He's like Rogers: Liverpool chase "generational" £80m ace who wants to join

Silly season is upon us, but given that Liverpool are the best team in England having won the Premier League, there are scant players across the globe who wouldn’t at least consider a move to Anfield this summer.

And players will come through the gates. FSG hit the jackpot when appointing Arne Slot to replace Jurgen Klopp last year, an affable but contrasting personality whose meticulous tactical approach has borne dividends.

Having done the business without any proper first-team investment, Liverpool’s owners are happy to get their purse out and reward the Dutch coach, with a range of incomings expected.

Arne Slot and Virgil van Dijk for Liverpool

While replacing Darwin Nunez, who has failed to react positively to Slot’s tactics and is expected to leave at the end of the season, is the chief attacking priority, especially with Mohamed Salah now tied down for two more years, Slot is keen to strengthen across a number of areas.

And that intrigue has led to Villa Park, with Morgan Rogers added to Liverpool’s shortlist.

Liverpool's interest in Morgan Rogers

Rogers has only been at Aston Villa for 14 months, but he’s made quite the impression, leaving Middlesbrough in the Championship to sign for Unai Emery’s side in a £15m deal.

His rise and rise has caught Liverpool’s eye, that’s for sure, with the mighty Fabrizio Romano revealing to GIVEMESPORT this week that Liverpool and Chelsea are among the top clubs to have been scouting the 22-year-old this season.

However, sealing a deal is hardly going to be a walk around Stanley Park, for Manchester United have also shown an interest in Rogers of late and were met with a response that a bid worth £68m would be required for Villa to consider his departure.

The ice-cold England international has scored 14 goals and added 13 assists across 50 Villan appearances this season, though it bears testament to the level of his ability that it is the underlying quality that has lifted him toward the top of Liverpool’s summer shortlist.

However, with Villa expected to play hardball, especially so if they retain their place in the Champions League, Liverpool might be forced to turn their heads elsewhere.

Luckily, a fitting and more affordable alternative has been earmarked.

Liverpool chasing new forward

As per Football Insider, West Ham United’s Mohammed Kudus is open to a move away from east London this season after a disappointing campaign, with Arsenal, Liverpool and Manchester City all interested.

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However, Reds fans will be pleased to know that FSG are singled out as the main party in the race so far, confident that they can seal a summer deal for a figure lower than his £80m release clause.

The player himself, meanwhile, is said to want to ‘make that move’ to Anfield and would ‘jump at the opportunity if an offer arrives’.

Mohammed Kudus celebrates for West Ham

While some will harbour reservations after the Ghanaian’s below-par output this season, this talent is unquestionable and the Hammers are willing to consider cut-price offers.

What Mohammed Kudus would bring to Liverpool

In August 2023, West Ham signed Kudus from Ajax for a £38m fee, pipping Brighton & Hove Albion to his signature. Regarded as a “generational talent” by journalist Gary Al-Smith.

He played an important part for United last term, scoring 14 goals and laying on nine assists as David Moyes’ side fought for European qualification in the Premier League and drove their way into the quarter-finals of the Europa League, losing over two legs against Bayer Leverkusen.

However, there’s no denying that Kudus has fallen down a notch this season, albeit struggling alongside the masses over a deeply frustrating year for the Irons.

Matches (starts)

33 (27)

28 (28)

Goals

8

4

Assists

6

2

Shots (on target)*

2.0 (0.5)

2.4 (0.8)

Pass completion

84%

90%

Big chances created

5

3

Key passes*

0.8

1.0

Dribbles*

3.8

3.0

Ball recoveries*

6.4

4.5

Tackles*

2.0

1.2

Duels won*

8.5

6.6

There is a reason why Liverpool have maintained an interest in the winger over the past year. Kudus would be the first to admit he has endured a testing campaign, but that doesn’t mean he’s not a player worthy of a place in Slot’s squad.

Indeed, his propensity for danger down the channels is quite a thing; for instance, Kudus disabled a firm Arsenal defence during a shock victory at the Emirates Stadium back in February, all but ending the Gunners’ feeble title hopes.

This is perhaps best illustrated through FBref’s data. The statistical site list that he ranks among the top 10% of attacking midfielders and wingers across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for pass completion and the top 2% for successful take-ons per 90.

Curiously, FBref also record that Rogers is one of Kudus’ most comparable players when assessing data from the ongoing Premier League season, and if the Villa man does prove to be unattainable in the market this summer, Liverpool may be convinced to move down a different track.

The statistical likeness suggests that either star would be a fitting addition to an already talented and dynamic frontline. Both have been profiled, and both are firmly on Hughes’ radar.

A “fearless” ball-carrying threat, as has been said by scout Antonio Mango, Rogers is proving himself to be a dangerous player indeed, breaking from midfield or the left flank and closer and closer toward the goalmouth, where his growing potency has indeed led to 27 goal involvements across all competitions this season.

However, Kudus demonstrated last season his elite level for West Ham. He will be annoyed at his own regression under Julen Lopetegui and now Graham Potter at the London Stadium, but there’s little question he has ‘generational’ quality that Slot could tap into and shape into something truly special for Liverpool.

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Cost £4.3m, now worth less than Scales: Rodgers messed up with Celtic star

Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers has been immensely successful throughout his time with the Scottish giants, in his second spell now with the club.

The Northern Irish boss won seven trophies in just over two-and-a-half years at Parkhead between 2016 and 2019 in his first go at it with the Hoops, before joining Premier League side Leicester City.

Celticmanager BrendanRodgerscelebrates with the trophy after winning the League Cup

Rodgers won two trophies in his first year back at Celtic last term, securing the Scottish Premiership title and the SFA Cup, and is currently on course to land the domestic treble.

The Hoops beat Rangers on penalties to win the League Cup in the first half of the season, they are one game away from winning the league title, and they are in the SFA Cup final against Aberdeen.

This means that the former Leicester and Liverpool head coach could have won 12 trophies in his career with Celtic to date by the end of this season.

The Northern Irish tactician has clearly been hugely successful for the Scottish giants, but that does not mean he has been perfect throughout that time. In fact, there have been some question marks over his centre-back selections of late, with Liam Scales getting the nod at the weekend.

Celtic's centre-back debate

The Hoops started the 2024/25 campaign with Cameron Carter-Vickers and Stephen Welsh as the two first-choice options in the right centre-back role and Auston Trusty and Liam Scales as the two first-choice options on the left side of the pairing.

Rodgers recently revealed that he prefers to play a left-footed player on the left side of the defence because it “allows you to get through the pitch quicker”, but he has had problems in that position this season.

