Keaton Jennings leads from the front as Lancashire top the North

Lancashire Lightning began this Vitality Blast North group visit to Trent Bridge with the best record of all 18 counties in the 2024 T20 campaign to date and Nottinghamshire Outlaws with the worst.Choosing to bat, Outlaws eventually rose to 153 foe 8 despite expert containment from Chris Green, the Australia T20 international, with 2 for 16 in his four overs of off-spin. Jack Haynes reached 45 before becoming one of two run outs in a sometimes naïve display and Liam Patterson-White, batting at No7 on debut in this format, made a fine, unbeaten 44 from 21 balls.But with Keaton Jennings making a skipper’s 64 to leave victory in sight, Lighting romped home by six wickets in the penultimate over as the Outlaws completed their first five games with a sobering fifth defeat.Lightning’s chase began stutteringly with both openers dismissed by the fifth over when Josh Bohannon sliced Matt Montgomery, the South African who plays for Germany and offers off-spin from an idiosyncratic action, to the infield. Olly Stone’s first ball, two overs before, had done Vince Wells for pace when he top-edged a hook to square leg.But Jennings smashed the first ball of Stone’s next over for six and Lancashire reached the end of their ninth over with 82 for 2 where Nottinghamshire had laboured in contrast to just 46 for 4 at the same stage earlier.Patterson-White’s left-arm spin was then introduced on a used pitch and his maiden performance grew yet more impressive when he removed Tom Bruce’s middle stump for 22 with his second ball.Lightning, however, still posted their hundred by the 13th over with fully 47 balls available for their last 54 runs and Jennings close to a fifty he then brought up with some ease from 41 balls as Stone’s third over (the 15th) went for eleven, leaving the target just 31 runs distant.But to his very evident annoyance at not finishing the job, Jennings, the captain, was bowled by Calvin Harrison, one of the six spinners employed in the match, and it was left to Matty Hurst and Steven Croft, 19 years his senior, to take them home with nine balls to spare. Hurst finished unbeaten on 33.In two of their previous four games, the Outlaws had begun well but crashed catastrophically from 104 for 1 to 154 all out and 54 for 0 to 127 all out. This time the start proved a disaster.Joe Clarke faced one ball from which he took a leg-bye before being run out in the opening over, attempting to come back for a second for Alex Hales after a misfield at mid-wicket. Hales then sliced to the backward point boundary for four in the fourth over from Saqib Mahmood whose fourth ball earlier was a lifting beauty that had undone Will Young.From 22 for 3 it became 45 for 4 when Matt Montgomery, swinging across the line, was leg-before to a Wells leg-break and though 32 followed in 20 balls, a Lyndon James reverse-swipe saw him comprehensively bowled by Green before, next over, further confusion found Haynes run out as the non-striker when seeking a single that Tom Moores never considered.With 41 balls left, at 80 for 6, late runs were at last sporadically plundered thanks to Patterson-White, one Jack Blatherwick over conceding 21 and the last, from Mahmood taken for 18, but a target of 154 never looked enough.

Leeds: 49ers lead race to sign £20m+ La Liga attacker who Chelsea wanted

Leeds United are reportedly in pole position to sign a £20m+ attacker who Chelsea wanted to sign last year.

Leeds on the search for attacking additions in Premier League

The Whites are yet to make their first signing of the summer transfer window following promotion to the Premier League, despite the 49ers promising a busy market.

Talking after their Championship title win, chairman Paraag Marathe said that the club would “spend to be competitive in the Premier League”.

Joe Rodon

Tottenham

£10m

Largie Ramazani

Almeria

£10.5m

Jayden Bogle

Sheffield United

£5m

Ao Tanaka

Fortuna Dusseldorf

£2.95m

Isaac Schmidt

FC St Gallen

£2.5m

Alex Cairns

Salford

Undisclosed

Joshua Guilavogui

N/A

Free

Manor Solomon

Tottenham

Loan

Joe Rothwell

Bournemouth

Loan

Daniel Farke and those behind the scenes at Elland Road have a lot to do before 2025/26 season, and attacking additions are required in Yorkshire.

A new number 10 is wanted with Emiliano Buendia, Gus Hamer and Gabriel Sara all linked with moves to Leeds in recent weeks, whereas it remains to be seen if winger Manor Solomon will return on a permanent basis from Tottenham.

Leeds make contact to sign free agent star who scored 23 goals this season

The Whites are looking for some attacking flair after claiming promotion to the top-flight.

BySean Markus Clifford Jun 2, 2025

When it comes to a new striker, Leeds have had their reservations over Championship Golden Boot winner Joel Piroe and the experienced Patrick Bamford, leading to rumours of a new centre-forwards arriving.

Forwards with Premier League experience such as Callum Wilson and Jamie Vardy have been mooted as targets, and there has been a new Leeds update on another attacking addition.

