Fabrizio Romano drops update on LFC target

Liverpool have reportedly held a long-term interest in Raphinha, and now a new update has emerged from a reliable source on the player’s future.

What’s the latest?

Italian journalist and transfer insider Fabrizio Romano has revealed that Chelsea have tabled a bid for Leeds United star Raphinha.

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Romano tweeted last night: “Chelsea have already sent an official proposal to Raphinha and his agent Deco to discuss personal terms as Boehly wants to be fast to avoid problems. Work in progress.”

Following up this morning with further details:

“Raphinha – Chelsea proposal, on the table since yesterday night. Boehly wanted contract bid to be sent right after £60m agreement with Leeds. Contract offered until June 2027.”

Supporters will be gutted

With the doubt surrounding Mohamed Salah’s future at Liverpool beyond the 12 months remaining on his contract, Raphinha was thought to be a worthy replacement for the Egyptian star with bids from Anfield reported to be rejected so far, supporters will surely be gutted to see the Brazilian go to a Premier League rival.

The winger has been impressive with his performances for Leeds United over the last two seasons after joining the West Yorkshire club upon their promotion into the top flight in 2020.

Raphinha has scored 22 goals and delivered 13 assists during his time at his current club, with a goal contribution every 168 minutes, but it’s not just his consistent goal contributions that make him an ideal player for the future at Liverpool.

According to FBref, in the Premier League last season Raphinha ranked ninth for shots on goal (85), crosses completed (90) and shot-creating actions (119), as well as ranking seventh for key passes (65), proving that the 25-year-old is a consistent attacking threat with the potential to compete to be one of the best forwards in the league.

Liverpool will need to begin to prepare for the expected departure of Salah next summer, and if the worst-case scenario does occur, a player like Raphinha might not offer the same number of goals as the Egyptian winger, but he could surely develop in the team whilst offering a number of talents he has already displayed.

With that being said, it is now looking likely that Raphinha will make the move to Chelsea which will require FSG to look elsewhere for their potential Salah replacements ahead of next summer, something that will leave supporters rather gutted.

AND in other news: Klopp can land his own Tchouameni as Liverpool now plot £5m offer for “absolute star”

Mount could be Fernandes 2.0 at MUFC

Erik ten Hag is reportedly plotting a shock move for Chelsea midfielder Mason Mount this summer and if he were to join Manchester United, he could be Bruno Fernandes 2.0 at Old Trafford.

It was reported recently that United are keeping an eye on the England international’s contract situation at Stamford Bridge following their recent takeover, with suggestions that they have already made contact with the player’s camp.

They also suggest that ten Hag has been following his progress since a loan spell with Vitesse Arnhem, and claim that Mount would jump at the chance to move to the north-west.

If he were to make the switch this summer, then the 23-year-old could be a superb addition to ten Hag’s squad, and could even replicate the performances of Fernandes.

The Portugal international has contributed 50 goals and 39 assists for the Red Devils since joining from Sporting Lisbon in January 2020.

Fbref suggests that Mount is very similar to the Portuguese midfielder, while WhoScored suggests that both Mount and Fernandes’ strengths include key passes and long shots, while both prefer to play layoffs.

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The 23-year-old has established himself as a key player for Chelsea following an impressive loan spell with Derby County in the Championship, where he contributed 11 goals and six assists in 44 appearances.

He has since gone on to make 160 appearances for the Blues, in which he has notched 30 goals and 31 assists, an impressive return for someone so young.

Former Chelsea man Joe Cole was full of praise for Mount after he starred in the 7-0 demolition of Norwich last season, saying:

“He doesn’t [get the credit] he deserves – he does from people within the game. I’ve never met one ex-player or one coach who doesn’t appreciate him.

“He’s a top, top outstanding player, he’s becoming one of the most important players in the country.

“But there is an unusual level of fans – I don’t know if it’s rival fans or whatever – who don’t quite get it.

“You want to sit them down in front of a touchscreen and educate them and show them that what this kid does is just unbelievable.”

Reports have suggested that Mount is valued at £70m by Chelsea but considering he is only 23, and seems to perform on a similar level as Fernandes, he could prove to be a superb addition to ten Hag’s side.

And, in other news… MUFC now “interested” in signing “unreal” 52-goal star, just imagine him & Ronaldo

Sunderland transfer news on Neil

Sunderland are reportedly now ‘ready for any offers’ to sign Dan Neil this summer.

The Lowdown: Speakman praise

Neil has recently earned the praise of Sporting Director Kristjaan Speakman, who has dubbed him an ‘incredible’ and ‘top young player’ (The Northern Echo).

The 20-year-old played 46 times in total over all competitions this season, scoring four goals and making eight assists (Transfermarkt), as he helped the Stadium of Light outfit gain promotion up to the Championship.

