Leeds celebrate title by eyeing £50k-p/w duo who have dominated for Celtic

Leeds United are currently enjoying their title party and could already be set to kick that up a notch after identifying two candidates to join them on their Premier League journey, according to a report.

Leeds crowned champions after stunning win at Plymouth

Daniel Farke has endured plenty of trials and tribulations this term, but his side have been a class above and deservedly find themselves top-flight bound after a successful campaign climaxed with a last-gasp title winner from Manor Solomon at Plymouth this weekend.

Many would argue that a club of Leeds’ stature belong in the Premier League, though there is plenty of work to be done to ensure his squad are equipped to take on the challenge of surviving after promotion from the Championship.

Dipping into the market, Farke has identified Celtic attacker Daizen Maeda as a primary target at Elland Road following his freescoring campaign north of the border. The Japan international is valued at £25 million, while Arsenal, Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur are among a host of clubs ready to swoop for his services.

Confidence is high that Solomon will join Leeds on a permanent deal after a fine campaign on loan from Tottenham Hotspur, with the player said to have agreed to a return next term.

Leeds "well-placed" to sign £6m+ ace who's similar to Phillips and Tanaka

He is tempted by a move to the Premier League.

ByHenry Jackson May 3, 2025

Kalvin Phillips and Tomas Soucek have been mentioned in connection with the Whites. The former hardly comes a surprise due to his links with his boyhood club, but it remains to be seen if a fairytale return is on the cards.

Scaling up ahead of their Premier League return won’t be easy for Leeds, given the level of side they are likely to come up against on a weekly basis compared to the English second-tier. Nevertheless, they now have two talented players in their sights that could make all the difference, per recent developments.

Leeds want Nicolas Kuhn and Cameron Carter-Vickers from Celtic

According to TBR, Leeds are in the mix to sign Celtic duo Cameron Carter-Vickers and Nicolas Kuhn to strengthen their Premier League survival bid. The pair earn £50,000 per week between them at Parkhead and have lit up the domestic scene in Scotland, emerging as two of the best players in the top-flight, with Carter-Vickers playing a part in the Bhoys conceding only 22 goals in 34 league matches.

Cameron Carter-Vickers – key statistics in 2024/25 (Scottish Premiership)

Duels won

160

Aerial duels won

119

Recoveries

123

Dribbled past

3

Interceptions

32

Nicolas Kuhn – key statistics in 2024/25 (Scottish Premiership)

Chances created

47

Completed dribbles

55

Shots on target

24

Touches in opposition box

157

Duels won

107

On the other hand, Kuhn has notched 20 goals and 14 assists in 47 appearances across all competitions, earning plaudits for his consistent displays coming off the right flank.

Celtic’s involvement in Champions League football may be a sticking point for Leeds if negotiations were to occur, though the lure of Premier League football can be a tempting one for top performers in Scotland.

Celtic "were close" to signing £40m star who's now outscoring Kyogo & Kuhn

Celtic are often praised for their transfer strategy at Parkhead, actually named the best-run club in Britain by the Fair Game Index last year.

Over the last decade or so, the Hoops have made a massive profit with the likes of Ange Postecoglou, Brendan Rodgers and Neil Lennon selling players such as Matt O’Riley, Jota, Moussa Dembélé, Kristoffer Ajer, Virgil van Dijk and many others.

Virgil van Dijk

Kyogo Furuhashi is perhaps the most notable recent example. A scorer of 12 goals in Celtic colours this term, he departed in January to the tune of £10m.

However, there is one striker in particular the Celts must rue missing out on and he’s now outscoring that man Kyogo.

How Celtic are coping with Kyogo's departure

One man chiefly; Daizen Maeda.

The striker’s red-hot form continued at the weekend, bagging a brace against Heart of Midlothian, taking his tally to 30 goals for the campaign, described by former Hibs and Hearts midfielder Michael Stewart as “top class”.

However, Maeda aside, Celtic’s other forwards have not been hitting the heights of late, as the table below outlines.

Daizen Maeda

17

17

Jota

12

4

Nicolas Kühn

18

4

Adam Idah

19

6

Yang Hyun-Jun

15

5

James Forrest

1

Zero

The form of Nicolas Kühn has been particularly disappointing, considering he scored 14 times during the first half of the campaign, on course to be Celtic’s player of the season, but has now only scored twice since 5 January. That said, he looks well-set to replace Kyogo’s output in time.

Adam Idah meantime, has failed to nail down a regular starting spot, with Maeda often favoured as the centre-forward, despite being signed for a huge £9.5m fee from Norwich last summer.

