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More than 200 arrests at Palestine Action protest
Event organisers said it would show the “resistance” to the ban on the group was “stronger than ever”.
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The Masters 2026: day three golf updates from Augusta National – live | The Masters
Key events
… and now that lead is back to four strokes. Patrick Reed dumps his tee shot at the par-three 4th into the bunker guarding the front right, and fails to get up and down. Bogey; he’s -8. Though I’ll hold off on updating the Leader Board for just a minute, because in the final match that follows, Rory clips the back-edge of the bunker on the left and might not have a whole lot of green to work with coming out. Moving Day is beginning to Viciously Oscillate.
McIlroy’s eagle effort on 3, a left-to-right curler from 20 feet, stops one inch short. But that’s a birdie to stem the bleeding. The lead, which stood at six shots just over half an hour ago, but was reduced to two barely ten minutes back, is now three again. Moving Day, ladies and gentlemen!
-12: McIlroy (3)
-9: Reed (3)
-8: Burns (3)
-7: Young (7), Li (6)
-6: Scheffler (13), Clark (5), Lowry (4), Rose (3)
Patrick Cantlay is another player who will be cursing his cold start on Thursday. An opening round of 77 put him behind the eight-ball from the get-go, but he carded a blemish-free 67 yesterday, and he’s not dropped a stroke today either. He’s birdied 2, 8, 12, 13 and now 16 to rise all the way up to -5 overall. Winning is probably beyond him, simply due to the amount of traffic ahead of him on the Leader Board, but improving on his best finish of tied-ninth in 2019 – when he briefly led on Sunday after eagle at 15 – is a live prospect now.
… so Rory being Rory, he responds to those two errant drives by clattering his tee shot at the 350-yard par-four 3rd up onto the green. He’ll have a look at eagle from 22 feet.
McIlroy’s lead cut to two
The craziest stat of the week? Rory McIlroy, six shots clear of the field after 36 holes, coming in 90th of 91 for driving accuracy! The big stick’s not behaving any better today, and having missed the fairway on 1, he finds the trees down the right of 2. He carves his second towards the patrons to the left of the green, and doesn’t get his chip in close. He’s left with two putts for par from 37 feet. He does well to cosy the first one close enough to tap in for the saver. But that’s a shaky 5-5 start. Not quite was wild as the 6-5 he started with on Sunday last year, but still. His partner Sam Burns meanwhile makes another birdie, while Patrick Reed makes it three in a row at 3. Rory at the Masters, eh?
-11: McIlroy (2)
-9: Reed (3)
-8: Burns (2)
-7: Li (5)
-6: Scheffler (13), Young (6), Clark (4), Lowry (4), Rose (3)
A third birdie in four holes for Haotong Li. The 30-year-old Chinese star was paired in the final round at the Open with Scottie Scheffler last year; what odds a repeat of that last-day pairing tomorrow? He’s -7. Meanwhile the aforementioned Brian Harman birdied 17 on his way home to a 67. The 2023 Open champ is the new clubhouse leader at -1.
You will have worked out from that updated Leader Board that Shane Lowry and Tommy Fleetwood both made eagle at 2. No birdie on that hole in the following match from Justin Rose … but Patrick Reed made one, and he’s closing in Rory McIlroy, who lest we forget he bested in the final pairing in 2018. It’s not taken long for six to become three!
-11: McIlroy (1)
-8: Reed (2)
-7: Burns (1)
Wyndham Clark takes a shy at the 3rd green from the tee. His ball bounds up onto the putting surface, rolls towards the cup and … dies to the left, four feet short. So, so, so close to a hole-in-one albatross! The 2023 US Open champion tidies up for eagle – only the 20th on this hole in Masters history – and he takes up his place in the chasing pack … which is given further encouragement by Rory, whose wedge into 1 from 90 yards topples over the back. The champion leaves a putt up from the fringe short, and that’s an opening bogey for the leader. Sam Burns makes birdie, and just like that, a six-shot lead has been reduced to four!
-11: McIlroy (1)
-7: Reed (1), Burns (1)
-6: Scheffler (12), Young (5), Li (4), Clark (3), Lowry (2), Fleetwood (2)
Scottie Scheffler isn’t the only big name looming in Rory’s rear-view mirror. The local lad Patrick Reed has some record around Augusta National. That win in 2018, of course, but also four subsequent top-ten finishes, the latest coming just last year, when he holed out from the 17th fairway for eagle and a third-place finish. He’s continued that form into this week seamlessly, with a pair of 69s, and now he cracks his approach at Tea Olive from 165 yards to five feet. In goes the birdie putt, he moves to -7, and McIlroy’s lead is cut to just (!) five in the blink of an eye.
