Jordan Cox seizes the night as Kent end their long wait for T20 glory

Vital half-century is followed by a tour de force in the field as Somerset are outmuscled

David Hopps18-Sep-2021Kent 167 for 7 (Cox 58*, Smeed 43, van der Merwe 3-19) beat Somerset 142 for 9 (Smeed 43, Denly 3-31) by 25 runsKent ended a 12-year drought without a trophy with a decisive 25-run victory against Somerset in the final of the Vitality Blast. And no matter how often it might be repeated that they deserved their success because of an all-round squad effort the whole summer long, attention will forever cling to Jordan Cox, who followed up a match-winning innings with a catch that never was and, minutes later, played the starring role in a catch that was so dreamlike it surely never happened.For Cox, only 20 but much more proven than many of the young players who graced Finals Day, it was a spellbinding day. He sprung to Kent’s rescue with a nervelessly-judged, unbeaten 58 from 28 balls (38 coming off his last 11 balls in the final three overs) and then played a central role in two notable “catches” – the first overruled by the combined might of the officials, the second which did not see his name appear in the scorebook.Blast Finals Day has a different feel to much of the T20 cricket played globally. Only rarely does it satisfy the yearning for big scores and an avalanche of sixes. It is September and squares on all major grounds are fatigued. But a slow pitch held up much better than might have been anticipated and another celebratory capacity crowd at Edgbaston insisted that, whatever uncertainty surrounds the future of county cricket, this tournament has a place in English cricket’s hearts.The final might have swung on an extraordinary moment when Somerset were 71 for 3 off 10.2. Smeed, who had played with impressive sagacity for 43 from 32 balls, appeared to have holed out for 37 at deep square leg, slog-sweeping Joe Denly’s legspin. The only problem was that as Cox nonchalantly took the catch, his team-mate, Daniel Bell-Drummond, came sliding in a split second later. Bell-Drummond was touching Cox and Bell-Drummond was touching the boundary marker. Thanks, skip. It was a daisy chain to disaster. After urgent deliberations between the three umpires and the match referee, Smeed was awarded six. It was a dubious ruling.Make them pay, the rest of Somerset’s party would have silently urged Smeed. But three balls later Smeed holed out against Denly, as he clothed a low full toss for Cox once more to trot in and swallow the top-edge. The impassioned fielder allowed himself a few words of retribution, but his most spectacular intervention was still to come. Another swipe to leg from Lewis Gregory off the ageless Darren Stevens, and Cox this time leapt balletically over the midwicket boundary to hang in the air, Cristiano Ronaldo style, and pat back a controlled catch to Matt Milnes. Somerset never looked likely again.ESPNcricinfo LtdAll day, wickets had fallen in the Powerplay and Somerset were no different. Tom Banton, whose game would probably benefit from a winter of reflection, was stumped second ball for nought as Denly found turn for the first time. Lewis Goldsworthy fell to a leading edge. By the end of the 12th over, Somerset were 89 for 5, with Tom Lammonby deeply unfortunate to be adjudged lbw to a big turner from Denly that was sailing past leg stump. Why is the review process not implanted into the final stages of the Blast? Why has it not been implanted for years?Denly, who had not bowled a full T20 allocation this season, finished with 3 for 31, an excellent accomplice for his fellow legspinner, Afghanistan’s Qais Ahmad, who removed Tom Abell and Roelof van der Merwe at low cost. Opportunities abound in T20 cricket for budding legspinners, but it is still largely upstart young batters who are coming through. And Somerset’s have temporarily hit a wall.Kent’s 167 for 7 had looked about par. They stated solidly with the bat. Bell-Drummond was struck on the hand first ball, by Craig Overton, more disconcerting than anything he had experienced during his blissful match-winning 82 in the semi-final win against Sussex, but he and Zak Crawley looked a classy opening pair.Then Roelof van der Merwe intervened. Somerset’s fielding was ragged in their own semi-final win against Hampshire and whether they spent the intervening hours sleeping, watching TV or playing video games, they knew they had to raise their game. For Gregory, a captain playing when not fully fit, a back affliction preventing him from bowling, it would be tougher than most.Smeed started the recovery, clinging to a fast catch at short midwicket to silence Bell-Drummond. But the tour de force came when Denly decided to hit his first ball over long-off for six, quite a gambit even in this era. Abell pelted back from mid-off to hold a stunning catch near the boundary, completed by a full-length dive and recognisable jaw jut of satisfaction. Gregory had wisely moved himself from that position moments earlier.Remarkably, according to those remarkable minds who research such things, it was Denly’s fourth golden duck this year, adding to unproductive days for Brisbane Heat, Lahore Qalandars and London Spirit. He is not thought to have tried to bash all of them out of the ground.Abell’s jaw had hardly returned to its normal position when van der Merwe took his third wicket in his first nine balls, as Sam Billings slapped him to extra cover. Van der Merwe, a dyed-in-the-wool competitor, finished with 3 for 19, whereupon a hard-headed rebuilding policy from Jack Leaning and Cox left ambition until the last few overs.Leaning, who gave two difficult opportunities to Ben Green, a return catch, and the wicketkeeper Banton, a partially obscured, knee-high stumping that he did not get near, did not see it through, but just as Somerset imagined themselves favourites, Cox began to send legside blows into the night sky, Somerset’s seamers vanquished, as Kent set a total to be reckoned with.

