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World Wide May 26, 2026

US Launches New Strikes Near Strait of Hormuz Amid Fragile Ceasefire

On May 26, 2026 the United States carried out self‑defence strikes near the Strait of Hormuz, targe…
Executive Summary: Renewed US Military Action Threatens CeasefireUnited States forces launched a series of “self‑defence” strikes near the Strait of Hormuz on May 26, 2026, while an Iranian delegation travelled to Qatar for peace talks. The attacks, described by CENTCOM as targeting missile launch sites and mine‑laying boats, raise doubts about the durability of the Pakistan‑mediated ceasefire that began on April 8.US Self‑Defence Strikes Target Missile Sites and Mine‑Laying VesselsCENTCOM spokesperson Tim Hawkins told Al Jazeera that the strikes hit “missile launch sites and Iranian boats attempting to emplace mines.” Secretary of State Marco Rubio, speaking from Jaipur, India, echoed the description, emphasizing the need to keep the Strait open.Iranian media reported explosions in Bandar Abbas, about 70 km from the Strait, but Tehran has not issued an official statement.Strategic Stakes: One‑Fifth of Global Oil Flow at RiskThe Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 20 % of worldwide oil and gas shipments under normal conditions.Disruptions could exacerbate the energy crisis that has already pushed oil prices higher since the war began.Diplomatic Ripple Effects: Talks in Qatar Face New UncertaintyIran’s delegation, reportedly including Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and Central Bank Governor Abdolnaser Hemmati, arrived in Doha to discuss remaining roadblocks.U.S. President Donald Trump posted that negotiations are proceeding “nicely” but warned that any failure could trigger further attacks. He also linked a potential settlement to broader regional moves such as the Abraham Accords.Outlook: Negotiations May Stall Unless De‑Escalation OccursAnalysts quoted by Al Jazeera note that the latest skirmish could derail the fragile ceasefire and delay a comprehensive peace agreement. With limited information on the scale of the US operation, the next few days will be critical for determining whether diplomatic momentum can survive renewed hostilities.
#United States #Iran #Strait of Hormuz
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Sports May 25, 2026

