Cook and Root leave the highlights for others to judge

The discipline displayed by Joe Root and Alastair Cook proved that highlights packages are not the best means of judging the merits of Test cricketers

George Dobell at Old Trafford22-Jul-2016In the aftermath of defeat at Lord’s, it was suggested that future England teams could be selected by the use of video highlights.This, we were told, would empower the England team management to pick players without the filter of other selectors.But imagine you were to watch a highlights package of England’s batting on the first day at Old Trafford. As well as Joe Root’s gorgeous back-foot drives – surely among the most beautiful strokes in contemporary cricket – and Alastair Cook’s straight drives – a less characteristic stroke – you would also have seen four sparkling boundaries from James Vince. One of them, a cover drive off Yasir Shah, was as pretty a shot as was seen all day. On such evidence, you could be forgiven for concluding that Vince was every bit as good a player as the other two.But it’s not the good shots that make the difference. Most professional batsmen can put away the half-volley and long-hop. Many boundaries look attractive.What separates the good – and they’re all good players – from those good enough to make it at Test level is the judgment of when to play and when to leave; when to attack and when to defend. As ever with Test cricket, it is as much the shots that are not played, as those that are, that make the difference.So, a highlights package might not include the many deliveries that Root left outside off stump. They might not show him taking a short ball on the shoulder when he realised that, should he attempt a shot, he risked pulling the ball to the two men out for the stroke. They might not illustrate the extra discipline and patience he showed when he swept or pulled – both shots brought his dismissal at Lords; both shots here were studiously played into the ground – or the fact that both men played straighter than in the first Test, or that, in Cook’s case, he played his forward defensive strokes with increased conviction to ensure he did not nick off in the same manner as Lord’s. Defensive shots and leaves tend not to make highlights packages.But they are the moments that make the difference. And as Vince, Alex Hales and Gary Ballance reflect on their performances here, they could do a lot worse than learn from the examples provided by Cook and Root.Hales, to be fair, was beaten by a fine inswinger. Albeit one that passed through a gap between pad and bat so large you could reverse a Winnebago through it. But perhaps the reason for Hales’ reluctance to get forward was an incident a few balls earlier when he had, on 6, sliced an attempted drive to gully and been fortunate to survive. Determined not to be lured into a similar error, he found his feet glued to the crease.Alastair Cook and Joe Root anchored England with a stand of 185•AFPThe worrying aspect of Vince’s Test experience so far is that he does not appear to be learning. Just as he departed at Lord’s, chasing one angled across him and slicing an attempted drive to slip, so he fell here. To make matters worse, he had already survived a chance to slip on 6 as a result of the same loose shot. He just makes it too easy for the bowlers.Ballance fell trying to chop a back-of-a-length delivery down to third man. Perhaps surprised by the extra pace of the new ball, his angled bat resulted in a deflection on to his stumps. A straighter bat, a more defensive shot and he would be resuming on the second morning.As it is, Chris Woakes will be the man walking out to bat next to Root. While Woakes’ promotion to No. 6 as nightwatchman (the position in which he made his Test debut in 2013) is, on one hand, frustrating – it leaves Moeen Ali batting at No. 9 – it was also understandable. He arguably has the tightest technique of any batsman outside the top three. Almost immediately upon arriving at the crease, he played an identical delivery to the one that dismissed Ballance straight back down the pitch: the benefits of a straight, dead bat might not make a highlights package, but they can make the difference in a career.Most of all, this was a day that showed England’s continuing reliance upon Root and Cook. Both men showed they had learned the lessons of Lord’s and both men showed a willingness to accept the responsibility that has been thrust their way and the desire to work for their runs. As Cook put it, they have talked about being the leaders in this batting line-up; here they backed up their talk with words.”As captain you might talk a little bit more than the other players,” he said. “So sometimes it’s nice that the actions back up some of the words you’ve been saying.”Cook will never play a drive with the fluency of Vince. But he now has 29 Test centuries. The message for Vince is pretty clear: Test batting is more about denial than dashing. If he can’t tighten up, if he can’t demonstrate the patience required to graft for his runs; if he can’t learn, much of his future batting will be done at county level.”The ways I got out last week weren’t the best,” Root agreed, “So it was nice to speak about things within the group and then actually go out and deliver it. It’s one thing saying it, and another going out and proving it to the rest of your team-mates.”I worked really hard today to graft. Maybe I didn’t score at the rate I have done previously over the last couple of years, but if that’s what it’s going to take to score big hundreds that’s what I’m going to have to do. I’ve felt in good touch all summer, but I’ve found some stupid ways to get out.”Looking back at last week, there were two quite reckless shots. You want to learn from that, and make sure you don’t make those mistakes again. I was trying to take as much risk out of my batting as possible.”Some caution is required while assessing this England total. This is a good batting surface and Pakistan, in chasing wickets, did not bowl with the discipline required to flourish. England are still at least 150 short of a commanding first-innings total. But they do have a platform and they do have Root and Cook and a whole lot of leaving and defending to thank for it.

