Mikel Merino saves Spain: Arsenal star grabs stoppage-time equaliser against 10-man Netherlands as Nations League quarter-final tie ends all square

Mikel Merino turned home a late equaliser to save Spain's blushes, after Jorrel Hato's red scuppered a fine Netherlands performance in Rotterdam.

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  • Nico Williams opened the scoring
  • Tijani Reijnders and Cody Gakpo gave Netherlands a deserved lead
  • Hato's red left the door open for late equaliser
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    Spain took the lead against the run of play after Jorrel Hato was caught in possession by Lamine Yamal. The young winger found his club team-mate Pedri, who duly squared the ball to Nico Williams. The Bilbao winger blasted home in the ninth minute.

    The Netherlands steadily grew into the game, bossing possession for much of the first half. The pressure finally told in the 28th minute, when Cody Gakpo rifled a low finish into the Spanish net after a well-worked move, inspired by a marauding run by Jeremie Frimpong.

    The Netherlands quickly asserted their dominance after the break, scoring their second a minute after the second half whistle. Again Frimpong was the inspiration, as the Leverkusen ma ndrove into the Spanish box before finding Tijjani Reijnders. The AC Milan midfielder produced a fine finish into the far corner of Unai Simon's goal.

    La Roja posed little threat to Die Oranjee's during the second half, until an 82nd minute red for a rash tackle by Hato invited mounting pressure for the game's final moments. Eventually, the Spanish attack told. Bart Verbruggen could only parry a Williams effort back into the box, allowing substitute Merino to turn the rebound into an empty net in the 93rd minute.

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  • THE MVP

    Jeremie Frimpong offered a constant threat on the right flank for the Netherlands, playing a key role in both goals. The Leverkusen man was playing in a more advanced position than for his club, and appeared to relish the freedom.

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    THE BIG LOSER

    Jorrel Hato will rue his costly mistakes as his two key interventions in the game resulted in Spain's first goal, and a crucial red card which invited Spanish pressure. The young full-back has an exciting future, and will be a key part of Ronald Koeman's plans going forward, but he must be more composed if he is to thrive on the international stage.

  • WHAT COMES NEXT?

    The two sides will meet again in Valencia on Sunday. Tempers began to fray in the second half, and with progress in the Nations League on the line, it promises to be another intense 90 minutes.

Bid made: Man Utd submit £55m+ offer to sign new wing-back for Amorim

Manchester United have submitted a new offer worth more than £55 million to sign “one of the best” defenders for Ruben Amorim, according to a recent report.

The Red Devils are just a few days away from getting the Amorim era underway, but since his appointment was made official a couple of weeks ago, it seems behind-the-scenes work was getting underway ahead of the January transfer window.

Amorim pushing Man Utd to sign £58m Spurs star with agents expecting offer

He’s made 98 appearances under the Red Devils boss.

By
Brett Worthington

Nov 21, 2024

Man Utd transfer news

United are heading into the January window under a strict budget, as finances appear tight due to their heavy spending during the summer. Therefore, it is unclear what the Premier League side will be able to do once the window opens in the New Year.

If money is available for Amorim, it could be a busy month, as United have been linked with several players in recent weeks. The Red Devils remain interested in signing Jarrad Branthwaite from Everton. United chased the centre-back during the summer, seeing several bids rejected, and despite the change of manager, he remains a top target for the Premier League side.

As well as Branthwaite, United are also interested in a deal for Tottenham Hotspur’s Pedro Porro. The right-back is known to Amorim, as the pair worked together at Sporting Lisbon, and now the Portuguese is said to be pushing United to bring him to Old Trafford. However, Porro is not the only right-back/wing-back the club are looking at, as they have now made a bid for another player who is performing well in that position.

Man Utd submit £55m+ offer to sign new wing-back for Amorim

According to El Nacional, relayed by TEAMtalk, Manchester United have made an improved offer to sign Jules Kounde from Barcelona after failing with a bid in the summer. The France international has been with the Spanish giants since July 2022 and has been a regular for both club and country since then.

jules-kounde-liverpool-transfer-joe-gomez-premier-league

Kounde, who was called “one of the best defenders in the world” by Xavi, has started 15 of the 17 games he has played for Barcelona so far this season. The 26-year-old has a great ability to get up and down the right-hand side and do his job both defensively and attacking, as shown by him scoring one goal and collecting four assists in all competitions so far this season.

Kounde has impressed that much; he is now on the radar of United. This report states that the Red Devils are keen to sign a new right-sided defender, as Amorim sees Kounde, who United were linked with during the summer, as an ideal option to play as a right wing-back. United have now made an improved offer for the defender worth €68 million (£56.7m) in the hope it will be accepted by Barcelona.