Celtic thought they had dream Scott Brown heir, then he left for nothing

Celtic could not break free of Aberdeen at the top of the Scottish Premiership table as they were held to a 2-2 draw at Parkhead on Saturday.

The Hoops and the Dons had both won their openng seven matches in the division ahead of the clash at Paradise over the weekend, but neither side could continue their perfect start.

Reo Hatate and Kyogo Furuhashi had the home team 2-0 ahead at the break, and on course to move three points clear, before goals from Ester Sokler and Graeme Shinnie in the second half rescued a point.

Brendan Rodgers will be hoping that his team can put daylight between themselves and Aberdeen over the coming months to move closer to a fourth straight title.

Captain Callum McGregor, who turned 31 in the summer, is gunning for his tenth Premiership title, having won nine – as part of a 22-trophy haul – in his Celtic career to date.

The former Scotland international, who retired from national duty after the 2024 European Championships, is the current skipper after taking over from iconic Hoops midfielder Scott Brown.

Scott Brown's Celtic career in numbers

In the summer of 2007, the Scottish giants swooped to sign the ‘exciting’ 21-year-old central midfielder from rivals Hibernian for a fee of £4.5m.

It was reported that Rangers were initially expected to secure a deal for the talented youngster, who had played 124 first-team matches for Hibs by the age of 21.

Celtic were able to steal a march on their fierce rivals and landed his services ahead of the 2007/08 campaign, for a record fee between two Scottish sides at the time.

Scott Brown in action for Celtic during the 2016/2017 campaign.

The Scottish dynamo did not take any time to settle into life in Glasgow. In his debut season, Brown produced three goals and four assists in 34 appearances to help his team win the title.

He became a staple of the Celtic midfield for the next 14 years or so and racked up 46 goals and 63 assists in 615 appearances in all competitions before his move to Aberdeen in the summer of 2021.

In those 14 years, Brown won a staggering ten Premiership titles – a feat McGregor hopes to match this term – along with six SFA Cups and seven League Cups.

As the Scotland international, who was capped 55 times by his country, headed into the final years of his career at Parkhead, the club attempted to sign players with a view to being his long-term heir.

Celtic once thought they had found a dream replacement for Scott Brown when they swooped to sign Ivorian starlet Ismaila Soro at the start of 2020.

How much Celtic paid to sign Ismaila Soro

The Hoops reportedly splashed out a fee of £2m to sign the central midfielder from Bnei Yehuda in the January transfer window in the 2019/20 campaign, with Neil Lennon in charge at the time.

He endured a difficult start to his career in Scotland, as the youngster was not selected for a single Premiership game in the second half of the season.

At the start of his first full season with Celtic, Soro admitted that he had problems stepping into Brown’s shoes, as his understudy at the time, but that he remained in Glasgow during lockdown and worked hard to show Lennon that he had the quality to step up.

He claimed it was a “big challenge” to replace what Brown offered in midfield but added that he has a “strong” mentality and would work to make himself a worthy heir.

Appearances

19

31

Starts

11

25

Pass accuracy

90%

88%

Tackles + interceptions per game

3.1

2.8

Ground duel success rate

52%

53%

Aerial duel success rate

50%

58%

As you can see in the table above, Soro showed plenty of promise in his first Premiership season, which also happened to be Brown’s last in a Hoops jersey.

The Ivorian gem was more reliable than the veteran Scotsman in his use of the ball and made more tackles and interceptions combined per game on average, whilst winning a similar percentage of his duels on the ground.

First Impressions

What did pundits and fans alike think about their new star signing when they arrived? Football FanCast's 'First Impressions' series has everything you need.

These statistics suggest that Celtic had a dream long-term heir to Brown on their hands, as he had already started to offer similar qualities and attributes as a combative midfield player in the 2020/21 campaign.

Ismaila Soro's Celtic struggles

Despite his promising form under Lennon in his first full campaign in the Premiership, Soro was unable to kick on and become Brown’s replacement after the captain left in the summer of 2021.

Ange Postecoglou came in to replace Lennon in the same summer and the Australian seemingly had different ideas for his midfield, signing James McCarthy ahead of the 2021/22 campaign, and then bringing in Matt O’Riley and Reo Hatate in the January transfer window.

Soro hardly got a look-in that season, featuring in eight Premiership games and starting one league game. In those eight games, the midfielder did not strengthen his case to play regularly, losing 65% of his duels and 76% of his ground duels in the division.

He also only featured in two of the club’s six Europa League group stage matches, as Postecoglou made it clear that the Ivorian was not a part of his long-term plans.

