Dinusha hits defiant ton after Australia A hand another left-field debut

Sri Lanka A allrounder Sonal Dinusha posted an unbeaten century as Australia A bowled out the tourists for 272 on day one of their four-day match in Darwin as the visitors plucked another debutant from nowhere.Louis Smith, a 19-year-old seamer from Tasmania where he plays for the same club as Australia A coach Tim Paine, had been playing in Darwin and acting as a net bowler for the home side. He was called up for a hasty debut having never played a full state game after Jack Nisbet suffered an injury.He removed Vishad Randika to claim a maiden first-class wicket with Josh Philippe taking a superb diving catch in front of first slip.”I was pretty pumped,” Smith told . “He dived straight in front of first slip so it was a bit heart in mouth for a moment, but it was super exciting, I was just so happy when it stuck.”After losing the toss, Sri Lanka A were in trouble at 89 for 5 at Marrara Stadium on Sunday before Dinusha steadied the ship. The 24-year-old left-hander hit 10 fours and a six on his way to 105 not out from 148 balls before he ran out of partners.Dinusha had help from Vishad Randika (27) and Isitha Wijesundara (33), while No. 3 Nuwanidu Fernando (34) also made a start.Louis Smith (left) and Zanden Jeh made their first-class debuts for Australia A•Cricket Australia

Jake Weatherald and Campbell Kellaway are set to open for Australia A when they start their reply on day two.Right-arm quicks Liam Scott and Henry Thornton each took two wickets for Australia A, as did Nathan McSweeney with his offspin.Smith, Mitchell Perry, Zanden Jeh and Kellaway also chipped in with one wicket apiece as the hosts spread the load.Jeh, a 21-year-old form Brisbane who has never played top-level state cricket, took 1 for 59 from 11 overs on his first-class debut, as Australia’s search for another left-arm spinners continues having made his one-day debut last week.”I was a bit nervous, to be honest,” Jeh said. “I felt I started all right. I probably lost my way a little through the middle there, and when you do that against quality batsmen they’ll put you away.”If that’s the case, it is what it is, but I felt like I came back towards the end there and finished up the day not too bad.”Jeh had Pavan Rathnayake caught at midwicket off a low full toss.

Hayley Matthews to miss next WBBL because of shoulder surgery

She picked up a shoulder injury recently but will go on to play until the CPL before she goes for surgery

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Jun-2025

Hayley Matthews played a crucial role in Melbourne Renegades’ title run last season•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

Melbourne Renegades were dealt with a big blow ahead of the WBBL draft on Thursday when their star allrounder Hayley Matthews was ruled out of the upcoming season due to a shoulder surgery. Matthews had been signed as a pre-draft recruit for two years by Renegades, the defending champions, but her unavailability was announced just hours before the draft.Matthews injured her shoulder recently while fielding in the first ODI against England, and she had to sit out of the last two games of the series. She has been playing after that – in the home ODIs against South Africa – and will feature in the subsequent T20I series too, followed by the Women’s CPL in September for Barbados Royals, and will then go for her surgery during the Women’s ODI World Cup as West Indies failed to qualify for the tournament. She won’t be available for the rest of the year after that.”We are clearly disappointed Hayley won’t be with us this season,” Renegades general manager James Rosengarten said. “She’s been instrumental during her time with the Renegades, not just with her performances but with her leadership and professionalism.Related

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Helmot at the helm of Renegades WBBL team for three more seasons

“There’s a very close relationship between the Renegades and Hayley and we know it will continue next year and beyond. Hayley loves this club and we share in her disappointment at not being available for this year’s tournament.”Renegades will now have all three overseas slots to fill at the WBBL draft on Thursday in Melbourne.Matthews had played a crucial role for Renegades in their run to lift their maiden title last season. She was their top scorer with a tally of 324 runs and a strike rate of 130.64 and was also their second-highest wicket-taker with 14 scalps, while leaking 6.98 runs an over, again among the best in her team. She was also the Player of the Match in the final against Brisbane Heat with a knock of 69 off 61 and figures of 2 for 24.

Juventus aim to bring ex-AC Milan midfieler back to Serie A but whopping salary proves major stumbling block

Juventus are interested in Al-Ahli midfielder Frank Kessie. The former AC Milan player's contract is set to expire in 2026 and Al-Ahli would rather sell the midfielder than lose him for free. Juventus, who were interested in the player in the summer, are set to launch a new bid in January with the Ivorian international interested in a return to Europe.