Leeds in pole position to sign £20m+ Christantus Uche

According to reports from SER journalist Jose David Palacio, relayed by MOT Leeds News, Leeds are in pole position to sign Getafe attacker Christantus Uche.

The La Liga ace is looking to leave his current employers, and alongside the Whites, Brentford are also at the front of the queue for Uche, who has a £21m release clause in his current contract.

The Nigeria international is primarily an attacking midfielder but can also drop deeper as a central midfielder or turn out slightly further forward as a second striker. At the age of 22, Uche has a career-high €8m Transfermarkt valuation and has been catching the eye over the last 12 months, with Chelsea making contact over a deal last year.

As can be seen, Uche, who actually doesn’t have a weak foot, has had quite the rise in recent years, playing amateur football at the age of 19, but by the looks of things, a move to the Premier League with Leeds could now be on the cards.

Conte 2.0: Spurs looking at hiring "phenomenal" Postecoglou upgrade

Before the Ange Postecoglou era, the permanent manager of Tottenham Hotspur was none other than Antonio Conte.

Now, it would be fair to say that for all of his success with other teams, the Italian icon didn’t fare too well in North London, as while he secured Champions League football for the club in his first season, he didn’t even make it to the end of his second one in charge.

The former Chelsea boss was infamous for playing a pragmatic, boarding-on-tedious style of football that couldn’t be any more different to the one Spurs try to play today.

However, while it didn’t quite work out for Conte, he did leave the club with a points per game average of 1.78 and now looks on track to win Serie A with Napoli, so recent news linking the Lilywhites with another manager who could easily be compared to the 55-year-old should excite fans.

Tottenham's manager search

Before getting to the manager in question, it’s worth looking at some of the other managers linked with the Tottenham job in recent weeks, like Brentford’s Thomas Frank and Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola.

Manager Focus

Who are the greatest coaches in the land? Football FanCast’s Manager Focus series aims to reveal all.

The former has done an exemplary job in West London, taking the Bees from a Championship side and turning them into one of the most entertaining sides in the Premier League, who still score goals for fun, even in the absence of former star striker Ivan Toney.

In a similar vein, Iraola took charge of the Cherries when they looked destined to return to the second tier last season and has transformed them into a team now fighting for a place in Europe next year.

However, a club like Spurs requires someone who can do more than improve the fortunes of smaller teams, which helps to explain their interest in Simone Inzaghi.

According to reports from Italy, the idea of the Italian coach moving to North London in the summer is ‘gaining traction’ and could soon develop ‘into something concrete.’

The report claims that a combination of a Premier League salary and his project at Inter coming to an end could convince the talented manager to move to N17 at the end of the season.

While it could be a challenging deal to get over the line, Spurs must do all they can to secure Inzaghi’s services. Not only would he be a monumental upgrade on Postecoglou, but he could be a more successful Conte 2.0.

How Inzaghi compares to Postecoglou

Okay, so before we compare Inzaghi to Postecoglou, why could his arrival be described as Conte 2.0?

Inter Milan coachSimoneInzaghi

Well, simply put, he’d be joining Tottenham from Inter Milan, a fellow Italian and, crucially, while he’s not quite as defensively minded as the former Spurs boss, he can be just as pragmatic.

Moreover, and this is one of the big advantages he has over Ange, the 49-year-old is a proven winner in a top-five league, having led Lazio to the Coppa Italia in 18/19 and then winning another two with Inter Milan, as well as leading them to the Scudetto last season.

In contrast, all the Australian’s successes have come in smaller leagues, be that in Scotland, Japan or Australia, and while that is not meant to demean his achievements, it is undeniable that the pressure to succeed in those leagues is far less intense than it is here or in Italy, for example.

Moreover, when we compare the two managers’ records at their current sides, it’s abundantly clear who is doing the better job.

Inzaghi vs Postecoglou current clubs

Manager

Inzaghi

Postecoglou

Games

212

96

Wins

138

45

Draws

40

14

Losses

34

37

Points per Game

2.14

1.55

All Stats via Sofascore

For example, since taking the job at the San Siro, the “phenomenal” Italian, as dubbed by Felipe Salvador Caicedo, has overseen 138 wins, 40 draws and 34 losses, which comes out to an average of 2.14 points per game.

In contrast, the former Celtic boss has overseen 45 wins, 14 draws and 37 losses since taking charge of the North Londoners, which comes out to a rather paltry 1.55 points per game.

Ultimately, Inzaghi has shown himself to be tactically flexible, has won major trophies and has far more experience in a top-five league than Postecoglou, so if Spurs can hire him this summer, they should.

Amazing upgrade on Solanke: Spurs ready to pay £30m for "remarkable" CF

The experienced marksman could be just what Spurs need.