Jules Kounde’s 2024/25 La Liga stats

Apps

13

Starts

11

Minutes per game

78

Goals

1

Assists

1

Big chances created

2

Clean sheets

3

Interceptions per game

0.4

Tackles per game

2.0

Dribbled past per game

0.6

Clearances per game

1.8

However, the Spanish side have knocked back this offer from Amorim’s side, as Kounde is considered a “fundamental pillar” in Hansi Flick’s squad. Barcelona have reportedly told United and Amorim that the only way they get Kounde to Old Trafford is by paying his full release clause, which stands at €1 billion.

Aggression lets Australia down

Australia’s top order’s eagerness to attack saw them gift England wickets, with Moeen Ali especially profiting from a blind spot against spin

Daniel Brettig in Cardiff09-Jul-2015With Australia and Yorkshire, Darren Lehmann laid waste to many a spin bowler. One modest opponent had the joy of occasionally taking him down.Even though Paul Wiseman of New Zealand was hammered plenty of times, he was twice able to deny Lehmann the sorts of milestones that have fallen to more prudent batting types. In 2004, he bowled Lehmann 19 short of a treasured Test hundred on his beloved Adelaide Oval. Two years later, Wiseman again splayed Lehmann’s stumps as he swung for the six that would have taken him to 345 and the highest ever score for Yorkshire. George Herbert Hirst’s 342 still stands.Another record still standing after day two of the Investec Ashes is Australia’s 14-year run without a series victory on English shores. It was difficult not to think that an opportunity had been missed, as all Australia’s top five made starts and none went on to a match-shaping hundred. Most damaging were the loss of Steven Smith and Michael Clarke to Moeen Ali, the latest addition to a growing trend.

Australia ‘disappointed’ by Broad reprieve

Australia have defended their short leg fielder Adam Voges and questioned the ruling of the umpires after he faced considerable criticism for appearing to claim a low catch off Stuart Broad that replays showed to have been grounded.
The opener Chris Rogers said Voges had actually said he was unsure if the chance carried to him, only for the umpire Marais Erasmus to give Broad out. Oddly the umpires then conferred and referred the decision, which was then reversed. Rogers questioned whether this process had been correct.
“Happy to defend Adam here, he stood up straight away and said ‘I’m not sure’, and actually the umpire said he was sure and gave him out, so Adam didn’t claim it,” Rogers said. “Then the fact that it was reviewed I’m not sure the ruling there, I think we have a right to be a little bit disappointed. That could be interesting to see what the development is there.”
Moeen Ali, who was at the non-striker’s end alongside Erasmus, said he also thought the chance had carried, and backed up Rogers’ assertion about Voges.

