Limited-overs losses dampen New Zealand's tour

They were in front halfway through the one-day series before they lost the plot a bit

Andrew Alderson24-Jun-2015New Zealand coach Mike Hesson could have been a contestant on , such was the considered thought he gave this closed-ended question:”Are you pleased with your side’s overall performance on the England tour?”Hesson paused.”I think it’s a pass,” he said, in the wake of the 56-run T20 loss to complete the series at Old Trafford. The hesitation was testament to Hesson’s character. He opted not to give a flippant answer, and realises England’s improvement to take overall honours and deliver New Zealand shock limited-overs defeats takes some explaining.As the hosts devote their attention to the Ashes, New Zealand exited as model tourists: competitive, sportsmanlike and beatable. Their 1-1 Test series draw and 3-2 ODI loss made compelling viewing, even if the latter was skewed in favour of bat, with a record 3151 runs scored for a series of five matches or less.The tour could be diced many ways. Each leg of the series slipped from New Zealand’s grasp. Victory is now the default expectation for a team ranked third in the Test and 50-over formats. The ODI losses, after having trounced England by eight wickets on the way to the World Cup final, were particularly galling.However, a 199-run victory in the second Test, at Headingley, just New Zealand’s fifth in 54 Tests in England and the first in 16 years, meant the country’s best era of undefeated series in the longest format continued – they are now up to seven. Every player delivered significant runs or wickets.That was tempered by a first Test in which a short-pitched bowling plan backfired against Ben Stokes. He inspired England, who had been in a dire position on the opening day at 30 for 4, to a second innings of 478, with an 85-ball century, the quickest at Lord’s. The hosts escaped.New Zealand continued their aggressive ODI brand and the batting strike rates were excellent, but England trumped the visitors at their own game. A dominant 2-1 series position was squandered. That included setting 350 to win in the fourth match, which England eclipsed with 36 balls to spare. The bowling also proved a letdown in the decider. England swatted a rain-adjusted 192 with one of the 26 overs to spare.An uneasy reliance is building on Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor to guarantee a platform for victory•PA PhotosInjuries to Trent Boult and Corey Anderson hindered New Zealand’s capability, as did Brendon McCullum opting to debut ring-in and top Ford Trophy wicket-taker Andrew Mathieson in the final ODI because Mitchell McClenaghan had lost form.Hesson lamented the loss in the final match, the T20 that left the scales of satisfaction teetering. The loss of five wickets for four runs in 1.5 overs chasing 192 signalled a capitulation. Hesson’s response that “it was a very poor finish [to the tour]” and “amateur shots would be the nicest way to put it” in relation to the dismissals, means fans can expect the side’s approach to undergo the cricketing equivalent of laparoscopic surgery ahead of next year’s World T20 in India.”It’s difficult when you finish with such a poor last hour,” Hesson said of the tour. “It leaves a sour taste but there were good things. We found out about some players leading into the next phase of short-form cricket.”Hesson singled out Mitchell Santner as one. The 23-year-old impressed through the ODI series and was New Zealand’s best bowler in the T20 bowler with 2 for 28 from his allotment. Dropping a skier off match winner Jonny Bairstow in the deciding ODI was his only obvious glitch.Details and personnel will likely be reassessed ahead of the limited-overs tour to Zimbabwe and South Africa in August, and the release of the latest batch of annual contracts next month.Despite the top seven’s consistency in all formats over the last 19 months, an uneasy reliance is building on Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor to guarantee a platform for victory. The two contributed significant Test runs but their average of 117.50 in four ODI stands resonated. They have nine century stands in 37 partnerships at 50-over level. The 206-run effort at Southampton was the highest by New Zealand for the third wicket against any country, surpassing Adam Parore and Ken Rutherford’s 180 against India in Vadodara in 1994, and the highest for any New Zealand wicket against England, overtaking the unbeaten 165-run opening stand between Brendon McCullum and Jesse Ryder at Hamilton in 2008.Williamson became the fifth-fastest ODI batsman to record 3000 runs, completing the feat in 73 innings. He sits behind Hashim Amla (57), Vivian Richards (69), and Gordon Greenidge and Gary Kirsten (72). He averages 47.41, the highest of any New Zealand batsman to have played ten or more ODI innings, surpassing Glenn Turner’s 47.Taylor’s 43.03 from 152 innings slots in next. He scored consecutive ODI centuries for the fourth time; Martin Guptill (twice) and Mark Greatbatch (once) are the other New Zealanders to achieve the feat.As for McCullum, there’s speculation he may have played his 254th and last one-day international. The 33-year-old, who puts his fragile back through an arduous regime each game, said he is yet to decide his coloured-clothing future. If he retires from ODIs, he will bow out as one of New Zealand’s finest captains, taking the national side to their first World Cup final.His winning record from 56 ODIs in charge (excluding three no results) is 58%. That rises to 62% (28 from 45 completed matches) once he was officially handed the captaincy in late 2012. He is second to Turner (71% – five wins from seven matches) and ahead of Daniel Vettori (55%), Geoff Howarth (54%), John Wright (52 %), Martin Crowe (49 per cent) and Stephen Fleming (48 per cent).Regardless of any New Zealand disappointment, the upshot is that grounds were almost filled to capacity wherever they went, indicating they are playing in a manner fans want to watch. The onus now goes on administrators to sign their talent to as many tours – particularly against big revenue earners Australia, India and England – as possible.