ByJack Salveson Holmes May 6, 2025

Nottingham Forest now eye Bournemouth star as cheaper Gyokeres alternative

Nottingham Forest are now monitoring a £40 million striker as a cheaper alternative to Sporting star Viktor Gyokeres, according to a new report.

Nottingham Forest hatch plan to sign Gyokeres

The Reds are firmly in the hunt for a top four spot this season, and if that is sealed, owner Evangelos Marinakis may be planning to spend big, looking to the likes of Aston Villa as examples of how to spend effectively to cement European status.

Nuno Santo will of course want to add more depth and quality to his squad if Champions League football is secured, and one surprise name that has emerged on their list is Gyokeres.

£25m release clause: Nottingham Forest join hectic race for "superb" star

They could trigger his release clause.

ByTom Cunningham Apr 7, 2025

The Sweden international has been linked with every big club around Europe, but that hasn’t put Forest off from putting their name forward in a bid to secure his signature. It was first reported last month that Forest were in contact with Gyokeres’ representatives over a move to the City Ground, seeing him as the ‘ideal’ long-term successor to Chris Wood.

Sporting CP's ViktorGyokeres

In a new report, it has now been stated that Forest are willing to offer Jota Silva in a swap deal for Gyokeres. The Sporting CP manager is a big fan of Silva, and Marinakis hopes offering him can help them secure a deal for the star striker. But it could still be a hefty transfer for the Reds, as Gyokeres is said to be valued between £50-58 million.

Nottingham Forest now look towards Bournemouth star Evanilson

While Forest remain interested in signing Gyokeres, they are also looking at other options, potentially cheaper ones, and according to TBR Football, Nottingham Forest are interested in signing Evanilson from AFC Bournemouth.

AFC Bournemouth's Evanilson in action with Brighton & Hove Albion's BartVerbruggenand Jan Paul van Hecke

The report states that the Reds are closely monitoring the Bournemouth striker, as they were interested in securing a deal for him last summer before he joined the Cherries in a deal worth £40 million. The report goes on to add that current Forest striker Taiwo Awoniyi is likely going to be allowed to leave come the end of the season, and therefore, Evanilson could be his ideal replacement, as he could provide sterner competition for Wood.

Forest are not the only team from the Premier League taking notice of the Brazilian international, as Newcastle United and Aston Villa are also keeping a close eye on his situation. Evanilson has scored nine goals in 24 league games this season, as Bournemouth continue their pursuit of finishing in their own European spot.

Apps

24

Starts

21

Goals

9

xG

10.28

Shots per game

2.3

Goal conversion

16%

Goals per game

0.4

Assists

0

Key passes per game

0.9

Big chances created

2

Evanilson is not the only Brazilian striker to on Forest’s radar either, as the Reds continue to be interested in signing Matheus Cunha from Wolves, as he looks set to leave the Midlands side.

Forest are also in the race to sign Luis Henrique from French side Marseille, and he could be another cheap option for the Premier League side, as Marseille are looking to get around £25 million for their centre-forward, who can also play out wide.

Washington Sundar bursts out of nowhere and announces his all-format chops

In a fairytale return to Test cricket, the allrounder demonstrated just how far he has come as a red-ball offspinner

Deivarayan Muthu24-Oct-20241:56

Manjrekar: Small sample but Washington shows promise as Ashwin’s successor

Washington Sundar wasn’t supposed to be in Pune for the second Test against New Zealand. He was supposed to be in Coimbatore with his Tamil Nadu team-mates for the Ranji Trophy. He was not in India’s Test squad three days ago. Before Thursday, he had last played a Test match three-and-a-half years ago. As it turned out, he made a serendipitous return to Test cricket, bagging career-best figures of 7 for 59.”It was all God’s plan,” Washington said.Washington. Pune. God’s plan. Sounds familiar?Related

  • Shastri: Washington Sundar 'is the future' for India

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  • Washington's career-best 7 for 59 spins out New Zealand

