Craig Ervine named Zimbabwe captain for Ireland, Scotland tours

Ervine will be the fifth man to lead Zimbabwe in white-ball cricket since the start of 2020

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Aug-2021Craig Ervine will captain Zimbabwe for their limited-overs series in Ireland and Scotland. Zimbabwe had named the 18-member squad last week but hadn’t named a captain.Ervine will be the fifth man to lead Zimbabwe in white-ball cricket since the start of 2020. During this period, they have tried Chamu Chibhabha, Brendan Taylor, Sikandar Raza and Test captain Sean Williams.This will be the first time Ervine will captain Zimbabwe in white-ball cricket. He has previously led the side in a Test match, against Bangladesh in Dhaka in 2020.Ervine, who has played 18 Tests, 96 ODIs and 26 T20Is for Zimbabwe, had missed out on all three formats against Bangladesh after coming into contact with people who tested positive for Covid-19.Related

Williams, Taylor, Ervine named in Zimbabwe squad for Ireland, Scotland tours

Campher gets maiden Ireland T20I call-up for Zimbabwe series

Zimbabwe are scheduled to play a five-match T20I series against Ireland, starting on August 27, followed by a three-match ODI series. The tour was originally scheduled to begin on August 6 but was postponed because of complications around Covid-19 protocols.The ODIs will be part of the World Cup Super League. With one win from six matches, Zimbabwe are currently at the bottom of the World Cup Super League points table, while Ireland are a bit better placed with three wins and a no result from 12 games.After their matches against Ireland, Zimbabwe will travel to Scotland to play three T20Is.Zimbabwe squad for Ireland and Scotland tours: Craig Ervine (capt), Ryan Burl, Regis Chakabva, Tendai Chatara, Luke Jongwe, Tinashe Kamunhukamwe, Wessly Madhevere, Tadiwanashe Marumani, Wellington Masakadza, Tarisai Musakanda, Blessing Muzarabani, Dion Myers, Richard Ngarava, Sikandar Raza, Milton Shumba, Brendan Taylor, Donald Tiripano, Sean Williams

Arsenal player ratings vs Tottenham: North London is red – Leandro Trossard and Gabriel lead comeback to propel Gunners back into title race

The derby swung the way of Arsenal over 95 enthralling minutes of football as the hosts took the spoils in a 2-1 victory

Arsenal closed the gap to Premier League leaders Liverpool to just four points with a frantic 2-1 win at home to Tottenham in the north London derby. Mikel Arteta's side were in dire need of a result to reignite their season following disappointing cup losses against Newcastle and Manchester United last week, and duly delivered with a comeback victory on home soil.

The hosts had all of the possession early doors but were nearly undone on the counter when Djed Spence zipped away down the left and delivered a teasing cross into Dominic Solanke, only for Gabriel to make a superb recovery challenge and deny a certain goal. From the ensuing corner, David Raya stood tall to keep out Dejan Kulusevski from point-blank range.

And with their next attack, Tottenham took a shock lead. Gabriel's header from another corner fell kindly to Son Heung-min on the edge of the box, and his volley deflected off the toe of William Saliba before squeezing through the legs of Thomas Partey and beyond a helpless Raya.

Just before the break, though, Arsenal turned the game around. An in-swinging corner from Declan Rice sailed over to Gabriel at the back-post, and his header went in off Dominic Solanke for the equaliser. Spurs were furious with the decision to award the Gunners a corner after the ball appeared to take a nick off Leandro Trossard rather than Pedro Porro as the referee had believed.

Minutes later, Arteta's side went in front. Yves Bissouma was dispossessed in midfield too easily, with Martin Odegaard switching play left to Trossard, and his powerful shot bounced over the weak wrists of Antonin Kinsky.

The Gunners sought to extend that lead in the second half, and went mightily close when Kai Havertz headed narrowly wide from an Odegaard corner soon after the restart. A mix-up at the back for Spurs then afforded Havertz and Raheem Sterling the opportunity to sweep home from inside the 18-yard box, but neither were able to take up that invitation.

Rice and Gabriel Martinelli both went close as Arsenal continued to dictate the game, while Odegaard missed the chance to ice the game from well inside the Spurs box in the closing stages.

Arsenal managed to keep Tottenham at a safe enough distance for five minutes of added time, in spite of Porro rattling the post from a vicious cross, and held on to secure three precious points and climb back above Nottingham Forest into second, while Spurs could still end this round of fixtures as low as 14th.

GOAL rates Arsenal's players from the Emirates Stadium…

Getty Images SportGoalkeeper & Defence

David Raya (7/10):

Played his part by claiming some high crosses, while his superb early save to keep out Kulusevski sadly fell into the backdrop of an eventful evening.

Jurrien Timber (7/10):

Son may have scored but the Spurs captain didn't have any luck in trying to beat the Dutchman down his side for the rest of the night. Looked absolute exhausted in the second half but soldiered on nonetheless.

William Saliba (7/10):

Didn't cover himself in glory when turning his back on Son's strike for the opening goal, though was pretty formidable that blemish aside.

Gabriel (8/10):

Arsenal's main man at both ends of the pitch. Came up with a superb sliding challenge to prod the ball away from Solanke with the goal gaping and scores locked at 0-0 before heading onto Solanke for the equaliser.

