Celtic set to make major striker signing if they sell £3m star this summer

Celtic are well in the hunt for a domestic treble, but Brendan Rodgers will have big plans ahead of a summer window that could see some notable departures and reinforcements at Parkhead.

Celtic look to fight the current of recent inconsistent form

Despite the Bhoys’ lightning first half of the campaign, they find themselves on the end of rare criticism for recent performances following their 1-0 defeat to St Johnstone last weekend.

Brendan Rodgers shared his frustration at Celtic’s recent run of form, which has included two losses to Rangers, losing out at Hibernian and a draw away to Dundee in Scottish Premiership action.

Celticmanager BrendanRodgerscelebrates with the trophy after winning the League Cup

However, the landscape is still bright for the reigning champions, who could be mathematically confirmed as league winners this weekend by defeating Kilmarnock followed by Aberdeen recording a triumph over Rangers come Sunday lunchtime.

Admittedly, the likes of Nicolas Kuhn and several others have fallen a little short of what is required in recent times. It feels unfair to overly critique his performances, but his goal contribution downturn since firing Celtic into a 1-0 lead over Bayern Munich at the Allianz Arena has caught the attention of supporters.

Nicolas Kuhn’s statistics for Celtic in 2024/25 – all competitions

Appearances

44

Goals

18

Assists

14

Without a goal in his last ten Scottish Premiership matches, the former Germany Under-20 international is on a frustrating run that has increased calls for the inclusion of other stars in his place, albeit he is likely to remain a key part of Rodgers’ plans.

Nevertheless, the supremely talented attacker’s stock remains relatively high in the grand scheme of things, which could lead to interested suitors this summer on the market.

Should Celtic decide to cash in on Kuhn for a hefty profit from the £3m they spent on him, former Scotland international Michael Stewart has delivered a clear picture of what he reckons Rodgers will do to replenish squad depth across his front four positions.

Michael Stewart thinks Celtic will 'clearly' sign a striker and winger

Speaking on the Scottish Football Social Club, Stewart has pointed out the fact he thinks Celtic will ‘clearly’ invest any profit on Kuhn into targeting a central striker or a ‘big name’ signing, potentially out wide too.

He stated: “If you look at the front three Celtic have at the moment, obviously there’s flexibility in there. Then you’ve got Idah and Yang as backup. They are clearly going to go and recruit a big name, or main, number nine striker.

“So if you’re selling one of the wide guys you could be signing a main striker and another winger and possibly still making a profit off that if you’re to sell Nicolas Kuhn at a good price.

“Celtic have shown over the years they are not frightened to sell one of their top assets at a good price and then reinvest, perhaps not all of it, but they’ve done well at then bringing in the next guy who’s gonna make them some money.”

It goes without saying, Celtic will need a striker this summer to help share the goalscoring burden moving forward. Maeda has hit 30 goals combined in his exploits out wide and through the middle, while Idah has added another 14 despite sometimes having to be content with a role from the bench.

Either way, there is a need for the Bhoys to splash out after losing Kyogo Furuhashi to Rennes in January. The Japan forward has hardly featured since moving to France, but his influence has been missed at times during the second half of the campaign.

Hasan Mahmud burns brightest on a historic day for Bangladesh's quicks

Bangladesh’s fast bowlers picked up all ten wickets in a Test innings for the first time, and Mahmud took five of them

Mohammad Isam02-Sep-2024Monday was a landmark day in the history of Bangladeshi fast bowling. When the visitors wrapped up Pakistan’s second innings for 172, they did so with their fast bowlers taking all ten wickets. It was a first for Bangladesh in Test cricket.Nahid Rana created a stir with his pace and bounce, and Taskin Ahmed used all his experience to keep Pakistan’s batters on the front foot. Amid all that, though, was the constant, wicket-taking presence of Hasan Mahmud, who picked up a maiden five-wicket haul in Test cricket, vindicating the selectors’ decision to bring him into the long format after a strong start in white-ball cricket.Related

