Anthony Gordon 2.0: Newcastle prepare offer for "world-class" £20m star

Newcastle United sealed their place in next season’s Champions League after finishing fifth in the Premier League, widening the scope of Eddie Howe’s plans.

As per The Athletic’s David Ornstein, star striker Alexander Isak is now expected to remain at St. James’ Park next year, while recent reports have suggested the Magpies are now ready to make an audacious double swoop for Brentford’s Bryan Mbeumo and FA Cup winner Marc Guehi, titan at Crystal Palace.

Brentford's BryanMbeumoreacts

However, the work won’t stop there. Newcastle, indeed, are looking to strengthen between the sticks.

Newcastle ready bid for rising star

As per The Daily Mail’s Craig Hope, Newcastle are preparing to make their first formal offer to Burnley for shot-stopper James Trafford, who is valued at over £20m.

A flurry of interest is expected in the 22-year-old keeper, with Chelsea and Manchester United both keen on the Championship superstar.

James Trafford for Burnley.

However, Newcastle are looking to get a deal done nice and swiftly, with Nick Pope mooted to be in line for an exit.

Why Newcastle want James Trafford

Pope has been a stalwart servant for Newcastle, joining from Burnley in a £10m deal back in June 2022. Now, the Toon can repeat the trick by bringing Trafford into the mix.

However, it’s not Pope who the England U21 international would be emulating in making the move to Tyneside; rather, Trafford could become Howe’s next version of Anthony Gordon.

Before we look at exactly why, let’s take a quick look at Trafford’s meteoric rise.

Leaving Manchester City’s youth academy for Turf Moor in 2023 after several successful loan spells in League One, some felt the £19m transfer fee was a little excessive.

England'sJamesTraffordduring the warm up before the match

He’s since been an instrumental part of Burnley’s success, the focal point of a watertight defence which kept 30 clean sheets across the Championship season.

Trafford only missed one match, and enjoyed 29 shutouts, saving two penalties and incredibly conceding just 16 goals.

Bolton

74

33

Burnley

73

31

Man City U21

13

6

Acc. Stanley

11

2

Man City U18

10

6

Truly, he’s been crucial in helping the Clarets secure promotion back to the Premier League, also receiving praise from his manager Scott Parker, for being a “world-class goalkeeper.”

With a cheeky personality and an acrobatic athleticism to back up his swagger, Trafford will no doubt have his sights set on becoming a Three Lions mainstay, emulating Gordon.

England international Gordon, indeed, made the right move in leaving Everton for £45m in January 2023, crowned Newcastle’s Player of the Year in his first full season after notching 28 goal involvements from 48 matches.

The duo played together for the U21s, with Gordon even remarking, “I’d trust him to save anything” after one wondrous display against Spain in the final of the U21 European Championship, en route to a 1-0 victory.

Like Gordon, Trafford also came through the academy of one of the Premier League’s goliaths, though he failed to make a senior appearance at Manchester City.

Although saying that, the 24-year-old Gordon was actually a member of Liverpool’s youth fold before leaving aged 11 and finding a new home over on the blue half of Merseyside.

While Newcastle’s star winger didn’t set the world alight at Goodison Park, scoring just seven times across 78 matches as a Toffee, he showcased a hunger and skill that could be shaped and developed under Howe’s wing, and indeed has.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

Now, Trafford must take the leap and follow suit.

He'd be incredible with Isak: Newcastle prepare bid for "deadly" £60m star

Newcastle are looking to make some impactful signings in the transfer market this summer.

1 ByAngus Sinclair May 30, 2025

Man Utd readying shock £85m offer to sign "excellent" Premier League rival

With INEOS looking to send a statement this summer, Manchester United are now reportedly ready to table a shock offer worth as much as £85m to sign a Premier League rival.

Man Utd must get summer incomings right

In what feels like an Old Trafford groundhog day, Manchester United cannot afford to get their incomings wrong this summer. Like in 2014 under David Moyes and then under the likes of Louis van Gaal, Jose Mourinho and Ole Gunner Solskjaer, the Red Devils are in no position to make mistakes in the transfer market as they look to hand their latest manager the keys to unlock a place among Europe’s elite again at long last.

Same agent as Dorgu: Man Utd now offered chance to sign "incredible" winger

He’s a serial winner.