Soro was then sent out on loan to Arouca in Portugal for the 2022/23 campaign, in which he made 22 starts in the Liga Portugal, before being released for nothing in the summer of 2023.

Rodgers replaced Postecoglou that summer and seemingly did not want to give the 26-year-old another chance to impress, despite playing regularly in Portugal in the previous term, and allowed him to move on for nothing.

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Soro signed for Beitar Jerusalem on a free transfer and made 30 league starts during the 2023/24 campaign, which shows that he has finally emerged as a key player for a club.

Unfortunately, it did not work out for him as a replacement for Brown, after appearing to be his dream heir under Lennon, but he is now playing regularly again and still has plenty of time left, at the age of 26, to go on and enjoy a successful career.

How Man City's season unravelled: From beating Barcelona and challenging Chelsea in the WSL to fighting for Champions League qualification amid a crippling injury crisis

The Cityzens have lost three of their last four league games, leaving them 12 points off the leaders and outside the European places

Manchester City's final game before the Women's Super League winter break could have sparked this season's title race into life. It came a day after Chelsea had dropped points for the first time, thus presenting the Cityzens with the chance to close the gap on the leaders to three points. Beat Everton, who had picked up just one league victory all season, and City would be right there on the tail of the Blues, despite the champions' near-perfect start. But instead of being a catalyst for a tantalising tussle for the title, it would prove to be the beginning of the end of City's tilt.

Rocked by Alex Greenwood's knee injury just a few days earlier, the City defence looked lost, and Everton took full advantage in a stunning 2-1 win. When the title hopefuls returned to league action some five weeks later, the back line was exposed again, this time by local rivals Manchester United in a damning 4-2 loss. Victory over Aston Villa the following weekend offered some respite, but if City's bid for a first WSL crown since 2016 wasn't already doomed, the final nail was hammered into the coffin by Arsenal on Sunday, in a 4-3 thriller.

"Of course, it's a blow," head coach Gareth Taylor said after that defeat. "You never want to lose games against teams you're competing with for those places, but that's our objective now, to be in the [Champions League] qualification places at the end of the season."

This is the team that pushed Chelsea to the final day last season, one that came into this campaign driven by the disappointment of falling short and, through the first half of it, looked like a real threat in all competitions, even shocking European champions Barcelona in October. Now, though, they're 12 points off the pace in the WSL and not even in a Champions League qualification spot. Why has it all unravelled?

AFPRavaged by injuries

There's one really obvious issue to point to here and that is the injuries City have sustained. Perhaps the tone was set back in July, before the season had even began, when summer signing Risa Shimizu was stretchered off at the Olympics with an ACL injury, just two weeks after being unveiled as a City player. Bad luck is also encapsulated by the fortunes of young defender Naomi Layzell, who had a breakout game with a goal and assist against Barca, only to be forced to leave the field with an ankle issue before full-time. She would be sidelined for two months.

In the time since, Greenwood, Vivianne Miedema and Lauren Hemp have all undergone knee surgeries, star striker Khadija Shaw only came back from an injury last month and Laia Aleixandri hasn't quite rediscovered her best form yet since returning from a problem sustained on international duty before Christmas.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesLack of depth

It's not just the importance of these injured players that has knocked City, but also the quantity of them, as Taylor doesn't have the deepest squad. That's not a passable excuse for their struggles, as they are a huge club with the finances to stock a big squad. However, it does offer an explanation for why they have endured such a devastating few weeks.

That's not changed much despite them being active in the January transfer window, either. Yes, they've done well to bring in Brazil forward Kerolin, named MVP in the NWSL in the 2023 season; defender Rebecca Knaak, who looked particularly good against Arsenal; and Austria international Laura Wienroither, to add necessary depth at full-back. Aemu Oyama, a star for Japan at youth level, is an exciting signing for the future, too.

But the departures of Alanna Kennedy and Chloe Kelly mean they're still a little short in some key areas, especially while players like Greenwood and Hemp are on the sidelines. In hindsight, this squad probably needed to avoid any mid-to-long-term injuries this season in order to really go toe-to-toe with Chelsea in the title race, particularly given how efficient the Blues have been.

Getty Images SportQuestionable squad-building

"This season, we're probably feeling the strain of being a Champions League group for the first time," Taylor said on Tuesday, speaking about that lack of depth. "That changes the schedule a lot. But squad depth, and quality of squad depth, is always going to be really important for any team to compete on multiple [fronts]. We've probably had to turn to young players quite a bit.

"Most coaches will always say they want that depth of quality to be a little bit better, but the teams that have done well, if you look at Chelsea, they've been able to build a squad over the last five, six, seven years, through the successes they've had. When you win the league, it gives you that two months then to be able to invest, knowing that [you're] going to be playing in the Champions League [group stage] and in multiple competitions, while the other two teams who qualify for the Champions League [qualifying rounds], there's no guarantee you're going to be in that competition. By the time you have qualified for [the group stage], the transfer window has closed. You're hedging your bets a little bit."