Runs and sixes galore, but grief for fast bowlers

Batsmen had a generally dominant season in IPL 2014, with the sixes count exceeding 700 for only the second time

S Rajesh03-Jun-2014Over the last few IPL seasons, there’s been plenty of talk about how bowlers have held their own in a format which is heavily stacked against them, but IPL 2014 was largely about batsmen dominating. It didn’t start that way when the tournament was in the UAE, but the momentum shift in favour of batting was clear the moment the bandwagon shifted to India. The scores became bigger, the ball cleared the boundary far more often, and the bowlers – especially the faster ones – struggled. The overall result was a tournament run rate of 8.20, which is the second-best in IPL history. The highest was 8.30, in the inaugural edition in 2008, but since then and before this year the rate was less than eight in four out of five years.The overall tournament run rate this time was 8.20, but that’s been brought down by the UAE leg: in the 40 games played in India, the rate was 8.52, almost a run more than in the first 20 games. With the seamers getting more assistance in the UAE, the scores were generally kept to manageable proportions: in 40 innings, only 12 times did teams score 160 or more, a percentage of 30; on the other hand, in 80 innings in India, there were 47 scores of 160 or more (59%).On the smaller grounds in India, the batsmen found it much easier to hit sixes too: in the UAE, there was an average of 8.65 sixes per match; in India, it increased to 13.5 per match. Thanks to the flurry of sixes in India, the total for the tournament exceeded 700 for only the second time in IPL history: it was 714 this year, second only to 731 in 2012, but there’d been 15 more matches in 2012. Going at the rate of 13.5 sixes per match, there’d have been 916 sixes this year, had the tournament consisted of 75 matches. (Click here for the list of highest totals this year.)There were also an unusually large number of matches won by the team batting second this time – the teams chasing had a 37-22 win-loss record, and it was fitting that the tournament ended with Knight Riders chasing down 200. The win-loss ratio of 1.68 is the best ever for chasing teams, marginally better than the ratio of 1.63 in 2008. (These ratios exclude matches which were tied and decided by the Super Over). Last year the win-loss was 37-37, and in 2012 it was 40-34.

Season-wise stats in each IPL

SeasonMatchesRunsWicketsAverageRun rate4s/ 6s20085817,93768926.038.301703/ 62220095716,32069723.417.481316/ 50620106018,86472026.208.121709/ 58520117321,15481326.017.721913/ 63920127522,45385726.197.821911/ 73120137622,54190924.797.672052/ 67320146018,90967128.188.201562/ 714

The two legs of IPL 2014

MatchesRunsWicketsAverageRun rate4s/ 6sIn the UAE20580423524.697.55464/ 173In India4013,10543630.058.521098/ 541The tournament was largely dominated by batsmen and by tall scores, but the team that won was the one with the best bowling attack. Knight Riders were the only team with an economy rate of less than eight, and while their batting run rate was only the third-best, their bowlers ensured they seldom had to chase tall targets. Kings XI, on the other hand, had a run rate of 9.09, which is the highest by any team in a season across all editions of the IPL, and the first time a team has touched nine. However, their economy rate of 8.42 was also the second-worst among all teams this year, next only to Delhi Daredevils’ 8.71. However, despite the poor economy rate, the positive difference between the run rate and economy rate was highest for Kings XI – at 0.67, they were marginally better than Knight Riders’ 0.52. Kings XI also had the best win-loss ratio in the tournament, and were the only team to take 100-plus wickets (though they also played at least one match more than any other side this year).The batting might of Kings XI shone through most strongly in the middle overs (6.1 to 15), where they were clearly the best team of the tournament, scoring at 8.93 runs per over – the second-best were Knight Riders with an average of 8.19. Of the 11 instances this year when teams scored 90 or more runs during this stage of their innings, seven were by Kings XI. This includes the final, when they scored 99 in those nine overs.Similarly, the biggest advantage for Knight Riders was their bowling in the last five overs of an innings, when they conceded only 8.73 runs per over, and also took 41 wickets. Six out of eight teams conceded more than ten runs per over during that stage, while Sunrisers went at 9.14. Sunil Narine didn’t have a memorable final with the ball, but in all the other matches he was superb in the last overs, taking 14 wickets at an average of 12.92 and an economy rate of 6.46. He also bowled 28 overs at the death; no other bowler in the tournament bowled more than 21 during the last five overs of an innings.

Team-wise stats in IPL 2014

TeamW/ LRunsRun rateWkts takenEcon rateRR-ERKolkata Knight Riders11/ 524888.24957.720.52Kings XI Punjab12/ 529879.091138.420.67Chennai Super Kings10/ 626508.53988.340.19Mumbai Indians7/ 823538.08738.020.06Rajasthan Royals7/ 721557.99848.07-0.08Sunrisers Hyderabad6/ 821027.99768.28-0.29Royal Challengers Bangalore5/ 920937.78738.07-0.29Delhi Daredevils2/ 1220817.64598.71-1.07The dot-ball factorAmong batsmen who faced at least 150 balls in IPL 2014, Knight Riders’ Shakib had the lowest dot-ball percentage, of marginally under 27%. Most of the batsmen in the list below are those who play in the middle order, which is understandable as they don’t usually bat during the Powerplay, when fielding restrictions increase the likelihood of dot balls.Batsmen with very similar dot-ball percentage have fairly different strike rates, though, which indicate the scoring patterns – specifically the boundary-hitting tendencies – of different batsmen. For instance, Faf du Plessis and AB de Villiers have similar dot percentages, but de Villiers has a strike rate which is 30 more than du Plessis’. That’s because de Villiers struck 26 fours and 24 sixes in the 249 balls he faced, compared to du Plessis’ 26 fours and seven sixes in 235 deliveries.