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Mahmud became only the third Bangladesh quick in the last 11 years to take a five-for in Test cricket, and like Ebadot Hossain and Khaled Ahmed before him, he too had done so on foreign soil.”I have played a good amount of first-class cricket, so the red ball isn’t new to me,” he said. “It has a different feel in the hand. I like it in my hand. I always have a feeling that I can get a wicket with the red ball.”Mahmud delivered for his captain Najmul Hossain Shanto at important moments. After Bangladesh had made an epic recovery from 26 for 6 to reduce their first-innings deficit to 12 runs, they took the ball late on day three hoping for at least one wicket early in Pakistan’s second innings. Mahmud picked up two. He found Abdullah Shafique’s edge by inviting him to drive at a wide outswinger, and cleaned up nightwatcher Khurram Shahzad to leave Pakistan 9 for 2 at stumps.Mahmud gave Bangladesh two early breakthroughs late on day three•AFP/Getty ImagesOn the fourth morning, Taskin got Bangladesh their first breakthrough by removing Saim Ayub, before Rana ran through the middle order, leaving Pakistan 81 for 6. Then Mohammad Rizwan and Salman Ali Agha added 55 for the seventh wicket, putting a puzzle in front of Bangladesh.It was time once more for Mahmud to make a mark. He removed Rizwan in much the same way he had sent back Shafique, coaxing a loose drive with a full one outside off, and perhaps this was even more impressive for the amount of late swing he generated with a 36-over-old ball. Next ball, he hit the perfect length in the corridor and found enough movement to get Mohammad Ali to nick to first slip.Agha’s unbeaten 47 led a mini rearguard, as Pakistan’s last two wickets added 36 runs before Mahmud ended their innings with his fifth wicket, that of the No. 11 Mir Hamza.”The bowler has to find ways to get wickets whenever he is handed the ball,” Mahmud said. “Taskin got us going, and then Rana bowled superbly. He was excellent. He shifted the momentum. I stuck to my process, to try to contribute.”A partnership often causes a bit of puzzle in the team. We tried to stop runs from both ends. Dry up the boundaries. It was our plan.”Mahmud’s performance capped a promising series with the ball. He bowled well in the first Test too, removing both openers in the first innings and dismissing Shan Masood in the second. And on the third day of this Test, he showed another facet of his game and his character.Mahmud revived Bangladesh with back-to-back wickets after a fightback from Mohammad Rizwan and Salman Ali Agha•AFP/Getty ImagesWhen he walked in at No. 10, Bangladesh were 81 adrift of Pakistan’s first-innings total, and Litton Das had run out of recognised batting partners. He was batting with a hand injury and also battling cramps. Bangladesh couldn’t afford to give away a big lead, and Litton needed someone to stay with him. Mahmud did exactly that. He defended for two straight hours, scoring an unbeaten 13 off 51 balls. Mahmud was so focused on his job that it took him a while to realise just how long he had spent at the crease.”[Litton] was the set batter, so there was a lot of work to do,” Mahmud said. “All he told me was that I had to give him support. He said he will do the rest. That’s what I tried to do. I really enjoyed batting with . I know now that I have batted for two hours. I realised this later. I only saw that I batted 55 balls when I was walking off with the bat.”Mahmud reiterated the belief within the group, going back to the mood in the dressing room when Litton and Mehidy Hasan Miraz came together at 26 for 6.”When we faced that situation, we lost all those wickets, we had to come out with a new plan,” Mahmud said. “We trusted Litton and Mehidy out in the middle to do the job. We felt that they will get settled, get the runs. They got settled, so we believed that they can do the job.”Bangladesh’s belief will be tested one last time when they resume the fourth innings on Tuesday morning, needing another 143 with all ten wickets in hand, and potentially rain in the air. This has already been a special tour for Bangladesh. Mahmud has done his bit, and he will hope his batting won’t be required once again as they look to end their trip on a massive, unprecedented high.

Hazlewood marks return to Australia XI with 'vintage' performance

Out of the XI for long periods with Australia recently opting for conditions-based attacks, the seamer showed he has plenty to offer

Andrew McGlashan07-Jan-2023It had been two years since Josh Hazlewood bowled a delivery in Test cricket on his home ground. He could barely have produced a better display to mark his return.It would be stretching things to say that Hazlewood needs a good performance – there is plenty of credit in the bank with 217 Tests wickets at 26.16 before today – but there is certainly competition for Australia’s fast-bowling spots, especially when only two are included. Scott Boland, holder of Test average 12.21, is watching from the sidelines this week.For Hazlewood this has been another frustrating summer interrupted by a side strain as the 2021-22 Ashes also played out. This is only his sixth Test in two years with conditions-based selection also keeping him out of the XI.However, before this game he was confident the pecking order remained intact and this display was vintage Hazlewood.With his second ball an edge from Dean Elgar flew wide of third slip and the South Africa captain was twice beaten before the over was complete. In Hazlewood’s next over, a similar pattern with two skimming past the outside edge.Related