After the fashion of Lehmann, a pillar of Australia’s previous Ashes success was a relentless attack on the spin of Graeme Swann. There was no secret to the tactic, which numerous players had flagged before the series, and no let up in its execution. From the first day in Brisbane, Swann was not allowed to settle. He ultimately chose to retire after three Tests, leaving the tour in haste.Next up, Clarke’s men were similarly successful in attacking South Africa’s left-arm spinner Robin Peterson at Centurion Park. Like Swann, Peterson did not see out the series, being dropped after the first Test. Neither Alastair Cook nor Graeme Smith had been able to gain any traction with spin, as blows rained down on their slow men without anywhere near enough wickets to justify the expense.Since then, however, a blind spot has opened up. In four overseas Tests, Yasir Shah, Zulfiqar Babar, Devendra Bishoo and now Moeen Ali have all benefited from the chances afforded them by Australian aggression. The attacks on spin have continued, but at a far greater cost. No team coached by Lehmann is ever likely to back off from a confrontation with a spin bowler, but there is mounting evidence that a more measured approach is required at times of import.Take Smith. Either side of an admittedly brilliant 199 in Jamaica, he has twice now been dismissed through an impetuous dance down the wicket. On both occasions the bowler anticipated his movement and adjusted his length and pace accordingly, leaving Smith stranded. As Australia’s new No. 3 batsman, Smith cannot afford to be losing his wicket in such a manner, and he knows it.Moeen had been the beneficiary of overconfident batsmen last summer, when India took progressively more liberties against him even as his tally of wickets mounted. He was less successful in Australia during the World Cup, but he is no mug, and like most spin bowlers has become well attuned to the desire of batsmen to use the advantages afforded them in the Twenty20 age – bats, short boundaries, gym work – to take him down.Against Smith, Moeen was initially cowed by the Australian’s fleetness of foot. Three of his first four balls were hammered to the straight and cover boundaries, an unmistakeable statement. In a show of faith, Alastair Cook did not take Moeen off, and in the two overs before he got another look at Smith, the spinner re-calibrated his approach. When they next faced one another, Smith spoiled to get down the wicket again, while Moeen aimed flatter stuff at his hip with a short mid on in place.Steve Smith leaves the field after getting himself into a horrible tangle against Moeen Ali•Getty ImagesThe result of this was a bizarre-looking dismissal, where Smith effectively gave up his wicket to a catch in an effort to avoid being stumped. He had not set off down the wicket before Moeen bowled, but was left hopelessly tangled as the bat face was turned almost completely around and the ball bobbled off near enough to the back of the blade to nestle in Cook’s hands.A little over an hour later, and Clarke was equally eager to get at Moeen. His strength as a player of spin has largely come from his ability to use the full width of the crease, whether getting quickly down the wicket or right back to cut or pull. Both gifts were on display in a pair of boundaries he struck against Moeen, but in attempting to go again, Clarke was jammed by a ball fuller than he was prepared for, bunting back a return catch.These dismissals were a source of great satisfaction for England, their captain Cook and their new coach Trevor Bayliss, who was himself something of a thumper of spinners. But they were exceedingly damaging to Australia, leaving them to struggle through the rest of this match without a first-innings hundred from the top order. As Ashes underdogs in 2013-14, Australia were able to ambush England and Swann. This time, more or less the opposite occurred, and the favourites have some thinking to do.Chris Rogers, who played with considerable verve to reach 95 before also losing his wicket to a shot lacking in some discretion, said that this was Australia, take it or leave it. “If you look at it today you could say perhaps we could have been a little bit more patient, but you can’t have it both ways,” he said. “That’s how guys play and they’ve been so successful doing it. Every now and again they’re going to get out playing that way, and particularly as a side that’s our mentality, to be positive, so when it happens you’ve just got to accept it.”We have spoken about if we can put pressure on the spinner, maybe get him off and get the quicks back on it’s going to help us in the long run. For a lot of us to get out the way we did it’s going to hurt, particularly when there was an opportunity to make it count today. The fact that I go a 90 and there were three thirties and the ways we got out. That’ll hurt us and we think we’re better than that, but these things happen. If you’re positive and you’re going at it, sometimes you’re going to get out these ways.”On day one, Joe Root had said something similar, mentioning that when taking the positive option and “it doesn’t quite come off, you look slightly stupid or you play what looks like a horrendous shot”. Just as Lehmann was made to look occasionally silly by Wiseman, Australia were left looking foolish by Moeen on day two. Their fervent hope is that over the broader measure of a five match series, their approach will win out, as it once did for their coach.

Australia, South Africa and a touch of destiny at the Women's T20 World Cup final

It’s Lanning’s five-time champions versus Luus’ first-time finalists. Newlands, are you ready?

Valkerie Baynes25-Feb-20234:01

Moonda: A World Cup win for South Africa at home will lift the nation

Big Picture: A sellout at Newlands

Ask any South African and they will tell you they never expected this – their team in the Women’s T20 title decider, the first senior cricket side from their country to reach a World Cup final. Ask any Australian and they will tell you they expected this – their team one match away from a third straight T20I World Cup crown and sixth in all.After South Africa’s three-run defeat at the hands of Sri Lanka in the opening match of the tournament and six-wicket loss to Australia in Gqeberha, they had to defeat Bangladesh in their final group match to reach the semi-finals, which is where this World Cup truly lit up. Australia edged past a courageous India by just five runs to advance before the hosts’ stirring six-run victory over England who, like Australia, had reached the knockout phase unbeaten.

Followers in the US can watch the Women’s T20 World Cup final LIVE on ESPN+

So have South Africa played their final already? Or can they be expected to lift another level before an expected sell-out crowd – a first for a women’s sporting event in South Africa – of nearly 13,000 at Newlands? It is hard to see any dents in Australia’s armour – even in getting a scare from India they did what they so often do and found a way, thanks to a superior fielding performance, their rock-solid top four and calm death bowling from Ashleigh Gardner and Jess Jonassen.The home side, however, are riding a huge wave of emotion and confidence. Their bowling attack is supreme, as shown in their win over England and they were sharp in the field during the semi-final also – especially Tazmin Brits – showing that they can handle the pressure.