Best dot-ball percentage for batsmen in IPL 2014 (Min 150 balls faced)

BatsmanBallsDotsAverageStrike rateDot %Shakib Al Hasan1524132.42149.3326.97JP Duminy3058651.25134.3328.20Faf du Plessis2356733.67128.3328.51AB de Villiers2497435.90158.5029.72David Miller2999149.55149.0030.43MS Dhoni2507774.20148.3330.80Glenn Maxwell2949134.50187.6730.95Ambati Rayudu2878925.78125.6731.01George Bailey1906028.55135.1731.58David Warner37511948.00140.6731.73Among the bowlers, Morne Morkel had the highest dot percentage, among those who bowled at least 30 overs. The list below is dominated by the quick bowlers, which is again expected since they bowl during the Powerplay overs, when the fielding restrictions ensure a higher number of dots. However, they also tend to go for more boundaries, because of which some of the economy rates are in excess of eight.Also, bowlers with similar dot percentages have very different economy rates. Sandeep Sharma, for instance, has a dot-ball percentage of almost 47, but an economy rate of 8.81; Lasith Malinga, with a dot percentage of 44.26, has an economy rate of 6.45. That’s because of the number of boundaries conceded by them: while Sandeep went for 40 fours and 14 sixes in 241 balls, Malinga conceded only 22 fours and six sixes in 235. Like Sandeep, Varun Aaron also went for plenty of boundaries, especially in India – 27 fours and 12 sixes in 220 balls – due to which his economy rate exceeds eight despite a dot-ball percentage of more than 44.

Bowlers with the highest dot-ball percentage (Min 30 overs)

BowlerBallsDotsWicketsERDot %Morne Morkel288154127.6453.47Bhuvneshwar Kumar319159206.6549.84Wayne Parnell1818967.3949.17Ishwar Pandey25212167.5748.02Sandeep Sharma241113188.8146.89Dale Steyn336154117.6945.83Mitchell Starc322143147.4944.41Lasith Malinga235104166.4544.26Varun Aaron22097168.1544.09Harbhajan Singh330144146.4743.64Mitchell Johnson321140178.2943.61Sunil Narine384166216.3543.23Akshar Patel396169176.1342.68Tough going for paceIn the UAE leg of the tournament, the fast bowlers and medium-pacers savoured the conditions, taking 156 wickets at 23.32 and an economy rate of 7.35, but it was all downhill in India, where they averaged 35.64 at an economy rate of 8.81. Those are the worst numbers for fast bowlers in any IPL season, but thanks to the UAE leg, the overall economy rate is 8.29, which is still the second-highest in any IPL season. For the spinners, the shift to India didn’t make such a huge impact: in the UAE they averaged 32.17 at an economy rate of 7.42.Overall, spinners also bowled more this season – they contributed 40% of the total overs, compared with 29% last year and 35.5% in 2012. The small boundaries in India and the lack of assistance in the pitches were challenges that the fast bowlers struggled to overcome this season.

Pace and spin in each IPL season

PaceSpinYearWicketsAverageEcon rateWicketsAverageEcon rate200846728.428.0513430.388.18200938826.257.6522624.776.77201040529.648.3221028.807.34201144928.627.7926827.607.11201253127.097.7924131.357.41201360426.787.7822526.176.88201437730.548.2922930.317.57The team-wise bowling stats indicate that Knight Riders’ spinners did an excellent job, taking 46 wickets at an economy rate of 6.82. Apart from Narine, Shakib also had a superb tournament with the ball, bowling 50 overs at an economy rate of 6.68. The only other team whose spinners went at less than seven an over were Rajasthan Royals. The team for which spin was a huge disappointment was Sunrisers: Amit Mishra finished with an economy rate of 9.06, while the spinners for the team had a combined economy rate of 8.21, the joint-highest with Daredevils.Kings XI’s seamers fetched 71 wickets, easily the highest among all teams, but they also went for plenty of runs, conceding 8.70 per over. In the UAE they took 28 wickets at an average of 17.92 and an economy rate of 7.20, but in India they leaked 9.45 per over, and conceded 30.95 per wicket. The difference in those numbers was largely the reason why they had a perfect 5-0 win-loss in the UAE, but only 7-5 in India.