Watson fires Royal Challengers to thrilling win

09-May-2016After being asked to bat, Royal Challengers Bangalore were given a blistering start by KL Rahul•BCCIVirat Kohli struggled for fluency during his 21-ball 20•BCCIThe pair put on 63 for the opening wicket, before Rahul missed a sweep off KC Cariappa. He made 42 off 25 balls•BCCITwo balls later, Cariappa had Kohli caught at short cover. Axar Patel bowled Shane Watson in the next over as Royal Challengers slumped to 67 for 3•AFPAB de Villiers, however, was in marauding form, and added 88 for the fourth wicket with Sachin Baby•BCCIDe Villiers struck his fourth fifty of the season before slicing a wide half-volley from Sandeep Sharma to short third man•BCCIM Vijay took a superb running catch to send back Travis Head off the penultimate ball of the innings, but Royal Challengers raced away to 175 for 6•BCCIHashim Amla scored 21 and put on 45 for the opening wicket with Vijay to give Kings XI a steady start•BCCIVijay played some delightful strokes as he dominated a second-wicket stand of 43 with Wriddhiman Saha•BCCIYuzvendra Chahal beat KL Rahul with a legbreak but Rahul recovered after a fumble to run him out. A clean stumping of David Miller off the next ball reduced Kings XI to 88 for 3 after 11 overs•BCCIVijay fought valiantly and added 51 for the fourth wicket with Marcus Stoinis to keep Kings XI afloat•BCCIA short ball from Shane Watson and Mohali’s long boundaries combined to remove Vijay, who holed out to Yuzvendra Chahal at square leg with 37 needed•BCCIStoinis kept the fight alive, but Watson conceded just seven off the penultimate over. Kings XI needed 17 off the last over, but eventually fell short by one run•BCCIWatson finished with 2 for 22 off four overs and was named Man of the Match, as Royal Challengers kept their qualification hopes alive•AFP

Jadeja, Pujara and Vijay given top BCCI contracts

Ravindra Jadeja, Cheteshwar Pujara and M Vijay have been included in Grade A category of annual contracts announced by the BCCI today

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Mar-20171:46

Kalra: Test performers not shortchanged

The BCCI’s contract list for 2016-17

Grade A (Rs 2 crore): Virat Kohli, MS Dhoni, R Ashwin, Cheteshwar Pujara, Ajinkya Rahane, Ravindra Jadeja, M Vijay.
In: Pujara (moved up), Jadeja (up), Vijay (up).
Grade B (Rs 1 crore): Rohit Sharma, KL Rahul, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammed Shami, Ishant Sharma, Umesh Yadav, Wriddhiman Saha, Jasprit Bumrah, Yuvraj Singh.
In: Rahul (moved up), Saha (up), Bumrah, Yuvraj.
Out: Suresh Raina, M Vijay (moved up), Pujara (up), Rayudu (down), Dhawan (down).
Grade C (Rs 50 lakh): Shikhar Dhawan, Ambati Rayudu, Amit Mishra, Manish Pandey, Axar Patel, Karun Nair, Hardik Pandya, Ashish Nehra, Kedar Jadhav, Yuzvendra Chahal, Parthiv Patel, Jayant Yadav, Mandeep Singh, Dhawal Kulkarni, Shardul Thakur, Rishabh Pant.
In: Dhawan (moved down), Rayudu (down), Pandey, Nair, Pandya, Nehra, Jadhav, Chahal, Patel, Jayant, Singh, Thakur, Pant.
Out: Stuart Binny, Mohit Sharma, Varun Aaron, Karn Sharma, Harbhajan Singh, S Aravind, Jadeja (moved up), Saha (up), Rahul (up).