So, would the Hoops’ centre-forward issue have been solved if they had been able to complete a deal to sign a “world-class” striker a few years ago? He’s now better than Kyogo.

The world-class striker Celtic almost signed

Back in the summer of 2020, Celtic almost signed Ivan Toney from Peterborough United, with then manager Neil Lennon later admitting, “we were close to getting him… I was really interested”.

Toney himself stated, “I went up there… I was actually at the training ground” Lennoxtown, which is how close the move came.

Instead, Toney joined Brentford for £5m, firing the Bees to promotion in his first season, finishing as the EFL Championship’s top-scorer, before netting 36 times in the Premier League for the club.

One that got away

The transfers that nearly happened but never did. This article is part of Football FanCast’s One That Got Away series.

Manager Thomas Frank described him as “world-class”, before the England international was sold to Saudi Pro League side Al Ahli last summer, costing a reported fee of £40m.

In the Saudi top-flight, only Cristiano Ronaldo, Abderrazak Hamdallah and Marcos Leonardo have scored more goals than Toney this season, so let’s assess his season-by-season statistics since almost signing for Celtic.

2020/21

EFL Championship

52

33

2021/22

Premier League

37

14

2022/23

Premier League

35

21

2023/24

Premier League

17

4

2024/25

Saudi Pro League

33

22

In the 2022/23 Premier League season, Ivan Toney was the division’s third-highest scorer, behind only Erling Haaland and Harry Kane, although the following campaign was massively hampered by his eight-month ban for breaching FA betting regulations.

Now in Saudi Arabia, Toney has rediscovered his best form, with Middle Eastern football expert Uri Levy describing his performances for Al Ahli as ‘fantastic’, advocating for him to receive an England recall.

His tally of 22 goals so far this season for Matthias Jaissle’s side means he has scored more goals than both Adam Idah (14) and Nicolas Kühn (18) this season, while doing so at a slightly-higher level; Global Football Rankings believes the Saudi Pro League to be the 31st strongest division in the world, with the Scottish Premiership down at 34th.

Thus, despite their continued domestic dominance, it’s hard to argue that Celtic wouldn’t be stronger with Toney spearheading their attack.

Celtic gem was "the next Van Dijk" but Postecoglou sold him for just £1m

The former Celtic star was described as “the next Van Dijk” by his former manager.

ByDan Emery Apr 3, 2025

Ben Duckett looks to Joe Root after overcoming thumb dislocation in style

Opener shines with 84 at No.4 but seeks conversion inspiration from England’s new leading runscorer

Matt Roller09-Oct-2024Ben Duckett was at the non-striker’s end when Joe Root; hit the boundary that made himEngland’s highest-ever Test run-scorer and, after his dismissal for 84, is intent on following Root’s lead in converting his starts into match-defining hundreds. But Duckett was grateful to be batting at all after a dislocated left thumb briefly threatened to rule him out of this series.He suffered the dislocation when taking the catch – off Root’s bowling – that ended Pakistan’s first innings on the second evening of the first Test in Multan. England’s doctor Glen Rae quickly put the thumb back in place, but Duckett was unable to open the batting and feared that it would become “quite sore” overnight.In practice, it healed enough that he was able to come in at No. 4 with his thumb strapped up and he batted with characteristic aggression, hitting 40 off the 31 balls he faced from Abrar Ahmed. Duckett looked to be cruising towards a fourth Test hundred when he was trapped lbw by Aamer Jamal for his fourth score between 70 and 90 since his most recent century, in Rajkot earlier this year.”I’d done the exact same thumb in the same way a couple of years ago,” Duckett said. “When I looked at it, I knew exactly what was wrong with it. We made the decision of giving it as many hours as we could, icing it a couple of times and seeing how it was in the morning. The worry was it was going to stiffen up… thankfully, it didn’t really change too much.”I’d have certainly taken that [84] last night when it happened… I’m obviously really happy with the form that I’ve had. I’m always very critical of myself, and I know we’ve had an incredible day, so it can be looked past, but I’ve got myself in a few times in the last however many Tests, and I’m the first person to know that.”I pride myself on scoring hundreds, and today it felt like it was going to be one of those days until I missed that ball. It’s something that I’m very aware of, and that’s maybe the different side of things now: the mental side of the game of getting yourself into those positions, and really kicking on and going big.”Duckett was unable to open the batting on day two because of his injury•Getty ImagesIt is not long since there was a similar narrative around Root’s own conversion rate: from 2017-20, he passed 50 on 28 occasions but only converted six of those innings into hundreds. But since 2021, he has become a relentless run-scorer, with 15 scores of 50-99 and 18 hundreds in that time – and Duckett believes he can learn that trait from his team-mate.”The one thing now is kicking on and getting those big scores,” he said. “If I ever have that problem, I’d be pretty happy. But these things happen and for Rooty, with the amount of cricket you play, you’re going to go through periods where you don’t get over the line and you’re going to have periods – right now – where he’s cashing in and scoring hundreds for fun.”It’s just a pleasure to share the dressing room with him. You wouldn’t know that he’s achieved what he’s achieved, how he is in the dressing room: he’s such a good man to have and he’s probably still working as hard as he ever has, always grinding away in the nets. We make jokes that he says he’s out of form when he’s getting Test hundreds, so it is probably a good place for him to be.”Duckett has not had his thumb scanned, but is confident that he will be fit to play in Tuesday’s second Test. “I want to say 100 percent,” he said. “Obviously, today went well, and I’m hoping each day is going to get easier and easier… It seems like there’s no clean break, so I think it’s one of those ones where it’s going to be a bit sore for a couple of weeks.”More immediately, his focus is on helping England to win the first. “I would imagine we’ll probably try to bat for quite a lot of tomorrow,” Duckett said. “We’ve got to earn the right to do that and start well in the morning – try to limit the damage, and hopefully get ourselves in a position where, after lunch, we can really push on, and try to score as quick as we can.”[We have to] hope that there’s going to be 10 more chances. The pitch isn’t doing loads, but you’ve seen a little bit of variable bounce and a fraction more spin today… It depends how quickly we score and how well we start in the morning, and then we will be doing absolutely everything to try and take 10 wickets.”