Rory McIlroy begins his third round
Rory on the tee. A few “Oh wow!”s as he batters his opening shot over the bunkers on the right of the fairway. His ball ends up in the second cut, but he should have a route to the green. He’s going round in this final pairing with Sam Burns, who splits the fairway. McIlroy goes into this round with the largest 36-hole lead in Masters history: his mark of six bests the five set by Harry Cooper (1936), Herman Keiser (1946), Jack Nicklaus (1975), Raymond Floyd (1976), Jordan Spieth (2015) and Scottie Scheffler (2022). All but Cooper went on to win.
… and now Young chips in from the back of the par-three 4th! That’s a huge bonus, and reward for a 25-yard wedge that bumps up the slope before travelling along a huge left-to-right swing and dropping. Meanwhile the Scottie charge continues apace. He sends a gentle draw into the 11th from 191 yards, setting up an eight-footer for birdie. He’s just missed one from similar range, so this could either kick-start another low-scoring blitz, or sour his mood severely. Ah, it’s the latter! In it goes, into the centre of the cup. And with back-to-back birdies for Haotong Li, it’s safe to announce that the cream is rising.
-12: McIlroy
-6: Scheffler (11), Young (4), Li (3), Burns, Reed
-5: Matsuyama (8), Lowry (1), Fleetwood (1), Rose
Cameron Young lashes his tee shot all the way up onto the hi-rise green at the short par-four 3rd. He’s rewarded with birdie. The new Players champion will be utterly cursing his sorry opening salvo on Thursday: without those bogeys at 1, 5, 6 and 7, he’d be just three off the lead now. Just the one bogey since that cold start, incidentally, 32 holes and ten birdies later. A major champion in waiting, surely.
-12: McIlroy
-6: Burns, Reed
-5: Scheffler (10), Young (3), Li (2), Lowry (1), Fleetwood (1), Rose
Scottie Scheffler sends a lovely approach into the 10th. From 151 yards, he uses the bank guarding the bunker on the right of the green to bring his ball around to eight feet. A huge birdie chance, but he uncharacteristically lets it dribble apologetically on the low side. Just a par, although given 10 has only given up five birdies today, that “just” is doing a lot of work.
Tyrrell Hatton found every single green in regulation yesterday as he made his 66. Only Jim Furyk and Kevin Na have managed to achieve that in the last 30 years. So what happens at the very first hole today? Well, he lands his second onto the front portion of the green … but the spin takes him back off it. So that’s snapped that sequence. But he wedges up elegantly to six feet, and tidies up for his par. He’s -4.
Scheffler out in 31
Scottie Scheffler is on the charge! A no-fuss birdie at the par-five 8th. Then from 160 yards on 9, he lands his approach 15 feet front-left of the pin and uses the camber of the green to gather his ball towards the hole. The ball rolls serenely towards the cup, and looks like dropping. Indeed it does, a little bit, taking a quick peek inside as it slingshots round the back, left, down, right, up again and out! So close to holing out for eagle! The ball stops four feet away. Birdie, and the world number one has traversed the front nine in 31 of your golf shots. This Masters ain’t over yet!
-12: McIlroy
-6: Burns, Reed
-5: Scheffler (9), Matsuyama (5), Gotterup (3), Rose, Lowry, Fleetwood
Chris Gotterup, who came third at last year’s Open, a week after winning the Scottish, looks the real deal. The 26-year-old from Oklahoma already has two wins on Tour this season, in Hawaii and Phoenix, and is looking good to make another big statement of intent on his Masters debut. Eagle at 2, after cracking his second from 227 yards to eight feet, and he’s -5 overall. He’s alongside Hideki Matsuyama, who has just carded his third consecutive birdie at 5, and you can be sure Rory McIlroy has clocked that the chasing pack haven’t given up hope yet. Plenty of movement beneath him on the Leader Board now.