Myles Lewis-Skelly (8/10):

A night the 18-year-old won't ever forget, with the home fans chanting he was 'one of their own'. Scarcely put a foot wrong, with his most notable discrepancy a foul throw-in during the second half. Given a standing ovation when subbed off for Zinchenko.

AdvertisementAFPMidfield

Thomas Partey (6/10):

Won the ball back off Bissouma which led to Trossard's winner on the stroke of half-time. Gave possession away in similar fashion on occasion.

Declan Rice (8/10):

Started a little within himself, but boy did he grow into the game as it wore on. Owned the midfield battle alone with one breathless shift. Taken off for Merino towards the end.

Martin Odegaard (7/10):

Exuded that typical elegance like a ballerina on tiptoes. Grabbed the all-important assist for Trossard's strike.

AFPAttack

Raheem Sterling (5/10):

Failed to make the most of a rare opportunity to start. Drew the ire of a frustrated home crowd whenever he decided against motoring down the flank and instead slowing down play. Replaced by Martinelli after an hour.

Kai Havertz (6/10):

Ran the hard yards and seemed desperate to make up for last week's misgivings. Lacked a direct threat himself but worked extremely hard for the cause.

Leandro Trossard (8/10):

So often the man at the end of Arsenal's clearest chance. Took his goal well, even if Kinsky ought to have got a stronger wrist to it. Replaced by Tierney late on.

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AFPSubs & Manager

Gabriel Martinelli (5/10):

Came on for Sterling on the hour. Brought a similar frustration to the game.

Kieran Tierney (6/10):

Given a run out in place of Trossard for the final stages.

Oleksandr Zinchenko (N/A):

On for Lewis-Skelly to see out the game.

Mikel Merino (N/A):

Replaced Rice for the last few minutes.

Mikel Arteta (8/10):

Arsenal needed a huge performance and three valuable points. His team came away with both rather emphatically.

Tottenham are in a relegation scrap: Years of negligence in the transfer market has caught up with Spurs and Daniel Levy – now they risk the unthinkable

Sunday's 2-1 loss to Leicester has left Tottenham precariously sitting above the Premier League drop zone on the precipice of crisis

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And so it has come to this. Little over five years ago, Tottenham Hotspur were 90 minutes away from being crowned champions of Europe for the first time in their history. Even in eventual and perhaps predictable defeat, they had the hope of a bright future to look forward to having just moved into their new billion-pound stadium designed to close the gap on the elite.

Half a decade on, it's now a very real possibility that Spurs will soon be playing in the Championship. The fall from grace has been painful for all involved. Think of Homer Simpson attempting to fly across Springfield Gorge on Bart's skateboard, only for gravity to hurl him down the cliff-face, hitting every jagged rock on his way to the bottom. He's airlifted to an ambulance, which promptly crashes into a tree and he topples out the wrecked vehicle back down the same cliff-face on a stretcher. That's the state of Tottenham right now.

At the time of writing, the Lilywhites sit 15th in the Premier League table having accrued a mere 24 points from 23 games – a tally which they cleared during the first 10 games of last season upon Ange Postecoglou's arrival. Ipswich Town are the only other club in the bottom five to have not changed their manager to this point, and that's down to the credit Kieran McKenna has stored in the bank following successive promotions.

The problems in N17 go beyond the man in the dugout, however. Postecoglou is not blameless, but he is definitely not the main reason why Tottenham are side-eyeing the second tier.

Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱AFPConstant failure

The first sign of Tottenham's decline ironically came around 12 months before their trip to the Champions League final, with the club going a year-and-a-half without an incoming. This was despite then-manager Mauricio Pochettino's desperate plea to help rebuild a playing squad he felt had hit the glass ceiling, and it's a minor miracle he was able to lead them to the brink of continental glory.

"When you talk about Tottenham, everyone says you have an amazing house but you need to put in the furniture," said the Argentine, half-referencing the stadium move. "If you want to have a lovely house maybe you need better furniture."

Chairman Daniel Levy has become notorious for shying away from the spotlight, particularly when Spurs seem to be in trouble. He did, at least, provide an explanation of this staggering lack of transfer activity at a meeting with the club's Supporters' Trust in October 2018. False presumptions that certain players would leave in order to free up funds and space was one reason cited, but concerningly, 'transfers were complicated with several variables' was another. This is the kind of remark that would leave Roy Keane flabbergasted and telling people to do their job.

By the time Pochettino finally got some new faces through the door in 2019, it was too late. The cycle had ended with that team and he was the one who paid the price, with Levy hiring Jose Mourinho – a man he claimed to have been the second-best manager in the world at the time, despite that clearly not being the case.

To the shock of no one, Mourinho didn't work out. He ought to have been sacked long before the 2021 Carabao Cup final, yet Levy chose until days before that showdown with Pep Guardiola's Manchester City to axe him. After roughly two months of searching for a successor, the job landed at the feet of Nuno Espirito Santo, who lasted about the same timespan into the 2021-22 season before he too was unceremoniously fired.

Then came Antonio Conte, the only manager to lead Tottenham to a top-four finish since Pochettino left. To the Italian's credit, he figured out how to get the best out of the Harry Kane and Son Heung-min duo without compromising at the other end of the pitch. He wanted to bridge the gap to the title contenders and fight for more than Champions League qualification. Just one player was signed in his only summer window that immediately improved the starting XI – Ivan Perisic, at this point in his mid-thirties – and three-quarters of the way into a challenging season professionally and personally, Conte lost his job after an astonishing 10-minute rant at a press conference digging out his players and the board.

