Leeds fans have their say on how much Phillips is worth

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Leeds United fans have had their say on how much Kalvin Phillips is actually worth.

This comes after reports that the Whites have set a £30m price tag on the midfielder.

Fans seemingly couldn’t agree on what he was worth, and they’re not the only ones.

Aston Villa have apparently been lining up a £14m bid, but Leeds want more than double that amount.

Estimations ranged from £10m all the way up to £35m, while other fans simply replied saying that he was worth as much as Jack Grealish as he has been seen as another premier second division talent.

Phillips’ commanding performances in the middle of the park for United this term earned him a place in the Championship Team of the Season.

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There has been plenty of Premier League interest in the 23-year-old, but if he is to leave the club this summer fans want their club to receive a good fee.

Here’s what the Elland Road faithful have been saying on Twitter…

Indians dominate overseas presence in DPL

With the BCCI allowing their players in List-A tournaments abroad, the DPL could once again become a profitable destination for Indian players

Mohammad Isam and Shashank Kishore26-Jun-2016Overseas interest in the Dhaka Premier League began to rise in 2013-14, when the tournament was granted List A status. That season attracted 82 players from outside Bangladesh, including Eoin Morgan, Ravi Bopara, Luke Wright, Jacob Oram and Ryan ten Doeschate. The BCB had allowed two overseas players per team then. That limit was set at one in 2014-15 and still there were plenty of players from Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, England and Afghanistan participating.