Juventus interested in Kessie but salary remains an issue

According to , Kessie earns €10 million (£9m/$11m) at Al-Ahli and would have to take a pay cut to join Juventus. The former AC Milan midfielder is keen to return to Europe and has attracted interest from the Bianconeri, who reportedly made an approach for him in July.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportKessie won Scudetto with Milan before move to Al-Ahli

Kessie rose to prominence as he won the Scudetto with AC Milan in the 2021-22 season. He then joined Barcelona on a free transfer and won La Liga in his debut season under Xavi. Despite this success, he was sold to Saudi side Al-Ahli as Barcelona sought to raise funds for signings like Rafinha and Jules Kounde. Since joining Al-Ahli, Kessie has won the 2024-25 AFC Champions League and the King’s Super Cup in the 2025-26 season.

Juventus want ex-AC Milan star to strengthen midfield

Juventus are reportedly looking to sign Kessie to bolster their midfield after failing to land Sporting CP’s Morten Hjulmand in the summer. The rise of Khephren Thuram has helped Juventus cover some gaps, but growing interest from Premier League clubs like Liverpool and Arsenal could see the Frenchman leave the club.

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Getty Images SportJuventus' hope to sign Kessie

Juventus will hope that the prospect of European football, along with a shot at the Serie A title, can persuade Kessie to accept a lower salary and make the move to Turin.

The uncomfortable truth behind Arsenal's hopes of moving to Wembley during Emirates Stadium expansion

Perhaps now more than at any other point in the modern history of football, the subject of stadia is increasingly dominant. Manchester United are trying to completely rebuild Old Trafford to the cost of £2 billion ($2.7bn). Spurs are six years into the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium experience and at last have a trophy to put in their new cabinet. Chelsea's dispute over land in west London continues to cast a shadow over the future and suitability of Stamford Bridge. Newcastle's Saudi owners are still deciding whether they should expand St James' Park or make use of the space on the adjacent land to start from scratch.

And then we have Arsenal, who must feel like the J. Robert Oppenheimer of these lavish new builds. Back in 2006, the Gunners made the short move from their iconic Highbury home to a plush arena on the site of Ashburton Grove, known nowadays as the Emirates Stadium.

Almost 20 years on, the north Londoners are looking into the prospect of expanding their home. It has been reported throughout 2025 that this was becoming much more of a topic of discussion within the club's walls, and the broke the news on Tuesday that they are indeed planning what has been described as 'major expansion'. There is, however, a pitfall that will affect match-going supporters. 

In order to undertake the works necessary for renovations, Arsenal would have to temporarily up sticks and play their home matches elsewhere for an undetermined period of time. The most likely venue would be Wembley, which boasts a capacity of 90,000 and is only about 10 miles across the capital city. On the face of it, that's hardly a negative, but it's only when you dig deeper that you realise the major downsides of such a move.

GOAL runs through why Arsenal's hopes of redeveloping the Emirates won't be as straightforward as they appear on the surface, and who would suffer most during the process…

Getty Images SportWhy Arsenal left Highbury

The younger generation of football fans likely won't even remember Highbury. Several of Arsenal's current first-team stars, including Max Dowman, Myles Lewis-Skelly and Ethan Nwaneri, were born well after the club left their spiritual home behind. Much of the old ground has been turned into flats, with some keeping and incorporating features of the stands that once stood there, if in part because of their statuses as grade-listed buildings.

Arsenal first explored leaving Highbury somewhere between Arsene Wenger's appointment as manager in 1996 and his first Premier League title in 1998. Requirements for English stadiums to become all-seater significantly reduced the capacity of the stadium, which became detrimental in an age where matchday revenue was becoming a major differential when it came to clubs' finances, best represented by Manchester United's success of that time and their redevelopment of Old Trafford.

Ironically, Arsenal considered buying Wembley Stadium, which itself was set to be demolished and rebuilt. As was pointed out in September when they faced the only other Football League club not named after a location in Port Vale, Arsenal didn't have to remain within the London borough of Islington in order to keep their name, which would have made such a move viable, even if it would have been unpopular to the local community. The Gunners even played Champions League matches at the national stadium between 1998 and 2000 in order to maximise that precious matchday revenue. However, the FA were reluctant to sign off a deal and the club eventually withdrew their interest in making it their permanent home.

Finding land sizeable enough to build a 60,000-seater stadium in London is scarce, but Arsenal were fortunate enough to find a suitable plot less than 500 yards from Highbury. In December 2001, after overcoming several hurdles and naysayers, the club first received official approval from Islington Council, subject to helping relocate local businesses, a waste recycling plant already on the site and upgrade of nearby Underground stations. "This is the most complicated stadium development in the world," Danny Fiszman, the late Arsenal director, claimed at the time. Wenger said it was the "biggest decision in Arsenal's history."

It wasn't until August 2006 that Arsenal were able to move into their palace of a new stadium, which sold its naming rights to airline Emirates in 2004 for an initial £100m, covering roughly a quarter of the project's cost.