The Latest: Ready for offers

Taking to Twitter, North East journalist Matty Jones has shared that the Wearside club are now ‘ready for any offers’ that may come their way for Neil:

“Scouts have been to watch Sunderland this season but it’s not certain whether they were there to watch Dan Neil in action.

“Nevertheless, the Black Cats are ready for any offers that might come their way.”

The Verdict: Keep!

If the Black Cats are to stay in the Championship, and even look to a potential Premier League push, then they need to be keeping hold of their key players, and Neil certainly fits into that category.

He has ranked highly among his teammates in terms of average key passes and through balls in League One this term, while his 82% pass completion rate is the joint-highest out of any of his teammates to have made five or more appearances (WhoScored).

Nonetheless, Neil would not be an easy player to replace, and so Alex Neil’s side should be looking to keep hold of him this summer, regardless of any potential offers that may come in for the Englishman.

In other news, find out what behind-the-scenes SAFC ‘talks’ have now been going on here!

Frenkie de Jong ‘wanted’ by Man United

Reputable Spanish outlet AS have provided an update involving Manchester United and Frenkie de Jong. 

The lowdown: Dutch connection

Following the official announcement from the club that Erik ten Hag would be the man in the Old Trafford hot seat from next season, Sport ran a report claiming that the current Ajax manager was eyeing a reunion with De Jong.

Sold to Barcelona in 2020 for £65m under the stewardship of the 52-year-old (BBC), the Dutch midfielder was hailed as a ‘great player’ by Ten Hag whilst the pair were together in Amsterdam.

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There could now be a reunion on the horizon in Manchester, as Barca have reportedly named their price for De Jong…

The latest: De Jong a ‘wanted’ man

As per AS, United and Bayern Munich are named as the two main protagonists in the pursuit of the 24-year-old.

The report claims that De Jong is ‘mainly wanted’ by the two European giants as the Catalan club put their star ‘up for sale’ for €70m (£58m).

It is also stated that other Premier League clubs have ‘tested’ the situation surrounding the 40-cap Netherlands ace.

The verdict: Value for money

As a matter of course, Ten Hag will need to strengthen the midfield in order to regain poise at United, with Paul Pogba and Nemanja Matic both preparing to leave at the end of the season.

Possessing a variety of impressive attributes including very strong dribbling and passing skills (WhoScored), the talented Dutchman stacks up stylistically alongside star midfielder such as Ilkay Gundogan, Bernardo Silva and Luka Modric when using the detailed FB Ref comparison tool.

So far this season, De Jong has scored four times and registered five assists in 44 appearances across all competitions, and signing him would be a superb place to start for any Old Trafford rebuild under Ten Hag this summer.

In other news: Man Utd star could make sensational summer exit…find out more here

BBL takeaways: crowds flock back, now to keep overseas stars

New local stars emerged, including Josh Brown, but Renegades and Thunder need to rebuild after poor campaigns

Tristan Lavalette26-Jan-2024After a rocky start, marred by a farcical abandonment in Geelong due to a dangerous pitch and the schedule being heavily impacted by bad weather, a shortened BBL season came alive in a throwback to its heyday.It built on the bounce back experienced last season following a difficult period for the BBL mired in successive Covid-19 affected seasons. The tournament appears in a good place, having eroded a negative perception that had set in, but as ever question marks remain.Shortened season fuels big crowdsThis was seen as a pivotal season for the tournament after a resurgence last year. There had long been complaints over the protracted length of the BBL and officials reacted by shortening the regular season from 56 to 40 games.Related

Wes Agar traded to Sydney Thunder as Adelaide Strikers improve draft position

BBL draft shake up looms, WBBL expected to be reduced to 40 games

Finch raises prospect of relocating BBL teams, calls for draft to go

What went wrong for Perth Scorchers in BBL hat-trick bid?

