NewsFeedMultiple explosions have hit Beirut’s southern suburbs as Israel launches new attacks, claiming to target Hezbollah. Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem says the attacks...
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Multiple explosions have hit Beirut’s southern suburbs as Israel launches new attacks, claiming to target Hezbollah. Al Jazeera’s Ali Hashem says the attacks come after Israel already violated a ceasefire announced earlier this week, when a US-backed statement said Israel and Lebanon had agreed to a truce.
Two suspects have been killed by security forces in Israel after shootings happened in multiple locations in central Israel. Al Jazeera’s Nida Ibrahim explains what we know.
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Several FBI analysts tied to the creation of a 2023 memo warning of a potential threat from Catholic “violent extremists” were fired on Friday, according to their lawyer, the latest wave of terminations under the leadership of its director Kash Patel.
The fired employees included four intelligence analysts and a supervisory analyst. The FBI declined to comment.
“This action is manifestly unjust, completely unsupported by the facts, and subverts standard FBI policy and procedure,” their lawyer, David Laufman, said in a statement. “These individuals deserved far better for the exceptional and faithful public service they rendered to protect our country.”
The January 2023 intelligence product produced by analysts in the FBI’s Richmond, Virginia, field office emerged as a political flashpoint after it was issued, with Republicans in Congress repeatedly citing it as part of their broader contention that the FBI during Joe Biden’s presidency was targeting conservatives.
Then FBI director Chris Wray repeatedly denied that charge and the bureau has said the document was quickly retracted and an internal review was launched. Merrick Garland, the attorney general under Biden, has said he was “appalled” by the memo.
Earlier justice department investigations into the memo challenged the analytical tradecraft but did not find intentional misconduct by the analysts involved.
The firings are part of a broader personnel purge under Patel, a loyalist of Donald Trump who has pushed out dozens of employees who either contributed to investigations of the president or who were perceived as not in alignment with the administration’s agenda. The justice department has engaged in similarly sweeping firings of prosecutors since Trump’s second presidency began in early 2025.
In February, for instance, the FBI fired a group of counterintelligence agents who participated in the investigation into Trump over his retention of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, after his first presidency.
The Richmond memo, which emerged from a domestic terrorism investigation, sought to examine a potential link between what it called “Radical Traditionalist Catholic” ideology and racially and ethnically motivated extremists. It warned of the potential for violence and also highlighted what the authors described as “new avenues for tripwire and source development”.
FBI leadership quickly condemned those findings once the document became public.
An internal FBI review described in a 2023 letter to Congress and based on interviews with 26 people “found that all individuals involved in the creation, review and approval of the product failed to adhere to analytic tradecraft standards and failed to recognize that the product, as drafted, equated the subjects’ interest in their self-described form of religion with racially or ethnically motivated violent extremist (RMVE) ideology without sufficient evidence or articulable support”.
The failure to adhere to standards, including on proper domestic terrorism terminology, “created the appearance that the FBI conducts investigative activity based on religious affiliation,” the letter said. “One of the FBI’s most fundamental principles is that investigative activity may not be based solely on the exercise of rights guaranteed by the first amendment” of the constitution, which includes the free exercise of religion.
A justice department inspector general report in 2024 summarized the earlier FBI review by saying that though there were departures from proper analytic tradecraft, “no evidence of a malicious intent or an improper purpose” were found.
President Donald Trump abruptly ended a tense “Meet the Press” interview with host Kristen Welker in Wisconsin Sunday after she repeatedly challenged his claims about election fraud, California’s vote count and his proposed “anti-weaponization” fund.
Trump cut off the interview after accusing NBC, ABC, CBS and CNN of being “crooked” during a final exchange over his claims about U.S. elections.
“You’re a one-sided crooked network,” Trump told Welker. “Sorry. Let’s call it quits because I’ve had enough. Thank you, darling. Have a good time.”
President Donald Trump abruptly ends interview with Kristen Welker.
The exchange escalated during the final block, when Welker pressed Trump on a proposed $1.8 billion fund intended to compensate people who said they were targeted by the former President Joe Biden administration’s alleged “weaponization” of government.
Welker asked Trump whether he was moving away from the fund after acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said the administration would not move forward with it.
“Just to be very clear, are you backing off the fund completely as your acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, has said, or are you looking for another avenue to revive the fund?” Welker asked.