Pace-spin stats for each team in IPL 2014

PaceSpinTeamWicketsAverageEcon rateWicketsAverageEcon rateKolkata Knight Riders3735.598.184622.916.82Kings XI Punjab7125.818.703327.667.54Chennai Super Kings5025.648.444031.077.91Mumbai Indians4233.698.122535.007.41Rajasthan Royals5430.148.142122.616.98Sunrisers Hyderabad4629.978.072335.438.21Royal Challengers Bangalore4729.278.062036.907.58Delhi Daredevils3042.908.592139.428.21

Birthday boy dismisses birthday boy

Plays of the Day for the fourth day of the second Test between Australia and South Africa in Adelaide

Daniel Brettig in Adelaide25-Nov-2012Cheer of the day
An uninitiated visitor to Adelaide Oval might have wondered why Imran Tahir seemed so popular when he was announced as appearing at the bowling crease. The reasons were more ironic than admiring, for after three days of watching Tahir being taken apart by Australia’s batsmen, the crowd looked forward to his spells with enthusiasm that bordered on Schadenfreude. By the end of the innings Tahir’s figures of 0 for 260 from 37 overs had taken an ignominious place in history, as the most expensive in Tests without a wicket. In other words, they were the worst.Brave act of the day
For the second consecutive day, the crowds pondered the sight of an injured batsman walking to the wicket. James Pattinson’s rib and side injury was so painful that after suffering it on day three he told Ricky Ponting he was struggling to breathe. Helped since then by the team physio Alex Kountouris but weighed down by the knowledge that his Test summer was over, Pattinson played with typical directness and considerable skill to make an unbeaten 29 before Michael Clarke declared. Pattinson boasts a batting average of 38.20 after seven TestsBirthday of the day
In 2010, Peter Siddle had celebrated his November 25 birthday by claiming a raucous hat-trick on the first afternoon of that summer’s Ashes series. This time around he found himself charging in at Alviro Petersen, another man to share the same birthday. In keeping with a dire day for South Africa and a dominant one for Australia, it was Siddle who had richer cause to enjoy the day, and he provided a moment of significance for trivia buffs as well as team-mates when he burst through Petersen’s defence to dismiss him for 24.Bunny of the day
Jacques Rudolph’s torturous stay at the batting crease was once again ended by Nathan Lyon; Ed Cowan’s sharp take at short leg making it four innings out of four in which the batsman had perished to the offspinner. Much was made of Daryl Cullinan’s “bunny” status when Shane Warne bewildered him with the flipper three times in four innings during the summer of 1993-94, but Lyon’s dominance of Rudolph has been arguably more complete than even that. Rudolph stood motionless at the crease after the dismissal, waiting for a replay to confirm a clean catch; it seemed as much out of shock than any genuine query about the validity of his exit.

David mugs Goliath

Mumbai’s visiting superstars are brought crashing to earth. A home team supporter soaks it all up

Joe Fiala11-Sep-2010Choice of game
My friends and I were fortunate enough to be attending the exciting opening game of the Champions League Twenty20 featuring the Highveld Lions against IPL runners-up Mumbai Indians. When I heard that the Wanderers was hosting the match, I swiftly snapped up tickets to be a part of the Joburg cricket-loving crowd.Team supported
As a lifelong Lions fan, I was eager to see what my boys could do against a classy side such as the Mumbai Indians. It was a real case of David versus Goliath, considering it was surprise the Lions qualified for the tournament in the first place!Key performer
There were several players who put their hands up, including Jonathan Vandiar, Neil McKenzie and Sachin Tendulkar. However, the player that I felt had the greatest impact was Shane Burger – he grabbed the valuable wickets of Tendulkar and Kieron Pollard when both men were threatening to take the game away from the Lions.One thing I’d have changed
I would have started the game an hour later. The match got underway at 5.30pm and unfortunately many people were still coming through from their places of work. The traffic outside the Wanderers didn’t do anyone favors. As a result, the ground was less than full when the first ball was bowled.Face-off I relished
The current Lions team, unlike the Transvaal “Mean Machine” of the 80s, does not have a bevy of superstars, unfortunately. They do however have an enthusiastic bunch of cricketers who have shown great potential in the last domestic Pro20 competition. I was looking forward to see how the bowling attack, spearheaded by Robbie Frylink, would do against the Little Maestro, Sachin Tendulkar. As it turned out, Tendulkar did indeed give a textbook cricketing lesson to the greenhorn Lions’ bowlers before Shane Burger produced an absolute peach of a delivery that had the great man bowled.Wow moment
The win was obviously a massive wow moment for this long-suffering Lions fan! However, the single moment that really grabbed me was after the game, when the loudspeakers boomed out K’Naan’s “Wavin’ Flag”, made popular during the recent football World Cup. The crowd rose as one and supporters of both teams waved their flags as colourful fireworks erupted above. A sight to behold indeed.Player watch
The crowd were fairly mild-mannered and did not really heckle the boundary fielders. Lasith Malinga of Mumbai fielded close to us, but did not have a lot of work to do. It was much the same with Vaughn van Jaarsveld of the Lions. Harbhajan Singh did however give the crowd a guilty laugh when he fell flat on the pitch after slipping in his run-up before his first ball.Shot of the day
Zaheer Khan came steaming in to bowl at Lions’ veteran Neil McKenzie. The crowd anxiously held its breath. Up until now McKenzie had played a magnificent innings and was only a few runs shy of a well-deserved fifty. It was a short-pitched delivery and McKenzie played a wonderful pull to smash a leg-side six that ended half-way up the stands. What a way to bring up your fifty, good sir!Crowd meter
After a sluggish start, the crowd began to fill up and enthusiastically started supporting their teams. Though the Lions were playing at their home ground, there was huge support for Mumbai and several Indian flags were waved energetically across the ground. Naturally Tendulkar received the biggest cheers, as did JP Duminy when he stepped out to bat. It was also great to hear a huge roar when McKenzie came out to bat – he’s been a wonderful servant to Lions cricket over the years and he proved that he still has what it takes to perform at this level.The cheerleaders: kept on their feet•AFPEntertainment
Enrique Iglesias entertained the crowd prior to the game, instantly making all the men in the crowd feel inferior. Sadly, the many threats from women along the lines of “I’ll be throwing my underwear at him” never materialised. As has become the norm at Twenty20 games, cheerleaders entertained the crowd after each boundary or wicket. And with Vandiar, McKenzie and Tendulkar in such great form, the cheerleaders certainly got themselves a good workout.Accessories
All that is really required for a Twenty20 game is a great group of mates and some cash with which to purchase food, drinks and those fun souvenirs that are seemingly a good idea at the time. The trusty camera did however make an appearance, capturing the many funny faces that were pulled, which no doubt will amuse work colleagues the following Monday once they are loaded on Facebook.Banner of the day
The short nature of a Twenty20 game means that many people don’t take the time to create their own banner. However, after Harbhajan Singh got knocked down to the ground after a fearsome Frylink delivery, a spectator quipped, “Get up man, it’s not soccer!”. Replays, however, confirmed that it was very understandable that Singh did go down after taking a ball like that just above the knee.Marks out of 10
A very satisfactory 8 out of 10. Watching cricket at the Wanderers is always a great way to spend a Friday night. It was an excellent experience and made all the more memorable by the Lions grabbing an exciting victory. David had indeed defeated Goliath once again. I thoroughly enjoyed myself and would urge all South Africans to attend as many Champions League games as they can.