In Pochettino's five full seasons, Spurs finished fifth, third, second, third and fourth. Since then, it's been sixth, seventh, fourth, eighth and fifth. They still haven't won a trophy since 2008.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesLevy's lost credit

It can't be forgotten that Levy did well to build Tottenham up as a contending club again after spending the nineties and early-noughties in the wilderness, but it is equally as impressive how he's lost a large proportion of the fanbase since his crowning moment of the stadium move.

At the start of the first coronavirus lockdown, there was significant backlash to the furloughing of club staff, so much so that this was quickly reversed. One year later, Spurs decided to throw their hat into the short-lived European Super League ring. More recently, soaring ticket prices in spite of a lack of success have been protested, as has the decision to remove concession prices. The sentiment among regular match-goers is they are being priced out for tourists.

During Sunday's 2-1 defeat at home to Leicester City, Tottenham supporters chanted against Levy, while a banner was unfurled in the single-tier south stand claiming it was 'time for change'. Levy has always been able to fall back on his prestige and expertise as a businessman, but as so many have pointed out, Tottenham are a club first and foremost, and that appears to have been forgotten.

Getty Images SportPostecoglou's doomed reign

Similarly to Nuno two years prior, Postecoglou was handed the head coach's job when other candidates, notably Arne Slot, decided against taking it. To make matters worse, the sale of Kane – a man whose quality was definitely taken for granted – to Bayern Munich was sanctioned on the opening week of the season. Had Tottenham plummeted into the no-man's-land of mid-table, it would have been understandable.

Alas, Postecoglou managed to steer Spurs to a respectable fifth-place finish, only two points behind Aston Villa in the Champions League spots. There were signs of promise for this new era. Like Conte though, the Australian was afforded only one player to come straight into his starting XI, as well as three teenagers and an extended loan for Timo Werner.

The squad needed surgery even prior to the injury crisis that has plagued their current campaign. Postecoglou's Tottenham are now on life support and he is hanging by a thread. After every defeat comes a new report that the board want to stick with the Australian and support him through this period, though all the while doing little to actually stand that sentiment up.

Unlike his predecessors who weren't afraid to make their ill-feelings towards the board known, Postecoglou has dressed up his request for reinforcements in a dignified manner and more along the lines of a cry for 'help'.

"I've said all along, the players need help and I've also said the club are working hard in that area to try to alleviate some of those problems," has been the constant message. "The players are going out there and giving everything they can because we can't call off games. We've got another game in three days' time that these players have to front up for. The injury situation will ease and I'm confident they will sort of help us. Even one more player coming in, just in the short term will give us an opportunity, at least to navigate these last 10 days, two weeks, of what's been a really hard slog for this group of players."

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Getty Images SportOn-field problems

Through the autumn, Spurs' main issue was their wild inconsistency. They were a team capable of winning away at both Manchester clubs with a combined score of 7-0, yet would be too easily undone when a game wasn't going their way – 12 of their 13 defeats in the Premier League have been by a single goal in matches where the opposition simply shut up shop.

Those would be understandable teething issues for a project team at or close to full strength, but Postecoglou has not been afforded that luxury. A detailed report from into their spate of injuries this season did not necessarily blame the head coach, though did suggest his high-energy style in training as well as matches hasn't done much to relieve the strain.

'Ange-ball' in full flight is breathtaking. It has made Tottenham one of the best watches in all of Europe and they have a clear identity again. But it's a style that often requires perfection in order to succeed, and at the moment, Spurs aren't even good enough to get lucky. There's been an absence of scrappy wins and draws, their penchant for late goals and comebacks from last season evaporating into thin air.

Tottenham, under Pochettino or anyone else, have been unable to win major honours because when you scratch beneath the surface of the first XI, there has always appeared a serious lack of quality and options. Only now has that truly been exposed with Postecoglou's makeshift lineups which are coming potentially at the detriment of his players' careers, with several soldiering on through injury just to help the cause.

Newcastle wasted £29m on Toon flop who earned more than Gordon

Newcastle United will want to get back into the swing of things when Premier League action resumes after the international break is over and done, but the Magpies don’t exactly have the easiest batch of fixtures to contend with.

Brighton and Hove Albion is the first tricky test at St James’ Park, with clashes against Chelsea and Arsenal then following this meeting with the Seagulls, as Eddie Howe’s men strive to remain near the top places in the division despite difficult matches ahead.

Howe will hope Anthony Gordon is back to his blistering best with the ex-Everton attacker cursing his luck last time out, having missed a costly penalty against his former employers in a 0-0 draw away at Goodison Park.

Anthony Gordon's form this season

Away from that disappointing spot-kick, Gordon has shone brightly for his Tyneside outfit this season.

He even managed to fire home a confident penalty against Manchester City just the game before this stalemate versus the Toffees, with the pressure of playing against his ex-employers presumably getting the better of him.

In total, the entertaining 23-year-old has two strikes next to his name from seven league games so far, with the Magpies number ten craving his third goal of the season already against Brighton to atone for his poor showing at Everton.

As much as the Toffees faithful now revel in the distaste of their former youth product, the Newcastle masses equally adore the energetic left winger all the same, who amassed a stunning total of 11 goals and ten assists last season in the Premier League to fully justify his bumper £45m price-tag.

Despite entering the building last year for that hefty amount, Gordon isn’t one of the highest earners in Howe’s camp currently, with the England international raking in a reasonable £60k-per-week pay packet.