Trump defended the proposal and said people had been harmed by officials in the Biden administration.
NBC’s Kristen Welker repeatedly pressed Trump for evidence as he claimed the 2020 election was “rigged” and accused California officials of wrongdoing.(Samuel Corum/Sipa/Bloomberg)
“People have been hurt so badly by radical left lunatics that worked for the Biden administration and Sleepy Joe,” Trump said. “They’re vicious. They’re violent, what they did to people. And, of course, they went after me more than anybody else.”
Welker pressed Trump on whether he still wanted to revive the proposal.
“So are you looking for a way to revive it?” Welker asked.
Trump said he personally supported the idea but acknowledged it would need approval.
“If it was up to me, I’d pay them the kind of money that they deserve,” Trump said. “So me, personally, I think the weaponization fund is a great idea, and so do many other Republicans. You have to get it approved.”
Trump defended his proposed “anti-weaponization” fund during a tense interview exchange, saying people had been “badly hurt” by the Biden administration.(Nathan Howard/Getty Images)
Trump later broadened his remarks, accusing the press and Biden officials of destroying people’s lives.
“I love the idea, because people like you, the fake dirty press, the crooked press, people like stupid Biden, he’s not smart enough to know what’s going on, but people that surrounded him, surrounded his beautiful Resolute Desk in the Oval Office, what they did to the lives of people, they destroyed people,” Trump said.
Welker pushed back on Trump’s claims, saying the President had no evidence.
“Just to be very clear, there’s no evidence of what you’re saying,” Welker said.
Trump rejected that.
Trump rips Welker, NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN as ‘crooked.’
“All I have to do is look,” Trump said. “They’re crooked just like you’re crooked, your press is crooked. And Meet the Press is crooked.”
“Your elections are crooked, and you’re crooked, and ‘Meet the Press’ is crooked. And so is ABC and CBS and CNN,” Trump said before ending the interview.
Welker attempted to keep the interview going, noting that NBC had traveled to Wisconsin for the sit-down.
“Mr. President, let’s… please, I traveled all the way to Wisconsin,” Welker said.
Trump said he had already given Welker enough time.
“I sat in the rain with you for an hour,” Trump said. “On and off in the rain, and I’ve given you enough time. You ought to straighten out your press, because you know what? A country can never be great with a dishonest press.”
CJ Womack is an associate editor at Fox News.
CJ joined Fox News Digital’s team in 2026, which highlights the vital role journalism plays in shaping politics and culture. He has years of experience analyzing and reporting on the news media.
CJ graduated from Long Beach State University in 2025 with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and a minor in Journalism.
Story tips can be sent to cj.womack@fox.com, and you can follow on Twitter.
Fired CBS 60 Minutes anchor Scott Pelley has accused editorial management at his old network of interfering with a broadcast segment looking at an immigration officer’s killing of Minneapolis protester Renee Good in January.
The veteran broadcaster, who was recently dismissed from the show, said CBS News’s editor-in-chief Bari Weiss had sent an email to his supervisor requesting changes be made soon before the airing of the segment in question.
Pelley told the outlet: “Two of the things in the email include, ‘Can we make the protesters look more violent?’ Now, I’m paraphrasing. I don’t have the quote, but that’s what was communicated to me. And the other thing, Renee Good’s car. You need to describe her as driving toward the officer.”
Pelley maintained that was the direction contained in the email even though video of Good’s shooting did not support such a conclusion.
A CBS News spokesperson told the Times in response to Pelley’s statements that Weiss had made four points in an email exchange on the segment that had “no political motivation and were proposed solely to make the piece as strong, fair, and accurate as possible”.
“Not everything she raised made it into the final piece,” the statement added.
Pelley’s accusation comes amid turbulence at the vintage TV news show that has seen 60 Minutes executive producer Tanya Simon replaced and several correspondents and producers leave over questions of editorial independence. Three of the show’s veterans – Lesley Stahl, Bill Whitaker and Jon Wertheim, – are staying on.
Newly-installed executive producer Nick Bilton, a former Vanity Fair journalist and filmmaker, told staff in a memo that “the foundation of 60 Minutes is journalistic independence.
“We will always pursue stories without fear or favor.”
