AC Milan is determined to add Arsenal star to their squad, here is why

AC Milan remains determined to sign Jakub Kiwior this summer, despite the defender now being a key player for Arsenal.

Kiwior initially struggled at the start of his time at the Emirates, but since the beginning of 2024, he has begun to impress whenever he plays, and Arsenal now considers him an integral part of their squad.

Mikel Arteta’s side is pleased with his contributions and expects him to continue improving. Kiwior himself is enjoying his time at the Emirates and wishes to remain with the Gunners.

However, AC Milan continues their pursuit of him and views him as a valuable addition to their defence. According to a report on Milan News, they appreciate his Serie A experience and success in another league.

Milan also values his versatility, which has proven crucial for Arsenal. They see Kiwior as a player who can strengthen their squad significantly.

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Pundit slams Rice again for making “sideways and backwards passes.”

James McClean criticized Declan Rice again after his performance in England’s game against Denmark.

England has been underperforming and uninspiring in their two matches at Euro 2024 so far.

The Three Lions are one of the favourites to win the competition, but they have not met expectations, and individual players will admit they have been underwhelming.

McClean, who has been serving as a pundit during the competition, recently criticized Rice for being overrated, stating that he cannot control games like Rodri and Toni Kroos.

After the last England game, he again called out Rice for making safe passes. He said, as quoted by the Daily Mail:

‘I made a comment about Declan Rice that people have got their knickers in a twist about but for a £100million player I want to see more than just five-yard sideways and backwards passes.

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Dwight Yorke urges Arsenal to invest £100million on Premier League star

Dwight Yorke has recommended that Arsenal sign a striker this summer after Benjamin Sesko snubbed them.

The Gunners are in the market for a new striker, and several names are on their shopping list.

Eventually, they will have to settle for one, and Yorke believes the player they should focus on signing for a huge fee is Alexander Isak.

The Swede has been in fantastic form for Newcastle since he moved to the Premier League, and the Magpies have made him unavailable for transfer.

Isak is one of the best strikers in the Premier League and keeps improving, but Newcastle does not want to sell him and has set a huge valuation for his signature.

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United worried about Arsenal’s interest in Zirkzee as the Gunners hold a key advantage

Arsenal and Manchester United are both in the running for Joshua Zirkzee, with both clubs considering bringing him to the Premier League.

The Dutchman was in fine form for Bologna last season, earning him a place in the Netherlands squad for Euro 2024.

Bologna also qualified for the Champions League thanks to his goals and overall performance, which has now attracted interest from several clubs.

Arsenal wants him in their squad, but Manchester United is keener and worried about the Gunners’ interest.

A report on Football Insider claims United fears they will miss out on signing him if Arsenal gets serious because the Gunners have Champions League football, while they do not.

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Mr Rat

What happens when you put two English referees on one of the most exciting clashes of the group stages? A 0-0 draw. That’s what PGMOL do to ya.


Marcus, Luke and Vish react to France drawing a blank against the Dutch, while Andy shares his experience of the atmosphere in the stadium but fails to pronounce buffet correctly. Plus, they discuss Austria’s slick team performance against Poland thanks to the great Specs himself, which has left the lads worried that Austria could literally press England into their own net. But – fear not – a Serbian psychic has predicted everything will be okay...


Elsewhere, there are fresh revelations about our new favourite footballer Serjio Robert Livingstone Pohlhammer and Pete gets a new nickname.


We're back on stage and tickets are out NOW! Join us at London Palladium on Friday September 20th 2024 for 'Football Ramble: Time Tunnel', a journey through football history like no other. Expect loads of laughs, all your Ramble favourites, and absolutely everything on Pete's USB stick. Get your tickets at footballramblelive.com!


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Arsenal is close to sealing a €120m package for sought-after striker

Arsenal is stepping up its interest in Viktor Gyokeres, according to a report from Portugal.

The Gunners are looking to bolster their attack after missing out on their number one target, Benjamin Sesko, who has decided not to change clubs this summer.

Mikel Arteta’s side is now keen on signing another striker, and Gyokeres has emerged as their latest preferred target.

They have followed the Swede for a long time, and he impressed them by scoring 29 goals and providing ten assists in 33 league games last term.

It was his first season at Sporting Club, yet he delivered impressive numbers, which the Gunners believe he can replicate in their team.

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New York’s Mitchell-Innes & Nash to Close Chelsea Space, Transition to ‘Project-Based Advisory’

Mitchell-Innes & Nash, a gallery that represents artists such as Pope.L, Martha Rosler, and Jacolby Satterwhite, will close its Chelsea space and transition away from its current business model.

