Foakes – 'Extremely tough pitch, we've got to apply ourselves'

“If the ball is moving around 140-145 clicks that has to be more challenging than somebody bowling at 85-90” – Ashwin

Matt Roller14-Feb-20213:57

Manjrekar – I don’t think anyone in his right mind will call this a good pitch

Ben Foakes said that conditions in Chennai were “obviously extremely tough, and probably not going to get any easier” after keeping wicket for 113.5 overs and batting for nearly two hours across the first two days of England’s second Test against India.With Jos Buttler at home in the UK as part of the ECB’s rotation policy for multi-format players, Foakes has been backed by England to keep wicket in the final three Tests of this series, and took his chance in India’s first innings with an accomplished display with the gloves: England did not concede a single extra, while Foakes took two catches off Olly Stone’s bowling and completed a stumping off Moeen Ali.Related

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R Ashwin: 'I have got better at varying the seam position'

He then performed creditably with the bat, compiling an unbeaten 42 from No. 7 after coming in at 52 for 5 to drag England up to 134 all out, though his keeping was less polished at the start of India’s second innings, as he missed a stumping chance off Moeen’s bowling to dismiss Rohit Sharma and also conceded five byes.”It was extremely difficult,” Foakes told the host broadcaster, Star Sports. “Obviously they [India] are a pretty high-quality spin outfit and the pitch was playing a few tricks, so all in all it was a really tough day. We have just got to try to apply ourselves [in the] second innings.”It’s obviously extremely tough and it’s probably not going to get any easier. Balls are going to spit past us, balls are going to keep low, and so we have to play within our own gameplans, our own limits, and try to put pressure on the bowlers where we can but also back our defence, too.”Foakes highlighted the lack of any moisture in the surface, which he suggested had made the pitch particularly difficult to bat on.Ben Foakes held up his end for a long time for England•BCCI”I think it’s just spitting so much,” he said. “It’s obviously so dry on the top that a lot of balls are taking the top and really turning, and then you’re getting the odd ball shoot low as well. All in all, it’s quite a difficult pitch to bat on.”I was just trying to play for the ball that wasn’t going to rag, try to play within my limits, and play the ball late, basically – not get too far outside my bubble.”Because the ball is taking the top of the surface, it’s spitting quite a lot, so it was almost [a case of] accepting that if one hit me on the glove or something then it was fair enough. Otherwise, I just tried to stick to my gameplan as if it was a normal sort of wicket and react if possible.”R Ashwin, who took 5 for 43 to help roll through England in their second innings, said that batsmen needed to be “very patient” on the Chepauk surface, but suggested that the pitch was no more challenging than one which would offer bounce and carry for fast bowlers.”I think it’s about being very patient, like when you play on a seaming wicket,” Ashwin said. “You have to dive through the initial phase, and get over it and then put runs on the board. When it comes to spin, unfortunately people don’t expect… they want conditions in their favour, driving, cutting, everything needs to happen. But when it comes to a seaming wicket, you can’t do all those things when you start playing on that kind of a wicket in the morning. The same benchmark needs to be set when you play spin on a challenging wicket as well.”I do not know if they [England] have complaints. If they do, it is quite natural for people to come up against adverse conditions and then feel taken aback by it. In all honesty, the seven days of cricket that they have played so far, they have played really well, competed really well. I haven’t seen any of them complaining or anything like that.

“The only comparison I can say is if the ball is moving around 140-145 clicks off the deck, that has to be more challenging than somebody bowling at 85-90. Clearly, the challenges are way greater when you come up against seam.”R ASHWIN

“But time and again there are conditions that will challenge, be it spin or seam. The only comparison I can say is if the ball is moving around 140-145 clicks [kph] off the deck, that has to be more challenging than somebody bowling at 85-90. Clearly, the challenges are way greater when you come up against seam. Just the same way when you come up against spin, you have to give it to the bowler, bide your time, and then probably cash in a little later. It is another art. As simple as that.”Graham Thorpe, England’s assistant coach, said that the toss had been an important factor – as it had been in the first Test of the series – and played down any concerns about umpiring. Rohit Sharma survived a review for lbw in the final half-hour after a ball from Moeen struck him outside the line and would have hit middle stump. Umpire Virender Sharma’s ‘not out’ decision was upheld after he had judged that Rohit had attempted to play a shot, despite appearing to hide his bat behind his front pad, which left Joe Root visibly frustrated.”It’s incredibly challenging on that surface on day two,” Thorpe said. “They’re a very skilled spin attack in their own conditions and it was a very good toss to win. Even in the first Test, we believed it was a good toss to win. I think this was just as important. We know that pitches deteriorate here as the game goes on, and this one has gone a little bit quicker.”It’s obviously a canny bit of play by Pujara [Rohit]. The umpire has to make that decision. He has to decide at the time whether he thinks a player has played a shot at the ball and you have to accept it. The on-field umpire has to make that decision and that’s the one he came down on: he thought Pujara [Rohit] was playing a shot.”