ByTom Cunningham May 10, 2025

What does seem to be different about Ruben Amorim compared to Moyes, Van Gaal, Solskjaer and in some ways even Mourinho is just how honest he’s been about the extent of the task in front of him.

Even in the build-up to Manchester United’s 7-1 aggregate mauling of Athletic Bilbao to reach the Europa League final, Amorim assured reporters that silverware would not take away from what has been a disastrous season.

The former Sporting Club boss told reporters: “For me, in that moment and you look at Premier League, we are the worst team since I arrived in terms of results. That is my idea. In the end of the season, we can be the worst team in Premier League history with a European title.

Manchester United manager RubenAmorimbefore the match

“So we will not change anything. We know that this season was disappointing. Nothing is going to change, in that moment, I have to think a bit more but I felt that. I still feel that this season was the worst in the last 50 years.”

Whether the Red Devils have what it takes to overcome Tottenham Hotspur in the final is another question, but if they do manage to win the competition then their transfer plans could become all the more interesting.

Man Utd readying shock Tonali offer

According to Corriere dello Sport, as relayed by Sport Witness, INEOS and Manchester United are now ready to table a stunning €100m (£85m) offer to sign Sandro Tonali from Newcastle United this summer. In an ambitious move, the Red Devils have set their sights on the Italian, who has enjoyed an excellent season at St James’ Park.

Premier League stats 24/25 (via FBref)

Sandro Tonali

Manuel Ugarte

Starts

25

21

Goals

3

1

Progressive Carries

33

16

Ball Recoveries

163

117

Manchester United’s interest, whether a deal is feasible or not, should come as no surprise. As the numbers show, Tonali would be an instant upgrade on Manuel Ugarte and perhaps the difference between taking Amorim’s side into Europe and a place in mid-table once again next season.

Eddie Howe will likely be keen to keep hold of his midfielder, however. Full of praise, the Newcastle boss told reporters earlier this season: “We’ve seen that in recent games from a defensive viewpoint now more than an attacking viewpoint, where he’s sprinting to put out fires for us, nicking balls, intercepting balls, using his athleticism to track runners. He’s been excellent in that respect and think that’s really helped the team.”

Best signing since Bruno: Man Utd pushing to land "best ST on the market"

While there is certainly more than one issue at Manchester United, much of the current problems can be centred around the long-standing woes of one key position – centre-forward.

Since arriving from Atalanta on a £64m deal back in 2023, Rasmus Hojlund has just scored 24 goals in 88 games in all competitions. Another Serie A import, Joshua Zirkzee, scored just seven times during his injury-curtailed debut campaign in Manchester.

Rasmus Hojlund

Prior to Hojlund’s arrival, Erik ten Hag had been forced to rely on an injury-prone Anthony Martial for much of 2022/23, following Cristiano Ronaldo’s hasty exit, a fact that led to the shock, short-term signing of two-goal loanee, Wout Weghorst.

The January addition of the Dutchman marked the lowest ebb in United’s search for a stop-gap, short-term striker – following the days of Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Edinson Cavani and Odion Ighalo – while the desire for more long-term acquisitions, like Hojlund and Zirkzee, has also backfired.

Season

Player

Goals

2024/25*

Bruno Fernandes

8

2023/24

Bruno Fernandes & Rasmus Hojlund

10

2022/23

Marcus Rashford

17

2021/22

Cristiano Ronaldo

18

2020/21

Bruno Fernandes

18

2019/20

Marcus Rashford & Anthony Martial

17

2018/19

Paul Pogba

13

2017/18

Romelu Lukaku

16

2016/17

Zlatan Ibrahimovic

17

2015/16

Anthony Martial

11

2014/15

Wayne Rooney

12

2013/14

Wayne Rooney

17

2012/13

Robin van Persie

26

That latter pursuit has sparked speculation surrounding the capture of Ipswich Town’s 22-year-old talisman, Liam Delap, although Ruben Amorim’s side need a proven, ready-made goal machine to arrive through the door this summer.

The latest on Man Utd's striker search

Alongside the desire to bring in a new number ten, in the form of Matheus Cunha, the latest reports indicate that the Red Devils are also ramping up their pursuit of Delap, with the Englishman available for £30m this summer, amid Ipswich’s imminent return to the Championship.

The former Manchester City academy graduate has enjoyed a fine season regardless of the club’s collective woes, after scoring 12 Premier League goals, although such a move would still represent a risk, considering he scored just eight times for Hull City in the Championship last term.