Owing to Premier League broadcast money going through the roof and reaching unprecedented levels during the late 2000s and early 2010s, Arsenal didn't even feel the financial benefit of the move until about 2014 when they paid off the debts accrued to build the Emirates Stadium in the first place. Deloitte figures for 2023-24 confirmed their status as the division's second-highest earners for matchday revenue, behind only United, but there is a looming threat of others overtaking them in the near future, including Tottenham, Liverpool and Manchester City, hence the need to expand.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportIssues expanding Emirates Stadium

The problems Arsenal once had both trying to expand Highbury and move into the site on Ashburton Grove are largely similar for the Emirates Stadium. As pointed out during the initial reporting this week, there is very little room to build out on the existing plot, given there are railway lines on two sides. On another, there is the busy Hornsey Road, which itself backs onto the even busier A1. From a safety perspective, there is only one vehicle ramp into the grounds for emergency services to use, and this would have to remain post-expansion.

The report adds that Arsenal's likeliest path to rebuilding will be from within the space they already occupy. In order to add more seats, they would change the angles of the current configuration to become steeper, reduce the already generous legroom in existing rows and adjust the slope of the roof. It has previously been suggested that the two corners which do not house a big screen could be filled with seats too.

Regardless, this is not going to be a simple or ordinary redevelopment. It's impossible for the Emirates Stadium to undergo a worthwhile expansion without bringing some sort of disruption with it. Thus comes the need to move out and play matches elsewhere.

Getty Images SportTottenham and the Wembley curse

As mentioned, Arsenal have played home matches at Wembley before, though in a different era and without much success. Wenger's teams of the 1998-1999 and 1999-2000 seasons fulfilled their home Champions League group stage fixtures in the London borough of Brent inside the old stadium with attendances slightly north of 70,000, though won only two of their six games there and were eliminated before the second stage on both occasions.

Much more recently, rivals Spurs spent three seasons staging home games at the new national stadium to a varying degree of success. Like Arsenal, they took Wembley for a test run during their 2016-17 Champions League campaign, but were knocked out at the group stage and then dumped out in the last 32 of the Europa League in humiliating fashion. There was also an agreement in place for Tottenham to spend the entire 2017-18 season there while they built their new £1bn ($1.3bn) ground on the site of the incumbent White Hart Lane, and though this proved to be a fine season by their standards, it arguably came at the worst possible time. The Spurs side of 2016-17 finished second in the Premier League and tallied a club-record 86 points, boasting a young team of stars such as Harry Kane, Dele Alli, Son Heung-min and Christian Eriksen, with Mauricio Pochettino in the dugout. They won 17 and drew two of their 19 league matches at home during White Hart Lane's farewell season, dropping only four points from a possible 57, before throwing away five from their first two matches at Wembley the following campaign.

Centre-back Toby Alderweireld admitted at the time that he and his team-mates had to get used to their new surroundings, and he span a story of how he would use features of White Hart Lane's architecture to calibrate his positioning and long-range passing. That was one teething problem to address, but another was the completely different atmosphere. Where the 36,000-capacity White Hart Lane kept noise inside and bounced around, neatly complementing Pochettino's intense pressing style, Wembley's vast open spaces meant you would often hear various chants at the same time which brought no bite, while lower profile matches saw little sound at all. The sense of community disappears in a bowl like that. This particularly became of detriment to Spurs when they were unexpectedly forced to spend the majority of 2018-19 at Wembley owing to delays finalising the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Spurs won only one of their first six matches at Wembley and were relieved to finally head back home in April 2019, returning to the same location where their old stadium once stood, which was another understated part of the move. Though Tottenham isn't too far from the national stadium – about a 30-minute drive round the North Circular Road on a good day – the area surrounding it is soulless, gentrified and not fit for club football. The outlets and novelty of it are fine for cup finals, England games, concerts or other sports, but when you're having to schlep there every other week, there's only the 90 minutes of the actual game to look forward to, which isn't always what football is about. A common 'what if' among Spurs fans nowadays revolves around the potential of having stayed at White Hart Lane for the remainder of the Pochettino era rather than going through a seismic period of transition.

The warning to Arsenal is twofold. Any move to Wembley, at this point for an unspecified amount of time but surely for at least one planned season, could lead to a period of tactical adjustment, and the longer they stay there increases the risk of apathy among supporters, which in turn would remove the atmospheric threat of home-field advantage.

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Getty Images SportNot about attendances

Tottenham averaged crowds of 67,953 in their one full Premier League season at Wembley, breaking the attendance record at 83,222 during a 1-0 win against Arsenal. They also welcomed 83,782 and 84,010 spectators in Champions League clashes with Real Madrid and Juventus respectively. But when Spurs had to continue there for 2018-19, attendances dropped to a mean of 52,584, with Pochettino bemoaning the occasions where the entire upper tier of the bowl was closed off.

