Peter Crouch takes aim at "lackadaisical" Tottenham player in Man Utd draw

Tottenham were denied a first Premier League win at home since the opening weekend this afternoon, as Man United defender Matthijs de Ligt broke Spurs hearts with a dramatic added-time equaliser, despite Thomas Frank’s side briefly snatching a late 2-1 lead.

Tottenham 2-2 Man United as poor Spurs home form continues

Bryan Mbeumo had put United ahead in the 32nd minute, with the October Premier League Player of the Month continuing his excellent form by nodding past a helpless Guglielmo Vicario at the far post.

The visitors dominated for large periods as Spurs looked disjointed and lacked overall creativity at home once again. Tottenham did have one chance before the interval, but striker Richarlison failed to capitalise — missing a golden opportunity when presented with a free header from 12 yards out.

He somehow completely missed the ball, leaving every Spurs fan in the stadium stunned, and those same supporters booed the home side off at half-time after a very disappointing first 45.

United looked on their way to three points, managing the game well after the restart, even if the brilliant Senne Lammens was forced into a couple of excellent saves to maintain their advantage.

However, the equaliser eventually did come, with substitute Mathys Tel’s shot in the 83rd minute deflecting off de Ligt and finding the back of the United net.

Wilson Odobert

7.4

Matthijs de Ligt

7.3

Amad Diallo

7.3

Mathys Tel

7.1

Patrick Dorgu

7.1

via WhoScored

Frank’s player introductions changed the game, with fellow sub Destiny Udogie setting up the Frenchman for his brilliantly taken equaliser inside the box. Yet another sub, Wilson Odobert, then chipped into the late drama.

Richarlison directed Odobert’s ball outside the box past Lammens and into the bottom corner on 91 minutes, sparking wild celebrations as the Brazilian removed his shirt in jubilation. Tottenham appeared to have completed a sensational comeback, yet there was one final twist.

A United corner to the back post was headed home by de Ligt, who was completely unmarked, in the 96th minute — silencing Spurs’ celebrations and rescuing a dramatic point for Ruben Amorim’s side.

The draw maintains United’s four-match unbeaten streak while Tottenham’s home woes continue. Spurs have now won just four of their last 20 home league games, with their excellent away record masking real struggles at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Peter Crouch takes aim at "lackadaisical" Djed Spence in Man United draw

For United’s first goal, so much went wrong.

Pape Sarr made the bizarre decision to play a very difficult pass to Micky van de Ven just outside Spurs’ penalty area, rather than just clearing the ball, and the Dutchman was then rushed into a botched clearance before United capitalised and opened the scoring.

Right-back Djed Spence also failed to close down the cross for Mbeumo’s header quick enough, with ex-Tottenham striker Peter Crouch telling TNT Sports at half-time that his defending simply wasn’t good enough.

Crouch said that Spence looked “too calm” when going to press Diallo, insisting that the defender was “lackadaisical” at that moment which cost Spurs the first goal of the game.

Djed Spence for England

Overall, the north Londoners were arguably the weaker side and a victory for them would’ve been quite harsh on United, even if their brief comeback sparked real hope of a perfect last Premier League result before the November international break.

Their next two matches after the break are actually away from home, but they’re against very tough opposition in Premier League leaders Arsenal and European champions PSG.

Bareknuckle Baz-brawl produces Ashes all-nighter for the ages

ESPNcricinfo UK editor Andrew Miller buckles up to recount the big moments that kept England fans going through the small hours

Andrew Miller21-Nov-20254:01

Speed of England’s collapse gave them better bowling conditions

Ashes first-day dramas have been a staple of England’s winters for more years than most fans would care to count. But this latest opening gambit might just have taken all the biscuits, and every other snack needed to stay awake all night. Andrew Miller tries to fight sleep long enough to remember the madness he just watched…Full disclosure. I am writing this at 11.19am on [checks notes] Friday, November 21, which is, of course, the day that every England cricket fan has had in their calendar for months. But, unless you happen to be one of the 40,000-strong crew to have made the long journey down under – and well done you if you are – you’ll by now have realised that that date is completely wrong.Because, of course, for the purposes of Ashes nightowl action, everything in Australia actually happens on the day before it happens. This phenomenon gets me every time, just like the changing of the clocks (including – full, full disclosure – as recently as last month, when I set my sights on a 1am start for England’s ODI debacle in New Zealand, only to discover the 1am in question was the one that jumped backwards an hour at 1.59am).And so, in short, I am a borderline catatonic mess right now. My 2025-26 Ashes experience started at roughly 8pm on Thursday, November 20, when I said goodnight to my family, lay in bed for three fitful hours of non-sleep, then got up again early to pace around the living room, confuse the dog, watch the first hour of because TNT’s bolt-on coverage hadn’t factored in any sort of extended build-up, then settle in for the longest, wildest night of my sports-watching life.Related

