(Video) Rio Ngumoha nets show-stopping goal in 7-goal thriller after being robbed of epic moment
Rio Ngumoha was controversially denied a fairytale moment at Anfield on Saturday night, but nothing and no-one was going to stop him from making a show-stopping impact less than 24 hours later.
The 17-year-old came off the bench for Liverpool’s first team in their 3-0 victory over Brighton in the FA Cup and momentarily thought he’d scored in front of the Kop when firing past Jason Steele, but unfortunately the goal was disallowed for offside.
Replays showed that it should have stood, and VAR wasn’t in operation to correct the error, and Arne Slot voiced his disagreement with the decision in his post-match press conference, although the teenage prodigy didn’t dwell on the disappointment for long.
Ngumoha scores worldie for Liverpool under-21s
On Sunday afternoon, Ngumoha lined out for the Reds’ under-21s against their West Brom counterparts in Premier League 2, and the goal that he scored to put his team 3-2 ahead shortly before half-time was a thing of beauty.
Collecting a ball on the left flank from a Trey Nyoni pass, he surged into the penalty area and jinked past two opponents before crashing an unstoppable shot into the top corner of the visitors’ net, and there was nothing in the slightest to prevent that magnificent strike from counting on the scoreboard.
It proved to be a significant moment too, as Rob Page’s side eventually won 4-3 (via liverpoolfc.com).
Image via @cnsultra on X
Ngumoha already looks like an elite talent
With the greatest of respect to the under-21s, even a hat-trick yesterday wouldn’t have meant as much for Ngumoha as a goal in front of the Kop in a competitive fixture only a few months after turning 17.
Nonetheless, what happened on Saturday night takes nothing away from the excellent of the strike that he produced in the victory over West Brom, and any minutes that he can get on the pitch at any level will stand to the teenager as he embarks on what has the makings of being an elite career.
It isn’t his first time double-jobbing on the same weekend, either – he followed up his outing off the bench in our 3-2 Premier League defeat to Bournemouth last month with by lining out for the under-21s against Leeds the very next day.
Ngumoha has already shown glimpses of his outrageous talent at senior level, displaying a confidence and dribbling ability which belies his tender years, and there have been calls for Slot to play him more regularly.
There has been an understandable reluctance from the first-team head coach to expose the winger too much at such a sensitive stage in his footballing development, but everything we’ve seen of the 17-year-old so far suggests that he’s taking that biggest of leaps in his stride.
You can view Ngumoha’s goal for Liverpool’s under-21s below, via thelfcacademy on Instagram:
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Trying to tame the Olympic controversy, World Curling sent in the umps. Then they sent them away
CORTINA D'AMPEZZO (AP) — The curling drama at the Winter Olympics sent the sport's governing body scrambling to address a growing controversy and curb conflicting accounts of rule breaking. The backpedaling came less than 24 hours later.
A day after World Curling ramped up monitoring of the matches it pulled the plug, saying umpires would retreat and be available on request but not by default.
The move came after a lightning-fast meeting between national curling federations and World Curling on Saturday, where curlers expressed dissatisfaction with the increased surveillance. Athletes wanted less monitoring, not more.
Why would Olympic curlers, playing a sport where mere centimeters can make the difference between a winning and losing stone, choose to send the umps away? The answer may have to do with the longstanding spirit of the game, which some athletes are clinging to even as it grows more popular — and professional.
“I think there’s a lot of pride in trying to be a sport that kind of officiates ourselves a little bit, so to speak," said Nolan Thiessen, CEO of Curling Canada, whose teams have been at the heart of the uproar over the past several days. “I think it was just everybody taking a deep breath and going, okay, let’s just finish this Olympics the way we know our sport is to be played.”
World Curling rethinks officiating
The saga began Friday, when Swedish curler Oskar Eriksson accused Canadian curler Marc Kennedy of breaking the rules by touching the rock again after initially releasing it down the sheet of ice. Kennedy's expletive-laden outburst drew widespread attention, as did the matches that tend to fall off the radar outside the Olympics.
World Curling decided it needed to double down on game surveillance, even though it was already midway through the Olympics men’s and women’s round-robin competition.
From then on, the federation said, two umpires would step out from behind the courtside table and watch the “hog line” — the point at which curlers must release the granite stone down the sheet of ice — from close proximity. That way, they’d be able to more closely check for illegal double-touches.
In just a day, officials called two double-touch infractions, by Rachel Homan of Canada and Bobby Lammie of Britain, removing their stones from play.
It is exceedingly rare for stones to be removed from competition with that frequency.
By Sunday afternoon, players and coaches were fed up and World Curling changed its policy after the meeting.
“When the players started complaining, it puts them in a tough position because they want to do their jobs and listen to the players that think that there’s a problem out there,” said Emma Miskew, a Canadian curler. “I’m happy with how the discussion went and what the ruling came to.”
Olympic curlers say the double-touch is not a big deal
Several Olympic curlers said that double-touching did not necessarily reveal a nefarious desire to cheat, and that penalizing a quick and accidental graze of the granite could be over the top.
“If you get a hog line violation, it’s not cheating,” Homan said Monday.
Miskew added that it was rare to hear the accusation, at least in women's curling, while Swiss curler Alina Paetz agreed with Homan that it is a minor infraction.
“If you do it it’s not allowed, but I think they blew it up a little bit, so it’s a bigger thing than it actually is,” Paetz said. "It’s the Olympics, there’s emotion in it. I don’t think it is actually that big of a deal.”
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AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics
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Sweden's Edin curling team has been eliminated from the Olympic semifinals after suffering their fifth consecutive loss, a defeat against Germany that ended their medal hopes. The team's poor performance has drawn criticism, with SVT commentator Niklas Nord remarking, 'Man känner inte igen laget' (One doesn't recognize the team), suggesting a significant decline in form.