Ravindra Jadeja, Cheteshwar Pujara and M Vijay have broken into the Grade-A category of the new annual contracts announced by the BCCI today. The trio joins Virat Kohli, MS Dhoni, R Ashwin and Ajinkya Rahane in the top bracket, the upgrade recognition of a prolific home season. The annual retainership for this grade of contract has also increased to INR 2 crore (USD 300,000 approx), double what was offered to Grade-A contract holders when the previous list was out in November 2015. The new contracts are for a year from October 1, 2016, to September 30, 2017.The BCCI has also doubled the retainers for the remaining two categories. Players in Grade B will now earn INR 1 crore (USD 150,000 approx) while those in Grade C will get INR 50 lakh (USD 75,000) per year. The match fee per ODI and T20I has also been increased* from INR 4 lakh to INR 6 lakh (USD 9,000 approx) per ODI and from INR 2 lakh to INR 3 lakh (USD 4,500 approx) per T20I. For Test-match fees, the BCCI has stuck to the decision taken last October to increase the amount from INR 7 lakh (USD 10,000 approx) to INR 15 lakh (USD 23,000 approx).The biggest beneficiaries in the new contracts are the Saurashtra pair of Jadeja and Pujara. The hike for Jadeja, who moved past Ashwin to become the No. 1 Test bowler after the Ranchi Test, is eight times his previous contract, which was worth INR 25 lakh (Grade C). Pujara, who plays only Tests and is currently No. 2 on the batting rankings, will get four times his previous retainer of INR 50 lakh (Grade B).The highest-profile name to miss out on the list of 32 is Suresh Raina; he was not given a contract, having been slotted into Grade B the previous time.KL Rahul and Wriddhiman Saha have moved up into Grade B, while limited-overs specialists Jasprit Bumrah and Yuvraj Singh are awarded contracts (both Grade B) after not featuring in the previous list. Shikhar Dhawan and Ambati Rayudu have moved down from Grade B to C.The decision to revamp the central contracts and match fees was taken by the BCCI management in conjunction with the Supreme-Court appointed Committee of Administrators (CoA). Kohli had conveyed to the BCCI top brass last October that the players wanted their central contracts revised. Reportedly, Kohli met with CoA head Vinod Rai earlier this month, after the Bangalore Test against Australia, to offer his thoughts. The issue was also discussed in several meetings among the CoA, BCCI chief executive officer Rahul Johri and MV Sridhar, the board’s game development manager.Vinod Rai, the chairman of the CoA, said the revision of the central contracts was long overdue. “From 2010 onwards it [the central contracts] has not been been reviewed. So we have taken inputs from lots of people and we have reviewed it,” Rai said. Ramachandra Guha, part of the four-member CoA, said the hike was also an “acknowldgement” of India climbing to No. 1 in Tests.An important consideration for the BCCI in revising the contracts was to safeguard the interests of players like Pujara, who do not play in all three formats and lucrative tournaments like the IPL.*18.00GMT, March 22: The article had previously said the ODI and T20 match fees had been doubled.

Tottenham Could Sign ‘Intelligent’ £30m Eriksen Heir At Hotspur Way

Tottenham Hotspur are set to continue their revolution under Ange Postecoglou, with one more creative target having piqued their interest.

What's the latest on Hakan Calhanoglu to Tottenham?

The latest player in question is Hakan Calhanoglu, with his links to a north London switch coming courtesy of InterLive.it.

Appreciated by the Lilywhites among other English clubs, the report suggests that Inter Milan must keep an eye out on the growing Premier League interest, with special reference to Spurs.

This is due to the €35m (£30m) bid they could be set to make, in an effort to force the hand of the Nerazzurri.

Would Hakan Calhanoglu improve Tottenham?