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That’s quite the statement, I know. But, hell, I’ve been doing this Cricinfo ball-by-ball business for a fair old while now, and cocking my ear to Ashes first-night bedlam for significantly longer still. And even by the (almost universally) horrific standards of my previous experiences, the opening night of Bazball Down Under was a doozy.Here then, before I expire, is a barely coherent stream-of-consciousness intended to weave its way through my very personal Ashes first-day history before landing on a spectacle in which 19 wickets tumbled in 71.5 overs, or at a rate of one every 22.68 balls.My first Ashes first-night came way back in November 1994, in typically clichéd fashion: via , under the covers in the dead of night at school, with Michael Slater mashing Phil DeFreitas through the covers to trigger that knowing dread that has probably never fully left any England fan of a certain age.My first first-night in a professional capacity came eight years later in 2002, in a post-student hovel in Finsbury Park, where we collectively punched the ceiling upon Nasser Hussain’s correct call at the toss, only to sink into our sofas and tinnies and despair in equal measure after you-know-what call.My “job” back then was to watch the first session from home, jump in a cab to Shepherd’s Bush in the lunch break, grind through the pre-diluvian gears of Wisden.com’s formative internet commentary service, and bash out some words at the close before crashing out to rinse and repeat. They truly were the Golden Years…He did it again: Mitchell Starc struck in the first over to remove Zak Crawley•Getty ImagesFour years later still, in 2006, I’d made it to Australia for the first time, in the overflow press-box high in the gantries of the Gabbatoir, where I was actually too far away from either the action or a replay screen to tell for certain that Steve Harmison’s first ball had landed in the hands of, not first, but second slip. But I was close enough to feel that dread descend once more, across both the fans in the stands and more importantly the England team.Next on this indulgent whistlestop witter-tour, it was back to the Gabba to watch Andrew Strauss cloth his third ball to point and for Peter Siddle claim a birthday hat-trick. Then, on through various miserable iterations, it was back to Blighty during Covid, for Rory Burns’ spectacular first-ball faux-pas, which is memorable to me only because my wife romantically offered to stay up to midnight to share the occasion, then laughed uproariously, and headed straight to bed.Which brings us, not exactly directly, to November 21 (sort of 20), 2025, and a hotch-potch of already fading vignettes that might just be my eyelids drooping. I’ve got a fairly well-set routine for nights such as these. Lots of tea. Enough fruit to sedate a fruit-bat. As few carbs as possible (because they are heavy and send you to sleep) and tons of emergency chocolate biscuits because fruit is boring and sugar rushes are very useful if you need to sound exciting/excited at 5am.Well, that wasn’t exactly a problem on this night of nights. Although, it has to be said, that first-over wicket of Zak Crawley turned out, in my line of work, to be a strangely dislocated affair.It’s hardly the fault of TNT’s equally dislocated commentary team that their paymasters have chosen not to dispatch them on an actual Ashes tour. But – for the purposes of ball-by-ball text commentary – the audio cues of a properly embedded commentator who can actually see the full context for a moment of sporting drama is really rather crucial. When, instead, the moment is relayed by a slightly confused third party who sounds like he’s talking through a locked bathroom door, it does somewhat draw the sting. Apologies if I sounded flat in that remarkable moment. I was too busy trying to join my own dots to colour in the picture.

“England’s brutal, blunt-instrument bowling response was hard and fast, like a Tony Greig parody tribute, as Jofra Archer, then Gus Atkinson, then Mark Wood, then Brydon Carse, took it in turns to crank up the wheels and rattle the pads, lids and elbows of Australia’s line-up”