Gary Neville branded a 'colossal tit' in 'best' social media post that leaves ex-Man Utd team-mate Paul Scholes laughing his head off

Even Gary Neville could see the funny side of a social media post branding him a 'colossal tit'.

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Neville shares 'best tweet' he's receivedEx-Man Utd team-mate Scholes enjoys post Pundit in good spirits after Amorim hireFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Neville is prone to receiving negative comments on social media – as a football pundit, it comes with the territory – but even he had to laugh at a social media post that he labelled "quite simply the best tweet I've ever received".

AdvertisementWHAT WAS THE POST?

The post in question highlighted the types of tit variety of birds found in Britain. There's the bearded tit, the blue tit, the crested tit… and the colossal tit, with a picture of Neville's face next to that one.

DID YOU KNOW?

Neville's former Manchester United team-mate Paul Scholes enjoyed the post – he reacted by commenting with three crying-with-laughter emojis. Jamie Carragher an ex-Newcastle United goalkeeper Shay Given were similarly tickled, both adding the same reaction as Scholes in the comments section.

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Neville will have a lot to say about the Red Devils in the coming weeks following Ruben Amorim's recent appointment. The former United right-back looked delighted when hearing Amorim describe the club as "my place".

No need to sign Hannibal: Rangers already have dream Cantwell replacement

Glasgow Rangers returned to their winning ways over the weekend as the Ibrox side secured their first three points of the Premiership season.

It wasn’t pretty at times for Philippe Clement during the 2-1 win over Motherwell, but a win is a win and at this moment in time, that is all that matters for Rangers.

Clement is slowly beginning to work out his best starting XI. With another couple of weeks left of the summer transfer window, there could well be another few additions to the Gers squad before the end of the month.

With Champions League football at stake, the next few weeks are crucial, potentially determining whether Clement lands his targets or not.

More important, however, is whether the Belgian can move on a few players who appear to have no futures at Ibrox.

The latest on Todd Cantwell's future

Following a 2-1 pre-season defeat to Birmingham City last month, Clement spoke to the media, seemingly about the recent defeat.

Instead, the 50-year-old coach discussed the future of Todd Cantwell, saying: "He came to say that he wants another challenge. I spoke long with him because I think Rangers is a really good club for him.

"I wanted to give him time also, so that's why the last couple of weeks I didn't speak about it. But he came back with the same request.”

Todd Cantwell

These comments were certainly a shock and, considering Cantwell hasn’t been involved in any of the first three matches of the campaign, it looks as though he will be leaving.

The former Norwich City attacking midfielder has played 64 times for the Light Blues since arriving in January 2023, scoring 14 goals and registering 12 assists in the process.

Inconsistency was perhaps his biggest problem last term, floating in and out of matches throughout the season.

Goals

7

Assists

5

Key passes per game

1.7

Big chances created

7

Shots per game

2.3

Successful dribbles per game

1.2

Total duels won per game

4.1

Will Clement aim to sign a replacement this summer? The Gers have been showing interest in a current Manchester United midfielder.

Rangers' potential Cantwell replacement

It was reported by TEAMtalk late last month that the Ibrox side were keen on a move to bring Hannibal Mejbri to Scotland this summer.

The report claims that Rangers have been in contact with Man United over a move for the Tunisian, as an initial loan deal with an option-to-buy clause is being touted.

The Old Trafford side would prefer to cash in on their young talent rather than sanction a loan deal, with the Premier League side looking for a fee of around £7m, which could prove to be a major stumbling block for Clement.

The youngster didn’t exactly have the most productive of seasons during 2023/24, scoring just one goal in 17 games for both United and Sevilla, where he spent the second half of the season out on loan.

Is he really the ideal choice to potentially replace Cantwell as Clement’s main attacking midfielder?

Maybe, just maybe, the Belgian has a player right under his nose who could make a much bigger impact this season should he be given a chance – Ianis Hagi.

Rangers' ready-made Cantwell replacement

The Romanian playmaker has turned out for the B team in order to gain some much-needed minutes as he seeks to move away from Ibrox before the transfer window closes.

In a game against a Derby County youth side over the weekend, Hagi scored a delightful hat-trick, including a stunning free kick, indicating that he could still offer something to Clement in the first team.

Last month, it was claimed by reports in his homeland that Hagi had agreed on a deal to return to his former club Fiorentina, but nothing has materialised on this move as yet.

Unless something miraculous happens, Hagi looks destined to leave Scotland in the next few weeks, but there is no doubting his wonderful talents when fully fit.

