's warm-up after recovering from the calf strain that ruled her out of the New Zealand ODIs, and allrounders Dani Gibson and Freya Kemp are both back from back injuries in time to bolster the seam-bowling unit.
Tuchel reported no fresh injury concerns from Tampa, though Cole Palmer was withdrawn at half-time as a precaution after a knock to the ankle picked up early in the second half. Bukayo Saka sat out the trip entirely and is being managed through the international window after a heavy season. Republic of Ireland boss Heimir Hallgrímsson is without Evan Ferguson for Sunday's friendly with Switzerland.
England captain Ben Stokes bowled only six overs in New Zealand's first innings on Friday and has been managing tightness in his left hamstring. The ECB will assess him during the gap before the Second Test at Trent Bridge beginning ; an enforced rest cannot yet be ruled out, with Sam Cook on standby.
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