With a past as a leading attacking midfielder, but having since reverted into more of a well-rounded deep-lying playmaker of late, the Turkey international could offer impeccable balance to Postecoglou's new-look side, and hand James Maddison a perfect new partner with which to kickstart his career at this club alongside.

The early parts of his career in the number ten role have afforded this 29-year-old magician remarkable technical prowess, however with a work rate and defensive know-how that few would have predicted to emerge, Calhanoglu has arguably never been as influential as he is right now.

He starred in the heart of Simone Inzaghi's side that reached the Champions League final, whilst also thriving in the Serie A too.

In fact, his 7.31 average rating in the league was the highest in the entire division. This was a figure largely buoyed by his nine goal contributions, 88% pass accuracy, 2.2 key passes and 1.5 tackles per game, via Sofascore.

This has hardly been a surprising season though, as former boss Stefano Pioli always expected big things from him. Especially given he had branded him a "leader on the pitch and "an intelligent player" only in 2020.

Having slowly slipped further down the pitch as he has grown older, it is hard not to draw comparisons with another ageing creator in Christian Eriksen.

The Denmark international spent seven fine years in north London, recording 159 goal contributions across 305 games, and becoming a fine fan favourite before his eventual exit to the Milan club in question. The 2016/17 season arguably saw him at his offensive best, with his 7.46 average rating feeding into the eight goals and 15 assists he would record in the league, via Sofascore.

Given the 31-year-old now plies his trade at Manchester United, in a role similar to the one Calhanoglu occupies for Inter, these similarities are only intensified.

christian-eriksen-tottenham-hotspur

To place him alongside Maddison, who would offer a much-needed injection of goals to the Spurs midfield, could see them strike up a fine partnership which is both balanced enough to defend, but potent enough to threaten opposition defences.

Last term the former Leicester City man notched ten goals and nine assists in a league campaign where his team would fall to the drop. However, averaging 1.7 tackles per game suggest he is more than capable of operating alongside another, to share both the offensive and defensive workload.

As Postecoglou has earned success in the past by deploying two attack-minded eights within his systems, these two creative leaders could provide the ideal balance to spearhead a press and back up the imperious Harry Kane.

When could Liverpool win the Premier League title? Arne Slot's men continue march to English crown after opening 12-point lead over Arsenal

Liverpool’s pursuit of a Premier League title received a major boost when they sealed a 3-1 comeback victory over Southampton at Anfield.

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The Reds are inching closer to their 20th league titleHave opened up a 12-point lead at the top with ArsenalCould potentially wrap up the championship in AprilFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

With 70 points after 29 games, Liverpool are now well-placed to secure the title, needing just 16 points from the remaining nine games to guarantee the championship. Even with Arsenal’s current ability to reach a maximum of 85 points if they win all their remaining fixtures, the gap is significant, and the Reds are edging ever closer to their record-matching 20th Premier League crown.

AdvertisementAFPWHEN COULD LIVERPOOL WIN THE TITLE?

The question now is: when can they mathematically seal the deal?

The earliest possible date for Liverpool to clinch the title is April 13, when they face West Ham at Anfield. For that to happen, Arsenal would need to lose their next two games, against Fulham and Everton, while the Reds win theirs against the same opponents, albeit with the Merseyside derby first. Arsenal would then be 18 points back, meaning a loss to Brentford in their next fixture would allow Liverpool to win the league by taking a point against the Hammers.

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Liverpool’s schedule in the lead-up to May could prove favourable as they face just one team currently in the top half of the table – Fulham. Moreover, they will be playing three of their five Premier League matches at Anfield, which is a massive bonus. If Liverpool do win the title against the Irons, Arsenal may be forced into giving their rivals a guard of honour when the two sides meet on May 10.

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR LIVERPOOL?

Liverpool face Everton in a Merseyside derby on Wednesday before taking on Fulham at the weekend.

NXGN 2025: Top 15 English teenage wonderkids in women's football

While Sarina Wiegman's Lionesses are preparing for their Euros defence, the next generation are showing that the future is also bright

There might only be one England player in the NXGN 2025 list, but that is more to do with the worldwide depth in quality when it comes to teenage talent in the women's game, rather than any lack of candidates in a country that won the last European Championship and reached the final of the most recent World Cup.