In 2017, Washington wasn’t supposed to be part of the IPL, but after an injury to R Ashwin, he bowled Steven Smith at a trial with Rising Pune Supergiant, and they picked him to replace the senior offspinner. At 17, Washington emerged as a powerplay specialist in T20 cricket.Seven years later, at the scene of his T20 emergence, Washington showed he could grow into an all-format player. Ravi Shastri certainly saw it coming, telling ESPNcricinfo he would go on to become India’s “premier allrounder across all three formats of the game.”But even Shastri couldn’t have seen Thursday coming.Washington Sundar exactly matched R Ashwin’s career-best Test figures of 7 for 59•AFP/Getty ImagesIt’s fairly unusual for this India team to make additions to their squad in the middle of a home Test series unless there are any concerns around players’ fitness or availability. While there were hints on Tuesday that Washington might play on a low-bounce, black-soil pitch in Pune – he had a long bowling stint alongside Ashwin in the nets – it still felt like a stretch that he would replace Kuldeep Yadav in India’s attack. And no one could have expected him to do that, and then outshine Ashwin.Washington ended up matching Ashwin’s career-best Test figures exactly, with the senior offspinner clapping his potential successor off the field at the end of New Zealand’s innings.At the start of the day, it was all about Ashwin. Midway through the seventh over, bowled by Jasprit Bumrah, Rohit Sharma gestured Ashwin to be ready to bowl. Ashwin got his fifth ball to turn and pin New Zealand captain Tom Latham lbw. Ashwin then had Will Young caught down the leg side with another offbreak that turned. It felt like Ashwin and India were onto something. Fans scrambling for shelter from the sweltering heat quickly filled up the stands.Washington wasn’t having quite the same effect on the Pune crowd, but he was quietly working his way back into Test cricket. There were signs of rust, especially when he bowled short and wide of off stump to Young with the leg side packed with six fielders.Then came the ball to Rachin Ravindra.Washington went wide of the crease from around the wicket and put more revs on the ball, which led first to dip and then turn. There was also inward drift, which led Ravindra to play down the wrong line. The ball slid past the outside edge and hit the top of off, providing a flashback to Ashwin’s dismissals of Alastair Cook in both innings of the 2018 Edgbaston Test.2:47

Washington opens up on Ashwin’s influence

For much of his career, Washington’s bowling has been tuned to the demands of white-ball cricket, and has generally been characterised by pace through the air and flatter trajectories often delivered with undercut. Of late, he has worked on refashioning himself into a more conventional offspinner. After IPL 2024, where he finished with zero wickets and zero runs in all of two games for Sunrisers Hyderabad, he called up S Sriram, the former India and Tamil Nadu allrounder who has worked with Australia and Bangladesh as a spin consultant, for his inputs on how he could become an all-format bowler. Having already worked with Washington at Royal Challengers Bangalore, Sriram suggested a few technical tweaks.”So one thing we spoke about was his run-up speed, you know, just get more energy into his run-up rather than just ambling, and more of overspin,” Sriram, who was following Washington’s spell from Chennai, told ESPNcricinfo. “He had a little bit of a finger issue also recently, so he was recovering from that. So one of the things we spoke about is always going back to that overspin, which gives him more bounce. And overspin is possible only when you have that momentum in the run-up.”If you don’t have momentum in the run-up, it’s very difficult to get that overspin. One of the things we discussed was obviously bounce was his main weapon. And how he can use that to his advantage in both white ball and red-ball cricket.”In his next over, Washington got the ball to drift away from Tom Blundell, then dip and rip through the gate. Washington is usually a man of few emotions, but this wicket meant so much to him that he brought out an animated fist pump. Washington was primarily picked to counter a left-hander-heavy New Zealand line-up. This was evidence that he could pick off the right-handers as well.”I think once he gets that seam angle right and the release right, and with the revs, automatically the drop and the drift takes care of itself,” Sriram said. “He used the shine to get the drift with the right seam angle. And also, if the seam is upright, it drops. Like that Blundell one, it dropped on him a little bit. He went to play with the spin, but the slight drift and drop got the wicket.”Washington then kept hitting the drier, good-length band on the pitch with laser-like precision and kept the stumps in play. He was rewarded with five more wickets in nine overs.Tom Blundell was bowled by Washington on the stroke of tea•BCCI”The first two spells, I think he was settling in,” Sriram said. “He was finding the right pace and also the right sort of rhythm. But once he got those two wickets around tea, his confidence also built up. It just happened so quickly for him, which made it look casual. But it wasn’t that casual.”Gautam Gambhir welcomed Washington back into the dressing room with a round of applause and a big smile. Like Shastri, Gambhir sees an all-format player in Washington. He had trusted him with bowling the Super Over in the Pallekele T20I in July, and Washington responded by bowling India to victory from out of nowhere.Gambhir then promoted Washington up the order to No.4 in the next match – the first ODI in Colombo. He didn’t score too many in that game, but his batting potential is clear: he already has three Test fifties, including match-turning interventions in Brisbane and Ahmedabad, and his Pune call-up came on the back of a Ranji Trophy 152 while batting at No. 3.Sriram is hopeful of Washington coming of age as an allrounder under Gambhir, with whom he worked as an assistant coach at Lucknow Super Giants.”Yeah, I think credit to Gauti also,” Sriram said. “Because I think he always rates him high. Whatever little conversations I’ve had with Gauti in LSG also, he always rated Washy very high. And he is someone, I think, he’ll use him very well as an allrounder. Both with bat and ball, he’ll promote him in certain times with the bat. And he’ll make best use of him with the ball as well and give him the ideal situations where he can succeed in all formats of the game.”Perhaps that, then, is God’s long-term plan.