Mass ILT20 exodus leaves BBL finals lacking star quality

Teams played 10 games each – down from 14 – and cut the length so it finished before the school holidays with finals having for a number of years been played in February. The finals series was reduced by a game after a rejigging of the format where only the top four qualified instead of five. It meant that games had more stakes and there were less dead rubbers.The truncated season proved a hit with crowds rising by 27 percent with five regular season matches boasting more than 40,000 fans. It recreated the type of spectacle that saw the BBL take off in the mid-2010s and helped ensure a much better television product to help banish the eyesore of empty grandstands from previous seasons.While traditional strongholds in Perth, Adelaide and Brisbane enjoyed record attendances, tournament officials would have been especially delighted with crowd numbers in Melbourne where the BBL has had difficulty penetrating. Renegades had an average crowd increase of 63 pe cent despite another underwhelming season.A capacity crowd of 43,000 at the SCG for the final was a fitting end to a successful season.Laurie Evans was brilliant for Perth Scorchers, but missed the finals•Getty ImagesMass exodus still underlines availability issuesIt wasn’t all smooth sailing with a number of players leaving ahead of the finals to rival leagues, mostly the lucrative ILT20 in the UAE.The BBL had sought to ward off competitors by doubling the salary caps of teams with top overseas players around $420,000 if they were available for the whole season.But it still fell short of the salary cap of teams for the ILT20, which has a footprint from the IPL and is played in a shorter timespan than the BBL. Players unsurprisingly have found the ILT20 too hard to resist.Laurie Evans emerged as a fan favourite for Perth Scorchers after his cavalier batting through the season, but he left the day after their final regular season match to fly to the UAE.He believed the BBL season needed to be further shortened to a month, so that a clash of tournaments could be avoided. Sam Billings, who also left for the ILT20 and subsequently missed the Heat’s triumph, floated the idea of multi-year deals as a way of retaining players.But as cricket’s calendar increasingly gets saturated, the clash of rival tournaments and international fixtures means the issue over player availability might prove impossible to fix.New local stars emergeJosh Brown has suddenly become sought-after around the world•Getty ImagesThe departure of overseas players gutted teams in the finals, who had to rely on bench strength and local talent to get them through. No one grabbed their opportunity more than Brisbane Heat opener Josh Brown, who stepped up with probably the most outrageous innings seen in the BBL when he clubbed 140 off 57 balls against Adelaide Strikers in the Challenger.He made headlines worldwide and backed up his heroics with a half-century – the only one of the match – in tough batting conditions in the final. Brown was subsequently offered a contract in the Bangladesh Premier League.The breakout batter of the regular season was Renegades dynamo Jake Fraser-McGurk, who is starting to put together his big-hitting talents to devastating effect. He produced clean hitting underlined by a strike-rate of 158.64. He also scored two half-centuries having never struck one in the BBL before.Fraser-McGurk, 21, has quickly become a drawcard and looms as a player of considerable interest for the national hierarchy having smashed the fastest ever List A century earlier in the summer and he also struck a maiden first-class hundred. He should make his international debut in the ODI series against West Indies.Seamer Xavier Bartlett has also been named against West Indies after starring with the new ball and at the death to finish as the season’s leading wicket-taker. His destruction of Hurricanes’ top-order had the Gabba heaving in the spell of the tournament.Nikhil Chaudhary, of the Hurricanes, was another to make a name for himself and has reportedly had interest from other BBL clubs.Heat end Scorchers/Sixers’ strangleholdWas this season the start of something for Brisbane Heat?•Cricket Australia/Getty ImagesAs top-placed Heat started wobbling late in the season, one suspected Scorchers and Sixers were on a collision course to meet in another final. But Scorchers could never quite overcome the absence of inspirational skipper Ashton Turner as they crashed to a big home loss in the Knockout to Strikers.Sixers, however, peaked at the right time to thrash Heat in the Qualifier on the Gold Coast to book a home final at their SCG fortress. But they were left stunned by Heat in a one-sided final in what might prove to be a changing of the guard.Scorchers and Sixers had won eight of 12 titles, including the last four, but Heat have replicated their blueprint of building around a local core. Queensland Cricket have reaped rewards for their local T20 Max competition which has proven an effective breeding ground for Heat.Having earned redemption after their nightmare defeat against Scorchers last season, Heat became just the third team to win multiple titles and might well be in the midst of a golden run.Renegades and Thunder struggleRenegades and Thunder have often struggled in the BBL – despite each team having won a title – to underline the difficulties of having multiple teams in a city.They combined for just three wins to finish at the foot of the table leading to uncertainty over their futures. Ricky Ponting and Aaron Finch have speculated that Thunder shift to Canberra in order to move away from the often difficult and slow Sydney Showground surface. newspapers recently reported that the ACT are pushing for a new BBL team to be based in Canberra, but expansion seems unlikely in the near future.Finch has also suggested that Renegades, who he used to captain, could move to Geelong. “I think we’re already a bit thin at the moment with the talent pool to get another side in,” he told ESPN’s .Next season: Australia’s stars set to returnThe schedule should allow more appearances from Australia’s Test players next season•Getty Images and Cricket AustraliaIn a reassuring sign of the competition’s footing, the BBL enjoyed considerable success even with most of Australia’s star players absent after the Test summer started later than usual.Having lit up the BBL late last season, Steven Smith and David Warner had limited impact in their two matches each. Although Warner did grab plenty of headlines over his arrival by helicopter to the SCG for the Sydney Smash. He will be retired from international cricket by next summer meaning he should be much more available for the BBL.Mitchell Marsh and Travis Head did not play at all, but Australia’s stars are likely to be available for the backend of next season amid a clear slate in the international fixtures in January after the India-Australia Test series wraps up at the SCG.The presence of Australia’s top players in the backend of the season and finals would undoubtedly catapult the BBL to even greater heights.