With that in mind, RB Leipzig’s Benjamin Sesko is among those seemingly under consideration as a potential upgrade, while The Mirror have only recently reported that Amorim and co are keen on a deal for Napoli’s Victor Osmihen.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

According to the report, the Old Trafford outfit are ‘pushing’ to strike a ‘cut-price’ deal for the Nigerian sensation, with Amorim said to have made the on-loan Galatasaray man his ‘top striker target’.

The belief is that United are keen to strike a bargain £40m deal with the Serie A side, capitalising on the fact that the 26-year-old is set to enter the final year of his current contract back in Naples.

Galatasaray's VictorOsimhenreacts

Amorim is said to ‘favour’ a move for Osimhen, ahead of Delap, and it’s easy to see why…

Why Osimhen could be the best signing since Bruno Fernandes

It has been made clear that INEOS are keen on pursuing a youth-centric approach to transfer dealings, a fact showcased with the recent signings of Patrick Dorgu (20) and Ayden Heaven (18), during the January transfer window.

That desire to plan for the future is all well and good, but United are crying out for figures who can instantly hit the ground running in Manchester. No longer can Amorim and co afford to play the waiting game.

Going down the route of signing the likes of Hojlund simply hasn’t worked, with the Old Trafford hierarchy needing to snap up players entering their peak years – much like with the capture of Bruno Fernandes in January 2020.

From his Man of the Match performance against Wolverhampton Wanderers on debut, the Portuguese playmaker has looked every bit a Manchester United player. Fast forward just over five years, and the now-30-year-old boasts 96 goals and 85 games in all competitions for the club.

It could be argued that bringing in Osimhen would represent a signing of similar ilk, with the former Lille man having ripped it up wherever he has been, as evidenced by his career tally of 144 goals in 258 club games.

Previously the driving force behind Napoli’s Scudetto success in 2022/23 – in which he scored 26 league goals – the towering striker is currently thriving out in Turkey, having only recently powered to 30 goals for the season across all fronts.

Lauded as the “best striker on the market” by Statman Dave, Osimhen looks like a centre-forward at the peak of his powers – much like Fernandes represented in his final full season at Sporting CP.

Games (starts)

24 (22)

33 (33)

Goals

21

20

Goal frequency

89mins

147mins

Big chances missed

21

7

Big chances created

10

9

Assists

4

13

Key passes*

1.1

3.2

Pass accuracy*

67%

75%

Successful dribbles*

0.6

0.9

Possession lost*

7.7

22.8

While yet to sample Premier League action, Osimhen has proven himself in France, Belgium, Italy and now Turkey, with it unlikely that he’ll find the jump too great a challenge next term.

In the case of Hojlund, United can hardly be too surprised by his current woes, considering he scored just ten goals for Atalanta prior to moving to Manchester. The promising Dane is a player of potential, but in Osimhen, Amorim could find the real deal.

Galatasaray's VictorOsimhenis picture wearing a protective face mask

Indeed, with club legend Gary Neville stating that Fernandes is the only signing of the last decade who has “done more than I thought he would”, perhaps the Napoli outcast could be the best addition since the Portugal star’s arrival.

New Cantona & Berbatov: Man Utd on the verge of signing £90k-p/w "maverick"

Man Utd appear to be closing in on what could prove to be a real marquee move

ByRobbie Walls Apr 22, 2025

It's 4am, do you know how high your ceiling is?

We love using real-life metrics to understand our beloved game better

Alan Gardner16-Sep-2024How high is Josh Hull’s ceiling? These are the sort of questions that keep the Light Roller up at night. And not just ones related to home improvement. Is Sam Billings an air-fryer convert? Does Ravi Bopara own a ride-on lawn mower? Never mind averages and strike rates, this is the good stuff.But anyway – just how high is Hull’s ceiling? It has been the talk of English cricket since Hull, a 6ft 7in left-arm seamer from Leicestershire, was picked for a surprise Test debut a couple of weeks ago. If he’s that tall, you’re probably thinking, then he a high ceiling. Quite likely a “massive” one, as his captain, Ollie Pope, put it in the build-up to his first England appearance.Does it have any nice cornicing, though? And what about the paintwork? Presumably an ornate light fitting is out of the question, with headspace at such a premium.Related