Indian players in DPL 2016

  • Rajat Bhatia (Abahani) 105 runs and 2 wickets in 2 matches

  • Dinesh Karthik (Abahani) 179 runs in 4 matches

  • Uday Kaul (Abahani) 169 runs in 4 matches

  • Manoj Tiwary (Abahani) 40 runs in 1 match

  • Yusuf Pathan (Abahani) 68 runs in 2 matches

  • Manvinder Bisla (Abahani) 50 runs in 2 matches

  • Yashpal Singh (Abahani) 9 runs in 1 match

  • Milind Kumar (Brothers Union) 49 runs and 4 wickets in 4 matches

  • Puneet Bisht (Gazi Group) 86 runs in 1 match

  • Gurkeerat Singh (Gazi Group) 22 runs and 2 wickets in 2 matches

  • Jatin Saxena (KCA) 279 runs and 7 wickets in 7 matches

  • Paras Dogra (Kalabagan) 23 runs in 2 matches

  • Rohan Prem (Kalabagan) 34 runs in 2 matches

  • Pawan Negi (Rupganj) 184 runs and 6 wickets in 5 matches

  • Jalaj Saxena (Rupganj) 52 runs in 2 matches

  • Ishank Jaggi (Rupganj) 39 runs in 3 matches

  • Bipul Sharma (MSC) 134 runs and 4 wickets in 2 matches

  • Mithun Manhas (MSC) 37 runs in 2 matches

  • Sachin Rana (Prime Bank) 75 runs and 4 wickets in 2 matches

  • Unmukt Chand (Prime Bank) 197 runs and 3 wickets in 6 matches

  • Sachin Baby (Doleshwar) 127 runs and 1 wicket in 5 matches

  • Ashok Menaria (Doleshwar) 75 runs and 4 wickets in 4 matches

Over the years, DPL teams have preferred to have Pakistani players. But that changed in 2013 when the PCB stopped issuing No-objection certificates to play in Bangladesh. The ban was lifted last year.This season Indians were the hot property. There were 22 of them in a total of 36 overseas players. Next in terms of number were the Sri Lankans (10). BCB director Jalal Yunus believed this was because the best available players were from those two countries.”The BCCI allowed them to play overseas, only in List-A format, after a number of years,” he said. “So, most of the clubs went for Indian and Sri Lankan players this season. Pakistani players were not called up this year because many of their top names were busy in various competitions.”Uday Kaul was the first Indian signed up this DPL; he appeared in Abahani Limited’s opening game on April 22. Abahani recruited six more of his countrymen, including Manoj Tiwary, Dinesh Karthik, Yusuf Pathan and Rajat Bhatia, who has played in previous seasons.Legends of Rupganj picked up three Indians – Jalaj Saxena, Ishank Jaggi and Pawan Negi, who stayed with them the longest.Jalaj’s elder brother, Jatin Saxena was the highest run-getter and wicket-taker among the 22 Indian players. He finished with 279 runs and seven wickets from the seven matches he played for Kalabagan Cricket Academy.His team was one of two to be demoted from the premier to the first division, but Jatin made the most of his opportunity and strengthened his chances of playing for a new team in the forthcoming Indian domestic season after obtaining an NOC from his current side Madhya Pradesh.Jatin made his debut for MP in 2008, but managed to play just 50 matches across formats in eight years. “Lack of opportunities at Madhya Pradesh was a little tough, so I wanted to look for avenues,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “I was in touch with clubs in UAE, but given the proximity and the standard of cricket, I thought Bangladesh was my best option.”Jalaj helped Jatin get in touch with Kalabagan. But the level of performance required from an overseas player to consistently feature in the XI had originally made him nervous.”It was a challenge playing there, especially because I was going there on the back of just training sessions here, and not matches,” Jatin said. “Given the competitive nature of the tournament, there is onus on you to perform, because two bad games, and there are chances that you would be replaced by another professional. So that way, there was pressure.”Jatin’s gains weren’t restricted to the field either. “As a professional, I learned about managing myself, going out of my way to interact with your team-mates. Language was a barrier, but we did just fine. The local players there were as eager to welcome me as much as I was looking forward to it. I made a lot of friends there. They were very inquisitive about club culture in India, our leagues, our domestic format. So, apart from cricket, there was healthy exchange of ideas.”While Jatin came, performed and left quietly, there was much frenzy in the media about the arrival of Tiwary. Ironically, he could only play one match in Dhaka and had to return to Kolkata to play the Super League, a club tournament – the final of which was the first match played in India with the pink ball.Tiwary said his interest in the DPL came via Shakib Al Hasan, his former team-mate at Kolkata Knight Riders. “Shakib and I forged a good friendship during my time with KKR, and he’s been talking about the DPL for a while now, and kept asking me if I was interested for the last two-three years. But because I was playing in the IPL, I wanted to use the little time we get after that to recover and gear up for our own season.”But this time, my summer was free since I wasn’t part of the IPL. So I thought it was good to get some match time in Bangladesh. But because this time the CAB [Cricket Association of Bengal] organised two more local tournaments, including the Super League, I could just play one game.”Tiwary didn’t get to play with Shakib, though both of them were in the same team but felt it had been a good experience to play with the other top Bangladeshi players in Abahani.”I played with Tamim [Iqbal], Taskin [Ahmed], Liton Das, so in a way it was the cream of the crop,” he said. “Net sessions were good, I thought it was extremely competitive. Bangladesh has improved in the limited-overs format, and that improvement, I feel, is a result of having competitive tournaments like these.”There was a time when players such as Raman Lamba, Ashok Malhotra and Arun Lal regularly played the DPL but the availability of Pakistani and Sri Lankan talent slowly took Indians out of the equation. Now, with the BCCI allowing their players in List A tournaments abroad, the DPL could once again become a profitable destination for Indian players.

One day in 1996

The 1996 South Australian side was a team of its time – a study in contrast to the youthful line-up who have brought the state back to the Shield final after 20 years

