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Naomi Girma, women's soccer's first million-dollar player, was injured and replaced in her Chelsea debut on Sunday.
The United States defender was taken off after 59 minutes of a 2-2 draw against Brighton and it was not immediately clear how serious the unspecified injury was.
"We'll need to assess her tomorrow, but it doesn't look too bad, but we will see," Chelsea coach Sonia Bompastor said.
The 24-year-old Girma joined Chelsea from the San Diego Wave FC in January for a reported fee of 900,000 ($1.1 million). That deal surpassed the previous world-record fee of $788,000 that Bay FC paid to sign Zambia striker Racheal Kundananji from Madrid CFF last year.
Girma was replaced by Nathalie Björn in the Women's Super League game at Brighton's Broadfield Stadium.
"She's learning about the league, the team and her teammates. As you could see, the first game is never easy because it's a competitive league," Bompastor said. "It was good for us to have her start this game, building minutes and being able to play with the team."
Five-time defending WSL champion Chelsea secured a point through Lauren James' equalizer in the 61st minute.
Chelsea led through Sandy Baltimore's opener in the 16th, but Brighton went into half-time up 2-1 after goals from Marisa Olislagers in the 22nd and Vicky Losada in the 42nd.
Chelsea are five points ahead of Manchester United at the top of the standings.

Ruben Amorim responded to Wayne Rooney's suggestion that he's "naive" to say his goal at Manchester United is to win the Premier League by telling the former club captain that it's "easy" to be a pundit.
Amorim said his main aim at Old Trafford is to win the title as he reflected on his disappointment at United's FA Cup exit to Fulham on Sunday.
Rooney, working as a pundit for the BBC, said the claim was "naive," but Amorim hit back by telling the former United striker it is was "easy" to speak from the safety of a television studio.
"[The Premier League] is the goal," said Amorim. "Being naive is to think we are going to do it this season or be the best contender next season. So I know that in this moment everybody knows everything. I know that and it's really easy -- I was a pundit when I finished my career. I know it's really easy.
"Our goal is to win the Premier League. Maybe it is not with me. But our goal, as a club, the board, is to win the Premier League like we did in the past with all the great glories and legends of this club and we will want to do better and we are in a difficult moment. And I'm not naive, that's why I'm here, at 40-years-old, coaching Manchester United."
Fulham knocked United out of the cup on penalties after a 1-1 draw at Old Trafford. Calvin Bassey gave Fulham the lead on the stroke of half-time before Bruno Fernandes equalised in the second half.
Both André Onana and Bernd Leno needed to make saves to send the game to penalties. Leno was the hero in the shootout after keeping out efforts from Victor Lindelöf and Joshua Zirkzee.
It leaves United needing to win the Europa League to save their season ahead of their last-16 first leg tie against Real Sociedad in Spain on Thursday.
"I think we started quite well, we had good possession, controlling the game but we cannot maintain that for all the game," said Amorim. "Sometimes we drop the lines to feel more comfortable to use the transitions.
"I think during the game we create the best chances. With the penalties it can happen and today was not our day."
Amorim, Man United's big week opens with FA Cup humbling for the holders vs. Fulham