Form guide

South Africa WWLWL (all completed matches, most recent first)
Australia WWWWWSune Luus and Meg Lanning pose with the Women’s T20 World Cup trophy•ICC via Getty Images

In the spotlight: Australia’s batting vs South Africa’s bowling

Australia’s batting line-up has been nigh on indomitable over recent years so the likes of Alyssa Healy, Beth Mooney, Meg Lanning, Garnder and Ellyse Perry against Shabnim Ismail, Ayabonga Khaka, Marizanne Kapp and Nonkululeko Mlaba looms as the key match-up of this final. Australia have three of the top 10 run-scorers at this tournament so far and South Africa two while each have two bowlers inside the leading 10 wicket-takers. South Africa’s batting really only began to gel in the last two games, with Brits and Laura Wolvaardt putting on opening stands of 117 and 96 so that’s an area they’ll need to fire against Australia, who have proven wicket-takers across the board.Don’t forget the home crowd. An additional 3,000 tickets were made available for the upper tiers at Newlands on Saturday morning and they had all been snapped up by mid-afternoon. Australia know what it’s like to play with a packed house behind them and now that the South African side can expect the same, there’s no telling what that could do.

Team news: Jonassen over King for Australia?

While it was pace duo Ismail and Khaka who did the damage in the semi-final, they have a top-class spinner in Mlaba in their midst too. South Africa played their best XI against England and are unlikely to change that winning formula for the final.South Africa (possible): 1 Tazmin Brits, 2 Laura Wolvaardt, 3 Marizanne Kapp, 4 Suné Luus (capt), 5 Chloe Tryon, 6 Anneke Bosch, 7 Nadine de Klerk, 8 Sinalo Jafta (wk), 9 Shabnim Ismail, 10 Ayabonga Khaka, 11 Nonkululeko MlabaAustralia have all players available for selection heading into the final. They replaced legspinner Alana King with left-arm spinner Jonassen for the semi-final against India and Jonassen’s bowling at the death was a key factor in Australia’s five-run victory so it would be no surprise to see her retain her place.Australia (possible): 1 Alyssa Healy (wk), 2 Beth Mooney, 3 Meg Lanning (capt), 4 Ashleigh Gardner, 5 Ellyse Perry, 6 Tahlia McGrath, 7 Grace Harris, 8 Georgia Wareham, 9 Jess Jonassen, 10 Megan Schutt, 11 Darcie BrownBig demand for tickets for the Women’s T20 World Cup final•ICC/Getty Images

Pitch and conditions

The match will be played on the same Newlands pitch that staged both semi-finals where pace played a part, particularly early in England’s chase as Ismail unleashed her thunderbolts. But by the following day it was looking fairly brown with some cracks appearing under a baking sun and with a drying wind about. Another sunny day is forecast with temperatures of 26 degrees Celsius expected. Almost bang in the centre of the ground, the on- and off-side boundaries are pretty much equidistant.

Stats and trivia

  • Australia have won all six of the T20Is between these sides and 14 of 15 ODIs. The only time South Africa avoided defeat was in a tied game in 2016.
  • Brits and Wolvaardt have shared 299 partnership runs between them so far. Only Healy and Mooney (352 runs in 2020) have added more runs together in an edition of the Women’s T20 World Cup.
  • Healy has five fifties in her last 10 innings at the Women’s T20 World Cup, where she has scored 407 runs at an average of 45.22 and a strike rate of 138.43.

Quotes

“We know we’re probably not going to be the team that everyone’s cheering for but that’s fine, you know it’s going to be an incredible atmosphere and an incredible game at an amazing venue – so we’re pumped, we can’t wait to get out here and play and no doubt it’s going to be a great contest.”
“That is just it, my friend. It’s history, understand? Tomorrow, it’s a one-off game. You can’t be worrying about Australia and what they’re doing.”

Chelsea want another winger: Blues aiming to recruit a right-footed forward as Enzo Maresca bids to strengthen squad further after signing Geovany Quenda

Chelsea will turn their focus to signing a right-footed winger this summer after agreeing a deal for Sporting's Geovany Quenda earlier this week.

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  • Quenda will move to Stamford Bridge in 2026
  • Enzo Maresca wants five wingers in Chelsea squad
  • Blues aiming to bring in right-footed option
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Chelsea have reportedly beat Manchester United to the signing of Quenda for an initial fee of €51 million (£43m/$55m), with the Sporting Lisbon teenager set to join the Blues in the summer of 2026. However, despite the deal, claims that Chelsea are keen to have five wingers in their squad, with manager Enzo Maresca wanting a right-footed option to add to his current crop of stars.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Chelsea are already well-equipped on the wings, although doubts remain over the long-term futures of a number of their stars. Jadon Sancho could still return to Manchester United this summer despite Chelsea having an obligation to sign the 24-year-old, while the Blues are still awaiting news over a potential ban for Mykhailo Mudryk. Noni Madueke and Pedro Neto are currently Maresca's left-footed options, but the impending arrivals of teenagers Estevao and Kendry Paez this summer may lead to further exits, while youngster Tyrique George has also emerged in the first team in recent weeks.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Quenda only made his senior debut in August under Ruben Amorim, who gave the 17-year-old his breakthrough with Sporting prior to being appointed as Man Utd manager. Amorim was keen to reunite with Quenda at Old Trafford this summer but Chelsea beat their rivals to the punch, allegedly winning the race due to their willingness to allow the teenager to stay with Sporting next season.