But, fear not, because the drama just kept on coming, and coming, and coming. And so, too, did the vital support network of an overnight cricket hack – the bellicose/surrender-monkey bleatings of my various and varied WhatsApp groups.These fall into three broad categories. ESPNcricinfo colleagues in Australia and elsewhere in the globe, exchanging match updates and expletives in equal measure, as well as more prosaic news about who is actually driving the site at any given moment. Next there are the friend groups, many of whom are former colleagues (certainly the ones who are conditioned to stay engaged with an Ashes Test all night, and with whom all exchanges are a variation on the word “brawling”), and finally, my Camel Cricket Club compadres who are, for the most part, defeatist Englishmen, trolling Kiwis, meme-addicted South Asians and off-duty first-responders, drowning in too many tequila shots in far too few overs.The chaos was real, on the pitch and in the ether. Starc was bowling left-arm swing from the Gods – unrelenting in his pace and carry, harassing the pads and outside edge of every man in his sights, simply by existing in that freakish slingy left-arm manner of his. But in between whiles, Ollie Pope was everything he’s not supposed to be, continuing his life-long Ian Bell impersonation by producing an innings every bit as good (and destined to be forgotten) as Bell’s first-day 76 at the Gabbatoir in 2010 – when his greatest contribution to England’s Ashes-winning cause was to curl his lip up at a post-match suggestion that England were cooked, and shoot back: “Of course not”. There and then, the Shermanator became an Ashes Panzerfaust.And then there was Harry Brook. Yeegads. I know Bazball is not everyone’s cup of tea, but the utter chutzpah of dancing down the track to Scott Boland’s second ball after tea, to smoke an inside-out six over extra cover. By now, it really didn’t matter that TNT were gargling in their bath-tub. The inner monologue was taking over for the purposes of bashing out the BBB action, fuelled by the paranoia and bravado of the nightowls pinging on my phone – not to mention the army of commentators on feedback. What we were witnessing was magnifique (until Brook’s limp glove down the leg-side, whereupon England pretty much opted to autocomplete their innings) but was it actually la guerre? I think, by the close of play, even the sceptics were having to accept that England have rewritten their own rules of Ashes combat, and don’t really give a monkey’s what anyone outside their dressing-room thinks.Ollie Pope was England’s surprising mainstay on a nervy first morning•Getty ImagesAnd so to the final act of a fevered night-sweat of an Ashes shift. England’s brutal, blunt-instrument bowling response. Hard and fast, like a Tony Greig parody tribute, as Jofra Archer, then Gus Atkinson, then Mark Wood, then Brydon Carse, took it in turns to crank up the wheels and rattle the pads, lids and elbows of an Australia line-up that barely knew its batting order two days out from the series and somehow ended up even more confused mid-match.It was relentless, it was magnificent, it made the guzzling of emergency chocolate so redundant that I forgot it was even in the fridge. And then, swaggering into the mix came the maker-of-things-to-happen Ben Stokes, channelling the best/worst of Ian Botham to burgle a six-over five-wicket haul cut from the purest, most eye-boggling vibes ever smuggled through Australia’s customs.Somehow, despite batting with a sense and responsibility that England couldn’t bring themselves to locate if they tried, Australia somehow managed to produce at least three of the five worst dismissals of the day – starting with Travis Head’s limp welly to mid-on and culminating in Starc’s heave through the line.And now, somehow, we’re all meant to park this now, shake off the caffeine/sugar/tequila and go again tonight? Preposterous sport.Postscript (and not a word of a lie): As if the night’s batting was not enough of a car-wreck already, just as I was finally preparing to flake out and get ready to go again I heard, from over my garden wall, the unmistakeable sound of a lorry striking the infamously low bridge near my house in East London that has been luring unsuspecting truckers to their doom for generations. If you don’t believe me, check TFL for Mildmay Line updates. It’s been a deeply weird night, and I’m not sure which part of me is pointing up anymore.

India's grit outlasts England's endurance to make 2-2 a possibility

Despite looking like the better team, India were in threat of being 3-1 down. Thanks to the riveting draw in Manchester, they now have a chance at 2-2

Sidharth Monga27-Jul-20252:09

Manjrekar: ‘Warriors’ keep sprouting for India when needed

One of the least appreciated aspects of cricket narratives is the sheer physicality of it.There were times during the Old Trafford Test when we sat and wondered what the narrative would have been had this been a three-match series. It would have offered India an honourable series defeat that they could have won with a little bit of luck or with a little bit of ruthlessness.Instead, it felt like the fourth Test was exposing them physically. Their strike bowlers were down on pace and looking toothless, their injury replacement was not serviceable for whatever reason (which they should investigate and prevent a repeat of), and they looked like they were losing to a side that had a bit of luck in the early part of the series, which was now displaying superior conditioning, not by much but enough to outlast them.India’s batters had one final chance to flip that narrative on its head. To show two can play the game. That even though Ben Stokes believes pain is just an emotion, they can make some of his team-mates feel the physical pain of a long Test series that has been going into the final session of the final day on flat pitches.Related