  • The PCB is even more disastrous than usual. Here are the numbers to prove it

  • Ollie Pope admits to 'frustration' after Test summer sweep goes begging

  • WTC scenarios: England's chances take a hit; Sri Lanka, Bangladesh still in contention

  • 'When we came back from 26 for 6, it was a new dimension': how Bangladesh pulled off their greatest feat

You might be wondering what this has to do with Hull’s potential as a Test cricketer – let’s just have a look at his numbers and decide whether he’s any good. But this isn’t how the game works in England anymore, not under Brendon McCullum’s Holistic Cricket Wellbeing Programme (Golf Module optional). Selection is now about attributes and moments. Zak Crawley is our guy to open – it, brother! Shoaib Bashir is a tall spinner with huge hands – get him on a plane to India!Now we have Hull, who had taken two wickets at 182.5 for his county this season, but has size 15 feet and a massive ceiling. And to be fair to Rob Key, McCullum and Co, this Jedi mind-trick stuff seems to be working out: Hull now averages 30.33 in Test cricket, compared to 84.54 in the County Championship.So what’s next? It turns out that, despite his enormous ceiling (as previously mentioned), Hull’s release point is slightly lower than Stuart Broad’s was – somewhere around the level you would hang a nice portrait in your hallway. England do like their raw data, so this will have doubtless been spotted. A plan may already be in place, involving yoga and visualisation techniques. Or maybe some time in the nets. You know, whatever works.And then it’s onwards and upwards, hopefully accompanied by statistics that go through the roof in the right way. Because only in the fullness of time will we come to know whether Josh Hull has the fixtures and fittings to accompany his truly stratospheric ceiling.Won’t even try to think up a joke about Pakistan here, because the PCB will always outdo us•AFP/Getty Images

****

Of course, despite all the attributes and moments, not to mention scintillating entertainment for Joe Public when Pope opted to bowl spin for a bit when the light was bad, England lost the Oval Test to Sri Lanka. Afterwards, Joe Root explained the team’s failure in the following terms: “Coldplay can’t be No. 1 every week.” Which seems to betray a fundamental misunderstanding of how the music industry works, as well as provide an interesting insight into Root’s musical tastes (are such bedwetters even allowed on the Baz boombox?) And, as far as analogies go, it also fails to explain why England have spent exactly zero weeks at No. 1 (on either the ICC rankings or the World Test Championship table) since McCullum took control of the playlist two years ago.

****

Elsewhere on the charts, meanwhile, Pakistan are still playing the old hits: dysfunction, hubris and farce. Barely a year on from Mickey Arthur minting “The Pakistan Way”, his replacement, Jason Gillespie, is discovering that the only way is down, as a 2-0 home defeat to Bangladesh extended their losing streak under Shan Masood’s captaincy to five Tests in a row. Afterwards, Masood attempted to put his team’s struggles into a context everyone can understand. “You can’t prepare for science and then sit a maths exam,” he said. “If you’re being tested for maths, you study maths. To play red-ball cricket, you must play red-ball cricket.” The PCB’s response, meanwhile, has been to come up with an entirely new curriculum in the form of the Champions Cup – proving themselves once again to be top of the class in shambling ineptitude.

Virat Kohli is India's slowest-scoring batter in T20 internationals. Should he go down the order?

In T20, how quickly a player scores depends on how quickly they accelerate, not on their strike rate at the end

Kartikeya Date06-Dec-2022When cricket teams lose, the tendency among supporters is to look for scapegoats. These tend not to have anything to do with the team’s competitiveness, but rather focus on “respectability”. Thus, when India lose a Test match or Test series, attention is inevitably drawn to the batters, though it is the bowlers who couldn’t bowl the opposition out twice. In T20, the blame tends to be directed at the batters who score the fewest runs, though it is the speed of run-scoring that determines competitiveness.In T20 matches the field is spread, and so singles are on offer pretty much on every ball a batter faces. So producing a high average is not very difficult (compared to doing so in Test cricket or even ODI cricket) if a player is prepared to score slow enough.Virat Kohli’s scoring rate after 4008 runs in T20Is stands at 137.96. Let’s say it is 138 runs per 100 balls faced. Compared to other players, that appears to be a healthy scoring rate. That is until you consider how long it takes him to achieve that rate. This is given in the table below. Kohli’s average T20I innings lasts 27.1 balls, from which he produces 37.5 runs. The same figures for the next 14 most prolific T20I batters for India are in the table below Kohli’s figures.Related

