What more can we expect to see from Zak Crawley in this Ashes series?

And have England found a way to counter the extraordinary Steven Smith?

Mark Nicholas24-Jul-2023You’d be unlucky if it rained pretty much solid for two consecutive days in July, said someone. Really? In Manchester? And so it was that Clive Rice’s old barb about England having nine months of winter and three months of bad weather came to haunt Ben Stokes. This was the gods of cricket at their meanest.As Test cricket continues its fight for salvation in the face of the seemingly unstoppable juggernaut that is all things T20 and private, 2-2 going to The Oval was what any level-headed lover of the game ached for. Such anticipation is rare: most five-match Test series are done before the scheduled denouement, upon which we hear all that witless rhetoric about playing for pride when we would prefer daggers. Still, in this instance The Oval will roar its emotion. The English feel cheated, claiming their team to be better than Australia’s, and gratifyingly, more entertaining. If the weather is a cheat, they may be right. If run rate is the benchmark, they are certainly so.The England team gave itself the best chance at Old Trafford by going at a lick for the 592 total and the 275 lead. In trying to write this without mentioning the “B” word, the players have been chosen specifically for the job. Years ago, in South Africa, Graeme Hick asked the England batting coach John Edrich how best to get out of his rut. “Keep buggering on,” replied the former Surrey and England grafter, as was his special subject in the days when batting was more about occupation of the lines than bursting out of the traps. That was the tour when Michael Atherton saved the Johannesburg Test with a valiant, unbeaten 185 across two days of gunfire from Allan Donald and Company. On return to the dressing room, he was seen punching the air, a rare moment of animation from one so introverted. Atherton faced 492 balls in that defiance, balls that included the first and the last.Related

  • That was then, this is now for Steven Smith

  • Zak Crawley: 'I do doubt myself but I have to keep being me'

  • Pat Cummins: 'Good to retain Ashes but work to do for next week'

  • Ben Stokes rues Old Trafford rain after 'pretty much perfect' performance

  • Zak Crawley bats like no one is watching

On Thursday last, Zak Crawley opened up, and out, for England, making four more runs than Atherton in 310 fewer balls. Of course, their ambitions were very different but the point is that neither could have done the other’s job. The Lancastrian was chosen for his resilience, concentration and accomplished technical skills against the new ball; the Kentish man for his strokeplay. Perhaps the most telling of all of Stokes’ comments on selection is: “We pick teams and players for what they can do on their best days”. It is a leap of faith.This was one of Crawley’s best days. He rode both his luck and the race at hand with a splendid sense of adventure. There really was no telling what would come next. He flapped around against Mitchell Starc pre-lunch and panned him into the bleachers post. He treated Pat Cummins like a medium-pacer, Josh Hazelwood like a has-been, and Travis Head as an imposter. If only the great Ted Dexter was still with us to rejoice. Ted loved Crawley’s batting and the reasons make for good reading.

  • Zak sets up to attack and is therefore, in theory at least, in the best position to defend when required.
  • His best form has come when he plays the ball alongside his body, a detail he should pursue always.
  • He has a clear idea of the way in which he wants to play whatever is in front of him. This suggests a strong mind.
  • He appears completely unfazed by the opponent and therefore plays the ball, not the man. This is not so easy as it sounds.
  • On the outside, it appears as if he doesn’t much care what others think. Ted loved that.