Therein lies another issue Arsenal would face. Tottenham had to receive special permission from Brent council to play their 2017-18 matches with the freedom to sell tickets for all 90,000 seats, with many locals opposed to such a move. Under current rules, Wembley can only host a certain number of full-capacity events per calendar year, which meant Spurs did not bother seeking that same approval for 2018-19. They had to accept their status as tenants rather than leaseholders, but this still led to various problems, including having to host a Carabao Cup win versus Watford at Stadium:MK in Milton Keynes – over 50 miles away – due to a clash of events, a Premier League loss to Manchester City being overshadowed by the ripped-up and spray-painted turf the match was played on after hosting the NFL one day prior, and then having to play three games in six days due to the inability to reschedule this tie.

There is no doubt that Arsenal would be able to come close to selling out Wembley should they move in as renters, just as Spurs did to the tune of £15m, and this would give supporters currently unable to frequent the Emirates Stadium due to the club's competitive ballot scheme the opportunity to see their heroes in the flesh. Conversely, the additional number of tourists and away fans capable of purchasing tickets in the home end would dilute an atmosphere which is already fiercely criticised at their current stadium. Arsenal and their supporters would be second-class citizens at the mercy of Wembley's operators.

Isak & Wilson upgrade: £50m man “pushing to join Newcastle" after Woltemade

Newcastle United’s search for attacking reinforcements has defined their summer window, with Eddie Howe desperate to reshape his forward line before the transfer deadline.

The long-running uncertainty surrounding Alexander Isak has complicated matters, while Callum Wilson’s departure to West Ham has also forced the club into action.

The Magpies have already secured one marquee addition up front, with German striker Nick Woltemade set to arrive from Stuttgart in a club-record £69m deal.

The 23-year-old, who impressed at the U21 Euros, is viewed internally as the direct replacement for wantaway forward Isak.

The Swedish international has refused to reintegrate into Howe’s squad after Liverpool made an approach earlier in the summer.

Woltemade’s arrival marks a significant step forward for Newcastle’s recruitment drive, but the club are not finished yet.

Howe and his staff want a second new attacker before the window closes – and another target continues to make headlines as he pushes for a move to Tyneside.

Newcastle ready for next striker swoop

According to Ben Jacobs, Brentford forward Yoane Wissa has made his desire to move to St James’ Park clear and is actively “pushing to join Newcastle” after the Magpies had their most recent bid – £35m plus £5m in add-ons – rejected.

The lure of playing Champions League football is said to play a central role in the forward’s thinking.

Brentford are holding firm on their reported £50m valuation, but Newcastle are expected to return with an improved offer.

At 28 years old, Wissa does not fit the usual recruitment profile favoured by the club’s hierarchy, who typically target players aged 24 or under.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

However, his Premier League track record makes him an attractive option.

Last season he scored 19 goals and registered five assists in just 35 appearances.

Newcastle view Woltemade as the long-term successor to Isak, but Wissa is seen as the ideal replacement for Wilson, who has struggled with injuries over the past two campaigns.

The prospect of pairing the Bundesliga forward with the Brentford star excites Howe’s staff, who may feel the duo would represent a clear upgrade on Wilson and Isak.

Newcastle could be set to upgrade on Wilson & Isak

From a tactical standpoint, the potential combination of Woltemade and Wissa offers Newcastle something they lacked last season – consistency and availability.

Injuries to Isak and Wilson meant the pair missed 38 games between them in 2024/25, leaving Howe short of reliable attacking options.

By contrast, Woltemade and Wissa missed only seven matches combined, underlining their durability across demanding domestic campaigns.

The German striker brings physical presence at 1.98m, aerial dominance, and the ability to link play with intelligent hold-up work.

His Bundesliga return of 12 goals in 28 appearances last season demonstrates his effectiveness, but his underlying numbers point to even greater potential.

According to FBref, Woltemade averages 4.38 shot-creating actions per 90 minutes – more than double Wissa’s 2.13 – and completed 26.1 carries per 90, highlighting his tendency to drop deeper and progress the ball.

Wissa, by contrast, offers ruthless penalty-box instincts and movement in behind. He contributed 23 goal involvements in 25 league appearances last season, placing him among the most efficient forwards in the division.

While his shot-on-target percentage of 45.6% was slightly lower than Woltemade’s 50%, his ability to get into scoring positions consistently is a key asset.

Stuttgart's Nick Woltemade

His 1.27 shots on target per 90 closely matches the German’s 1.28.

In terms of progressive metrics, Woltemade edges it again, with 2.89 progressive passes per 90 compared to Wissa’s 2.07 and a passing distance of 58.8 metres against 49.9.

But Wissa makes up ground defensively, averaging more tackles (0.68 per 90) and matching the younger striker’s pressing intensity.

For Howe, the blend of attributes is what makes the partnership appealing.

Woltemade can act as the focal point – a target man capable of holding defenders and bringing teammates into play – while Wissa thrives as a secondary striker or inside forward, exploiting space with his acceleration and sharp finishing.