Away from Gordon coming good, Newcastle have been burnt in the past with overspending and dishing out lavish wages, with one former striker denting the Magpies’ bank account significantly during his disastrous year at the club.

Newcastle winger Anthony Gordon

Chris Wood's time at Newcastle

Despite transforming himself into a feared goal machine for Nottingham Forest now, with four league strikes already notched up from seven clashes in 2024/25, Chris Wood never successfully managed to fit in at St James’ Park as a deadly option up top.

Costing an excessive £25m to get through the door, the New Zealand international undoubtedly goes down as a dud buy, with just a paltry five goals managed from 39 games donning a Magpies strip.

24/25

7

4

23/24

35

15

22/23

7

1

Perhaps Newcastle should have exercised more patience when it came to the 32-year-old centre-forward’s indifferent form in front of goal, with Wood going on to hammer home an impressive 15 goals from 35 games during his first full campaign at the City Ground, exorcising his Tyneside demons in the process.

But, the best decision at the time from Newcastle’s perspective would have just been to get him off their books, with Wood earning an extortionate pay-packet of £80k-per-week, with his weak displays advancing through on goal not justifying that salary whatsoever.

To add context, that’s £20k-per-week more than what Gordon currently takes home playing week in week out for Howe, whilst the likes of Harvey Barnes now remarkably pockets the same wage.

Wood did manage to have the last laugh last campaign when firing home an unbelievable hat-trick back at his old stomping ground, but Newcastle would have felt it was the correct call at the time to offload him anyway, with Wood costing the club an eye-watering £29m – when taking into account his transfer fee and wage costs – across his cursed one year stay.

Howe will just pray Isak is back to full fitness soon, having had to sit out his side’s last few clashes owing to a broken toe knock, whilst also keeping his fingers crossed there’s more to come from Gordon this campaign as he strives to put together even better numbers than his whirlwind 2023-24 output.

Newcastle may regret losing £15m ace who is now playing better than Gordon

Newcastle United never got the best out of this star.

ByKelan Sarson Oct 14, 2024

Babar, Faheem inflict sixth straight loss on Southern Punjab

Mohammad Nawaz and Haris Rauf hold off Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to take Northern to fourth

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Oct-2021Southern Punjab lost their sixth straight game in a row, with Central Punjab trouncing their provincial rivals by seven wickets to eliminate them from semi-final contention.SP found themselves under pressure instantly after being put in to bat with Faheem Ashraf removing both openers in the first over. Agha Salman and Azam Khan looked to have put them back on track with an 84-run stand, but once it broke, SP crumbled completely. Hasan Ali ripped through the order with four wickets as CP picked them off with ease, the last eight wickets falling for 34 runs to leave CP chasing a straightforward 120.The chase was as simple as they come, with Babar Azam assuming complete control from the outset. An unbeaten 59 formed the spine of the CP innings, with Kamran Akmal playing his part for the second-wicket partnership. CP had no need to ever really get out of second gear, finally putting SP out of their misery in the 18th over, both on the night and in the tournament.Mohammad Nawaz scored an unbeaten 56 off 35 balls•PCBA whirlwind 90-run fifth-wicket partnership between Mohammad Nawaz and Shadab Khan helped Northern recover from the loss of four early wickets to beat Khyber Pakhtunkhwa by 14 runs.Table-toppers KP put Northern in to bat first, and Shaheen Afridi put them under immediate pressure in a glorious first over in which he removed Ali Imran and Haider Ali. Northern rebuilt with a 50-run third-wicket stand, only to lose another couple in quick succession. But they stuck to their plans, with the in-form Nawaz and Shadab launching an impressive counter-attack, with the next 90 runs coming in nine overs as Nawaz smashed a 34-ball 51, his second half-century in three games. Shadab’s 27-ball 46 was the accompaniment, and thanks to a handy cameo from Asif Ali, Northern got to 181.KP’s response lacked the necessary intent required to chase down a steep total for much of the first ten overs, hampered by the loss of Mohammad Rizwan and Sahibzada Farhan early. With the asking rate rising, Iftikhar Ahmed brought his side back into the contest with a glorious half-century, but lack of support from the other end ensured KP were always a touch too far behind the game. And once Haris Rauf, who starred with three wickets, had Iftikhar hole out, all doubts vanished, with a clinical Northern closing out an impressive win.

USL Clubs vindicated, MLS's return a boost, but Leagues Cup caught in between: Winners and Losers of 2025 U.S. Open Cup format

GOAL US looks at the winners and losers for the 96-team field of a revamped US Open Cup after a new format was revealed

A year ago, the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup was on its last legs. Or so we were told. There had been talk for some time that MLS might decrease its involvement in the competition. And so it came to pass, with just eight teams from America's top flight sending their first teams to the competition.

The rest deployed their MLS Next Pro sides – a combination of youth talent and college draftees yet to break into the senior side. It seemed to be the start of the death of one of American soccer's great institutions. This thing had been around for more than 100 years. Amateur teams could enter. A roster made up of workers from a burrito restaurant deployed a team. Like England's FA Cup, France's Coupe de France or Spain's Copa del Rey, the U.S. Open Cup is a leveler. Anything, in theory, can happen.

But that was all soon to be done away with. The Open Cup could work as its own institution but needed MLS teams to pace the whole thing – and keep it relevant. And U.S. Soccer, it seems, has realized that. This year, 16 MLS teams will participate, eight more than last year.