All you need to know about the Women's Asia Cup 2022

Who are the teams? What is the format? Matches to look forward to? Find answers to all of that here

S Sudarshanan29-Sep-2022An Asia Cup? Another one?
Yes, the men had their time under the sun in the UAE, and it is now time for the women to take centre stage.Oh! And where is it being held?
Bangladesh will play host to all matches, which will be held at the Sylhet International Cricket Stadium. It is the first time women’s international matches are being played in the country since Pakistan’s tour in October 2018. It is also the first time since the 2014 T20 World Cup that Sylhet will play host to women’s internationals.Tell me more. Which are the teams? What is the format?
The Women’s Asia Cup was first held in the T20 format in 2012. The last edition was in 2018, while the one to be originally held in Bangladesh in 2020 was first postponed to 2021 because of the Covid-19 pandemic before being cancelled altogether. So finally, 2022 will see the fourth edition of the T20 Asia Cup, and eighth including the four 50-over contests in 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2008.Related

Sylhet to host 2022 Women's Asia Cup starting October 1

Bangladesh face Thailand in opener on Oct 1; India vs Pak on Oct 7

This time, the competition will see seven teams vying for the trophy. India, Pakistan, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, UAE and hosts Bangladesh will take on each other in a round-robin format. Each team will play six matches, with the top four qualifying for the two semi-finals, thus making it the longest Asia Cup for women. In the last two editions – featuring six teams each – the top two teams in the league stage directly played the final.Also, UAE will be making their first appearance in the competition, having beaten hosts Malaysia in the final of the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) Women’s T20 Championship, the qualifying event for the tournament proper.India and Pakistan meet on October 7•ICC via Getty ImagesWhen is it starting, and what are the timings?
It is a 15-day tournament, with Bangladesh taking on Thailand in the opener on October 1. India then play Sri Lanka in the afternoon game on the same day. The morning matches start at 9am local time, while the afternoon games begin at 1.30pm local time.Who are the defending champions? And who has won the Asia Cup the most times?
Bangladesh are the current Asia Cup holders, having beaten India in a tight final in Kuala Lumpur in 2018.As for dominance, India have won two out of the three T20 versions of the Asia Cup and all four four 50-over versions. That’s 30 victories in 32 games.Any specific matches to look forward to in 2022?
If it is an Asia Cup, then India vs Pakistan becomes inevitable. The two teams meet on October 7. Among the other fixtures, Pakistan vs Sri Lanka four days later could be interesting. They have so far played each other 16 times in T20Is, with Pakistan holding a 9-6 edge (5-0 since 31 March 2018). One game was washed out in 2013.Thailand beat Sri Lanka in 2018, and gave Pakistan a scare in the T20 World Cup in 2020•Getty ImagesBut before all of that, expect Sri Lanka vs Thailand on October 4 to also be eye-catching. Both teams have played each other only once – in the last Asia Cup in 2018 – with Thailand upsetting their opponents in what was their first win over a Full Member. Moreover, since this August, Sri Lanka have played only two T20Is compared to Thailand’s eight.In 2020, playing their first ever World Cup, Thailand gave Pakistan a scare before rain ruined their hopes of a win. That was the last time the two teams had met, so who knows, come October 6 this year, there could be a surprise in store.Can you tell me a bit about each of the squads?