Together, they could provide Newcastle with a frontline as effective as any in the Premier League.

Stats – 2024/25

Matches Played

35

28

Goals

19

12

Assists

4

2

Progressive Carries

60

31

Progressive Passes

67

52

The only concern is Wissa’s age profile and potential absence due to the Africa Cup of Nations in early 2026.

At 28, he does not represent a long-term investment in the same way as Woltemade, and his participation in AFCON could leave Newcastle short during a critical period of the season.

That said, the contrast in availability compared to Wilson and Isak last season suggests he would still significantly boost squad reliability.

Newcastle have already strengthened across other positions – adding Jacob Ramsey, Anthony Elanga, Malick Thiaw and Aaron Ramsdale – but the club’s ability to truly challenge on all fronts depends on securing the necessary firepower.

Without a recognised striker, they struggled to convert chances in their opening fixtures against Aston Villa and Liverpool, with makeshift options failing to deliver in front of goal.

The pursuit of Wissa, therefore, is about more than depth. It represents Newcastle’s determination to build a balanced and reliable forward line for both domestic and European campaigns.

With Woltemade already in the building and the Brentford forward still pushing to make the switch, Howe could soon have the attacking options he needs to move on from the uncertainty of the Isak era.

Not Woltemade: Big-money Wilson upgrade has said yes to joining Newcastle

Newcastle could be closing in on the signing of a new striker at St James’ Park.

ByWill Miller Aug 28, 2025

Better deal than Isak: Liverpool planning D-Day bid for £76m "superstar"

Rio Ngumoha is the talk of the town after scoring a last-gasp winner for Liverpool at St. James’ Park on Monday night, thus preserving Arne Slot’s flawless start to the Premier League campaign.

‘Flawless’ perhaps conveys the wrong mood. Liverpool have been pressed against the ropes in each of their opening league fixtures this season, yet they have snatched victory against Bournemouth at Anfield and Newcastle United on Tyneside.

It wouldn’t be unfair to suggest that Slot’s side are tactically imbalanced at the moment, with the thrilling addition of British-record playmaker Florian Wirtz seeming to distort the team’s balance, and the defensive fragility of Ibrahima Konate and much change further providing Slot with food for thought.

And so talks are ongoing for Crystal Palace centre-back Marc Guehi, with hope that he will sign before deadline day. Perhaps the 25-year-old’s arrival would add depth and another dimension at the rear to launch Liverpool back into a smoother rhythm.

However, there’s another top target who could. Indeed, Alexander Isak’s potential move to Merseyside remains one of the biggest stories as the market winds down.

The latest on Isak to Liverpool

Liverpool’s bid for Newcastle United striker Isak is going down to the wire, with the Magpies still yet to sign one centre-forward this summer – let alone two.

The Sweden international has made it perfectly clear he has no intention of staying at St. James’ Park beyond the transfer window (though how much power he has over that is another matter), but Liverpool will not follow up their rejected £110m offer from the start of August without encouragement from the Toon.

A PIF delegation extended an olive branch to the 25-year-old after Liverpool’s dramatic victory on Monday, but Isak has doubled down on his stance.

The ball, frustratingly, is in Newcastle’s court, for they cannot reasonably cash in on their talisman if they do not find and sign a replacement (or two).

With that in mind, FSG have identified the perfect alternative, and he might even prove to be a better signing for Slot’s side.

Liverpool ready D-day bid for Isak alternative

If Liverpool do fail in their protracted bid to sign Isak, sporting director Richard Hughes won’t turn to an alternative centre-forward.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

That’s according to GIVEMESPORT. The publication have revealed that Liverpool are ready to make a deadline-day swoop for Real Madrid winger Rodrygo in the event that they miss out on Isak.

Rodrygo has been anticipated to leave Real this summer after struggles last season and signs of a diminished role under Xabi Alonso’s wing. Even with the La Liga giants open to the Brazilian’s departure, he has been priced at £76m.

Real Madrid's Rodrygo

Arsenal and Manchester City have shown interest of their own this summer, but the Gunners have signed Eberechi Eze this week and Pep Guardiola’s outfit look set to bar Savinho’s move to Tottenham Hotspur, thus jeopardising their move for Rodrygo.

What Rodrygo would bring to Liverpool

Liverpool sold Luis Diaz to Bayern Munich this summer, but Cody Gakpo has started the season strongly, scoring against Bournemouth and notching two assists at Newcastle. Ngumoha’s incredible emergence eases the need for a wide forward further.

But Rodrygo is a special player, and there’s no doubt that Liverpool could do with a little bit more to complete their frontline.

Given that the 24-year-old, who can play on both wings and as a frontman, managed to score 14 goals and provide 11 assists across all competitions last year, even though in a rut, Liverpool could strike gold in bringing him over.