While those accolades are related to the senior game, the Young Lionesses have come close to replicating such feats over the last couple of years, too. It's been a terrific two years for England's Under-17s, with a run to the semi-finals of the Euros in 2023 bettered in 2024 by their qualification for the final of that competition and a fourth-placed finish at the World Cup. The U19s also had a big 2024, reaching the semi-finals of their Euros again after 11 years of either failing to qualifying or failing to get out of the group stage.

Such results at major tournaments serve to underline the quality coming through the England youth ranks, quality that Sarina Wiegman has shown she will reward with senior call-ups when the time is right, as players like Aggie Beever-Jones, Laura Blindkilde Brown and Ruby Mace will attest to.

So, who are the potential future Lionesses that fans of the women's game in England should be keeping an eye on? GOAL picks out 15 players who were born on or after January 1, 2006, who could develop into stars…

Getty ImagesMichelle Agyemang (Arsenal)

England's sole representative on the NXGN 2025 list, Michelle Agyemang's consistent goal-scoring record for the Young Lionesses caught the eye a while back. She netted four times in three games at the 2023 U17 Euros, three times in four games at the 2024 U19 Euros and she appears to be taking the step up to the U23s well, too, netting twice against Germany in February, just two weeks after her 19th birthday.

No doubt aiding her development this season is a loan spell in the Women's Super League, after playing for Watford in the Championship last term. Agyemang signed for Brighton back in September and has been developing well in Dario Vidosic's unorthodox system and style, playing a little wider at times in a role she believes is helping her to improve her creativity and ability in one-v-one situations.

It's as a centre-forward that she will hope she can come to the fore with England and Arsenal, her parent club, in due course though, and she certainly has the potential to be a star on both fronts given her wonderful talent and complementary physical profile.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesLola Brown (Chelsea)

One of three England players to make the Team of the Tournament at last year's U17 Euros, Lola Brown was electric in her team's run to the final. The 17-year-old racked up two goals and two assists in four games, with the highlight of her campaign a match-winning finish against France in the final round of group games to secure top spot for the Young Lionesses, and she put in some great performances at the U17 World Cup later in the year, too.

However, perhaps the greatest indication of her promise is that Chelsea boss Sonia Bompastor has started to give the youngster a look-in with the Blues' first-team. Brown has been in the squad regularly this season and made her senior debut back in November, in the Champions League win over Celtic. That's no mean feat in a squad as star-studded as Chelsea's.

With a desire to run at her marker to try and make things happen, it doesn't take long to realise why Brown is so exciting either. Surrounded by top forwards like Lauren James on a day-to-day basis, she'll be learning plenty and, given the style of play of many of the club's wingers, unlikely to lose her direct and positive approach.

Getty ImagesMadison Earl (Arsenal)

Arsenal is the best-represented club on this list by some distance, with their academy having a strong record at producing plenty of homegrown talent. With players like Leah Williamson and Lotte Wubben-Moy there to look up to, these teenagers can see a genuine pathway into the first team, and Madison Earl is one of those looking to follow it.

A bright attacking midfielder, Earl won the Golden Ball as Arsenal's U21s won the prestigious FIFA Youth Cup in May 2024, despite being just 17 years old at the time. She's a stalwart in the U19s and boasts an impressive goal-scoring record throughout the youth teams, especially for a midfielder.

After signing her first professional contract at Arsenal back in January, the teenager is now looking to get some senior experience under her belt. She spent the first half of her 2024-25 season at Bristol City and is now with Sheffield United, where she'll hope to provide an attacking spark that can steer the Blades clear of the Championship's relegation battle.

Getty ImagesLaila Harbert (Arsenal)

Another product of the Gunners' academy, Laila Harbert is a more defensive-minded midfielder who also signed her first professional deal at Arsenal in January. Captain of England's U17s, her leadership was evident throughout a remarkable 2024 for the Young Lionesses, as they reached the U17 Euros final and the last four at the World Cup a few months later.

She's been racking up plenty of experience on loan in the Championship over the last couple of years, too, starting 11 times for Watford in the 2023-24 campaign and finding herself an immediate regular at Southampton following a January switch. That will do Harbert's development wonders as she looks to ascend to new levels, having already shown so much promise to date.