Jemimah Rodrigues returns to the Indian side after missing the tour of England due to injury. Richa Ghosh, who made a comeback in England after being dropped from the Commonwealth Games, is also in the mix. These two could be key in the middle order, as Renuka Singh spearheads the seam attack.Pakistan, meanwhile, suffered a setback as promising fast bowler Fatima Sana was ruled out after twisting her ankle during the CPL earlier this month. But their squad still has a solid and experienced core in captain Bismah Maroof, and allrounders Nida Dar and Aliya Riaz. Add the young Ayesha Naseem, and Pakistan become a proper force to reckon with.Nigar Sultana is in good form, while Fargana Hoque also bolsters Bangladesh•ICC via Getty ImagesBangladesh, who enter the Asia Cup with great momentum after winning the Women’s T20 World Cup Qualifier last week, have been bolstered by the addition of Jahanara Alam and Fargana Hoque. Meanwhile, their captain Nigar Sultana comes into the Asia Cup after scoring 180 runs – the most for Bangladesh – in the qualifiers.Sri Lanka’s team could yet again be reliant on Chamari Athapaththu, especially with the young Vishmi Gunaratne out due to a stress fracture of her back. Spinners Inoka Ranaweera and Oshadi Ranasinghe could be key to their success with the ball, while with the bat, their middle order might revolve around Hasini Perera and Harshitha Samarawickrama.Thailand have made their third straight Asia Cup, and would be hungry for success, especially after their fourth-place finish in the T20 World Cup qualifiers. Natthakan Chantham, Nattaya Boochatham and Chanida Sutthiruang are high among their players to watch out for.After going down to UAE in the final of the ACC T20 Championship, Malaysia blanked Singapore 3-0 in the Saudari Cup, as Elsa Hunter led the spoils with the bat. Her strike rate of 135 was by far the best among both teams, and alongside captain Winifred Duraisingam and deputy Mas Elysa, Hunter could be key to Malaysia’s fortunes. Right-arm seamer Sasha Azmi has also been in good form, and was part of the last edition of the Asia Cup.UAE, on the other hand, have played 28 T20Is since 2021 – the most among all participating sides in the Asia Cup – and have won 20 of those, including beating an in-form Zimbabwe in the T20 World Cup qualifier. Esha Oza, Theertha Satish, Kavisha Egodage and captain Chaya Mughal form the heart of their Asia Cup squad.Many of the UAE and Malaysia players also had the experience of rubbing shoulders with several star players in women’s cricket at the inaugural FairBreak Invitational tournament held in the UAE this May.

Dan Lawrence lives up to expectations as England's hot-house bears fruit again

Nurtured like a tropical plant, Lawrence’s maiden innings may herald the start of a long career

Andrew Miller15-Jan-2021″The exciting thing for me is that this is the beginning of a very successful, long international career, where you’ll be winning many, many games for England.”Individual batsmen may still harbour their superstitions, but the England management clearly doesn’t believe in tempting fate these days. For these were the very words uttered by James Foster, the team’s wicketkeeping consultant, in the minutes before the start of the Galle Test, as he presented Dan Lawrence, his former Essex team-mate, with his maiden Test cap.No equivocation, no doubts, and only a fleeting nod to “luck” as Foster walked over to shake the youngster’s hand and confer on him cap No. 697*. And sure enough, it has taken just two days for Lawrence to live up to those eagerly-expressed expectations, with a thrillingly sure-footed maiden fifty that leaves few reasons to doubt there will be much more to follow.

