Inter Miami might be returning to form at the right time and it's no surprise that Lionel Messi is leading the way.
Messi scored two goals with an assist when Inter Miami broke a four-match winless streak (0-2-2) with a 4-2 victory against CF Montreal on Wednesday.
Miami (7-3-5, 26 points) now will play host to the struggling Columbus Crew (7-2-7, 28 points) on Saturday before beginning Club World Cup play against Al Ahly of Egypt on June 14.
"These kinds of situations also end up strengthening you as a group, so hopefully we can take this as something that makes us stronger for the future," Miami coach Javier Mascherano.
Messi scored the first and fourth goals vs. Montreal and set up the first of two goals by Luis Suarez to make it 2-0.
"He makes everything look easy," Mascherano said of Messi. "He has accustomed us to that at this stage of his career. ... That's the player that we have to follow because he shows us the way to be able to compete in a very good way."
Miami defender Jordi Alba will be out at least two weeks with a muscle injury and defenders Gonzalo Lujan and Toto Aviles also are unavailable vs. the Crew. All three were injured Wednesday.
The Crew have lost their way. Their last win on May 3 over Charlotte FC by a 4-2 score pushed them into a two-point lead in the Eastern Conference. A five-match winless streak (0-4-1) now has them in fourth, five points behind the first-place Philadelphia Union.
Backup Crew goaltender Nicholas Hagen has allowed five goals in the past two matches playing for the injured Patrick Schulte (oblique) but he's been under siege, needing to make 12 saves in those matches.
"This season, we do a good job defensively," Crew coach Wilfried Nancy said. "But the last few games, we are a bit average, not in term of the consistency to defend (but) in terms of key moments."
The Crew have allowed the first goal in four of the past five matches.
-- Field Level Media
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Manchester United supporters woke up to a surreal football soap opera on August 29 2025. Two former United managers lost their jobs in Turkey within hours of each other. Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was sacked by Besiktas after a painful European exit. José Mourinho left Fenerbahçe following a Champions League playoff defeat. Those events sent betting markets and social feeds into overdrive with one recurring question. Could Solskjaer return to Old Trafford if Ruben Amorim continues to struggle? This article sorts the headlines from the real chances and explains why a Solskjaer comeback would be emotionally satisfying yet practically complicated. What Happened in Turkey and Why it Matters to United Fans The avalanche of managerial churn in Turkish football matters to Manchester United because it places two high-profile names squarely back on the market. Solskjaer’s dismissal came immediately after Besiktas were knocked out of European competition. His tenure had moments of optimism, but ultimately collapsed with the same fate as Ole’s. Mourinho’s exit at Fenerbahçe arrived after an equally brutal elimination that left the club and its fans furious. The double headlines are rare yet potent. They revive the debate about whether Manchester United should ever look backwards for stability or push on with a fresh identity under Amorim. Why a Solskjaer Return Would Make Sense Emotionally and Politically Solskjaer is still beloved by a large chunk of the Manchester United base. He embodies a club identity many supporters miss. The narrative is straightforward. Solskjaer was a player-turned-manager who once steadied the ship and delivered memorable wins. That emotional currency buys trust from fans and some players. If Amorim’s results deteriorate in a public way, the board could face enormous pressure to act. Reappointing a figure with instant goodwill seems like a low-friction fix. Bookmakers reacted fast to the Turkish sackings and trimmed odds on familiar names returning to big jobs. That reaction signals how much quick narratives influence decision-making in football. Tactical and Structural Reasons Why the Boycott of History Matters Solskjaer’s strengths lie in man management and restoring confidence. He earned praise for steadying a top job during difficult periods by simplifying the message and giving young players chances. United now sits at a crossroads where tactical clarity and a coherent long-term plan are arguably more important than short-term emotional relief. Amorim offers a distinct footballing blueprint that the club invested in through transfers and a broader recruitment approach. However, with just four Premier League wins in almost 28 games, and failing even to win back-to-back matches, it has raised lots of questions about the Portuguese. Reverting to a man who symbolizes a previous era risks undoing those structural moves. Chief executive and sporting directors rarely want to invite another public reset because continuity, however imperfect, often protects multi year projects. The financial and reputational cost of hiring then firing familiar faces again would be significant. Could Solskjaer Actually be Hired, and What Would That Look Like A reunion would require more than fan chants. Manchester United’s hierarchy would weigh multiple variables. Contractual details matter because Solskjaer is now a free agent. The board would assess whether his coaching staff, tactical staff, and player relationships align with what the club wants next. United would also run scenario planning against other available candidates, including established veterans and innovative young managers. A short-term rescue mission usually costs heavily in the transfer market later on. The club must decide whether immediate results trump a coherent plan. Practicalities aside, Solskjaer himself has repeatedly given mixed signals about chasing high-pressure jobs. He made comments in the past that suggested a willingness to return if asked, but that willingness matters less than the structural fit. The Amorim Factor and Why Impatience Can Be Dangerous Ruben Amorim arrived with a reputation for building disciplined teams. United insiders stress there are no current plans to sack him. Internal anxiety sits alongside public criticism. Players and staff sometimes express confusion about tactical switches and selection policies. Those murmurs grow louder when results do not follow. The club has started the season with no wins in three games, including getting knocked out by a fourth-tier club, Grimsby. With a managerial record now as bad as Garry Neville‘s Valencia, despite decent recruitment, fate could be decided sooner than later. Sacking Amorim would trigger a heavy compensation package for United due to the length and terms of his contract. The club must also consider the message it sends to prospective managers and to the marketplace. Football boards that shift frequently undermine the stability that attracts the top tactical minds, United say they want. A cautious approach remains the safest route to protect long-term ambitions. Final Thoughts A Solskjaer return would satisfy a large part of the fanbase and create headlines that soothe immediate pain. History, sentiment, and short-term optics all favor a reunion in the event Amorim falls. Reality demands a more solemn calculus. United’s project requires coherence in recruitment planning, tactical identity, and long-term financial prudence. The best long-term decision will probably frustrate some fans but protect the club from repeated cycles of hope and disappointment. Expect sharp media narratives. Rumour mills will accelerate whenever United drop another point. The international break looms as a likely drama window. Club statements will be minimal and cautious until a clear direction crystallizes. If results stay poor and the board senses the dressing room fracturing then a managerial change becomes plausible. That path will produce candidate lists, odds shifts, pundit debates and social storms. Every United supporter should remember one truth. Manchester United play Burnley before the international break, and it could be a make-or-break for a long-term decision.