The gallery will now be “a project-based advisory space,” founders Lucy Mitchell-Innes and David Nash wrote in a letter sent on Friday evening that was obtained by ARTnews. “Moving forward we will be working within a new paradigm, consulting with select primary market artists and estates, providing art advisory services to individual collectors and foundations, and representing artworks on the primary and secondary markets,” the dealers wrote.

They founded their gallery 28 years ago, in 1996, on the Upper East Side, and they relocated the business to Chelsea in 2005. The married dealers, who both held high-ranking positions at Sotheby’s prior to launching Mitchell-Innes & Nash, teased a move to a new location in Manhattan, but they did not say where.

A wide range of artists have shown at Mitchell-Innes & Nash, from established giants like Roy Lichtenstein and Joseph Beuys to emerging talents like Satterwhite and Gideon Appah. Conceptual artists like Rosler, Pope.L, Mary Kelly, Monica Bonvicini, and the collective General Idea all found a home at the gallery alongside abstractionists such as Eddie Martinez, Keltie Ferris, and Gerasimos Floratos.

A spokesperson said that Mitchell-Innes & Nash confirmed that the gallery would no longer be open to the public and it would no longer host an exhibition program. Select artists and estates will continue to be represented by Mitchell-Innes & Nash, the spokesperson said, although it was not immediately clear which ones.

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Philadelphia’s UArts Lacks Funds Owed to Employees Under Federal Law, Union Says

The University of the Arts in Philadelphia lacks the funds legally owed to employees, according to union representatives for staff at the abruptly shuttered school.

Representatives from the institution’s staff and faculty unions said an impact negotiating session with the university’s associate vice president of human resources Caroline Tate and attorney Kristine Grady Derewicz was “insulting and insubstantial.”

Union officials told the Philadelphia Inquirer that Derewicz did not give them proposals on health insurance, severance, or other benefits during the meeting. Details on the school’s finances were also not given, with the Inquirer reporting that such information “does not exist.”

The Philadelphia arts institution was founded in 1876 and is commonly known as UArts. Union officials said in a statement that the school “lacks the cash flow to comply with laws requiring 60 days of advance notice and pay before mass layoffs.”

On May 31, the university announced that it had lost accreditation with the Middle States Commission on Higher Education and that it would not offer classes in the fall. The statement promised students they would be offered a “pathway” to other local institutions, including Temple University, Drexel University, and Moore College of Art and Design.

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Architects for the Centre Pompidou’s Five-Year Renovation Project Have Been Announced

Despite major financial concerns, the Centre Pompidou announced the architects for its forthcoming five-year renovation project.

The museum, designed by Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano in 1977, will be in the hands of Moreau Kusunoki, a French office founded by Nicolas Moreau and Hiroko Kusunoki, with Mexico City–based Frida Escobedo Studio as associate designer, the Architect’s Newspaper reported.

The firms won a competition to modernize the building at a cost of $280 million. The museum won’t reopen until 2030.

Additionally, Moreau Kusunoki and Escobedo plan to collaborate with French engineering firm AIA Life Designers, and to consult Piano, who was also on the competition jury.

As part of the renovation, there will be ADA improvements to spaces like the library and rooftop, and asbestos removal, as well as added floor space and increased natural light. According to the museum, the structure has weathered significant damage since it was first built in the ’70s.

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The Supreme Court Just Proved That Its Gun Rulings Have Been a Disaster

In 2022, in a decision penned by Justice Clarence Thomas, the Supreme Court announced a new approach to regulating firearms. Henceforth, the court declared in Bruen, gun laws would only pass Second Amendment muster if they are “consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.”

Within a year, the Supreme Court was asked to confront the effect of their backward-looking decision: Could someone subject to a domestic violence restraining order have firearms? The question pitted the right of abusers to possess guns against the right of their victims not to be murdered. Would the justices double-down on their history-only approach, or would it find a way to keep guns away from violent abusers?

This decision hinges on ancient laws most people have never heard of.

On Friday, all the justices—except Thomas—decided that the government could take guns away from people whom a court deems a credible threat. The decision in United States v. Rahimi attempted to make Bruen workable in our modern world: one with far deadlier weapons than in 1791, and far more respect for women. But as the decision in Rahimi, its concurrences, and its lone dissent demonstrate, a clear and sensible approach to evaluating gun laws is a long way off.

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