A note of caution is obligatory at this stage. There have been 103 debut half-centuries in England’s 144-year history, and while David Gower and Peter May are notable examples of players who shone as brightly from the outset as they did in their pomp, Paul Allott and Liam Dawson also exist as proof of the old adage about all penguins being birds, but not vice versa.But if you reduce that sample size to the dawn of the millennium onwards – which also happens to be the dawn of England’s central contracts era – then a more focused picture appears. From the moment that England’s 20th century survival-of-the-fittest mentality was ditched in favour of a mutually supportive team ethic, a total of 21 England batsmen, or one a year, have landed on their feet at the first time of asking (as opposed to just three in the whole of the 1990s – the ebullient Darren Gough, whose self-belief could launch armadas, and a pair of more designated allrounders in Dermot Reeve and Mark Ealham, both of whom, you sense, probably benefited from the job security that their second string offered).That post-2000 list does include some curios, not least the current national selector Ed Smith, while likely lads of the future such as Ollie Pope and Zak Crawley are obvious absentees. But more relevantly for Lawrence’s prospects of living up to Foster’s lofty billing, it also features each of England’s six highest run-scorers of the century.There’s Alastair Cook at Nagpur in 2006, of course, parachuted into a chaotic debut after hot-footing it from an A-team tour in the Caribbean. There’s Kevin Pietersen at Lord’s in 2005, whose unfettered assaults on Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath sowed the seeds of a fightback yet to come. In 2004, Andrew Strauss’s Lord’s debut was so unwavering that Nasser Hussain, a fellow century-maker, instantly knew his days were done.ESPNcricinfo LtdBefore that, came Strauss’s long-term opening partner, Marcus Trescothick, whose demons may have curtailed his England career at the age of 30, but not before he’d chalked up 5825 Test runs at 43.79. And if Ian Bell faltered at times on his own path to the upper echelons of England’s run-makers, then his average after three Tests, an unwieldy 297, was a clear sign that his class was worthy of investment.And last but clearly not least, there’s Joe Root, the current England captain, and Lawrence’s partner throughout a fourth-wicket stand of 173 at Galle on Friday. He turned 30 a fortnight ago, he’s likely to reach 8000 Test runs before this match is over, and he’s set to play his 100th Test when the tour moves to India in three weeks’ time. But it feels like only yesterday that Root himself was also making 73 on debut, in the fourth Test at Nagpur at the culmination of England’s epic series win against India in 2012-13. Pietersen and Cook had bossed that campaign for England, but with a draw sufficient to seal the series, Root rocked up with an apprentice’s performance of such mastery that few onlookers had any lingering doubts that they were witnessing the real deal.So… expectations? Yep, there are a few bubbling below the surface for Lawrence. And yes, there will be tougher days in prospect that the one that he has just encountered. While batting in Asia is never an easy challenge, especially when the ball is spinning quite as sharply as it was when Jonny Bairstow was extracted without addition in the opening moments of today’s play, Sri Lanka’s performance with the ball was barely any more continent than their own batting had been on day one. Only the admirable Lasith Embuldeniya posed a consistent wicket-taking threat, until he too got collared as the hardness of the second new-ball backfired on a toiling attack.And yes, there were flaws in Lawrence’s maiden innings – a spilled nudge to gully, and a brace of missed stumpings, one of which drew a grin of amusement from Root as he all but hauled himself off his feet. But the most telling feature of his performance was the poise that he projected, right from the moment of his first two deliveries – a quick-wristed cuff into the covers to hustle off the mark first-ball, then a compact thump through the same region for his first boundary as Dilruwan Perera over-pitched.There’s something about Lawrence which evokes Kevin Pietersen•SLCWhatever nerves may have existed had vanished in a trice, and suddenly Lawrence was batting as an equal partner to his skipper. If Root’s ruthless sweep-shots were the bread-and-butter of their stand, then the cream was provided in no uncertain terms by the new boy, who blatted Embuldeniya for a hold-the-pose six over cow corner, a shot that screeched of the sort of belonging that entire generations of England cricketers never dared to feel in years gone by.It was a familiar brand of audacity, and one that many observers had probably been craning their necks to witness from the moment that Lawrence came to the crease. Comparisons with Pietersen don’t have to be odious (although you wonder if Tom Banton, for one, might wish they weren’t thrown his way quite so frequently) but there’s something about Lawrence’s imposing frame, meaty strokeplay, and preternatural confidence that evokes KP’s arrival in the side in the 2005. There might even be something about his catching too, to judge by his first visible act as an England player, although hopefully he’ll cling onto at least one of the first five chances that come his way.There’s something, too, about the selectors’ eureka moment in the final months before their senior call-ups, when both men produced an acceleration of intent to prove beyond doubt their worthiness. For Pietersen, it was a run of performances on the England A tour of India in 2003-04 that, even to this day, stand out from the scorecards; for Lawrence, it was a match-winning century at the MCG back in February 2020, as England Lions completed their first victory in an unofficial Test in Australia, after seven blank campaigns.Related

Stats – Joe Root racks up the milestones, and England's run-rate in Sri Lanka

Stats – Lawrence matches Root's debut

Lawrence: 'I am a big one for trying to do things my own way'