-12: McIlroy
-6: Burns, Reed
-5: Matsuyama (5), Gotterup (2), Rose, Lowry, Fleetwood
-4: Scheffler (8), Knapp (4), Homa (3), Young (1), Clark, Hatton, Li, Reitan
-3: Fitzpatrick (6), Griffin (3), Day (1)
Max Homa led at this stage two years ago, ending the week in third spot after falling away over the weekend with a pair of 73s. Undaunted, he came back last year, and tied for 12th. The 35-year-old Californian has fallen in love with Augusta National late in life, and he’s going well again this week. Birdies at 1 and 2 have whisked him up the standings to -4.
While we’re waiting for the leading players to take to the course, we’ve got time to indulge in a wee spot of Masters nostalgia. This episode of This Golfing Life, a wonderful new golf podcast hosted by the award-winning journalist and author Dan Davies, dives deep into the career of the 1980 and 1983 champion, the legendary Seve Ballesteros, and comes much recommended. (Fans of Paddington and Maurice Flitcroft may enjoy this episode too.) Get on it!
Back-to-back birdies for the 2021 champion Hideki Matsuyama at 3 and 4. Meanwhile Matt Fitzpatrick pours in a downhill left-to-right 30-footer on 4. It’s the 2022 US Open champion’s second birdie of the day, and he moves to -3 … where he’s joined by Scottie Scheffler, who after a string of pars, adds to his eagle on 2 with birdie at 7. Scheffler’s drive at 7 toyed with the pines down the left, but from 130 yards, he wedges to seven feet and tidies up to regain that upward momentum. And there’s the inviting par-five 8th coming up.
-12: McIlroy
-6: Burns, Reed
-5: Rose, Lowry, Fleetwood
-4: Matsuyama (4), Clark, Hatton, Li, Reitan, Day, Young
-3: Scheffler (7), Fitzpatrick (4), Griffin (2), Homa (1), Gotterup (1)
Brian Harman hasn’t been in great form of late. Even so, he was mentioned in dispatches before the Tournament began as a dark horse, with the fiery conditions negating his length disadvantage, and his short game so sweet. However, form trumped hipster punditry as he opened with a dismal 79. However the 2023 Open champion bounced back spectacularly with a 69 yesterday, and he’s in even better nick this afternoon, with birdies at 2, 4, 6, 8 and 14. Just the one dropped shot at 7, and he’s level par overall.
Alex Noren was out in the first group this morning. The veteran Swede has absolutely no history at Augusta National to speak of – a tie for 62nd in 2019 is his best return – but he’s looking to amend that record this year. A round of 69 today to follow yesterday’s 71; how he’ll be ruing his opening 77. But as things stand he’s in the top 40 at +1 overall and very much trending in the right direction. Ladies and gentlemen, your very early clubhouse leader.
In terms of importance and sheer breathtaking drama, Rory McIlroy’s run of six birdies in the last seven holes last night is unlikely to be matched this week. If it is, we’re in for an era-defining treat. But the course does seem to be offering opportunities. The 2011 PGA champion Keegan Bradley reached the turn a wee bit earlier with four consecutive birdies, 6 through 9; he’s level par for the Tournament. And now Rasmus Højgaard has matched that feat with birdies at 13, 14, 15 and 16. The run’s unlikely to continue, as he’s just whistled his tee shot at 17 into the trees down the right, although that’s what Rory did yesterday and look what ended up happening there. Anyway, Højgaard is +3 overall for now.
There have only been three aces in Masters history at the famous short par-three 12th Golden Bell. Claude Harmon (1948 champion and father of Butch) in 1947; the amateur William Hyndman in 1959; and two-time US Open champion Curtis Strange in 1988. Three in 89 years … then nearly two in two days. Yesterday afternoon, the 18-year-old amateur Mason Howell landed his tee shot a couple of inches away from the hole; today the 2011 winner Charl Schwartzel smacked his wedge flush onto the base of the flagstick, a couple of feet up, and away. So close, but yet so far. Howell’s ball stopped near enough to tap in for birdie; Schwartzel’s nearly twanged back off the green but at least he saved his par.
The world number one Scottie Scheffler, twice a winner here, started the day 12 shots off the lead. But he’s only six off second spot, and you can be darn sure he won’t have given up the ghost just yet. To this end, he creams a high fade into the 2nd green from 265 yards to six feet, and makes no mistake with the eagle putt. That’s his second eagle at Pink Dogwood of the week, and it whisks him up the standings to -2. He followed up the first on day one with birdie at 3, but he can’t repeat that today, missing a relatively straight seven-footer on the next green. But there’s an early reminder for Rory that there’s plenty of trouble lurking in the pack should he slip up.