Instead of signing a player such as Hannibal – who failed to really showcase his talents last term – Clement must consider bringing Hagi back into the first team fold, even to just give him a chance in his current tactical system.

It could be the most important thing the manager does this summer.

Ianis Hagi’s statistics at Rangers

The Romanian joined Rangers on an initial loan deal in January 2020, going on to make a positive impact in the first team between then and when the season was cancelled due to the Covid-19 pandemic in March.

Rangers winger Ianis Hagi warming up.

The Ibrox faithful won't forget his sublime two-goal salvo against Braga to turn a 2-0 defeat into a 3-2 victory. This led to Steven Gerrard securing the youngster on a permanent deal that summer for a fee in the region of £4m ahead of the 2020/21 campaign.

He didn’t know it at the time, but that season would be Hagi’s nadir at Ibrox. Not only did the club claim a first league title in a decade, but they did it unbeaten.

The Romanian scored seven Premiership goals and recorded 12 assists, a wonderful return as he demonstrated his qualities throughout the campaign.

Gerrard hailed the player as an “absolute dream to work with” during his tenure as manager, but things soon unravelled midway through the following season as he suffered a knee injury during a Scottish Cup tie against Stirling Albion which would sideline him for 12 months.

Michael Beale tried to restore him back into the first team fold but felt a loan move was the best course of action last season, joining La Liga side Alaves for the 2023/24 campaign.

Ianis Hagi for Rangers.

His abilities could give Clement a much-needed boost in that area of the team and would be a cost-effective replacement for Cantwell should the manager persuade him to stay.

It might be too late, but Hagi is a player who, on his day, can terrorise defences up and down the country with ease.

If a move cannot be reached with regard to his exit, Hagi should return to the senior setup sooner rather than later.

Rangers could drop Lawrence by signing "sensationally intelligent" star

The Light Blues have been linked with an interest in the young midfielder this summer.

1 ByDan Emery Aug 11, 2024

With series on the line, deciding India-England ODI set up to be fitting tour finale

Excitement galore in Pune with series locked at 1-1

Sreshth Shah27-Mar-20214:31

Do India need to change their batting approach?

