Tottenham ready double-your-money offer for player who’s keen to join Frank

Tottenham are readying a double-your-money offer to sign a player who’s apparently keen to join Thomas Frank’s side, according to a fresh update.

Thomas Frank eyeing January deals amid Spurs pressure

Spurs are currently on a torrid run of form, having won just three of their last 11 matches in all competitions, and are also having to deal with a real injury crisis in certain areas.

To add to their woes in that regard, star winger Mohammed Kudus, who has been their arguable best attacking player this term, is set to miss several matches after picking up an injury against Sunderland.

A new forward was already reportedly high on Frank’s list of January priorities after selling last season’s top scorer Brennan Johnson to Crystal Palace for around £35 million, but this fresh Kudus blow will now bring it even more to the forefront.

The Lilywhites have already seen an offer rejected by Antoine Semenyo, who has instead chosen to join Premier League heavyweights Man City, so it is back to the drawing board for Spurs as they pursue fresh attacking options.

Tottenham set for talks to sign AC Milan target "this week", offer being prepared

The Lilywhites are prepared to spend in January.

ByEmilio Galantini

Dejan Kulusevski and James Maddison are yet to return from their serious injuries too, and in the meantime, Frank has been left desperately short of numbers further forward.

Left-back Destiny Udogie has also missed their last seven matches due to a hamstring injury, meaning Tottenham have been forced to turn to veteran Ben Davies and Djed Spence to cover the Italian.

As such, it is believed that they are eyeing a January move for Souza as potential cover in that area of the pitch.

According to reports this week, the north Londoners are poised to submit a new and improved bid for the Santos left-back after seeing their initial £8.5 million offer rejected.

Now, as per a fresh update from journalist Eduardo Burgos this evening, Spurs have been given encouragement in their pursuit of the Brazilian.

Souza keen to join Tottenham as Spurs ready double-your-money offer

Taking to X, Burgos reports that Souza is keen on the idea of joining Tottenham for various reasons, like the sporting project on offer and the opportunity to live in London.

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He also reveals that Spurs’ second bid for the teenager will be worth nearly ‘double’ their initial offer, with ‘busy days’ expected as Frank’s side try to get him over the line.

Souza, who made 29 appearances for Santos last season, bagging a goal and two assists from full-back, is very highly-rated amid reports that AC Milan and BlueCo are also pondering a move for him.

However, as things stand, it is Spurs who are in pole position to sign the Brazilian Serie A talent this month, and he could be their first arrival of the winter.

Tottenham now in contact to sign "phenomenal" £40m Premier League forward

Spurs are being kept informed about a centre-forward.

ByDominic Lund

Bigger talent than Gabriel: Liverpool in bid to sign £35m “monster”

Liverpool have settled back down in the Premier League top four, and after Chelsea’s draw with Bournemouth on Tuesday, have the chance to go five points clear with a win over Leeds United at Anfield on New Year’s Day.

But there’s no denying Arne Slot’s side are a world away from their title-winning level of last season, and FSG will be looking to utilise the January transfer window to add an elite addition to the mix.

At Manchester City, they have Erling Haaland, while Arsenal’s formidable defensive structure is championed by Brazilian centre-back Gabriel Magalhaes, who dominated as the Gunners thrashed Aston Villa on Tuesday evening.

With Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah winding down, Liverpool have recruited new stars-in-the-making, but it’s clear that the club still need a centre-back to rival the likes of Gabriel.

Liverpool ready to sign Prem star

Some Liverpool fans will be frustrated to miss out on Antoine Semenyo, with the Bournemouth forward among the most dangerous players in the Premier League this season.

But the Reds desperately need a defender. Slot’s system is one Van Dijk or Ibrahima Konate injury away from chaos.