Stats – Harmanpreet's record century, India's first ODI series win in England since 1999

All the important numbers from India’s emphatic 88-run win over England in Canterbury

Sampath Bandarupalli22-Sep-2022333 for 5 – India’s total in Canterbury is their second-highest in women’s ODIs, behind 358 for 2 that they recorded against Ireland in 2017. It is also the second-highest score by any team against England in this format, second only to Australia’s 356 for 5 in the World Cup final earlier this year.143* – Harmanpreet Kaur’s score in the second ODI is now the highest by an India captain in women’s ODIs. Mithali Raj’s 125* against Sri Lanka in 2018 in Katunayake was the previous best for. Harmanpreet’s score is also the third-highest individual score for India in this format.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1999 – The last instance of India Women winning an ODI series against England in England. India lost all six bilateral series played between the two sides in the country since then.2- India are only the second team to win an ODI series in England in the last 15 years after Australia, who won in 2015 and 2019. England have been victorious in 17 of the 20 bilateral ODI series they have played at home in this period.1 – Harmanpreet’s 143 not out is the highest individual score in an ODI against England in England. Sophie Devine’s 117* in 2018 was the previous highest, while Debbie Hockley and Lizelle Lee also scored 117 against the hosts in 1996 and 2018 respectively.

390.91 – Harmanpreet’s strike rate after she completed her century. She smashed six fours and three sixes off her next 11 balls collecting 43 runs.5 – ODI hundreds for Harmanpreet, the joint second-most by a batter for India Women. Raj leads the list with seven, while Smriti Mandhana also has five centuries. All five of Harmanpreet’s centuries have come batting at No. 4 or lower, joint-most with Nat Sciver.17.75 – The run rate during the 71-run partnership for the sixth wicket between Harmanpreet and Deepti Sharma is the highest for any 50-plus stand in women’s ODIs (where ball-by-ball data is available). The previous highest was 15.75 by Heather Knight and Sciver, when they added 84 off 32 balls against Pakistan in 2016.82 – Runs conceded by Freya Kemp, the second-most by any bowler on debut in women’s ODIs. Ireland’s Cara Murray leaked 119 runs on her debut against New Zealand in 2018, which is also the most runs leaked ever in the format.1 – Kemp’s 82 runs are also the most conceded by an England bowler in a women’s ODI. Lauren Bell, who also conceded 79 runs in this match, recorded England’s second-most expensive spell.

Ben Stokes repays the faith

‘Best’ training session, cutting out external noise helps bring back the punch

Hemant Brar26-Oct-20201:16

‘Wish I started playing like this three games ago’ – Ben Stokes

Coming into Sunday’s clash against the Mumbai Indians, Ben Stokes had managed just 110 runs from 103 balls in IPL 2020. He hadn’t hit a single six in the tournament and was struggling for the timing. If Shane Warne, the Rajasthan Royals’ mentor, had his way, Stokes would have been batting at No. 4.The Royals though decided to stick with Stokes as opener. The move finally paid dividends as he made a 196-run chase, against possibly the best bowling attack in the tournament, look like a canter. Their best batsman, Jos Buttler, wasn’t even needed.During his unbeaten 107 off 60 balls, Stokes hit 14 fours and three sixes, and doubled his run-rally for the tournament in just one knock. But before the madness, there was some method to his innings.So far, bowlers had kept Stokes quiet by hitting the hard lengths at the stumps or just outside off, thereby not allowing him any room. Trent Boult too had a similar plan. Except, Stokes had a ready counter. He defended Boult’s first ball bowled, a length delivery on the stumps, but the moment he drifted, Stokes punished him. Boult kept attacking the stumps but the length was too full. Stokes, meanwhile, also started creating room for himself by moving towards the leg side.Later in that over, he backed away, even as Boult followed him and presented the full face of the bat. Whether it was the confidence in his shot, or a streak of arrogance that every maverick carries, or just a sign frustration about how his tournament had gone till then, Stokes didn’t bother looking at the result after hitting the ball. By the time the ball reached the boundary line, he was gearing up for the next ball. No fist-bump with his partner at the other end, no customary gardening on the pitch. Nothing.As he often does after making an impact, Ben Stokes pays tribute to his dad with the folded finger celebration•BCCIInitially, he looked more focused on the timing than power. That isn’t to say the timing didn’t elude him at all. He chipped one over Boult’s head that the chasing mid-off and mid-on fielders couldn’t get to even though Stokes hadn’t middled it. Off the last ball of that over, he again backed away and smashed one through covers. With 16 off six balls, with the help of four boundaries, Stokes was off.One reason to prompt the Royals to open with Stokes could have been his not-so-good record against spin. Since 2018, he had averaged 18.76 and struck at 114.55 against spin. But here two things worked in his favour. Firstly, he was already 20 off nine balls when spin was introduced. Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, both Mumbai Indians spinners – Krunal Pandya, the left-arm orthodox, and Rahul Chahar, the legspinner – were bringing the ball in to Stokes, therefore, making it easier for him to line them up.The Mumbai Indians ensured both Pandya and Chahar bowled their overs with the longer boundary on Stokes’ leg side. But it hardly mattered as he slog-swept Chahar over deep midwicket for his first six off the tournament. He also peppered the shorter boundary by using reverse sweep to great effect against both against Krunal and Chahar.The way Stokes was going also allowed Sanju Samson to get his eye in. With the Royals needing 89 from 48 balls, the madness began. In the next four overs, Stokes and Samson plundered 65 runs, hitting a combined seven fours and three sixes to bring the equation down to a run-a-ball 24.