Pakistan's most successful venue in England

The stats preview for the fourth Test between England and Pakistan at The Oval which starts on Thursday

George Binoy17-Aug-2006

Marcus Trescothick celebrates his hundred against South Africa at The Oval in 2003 © Getty Images
With nothing to play for but pride, Pakistan square off against England at what is their most successful venue in England. In seven Tests at The Oval, Pakistan have beaten England thrice, lost twice and drawn as many. Pakistan have won the last two Tests at this venue – by ten wickets in 1992 and nine wickets in 1996.Since 1990, the team winning the toss has batted first 13 times out of 16. On the three occasions when they have chosen to field, they have lost twice and won only once.In the last ten Tests at The Oval, the team batting first averages 42 per wicket. That figure reduces significantly as the match progresses. The averages for the second, third and fourth innings are 38.2, 23.8 and 21.3.Marcus Trescothick’s average of 75.22 is his highest for any groundin England at which he’s played more than two Tests. In 12 innings, Trescothick has scored five half-centuries and a matchwinning 219against South Africa in 2003. Only once has he been dismissed for less than 20 at this venue.England’s opening bowlers have had contrasting performances at The Oval. Steve Harmison has taken 14 wickets in three Testsat The Oval at an average of 22.42 and a strike-rate of 42.8. Matthew Hoggard, on the other hand, averages 39.28 and has taken only seven wickets in four innings.Pakistan scored their highest total in Tests at this venue in 1987. Javed Miandad made 260, while Saleem Malik and Imran Khan weighed in with hundreds as Pakistan piled up 708 in the first innings. The match ended in a draw.

Viktor Gyokeres, Florian Wirtz & 50 players who will define the 2025 summer transfer window

Some of the biggest names in the game are set to be on the move over the next three months in what promises to be a wild window

The 2024-25 European season is finally over, which can only mean one thing: It's time for transfers! Yes, there's the Club World Cup to keep us occupied through the first half of the summer, but for the majority of supporters, the most exciting period of the year begins when the window flies open.

Some teams have already got to work, including Real Madrid, who have announced deals for defensive duo Dean Huijsen and Trent Alexander-Arnold, while Liverpool have moved quickly to replace the latter by bringing in Bayer Leverkusen full-back Jeremie Frimpong. A host of other transfers are also said to be close to completion, but there are still plenty of big-name players whose futures are far from certain.

So with that in mind, GOAL has run down 50 players who are set to define the 2025 summer transfer window…

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    Rayan Ait-Nouri (Wolves)

    One of the most consistently impressive left-backs in the Premier League over the last few years, Rayan Ait-Nouri is now being tipped to take the next step in his career. With his contract set to expire in 2026, the Algeria international is expected to be available for around £45m ($60.5m), making him a potential bargain buy if he continues to develop at the same rate he has at Molineux.

    Manchester United, Liverpool and Tottenham have been linked with Ait-Nouri in the past, but Manchester City now seem to have leapfrogged to the front of the queue after launching an enquiry as to the availability of the 23-year-old defender.

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    Antony (Manchester United)

    Six months ago, the number of potential suitors for Antony could probably have been counted on one hand. Regarded as one of the biggest transfer flops in Manchester United history, any hope of the Red Devils recouping even half of the £85 million ($114m) they spent on the winger seemed fanciful at best, and downright delusional at worst.

    However, after reviving his career during a loan spell at Real Betis that saw him directly contribute to 14 goals in 26 appearances and earn a Brazil recall, Antony has re-emerged as a viable option for clubs around Europe this summer with United open for business. Betis are desperate to keep hold of the former Ajax star, though they could face competition from Atletico Madrid, amongst others.