'I'm always ready' – Rehan Ahmed is on the move, and has a World Cup trophy in his sights

The 17-year-old legspinner is one of the players to watch out for as England try to match their title-winning feat from the 1998 Under-19 World Cup

Andrew Miller04-Feb-2022The kids are all right, you know.Amid the existential gloom of England’s Ashes misadventure, and the potshots at a county system that no longer seems capable of coaching a functioning technique into a generation of Test wannabes, there is an alternative narrative taking shape in Antigua this week.One in which a batch of fearless teenagers, raised on the derring-do of the greatest white-ball team in England’s history, and decked out in the same sky-blue shirts in which their heroes won the most thrilling World Cup final of all time, have surged into their own global final with a series of captivating performances.On Saturday, England’s Young Lions take on India in the country’s first appearance in the Under-19 World Cup final since their victory over New Zealand in 1998. And win or lose, if this latest contest comes close to living up to the epic semi-final against Afghanistan on Tuesday, it is safe to assume that more than a few of the combatants will be ready to follow in the footsteps of Graeme Swann, Owais Shah and Rob Key, the three most notable members of that trophy-lifting team from the previous millennium.One or two, however, would already appear to be on the fast track, not least the precocious Leicestershire legspinner Rehan Ahmed, who can loosely claim to have taken his first Test wicket at the age of 11, and whose extraordinary three-wicket over against Afghanistan – in the crunchiest match situation that he can yet have encountered in his young career – became the moment that his team-mates could finally dare to believe.Rehan Ahmed’s three wickets at the death turned the semi-final against Afghanistan around in England’s favour•ICC/Getty Images”Those are the games you live for,” Rehan tells ESPNcricinfo. “I’d much rather have a game like that and win, than an easy win. It was fun to be part of it.”England’s 15-run winning margin does little justice to the raw jeopardy of the contest’s closing overs – pound for pound, it was arguably the most compelling 50-over contest since World Cup final. With four overs remaining, England seemed finally to have settled it with room to spare. Afghanistan needed 43 more runs with four wickets standing, and Rehan for once looked to have played a bit-part role, after an uncharacteristically loose first spell and a solitary wicket in his second.But then, all hell broke loose, and all bets were off. The first ball of James Sales’ next over was skied to point for what seemed like the match-settling wicket, only for the batter to be reprieved by a front-foot no-ball. The resulting free hit skidded away for five no-balls as well, and when a nervous Sales was cracked over long-on for six, 20 runs had been skelped from the over to transform the match situation.Related

  • James Vince on Rehan Ahmed: 'You forget his age … he knows what he's doing'

  • Rehan Ahmed shows early signs of substance as England relive their fragile legspin dream

  • Rehan Ahmed, England Under-19 legspinner, signs contract extension at Leicestershire

  • Fateh Singh's journey – from seam to spin, now treading the Moeen Ali route

  • Teenage legspinner turns heads in Lord's nets

What happened next was a credit to the players’ composure and burgeoning professionalism – but also, you sense, to the never-say-die attributes of the senior team on whom they have modelled their approach to the game. The notion, for instance, of an England captain tossing the ball to his legspinner with 19 runs needed from 12 balls might never have crossed the mind of a previous generation. But that is what Eoin Morgan memorably did in an ODI in Grenada in 2019, when Adil Rashid responded to his captain’s faith with four wickets in five balls, and as Tom Prest had hinted in the build-up to the Under-19 final, this was a tactic he had no qualms about emulating.”At the start, I didn’t bowl as well as I wanted to, but I knew I had an over in there somewhere,” Rehan recalls. “We have so many bowling options but I told Presty, ‘look, I want to bowl at the death; even if they need three runs in the last over, give it to me and I’ll still bowl it’. I told him I’m ready whenever he needs me.”

“I know I’ve got some kind of natural cricket skills, but if I don’t work as hard as I should, then there’s no point in being talented. Even if I’m not the most talented, if I work the hardest, I’ll still be in a good position”

His first ball alone justified the faith. The dangerous Noor Ahmad failed to connect properly with a high-bouncing googly, and James Rew sprinted in from long-on to hold on to a magnificent catch. Three balls later, Izharulhaq Naveed also went for broke, and Sales on the midwicket boundary atoned for his jitters with another hugely composed take. One ball later, it was all but over – another wicket-taking googly, Rehan’s fourth of the innings – ripped into middle stump to dispatch Bilal Sami for a duck. Though Josh Boyden still had to close the match out, Rehan’s three wickets for a single run had put the game way before Afghanistan’s last pair.”If I was to bowl a ball that could save my life, I would just bowl my googly,” he says. “I just love bowling it. I’m trying to bowl it quicker, so that even if they do pick it, they have less time to react to it. It’s a wicket-taking ball. In practice, I’ll focus my legspin against the batters, and then afterwards I just bowl four overs of googlies, top of middle, top of off… I’m very confident in my googly.”