Pelley’s accusations to the Times followed a heated exchange at a meeting on Monday in which he accused Weiss of “murdering” the show. He was fired soon after.
In his latest salvo, Pelley said he was concerned that Weiss “had zero television experience and had never managed a large global operation like CBS News”. He also called her lack of TV news experience “red flags to me”.
Pelley also said that Bilton’s mission to modernize the 58-year-old show ignored changes that were already in play.
“Of course we have to reach out to a younger and younger audience, but their argument about joining the internet age is just disingenuous,” Pelley said. “It’s almost as if Bari Weiss and Nick Bilton were sealed in a time capsule in 1990, and it just cracked open. They’ve just discovered the internet, and they’re running around telling everybody how important it is.”
Pelley’s accusations over the Minneapolis segment in part centered on what took place in the seconds before Good was shot by an immigration enforcement officer.
“On the video, you see the officer standing slightly off the front of the car,” Pelley told the Times. “You clearly see Ms Good’s wheels turned completely as far as they will go, away from the officer. But he shoots her in the head [and] kills her.”
Pelley also alluded to cell phone video from the officer’s vantage point that was publicly released and captured him calling Good a “fucking bitch”.
As Pelley put it, the officer said “something about her that I can’t repeat in polite company”.
Pelley said that 60 Minutes had “gone out of our way in our plan from the very beginning to show the protesters for the responsibility that they had … somehow that wasn’t enough for Ms Weiss”.
He added that video of the shooting showed that the officer wasn’t standing in front of the car and she wasn’t “driving toward him”. He argued that Weiss “wanted it described that way” because it echoed what Donald Trump said of the shooting in his capacity as president.
Asked to respond to Pelley’s claim that Weiss “was putting a thumb on the scale on behalf of the [Trump] administration”, CBS News said there was “no credible argument” to suggest she was doing that.
Having fled sex trafficking gangs in Belgium and Manchester, the woman from Albania thought she was finally safe when she arrived in west London with her two young children.
A single mother, she had been granted asylum in the UK and was ready to start a new life in the capital. But first they needed a home.
She approached Ealing council for help, telling housing officers she would feel “completely hopeless and unsafe” anywhere outside the city, where she was receiving vital support.
Three weeks later, Ealing council had found her a property – but it was more than 250 miles away in County Durham. If she refused to move, she would effectively be on the street.
“When I saw [the location], it was really bad. I was crying a lot, shaking,” she said. “My older daughter kept saying, ‘what’s happened, mummy? What’s happened?’ I was crying because I was really stressed. I felt they didn’t care.”
The woman, who cannot be named, won a legal challenge against the move in November when a high court judge ruled that Ealing council had acted unlawfully.
A high court judge ruled that Ealing council had acted unlawfully in offering a woman accommodation 250 miles away. Photograph: Terry Harris/Alamy
Ealing council said it recognised “the seriousness of the [high court] judgment and the importance of ensuring housing decisions fully reflect individuals’ circumstances”. It added: “We have taken on board the court’s findings and have strengthened our processes to ensure each case is assessed on an individual basis giving regard to vulnerability and safeguarding risks.”
The Albanian woman is one of hundreds of homeless people who have been handed “inhumane” ultimatums by London councils in recent years in which they are forced to choose between living on the streets or accepting a property hundreds of miles away in some of the poorest parts of England.
Charities say a number of London councils are acting unlawfully and targeting particularly vulnerable people, such as refugees or those who may not speak English, to get them off the books.
When the Albanian woman raised concerns about moving to County Durham, Ealing council officers assured her there would be adequate support services for trafficking victims in the area. They emailed her two links to relevant services in Durham as proof – except, one was based in Durham, North Carolina in the US, and the other in Durham, Ontario, Canada.
Ealing council still insists the County Durham property was suitable for the woman and are appealing the legal ruling, which followed a challenge in support of the woman by the housing charity Shelter.
The Guardian has learned of a separate case involving another Albanian woman, a 24-year-old mother who also survived sex trafficking.
Last November, she was moved by Redbridge council to a house 250 miles away in a town in north-east England. The relocation has separated her one-year-old daughter from her father, who still lives in London.
The woman, who is named IRT in legal proceedings, said she felt pressured to accept the council’s offer or risk becoming homeless on the streets with her young child.
The street where she now lives is partly abandoned, leaving her feeling isolated and fearful to leave the home.