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT FOR CHELSEA AND QUENDA?

    Quenda will have one more season to prepare for his move to Chelsea, having established himself as a winger for Sporting after Amorim's departure, despite previously breaking through as a wing-back. Chelsea, meanwhile, will continue to assess their options out wide before making a decision over the futures of players like Madueke and Sancho in the summer. Their current stars will be hoping to impress between now and the end of the season, starting with the away trip to Arsenal in the Premier League on Sunday.

Erwee and Bavuma hold Australia off to ensure a draw

South Africa muster belated fight to end a disappointing series on a better note

Tristan Lavalette08-Jan-2023South Africa defied Australia’s bold push for an improbable victory, and series sweep, as the third Test ended in a draw at the SCG.After following on, South Africa were 106 for 2 in their second innings when play ended five overs before the close. The surface played slowly and did not deteriorate as expected with South Africa mustering belated fight to end a disappointing series on a better note.Australia would have booked a spot in the World Test Championship final in June with victory, but one drawn match in the upcoming four-Test series in India will prove enough.Given their batting frailties, South Africa will be relieved to have escaped with a draw – their first such result since 2017.South Africa were nervous after skipper Dean Elgar fell before tea when he gloved a short Pat Cummins delivery to be caught behind. An under-pressure Elgar’s wretched series ended with just 56 runs at an average of 9.33 marked by struggles against short leg-side deliveries.After tea, spinner Nathan Lyon was left frustrated after a review on an lbw decision on Heinrich Klaasen went against him. The not-out decision was upheld even though replays showed the ball hitting middle stump.His mood soured further three balls later when Klaasen, playing his first Test match since 2019, stood his ground after edging a delivery to Steven Smith, who claimed a low catch at slip.But replays cast doubt over whether the ball touched the grass when it went into Smith’s fingers and it was enough for third umpire Richard Kettleborough to give not out.Klaasen’s luck ran out when he was clean bowled by a cracking reverse swinging delivery from Josh Hazlewood to provide a glimmer of hope for Australia with 20 overs remaining.South Africa were 82 for 2 with 15 overs left but Australia’s push continued with Cummins giving himself one last burst without reward.Cummins had also tried part-time spinners Smith, Marnus Labuschagne and Travis Head, who claimed the only wicket in the morning session, but to no avail.Left-arm spinner Ashton Agar, who was wicketless in 14 overs in the first innings, was surprisingly backed to share the new ball alongside Hazlewood.In his first Test match since 2017, Agar again struggled with his accuracy in what has been a tough return in an audition ahead of Australia’s tour of India. He finished wicketless from 22 overs in the match.South Africa started the day precariously placed at 149 for 6 after Cummins and Hazlewood bowled superbly late on day four in fading light.Steven Smith fails to grab onto a tough chance from Heinrich Klaasen•Cricket Australia via Getty Images

But Harmer and Marco Jansen batted cautiously to thwart Australia’s attack. Jansen played a rearguard until being dislodged caught behind by Head with a delivery outside off stump that stayed low.But an 85-run partnership between Harmer and Keshav Maharaj pushed South Africa close to the follow-on target and likely safety from a series whitewash.Maharaj reached his half-century on the first ball after lunch before falling to Hazlewood with South Africa 24 runs short of avoiding following on.Having been preferred over Scott Boland, Hazlewood repaid the faith of the selectors on his return with four wickets after suffering a side strain against West Indies in the opening Test of the home season.Maharaj’s dismissal triggered an all too-familiar rush of wickets for South Africa to set up an intriguing finish although it proved an anti-climax.Australia ran out of time in a truncated match, where four straight sessions across days three and four were washed out. Forty-nine overs were also lost to rain and bad light on the opening two days to continue a run of rain-affected matches at the traditional SCG New Year’s Test.But Australia thoroughly dominated South Africa throughout a one-sided series to complete an unbeaten home Test season after earlier thrashings over West Indies in Perth and Adelaide.Australia’s massive first innings was built on an unbeaten 195 from opener Usman Khawaja and 104 from Smith, who passed Don Bradman with his 30th Test century.Having won three straight Test series in Australia, South Africa were a shadow with their batting unable to muster much of a challenge.Apart from fiery quick Anrich Nortje, their attack also underwhelmed with spearhead Kagiso Rabada taking just three wickets at 87.66 in the last two matches after an eight-wicket haul on the bowler-friendly Gabba surface. South Africa’s disastrous series also ended their chances of qualifying for the WTC final.