Scales and Trusty have both dropped out of the team at times, with neither able to definitively say that they are the number one option, and thay may be because of the mistakes that they have made in the Premiership.

Appearances

22

20

Starts

17

20

Error led to shot

1

4

Error led to goal

0

1

Penalties committed

1

0

Dribbled past

4x

10x

As you can see in the table above, they have both started a similar number of matches and have combined for five errors that led to shots, one error that led to a goal, and one penalty conceded. Trusty has also been dribbled past twice as much as the Irishman, as opposition forwards have found it too easy to get the better of him.

These statistics show that the two naturally left-footed defenders in the squad have not been particularly reliable at the back, because of the errors that they have made in the Premiership.

Scales started the 5-0 win over St. Johnstone in the SFA Cup and the 5-1 win over Kilmarnock in the Premiership, suggesting that he is currently ahead of Trusty in the pecking order.

That is despite Scales (£3m) being worth significantly less than Trusty (£6.4m), as per Transfermarkt, who joined the club from Sheffield United last summer.

The Irish defender’s value may have been higher, however, if he had more game time on the pitch because he has only started 17 times in the Premiership, which means that the centre-back has not had as many starts to showcase his quality as Trusty has had.

But Scales is not the only central defender who falls into that category. Rodgers has also messed up with Polish stopper Maik Nawrocki, whose value has plummeted during his time at Celtic.

Why Maik Nawrocki's value has plummeted at Celtic

The Hoops were in the market for a replacement for Carl Starfelt in the summer of 2023 and decided to splash a reported fee of £4.3m on the Legia Warsaw squad to bolster their options in that position.

That was a significant outlay, given it was the most expensive signing of the summer as per Transfermarkt, for Celtic and that suggests that they expected him to play a key role on the pitch.

That was not what happened, though, as Nawrocki went on to play just ten times, starting seven of those outings, in the Premiership during the 2023/24 campaign.

He won 57% of his duels and did not make a single error that led to a shot, goal, or penalty in those ten matches, but that was not enough to earn him a regular place in the team.

Carter-Vickers has nailed down the right-sided centre-back role and that has left Nawrocki fighting for a place on the left, which leaves him at an immediate disadvantage as a right-footer.

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He did not make a single appearance in the league until March of this season, when injuries to Trusty and Scales presented him with a chance to shine against Rangers and Hearts.

Nawrocki took his chance to impress in both of those matches, as you can see in the table below, by dominating opposition attackers in duels and being reliable in possession.

Minutes

90

90

Clearances

7

9

Blocks

0

3

Tackles + interceptions

5

1

Duels won

7/10

8/9

Dribbled past

0x

0x

Pass accuracy

93%

98%

Error led to shot/goal

0

0

These performances from the £12k-per-week star were not enough to keep his place in the side, however, as he has been an unused substitute for the last two Premiership matches and did not make the matchday squad against St. Johnstone in the SFA Cup.

As a result of his lack of minutes on the pitch in the last two seasons, Nawrocki’s Transfermarkt value has plummeted millions down to just £1.7m, making him worth even less than Scales and Trusty.

This shows that Rodgers has messed up with the defender because Nawrocki was brought in for a whopping £4.3m and has rarely been used by the manager, despite his impressive performances, and the club now have a depreciating asset because of it.

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It will now be interesting to see what Celtic do with Nawrocki in the summer because he is not worth anywhere near as much as the fee they paid for him due to Rodgers’ reluctance to use him, and he does not seem likely to be a key player moving forward due to his lack of minutes.

The wait is Over: Six balls and a lifetime later, Jofra Archer returns with a bang

Four years after his last Test appearance, England’s fast bowler scripts a perfect return to the big time

Vithushan Ehantharajah11-Jul-20250:50

Manjrekar: Great comeback story for Archer

There was a touch of anxiety in the England camp on Friday morning, when eight of the Test squad set off on Lime bikes for the near four-mile journey from the team’s Royal Garden Hotel to Lord’s.The one-day squad did similar to beat the traffic for an ODI against West Indies at the Kia Oval last month, but this was different. Once you are through the picturesque Kensington Gardens, you enter the realm of the main roads, tangling treacherously like competing interests as Paddington becomes Edgware Road.In May, the NHS reported a surge in A&E admissions for people who had suffered trapped legs in falls, colloquially known as “Lime Bike Leg”. Imagine the uproar if an active member of England’s XI in this third Test did himself a mischief on the commute, when even Brendon McCullum chose to walk in this morning?Jofra Archer was one of the “Lime Bike Eight”. And maybe it was only right for there to be a hint of jeopardy on his final journey before returning as an active Test cricketer.When he walked out to bat, it was Archer’s first competitive act in England whites in more than 1500 days. And it is no reach to suggest that each day had carried an associated risk, such as simply commuting to work, which might have added to the wait.Jofra Archer claimed a wicket on his Sussex return after four years out of red-ball cricket•PA Photos/Getty ImagesIt was not just those five days across a 25-month period in which he underwent surgery on his elbow, lower back and hand. Nor the 77 matches he has played in the four-year period since that 13th Test cap in Ahmedabad back in February 2021. Every time Archer got out of bed in the morning during this period, including this Friday, there will have been a fleeting moment of wondering whether he was about to feel the wrong thing in the wrong place.So, really, what was a bike-ride to work, other than a final journey for Archer: a man already incarcerated by hours of doubt, contained within the months of rehabilitation, and years of uncertainty over getting back to Test cricket. The air on his face as he ventured back to where this all began, against Australia in 2019, weeks after hisSuper Over heroics at the same venue in the World Cup final, must have felt like liberation.Even more so as he steamed down from the Pavilion End. Out came the first ball, played judderingly by Yashasvi Jaiswal. The crowd, already swelling with pride, swelled even more, yearning to burst.