Daniel Brettig in Adelaide25-Mar-2016Tucked away on Youtube is a 15-minute video capturing the last two overs of the 1996 Sheffield Shield final.The scenes in the middle are tense enough, as Western Australia’s Brad Hogg and Brendon Julian try valiantly to separate South Australia’s last pair of Shane George and Peter McIntyre. But much of the best footage captures the scenes around the game, as a crowd of some 15,000 expectant South Australians, and a transfixed state team, sit and ponder how life might be different depending on these last 12 balls.When the celebrations arrive, they are as intense as anything seen in the game, from McIntyre’s hilarious attempts at heel kicking and the release of tension in the SA viewing area, to the crowd’s uproarious invasion of the field. One supporter races a tricolour flag onto the pitch, in a harbinger of the scenes to be witnessed when the Crows won the AFL premiership a year later.Reminders of time and place abound. This is a vivid portrait of Australian cricket, and Adelaide, 20 years ago. A few of the glimpses include:* It was the last year of Benson and Hedges sponsorship of Australian cricket, and SA’s captain Jamie Siddons makes special mention of the hole being left by the legal inability of a tobacco company to sponsor the game anymore.* The game is televised by Optus Vision, a defunct early pay television operator after the market was opened up beyond the free-to-air networks in 1995.* Adelaide Oval was still a relatively small cricket ground, and would not have lights for another two seasons. A young Andrew Sinclair, now the president of the South Australia Cricket Association and a member of the board of the Stadium Management Authority that presides over the multi-purpose venue, watched the final hour from in front of the Victor Richardson Gates, now occupied by the vast eastern stands.* SA’s viewing area is a veritable who’s who of Australian cricket coaching. Siddons is now coach of the Redbacks, wicketkeeper Tim Nielsen a former Australia coach and now Siddons’ immediate superior at the SACA. Darren Lehmann and Greg Blewett are now offsides with the national team. SA’s coach Jeff Hammond was at the time thought a contender to replace Bob Simpson.* Yorkshire coach Jason Gillespie is still sporting his youthful ponytail when SA pose with the Shield. James Brayshaw is still Jamie, not a Channel Nine personality, but a forceful middle-order batsman with a knack for making hundreds, against Victoria, in particular.

‘Chadd Sayers my one regret’

Seven years after his retirement, Paul Nobes returned to Adelaide Oval as South Australia’s chairman of selectors, and ushered in a fresh generation of players who came within one match of making the Sheffield Shield final in 2006 – the closest in any season since their last victory.
The role included some unpleasant tasks, such as ushering his old friend Darren Lehmann into retirement in 2007, but Nobes says he has only one regret: not choosing Chadd Sayers when he was tearing up club and second-XI batting with a method deemed at the time to lack pace and height.
“We had Jason Gillespie, Ryan Harris, Paul Rofe and Mark Cleary, and I regretted not picking Chadd in that period,” he says. “He was playing very well in second XI cricket, but there were always doubts there shouldn’t have been. We kept on hearing, ‘he’s not quite quick enough,’ or ‘not quite tall enough,’ and that was the mistake we made as a panel, because we gave too much credence to it.
“In the end, it’s not your height or your pace, it’s how many wickets you can get and what contribution you can make to a team. Swing bowling in Australia is precious because not many batsmen play it well.”

* A fresh-faced Adam Gilchrist is interviewed briefly after WA were thwarted. A first-innings 189 was his first major innings, and led to the first Australian call-up of a decorated career later in the year. “An exceptional game of cricket, one of the better ones I’ve ever played in,” he says, “but very disappointing to dominate a game like that.”* The Shield is presented to Siddons by Tasmania’s Denis Rogers, who was then the ACB chairman. This time the Cricket Australia chairman David Peever and the chief executive James Sutherland will both be away in India. CA have discussed the future of the final lately, a conversation Rogers could not have imagined.* Siddons, when handed the Shield, invites “as many people as we can fit into the Planet tonight” to celebrate. The Planet was a nightclub in Pirie St, part owned by the off spinner Tim May, who now lives in the US, along with the footballer Chris McDermott, the professional tennis player and coach Darren Cahill, and the prominent Adelaide lawyer Greg Griffin. WA’s players joined the Redbacks in the club that night.* To one side of SA’s team pose is Barry “Nugget” Rees, the team’s constant companion and motivator, whose prominence in Australian cricket has only grown since. These days, Lehmann gets him involved with the national side as much as possible.At the back of the team is the moustachioed figure of Paul Nobes, another figure very much of that time. Never an athlete, he was an opening batsman, at once swashbuckling and resolute, and impressively consistent with a rough-hewn method. An understated member of the team, his low profile is summed up by the fact that Nobes and May are not visible in the viewing area shots, for superstition had them bolted down to their seats in the dressing room beneath, having been there when the final hour began.Nobes remembers an SA side that built steadily over three seasons – competitive in 1994, thwarted finalists against Queensland in 1995, and then, finally, victorious in 1996. He says that a team largely considered cavalier had matured into a far more adaptable unit by that third summer, capable of dogged defence as much as brazen attack, as they proved on that final day. McIntyre, in particular, had been moved to improve his batting after his Test debut was marred by a failure to stay with Ian Healy against England in Adelaide the season before.”Credit to Macca, he’d done a fair bit of work on his batting during the year and it hadn’t really shown up much because our tail wasn’t one of our strong points for the year,” Nobes says, “and Georgey always had the ability but didn’t put his mind to it that often. But the last hour, and then the countdown from the crowd, I think it was 30 balls, Julian and a young Brad Hogg bowling. It was very exciting, which made it all the better at the end.”There was a lot of hugging and ‘Wow this is incredible’. I remember Macca running up the stairs and not going through the door, just jumping through the front of the viewing area. That night, we ended up at the Planet Nightclub that Tim May was a partner in, the WA boys came along too, and it was a great night, a real thrill.”