-12: McIlroy
-6: Burns, Reed
-5: Rose, Lowry, Fleetwood
-4: Clark, Hatton, Li, Reitan, Day, Young
-3: Gotterup, Koepka, Griffin
-2: Gerard (4), Scheffler (4), Homa, Knapp, Schauffele, Matsuyama
Welcome, patrons, to another sunny day in Augusta, Georgia. Temperatures are expected to make the mid-80s this afternoon, and the wind shouldn’t get up too much. So expect the course to get harder and faster as the day progresses … though the early signs suggest the greens might have been treated to a sprinkle of water overnight or early this morning, because they’ve been fairly receptive and agreeable so far. That seems a fairly logical thing to do if you’re hoping to keep this Tournament competitive: more birdies, more chance of someone taking a run at Rory McIlroy and making a game of this tomorrow. Then again, that also gives Rory the chance to attack the pins, and look what happened with relatively agreeable greens yesterday afternoon. Who’d run a professional golf tournament?
Preamble
It’s Moving Day! Here’s what the top of the leaderboard looked like after 36 holes …
-12: McIlroy
-6: Burns, Reed
-5: Rose, Lowry, Fleetwood
-4: Clark, Hatton, Li, Reitan, Day, Young
-3: Gotterup, Koepka, Griffin
-2: Homa, Knapp, Schauffele, Matsuyama
-1: Brennan, Taylor, Fitzpatrick, Morikawa
E: Campbell, Åberg, Scheffler, English, Gerard, D Johnson, Henley, Cantlay
… here are some big names who have missed the cut …
Danny Willett, JJ Spaun, Bubba Watson, Zach Johnson, Nicolai Højgaard, Akshay Bhatia, Robert MacIntyre, Cameron Smith, Fred Couples, Jose Maria Olazabal, Mike Weir, Vijay Singh, Angel Cabrera and perhaps most shockingly of all Bryson DeChambeau …
… and today’s tee times can be found here. We’ll get going at 6pm BST. It’s on!
UK News
Liverpool v Fulham: Premier League – live | Premier League
Key events
Half-time reading
Half time: Liverpool 2-0 Fulham
Just what the doctor ordered for Arne Slot and Liverpool, a largely stress-free first half. Rio Ngumoha, 17, and Mo Salah, 33, curled two fine goals in the space of five minutes to put Liverpool in control – and, as things stand, four points clear of the Champions League-chasing pack. (Though Chelsea have a game in hand against City tomorrow.)
45+2 min Jones is back on the field, at least for the remainder of this half.
45+1 min “Tim Wheeler was 17 when he recorded Girl From Mars,” writes Matt Dony. “Mary Shelley began drafting Frankenstein at the same age. Picasso already had Science and Charity under his belt by his 17th birthday. And Rio Ngumoha goes and does that. 17. Seventeen. Unbelievable. Still, maybe I’ll still create a masterpiece…”
I can’t lie, Matt, I’m a bit disappointed to be excluded from your list of precocious 17-year-olds.
45 min Curtis Jones is down with what looks like a muscle injury. There will be two minutes of added time.
43 min Fulham were having their best spell when Ngumoha scored. Now they’re in danger of being finished off before half-time. Ngumoha tees up Robertson for a shot on the half turn that is saved to his right by Leno.
43 min “Robster!” writes Simon McMahon. “I’m high on crack life after a last kick winner for Dundee United today, and also the fact that it’s Masters Saturday Andrew ‘Andy’ Robertson is starting for Liverpool. He might be my favourite player of the last 15 years. The season he spent at Tannadice seems like a distant dream, but a very pleasant one.
“Will never forget this goal he scored, I watched him all the way as he made his way forward before drilling a shot into the corner. If the net hadn’t been there it would have made its way to me as I stood open mouthed, like he knew I was watching and was trying to pass to me. He celebrated right in front of me and my daughter, who was about 15 at the time, not an awful lot younger than him. Happy days.
“I guess, even after the career high of a Scottish Cup final to defeat to St. Johnstone in 2014, he’s done alright for himself since he left, and even though we’ve been relegated twice in the decade since, I’d still have him back.”
42 min That’s Mo Salah’s 256th goal for Liverpool. Two hundred and fifty blooming six.