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It was no surprise Archer’s follow-up was near perfection. One of his understated super-strengths is unerring accuracy. During his early, pre-England days with Sussex, he could sit into a holding pattern, hammering out the same length, over after over. His former coaches, Jason Gillespie and Jon Lewis, often reiterated the importance of marrying such precision with patience. And though Archer often indulged his frustrations with the odd short ball, he understood the value in testing a batter’s substance with his restraint.Related

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His patience has certainly come in for a serious examination. From messaging Ben Stokes “Zim?” ahead of the one-off Test against Zimbabwe earlier this summer, to turning out for his old school team, Foundation, in December 2023 – much to the surprise of men’s managing director Rob Key ­ Archer has veered towards the impetuous in the final stages of this comeback.You can understand why. England’s plans to get him back as a three-format bowler have come in two phases – heavily planned and .Ahead of the 2022 Pakistan tour, he bowled for England Lions against the full side in the UAE, the first steps on a roadmap that required a good deal of politicking.Earlier that year, Key and SA20 commissioner Graeme Smith had struck a gentleman’s agreement that, within reason, all centrally contracted England players would be granted an NOC for the inaugural competition. In turn, a stint for Archer with MI Cape Town was worked out for the new year, which led neatly into a series against South Africa that marked Archer’s first England appearance in close to two years.Everything was on course until another stress fracture in his elbow ruled him out of the 2023 Ashes. From that point on, England decided to be less proactive and more reactive. Though the coaches and medical staff hive-minded a PDF on Archer’s next steps – common practice for all their bowlers – it was only after regular assessments, at each of his homes in Brighton and Barbados, that the next plan was put in place.3:04

Root: ‘Great to see Archer smiling, enjoying his cricket’

The 2024 T20 World Cup was a personal success, even if England were as underwhelming as a team could be in reaching the semi-finals. A fixture against Scotland in Barbados brought Archer’s two worlds together, and felt, outwardly, like a springboard. Cheered on by kids from his former school, he admitted to tearing up, even if the game ended as a no-result.ODIs against Australia later that summer brought the enticing prospect of an Ashes series to the fore. It felt, at the very least, that a corner had been turned: even when Archer returned to the IPL with a thumb injury, the light at the end of the tunnel was illuminating the final steps.He missed the ODIs against West Indies at the start of this summer, but stepped up his bowling loads. Barring that text to Stokes, he bided his time, ticked a box with a first County Championship match in four years for Sussex against Durham, and did enough in the intervals during the second Test at Edgbaston last week to show England’s hierarchy he was ready. On the eve of the match, he gave his captain such a beasting in the nets that Stokes was late for his captain’s pre-match press conference, as he went back in for another hit.

****

Who knows what would have happened had Bashir not been there. Archer might have run all the way through the Lord’s Grandstand, into another dimension. And those in the ground who had cheered his return, then hugged each other at this crowning moment, would have followed.The beauty of true fast bowling is not about destroying stumps or ending batters, but creating worlds in an instant. And wherever Archer had ended up – whether he’d stopped at square leg or not at all, he was at the centre of it.The visceral screams. The straining of his face. The thrusting of his limbs, as if more outlets were needed for his emotions. His gold chains bounced on his reinforced chest and shoulders, as if they were extensions of the man, rather than the impediments they were first made out to be when he arrived on to the international scene.It’s worth noting there are now two chains around Archer’s neck. In ancient Egypt, the wealthy would be buried with their gold, which they would then exchange for passage into the afterlife. Such has been Archer’s toil in this realm already, the extra one has the feel of a souvenir of his journey through purgatory.Archer was a regular attendee at England training sessions while rehabbing from his elbow injury•PA Photos/Getty Images

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Part of Archer “injury-proofing” his body has been a more muscular physique. His trunk is thicker, his upper body more welter- than lightweight.As a result, the way he delivers the ball has changed. Where once his trajectory came over his right shoulder, with the smoothest path from A to B, his release-point now comes from slightly further out. It’s not a conscious choice from Archer but a case of his body adapting to new restrictions, and finding a way to avoid the pain.Undoubtedly, Archer has lost the whippiness of his first incarnation, along with the ability to get front-on, and come over the top of his front leg in the manner that he used to. And yet it took him just four balls to unleash the fastest delivery of the series so far.He would deliver another close to it – 93.3mph, third ball of his second over. By the end of his initial spell of 1 for 16, he was averaging 89.8mph, the third-fastest new-ball spell of five or more overs since 2006.Archer returned to the IPL with a bang this season•BCCI

****

Having watched the previous delivery go by in a flash, Karun Nair barely moved his feet to this one. An impulsive twitch brought the inside half of his bat into play, which just about saved him from the nip down the slope that had done for Jaiswal. This delivery had designs on Nair’s front pad, maybe even some stumps.By now, the near-30,000 spectators inside Lord’s were transfixed. Just as Jasprit Bumrah had demanded their attention earlier in the day, here was Archer, keeping them on the edge of their seats, with only that familiar shuffle – head down, back to the top of his mark – allowing them a moment to lean back and catch their breath.The nagging length was there, his pace with the new Dukes ball was amplifying every available bit of movement and drama. This is why so many fans kept faith with the idea of Archer. That he could come again, eliciting bygone brilliance here and now.It is also why the ECB has invested so much in him. The central contracts, the round-the-clock care, the expertise of industry-leading surgeons such as Rowan Schouten (back) and Roger van Riet (elbow), and the leeway to indulge home comforts and, eventually, cede to his forceful request to enter the recent edition of the IPL.That caused some alarm. The IPL’s stipulation on entering 2025’s auction or risk being banned from the next two editions was, understandably, too big a risk for Archer, even if the ECB wanted him fresh for as much or as little of this India series and the winter’s Ashes as possible. The masterplan was into his final throes – but was Archer getting cold feet?Far from it. Sure, he was wary, as much about his luck as history and his age. But the 30-year-old’s desire to get back to Test cricket has never dimmed.Jofra Archer returned to his native Barbados for the T20 World Cup last year•Getty ImagesThe kid at home in Barbados, posting constantly about the cricket he was watching, had become an adult posting intermittently about the cricket he was watching. Stokes bit back at the suggestion that Archer had been kept around for the Headingley Test in order to persuade him to keep the format on his agenda. “Look, he didn’t need any more reason to find any more desire,” Stokes said, and he should know, having never stopped checking in on Archer through his years of rehab.Rightly or wrongly, Archer also carries guilt. Speaking during last year’s T20 World Cup, he revealed that not playing made him feel like a burden. “I’ve seen a few comments, people saying ‘he’s on the longest paid holiday they’ve ever seen’,” he said of barbs from keyboard warriors in his mentions and comments.Here, in real life, there were no haters.