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Hazlewood then took the edge from the first delivery of his third, with Steven Smith diving low to his right to hold what would have been one of great slip catches only for the third umpire, Richard Kettleborough, to decide after much deliberation that it was not quite a clean take. “I had a pretty good look and thought it was definitely out and think most the people out there did,” Hazlewood said.But Elgar, who has had a forgettable tour, was living on borrowed time. He almost fell to Pat Cummins when he fended a short ball off his gloves and it dropped just in front of short leg.However, Hazlewood would not be denied. In the fifth over of an exacting spell he produced a brutal short ball from around the wicket which Elgar could only glove through to a leaping Alex Carey. With one innings left for the tour, Elgar held an average of 9.20 having been South Africa’s main hope of standing up to Australia’s bowlers.It was reward for high-quality Test bowling, but Hazlewood was modest about his return performance.”Was quite windy at times and it swirls here and it can be quite tough to get your rhythm, we probably saw a couple of no-balls from me and Patty, maybe due to that, but felt decent all day,” he said. “Think your first hit-out back, you start blowing a bit quicker than normal just with a bit more excitement. It’s different in a game to the nets so it’s good to get that day out of the way and zero in tomorrow.”Dean Elgar was bounced out by a snorter from Josh Hazlewood•Getty ImagesHazlewood had one more over in his first spell and thought he had got through Henrich Klaasen but on the DRS there was ruled to be inconclusive evidence as to whether he had hit it, and it looked to be striking outside the line as well.He was held back briefly after tea, but it did not take long when he was brought on to add to his success. In the channel outside off that has been the hallmark of his career he drew Temba Bavuma into a poke.How many Tests in a row Hazlewood can string together remains uncertain and will depend on the conditions which present in India. Mitchell Starc is touch-and-go for the opening Test in Nagpur, but when he is available it is him and Cummins who will be first-choice if only two are picked, judging by how Pakistan and Sri Lanka played out.While those sorts of decisions can only be made when they see what’s in front of them next month, it may be worth Australia recalling how the 2004 side earned their series victory in India with a three-one attack of Glenn McGrath, Jason Gillespie, Michael Kasprowicz and Shane Warne.Although the weather in Sydney has not allowed the pitch to break up as it might, the way that South Africa struggled against the brilliance of Hazlewood and Cummins suggests that Australia might have been better served with Boland to call on but there is a belief spin will still be key.”Think it’s the right call,” Hazlewood said on the balance of the attack. “Would have been interesting to see the wicket after a full four day’s play, think it would have been a nice wicket to bowl spin on. Still think it will be, but with a lot more traffic on it…think it’s the right attack and the ball spinning into the bat is more dangerous.”If the fourth day was any indication, Hazlewood and Cummins will have a hefty workload as Australia seek to enforce the follow-on and take the 14 wickets that would secure victory. Neither will shirk the challenge and, after watching others take the spoils in the preceding four Tests, Hazlewood will no doubt savour his chance to at the centre of the action.”You are there in that XI to win that Test match,” he said of a potentially heavy final day. “Whatever it takes to win it, then you see how everyone’s pulled up afterwards. In the back of your mind a little bit is we have three weeks off so we can burn ourselves tomorrow.”

Battle-lines drawn in the culture war as Ollie Robinson episode becomes political cricket ball

English cricket has no time to lose as divisive issue exposes society’s faultlines

David Hopps09-Jun-202113:01

Newsroom: Was the ECB fair in its dealing with Ollie Robinson?

The cricket writer and broadcaster, Adam Collins, observed in podcast this week that he could pretty much guess 80 percent of the stance that the usual suspects would take on the Ollie Robinson affair.Sportswriters, shock jocks, politicians, the bloke down the pub and, most unnervingly, ourselves, we all now routinely rehash positions established long ago in the full-scale culture war that has become a permanent feature of British life. So here we go then, that leaves 20 percent of unexpected insights at best – and, if they emerge at all, they will probably emerge from an empty, hollow despair about how society should be better than this.Robinson, or at least an 18-year-old Robinson, has blundered oafishly into the latest episode of the never-ending culture war that has become our daily soundtrack. Twitter has condemned him, or condemned those who do; the usual riot of digital indignation. And, in a polarised world, all of us have rushed to the side we were told we must choose long ago. Woke liberals against prejudice and injustice to the left, conservative self-appointed defenders of free speech to the right. Hurry along now, and assume your positions. Most of you were in position already, debating the booing of England’s football team. The ignorant and bigoted booing, that is. Just in case you want an early clue where these observations might be heading.To its dismay, the ECB finds itself caught up in an issue which is being wilfully misrepresented by many outside the game. The prime offender is the prime minister, Boris Johnson, assisted by his underling at the ministry for digital, culture, media and sport, Oliver Dowden, who have both termed Robinson’s “punishment” (actually a suspension pending an investigation) as excessive as they calculatingly seek political capital from the latest populist issue to protect their lead in the polls. The prime minister does not much care for accountability or moralising – and the opinion polls suggest that neither does the majority of the public.But this is not about victimisation of the perpetrator. It is about protecting the real victims – the minorities who became the quarry during Robinson’s sexist and racist tweets, however immature and unthinking that they may have been, and who repeatedly find such episodes socially debilitating as they seek a just and fair society.Related