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He is very confident in general – infectiously so – and with ample justification too, given the strides he is already making. But even at the age of 17, Rehan’s game is underpinned by a work ethic that players a decade older would kill to have recognised at such a tender age.”I know I’ve got some kind of natural cricket skills, but if I don’t work as hard as I should, then there’s no point in being talented,” he says. “Even if I’m not the most talented, if I work the hardest, I’ll still be in a good position.”To say he has been on England’s radar for a while would be understating it. In July 2016, Rehan hadn’t even celebrated his 12th birthday when he was spirited down to Lord’s by the MCC head coach Steve Kirby, whose job it was to round up net bowlers to assist preparations ahead of England’s Test series against Pakistan.Rehan Ahmed, just 13 then, in action against Test-class batters at Lord’s•Getty ImagesFinding himself short of adequate legspinners to replicate the methods of Pakistan’s star bowler Yasir Shah, Kirby put out feelers with his scouts on the league scene, including with Gemaal Hussain, his former Gloucestershire team-mate, and one of Rehan’s team-mates at his club in Nottinghamshire, Thoresby Colliery CC.”Gemaal was like, ‘are you ready’?” Rehan recalls. “And I was like, ‘I’m always ready’!”I wasn’t initially meant to bowl to the England boys [but only to the Pakistan players], but I bowled a couple of legspinners to Kirby, then I bowled the googly. He didn’t pick it. And he was like, ‘you can come bowl to the senior guys’.”As much as I tried to stay calm and bowl to them like normal people, I just couldn’t, because I was bowling to Ben Stokes and Alastair Cook and people with Ashes hundreds, and bowling in the same nets as people with five-fors and Test-match wickets. It was crazy.”But you nicked them off, didn’t you?Rehan grins: “Well, yeah, that did happen… yeah.””I bowled Ben Stokes a couple of legspinners and a googly and he snicked off; he wasn’t the happiest so I didn’t celebrate… I just took the ball and walked back to my mark. But when I snicked off Alastair Cook, that was a bit more like it. He wasn’t as bothered. But I didn’t celebrate because he’s probably the best player in Test cricket. So I was just lucky to do that.”The impact that Rehan made was so telling that MCC politely declined any media coverage, rightly suggesting that too much attention at such a young age would be detrimental. But when Rehan was brought back to Lord’s in 2017 for the visit of West Indies, he sensed a new-found respect from the players in his sights.”When I bowled to Pakistan, they didn’t take me seriously and I got a few more wickets against them,” he says. “But West Indies played me like an actual bowler, which was a big difference, and I learnt so much more. They just showed a different standard. When I bowled to Jason Holder, it was just a different class. He was the No. 1 Test allrounder at the time, and it was just crazy.”

“I never had much coaching when I was younger. It was mainly YouTube and a few tips from my dad. But you can take everything as a learning, whether it’s watching someone bowl badly or watching someone bowl well”

Word was spreading beyond the confines of the nets too. “Steve Kirby just dropped it on me during one of the sessions, saying I’m gonna meet Shane Warne,” Rehan recalls. “I thought I was just going to sit down with him and have a chat – that was already amazing – but when he said ‘come on, let’s go have a bowl’, I couldn’t feel my toes!”It is shocking to think that Rehan hadn’t yet turned three when Warne played his last Test in January 2007. But thanks to YouTube, his legend lives on, and in fact, it was Rehan’s hours spent studying Warne’s variations that helped to inspire a diminutive young seamer to first give it a rip.”I never had much coaching when I was younger,” he says. “It was mainly YouTube and a few tips from my dad. But you can take everything as a learning, whether it’s watching someone bowl badly or watching someone bowl well. Even the other day [against Afghanistan], I took my first spell as another learning curve. You never look down on yourself after a couple of bad balls or a bad spell. It’s always about having belief till the end.”But as his game continues to progress, the coaching support around Rehan becomes increasingly valuable. He speaks particularly highly of Richard Dawson, the Young Lions head coach whose name has entered the frame for the interim Test role, and whose methods are sufficiently hands-off to allow him to develop at his own pace.”He’s been a massive help,” Rehan says. “He’s not a big technical coach; he’s more of a feel coach, which I don’t mind. I much prefer it when people tell me how to do stuff, rather than telling me what to do and what not to do… like front leg, front arm, this and that. With Daws, he says if the outcome’s good, you don’t need to worry about anything else. Focus on the outcome – if you’re landing in a good area, your action must be good enough.”Sometimes I’ll force myself to bowl full tosses, just to see if I have control of the ball,” he adds. “In nets, I’ll see if I can hit the top of middle on the full, or bowl a half-tracker. Because if someone’s going well, you want to get them off strike, if he’s whacking the good balls, you need to learn how to give them one, so it’s not just about bowling in one area for every batter.”