And considering that he would cost less than Isak, maybe Rodrygo would even prove the better signing to make.

Isak is one of the best strikers in the world, and last year he scored 27 goals across all competitions as Newcastle qualified for the Champions League and won the Carabao Cup, with Isak scoring as Newcastle beat Liverpool at Wembley.

But Madrid’s tenacious wide forward has been remarked to be a “world-class superstar” by his former teammate Luka Modric, and boasts a wide-ranging skill set that appears custom-built for a top role in the Premier League.

Rodrygo’s clinical output over the past year has left plenty to be desired, no doubt about it, but there would be confidence that Slot could give rise to the £207k-per-week talent’s prolific side, while harnessing that ever-present underlying energy and application.

Goals

0.32

0.80

Assists

0.20

0.17

Shots taken

2.54

3.14

Shot-creating actions

4.75

3.07

Pass completion

85.8%

75.8%

Touches (att pen)

5.88

6.15

Progressive passes

4.72

3.00

Progressive carries

5.22

2.73

Successful take-ons

2.19

1.43

Isak and Rodrygo, two forwards of varying position and role, aren’t comparable in the strictest sense, but looking at their data when lined against one another underscores the reasoning behind a Liverpool bid for the latter.

To put it simply, Liverpool have hit the jackpot on Hugo Ekitike, whose £79m journey from Eintracht Frankfurt to Anfield has already yielded three goals and an assist from three matches. Sky Sports’ Jamie Carragher has hailed the Frenchman’s “brilliant start”, and there are those who question the need for a record-breaking move for Isak after such an exciting addition.

Ekitike, 23, looks a real sensation in the making, and though it would be unfair to expect him to maintain his present output across the long and circuitous campaign, who can deny him his potential?

Hugo Ekitike scores for Liverpool

Might Isak inhibit that growth? Might the addition of the Scandinavian superstar threaten to disrupt the progress of a rising talent who has already found a degree of fluency in England that avoids so many foreign hopefuls as they wade in and look to make their name.

Rodrygo, however, could play across the frontline and thus add depth without disrupting the progress being forged at Anfield right now.

Make no mistake, Isak would be an incredible signing for Liverpool, but Rodrygo, cheaper and more positionally dynamic, is a world-class player himself, and he knows how to shape a team aiming for the top.

Bad news for Wirtz: Liverpool "ready to bid" for £120k-per-week "machine"

Liverpool are set to continue their heavy summer spending with a deal that could even hamper Florian Wirtz…

4 ByJoe Nuttall Aug 28, 2025

India A to play three four-day games against Lions before England Tests

This is a chance for Test regulars to find form or hopefuls to stake claim for selection

Sidharth Monga16-Jan-2025

Senior batters Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma had a difficult tour of Australia•Associated Press

Players wanting to stake claim or to regain form for India’s tour of England will get three four-day matches against England Lions between the end of the IPL on May 25 and the start of the Tests on June 20.India’s batters playing hardly any multi-day cricket outside Test matches has emerged as a point of contention in the fallout of a disastrous season. In 2024-25, India ended their dominant unbeaten series streak at home with a 3-0 whitewash against New Zealand followed by a 3-1 defeat in Australia, the first time they have lost the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in 10 years. For the first time in three editions, India failed to make the World Test Championship (WTC) final, which will now open up time for even Test regulars to play for India A.The batting was in such disarray in Australia that the captain Rohit Sharma even “opted out” of the Sydney Test. He also said he was not retiring and not “going anywhere”. It can be a long way back into the side when you consider yourself to be not good enough to play a specific Test. The obvious question can be: what has changed between then and now that you return into the squad and potentially be the captain?The heat is also on Virat Kohli, who has averaged 30.72 and scored only three hundreds since 2020, to work on his game after he was dismissed off the outside edge in each of his innings in Australia and had no off-side scoring options off the back foot.There is only one Ranji Trophy game they – and indeed the youngsters – can play before they join the ODI side for the series against England. The English County Championships go into a break to provide a window for the T20 Blast exactly during the gap between the IPL and the Tests in England.The window for the T20 Blast might raise a question over the quality of opposition India A might get but the BCCI is confident that the ECB will reciprocate after the Lions were given a strong opposition on their shadow tour alongside the Test tour of India in 2023-24. The BCCI has an arrangement for shadow tours of the A team around the Test tours with both ECB and CA.England Lions’ opposition last year included Sarfaraz Khan, Dhruv Jurel, Akash Deep and Prasidh Krishna, all of whom went on to play Tests for India later in the year. When India toured Australia, their opposition included Scott Boland, Sam Konstas, Beau Webster and Nathan McSweeney, all of whom played during the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.The exact dates and opposition remain to be finalised, but the BCCI expects a Lions team of similar strength in the lead-up to the Tests in England in 2025. It is learnt that the BCCI has offered the batters these matches as an opportunity to present their case for selection. Whether they play and how they do there is likely to be considered by the selectors when they pick the squad.