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In suspending Robinson, English cricket acted as it must – although, if the investigation drags on, it has the capacity to mess up from here. Robinson’s historic tweets were not only distasteful, the timing of their discovery could not have been more unfortunate as they ran directly contrary to the ECB’s central tenet – emblazoned on pre-Test t-shirts – that the game must become more inclusive, diverse and welcoming to everyone. Test debut or not, irrespective of whether the greatest day in his life was about to be tarnished for ever, the ECB had no choice but to explore the matter further. It is what any well-run business would feel obliged to do.That commitment to diversity is not just decent and principled, and how it should be, it is the only way cricket in England can prosper. It speaks to many ethnic groups in our society. It can – and does – strengthen bonds. The game must clearly and happily embrace all races, all genders, all sexualities, (not to mention all classes) if it is to achieve its potential. And the irony is that when it is seeking funds from public bodies, that is exactly what it is expected to do.Ollie Robinson’s indiscretions ruined what should have been the greatest day of his life•PA Images via Getty ImagesFor sure, Robinson’s apology was well-judged. But one presumes it was written for him, as these things normally are, and he grabbed the lifebuoy with relief. We just have to hope it conveys his true feelings.That ECB investigation must be rapid; this issue has already festered long enough. Under no circumstances must Robinson’s doltish, highly dubious behaviour make him some kind of anti-hero for every small-town bigot, or every far-right commentator, and it is to be hoped that he fears exactly the same. But neither should Robinson become a convenient scapegoat by which the ECB can protect its own reputation. At such moments, a governing body’s capacity for self-protection should never be under-estimated.As Michael Holding, the West Indian great, shrewdly pointed out, a humane and proportionate response is necessary here, with demands for high standards and personal growth going alongside a recognition that people can change as they mature. Such a conclusion, from a man whose contribution to the Black Lives Matter debate was moving enough for to win a BAFTA, carries considerable weight. It is what most people in the game are calling for and it is probably what he will get. Discussions in specialist cricket circles have been largely in agreement, although there is the juicy possibility that and the magazines will take different political slants.So imagine the fastest response the ECB has ever made to any disciplinary matter and divide it by ten: that is how quickly they should act. But they must also be thorough because if there are any other skeletons in Robinson’s closet – verbal or otherwise – they must be unearthed now. That would at least disappoint the Australian media, which likes to reserve such revelations for the day before a first Ashes Test.

If cricket really does want to achieve its worthy ideals of promoting a self-evidently inclusive game, then the evidence is that society is not about to deliver perfect citizens. Britain’s culture war has emboldened the prejudiced and deepened divisions within our society.