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It has been a remarkable journey for Rehan already, and he doesn’t even turn 18 until August. But if the World Cup final marks his first major foray into the limelight, then the events of the past 12 months – including his first season of List A cricket for Leicestershire, and even a call-up to the squad for India’s tour match at Durham last summer – have all added to the sense that he is ready for whatever is coming next.Rehan Ahmed has four-fors in each of his three outings at the Under-19 World Cup so far•ICC via Getty”Joining Leicestershire was probably one of the best decisions that I could have made at the time,” he says, having initially been part of Nottinghamshire’s youth system. “Notts is a massive county – and obviously you never close doors – but I felt at Leicestershire there were more coaches available at more times. When you see Paul Nixon coaching the Under-10s, you’re like, yeah, this is the county for me.”Though he didn’t play in the County Select XI fixture against India, he did more than just gawp at the superstars in his midst. “Just being around the whole Indian team, you see [Virat] Kohli walking up there and Rishabh Pant hitting it, and Rohit Sharma playing – it was just crazy. But then I came on a substitute and I took a catch of [Cheteshwar] Pujara. He just guided it to me at leg slip, and I took the catch, and he’s walking off giving me a death stare, and I’m just smiling because I’ve caught Pujara out.”And it will be India in his sights once more on Saturday, albeit a generation of players that he may yet get a chance to mix with on a more regular basis as their careers progress.”They’re a very good batting side,” he says, after watching Yash Dhull’s century, and 94 from Shaik Rasheed put their semi-final against Australia out of reach. “If they bat first and we try and restrict them to a low score, it could happen… but it doesn’t really matter. They have bowled teams out for 50 before, so they have a decent attack as well.”Either way, Rehan is convinced that the events of England’s semi-final, and the fact that they were forced to dig so deep – first with the bat, as George Bell and Alex Horton transformed their target with an unbeaten 95-run stand, and then with the ball – can only serve as a huge confidence boost to the whole squad.”Belly is one of the best players I’ve seen in pressure situations,” Rehan says. “Even though he’s quite a nervous guy, he always finds a way. When I was batting with Belly, I was like, ‘he’s going to do it again’. If Belly’s there, you never lose hope.”That last game, Horts came out and he still smashed a fifty from No. 8. It just shows that we’ve got batting to the bottom. [Jacob] Bethell is in unbelievable form, Prest is in unbelievable form, [Will] Luxton is batting so well. [James] Rew is doing his own thing. Everyone’s contributing.”It’s just about doing our own skills the best we can, because it’s the biggest game of all our lives right now.”

دانيلو: بيراميدز منافس جيد.. وباريس سان جيرمان المرشح للفوز بكأس إنتركونتيننتال

علق دانيلو، لاعب الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي فلامينجو البرازيلي، على فوز فريقه على بيراميدز، في نصف نهائي بطولة كأس إنتركونتيننتال “كأس التحدي”.

ولعب بيراميدز مع فلامينجو، في نصف نهائي كأس إنتركونتيننتال في قطر، وفاز بهدفين نظيفين.

طالع | موعد مباراة باريس سان جيرمان وفلامينجو في نهائي كأس إنتركونتيننتال

وقال دانيلو في لقاء مع قناة “بي إن سبورتس”: “كانت مباراة جيدة جدًا أمام منافس جيد، ولكن نحن لعبنا بالجد المطلوب واستحقينا الانتصار”.

وتابع: “مباراة باريس سان جيرمان ستكون صعبة جدًا وممتعة، باريس هو المرشح للفوز وسنحاول أن نقدم أفضل ما لدينا ونمنح السعادة لجماهيرنا”.

ومن المقرر أن يلتقي فلامينجو البرازيلي أمام باريس سان جيرمان الفرنسي في نهائي كأس إنتركونتيننتال.

Flamengo x Grêmio: como é o histórico do confronto?

MatériaMais Notícias

Flamengo e Grêmio vão se enfrentar, na noite desta quinta-feira (13), às 20h, no Maracanã. Ao longo da história, os times fizeram grandes jogos. Confira o retrospecto!

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Estatísticas gerais de Flamengo x Grêmio

Os dois times já se enfrentaram em 106 oportunidades, com 36 vitórias para cada lado e 34 empates. Jogando em casa, o Rubro-negro leva vantagem. Em 57 jogos, são 28 vitórias, 16 empates e 13 derrotas para o Imortal. No último encontro, vitória do Grêmio por 3 a 2 em jogo disputado pelo Brasileirão.

Grêmio tem desfalque de peso

Diagnosticado com uma lesão muscular de grau três, Diego Costa será desfalque do Grêmio contra o Flamengo. Por conta da gravidade, o centroavante não deve ser visto em campo com a camisa do Imortal por algumas semanas.

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O atleta se lesionou na partida contra o Estudiantes, pela 6ª rodada da fase de grupos da Libertadores. O atacante precisou ser substituído no início da segunda etapa com dores na região do adutor da coxa esquerda.