Important Leeds player could now leave in 2025 after talks held with Farke

A Leeds United player who earns £70,000 a week is wanted by two clubs ahead of the January transfer window opening, and he could leave after talks with Daniel Farke.

Leeds United transfer rumours

January could be a busy month for the Whites, as manager Farke is surely going to want to freshen his side up ahead of the second half of the season, where he will hope it ends with them being promoted to the Premier League.

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One player who could be heading to Elland Road in the New Year is Louie Barry. The forward has been sensational in League One this season on loan at Stockport County, and it looks as though parent club Aston Villa are set to recall him in January and then loan him out to a Championship team. Leeds are among the teams interested but face a battle to win the race, as Sheffield United and Middlesbrough are also chasing his signature.

The Yorkshire side are also among the teams interested in signing Ben Godfrey from Atalanta. The centre-back’s move to Italy hasn’t quite worked out, and he could soon be returning to England. Leeds are interested in signing Godfrey, as Farke has worked with the player before at Norwich City, but any deal weighs on them securing promotion to the top flight; therefore, they could miss out on the transfer if a Premier League club makes a move next month.

£70k-p/w Leeds player wanted by two new clubs in January

While incomings will be on Farke’s mind, he may also have to deal with an exit, as according to TEAMtalk, Leeds’ Patrick Bamford is wanted by Genoa and Wrexham in January and an exit could happen.

Bamford, who earns £70,000 a week at Elland Road, has been at Leeds since 2018 but has played eight times for the Whites in the league this season, failing to start any of those games.

Despite his injury troubles, both Genoa and Wrexham are interested in signing the experienced forward in the New Year. Both teams are keeping an eye on his situation, but Farke is keen to have depth to his attacking options, and that makes a move in January for Bamford more difficult, but it hasn’t been ruled out.

Apps

196

Goals

60

Assists

22

The 31-year-old is said to be considering his future options ahead of the transfer window opening and has spoken to the Leeds boss about his lack of playing time. Bamford is currently behind Joel Piroe and Mateo Joseph in the pecking order, and if promotion to the Premier League is sealed, his game time could decrease even more.

Farke still sees Bamford as an “important” part of the team, but this report states that a move away in 2025 is “realistic,” as he is under contract until 2026, but an exit will depend on whether Leeds can bring in a replacement.

Scouts sent: Spurs pushing for "monster" £25m Gray upgrade in January

Tottenham Hotspur were a day late and a dollar short in the Premier League last season, but there were patent signs of growth under Ange Postecoglou.

The Australian coach had fashioned an exciting outfit from one of drab and colourless football, reigniting the spark within Lilywhites supporters’ hearts and planting the hope of something more, success of a tangible nature.

Tottenham Hotspur managerAngePostecoglou

It’s been chequered. Up and down. This year, tenth-place Tottenham have outscored every team in the Premier League this season but lack synergy and resistance at times, still capable of an unexplainable capitulation.

That needs to change, and while Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero form a defensive duo as fearsome as any across the continent, both have found themselves unavailable on numerous occasions since the start of last season.

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Dejan Kulusevski

64

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Pape Matar Sarr

60

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Brennan Johnson

59

4.

Pedro Porro

58

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Gulielmo Vicario

55

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Cristian Romero

48

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Micky van de Ven

40

Spurs need a new centre-back, to be sure.

Spurs eyeing centre-back in 2025

According to Caught Offside, Tottenham are preparing to move for Inter Milan star Yann Bisseck, though the defender is also on West Ham United’s radar.

Spurs might have a more appealing proposal but the Hammers have been emboldened in their chances due to technical director Tim Steidten, with the German connection possibly handing them the edge in negotiations.

Inter Milan defender Yann Bisseck

Nonetheless, Tottenham have sent scouts to watch the talented centre-half in action, and given that he could be available for a smart £25m fee, there’s a real sense that this one could be completed in the new year.

Why Spurs need to sign Yann Bisseck

Tottenham were active during the 2023/24 January transfer market and there’s no reason why Daniel Levy wouldn’t enforce a shrewd signing or two if it stands a good chance of elevating the north Londoners’ campaign.