'More questions than answers' – Stu Holden calls out Mauricio Pochettino's tactics, insists that changes are needed for the USMNT to 'start beating top opponents'

Holden questioned both tactical and lineup decisions by Pochettino, pointing to the Tim Ream and Tristan Blackmon pairing

Holden questioned several of Pochettino's decisionsDidn't understand the thought process on defenseSays U.S. must get a win against a top opponent Get the MLS Season Pass today!Stream games nowWHAT HAPPENED?

Following a 2-0 loss to South Korea on Saturday night, the USMNT are now winless in their last seven matches against non-North American top-25 opponents, being outscored 17-3 in that span. It is a worrying sign for former U.S. star Stu Holden, who says manager Mauricio Pochettino needs to find a rhythm with the team ahead of the World Cup.

"This is the national team 10 months away from the World Cup," Holden said on the "State of the Union" podcast. "If you're going to experiment and you have different partnerships, some of that is expected. But tactically, the discipline, the way the U.S. looks in and out of shape, it's more concerning for me than it is encouraging from what I saw in this game."

Holden pointed to numerous tactical decisions by Pochettino, including the manager's call to start Tristan Blackmon in his first U.S. game, which led to issues against Son Heung-Min and the South Korea attack.

"Let's be honest, Tristan Blackmon was pretty underwhelming," Holden said. "I was interested in trying to figure out what Pochettino was really asking of him. Especially when the U.S. were in possession, he was squeezing very tight. And then even defensively, when the U.S. were in their own half defending, he was playing very aggressively. And that's actually what led to that first goal by South Korea."

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Blackmon wasn't the only player who had issues for the U.S. Holden called out other tactical flaws, saying, "We had no pressure on the ball, and the lines were disconnected."

Despite the loss, Pochettino stressed that the USMNT have improved, evidenced by bettering South Korea in both shots taken and possession. Yet the team was shut out.

"The fact is, again, we didn't score a goal. Again, we didn't beat a top-25 opponent, which we haven't done since the 2022 World Cup," Holden said. "And once again, we're left with more questions than answers." 

Holden suggested that Pochettino consider a five-man backline and start another centerback with Chris Richards and Tim Ream, which could create more freedom for the attack.

"It alleviates a little bit of defensive pressure on [Christian] Pulisic and [Tim] Weah, from [Diego] Luna, from whoever is on the forward part of the field," Holden said. "I just think Pochettino now has to start transitioning his head to start thinking 'We can't beat top opponents, we need to stop conceding goals against top opponents.'

"To go far in the World Cup, you need to start beating top opponents. We can't do it in the formation that we have. He's even said it himself, that this is the last window for experimentation… Formation may indeed be a part of the problem."

WHAT HOLDEN SAID

Josh Sargent made the start at striker against South Korea, but struggled before being subbed off for Folarin Balogun in the second half. Holden said the way the U.S. are being set up in attack doesn't allow the team to get the best out of Championship's leading striker.

"He is a guy who thrives off crosses in the box – we don't cross the ball," Holden said. "Josh Sargent, his average position was deeper than Diego Luna… It's just this hodgepodge in the middle, and there's no width. There's nothing dynamic in the way they were creating."

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WHAT NEXT FOR THE USMNT?

The U.S. will now look to regroup when they face Japan on Tuesday in Columbus, Ohio.

Chelsea hold talks with £100k-per-week England star this week

Chelsea are still in the market for new signings after sealing deals for Liam Delap, Jamie Gittens and Joao Pedro, despite their immediate need to sell players, and they could be on for an end-of-window surge.

£130k-a-week ace in talks to leave Chelsea as BlueCo prepare "ruthless" axe

The west Londoners are ready to offload a host of players.

1

By
Emilio Galantini

Jul 16, 2025

Their triumph in the Club World Cup and subsequent £87.5 million cash prize has practically paid for both Delap and Gittens – who cost a combined £85 million – so BlueCo do have money to spend.

Chelsea’s best performers in the Premier League last season

Average match rating

Cole Palmer

7.33

Moises Caicedo

7.02

Enzo Fernández

6.95

Nicolas Jackson

6.88

Noni Madueke

6.82

via WhoScored

They’ve also sold Kepa Arrizabalaga, Basir Humphreys, Noni Madueke, Marcus Bettinelli and Djordje Petrovic for a combined, estimated and reported total of around £96 million, with midfielder Mathis Amougou joining sister club Strasbourg for an additional undisclosed fee.

In terms of PSR, Chelsea are actually in line to make a profit right now and sailing comfortably under the limit, but they were recently sanctioned by UEFA for breaking their separate, more strict FFP rules.

