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head coach has said he does not regret his confrontation with supporters at on Thursday, insisting he will never back down from doing "the right thing". in the away end after full-time of Spurs' 1-0 loss at the Vitality Stadium. The Spurs manager revealed his wife disapproved of his behaviour but, speaking ahead of Sunday's derby against , said he had no regrets about the incident. "No, they felt like they needed to give me feedback, so I thought I’d get close enough for them to make sure they were heard," Postecoglou said. "Hopefully after 18 months, you [the media] have realised that I am who I am. I don’t really care. "Whether people think I’m an easy target, soft target. I’m going to shy away from it. I’ve fought my whole life and I’m not going to race down the tunnel because some people feel like they need to give me some direction. It doesn’t bother me, it doesn’t. "From my perspective, what motivates me and what drives me on a daily basis is to continually stay true to my values and what I believe is the right thing to do in every situation. Maybe people thought it wasn’t the right thing to do. My wife certainly didn’t. "So I got some feedback there as well. But that’s ok. I’m not going to change. It’s who I am, mate. I’ve been like that my whole career and I won’t change.” Postecoglou approached fans after his players had received a mixed reception from the travelling support and could be seen pointing to his chest during the exchange. Asked if he was taking responsibility for Spurs' performance and result, he said: "Yeah, [I was saying], 'It’s on me but also whatever you’ve got to direct, direct it at me. And I’m listening. I’m listening, I’m looking, I’m understanding.'" After last season's home game with Chelsea, Postecoglou's side were applauded off after bravely sticking to Postecoglou's high defensive line and attacking principles, despite having two players sent off before the hour and losing two more to injuries. Asked about the connection with fans, Postecoglou admitted that he would have "to find a way" to get the majority of supporters behind him, adding: "That will be dependent on what people see, what people feel. "The only way I can affect that is by what we produce on game days. "I’ve got to concentrate on the controllables, and the controllables are the team, how we prepare, how we play and hopefully through that vehicle we get everyone on board. "I’m sure at other clubs, if you stick to a plan and go through difficult moments, there’s dissension among supporters in these moments. You forget about that when you’re on the other side. Yeah it’s about winning but it’s about belief as well in what you’re doing sometimes. You look beyond the results I think. "That’s what happened at the start of my tenure last year. We lost against Chelsea but there was a sense that we were building something. Obviously it kind of went off the rails after that game. It’s not just about winning, but where we are right now it will certainly help." A depleted Spurs, who were again missing seven players to injuries, illness and suspension, after Dean Huijsen ghosted in at the far post to head home a corner after 17 minutes. "It can’t be a physical thing when it happens early in the game, I don’t think," Postecoglou said, when asked what went wrong on the south coast. "It’s not a physical thing. We started the game well. It’s not like we started sluggishly. The first two chances that came fell to Deki and Dom. Two chances where you go: ‘Ok, we’ve started the game really well.’ “And literally the first time they go up, they get a set-piece and they score an unopposed header. That kind of tells you that, nah ... You can’t go into a game like that and allow the opposition then to take control of the game. "We prepared ourselves for a tough game, that was going to be tougher than any other game we were going to face last night. And the disappointing thing is, like I said, that in a game where we started well, we once again allowed the opposition to play the game on their terms by us lacking discipline and conviction in a key moment. And we can’t keep doing that."Landman star Kayla Wallace makes official red carpet debut with Hallmark channel star husband
NoneLANDOVER, Md. (AP) — Allowing two kickoff return touchdowns and missing an extra point all in the final few minutes added up to the Washington Commanders losing a third consecutive game in excruciating fashion. The underlying reason for this slide continuing was a problem long before that. An offense led by dynamic rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels that was among the NFL's best for a long stretch of the season put up just nine points and 169 yards for the first three-plus quarters against Dallas before falling behind 20-9 and teeing off on the Cowboys' conservative defense. “We just couldn’t really get it going,” said receiver Terry McLaurin , whose lengthy touchdown with 21 seconds left masked that he had just three catches for 16 yards through three quarters. “We’ve got to find a way to start faster and sustain drives, and that’s everybody: the whole coaching staff and the offensive players just going out there and figuring out ways that we can stay on the field.” This is not a new problem for Washington, which had a season-low 242 yards in a Nov. 10 home loss to Pittsburgh and 264 yards