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Australia resort to new DRS system

Josh Hazlewood says the team is trying to limit the number of people who decide when to take a review

Daniel Brettig at the Gabba21-Nov-2019If it didn’t quite go to plan – the slip fielders pushing for a review to the edge from Shaheen Afridi’s bat – there was evidence at the Gabba that Australia have thought long and hard about improving their use of DRS in the field after a nightmarish streak in England.During the Ashes it was not until the fifth and final Test at the Oval that the captain Tim Paine successfully reviewed an on-field call of not out from an umpire, but it took only one day of the home summer for a successful overturn to be achieved when Afridi edged Mitchell Starc behind first ball.Josh Hazlewood, who claimed two wickets as part of a sustained “strangle” of Pakistan’s batting by the Australian attack, explained that the hosts were aiming to keep DRS discussions to as few voices as possible, namely the bowler and wicketkeeper, with additional advice from a square of the wicket fielder for height in the case of lbws. This element was seen when Hazlewood appealed for an early lbw against Azhar Ali before the fielders rightly elected not to challenge the umpire’s not out verdict.Josh Hazlewood continued to win the battle against Babar Azam•Getty Images”I think just keeping it every simple, we were trying to get the bowler and keeper obviously, and height’s a big issue with the lbws so we try to get someone from point in, just have a quick chat, keep it quite simple, why didn’t the umpire give it out,” Hazlewood said. “At least we have a process then and we can judge ourselves if we’re getting better or worse and change the process or keep it going the same if we’re going well. Worked today, we got one caught behind, so we’ll tick one off.”Just keeping it as simple as possible between whoever’s bowling and the keeper, and if it’s an lbw then height. If someone hears something, they can run in and yell it out if it’s very clear, but trying to restrict it to those three people.”The Australians were rewarded for perseverance and minor adjustments to their bowling across the day, pushing for a fuller length after being a little too short early on. These tactical discussions are now the purview of the new senior assistant coach Andrew McDonald, and they were aided by the fact that the bowling was disciplined enough to ensure that Pakistan could never dictate terms with their scoring rate.”I thought we strangled them to a degree in that first session, we probably bowled too short on the majority, especially the first hour I think,” Hazlewood said. “We got better as the day went on. While the scoreboard wasn’t moving, we didn’t feel too much pressure, we thought if we could get a couple [of wickets], we could get three or four in a row, which we did. That strangle mindset was certainly in effect out there, especially in that first session. A little bit to work on, but it was a pretty good comeback I thought.There was no early success for the Australia attack•Getty Images”Ideally you make it [the adjustment in length] straight away. It is hard sometimes, all three of us bowled at the SCG last week, which was exact opposite conditions if that makes sense, but we just got better in that first session. Could’ve done it earlier, but I thought eh scoreboard was going nowhere so the pressure wasn’t quite on us as much as it could’ve been.”The reward for the combination of consistent pressure and tactical tweaks was a continuation of Hazlewood’s domination when bowling to Babar Azam – a fourth ball edge in Brisbane was the fifth time he had dismissed the Pakistani shot-maker in four Tests.”It’s huge to try and stay on top of him for sure,” Hazlewood said. “He’s probably coming off T20 cricket as well, and we know he’s a stroke-maker, so he certainly likes to put the pressure back on you as a bowler and you feel if you can get him early you and get a rash shot like that sometimes. But if he drives for four, he’s away as well in his game. It can go both ways there, but we were lucky enough to get the nick, and hopefully stay on top of him for the series.”

Botham, Flintoff, Stokes – who is England's greatest allrounder?

Ben Stokes appears to be reaching his golden age, but how does he stack up against his celebrated predecessors?