Régis Le Bris: The Quiet Architect of Sunderland's European Resurgence

Régis Le Bris has transformed Sunderland from a Championship club to Europa League qualification th…
The LeadOne of Régis Le Bris's first acts as Sunderland's head coach was to preside over a pre-season training camp near Alicante. It was July 2024 and, according to those present, the Breton sometimes cut a slightly isolated figure. "I arrived alone, without any collaborators," Le Bris has said, reflecting on his leap of faith that involved exchanging the familiarity of Lorient for a job that, initially, meant working with Sunderland's existing backroom team rather than bringing hand-picked assistants.The Strategic Transformation at WearsideThe coach who ended last season with a Championship playoff final victory and, a year to the day later, led Sunderland into the Europa League was playing a longer game. "Step by step I started to express my ideas and my concepts," Le Bris said. Slowly but surely he also began to establish a power base on Wearside.Le Bris went unrecognised when, shortly before taking charge at the Stadium of Light, he slipped into the back of a lecture room where Sunderland's club historian, Rob Mason, was recounting the team's sometimes illustrious past. But within six months Le Bris would be serving as a magnet, his unshowy pulling power attracting some of football's brightest emerging talents.Everything changed in January 2025. Sunderland's young, inexperienced side were pushing for automatic promotion and, unusually, the owner, Kyril Louis-Dreyfus, allowed Le Bris rather than the then sporting director, Kristjaan Speakman, to take the lead on pursuing a statement signing.The Recruitment Revolution and Financial InvestmentLe Bris had first coached Enzo Le Fée as a 12-year-old in Lorient's academy and knew the playmaker's recent transfer, to Roma, was not working out. With Le Fée receptive to a loan, Louis-Dreyfus and Speakman began talking to Florent Ghisolfi, then Roma's sporting director.Ghisolfi was gaining a reputation as a shrewd, well-connected recruitment specialist, with his work at Lens and Nice seen as highly impressive. What went under the radar was that Ghisolfi had worked with Le Bris at Lorient and had tried to lure him to Nice.Louis-Dreyfus and Ghisolfi bonded and the idea of the latter relocating to Wearside as football director no longer seemed ridiculous. Sure enough he arrived last July, partnering with Speakman to sign 15 players. Including Le Fée, whose assists would help to clinch promotion.The presence of Le Fée and Ghisolfi ensured that when Louis-Dreyfus called Granit Xhaka out of the blue at 11pm last summer as the Switzerland captain was preparing for bed, the midfielder did not immediately cut the call.If it helped that Louis-Dreyfus is Swiss-French and knew Xhaka slightly through mutual acquaintances in Basel, Xhaka needed a little more convincing. Not that it took long for him to decide that swapping Bayer Leverkusen for a club managed by a coach who reminded him of his old Arsenal boss, Arsène Wenger, and serious enough to have acquired Le Fée and Ghisolfi, was an exchange worth making.Sunderland's long-serving club captain Luke O'Nien – who joined back in the League One days and now helps Xhaka run the dressing room, takes up the story. "I always say Enzo was the catalyst for all this," the defender says. "He was the first top player to trust us as a club and he's made a big contribution to where we are today. Enzo works so hard, he's unbelievably humble and, as good a player as he is, he's an even better person."The same could be said of Xhaka. In a recent interview with the Guardian Le Fée said: "Granit's arrival changed everything." Significantly, Xhaka played a key role in persuading one of Sunderland's stars of this season, the former Paris Saint-Germain defender Nordi Mukiele, to join. The pair had played together at Leverkusen and Mukiele says: "When Granit speaks you have to hear with both ears."With last summer's Ghisolfi-inspired £155m investment in, among others, Robin Roefs, Noah Sadiki, Habib Diarra, Omar Alderete, Reinildo, Chemsdine Talbi and Brian Brobbey paying rich dividends, Sunderland reached Le Bris's pre-season target of 40 points with a win at Leeds in early March and finished seventh.The Power Restructuring and Club CultureIn February Speakman departed, amicably if not exactly willingly, as it became clear Ghisolfi's arrival had made a large part of his role redundant. Other high-profile executive exits followed, prompting erroneous suggestions Le Bris could be next. In reality the coach who arrived "without collaborators" had built an on- and off-field support network the envy of many Premier League peers.Now, a cerebral manager whose natural courtesy and gentle humour are said to conceal a capacity to be "utterly ruthless" when necessary, faces twin tasks. He must nurture his power base and a tightly-bonded dressing room amid the demands of playing European football on Thursday nights.Xhaka, though, harbours few fears. "As Sunderland's captain I can promise you that this is the just the beginning," he says. "We want more."Le Bris, sensibly, talks of the need to "stay humble" and remember the essential "fragility" of footballing success, but he is also justifiably proud. "This club is a special place in English football and our journey is really special because we feel the connection, the alignment with our fans," he says. "It's a really nice feeling."The European Challenge and Future ProspectsThe impeccably polite, quietly unassuming Frenchman who spent his first two weeks in charge of Sunderland unnoticed by fellow guests at a County Durham hotel, no longer walks alone on Wearside. Having transformed the club's fortunes from Championship contenders to Europa League participants, Le Bris now faces the challenge of maintaining momentum while navigating the complexities of European competition.The question for Sunderland and their supporters is whether this remarkable ascent represents a temporary resurgence or the dawn of a new era for the Wearside club. With Le Bris's methodical approach, the backing of owner Kyril Louis-Dreyfus, and a squad increasingly filled with quality internationals, the foundations appear to be in place for sustained success at the highest level of English and European football.
#Régis Le Bris #Sunderland #Europa League
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Sports May 24, 2026

Middlesbrough's Hellberg Endors Spygate as 'Toughest Two Weeks' After Playoff Defeat