This makes sense to some degree. After all, having Champions League football makes it easier to attract top players, while giving minutes to a squad built for four competitions becomes tougher if you then lose out on European qualification. Yet, Man City are not a small club. They should be able to attract players regardless, they are certainly in the financial position to be able to build a big squad and may well have avoided some of those qualifying defeats if they had one.

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Getty ImagesCrumbling defence

As it is, that lack of depth and the injuries suffered has impacted the back line more than any other area of the team. The time spent on the sidelines by Greenwood, Layzell, Aleixandri and Shimizu has left City with only one senior right-back for most of the season, and often just two centre-backs until Knaak's January arrival, while Leila Ouahabi is the only left-back in the squad to have played a game for the club. Again, this comes down to squad composition as well as absences.

As a result, City have conceded an uncharacteristically high number of goals, with 18 shipped in 13 WSL fixtures. That's an average of 1.38 per game, up from 0.68 last season. Most notably, in the four WSL outings since Greenwood's injury, which began with that defeat at Everton, City have conceded 12 times. That's an eye-watering three goals per game.

It's no huge surprise that Taylor's team don't look as sturdy at the back without their captain, and Aleixandri's surprising dip in form hasn't allowed her to step up and lead the defence as well as many might've have imagined – not yet, at least. As they say, form is temporary, class is permanent. But some of the problems have been preventable, too. For example, when Kennedy came in for Greenwood for the Everton game, City didn't adjust their high line. That inability to recognise that tweaks were necessary, in order to account for the two centre-backs having differing strengths, proved costly.

Jayden Goodwin could make Western Australia first-class debut

The son of former Zimbabwe batter Murray had planned to take two years out of the game for his Mormon mission

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Nov-2021Jayden Goodwin, the son of former Zimbabwe batter Murray Goodwin, could make his Western Australia first-class debut this week after being named in the Sheffield Shield squad to take on Queensland.Goodwin, a 19-year-old left hander, comes into the squad in place of Sam Whiteman who has been ruled out with delayed symptoms of concussion after weekend grade cricket.Goodwin has been considered a huge talent for some time but was set to take two years out of the game to undertake a Mormon mission in Zimbabwe – leaving in 2020 midway through a rookie contract with WA which was left open for him – before the pandemic prevented international travel.”I had uncles that did [the mission]; they go away and serve God and help others, and just give to the community,” he told earlier this year. I just really wanted to do that. I saw it as a great blessing.”But when I got the contract [with WA], because it was my dream job, it was the hardest decision I ever had to make. It’s a weird thing to think about, to give up everything – and having a contract was everything to me – to go and do something to show your love for God and teach others about Christ.”The impact of Covid-19 meant the mission was relocated to Bunbury near Perth but he has since opted to cut it short and return to cricket.His father, Murray, played 19 Tests and 71 ODIs for Zimbabwe. He had emigrated to Western Australia as a 13-year-old and scored 4078 Sheffield Shield runs.

90% passing: Man Utd star just proved he’ll be "incredible" under Amorim

Ruud Van Nistelrooy began his interim stint in charge of Manchester United with a bang on Wednesday night, as his reinvigorated Red Devils side emphatically beat Leicester City 5-2 in EFL Cup action.

Nobody knows quite how long the Dutchman will be in temporary charge for, after being handed the reins following his fellow compatriot Erik ten Hag’s dismissal, but the United legend is already firmly in the good books as boss after he spearheaded this win.

There were many top performers from a United perspective on the night, with the likes of Casemiro and Bruno Fernandes obviously standing out for their goals, among other bright sparks in the Premier League club’s ranks.

Top performers for United vs Leicester

Casemiro’s display feels like a good place to start, with the Brazilian opening the scoring on the night to set his team on their way to a convincing demolition job victory, after hammering home a fierce early effort past helpless opposition goalkeeper Danny Ward.

He would pick up his second strike in the first half too, as the United number 18 blew off any cobwebs beginning to form with a top-drawer showing, which saw the ex-Real Madrid midfielder also register three blocks and win five duels when competently completing his defensive work.

Fernandes also shone brightly for his side, after putting in some notably lacklustre displays towards the back end of Ten Hag’s bumpy tenure, with the Portuguese ace boasting his own brace alongside Casemiro.

Away from those goals helping his side cruise to a mid-week win, the impressive 30-year-old also registered four key passes as he stylishly went about his business, hunting down a potential assist away from simply converting chances that came his way.

Other standout faces during the statement victory included Alejandro Garnacho picking up a goal and an assist for his troubles down the left wing, on top of Manuel Ugarte slotting in nicely to the side next to Casemiro in the holding midfield positions, with plenty more to come from the Uruguayan gem if Ruben Amorim does walk in through the door shortly.

Ugarte's performance in numbers

Of course, Ugarte and the rumoured successor to Ten Hag know each other well, with the 23-year-old developing into a top talent at Sporting CP under Amorim’s watchful eye, so much so that he ended up winning himself a bumper £51.1m move to Paris St. Germain subsequently.