In fact, it’s all quite Dexter. Richie Benaud used to say similar things about Norman O’Neill, the brilliant Australian batter of the 1960s. At the time, the two of them stood out: both tall and powerful right-handers whose games were based on an organised technique and a complete lack of fear. When they walked to the wicket, the spectators took their seats. There is no greater compliment. It will apply to Crawley now.In the face of criticism and the many feeble digs about the Kent opener being the luckiest England cricketer to have retained his place in the team, he has had to look within. His father, Terry, once said, “My dad was the toughest man I ever knew until I met my son.” Aha, so that fresh, boyish face is a disguise. And if you don’t trust his dad, ask the England dressing room; there are no cheap shots at him in there.It is not easy to stick with a method that is publicly scrutinised and frequently criticised. But having tinkered a little with his footwork along the way, he has done so and now has 385 runs in the series. Some innings that might not have seemed much have meant a great deal, not least the start at Edgbaston when he creamed the first ball of the match through extra cover and went on to 61 without raising a sweat. There have been other accomplished 30s and 40s against a fine new-ball attack that critics then complain about when he “nicks off”.Steve Smith hasn’t been at his best in this series, but expect some big runs from him at The Oval•Getty ImagesOf course, if you get in, you should go on. But if only it were that simple. The mindset of the current England players is for the moment, not its future. There were little somethings of Ian Botham’s two great, freewheeling 1981 innings in Crawley’s buccaneering assault on the Australian attack. It is an approach that all of us on the outside should buy into as enthusiastically as those on the inside. We continue to live, and judge, in a world pre-Stokes and McCullum, but we must awake to the zeitgeist.Somewhere in approach between the Atherton trot and the Crawley gallop is Steven Smith’s canter. Smith averages 58.56 in Test matches – a rare dip, he has been 60 and more for the most part. It is a number nothing short of mind-blowing once you have looked anywhere other than the Don Bradman page. He began as a legbreak bowler and No. 7 batter. They said he was the next Shane Warne; it turns out he was the next Bradman. This is a guy who concentrates like Atherton and can take you apart like Crawley. He can mark time or push on; defend gallantly or attack with venom. He is not one for the aesthetics but neither is his play unattractive. Rather, it is a fascination.Were you asked how many teams Smith had played for in his career at the top level, you might say six or seven. It is nearer 20. He has been from New South Wales to Worcestershire and Sussex and back again via Toronto, Antigua and Barbados, Bangalore, Rajasthan, Kochi, Delhi and many more. He is wedded to the game, one-dimensional perhaps but no worse a team man for that. In Australia he’d be known as a cricket tragic, which is mainly a compliment.At Lord’s, Smith peeled off a Smith classic – all angles and gaps and fidgets and squawks. He cover-drove better than ever, occasionally cut square, and otherwise manoeuvred the ball to the leg side with dancing feet and contorted wrists. He defies lbw like it was a law for everyone else, walking deliberately across his stumps and standing right there in front of all three as if it were French not Anglo-Australian cricket he was playing. Come to think of it, you could read Bradman’s The Art of Cricket and wonder if the Don and Smithy were even at the same game. For certain, they are two of the strongest minds to have played the game.England fans can take heart that their team has played entertaining cricket throughout the summer•Getty ImagesHas anyone ever batted like Smith before? Will anyone? Does he have the best hand-eye coordination of them all? Can it last forever? At both Headingley and Old Trafford, he has looked fallible. Is this simply the fading of the light or are we witnessing an unravelling? Have England found a way to counter this extraordinary, unorthodox talent?Some yeses and no’s there. Mark Wood trapped him lbw the other day, then bounced him out in the second dig. At Headingley, he nicked off against Stuart Broad and walked off embarrassed against Moeen Ali after a miscalculated chip into the hands of the man at midwicket. Four very different outs.England are right to bowl gun-barrel straight at Smith and pack the leg side. Heaven knows why everyone hasn’t been at it for years. Given the extreme trigger movements and the fact that he ends up in front of all three, lbw has to be brought into play. One former captain told me they didn’t dare bowl too straight because he picked them off so easily. I guess it depends who “they” are. A strength is invariably a weakness too. Stokes has posted fielders in both old-fashioned places (leg slip and gully) and new-fashioned places (square leg and midwicket sweepers, short mid-on, short square leg, short, fine third man) and Smith has had to adapt. By definition, the tactics have worked to good effect.Occasionally – Wood in the first innings at Old Trafford, for example – the England bowlers have switched to wide of off stump, drawing Smith across almost to fourth stump in his final position of guard. Upon which Wood zoomed in on middle and off and trapped his man. Given out by review, Smith looked perplexed not so much by the decision as by the place at which the replay showed his feet to be.This needed Wood’s fierce pace to be effective – remember Jofra Archer against him four years ago and imagine Harold Larwood thundering in to Bradman – because even a player this good is wary of looking to get back into the ball by edging forward, in case the skidding bouncer is up next. When we all bang on about the brilliant cricket we have seen in the series, such vignettes drive our excitement. Finding ways to outsmart Australia’s prolific No. 4 are uppermost in the minds of all opponents. Random hook shots have cost his wicket in this series; the bouncer is now on the list of options.Smith will come to The Oval bloodied but by no means beaten. Generally, with the true bounce it is a good place for batters, so he may well be licking his lips. This is not yet the fading of the light, not at 34 years and with energy to spare. It is reasonable to assume no one before has batted quite like him and worth adding how we will miss the often bizarre idiosyncrasies when they have gone.Right now, Smith is not listed in the top five run-scorers of the series. Expect that to be corrected in South London. Crawley, it is worth repeating, is top of that list. Don’t change a thing, Zak.