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It was just that India had lost two wickets in the first over. That can happen. Especially in a short period before a break when batters appear to be facing a lose-lose situation. They still had five sessions to go with two wickets gone and their best batter of the last five years down with a broken foot.India had an ally in the dying pitch – otherwise you can’t hope to bat five sessions for a draw against modern Test attacks – but this was as much a test of their temperament as it was of their physicality. Batting out draws is a task modern batters have to rarely face. Unless the deficit is small – 311 wasn’t – you can get there only one ball at a time. There is no counterattacking, there is no rushing. Time moves at its own objective pace. It can feel excruciatingly slow, especially when you are not in the middle.Out in the middle, India needed only four batters to negotiate 875 balls between them.Why KL Rahul had a middling batting average had been an enigma coming into the series. He had never scored 400 runs in a series nor scored more than one hundred in one. A lot of his good work in the rest of his Test career had happened in the first quarter of series. Here, he had scored a second century in a series for the first time, but even that resulted in a turning point in a Test India lost at Lord’s.Ben Stokes sees his offer for a draw to Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar rebuffed•Getty ImagesRahul and Rishabh Pant, his partner at the time, wanted to get the milestone out of the way if they could before lunch. Pant ended up getting run-out. It was a human reaction. Rahul was honest enough to acknowledge what that happened. And good enough to regroup a week later and go back to doing what had brought him close to that second hundred.Except that runs didn’t matter here. So engrossed was he in just defending, switching off and switching on, that he was not even awake to a misfield late on the fourth evening. The milestone didn’t matter in this innings. The greatest achievement for Rahul was that he forced the opposition captain to risk an injured bicep and then come up with an absolutely unplayable ball to get him out. Not before he had faced 230 balls.Rahul’s partner on the fourth evening, Shubman Gill, is in the form of his life but under the pump as captain. There have been questions if this is his team. Whether it was him who wanted Shardul Thakur and not Kuldeep Yadav in the XI, and if so, why did he not bowl Thakur enough? Why were India 2-1 down, and going towards 3-1, after looking like the better team for long periods of this series? He also had to face the hat-trick ball with India needing to bat out five whole sessions.His bat doesn’t ask Gill these questions. That’s the one thing he is in control of. Not the injuries, not the weather that keeps turning against him, not the toss. He faced 238 balls with calmness and composure that have been the hallmark of his batting. This was his slowest Test hundred. Only once has he left more balls alone in an innings. He needed to quickly put behind the one he left alone and was out lbw.2:34

Has Washington nailed his spot in India’s Test XI?

Batters generally tend to not tempt cricketing gods. They take the runs that are available unless batting with the tail or with an injured batter. Gill was not afraid of doing that when he decided to face all the left-arm spin – in the first session of the day – when Liam Dawson was firing it in the rough for Washington Sundar.Washington, who had to be promoted to cover for the injury to Pant. Washington, who is so good a player that the team management is moving mountains to fit him in the XI. He has bowled balls and hit shots that will fit in the highlights reels of the series, but this innings was about anything but highlights.For more than two sessions, he and Ravindra Jadeja needed to negotiate everything thrown at them. India’s No. 1 allrounder and his heir apparent. Jadeja became only the third visiting player to score over 1000 runs and take more than 30 wickets in a single country. Washington finally got his maiden Test century after having been stranded on 96 and 85 before. They batted together for 55.2 overs, keeping out shooters and kickers. By the end of it, England were so knackered they wanted to get off the field with 15 overs left.The physicality was now catching up with England. India now have a full set of fit fast bowlers to choose from. The luck finally turned for them with three dropped catches that proved pivotal. They now have a chance to walk away with 2-2, which, at this point, seems like a fair result. It’s a good thing this was not a three-Test series.

Winger reveals "one conversation" that made him reject Thelwell and Rangers

A matter of days after Kevin Thelwell was relieved of his duties as Rangers’ sporting director, a former Premier League winger has revealed exactly why he rejected a move to Ibrox.

Cavenagh reveals reasoning behind Thelwell's Rangers exit

Thelwell’s exit looked on the cards as soon as he appointed Russell Martin. The sporting director instantly failed to win the fans over after a disastrous summer of decisions and has now paid the price alongside chief executive Patrick Stewart.

Revealing the news, chairman Andrew Cavenagh said: “Paraag and I have analysed the club’s needs, and as we reflect on what the club needs today, and where Kevin and Patrick are, we think we need something different.

“Our focus the first part of this season, the first part of our ownership period, has been on the sporting side and that’s where all of our attention went to for obvious reasons.

“With Danny coming in, he has started to improve the on-pitch performance, and that has created the space to allow Paraag and I to look at other parts of the club with new eyes and assess what we need going forward.”

Rangers dud is rivalling Chermiti for being one of Thelwell's worst signings

This Glasgow Rangers flop has been as bad of a signing as Youssef Chermiti was by Kevin Thelwell.

ByDan Emery Nov 25, 2025

It’s a major decision from the 49ers, who have seen Rangers get back on track on the pitch since Danny Rohl’s arrival. The German has won all four of his Scottish Premiership games, but his side still sit nine points behind shock leaders Hearts to highlight the damage done by Martin’s time at the club.

Thelwell’s downfall can be pinpointed to his decision to hire Martin, but also his transfer decisions, including times when he missed out on top targets like Carlos Forbs.

Carlos Forbs reveals "one conversation" before Rangers rejection

Speaking to Belgian newspaper Het Belang van Limburg, Forbs revealed why he rejected Rangers and Thelwell in favour of a move to Club Brugge in the summer.

The former Wolverhampton Wanderers loanee had quite the decision to make in the summer and Thelwell just couldn’t lure him to Rangers in what was a sign of things to come.

Since then, the now-former sporting director failed to get deals over the line to hire the likes of Steven Gerrard, before finally turning to Rohl. From appointing Martin, to missing out on Forbs and then Gerrard, the clock was always ticking on Thelwell’s time in Scotland.