Scouts sent to watch two Scottish sensations as Everton plot double swoop

As the international break arrives, Everton have reportedly turned their attention towards the future and landing not one but two young stars from Scotland in a double swoop.

Everton transfer news

The Toffees will welcome the international break with open arms having gone three games without victory in the Premier League after the ultimate stalemate against West Ham United. It had looked as though they finally turned a corner under Sean Dyche but recent results suggest that they’re far from out of trouble just yet, making further reinforcements all the more important.

On the transfer front, names such as Bright Osayi-Samuel and Tariq Lamptey have already been linked with a move to Goodison Park as The Friedkin Group look to make an instant impact on arrival.

Andy Robertson challenges Tariq Lamptey

Lamptey would be a particularly interesting deal. Once the next talented right-back coming through English football, Lamptey struggles to break into the Brighton & Hove Albion side these days, leaving the door ajar for an exit in 2025. In pursuit of rediscovering his form through game time, Goodison Park could be an ideal location. It’s not just current stars that the Toffees are targeting, however.

According to Pete O’Rourke of Football Insider, Everton are now plotting a double swoop to sign Cole and Dylan Williams from Scottish side Airdrie after sending scouts to watch the twins in action.

Revealed: When Everton's takeover could be completed

The news comes after a sale has been agreed with the Premier League.

1

By
Ben Browning

Nov 13, 2024

Two players for the future at just 16 years old, Everton’s focus on youth should benefit them in the long term, especially as they aim to push beyond relegation scraps and gradually back towards the top half where they belong. Already named on the bench for Scottish Championship side Airdrie, the Williams twins are certainly ones to watch.

Williams twins are ones for the future

There’s plenty of famous siblings in football – be it Gary and Phil Neville or more recently Inaki and Nico Williams – and now the Williams twins may well follow in suit should they complete a move to Everton. Both midfielders, their own dream will undoubtedly be to form a partnership at the heart of a top flight side, which Everton could pave the way for.

Still incredibly young players, they will have it all to think about if the Toffees come calling. A place in the academy would likely await, of course, before a path towards the first team is formed. With Crystal Palace also reportedly interested, however, the twins could yet deal those in Merseyside the ultimate blow.

Whether it would be a good time to be joining Everton remains to be seen. When Dan Friedkin arrives, the hope will be that one of England’s oldest clubs finally climb away from relegation concerns and become a go-to side for young players once again. As things stand, however, a move to Goodison Park is one with far too many risks for one young player to complete, let alone two already making their way in senior football.

Azhar Ali needs time to move out of Misbah's shadow

Azhar Ali’s early steps in captaincy will be analysed extensively but he needs time to step out of the large shadows of Misbah-ul-Haq and Shahid Afridi