Big pictureMore than seven weeks after England played their first day of cricket in India, it’s time for the finale of the tour. It’s a Sunday afternoon fixture, the ODI series is tied 1-1, and there’s everything to play for. What more do you want?Well, if you’re Virat Kohli, you want more from your spinners. In 35 overs, they’ve conceded 283 runs at an economy of 8.09 for just one wicket. Be it IPL experience or pure skill (or a combination of both), England’s batsmen have been supremely confident against the spinners. Some said dropping Kuldeep Yadav after one game would be too harsh on him, but now it seems like India have no choice. After spending a good period on the bench, it might be time for Yuzvendra Chahal to show why he should be the first spinner on the ODI teamsheet every time.And then there’s the dreaded ‘I’ word: intent. Par scores can’t simply be judged by the surface you’re playing on, but also by the opposition you’re against. India had a particular method in the T20Is. They threw caution to the wind while batting, even if it meant they lost two of the five games, but that template has gone out of the window in the ODIs. They’ll need the top order to either score quicker or start their late-overs surge earlier.Either way, the final ODI will be a test of India’s brand of batting, more so if Kohli has a hat-trick of losing the toss. Finding the gaps and running hard twos in the first 30 overs is usually fine, but against England, more boundary shots are needed from the top order. Friday’s target of 337 was chased down with 6.3 overs to spare and even in the first ODI, let’s be honest, England were well ahead of the game for the first 20 overs of the second innings.England’s batting remains their biggest strength. Their philosophy has remained unchanged, the openers are firing, Ben Stokes has been on a rampage and the injury-replacements have chipped in. They know the fast bowlers are inexperienced, more so if Mark Wood does not return for the decider, but that’s not in their control. However, they’ll be happy the way Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali have performed. At the start of the spells, they have done enough to ensure India don’t get on top of them, and the hosts are, perhaps, leaving some runs out there, by not going harder at the duo.Overall, it’s a fitting finale to the tour. The team that has lost the first match of every series has gone on to win it. That was India in the first two occasions, but can England complete their own comeback? If they do, it will be a gentle reminder of why they are world champions.Form guide(Last five completed matches first)
India: LWWLL
England: WLLWLEngland’s batting poses a clear and immense threat to any team they face•BCCIIn the spotlightWhen it’s a big game, expect to see a different version of Ben Stokes (remember Headingley and Lord’s 2019?). In the first ODI, his 3 for 34 broke Indian partnerships every time they looked to change gears. In the second game, he hit the fastest 99 in ODI history. India will be hoping Stokes’ numbers are a mere footnote in the match’s statistics because if it isn’t so, it’s likely his contributions will be match-winning. In the last game, his bowling numbers were under par and he could not get that one extra run to dedicate a century to his late father. He’ll be looking to change both those things.Hardik Pandya has not bowled in the series yet, leaving India with only five bowling options. But he did bowl in the T20Is, so even if Kohli uses Hardik for just four overs, it will reduce the load on the off-colour bowler and could be the missing piece in the Indian bowling jigsaw. There’s also more that Hardik, the batsman, can do. In the XI, he is one of the best hitters of spin and could do to Moeen and Rashid what Stokes did in the second ODI to Kuldeep and Krunal Pandya. If the top order has set up a solid base, it’s worth sending him above KL Rahul and push the envelope on what total India can achieve. He hit 35 off 16 balls last game. Extrapolate that score if he faced, say, 50 balls.Team newsAll India’s batting will be trying, is to add 10-15% more runs to their scores, so that part of the XI should stay unchanged. They could tinker with the bowling though, Chahal for Kuldeep being the likeliest change. Washington Sundar could also replace Krunal Pandya, after the latter conceded 72 in six overs on Friday, although there isn’t any evidence that Sundar would improve that. Among pacers, one of Prasidh Krishna or Shardul Thakur could be replaced by T Natarajan, both for his left-handedness and for his ability to execute yorkers more consistently. Keeping Thakur gives the team more batting depth, which might be a consideration.India (possible): 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Virat Kohli (capt), 4 Rishabh Pant, 5 KL Rahul (wk), 6 Hardik Pandya, 7 Krunal Pandya/Washington Sundar, 8 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 9 Shardul Thakur, 10 Yuzvendra Chahal, 11 Prasidh Krishna/T NatarajanWood was rested for the second ODI and could return in place of either Reece Topley or Tom Curran, the latter being more likely after conceding 83 runs in the last match. England will wait on the fitness of Sam Billings, who injured his collar bone in the first game, until match day.England (possible): 1 Jason Roy, 2 Jonny Bairstow, 3 Ben Stokes, 4 Dawid Malan, 5 Jos Buttler (capt & wk), 6 Liam Livingstone, 7 Moeen Ali, 8 Sam Curran, 9 Mark Wood/Tom Curran, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Reece TopleyPitch and conditionsWith not much in there for spinners, Pune is as ‘international’ a surface you can get in India. A good batting pitch in the afternoon turns into a great batting pitch in the evening. For the team batting first, aiming for scores in excess of 330 should be a bare minimum.Stats and trivia India are looking to avoid a third-straight ODI series defeat. They lost 1-2 in Australia and 0-3 in New Zealand. Dhawan needs 90 to become the 10th Indian to get 6000 ODI runs. Bairstow and Roy had hit 13 century stands as openers in ODI cricket, the most by an England pair and the fifth-highest among openers. In the last five matches at Pune, the average first-innings score has been 303.20 with the contests 3-2 in favour of the chasing side.Quotes”We’ve said for a while we want to play in a certain fashion and push the boundaries of what we’re capable of as a side. That’s probably what I was most proud of – we got some criticism from the first game but came out and played in exactly the same fashion, which rings true to us”
Jos Buttler promises that England will play the same way for the decider

Lancashire on top after Dane Vilas 189 but weather gives Sussex a glimmer

Visiting openers negotiate tricky passage to cut arrears before early close

Paul Edwards10-Apr-2021
A day that began with snow at Emirates Old Trafford ended with bad light at 4.30pm followed by rain, sleet and a premature dusk tugging at the sky’s skirts. In between those meteorological events, one of them eccentric, another inevitable, we had a day of shreds and patches in which Lancashire established a first-innings lead of 106, only for Sussex’s openers to reduce the advantage to 68 without too many alarums. If Dane Vilas’s bowlers hear any dreamy lullabies this evening, they will concern early wickets in good weather on the morrow. One cannot like their chances with the weather but the pressure exerted by Saqib Mahmood and Tom Bailey will warm the home coaches this evening. Merciful God, something needs to.There are days in the close season when one arrives at this ground and observes with sage joviality that cricket would be impossible. The rain is icy and grey skies complete the wintry aspect. This was one such morning. Friday’s improvement in the weather had been brief. Folk arrived from distant parts – well, Skelmersdale anyway – with talk of snow. Sleet speckled the morning air, sending the already euphoric photographers scurrying for their cameras. A thrush perched outside Exchange Quay looked so beruffled it might have been a distant descendant of Thomas Hardy’s possibly percipient bird.Related

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Burns, Foakes dig in to keep Surrey afloat