Contra o Flamengo, o Grêmio deve iniciar o jogo com João Pedro Galvão, que é o único centroavante de origem disponível para o técnico Renato Gaúcho. Outra opção, André Henrique está em tratamento de uma lesão no tornozelo direito.

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Navi Mumbai gears up for India-Australia epic, but will Healy play?

The Australia captain could be in doubt, having missed two matches with a calf strain

S Sudarshanan29-Oct-20254:35

Krishnamurthy: ‘X-factor Shafali can put India ahead’

Big picture – How will Shafali-Mandhana bat?The stakes couldn’t be higher.Australia are here with a clean slate. They have been pushed back multiple times during this World Cup, and they’ve found a way back each time. Two of their batters, Alyssa Healy and Ashleigh Gardner, have scored two centuries each. Two of their bowlers, Annabel Sutherland and Alana King, have taken more than ten wickets each. And apart from everything else that makes them such intimidating opponents, Australia have not lost an ODI knockout game since they lost to India in the the semi-finals of the 2017 World Cup.Related

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India are riding a wave of emotion. They recovered from a three-game losing streak to sneak into the semi-finals. In their last full game, played at the same venue, they posted their record World Cup total. No team has pushed Australia harder than India in recent times. And they are now two wins away from doing what no India women’s team has ever done.Their key player Smriti Mandhana has scored 105, 58, 117, 125 and 80 in her last five ODIs against Australia. But she’ll start from 0 again, and this time she’ll have an adjustment to make, with her usual opening partner Pratika Rawal, with whom she added a record 212 against New Zealand, ruled out of the World Cup. Mandhana is all set to open with Shafali Verma, and the new combination could have an effect on how she bats.In ODIs involving Shafali, Mandhana averages 51.83 and strikes at 85.55. When these two opened together, Shafali was usually the early aggressor. Mandhana took on that role when Shafali went out of the side, however, as her numbers in matches involving Rawal suggest: an average of 62.65, a strike rate of 108.75. How will the new (old) opening combination bat on Thursday?For Australia, there is a fair bit of intrigue around Healy’s availability. A minor calf strain sidelined her ahead of the game against England, and she missed two matches subsequently. Australia would not want to be reminded of the T20 World Cup semi-final from last year; Healy missed the clash and South Africa romped to an eight-wicket win.The second semi-final, for which the cheapest tickets were priced at INR 150 (as opposed to INR 100 for the Guwahati semi-final), is a sell-out. You can expect all of Navi Mumbai to cram itself into the DY Patil Stadium. They could get to witness an epic.Shafali Verma waits for her turn at the nets•ICC/Getty Images

Form guideAustralia WWWWW (last five completed ODIs, most recent first)
India WLLLWIn the spotlight – Phoebe Litchfield and Deepti SharmaPhoebe Litchfield loves playing India. She has one century and four fifties in just eight ODI innings against them, and averages 63.50. She has a wide range of sweeps that could potentially upset the rhythm of India’s spinners. After a pair of low scores against England and South Africa, Litchfield may feel she is due some runs too.Deepti Sharma has been India’s leading wicket-taker at this World Cup with 15 at 22.46. There will be a lot of focus on her during this game, because she has a fine record against Australia’s middle-order batters. She has dismissed Beth Mooney and Ashleigh Gardner twice each in ODIs, while going at less than a run a ball against both, Ellyse Perry three times, and Tahlia McGrath five times in nine innings. Only Perry and Annabel Sutherland from the current side have managed to hit Deepti for a six in ODIs.Team news – Australia sweat on Healy’s availabilityWhile Healy batted and kept wicket during Tuesday’s training session, she opted out of optional training on Wednesday, with Georgia Voll batting in partnership with Litchfield. Head coach Shelley Nitschke said Australia would give Healy “as much time as she needs” and will take a call on her participation on Thursday. That aside, expect Sophie Molineux to come back into the spin attack for Georgia Wareham, who played against South Africa but did not get a chance to bowl.Australia (probable): 1 Alyssa Healy (capt & wk), 2 Phoebe Litchfield, 3 Ellyse Perry, 4 Annabel Sutherland, 5 Beth Mooney, 6 Ashleigh Gardner, 7 Tahlia McGrath, 8 Sophie Molineux, 9 Alana King, 10 Kim Garth, 11 Megan Schutt.Shafali is likely to swap straight into India’s XI in Rawal’s place at the top of the order. Richa Ghosh, who was rested against Bangladesh after injuring her finger during the match against New Zealand, did not look in any discomfort during her keeping drills and batted a fair bit on Tuesday. Sneh Rana and Kranti Gaud, both of whom were also rested against Bangladesh, could come back into the XI.India (probable): 1 Smriti Mandhana, 2 Shafali Verma, 3 Harleen Deol, 4 Harmanpreet Kaur (capt), 5 Jemimah Rodrigues, 6 Richa Ghosh (wk), 7 Deepti Sharma, 8 Sneh Rana, 9 Kranti Gaud, 10 N Shree Charani, 11 Renuka Singh.2:15