India's T20 approach needs a reboot, not a refresh

T20 openers are more conservative than they need to be

T20 chases are won and lost in the first ten overs, not the last ten

Immediately below Kohli in the table are India’s current opening pair. Let’s say that they both score at the same rate as him. Except, that they survive 20 and 24 balls per innings respectively compared to Kohli’s 27. This means that they get to that scoring rate quicker. The last column below gives the difference between Kohli’s scoring rate and that of other players after the average number of balls of the other player’s innings. Kohli scores 5.7% slower than Rohit Sharma, 5.2% slower than KL Rahul, 27% slower than Suryakumar Yadav, and so on.

The ball-by-ball record of T20 internationals gives each player’s average score after each ball of their innings. All five other batters in the current India line-up accelerate faster than Kohli does. This means that they attempt boundaries more frequently than Kohli does, and that’s why they get out earlier more often than he does.Kartikeya DateThe temptation, especially if one is a fan of Kohli, is to ask, “Why focus on Kohli, who made more runs than anybody else in the tournament?” The above is the answer. T20 is not a game for accumulators. It is a game for plunderers.Teams have ten wickets to spend over 120 balls – 12 balls per wicket, compared to 30 balls per wicket in ODIs, and roughly 62 balls per wicket in Tests (the average Test innings lasts just over 100 overs in the modern era). So we can say that for a player’s innings to not be considered a failure, the player should not be dismissed in their first 12 balls. But we also don’t want the player to score slowly just to survive 12 balls. Which is why we also use the expected runs from that delivery in the comparison.The expected runs from each ball are estimated as the average runs scored from a given delivery. This is defined in terms of three variables at the time the delivery is bowled: (a) the number of balls remaining in the innings, (b) the number of wickets in hand, and (c) the innings scoring rate at the start of the delivery. For example, after 50 balls, with two wickets lost and a current scoring rate of six runs per over in T20, the 51st ball of the innings is expected to produce 1.061 runs. Given a current scoring rate of nine runs per over, the same delivery is expected to produce 1.304 runs. After 80 balls, with two down, a current scoring rate of nine runs per over produces an expected-runs estimate of 1.518 runs per ball.Note that these are actual average runs from such deliveries available in the record. As more and more T20 fixtures are played, this expected runs record will become “smoother”. An alternative approach would be to train a linear model, which uses the same three inputs and estimates outputs for a given (balls, wickets, economy) input, but here I use the average runs from deliveries in the T20 record.

We can now organise T20 innings into four categories:
1. Failures: The player is dismissed within 12 balls and scores fewer than the expected runs from the balls faced.2. Cameos: The player is dismissed within 12 balls and scores more than the expected runs from the balls faced.3. Successes: The player faces at least 12 balls and scores more than the expected runs from the balls faced.4. Under Par: The player faces at least 12 balls and scores less than the expected runs from the balls faced.The distribution of Rohit Sharma’s T20 international innings according to the classification above is in this graph.Kartikeya DateThe distribution of innings across these categories in all T20 internationals for India’s top six batters in the 2022 World Cup is below. Kohli plays Under-Par innings more frequently than any other player. Note the high rate of Failures and Under-Par innings for Hardik Pandya, who bats later in the innings than players who regularly bat in the top four, and so is at the crease when the expected runs from each delivery are higher than they are in the first half of the T20 innings.