Andrew Miller14-Jan-2020Three different generations, three forces of nature. Three men with the priceless ability to bend cricket matches through their will to win, and through their extraordinary range of skills with bat, ball and in the field.Ian Botham, Andrew Flintoff and now Ben Stokes share more than just the epithet of great England allrounder. They share a buccaneering approach to their cricket that transcends mere statistics. If, in the oft-quoted words of Graham Gooch, Test-match run-scoring is “not how, but how many”, then the defining feats of these three have tended to pivot on the key question “when?” and the baffled exclamation “what?!”For we are talking about players who manipulate emotions in the big moments as much as they rack up numbers across a completed body of work. What did it feel like to be a spectator at Edgbaston when Andrew Flintoff ripped that vicious outswinger off the edge of Ricky Ponting’s bat to send a surge of optimism through a hitherto tense stadium? And how did it feel to be a member of Australia’s dressing-room when Ian Botham started firing up his greatest hits on the Ashes tour of 1986-87: that century at Brisbane, that preposterous five-for at Melbourne, torn intercostal muscle and all?ESPNcricinfo LtdAnd now that we have reached a period that will surely come to be viewed as Stokes’ own golden age, what unquantifiable impact does his presence have on each contest that he seeks to make his own? Was it inevitable that he’d make the difference with the decisive wickets on that final day at Cape Town? Not necessarily. But as soon as he took the ball for that critical final spell, did the participants – playing and viewing alike – shuffle that little bit further forward in their seats in anticipation? Indubitably.None of this, however, is truly visible in the trio’s career figures which, though outrageously good by the standards of most cricketers, fall short of sublime when viewed as their individual components.Of the three, no one averages more with the bat than Stokes’ current mark of 36.12, or less with the ball than Botham’s final figure of 28.40 – while Flintoff didn’t even finish his Test career with that ultimate seal of allrounder status, a batting average (31.77) higher than his bowling mark (32.78). In fact, by that rationale, none of the trio has a greater record than the great forgotten member of England’s all-round elite, Tony Greig (40.43 and 32.20), whose defection to Kerry Packer cut short a career that might otherwise have deserved to be mentioned in the same breath.ALSO READ: Love, loyalty, stamina: the secrets of Stokes’ brillianceCompare that range of numbers to the single-discipline mastery achieved by many of the greatest allrounders from other nations: from Garry Sobers and Jacques Kallis with the bat (57.78 and 55.37 respectively), to Richard Hadlee and Imran Khan with the ball (22.29 and 22.81), and you might even try to argue that they all failed to achieve their full potential. Though perhaps not to their faces …And so instead, here’s an attempt to rationalise their contributions, and shed some light on quite what it is they’ve brought to their respective parties.Peak performancesFor the clearest idea of just what an impact these men have made when fully on-song, it is perhaps best to focus in on the indisputable elite years of their storied careers. In one sense, this requires an arbitrary cut-off – farewell Beefy’s Ashes last hurrah, and Flintoff’s last-ditch heroics against Australia, for example – but few can dispute that Botham’s best years extended from his five-for on debut against Australia at Trent Bridge in 1977, right through to the end of England’s home summer in 1982, which featured a career-best 208 against India at The Oval, and nine series-sealing wickets against Pakistan at Headingley.By that winter’s tour of Australia, for all that he conjured another miracle finish in the three-run win at Melbourne, and went on to rack up a further three Test hundreds and seven five-fors (more than Stokes and Flintoff combined) Botham was just beginning to betray the signs of a player living on his past glories, as his figures for that final decade of his career, 29.00 and 37.84, attest.As for Flintoff, the drop-off either side of his elite years is even more stark – prior to his recall in the summer of 2003, he was averaging 19.48 and 47.15 (switch those numbers around and there would be nothing left to debate…). Then, from the moment he ploughed his ankle into the Lord’s turf in May 2006 in vain pursuit of victory against Sri Lanka, his returns drift out to 26.37 and 37.25. There were a handful of unforgettable performances in that latter period, against South Africa at Edgbaston and Australia at Lord’s in particular, but he also missed more matches (26) than he played (20).

And yet, for those glorious three years in which Flintoff was the beating heart and soaring soul of arguably the very best England Test team of the modern era (again, the stats might beg to differ, but can you not remember how this lot made you feel?), his impact was simply incredible – and greater even than his impressive figures of 41.30 and 27.78 would have you believe.For a start, England kept winning – seven Tests out of seven in the summer of 2004, a first series win in South Africa since readmission in 2004-05, and crowned of course by the Ashes to end all Ashes. And Flintoff’s standout displays just kept racking up as England gathered a serious head of steam from what had seemed a standing start in the wake of their dispiriting 4-1 Ashes loss in 2002-03.A barnstorming 95 at The Oval in 2003, including a ninth-wicket stand of 99 with Steve Harmison, helped to snatch a shared series from Graeme Smith’s previously dominant South Africans; a maiden five-wicket haul at Bridgetown in 2004 set up a first series win in the Caribbean since 1968. Back on home soil, Flintoff even managed to smack a six into his father’s hands (and out again) en route to a career-best 167 against West Indies at Edgbaston. And all the while, his bowling seemed to be getting quicker and quicker, and more skilful by the session, as he honed the reverse swing that would prove so decisive in that defining summer of 2005.As for Stokes, his second coming truly began in an immense Test against New Zealand in 2015 – only months, remember, after he’d been dropped from England’s World Cup squad following a grim loss of form that encompassed a broken wrist courtesy of that locker door in the Caribbean. Stokes’ scores of 92 and 101, the latter beating Mohammad Azharuddin’s record for the fastest Test century at Lord’s, and three typically vital wickets on the final day, including Brendon McCullum first ball, secured a thrilling victory that laid the groundwork for England’s subsequent Ashes win.From a statistical perspective, however, Stokes didn’t truly come into his own until the following year – his Ashes returns in 2015 included a run of 0, 0, 5, 15 and 0 (albeit in the course of four hugely one-sided games – two wins, two losses – which were unlikely to have been influenced either way) while his match-sealing six-for at Trent Bridge was arguably less of a game-changing intervention than his one-handed screamer at gully on the first morning – the defining dismissal of Stuart Broad’s 8 for 15.

At the peak of his powers Botham truly was a class apart, quite possibly the best attacking swing bowler that England has ever produced