Now, the pair could be reunited at Old Trafford imminently, which will be music to the ears of the United number 25 who conjured up one of his best performances in England to date last night.

Stat

Ugarte

Minutes played

90

Goals scored

0

Assists

0

Touches

75

Accurate passes

52/58 (90%)

Clearances

1

Interceptions

2

Total tackles

4

Total duels won

6/8

Whilst the likes of Casemiro would put in a far flashier display than what Ugarte would deliver, the South American was still key in United picking up their first win post-ten Hag, with the ex-PSG man calm and measured on the ball with a 90% pass accuracy in-tact come the full-time whistle.

Moreover, it was also the United number 25’s forcefulness to break up play and launch into tackles that ensured Leicester didn’t get more than the two goals they helped themselves to at the Theatre of Dreams, with six duels won on top of four tackles being registered.

Labelled as putting in an “incredible” performance after the game by football journalist Dylan McBennett, a lot more will be expected of the summer buy as he grows more and more accustomed to the challenges of playing for the Red Devils, with Amorim’s potential arrival no doubt boosting him even more.

Until there is official confirmation on Amorim being Ten Hag’s replacement, however, Van Nistelrooy will continue to be the main man in the dug-out – and based on his team’s showing against Leicester, they’re in capable hands for the meantime.

No Rashford, Fernandes gets new role: Man Utd's dream XI under Amorim

Manchester United could be set for an exciting period under the new potential boss.

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Shaheen Shah Afridi breaks into top five in Test rankings for bowlers

Latham, Karunaratne in top 10 of batting rankings; Jadeja No. 2 allrounder

ESPNcricinfo staff01-Dec-2021Shaheen Shah Afridi has broken into the top five of the ICC Test bowling rankings for the first time following his five-for against Bangladesh in Pakistan’s eight-wicket win in the first Test in Chattogram. Afridi, who finished with a match haul of seven wickets, moved up three places to No. 5, overtaking James Anderson, Kagiso Rabada and Neil Wagner in the process.Each of the three bowlers Afridi has overtaken will have an opportunity to make gains of their own. Wagner could have the first crack if he makes New Zealand’s XI for the second and final Test against India in Mumbai. Anderson is likely to line up for the first Ashes Test next week, while Rabada will spearhead South Africa’s pace attack during their home Tests against India later this month.Full rankings tables

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Meanwhile, Afridi’s new-ball partner Hasan Ali also moved five places to 11th, his best-ever position so far, following seven wickets in the Chattogram Test. This included figures of 5 for 51 that hastened Bangladesh’s collapse in the first innings after Liton Das and Mushfiqur Rahim put on 206 runs for the fifth wicket.Kyle Jamieson, who impressed in his maiden outing in the subcontinent, was ranked ninth, while Tim Southee was within a point of second-placed R Ashwin following his eight-wicket match haul in Kanpur. Pat Cummins, Australia’s new Test captain, heads the list.Among batters, Tom Latham and Dimuth Karunaratne made significant gains for their efforts in Kanpur and Galle respectively. Latham, who made 95 and 52 in New Zealand’s thrilling draw, jumped five places to No. 9, while the Sri Lankan captain was two spots higher st seven following scores of 147 and 83 in Sri Lanka’s 187-run win in the first Test.Over in Bangladesh, the nature of Pakistan’s come-from-behind win had a few other gainers too. Abid Ali’s 133 and 91 helped him jump 27 slots to a career-best 20th rank, one place above Mushfiqur. Among the other gainers was Bangladesh left-arm spinner Taijul Islam climbed two places to 23rd after picking up a seven-for in Pakistan’s first innings.In the allrounders’ rankings, Ravindra Jadeja jumped one place to be ranked second, behind West Indies’ Jason Holder. Jadeja struck a defiant half-century in the first innings, while his five wickets in the match also helped him jump to 19th in the bowling chart.

Antoine Griezmann is rolling back the years at Atletico Madrid – but is this his last dance before making MLS his home?

The Frenchman is being linked with a move to the U.S., but remains a key man for Diego Simeone going into Saturday's showdown at the Bernabeu

Antoine Griezmann has another important decision to make. This time around, there will be no big reveal in a horribly ill-advised documentary – or an even more foolish U-turn less than a year later.

According to the latest reports, Griezmann will remain true to his word: Atletico Madrid will be his "final club in Europe". The only real doubt lies over whether he will leave this summer or next – and which MLS franchise he will join, given his well-known adoration for all things American.

The feeling is that the Frenchman, who will turn 34 in March, is leaning towards departing at the end of the current campaign, meaning Saturday could well be the last dance for 'The Little Prince' in a Madrid derby (although Atleti could yet draw Real in the last 16 of the Champions League). The stakes couldn't be much higher regardless, with the Rojiblancos currently sitting second in La Liga, just one point behind their hated city rivals after 22 rounds.