Stats – James Anderson's 454-ball wait against Virat Kohli comes to an end

All the stats from the second day’s play of the first England-India Test in Nottingham

Sampath Bandarupalli05-Aug-202137.3 Overs batted by Rohit Sharma and KL Rahul, the most by an opening pair for India in Tests outside Asia since 2008. Four of India’s top five longest opening partnerships outside Asia in this period came in 2021.97 Opening stand between Sharma and Rahul, the second-highest opening partnership for India in Test matches in England since 1980. Only Wasim Jaffer and Dinesh Karthik pair had a higher partnership, 147 in 2007, also in Nottingham.Sharma and Rahul’s partnership is the highest for the first wicket by a visiting pair in England since Dimuth Karunaratne and Kaushal Silva’s 108-run stand in 2016 at Lord’s.It is also the second-highest opening stand in Tests by any team in the last five English seasons. Rory Burns and Dom Sibley’s 114 against West Indies in Manchester is the highest in this period.ESPNcricinfo Ltd454 Balls faced by Virat Kohli against James Anderson between his last two dismissals against the veteran pacer in Test cricket. The last time Kohli got out to Anderson before his golden duck in Nottingham was during the 2014 Manchester Test. Anderson has dismissed Kohli on six occasions in Test cricket so far, including twice for a duck.22 Balls faced by India’s No. 3 (Cheteshwar Pujara), No. 4 (Kohli) and No. 5 (Ajinkya Rahane) collectively in the first innings. Only twice did India’s No. 3, 4 and 5 faced fewer balls in a Test innings since 2000. Pujara, Kohli and Rahane lasted only eight balls in the second innings of the 2018 Melbourne Test while Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly collectively faced only 14 balls in the first innings of the 2008 Galle Test.9 Ducks, including three on the first ball, for Kohli as a Tests captain, the most by an Indian captain in this format. Four of Kohli’s nine ducks as Test skipper came while playing against England, including three in 2021.

حكم مباراة برشلونة وأوساسونا في الدوري الإسباني

كشف الاتحاد الإسباني لكرة القدم عن هوية الحكم الذي سيتولى إدارة مباراة برشلونة وأوساسونا، المرتقبة مساء السبت، وذلك في إطار منافسات بطولة الدوري الإسباني لذلك الموسم.

ويستضيف ملعب “كامب نو” مباراة برشلونة وأوساسونا، في الجولة السادسة عشر من بطولة الدوري الإسباني، موسم 2025/26.

اقرأ أيضًا.. بين الأهلي وبرشلونة | سبورت تحلل تصريحات حمزة عبد الكريم.. تحكم ذهني ورسالة خفية

ويحتل برشلونة صدارة الدوري الإسباني في الوقت الحالي، برصيد 40 نقطة، في حين أن أوساسونا لديه 15 نقطة في المركز الخامس عشر. حكم مباراة برشلونة وأوساسونا في الدوري الإسباني

وحسبما نشر الاتحاد الإسباني عبر موقعه الرسمي، فإن الحكم أدريان كورديرو فيجا، سيكون مسؤولًا عن إدارة مباراة برشلونة وأوساسونا في الدوري الإسباني، مساء الغد.