MANCHESTER, England -- A big week for Ruben Amorim has started with another setback.
Two cup games in the space of five days -- one against Fulham in the FA Cup fifth round, the other against Real Sociedad in the Europa League round of 16 -- offered Manchester United and their head coach hope that something can yet be salvaged from this miserable season. Fulham, though, had other ideas and after a 1-1 draw played out over a tense 120 minutes short of any real quality, it was Marco Silva's side that prevailed 4-3 on penalties. Victor Lindelöf and Joshua Zirkzee missed from the spot as United -- the holders -- crashed out.
The cup exit closed another door for Amorim and now the pressure on Thursday's trip to San Sebastian has heightened even further. The Europa League offers a trophy and a place in next season's Champions League. Winning it would turn this season into something resembling a success. On the evidence of their performance against Fulham -- which lacked any real cutting edge in key moments -- that's easier said than done.
"In the end, the penalties can go both ways and today wasn't our way," Amorim said. "We know that we are losing games, but the goal is to win the Premier League again. I don't know how long it will take. We have a goal, and we continue forward no matter what.
"It's impossible to know, but you start understanding the players are better and we understand the league. We'll see in the future."
Sometimes he must feel as if he's banging his head against a brick wall. In his programme notes ahead of the game, he paid tribute to his coaching staff for "improving in how we defend set-pieces in recent weeks."
It was typical of his "one step forward, two steps back" start to life at Old Trafford that at the end of one of United's better first halves under his management, Fulham scored from a set piece.
It looked like a poor decision to award a corner, but that doesn't excuse the ease at which Rodrigo Muniz flicked it on for Calvin Bassey to nod it home at the back post. Manuel Ugarte, who lost Muniz's run, and Noussair Mazraoui, who was marking Bassey, won't want to see a replay.
It was the fifth time in a row United conceded the first goal. In Amorim's 24 games in charge, United have conceded the first goal 16 times. That's a damning stat on its own, but particularly when the team is struggling to score itself. Goalless again in the first 45 minutes, United have failed to score from open play in 19 consecutive first halves.
Amorim's list of problems is a long one. Among other things, he was able to name only seven substitutes instead of the permitted nine. Of those on the bench, two were young goalkeepers.
Fulham eliminate Manchester United from the FA Cup after winning a penalty shootout to decide the tie at Old Trafford.
It's lucky for Amorim that Bruno Fernandes is so durable. After a week that has seen more criticism come his way courtesy of former captain Roy Keane, the Portuguese midfielder showed again that he is United's most important player. He might not rank with Keane or Paul Scholes as one of the club's greatest ever midfield players; he is, though, the undisputed star of this team.
It was Fernandes who dragged United level in the second half, ghosting in to whip Diogo Dalot's cross into the bottom corner. The technique was exquisite, but he made it look simple.
Fernandes now has six game-changing goals this season -- three winners and three equalisers -- and has more goals (11) and assists (12) than anyone else. He stepped up first in the penalty shootout and rifled his shot into the net in front of the Stretford End, but he can't do it all on his own and in the absence of 11 Brunos, both Lindelof and Zirkzee saw their efforts saved by Bernd Leno. The Fulham keeper was outstanding, making key saves from Alejandro Garnacho and Chido Obi to keep the game level.
"Unbelievable," Leno said after the win. "I think we deserved to win after 90 minutes. Of course, penalties, it is sometimes a lottery and luckily, we won. The goalie coach told me a couple of informations, but my feeling is more important."
Fulham have a quarterfinal against Crystal Palace to look forward to. For Amorim, it's Europa League or bust.
The Portuguese coach has lost 10 of his 25 games since replacing Erik ten Hag in November. United are refusing to countenance that he could be under pressure so early into his tenure, but there was an acceptance before the defeat to Fulham that the cup competitions are important -- both in terms of extending interest in the season and providing a pathway into Europe.
Languishing 14th in the Premier League table and now out of the FA Cup, United are left with just the Europa League. A pivotal week in Amorim's short reign rests on Real Sociedad.
India to face Australia in Dubai semi-final; NZ to meet SA in Lahore semi-final