As already discussed, Romero and Van de Ven have been sidelined far too often given the standing they hold in the Tottenham squad, and it’s clear that another member in the rearguard could make a world of difference.

Radu Dragusin joined from Genoa for £27m one year ago and Ben Davies continues to be a dependable and experienced presence.

Current issues have seen 18-year-old Archie Gray chucked into a defensive role alongside his Romanian peer, and while he’s performed admirably, Postecoglou’s forced hand only heightens the need for a talented player like Bisseck.

Bisseck, yet to make his Germany debut, has been something of a late bloomer, playing for AGF in Denmark until signing for Inter in a deal worth roughly £5m in 2023.

He won the Scudetto last season, only starting nine Serie A fixtures but scoring twice, completing 93% of his passes and winning 61% of his ground duels, as per Sofascore. It’s no wonder he was described as a “monster” by one keen-eyed analyst.

Inter Milan's Yann Bisseck

It’s at no discredit to Gray’s precocious qualities that Bisseck is the perfect profile for Postecoglou. The hulking defender stands at 6 foot 4 and would be playing in his natural position. Gray is deceptively tall at 6 foot but he moonlights at centre-half and is better placed in the middle of the field, when possible.

As per FBref, Bisseck ranks among the top 4% of centre-backs across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for goals scored, the top 16% for pass completion, and the top 1% for progressive carries per 90, making an interesting comment on his varied skillset and how that could be harnessed by Postecoglou.

Tottenham beat off Brentford to bring Gray to north London in the summer, with the teenager leaving boyhood club Leeds United for a fee that could rise to £40m.

He’s versatile and dynamic, with an eye-catching technical ability and an unflappable mindset allowing him to surge head and shoulders above other hopefuls in his age bracket.

Many young players are shuffled across a range of positions as they look to streamline their youthful avidity, but Gray’s positional flexibility is something to behold.

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Even so, he’s not a centre-back and should not be saddled with regular football in an area that does not best serve his skills, even if he does play remarkably well and invariably showcases his ‘elite mentality’, as journalist Henry Winter said.

It just goes to show that Bisseck would be the perfect addition. The German defender is robust and also provides the balanced and multi-layered football that Ange’s fluid outfit demands.

Gray started at centre-back against Manchester United on Thursday night, and though Fraser Forster’s inexplicable errors provided the drama on what should have been a concessional second half, you can’t help but feel that with established central defenders Romero and Van de Ven in the mix, Spurs might have held their nerve with a bit more steel and assurance.

Therefore, it seems crucial that Tottenham make their move in January. Allowing West Ham to boost their hopes under Julen Lopetegui with one of Levy’s top winter targets is unthinkable. Moreover, it will hamper Tottenham’s chances of making headway in the capital and leapfrogging the likes of Arsenal and Chelsea.

It’s already starting to look like it’s going to be a real scrap for a top-four Premier League finish, and given that Spurs are into the semi-finals of the Carabao Cup, will look to wade deep into the FA Cup and the Europa League too, a lack of depth unravelling the good work would be inexcusable. Bisseck needs to be signed.

Kulusevski 2.0: Spurs target unreal Maddison upgrade in £40m "diamond"

The incredible talent could be a game-changer for Spurs.

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Tamim and Mahmudul start strongly after Mathews 199 drags Sri Lanka to 397

Nayeem Hasan was the star of the Bangladesh bowling show, ending with career-best figures of 6 for 105