USSF CEO JT Baston expressed his satisfaction that this institution is looking more like its old self: "The Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup is a crucial connection point for all levels of soccer in the United States. U.S. Soccer exists in service to soccer and this historic tournament allows us to lift up the people who are leading the charge to support soccer in their communities. We’re pleased to continue working with and collaborating with all U.S. Soccer members to maximize the tournament’s impact on soccer at all levels in this country."

It's not perfect. Not everyone is back. But it signals improvement, a revival of sorts for a competition that was on the brink. GOAL looks at the winners and losers of yet another version of the US Open Cup in 2025.

Get the MLS Season Pass today!Stream games nowUSLWINNER: The USL

How relieved USL teams must be. It is worth pointing out, first, that MLS teams don't really need the money from this thing. Unlike another competition emerging in the American soccer landscape – more on that later – there is no great financial incentive for MLS sides. But the U.S. Open Cup is absolutely a revenue driver for smaller teams.

These are, usually, tiny markets matched up against some of the biggest teams in American soccer. Last year alone, LAFC traveled to Cashman Field, home of Las Vegas Lights. Atlanta United played at Patriots Point, the stomping ground of Charleston Battery. Those are big games that packed stadiums and bolstered matchday revenue – which smaller clubs rely on.

There's also something to be said for the legitimacy of this all. USL is one of the more interesting things happening in professional soccer – a space of brand building, innovation, and ever-improving quality. It needs eyes, and having MLS teams participate only helps those clubs.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportLOSER: Leagues Cup

Let's make something clear: the semi-revival of the Open Cup does not mean that the Leagues Cup is finished. In theory, it shouldn't impact the way that teams treat either competition. But whereas the competition previously dominated six weeks of the North American soccer calendar, it did lose a little bit of relevance with more MLS interest in the Open Cup.

The Leagues Cup has long been a controversial tournament. The reasons for that are many: fixture congestion, financial incentives, and abandonment of fan interest. It was assumed in some circles that the decrease in MLS teams participating in the U.S. Open Cup, linked with an expanded Leagues Cup, meant that the latter competition would slowly drain life from the former.

But now the inverse has happened. The Leagues Cup has changed significantly, with just 18 MLS clubs participating and no league break anymore. And with more MLS teams returning to the traditional tournament, that steady dominance of the new tournament is losing momentum.

Getty ImagesWINNER: U.S. Open Cup

Well, obviously. This thing was once the lifeblood of American soccer, a constant churning away in the background as MLS teams came and went. Now, with MLS expanding to 30 franchises, there's no longer a real need for the competition to exist – at least, not as a fundamental part of U.S. soccer. But it is a crucial component of the landscape, a small but significant way of upholding tradition in American soccer — one that started way before MLS's founding in 1995 and dates back to 1914.

Yet another shift to the makeup of the competition does not mean that it will stay alive forever. Nor does it signal a total sea of change in the way the powers that be view it. But it certainly does give the competition some momentum, a valuable boost after a few years of deterioration. Could things revert back to doom and gloom next year? Quite possibly. But for now, the U.S. Open Cup is back on track.

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Getty Images SportLOSER: MLS Clubs that aren't participating

There was widespread protest last year among fan groups of clubs that didn't participate in the US Open Cup. Colorado Rapids and Chicago Fire fans, in particular, expressed their anger with their teams' decisions to send MLS Next Pro teams to the competition. Chicago have since pivoted and returned to the competition after a year of absence.

Colorado will once again send its MLS Next Pro side. There are, admittedly, financial incentives at play here. The Leagues Cup is a more lucrative venture. Teams can also point to fixture congestion as a limiting factor. But more broadly, failing to send a first team risks further alienating fans who are already unhappy with decisions that took place some 12 months ago.

High-flying Pakistan set for versatile New Zealand

Pakistan will have to quickly adjust from the highs of their historic win

Danyal Rasool25-Oct-20211:54

Should NZ play both Boult and Southee?

Big pictureWell, how do you top that then? How do you get back to the grind after an achievement that will almost certainly define this tournament for Pakistan, regardless of what happens hereon in? Beating India might not bring its own trophy, but for a significant chunk of Pakistan supporters, getting that monkey off their back was really what mattered this tournament. To shake off that euphoria and have to go again less than 48 hours later carries its own challenges, but perhaps its own opportunities too.This might both be the best and worst time to play for Pakistan. The high they’re on likely won’t be topped all tournament, but regathering the intensity necessary to see off their next opponents, New Zealand, cannot be easy. The celebrations might have carried on long into the Dubai night, but professionalism, and the necessity of the schedule, demands all those emotions be brushed aside for what will follow in Sharjah on Tuesday.Related