The tangled scheduling was a result of India not playing any of their games in Pakistan for the tournament, and they were supposed to play the semi-finals in Dubai, regardless of their standings in Group A. Such a scenario became all but inevitable after India refused to travel to Pakistan for the tournament, despite the country officially being the sole host of the tournament. The PCB had spent several months trying to get India to visit Pakistan, at one stage proposing hosting all their games in Lahore. However, the BCCI said the Indian government did not grant the team permission to play cricket in Lahore.
New Zealand are set to take an early-morning flight to Lahore from Dubai on Monday while South Africa will fly back to Pakistan later in the day after having spent around 36 hours in Dubai.
While Rohit Sharma was pleased with India's showing - they are the only team with three wins in as many games in the Champions Trophy - he turned his focus to the semi-final against Australia.
"I think it [momentum] is very, very critical when you're playing such a short tournament," Rohit said after the win against New Zealand. "You try and possibly win every game that is in front of you and try and do everything right and while doing that, there are bound to be mistakes but as long as you correct them quickly, that is what matters. I thought the mistakes that we've been making from game one now, we tend to correct those mistakes and that is what is required.
"It [semi-final] is going to be a good game and obviously we know Australia has a rich history of playing ICC tournaments well. We do understand that; it's about what we want to do against the opposition and try and do that right. We're all looking forward to that contest and hopefully we can stitch one [more win] towards us."
'My shot changed the momentum' - Sachin Baby takes 'blame' for Kerala's heartbreaking loss

Several members of the Kerala team, heartbroken and lost for words, recognised the presence of these young kids in the stands, posing for pictures even as Baby momentarily brought some comic relief at the presentation. "You guys have beaten us in all three knockout stages. Next time, guys, we'll beat you. We'll give you a tougher time," Baby told the Vidarbha team in jest.
"Brain fade," he said at the post-match press conference, of the slog he dragged to Karun Nair at deep midwicket on 98. The occasion couldn't have been bigger; a century in his 100th first-class game may have well killed the game. But it wasn't to be; it was as if they'd run out of luck in the quarter-finals and semi-finals, which they scraped through courtesy leads of one and two runs respectively.
"As the leader, I'll take the blame," he said. "My shot changed the momentum of the game. I wanted to be there for the team, and we were six down. I wanted to be there till the end to get the lead. I wanted to have a lead of 100-plus if at all we got a lead. That would have made a difference."
Baby couldn't quite explain why he played the slog - it was instinct more than a calculated risk, one that he will perhaps replay in his mind over and over again. "I was playing all along the ground till that moment, but then I don't know what happened and why I played that shot. But that and the dropped catch of Karun [Nair] were important moments of the game."
And then he continued. "If I take credit for the success, I will take the blame for failure, too. Nobody plays a shot to get out. That shot was not on my mind, actually. Maybe, it was a brain fade moment. But on this wicket, you had to play shots. If I had played too defensively, there would have been pressure on the team and myself."
At 36, Baby is the oldest member of this side. He hates the use of the word 'veteran' to describe ageing stars. He says he's never felt fitter - all possible signs of him wanting to continue. But without wanting to make it about him, he continued: "We have to improve still. I was telling the team about how Vidarbha came back from the defeat in last year's final to win the trophy this year."
Varun takes five as India top group and set up Australia showdown