But from the moment, at Cape Town on England’s last tour of South Africa, that Stokes belted that extraordinary 258 from 198 balls – a rare example of his very best coming in a context that counted for little in the final analysis – he has produced an unarguably consistent and world-class body of work: nearly 3000 runs at 40.38 and just shy of 100 wickets at 29.20, including seven of his eight Player of the Match awards – more than Flintoff managed in his entire career, and one shy of Botham’s “pomp” haul of nine.And that tally, of course, doesn’t factor in Stokes’ incredible influence on England’s World Cup win. Whereas the careers of Flintoff and, especially, Botham were judged for the most part on their feats in the Test arena (until his final flourish at the 1992 World Cup, Botham’s one-day record was remarkably poor), Stokes’ priorities have been split across formats to a greater degree than any of his allrounder forebears.It’s fitting, then, that his unbeaten 84 in the World Cup final against New Zealand – an innings as epic in scope as anything you’re likely to encounter in a Test match – was the performance that sealed him the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, over and above even his 135 not out at Headingley – which might even be a genuine contender for the greatest Test innings of all time.Impact on their teamsTalking of SPOTY, that most over-hyped of Christmas baubles, a word of warning to anyone who believes that Stokes has simply reached the level at which the rest of his career will be defined. It’s also possible that his ascent to national icon status will signal the beginning of the end of his glory days.We saw it in Botham, who became public property throughout the 1980s – as likely to feature on the front pages of the red-tops as influence England’s key series of the decade, particularly against his nemesis, West Indies. And likewise, Flintoff – salt-of-the-earth Fred – became a polarising and contrary figure towards the latter years of his career, as his head began to turn from on-field stardom to off-field marketability.But you sense … … that the same is not about to happen with Stokes. That is thanks in no small part to his brush with career oblivion at Bristol in 2017. At the time, his brawl outside a nightclub and subsequent arrest seemed straight out of the Botham playbook, but since his acquittal for affray, Stokes has channelled every ounce of his second chance into the betterment of his own game and, crucially, the betterment of the team whom he felt he let down so badly with his actions and subsequent absences.Ben Stokes was crowned Sports Personality of the Year•Jane Barlow/PA Images via Getty ImagesThat was evident in the aftermath of Stokes’ most recent performance, at Cape Town last week, when he handed over his match award to his rookie team-mate Dom Sibley. As an isolated gesture it might have felt contrived, but it was typical of the man’s build-em-up attitude to team morale – it was also witnessed in the moment he sought out Jofra Archer ahead of the World Cup Super Over, and assured him – from rock-solid personal experience in Kolkata – that whatever happened in the coming six balls would not define his career.That’s not to say that Botham and Flintoff were not capable of similar magnanimity – Botham’s role as senior pro and general media lightning rod on the 1986-87 Ashes tour was of fundamental importance to that particular team dynamic. But by and large, both were men apart at those crucial moments when their fame and their form started to go in opposite directions.Relationship with captainsIn the course of their careers, each of the three allrounders has come into his own under one particular captain. Botham’s best years came with Mike Brearley in the background, gently channelling his ego, while Flintoff was never better than when Michael Vaughan – a contemporary as much as a captain – was fine-tuning the band of brothers whom Nasser Hussain had spent the previous four years whipping into shape.Unlike Botham, who never had a prayer in being handed back-to-back series against West Indies in 1980 and 1981, Flintoff flickered briefly in his stint as England’s Test captain, before everything went to rack and ruin in the 2006-07 Ashes. On the drawn tour of India in March 2006, he inherited a side shorn at the last minute of Vaughan and Marcus Trescothick, and responded first and foremost with a batting display of painstaking maturity, particularly in the series-squaring win in Mumbai.ESPNcricinfo LtdOnly time will tell whether Stokes himself will be asked to step up to the role – his predecessors’ experiences would caution against it – but for the time being, his relationship with Joe Root is perhaps the most interesting of the three dynamics … because it isn’t actually very dynamic at all. Whereas Brearley and Vaughan are widely recognised as two of the most tactically astute England captains of all time – and the only two men of the modern era with a greater than 50% win ratio – Root’s lumpen leadership has been in the spotlight for several months now, never more fervently than after a flaccid defeat in the first Test against South Africa.And yet, with Stokes as his vice-captain and reputational gatekeeper, Root might just prove to be unimpeachable. Because if the Cape Town win proved anything at all, it is that the men in his charge still back him four-square, and no-one more fervently than Stokes, the official vice-captain – a position for which he begged for reinstatement after his post-Bristol demotion, largely you sense because he wanted the management’s blessing before he started throwing his weight around in the dressing room again. With the best will in the world, it’s hard to imagine Botham or Flintoff ever seeking permission to be boisterous.Relative durabilityOne thing that goes without saying, being an elite allrounder is hard work. In 1980, right at the peak of his powers, Botham suffered a back injury that would eventually lead to an operation to fuse his vertebrae, and which gradually robbed his action of the lithe “whip” with which, in 1979, he became the fastest England bowler since SF Barnes to reach 100 Test wickets, in just 19 Tests.And, as that gold-plated statistic shows, at the peak of his powers Botham truly was a class apart, quite possibly the best attacking swing bowler that England has ever produced – better even, you might argue, than James Anderson, whose defensive attributes (particularly overseas) have become a key part of his arsenal.In addition to a formidable haul on home soil, Botham’s early record included eight wickets in Christchurch, 11 at Perth and 13 in the crowning glory of his all-round career, the Jubilee Test at Mumbai in 1980 – and when you factor in three centuries in his first seven Tests too, it’s debatable whether any player in Test history has made a more immediate splash at the highest level of the sport.