four days later in a defeat at Philadelphia. Since returning from a rib injury that knocked him out of a game last month, Daniels has completed just under 61% of his passes, after 75.6% over his first seven professional starts. Daniels and coach Dan Quinn have insisted this isn't about injury. The coaching staff blamed a lack of adequate practice time, but a full week of it before facing the Cowboys did not solve the problem. It is now fair to wonder if opponents have seen enough film of offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury's system to figure it out. “I think teams and coordinators are going to see what other teams have success against us and try to figure out how they could incorporate that into their scheme," Daniels said after going 12 of 22 for 80 yards passing through three quarters in the Dallas game. "We’ve been in third and longer a lot these past couple games, so that’s kind of where you get into the exotic pressures and stuff like that. We’ve just got to be better on first and second downs and stay ahead of the chains.” Daniels has a point there, and it predates this losing streak. The Commanders have converted just 36% of third-down opportunities (27 for 75) over their past seven games after 52% (31 for 60) in their first five. That challenge doesn't get any easier with Tennessee coming to town Sunday. The Titans, despite being 3-8, have the second-best third-down defense in the league at 31.6%. The defense kept the Commanders in the game against Dallas, allowing just 10 points until the fourth quarter and 20 total before kickoff return touchdowns piled on to the other side of the scoreboard. Even Cooper Rush's 22-yard touchdown pass to Luke Schoonmaker with five minutes left came after a turnover that gave the Cowboys the ball at the Washington 44. The defense spending more than 35 minutes on the field certainly contributed to fatigue as play wore on. The running game that contributed to a 7-2 start has taken a hit, in part because of injuries to top back Brian Robinson Jr. The Commanders got 145 yards on the ground because Daniels had 74 on seven carries, but running backs combined for just 57. Daniels could not say how much the rushing attack stalling has contributed to the offense going stagnant. “You’ve got to be able to run the ball, keep the defense honest,” he said. "We got to execute the plays that are called in, and we didn’t do a good job of doing that.” Linebacker Frankie Luvu keeps making the case to be first-year general manager Adam Peters' best free agent signing. He and fellow offseason addition Bobby Wagner tied for a team-high eight tackles, and Luvu also knocked down three passes against Dallas. Kicker Austin Seibert going wide left on the point-after attempt that would have tied the score with 21 seconds left was his third miss of the game. He also was short on a 51-yard field goal attempt and wide left on an earlier extra point. Seibert, signed a week into the season after Cade York struggled in the opener, made 25 of 27 field goal tries and was 22 of 22 on extra points before injuring his right hip and missing the previous two games. He brushed off his health and the low snap from Tyler Ott while taking responsibility for not connecting. “I made the decision to play, and here we are,” Seibert said. “I just wasn’t striking it well. But it means a lot to me to be here with these guys, so I just want to put my best foot moving forward.” Robinson's sprained ankle and fellow running back Austin Ekeler's concussion from a late kickoff return that led to him being hospitalized for further evaluation are two major immediate concerns. Quinn said Monday that Ekeler and starting right tackle Andrew Wylie are in concussion protocol. It's unclear if Robinson will be available against Tennessee, which could mean Chris Rodriguez Jr. getting elevated from the practice squad to split carries with Jeremy McNichols. The Commanders still have not gotten cornerback Marshon Lattimore into a game since acquiring him at the trade deadline from New Orleans. Lattimore is trying to return from a hamstring injury, and the secondary could use him against Calvin Ridley, who's coming off a 93-yard performance at Houston. 17 — Handoffs to a running back against Dallas, a significant decrease from much of the season before this losing streak. Don't overlook the Titans with the late bye week coming immediately afterward. The Commanders opened as more than a touchdown favorite, but after the results over the weekend, BetMGM Sportsbook had it as 5 1/2 points Monday. AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl