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Can you really come back if you have never been away?Since Ahmedabad 2021, Archer has played 41 matches for England. All have come in white-ball cricket, and featuring in two international tournaments in that period skewers the notion of one returning from the wilderness. Nair, the man who placed meaningful bat on ball for this final delivery of the over, has more of a claim for that narrative.Archer in his delivery stride on his return to Test cricket•Getty ImagesThere was a moment, when that final ball was gathered at midwicket, that the crescendo-ed whoops that had greeted Archer’s run-up tailed off into a drop of silence.It was a pause to catch your breath. A moment to glance at the scoreboard and realise Archer’s first over was done. A realisation that now, this Dukes, in other hands, won’t dance as smooth, sing as sweet, or sting as sharp.All those emotions from all those people soon joined as one again, as they coo-ed for an encore from Archer who, simply by collecting his cap off umpire Sharfuddoula, had already exited the stage.Archer would bowl nine more overs, closing out the day with 1 for 22, to finish as England’s most economical and threatening bowler. Like Bumrah, a singular threat, a singular thrill. But unlike Bumrah, a vindication of the excitement and anticipation that had been underpinned by trepidation.This is a new Archer. One we have seen building out in the open in patches, but behind the scenes for years.In an era when most blockbuster Hollywood productions are modern remakes of beloved classics, it is not unfair to suggest that Archer will be seen as a peak example of this trend. He is not quite the original, and probably never will be.But he remains compelling theatre, heart-warmingly brilliant and, now, an embodiment of spirit. If you need to know how deep a man must go to reclaim what he really wants, you’d do well to chart his return to the Test stage.And that’s just from one over.

How do India approach the WTC final without Bumrah and other questions

Has Gill sealed a permanent place? And what about life after Ashwin and Jadeja

Karthik Krishnaswamy13-Mar-20232:44

What could India’s XI look like for the WTC final?

India were expected to retain the Border-Gavaskar Trophy and they met those expectations, but few would have imagined they’d be pushed as hard as they were by an Australia side that lacked Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Cameron Green and David Warner during large parts of the series and Josh Hazlewood through all of it. Having gotten through that experience, India are now set to face Australia again in the World Test Championship final at The Oval in June. It promises to be a cracker, but before they get there, here are five questions they can ponder on in the short and long term.

How do India approach the WTC final without Bumrah?

India won’t play three spinners at The Oval, but they may seriously consider playing two. They played both Ashwin and Jadeja during the 2021 final in Southampton, as part of a 3-2 combination, and it didn’t quite work. Ashwin bowled beautifully, and was perhaps India’s best bowler in that game, but Jadeja went under-bowled, and New Zealand’s victory in overcast, seaming conditions was in large part down to their depth of seam options – they had four genuine quicks plus the medium-fast accuracy of Colin de Grandhomme, while India only had three fast bowlers.India played a five-Test series in England after that – spread over two tours – and never picked a 3-2 attack again. They went 4-1 in all five Tests, leaving out Ashwin and preferring Jadeja for being the better batter of the two.India drew that series 2-2 with that 4-1 attack, and they will probably want to stick to that combination at The Oval unless conditions seem unusually spin-friendly – an unlikely event in June. But India will be without Jasprit Bumrah, their pace spearhead. In his absence, India may find it hard to pick a four-man seam attack that offers the relentless control that won them Tests at Lord’s and The Oval in 2021.Mohammed Shami and Mohammed Siraj will probably be the first-choice new-ball pair, if both are fit, while Umesh Yadav, Shardul Thakur and Jaydev Unadkat are the other pace options who could realistically be on that flight to the UK. Hardik Pandya, who last played a Test match in 2018, could be a left-field choice too, as the allrounder who can fill in as fourth seamer. But the first three names mentioned above didn’t bowl too many overs through the Border-Gavaskar series, with the spinners doing the bulk of the work, and the other three didn’t feature at all.Between now and the WTC final, India’s players will play no competitive red-ball cricket, with most of them set to get through a busy IPL season.Given this, it’s hard to see how India will assemble a four-man pace attack whose rhythm they can be confident of. There’s a chance, therefore, that they could go 3-2 again, and trust Ashwin and Jadeja to give them control even in conditions not ideally suited to their bowling.Jasprit Bumrah has been wrapped up in cotton wool to make sure he can play the ODI World Cup•Getty Images

Is KS Bharat the right back-up for Rishabh Pant?

Bharat began his debut series impressively behind the stumps, particularly while standing up to spin, but as the series progressed he began looking less assured. The new ball wobbled after passing the stumps on the first morning in Ahmedabad – a frequent scourge of overseas wicketkeepers touring England – and he struggled to cope with it, and put down a catch off Travis Head.Mistakes began to creep into his keeping against spin as well, particularly against edges travelling to his right, which often tended to miss his gloves and hit his right leg. On TV commentary, Dinesh Karthik – veteran of 26 Tests, 94 ODIs and 60 T20Is for India – suggested that this particular issue was down to Bharat’s right foot being his anchor foot – keepers are advised to use their left foot as anchor, to be able to move quickly to their right, which is where they can expect to collect the ball most often. This also perhaps explained why Bharat was often so impressive while collecting the ball down the leg side of right-hand batters – his catch off a gloved sweep from Green, in Ahmedabad, was remarkable for how far he moved to get into position.As the series progressed, Bharat seemed to gain confidence with the bat – or stayed in long enough to show how much talent he has. The unbeaten 23 in India’s chase in Delhi and the 44 in Ahmedabad were both bright and enterprising cameos full of attacking strokeplay – his back-to-back pulled sixes off Green in the latter innings were particularly eye-catching – and India have reason to believe he can hold his own with the bat.The keeping could be more of a worry, but Karthik’s comments suggested his issues were technical and fixable.No team can fully replace Rishabh Pant, but India have invested plenty of faith in Bharat, and it’s likely that they’ll see his mixed debut series as a learning curve, and continue to believe he has a higher ceiling that he can reach with smart work behind the scenes.Wicketkeeper KS Bharat began the Border-Gavaskar series well but a few errors crept into his game later on•Getty Images

Has Shubman Gill sealed a permanent slot in the Test XI?

There seems to be no end to Gill’s insatiable hunger for hundreds. He’s now scored five in his last 10 innings for India. It almost felt inevitable that he’d get to three-figures when India began their innings in Ahmedabad, but a lot of that feeling was down to how true and easy-paced the pitch was. The other four hundreds Gill has scored in this remarkable stretch have all come on white-ball surfaces, which tend to be considerably flatter than Test pitches.That takes nothing away from Gill’s achievement, of course. But it’s important for fans to understand that this sort of form can’t go on forever – unless Gill turns out to be the reincarnation of Don Bradman – and that he, like any other batter, could make a run of low scores if India play their next few Test matches on challenging pitches.This is why India gave KL Rahul a long run in the side before they replaced him with Gill, and it’s also why they’ll likely give Gill a long run too. He will face plenty of hurdles as his career moves forward – seaming pitches in England could potentially prove his biggest challenge, given that his game seems ideally suited for hard pitches and back-foot play – but India know he’s a special talent and will back him to find a way to score runs in all conditions.2:01

Tait: Gill has a huge future ahead of him

Who after Ashwin and Jadeja?