“There was one night where a woman was screaming, maybe two metres away from my door,” she said. “She was saying, ‘Please don’t kill me,’ and another man said ‘I’m gonna kill you.’ No one else was outside. I was getting ready to call the police. My baby was crying, I was crying as well. I was so afraid.”
The move has also left an impact on her child. “I can see she has changed,” IRT said, “Right now, she’s not happy. She’s not playing too much. She doesn’t react as much. I’m still waiting for her to speak, at 19 months. She was so happy with her dad, smiling, running, waiting to go outside.”
After requesting a review of Redbridge council’s decision, Shelter and IRT have now filed an appeal to the county court.
“When I came here, I was all alone, with no one, just my baby. And everything has come back to me,” said IRT. “I have so many nightmares, so many days I don’t eat. Now I need to start from zero again.”
Redbridge council said demand for affordable housing “far exceeded” supply and that its staff ensure no decisions are taken without “proper consideration or in a way that disadvantages particular groups”.
Thousands of mourners have turned out for a silent march for a 11-year-old schoolgirl whose murder prompted widespread outrage when it emerged police had failed to question the suspected killer about previous child sexual abuse allegations.
The parents of the girl, who has been named only as Lyhanna, led the cortege on Sunday in the south-western village of Fleurance behind a banner reading “Never again”. Most of those who marched, including children, wore white shirts or T-shirts, many bearing a smiling portrait of the young victim.
Grief has been met with profound shock and anger. The killing has sparked a heated national debate over the delays and failings of France’s justice system after it emerged that the man being held in connection with Lyhanna’s disappearance and murder had been on the police’s radar since 2017.
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, acknowledged there had been an “unacceptable” failure in the legal system.
“We cannot ignore the fact that flaws have been exposed,” he said during a visit to Montenegro last week. “It is not a question of resources but responsibilities that will need to be determined through an official investigation.”
Lyhanna was last spotted getting into a grey car, identified as belonging to Jérôme Barella, a father of two and school cleaner, in Fleurance in the Gers département on 29 May. Her body was found seven days later in a disused grain silo 15km from where she went missing. Barella has denied killing her, telling police he had dropped her off at the local swimming pool.
The silent march makes its way through Fleurance. Photograph: Lionel Bonaventure/AFP/Getty Images
After his arrest, it was discovered that, last August, the mother of a 10-year-old girl had gone to the police to allege that he had raped her daughter on several occasions. The preliminary investigation, containing interviews with the victim, psychological and medical reports confirming the child had injuries consistent with sexual abuse, and details of previous accusations against Barella, was sent by police in nearby Toulouse to the prosecutor’s office at Auch in January with an instruction to question him.
However, the prosecutor’s office reportedly failed to open the file for several weeks, then took a further six weeks to assign officers to the case. Barella had still not been contacted or summoned for questioning in the three months before Lyhanna was abducted and killed.
Other allegations have also emerged. In December 2017, a mother reported that her 17-year-old daughter had been in a relationship with Barella, but the case was dropped in 2018 after the girl said she had consented. In France a 17-year-old is considered able to consent.
In 2021, the suspect was fired from a cleaning job at another school for alleged inappropriate behaviour with a female student online.
In January 2022, he was accused of raping a seven-year-old child at his home in south-western France. The case was transferred to the local prosecutor but dismissed in 2024 owing to lack of evidence. The public prosecutor in the Gers town of Auch, Clémence Meyer, said inquiries, both medical and psychological, had not allowed police to verify the allegation.
A further accusation of rape was lodged last week but no details have been given.
France’s justice minister, Gérald Darmanin, said there was currently a backlog of 3m police complaints, of which 70,000 involve allegations of rape or sexual assault.
Darmanin, who instructed police last year to make sexual abuse cases a priority, said the breakdown in the legal system was “terrifying”.
“We failed to follow up on the complaints. I will take full responsibility for this. I am furious about this situation,” the minister told TF1.
The “Ramadan War”, as the US-Israel war on Iran is popularly known, disrupted daily life in Iran. Universities, schools and industries were bombed, and streets were emptied out.
Mehran, a 47-year-old teacher based in central Tehran, has been forced to teach his students online from a cramped corner of his modest apartment as distance learning has become the norm.