"Rotten" Thelwell signing is Rangers' biggest waste of time since Dowell

Grounding, poems and bird videos – how Paul Adams is inspiring South Africa

The spin-bowling consultant has also taken on the role of being motivator-in-chief at the Women’s T20 World Cup

Firdose Moonda16-Oct-2024Most teams are made up of certain key characters: the responsible one, the serious one, the young one, the popular one, the talented one and most importantly the funky one. In South Africa’s case, the last of those is a position taken up by one of their support staff: spin bowling lead Paul Adams.He has assumed the role of motivator-in-chief, alongside his technical coaching, and taken some of the burden off captain Laura Wolvaardt, who also has opening the batting to focus on.”I found it one of the hardest parts of the job – finding something new to say every single game,” Wolvaardt said at her pre semi-final press conference. “A lot of it doesn’t really change, especially in the series where we play the same opposition six times, so to come up with a new pre-game speech is tricky. But we’ve had Paul Adams and every game he’s come up with something really creative and really new.”Related

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Adams started off by introducing the team to the ancient but now-popular practice of grounding, which traces its history back to ancient Egypt, and does exactly what it says on the tin. All it is is standing barefoot on a surface, preferably grass but beach sand or if circumstances are extreme, artificial turf or concrete might do just as well, and feeling the earth below. The team did it ahead of their first match to feel as though they had arrived in the UAE, the place where they will compete to win the World Cup for the first time.Then, he moved to poetry and composed four verses for the team ahead of their final group stage match against Bangladesh to urge them to stay in the moment. A taste of it reads: “So focus hard, embrace the fight, each second is our only right,” and Tazmin Brits described it to ESPNcricinfo Powerplay’s podcast as emotional and inspiring.Laura Wolvaardt: It’s an amazing opportunity we have tomorrow to have all those lights on us and have a good time•ICC/Getty ImagesNow, ahead of the semi-final, Adams has had to pull another trick out of the bag and he managed to come up with one. “Today we had a video about ebbs and flows and going with the game,” Wolvaardt said. “He absolutely loves it. He runs our spin meetings as well and every meeting there’s some kind of a video about birds that fly together and stick together and teamwork and all of that stuff.”Of course, we shouldn’t forget that spin coaching is Adams’ primary role and he has done some innovative things in that department too. He has worked on Nonkululeko Mlaba, Chloe Tryon, Sune Luus and Seshnie Naidu’s actions, not by passing on his own contortionist means of delivery, but by using weighted balls to align their hips over their feet and get their arms into the optimal position for accuracy and the results, especially for Mlaba, are obvious. She is the second-leading wicket-taker of the tournament and has rediscovered an element of threat that left her after the last World Cup.Adams, who has himself been through a harrowing time after the Social Justice and Nation-Building hearing in 2021, will not necessarily be with the women’s team through all of their next series. Since the SJN, he coached a bit at the provincial team Border and has now been employed to work across all South African teams, but for now, the impact he is making is clear. “He’s very creative, he loves it, he always reads into things and he’s been really great for the group,” Wolvaardt said. “We’ve needed someone to really pump us up and bring our little fun element to each game as well, which has been awesome.”That comment is telling because this South African team, until earlier this year, had been under the same management for most of their careers. Hilton Moreeng, who oversaw the development to professionalism and years of succession in reaching semi-finals and eventually a final, was in charge for almost 12 years. Post last year’s World Cup, there was talk of a need for change in order to inject new ideas and move the team forward. That half-happened with the promotion of assistant coach Dillon du Preez to interim head coach and the appointment of other, new support staff.For the first time, the South African women’s team have a batting coach in Baakier Abrahams, and a spin-bowling consultant in Adams. They mention the pair almost every time they are asked about how this side is different, and perhaps better, than the one that reached the final in 2023. “We have a year of experience, we line up a little differently and we’ve also had a bit of change in staff,” Wolvaardt said. “So, a couple of fresh faces, fresh ideas. It’s been a bit of an up and down year for us. I think we’ve played some really good cricket in Australia and had a few disappointing series as well.”For South Africa, their first wins over Australia in an ODI and T20I earlier this year is what they are holding on to as they take on the world champions again. But whatever happens, they know they’ve already done something “very special,” as Wolvaardt put it by qualifying for another semi-final and doing it with a smile. “We don’t even realise how many people at home are following us and watching us. My mum keeps texting me that she’s been to the dentist today, and the dentist is asking about our game tomorrow, and they seem super excited,” she said. “It’s an amazing opportunity we have tomorrow to have all those lights on us and have a good time.”

He’s like Amad: Amorim has a 17-year-old who can end Dalot’s Man Utd career

After Erik ten Hag’s dismissal from Manchester United in October last year, it was always going to be crucial that the hierarchy made the right call with their next appointment.