England 'unconcerned' by hotel staff's positive Covid tests

Timely Root ton sees England tighten their grip

For that’s the thing about England’s expectations these days. It’s no longer simply that a good player rocks up with a reputation after a handful of county knocks, and gets the cocksuredness knocked out of him by team-mates and opposition alike. As alluded to by Foster in his capping ceremony, Lawrence is a pathway player, identified as a 15-year-old as Essex’s Next Big Thing, and nurtured like a tropical plant thereafter. So too is his likely rival for selection in the short term, and likely sidekick for years to come, Pope – injured at present, but gunning for full fitness in India next month, the team against whom he debuted at Lord’s in 2018.Since then, of course, the world has turned upside-down, and Lawrence is the first England debutant of the Covid era – a player who has been part of the Test bubble since last June, a period of dressing-room hot-housing like no other in Test history. For months at a time, the players have been cooped up like contestants on Big Brother, and behind those closed doors, their characters – good, bad and insidious – will doubtless have been scrutinised by players, management and psychologists alike, and with every bit as much intensity as a high-octane passage of Test cricket.Lawrence’s apprenticeship has encompassed tragedy too, with the death of his mother in August leading to a spell of compassionate leave during the Pakistan Tests. But as Root reiterated at the close – and as frequently mentioned by James Anderson, the last man with a true insight into England’s dog-eat-dog days of yore – the current dressing-room atmosphere is more accommodating and supportive than at any stage in its history.”You just want them to feel as at home as possible,” Root said at the close. “We have got a very good environment. We’ve got some really good senior players, a good group of lads who enable that process of coming into the team to be a smooth one and a nice one. If you feel comfortable in the environment, I do think it probably feeds into your game, but the most important thing is that they see that as a start of something very exciting to build on.”* Alan Jones was retrospectively awarded England cap No. 696 in June 2020 after playing against Rest of the World in one-off Test in 1970

Ceará vence o Fortaleza nos pênaltis e é campeão estadual após cinco anos

MatériaMais Notícias

Depois de cinco anos de espera, o Ceará volta ser campeão do Campeonato Cearense. Após um empate por 1 a 1 no tempo normal, a taça foi decidida nos pênaltis e teve Richard, goleiro do Vozão, como herói da conquista. Nas penalidades, deu Vozão por 3 a 2.

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➡️ Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

➡️A boa do Lance! Betting: vamos dobrar seu primeiro depósito, até R$200! Basta abrir sua conta e tá na mão!

⚽ COMO FOI A PARTIDA?
O jogo começou com tudo. Equilibrado, o duelo reunia a vontade do Ceará de vencer a qualquer custo e o empenho tático do Fortaleza, que esperava um erro do rival para sair na frente. Mesmo assim, o primeiro tempo ficou marcado por poucas chances dos dois lados, com os destaques sendo Saulo Mineiro, pelo Ceará, e Lucas Sasha, pelo Fortaleza.

No segundo tempo, Saulo Mineiro seguiu se destacando, e acabou premiado com um golaço na segunda etapa. Animado, o Ceará segurou até o momento que pode, mas o artilheiro Lucero, com sua classe de sempre, empatou de cabeça. Após isso, o equilíbrio voltou, mas o Fortaleza perdeu Bruno Pacheco, expulso da partida. Com o empate, tudo acabou decidido nos pênaltis.

continua após a publicidade

Nos pênaltis, a parada só foi decidida após cinco cobranças, com o Ceará vencendo por 3 a 2 e o goleiro Richard sendo o herói.

➡️ O QUE VEM POR AÍ?

O Ceará volta a campo nesta quarta-feira (10), às 21h30, contra o Sport, pela Copa do Nordeste. O Fortaleza recebe o Nacional Potosí, às 19h, também na quarta-feira (10), pela Copa Sul-americana. Os dois jogos acontecem no Castelão.

Tudo sobre

Campeonato CearenseCearáFortaleza

Stats – MI post their highest WPL total to make it 7-0 against Giants

Mumbai Indians upped their six-hitting on the big night, to knock Gujarat Giants out

