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How to watch Soccer Aid 2025: TV channel and live stream for charity match today

How to watch Soccer Aid 2025: TV channel and live stream for charity match today

Yahoo8 hours ago
Star studded: Joe Hart and Tyson Fury will be among those appearing at Soccer Aid (©UNICEF/Soccer Aid Productions/Stella Pictures)
Soccer Aid returns to Old Trafford today as England eye a seventh win over the World XI.
It is the 14th instalment of the annual charity match, which has raised over £106million for UNICEF since its inception in 2006.
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CLICK HERE TO FOLLOW SOCCER AID LIVE!
This year's fundraising is already underway, as Sam Thompson carried the match ball from Stamford Bridge to Old Trafford, raising over £1.5m in the process.
As ever, a crop of former footballers will take the field, with the likes of Wayne Rooney, Gary Neville, Paul Scholes, Nemanja Vidic, and Edwin van der Sar all set to participate.
An impressive lineup of celebrity guests has also been assembled. Former One Direction star Louis Tomlinson will appear alongside distance runner Mo Farah, pop star Tom Grennan, and radio host Roman Kemp.
Comedians Lee Mack and Paddy McGuinness will both attend, with boxer Tony Bellew also set to make an appearance.
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Harry Redknapp will again take to the England dugout, while World XI will be headed up by Peter Schmeichel and Robbie Keane. Read the full squad lists here.
England halted World XI's run of five straight wins last year, winning 6-3 at Stamford Bridge with Joe Cole, Ellen White, Steven Bartlett, Jermaine Defoe, and Theo Walcott all on the scoresheet. Eden Hazard scored a free-kick for the World XI on his return to West London.
How to watch Soccer Aid 2025
TV channel: Soccer Aid 2025 will be broadcast live and free-to-air on ITV1 in the UK, with coverage starting at 6pm BST.
Live stream: The match will also be available to stream online via ITVX.
Live blog: You can also follow the action with Standard Sport's LIVE blog.
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Jack Draper out of Wimbledon in second round as Marin Cilic's grass pedigree triumphs
Jack Draper out of Wimbledon in second round as Marin Cilic's grass pedigree triumphs

New York Times

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Jack Draper out of Wimbledon in second round as Marin Cilic's grass pedigree triumphs

THE ALL ENGLAND CLUB, LONDON — For Jack Draper, Wimbledon remains a conundrum. For the second straight year the great home hope fell in the second round on No. 1 Court, this time beaten 6-4, 6-3, 1-6, 6-4 by the world No. 83 and former finalist Marin Čilić. Those two early exits bookend an otherwise very impressive Grand Slam year for the world No. 4, with runs to the semifinals at the U.S. Open and then fourth-round appearances in Melbourne and Paris. Advertisement It would be easy to attribute the consecutive second-round losses to the pressure of being Britain's highest-ranked player at Wimbledon — something Draper has continually played down — but like last year's defeat to Cameron Norrie, this was a case of his struggling to impose his game on home turf. Normally so nimble, Draper can look a little heavy-legged here, as though not quite sure yet how to best maneuver his bulky 6 feet 4 inches (193 cm) frame across the grass. Čilić, 36, is fresh from winning an ATP Challenger title in Nottingham and knows the intricacies of this surface. He reached the Wimbledon final in 2017 and won the prestigious warm-up tournament at Queen's in 2012 and 2018. He displayed all of that grass-court pedigree against Draper, dominating from the baseline and neutralizing Draper's power. His stronger wing is his backhand, which caused Draper a big problem. The Brit's favored serve from the ad court swings out to the right-hander's backhand, and it's generally a devastating weapon. Not so against Čilić, who could handle it with his favorite shot, winning the first set with a return winner off that wing. Čilić's forehand is much more up and down, but when it works it can be lethal. It flew through the court at times here, augmented by a brilliant serving display that took in 16 aces and an 88 percent win-rate on first-serve points in the first two sets. Most importantly, Čilić was able to get on the front foot. In the first couple of sets he spent 25 percent and then 28 percent of the time in attack, compared 16 percent in both for Draper, which is a huge drop-off from his average in the past year of 26 percent. Draper flipped this in the third set, when it felt as though the momentum of the match might be about to turn. Draper finally broke for the first time and then raced away with the set, harnessing the energy of a crowd who enjoyed seeing their adversary for the day getting a time violation down break point. Čilić wasn't rattled by the home fans getting on his back. He refocused and got back on the front foot, attacking in 27 percent of the fourth set compared to Draper's 21 per cent. His movement was impressive too, chasing down drop shots in a way that even when he was younger and hadn't had two knee operations wasn't necessarily his strong suit. It felt hard to believe that his injuries have been so persistent that this was Čilić's first Wimbledon appearance since 2021. Advertisement Draper clung on to save two break points down 3-4, but a few games later it was all over as Čilić forced a missed backhand to claim a memorable victory that opens an already interesting section of the men's draw even further, in a tournament defined by upsets on both the men's and women's side. Novak Djokovic, the seven-time champion, is now the highest seed in Draper's quarter, with the next highest Jakub Menšík, the 15th seed. It is also a statement at a Grand Slam for a player who only played a few events between summer 2023 and 2024, fearing that his career would be over after a second knee operation in May last year. For Draper, this is a monumental disappointment, but its significance may be up to him. He has made great strides in so many areas over the past year, climbing from No. 40 and without a title in June 2024 to being a Masters 1,000 winner and a fixture in the world's top five. For now, his home major continues to be his kryptonite.

Game, Set, Match: Iga Świątek is through!
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New York Times

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Game, Set, Match: Iga Świątek is through!

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Wimbledon celebrity sightings: David Beckham, Cate Blanchett and Dave Grohl were among stars packing the royal box on week 1
Wimbledon celebrity sightings: David Beckham, Cate Blanchett and Dave Grohl were among stars packing the royal box on week 1

Yahoo

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Wimbledon celebrity sightings: David Beckham, Cate Blanchett and Dave Grohl were among stars packing the royal box on week 1

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