Middlesbrough manager Kim Hellberg described the spygate saga as the 'toughest two weeks' of his li…
The Lead: Spygate Fallout at WembleyKim Hellberg lamented the recent spygate saga as the "toughest two weeks" of his life after his reinstated Middlesbrough side missed out on Premier League promotion at Wembley. Boro became the first team in Football League history to be defeated in both the playoff semi-final and final, after his team replaced Southampton, who were thrown out of the competition for spying on rivals' training sessions.The Championship Final DramaHull's 1-0 win, courtesy of Oli McBurnie's injury-time goal, returned them to the Premier League after a nine-year absence, with Hellberg left to rue a "rollercoaster" for his Middlesbrough side. "It has been tough," he said. "It's been draining emotionally. But there is no excuse. Hull scored a goal today and you have to congratulate them. We were ready to play the game. It's been two heartbreaking losses in one week. When the game ends you feel very empty."The Spygate ControversySergej Jakirovic had described his Hull team as "collateral damage" in a spying episode in which they played no part. Having prepared to face Southampton for a week, he had to switch plans a few days before the final. Nonetheless, he insisted he saw the funny side of a saga that means Southampton begin next season with a four-point deduction."When I heard for the first time, I start to laugh because what you can spy?" he said. "To send a guy to do this, I don't understand."Hull's Unexpected JourneyHull's promotion came just a year after avoiding relegation to League One on goal difference, and operating with a two-window transfer fee embargo that left them able to sign only free agents. Concentration will now turn to the Premier League and how to avoid the instant relegation they experienced last time they played in the top flight."We will try to add better players than we have right now," said Jakirovic. "But I think these main players who bring us to the Premier League can stay and help us as well. We just have to add better players than we have. Sunderland's recipe is great because they brought dynamic players with pace and speed. I'm ready for everything. We have a nice budget. We will see."
#Middlesbrough #Kim Hellberg #Spygate
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Lifestyle May 23, 2026

The Decline of the Office Lunch: From Luxury to Burden

The office lunch has transformed from a midday luxury to an unnecessary burden in modern work cultu…
The Evolution of the Office LunchIt's 12.30pm as I write this. My mind is preoccupied with moving my fingers from key to key on my ageing laptop, a task I paused briefly to remove a hair from the screen. Then, I scratched my leg again, which kicked up another hair. I should get back to work, but I can't concentrate. Why? Because I'm incredibly hungry. It is, after all, lunchtime – the most worthless part of any work day.It is not that there's shame in lunch. It's just that we're not programmed to eat at a certain time. We're all different and the whole concept of the office lunch is obsolete nonsense in 2026. Let it go.The Industrial Roots of the Midday MealBig Lunch (or alternatively, the Lunch Industrial Complex) will tell you otherwise. Lunch is considered a fundamental element of the work day. It is legally mandated here in California, after all. But it is also something people who work in offices look forward to. It's a moment to step away from the invisible chains that attach us to our computers for an hour or so of normal human behavior. Back when I worked in an office, I would look at my phone and think, if I can just make it to noon, I'll be OK. Lunch was like a little treat to break up the monotony of corporate life. In some jobs, there was even a free lunch to make the whole thing even more appealing. You can't leave the office. You don't even have to leave the office!I wasn't around for most of the 20th century, but according to TV shows like Mad Men, the old days of lunch meant meandering to a classy steakhouse and getting drunk off martinis, then plopping on to a chaise longue until the buzz wore off. I would happily endorse that version of lunch, but that's not what we are being presented with today. The modern office lunch is about convenience and expediency. It's being hustled through a Sweetgreen to collect your biodegradable bucket of vegetables so you can get back to your desk before your next meeting.The Economic Impact of Changing Lunch HabitsThe work day lunch is merely a distraction from your unenviable reality, offering the illusion of choice while reinforcing the plain and simple fact of your need to earn a living performing a series of tasks you hate. Shall I have pizza or Mexican food? No, I mustn't. I shall have a salad, lest I become a walking man-beast made primarily of partially digested carbohydrates.Lunch, as a concept, evolved from light refreshments as a leisure activity to a meal equal to the other two, thanks to the rapid rise of industrialization in the 19th century. Lunch became a crucial break from mining coal or assembling car parts. I don't need nearly as much of a break from designing PowerPoint slides or responding to an email that's "just following up on my previous request". Patience, yes. But that's a different story.So, we have rendered this middle child of a meal (not as nourishing as breakfast and not as fun as dinner) a culinary pariah tied directly into emotional desire. Lunch is the vestigial tail of the Industrial Revolution. I no longer look forward to noon like an over-caffeinated child anticipating Christmas morning. Maybe I'll have a small snack – nuts, a protein bar, crudites. I might even read or go for a walk. I recognize my privilege here, that I'm not mandated to be anywhere or do anything I don't want to do. I can occupy myself with other pursuits that are more nourishing than a buffalo chicken wrap. But the fact remains that my job is still as active as any office worker's. As in, not at all. I prefer a big, nutritious breakfast or a nice, early dinner.The Changing Landscape of Office DiningIf I have to meet someone socially or professionally during the day, or if my stomach is screaming at me, I'll eat. (In my fantasies, my stomach sounds exactly like my mother, a topic to unpack another time.) But without the peer pressure of needing to make use of my hour of mandated leisure time by filling my mouth with overpriced junk (or gossiping with co-workers), I can truly be free. The office lunch is a scam perpetrated by venture capitalists with big dreams of franchising their various "elevated" takeout dining experiences. But automation, economic malaise and the collapse of the urban business district are going to make these places even more useless. Sweetgreen's business is cratering for these very reasons. As the economy suffers, fast food is growing in popularity again, but fast food is not the answer.Places like Sweetgreen, Pret a Manger or Cava sustain themselves on the concept of lunch being connected to leisure: with your hour of free time, you should have a meal, even if it's food you don't even particularly enjoy consuming. I'm not saying don't eat lunch; rather that the break you receive from the drudgery of employment should be spent on pleasurable activities. If that means eating, great. But don't do it just because you think you have to. I say we should normalize taking a nap in the afternoon. Not a Mad Men-style snooze caused by excessive alcohol consumption, but a rest from the all-consuming stimulus of modern life. Get rid of the cubicles and unused couches in the various open-plan tech spaces and put in beds. Give me a teddy bear and one of those caps cartoon characters wore at night.The Future of Workplace DiningAnd now … I'm done typing. I can go eat something. Why am I eating in the afternoon? Am I some kind of hypocrite?No.It's because I didn't eat breakfast.
#Office Culture #Work-Life Balance #Meal Habits
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Health May 23, 2026