They have 738 Test wickets between them, and they dominated the wicket charts to such an extent during the Border-Gavaskar Trophy that the adjudicators decided to jointly award them the Player of the Series trophy. Oh, and they’re both genuine allrounders too, particularly in Indian conditions.R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja are irreplaceable, but they’re also 36 and 34, and it’s almost impossible to see how India will replace them when the time comes.Rohit Sharma was asked this during his post-match press conference in Ahmedabad – whether he felt the two would still be around when India next host Australia for a Test series in four years’ time.”I don’t know, honestly, if they’ll be around,” he said. “I don’t know if I’ll be around. But no, four years is a long time. For the sake of Indian cricket I hope they stay and they play a lot of cricket for India. Honestly, both of them are marathon players for us. They know exactly how to get the job done, especially in this part of the world.”You give them the ball, they get you those breakthroughs. With the bat they get you crucial runs. Very very important players for us. Where we stand today in terms of how we’ve performed, especially in Indian conditions, the credit goes to them. A large part of our success belongs to those two guys, obviously because it’s not just for a period of few years but it’s over a decade now.R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja have been marathon players for India•BCCI”It’s a long long time to keep performing in the way these two guys have done for us, and I can only hope that they continue to play as long as possible, because those shoes will definitely be very very big ones to fill.”Ashwin took 25 wickets at an average of 17.28 over the four Tests against Australia, and Jadeja 22 at 18.86. They also made crucial runs in difficult conditions, with Jadeja scoring 70 during India’s only innings in Nagpur and Ashwin contributing 37 to a lower-order rearguard in Delhi, where he and Axar Patel rescued India after they were 139 for 7 in response to Australia’s first-innings total of 263.Happily for India, they’re both bowling as well as ever – Jadeja’s bowling form seemed to tail off somewhat as the series went on, but it may possibly have been down to his having returned to action only recently after undergoing knee surgery – and they don’t need to answer that big question yet.And as much as its important for teams to plan how they handle transitions, they can’t be micromanaged, and they often take place in unexpected ways. Ashwin came to Test cricket with a bowling average of 28.12 and a strike rate of 63.3 after 34 first-class matches. He was viewed as highly promising, but no one could have imagined he’d go on to be one of India’s all-time greats.Likewise with Jadeja, who many viewed as a bits-and-pieces white-ball specialist when he made his Test debut in 2012-13, his bowling seen as accurate but limited and his batting achievements in first-class cricket – including three triple-hundreds – viewed with suspicion. Look where he is now.It’s possible that India will struggle for years to replace Ashwin and Jadeja. But it didn’t take them all that long to replace Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh, and there was no grand plan as to how that happened.Axar Patel chipped in with useful runs but his bowling fell short of expectations•Getty Images

What next for Axar Patel?

The foremost candidate to partially answer the previous question is, of course, Axar, who is in some ways a Jadeja clone. He was India’s second-highest run-getter during the Australia series, and while his bowling fell well short of pre-series expectations both in terms of volume and potency, he seemed to find some rhythm when he got a chance to bowl longer spells on the flat deck in Ahmedabad. His dismissal of Head on the final day was one of the balls of the series, drifting away from the left-hander before spinning back sharply off the footmarks to bowl him through the gate.Axar looks, in every way, a long-term prospect, and while 29 isn’t young in cricket terms, it’s young enough for a spinner to enjoy a long career.In the immediate term, though, his bigger worry is about featuring in India’s XI overseas. Whatever the conditions are at The Oval in June, they’re unlikely to be of the sort that gets teams thinking of three spinners. He’ll probably be part of India’s squad, though, and he’ll keep working hard with both bat and ball to remind the team management that he can do a job if needed.To get to a stage where he becomes a candidate for the first XI in all conditions, however, there’s one thing he can work on. At present, his biggest threat comes from his unusual trajectory and exaggerated angle into the right-hand batter. If he can work on his stock ball so it turns sharply more often than it currently does, he’ll make batters worry about both edges rather than just one, and that’ll make him an incredibly potent bowler.

Shardul Thakur's evolution into India's canny white-ball option

His variety of slower balls and ability to give a good whack with the bat make him a valuable T20 World Cup candidate

Deivarayan Muthu19-Mar-2021In the lead-up to IPL 2018, Chennai Super Kings coach Stephen Fleming was impressed with Shardul Thakur in match-simulation slog overs at Chepauk, although the seamer was bit of a hit-and-miss. Fleming believed that Thakur could become a death-bowling option for the franchise along with the first-choice Dwayne Bravo – if he could work on his lines and lengths. Three years later, Thakur showcased his T20 evolution in a must-win match for India against a power-packed England line-up with an assortment of slower deliveries that might have done Bravo proud.The conditions at Motera on Thursday night were as tough as they could get for any bowler. When Thakur aimed for a yorker at the death with a dew-slicked ball, he lost grip of it so much that it flew behind him. Thakur hadn’t started well either, dropping Dawid Malan on 3 at short third man and then leaking 21 runs from his first two overs. The catch was a tough one, and two boundaries came off edges, but the figures didn’t tell these tales.Related

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  • Stand-ins Thakur and Sundar stand out