Kyle Schwarber made sure his Philadelphia Phillies bounced back after being swept by the New York Mets earlier this week. Schwarber went 4-for-6 with four home runs and nine RBI in Philadelphia's 19-4 win over the Atlanta Braves on Thursday. His first home run of the night came in the first inning, a solo shot for his 46th of the season. In the fourth inning, the three-time All-Star blasted his second home run of the night (47), this time a two-run knock. Schwarber’s third long ball came in the following frame, with his 48th being a three-run homer. Finally, in the seventh inning, Schwarber hit his fourth home run (49) of the night to right field to come within one dinger of 50 for the season. The 32-year-old made all kinds of history on Thursday against the Phillies’ division rival. He already surpassed his previous career high for home runs in a single season, but also became just the fourth player in franchise history to have four homers in a game and the first since Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt did so in 1976. Additionally, Schwarber is only the 21st player in MLB history to achieve this feat, and the fifth player all-time with at least four homers and nine RBI in a game. Plus, Schwarber joined the Athletics’ Nick Kurtz and Seattle Mariners’ Eugenio Suarez as the only players to have a four-homer game this season — the first time this has occurred. Clearly, Schwarber and the Phillies were anxious to get out of Queens and return to Philadelphia. The Phillies’ offense scored just eight runs across the three-game set against the Mets. They scored 19 runs off the Braves’ pitching at Citizens Bank Park. Schwarber received “MVP” chants from Phillies fans on Thursday, and rightfully so. He’s on his way to breaking Ryan Howard’s previous franchise record of 58 home runs in a season, which earned him the 2006 National League MVP.
And just like that, Kenny Clark’s time with the Green Bay Packers is over. Clark is now with the Dallas Cowboys, where he will continue his journey in the NFL. Clark was part of the shocking trade that sent superstar pass-rusher Micah Parsons to Green Bay. In exchange, the Packers gave up Clark and first-round picks in 2026 and 2027. It will be Clark’s first time in the pros playing for a team other than the Packers, who selected him in the first round (27th overall) of the 2016 NFL draft. Clark will surely be missed by Green Bay fans and, of course, by his teammates. Green Bay Packers’ Jordan Love shares Clark post after DT’s trade to Dallas Following the Parsons trade, Packers quarterback Jordan Love hopped on social media to share a couple of Instagram Story posts. The first one was a fire-emoji post that shows an edited image of Parsons in a Packers uniform. The next one was a caption-less repost of Green Bay general manager Brian Gutekunst’s farewell message for Clark. “Kenny will be greatly missed, and we wish him and his family nothing but the best in the future,” Gutekunst’s message read. While it hurts for the Packers and their fans to see Clark go, given his long tenure in Green Bay, it was a no-brainer for the team to give him up for Parsons, who is a young and devastatingly talented linebacker, who might not have even reached his peak form yet in the NFL. Clark leaves the Packers with 35 sacks through 140 games (126 starts) played with Green Bay.
Adam Thielen Traded Back to Vikings, Set for Possible Final Season in Minnesota Adam Thielen is heading home. The Carolina Panthers have traded the veteran wideout back to the Minnesota Vikings, the team where he became a star. The deal sends Thielen and a couple of late-round picks (a 2026 conditional seventh and a 2027 fifth) to Minnesota in exchange for a 2026 fifth-rounder and a 2027 fourth. Thielen, 35, hinted this past spring that the 2025 season might be his last. If that holds true, he’ll finish his career where it all started. An undrafted free agent out of Minnesota State, Thielen carved out nine memorable seasons with the Vikings from 2014 to 2022, piling up two 1,200-yard campaigns and earning a pair of Pro Bowl nods. His career-high in targets (153), receptions (113), yards (1,373) and touchdowns (14) all came during his stint with Minnesota. After being released in 2023, he signed with Carolina, but now he’s back in purple as the Vikings look to bolster their receiver room with some proven experience. It’s a full-circle moment for the Minnesota native—and possibly the final chapter of an incredible career.
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