By contrast, Flintoff’s career took five years to take shape, as he battled initially with his weight before being waylaid by a hernia operation that caused him to miss the 2002-03 Ashes tour. And then, as his bowling came into its own, the rumbustious nature of his action put an intolerable strain on his left ankle and knee, which both underwent six operations in the course of a career that was cut cruelly short at the age of 31.Stokes, likewise, is nursing a long-term knee “condition” – he underwent surgery on torn cartilage in 2016 – and at times in New Zealand in November, he looked close to needing another operation as England toiled on some of the flattest pitches imaginable. Already, in an England one-day side stacked with options, he has become a bowler of last resort – if Stokes doesn’t bowl on any given day, you can be sure that England feel in charge of the contest – and at The Oval last September, he didn’t bowl in either innings of a completed Test for the first time in his career.LegacyThough recency bias might try to argue otherwise, there is simply no quibbling with Botham as the greatest of England’s allrounders. The sheer volume of his output – including a then-world record wickets tally and the small number of 27 five-wicket hauls – a figure that Anderson passed only last week, brooks no argument, and nor do the heights that he scaled when at his absolute peak. By the end of that Mumbai Test against India, his 25th, he was averaging more than 40 with the bat, and less than 19 with the ball.In the course of his career, however, Botham did give off the sense that inspiration was everything – a notion that was aided and abetted by his similarly effortless contemporary, David Gower. As a consequence, England wasted a generation trying to replicate a man who broke the mould, and left a glut of talented toilers such as Derek Pringle, David Capel, Phil DeFreitas and Chris Lewis encumbered with extraordinary levels of baggage.Ian Botham celebrates his brilliant all-round show with a drink at the Lord’s balcony•PA PhotosFlintoff shared with Botham a capacity for large living that made him the life and soul of a successful dressing room, if arguably a burden when the party went flat – but it meant that, of the three, he perhaps burned brightest and fastest of all. If ever there was a summer in which to lay everything you’ve got on the line, then the greatest Test summer of all time is a good place to start.Botham, for all his stunning achievements, barely laid a glove on the outstanding team of his era, with his only victory over West Indies coming at the 20th attempt, at The Oval in 1991 (though typically he hit the winning runs). Flintoff, by contrast, has the on-field handshake from Shane Warne to prove that, when faced with the biggest challenge of his career, he pinned the title holders to the canvas.Stokes, in his less focused early years, looked set to follow his forebears’ examples to the letter. It’s easy to forget now, post-Bristol, that he was sent home from a Lions tour of Australia in 2013 for excessive late nights, only 12 months before returning Down Under as part of the full Test squad.ALSO READ: Nicholas: Why Cape Town was a big win for RootAnd yet, the absorption of all those life lessons is where Stokes still has a chance to break free of historical precedent. At the age of 28, his dodgy knees notwithstanding, he is fitter and a more dedicated trainer than either of his two predecessors, and where both Botham and Flintoff were defined to a greater extent by their bowling, and therefore by the atrophy that such a workload entails, it is Stokes’ ceiling as a pure batsman that could yet set him apart in the final reckoning.As a role model, he could do worse than study the late period of the mighty Imran, who averaged 59.69 in the final five years of his career – almost double his pre-1987 mark of 30.06. By that stage, of course, his legend as a fast bowler had already been established, but in ceding top billing to the emerging Wasim Akram, 80 further wickets at 27.52 did nothing to diminish his standing.Stokes certainly has it in him to push for such standards. His technique, temperament and decision-making were witnessed in all their glories at Headingley, self-evidently, but given the imperatives of the coming years for English cricket, the character he showed in his stunning century at Perth on the 2013-14 Ashes is perhaps most instructive – an innings compiled, lest we forget, at the age of 22, into the teeth of a Mitchell Johnson gale, in only his second Test.Australia is the tour that Stokes missed out on while awaiting his fate post-Bristol. It is where England return in two years’ time, when all things being equal – as a 5000-run and 200-plus wickets Test veteran – he ought to be in his absolute prime. And only then will we truly know what shape his legacy will take.

Leeds and 49ers set to sell £30,000-a-week dud who Farke called the "best"

Leeds United look ready to sell a Daniel Farke regular who the Whites boss has previously called the “best”.

Leeds back on top of the Championship with five games to go

It was another eventful night in the Championship on Tuesday, with Leeds returning to the top of the table after their 1-0 win at Middlesbrough.

Dan James scored the winner early on, whereas Burnley were held by Derby County and Sheffield United fell to defeat at home to Millwall.

Karl Darlow kept his first clean sheet in the league for Leeds in what was his second start after replacing Illan Meslier.

The Frenchman has been a regular under Farke’s reign at Leeds, however, he decided to drop the goalkeeper after errors against Swansea City at the end of March.

Talking about the decision, Farke, who called Meslier the “best in the league” last year, said: “Obviously he was involved in both [Swansea] goals in the last game, and it was a shame because after the penalty save he was on his way to being man of the match.

Meslier stats under Farke

Games

88

Goals conceded

71

Clean sheets

42

Minutes played

7,913

“So it was clear we had to make a decision. And we had to make it early in the week, because in that position the players need clarity, and Karl [Darlow] needs the time to prepare. We had a pretty open, honest conversation. Of course he’s disappointed he won’t start. But he took it very professionally and he was still more disappointed about the Swansea game.”

Leeds have been linked with Chelsea’s Djordje Petrovic, Southampton’s Aaron Ramsdale and even Newcastle United’s Nick Pope, and it looks as if they are willing to cash in on their now number-two shot-stopper.

Leeds ready to sell Illan Meslier and are working on replacement

Talking to Football Insider, former scout Mick Brown has heard that Leeds are ready to sell Meslier this summer and are already “working” on a replacement.

“He isn’t going to be a part of their plans for the future. From what I hear, Leeds are going to listen to offers for him in the summer. Question marks have been raised about him throughout the season because he keeps making mistakes and it’s costing them dearly.

“It has to come to a point where the manager sits him down and says it’s not good enough. You look at the successful teams, they’ve all got a top-class goalkeeper, and that goes from the likes of Liverpool and Man City over the years to Burnley at the moment.

“So Leeds are going to see if they can raise some money from him, and then whatever they bring in will go towards signing a new goalkeeper. They’ve already been working to identify replacements, and they’ll know who might be available.”

Meslier included: Leeds must axe £150k-p/w quartet if they go up

Daniel Farke will tempted by a slight clear-out at Leeds United if Premier League football returns to Elland Road.

By
Kelan Sarson

Apr 8, 2025

On £30,000-a-week, Meslier is under contract at Elland Road until 2026, so this summer looks like the last chance the Whites can recoup some or all of the £5m they paid back in 2020.

Fewer touches than Vicario: Ange must axe Spurs dud who lost 66% of duels

Tottenham Hotspur secured their place in the semi-final of the Europa League last night, with a hard-fought 1-0 win over Eintracht Frankfurt in Germany.