“I am a bit taken aback by why it has taken me so long to get into the tournament for the team. I would have preferred to get this form two-three games ago when we weren’t relying on other results to get us through to the qualifiers.”Stokes at the post-match presentation

The dew meant the ball was also coming on to the bat much better than it did in the first innings. Only when the bowlers really dug it into the pitch, it caused some difficulty. That, however, was offset by a couple of edgy fours Stokes got through the third man region.”It was sort of bittersweet, to be honest,” Stokes said at the post-match presentation. “I am a bit taken aback by why it has taken me so long to get into the tournament for the team. I would have preferred to get this form two-three games ago when we weren’t relying on other results to get us through to the qualifiers. But it’s always nice to get back into form. But yeah, we are relying on a few other results at the moment. So a bit of bittersweet.”But how did he turn it around?”The training yesterday [Saturday] was the best I have had for the time I have been here. So I came into this game with a bit more confidence than the other games. It was nice to spend some time out in the middle and finish the game off.”Later, when Samson asked him on how he dealt with the ups and downs he has faced as a cricketer in the last couple of years, Stokes said: “Outside noise can affect people in different ways. When I was younger, it affected me. It took me a while to understand that outside noise isn’t what matters. It’s all about what’s within the team and the people who have an influence on you at a certain time in your career. I found the backing from everybody in the [Royals] franchise in the last three years.”I know that I haven’t delivered on the expectations but having the backing from the people that matter in this franchise is really the thing that I sort of pride everything on. So it was good to return a little bit of faith tonight.”

مارسيلو يحدد لاعبه المفضل في تشكيل ريال مدريد ويؤكد: عانيت من زيادة الوزن

اختار مارسيلو، أسطورة نادي ريال مدريد، لاعبه المفضل في تشكيل الفريق الملكي الحالية، موضحًا أنه كان يعاني من زيادة في وزنه خلال مسيرته.

مارسيلو يعتبر ضمن أفضل اللاعبين في تاريخ ريال مدريد، وقدم الظهير الأيسر عروضًا لا تنسى مع الملكي قبل الرحيل بنهاية موسم 2022 ومن ثم التوقيع مع فلومينينسي.

وقرر مارسيلو في نهاية المطاف وضع حد لمسيرته الكروية واعتزل في وقت سابق من هذا العام.

وأشاد مارسيلو في حوار مع أسطورة ريال مدريد، إيكر كاسياس، والذي نقلته شبكة ”Madridxtra” بنجم ريال مدريد، فينيسيوس جونيور، موضحًا أن الأخير هو لاعبه المفضل في جيل الفريق الملكي الحالي.

وقال مارسيلو عن مواطنه فينيسيوس: “أنا دائمًا أشجع فريقنا الحالي وسعيد لأجلهم، وخاصة فينيسيوس، لأنني رأيته منذ صغره”.

وعن تعرضه للانتقادات، أضاف: ”كنت دائمًا ممتلئ الجسم بعض الشيء، لم أملك عضلات كريستيانو طوال حياتي (يضحك)”.

اقرأ أيضًا .. حقيقة إصابة كامافينجا أمام أتلتيك بلباو

وأوضح: ”عندما تسوء الأمور يقولون إن السبب هو زيادة وزني، كان ذلك طبيعيًا، سألني ابني ذات مرة وقال لي أبي، لماذا أنت ممتلئ الجسم في فيديوهات نهائي دوري أبطال أوروبا؟ ثم أجبته وقلت له هذا الرجل الممتلئ دائمًا ما كان يلعب بنفس الجسم ويفوز بالألقاب ويلعب في النهائيات، وكان حاسمًا فيها (يضحك)”.

وأردف: “كان رفع الكؤوس كقائد من أفضل التجارب، لأنك تتذكر ما كان عليه الحال مع سيرجيو راموس”.

ثم رد كاسياس على مارسيلو، وقال: “أتذكر، لم أحمل الكأس إلا لعشر ثوان”، وعاد مارسيلو ليرد على كاسياس: “كان سيرجيو يأخذها، ويضع عليها وشاحًا”.

كما كشف مارسيلو عن موقف طريف جمعه مع جوزيه مورينيو، مدرب ريال مدريد السابق، حيث أوضح: “لعبت بشكل رائع في هذه المباراة ثم جاءني جوزيه وقال، أنت الأفضل، رائع، ثم عدتُ إلى المنزل وكنت سعيدًا جدًا بكلام مورينيو”.