India 249 for 9 (Iyer 79, Axar 42, Henry 5-42) beat New Zealand 205 (Williamson 81, Varun 5-42) by 44 runs
Wave after wave of attack from India's spinners was held back by some luck and Williamson, but eventually they broke the bund starting with Ravindra Jadeja getting Tom Latham lbw on the reverse-sweep in the 33rd over. India bowled 29 overs of spin out of the 30 middle overs, and 37.3 in all for nine wickets and just 166 runs. This was an improvement after their spinners had gone at 0.7 an over more than the opposition spinners in the first two games. Turns out it was only a function of bowling first when the ball gripped less than in the second innings.
Iyer and Axar Patel then shored India up with some old-fashioned ODI batting. They went 51 balls without a boundary but didn't play a rash shot. Iyer went from 12 off 29 to 27 off 35 and went back into his bunker, eschewing any risk before opening up after having faced 63 balls. Axar kept pressing claims to a proper allrounder spot with a mature 42 off 61 in the 98-run stand.
After taking 21 runs off 19 short or short-of-a-length deliveries, Iyer finally fell to a bouncer from Will O'Rourke in the 37th over, a wicket that curtailed India's ambitions at the death. Still, KL Rahul's 23 off 29 and Hardik Pandya's run-a-ball 45, which he scored while also turning down singles when batting with the tail, took India to a challenging total.
Hardik then proved to be a serviceable replacement for Harshit Rana with the new ball, drawing some movement in the first over and then getting Rachin Ravindra caught on the upper-cut. Before long, spin was in, and it was apparent New Zealand were not reading Varun out of the hand, from whom they had collectively faced 34 balls in all T20Is and IPL before this match.
Will Young, a key batter during New Zealand's Test whitewash of India in India, was the first one to fail to play a wrong'un off the pitch and pay the price. Daryl Mitchell was all at sea too. India had tied the batters down, the asking rate went to six in the 23rd over, and runs only came in drips, a nudge here, a paddle there, and the rare loose ball. How long could they avoid a risk?
It didn't matter as Kuldeep Yadav had Mitchell lbw with the perfect left-arm wristspinner's delivery, but it also beat Mitchell's inside edge by a distance unbecoming of an international batter. He also burned a review, which would cost Michael Bracewell a reprieve later.
The 40-run stand between Williamson and Latham was the smoothest New Zealand batted with Latham's sweeps and Williamson's inside-out chips giving them some momentum. At the 30-overs mark, New Zealand had scored exactly half of their target and had seven wickets in hand. However, Jadeja soon turned one past Latham's reverse-sweep from around the wicket, and bowled it so accurately that it pitched on and turned enough to hit the wicket.
Now the game changed. Williamson would have to carry this chase on his bat if New Zealand were to get close. Varun came back to make even that a near impossibility. Phillips missed an in-drifting half-volley one ball after pulling Varun for a six. Then a significant dismissal followed.
Video analysis suggests Varun tends to bowl wrong'uns with a scrambled seam and legbreaks with the seam straight and tilted to slip. Now, though, he got Bracewell with a legbreak bowled with a scrambled seam, which presents batters and analysts with a new challenge. Also Williamson, probably mindful of only one review left, advised against the review only for the projection to show it hadn't turned back enough to be hitting the stumps.
Dropped on 17 and 68, Williamson couldn't make India pay the ultimate price as Axar got the man off his bowling with the last ball of his allotment. The asking rate of nine an over now demanded a risk, and Williamson just walked past a straight delivery.
Mitchell Santner delayed the inevitable, but Varun ended his resistance with his other variation: a medium-pace cross-seam ball bowled at 113ks to rip out the off stump. He had four balls left in which to complete a five-for. It took him two as Henry tried to hit out.
Sidharth Monga is a senior writer at ESPNcricinfo
Panthers' Tkachuk placed on IR with groin injury

Florida Panthers forward Matthew Tkachuk, who has missed the past four games since suffering a groin injury during the 4 Nations Face-Off, was placed on injured reserve Sunday.
It was not immediately known if Tkachuk is on the traditional or long-term IR.
Tkachuk first experienced discomfort during the 4 Nations Face-Off, where he helped lead the United States to the tournament final. He was limited to 6:47 of ice time in the United States' 3-2 loss in overtime against Canada.
Evan Rodrigues and Mackie Samoskevich could see additional ice time in place of Tkachuk, who has totaled 57 points (22 goals, 35 assists) in 52 NHL games this season.
A Stanley Cup champion with Florida, Tkachuk has totaled 636 points (240 goals, 396 assists) in 642 career games with the Calgary Flames and Panthers.
Field Level Media and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Pitt freshman CB Alexander dies in car accident