Namooh Shah13-Mar-20257-0 – Mumbai Indians’ (MI) record against Gujarat Giants, MI are the only team to remain unbeaten against an opponent in the WPL.213 for 4 – MI registered their highest total in the WPL, going past the 207 for 5 they made against the same opponent in 2023. It is also the third-joint highest total across WPLs.5 – Fifty-plus scores by Natalie Sciver-Brunt in this WPL so far, the most by any batter in one season. Three other batters have four fifty-plus scores in one edition of the WIPL.ESPNcricinfo Ltd122 – Total runs scored by MI during the middle overs (7-16) in the Eliminator – the most by any team in a WPL innings, bettering the 121 runs scored by UP Warriorz against RCB last week.133 – Partnership runs between Hayley Matthews and Sciver-Brunt in the Eliminator – the joint-highest stand for MI, equalling their own record against UPW this season in Bengaluru. It was also the third century partnership between the pair, the joint-most by a pair in the WPL alongside Shafali Verma and Meg Lanning for Delhi Capitals.9 – Sixes hit by MI – the most they have hit in a WPL match. The MI batters hit a six every 13.33 balls on Thursday, nearly three times their ratio of 43.28 during the league stage. They were able to hit only 21 sixes in the league matches, the least by any team, and they hit no more than four sixes in any of those eight matches.4 – Number of boundaries Giants conceded through misfields in the Eliminator. In addition, they also put down four catches and missed a run-out chance.22 – Runs Priya Mishra’s drop of Harmanpreet Kaur in the 17th over cost Giants, as per ESPNcricinfo’s Luck Index. Harmanpreet had faced only three balls for two runs at that point, including a run that came from the dropped chance.In the next nine balls, she scored 34 runs with four sixes and two fours. According to the algorithm, the other MI batters would have scored only 13 runs in the nine balls that Harmanpreet faced after the reprieve.Giants dropped Matthews twice – when she was on 5 and 42. Those two catches cost them 9 and 12 runs respectively, as per ESPNcricinfo’s Luck Index.

Qarabag fined by UEFA after fan racially abused Chelsea U19 player in UEFA Youth League clash

Qarabag's youth team have been fined just over £4,000 by UEFA after a supporter was found to have racially abused a Chelsea player during an academy match in Azerbaijan. Shortly after Blues striker Sol Gordon opening the scoring at Azersun Stadium in Baku earlier this month, the 17-year-old was allegedly subjected to monkey gestures. Now, Qarabag have been punished off the back of what transpired in this UEFA Youth League encounter.

  • Chelsea strongly condemn unsavoury incident

    Despite Chelsea's Under-19 side going on to win the game 5-0, the contest was marred by Gordon being discriminated against by those in the crowd. 

    At the time, the Blues said in a statement: "We are aware of an incident during today's UEFA Youth League match in Azerbaijan in which, after scoring, a number of our players were subjected to racist abuse from an individual in the crowd. Racism and all forms of discriminatory behaviour are completely unacceptable and have no place in football or indeed in society. We strongly condemn the actions of the individual responsible. Our players have the full support of everyone at the club, and we have raised the incident immediately with the UEFA match delegate and home club: We expect this matter to be investigated fully under UEFA's disciplinary procedures. We are proud of the way our players and staff responded to the incident on the pitch, swiftly reporting it to the referee, and commend those for dealing with the matter professionally and appropriately in line with UEFA protocols."

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    Qarabag apologise before getting fined

    Soon after Chelsea's statement, Qarabag responded with their own. They vowed to investigate the matter and said this incident does not reflect the club's values. 

    They added: "We are sorry about this incident. It does not reflect the values of our club. We will investigate it thoroughly."

    Now, European football's governing body, UEFA, has slapped them with a £4,379 fine, with Qarabag's youth team having to play a match behind closed doors following "racist and/or discriminatory behaviour of its supporters" – though that punishment is suspended for a year.

    A statement from UEFA reads: "The CEDB has decided: To fine Qarabağ FK Youth €5,000 and to order Qarabağ FK Youth to play its next one (1) UEFA competition match as host club behind closed doors, for the racist and/or discriminatory behaviour of its supporters. Said match behind closed doors is suspended during a probationary period of one (1) year, starting from the date of the present decision."

  • Atletico Madrid punished for racism

    On a similar note, Atletico Madrid have been fined £26,256 by UEFA after their fans reportedly made monkey gestures and noises, along with Nazi salutes, towards Arsenal's players in their 4-0 home win at Emirates Stadium in October. The club has also been hit with a suspended sanction of a ban on travelling supporters for "racist and discriminatory behaviour". Despite the severity of the charges, the one-match ban on ticket sales for an away game has been suspended for a probationary period of one year.

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    What comes next for Chelsea?

    Aside from the aforementioned matter, Chelsea return to Premier League action on Sunday when they host London rivals and league leaders Arsenal in a huge clash at the top of the table on Sunday. The Blues sit six points behind the Gunners, and a win at Stamford Bridge could catapult them into the title race. But a loss could put pay to those hopes and give Mikel Arteta's team a huge boost in their bid to win their first league title since 2004.

    Following Chelsea's 3-0 Champions League win over Barcelona in midweek, head coach Enzo Maresca said: "I’ve told the players, next 48 hours, completely switch off. Have a rest. Recover the energy. Because [on] Sunday we have Arsenal. My message after the game was just: recover the energy. That, in this moment, is the most important thing. Then, on Friday, we start to think about Arsenal. We need to keep the momentum because it’s very nice – and it’s much easier to recover energy when you win games."

