Ødegaard og Sørloth på benken fra start
Kapteinen på Arsenal og på Norges landslag er friskmeldt, men starter på benken i den viktige semifnalen i Mesterligaen mot Atletico Madrid tirsdag kveld.
Alexander Sørloth starter også på benken for gjestene.
Det står 1-1 etter det første oppgjøret i Madrid. Ødegaard startet det og, men ble byttet ut til pause. I helgens Premier League-kamp mot Fulham sto Ødegaard over med en skade. Også Sørloth har slitt med en skade de siste kampene.
Slik starter lagene:
Arsenal (4-2-3-1): Raya - White, Saliba, Gabriel, Hincapie - Rice, Lewis-Skelly - Saka, Eze, Trossard - Gyökeres
Atletico Madrid (4-4-2): Oblak - Pubill, Le Normand, Hancko, Ruggeri - Simeone, Koke, Llorente, Lookman - Alvarez, Griezmann djcc.club
Eagles Film Review: Markel Bell best summed up his game in one sentence
Now that the 2026 NFL Draft is done, it’s time for some film rooms on the Philadelphia Eagles’ rookie class. Over the coming weeks, I’ll be publishing individual film breakdowns on the Eagles’ 2026 draft class here at Bleeding Green Nation. My pre-draft rankings and position previews are still up if you want to cross-reference. A quick note on the film: I can’t share All-22 footage here without risking content strikes, so I’ll use clips from other accounts below. However, I’ll have full All-22 breakdowns available on my Patreon, which you can check out and support if you want to see full games of All-22. Let’s go!
PREVIOUSLY IN THIS SERIES: Makai Lemon | Eli Stowers
Markel Bell
A lot of what follows in this piece draws on Brandon Thorn’s film room session with Markel Bell on his Trench Warfare Substack, which I recently watched. If you are not subscribed, it is excellent! Thorn walked through Bell’s tape in detail, with Bell himself present to explain his thinking on specific reps, and it is one of the better prospect film sessions I have seen ahead of this draft. I will reference it throughout, as it was really cool to back up my own film with information from the player.
There is a quote Bell gave in the first 10 minutes of that video (twice!) that has stuck with me and that I think frames this pick better than any analytical breakdown can. Asked about his style as an offensive tackle, Bell said: “It ain’t gonna be pretty all the time, but I got the job done.” That is Markel Bell in a sentence. He’s not polished, not refined, but physically equipped to do the work and self-aware enough to know that the technique has to catch up to the tools.
The great thing about the NFL Draft is that I can’t lie! You can all go back and read where I stood before the draft. Bell was in my Round 4 tier. My pre-draft notes read: “Overall: A massive, long tackle whose traits give him developmental value, but he is a long way away from contributing to an NFL team. Eagles Thoughts: If Bell falls to Day 3, I wouldn’t mind investing in him as a long-term project. However, I don’t see it for a Day 2 pick. He might just be too tall.” The Eagles took him in the third round, which is earlier than I would have gone. Having watched more film on him since (including the Thorn session) I understand the decision more than I did. The Eagles needed an offensive tackle; this class ran thin quickly at the position, and Bell was arguably the last prospect on the board with a legitimate starter ceiling. At some point, you pay the premium on upside rather than wait for a safer pick who has no upside to pay for.
Strengths
The Physical Profile
Everything about Bell’s game flows from the sheer size of the man. He measures 6’9¼” and 346 pounds with an 87⅛-inch wingspan and 36⅜-inch arms in the 98th percentile. That frame changes pass-rush geometry in a way that cannot be taught or developed. Here is a really smart take for you all: defenders simply have to travel farther to reach the quarterback because he is massive. The path around Bell’s frame is longer than almost any offensive tackle in football. His sheer range and size make it mechanically difficult to rush him cleanly.
For a man his size, Bell is shockingly light on his. He is not explosively quick off the ball, but his redirect ability, his footwork in space, and his lateral agility at 350 pounds are pretty rare. He is particularly dangerous on screen, as it’s hard for defenders to avoid him out in space. His work on the 2025 Indiana tape on screens is worth watching in particular. The athleticism is not elite, but at his size, it does not need to be. It just needs to be sufficient.
Hand Usage
This is the most interesting technical element of Bell’s game, and the Thorn session explains it well. Because his height makes natural leverage battles underneath defenders structurally difficult, Bell has developed a specific set of adaptations to compensate. Rather than committing to two-handed punches, he strikes first with his outside hand and keeps his inside hand in reserve. This enables him to protect his inside shoulder, avoiding vulnerability to various moves. It is a sophisticated workaround for a structural problem, and the fact that he has developed it relatively recently shows an above-average ability to be coached.