However, victory wouldn't just put Atleti back in the driving seat in an absorbing three-way title race also featuring Barcelona, it would also give Griezmann an even greater chance of adding a fairy-tale ending to a remarkable tale of redemption.

AFP'Griezmann, die!'

When Griezmann returned to the Metropolitano for the first time after joining Barcelona in the summer of 2019, some irate fans left toy rats on the plaque previously placed in his honour outside of the stadium. Inside, meanwhile, a banner was unfurled on the Fondo Sur that read, "You wanted to have a name and you forgot to be a man." When the forward appeared for the warm-up, "Griezmann, die!" rang around the ground.

For Atleti supporters, it wasn't so much Griezmann leaving that upset them, it was the way that he did so. His future was supposed to have been resolved once and for all after 'The Decision', in which he claimed that the fans had been a massive factor in him snubbing Barcelona.

"When you're shown love at home, you don't go elsewhere," he told . And yet when Josep Maria Bartomeu came calling again the following summer, Griezmann turned his back on the Rojiblancos.

AdvertisementAFPSimeone key to return

It wasn't in the least bit surprising, then, that Atleti's shunned supporters savoured the striker's subsequent struggles at Camp Nou. One of the main motivations behind his move was the desire to win a Liga title and yet he failed to get his hands on a first winners' medal in either of his two, ill-fated seasons with Barca.

In a delicious irony for Atletico fans, they pipped the Blaugrana to first place in 2020-21 thanks in no small part to Luis Suarez, who had been brutally binned by Bartomeu the year before. So, they were seriously unimpressed by their club's decision to re-sign one of the biggest flops in football history in 2021.

Griezmann, though, still had one massive fan at the Metropolitano in Diego Simeone, who welcomed the World Cup winner back with open arms.

Atleti had broken their transfer record to sign Joao Felix to replace Griezmann, but he wasn't fit to wear the No.7 shirt the Frenchman had left behind. Felix had neither the intelligence nor the industry required to play as a forward in Simeone's side.

Griezmann, by complete contrast, is as smart as he is selfless and a very rare commodity in modern football: a superstar willing to sacrifice himself for the team, which is why France coach Didier Deschamps always appreciated him just as much as Simeone.

Getty ImagesContract clause chaos

Not everything went according to plan during Griezmann's first year back at the Metropolitano. For starters, there was the clause in his contract that stated if he played 45 minutes or more in 50 percent of Atleti's games during his two-year loan, the Rojiblancos would be forced to pay €40 million (£33m/$42m) to re-sign Griezmann on a permanent basis. This created a farcical situation in which he was repeatedly used as a second-half substitute as Atleti tried to reduce his game time.

However, a compromise agreement was eventually reached with Barca which enabled Atleti to buy Griezmann outright for €20m (£17m/$21m) in October 2022 and, unsurprisingly, the resolution resulted in an immediate upturn in Griezmann's form, for both club and country.

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Best player in La Liga

In a stunning demonstration of his versatility, which resulted in some long overdue love from the wider footballing world for Griezmann, he proved France's hybrid hero during their run to the final of the 2022 World Cup. And as soon as he returned to Atleti after the tournament in Qatar, he quickly set about proving himself the best player in La Liga.

In 2023, he was directly involved in 37 goals in all competitions – more than any other player plying their trade in Spain's top flight. In January 2024, he became Atletico's all-time leading scorer, surpassing the legendary Luis Aragones, who has a statue outside of the Metropolitano. Griezmann may well end up getting one of his own, as he's also just broken into the top 10 of the club's top appearance-makers.

Of course, that's a discussion for another day. Nobody at Atletico really wants to think about Griezmann's exit right now, not with the multi-talented attacker still performing so well.

£120k-per-week Tottenham ace now seriously considering exit to La Liga side

An exit from Tottenham Hotspur is beckoning for one member of Ange Postecoglou’s side, as a Madrid-based side look to take advantage.

Players likely to leave Spurs in 2025

Postecoglou, chairman Daniel Levy and technical director Johan Lange could decide to offload a few members of the Lilywhites squad when the turn of the year comes around – and there are a few interesting names in the frame to leave.

Club chiefs convinced their "extraordinary" player is set to join Tottenham

There is a theory growing within the side.

1 ByEmilio Galantini Oct 29, 2024

Timo Werner scored his first goal since March in Tottenham’s much-needed 2-1 win over Premier League champions Man City in the Carabao Cup on Wednesday, helping to guide Spurs into the quarter-finals, where they will face off against City’s cross-town rivals Manchester United in north London.

While this could go some way into eventually redeeming himself to the club’s hierarchy, depending on how he builds upon the strike against Pep Guardiola’s men, it is believed Werner is likely to leave Tottenham and head back to RB Leipzig at the end of his loan spell – as things stand.

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It has also been reported this week that summer signing Archie Gray could head out on loan in January, with the former Leeds United star struggling to establish himself as a regular Premier League starter as he’s relegated to a bit-part, cup-playing role in the squad.