Eventually, play got under way and things immediately proceeded much as they had on Friday: Dane Vilas pushed Sean Hunt to deep point and took a single. At times one believes Lancashire’s captain would look to keep the scoreboard moving in the aftermath of nuclear winter. Rather like Don Bradman or Alastair Cook, he finds the tedium of incessant accumulation most congenial.One imagines Hunt will be particularly glad we got on the field. A Guildford lad who played all his age-group cricket for Surrey, Hunt took his maiden first-class wicket, that of Alex Davies, on Friday afternoon and nearly 24 hours later he got two more leg before decisions from Neil Bainton when Luke Wood and Danny Lamb played around very straight balls. In a match where more experienced bowlers have been taken out, Hunt can take pride in having adhered to his disciplines.The next wicket was taken by George Garton, who stopped the ball off his own bowling and ran out the non-striking batsman, Bailey, for 24 when he and Vilas were negotiating a single. Another “shall-we? shan’t we?” total balls-up resulted in Tom Hartley being run out by Stiaan van Zyl for 4 but by then Lancashire had a full bag of bonus points. Almost immediately Vilas was dropped by the scampering wicketkeeper, Ben Brown, when he top-edged a skyer towards long leg. The escape counted for nothing but entertainment. Next over Lancashire’s captain was caught at deep point by Aaron Thomason for 189 when reverse-sweeping Carson. It is the eleventh time Vilas has passed 150 in his 22 centuries.Our season is barely three days old yet there has been so much to learn. Brown’s bowlers, two of them Championship debutants, can reflect on their first experience of big school. Carson, for example, could have dismissed both Davies and Vilas quite cheaply on Friday afternoon but instead ended the innings with 2 for 106 from his 24.4 overs. Every inaccuracy was seized upon and punished. In that context Brown’s decision to give his young offspinner second and third spells on Friday, and then more bowling on Saturday, suggests Carson has the steel to prevail and will, in time, repay his skipper’s faith. By September we shall all know more about the matter.We will know more about Tom Haines and Thomason, too, but what they revealed this afternoon was a shrewd awareness of their responsibilities and a determination to defend the commonwealth. The pair had to face a very tough examination from Bailey and Mahmood with the new ball but the nearest Lancashire came to a breakthrough was when Haines miscued a drive over Josh Bohannon’s head at cover. Were Sussex to have been 38 for 2 at the close we would be considering a very different final act to this drama. As things are, a draw is the most likely outcome and the only things a fellow can ask of this evening are a hearty supper and an improving book. Patrick Kavanagh’s seems about right.

Forget Trippier: Dyche could land late Everton move for £12k-p/w ace

The right-back situation at Everton will be a cause for concern for Sean Dyche, with limited options available to the Toffees boss ahead of this weekend’s trip to face Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday.

Ben Godfrey featured at full-back towards the end of last season, but after his departure to Atalanta earlier this summer, the club now only have a couple of options in that area of the pitch.

Ashley Young has been the most consistent figure at right-back, making 31 appearances in the Premier League during 2023/24, but made a horror start to the new campaign, picking up a red card in the opening-day defeat against Brighton.

Seamus Coleman is currently the club’s longest-serving player after arriving on Merseyside back in 2009, but the now 35-year-old has struggled with injuries over the last few campaigns, restricting him to just seven league starts last time around.

However, with just a week to go in the transfer window, Dyche may want to invest in a new talent at full-back, with another experienced option linked with a move to Goodison Park in recent days.

Everton's search for a right-back

According to The Athletic’s David Ornstein, Everton have made contact with Newcastle United over a deal to sign 33-year-old right-back Kieran Trippier.

It comes after the England international lost his captaincy role at St James’ Park, with Trippier wanting to leave the club after being an unused substitute in the opening-day victory over Southampton last weekend.

He’s been an excellent option for the Magpies after his move from Atlético Madrid back in January 2022, helping the club reach the Champions League for the first time in over two decades.

However, he suffered an injury towards the back end of last season, looking a shadow of his former self with age starting to catch up with him – even admitting himself to a drop in his own "standards".

Any deal would likely be a loan move for Trippier, but it’s unclear how much of his £120k-per-week salary Dyche’s side would have to contribute to a deal – with the Toffees needing to explore other transfer targets, including one player who’s also previously been touted with a move to Merseyside.

Everton's ideal Trippier alternative

In recent days, Everton have been linked with a move to sign versatile talent Junior Dina Ebimbe from Eintracht Frankfurt before the end of the transfer window.

The Frenchman could be allowed to leave the Bundesliga outfit this summer, despite only joining the club on a permanent basis from PSG last summer.

With Ebimbe only being 23, he would provide a youthful option that is desperately needed in the right-back department, with his figures from last season showing why he would be a better option than Tripper for Dyche’s side.