The Red Devils board turned to Ruben Amorim to fill the void, but around 13 months on from his arrival, he’s still struggling to provide the goods on a consistent basis.

He’s currently achieving a 41% win record in his 56 matches in charge at Old Trafford to date, with the 40-year-old only registering a total of 23 victories across all competitions.

His 3-4-2-1 system is yet to be seen in full flow, as numerous players are still getting used to the demands of the manager’s intricate system in the Premier League.

One player in particular has had to adapt his playstyle over the last couple of months as a result of the switch, but he’s struggled in 2025/25 – as seen by his stats in recent weeks.

The stats behind Dalot’s struggles in 2025/26

Diogo Dalot was signed by United back in 2018 from boyhood club Porto, with the Portuguese star seen as the long-term solution at right-back at Old Trafford.

The 26-year-old has already racked up over 200 senior appearances for the Red Devils since his transfer, but concerns have been raised about his performance levels in 2025/26.

He’s been asked to operate in a more advanced right-wing-back role as a result of Amorim’s 3-4-2-1 system – a position in which he’s massively struggled to date.

In his 11 appearances in the Premier League, he’s massively struggled in possession, as seen by his lowly tally of just 2.8 progressive passes completed per 90.

Such a tally ranks him within the bottom 20% of all full-backs in the division this season, further showcasing his lack of impact when in possession this campaign.

Going forward, he’s also massively struggled to impress, as seen by his tally of just 1.7 passes into the final per 90 – which also places him in the bottom 14% of other defenders in the league.

When he gets himself into shooting positions, Dalot has also massively struggled in the Premier League, as seen by his tally of zero shots on target, the joint-worst of any player in the division.

It’s evident that he’s massively struggled to impress since the arrival of his compatriot, with the manager desperately needing to address the situation in such an area.

The star who can end Dalot’s Man Utd career

In an attempt to fix the issues in the wing-back department, Amorim has put faith in Amad Diallo to try and nail the place down as his own in recent months.

The Ivorian, who’s primarily a winger, has managed to impress in the role, with the 23-year-old netting 11 goals and eight assists across all competitions in 2024/25.

In the current season, the youngster has continued to impress, already netting a goal and two assists – with his only goal a tremendous strike in the 2-2 draw with Nottingham Forest.

However, the manager could be presented with an issue in the months ahead, with the player set to join up with the Ivory Coast national team for the African Cup of Nations.

Despite the issues, the manager could call upon academy star Bendito Mantato to try and fill the void and solve the long-standing problem in wide areas.

The Englishman joined the academy at the age of nine, subsequently spending his entire youth years with the Red Devils and is now a star performer in the youth ranks.

He’s made three appearances for the U18 squad during the early stages of this season, but has managed to impress – as seen by his tally of three goals and three assists.

Mantato, who started out as a winger, has even played as a full-back for the academy sides, subsequently allowing him to make 11 appearances for the under-21 side this campaign.

As a result of his recent performances, analyst Ben Mattinson has already labelled “explosive” – even touching on his ability to get up and down the pitch with his tireless nature.

Bendito Mantato – stats in 2025/26

Statistics (per 90)

Tally

Games played

14

Goals & assists

9

Pass accuracy

89%

Successful dribbles

1.1

Tackles made

3.4

Duels won

6.7

Duels won

49%

Fouls won

1.3

Stats via FotMob

The youngster starred in the U18s 7-0 demolition of Liverpool at the weekend, with the wideman finding the net early on to get the ball rolling against their bitter rivals.

At just 17, expectations will no doubt have to be managed by the club and Amorim, but it’s evident that he’s a player with bags of talent and potential for the future.

However, if he does manage to continue his current trajectory, there’s no reason why he can’t replace Dalot in the first-team setup and save the hierarchy millions.

The Portuguese international is certainly on borrowed time at Old Trafford, with the full-back needing a miracle to prevent the hierarchy from looking at options to replace him.

Better than Dorgu: Man Utd plot move to sign 'the world's most coveted LB'

Manchester United look set to make yet another big-money move in the defensive department.

By
Ethan Lamb

Dec 2, 2025

Pant to lead India A in prelude to Test series vs South Africa

Rishabh Pant has received a “return to play” clearance from the BCCI’s Centre of Excellence following two stages of rehab for a fractured foot and if fit and in form, could make the squad for the two-Test series against South Africa

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Oct-2025Rishabh Pant’s return to competitive cricket following a foot injury will begin with him captaining India A in the two four-day fixtures against South Africa A in Bengaluru starting October 30.Pant has received a ‘return to play’ clearance from the BCCI’s Centre of Excellence following two stages of rehab for the fractured foot that he suffered during the fourth England vs India Test in Manchester in July. Pant’s India A selection means he will not be playing for Delhi in the second round of the 2025-26 Ranji Trophy from October 25 as earlier envisaged.India A vs South Africa A fixtures