Dominic Solanke’s first-half penalty was enough for Ange Postecoglou’s side, securing a 2-1 aggregate win after the 1-1 draw in North London last Thursday.

The triumph sets up a last-four clash with Bodo Glimt, moving the Lilywhites one step closer to European glory and potentially putting a superb end to a dismal season.

Tottenham Hotspur manager AngePostecogloucelebrates after the match

It certainly was a night to remember, giving a generation of supporters a new high in their time supporting the club, aiming to reach a first European final since 2019.

However, despite the impressive victory, numerous players failed to deliver in Germany, potentially putting their place in the side at huge jeopardy going forward.

Spurs’ poor performers against Eintracht Frankfurt

Winger Mathys Tel has been an inconsistent player to say the least since his January loan move from Bayern Munich, with last night no different for the Frenchman.

The 19-year-old only completed one of the five dribbles he attempted, whilst finding a teammate on just 33% of the times he delivered the ball into the 18-yard box.

He wasn’t the only one who struggled, with Uruguayan midfielder Rodrigo Bentancur looking a shadow of his former self during the victory over Frankfurt.

He featured for the entirety of the contest, but only managed to win 17% of the ground duels he entered, along with getting dribbled past twice as he was unable to make a huge impact on proceedings.

Despite the showings of the aforementioned duo, one other player failed to impress, with boss Postecoglou desperately needing to drop him ahead of Monday’s game with Nottingham Forest.

The Spurs player who needs to be dropped after Frankfurt

Injuries at Spurs have left Postecoglou with limited options at numerous points of the season, undoubtedly having a huge impact on the club’s lowly league standing.

Such an occurrence has allowed numerous players to stake their claim for a regular starting role, taking advantage of an opportunity that often wouldn’t be thrown in their direction.

Lucas Bergvall is arguably the biggest example of the situation, now being a vital member of the side, featuring for the entirety of the win against Frankfurt last night.

However, despite his success, winger Brennan Johnson was unable to have a similar impact, once again struggling to provide a reason as to why the hierarchy paid £47.5m for his signature.

The Welshman featured for 85 minutes before being replaced by Kevin Danso, with Ange opting to see out the result and switch to a back five for the closing stages.

Such a change was inevitable, but the 23-year-old did himself no favours during his time on the pitch, completing just 69% of the passes he attempted, whilst losing possession six times.

He also lost 66% of the duels he entered against the German opposition, whilst managing just 22 touches – a tally less than that of goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario, who registered 45.

Brennan Johnson’s stats for Spurs against Frankfurt

Statistics

Tally

Minutes played

85

Touches

22

Passes completed

11/16 (69%)

Duels lost

4/6 (66%)

Possession lost

6x

Shots taken

0

Dribbles completed

0

Stats via Sofascore

As a result of his showing last night, Johnson was handed a measly 6/10 match rating by the London Standard’s Dan Kilpatrick – highlighting how disappointing he was in the triumph.

Given his display, Ange simply has to drop the winger ahead of the clash with his former side, needing to give other players an opportunity to demonstrate their quality.

He’s struggled massively in recent weeks once again, potentially needing to be taken out of the firing line to recapture his early season form in North London.

Bigger star than Bergvall & Moore: Spurs have struck gold on "monster" gem

Tottenham Hotspur already have a star who could surpass the levels achieved by Lucas Bergvall & Mikey Moore.

By
Ethan Lamb

Apr 17, 2025

Development: Man City now close in on move to sign "world-class" £54m star

Manchester City are now closing in on a “world-class” defender, having recently received a boost in their transfer pursuit, according to a report.

Man City pursuing new full-back

With captain Kyle Walker being shipped out on loan to AC Milan in January, Matheus Nunes has been filling in at right-back, meaning Man City have now set their sights on a replacement, and Tottenham Hotspur’s Pedro Porro has been identified as a potential target.

Spurs are set to drive a hard bargain for the right-back, having set an asking price of £50m, but the Spaniard is not the only Tottenham defender of interest to City, with left-back Destiny Udogie emerging as a target earlier this month.

The Blues have been pursuing a new left-back for quite some time, and there are a number of options from within the Premier League, including AFC Bournemouth’s Milos Kerkez, although there could be competition for the Hungarian from Liverpool and Real Madrid.

Man City now make £34m+ offer to sign "incredible" Ederson replacement

The Citizens have stepped up their pursuit…

By
Sean Markus Clifford

Apr 28, 2025

Pep Guardiola’s side have also been extensively linked with a move for Juventus’ Andrea Cambiaso, and a new report from The Sun has revealed they are now closing in on a move for the Italian after receiving a recent boost in their pursuit.

Juventus are advancing towards signing a replacement for Cambiaso, namely Arsenal’s Nuno Tavares, who is currently on loan at Lazio, which indicates they are planning to sell their current left-back in the summer transfer window.

Atalanta's Berat Djimsiti and Marco Brescianini in action with Juventus'AndreaCambiaso

Man City are expected to make a fresh attempt to sign the 25-year-old, who they have been interested in signing since the January transfer window, and reports from elsewhere have stated that a deal could amount to around £54m.

"World-class" Cambiaso could be fantastic signing

Since forcing his way into the first-team, Nico O’Reilly has done a remarkable job at left-back, particularly impressing in an attacking sense, having picked up five goals and two assists in 16 games for City.

However, Guardiola may want to bring in a more experienced option this summer, and there are signs the Juventus defender could be a fantastic signing, given that he has received very high praise from journalist Zach Lowy.