GOAL! Liverpool 2-0 Fulham (Salah 40)
Mo Salah makes it two! It was almost a mirror image of Ngumoha’s goal, curled and placed immaculately into the far corner with his left foot. Ngumoha and Gakpo combined to see up Salah, who took the shot first time and swept it beautifully past Leno. He didn’t strike it was quite as cleanly as Ngumoha but both shots were right in the corner and gave Leno no chance.
40 min Szoboszlai wins the ball high up the field and finds Wirtz, who pings a shot over the bar from 20 yards.
It’s Rio Ngumoha’s first goal at Anfield, and nobody at the ground tonight will forget it in a hurry. Anthony Taylor played a good advantage, allowing Wirtz to move forward and find Ngumoha on the left side of the area. He twisted Castagne one way and then the other before moving back onto his right foot and curling a perfectly placed shot into the far corner. He set it outside the far post with just enough curler to bring it back into ithe net. That’s such an accomplished goal, the kind a 17-year-old should be incapable of scoring.
GOAL! Liverpool 1-0 Fulham (Nguomha 36)
Rio Nguomha, 17 years old, gives Liverpool the lead with a beauty!
35 min After another smooth Fulham attack, Robinson badly overhits his cross. But this is a good spell for Fulham, easily their best of the match.
33 min Harry Wilson comes close against his old club with a trademark curler from the edge of thea rea that dips onto the roof of the net. Mamardashvili probably had it covered, but I wouldn’t put the farm on it.
32 min Fulham are growing into this game. Bobb’s snapshot from 12 yards is pushed away by Mamardashvili, diving to his left. A fairly comfortable save.
29 min King plays a fine reverse pass to the underlapping Castagne, who moves into the area and arrows a cutback towards the unmarked Iwobi 15 yards out He can’t control the ball and the attacks peters out. Moments later Iwobi shoots straight at Mamardashvili from distance.
23 min Ngumoha almost beats Castagne in the area with an extravagant piece of skill. Castagne read it well and got between his man and the ball.
Liverpool have been very good so far.
22 min Salah has a close-range shot well blocked, I think by Berge. He tried to delay the shot to buy a yard, but it was such a crowded penalty area and there was just no room to get a shot away.
20 min Wirtz, Ngumoha and Robertson combine nicely to find Gakpo, whose low drive from 20 yards goes not far wide. Leno probably had it covered.
19 min Fulham’s first corner is punched away with authority by Mamardashvili.
17 min Ngumoha goes down in the area after a slightly clumsy challenge from Bobb. Anthony Taylor waves it away.
16 min It’s still all Liverpool. They’re playing with good rhythm and plenty of intensity. So far Fulham haven’t had a chance to get on the ball.
14 min: Good save! Frimpong fires the ball into Salah, who hits a sharp right-foot shot that is well stopped at the near post by the plunging Leno.
11 min Robertson runs onto a Frimpong cutback, only to hit a tame shot from the edge of the area that is easily blocked.
9 min Ngumoha gets away from Castagne in the area but chips his cross too close to Leno.
9 min The lively Frimpong wins another corner down the right. Salah’s inswinger is nutted away by Bassey.
6 min Nothing comes of the corner, with Konate penalised for wrestling with Berge.
5 min Salah finds the underlapping Frimpong, who wins the first corner of the game. Liverpool have started pr-etty well.
3 min Both teams have started in a 4-2-3-1 formation as expected.
1 min Fulham kick off from left to right as we watch. The home fans launch straight into a song about Andy Robertson, who announced this week that he will leave the club this summer. £8m he cost.
A peedie reminder of the teams
Liverpool (4-2-3-1) Mamardashvili; Frimpong, Konate, Van Dijk, Robertson; Szoboszlai, Jones; Salah, Wirtz, Ngumoha; Gakpo
Subs: Woodman, Gomez, Kirkez, Isak, Mac Allister, Chiesa, Ekitike, Gravenberch, Nyoni.
Fulham (4-2-3-1) Leno; Castagne, Andersen, Bassey, Robinson; Berge, Iwobi; Wilson, King, Bobb; Muniz.
Subs: Lecomte, Diop, Cuenca, Sessegnon, Lukic, Cairney, Smith Rowe, Chukwueze, Raul Jimenez.
Referee Anthony Taylor.