Mohammad Isam20-Apr-2015On Monday afternoon, Shahid Afridi arrived in Dhaka along with three other members of Pakistan’s T20 squad. When he reached the reception of his hotel two hours later, he was engulfed by a crowd of journalists, photographers, cameramen, fans and security persons.Afridi spoke briefly to the reporters before being whisked away to his room. “This is a young team,” he said. “It takes time to get everything right. You have to give them time.”Pakistan’s ODI players have been in Bangladesh for a week already, but none of them have attracted this sort of fan and media attention. Given that they’ve just lost a series to Bangladesh for the first time, it’s fair to call this Pakistan ODI outfit the weakest they have sent to these shores. And possibly the most anonymous too, given the retirements of Afridi and Misbah-ul-Haq from the 50-over format.But they haven’t gone away completely. Afridi is the T20 captain. Misbah, the Test captain, will arrive with Pakistan’s other long-form specialists on the day of the third ODI. Azhar Ali, the new ODI captain, will welcome their presence in the dressing room, but it will be another reminder of the shadows he seeks to emerge out of.After Pakistan’s loss in the second ODI, Azhar was asked about the pressures of taking over from Misbah.”He was a terrific ambassador for Pakistan and he led exceptionally well,” Azhar said. “I played with him a lot, definitely taking over [from] him is not easy; the way he led Pakistan for 4-5 years. It has been a long time. When the time goes, things will settle down. When the team starts performing, it gets easier. I am very hopeful that in the near future we will be a very, very good team.”Azhar has plenty on his plate as it is – managing the team’s transition; injury worries within the squad; the weakening of Pakistan’s historical dominance over Bangladesh; and last but not least his own place in the ODI team, to which he has returned after nearly two years out – and his way of dealing with them, so far, has been to try and be in the thick of things.He rushed in from his position behind the bowler, mid-on or mid-off, after nearly every delivery, and often walked his bowlers back to their mark. He was there for a pat on the back at the end of the over or to consult with the bowler if he wanted to review a caught-behind or leg-before decision. The first time he asked for a review in his captaincy tenure, he overshot the 15-second stipulation.Every time the ball went to the boundary, the camera panned to Azhar, and on most occasions he showed enough self-awareness to keep his expression inscrutable. In both matches he held his own with the bat, latching on to every short ball and giving them a fair clump.Still, every time Pakistan fell in trouble, the mind traveled to a time, not too long ago, when they would be bailed out by a few Afridi thumps or smoothened by Misbah’s batting or captaincy. Bangladesh has been at the receiving end of both. On Friday when Pakistan were chasing 330, it was hard not to think of Afridi’s 25-ball 59 at the same ground last year, in a similar-sized chase that Pakistan pulled off.In 2011 it was a Misbah-Umar Akmal partnership that bailed Pakistan out of a rut in Chittagong. The following year it was Misbah’s calmness as captain that helped Pakistan clinch the Asia Cup against a Bangladesh side that fought tooth and nail in the final.Misbah was Pakistan’s ODI captain from May 2011 to the end of this year’s World Cup. He led in 87 matches and Pakistan won 45 of them. He made 27 of his 42 fifties as captain.Overall, Misbah’s was a moderately successful record on paper but his leadership was of the sort that will be talked about for years to come. Azhar’s infancy as a leader will be chewed over, and whether or not it is fair to him will not matter in this day and age of instant gratification. As he has said a number of times already, this young Pakistan team needs time. He will need that time too.

NZ in need of a steadier outing

After two whirlwind fixtures, New Zealand’s batting line up would benefit from a calmer workout with Ross Taylor the most in need of a substantial score before the quarter-finals

Andrew McGlashan02-Mar-2015The uneven schedule of the World Cup is far from ideal, with gaps of longer than a week between some team’s matches, but on balance it’s probably a good job New Zealand have some time off before their next outing against Afghanistan. After Saturday at Eden Park everyone needs a moment to catch their breath and, in Brendon McCullum’s case, shake off the bruises.As the emotion subsides from that incredible day – courtesy of Trent Boult and Mitchell Starc a much shorter day than it might have been – it will also be worthwhile for some calm assessment of the “learnings”, as Mike Hesson termed them, which can be taken from New Zealand’s heart-stopping run chase.It’s plainly clear that their bowling is in fine fettle and it may seem churlish to try to find weakness in a campaign that is now four wins from four, swept along on a wave of emotion that hit new levels on Saturday. But it is often wise to be critical from a position of strength.Before the match against Australia (and, for that matter, England although that is now appearing a gross over estimation) it was billed as the true test of where this New Zealand side had progressed to, especially with their batting line-up. The England game proved little – except how far McCullum could hit a ball – and for a period the Australia contest appeared to be heading in the same direction.But then the collapse set in. Firstly a wobble as McCullum, Ross Taylor and Grant Elliott fell in the space of one run before the more eye-popping demise from 131 for 4 that almost cost them the game.Before going further it should be restated how outstanding Starc’s spell was – one of the great white-ball bursts, as was Boult’s a few hours earlier. Still, some techniques were also left wanting, as Michael Clarke made plainly obvious with his comments about Australia’s performance. Hesson was a little subtler about the challenges of facing swing. “It’s something we’re going to have to be a little bit better prepared for next time,” he said.Adam Milne and Tim Southee can be excused for their swift departures to Starc, but Elliott was not in the same postcode when he faced the first ball after the interval, while Taylor did not give himself the best chance by playing across the line. The zing bails never threatened to stay in their grooves and will have needed recharging.

After the frenetic pace of the outings since then, a performance closer to their first outing in one of their two remaining matches would serve New Zealand well.