“Life hasn’t stopped here, as some might imagine, but it has taken on a completely different rhythm,” Mehran told Al Jazeera, which shadowed the teacher, who wished to be identified by a single name, as he navigated a new reality dictated by the war.
From the frustrations of a virtual classroom to pharmacies with bare shelves, and from hyperinflation to crowded, fare-free public buses, Mehran’s day offers a microcosm of a city desperately trying to maintain normalcy as war leaves its indelible mark.
The digital bottleneck
Mehran’s day begins with a gruelling battle for bandwidth. Following the curbs on the internet during the early days of the war, the education system shifted to the domestic “Shad” e-learning platform.
“The national internet is available, but it has become frustratingly weak due to the massive surge in users,” the teacher explained with an exhausted smile. “Sometimes my voice breaks up, and suddenly dozens of students just vanish from the platform.”
Inside his small apartment in the Amirabad neighbourhood, the day is a cacophony of overlapping lives. In the living room, his 14-year-old daughter, Mehraneh, squints at an old tablet for her own lessons. In the narrow hallway leading to the kitchen, his eight-year-old son, Sam, clings to his mother’s smartphone, hovering near the window to catch the strongest signal.
Meanwhile, Mehran’s 41-year-old wife, Azadeh, manages the finances for a private company from another room – a job that transitioned entirely to remote work until last month.
“The weak internet can barely sustain one stable connection, let alone three or four at the same time,” Mehran said. “Add to that the cramped space and total lack of privacy, and the daily toll just multiplies”.
The cost of survival
When the virtual school bell rings, Mehran heads to a nearby pharmacy to buy heart medication for his mother. At first glance, the shelves look neat and well-stocked, but a closer look reveals that dozens of essential medicines have been unavailable for over a month.
According to Mehri, a young pharmacy worker, prices for both domestic and imported drugs have skyrocketed.
After paying for a month’s supply, Mehran quietly slips the boxes into his bag.
“Medicines now eat up a quarter of my salary; they used to be just seven percent,” he noted. Still, he considers himself lucky. Other families face severe shortages of life-saving drugs due to the United States naval blockade of Iranian ports and suspended flights that have crippled supply chains.
The economic strain is even more glaring at the Jomhouri electronics market. Mehran travelled there to buy a new television ahead of football’s World Cup, which is going to be held in Mexico, the US and Canada, as his old set was damaged by explosions near his home during the final week of the war.
Football is the most popular sport in Iran. Its national team has been based in Mexico amid the conflict with the US.
Mehran has opted for the metro over a taxi amid soaring inflation. Public transport has been free since the war began, a government measure to ease traffic and conserve petrol.
Inside an electronics shop, a vendor observed: “The war made transportation free, but it made everything else unaffordable, especially food.” The vendor noted that TV prices in his shop alone had surged by 40 to 60 million rials ($29 to $44) – roughly matching the dramatic plunge of the local currency, the rial, against the US dollar.
At a nearby shop selling TV stands, 59-year-old owner Ali Morad said prices have doubled since last winter, despite the goods being entirely locally manufactured. He blamed soaring wages, rent, and raw material costs, which have driven customers away as their purchasing power has evaporated.
An illusion of normalcy
Exhausted by the market, Mehran takes a break at the nearby Osta public park. The scene is jarringly serene: children bouncing around colourful playgrounds, families picnicking under ancient trees, and young men vigorously using outdoor gym equipment.
In a quiet corner, an elderly woman sits entirely absorbed in a paperback book, insulated from the chaos.
“For a second, looking at this, you forget we are living under a blockade,” Mehran reflected. “You see Tehran wresting its right to live from the jaws of breaking news and a relentless war.”
But 22-year-old Mona sees a different reality. The calm, she argued, is just the “face of a city learning to dance on the edge of crisis”.
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Mona explained that the people in the park are not there for leisurely strolls; they are seeking a free space to breathe. Their household budgets have been decimated by doubled food costs and internet bills.
To Mona, the parkgoers are hiding profound exhaustion behind a facade of tranquility. “It’s as if they collectively decided to grant themselves an hour-long ceasefire from the idea of war before they have to go back home,” she added.
Searching for rhythm in the dark
As night falls over Tehran, Mehran does not head home. Instead, he makes his way to Enghelab (Revolution) Square near Tehran University. Here, hundreds of men and women gather nightly to chant nationalistic slogans and sing in support of the state and its armed forces.