It might well be true that the ECB is being driven as much by economic necessity as much as idealism, but some of the charges against it have been absurd. Prominent among them is the idea that Robinson is undergoing “retroactive adjudication” – that he is being punished for behaviour that was acceptable in the past.Well, “wokeness” might not have been a word in 2012, but I don’t recall 2012 behaving like 1972 – his racism and misogyny was just as unacceptable then. Neither is the ECB investigation remotely an issue of suppression of free speech, of so-called Cancel Culture, in which public figures are ostracised for not conforming to acceptable liberal beliefs.Some on the other side of the argument have charged that Robinson’s behaviour is indicative of a deep-seated problem within the game. That cricket is somehow rotten. Cricket certainly needs to examine whether it has underlying problems. But blaming the game is reminiscent of the day the Conservative PM, Margaret Thatcher, marched into the Football Association with hooliganism rampant in the early 80s to ask when the game would stop its hooligans damaging society, to which she was asked, , when would society stop its hooligans damaging football.Evidence that cricket has a problem is most persuasive in its terrible developmental record for cricketers of black and Asian background or from the testimonies of men such as Michael Carberry, who has long been adamant that racist attitudes lurk within the game. Less persuasive are the discoveries made this week while grubbing around in the detritus of English cricketer’s Twitter feeds, which doesn’t immediately appeal as a positive way to spend the day and appears to be the modern sports journalist’s version of going through the dustbins.Boris Johnson, pictured at The Oval in 2018, has passed his own judgement on the Robinson saga•AFP via Getty ImagesTo offer up one example: if Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler were occasionally tempted on social media to send up the distinctive English speech patterns of some Indian cricket fans then, sure, it was a bit tawdry, and was not about to win them a stint on Live at the Apollo, but a life lived in fear of light-hearted expression is no life at all. Self-censorship can go too far and when that happens the ECB should have the courage to tell the most extreme social media Thought Police to commit their energy to the real, pressing problems of the world.If the ECB is to prove that its response is not sanctimonious, if it really does want to achieve worthy ideals of promoting a self-evidently inclusive game, then it must recognise that the evidence is that society is not about to deliver perfect citizens. Britain’s culture war has emboldened the prejudiced and has deepened divisions within our society.Schools are just about holding the line. One head of sixth form messaged me last week desperate for Robinson to be punished because, if he wasn’t, then the teacher faced a near-impossible task to impress on sport-mad pupils that unacceptable behaviour on social media at 17 and 18 – not stray verbal errors (most of us must plead guilty to that), but a digital footprint, errors for posterity – could harm them later in life.”He can’t get away with it,” he said, but he seemed to overlook the fact that Robinson’s antics had already ruined what should have been the greatest day of his life. He would be better off lobbying the culture secretary.If society patently cannot deliver, then the only choice for cricket – if it is to achieve the standards it proclaims to want – is to ring-fence the game. Rid yourself of cynicism about glib marketing phrases and “improving society through sport” is a noble aspiration. As Jimmy Anderson suggested after attending a PCA/ECB racism workshop this summer, “you’re never too old to learn”, but more importantly you’re never too young either. From the time any player reaches a county 2nd XI, the process of education must be strengthened and embraced by everyone. That education must make demands on all classes, all races, all religions, without fear or favour, laying down basic cultural expectations.By the time a player represents England, these expectations should be second nature, and not temporarily adopted whenever a crisis strikes in an atmosphere of paranoia. An alternative Spirit of Cricket is required – one that enables England to confidently lead the way, and which can have a more meaningful effect than some desperate rinsing of social media accounts to keep the hounds at bay.

Club willing to sell: Leeds hoping to land January deal for £139k-p/w star

Leeds United have proved to be more than a match for Premier League football and now have growing confidence they can seal a statement deal at Elland Road in January.

Leeds move forward after pivotal victory over West Ham

Daniel Farke has had his doubters in the top-flight and some reservations will always remain after his previous spell in the division with Norwich City. However, there can be no doubt that he has made the Whites a competitive force at the highest level.

Claiming 11 points inside nine matches, Leeds find themselves in a decent position to kick on after a much-needed victory over West Ham United on Friday, which may be symbolic in a way as the Hammers slide further towards the bottom of the table.

Either way, there is a long way to go and nobody will be getting ahead of themselves. Still, Farke singled out his players for the determination they showed to ensure three points were claimed in front of a raucous home crowd against Nuno Espirito Santo’s men.

He said, via BBC Sport: “First of all, I’m delighted to take the three points. It is difficult to explain how we were standing there after the last three games with one point. We had much more domination and controlled the performance. We had a difficult week, in terms of illnesses and injuries.

“It was a difficult week for us. You could feel it. We showed passion and bravery. In the last 20 minutes you could feel it was a difficult week. A big fighting spirit, will and passion to bring it over the line.”

Come the January window, Leeds could make a move for Maccabi Tel Aviv midfielder Issouf Sissoko and may look to his displays in Champions League qualifying matches as an indicator of his potential.

With the engine room a key priority, Farke and company are now said to be growing in confidence that they can sign an experienced international in mid-season.

Leeds could land Piotr Zielinski in January

According to Football Insider’s Pete O’Rourke, Leeds are hoping to sign Inter Milan midfielder Piotr Zielinski in January as the Serie A giants are now ‘definitely’ open to sanctioning his departure.

The reporter said: “He was linked with Leeds in the summer window and they were linked with a couple of other midfielders as well. He is well down the pecking order at the San Siro. He’s struggled for game time, had just two starts in the Champions League, so he’s not started a Serie A game.

Appearances

47

Goals

2

Assists

4

“Inter are definitely open to his departure to try and save some money and boost their own transfer coffers. Whether they’ll be able to sell Zielinski to Leeds, that remains to be seen. He’s 31 now, but I still feel he’s got a lot to offer and the player himself would be interested in a move away in January in search of regular first team football. If he’s not going to be getting that at Inter, he will maybe seek a move away.”