When only 120 balls are available to the team in the innings, acceleration in run-scoring is as significant as scoring. Kohli’s scoring rate in his first 27 balls (the number of balls he faces in his average innings), is 128.6 runs per 100 balls faced. Rohit Sharma’s scoring rate in his first 20 balls is 127.6. KL Rahul’s scoring rate in his first 24 balls is 134.1. Note that this comparison provides a picture that is distinct from the one provided in the first table in this article. In that table, scoring rates are compared relative to dismissal rates (X balls), with faster dismissal rates indicating propensity to take greater risks earlier. Rohit’s scoring rate in T20Is is 139 runs per 100 balls faced, and he is dismissed once every 19.8 balls. But if you consider only his first 20 balls his scoring rate is 127.6. This provides a picture of different rates of acceleration between these players.In the table above, readers will also note that while one in four of Pandya’s innings in which he lasts less than 12 balls are Cameos (Failure and Cameo percentages add up to 45.8, and Cameos are about 25% of that total). One out of five of Kohli’s innings of this type are Cameos (4.7% Cameos, 18.7% Failures). KL Rahul starts even slower than Kohli (4.7% Cameos, 23.5% Failures), but if he lasts 12 balls, the majority of his 12-ball-plus innings are Successes, while only two out of five such innings by Kohli are Successes.However the record is considered, it shows that Kohli is a slow-scoring T20 player as a rule. It is only in the slog that he opens out. A consequence of this is that out of the 120 deliveries available, a large number go uncontested, and are unavailable to other batters. India’s problem here is not as acute as Pakistan’s. Pakistan have both Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam who have T20 scoring profiles similar to Kohli’s. Nevertheless it remains a problem for India, much as Kane Williamson’s difficulties remain a problem for New Zealand.There is a lot of discussion in the media about India needing to set up separate squads with separate coaches for each format. As these questions are considered, one issue would be whether players with the scoring profile of Virat Kohli or Kane Williamson are good fits in T20 top orders.India may not be able to match England’s versatility in the short run (England could field six allrounders in their XI in the T20 World Cup final), but they could potentially front-load their hitting talent and use someone like Kohli at No. 6, as insurance, instead of using him to anchor the innings from one end at the top of the order. This will ensure the necessary acceleration, and provide the assurance of there being a backstop in case of early wickets (which is inevitable from time to time). This will reduce the frequency of Under-Par innings from India’s top order and raise the ceiling for the scores India can produce.If the idea is, as many observers have noted, that India need a reboot, then part of this reboot ought to be to take seriously the proposition that T20 is a contest of efficiency. This will require measurements that go beyond basic scoring rates, which can be deceptive, especially for top-order T20 bats.

Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy quarter-finals: All you need to know

With IPL auction just around the corner, national selectors and talent scouts could keenly watch out for players they could shortlist

Shashank Kishore25-Jan-2021Karnataka vs PunjabKarnataka are the defending champions. Punjab are looking to shed bridesmaid status. When these two teams met in the league phase, Siddarth Kaul picked up a hat-trick and Prabhsimran Singh made a bruising unbeaten 89 to make light work of Karnataka’s target of 126.Punjab finished the league phase with an all-win record, while Karnataka just managed to sneak through on net run rate despite winning four out of five matches. Going into the final day of the league phase, they needed three results to go their way, and luckily for them, the stars aligned.Manish Pandey is unavailable due to a tennis elbow. Karun Nair’s prolonged bad patch is now into its third year, Devdutt Padikkal is yet to hit top gear and Shreyas Gopal has been in and out of the side. The bowling has blown hot and cold, and with K Gowtham unavailable due to net-bowler duties with the Indian team for the upcoming England series, Karnataka will need a collective effort.For Punjab, Prabhsimran and Abhishek Sharma have swatted bowling attacks to the extent that the middle order has hardly had a look-in, but there’s experience to bank on in the form of Mandeep Singh, Anmolpreet Singh, and Gurkeerat Mann.Himachal vs Tamil NaduThe Dinesh Karthik-led Tamil Nadu not only dominated the group stages, but also had an air of intimidation to their performances. Four of their five wins came in chases after those games were set up by the spin trio of R Sai Kishore, M Ashwin and B Aparajith; the fifth was set up by the batsmen, led by N Jagadeesan. Sandeep Warrier has given their attack some pace and control upfront with the new ball.Himachal, meanwhile, have come through the tough way, staving off competition from Gujarat to finish as the team with the second-best net run rate from the Elite pool. Their defense of 141 against Gujarat proved to be crucial to their qualification, and the win was carved out by Rishi Dhawan courtesy an unbeaten 43 and two wickets. Once touted a serious India prospect, he has slipped under the radar and performances like those should help him at least come back into the IPL radar.Haryana vs BarodaJayant Yadav, Yuzvendra Chahal, Mohit Sharma, and Rahul Tewatia give Haryana the kind of experience they have been yearning for. That they have got here having convincingly beaten Delhi, consisting Ishant Sharma, Shikhar Dhawan and Nitish Rana among others, tells you how well they’ve gelled as a unit. Along the way, they also had to stave off a serious fight from Kerala, who fizzled out after starting the tournament with a bang.Up against them is a side that has punched above its weight to get here. The build-up to their tournament wasn’t the best, with senior allrounder Deepak Hooda leaving the camp after a tiff with Krunal Pandya. Then, Krunal, the captain, had to leave the camp due to the death of his father, leaving Kedar Devdhar with a relatively inexperienced side. Lukman Meriwala, the fast bowler, has been key to them bowling out two accomplished sides in Maharashtra and Chhattisgarh for sub-100 totals. Devdhar himself has taken up the batting responsibility and tops their run charts currently with 226 runs in five innings, including a best of 99 not out against Maharashtra.Rajasthan have developed a good core group of players, like the Chahars who are also key to their respective IPL teams•BCCIBihar vs RajasthanThis may seem as a bit of a mismatch. Bihar didn’t even know the side they’d put out for their first game a week before departure. Two different factions, claiming to run cricket in the state, picked squads amid administrative squabbles. But having got the distraction out of the way, Bihar did well to keep up their side of the bargain by winning four out of five.However, they must also consider themselves massively lucky for a washout between Chandigarh and Nagaland, the other two sides with four wins, pushed them into the knockouts. A result either way in that game could have certainly meant curtains for Bihar. They’ve hardly been troubled, though. The highest of their four chases was a mere 111. Ironically, their serious challenge came from seventh-placed Arunachal, who bowled them out for 122 and then lost by 18 runs.Rajasthan aren’t strangers to administrative issues but seem to be developing a good core group of players, like the Chahars – Deepak and Rahul – who are both capped India players and key to their respective IPL teams, young legspinner Ravi Bishnoi, fast bowler Kamlesh Nagarkoti and Tanveer Ul-Haq and batsman Mahipal Lomror. Deepak Chahar, though, will miss the knockouts due to injury, but Bihar’s inexperience may just help Rajasthan sail through their first knockouts hurdle.