The diverse pathways taken by so many of the class of ’96 demonstrates how admirable it was to mould that disparate group into a team, but also that the Australian game back then was still able to take all sorts

At the time, Siddons and others spoke of dynasties, but the centre did not hold. Calming influences like May and Nobes disappeared into retirement, Brayshaw began thinking of a looming media career, and Hammond departed for pastures new. Nobes believes the coach’s role was not sufficiently acknowledged at the time, and notes how a more mellow and experienced Siddons is now providing the right combination of elements for a young SA team 20 years later.”Bomber [Hammond] played an integral part, but some people in the team and around the team didn’t see the importance of him,” Nobes says. “But there was a few of us who certainly did. He was able to manage individuals – Tim May and I probably weren’t the greatest athletes and someone else may think everyone needs to run a time trial in certain times, but Bomber was very good at managing the players and their personalities. I think Jamie probably understands a lot more about that now. Not everyone’s the same”I’ve spoken to him a couple of times this year and I think he’s much more rounded and he would have matured as well over time. He’s a much better coach now than he was back in 1996-97, although I was never coached by Jamie as I’d retired. Coaching is much more about being a people manager – probably not his strongest suit as a cricketer – and that’s what he’s grown into. As we get older we learn a few more lessons, and I’m so pleased for him.”Minus Nobes, May and Hammond, SA went from first in 1996 to last in 1997, beginning two decades where the team did not even make the Shield final, let alone win it. The team of 1996 has never assembled for a formal reunion, and Nobes observes how many different directions that players have gone in, from cricket coaching and television work, to overseas lives like May’s in Texas. “It was,” he says, “a funny old team.”A childhood friend of Lehmann in Adelaide’s north, Nobes remains in the motor vehicle industry that has been the region’s lifeblood. He will take control of a new car dealership during the Shield final at Glenelg – though he hopes to find time to pay a visit. The diverse pathways taken by so many of the class of ’96 demonstrate how admirable it was to mould that disparate group into a team, but also that the Australian game back then was still able to take all sorts.That fact is in strong contrast to the more rigorous and athletic approach that has pushed the Redbacks back to the decider this time around, and another reason the Youtube snapshot of that breathless March day in 1996 is one to cherish.

'I should have had five or six!' – Cole Palmer not entirely happy despite scoring four goals in Chelsea win against Brighton – and coach Enzo Maresca agrees

Cole Palmer says he should have scored "five or six" in Chelsea's 4-2 win over Brighton – and coach Enzo Maresca agreed with him.

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  • Chelsea beat Brighton 4-2
  • Palmer scores four goals
  • Says he should have bagged more
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The England international put on a masterclass with four goals in a thrilling win at Stamford Bridge on Saturday. Despite becoming the first player to score four goals in a first half in Premier League history, the former Manchester City man was not entirely satisfied – nor was Blues boss Maresca.

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    WHAT COLE PALMER SAID

    He told : "I should have had five or six! When I missed the first chance I was upset but with the way they played and their high line I felt we'd get more chances. The manager set up a good game plan, we knew how to attack them with first-time passes in behind. Brighton are a good team, pass the ball well. [Brighton] play similarly to us. Three points is what we needed and that is what we got. I try and play every game the best I can."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Since signing for Chelsea last summer, Palmer has scored 31 goals and bagged 19 assists in just 53 games. He is currently showing that last season's numbers were not a fluke – with some Blues fans calling him the "best in the world".

    Head coach Maresca also heaped praise on him but felt he could do even better.

    The Italian said: "[Palmer] scored four, I told him he could have scored two or three more. I knew Cole from years ago at City, he is a top player and just has to continue in the same way."

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    WHAT NEXT?