The “fantastic” Frenchman, as described by scout Antonio Mango, may have registered slightly fewer goal contributions, but excelled with the ball at his feet, averaging more progressive carries and take-ons per 90 than Trippier.

Games played

31

28

Goals + assists

8

11

Progressive carries

2.6

1.4

Pass accuracy

77%

76%

Take-ons completed

1.9

0.7

Tackles won

1.3

1.1

Aerials won

1.5

0.7

Ebimbe, who only earns a reported £12k-per-week as per Capology, also bettered the Englishman defensively, winning more tackles per 90 alongside aerial duels – showcasing the defensive stability he can provide should he move to Goodison.

On the face of the deal, Trippier would provide experience and quality in the right-back position, but given his age, it would be a huge risk signing another player on the wrong side of 30.

Ebimbe would offer a youthful and versatile option, whilst having the potential to improve further down the line, with his abilities in and out of possession helping the Toffees at both ends of the pitch.

Bargain: Everton in the race for £8.5m starlet who can be Richarlison 2.0

The Toffees could still land more attacking reinforcements.

ByEthan Lamb Aug 23, 2024

Kylian Mbappe begins Real Madrid redemption! Players and club staff impressed after newest Galactico takes blame for Athletic loss with emphasis on new 'leader' role in project

Kylian Mbappe's defiant social media message after defeat to Athletic Club has supposedly impressed his team-mates and Real Madrid officials.

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Mbappe took responsibility for Athletic Club lossTaking leadership role in the dressing roomForward criticised for recent performancesFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Mbappe took the blame after missing a second penalty in his last three matches as Real Madrid went down 2-1 against Athletic Club. He wrote on Instagram, "Bad result. A big mistake in a match where every detail counts. I take full responsibility for it. A difficult moment but it’s the best time to change this situation and show who I am."

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According to , Mbappe's gesture impressed his team-mates and club officials as they appreciated his decisive attitude. He also reportedly spoke to some of his colleagues individually in the dressing room to motivate them, which has clearly indicated that the France captain is willing to shoulder a leadership role at Los Blancos.

WHAT HAS BEEN SAID

Quoting a source close to the club, further wrote: "There are many footballers who are in that line. Mbappe has opened the door that many of his teammates were eager to enter through."

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR MBAPPE?

With a new leadership role in the team, the 25-year-old will now aim to regain his form and step up to the challenge. The reigning Spanish champions will be next seen in action against Girona in La Liga on Saturday.

Chelsea decide to sell 2023 signing with Madueke after £54m Pedro Neto deal

Chelsea have decided they want to sell another 2023 signing alongside Noni Madueke, following the club's capture of Pedro Neto in a £54 million deal from Wolves.

Chelsea ready to sell wingers before summer deadline day

Neto's arrival, coupled with Chelsea's ongoing talks to sign Joao Felix from Atletico Madrid, has cast doubt over the futures of some of Enzo Maresca's current wide men.

£200k-per-week star prepared to leave Chelsea after message from Maresca

The Italian’s words have not gone down well.

ByEmilio Galantini Aug 14, 2024

According to reliable transfer journalist Fabrizio Romano, the west Londoners are ready to part company with high-earning forward Raheem Sterling if Felix re-joins Chelsea from Atletico, while Neto's arrival has provided a fresh worry for Madueke over his game time at Stamford Bridge.

Madueke, signed from PSV Eindhoven in January 2023, has gone on to make 46 appearances in all competitions – scoring nine goals and assisting three others over that period.

Last season, the 22-year-old racked up eight goals and three assists across 34 total cameos – starting each of Chelsea's final nine Premier League games under Mauricio Pochettino as the Blues clinched Europa Conference League qualification.

Cole Palmer

7.48

Conor Gallagher

7.13

Nicolas Jackson

7.07

Moises Caicedo

6.85

Noni Madueke

6.84

Despite performing impressively towards the back end of last campaign, reports this week have claimed that Chelsea could in fact sell Madueke for around £40 million, as Newcastle United hold talks with the player's representatives.

It is no coincidence that rumours of a possible Madueke departure have come right after Neto's signing, and if Felix joins Chelsea with his compatriot, there could seemingly be a domino effect of wingers departing to make room for the Portugual internationals.

While both Sterling and Madueke leaving appears a possibility before the transfer cut-off, there is another 2023 signing who may well be sacrificed.

Chelsea want to sell Angelo Gabriel with Madueke after Neto deal

As per BBC Sport reporter Nizaar Kinsella, Brazilian winger Angelo Gabriel is no longer in Chelsea's long-term plans.

The 19-year-old, signed from Santos last July, spent 2023/2024 on loan at their sister club Strasbourg in France. He has since returned to a host of teammates ahead of him in Maresca's pecking order, and it now appears Chelsea want to sell Gabriel this summer rather than loan him back out again.