Australia coach Nitschke: Not underdogs, but also not favourites’

Pitch and conditionsThe game will be played on the pitch on which Sri Lanka played Bangladesh. That track was devoid of grass and had a bright brown look to it. It is expected to be a high-scoring game. There has been rain in Navi Mumbai in the lead-up to the match, with the India Meteorological Department (IMD) issuing a yellow alert for Wednesday and Thursday, but the forecast for matchday has cleared up somewhat. The match will go into a reserve day should it not finish on Thursday.Stats and trivia Mandhana and Shafali have opened together 25 times in ODIs, adding 893 runs at an average of 37.20 and a run rate of 5.38. Mandhana and Rawal, who have opened together 23 times, are India’s most successful opening pair in ODIs, having put on 1799 runs at 78.21 and 6.06. Alana King’s average of 34.63 and economy rate of 5.93 against India are her worst by a distance against any opposition in ODIs. Mandhana (160.00), Harleen Deol (116.66), Harmanpreet Kaur (114.58), Jemimah Rodrigues (113.23) and Deepti Sharma (105.40) have 100-plus strike rates against the legspinner. Australia are on a 15-match winning streak in ODI World Cups. They had also won 15 in a row across the 1997 and 2000 editions. Megan Schutt is one wicket away from becoming the leading wicket-taker for Australia in ODI World Cups. She has 39 now, on par with Lyn FullstonQuotes”Ash [Gardner] has been unbelievable. We all know what she’s capable of with the bat, but to take her game to the next level, and do that in a World Cup, has been fantastic. She’s someone who is very diligent in everything she does; she’s a hard worker. When she’s at her best, it’s about making sure that she’s enjoying the game and enjoying the environment and she’s getting in the contest.”
“I was playing domestic cricket and was in good touch. [Semi-finals] are not something new for me because I’ve played many semi-finals before. It’s just a matter of keeping my mind clear and giving myself confidence. I’ve been in such situations earlier, so it’s nothing new. I’ll keep telling myself to stay calm and believe in myself. So absolutely, I’ll do well, 200%.”

Man Utd and INEOS progress in bid to sign £40m+ star who gives "everything"

Manchester United find themselves fighting to climb into the Champions League slots and now appear to be closing in on the signing of a midfielder to help their aspirations of competing with their rivals.

The Red Devils have taken time to get going this season, and Ruben Amorim has needed to face his fair share of criticism amid scrutiny when results haven’t gone in the favour of the Old Trafford outfit.

Still, a run of five Premier League matches unbeaten before the international break has been enough to restore confidence among an expectant fanbase, who appreciate that the former Sporting boss is trying to implement a complex system that will take time to fully perfect.

With Lisandro Martinez nearing a return to full fitness, Amorim was asked before his side’s clash with Everton whether the Argentinian defender could be an unlikely solution to step into the breach. However, he moved to play down any notion that he could fill the vacant hole in the engine room.

He said: “A smart, intelligent football player can play in a lot of positions, but it is not the right position for him. I feel Licha is becoming close to be ready able to play. We need to be careful, but he is clearly in a better position.”

Come January, it feels likely that Manchester United will look to find a long-term solution with Casemiro coming towards the twilight years of his career.

Brighton & Hove Albion star Carlos Baleba is a long-term Red Devils’ target, albeit his £115 million valuation is likely to put their pursuit of the Cameroon international to bed.

That being said, Manchester United and INEOS could now be willing to go in a different direction as they close in on the arrival of another talent from the English top-flight.

Man Utd in advanced talks to sign Joao Gomes from Wolves

According to Trivela, Manchester United’s discussions to sign Wolverhampton Wanderers star Joao Gomes have progressed to advance stages in recent days as they look to complete a deal in January that could be worth in the region of £44 million.

The Brazilian star could put the cat among the pigeons regarding Kobbie Mainoo’s long-term future at the club if he were to come in after registering a solitary assist in 15 appearances this campaign.

Five similar players to Joao Gomes (FBRef)

Djaoui Cisse

Rennes

Thomas Partey

Villarreal

Ilaix Moriba

Celta Vigo

Junior Mwanga

Nantes

Kevin Danois

Auxerre

Rob Edwards is keen for the 24-year-old to stay in the West Midlands despite Wolves staring down the barrel at relegation to the Championship, something that a move to Old Trafford could alleviate if he were to seek a new career challenge.

Dubbed as someone who gives “everything” by Vitor Pereira, he would represent a younger upgrade on some of Amorim’s current crop in midfield, albeit it remains to be seen whether they can push a deal over the line once the window opens.

Man Utd now make approach to sign exciting gem who shone at U17 World Cup

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