“These gatherings make us feel like we are all in the same trench,” he said. “We might not have stealth bombers or aircraft carriers, but we have our voices and our physical presence. The war may have stolen our comfort, but it gave us back our social solidarity.”
What started as a political statement has evolved into a psychological anchor.
“Up until the 10th night, I came here out of duty,” Mehran confessed, picking up a pebble and rolling it thoughtfully between his fingers. “By the 30th night, I came looking for familiar faces. By the 100th night, I realised this isn’t just politics anymore. It’s the daily fabric that gives us a steady rhythm in a time when every other rhythm has collapsed.”
He noted that professors, labourers, engineers, and homemakers flock to the square to find warmth in the community during the cold nights.
“We ask ourselves: what if these gatherings just stopped? Where would we put our energy, our anger, and our hope?” Mehran wondered. “Would the silence be heavier than the sounds of the bombing?”
After playing at Qatar 2022 at age 35, US national team defender Tim Ream thought it was “pretty unlikely” he could play in another World Cup. But he decided he would at least try to stay in the game as long as possible.
“Because for me, it’s about pushing boundaries, pushing myself, pushing the limits of what I can physically and emotionally handle,” he told Al Jazeera.
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Last week, Ream was named as the US’s captain for the upcoming football tournament in North America and, at 38, is the oldest ever outfield player in a US World Cup squad.
“To be given the honour and the opportunity to wear the captain’s armband in a home World Cup is incredible,” he said.
Ream, who played for Bolton Wanderers and Fulham in the Premier League and is now at Major League Soccer (MLS) side Charlotte FC, is one of several outfield players in their late 30s and beyond at the 2026 World Cup; including Portugal superstar Cristiano Ronaldo, 41, the 40-year-olds Luka Modric and Edin Dzeko, Yuto Nagatomo, 39, and Argentina legend Lionel Messi, who turns 39 later this month.
Evolving sport science plays a significant role in extending career longevity – the days when “recovery” meant having a few beers after the game are long gone, and many players now extoll all kinds of developments from lymphatic draining to cryotherapy.
Huge amounts of data measuring biomarkers from heart rate variability and muscle oxygenation to hormonal fluctuations and inflammation are also now available, including from wearable technology.
But experts argue that sport science is just part of a complex system of interlocking factors needed to extend longevity in football, including culture, relationships, a learning mindset, luck, resources, and the motivation to keep going into a fifth decade.
“It’s not just about the science, or machines, or AI,” Vlatko Vucetic, a professor of kinesiology at the University of Zagreb who has worked as a personal trainer with Croatian and Real Madrid star midfielder Modric for more than 10 years, told Al Jazeera.
“This question is always about people.”
Superstars Luka Modric of Croatia #10 and Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo #7 have a combined age of 81 heading into the World Cup 2026, but show few signs of ageing [File: Slavko Midzor/Pixsell/MB Media via Getty Images]
‘I’m setting an example’
Footballers tend to peak before the age of 30, with research suggesting a general decline in the early 30s in terms of speed, power and explosiveness, although endurance fades more slowly.
As players age, recovery takes longer, and they also become more susceptible to injuries. Football has also gotten much faster and more physical over the last few decades, and the number of matches at the elite level has increased dramatically.
Goalkeepers have tended to play on the longest; the oldest World Cup player ever was Egyptian keeper Essam El Hadary, who played at Russia 2018 at the age of 45.
According to Transfermarkt.com, only 15 players aged 35 or above appeared in the Premier League this season out of more than 500 players.
However, there is evidence that the median age of footballers may be increasing, while the number of outfield players playing into their late 30s and early 40s at the upcoming World Cup is striking. Before this tournament, Cameroon’s Roger Milla – who scored at USA 1994 aged 42 – was the only outfield player in their 40s to play at a World Cup.
Ben Rosenblatt was the lead performance coach for the England men’s team for seven years and is the founder and director of 292 Performance, a sport consultancy firm that trains and advises elite individuals and organisations.
He told Al Jazeera that advances in sport science and data collection – and an increased focus on health and wellness culture inside and outside the game – have helped extend careers in football.