NEW YORK (AP) — More shoppers than ever are on track to use ‘buy now, pay later’ plans this holiday season, as the ability to spread out payments looks attractive at a time when Americans still feel the lingering effect of inflation and already have record-high credit card debt. The data firm Adobe Analytics predicts shoppers will spend 11.4% more this holiday season using buy now, pay later than they did a year ago. The company forecasts shoppers will purchase $18.5 billion worth of goods using the third-party services for the period Nov. 1 to Dec. 31, with $993 million worth of purchases on Cyber Monday alone. Buy now, pay later can be particularly appealing to consumers who have low credit scores or no credit history, such as younger shoppers, because most of the companies providing the service run only soft credit checks and don’t report the loans and payment histories to the credit bureaus, unlike credit card companies. This holiday season, buy now, pay later users can also feel more confident if a transaction goes awry. In May, the CFPB said buy now, pay later company must adhere to other regulations that govern traditional credit, such as providing ways to demand refunds and dispute transactions. To use a buy now, pay later plan, consumers typically sign up with bank account information or a debit or credit card, and agree to pay for purchases in monthly installments, typically over eight weeks or more. The loans are marketed as requiring no or low interest, or only conditional fees, such as for late payment. Klarna, Afterpay and Affirm are three of the biggest buy now, pay later companies. But consumer advocates warn that shoppers who sign up for the payment plans using a credit card can be hit with more interest and fees. That's because individuals open themselves up to interest on the credit card payment, if it's carried month to month, on top of any late fees, interest, or penalties from the buy now, pay later loan itself. Experts advise against using a credit card to pay for these plans for this reason. Consumer watchdogs also say the plans lead consumers to overextend themselves because, for example, not paying full price up front leaves, in the shopper’s mind at least, more money for smaller purchases . They also caution consumers to keep careful track of using multiple buy now, pay later services, as the automatic payments can add up, and there is no central reporting, such as with a credit card statement. “Buy now, pay later can be an innovative tool for purchases you’re going to make anyway,” said Mark Elliott, chief customer officer at financial services company LendingClub. “The challenge is that it does fuel overspending.” For merchants, that’s part of the appeal. Retailers have found that customers are more likely to have bigger cart sizes or to convert from browsing to checking out when buy now, pay later is offered. One report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York cited research that found customers spend 20% more when buy now, pay later is available. “The reality is that the increased cost-of-living and inflation have put more people in a situation where they’re already relying on revolving credit,” Elliott said. “The psychographics of ‘buy now, pay later’ may be different — people don’t think of it as debt — but it is.” If a consumer misses a payment, they can face fees, interest, or the possibility of being locked out of using the services in the future. Emily Childers, consumer financial expert for personal-finance technology company Credit Karma, said that internal data shows member credit card balances are up more than 50% for Gen Z and millennial members since March 2022, when the Fed started raising interest rates. “Young people are entering this holiday season already in the red,” she said. “And, based on what we’re seeing in the data, they’re continuing to bury their heads in the sand and spend.” The Associated Press receives support from Charles Schwab Foundation for educational and explanatory reporting to improve financial literacy. The independent foundation is separate from Charles Schwab and Co. Inc. The AP is solely responsible for its journalism.Presidio Granted Second 180-Day Period by Nasdaq to Regain Compliance with Minimum Bid Price Rule
Enzo Maresca urges Chelsea to exploit 'vulnerable' Tottenham but insists his players should show more discipline than he did in the Turin derby in 2002 Enzo Maresca believes Chelsea can get the better of a 'vulnerable' Spurs side Maresca is eager for his players to show more discipline than he did in 2002 It's All Kicking Off! : Why can't Chelsea win the league? They made seven changes and still scored five. Do you think Liverpool could do that? By KIERAN GILL Published: 17:31 EST, 6 December 2024 | Updated: 17:31 EST, 6 December 2024 e-mail View comments Enzo Maresca wants Chelsea to ‘exploit’ vulnerable Tottenham on Sunday, but the Blues boss has told his players to avoid being as naughty in this seething showdown as he was in the Turin Derby of February 2002. On Friday Maresca discussed the classic 2-2 draw in which he scored an 89th-minute equaliser for Juventus at the home of their rivals Torino. The Italian sparked chaotic scenes as he performed a bull-horn celebration while rampaging around the pitch, in reference to the symbol on their opponents’ badge. It was a moment which went down in Italian football history, though while Maresca wants Chelsea to take advantage of Ange Postecoglou ’s struggles, he called on his players to show more discipline than he managed all those years ago. ‘We try always to exploit,’ Maresca said of taking on a patched-up Spurs, who used Ben Davies in central defence in their 1-0 loss to Bournemouth on Thursday. ‘I think (Cristian) Romero can be back, so probably Romero can be the solution for them in this moment, but we will see. We prepare for the game thinking it will be big. It is a derby, it is Tottenham.’ On his Juventus leveller all those years ago, he said: ‘That was a long time ago. That moment was the last moment of the derby. It was a good game, a warm game. Every player lives the game, the moment, in different ways. I don’t know if they need these kind of things, but they are aware that it is an important game. I don’t know if they need something extra. ‘Today, in football, I know we have many English players but most of them probably come from abroad, they are not even aware about the derby and these kind of things. The only thing is that we try to make sure that every game they are focused and give everything. We don’t change the way we want to be aggressive depending on the other team. Enzo Maresca has urged his Chelsea team to exploit a 'vulnerable' Tottenham side Maresca wants his Chelsea players to be more disciplined than he was for Juventus in 2002 Maresca is confident that Moises Caicedo can continue his impressive form for Chelsea ‘Hopefully we can give our fans a big day, a victory in that. We prepare for the game thinking it will be big. Because first of all it is a derby, it is Tottenham. But at the end, three points against Southampton, three points against Aston Villa, three points against Tottenham, the points are the same.' Maresca added that Moises Caicedo can continue his fine form at Tottenham, saying the Chelsea midfielder has earned the right to be compared to Rodri and Declan Rice. ‘He is for sure now at that level,’ Maresca said. ‘No doubt. Unfortunately, Rodri is injured but Declan is playing. But Moises can sit at that table with that kind of midfielder.’ Maresca is also confident they can do damage as he insisted they should no longer be seen as 'Cole Palmer FC'. Chelsea Enzo Maresca Ben Davies Share or comment on this article: Enzo Maresca urges Chelsea to exploit 'vulnerable' Tottenham but insists his players should show more discipline than he did in the Turin derby in 2002 e-mail Add commentOTTAWA — Canada is considering supplying the RCMP and border agency with more resources including drones, helicopters and personnel in case of a "surge" at the border, Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc said Tuesday in response to Donald Trump's threat to impose steep tariffs on Canadian imports into the U.S. The president-elect threatened to impose 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian and Mexican imports unless action is taken to stem the flow of both migrants and illegal drugs crossing the border. "As everyone is aware, thousands of people are pouring through Mexico and Canada, bringing Crime and Drugs at levels never seen before," Trump said on Truth Social on Monday night. LeBlanc said his office has been working with finance officials, the RCMP and the Canada Border Services Agency "for months" to see what is needed and feasible. The minister added that Canada shares many of the same concerns as the Americans when it comes to illegal migration, and drugs and other contraband making its way across the border. LeBlanc said Canadian agencies work collaboratively with their U.S. counterparts. "For decades, this collaborative work happening literally daily with American authorities and Canadian authorities has allowed us to keep both countries safe, including dealing with some of the real challenges around the opioid crisis," LeBlanc said. Immigration Minister Marc Miller was asked on Tuesday about deploying more officers to oversee the New York-Vermont border area, which sees the highest rates of illegal crossings from Canada into the United States. He cautioned that there is no comparison to the flow of migrants entering the U.S. from Mexico. "It's the equivalent on a yearly basis with a significant weekend at the Mexico border. At the same time, it's not something I want to not take seriously, because it is serious," Miller said. "We have a job to not make our problems the Americans' problems and they have a job not to make their problems ours." U.S. Customs and Border Protection data shows its officers recorded nearly 200,000 encounters at the northern border between October 2023 and September 2024. The same period in 2022 saw more than 109,000 encounters and there were around 32,000 in 2020. The term "encounters" includes apprehensions, people who are deemed inadmissible and those who are expelled from the U.S. Between October 2023 and September 2024, U.S. officials recorded more than two million encounters at the Mexican border. The two prior years also saw more than 2 million encounters each at the southern border. Chief border patrol agent Robert Garcia said last month on X that agents in the Swanton Sector, which covers Vermont's border with Quebec, apprehended more than 19,000 people from 97 countries in the last year — more than the last 17 years combined. U.S. Customs and Border Protection said it also seized nearly 5,000 kilograms of illegal drugs at the Canadian border between October 2023 and September 2024. That included 19.5 kilograms of fentanyl. Comparatively, border agents seized nearly 125,000 kilograms of narcotics at the border with Mexico, including almost 10,000 kilograms of fentanyl. According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, two milligrams of fentanyl is a potentially fatal dose. Cannabis is by far the most commonly seized drug coming from Canada, accounting for almost 60 per cent of total seizures. From Mexico it's methamphetamine, accounting for about 57 per cent of seizures at the southern border. Drug seizures coming from Canada to the U.S. are down significantly from the prior two years, according to border patrol data: about 25,000 kilograms of narcotics were seized between October 2022 and September 2023, down from about 27,200 kilograms in the year before. Both Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet called on the Trudeau government to ensure the border is secure on Tuesday. Poilievre focused on government data that was raised at the immigration committee on Monday that said 4.9 million people will have their Canadian visas expire by the end of December 2025. In question period Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the "overwhelming majority" of people leave when their visas expire and there are measures in the immigration system to deal with cases where that does not happen. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said she is open to talks with the Trump administration on the tariff issue, but said drugs were a "public health and consumption" issue in the U.S. She added most of the weapons entering Mexico are smuggled in through the U.S. In recent months the RCMP have announced two significant operations with ties to Mexican drug cartels. This includes the arrest of three men in Surrey, B.C., earlier this month, who police say are connected to an organized crime group with ties to Mexican drug cartels. Police seized "multiple kilos" of illicit drugs, and said the accused were allegedly "planning large-scale distribution" of drugs out of Surrey. In October, the RCMP, FBI and other policing partners arrested nine Canadians in Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. The accused are alleged to have ties to a Mexico cartel-linked criminal network. Charges include murder, conspiracy to commit murder and drug trafficking. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 26, 2024. — With files from The Associated Press David Baxter, The Canadian Press
LAS VEGAS — Players Era Festival organizers have done what so many other have tried — bet their fortunes in this city that a big payoff is coming. Such bet are usually bad ones, which is why so many massive casino-resorts have been built on Las Vegas Boulevard. But it doesn't mean the organizers are wrong. They're counting on the minimum of $1 million in guaranteed name, image and likeness money that will go to each of the eight teams competing in the neutral-site tournament that begins Tuesday will create a precedent for other such events. EverWonder Studios CEO Ian Orefice, who co-founded Players with former AND1 CEO Seth Berger, compared this event to last year's inaugural NBA In-Season Tournament that played its semifinals and final in Las Vegas by saying it "did really well to reinvigorate the fan base at the beginning of the year." "We're excited that we're able to really change the paradigm in college basketball on the economics," Orefice said. "But for us, it's about the long term. How do we use the momentum that is launching with the 2024 Players Era Festival and be the catalyst not to change one event, but to change college basketball for the future." Orefice and Berger didn't disclose financial details, but said the event will come close to breaking even this year and that revenue is in eight figures. Orefice said the bulk of the revenue will come from relationships with MGM, TNT Sports and Publicis Sport & Entertainment as well as sponsors that will be announced later. Both organizers said they are so bullish on the tournament's prospects that they already are planning ahead. Money made from this year's event, Orefice said, goes right back into the company. "We're really in this for the long haul," Orefice said. "So we're not looking at it on a one-year basis." Rick Giles is president of the Gazelle Group, which also operates several similar events, including the College Basketball Invitational. He was skeptical the financial numbers would work. Giles said in addition to more than $8 million going to the players, there were other expenses such as the guarantees to the teams. He said he didn't know if the tournament would make up the difference with ticket sales, broadcast rights and sponsorship money. The top bowl of the MGM Grand Garden Arena will be curtained off. "The math is highly challenging," Giles said. "Attendance and ticket revenues are not going to come anywhere close to covering that. They haven't announced any sponsors that I'm aware of. So it all sort of rests with their media deal with Turner and how much capital they want to commit to it to get these players paid." David Carter, a University of Southern California adjunct professor who also runs the Sports Business Group consultancy, said even if the Players isn't a financial success this year, the question is whether there will be enough interest to move forward. "If there is bandwidth for another tournament and if the TV or the streaming ratings are going to be there and people are going to want to attend and companies are going to want to sponsor, then, yeah, it's probably going to work," Carter said. "But it may take them time to gain that traction." Both founders said they initially were met with skepticism about putting together such an event, especially from teams they were interested in inviting. Houston was the first school to commit, first offering an oral pledge early in the year and then signing a contract in April. That created momentum for others to join, and including the No. 6 Cougars, half the field is ranked. "We have the relationships to operate a great event," Berger