    After his goalscoring heroics in the Premier League, Palmer's Chelsea side host Gent in their next Europa Conference League match on Thursday – a game the 22-year-old will not be playing in as he is not in the Blues' squad for the competition.

Luke Shaw may not return for Man Utd until AFTER next international break as Erik ten Hag delivers honest update on full-back's recovery from calf injury

Luke Shaw might not return for Manchester United until after the October international break as Erik ten Hag delivered an honest update on his injury.

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  • Shaw nursing a calf injury
  • His progress has been slow
  • Might not be available until late October

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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Shaw has been absent from the United squad since February 18, with a calf injury derailing the latter part of his 2023-24 season. Although the left-back did manage to make a return for England during the summer’s European Championship in the later stages of the tournament, another setback in pre-season has continued to keep him out of action.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Shaw's progress has been at a snail's pace which has further worried Ten Hag. The defender was anticipated to return in September but is running behind schedule and could potentially take close to a month more before being available for selection again.

  • WHAT TEN HAG SAID

    During a press conference ahead of United's Europa League clash against Twente, Ten Hag addressed questions regarding Shaw’s recovery timeline, offering a cautious update on the situation.

    “I think it’s probably [before the break], but I can’t say I'm 100 per cent sure,” Ten Hag said when asked if Shaw could return before the October international break.

    "The plan is just to be back before but as I say I can’t say this 100 per cent for sure. It could also be shortly after the break.”

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Shaw’s continued absence places additional pressure on United’s defensive options, especially with Tyrell Malacia also ruled out for an extended period. Although the young defender is back in a measured capacity at Carrington, he will not be available against Twente. In their absence, Moroccan defender Noussair Mazraoui will likely continue to feature as a full-back along with Diogo Dalot on the other side.

Fabrizio Romano – Arsenal are convinced they can sign £86 million defender

Reliable journalist Fabrizio Romano says Arsenal are really pressing to sign a highly-rated star for their central defence, regardless of claims he could cost £86 million.

Arsenal targeting new defender as Edu eyes four summer signings

Sporting director Edu vowed this week to keep on improving the Arsenal squad, coming after they managed to tie down midfielder Jorginho for another full season.

Arsenal looking into signing "phenomenal" £34 million Partey replacement

The Gunners could wave goodbye to him this summer.

By
Emilio Galantini

May 10, 2024

This message is relayed by Standard Sport journalist Simon Collings, who also shared his own information that Arsenal want a new goalkeeper, defender, midfielder and forward as they seek to back Mikel Arteta for next season.

"We’re very happy to have Jorgi sign a contract extension with us," said Edu on Jorginho's new deal. "He represents what we stand for here at Arsenal with his professionalism and success. “I know everyone at the club will be very excited that Jorgi will continue to be with us, not only the players and coaches, but all the staff behind the scenes as well.

“It’s great that Jorginho remains with us, as we continue building to be better and stronger."

Some reports have claimed that Arsenal could even be set for a record summer spend this year, despite the club splashing out £208 million in total on new arrivals in 2023. A new centre-back is on Edu's agenda at Arsenal, with the likes of Crystal Palace defender Marc Guehi and Sporting Lisbon starlet Ousmane Diomande linked since the start of this year.

Gabriel Magalhaes and William Saliba have been crucial at the back for Arteta over the last two seasons, but as we've seen from Jurrien Timber's ACL injury at the start of this season, either one of them could be unavailable in the blink of an eye.

Arsenal need astute defensive back ups/alternatives to the duo, and one player who they rate very highly in this regard is 18-year-old centre-half Jorrel Hato. The Ajax starlet, who recently signed a new deal, has been tipped to bring in £86 million by journalist Suleyman Ozturk.

“This is a player who represents a transfer value of a hundred million euros, if you think about the future," wrote Ozturk (via Soccer News).

Jorrel Hato's best league games for Ajax this season

Match Rating (via WhoScored)

Ajax 5-0 Vitesse

8.35

Ajax 2-2 PEC Zwolle

7.80

Ajax 2-0 FC Volendam

7.70

Ajax 4-1 Heracles

7.65

Ajax 2-0 FC Utrecht

7.49

"Perhaps he will be the first Ajax player to be sold for more than a hundred million euros."