وفيما يتعلق بتقنية الفيديو في المباراة نفسها بين برشلونة وأوساسونا، سيكون مسؤولًا عنها كارلوس دي سيرو، حسبما أعلن الاتحاد الإسباني لكرة القدم كذلك.ًِ

Mikel Arteta says "very powerful" Arsenal star has took him completely by surprise

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has lavished praise on a Gunners who’s done something he never expected.

Arsenal look to extend unbeaten run against Brentford

Arsenal return to the Emirates tonight seeking to rebuild momentum against Brentford following Sunday’s 1-1 draw at Chelsea, where Arteta’s side failed to capitalize on their one-man advantage despite playing almost an hour against ten men.

The north Londoners have also seen their five-point lead atop the Premier League table reduced to two after Man City’s thrilling 5-4 win away to Fulham on Tuesday, so nothing but a win will do against one of the worst away teams in the division this evening.

Arteta faces selection dilemmas ahead of Brentford’s visit, with defensive concerns persisting following the unexpected absence of both first-choice centre-backs at Stamford Bridge.

Arsenal 3-0 Nottingham Forest

Athletic Bilbao 0-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 1-1 Man City

Port Vale 0-2 Arsenal

Newcastle 1-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 2-0 Olympiacos

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

Fulham 0-1 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-0 Atlético Madrid

Arsenal 1-0 Crystal Palace

Arsenal 2-0 Brighton

Burnley 0-2 Arsenal

Slavia Prague 0-3 Arsenal

Sunderland 2-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-1 Tottenham

Arsenal 3-1 Bayern Munich

Chelsea 1-1 Arsenal

William Saliba suffered a training ground injury in the build up to Chelsea, compounding Gabriel Magalhaes’ absence and marking only the second occasion in 162 matches both defenders have missed simultaneously.

It could well be the third time in 163 matches against Brentford, with Saliba a doubt for tonight’s clash and Gabriel still weeks away from returning to the field.

Arsenal’s incredible unbeaten streak has now reached 17 matches across all competitions, yet Arteta demands improvements following the Chelsea stalemate. The Gunners managed just eight shots at Stamford Bridge – their lowest total in any Premier League fixture this season.

Arsenal hold new talks with Juventus star who Alonso has recommended to Real Madrid

The Gunners are ‘captivated’ by him.

ByEmilio Galantini Dec 3, 2025

Leandro Trossard, who’s been in excellent form with 10 goal contributions already this term, looks set to miss the Brentford game with Havertz also suffering a setback in his recovery from a knee injury.

Mikel Arteta says Merino has took him by surprise at Arsenal

Bearing this in mind, if Arteta doesn’t start Viktor Gyokeres, then makeshift number nine Mikel Merino could well be handed another chance to impress.

The Spain international has been nothing short of extraordinary in a very unfamiliar role, scoring 20 goals this calendar year for club and country, and Arteta has now had his say on the matter.

When asked by reporters whether he thought Merino could become a striker like this, Arteta admitted the 29-year-old has taken him completely by surprise.

Merino’s equaliser ensured that Arsenal’s unbeaten streak didn’t end in west London on Sunday, and the former Newcastle star has fast become a fan favourite.

2025 has been a real year to remember for the midfielder, who was one of Edu’s final signings before his departure as sporting director late last year.

Arteta can take a lot of the credit for transforming Merino into an attacking powerhouse and having the initiative to experiment with him up front, but the versatile star has seized that opportunity with both hands.

Arteta reveals what he told Calafiori right before Arsenal assist in Bayern win

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has revealed what he told defender Riccardo Calafiori right before his immediate impact off the bench against Bayern Munich in the Champions League.

Arsenal cruise to statement win over Bayern Munich

The Gunners enjoyed a night to remember in Europe on Wednesday after putting Vincent Kompany’s side to the sword over what was a phenomenal second-half display.

Heading into the game, Bayern were unbeaten in all competitions and had reigned victorious in every single game bar one, with Arsenal inflicting their first defeat of 2025/2026.