Daryl Mitchell is ready to blast off

If the India game carried the emotions of an epic arch-rivalry, there’s a different kind of tense hostility to the clash against New Zealand. This, remember, is the side that pulled out of a tour of Pakistan minutes before the first game was due to be played citing security concerns; the spiraling chain reaction that followed saw England pull out, too, and the entire home season for Pakistan thrown into jeopardy. If a surging Pakistan can find a way to channel that righteous anger in Sharjah tomorrow, New Zealand have quite the task on their hands.But while New Zealand’s pullout hurt Pakistan’s World Cup preparations significantly, it’s worth remembering Kane Williamson’s side didn’t gain much from the decision, either. The five extra T20I games they had lined up in Asia ahead of this tournament never materialised. While some of the squad did end up linking up with their IPL franchises in the UAE, that was never going to perfectly replicate playing as a team in the subcontinent. The two warm-up games they did get last week – against Australia and England – saw New Zealand turn in somewhat flat performances, finding themselves on the wrong end of the result each time.But if Pakistan pride themselves on their unpredictability, New Zealand have turned consistency at ICC events into an art form. In a group where India suddenly look a shade vulnerable, they have their opportunity to state their credentials by getting one over a Pakistan side that might not have fully returned to earth after the stratospheric heights they hit on Sunday. They have among the most well-rounded bowling attacks of the tournament – high pace in Lockie Ferguson, bounce with Kyle Jamieson, swing with Trent Boult and variation with Tim Southee, in additions to both a legspinner – Ish Sodhi and a left arm orthodox bowler in Mitchell Santner. That adaptability means they can might be able to press any of a number of gameplans into service as the situation allows, and – to use that most tired of cliches – punch above their weight.Shaheen Shah Afridi is red hot after his India exploits•AFP/Getty ImagesForm guidePakistan WWLLW (last five completed matches, most recent first)New Zealand WLWLLIn the spotlightIt’s fairly obvious the most exciting aspect of the contest should be Shaheen Afridi against whichever New Zealand opener he finds himself bowling to, particularly if they’re right-handed. The Pakistan left-arm pacer’s first two overs burst through India’s top order on Sunday, and a match-up against someone like Martin Guptill should in theory favour the bowler. If Pakistan can get early wickets through their trump card once more, they might feel they can follow the template of the India game, restrict New Zealand to a below-par total, and allow Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan to do their thing.The early evidence of the World Cup suggests these surfaces should suit Mitchell Santner’s game rather well. Coming in from around the wicket, the left-arm offspin should be difficult to negotiate at any stage of the innings. If New Zealand feel aggressive enough, he might even open the bowling to mirror the role Imad Wasim will play for Pakistan, especially if he deploys the arm ball to good effect. He was arguably the pick of New Zealand’s bowlers in the warm-up games against Australia and England, and probably won’t get a better chance to lead the line in a global tournament.Team newsPakistan are extremely unlikely to change the side that brought them Sunday’s 10-wicket win.Pakistan: (probable): 1 Babar Azam (capt) 2 Mohammad Rizwan (wk) 3 Fakhar Zaman 4 Mohammad Hafeez 5 Shoaib Malik 6 Asif Ali 7 Shadab Khan 8 Imad Wasim 9 Hasan Ali 10 Haris Rauf 11 Shaheen Shah AfridiNew Zealand played around with their combination during the warm-ups so their line-up is a bit less predictable. Two spinners, though is pretty much a lock, so expect Santner and Sodhi to both line up. The batting line-up, according to Williamson, is flexible, depending on conditions. The captain himself should be fit to play, despite an ongoing elbow niggle he described as a “work in progress”.New Zealand (possible): 1 Martin Guptill 2 Devon Conway 3 Glenn Phillips 4 Kane Williamson (capt) 5 Tim Seifert (wk) 6 Daryl Mitchell/Todd Astle 7 Mitchell Santner 8 Tim Southee 9 Trent Boult 10 Lockie Ferguson/Kyle Jamieson 11 Ish SodhiPitch and conditionsThe surface in Sharjah might be conducive to bigger hitting than the ones in Dubai and Abu Dhabi are. The evidence of the Sri Lanka-Bangladesh clash on Sunday would appear to bear that out. This fixture, though, will be played on a new strip, but the low bounce in Sharjah could still be something to watch out for. Dew, too, could be a problem later into the night, which in theory might make fielding first an attractive option.Stats and trivia Pakistan have won three of the five T20 World Cup clashes against New Zealand, though Kane Williamson’s men won the most recent encounter in Mohali in 2016 Tim Southee is one wicket away from becoming the third bowler with 100 T20I wickets after Shakib al Hasan and Lasith MalingaQuotes”It was a really disappointing situation. I know the team that were there were very much looking forward to the occasion and playing cricket over in Pakistan, and it was a real shame that it wasn’t able to go ahead”Kane Williamson talks about New Zealand pulling out of last month’s tour of Pakistan

Forget Trent: Real Madrid should sign "world-class" Liverpool star instead

Arne Slot’s Liverpool have been playing competitive football for over two months now and have won nine matches and have lost just one.

The Reds are approaching the next batch of Premier League fixtures with the surety that producing a winning streak will keep them in first place while, at the least, creating some distance between Arsenal, who are one point behind Liverpool and welcome them to the Emirates in just over one week.

Liverpool head coach Arne Slot-1

Liverpool face Chelsea at Anfield first, and Slot will likely get to know his squad even better, for the Blues with their lightning attack could present the toughest test of the term.

The hosts will need to maintain their new-found strength and vim in defence while clicking and moving with slick synergy in attack. Connecting the two, Trent Alexander-Arnold will, as ever, be key, and he’ll be confident after making a positive impression.

Real Madrid's interest in Trent Alexander-Arnold

Will he or won’t he? Last week, during an interview with ITV’s Gabriel Clarke, Alexander-Arnold commented on speculation surrounding his future and stated that he doesn’t want his trophy-laden career to peter out as he enters the ‘prime’ of his career.