Arsenal "pushing" to sign Jorrel Hato and convinced they can do it

Speaking on the Here We Go podcast, reliable transfer reporter Romano has claimed Arsenal are "pushing" to sign Hato and convinced they can strike a deal – regardless of his new contract.

“Yes, Arsenal are also working on their future, we know they have many wonderkids in the academy, but there is a player they love. He is playing at Ajax, a centre-back and it is Jorrel Hato,” Romano said.

“Hato signed a new deal at Ajax two months ago, but Arsenal are still following him. They believe Hato is a top centre-back in terms of potential. Keep an eye on Arsenal, they are still pushing for Hato, they believe they are frontrunners in the race to sign him. Let’s see if they can make it happen this summer or if it has to be in the future.”

Newcastle now among favourites to sign "exciting" new star in Gordon repeat

Hoping to make their return to the Premier League's top four next season to prove that the 2022/23 campaign was no blip, Newcastle United are now reportedly in pole position to land a key player in pursuit of their ambitions.

Newcastle transfer news

The Magpies have learned a harsh lesson in squad depth this season, with Eddie Howe's injury list often leaving him short on options as he attempts to navigate playing in four competitions. And that injury list is only set to continue into the next campaign, given that both Sven Botman and Jamaal Lascelles suffered ACL injuries that will rule them out of the start of next season.

Wow: Newcastle reportedly in pole position to snap up off-field addition

A “very important offer” has been made.

By
Henry Jackson

May 1, 2024

The transfer window should help solve Newcastle's problem in the form of Tosin Adarabioyo, however. Reports suggest that those at St James' Park are set to sign the Fulham defender on a free deal this summer upon the expiry of his current deal at Craven Cottage.

Bournemouth's Lloyd Kelly could then follow suit in a similar deal as a free agent this summer. But that will still leave Newcastle with a midfield problem that will prove to be a more expensive fix if reports are to be believed.

According to Football Transfers, Newcastle are leading the way to sign Amadou Onana this summer alongside Arsenal and Bayern Munich in a deal that could be worth over £50m in the coming months. This wouldn't be the first time that Newcastle and Everton have done business around that price range, having previously agreed a deal that saw Anthony Gordon head to St James' Park in a deal worth £45m.

That deal has since paid dividends for the Magpies, who have seen Gordon discover his best form in the current campaign. Now, they could see the same happen with Onana if they push on and beat Bayern Munich and Arsenal to the midfielder's signature.

"Exciting" Onana can replace Longstaff

If Newcastle want to push on and return to the Champions League places next season then players of Onana's potential will quickly prove to be the key, especially in place of the likes of Sean Longstaff. What's more, the return of Sandro Tonali will also hand Howe a major boost and perhaps even give Onana the perfect partner if he completes a move this summer.

League stats 23/24 (via FBref)

Amadou Onana

Sean Longstaff

Progressive Passes

101

125

Progressive Carries

20

17

Tackles Won

33

29

Interceptions

15

15

Ball Recoveries

148

108

The Belgian has received high praise during his time in England too, including from former Everton and Belgium boss Roberto Martinez, who told Sky Sports "Really exciting footballer. I know that sometimes when we speak about players, it’s very difficult to measure their potential. I think we are talking about a 20-year-old boy, who is probably one of the most talented at that age in European football, and that’s how excited we are in Belgium.

“He’s got the physicality and the presence of a player that the Everton fans know very well in Marouane Fellaini. He can become anything in that central area, so I can understand the excitement around Everton – this is one of the most exciting prospects in European football at this present time.”

Carlo Ancelotti considering Saudi Pro League move as Real Madrid identify perfect replacement for iconic Italian coach

Carlo Ancelotti is reportedly thinking over a move to Saudi Arabia as Real Madrid have already identified a replacement for the iconic Italian coach.

