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Interviews

  • René Meulensteen at home in Cheshire ahead of going to the World Cup.

    ‘It was madness in Baghdad’: René Meulensteen on coaching Iraq and helping Ronaldo

    Iraq’s No 2 discusses his recipe for a World Cup shock, the players’ singing and his time assisting Alex Ferguson at Manchester United
  • England's Alice Capsey during a nets session at Trent Bridge, Nottingham

    ‘A once-in-a-career opportunity’: Alice Capsey gears up to be England’s World Cup gamechanger

    The in-form better tells Raf Nicholson that the team must seize home advantage to emulate the 2017 triumph
    • ‘I didn’t think I’d be playing at 40’: Edin Dzeko on defying age to lead his country at the World Cup

    • ‘They are isolated … they are alone’: Zelenskyy on Russia, Putin’s lies – and fighting back

    • ‘We were going off the cliff’: Soundgarden’s Kim Thayil on inventing grunge – and losing Chris Cornell and Kurt Cobain

  • United States v Mexico - Gold Cup 2025: FinalHOUSTON, TEXAS - JULY 06: CONCACAF President Victor Montagliani walks across the field before the finals of the CONCACAF Gold Cup 2025 between the United States and Mexico at NRG Stadium on July 06, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Omar Vega/Getty Images)

    Fifa vice-president Victor Montagliani: ‘MLS can become the second-biggest league in the world. Maybe the biggest’

  • Kelly Cates

    ‘We’re going to be in an unreal, mad World Cup time zone’: Kelly Cates on presenting in Salford at 2am

  • Bedouine wearing an ornate blue silk dress with costume jewellery

    ‘You escape the slaughter. But there’s a long tail of sadness’: musician Bedouine on the strangeness of Arab life outside the Middle East

  • A woman in glasses smiles

    Money whisperers
    ‘I want to be other people’s cautionary tale’: how do you financially prepare for a parent’s death?

  • ‘In prison, I made a little studio in my head. It kept me sane’: Ibrahim Alfa Jr, British techno’s great survivor

  • The big interview
    ‘My life is about beauty’: Julie Newmar at 92 on shocking the world as Catwoman – and caring for her son

  • A person holds a sign a sign saying 'Close Delaney Hall' in a scrum of protesters as federal agents line up to oppose them

    Building power
    ‘They have nothing else to lose’: Delaney Hall hunger strikes are a hallmark of resistance in detention

    As protests flare at New Jersey’s Delaney Hall, Jessica Ordaz examines the US’s complex relationship with migration and detention
  • Luis de La Fuente sits smiling in front of a red wall with 'ESPAÑA' branding

    Luis de la Fuente: ‘The appreciation for Spanish coaches should have happened ages ago’

    Spain manager on the values behind the nation’s coaching culture, the joy of teaching and Lamine Yamal’s otherworldly talents
  • Sarah Rhind

    ‘Football saved me’: Street Soccer coordinator Sarah Rhind on life after heroin addiction

    Sarah Rhind tells Suzanne Wrack how football was her focus as she recovered and how it helped her create ‘beautiful friendships’
  • Philippa Dunne looking at the camera with her head tilted to the right and her hands in her pockets, wearing a long silver coat with a fluffy white collar, a white top and purple trousers

    The Q&A
    Actor Philippa Dunne: ‘Someone once saw me in a play and said that I was disgusting’

  • Romário holding the World Cup trophy

    Romário: ‘I consider myself one of the greatest players ever. An 11 out of 10’

  • Rambert’s adaptation of Peaky Blinders

    ‘Peaky Blinders is our Nutcracker’: how Rambert are dragging dance into the present – and their message for Timothée Chalamet

    How does a 100-year-old dance company face the 21st century? For Rambert’s Benoit Swan Pouffer the answer is combining innovation with popular adaptations such as the Brummie crime saga
  • Graham Potter

    Graham Potter: ‘I feel very Swedish when I’m working – I look a bit Swedish’

    The head coach is looking forward to leading Sweden into the World Cup after reflecting on his failures at Chelsea and West Ham
  • She stands outside in a pink dressing gown, looking worried

    Sex, austerity and mugs of vodka: how the Greek myth Iphigenia became a Welsh-language film sensation

    The movie adaptation of Gary Owen’s acclaimed play Iphigenia in Splott, Effi o Blaenau, is released this month. Here, its director and crew explain why they relocated the film to a post-industrial mining town – and refused to make it in English
  • Andy Burnham walks outdoors, gesturing as he speaks

    ‘I wouldn’t flinch’: Burnham on social care, markets, Brexit – and the prospect of a general election

    Exclusive: Greater Manchester mayor sets out his priorities before Makerfield byelection – and what might happen after the vote
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