In a campaign where he has struggled for starts, the Poland international has still managed to create three chances in 167 minutes of Champions League football, per Fotmob, illustrating his capacity to cause danger.

While his £139,000 per week wages would be an expensive commitment, they are probably not out of the Whites’ budget, so it wouldn’t be a surprise if Zielinski were to end up at Elland Road.

£250k-p/w Chelsea duo are looking like they belong in the Mourinho era

After a run of poor results, Chelsea got back to winning ways in the Premier League, overcoming Everton 2-0 at Stamford Bridge.

It is the first time since 22nd November that Enzo Maresca’s side have tasted victory in the top flight.

It only took the Blues 21 minutes before they went 1-0 up. On his first start at the Bridge since August, it was always going to be Cole Palmer who fired Chelsea into the lead.

It was a well-taken goal, too, with the England star making a well-timed underlapping run between the Everton defence and firing home past Jordan Pickford.

Chelsea had chances to double their lead, which they squandered. However, they did find the back of the net again on the stroke of half-time. It was Malo Gusto who got on the scoresheet this time, capping off an incisive counterattack by slotting home Pedro Neto’s cross.

It was a fantastic performance on the whole from the West Londoners. They shoot up to fourth in the Premier League, although most teams around them have a game in hand. Maresca will be hoping his side can build some momentum ahead of a busy few weeks.

There were a couple of real standouts for the Blues, and not just Palmer and Gusto…

Chelsea's best players vs Everton

It was inevitable, in many ways, that Palmer was going to have his say on this game. His first home start in months did not disappoint, with the Wythenshawe-born attacker proving why he is one of the Premier League’s most dangerous players.

It was a showing worthy of an 8/10 rating from Goal journalist Richie Mills. He said the Chelsea number 10 ‘showed good speed and a smart finish’, describing his performance as ‘a good day at the office’ in front of the home faithful.

The same could certainly be said for Gusto. He set Palmer up with a through ball that threaded the needle superbly, before getting on the score sheet himself for the second time in that famous Blue shirt.

Indeed, his stats from the game are superb. Gusto was constantly involved, having 81 touches, and completed 90% of his passes, as per Sofascore. Not only did the Frenchman create two chances, but he also made four ball recoveries and was impressive off the ball.

However, Palmer and Gusto were not the only two Chelsea players who stood out against Everton.

Chelsea duo look made for Mourinho

It was yet another clean sheet for the centre-back pairing of Trevoh Chalobah and Wesley Fofana. As a partnership, they have begun to string together some impressive performances and have become more than reliable for Maresca.

That was no different against the Toffees. They each received a 7/10 rating from Mills for their afternoon’s work. The journalist was full of compliments for the pair and said they are perhaps the ‘best centre-back pairing’ available to the Blues at the moment.

The stats from the game show just how well the pair, who earn a combined £250k per week, performed against the Toffees.

Some of the standouts included Fofana’s impressive 11 clearances and Cobham graduate Chalobah’s five successful duels out of seven.

Pass accuracy

97%

99%

Touches

84

83

Clearances

11

9

Ball recoveries

5

3

Duels won

6/15

5/7

Looking at the numbers in more detail, the West Londoners are unbeaten in their last seven games when the Frenchman and their academy graduate have started together.

Six of those games have been clean sheets.

Those numbers are superb and would certainly not look out of place in the era of Jose Mourinho at Stamford Bridge. The Portuguese manager famously oversaw a team that conceded just 15 league goals in a single season in 2004/05 – still the best-ever record in the division.

With the performances that Chalobah and Fofana have put in this season, it certainly feels very Mourinho-era coded. The ex-Blues boss is a famously pragmatic coach, so he would no doubt appreciate a record like six clean sheets in seven games.

Indeed, it is helping Maesrca’s side, and the current Chelsea gaffer surely has his centre-back pairing locked in for the foreseeable future.

Caicedo 2.0: Chelsea have made contact to sign "world-class" top target

Chelsea have made one player their top target ahead of the upcoming January window.

ByEthan Lamb 3 days ago

Umpire Caught Swearing at Himself on Hot Mic For Missed Call After Review

Umpire Bill Miller couldn't believe he missed this call at the plate during the Boston Red Sox's 6-1 win over the Minnesota Twins on Friday.

With two outs in the bottom of the 8th, Jalen Duran tried to score from first on a Rafael Devers single to center. Duran slid headfirst into home right as the throw reached catcher Ryan Jeffers, who reached out to tag him just before he touched the plate.