On paper, it was perhaps Arsenal’s toughest test of the season against Europe’s most in-form team, but the north Londoners still found a way to win and extend their own unbeaten run to an incredible 16 matches on the trot.

Arsenal 3-0 Nottingham Forest

Athletic Bilbao 0-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 1-1 Man City

Port Vale 0-2 Arsenal

Newcastle 1-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 2-0 Olympiacos

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

Fulham 0-1 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-0 Atlético Madrid

Arsenal 1-0 Crystal Palace

Arsenal 2-0 Brighton

Burnley 0-2 Arsenal

Slavia Prague 0-3 Arsenal

Sunderland 2-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-1 Tottenham

Arsenal 3-1 Bayern Munich

Bukayo Saka directed a corner towards the near post and Jurrien Timber glanced his header past the flapping Manuel Neuer to open the scoring, but out of nowhere Bayern conjured up an equaliser.

Joshua Kimmich pinged the ball out to former Arsenal winger Serge Gnabry, who cushioned it first time into the path of Lennart Karl. Cool as you like, the teenager – who became Bayern’s youngest Champions League goalscorer against Brugge last month – did not break stride as he crashed his first-time volley into the roof of the net.

Moments later a Kane pirouette in the area had Arsenal flustered until William Saliba hacked the ball clear at the second attempt.

After the break, Saka, Noni Madueke and Mikel Merino all threatened for the hosts before the second goal arrived in the 69th minute.

Bayern’s Dayot Upamecano gave the ball away, substitute Calafiori swung in a low cross and Madueke pounced from six yards out – scoring his first ever goal for Arsenal.

Neuer then suffered a horrible moment as he came out to deal with Eze’s long ball, only for another sub, Gabriel Martinelli, to waltz past him and finish into an empty net.

"Magnificent" – Ally McCoist hails "out of this world" Arsenal star in Bayern Munich win

He was truly exceptional on a night to remember for the Gunners.

ByEmilio Galantini Nov 26, 2025

‘Are you Tottenham in disguise?’ and ‘Harry, what’s the score?’ were the predictable chants from the home fans as they revelled in their old foe’s misery, all while celebrating a deserved, statement win against the Bundesliga champions.

Declan Rice put on a man of the match display against Bayern, one of his best ever performances since joining the club, but Arteta’s substitutions were inspired and a key part of why they won the blockbuster clash.

Mikel Arteta reveals key Riccardo Calafiori message before Arsenal assist

Just one minute after being introduced by Arteta, left-back Calafiori, who replaced Myles Lewis-Skelly, put the ball on a plate for Madueke after darting in behind to whip in a low cross.

The Italy international played a major role in putting Arsenal back into the ascendancy, with Arteta revealing what he told Calafiori right before his game-changing assist against Bayern.

The £42 million signing from Bologna has further staked his claim as Arsenal’s undisputed number one left-back, and contributions like last night highlight exactly why Lewis-Skelly has struggled for minutes.

In the background, reports suggest that Chelsea are making a bold attempt to convince Lewis-Skelly to join them amid his lack of match action, but the Hale End sensation is determined to battle his way back into the starting eleven.

Unfortunately for him, the teenager might have a hard time doing so with Calafiori proving so instrumental for Arteta right now.

Mookie Betts Had Brutal Line About Mysterious Illness That Has Seen Him Lose 20 Pounds

Mookie Betts is sick. The Los Angeles Dodgers star traveled with the team for their season-opening series in Tokyo, but did not play because of a mystery illness and things have not improved since he returned to the states.

Betts spoke with the media on Sunday and revealed some jarring details about his situation. Betts, who is listed at 180 pounds, says that he was 175 and is now down to 157 and he's sounds miserable. Via Yahoo!:

Betts said he felt fine on Sunday morning and showed up at the park for the team's spring training game against the Angels, but had to throw up a few hours later. He's trying to give it a go, but no one knows what's happening with him.

Betts hopes to be in the starting lineup on Thursday for opening day, but who knows?