Taylor’s form is shaping as the key concern for New Zealand. His World Cup hasn’t started yet. A scratchy innings against Sri Lanka, a slog against Scotland, a brief not out against England and then 1 off two deliveries against Australia.He entered the tournament with some strong numbers under his belt – 96 against Sri Lanka then unbeaten scores of 59 and 102 against Pakistan – so it is far from a crisis, especially for a player who averages 41.18 in ODIs, but the way New Zealand structure their innings, with early aggression the order of the day, makes the role of Nos. 3 and 4 even more vital.Kane Williamson is ticking along beautifully, but he can’t be expected to shoulder all the burden of travelling in the slipstream of McCullum. Martin Guptill’s frustrating knack of progressing smoothly but not converting means, as against Australia, a blistering start can soon become something less secure.There remains a school of thought that McCullum should rein himself in rather than blazing on regardless but New Zealand have built their team to allow him that freedom. His numbers in 2015 – an average of 40.58 and a strike-rate of 142.39 – shows he is marrying two elements and in the last three World Cup matches the success of his attack has allowed him a free approach. They are also a vast improvement on 2014 when he averaged 20.33. But that does not mean that the prospect of him at the crease for closer to 30 overs rather than 10 is not a tantalising one (unless you are a bowler).The structure of New Zealand’s fixtures could help them, even if the lengthy gaps provide a little too much downtime. They now have matches against Afghanistan and Bangladesh, both capable of making life tricky for batsmen but also offering the chance – on two traditionally flat surfaces in Napier and Hamilton – to build substantial innings ahead of the quarter-final, perhaps against South Africa, in Wellington.The form of the bowling attack will make it very tempting for McCullum to stick the opposition in and aim for further quick victories but there is also value in considering allowing his batsmen to set a target – providing them the chance to bat 50 overs and reacquainting them with the skills of having to deduce a target to set rather than hunt one down with insatiable haste.Of course, that decision could be made for McCullum, as it was in the opening match of the tournament when Sri Lanka inserted them at Hagley Oval. New Zealand proceeded to forge a near-complete batting performance, putting 331 for 6 on the board, with three individual half-centuries and everyone who batted reaching double figures.McCullum attacked, but in a relatively restrained fashion compared to his rampages against England and Australia, Williamson was the fulcrum, Corey Anderson provided the steadying hand before a strong finish with Elliott and Luke Ronchi chipping in. After the frenetic pace of the outings since then, a performance closer to their first outing in one of their two remaining matches would serve New Zealand well.

Man Utd considering ditching £10m-a-year target for "underrated" player

Manchester United are now considering moving away from a £10m-a-year target and going after an “underrated” player instead due to wage demands, according to a recent report.

The Red Devils look set to announce Ruben Amorim as their new head coach, and the Portuguese will be keen to hit the ground running when he arrives during November’s international break, which was agreed between the two clubs when his release clause was met.

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Amorim needs to address Man Utd left-back problem

Amorim’s short-term goal at Old Trafford is to get going in the best way, and that is by winning football matches. But one of his long-term goals must be addressing the left-back problem at the club.

Luke Shaw

United spent the majority of last season and all of this season so far without a recognised left-back, as Luke Shaw continues to be on the sidelines with a calf injury, on which he has suffered a setback this week, and Tyrell Malacia continues his recovery from a long-term injury. INEOS decided not to sign a left-back during the summer, a decision that has been described as “unbelievable” by pundit/fan Mark Goldbridge.

The Premier League side are clearly looking at all their options, as Julio Soler emerged on their radar last week as an option to replace Shaw. Meanwhile, Wolves’ Rayan Ait-Nouri is also being looked at by United, and there are two other names under consideration at Old Trafford in what looks sure to be the priority position they choose to address in 2025.

£10m-a-year wage demands too much for Alphonso Davies

According to Caught Offside, Manchester United remain keen on Alphonso Davies but are also interested in signing Ben Chilwell from Chelsea. The report states that it remains to be seen if a deal for Davies can be justified by INEOS due to his demands, as he looks for around 12 million euros a year, which is roughly £10 million, the same wages that Antony is on at Old Trafford.

Davies is in the final year of his contract at Bayern Munich and has interest from United, as well as Real Madrid and Barcelona. His future with the German side remains up in the air, but given his demands, a move to Old Trafford may not happen, and therefore, United are also interested in signing Chilwell.

The Chelsea defender, who has been called “underrated” by Youtuber and podcaster Laurenz Vescoli, is seen as a more realistic and affordable option for the Red Devils. However, the Englishman has also had injury problems while at Stamford Bridge, and that could potentially put United off any deal.

Alphonso Davies and Ben Chilwell’s 2023/24 stats compared

Davies

Chilwell

Apps

36

13

Goals

2

0

Assists

6

1

Progressive carries

149

22

Goals per 90

0.07

0.00

Assists per 90

0.21

0.12

Tackles (Won)

57 (29)

15 (10)

Interceptions

30

4

Davies could still be seen as a viable option for United, but it is likely that players will have to be sold and moved off the wage bill before the left-back can come to the club. Unlike Davies, Chilwell still has two and a bit years left to run on his contract, so United will have to pay a transfer fee to get him out of Stamford Bridge.

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