Home plate umpire Bill Miller immediately signaled safe, but the play went to review where it was decided that Durant was actually out. After announcing this news to the fans at Fenway Park, Miller apparently forgot to turn off his microphe.

What followed was not safe for work.

"F—," Miller exclaimed as the crowd booed. "F—— saw that too. G– dammit."

The important thing is that the call was right in the end. And the team that had a run taken off the board still won so there was really nothing for anyone to be upset about.

Spurs have another Kane in the making but he's likely to leave like Parrott

Tottenham Hotspur have levels still to reach under Thomas Frank’s management, but with such an exciting academy underbelly, there’s every reason for fans to be excited about the club’s long-term success.

There has been a real wave of youth investment in recent years, with Lucas Bergvall and Luka Vuskovic among the formative additions landed after showing signs of prodigious potential. However, the next superstar has yet to present himself.

Harry Kane is the most notable alumnus kicking a ball today, with the Three Lions captain in devastating form for club and country this season. Kane is one of the Londoners’ greatest players of all time, for sure.

Tottenham’s All-time Record Scorers

Player

Apps

Goals

Harry Kane

435

280

Jimmy Greaves

376

266

Bobby Smith

316

211

Heung-min Son

454

173

Martin Chivers

350

167

Data via Transfermarkt

How Frank must long for the 32-year-old’s qualities. He would be the icing on the cake down N17 this season. However, Kane isn’t the only one-time Spurs striker making headway at the moment, with Troy Parrott in the form of his life.

Parrott's record since leaving Spurs

Parrott left Tottenham for AZ Alkmaar in the Dutch Eredivisie in July 2024, completing a transfer worth around £7m. He had only featured four times for Spurs’ senior side and had completed five separate loan spells away, the last of which was a prolific year in Holland with Excelsior.

However, his 2024/25 campaign stood as the opus of his young career. The 23-year-old has been thriving with Alkmaar, and he has used that platform as a springboard toward new heights with the Irish national team too.

Indeed, after scoring 13 goals and supplying two assists across 14 matches in all competitions for his club this season, Parrott has headed out with his nation and dragged them to the World Cup qualifiers, scoring a brace in last week’s surprise victory over Portugal.

But it was the sublime hat-trick over Hungary on Sunday evening that consolidated Parrott’s new reputation as a hero in his homeland and one of the most talented up-and-coming strikers out there.

How Spurs must regret letting him leave, especially considering the current conundrum Frank is dealing with at number nine. That said, they do have a potential replacement in the wings who could be seen as the club’s new version of Kane.

Spurs' new version of Harry Kane

Dane Scarlett may have envisaged a bigger role at this stage of his career, but the 21-year-old Tottenham talent is undoubtedly still in with a shot of making it at the club.

Having been praised by former coach Jose Mourinho in the past for being a “diamond” of a prospect, Scarlett found a way back into the reckoning after a series of loan spells last season, and in this, he could emulate Kane and take a step forward where Parrott was unable to.

Curiously, Kane completed a series of loan spells away from Tottenham before establishing himself as one of the finest strikers of his generation. He was 21 when it all came together in London.

Scarlett must not be written off, not yet. The “fantastic finisher”, as he has been called by Frank, scored his first goal for the club in the Europa League last season, and while Frank has not yet unleashed him in the Premier League, the 5 foot 11 striker has made the bench five times across the club’s past seven matches.

TNT Sports pundit Peter Crouch said after that win over Elfborg last season that Scarlett reminded him of Kane back in his younger days, having displayed such resilience to kick on after a series of loan spells and become one of Tottenham’s greatest players.

While Parrott might have seen the chance for such success pass him by, it’s certainly not too late for Scarlett, and given the current attacking issues at the club, one golden chance may bloom into a prosperous future down N17.

However, given his record at senior level to date, it would not be a huge surprise if things ended in the same way it did for Parrott; a move elsewhere.

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بعد تصريحات إيميليانو مارتينيز.. جاتوزو: نعيش في عالم لا يمكن الكلام فيه

قرر جنارو جاتوزو مدرب منتخب إيطاليا عدم الإدلاء بمزيد من التصريحات حول نظام كأس العالم والتصفيات، بعد حديثه خلال الجولة السابقة من تصفيات أوروبا المؤهلة لمونديال 2026.

ومن شبه المؤكد أنه في حالة قام جاتوزو بإطلاق مزيد من التصريحات فإن ذلك قد يؤثر على إيطاليا في ملحق التأهل لكأس العالم.