1st four-dayer – Oct 30 to Nov 2
2nd four-dayer – Nov 6 to Nov 9

Pant and vice-captain B Sai Sudharsan are set to feature in both the matches, while the likes of KL Rahul, Dhruv Jurel, Prasidh Krishna ad Mohammed Siraj will feature in only the second four-day fixture, to be played from November 6. It’s likely that all of them will make the cut for India’s Test squad for the South Africa series, which starts on November 14 in Kolkata.The Ajit Agarkar-led selection panel has had to balance out the squads to ensure there’s also a bit of continuity with those featuring for their respective state teams in the ongoing Ranji Trophy season.This is possibly why Rajat Patidar (captaining Madhya Pradesh), Ruturaj Gaikwad, Abhimanyu Easwaran (captaining Bengal) and Akash Deep, among others, are part of the squad for just one of the two matches. Meanwhile, the likes of N Jagadeesan, Manav Suthar, Saransh Jain and Harsh Dubey have been rewarded for their domestic form.KL Rahul is among a host of internationals who will come in for the second game•AFP/Getty ImagesIf the selectors are convinced with his form and fitness, Pant is likely to make his Test comeback at the first India vs South Africa Test.India squad for first four-day matchRishabh Pant (capt, wk), Ayush Mhatre, N Jagadeesan (wk), Sai Sudharsan (vice-capt), Devdutt Padikkal, Rajat Patidar, Harsh Dubey, Tanush Kotian, Manav Suthar, Anshul Kamboj, Yash Thakur, Ayush Badoni, Saransh Jain, Gurnoor Brar, Khaleel Ahmed.India squad for second four-day matchRishabh Pant (capt, wk), KL Rahul, Dhruv Jurel (wk), Sai Sudharsan (vice-capt), Devdutt Padikkal, Ruturaj Gaikwad, Harsh Dubey, Tanush Kotian, Manav Suthar, Khaleel Ahmed, Gurnoor Brar, Abhimanyu Easwaran, Prasidh Krishna, Mohammed Siraj, Akash Deep.

Botafogo x Bahia: onde assistir ao vivo, escalações e horário do jogo pelo Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

O Botafogo tem jogo contra o Bahia neste domingo (5), pela quinta rodada do Brasileirão. A bola vai rolar a partir das 18h30 (de Brasília), no Nilton Santos (Rio de Janeiro), com transmissão do SporTV e do Premiere.

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➡️ A maior cobertura do futebol brasileiro. Aproveite 30 dias grátis e assine o Premiere para assistir ao Fogão!

➡️ Fogão embaladão! Aposte R$50 no Lance! Betting e leve R$595 se o Botafogo bater o Bahia por 1 a 0

Confira todas as informações que você precisa saber sobre o confronto entre Botafogo e Bahia (onde assistir, horário, escalações e local).

➡️ Tudo sobre o Fogão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Botafogo

✅ FICHA TÉCNICA
BOTAFOGO X BAHIA
BRASILEIRÃO – 5ª RODADA

🗓️ Data e horário: domingo, 5 de maio de 2024, às 18h30 (de Brasília)
📍 Local: Estádio Nilton Santos, no Rio de Janeiro (RJ)
📺 Onde assistir: SporTV e Premiere
🟨 Árbitro: Rafael Klein
🚩 Assistentes: Rafael da Silva Alves e Tiago Augusto Kappes Diel
🖥️ VAR: Igor Junio Benevenuto de Oliveira

⚽ PROVÁVEIS ESCALAÇÕES

BOTAFOGO (Técnico: Artur Jorge)
John, Damián Suárez, Bastos, Lucas Halter e Hugo; Danilo Barbosa, Marlon Freitas e Eduardo; Júnior Santos, Savarino e Luiz Henrique.

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BAHIA (Técnico: Rogério Ceni)
Marcos Felipe, Gilberto, Gabriel Xavier, Víctor Cuesta e Luciano Juba; Caio Alexandre, Jean Lucas, Thaciano, Everton Ribeiro e Cauly; Everaldo.

Tudo sobre

BahiaBotafogoBrasileirãoOnde assistir

Wolves make contact to appoint Xavi as top target to replace Pereira revealed

Wolverhampton Wanderers have now made contact with Xavi as a replacement for Vitor Pereira, with the 57-year-old being dismissed after the 3-0 defeat against Fulham on Saturday.

Pereira was given plenty of time to turn things around, but the loss against the Cottagers was the final straw for Fosun, with the Old Gold now eight points adrift of safety in the Premier League, having made a very poor start to the season.

Goalkeeper Sam Johnstone was particularly critical of the performance after the match, describing it as “embarrassing.”

Wolves are still searching for their first top-flight victory, having collected just two points from their opening ten games, while they were also dumped out of the EFL Cup by Chelsea last Wednesday, with the Blues emerging as 4-3 winners at Molineux.