It appears the Italy international is very comfortable in possession of the ball, given the number of passes he has attempted per 90 over the past year, while his pass-completion rate is also very impressive, potentially making the defender a perfect fit in a Guardiola system.

Statistic

Average per 90

Passes attempted

67.05 (92nd percentile)

Pass-completion %

88.5% (96th percentile)

Progressive carries

3.35 (92nd percentile)

Successful take-ons

1.10 (86th percentile)

There may be concerns that Cambiaso’s arrival could stunt O’Reilly’s development, but the Englishman is capable of playing in a number of different positions, so he should still receive regular game time, and the Juventus star could take City’s defence to the next level.

109-touch Man City star put in his best display of the season at Wembley

All of sudden, Manchester City’s season doesn’t look quite as cursed.

Indeed, Pep Guardiola’s men might not be picking up a Premier League title, but the bruised Citizens have at least managed to dress up their wounds somewhat, with an FA Cup final against Crystal Palace now on the horizon after a comfortable 2-0 victory over Nottingham Forest at Wembley.

In the end, City’s class and know-how won them the high-stakes affair, with a whole host of players sticking out on the big occasion.

Man City's top performers vs Forest

City were in control of the game from the moment Rico Lewis broke the deadlock after just two minutes, with Forest’s counter-attacking game disrupted by Lewis’ early opener.

Overall, the City academy product stood out at Wembley, away from just this crucial contribution, with the 20-year-old showing off his coolness throughout when only giving up possession six times from 36 accurate passes.

Likewise, the second goalscorer on the day in Josko Gvardiol was a calm performer throughout, with his header on the 51st minute mark amazingly his sixth strike of a mightily impressive individual campaign.

Away from the Croat and the Englishman stealing most of the headlines, the likes of Nico O’Reilly also impressed once more at Wembley, with one solo effort from the versatile number 75 nearly sending the City masses into raptures in the first half, as well as successfully winning eight duels.

But, there was another star performer who arguably put in his greatest performance of the season to send City to the FA Cup final…

Man City star put in his best performance of the season

Away from faces such as O’Reilly breaking into the first team picture recently, the City lineup to face Nuno Espirito Santo’s challengers was comprised of some well-known Etihad figures.

Mateo Kovacic certainly fits into this category, with the 30-year-old up to 85 appearances and counting for Guardiola’s men after dictating play centrally versus Forest.

Whilst the 110-time Croatia international had chipped in with seven goals and one assist in all competitions this season prior to this showdown, he hasn’t quite been as influential over one isolated contest like he was on Sunday, with City immediately in the driving seat in the game after the ex-Chelsea man teed up Lewis for the opener.

Away from picking up that assist, Kovacic amassed his aforementioned 109 touches as a busy body in the middle of the pitch, alongside also registering five successful dribbles to constantly push his team forward to unsettle their opponents.

Kovacic’s performance in numbers

Stat

Kovacic

Minutes played

89

Goals scored

0

Assists

1

Touches

109

Accurate passes

88/94 (94%)

Key passes

2

Successful dribbles

5/6

Total duels won

7/13

Stats by Sofascore

Whilst Kovacic would strut his stuff throughout as a confident performer, he would also roll up his sleeves when needed to battle against Forest, with seven total duels won in total proving his well-rounded game.

Subsequently, Manchester Evening journalist Simon Bajkowski would wax lyrical about the 30-year-old come the full-time whistle, stating that Kovacic was “barely a step out of place” across his 89 minutes on the Wembley turf, resulting in a high 9/10 rating being handed his way.

City will be gunning for another Wembley success when the FA Cup final occurs next month, knowing full well that another trophy being added to their glittering cabinet makes this campaign worthy of remembering for the positives, rather than any lingering blunders.

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Ex-Man City gem could replace Gibbs-White if he leaves Nottingham Forest

With Manchester City continuing to chase Morgan Gibbs-White’s signature, Nottingham Forest have reportedly joined the battle to sign a La Liga midfielder who once played for the Blues.

Nottingham Forest's worrying form continues

Forest had been flying towards the Champions League places and even found themselves as high as third throughout the current campaign. As things stand, however, they now sit sixth and are on course to miss out on a place among Europe’s elite with three games to play. In a season full of shock form, Nuno Espirito Santo’s side have seemingly run out of steam at the worst possible time.

With one win in their last five Premier League games, Forest must rediscover their form as soon as their next attempt which will see them play host to a relegated Leicester City side. They then visit a struggling West Ham United side with the same aim before they square off against Chelsea on the final day in a game likely to decide their Champions League fate.

Nuno spoke to reporters after his side were held to a 1-1 draw by Crystal Palace on Monday, saying: “I think we improved in many aspects of the game, first half we were in control, we were dominant and had good possession and we didn’t allow Palace to counterattack against us.

“We didn’t create too many, but we had a clear chance. The second half was different, it was important that we reacted from the goal and the reaction we had showed character and belief.

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“We were fighting until the end, always with the belief that we could achieve more. The boys did well, Palace have a difficult shape to break down and they always have the threat of the counterattack when they recover.”

Meanwhile, away from the pitch, those in the Midlands have also been busy setting their sights on potential summer arrivals to replace Gibbs-White amid rumours that Manchester City are pushing to sign their star midfielder.

Nottingham Forest battling to sign Yangel Herrera

According to reports in Spain, Nottingham Forest are now battling to sign Yangel Herrera from Girona this summer and face competition from the likes of Atletico Madrid for his signature. Having spent time at Manchester City in the early stages of his career, the South American has finally found his feet at Girona and could now be on his way back to the Premier League as a result.