Aged 26, Alexander-Arnold is one of the Premier League’s biggest names and is Liverpool’s vice-captain. He has long harboured hopes of captaining his boyhood club, with whom he has played for since his formative years, joining the academy in 2004.

But he’s also approaching the end of his £180k-per-week contract and has attracted the vested interests of Real Madrid, probably the most illustrious and prestigious outfit on the globe. Los Blancos have all the pull of a super-charged tractor beam, one that players can rarely resist.

But Liverpool will hold out hope. Transfer guru Fabrizio Romano has repeatedly said over recent months that the England international is giving priority to Liverpool.

Mohamed Salah and club captain Virgil van Dijk are also heading toward the end of their deals. Let’s not forget that in a little over two months, all three superstars can chat with clubs from overseas and unite in a pre-contract agreement.

Liverpool's Trent Alexander-Arnold with Jurgen Klopp

For Alexander-Arnold to remain, it’s clear that he’s going to want a package on his doorstep that reflects his prodigious powers. Salah, for example, earns £350k per week. Alexander-Arnold will want a deal to match, or maybe even surpass that total.

Perhaps Real Madrid should sign the Egyptian this summer instead…

Mohamed Salah is approaching the end

Many talented players have graced Anfield’s pitch over the past decade, but Van Dijk is probably the only one who can rival Salah in terms of influence and importance.

Liverpool star Mohamed Salah scores

Signed from AS Roma in a deal worth £34m in July 2017, Salah was awarded a second shot at the Premier League after previously failing to make the grade with Chelsea.

We need not deep-dive into all of the Egyptian king’s accolades, but let’s touch on his ridiculous potency in the final third, scoring 217 goals and supplying 94 assists across 359 matches for Liverpool, giving rise to title-winning success on the biggest stages.

1.

Alan Shearer

441

260

2.

Harry Kane

320

213

3.

Wayne Rooney

491

208

4.

Andy Cole

414

187

5.

Sergio Aguero

275

184

6.

Frank Lampard

609

177

7.

Thierry Henry

258

175

8.

Robbie Fowler

379

163

9.

Jermaine Defoe

496

162

10.

Mohamed Salah

270

161

This season, as he approaches the end of his contract, the 32-year-old has posted six goals and five assists across ten matches for the Merseysiders, intent on chasing down more glory under new management.

He’s been the centre point of Liverpool’s attack since signing, and if Liverpool want to keep him on the books for the next few years, it’s hard to imagine he would settle for anything less than his current £350k per week salary. He may even want more.

Alexander-Arnold is also a player who has had a significant say in the narrative at Anfield since Klopp arrived after Brendan Rodgers’ demise, but he’s only 26 and has, possibly, his best days ahead of him, which is a staggering thought.

The thought of his plying his art for an overseas nemesis in Real Madrid is inconceivable to most of the fanbase, and that’s why it might not be the worst thing in the world for Salah to be signed instead.

Hailed as “world-class” by Klopp, Salah has been linked with the Spanish giants in the past, with reports in 2023 even suggesting that La Liga would be the right-sided star’s preferred destination if he were to pack his bags next summer.

The goal machine is still an elite-level striker, but he’s going to be 33 years old by the start of next season and any extension to his current deal would likely take him to the age of 35 or 36 by its conclusion.

Whether FSG would move away from their circumspection to agree to such hefty terms with an ageing player – who has no guarantees over productivity as he approaches the twilight colours of his career, remains to be seen.

And though Madrid are well stocked up front, there have been murmurings of discontent from Rodrygo’s camp and Arda Guler is routinely discussed for a loan move away from the Santiago Bernabeu to best serve his development.

As Michael Dawson has mused, any of the discussed trio at Liverpool will be entitled to pen contractual extensions, should they please.

Salah is a first-class forward, and Van Dijk is the backbone of the ranks, but both are several years into their 30s and Alexander-Arnold simply cannot be allowed to move away in search of pastures new.

Relevant figures of a Liverpool persuasion might want to see if the La Liga champions can be convinced into taking Salah on board for the next few years, instead of pulling the lifeblood from Slot’s exciting Liverpool project.

Forget Trent: Liverpool have another £100m star in the making

Liverpool could soon have a real superstar on their hands under Arne Slot

ByJoe Nuttall Oct 17, 2024

Rodgers must drop Trusty to unleash "aggressive" Celtic star

Celtic return to action in the Champions League this evening as they prepare to travel to Bergamo to take on Atalanta away from home in their third league game.

The Hoops are looking to bounce back from their last away day in Europe after they were hammered 7-1 by Borussia Dortmund in Germany in their second outing.

Brendan Rodgers’ side had beaten Slovan in their opening game at Parkhead, with a convincing 5-1 scoreline in Glasgow, before they were humbled by the Bundesliga giants, who raced to a 5-1 lead by half-time.

The Scottish Premiership champions will be hoping to offer a better account of themselves when they come up against the Serie A outfit tonight, whilst also putting in a strong performance than they did at the weekend.

On Saturday, Celtic were held to a 2-2 draw at Parkhead by Aberdeen, to keep the two sides locked on points at the top of the table, after going 2-0 up ahead of half-time.

They let their lead slip and must avoid those defensive frailties to be on show against the likes of Mateo Retegui, Ademola Lookman, and Charles De Ketelaere.

Celtic's top performers against Aberdeen

There were plenty of impressive performers on the pitch for the Hoops against the Dons on Saturday, though, and they should keep their places in the starting line-up.