Bangladesh measles outbreak kills over 500 children

A measles outbreak in Bangladesh has killed over 500 children, with 13 deaths reported in the past …
The Measles Outbreak in Bangladesh A measles outbreak in Bangladesh has killed more than 500 children in the deadliest surge there in decades. The death toll continued to rise on Saturday, with 13 children passing away in the past 24 hours alone, increasing the total to 512, according to a health department tally that began on March 15. Causes and Complications of Measles Measles, which has no specific treatment once caught, is a highly contagious viral disease that spreads through coughs and sneezes. The disease primarily affects children and can cause severe complications, including pneumonia, brain inflammation and death, particularly among malnourished or unvaccinated children. Vaccination Efforts and Challenges The South Asian nation of 175 million people has rolled out a mass vaccination drive to combat the outbreak. United Nations children’s agency (UNICEF) country chief Rana Flowers said this week that the campaign has reached 18 million children. However, the health department said the full impact of the vaccinations would take months to be felt. The Impact on Healthcare and Future Prospects Hospitals in the capital Dhaka, which have been overwhelmed with cases, have set up dedicated wards but lack sufficient numbers of intensive care beds. UNICEF stressed the need to boost vaccination programmes and increase funding for health facilities, surveillance and data systems in the future. Future Outlook and Prevention UNICEF said gaps in immunisation worsened during and after the chaos of the 2024 student-led uprising that toppled the government, leaving large numbers of children unprotected. The health department’s death toll comes after the government said the outbreak was now contained, noting a decline in cases in several previously hard-hit areas.
#Bangladesh #Measles Outbreak #UNICEF
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Sports May 22, 2026

Pep Guardiola: From Football Pitch to Fashion Runway

Pep Guardiola has evolved from a traditional football manager to an unexpected fashion icon, revolu…
The Fashion Revolution of Pep GuardiolaIn 2016, when Pep Guardiola took his place in the dugout for his first game in charge of Manchester City, the fashion plates in the Premier League included José Mourinho, in a quarter zip and mac at Manchester United and Arsène Wenger, dapper in his suit and unzippable puffer jacket at Arsenal. Guardiola, dressed like an overgrown school boy in v-neck, shirt, tie and blazer, didn't seem as if he was going to be that much of a sartorial threat. But 10 years down the line he is the undisputed champion of dugout style.The Transformation of Managerial FashionGuardiola can be credited as the man to relax the unwritten manager dress code, which swung between wedding-worthy smart suits or club-issued tracksuits. Instead, he chose clothes that worked beyond that small patch of grass managers stand in: blouson jackets, nice brogues, three quarter coat. By 2019, his style was a talking point – and he had a hand in making cardigans a trend for men. He wore a £1200 "lucky" grey knit 30 times in the season Man City won the treble.How Guardiola Redefined Football StyleGuardiola's loosening up continued – he brought sneakers to the dug out, preferring baseball boots by catwalk designer Rick Owens as well as combat-style trousers and Stone Island jackets. If he was increasingly praised for what he wore, in 2022 he credited his then-wife, Cristina Serra, as the person to pick his outfits. "Absolutely, ever since I met her," he told Sky Sports "before I was a disaster, now I'm elegant, thanks to her."When Football Fashion Went ViralWhen Guardiola wore a slacker-style checked shirt by Swedish brand Our Legacy to a Champions League game in March, the look – which GQ described as "cool stoner" – went viral across fashion and football time lines. Some speculated the look was the influence of his Gen Z daughter, others suggested he had hired a stylist. Whatever the backstory, he has followed it up with elegant polo necks and pleated trousers that wouldn't be out of place on the front row of the menswear shows.Guardiola's Fashion Legacy in FootballGuardiola may be saying goodbye to the Premier League but football always needs style champions to show managers – and men - life beyond the quarter zip. His fashion evolution has not only transformed how managers dress but has also influenced broader menswear trends, proving that style and substance can coexist even in the high-pressure world of professional football.
#Pep Guardiola #Manchester City #Premier League
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Art May 22, 2026