Marco Silva talks to Sky Sports
I like to be ambitious but realistic – Liverpool’s home season has not been that different from last season. We are prepared for a tough game but we are capable of playing good football and let’s hope we can reach our level again at Anfield.
It’s another big game for us. We want to restart in the best way possible [after the international break].
Arne Slot’s pre-match thoughts
[On making five changes] That made complete sense after the week we’ve had. It’s been very demanding physically and mentally. I tried to use yesterday’s training session to see who had recovered fully.
Some of them have to play again because I’m out of options in those positions. We have a lot of ingredients for a good game.
If you play for Liverpool, every game is a must-win, and this one as well.
Premier League results
And this is what it means for the Premier League table. There’s a Spandex mini-league taking place below the top four.
The Guardian has kicked off a new chapter in puzzles with the launch of its first daily football game, On the ball. It is now live in the app for both iOS and Android … so what are you waiting for?
Team news: Salah and Robertson start, Fulham unchanged
Mo Salah returns to the Liverpool team after being manacled to the bench in Paris. Andy Robertson also starts, as do Curtis Jones, Cody Gakpo and 17-year-old Rio Ngumoha. Hugo Ekitike, Milos Kerkez, Joe Gomez, Alexis Mac Allister and Ryan Gravenberch all drop to the bench.
Fulham haven’t played since a 3-1 win over Burnley on 21 March. Marco Silva has named an unchanged side, which means an exciting front four of Harry Wilson, Josh King, Oscar Bobb and Rodrigo Muniz.
Liverpool (4-2-3-1) Mamardashvili; Frimpong, Konate, Van Dijk, Robertson; Szoboszlai, Jones; Salah, Wirtz, Ngumoha; Gakpo
Subs: Woodman, Gomez, Kirkez, Isak, Mac Allister, Chiesa, Ekitike, Gravenberch, Nyoni.
Fulham (4-2-3-1) Leno; Castagne, Andersen, Bassey, Robinson; Berge, Iwobi; Wilson, King, Bobb; Muniz.
Subs: Lecomte, Diop, Cuenca, Sessegnon, Lukic, Cairney, Smith Rowe, Chukwueze, Raul Jimenez.
Referee Anthony Taylor.

Andy Hunter
Arne Slot has said last season’s title triumph “postponed” the end of an era at Liverpool but that the club were under no illusions a rebuild was required when appointing him as Jürgen Klopp’s successor.
Two more links to the Klopp era will be removed this summer when Andy Robertson and Mohamed Salah leave on free transfers. Virgil van Dijk, Alisson and Joe Gomez, the remaining players from the squad that delivered Premier League and Champions League success to Anfield under Klopp, will then enter the final years of their contracts.
Slot is under intense pressure after a dismal season that has brought 16 defeats, a figure he knows is unacceptable. The head coach, however, insists he and the club hierarchy, including the sporting director, Richard Hughes, and the owner, Fenway Sports Group, remain aligned on the reasons for the problems, including an inevitable transition period after Klopp. The turmoil that accompanies transition, Slot believes, was delayed by last season’s Premier League title.
Preamble
Pop quiz, hotshot. Which of Liverpool’s next two games is more important: Fulham (H) or Paris Saint-Germain (H). It’s the Fulham game we’re covering today, so let’s try to hype that within an inch of its life make the case for that being the big one. It’s pretty simple: Liverpool have a 5-10 per cent of overcoming a 2-0 deficit against one of the greatest club sides in modern history, so they should prioritise qualifying for next year’s Ch£mpion$ League. Next stop, rocket science.
Liverpool have a tough Premier League run-in, including matches away to Everton, Man Utd and Aston Villa, and their home form will probably determine whether they finish in the top five. Even allowing for some good recent home form – Liverpool have scored 24 goals in the last seven games at Anfield – this is unlikely to be an easy night. Fulham can give any Premier League team a game, as they showed that last season when they took four points off a Liverpool side that romped to the title.
It’s too easy, when spring comes around, that Fulham are safely in mid-table and have nothing much to play for. Wrong! They started the day in ninth and have every chance of qualifying for Europe for the first time since 2011-12. They could even reach the Champions League: if they win today, they will be only two points behind Liverpool.
Kick off 5.30pm BST
UK News
I Am Maximus wins Grand National for trainer Mullins
I Am Maximus wins the Grand National for the second time for trainer Willie Mullins at Aintree – pulling off a feat last achieved by Red Rum in doing so.
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