وأردف: ”في المباراة التالية قدمت أداءًا سيئًا، فقال لي أنت سيء، ماذا تفعل؟ (يضحك)”.

واختتم مارسيلو في حديثه: ”كما تعلم، عندما قال لي ذلك أعجبني كثيرًا، لأنني تعلمت منه الكثير”.

Flintoff: Rob Key is 'best captain England never had'

Andrew Flintoff has credited his friend and former team-mate Rob Key for creating the conditions that have allowed the England men’s set-up to flourish under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum, and says that the team’s positive outlook is a key reason why he wanted to come on board as England Lions head coach.Speaking to the Beard Before Wicket podcast, Flintoff reiterated that Key’s friendship had been a crucial factor in his return to public life, following the horrific car-crash on the set of Top Gear in December 2022.However, it was Key’s vision for English cricket that persuaded Flintoff to make a full return to the sport in a coaching capacity, initially as a consultant for the men’s white-ball squad, and latterly as Lions coach, including for this winter’s tour of Australia, which will run parallel to the main Ashes campaign.The pair have been close friends since their days in the England Under-19 set-up, and Flintoff declared that Key was “England’s best captain never to a captain the side”.”His cricket brain works in a different way to a lot of other people,” he said. “He’s similar to Shane Warne and people like that, they see the game differently.”You’re always going to have your critics. You can go into Wetherspoons down the road, and there’ll be 15 people who know better than Pep Guardiola. Everyone’s got an opinion, but I think he enjoys being the one making the decisions. He loved playing, but by doing this job, he can make an impact, and he wants to do it his way.”I think what they’ve done – himself [Key], Brendon, Stokes, now Harry [Brook]’s taken over in one-day cricket – as a fan, it’s been amazing. The way they play and the players they pick, they seem really good lads from the outside. I suppose that’s one of the reasons I wanted to be involved in this.”English cricket’s going forward. We’re leading the way in a lot of respects, and I want to be a part of that. By doing the Lions, I’m getting a chance to get involved and hopefully bring the next lads through. I’m very much on the same page of what they’re trying to do with England, and I feel fortunate to be a part of it.”England head into this winter’s Ashes with Ben Stokes looking to cement his legacy as captain with a first series win in the country since 2010-11. Flintoff himself captained England to a 5-0 loss in the 2006-07 campaign, and while he recognised there were similarities between the two men as players, he insisted Stokes was on a different level as a leader.”I do see similarities, but as a leader, he’s incredible,” Flintoff said. “I captained England, and I was terrible. I really was. It wasn’t for me, but you see him … he’s got that atmosphere. He’s got that aura.Three lions: Steve Harmison, Rob Key and Andrew Flintoff celebrate England’s 2004 series win against West Indies•Getty Images

“One of the things which I prided myself on as a player was, when the game’s on the line, that’s when the best of me came out. And I see that with Ben. Playing against Zimbabwe in Harare, I’m probably not going to at be my best, you know, but in the big moments, that’s when I came alive, and that’s when Ben does.”Both players have been prone to bowling long, punishing spells as captain – with Flintoff once bowling more than 50 overs in a drawn Test against Sri Lanka in 2006.”I just ran myself into the ground,” he said. “I’ve seen him do that a little bit as well, but Ben’s got Baz and good people around him, just to save him from himself. I never had that.”Elsewhere in the interview, Flintoff recalled how Key had helped to coax him back into the public domain, first by inviting to attend the 2023 Ashes series in a private capacity, and then by offering him a chance to work behind the scenes with England’s squads.He admitted that he had been “bricking it” prior to his first involvement with the men’s squad, for their white-ball series against New Zealand in September 2023, at which stage he had still not been seen in public since his crash.However, the welcome he received from the squad reminded Flintoff that “actually, this is this is where I want to be, this is where I feel comfortable”.”Cricket did save me,” he added. “It got me out of the house, and it got me focused on something, but more importantly, surrounded by people who have got something in common. I genuinely love it. I love the culture. It’s so much fun.”

Paratici could fund mega Semenyo move by selling "disaster" Spurs flop

Watching Tottenham Hotspur’s 4-1 defeat to their bitter rivals in the Premier League on Sunday made it clear where Thomas Frank’s priorities need to be moving forward.

Whilst you could look at that loss and suggest that they need to improve defensively, which would be a fair comment after they conceded four goals, it is in possession where they really need to improve.

xG

11.0

17th

Non-penalty xG

11.0

16th

Progressive passes

413

12th

Shots

110

19th

Shots on target

40

15th

Average shot distance

15.6 yards

17th

As you can see in the table above, Spurs are one of the worst teams in the Premier League at progressing play with passes, creating shooting opportunities, and creating high-quality chances.