It is going to be a tall order for whoever replaces Pereira to dig the Wanderers out of trouble, but Fosun are now eyeing what has to be considered an ambitious move for Xavi…

Wolves make contact with Xavi to replace Pereira

That is according to a report from Spain, which states that is indeed not Gary O’Neil at the top of the wishlist. Wolves have now made contact with the former Barcelona manager, who they have identified as the main candidate to replace Pereira, given his experience of managing at an elite level.

Fosun see appointing the legendary midfielder as a golden opportunity, as they are admirers of his possession-based style of play, and believe the 45-year-old could restore confidence to the squad.

The Spaniard is the top target, but he is not the only manager on the shortlist for the Old Gold, who are working quickly to appoint a new manager, with Bologna boss Thiago Motta emerging as a potential alternative option, given the Italian side’s impressive start to the campaign.

It would no doubt be a major coup if Wolves were somehow able to tempt the former Al-Sadd manager into a move to Molineux, given that he is held in very high regard by Barca president Joan Laporta.

The Terrassa-born manager, who prefers to implement a 4-3-3 system, has won eight trophies as a coach, across spells in Qatar and La Liga, most impressively lifting the Spanish title in the 2022-23 season.

Xavi has been out of work since being dismissed by Barcelona over 18 months ago, but in truth it is difficult to picture him moving to Molineux, given the mess Wolves currently find themselves in, sitting bottom of the Premier League, having shipped 22 goals, the highest number of any side.

Wolves also targeting Brendan Rodgers as replacement for Pereira

Wolves targeting Brendan Rodgers amid doubts about Vitor Pereira

The Old Gold have made a very poor start to the season.

2

By
Dominic Lund

Oct 29, 2025

Liverpool warned Mohamed Salah won't play for the club again by Man Utd legend after 'Cristiano Ronaldo-esque' outburst against Arne Slot and Co.

Liverpool have been warned that club legend Mohamed Salah will not play for the club again following his explosive rant against the Reds and manager Arne Slot. Salah let rip after being benched for a third straight match against Leeds and told the media he felt he had been "thrown under the bus" by the club. The Egypt international was subsequently omitted from the Liverpool squad to face Inter in the Champions League and is facing an uncertain future at Anfield.

  • Salah rant adds to Liverpool struggles

    Liverpool have endured a miserable defence of their Premier League title so far in 2025-26 and currently sit down in 10th place in the Premier League table, already 10 points behind leaders Arsenal. The Reds have also seen Salah add to their struggles by giving an explosive interview after defeat to Leeds last time out in the Premier League. Manager Slot has said he has "no clue" if the talisman will ever play for the club again, while former Manchester United forward Patrice Evra has insisted it's all over between Liverpool and Salah and that the Egypt international's rant reminds him of a certain Cristiano Ronaldo.

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    Salah's rant is 'Ronaldo-esque'

    Evra told : "It reminds me a little bit of when Cristiano did the interview with Piers Morgan (in 2022). People sometimes forget we are human beings and we can get hurt. And I feel like when I heard what Salah said, I feel like someone is hurting a lot. The backlash he had from the fans is just ridiculous. Like what he achieved for the club, but at the same time, when you're not playing well, sometimes you need to accept being on the bench. I feel like he’s not going to play for Liverpool again. You never know, Liverpool could perform better without him and they're going to maybe let him go in January.

    "I feel like it was a year too long, he should have left last summer. When Sadio Mane left, I knew Liverpool would be in trouble. Even though they won the league last year, I knew at a certain point they would get in trouble. Salah feels like the club is throwing him under the bus – but it’s never good to speak out about the club publicly. I don't blame Liverpool. I don't blame Salah. He's a human being. He went there. He did an interview. He talked with his heart. Sometimes it's not always good to talk with your heart, but I see it as a no return for Salah."

  • Could Salah follow Ronaldo to Saudi Arabia?

    Ronaldo famously let rip at Manchester United and manager Erik ten Hag, saying he had no respect for the Dutch coach, before leaving Old Trafford at the end of 2022 and moving to Saudi Pro League side Al-Nassr. Salah is now being tipped to follow in the Portugal icon's footsteps and move to the Middle East, with a host of clubs reportedly interested in trying to tempt him away from Anfield in the January transfer window. It still remains to be seen if Salah will move on this winter, but he has previously admitted he came very close to joining the Saudi Pro League earlier this year before penning a lucrative two-year contract extension with the Reds.

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    All eyes on Salah as Liverpool face Brighton

    All eyes will now be on Anfield on Saturday as the latest drama in the Salah saga unfolds. Liverpool return to action in the Premier League against Brighton in a fixture that will be Salah's last before he is due to join up with Egypt's AFCON squad. It's not clear yet if Salah will be involved in the game or if he will be on the bench once again for Liverpool. If Slot does leave Salah out of his starting XI once again, it will likely increase speculation about a winter move away from Anfield.

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