When Thakur was recalled into the attack, England were in front, needing 46 from 24 balls, in their chase of 186, with six wickets in hand. Ben Stokes had just taken down both Indian spinners Rahul Chahar and Washington Sundar, peeling off 41 from a combined 19 balls off them.ESPNcricinfo’s forecaster pegged England’s chances of winning at 50.62% at the start of the 17th over, but in a space of two balls it nosedived sharply to 15.94%. Thakur rolled out a pair of offcutters and had both Stokes and Eoin Morgan holing out of successive balls. He banged those cutters into the pitch and hid it away from the swinging arcs of both the left-handers. Both batsmen took the wiser option of attempting to hit Thakur straighter as opposed to squarer, but they ended up slicing the ball to the outfielders. With Thakur’s double-strike, India were onto something…Hardik Pandya and Bhuvneshwar Kumar, too, kept taking pace off the ball, bowling legcutters to right-handers and offcutters to left-handers, leaving Thakur with 22 to defend off the last over against Jofra Archer and Chris Jordan. Thakur floated a legcutter away from Jordan’s reach first ball and kept him to an under-edged single. However, against Archer, Thakur veered away from his slower variations wide of off, and served up an on-pace length ball on the stumps that was pumped down the ground for four. The next ball was short and wide with Archer mowing it over midwicket for six. The equation was narrowed to 12 from three balls, and the pressure was back on Thakur. The seamer tossed the ball into his trouser pocket and wiped it furiously.The pressure mounted further on Thakur after he sent down two wides – one for height and the other for width. After a seemingly intense discussion with Rohit Sharma, the stand-in captain, and Pandya, Thakur revisited Plan A: dig slower balls into the pitch and take it away from the batsman. He splintered the toe of Archer’s bat with the fourth legal ball of the over and then had Jordan holing out next delivery with what looked like a knuckle ball to close out the game for India.Shardul Thakur’s double-strike at the death derailed England’s chase•BCCI”The last over [is] never easy and with dew coming in so much…there was not much dew in the last three games, but this game yes there was dew,” Thakur outlined the challenge for him, speaking to . “Definitely a tough over and they [England] were swinging hard. So, they were going for a few runs and it was important to bowl those dot balls – one or two dot balls – and the game was sealed.”Yes definitely because like I mentioned earlier there was dew coming in, so had we bowled the slower ones in the stumps or little bit up then it would have been easy to hit. The idea was to hit into the stumps and keep [the ball] away from their power zone.”Thakur also said that he relished the pressure of bowling the tough overs in the death and powerplay, having also done it recently for CSK in IPL and Mumbai in domestic cricket.”I’m enjoying it a lot,” he said. “Even when I’m playing in the IPL or domestic cricket, I bowl a lot of overs in the death or fourth, fifth or sixth over in the powerplay. So, I bowl a lot of overs where batsmen come hard at bowlers. Kind of getting used to it now.”The Thakur of the old, however, wasn’t used to white-ball cricket. He had fairly limited exposure with the white ball, having played a bulk of his age-group cricket in Mumbai with the red ball. Then, in senior cricket, he first broke into India’s Test squad in 2016 with his strong Ranji Trophy performances. He has since learnt on the job, adding more tricks to his repertoire and knowing when to use them.When Thakur made his T20I debut in 2018, he only seemed to have the knuckle ball as his change-up option. He can now bowl a split-finger variation, cutters into the middle of the pitch, and a cross-seamer that he gets to swerve by imparting backspin. In the ongoing T20I series against England on the grippy Ahmedabad tracks, he has taken all his five wickets with the offcutter, according to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data, giving up 65 runs off 43 balls. And he bowled 21 of those offcutters on Thursday alone.India’s attack, much like their batting line-up, is packed with options in the approach to T20 World Cup, but not too many have the adaptability and variety of Thakur. Plus, he can give it a good whack with the bat in the lower order.

Former Arsenal "genius" is rivalling Zubimendi for the best CM in the Prem

Two decades. For a club of Arsenal’s prestigious standing, 20 years without touching the Premier League trophy is inexcusable.

Mikel Arteta has changed the narrative in north London, raising this club from the rubble and turning them into bona fide contenders. But contenders are not champions, and that is the next step.

Two decades. Too long. But Arteta has changed things, alright, and there’s a building momentum about the Gunners which is leading toward silverware.

Three times in a row, Arsenal have finished the Premier League season as runners-up, but last weekend’s slender win over Fulham has seen them shift three points clear at the top, ahead of Manchester City and stretching clear of Liverpool, with the defending champions having lost three games on the bounce.

Careful, calculated progress on the transfer front has built Arteta’s vision, and the signings struck this summer may prove decisive in finally restoring glory to the Emirates.

The jackpot has been struck multiple times, but Martin Zubimendi may well be the cream of the crop.

Martin Zubimendi's start to life in London

Arsenal have made some top signings this summer, strengthening across the park and stepping that bit closer toward the silver-laden success that the Arteta era deserves.

Zubimendi is the man who makes it all tick, and he might come to prove the signing of the summer – not just for Arsenal, but across the Premier League.

Arriving from Real Sociedad for £60m in July, the deep-lying midfielder has added quite the dimension to Arteta’s engine room. He is 26 years old and mature, and it shows.

Crisp, tempo-setting passing is his forte. FBref data records that Zubimendi ranks among the top 9% of midfielders in the Premier League this season for pass completion and the top 12% for passes attempted per 90. He’s a maestro, plain and simple.

Zubimendi’s work platforms the show-stopping success of the likes of Declan Rice and Martin Odegaard. There is such balance coursing through Arsenal’s team, and if they do manage to get their hands on the Premier League title this term, Zubimendi will be will be lauded as one of the biggest difference-makers.

While Zubimendi has been one of the best number sixes in the top flight, there are some who would rival him for that crown. Among them, a former Arsenal star.

You probably know who.

The former Arsenal star who's rivalling Zubimendi

Liverpool midfielder Curtis Jones made an interesting point after his struggling side returned to winning form against Eintracht Frankfurt. He said that an elite central midfielder makes the bedrock of a successful, title-winning outfit.

And over at Arsenal, Zubimendi is that man, but it’s interesting to note that Granit Xhaka is rivalling the Spain international for newly-promoted Sunderland.

He knows the Premier League well. After all, Xhaka arrived at Arsenal from Borussia Monchengladbach in 2015 and made 225 appearances in the division before leaving for Bayer Leverkusen and then returning to English shores and taking the captaincy at the Stadium of Light.

He went through all the emotions at Arsenal, but left the club regarded as an important piece of their modern history. Combative, tenacious and never afraid to channel his power and strike on goal, Xhaka was almost unplayable on his day, and Arteta will be happy that he has found his new version of the Swiss machine in Zubimendi.

Now 33, most were uncertain he would thrive after joining Regis Le Bris’ side this season, so late into his career and surely content with winning silverware over in Germany under Xabi Alonso’s wing.

But the new Real Madrid boss has fuelled his lieutenant with a late-career fire for more, and, as the statistics will show you, he has been an integral part of Sunderland’s success this season, going punch for punch with one of the division’s finest in Zubimendi.

Having started all nine of Sunderland’s matches, Xhaka would stake a compelling case for being in the Premier League Team of the Year so far; the Wearsiders are fifth in the standings, and they have lost only two of their nine matches.

Matches (starts)

8 (7)

8 (8)

Goals

2

0

Assists

0

3

Touches*

69.6

69.9

Accurate passes*

53.8 (90%)

44.1 (82%)

Key passes*

0.8

1.2

Big chances created

1

4

Dribbles*

0.1

0.3

Recoveries*

3.3

4.8

Tackles + interceptions*

2.8

3.1

Duels won*

3.5 (51%)

6.2 (62%)

Zubimendi is not defined by statistics. He is an immense midfielder, elegant and intelligent, and has even been hailed as “one of the best Emirates era signings” by Arsenal content creator Jamie Kent.