Final Oakland A’s Postgame Awkwardly Pre-Taped Because of ‘Studio Conflicts'

The Oakland Athletics are no more. The A's franchise played its final game under the Oakland banner on Sunday and will now begin its journey towards Las Vegas, with a three-year stop-over in Sacramento.

The team's last few years in Oakland have been a mess with ownership refusing to put together a competetive payroll and the results on the field matching with three consecutive losing sesaons. Between the impending move and the bad baseball, atteandance went in the tank.

And yet somehow the organization found one final way to look silly on the last day of the season as the official postgame show was pre-taped because of "studio conflicts." Hosts Brodie Brazil and Dave Stewart were left recapping their time with the team. Fittingly, the results of the game did not matter.

"Well, after 57 seasons and more than 9,000 baseball games, the A's have played their last contest representing the city of Oakland," said Brazil. "It happened today right there in Seattle. Full disclosure this is Postgame Live, however it's prerecorded. We had some studio conflicts so we don't even know the result of today's baseball game. Just want to be fair, if we don't reference something that just happened, the reason why is that this show is prerecorded."

It's hard to imagine how there was a scheduling conflict for the postgame show for a game that was scheduled back in March, but this is the just how things work for the A's.

Ruben Amorim responds to Cristiano Ronaldo's criticism as Man Utd boss admits to 'problem' ahead of Tottenham clash

Manchester United boss Ruben Amorim has fired back at Cristiano Ronaldo and urged the club to look to the future, rather than focus on the mistakes made under his regime and those made by previous managers. The United manager has also highlighted the key problem "he cannot allow" to continue holding his team back this season.

  • Ronaldo wades in on United slump

    In a recent interview with Piers Morgan, Ronaldo criticised Man Utd's continued struggles, stating the club "don't have a structure" and are "not on a good path". He expressed sadness over the team's decline, despite still loving the club. Ronaldo claimed that Amorim could not perform "miracles" with the current set-up and that some players don't have the right mentality for a club of United’s stature. The comments came nearly three years after his explosive 2022 interview with Morgan, which led to his departure.  

    The five-time Ballon d'Or winner said: "You have to follow with the intelligent people, smart people, to create a base for the future as Manchester United have (done) so many years ago. Nicky Butt, Gary (Neville), Roy Keane, (David) Beckham, they became big players but they had youth. So Manchester United right now, they don't have a structure. I hope that changes in the future, present/future, because the potential of the club, it's amazing. It's one of the most important clubs of the century. 

    He added: He's (Amorim) doing his best. What are you going to do? Miracles? Miracles is impossible. We say in Portugal, 'miracles is only in Fatima', and he's not going to do miracles." 

    The Miracle of Fatima occurred in Portugal in 1917,  where observers claimed to have seen the sun dance, spin, and appear to fall towards the earth. 

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    'Let's continue and forget the past'

    Amorim said: "Of course, he knows and he (Ronaldo) has a huge impact in everything he says. What we need to focus on is the future. We know that we as a club made a lot of mistakes in the past and we are trying to change that. Let's not focus on what happened, let's focus on what we are doing now and we are doing that. We are changing a lot of things in the structure, the way we do things and want the players to behave. We are doing that and we are improving, so let's continue and forget the past."

  • Amorim identifies key problem

    Amorim added: "I think you can attack really well. Sometimes when you defend better, you attack better. I think it's not that, it's the way we defend the box, but the last game we struggled inside the box because we allowed the crosses into the box without any pressure.

    "These small details that you watched during the last game, we have worked on that. In our last game, they had 17 shots and we cannot allow that. It's something we need to change. We can attack the same way, score even more goals, but we need to defend better."

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    United Spurred on for revenge

    United face Tottenham this weekend, the first time the two teams have met since the Europa League final in May, which the Reds lost 1-0. Spurs have an excellent away record, but have been woeful at home and Amorim believes his side have improved since losing the final in Bilbao. 