ويحتل منتخب إيطاليا المركز الثاني في المجموعة التاسعة من تصفيات أوروبا المؤهلة لكأس العالم قبل لقائه مع النرويج يوم الأحد، وسينهي الأزوري المجموعة في هذا المركز إلا إذا حقق فوزًا ساحقًا بتسعة أهداف على المنتخب الذي لم يتعرض لأي هزيمة.

وكان جاتوزو قد أوضح بعد تأهل منتخب إيطاليا على مولدوفا بهدفين نظيفين، أن نظام التأهل للعب في كأس العالم لا يبدو مثالياً.

وأعادت “فوتبول إيطاليا” نشر تصريحات جاتوزو التي قال فيها إن تأهل المنتخبات الأوروبية كان أسهل بكثير في الماضي وأن تأهل منتخبات من قارات أخرى أصبح أسهل بكثير.

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وذكر جاتوزو: “في عام 1994، كان هناك منتخبان إفريقيان في كأس العالم، والآن لا بد من وجود العديد من المنتخبات وهذا العدد في ازدياد مستمر، في أيامي كان يتأهل متصدر كل مجموعة بجانب أفضل منتخبات تحتل المركز الثاني، لدينا 18 نقطة وفزنا بست مباريات وما زال أمامنا مبارتان آخريتان للتأهل، لا يبدو الأمر منطقي”.

وقد أشار جاتوزو إلى أن منتخبات أمريكا الجنوبية تملك حظوظًا أسهل في التأهل من الفرق الأوروبية، وتستعد إيطاليا لخوض الملحق رغم فوزها بست من أصل سبع مباريات.

وعلى جانب آخر تأهل منتخب باراجواي بعد احتلاله المركز السادس في تصفيات أمريكا الجنوبية وفازت بسبع من أصل 18 مباراة، وكان إيميليانو مارتينيز الحارس الأرجنتيني أحد اللاعبين الذين دافعوا عن كرة القدم في أمريكا الجنوبية بعد تعليقات جاتوزو.

ورد مارتينيز: “يلعبون دائماً على ملاعب مثالية ورطبة، لا يعرفون كيف تسير الأمور في أمريكا الجنوبية، هناك تحديات أخرى لا يرونها في أوروبا”.

وسئل جاتوزو في مؤتمر صحفي لمباراة النرويج إن كان لديه أفكار أخرى: “لا أريد التحدث عن هذا الأمر بعد الآن لأنهم يقولون لي إنني أتعرض لضغوط شديدة في أمريكا الجنوبية حاليًا، نعيش في عالم لا نستطيع قول فيه أي شيء بعد الآن”.

Carragher tells Slot to copy Real Madrid amid current Liverpool "problem"

After losing three-consecutive games for the first time under Arne Slot, Jamie Carragher has told the Dutchman that he may have to copy Real Madrid to solve his current problem at Liverpool.

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Last-gasp defeat against Crystal Palace saw the cracks begin to appear, but that could have been put down to a bad day at the office rather than a pending problem. Defeat in midweek against Galatasaray then sparked some uncomfortable questions, before Chelsea’s late winner handed Slot his biggest problem yet as Liverpool manager.

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After spending £400m in the summer, the Reds have looked a shadow of the Premier League champions that they became last season. Milos Kerkez, Florian Wirtz and Jeremie Frimpong have all endured particularly slow starts, whilst long-term stars such as Ibrahima Konate, Mohamed Salah and Alexis Mac Allister have failed to reach the levels they’re known for at Anfield. It has been an exposing seven days for Liverpool.

It’s now a big couple of weeks for Slot, who must solve his side’s current problems in the international break before welcoming Manchester United to Anfield. To do exactly that, Carragher has told the former Feyenoord boss that he may need to copy Real Madrid.

Carragher tells Slot to copy Real Madrid as problem emerges

Having his say on Liverpool’s current form, Carragher told Slot that he may have to copy Real Madrid to solve the “problem” of getting all his star men in the same, thriving team. The former centre-back even suggested that the Dutchman could need to become the “ultimate Real Madrid manager” after the Reds’ Galactico-esque summer.

Carragher said on The Overlap: “Because it’s being a Real Madrid summer in terms of buying big players, does Slot almost need to be like the ultimate Real Madrid manager? And I always think of Ancelotti, and I feel like Ancelotti every summer, you’d almost be thinking, ‘what’s he going to do with that?’

“Even last season there was, ‘how can he get Mbappe and Vinicius in the same team?’ But even go back to his AC Milan teams, or his Real Madrid teams, that was his greatest strength as a manager, he’d find a way whatever system, and he’d just get the best players on the pitch where they wanted to play and almost do it for the players.”

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