said. "We had to get coaches over those hurdles, and once they knew that we were real, schools got on board really quickly." The founders worked with the NCAA to make sure the tournament abided by that organization's rules, so players must appear at ancillary events in order to receive NIL money. Strict pay for play is not allowed, though there are incentives for performance. The champion, for example, will receive $1.5 million in NIL money. Now the pressure is on to pull off the event and not create the kind of headlines that can dog it for years to come. "I think everybody in the marketplace is watching what's going to happen (this) week and, more importantly, what happens afterwards," Giles said. "Do the players get paid on a timely basis? And if they do, that means that Turner or somebody has paid way more than the market dictates? And the question will be: Can that continue?" CREIGHTON: P oint guard Steven Ashworth likely won’t play in the No. 21 Bluejays’ game against San Diego State in the Players Era Festival in Las Vegas. Ashworth sprained his right ankle late in a loss to Nebraska on Friday and coach Greg McDermott said afterward he didn’t know how long he would be out. Get local news delivered to your inbox!Chelsea gifted easy win as title race momentum builds ahead of busy Christmas
You did not really believe Enzo Maresca when he called this Chelsea ’s toughest game of the season yesterday, and you knew he didn’t himself either when you saw his team. But whatever part of the pretence had survived until kick-off died swiftly when the football began. On a frankly comic evening at St. Mary’s, a Southampton side admittedly missing a handful of key players showed exactly why they are already charging back towards the Championship, with only a third of the season gone. Weirdly, in being quite so inept, they denied Chelsea the chance to enhance their growing reputation, even as a 5-1 victory closed the gap on leaders Liverpool to seven points . Officially, Maresca’s side won this game but, really, they didn’t have to. Given the time of year, it is tempting to say it was handed to them gift-wrapped, but Southampton didn’t even bother to do that. This was straight out of the shop stuff, handed over in a carrier bag, the receipt still inside and the accompanying card written out in a bookmaker’s pen. Self-destruction has been Southampton’s stock and trade this season but this was a genuine masterclass, best summed up not by any of the goals but by the red card that left the hosts down to ten men before half-time. From their own attacking corner, no less, Saints lost their captain, Jack Stephens, sent off for a petulant hair-pull on Marc Cucurella that was picked up and deemed violent conduct by VAR. Now, to be fair, no man, woman or child has ever been within five yards of that barnet and not been tempted to give it a tug. But come on, Jack. There’s a time and a place. For Maresca, who has been threatening to hand his Conference League second-string their Premier League chances for months, this was both. There were seven changes to the side that beat Aston Villa on Sunday, including a Premier League debut in goal for Fillip Jorgensen and a first league start since the opening day of the season for Christopher Nkunku , who inevitably scored to take his tally for the campaign to 12. Maresca had seen his Leicester score nine goals in two meetings with Russell Martin’s side in the Championship last term, an explanation perhaps for why this trip was seen as so ripe for rotation. Or maybe it was habit, having given his regulars their midweeks off for months. Hard as it is to believe given what followed, there was a genuine vulnerability to Chelsea in the opening 20 minutes and certainly none of the controlling authority that had seen Villa so comprehensively outplayed as Southampton got in behind both full-backs repeatedly and to the front door of a new-look centre-back pair with troubling ease. They scored, too, in that period through Joe Aribo. Trouble was they allowed Chelsea to, twice, as well. Joe Lumley, probably Southampton’s fourth-choice goalkeeper, bore the brunt of the noisy blame. He was tame flapping at Enzo Fernandez’s corner, which Axel Disasi headed in, and then part of a typically hapless passage playing out that was punished by Noni Madueke and Nkunku. Looking like you might score whenever you attack is one thing. But every time the home goalkeeper has the ball? At one stage here the home crowd actually cheered a Lumley hoof out of the hands. At another, his defenders scuttled off to halfway and simply refused to come short in a bid to force the matter. Chelsea, for a while, stopped trying to play themselves, failing to see the point when they could just sit and wait for Southampton to trip over their own feet. Madueke’s third goal and then Stephens’s sending-off settled the contest before half-time. Chelsea could have had any number thereafter, the fourth and fifth eventually scored late on by Cole Palmer and substitute Jadon Sancho. The scoreline by then, though, was secondary to the feeling, a raucous away end singing Maresca’s name with greater gusto than at any point in his tenure, which is only six months old this week. Momentum is building at Chelsea. with or without this kind of helping hand.NoneHow Major US Stock Indexes Fared Nov. 21
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