    Amorim said: "The characteristics of the players, we have different characteristics in our team, but we also have a lot of players who played last year. We are a better team, we play better and we understand the game better. We are more confident. At this moment, we play with a different confidence. We manage better the moments of the game, but if you remember that game, they had that shot on the goal and won the game. I expect a different game. We can play better, but also have a little bit of luck to win the game."

    He added: "I think we are more confident. We believe more that we can win any game and we prove already that we can win any game. The last game was tough on us because in some moments we weren’t the team we were supposed to be in every minute. And compare that against Brighton, it was a different thing.”

Arsenal tell £265k-per-week star he's free to leave as Arteta makes feelings clear

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has made his feelings clear behind-the-scenes about the potential departure of a big-name player in January.

Arsenal make key decisions on player futures amid Premier League title race

The Gunners are moving to lock down squad members who they view as pivotal for the long-term.

Sporting director Andrea Berta, in a major boost for the Premier League title chasers, convinced star defender William Saliba to commit his long-term future to the club, with the Frenchman signing a new deal until 2030.

The move reflects Saliba’s importance to Arsenal as a cornerstone of their defence for years to come, rewarding his consistent performances and growth, whilst also thwarting Real Madrid’s interest in the 24-year-old as Xabi Alonso’s side are forced to look elsewhere.

In addition to Saliba, goalkeeper David Raya has also agreed to improved terms, reinforcing Arsenal’s commitment to keeping a strong and reliable last line of defence.

Raya’s improved terms with no actual extension, while not announced by the club, highlights Arteta’s desire to reward his players for their excellent form, with the Spaniard proving invaluable between Arsenal’s sticks after back-to-back Golden Glove awards.

The former Brentford shot-stopper has established himself as one of the best goalkeepers in the world since joining the North Londoners, and it is vital he maintains this level if Arsenal are to win their first Premier League title in over 20 years.

Rank

Player

Age

Club

Nation

1

Gianluigi Donnarumma

26

Man City

Italy

2

Alisson

33

Liverpool

Brazil

3

David Raya

30

Arsenal

Spain

4

Jan Oblak

32

Atletico Madrid

Slovenia

5

Diogo Costa

25

FC Porto

Portugal

Beyond those deals, Arsenal are currently engaged in ongoing talks with several other vital squad members.

Bukayo Saka remains a high priority, as the club looks to secure the long-term future of their talismanic winger who has become central to their attacking threat.

Similarly, discussions are underway with defensive stalwart Jurrien Timber, who has impressed with his versatility, defensive solidity and consistency since recovering from his debut season ACL injury.

Midfield maestros Martin Odegaard and Declan Rice have also held talks with Berta over new deals, with Arsenal eager to keep both big names at the heart of their team.

However, the long-term future of £265,000-per-week striker Gabriel Jesus remains far more uncertain.

Arsenal tell Gabriel Jesus he could leave with Mikel Arteta feelings clear

The Brazil international suffered an ACL rupture just as he was enjoying a real purple patch of form midway through 2024/2025, but with his own terms expiring in under two years, Arsenal have told Jesus his January exit is a real possibility.

The former Man City star, once back to full fitness, will have to contend with the likes of Kai Havertz and summer signing Viktor Gyokeres for a place in Arteta’s starting eleven.

Jesus can play on the wing, but Arsenal are also looking pretty strong out wide, so doubts surround whether he really has a place in the team anymore.

The ex-Palmeiras sensation has bagged 26 goals and 20 assists in just under a century of appearances for Arsenal and showcased his worth to Arteta on more than one occasion, but he was never the reliable scorer that they craved up top.

Despite being called a “frightening” player by those who’ve trained alongside him, like Jack Grealish, the writing appears on the wall for Jesus.

As interested sides stand up and take note of his availability, it is believed that his preference is to remain in Europe despite reports linking the forward with a return to Brazil.