Mohammad Isam16-May-2022Stumps Angelo Mathews’ marathon innings in the oppressive May heat of Chattogram led Sri Lanka to a competitive total, but it was heartbreak for him as he was dismissed on 199, the 12th batter to record the score in the history of Test cricket. Sri Lanka put up 397, having started the day on 258 for 4, and Bangladesh responded well, Tamim Iqbal and Mahmudul Hasan Joy scoring 76 runs in 19 overs to finish the second day with the deficit down to 321 runs.Before Tamim (35*) and Mahmudul (31*) controlled the last hour-and-some of the day, Chattogram boy Nayeem Hasan returned career-best Test figures of 6 for 105 to keep Sri Lanka in check. He took early wickets on both days, but his big strike was Mathews, the last Sri Lankan wicket to fall. It was the last ball of the 153rd over, and Mathews, who faced 397 balls across two days, played a tired-looking hoick towards midwicket, where Shakib Al Hasan took an easy catch.Mathews threw his head back in disappointment as he trudged off, even as the Bangladesh fielders rushed to congratulate him for his big effort.Despite failing to get to what would have been his second Test double-century, Mathews’ was a massive effort. His 199 was one more than what the rest of the batters – including extras – combined to score. But more than just the runs, he kept Sri Lanka’s fight going for over nine hours in scorching heat. He managed to get them out of tricky periods on the first day, and then battled through a batting collapse on the second morning when they lost four wickets for nine runs in 3.3 overs.Mathews, however, had a lucky escape early on the second morning when he edged Khaled Ahmed in the fourth over. But neither the bowler nor the wicketkeeper or any of the close-in fielders seemed to have noticed the noise, which was later picked up by the broadcasters. He was on 119 at the time.Mahmudul Hasan Joy and Tamim Iqbal saw off the final session for Bangladesh•BCBSri Lanka went swimmingly thereafter, with Mathews hitting a couple of fours, while Dinesh Chandimal struck the ball well through the covers and down the ground. But less than 20 minutes before lunch, Chandimal fell for 66, the second-highest score of the innings, when he missed an attempted reverse sweep off Nayeem. Nayeem removed Niroshan Dickwella in the same over, with a delivery that went straight on from around the wicket.Shakib then struck with two wickets in the first over after lunch. First, Ramesh Mendis missed a pull to be bowled by a low arm-ball, and then Lasith Embuldeniya missed a straight one from around the wicket.At 328 for 8, the end seemed around the corner, but Mathews added 47 runs for the ninth wicket with Vishwa Fernando, who stayed in the middle for 84 balls for his unbeaten 17. Vishwa struck three fours, before Mushfiqur Rahim dropped him off Shakib shortly before the tea break. In the next over, Shoriful Islam struck him on the top of his helmet with a bouncer, which forced him to retire hurtShakib fumbled a throw with Asitha Fernando well short of the non-striker’s end in the first over after tea, but Asitha fell eight overs later with Mathews on 192. Vishwa returned, and though Mathews found a boundary – his 19th, to go with one six – the milestone eluded him.Tamim edged Asith to Kusal Mendis at second slip in the second over of the Bangladesh innings, but the fielder dropped the chance. It wouldn’t have counted anyway, as it was a no-ball. But it was a testing period for the openers, as Mahmudul, too, survived a couple of iffy moments. But they stuck it out, getting Bangladesh to safety during a period of the match in which they struggled so much in South Africa last month.

'Sick of hearing how talented this group of players is' – USMNT legend Landon Donovan questions Americans' pride after falling to Canada in Nations League third-place match

Donovan, considered by many the USMNT's greatest player, was critical of the national team after a poor performance vs Canada

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Donovan questions USMNT prideCanada beat U.S. in third-place gameAltidore opts instead to focus on positivesFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Count former U.S. superstar Landon Donovan among those perplexed by the USMNT's poor showing at the CONCACAF Nations League Finals. The Americans suffered back-to-back defeats to Panama and Canada, leading to questions on whether the supposed "Golden Generation" can actually live up to its considerable potential.

Donovan didn't hold back on his assessment of the Americans.

"I’m so sick of hearing how 'talented' this group of players is and all the amazing clubs they play for," Donovan posted on social media. "If you aren’t going to show up and actually give a s!%* about playing for your national team, decline the invite."

AdvertisementWHAT DONOVAN SAIDTHE BIGGER PICTURE

There's been a mood of frustration among former U.S. internationals for Mauricio Pochettino's side, with both the manager and his players getting criticism on broadcasts and social media.

Taylor Twellman questioned whether the U.S. would qualify for the World Cup if they were among the three countries hosting the expanded format.

JOZY ALTIDORE STAYS POSITIVE

Former USMNT star Jozy Altidore, on the other hand, opted to remain positive about the relatively young side.

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