“Within the game, there is more attention to detail over the last two decades being placed on an understanding and knowledge around training science and in particular, how to schedule organised training sessions to optimise athletes’ performance and reduce injury risk – which is obviously going to be a big survival factor for players,” he said.
While Rosenblatt says longevity relies on “the amalgamation of all the different tools, resources, culture and behavioural shifts that are taking place within the game”, the fundamentals remain crucial; training, recovery, sleep, lifestyle, nutrition and hydration.
“It’s about doing the stuff that’s quite boring and basic 99 percent of the time,” he said.
Vucetic is an evangelist for elastic bands, which he says help keep the body strong and agile by enhancing muscle plasticity, and for microdosing exercises throughout the day to stay primed for explosive demands like sprints, jumps and sudden changes in direction and prevent injury.
But he also says athletes need to excel across eight “parameters”: a healthy lifestyle, morphology (physical form and body structure), motor skills, motoric knowledge (the capacity to learn movement), energy capacity (especially aerobic and anaerobic fitness), mentality, intelligence, and socioeconomic status.
And Vucetic says maintaining motivation and love of the game is crucial to longevity, as senior players need to work harder for diminishing returns. Many older players – who may have families, a declining salary and opportunities, and a creaking, protesting body – find staying in football to be too much of a grind.
“That’s challenging, and a lot of athletes after 30-35 cannot continue with this,” he said.
Vucetic said the motivation to keep playing at an elite level as players age is usually intrinsic, rather than for money or other extrinsic factors. For Modric, it is the desire to be the “best version of himself” and an enduring love of the game.
“He likes to play like a kid in the sand, as we say in Croatia,” he said.
Ream – who made his US men’s national team debut way back in 2010 – says recovery has become harder as he’s aged and he credits Pilates, red-light therapy, and prioritising sleep with helping him in recent years.
He says the hardest part of playing on at 38 is being away from his family for large stretches. But he notes that he is partly playing on for his three children.
“[I’m] setting an example for them of setting goals and following through and pushing yourself and grit and determination and leadership,” he said.
‘It’s all about connections’
Paddy Hogben, rehab strength and conditioning coach at Premier League club Brentford FC, recently co-authored an academic paper about longevity in professional sport that highlighted the importance of “psychosocial and organisational” variables – such as a supportive environment and leadership qualities – for extending careers in football.
“I was definitely surprised by the lack of emphasis a lot of the players put on lifestyle and physical things, and that they talked more about opportunities and relationships,” he told Al Jazeera.
Hogben says that while most clubs want to extend the careers of their players, economic pressures can undermine longevity, as a 20-year-old’s resale value will be considerably higher than that of someone a decade older – so successful senior players usually provide added cultural or social value for their clubs.
“If you’ve got older players that have got good emotional intelligence, good communication abilities, can lead for you on the pitch – I think that’s where you will find a way to play them, even if you’ve got a replacement that could output more,” he said.
Hogben noted that this requires a learning mindset from early in the career and the ability to balance supreme self-belief with humility.
“If you can think you’re the best, but part of that is because of your growth mindset, your ability to evolve, to keep getting better – I think that’s such an underrated form of talent.”
Veterans playing into middle age will often adapt their game to compensate for slowing legs with assets like enhanced vision.
“I think my biggest improvement is being able to see things as they’re developing, and as they’re happening, but then also understanding and adapting to different coaches,” Ream said.
“I think that’s where you have to understand the interpersonal side with this game, because it’s all about connections, it’s all about communication, it’s all about relationships on and off the field.”
Tactics and positioning are also important for veteran players; the middle-aged Ronaldo would surely not take kindly to being asked to work the channels anymore.
“[Older players] are probably at a club where they have got some influence, they can train in a way that helps them, they can have a tactical ear with the coach to be in a role that is right for them,” Hogben said.
Looking ahead, Rosenblatt says putting the huge amount of available data together to create a more holistic picture of a player could be “transformative” for longevity.
“That’s kind of the Holy Grail, because you can give clarity to a manager or an owner game by game or across the course of a season about what the player is capable of delivering, and then obviously what development they require,” he said.
And extending longevity means establishing routines, discipline, and what works early on.
“I know so many players who, towards the end of their career, tried to find a routine and they couldn’t stick with it because they hadn’t done it early enough,” Ream said.
“Find these things and get into them early, because it’ll help you in the long run.”