Levy and Lange managed to shift plenty of deadwood in the summer window, with Joe Rodon, Emerson Royal, Oliver Skipp, Giovani Lo Celso, Eric Dier, Ryan Sessegnon, Ivan Perisic, Tanguy Ndombele, Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg and Japhet Tanganga all departing N17 permanently.

One player they didn’t manage to offload, though, was left-back and forgotten man Sergio Reguilon. On a reported £120,000-per-week, according to the Manchester Evening News, the Spaniard has been deemed surplus to requirements by Postecoglou – who gave the green light for Reguilon to spend last term on various loan spells at United and Brentford.

Reguilon was attracting interest from Turkey and other European clubs in the summer, but a move never materialised for the former Real Madrid starlet.

Reguilon seriously considering Tottenham exit to Getafe

As per Spanish media, it is now believed that Reguilon is seriously considering a Tottenham exit to Getafe – who could offer him the opportunity to make a return to Madrid by signing him as a free agent in 2025.

It is a golden opportunity for the La Liga side to snap him up at zero cost, with Reguilon’s contract set to expire in the summer and up for grabs at zero cost. The ex-Sevilla star could technically sign a pre-contract in January, so Getafe may have an opportunity to nip in ahead of other interested sides to secure his signature.

Tottenham defender Sergio Reguilon.

Once tipped to shine under Antonio Conte, with pundit Noel Whelan calling him a “quality player” (Football Insider), things haven’t exactly gone to plan for Reguilon and the writing now appears on the wall for his departure next year.

Whilst the player has been spotted training with the senior squad, he is yet to make a single appearance in all competitions this season, and has been named in just one matchday squad so far – Spurs’ trip to Coventry City in the Carabao Cup.

Sacked staff seek legal action after racism crisis prompts Yorkshire purge

Culled staff had written to board deploring reputational damage Rafiq allegations had inflicted on club

David Hopps04-Dec-2021The 16 members of Yorkshire’s coaching and backroom staff who were sacked this week are expected to seek legal advice on Monday, as a club that has long specialised in internal strife braces itself for the deepest crisis in its history.Even allowing for the widespread acceptance that change at Yorkshire was necessary in the wake of Azeem Rafiq’s allegations of institutional racism, the purge of the club’s coaching and medical staff has left many in the county in a state of shock. Where there was briefly talk of a brave new world of inclusivity and enlightenment, there is now more division, hurt and punishment. Legal action, or potential pay-offs running into millions of pounds, and player departures in protest are all possible outcomes as the affair spirals out of control.The charge levelled against many of the 16 sacked staff members is that they jointly wrote a letter to the Yorkshire board on October 14. In that letter, seen by ESPNcricinfo, they deplored the reputational damage being done to the club, questioned why Rafiq’s claims had not been rebutted, and further accused Rafiq of being “on a one-man mission to bring down the club and, with it, people of genuine integrity”. They spoke of the “grossly unfair” criticism of the former chief executive, Mark Arthur, and director of cricket, Martyn Moxon, and said that the allegations were “having a profound effect on us all, physically, emotionally and psychologically”.The letter makes no concessions as to Yorkshire’s treatment of Rafiq, who told ESPNcricinfo last year that he had been driven “to the brink of suicide” during his time at the club; in fact, it doubles down on his reputation as a troublemaker (“problematic in the dressing room and a complete liability off the field”), and seeks to defend the name of Yorkshire cricket and the “White Rose” culture that Rafiq called into question during his emotional testimony to the Department of Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee last month.Related