Art World Roundup: Churchill's Paintings, Sci-Fi Installations and Valie Export's Legacy

This week's art scene features Winston Churchill's paintings, futuristic installations by Liam Youn…
The Churchill Exhibition: War Leader's Artistic EscapeBritain's eloquent war leader kept himself sane by puffing on cigars, swilling brandy – and painting the world around him. The Wallace Collection in London is hosting "Winston Churchill: The Painter" from 23 May to 29 November, offering a rare glimpse into the artistic side of the historical figure.New Voices in Contemporary ArtThe London art scene is buzzing with new exhibitions featuring contemporary artists:Kira Freije presents hollow metal people at Modern Art Oxford, showing shadows of Berlin Dada in her work. The exhibition runs from 23 May to 16 August.Miriam Elia, known for her witty take on Ladybird books, turns her eye towards Moses in this exhibition for Jewish Cultural Month at JW3, until 30 June.Liam Young offers futuristic but lo-fi worlds you can walk through at the Barbican, until 6 September, with installations finding hope for our planet.Zsuzsi Ujj presents her first UK solo show at Arcadia Missa, from 22 May until 18 July, establishing her presence from Hungary's dissident art and underground music scenes.Remembering Valie ExportThe art world mourns the passing of Austrian feminist artist and film-maker Valie Export, who died this week. Her 1968 performance piece "Tapp und Tastkinema" (Tap and Touch Cinema) is highlighted as typically provocative but playful, giving people the opportunity to interact with and appraise a real female body: her own. Export's fearless approach to challenging beauty standards continues to influence contemporary artists.Notable Art News and DevelopmentsThe week brought several significant stories from the art world:Taiba Akhuetie makes wild creations out of hair – Rihanna and Cate Blanchett are fansWhistler should have used better paint to capture his motherNina Simone's chewing gum is going on show in a new exhibition celebrating the superfanChristo made the invisible visibleGrayson Perry's life story is to be made into a musicalFlorentina Holzinger rocked this year's Venice Biennale with naked jetskiers, human bells and urine diversGen Z can't get enough of the king of colour, Mark RothkoSanya Kantarovsky's paintings of Christian iconography and children will haunt youMasterpiece of the Week: The Judgement of ParisJoachim Wtewael's "The Judgement of Paris" (1615) stands as this week's masterpiece. The painting depicts the moment when Trojan prince Paris foolishly rates the beauty of Minerva, Venus, and Juno, giving the prize to Venus in return for her helping him seduce Helen. This decision sparked the Trojan War, with the Greeks supported by the furious Juno. Wtewael's mannerist style, with its bony, angular forms and deliberate distortions, creates an overabundance that presages doom, reflecting the war-torn Europe of the 1600s. The painting is on display at the National Gallery in London.
#Winston Churchill #Valie Export #Liam Young
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Politics May 21, 2026