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    Jobe Bellingham (Sunderland)

    Ready to step out of his brother's shadow, Jobe Bellingham is set to get his first taste of top-flight football in 2025-26 after earning increasingly rave reviews with his performances for Sunderland in the Championship over the past two seasons. The midfielder played a key role in the Black Cats' promotion back to the Premier League via the play-offs, but their return to the top tier in England won't necessarily be enough to keep Bellingham at the Stadium of Light.

    A host of Bundesliga clubs, including Jude's former side, Borussia Dortmund, have shown an interest in the younger Bellingham, but the 19-year-old has already rejected the opportunity to join Eintracht Frankfurt, meaning his future remains very much up in the air heading into the window.

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    Andrea Cambiaso (Juventus)

    Juventus fans breathed a sign of relief when the January window finally closed as they'd been fearing a deadline-day move to Manchester City for Andrea Cambiaso. At one point during January, the deal looked a formality, and, according to widespread reports, the Bianconeri were willing to cash in on Cambiaso in order to strengthen the squad elsewhere.

    However, no agreement was reached over the fee, with Juve said to have demanded somewhere in the region of €80m (£67m/$82m) for the Italy international. This saga is far from over, though, as it's widely expected that City will return for the 24-year-old during the summer, with Pep Guardiola apparently feeling that the versatile left-back, who can also play on the right-hand side, can be a key component in his Etihad rebuild.

Nottingham Forest leave record signing Omari Hutchinson AND Oleksandr Zinchenko out of Europa League squad

Nottingham Forest have left record signing Omari Hutchinson and Oleksandr Zinchenko out of their Europa League squad, with UEFA rules restricting them to just 22 List A players. Despite spending big in the summer, Forest’s lack of ‘club-trained’ players has forced head coach Nuno Espirito Santo to make difficult omissions ahead of their European campaign.

Hutchinson & Zinchenko omitted from Europa League squadUEFA rules limited Nottingham Forest to 22 List A playersForest kick off campaign against Real Betis on Sept 24Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

As per , Nottingham Forest were restricted to naming 22 players due to UEFA’s homegrown quota rules. As a result, Hutchinson, Zinchenko, Angus Gunn, Jair Cunha and Cuiabano have all been omitted from the squad. Jota Silva and Taiwo Awoniyi have also been left out, but summer signings Arnaud Kalimuendo, Dan Ndoye, Dilane Bakwa and Douglas Luiz all made the cut.

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The exclusion of Hutchinson is a major surprise given his status as Forest’s £37.5 million record signing. Arsenal loanee Zinchenko’s absence is arguably even more eye-catching, with full-back cover having been a major concern for Nuno in the latter parts of the summer transfer window.

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Hutchinson’s omission stems from competition in his position, with Bakwa, James McAtee, Ndoye, Callum Hudson-Odoi, and Morgan Gibbs-White all currently ahead of him in the pecking order. Zinchenko’s versatility in both midfield and defence appeared to strengthen his case, but Forest opted for alternatives such as Ola Aina, Neco Williams and Nicolo Savona at full-back.

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Forest will hope their 22-man squad proves enough to navigate the opening Europa League phase, which they kick off when facing Real Betis on September 24 at Estadio de La Cartuja. Should Nuno's side progress, both Hutchinson and Zinchenko may yet be added to the squad before the knockouts, as UEFA rules do allow three changes to the squad from that point.

Crystal Palace LOSE appeal over UEFA expulsion from Europa League due to multi-club ownership rules with Nottingham Forest set to benefit

Crystal Palace have lost their appeal against being expelled from the Europa League, with the FA Cup winners dropping into the Conference League.

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The Eagles won their first major trophy in 2025, seeing off Manchester City in historic style at Wembley. Success there earned them qualification for the Europa League. A multi-club ownership saga quickly broke out, though, with UEFA initially dumping Palace into the Conference League.

The Premier League outfit took their legal argument to the Court of Arbitration of Sport (CAS), hoping to be granted permission to grace the competition they believed they had secured the right to play in.

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However, CAS has ruled against Palace. The Eagles did not put arrangements in place regarding multi-club ownership prior to UEFA’s deadline on March 1. John Textor did eventually sell his stake in the club to Woody Johnson – owner of the New York Jets NFL franchise.

Textor is also involved with French giants Lyon, who secured Europa League qualification themselves in 2024-25. Palace argued that he never had decision-making influence at Selhurst Park, but that argument has fallen on deaf ears.

WHAT CAS SAID

A statement from CAS read: “The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has dismissed an appeal by Crystal Palace FC (CPFC) against UEFA, Nottingham Forest FC and Olympique Lyonnais (OL) concerning a decision by UEFA to remove CPFC from the UEFA Europa League 2025/2026 due to a breach of UEFA multi club ownership regulations. As a result, CPFC will be admitted to compete in the UEFA Conference League 2025/2026.

“The appeal sought to annul the decision by the UEFA Club Financial Control Body on 11 July 2025 which found CPFC and OL non-compliant with multi club ownership regulations. Alongside the annulment of the decision, CPFC requested readmission to the UEFA Europa League with Nottingham Forest or OL’s admission rejected.