Turkish Süper Lig side Besiktas have registered an interest in taking the South American teenager on a permanent deal, but it is believed Todd Boehly and BlueCo prefer to find him a permanent new home, despite only bringing him in 13 months ago.

Gabriel impressed in flashes at Strasbourg last term, bagging four assists across 25 appearances in all competitions.

Ben Raine inflicts pain as Warwickshire slide to 87 all out

Mark Wood also in wickets before Durham openers overhaul meagre total

Paul Edwards29-Apr-2021Going home is always a risk. “Will people remember me?” a returning traveller asks. “Will they remember me only too well,” is occasionally the next question. Somehow, though, such undertakings are not so perilous in the North East. Loyalties are so deep-rooted in this part of England that they can never quite be betrayed; when people come back it is often seen as a natural progression. And it is for days like this that the Sunderland-born pair Scott Borthwick and Ben Raine returned to Durham and to the places they love best of all.In truth Borthwick had little to do except toss a coin, choose to field, rotate his seamers and take a slip catch. Raine, on the other hand, can rarely have bowled more effectively than he did when taking his first five wickets for two runs in 28 balls as Warwickshire’s batters struggled dreadfully on a pitch containing fewer demons than their response suggested. Helped by Mark Wood, who was playing his first Championship match since September 2018, Raine dismissed five of the top eight in the visitors’ order as Will Rhodes’ side subsided to 87 all out. And just to complete a day that could barely have gone better for Borthwick, Alex Lees and Will Young overhauled that total just before the close.All these delights for home supporters were delayed by a substance rarely seen at cricket grounds this April: the soft refreshing rain beloved of the hymnist Jane Montgomery Campbell who, in 1862, loosely translated Matthias Claudius’s harvest lyric “Wir pflügen und wir streuen” into, “We plough the fields and scatter”. Play did not start until noon and an hour later Warwickshire’s batters returned to the pavilion for lunch perhaps wondering why there had been such a rush. Surely mid-June would have been early enough?If so, it was a good point, well made. The portents for the innings looked grim as early as the fourth over when Rob Yates had his off stump smacked back by a ball from Wood that kept spelunkingly low. Six overs later, after surviving a leg before shout that might have had Russell Warren’s finger twitching, Hanuma Vihari was on his way when attempting to work Raine to leg. Two overs later, Rhodes attempted the same trick off the same bowler with the same thud into the pad. Just before lunch Matt Lamb was bowled when he played inside a ball from Wood that held its own. That left Warwickshire on 22 for 4 and one imagines the away dressing room was hardly a place of jollity and merriment.The break in play did not interrupt the pattern of the game. Seven balls after the resumption Sam Hain played no stroke at a ball from Raine which tracked back just enough to hit his off pole. “Sam Hain’s disdain was mainly tamed by Raine,” murmured someone and suddenly we had a Broadway musical on our hands. But Durham’s bowlers, like the big ships for which a big river in this land was once famous, were not to be diverted or delayed. Lerner and Loewe would have to wait their turn.For the collapse was in full spate. Michael Burgess, Danny Briggs and Tim Bresnan all departed for five runs in the space of four overs, and only Briggs, who chipped a catch to Chris Rushworth at mid-on, deviated from the fast-established pattern. At this point in the early afternoon, all sorts of feats were noted and all manner of records threatened. Raine’s figures read 6.3-5-2-5 and Warwickshire were 30 for 8, in danger of recording their lowest total since they were skittled by ‘Charlie’ Blythe and Frank Woolley at Tonbridge in 1913 or by Bill Copson at Derby in 1932.Instead of such mighty dramatics we had a sensible partnership between Craig Miles and Liam Norwell, whose batting was uncluttered by subtlety or stylish pretension. Good balls were left alone if possible; pitched-up deliveries were driven or pulled into the deep field. Over an hour passed and 52 runs were added before Miles edged Brydon Carse to Borthwick at slip and Norwell nicked the same bowler to Poynter. The total of 87 was Warwickshire’s lowest against Durham but somehow it seemed like abundance. Raine finished the piece with 5 for 9 from 13 overs.The end of Warwickshire’s innings was immediately followed by the tea and the realisation that 45 overs were still to be bowled. What followed in the evening might do just as much to determine the shape of the match as the dramatics of the first two sessions.Perhaps it has. Lees is now well-established and well-regarded at the Riverside, perhaps rather more so than he was at Headingley. His unbroken stand of 88 with Young offered Warwickshire’s batters a close-up view of what can be achieved on this pitch by tight techniques and discrimination. This latter quality allowed the openers to climb into the loose stuff sent down, most egregiously by Craig Miles. Norwell and Oliver Hannon-Dalby, by contrast, rarely leaked runs but their side is already deep in trouble. Beating Essex may seem straightforward when compared to getting anything but the odd bonus point out of this game.