League stats 24/25 (via FBref)

Yangel Herrera

Morgan Gibbs-White

Starts

24

31

Goals

4

5

Assists

3

7

Ball Recoveries

95

118

When compared, Herrera’s numbers show that he could be an option to replace Gibbs-White. In six fewer starts, the Girona man has managed just one less goal than the Forest man, albeit whilst struggling to create at the same level.

Girona'sYangelHerrerain action with AC Milan's Tijani Reijnders

Potentially coming back to haunt Manchester City, Herrera could find himself on his way back to English football courtesy of Nottingham Forest this summer.

Worse than Hojlund: Man Utd must axe dud who Neville dubbed "embarrassing"

Manchester United’s Europa League final woes have not only exposed the task at hand for manager Ruben Amorim moving forward, but have also put the decisions of the previous regime even further under the microscope.

Indeed, on Wednesday night, goalkeeper Andre Onana couldn’t keep out Brennan Johnson’s scruffy effort, with the Cameroonian hardly inspiring much confidence in a season in which he has made five errors leading to a goal in Europe and in the Premier League combined.

In attack, meanwhile, the decision to start Mason Mount failed to work out, with the Englishman producing an ineffective performance in which he was restricted to even fewer touches than Onana, with just 25 in total.

Mason Mount

Ahead of the ex-Chelsea man, Rasmus Hojlund was even more peripheral as he recorded just 15 touches of his own, with the Dane again firing a blank in a season in which he has scored just ten times in total.

The common thread between that trio? Well, they were all signed in what now looks like a sliding doors summer for the Red Devils in 2023. Fresh off the back of a promising first campaign under Erik ten Hag that yielded a third-placed finish and Carabao Cup success, the club needed to kick on again with marquee moves.

The likes of Harry Kane were touted, although Hojlund and co arrived instead – the Old Trafford side are still paying the price for that decision…

Analysing Hojlund's two seasons at Man Utd

For all the talk of Kane, for a fleeting moment it looked like the correct call had been made by plumping for the youthful Hojlund, with the £64m signing – rising to £72m – enjoying an impressive cameo on debut against Arsenal.

Unleashed off the bench, the promising speedster ran Gabriel and William Saliba ragged, playing his part in the eventually disallowed ‘winner’ from Alejandro Garnacho, while drawing a clumsy foul from the former that surprisingly didn’t result in a penalty.

That bright start culminated in a standout Champions League group stage run that yielded five goals, including a breakaway effort against Galatasaray that even sparked comparisons to a certain Ruud van Nistelrooy.

Frustratingly, however, it took until Boxing Day for Hojlund to notch a first top-flight goal for the club, albeit with that breakthrough sparking a run of seven goals in just six games at the turn of the year.

Despite ultimately ending 2023/24 as the top scorer for Ten Hag across all fronts, injuries and a lack of consistency saw him slip out of the starting lineup as the campaign progressed, with the Dutch coach opting for a strikerless system in the FA Cup final triumph over Manchester City.

Perhaps, on reflection, Amorim should well have attempted a similar tweak in recent weeks, with Hojlund coming to the end of a simply wretched campaign that has yielded only four league goals.

In truth, as last season showcased, the 22-year-old does appear more effective in Europe, although even then his impact has largely come in bursts, notably netting four times across successive outings against Bodo/Glimt and Viktoria Plzen.

Rasmus Hojlund

A streaky striker, and an expensive one at that, the former Atalanta man could be set for a swift return to Serie A this summer by all accounts, having failed to live up to expectations and the burden of being United’s leading number nine.

For all the frustration over what now looks like a costly mistake, it’s fair to say that Hojlund – who has 26 goals in 94 games – isn’t the biggest transfer misfire of the last decade or so…

Man Utd's bigger mistake than Hojlund

Dishing out £64m on a player who had scored just ten goals in Italy the year prior remains a simply headscratching decision, although so too does forking out £86m to sign Antony a year earlier.

Reportedly valued at around £25m at one stage, amid prior interest during Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s tenure, the Brazilian was earmarked as a key signing for Ten Hag in the summer of 2022, amid their prior relationship at Ajax.

With that window quickly heading to a close, and United losing their opening two games under the new boss, the desperate decision was made to plump for Casemiro and then Antony at the death, with the latter man arriving on deadline day.

Despite a lively start, which yielded three goals in his first three league appearances, the 24-year-old has been simply a disaster since then, with pundit Micah Richards notably highlighting his “lazy” approach in the dismal 7-0 defeat to Liverpool at Anfield.

An at-times headless and petulant presence on the pitch, Antony was also dubbed “embarrassing” by club legend Gary Neville for kicking out at Jeremy Doku in the final knockings of the 3-0 Manchester Derby defeat last term, a moment that could well have resulted in a red card.

Man Utd record for selected wingers (past and present)

Player

Games

Goals

Assists

Total G/A

Antony

96

12

5

17

Anthony Elanga

55

4

4

8

Amad

63

13

11

22

Jadon Sancho

83

12

6

18

Alejandro Garnacho

144

26

22

45

Dan James

74

9

9

18

Angel Di Maria

34

4

12

16

Henrikh Mkhitaryan

63

13

11

24

Memphis Depay

53

7

6

13

Stats via Transfermarkt

Of course, there has been the odd bright moment – such as his Europa League efforts against Barcelona and Real Betis – yet those have been few and far between, with the exiled winger racking up just 17 goals and assists in 95 games for the club to date. To put that into perspective, even Jadon Sancho boasts a better return, with 18 goal involvements in 83 games.

Like Sancho, Antony is now something of a forgotten man after being shipped out on loan, with not even his mini-revival at Betis enough to spark hope of a fresh start in Manchester next season, despite scoring eight times in just 24 games in Spain.