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  • Ancelotti has a contract at Real Madrid until 2026
  • Italian manager being courted by SPL
  • If Ancelotti leaves, Alonso will take over
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to Spanish journalist Ramon Alvarez, Ancelotti is seriously weighing his options regarding a potential departure from Real Madrid, with Saudi Arabia emerging as a possible destination. Alvarez has reported that Ancelotti has received a major offer from the Middle Eastern country, as they are eager to add him to their rapidly growing football project.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Though Ancelotti extended his contract with Real Madrid in November 2023, a deal that runs until 2026, he can choose to leave the capital club earlier than the 2025-26 season. Real Madrid have already begun laying the groundwork for life after the Italian coach and have shortlisted Xabi Alonso as the ideal candidate to take over as manager when the time comes. Alonso, a former Real Madrid player and current head coach of Bayer Leverkusen, has been garnering praise for his tactical acumen and leadership abilities since taking the reins in Germany. And his stock has been rising steadily after he guided them to a domestic double last season.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Liverpool and Bayern Munich were eager to sign Alonso to lead their fresh sporting projects after the departure of Jurgen Klopp and Thomas Tuchel, respectively but Alsonso chose to continue his journey at Bay Arena. With Alonso committed to Leverkusen for the 2024 season, Real Madrid can closely monitor his progress and assess his suitability to take over from Ancelotti. Moreover, club president Florentino Perez and the board are believed to be impressed with Alonso’s development as a coach, and they see him as the ideal figure to lead the club in the coming years.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Ancelotti has time and again insisted that he would continue at Real Madrid until he is forced to leave. If the manager continues to deliver trophies then it is more likely that he will continue at the Bernabeu hotseat until the expiry of his current deal. However, if the substantial financial offer from Saudi Arabia gives him food for thought, Real Madrid are ready to usher in a new era with a club legend in Alonso at the helm.

Ange criticised for underestimating star who’s now thriving away from Spurs

Tottenham boss Ange Postecoglou has been subtly criticised this week for letting go of a player who's now thriving away from north London.

Casualties of the Postecoglou era at Spurs

The Australian's promising debut campaign in the Spurs dugout has seen a few players become regular first-team stars, like Yves Bissouma and Pape Matar Sarr, but the same cannot be said of a few others.

Tottenham eyeing zero cost move for £250,000-per-week ace hailed by Carrick

He’s set to leave his club as a free agent,

By
Emilio Galantini

Apr 17, 2024

Once a mainstay under Antonio Conte and previous Tottenham bosses, midfielder Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg has been the main casualty of Postecoglou's arrival. The Denmark international has actually featured in nearly every single Premier League game, playing in 31 out of 32, but only six of them have been starts.

Indeed, Hojbjerg's status as a substitute has prompted reports that the 28-year-old could seek to move on this summer, especially as he enters the final year of his contract.

“Hojbjerg, there has been a conversation for a while now that maybe his Tottenham career was over," said pundit Alan Hutton to Tottenham News this week.

"Ange has brought him back in from time to time and he has played minutes but not as regularly as he would want. I genuinely believe he would have left before now but with a new manager coming in, he probably thought he had an opportunity to force his way in, but it has not quite happened. Again, if they’re going to bring in a midfielder who is relatively similar then you’re thinking maybe my time is up here so he’s somebody who will be looking at his options again come the summer.”

Hojbjerg is by no means the only player to suffer Postecoglou's axe after being a regular before. Former defender Eric Dier, who will fully join Bayern Munich on a permanent deal this summer when his loan expires, was banished from the first team starting line up week-in, week-out by Postecoglou in favour of 2023 summer signing Micky van de Ven.

Eric Dier's best Bundesliga games for Bayern Munich

Match Rating (via WhoScored)

Bayern 2-0 FC Koln

7.30

Bayern 8-1 Mainz 05

7.26

Darmstadt 2-5 Bayern

7.25

Bayern 3-1 Borussia Monchengladbach

7.20

Freiburg 2-2 Bayern

6.86

The 30-year-old wasn't a suitable fit for Tottenham's new high-pressing style, as his pace was pretty limited in comparison to van de Ven, but Postecoglou didn't even select him when both Cristian Romero and van de Ven were injured around December-time.

Ange criticised for underestimating in-form Dier

However, Dier has now turned over a new leaf and found excellent form at Bayern, becoming one of their bright sparks in an otherwise disappointing campaign.

Serge Gnabry and Eric Dier.

Interestingly, Postecoglou has been criticised for underestimating Dier and thinking he was a "discontinued model" by newspaper Illertisser Zeitung (via Sport Witness) – who rave over the Englishman as a shining light under Thomas Tuchel.

"The more I look at his profile, the more I see it," said Rugby coach Eddie Jones a few years ago.