“After considering the evidence, the Panel found that John Textor, founder of Eagle Football Holdings, had shares in CPFC and OL and was a Board member with decisive influence over both clubs at the time of UEFA’s assessment date. The Panel also dismissed the argument by CPFC that they received unfair treatment in comparison to Nottingham Forest and OL.

“The Panel considered that the UEFA Regulations are clear and do not provide flexibility to clubs that are non-compliant on the assessment date, as CPFC claimed.”

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The ruling represents a severe financial blow to Palace, who could lose around £20 million ($27m) in prize money. It is claimed that the Eagles could now open another legal case as they seek financial compensation.

Nathan Smith's allround impact leaves Nottinghamshire praying for rain

Fast bowler makes half-century then claims four wickets in seven balls to lift Worcestershire

ECB Reporters Network14-Apr-2024Nathan Smith, Worcestershire’s new Kiwi signing, made 58 as his side, six-down overnight, added a crucial 135 lower-order runs to total 355 and then took four wickets in seven balls as Nottinghamshire, batting again, went to a shell-shocked 151 for 7 at the close, a lead of 195.In a season notable for leg-spin, another of that craft, Calvin Harrison, completed a maiden five-wicket bag for the home side earlier on the third day of this Vitality County Championship match but Smith’s thrilling counter with pace in the evening raised the spectre of a second home batting debacle at Trent Bridge in seven days.Ben Duckett raced to 63 from 87 balls until undone an hour from the close, the first casualty of a triple-wicket maiden to which Smith then added a fourth success, ripping out Jack Haynes’s off stump. When Ben Slater went to a reflex short-leg catch off Josh Baker and Harrison was bowled by Adam Finch offering no shot, the collapse had encompassed six wickets for 19 runs in 51 balls from 125 for one.With heavy showers forecast for Monday morning, Nottinghamshire, needing quick progress, belted 57 from a dozen overs either side of tea in an opening stand of 81. It is now more a question of whether they are bowled out before they are able to set a target.The visitors resumed their overnight seventh-wicket partnership and had added exactly 50 more runs before slow left-armer Liam Patterson-White, with only one wicket in five games of a difficult 2023 campaign, gained a first success this year when Brett D’Oliveira fell leg-before for 54.But Smith, a good enough No. 8 to have hit a hundred and average 27 back in New Zealand, continued past his fifty from 103 balls after Baker, deceived in the flight, gave Harrison his fourth wicket via a third return catch. Once Joe Leach, no rabbit either, had escaped a run-out chance on one, lunch came at 331 for eight.Harrison was briefly stood down – following 36 consecutive overs from before tea on Saturday but no maiden until his 26th – and it was Dillon Pennington with the new ball who finally had Smith caught, hooking to the deep. The return of Harrison undid the last man and left Leach unbeaten with 48.Harrison’s figures, 36.3-2-128-5, evoked those of wrist-spinners of another era and were completed even as, down in Chelmsford, fellow leggie Matt Critchley took his first five-wicket bag since joining Essex in 2022. With Cameron Steel also taking a maiden five-for for Surrey in the opening round last week, the Kookaburra ball has at least given leg-spin a chance.But it certainly couldn’t stifle Smith, tearing in from the Stuart Broad End in late sunshine after Haseeb Hameed skied a catch to point for 40 off Baker’s left-arm spin. In his eighth over, Smith had Duckett caught at square leg, flicking a ball off his hip, saw Joe Clarke superbly caught by the diving keeper, then shot out Matt Montgomery, a second duck, leg-before.He reached the close with figures of 11-4-29-4, meaning that Nottinghamshire may be the keener of the two sides to hope that rain does indeed arrive on the final day.

Cole Palmer is Frank Lampard, Didier Drogba & Eden Hazard all in one – Chelsea's newest modern legend combines the best attributes of Stamford Bridge's immortals

The Blues' FIFA Club World Cup exploits have set them up for future success, with their No.10 the main man in the BlueCo project

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"Everyone has talked a lot of sh*t about us all season," a carefree Cole Palmer so characteristically proclaimed after Chelsea were crowned champions of the world on Sunday. "But I feel like we're going in the right direction." The Blues didn't just beat Paris Saint-Germain, the consensus best team in the world, but absolutely smashed them in the first final of the revamped FIFA Club World Cup, running out 3-0 victors at MetLife Stadium.

Chelsea weren't given much of a fighting chance heading into the showdown in New Jersey. Their run throughout the tournament, compared to the gauntlet that PSG faced, was derided as one more reminiscent of their Conference League campaign. When Levi Colwill and captain Reece James expressed their confidence pre-match, there were claims of 'delusion' thrown their way.

Yet here we are in a reality where Chelsea are basking in the golden glow of world domination, again. The club is in a very different position to the last time they won the Club World Cup in 2022, but are still winners all the same. The critical noises surrounding BlueCo have quietened, and that's largely down to their project's star man.

Palmer scored two of Chelsea's three goals and assisted the other for Joao Pedro inside 43 first-half minutes. He was the tactical wrinkle that not even the great Luis Enrique could iron out, his fingerprints all over the game as PSG were tossed to-and-fro by the west Londoners. Now that he has silverware in his cabinet and enough credit in the bank, we can start talking about Palmer in grander terms.