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For the likes of Lord Kamlesh Patel, the county’s new chairman, and the ECB – for whom the Yorkshire crisis is a direct threat to their attempts to promote diversity and to ensure that the game is universally recognised as offering fair opportunities for all – this private appeal to the board appears now to have been regarded as ample evidence of an unwillingness to change. However, in the event of legal action, it may fall well short of constituting gross misconduct.The best-known names on the redundancy roll are the club’s coach, Andrew Gale, and the director of cricket, Moxon, who has been a popular character in Yorkshire cricket for most of the past 40 years, and who was on sick leave before his sacking. Moxon has been deeply affected by general allegations of racism, and there is general fury within Yorkshire cricket circles that despite his illness, he was labelled “a coward” by Julian Knight, chair of the DCMS committee, for not appearing before their investigation last month.Among the other casualties are Paul Grayson, the batting coach who returned to the club less than three years ago, when Rafiq had already left, and so unless other evidence comes to light he can hardly be implicated in his allegations; and Dr Nigel Mayers, the club’s medical officer, who has served the club for most of the century and who has committed much of his life to working in Kirkstall, a diverse Leeds ward. Wayne Morton, head of sports science and medicine, has gone, too – a man who once had to be pulled out of the crowd at Scarborough for his own safety after confronting a group of spectators who had been throwing bananas at the black Gloucestershire fast bowler, David ‘Syd’ Lawrence.By midweek, an emergency director of cricket is expected to have been appointed – there is even talk of Darren Gough, who has minimal coaching experience and who has spent the past decade as a sports radio host – supported by a skeleton staff which is being assembled with the help of the ECB.Rafiq’s claims of racial mistreatment have taken a wrecking ball to Yorkshire cricket, with sponsors abandoning the club in the wake of the allegations and the ECB suspending the county from hosting major matches. Many within the club suspect that the imposition of an ECB-approved emergency staff could be a means of ensuring an early return of international cricket to Headingley.Either way, the dismissal of individuals with not far short of 300 years’ service to Yorkshire, and the county’s apparent scapegoating as English cricket’s bad apple, would appear to draw attention away from the sport’s long-term failures in the development of minority-ethnic cricketers, a widespread and complex issue. But in a febrile social media world, with a culture war at its height, general postures are adopted in an instant with little care for specific facts.Head coach Andrew Gale was among those to leave the club•Getty ImagesYorkshire’s playing staff have held an emergency meeting with Lord Patel, but his conciliatory remarks upon taking up the role, including assurances that the club was seeking a quick return to stability and normality, now seem very much at odds with the mass dismissals. He had promised in a media conference “urgent and seismic change” and that is what he has delivered. Players’ talk of finding new counties are often not followed up – and many counties’ budgets are already spent – but the mood is an unhappy one.Lord Patel is not the only person in this drama to now be accused by those he has dispensed with of duplicitous behaviour. The former chairman of Yorkshire and the ECB, Colin Graves, whose family trust is owed nearly £20 million by Yorkshire, has an investment to protect. And Roger Hutton, the former chair, and the one person who gave evidence on behalf of Yorkshire to the DCMS committee, is also facing renewed accusations that he mishandled an investigation that should have been settled in weeks, but has now stretched for well over a year. Hutton, for his part, told the DCMS hearing that he felt the club’s culture had been “stuck in the past”, and that his resignation back in August, in the wake of the club’s “profound apologies” to Rafiq, would not have helped to bring about change.Many people have bought into the view that Yorkshire’s systems were institutionally racist, more by obstinate refusal to change than design, and that this had contributed to the failure to bring through Muslim cricketers from Yorkshire’s inner cities. Many were appalled by Rafiq’s relationship with Gary Ballance, which had racial overtones at its heart. Many, too, watched Rafiq’s moving evidence to the DCMS committee and, even those who argued that he was a far from perfect individual, felt the need for change, to rid Yorkshire of this stain once and for all.But many of those same people had signed up for a vision of a better way forward, of a vision of fairness for all, based on a commitment to education, not a full-scale coup d’etat. To express deep misgivings is uncomfortable, and risks echoing the views of the far-right, who are now sniffing round this story with a growing realization that here is a chance to sow division and disunity. But rifts could now deepen. That, in itself, is a tragedy.Lord Patel, whose family relocated to Bradford in the early 60s when he was an infant, has an impressive CV, but his approach – endorsed how much by the ECB? – is now giving grave cause for concern. Uncompromising, implacable, adamant that only his way is the right one, and supremely confident in his own moral compass, he has revealed many of the Yorkshire attributes that over generations have caused the county so much pain.

Real Madrid star Vinicius Junior hoping his future will be 'resolved in next few days' amid PSG and Saudi Arabia transfer links

Vinicius Junior is hopeful his Real Madrid future will be resolved "in the next few days" amid links with Paris Saint-Germain and Saudi clubs.

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Vinicius hoping Real Madrid future will be resolvedForward linked with PSG and Saudi clubsStarred in Tuesday's 3-2 win over Man CityFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The forward is contracted to the La Liga champions until 2027 and is playing a key role in their efforts to defend both the La Liga title and the Champions League. Despite rumours linking him with a move to either PSG or a Saudi Pro League club, he believes a contract extension resolution at Real will be reached soon.

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Vinicius has not had an easy ride at Real Madrid, targeted by racist abuse on several occasion and admitting last year that he felt "less and less like playing". There were some suggestions he may look to leave Real as a result but he has always been adamant he would like to remain with the club. He now appears set to extend his stay for a while longer.

WHAT VINICIUS SAID

Speaking after he won Man of the Match in Real's 3-2 Champions League round of 16 play-off first-leg victory at Manchester City on Tuesday, Vinicius told : "It's very exciting to have conversations with Real Madrid about my renewal. I have a contract until 2027, but I've always said that I want to continue playing here after so much time and making history. I've received the affection of the fans, the president, the coaching staff, all the players. My wish is to be here longer and God willing, in the next few days all the negotiations will be resolved to spend much more time here."

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR VINICIUS AND REAL MADRID?

Vinicius' aim to make history with Real is certainly on track, with a repeat of their 2023-24 La Liga-Champions League double on the cards, as well as a Copa del Rey semi-final and this summer's Club World Cup. With Kylian Mbappe and Jude Bellingham also in eye-catching form, Real's frontline is the envy of rivals across the continent.

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