"He is totally selfless; will shift from midfield, centre-back and right-back at a moment’s notice."

How Arsenal could line up in the 2024-25 season: Who is Beth Mead's competition and where do the new signings fit in?

Boasting stars like Leah Williamson, Alessia Russo and Lotte Wubben-Moy, Gunners boss Jonas Eidevall has plenty of quality to choose from

On Wednesday, Arsenal’s season begins as the Gunners take on Rangers in the first round of Women’s Champions League qualifying. Jonas Eidevall’s side have a tough draw as they look to exorcise the demons of last season, in which they fell at this stage. Fortunately, they have plenty of talent to call upon in their bid to do so after a strong transfer window.

The departure of Vivianne Miedema, and her subsequent signing with Women’s Super League rivals Manchester City, drew plenty of criticism earlier this summer and it could well come back to bite Arsenal, not least when they face the Cityzens on the opening weekend of the league season. However, there have been plenty of exciting incomings, too.

Mariona Caldentey, a quadruple-winner at Barcelona, arrives to bolster the front line, while youngster Rosa Kafaji has shown in pre-season that she can help make up for some of that attacking threat the Gunners have lost in Miedema. At the back, Eidevall appears to have finally got the No.1 goalkeeper he desires, too, in Daphne van Domselaar.

But these players join a squad that is already stacked with star talent, featuring huge names such as England Lionesses Beth Mead and Alessia Russo. So how will it all come together? GOAL takes a look at how Arsenal could line up this season…

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    GK: Daphne van Domselaar

    Arsenal fans have still to see Van Domselaar in action and yet it feels like the No.1 spot will be hers. The Gunners have been in the market for a new goalkeeper for a while now and the fact that they have signed one of Europe’s most promising shot-stoppers, after being heavily linked with Mary Earps for a long time before she joined Paris Saint-Germain, suggests that Eidevall hasn’t been searching for someone to simply provide depth behind Manuela Zinsberger.

    The Austria international has been harshly criticised at times in her Arsenal career, with a shaky defence not helping her case, but the commanding of her box can be inconsistent and lead to errors. She still has a huge role to play at the club and will get chances to shine, but Van Domselaar is likely to receive the larger bulk of starts.

    That might not be the case this week, with the Dutchwoman not featuring in pre-season as she works her way to full fitness, and Zinsberger will be keen to make a statement if she instead gets the nod in Arsenal’s European qualifiers. Over time, though, Van Domselaar looks set to come out on top in this positional battle.

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    RB: Emily Fox

    Emily Fox has been superb since arriving at the club in January and is one of the best in the world in her position, so should continue to keep her spot in Arsenal’s first choice XI locked down.

    The United States star won’t play every game, especially when factoring in those trans-Atlantic flights for international duty, and that’s where Laura Wienroither will provide good depth and a more than capable option for rotation. But Fox is certainly on top in the pecking order.

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    CB: Lotte Wubben-Moy

    There are a few differences for Arsenal when it comes to their centre-back options this season. Leah Williamson is back to full fitness after an ACL injury, but Amanda Ilestedt will miss at least the majority of the campaign after announcing her pregnancy in March. That, then, gives promising teenager Katie Reid a chance to be in the picture for minutes when Arsenal rotate, the young defender having impressed plenty in pre-season.

    However, when it comes to the regular starting roles, it’ll be Williamson, Laia Codina and Lotte Wubben-Moy battling it out, and the latter should rack up plenty of games as she looks to build on a fantastic 2023-24 campaign. In Williamson’s absence, the England defender was superb for the Gunners, showing her qualities as a footballer and a leader.

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    CB: Leah Williamson

    Williamson found things difficult upon her return from that devastating knee injury last season, but this pre-season campaign has allowed her to shake off any rust as she prepares to get stuck back into competitive action, a luxury she wasn’t afforded by her January comeback. As the summer has progressed, Williamson has looked sharper and sharper, which certainly bodes well for Arsenal moving into 2024-25.

    Codina, also battling for minutes here, should improve this season after some tricky moments in her first year in England and she will hope to showcase her qualities in a bid for regular starts when given the chance. Still, it seems likely that Eidevall’s first choice centre-back pair will consist of Williamson and Wubben-Moy.

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