His aiming points reflect the same adaptive thinking. Rather than fighting for traditional hand placement, he targets fixed points that do not move regardless of a defender’s moves, giving him a reliable anchor. Short, choppy steps rather than large sweeping kicks keep him balanced and allow easy redirection. These are not things you develop naturally; they are things you develop by working hard at your craft. It was cool to hear Bell talk about it.
However, it is worth noting here that Bell has taken every college snap at left tackle. His outside-hand-first striking mechanic is built around that alignment, and if the Eagles move him to right tackle, which is the obvious long-term plan, he will need to rebuild those instincts from the other side. Bell acknowledged this directly in the Thorn session. It is a real developmental challenge, and the coaching staff will need to be patient with the transition.
Run Blocking and Frontside Movement
Bell’s run blocking is where you see the size and movement most clearly. On wide zone in particular, he generates a lot of movement on the frontside. I bet this is a huge reason why this staff liked him. He keeps his feet moving to wash defenders out of the play in a way that creates lanes rather than just filling gaps. His double-team work on feeds and kick-outs shows the same active feet, and when he gets it right, the combination of length and momentum is very difficult to deal with.
Character and Accountability
The interview element of the Thorn session is worth discussing separately, because it has impacted how I view this pick. I’m a sucker for a good interview, what can I say. Bell comes across as very self-aware, coachable, and prepared to do the work. He talks specifically about his weaknesses, names them precisely, and frames them as problems he is actively solving rather than things he hopes to paper over with his size. He looks like he studies film a lot and was able to name the pass rushers and how they win, specifically, in all the clips. He would speak about how he had to change how he plays depending on his opposition, which is good.
Weaknesses
Leverage
Bell’s height is his greatest asset and his most persistent limitation, and the leverage problem is a big issue. Bell knows it too, as he talks about it with Thorn a lot. His high center of gravity makes him vulnerable to speed-to-power rushes where defenders get into his chest before he can drop his hips and reanchor. The “forklift” technique, where defenders can get under his pads and move him backward, specifically targets what his frame makes structurally difficult to protect. He can recover, and he does recover on film, but he gives up initial ground in a way that a more compact tackle does not.
The inconsistent knee bend is a related issue. There are run plays in the Thorn session where he fits too high and the defender is able to recover and disengage precisely because Bell’s pad level gives them a path back. Getting his hands lower in the run game is a constant coaching point, but the height makes it difficult to solve rather than simply a habit to correct.
Footwork Inconsistencies
His feet are better than they should be at his size, but they are not consistently reliable. Against sophisticated rushers who have some useful pass rush moves, Bell’s feet are occasionally a bit all over the place. His pass set angles need quite a bit of work. He sets at too much of an angle or steps out too wide rather than setting vertically, which gives rushers the space to operate on their own terms rather than forcing them to run through his frame.
Limited Experience
One full season as an FBS starter is a thin resume to project from. Bell only accumulated 21 career starts at Miami. The upward trajectory is visible on film, but there are situations he has not yet seen and techniques he has not had to develop because he has not consistently faced elite competition. The Eagles are betting on the trajectory and the ceiling rather than the completed product. That is fine, but it is a bet, not a certainty.
The Film
Overall Assessment and Fit With the Eagles
Markel Bell is a project. I had him in Round 4 before the draft. I said I would not do it on Day 2, and the Eagles took him in Round 3. Having spent more time on his film since, I understand the decision better than I did in the moment, even if I would still have waited a round.
This offensive tackle class was strong early, but it fell off quickly. By the time the Eagles were picking in Round 3, Bell was likely the last prospect on the board with a starter ceiling rather than a career backup profile. Paying a third-round price for a player I had as a fourth-round prospect is not a catastrophic overpay when the alternative is getting nothing at the position at all. You can make that calculation and feel fine about it.
This feels like a bit of a boom/bust pick. I don’t know how easy it is for someone that tall to ever win the leverage battle, and the RT transition from LT is a real challenge that will require rebuilding instincts if the Eagles want him to replace Lane Johnson.
However, the ceiling is real. The frame, the movement, and the willingness to be coached all point toward a player who, given time and the right staff, could develop into a starting right tackle. The Eagles have Lane Johnson in the building for at least another season. If Bell can sit and develop behind him while the coaching staff works on the leverage, the stance, and the RT-specific technique, this pick could look very good in a couple of years.