Rookie Pitcher's Parents Share Awesome Moment After Son Shines in Yankee Stadium Debut

Even if you're not a big fan of the New York Yankees and think their mystique is overstated, there's something about a player making their Major League debut at Yankees Stadium that adds just a bit of extra intensity to the moment. And when the player comes out of the gate with a measure of success, well, it's tough to imagine many cooler introductions to the sporting world.

Cam Schlittler fit the bill last night, working into the sixth inning and holding the Seattle Mariners at bay to pick up up a victory in the Yankees' 9-6 win. The 6'6" right-hander impressed right out of the gate, striking out seven batters a formidable fastball.

Everything came together perfectly for him to get the moment of his life as manager Aaron Boone strode out to take him out of the game in the sixth inning. Schlittler received a well-deserved standing ovation from the Bronx crowd and YES' cameras honed in a heartwarming moment from his parents as they shared a hug.

That's the good stuff right there.

It was only a few months ago that Schlitter was pitching for the Somerset Patriots. Now he's out there on a massive stage against a playoff-caliber team making it look easy. Hard to imagine the sense of pride and joy going on in that hug.

The Schlittlers may have more opportunities to tell everyone in their section that there as he slots potentially as a key aide in their quest to win the American League East.

Player reveals Daniel Levy blocked his dream transfer to Chelsea from Tottenham

Former Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy played a major role in stopping one ex-Spurs star from sealing what was a dream switch to Chelsea, with the player making a candid admission.

Tottenham post-Daniel Levy as problems remain at N17

It’s been three months since the Lewis family decided to force Levy into resigning as Lilywhites chairman, following a topsy-turvy 25-year stint in the role.

Levy was barely ever away from the headlines and attracted plenty of criticism, particularly towards the end of his tenure, when fans turned out in droves to protest both his and ENIC’s stewardship of the club.

"ENICOUT" banneroutside Spurs

His exit marked the end of the longest chairmanship in Premier League history, a tenure defined by extraordinary infrastructure development yet marred by agonising near-misses.

His business acumen transformed Tottenham into a financial powerhouse, culminating in the £1.2 billion Tottenham Hotspur Stadium which opened in 2019 and revolutionised the club’s commercial capabilities.

World Football’s highest revenue-generating clubs — 2025

Value

Real Madrid

£1.2 billion

Man City

£727 million

PSG

£700 million

Man United

£668 million

Bayern Munich

£664 million

FC Barcelona

£659.5 million

Arsenal

£621.5 million

Liverpool

£620 million

Tottenham Hotspur

£533 million

Chelsea

£474 million

via Deloitte Money League

Under his stewardship, Spurs competed in Europe over in 18 of the past 20 seasons, establishing themselves among England’s elite despite chronic underinvestment in recruitment compared to their rivals.