But even so, we cannot take anything away from Xhaka’s start to the season. The man has been hailed as a “genius” signing for the Black Cats by Sky Sports’ Don Goodman, and you can see why.

Arsenal are happy to see him succeed. It’s nice to watch Xhaka return to England and do so well. There’s a man who played an important role in the ascension of this outfit in modern times. He’s firing on all cylinders, but would Arsenal replace their Spanish summer signing with the veteran? We need not answer that one.

20 years is too long to go without the Premier League title. Too long for a club like Arsenal. But they are getting there, piece by piece.

It’s too early to say with total conviction, but the Londoners stand as good a chance as they’ve ever had to claim the title this year, and with Zubimendi orchestrating in the middle of the park, they might just reach their goals.

Bergkamp 2.0: Arsenal's "magic" star can turn Gyokeres into the new Henry

Could Arsenal’s “magic player” alongside Viktor Gyökeres replicate the club’s best-ever attacking partnership of Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp?

Oct 25, 2025

Spurs have a “freak” teen talent who’s a bigger star than Williams-Barnett

Tottenham Hotspur have been a club known to produce elite talent over recent years, with many of them making the jump into the professional game and having a huge impact in the first-team.

Harry Kane is arguably the biggest example in recent years, as the Englishman rose through the academy setup before cementing his place as the Lilywhites’ starting centre forward.

He racked up a total of 280 goals during his decade in the first team in North London, with such a record still remaining as the best tally of any player in their club’s history.

However, it wasn’t enough to catapult the side to any Premier League glory, with Thomas Frank the latest boss try and achieve such a feat in the near future.

His chances of potential success in the role could well be boosted in the years ahead, especially if one player is able to make a jump similar to Kane during the Dane’s tenure.

Why Williams-Barnett could be the future of Spurs

Spurs fans have been given yet another youngster to be excited about in the past couple of months after the emergence of academy star Luca Williams-Barnett.

The 17-year-old attacking midfielder joined the youth setup at U10 level, subsequently spending seven years in the ranks, with the last few months seeing the teenager enjoy a breakthrough.

He’s already made his first-team debut, coming off the bench in the Carabao Cup against Doncaster Rovers this campaign, but it’s his numbers in the youth ranks which has caught the eye.

In his 14 appearances across all competitions, Williams-Barnett has already racked up an incredible tally of 22 goal contributions – broken down into 15 goals and seven assists.

The youngster played in the UEFA Youth League clash against Slavia Prague on Tuesday night, with the attacker registering five goals in their 9-1 triumph over the Czech outfit.

After such a showing, Frank named the teenager on the substitutes bench for the first-team for the Champions League clash last night, but he was unable to get onto the pitch.

However, at just 17, there’s no denying the future is bright for the youngster, with Williams-Barnett undoubtedly a player who could be a key asset in North London for many years to come.

The Spurs star who’s a bigger talent than Williams-Barnett

Despite the academy producing numerous top-level talents in years gone by, the hierarchy have also invested money in the transfer market to try and land players for the future.

Lucas Bergvall joined the Lilywhites last summer for a reported £8m from homeland club Djurgarden, with many expecting the teenager to originally link up with the youth team.

However, the massive injury crisis in North London during 2024/25 handed the Swede the chance to stake his claim, subsequently making 45 appearances across all competitions.

Even after Frank’s appointment, he’s remained as a key member of the squad, as seen by his tally of 19 outings – even netting his first Premier League goal against West Ham United.

Bergvall isn’t the only top young talent who could have a huge impact in the near future, with centre-back Luka Vuskovic another player who could be a first-team regular in the years ahead.

The Croatian joined in a £12m deal from Hajduk Split despite being just 16, with his move to join the Lilywhites only being confirmed during the recent summer window.

The defender, who’s now 18, has already racked up 74 senior appearances despite his tender age, with all of which to date coming away from North London.

Such numbers undoubtedly make him a bigger talent than Williams-Barnett, especially considering he’s already starring in one of Europe’s top-five leagues in 2025/26.

Vuskovic is currently spending the season on loan at Bundesliga side Hamburg, which has resulted in the teenager producing some remarkable figures at both ends of the pitch.

The youngster, who’s been labelled a “freak of nature” by one analyst, has already netted twice this season – including an incredible scorpion kick effort in the recent clash with Werder Bremen.

However, his underlying stats in the defensive third are just as impressive, which highlights why he’s already a bigger talent than Lilywhites star Williams-Barnett.

Vuskovic has been a sensational option in possession this campaign, as seen by his tallies of 86% passes completed and 100% dribbles completed to date.

Games played

11

Goals scored

2

Pass accuracy

86%

Dribbles completed

100%

Duels won

7.5

Duel success rate

67%

Aerials won

5.3

Aerial success

81%

Recoveries made

4.1

Such numbers could make him the perfect ball-playing option in Frank’s system, whilst also having the potential to improve in the future given his tender age.

However, out of possession, the Croatian star has also dominated, as seen by his tally of 7.5 duels won per 90 and his 81% aerial success rate in Germany’s top-flight.

The club’s £12m investment in his signature two years ago is no doubt already appearing to be a bargain, with Vuskovic undoubtedly their long-term solution at the heart of the defence.

His immediate impact on the professional game is nothing short of phenomenal, with his recent showings for Hamburg already handing the fanbase reasons to be excited for the future.

Fewer touches than Vicario & only 9 passes: Spurs flop must now be dropped

Thomas Frank must now drop one Tottenham Hotspur player after the Slavia Prague victory.

ByEthan Lamb 5 days ago

Mikel Arteta confirms Arsenal star will miss Chelsea clash through injury

Arsenal take on Chelsea this weekend in a blockbuster Premier League clash which could help to define this year’s title race, and Mikel Arteta has provided some team news ahead of the clash.

Arsenal take on Chelsea in mouth-watering Sunday encounter

Arsenal’s emphatic 3-1 victory over Bayern Munich on Wednesday evening has catapulted the Gunners into Sunday’s London derby with serious momentum.

Arteta’s side complemented their 100 per cent Champions League record with a dominant display that overwhelmed the Bundesliga champions, who were unbeaten in all competitions before their defeat at the Emirates.

It was a massive performance by Arsenal on a real night to remember, but attention now turns immediately to Stamford Bridge, where the league’s top two meet in what represents a genuine six-pointer.

Arsenal arrive at Chelsea’s home ground boasting a formidable recent record against their London rivals.

The north Londoners are unbeaten in their last seven matches against Chelsea, recording five wins and two draws over that mightily impressive run.