It ain’t gonna be pretty all the time. But he might just get the job done.
Thank you for reading! I’d love to hear your thoughts, so feel free to comment below and ask any questions. If you enjoyed this piece, you can find more of my work and podcast here. If you would like to support me further, please check out my Patreon here!
Chiefs GM says Patrick Mahomes is 'way ahead of schedule' after tearing ACL in December
Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes tore his ACL in mid-December. When the Chiefs take the field in September for their Week 1 game, will their quarterback be able to play?
Mahomes continues to received rave reviews as he recovers from that injury. The quarterback played into that in March, posting a video in which he’s already throwing just months after surgery. Chiefs coach Andy Reid then added fuel to that fire Saturday, revealing Mahomes should be able to take part in OTAs.
On Monday, another big voice spoke highly of Mahomes’ recovery. Chiefs general manager Brett Veach said Mahomes was “way ahead of schedule,” during an interview on Sirius XM NFL Radio.
Veach said he wouldn’t be shocked if Mahomes wanted to be “full go” when the team starts training camp, per For The Win.
“I will say this, I think it wouldn’t surprise you guys, the way it’s been really inspiring to just see, in my mind, I’ve been there before with Pat [Mahomes], he had that dislocated knee [in 2019] and worked his tail off, and came back in three weeks. I knew this bump in the road wouldn’t slow him down at all," Veach said. “But, I mean, this guy has been in the building. Especially for a player who has accomplished everything, can do anything he wants, he can hire his own trainers, he can be wherever he wants. He’s in our building every single day. And even when he goes away for a few days, say to Dallas for a weekend with his family, he takes one of our trainers with him.
“So, needless to say, he’s way ahead of schedule. I think the biggest challenge we’re going to have is protecting him against himself, because I’m sure when we get to St. Joseph, Missouri, for training camp, he’s going to want to be full go. But we’re going to have to hold him back a little. And, again, I don’t want to put a timetable on it. But I think you guys know the kind of person and competitor Pat is, and I would just say, we’re in a really good place right now.”
It’s unclear whether the team will allow Mahomes to fully return at that point. Veach said “protecting [Mahomes] against himself” would be a big challenge for both the quarterback and the team. While it sounds like everything has gone well with Mahomes’ recovery, the team doesn’t want to risk further injury by pushing Mahomes back into action too quickly.
If Mahomes were able to return in Week 1, it would be rare, but not unprecedented. Former Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson did exactly that during the 2012 NFL season. The previous year, Peterson tore his ACL in December — roughly 10 days after Mahomes sustained his injury. Despite that, Peterson returned in time for Week 1 in 2012 and went on to rush for over 2,000 yards and win the MVP award.
That’s very obviously not the expectation for players coming back from ACL injuries. Still, given Mahomes’ quick recoveries in the past, that timeline can’t be ruled out for the two-time MVP.
Getting Mahomes back quickly would go a long way toward the Chiefs re-establishing themselves as contenders in 2026. Even with Mahomes, that could prove challenging. The team struggled when Mahomes was healthy last year, finishing 6-11.
If Mahomes is unable to return in Week 1, the team will turn to former Chicago Bears first-round pick Justin Fields, which it acquired in an offseason trade with the New York Jets.
Reggie Gilliam details early bond with Patriots QB Drake Maye
FOXBOROUGH, Mass — Before the pads have even come on, Reggie Gilliam and Drake Maye are already developing something that is crucial to every offense: chemistry.
"Drake and I have kind of hit it off the bat right away," Gilliam said. "From the very first workout on the field, we were just stretching together, just kind of getting to know each other in the last couple of days."
And they've already been putting in additional work together.
"We've been meeting after our little practice out there, and kind of going over some schemes," he added.
The fullback signed a three-year deal with the Patriots in March and was very complimentary of the quarterback during his introductory press conference, where he even compared him to an MVP.
”He’s built just like Josh (Allen),” Gilliam said earlier this year. “Yeah, he’s a cool guy. … I’m excited. He’s a young player. When I got to Buffalo, Josh was three years in. Not fully established, but he was already, like, we knew he was going to be a guy. And Drake is obviously the guy here. I’m excited to be with a young quarterback and help him grow.”
It's only been a few weeks since many of the players returned for the voluntary offseason program, but if this connection between Gilliam and Maye is already this strong, just imagine what it will be like when September rolls around.
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This article originally appeared on Patriots Wire: Reggie Gilliam details early bond with Patriots QB Drake Maye