The club’s net spend during Mauricio Pochettino’s first four years totalled just £29 million, while Tottenham infamously became the first Premier League side to complete an entire summer window without a single signing in 2018.

That cautious transfer approach became Levy’s defining characteristic, and it drew fierce criticism, alongside their barren trophy haul.

Tottenham reached the Champions League final under Pochettino in 2019, only to dismiss the Argentine four months later despite Spurs’ constant transfer budget restrictions.

Levy’s final season proved very turbulent, with Ange Postecoglou sacked shortly after delivering Europa League glory. Fans had grown tired of the constant managerial churn without meaningful silverware, despite Levy’s long list of appointments including serial winners José Mourinho and Antonio Conte.

Tottenham could prove 'irresistible' to manager who Levy was urged to hire before Frank

He’s on the verge of leaving his current club.

1

By
Emilio Galantini

Dec 2, 2025

Levy’s departure triggered a major restructuring, with former Arsenal CEO Vinai Venkatesham arriving and Thomas Frank replacing Postecoglou.

Peter Charrington assumed the newly-created non-executive chairman role to jump into Levy’s stead, though in a far less involved capacity, with co-sporting directors Fabio Paratici and Johan Lange making up the new leadership team.

Levy, despite his unpopularity among much of the fanbase, undoubtedly left a mark on Spurs which will be remembered for decades to come.

Now, ex-Tottenham favourite Luka Modrić has revealed how the former chairman stopped him from joining London rivals Chelsea.

Luka Modrić reveals Daniel Levy blocked Tottenham transfer to Chelsea

Speaking on the Neuspjeh prvaka show, via ESPN, the now-AC Milan midfielder says that he was eager to join the west Londoners, but Levy told him there was ‘no chance’ that Modric would be allowed to go.

The Croatia legend, who went to enjoy a fantastic season at Tottenham right afterwards, then admitted that it eventually worked out for the best.

Modric is now the most decorated player in his country’s history after a glittering career at Real, with Levy eventually green-lighting his exit to the Bernabeu for £30 million in 2012.

The 40-year-old, who is incredibly still playing at an elite level, made over 150 appearances for Spurs, scoring 17 goals, and comes as one of the best signings of Levy’s tenure for just £16.5 million from Dinamo Zagreb.

Alex Cora to Miss Monday's Red Sox Game for Special Reason

Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora is slated to miss his team's series-opening game Monday against the New York Mets according to a report Sunday from ESPN and the . His absence is for a good reason though, as his daughter, Camila, is graduating from Boston College.

The Red Sox are in the midst of a 10-game home stand that continues with their three-game series against the National League East-leading New York Mets starting Monday. Ahead of Boston's rubber match with the Atlanta Braves Sunday, Cora opened up about the special day for his family.

"It's going to be a very special day—one that I'm not going to miss," Cora said pregame Sunday via ESPN and the . "I 100% will miss the game for that. I will do that any given day. It's going to be a very special day for us."

The Red Sox are coming off a thrilling win over the Braves Saturday night thanks to a walk-off home run from Rafael Devers—the first of his career. The win snapped a four-game losing streak for Boston.

Without Cora Monday, bench coach Ramón Vázquez will serve as manager according to .

Flamengo anuncia renovação de Bruno Henrique; veja tempo de contrato

MatériaMais Notícias

O Flamengo anunciou neste sábado (6) a renovação com o atacante Bruno Henrique. O novo vínculo do jogador, um dos remanescentes do histórico time de 2019, com o Rubro-Negro vai até 31 de dezembro de 2026.

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Carinhosamente apelidado de “Rei dos Clássicos” pela torcida do Mais Querido, Bruno Henrique é um dos maiores ídolos da história do clube. No time da Gávea desde 2019, o craque soma 86 gols e 47 assistências em 224 jogos, segundo o site “ogol”.

➡️ Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

Bruno agora tem mais dois anos no Rio de Janeiro para seguir escrevendo o seu nome na história do Rubro-Negro. O currículo de conquistas não é nada modesto: são três Campeonatos Cariocas, duas Libertadores, dois Brasileiros, duas Supercopas do Brasil, uma Recopa Sul-Americana e uma Copa do Brasil.

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