Arsenal’s unbeaten run in all competitions since defeat to Liverpool

Arsenal 3-0 Nottingham Forest

Athletic Bilbao 0-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 1-1 Man City

Port Vale 0-2 Arsenal

Newcastle 1-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 2-0 Olympiacos

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

Fulham 0-1 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-0 Atlético Madrid

Arsenal 1-0 Crystal Palace

Arsenal 2-0 Brighton

Burnley 0-2 Arsenal

Slavia Prague 0-3 Arsenal

Sunderland 2-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-1 Tottenham

Arsenal 3-1 Bayern Munich

Chelsea currently sit six points behind Arsenal, meaning victory for the hosts would reduce that gap to three and reignite their title challenge.

However, a triumph for Arsenal would establish a potentially insurmountable nine-point cushion over their closest challengers, effectively ending Chelsea’s realistic hopes of catching the leaders barring a miracle.

Both sides enter the fixture riding waves of confidence following midweek European statements.

Arsenal hold 'initial talks' to sign Real Madrid target who Arteta thinks is 'ideal'

The Gunners are moving in ahead of January.

By
Emilio Galantini

Nov 28, 2025

Chelsea demolished Barcelona 3-0 with teenager Estevao producing a moment of magic to live long in the memory, while Arsenal’s dismantling of Bayern demonstrated their credentials as genuine Champions League contenders.

Captain Martin Odegaard made his long-awaited return from injury after coming on as a late substitute, gifting Arsenal a major boost ahead of Chelsea after both Noni Madueke and Gabriel Martinelli also made their comebacks recently.

Supporters are now waiting for updates on Viktor Gyokeres, Kai Havertz, Gabriel Jesus, Gabriel Magalhaes and Leandro Trossard, with the latter subbed off against Bayern after picking up a knock.

Mikel Arteta shares Gabriel injury update out of Arsenal

Now, speaking in his pre-match press conference, Arteta has provided some news.

Arteta confirms that Gabriel will miss Arsenal’s trip to Chelsea after a further scan, with the Brazilian still not ready to take part.

Being without the “underrated” star for a little while longer is unfortunate, but there is some positive updates.

The Spaniard says that there is a ‘potential chance’ that Trossard could be available to play Chelsea, and refuses to rule out Gyokeres and Havertz playing a part too, with all three subject to late fitness tests.

When asked about Havertz and Gyokeres, Arteta explained:

As things stand, the Arsenal trio all have a chance for the matchday squad tomorrow, it would seem, which comes as a massive boost given their real shortage of attackers in the last two months.

Havertz hasn’t played since the start of the season due to a knee injury, while Gyokeres has been sidelined since Arsenal’s 2-0 win away to Burnley.

AO VIVO! Assista à coletiva de Tite, técnico do Flamengo

MatériaMais Notícias

Tite, técnico do Flamengo, concede entrevista nesta sexta-feira (26). Assista a coletiva no vídeo acima.

O treinador rubro-negro fala com a imprensa após treinamento realizado nesta manhã, em Orlando, nos Estados unidos, onde a equipe carioca realiza pré-temporada.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Mengão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Flamengo

CRONOGRAMA DE PRÉ-TEMPORADA DO FLAMENGO

O elenco rubro-negro se reapresentou no dia 8 de janeiro, no Ninho do Urubu, e realizou dez dias de treinamento no Brasil antes de viajar para a Flórida. Neste intervalo tempo, a equipe estreou com vitória no Campeonato Carioca.

Atuando com os titulares, o Fla não tomou conhecimento do Audax Rio na Arena Amazonas, em Manaus, e venceu por 4 a 0. Posteriormente, o grupo principal partiu para Orlando para dar continuidade a pré-temporada.

continua após a publicidade

O restante do elenco, por sua vez, permaneceu no Rio de Janeiro para a disputada do torneio estadual.

Nos Estados Unidos, o Flamengo disputou seu primeiro amistoso no domingo (21) contra o Philadelphia Union, da MLS, e venceu por 2 a 0. Neste sábado (27), o Rubro-Negro enfrenta o Orlando City antes de retornar ao Brasil.

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Graeme Cremer available for Zimbabwe selection after seven-year hiatus

Having last played for Zimbabwe in 2018, he recently returned to domestic cricket and could be in contention for the T20 World Cup Qualifiers

Firdose Moonda08-Aug-2025Former Zimbabwe captain and legspinner Graeme Cremer has returned to the country’s domestic cricket structure and is available for international selection. Cremer, who is 38 and led Zimbabwe between 2016 and 2018, gave up cricket for golf and then moved with his family to the UAE, where his wife Merna works as an airline pilot. He has now made his return in Zimbabwe’s National Premier League, the 45-over club competition.ESPNcricinfo has confirmed he is eligible for selection for the national side and could be in contention for September’s T20 World Cup Qualifiers, which will be played in Zimbabwe.Cremer last played international cricket in March 2018 and has been involved in coaching roles in Dubai, including with the Rajasthan Royals Academy. He is now playing for the defending champions, Takashinga Patriots 1 Cricket Club, and is the leading wicket-taker after two matches.Related

Cremer temporarily puts cricket career on hold for family

'A debut-like feeling' – Taylor grateful for second chance

“It’s amazing being back,” Cremer told about his return after the match against Queens Sports Club in Kwekwe. “Kwekwe was my home ground for many years, so it was great walking out and being part of Takashinga, which is such a prestigious club. They welcomed me into the team and it was an amazing team environment. I’m really happy with the start.”Cremer took 4 for 43 as Takashinga defended 263 for 6 and won by 134 runs. That match, played on August 3, also featured Brendan Taylor, who has subsequently made his return to the Test side after serving a three-and-a-half-year ban for breaching the ICC’s anti-corruption code. Taylor scored 61 in that match as he tuned up ahead of his international comeback.”We are close friends, myself and Brendan, so it was an amazing feeling being on the field with him again and nice to see him score some runs,” Cremer said. “It’s great watching him bat, and then walking out onto the field with him, just how we communicate because we have played so much cricket together. It really helps someone like that out with me.”Taylor and Cremer are two of Zimbabwe’s most experienced players, and their return to the set-up with two ICC tournaments (T20 World Cup 2026 and ODI World Cup 2027, which Zimbabwe will co-host) speaks to Zimbabwe Cricket’s seriousness to ensure they qualify. Zimbabwe missed out on the last T20 World Cup in the USA and the Caribbean after losing to Uganda in qualifiers and have not played a 50-over World Cup since 2015 after missing out on both the 2019 and 2023 editions.Zimbabwe will host the Africa Regional Qualifier for the upcoming T20 World Cup from September 26 to October 4. The tournament consists of eight teams, and the top two will progress to the main event.

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