Baywatch Standoff Turns LA Film Policy into Mayoral Battleground

A dispute over drone and night‑shooting permits for the new Baywatch reboot sparked a political fir…
The LeadWhen producers of the revived Baywatch series hit unexpected permitting roadblocks on Venice Beach, the incident quickly morphed into a political flashpoint, with opponents of Mayor Karen Bass branding Los Angeles “not film friendly” and using the controversy to sharpen their mayoral campaigns. The Baywatch Production Standoff on Venice BeachAfter receiving a $21 million state tax credit, the Baywatch team arrived in February to film on Venice Beach. Within four days, the County Beaches and Harbors Department barred the use of camera drones, night shooting, and even limited the sand area and parking options, forcing production to halt. Tax credit: $21 million Restrictions: no drones, no night shoots, limited sand and parking Production downtime: four days before a full stop Financial Stakes and Shooting‑Day MetricsThe Baywatch dispute arrived at a moment when the city was trying to reverse a long‑term decline in film activity. Industry loss: nearly 50 % drop in shooting days since 2018 (cited by challenger Nithya Raman) Recent rebound: 10.7 % increase in total productions Q4 2025 → Q1 2026 Feature‑film surge: 45 % rise in shooting days over the same period Political Fallout in the 2026 Los Angeles Mayoral RaceOpponents seized the Baywatch saga to question Bass’s leadership. Right‑wing challenger Spencer Pratt called the incident “political fecklessness,” while left‑leaning councilmember Nithya Raman highlighted the broader decline in shooting days. Bass responded by coordinating with the state coastal commission, FilmLA, and city council to clear the bureaucratic hurdles. What the Next Months Hold for LA’s Film PolicyMayor Bass announced a series of reforms: streamlined permitting across agencies, accelerated sound‑stage certification, waived fees for “microshoots,” and a six‑month pilot by FilmLA to cover permits for low‑impact productions. If these measures sustain the recent 10.7 % production uptick, they could become a cornerstone of Bass’s re‑election narrative, while challengers will likely continue to press for faster, more transparent reforms.
#Los Angeles #Karen Bass #Baywatch
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Sports May 21, 2026

Mohamed Salah to Captain Egypt at FIFA World Cup 2026

Mohamed Salah will captain Egypt's squad at the FIFA World Cup 2026, alongside Manchester City's Om…
The Road to FIFA World Cup 2026 Egypt's head coach, Hossam Hassan, has announced the preliminary squad for the FIFA World Cup 2026, which will take place in the United States, Canada, and Mexico from June 11 to July 19. Liverpool's Mohamed Salah will lead the team as captain, supported by Manchester City's Omar Marmoush. Squad Selection Highlights The squad includes some notable inclusions and exclusions. Uncapped teenager Hamza Abdelkarim, who plays for Barcelona's under-19 team, has been included in the squad. On the other hand, Nantes forward Mostafa Mohamed has been left out. The Data Behind the Squad Mohamed Salah (Liverpool) - Captain Omar Marmoush (Manchester City) - Forward Hamza Abdelkarim (Barcelona U19) - Forward The Impact of Squad Selection The selection of Hamza Abdelkarim and exclusion of Mostafa Mohamed reflect the team's strategy to blend experience with youth. Mostafa Mohamed's omission is notable, given his recent form struggles with Nantes. The Road Ahead Egypt will play friendly matches against Russia and Brazil before heading to the World Cup. Their campaign begins against Belgium in Seattle on June 15, followed by matches against New Zealand, and Iran. Egypt's Squad for FIFA World Cup 2026 Goalkeepers: Mohamed El Shenawy (Al Ahly), Mostafa Shobeir (Al Ahly), El Mahdi Soliman (Zamalek), Mohamed Alaa (El Gouna) Defenders: Mohamed Hany (Al Ahly), Tarek Alaa (Zed), Hamdy Fathy (Al Wakrah), Rami Rabia (Al Ain), Yasser Ibrahim (Al Ahly), Hossam Abdelmaguid (Zamalek), Mohamed Abdelmonemn (Nice), Ahmed Fatouh (Zamalek), Karim Hafez (Pyramids) Midfielders: Marwan Ateya (Al Ahly), Mohanad Lasheen (Pyramids), Nabil Emad (Al Najma), Mahmoud Saber (Zed), Ahmed Zizo (Al Ahly), Emam Ashour (Al Ahly), Mostafa Ziko (Pyramids), Mahmoud Trezeguet (Al Ahly), Ibrahim Adel (Nordsjaelland), Haissem Hassan (Real Ovideo) Forwards: Omar Marmoush (Manchester City), Mohamed Salah (Liverpool), Aqtay Abdallah (Enppi), Hamza Abdelkarim (Barcelona U19)
#Mohamed Salah #Egypt #FIFA World Cup 2026
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