Lucas Paqueta makes West Ham transfer admission and expects move to happen

West Ham United midfielder Lucas Paqueta has made an admission about his future at the club amid repeated suggestions he could leave in January.

Paqueta’s time at West Ham has been intriguing to say the least, and fresh speculation has emerged recently about a potential winter exit from the London Stadium.

West Ham paid £51 million to secure his services in a club-record deal from Lyon three years ago, with the Brazilian quickly establishing himself as one of the Premier League’s most technically gifted playmakers in his debut season under David Moyes.

Paqueta helped the Hammers to a glorious Conference League triumph that year, their first major trophy since 1980 and first European trophy since 1965, but a spot-fixing scandal then began to overshadow his time at the London Stadium.

West Ham manager David Moyes

The 28-year-old was charged with four alleged breaches of FA rule E5.1 in May 2024, relating to matches involving West Ham, with allegations that he directly sought to influence matches by intentionally seeking to receive a card from the referee for influence of the betting market.

The investigation, which began in August 2023, cast a dark cloud over his future, with the FA once seeking a lifetime ban for him. Throughout the ordeal, West Ham stood firmly by their star man, and in July this year, he was finally cleared.

With that uncertain point of his career finally over, Paqueta got back to focusing on the pitch, and clubs also started taking an interest in the £150,000-per-week star.

Sunderland 3-0 West Ham

West Ham 1-5 Chelsea

Nottingham Forest 0-3 West Ham

West Ham 0-3 Tottenham

West Ham 1-2 Crystal Palace

Everton 1-1 West Ham

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

West Ham 0-2 Brentford

Leeds 2-1 West Ham

West Ham 3-1 Newcastle

West Ham 3-2 Burnley

Aston Villa tried to sign Paqueta in the summer, but he ultimately chose to stay put and show loyalty to a side who backed him off the field.

However, credible reports are indicating that his long-term future could be away from Rush Green. The Times recently reported that Paqueta is keen to leave West Ham as early as next month, with Fabrizio Romano also backing up that the ex-Ligue 1 star’s exit is a realistic possibility.

Lucas Paqueta makes West Ham transfer admission and expects move to happen

Now, the player himself has come out to make a revelation of his own.

Speaking to Brazilian outlet Globo, as translated by Standard Sport, Paqueta says that he had a desire to return to Flamengo in the most recent summer window, and he expects that transfer to happen eventually due to his close ties with the club.

Paqueta’s current deal expires in 2027, and while Nuno Espirito Santo won’t want to lose him in January, a summer transfer certainly appears on the cards next year.

Unfortunately for chairman David Sullivan, by that point, the Irons wouldn’t be in a position to demand big money for the player with just one year remaining on his contract.

Flamengo’s best opportunity to strike a reunion could be next year, if a more illustrious European or Premier League big-hitter don’t move to entice him first.

Corinthians prevê fechar 2023 com o maior superávit da era Duílio

MatériaMais Notícias

Documento apresentado aos conselheiros do Corinthians pela atual diretoria prevê que o clube encerre 2023 com superávit líquido de R$20,4 milhões, marca mais alta registrada nos três anos da gestão do presidente Duílio Monteiro Alves.

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De acordo com o relatório, que faz parte da previsão orçamentária para 2024, em 2022, o superávit foi de R$15,4 milhões. Em 2021, o clube tinha fechado no azul em R$5,7 milhões. O orçamento, aprovado pelo Conselho Deliberativo na última sexta (15), projeta para 2024 marca superavitária de R$7 milhões.

O superávit esperado ao final de 2023 é embalado pela previsão de uma receita bruta recorde para o Alvinegro no ano: R$ 954,5 milhões. Esse valor foi alcançado com a ajuda de R$ 240 milhões arrecadados com a negociação de direitos federativos de atletas. Essas operações, porém, tiveram custos de R$ 64,1 milhões.

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No ano passado, a receita com repasses de direitos federativos foi de R$ 146,4 milhões com custos de R$ 42 milhões. Em 2021, tinham sido arrecadados com essas operações R$28,2 milhões. Na ocasião, foi apurado custo de R$900 mil. Além de obter superávit, Duilio prevê encerrar sua gestão com redução de R$ 109,2 milhões da dívida corintiana

O orçamento para 2024, quando começa a gestão do presidente eleito Augusto Melo, prevê que o Corinthians terá receita de R$816,6 milhões.

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