Pitt freshman football player Mason Alexander was killed Saturday night in a car accident in his hometown of Fishers, Indiana.
Alexander, 18, was pronounced dead at the scene. According to the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office, he was a passenger in a 2016 BMW driving south on Florida Road. The driver of the car tried to pass a 2015 Toyota before a hillcrest and swerved to avoid a head-on collision with another car traveling in the northbound lane. The BMW traveled off the road and eventually hit a tree, catching on fire.
Alexander starred at cornerback for Hamilton Southeastern High School in Fishers, near Indianapolis, and was an ESPN 300 recruit in the 2025 class. He signed with Pitt in December, enrolled early and was set to join the team for the start of spring practice this month.
"I received a call this morning that no parent, teacher or coach ever wants to get -- the news of the sudden loss of a young and promising life," Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi said in a statement. "Our entire program is shocked and deeply saddened to learn of Mason Alexander's passing.
"Mason had just enrolled at Pitt in January following his early graduation from Indiana's Hamilton Southeastern High School. Even during that short time, he made a great impression on all of us. Mason was proud and excited to be a Panther, and we felt the same way about having him in our Pitt family. He will always be a Panther to us. The Alexander family and Mason's many loved ones and friends will be in our prayers."
Peyton Daniels, a high school teammate of Alexander's who plays at Butler, posted about his friend on X, writing, "Mason lit up every room he was in. Brought joy and playfulness to everything and everyone. He could change the entire direction of your day with one interaction. Mason is the embodiment of exceptional. Rest Easy 15. Love forever."
It's hard to find the words to say right now. Mason lit up every room he was in. Brought joy and playfulness to everything and everyone. He could change the entire direction of your day with one interaction. Mason is the embodiment of exceptional. Rest Easy 15. Love forever. pic.twitter.com/FptDR74MSN
Peyton Daniels (@daniels_peyton) March 2, 2025
Mulkey: LSU's Johnson (shin) to miss SEC tourney

LSU guard Flau'jae Johnson will miss the SEC tournament, Tigers coach Kim Mulkey told the team's radio station Sunday.
Johnson has been battling shin inflammation since the Tigers' Feb. 16 loss to Texas, Mulkey said. Johnson missed LSU's regular-season finale against Ole Miss on Sunday, and now the hope is that she will be healthy enough to rejoin the team by the start of the NCAA tournament.
"I know she's trying to mask the pain she's in," Mulkey said on the pregame radio show. "It's not a stress fracture or anything like that. It's just rest. We'll get that inflammation down, and we'll see the Flau'jae that we need to see when we start playoffs."
The game Johnson missed on Sunday was only the second contest she's missed in her career.
This season, the junior is leading LSU in scoring with 18.9 points per game -- good enough for the sixth-best scoring average in the SEC -- on 46.5 percent shooting.
In her last game, though, Johnson scored a season-low six points, promoting Mulkey and her staff to look to get her some recovery time.
"I don't think Flau'jae's best basketball has happened in the last couple of weeks," Mulkey said, "so let's rest her. Why put her through that? Because it's just not worth it."
The SEC tournament tips off on Wednesday in Greenville, South Carolina.
S. Carolina tops Kentucky for share of SEC title

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- Tessa Johnson scored 16 points, and the No. 6 South Carolina women's basketball team claimed a share of the Southeastern Conference regular-season championship with a 78-66 victory over No. 15 Kentucky on Sunday.
No. 1 Texas defeated Florida 72-46 on Sunday, so the Longhorns and Gamecocks both finished 15-1 in conference play. Because the teams split the season series, a coin flip Sunday determined that South Carolina would have the No. 1 seed for this week's SEC tournament in Greenville, South Carolina.
Te-Hina Paopao added 13 points and Chloe Kitts had 12 points and 10 rebounds for South Carolina (27-3), which has won at least a share of the regular-season title for the past four seasons.
Clara Strack scored 23 points and Georgia Amoore had 16 points for Kentucky (22-6, 11-5), which failed to build on the momentum of its 82-58 home win over No. 11 Tennessee on Thursday night. Kentucky struggled from deep, converting just 6 of 23 shots from beyond the arc.
South Carolina led 41-33 at halftime, but Kentucky closed to 63-62 with seven minutes left on a driving layup by Amoore. The Wildcats had a chance to take the lead on their next possession, but MiLaysia Fulwiley blocked Teonni Key's shot under the basket and drove the length of the floor for a layup, igniting a 12-2 run.
The Gamecocks outscored the Wildcats 13-2 in the final six minutes.
Both teams will compete this week in the SEC tournament. Kentucky was locked in as the No. 4 seed whether it won or lost on Sunday.
The Associated Press contributed to this story.