No Gabriel, no problem! Winners and losers as Arsenal's deadly set-pieces come up big despite Brazilian's absence while Ruben Amorim counts the cost of rotating his forwards in first Man Utd loss

The Red Devils' trip to north London ended in defeat as the Gunners closed the gap on Premier League leaders Liverpool to seven points

Arsenal handed Ruben Amorim his first loss as Manchester United head coach with a 2-0 victory on Wednesday. The Red Devils arrived in north London on an impressive run of seven games without defeat stretching back to Ruud van Nistelrooy's time as interim manager, but that streak was snapped with authority.

Though the Gunners found it difficult to break down their stubborn visitors in the first half, they ramped up the pressure after the break and made United pay for their careless defending on set plays.

Jurrien Timber headed the hosts into the lead before William Saliba doubled their advantage shortly after, and Amorim's charges were unable to conjure up a suitable response at the other end.

GOAL breaks down the winners & losers from the Emirates Stadium…

AFPWINNER: Arsenal's set-pieces

As Bukayo Saka went up for Arsenal's 13th and final corner of the evening, the Clock End – home to the club's ultra-lite Ashburton Army – bounced around chanting, 'set piece again, ole ole'.

Everyone knows the Gunners rule the roost when it comes to dead balls. Their specialist coach, Nicolas Jover, is a celebrity around these parts now. He prowls Mikel Arteta's technical area whenever the team have the chance to score from one and rarely leaves a game disappointed with his work.

Arsenal, even with Martin Odegaard fit and in the groove again, created little from open play when United's main objective was to shut up shop. But the relentlessness of their menace from set-piece situations is driving teams crazy.

Midway through the first half, Andre Onana cut a frustrated figure when his angle for clearing the ball was obscured and he had to boot the ball into touch behind his goal instead. Before Timber's deadlock breaker, they could have scored two or three from corners alone. Post-match, ex-United forward Dimitar Berbatov declared Arsenal as "the new Stoke City" in reference to their days under Tony Pulis. These are the marginal gains that Arteta has preached to yield results from, and tonight they were the difference makers.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportLOSER: Man Utd's dead-ball defending

Perhaps the Clock End's jubilance at their side's domination on corners was in-part fuelled by United so blatantly trying, and subsequently failing, to prevent such events from occurring.

A fairly significant chunk of the Red Devils' warm-up was spent on defending set-pieces. Crosses came in, crosses were cleared. Amorim had identified a threat, but still felt the need to put his players through those paces on matchday right before kick-off.

That extra homework didn't pay off. United were outwitted and outmanoeuvred on nearly every delivery which pierced the penalty area. Down the final stretch of the game, Amazon Prime's TV cameras panned to a frustrated Amorim on the bench, who was rubbing his forehead with the same stress levels as an office worker heading in on a Monday off the back of a two-day hangover. He knows there's work ahead if he's to turn United around.

Getty Images SportLOSER: Man Utd's rotating attackers

United, for all of the riches they boast and all of the millions they have spent, have far too many headaches trying to put the ball in the back of the net. Here, they barely laid a finger on a makeshift Arsenal backline that was there for the taking – not many teams will be so fortuitous to play them without Gabriel Magalhaes or Riccardo Calafiori.

Rasmus Hojlund is a trier, and God loves a trier, but the Red Devils could do with him being a bit more than that too. Even when wrestling and grappling with Saliba, it felt like the Dane was always going to be the player hitting the deck and losing the ball.

Amorim later threw on Joshua Zirkzee, Marcus Rashford and Antony – the last of whom was sarcastically cheered onto the pitch by home supporters – in search of a solution, but found none. Maybe that's a chemistry issue in this new system, maybe it's a sign that the club have blown too much money on attacking duds. United's links to Sporting CP striker Viktor Gyokeres, someone who combines end product with physical brutishness, make more sense by the day.

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AFPWINNER: Tyrell Malacia

Good news, United fans – Tyrell Malacia might actually still be a good player despite his lengthy lay-off. The left-back, who has only recently returned after a year-and-a-half on the treatment table, was handed the unenviable task of trying to pin down Saka during his 45 minutes from the start. When the line-ups were announced, you feared for the Dutchman and the task he had ahead.

Yet Malacia stood tall in that battle. Not many defenders can proudly proclaim they slowed Saka down without kicking lumps out of him and tugging him to the ground, but he did. When Diogo Dalot switched to the left in the second half, the Gunners winger had a little more freedom to get down the outside and weave infield.

Luke Shaw will spend the next few weeks nursing a new injury, and Malacia's comeback has come at an opportune time for United.