As revealed by the MEN, even while a review of the current campaign and Wednesday’s showpiece defeat is likely to take place, the priority at present is cashing in on Sancho, Marcus Rashford and Antony, with funds needed to spark yet another rebuild at Old Trafford.

Hopefully, lessons will have been learned from the bumper deals for the likes of Hojlund and Antony, with INEOS now needing to ensure that they can at least claw back some sort of substantial fee for Ten Hag’s dismal duo.

Not just Hojlund: 4/10 dud must now never play for Man Utd again

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1

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"Elite" player green-lights move to Chelsea with formal bid expected soon

Chelsea are one of the busiest Premier League sides this transfer window, with just days remaining for Enzo Maresca and BlueCo to register new players in time for the Club World Cup.

Who Chelsea could sign after Liam Delap

The Blues have already sealed their first signing of the summer after shaking hands on a deal for Ipswich Town striker Liam Delap (Fabrizio Romano), who joins in a £30 million deal, but Chelsea are by no means done following the Englishman’s arrival.

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Emilio Galantini

Jun 3, 2025

Work is happening behind-the-scenes at Stamford Bridge, with Chelsea attempting to bring one or two more signings through the door before they kick off their CWC campaign on June 16 against Leon (Simon Phillips).

Race for Champions League qualification – Final standings

Rank

Team

Points

GD

3

Man City

71

+28

4

Chelsea

69

+21

5

Newcastle

66

+21

6

Aston Villa

66

+7

7

Nottingham Forest

65

+12

It is believed that the west Londoners are laying the groundwork on potential deals for wingers and attacking midfielders as one key item on their agenda. Chelsea held talks with the representatives of Athletic Bilbao winger Nico Williams last week, and informed the Spaniard’s camp that they’re prepared to pay his £50 million release clause.

As well as the 22-year-old, Kenan Yildiz (Juventus), Eberechi Eze (Crystal Palace), Jeremy Doku (Man City), Morgan Rogers (Aston Villa), Max Tillman (PSV), Jamie Gittens (Borussia Dortmund), Alejandro Garnacho (Man United) are all reportedly on Chelsea’s shortlist of wide-attacking targets.

Chelsea are expected to sign a centre-back too, amid links to Everton’s Jarrad Branthwaite, and they’re currently in talks with AC Milan over a deal for French international goalkeeper Mike Maignan.

AC Milan's MikeMaignanreacts

The 29-year-old’s contract expires next summer, and this situation has alerted Chelsea to a potential upgrade on Robert Sanchez and Filip Jorgensen.

However, there is still a major gap when it comes to price, so the west Londoners are prepared to walk away and stick with what they have if Milan don’t lower their demands.

That being said, even if the clubs are failing to find common ground right now, Chelsea do have the player’s approval.

Mike Maignan gives green-light to join Chelsea from AC Milan

According to Football Italia, Maignan has given his green-light to join Chelsea, with the Frenchman approving a switch to Cobham as he ponders life after the San Siro.

The outlet adds that a formal bid is expected to arrive from Chelsea “in the near future”, and if they can reach an agreement on Maignan’s final asking price, he could depart the Rossoneri “in the coming days”.

There is no doubt he would be a stellar addition between the sticks, with Liverpool star Alisson believing Maignan is in the “elite” bracket of keepers. Milan are also eyeing up Torino number one Vanja Milinkovic-Savic in the event they do lose their star shot-stopper.

This saga definitely appears one to watch over the next week, and it could prompt BlueCo to undergo a major goalkeeping reshuffle considering Chelsea’s backlog of five keepers already on their books.

"Special" £30m international forward now a front-runner to sign for Everton

Everton manager David Moyes desperately wants to bring a “special” Premier League player to the club this summer, according to a new transfer update.

Everton eye attacking reinforcements

The Blues have been linked with lots of players since the 2024/25 season reached its conclusion, but few rumoured signings have caught the eye more than Ben Doak. The Liverpool teenager is reportedly the subject of interest from several top flight clubs, as the Blues look to seal the first direct senior signing between the two Merseyside rivals since 2002, when Abel Xavier traded Goodison Park for Anfield.

The Reds have a big decision to make with Doak, who spent the season on loan in the Championship with Middlesbrough, as they weigh up whether they think he is good enough to make the grade in the years to come, or cash in on him for a healthy amount of money this summer.

Plenty of clubs are hovering if they do decide to sell the 19-year-old, and for Everton supporters, the idea of snapping up a bright Liverpool talent will be a mouthwatering prospect. Now, there has been a fresh development in the saga, as Moyes looks to work his magic.

Doak now Everton's leading winger target

According to TEAMtalk, Doak is now a “leading target” for Everton to sign this summer, as their interest in the Liverpool youngster shows no sign of going away. It is claimed that Moyes is a “huge admirer” of the £30m-rated Scottish wide man, as they look to complete a memorable piece of business.

This has to be considered an encouraging update regarding Everton’s pursuit of Doak, not least the fact that Moyes would seemingly love him at the club.

The Scotland international is exactly what the Blues are crying out for on the flank, with the Liverpool man possessing blistering pace, an ability to both cut inside and hit the byline, and also an enormous amount of long-term potential.

Doak is admired by so many, including former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, who has said of him: “Special boy. Really confident, has something nobody else delivers really, this kind of dribbling, this kind of straight-forward bravery, all these kind of things.”

The biggest downside to this whole situation is that the Reds may be unwilling to sell to Everton, given the risk of one of their own players becoming a star for their local rivals, which could put paid to a move.

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If the Scot likes the idea of playing for the Blues, though, not least as it would mean not having to move away, Moyes and those high up at the club must pounce while they have the chance.

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