One player who must stay in the team is centre-forward Kyogo after his impressive contributions during the first-half of the game against Aberdeen.

Firstly, the Japan international made a fantastic run down the right channel and played the perfect pass across the box for Hatate to find the back of the net.

Then, Kyogo pounced on a loose ball in the box, after a shot was deflected into his path, to find the bottom corner to make it 2-0 to the Hoops.

The scorer of the opening goal, Hatate, is another player who was a top performer on Saturday and should start tonight. He produced a fine finish to find the far corner from the striker’s cutback to open the scoring.

Along with his strike, the central midfielder won five of his seven duels and created two chances for his teammates, which shows that he was combative and creative in the middle of the park.

Rodgers must, however, make a change at the other end of the pitch by bringing centre-back Maik Nawrocki in for a rare start, after the disaster in Europe last time out.

The player who should be dropped for Maik Nawrocki

Celtic have been playing with two left-footed centre-backs – in Auston Trusty and Liam Scales – in recent weeks and this means that either of them could drop out to allow Nawrocki to play on the right side.

It should be Trusty, however, who is dropped back down to the bench by Rodgers, as Scales had partnered Cameron Carter-Vickers with success at the start of the season, keeping five clean sheets in five league games.

Whereas, the summer signing from Sheffield United has only helped to keep one clean sheet in his four starts for the club since Carter-Vickers’ injury.

Trusty, who was handed a player rating of 6/10 by The Scotsman, was part of the leaky defence that let in two goals against Aberdeen on Saturday, the second of which deflected off him and in after he turned away from the ball in a weak attempt to block the shot.

In his four appearances for Celtic, the American has been part of a team that has shipped ten goals – including seven in the heavy defeat to Dortmund.

The Hoops have let in three goals in his three starts in the Premiership, after zero goals in Carter-Vickers’ five starts, which suggests that the team was far more defensively secure with the former Tottenham man at the back.

Trusty has yet to prove that he has what it takes to be a key part of Rodgers’ team, given the team’s struggles defensively since his introduction to the side, and that is why he should be ruthlessly ditched from the starting XI for the clash with Atalanta tonight.

Therefore, with Carter-Vickers still missing from injury, the manager should turn to his other available central defender and unleash Nawrocki in his place.

Why Maik Nawrocki must be unleashed

The Polish colossus, who was once hailed as “aggressive” by Rodgers, has yet to start a game in any competition this season, but can offer a natural option on the right side of the defence, instead of having a left-footed player – in Trusty – attempting to play out on his weaker side.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast's Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

The giant, signed from Legia Warsaw in the summer of 2023, is comfortable on either foot but is predominantly right-footed, which means that he can open up and play passes into midfield or down the line on the right with ease, which could allow Celtic to bypass the Atalanta press more efficiently than they would with a left-footer in that role.

Last season, Nawrocki did not make a single appearance in the Champions League for the Hoops last season, which could give him added motivation to make his mark if he is selected this evening.

The central defender won 78% of his duels across four appearances in the Europa League for Legia Warsaw in the 2021/22 campaign, which was his last attempt at competing on the continent, and this shows that the potential is there for him to be a dominant figure at the back.

Nawrocki only made ten appearances in the Premiership during his debut season with the Scottish giants last term, but did show signs of promise in that time.

Appearances

10

Sofascore rating

6.97

Pass accuracy

88%

Clearances per game

3.2

Ground duel success rate

69%

Aerial duel success rate

50%

As you can see in the table above, the Polish ace was incredibly dominant in his duels on the deck, winning 69% of his ground battles against Premiership attackers.

Nawrocki, however, has yet to be tested in the Champions League or the Premiership this season and it could, therefore, be a risk to bring him in from the start.

Trusty’s disappointing form, and the seven goal concession against Dortmund, suggests that there is not much to lose from the Hoops giving him a chance, in the absence of Carter-Vickers, and that is why Rodgers must take the plunge and hand him an opportunity.

Celtic had a star who was "similar to Messi", then he left for nothing

The Celtic youngster never lived up to his potential at Parkhead, after being compared to Lionel Messi.

1 ByDan Emery Oct 22, 2024

VIDEO: Channing Tatum shows Wrexham squad how to improve their celebrations with his famous Magic Mike moves in hilarious crossover – with manager Phil Parkinson even making a cameo

Paul Mullin, Ollie Palmer and the rest of the Wrexham squad looked on in awe as Channing Tatum taught them how to improve their goal celebrations.

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Hollywood actor charged into Wrexham dressing roomTaught Red Dragons stars how to celebrateParkinson, Mullin & Palmer all appear in advertFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

As part a promotion for SToK Cold Brew coffee, the Hollywood actor burst into the team's dressing room, and informs the squad: "Alright boys, your bosses are not happy with your celebration dances." The Magic Mike star recreates some of his dance moves from the iconic film and gets the Wrexham stars to join in.

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The likes of star players Paul Mullin, Ollie Palmer, Elliot Lee and Steven Fletcher all feature in the advert, while coach Phil Parkinson even makes an appearance towards the end.

In a hilarious end to the video, Tatum gets hit in the face by a Wrexham jersey and says: "No, no. I promised Ryan [Reynolds] and Rob [McElhenney] I'd keep it classy. Everyone put your clothes back on."

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR WREXHAM?

Wrexham's next game is against Bolton in the quarter-finals of the EFL Trophy on February 11. They then return to League One action with a game against Northampton on February 15.

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