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The Conference League and Club World Cup aren't actually the first trophies of Palmer's career, but he arrived at Chelsea as if they were. He broke into the Manchester City team during the 2021-22 season and spent two campaigns skirting around the fringes of Pep Guardiola's squad, earning himself four gold medals in that time.

Heading into 2023-24, Palmer made it clear that he wanted immediate first-team football at the highest level, be that at City or elsewhere. Neither party wanted to entertain a loan and sought for a permanent solution, which ended with Chelsea snapping him up for little over £40 million ($53m) shortly before the summer window closed. Much to the Blues' benefit, he was motivated to leave his own legacy as a main man rather than in a supporting role.

"I always say, I don't feel like a Champions League winner, if I'm being honest," Palmer said earlier this year. "It doesn't really mean anything to me. People say it, but I weren't involved. Obviously I played in the group stage and stuff like that, but it's not the same, is it? I've not threw the medal away! I've still got it, but it's not like I feel like I've won it."

Palmer didn't score in any of his 19 Premier League appearances for City prior to his exit, yet already has 37 across two seasons for Chelsea. On this current trajectory, he will enter the 100 Club at the age of 27.

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In two of his last games for City, Palmer showed what he could do in a more enhanced role. During their eventual Community Shield defeat on penalties to Arsenal, Palmer gave his side the lead with a wonderful curled effort which would later become somewhat of a trademark, while his cushioned header after sneaking in at the back post brought Guardiola's men level en route to UEFA Super Cup glory against Sevilla.

This is a trend that has continued into finals with higher stakes. Palmer came off the bench to fire in an equaliser, albeit in vain, for England in their Euro 2024 final loss to Spain, before being named Player of the Match in both the Conference League and Club World Cup finals for Chelsea this summer. It's a record that is starting to look a little reminiscent of Blues legend Didier Drogba, who won eight of his ten finals for Chelsea, scoring nine goals. The Ivorian didn't even play a competitive final in his career until he was 26.

"I like finals, it happened again." Palmer said on Sunday. "The gaffer put a great game plan out. He knew where the spaces were going to be. He freed me up as much as possible, and I just had to repay him by scoring some goals."

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Palmer's admittance that Enzo Maresca wanted to 'free' him up and exploit PSG was notable in an age where player roles are more defined and structured than ever. The Italian himself came in for criticism for a supposed rigidness in Chelsea's setup when their backs were against the wall in 2024-25, and he suggested pre-Club World Cup final with a quick-witted quip that he wanted his players to dominate possession as per usual. That turned out to be a smokescreen, with the Blues seeing only 34% of the ball, but their swarming energy and tactical tweaks made it feel like they had much more than that.

Maresca didn't quite see Palmer's role as completely without restriction, rather that the new owner of Chelsea's fitting No.10 shirt had licence to kill. "They have three midfielders and two of them were in charge of Reece [James] and Moi [Caicedo]. Vitinha was in charge of Enzo [Fernandez]," the head coach explained post-victory. "We thought it was a good chance to exploit the space with Cole and Malo [Gusto]. It was the game plan. We try to help the players be in positions where they can give everything. It's been the effort from all the team, all the players. I'm very happy for them. They deserve this moment."

Nevertheless, the outcome of these specific instructions made Palmer look all the more like a probing, menacing attacking midfielder of a forgotten ilk. He boasts no standout physical qualities and can appear quite languid in his movement at times given his lanky frame, but still finds a way to thrive in transition. One of the more minor feats Palmer accomplished was making Nuno Mendes, a left-back with Ballon d'Or shouts even a few days ago, seem as if he had never played the sport before.

Palmer led the final in progressive carries (four) and involvements in attacking sequences (seven), opening the game up by darting inside from the right and often beginning forays into the PSG half from deep. He was conjuring the sort of on-ball magic Chelsea were used to in the pre-BlueCo days in a project more resembling Real Madrid's 'Galacticos'.

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It would be very easy to sit here and overlook Palmer's flaws and weaknesses while he's on top of the world. After ending the season with 18 goals and 14 assists to help win two trophies, you'd think it was a campaign with little adversity, but that doesn't tell the whole tale.

In fact, Palmer had reached 14 goals alone by January 14 before going 18 Premier League matches without finding the net. Even then, that mid-winter strike against Bournemouth was the last from open play, with his settler against champions Liverpool on May 4 coming from the penalty spot.

Teams resisted the urge to press Chelsea high during the second half of the season, knowing full well they would carve them up with space to gallop into. It limited opportunities not only for Palmer, but also his various attacking team-mates. After breaking his duck, he got it all off his chest: "Sh*t happens…sorry for my language. Obviously it happens, I went three months without scoring, but it just gives me more fight and motivation to do more for myself and for the team.

"Social media nowadays is full of idiots. I don't pay any attention to that. I've scored today and I'm happy, but it's only one and I've got to keep improving and try and reach new levels. Getting chances and not scoring, it feels like you're letting your team down. I feel like I am mentally strong anyway. I feel pride in helping the team and if I'm not doing that, I'm not happy."

Palmer went into the Club World Cup off the back of Conference League glory and completing Chelsea's mission of securing Champions League qualification, though the goals weren't exactly free-flowing. Before Sunday's final, he scored once before in the tournament – a fine effort in a 2-1 victory against Palmeiras in the quarters. His performance to take home the trophy didn't exactly scream of a player low on confidence or out of form.

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