The Blues need to sell players and balance out their squad, or face the prospect of not being able to register new players for the Champions League next season (Kaveh Solhekol).

With many players facing uncertain futures on the chopping block, Chelsea’s business for the rest of the window hinges on managing to get rid of certain squad members, but if they do, the west Londoners could still be on for a late-window flurry of incomings (Simon Phillips).

BlueCo remain keen on backing Enzo Maresca in the transfer market, and journalist Simon Phillips reports that the Italian is prioritising further attacking additions, due to Chelsea’s struggles playing against teams with a low block last season.

Chelsea hold new talks with Eberechi Eze's representatives this week

Writing via his Substack, the Chelsea reporter claims £100,000-per-week Crystal Palace star Eberechi Eze is among their key targets.

Crystal Palace's EberechiEzeposes with the player of the match trophy

They face stiff competition from Arsenal, who are about to formally approach Palace over signing Eze after holding talks on the player’s side for weeks (Ben Jacobs), but Chelsea have now reached out to the 27-year-old’s camp as well.

“SPTC sources have heard that yesterday, Chelsea held new talks with the agents of Eberechi Eze of Crystal Palace,” said Phillips on Wednesday.

“However, there has been no club-to-club contact yet, but it looks like Chelsea are seeing if they can get the player buy-in first. Eze has a release clause believed to be around £65m. So if Chelsea get the player buy in, they can just trigger this.

“However, we know that it’s not just about the fee, it’s about how it can be paid, and other aspects. Chelsea may also look to bring that fee down by offering players as they do with most deals at the moment. Palace have a number of Chelsea players on their wish list, with Trevoh Chalobah being the main one.

“Let’s see if this goes any further but for now, just talks with Eze’s agent to establish if any deal is possible on that side.”

The England international netted 14 goals and 11 assists in all competitions last season, including Palace’s match-winning goal against Man City in the FA Cup final, and he’s been a star player for Palace since his move from QPR in 2020.

Club now "working tirelessly" to sign Arsenal "magician" for pre-season

Arsenal have made a real splash in the market this summer, completing an array of high-profile deals with more to follow, but they’ll also need to sell this summer.

The north Londoners, once they announce their £50 million-plus deal for Noni Madueke, will have spent around £125 million on transfers, and that isn’t including their potential moves for Sporting striker Viktor Gyokeres and Crystal Palace star Eberechi Eze.

Arsenal transfer spending under Arteta (via Sky Sports)

Money on new signings

19/20 – winter

£0

20/21 – summer

£81.5m

20/21 – winter

£900k

21/22 – summer

£156.8m

21/22 – winter

£1.8m

22/23 – summer

£121.5m

22/23 – winter

£59m

23/24 – summer

£208m

23/24 – winter

£0

24/25 – summer

£101.5m

24/25 – winter

£0

25/26 – summer

£75m

Arsenal are in advanced talks to sign Viktor Gyokeres, according to credible media sources, and the Swede is even refusing to train as he eyes a dream move to the Emirates Stadium.

Meanwhile, positive discussions have been held with Eze’s representatives too, and the 27-year-old could join Arsenal in an entirely separate deal to Madueke – so Andrea Berta could easily take Arsenal’s spending to over £200 million if these moves come to fruition.

The signing of Madueke has brought up question marks surrounding both Gabriel Martinelli and Leandro Trossard’s futures.

Given Arsenal need to balance the books, either one of the left-wingers could realistically depart, with The Athletic previously reporting that Arsenal are not averse to a suitable bid for Martinelli and will consider selling for the right price.

The Brazilian’s contract also expires in 2027, but Arsenal do have an option to extend it by a further year. However, the same cannot be said for Trossard, who’s now entered the final 12 months of his deal, and this window represents a final opportunity for Berta to make any cash back off the 30-year-old’s exit.

Fenerbahce "working tirelessly" to sign Leandro Trossard from Arsenal

According to Turkish news outlet Ntvspor, via Fener Ajans, Jose Mourinho’s Fenerbahce could give Arsenal an avenue to agree Trossard’s departure before his contract expires.

What’s more, they could do it in imminent fashion, with Fenerbahce “working tirelessly” to sign Trossard for pre-season, which begins in just three days, as the Süper Lig giants fly out to Portugal and begin their camp on July 14 (Daily Sabah).

The Belgian has been a very useful impact player for Arteta since his move from Brighton, and perhaps underrated, with Trossard featuring in every single Premier League game for them last season.

Trossard also bagged 10 goals and 10 assists across 56 appearances in all competitions during 2024/2025, and he’s thought of highly by Arteta, so his departure would certainly come as bitter-sweet.

“Trossard, great player. He’s a little magician,” said Arteta about Trossard in 2024.

“He can score on any surface, and he’s a big threat; so composed, so cool, he can play in different positions. It’s just a joy to have him in the team.”

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