Crystal Palace are an example for rivals to follow as England come calling amid Patrick Vieira transformation
Mikel Arteta: Arsenal and Watford looking to forge working relationship
Russian shelling damages Ukrainian nuclear power plant
James Robson on Chelsea's uncertain future without Roman Abramovich
Jurgen Klopp: Liverpool quadruple talk is crazy
James Robson on Chelsea's future post Roman Abramovich announcement
Defence Secretary: Russian offensive in Ukraine likely to become 'more violent'
Guardiola hails 'fantastic' Man City players following win over Everton
Thomas Tuchel not blaming Kepa Arrizabalaga for Chelsea’s cup final defeat
Ralf Rangnick frustrated by Man Utd’s failure to take chances in Watford draw
Nearly 120,000 Ukrainians have fled Russian invasion, says UN
Conte remains 'committed' to Spurs jobs
Explained: Russia and Ukraine's turbulent history that ended in invasion
Ukraine crisis: Klitschko brothers issue call for international partners to unite over Russia invasion
Nato condemns Russia's 'deliberate, cold-blooded' attack on Ukraine
Klopp insists Manchester City’s defeat changes nothing for Liverpool
There is a long way to go – Mikel Arteta won’t get distracted by top-four talk
Patrick Vieira’s induction into the Premier League Hall of Fame is a scarcely-needed reminder of his quality as a player, but this week has felt like a good opportunity to consider Vieira’s potential as a manager.
There cannot have been a prouder few days for many supporters of Vieira’s Crystal Palace, who reached an FA Cup semi-final on Sunday, before three of their players — Marc Guehi, Tyrick Mitchell and Conor Gallagher — reported for England duty yesterday.
For context, only 15 Palace players have ever previously won England caps, including Gallagher in November, and this Three Lions squad reached the final of a major