Payne the hero with bat and ball as Gloucestershire seal low-scorer

Hampshire scrap hard in defence of 124 but come up short against veteran seamer

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay20-Jun-2025

David Payne ripped apart the Hampshire top order•Getty Images

David Payne deployed all his considerable experience to propel Gloucestershire to a dramatic two-wicket victory over Hampshire Hawks in a low-scoring but memorable Vitality Blast contest at the Seat Unique Stadium.Chasing a modest 125 to win and buoyed by D’Arcy Short’s 41-ball 49, Gloucestershire were cruising at 112 for 4 in the 16th, only to then lose four wickets for the addition of 11 runs to set-up a nerve-jangling finale. With the scores level, Payne kept his composure to lift the final ball, bowled by Chris Wood, over long-on for an astonishing last-gasp match-winning six.The veteran left arm seamer had earlier claimed 3 for 20 from four overs to undermine Hampshire’s top-order and help restrict the visitors to 124 for 9 after they had been inserted on a characteristically slow Bristol pitch. Josh Shaw and Ben Charlesworth weighed in with two wickets apiece and Miles Hammond claimed a remarkable five catches as Gloucestershire picked up a second win in as many games to keep alive their outside hopes of making the quarter-finals.Without a win in their last five games, Hampshire missed an opportunity to move above Glamorgan and back into top-four contention.Looking to follow up his half-century made against Somerset 24 hours earlier, Hampshire skipper James Vince enjoyed a moment of good fortune before he had even got off the mark, being dropped by Graeme van Buuren at extra cover off the bowling of Payne. But there was no such escape for fellow opener Lhuan-dre Pretorius who was held on the deep square leg boundary by Short later in the same over as Gloucestershire effected an early breakthrough.Payne struck another telling blow in his next over, persuading Vince to sky a catch to Miles Hammond at mid-off and depart for 7 with the score 9 for 2. Toby Albert poached a trio of boundaries at the expense of Matt Taylor and Shaw to afford the innings much-needed impetus, but he was bowled by Payne for 16 off the final ball of a powerplay that yielded an underwhelming return of 29 for 3.If Hampshire were reliant upon overseas star Dewald Brevis, they were disappointed. Having taken slow left armer Tom Smith for a six and a four in the seventh, the South African chanced his arm once too often, aiming an extravagant pull shot at a shortish delivery from Charlesworth and succeeding only in finding deep midwicket. He had contributed 13 and the Hawks were 49 for 4 and under the pump.The middle order did not respond well to pressure, Joe Weatherley hoisting Charlesworth to deep midwicket for 18 and Eddie Jack served up a carbon copy dismissal in the next over, falling to van Buuren’s slow left arm without scoring as Hampshire lurched to 67 for 6. Shaw returned at the Ashley Down Road end to remove James Fuller for 17, superbly caught on the run by Ollie Price at long-on as Gloucestershire continued to turn the screw.Liam Dawson followed Fuller back to the pavilion soon afterwards, brilliant held by Hammond in the deep off the bowling of Matt Taylor, and when Benny Howell hit Shaw high to long-on and fell for 14, the Hawks were 100 for 9 in the eighteenth. A late flurry from the last wicket pair of Wood and Scott Currie, who added an unbeaten 24, was not sufficient to paper over the cracks.Hammond and Short staged a brisk opening stand of 30 in five overs to afford the reply reassuring momentum. Hampshire desperately needed to take early wickets and Jack yorked Hammond for 22, but Short continued to apply pressure, carting Wood for two sixes as the home side posted 46 for 1 in the powerplay.Although England spinner Dawson snared Cameron Bancroft lbw without scoring, it did little to slow West Country progress, Price joining Short in staging a partnership of 32 for the fourth wicket to bring the required rate down to a run a ball.Price contributed 22 before slapping a short ball from Wood to midwicket and Howell then accounted for Jack Taylor with the score 87 for 4 in the 14th. Short had accrued three fours and three sixes and had his sights set on what would have been a maiden 50 in Gloucestershire colours when he top-edged Fuller to short third. Hampshire made the home side work hard for their runs and Howell bowled Charlesworth in the penultimate over before Wood removed Matt Taylor and van Buuren in the last to set-up a tense finale.Shaw scrambled a single off the next ball to bring the scores level and Payne calmed any nerves by smiting the final ball over long-on for six to send the crowd into raptures.

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