The Lilywhites ended the match against Arsenal with three shots on goal and 0.07 xG, per Sofascore, with their goal coming from Richarlison’s stunning long-range lob over David Raya.

Tottenham’s struggles at the top end of the pitch explain why the club are reportedly considering a move to sign Bournemouth forward Antoine Semenyo.

The Ghana international has a £65m release clause that can be activated at the start of the January transfer window, and Spurs are one of the teams vying for his signature.

How Antoine Semenyo could solve Tottenham's attacking problems

Whilst a lot of Tottenham’s problems could come down to coaching issues, with how players are asked to play, the team selections, and the patterns that are or are not coached in training, having a top talent in the final third can make up for some coaching problems.

Semenyo is the kind of forward who can create things for himself with his incredible speed, power, ball control, and ability in front of goal when he gets near the opposition’s box.

The former Bristol City striker’s goal against Liverpool at Anfield earlier this season is the perfect example of the kind of quality that he could bring to North London in the second half of the campaign.

With Tottenham’s lack of progressive passing and high-quality chances this season, having a player who has runs and goals like that in his locker would be invaluable for Frank.

That strike against Liverpool was also not a flash in the pan for the versatile attacker, who can play out wide or through the middle, because he has been in impressive form in the Premier League this term.

xG

4.58

Top 1%

Goals

6

Top 1%

Shots

23

Top 10%

Shots on target

14

Top 1%

Assists

3

Top 6%

Successful dribbles

21

Top 5%

Touches in the opposition’s box

45

Top 12%

As you can see in the table above, Semenyo has been one of the most productive wingers in the division for Bournemouth this season, with more goals than any other winger in the league.

These statistics, and the nature of his goal against Liverpool in particular, suggest that signing the Cherries star would go a long way to solving some of the attacking issues that Frank’s side have.

Therefore, Spurs should push hard to win the race for his services by activating his release clause at the start of the January transfer window and trying their hardest to convince him that a move to North London is the best next step in his career.

£65m, though, would make him the club’s joint-record signing alongside Dominic Solanke, who also came from Bournemouth, so it would take a big financial commitment from the Lilywhites.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

In order to make a move for the 25-year-old star viable, sporting director Fabio Paratici should look to ruthlessly sell some of the club’s current players to fund a transfer for Semenyo.

One of the sellable assets who should be cashed in on by Paratici to create funds for a swoop for the Cherries sensation in January is right-back Pedro Porro.

Why Spurs should sell Pedro Porro

Ahead of the summer transfer window, CaughtOffside reported that the Spain international was attracting interest from Barcelona, Bayern Munich, and Manchester City.

It was claimed that Spurs were not interested in selling the full-back at the time, which was in May, but that they would have changed their tune if an offer of around £57m came across their desk.

Whilst Porro ultimately remained in North London, that report in the summer shows that there are some top clubs across Europe who would be interested in him if he became available, although it remains to be seen if any of them would pay the £57m price tag.

The Spaniard attracted interest from those teams after a return of four goals and nine assists in 51 appearances in all competitions for Spurs in the 2024/25 campaign, per Sofascore, but his form this season has left a lot to be desired.

Polish journalist Michał Okoński described his crosses into the box as a “disaster” earlier this month, and it is hard to disagree with that assessment when you consider that he has lost possession 222 times and delivered one assist in 12 Premier League games, per Sofascore.

Appearances

33

12

Possession lost per game

17.5

18.5

Key passes per game

1.7

1.2

Big chances created

10

2

Assists

6

1

Pass accuracy

76%

73%

Cross accuracy

31%

17%

As you can see in the table above, the Spain international’s use of the ball has regressed since the end of the 2024/25 campaign. He is currently giving the ball away more frequently whilst creating less for his team.

Porro has been far too wasteful with the ball at his feet at right-back for Tottenham. That is evident in his regressing creative stats, but it is also evident in that he has made four errors leading to shots for the opposition in the Premier League, twice as many as he made in 33 matches last season.

As well as his struggles on the ball, the former Sporting star has gone from averaging 3.1 tackles and interceptions per game last season in the Premier League to averaging just 1.7 per match in the current campaign, per Sofascore.

These statistics show that Porro has regressed in and out of possession at right-back for the Lilywhites, which is why it could be the right time for Paratici to cash in on him in January, amid interest from City, Barcelona, and Bayern, to avoid his value dwindling if his form does not improve.

Fewer touches than Vicario: Frank must drop 3/10 Spurs dud after Arsenal

Thomas Frank has numerous glaring errors he needs to address at Tottenham Hotspur after the Arsenal defeat.

ByEthan Lamb Nov 24, 2025

Whilst it remains to be seen how much teams would be willing to pay for him, any fee in the region of the quoted £57m would go a long way to funding a deal for Semenyo, who has a £65m release clause.

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