Premier League Top Scorers (25/26)

Player

Apps

Goals

Erling Haaland

18

19

Igor Thiago

18

11

Antoine Semenyo

18

9

Dominic Calvert-Lewin

16

8

Hugo Ekitike

17

8

Danny Welbeck

18

8

Data via BBC Sport

With Giovanni Leoni sidelined for the season with a knee injury, it’s clear that addressing a lack of defensive depth should be the Anfield side’s first port of call.

And according to Liverpool correspondent Lewis Steele, it may well be, with a list of centre-half targets compiled, and Crystal Palace’s Marc Guehi still sitting at the top.

Guehi is out of contract at the end of the season, and it’s felt that Eagles chairman Steve Parish would only let his side’s skipper go at the season’s midpoint if his £35m valuation is met. FSG, understandably, would be hesitant to meet that.

Why Liverpool should sign Marc Guehi

Guehi is accomplished as a Premier League defender, and in 2025, he has played a critical role in winning the FA Cup and Community Shield under Oliver Glasner’s wing.

A “monster in defence”, as has been said by Palace reporter Bobby Manzi, Guehi has fostered his clear qualities in south London over a number of years after being sold by Chelsea before he could show what he could do.

But Liverpool can see his talent and know that by signing the England international, they would land a centre-back with the perfect skillset for a career at the top of the Premier League and the top of European competition too.

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After all, he scrubs up well against someone like Gabriel, who data-driven site FBref actually reveal to be among his most comparable players.

Premier League 25/26 – Gabriel Magalhaes vs Marc Guehi

Stats (per 90)

Gabriel

Guehi

Goals

0.17

0.12

Assists

0.17

0.12

Touches

73.34

63.71

Pass completion (%)

88.5

84.8

Progressive passes

3.56

5.47

Progressive carries

0.50

1.18

Shot-creating actions

1.41

1.41

Ball recoveries

1.49

4.35

Tackles + interceptions

1.91

2.76

Clearances

5.55

5.29

Aerials won

3.31

2.76

Data via FBref

The 25-year-old has also shown that he is going from strength to strength. Sofascore data records that he has won 69% of his aerial duels in the Premier League this season, having only won 54% last term.

Liverpool boast the strongest aerial duel success rate in the division at 57.2% as a collective, and a large part of that is down to Van Dijk and Konate’s dominance in the skies. To lose this crucial defensive asset would be detrimental to a backline already struggling for stability, and Guehi would ensure that Slot’s project glides into the next phase, all the while adding a new flavour of on-the-ball quality.

Gabriel is the talk of the town, but at Liverpool, Guehi would elevate his qualities and his reputation, becoming something truly special and spearheading the Merseysiders to title-winning success.

Needed more than Semenyo: Liverpool leading the race to sign £34m talent

Liverpool are ready to react to opportunities in the January transfer window.

ByAngus Sinclair

Sri Lanka hold advantage over spirited West Indies


Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Malinda Warnapura extended Sri Lanka’s lead without hassle © Getty Images
 

A refreshingly positive West Indian response to a record target of 437 from 113 overs has set up an intriguing conclusion at the Providence Stadium. The day belonged to Sri Lanka who, thanks to half-centuries from Malinda Warnapura and Thilan Samaraweera, declared at 240 for 7, but Dwayne Bravo and Ramnaresh Sarwan’s 74-run stand in 18.3 overs gave West Indies a flicker of hope. Saving this Test remains a long, long way away for the hosts against a side that has a lethal bowler on a last-day track, however benign it may be.Having dismissed West Indies for 280 early on – Jerome Taylor and Daren Powell averted the follow-on – Sri Lanka ventured into their second innings with quick runs in mind. Warnapura backed his first-innings century with an aggressive 62 and Samaraweera hit his first half-century in just shy of two years amid a series of cameos.A negative Chris Gayle spread his field soon into the innings to try and block the boundaries, rather than stack the slip cordon and attempt to get wickets. Michael Vandort began with a series of pleasing square-drives and his favourite shot, the steer past gully, to lead a 43-run stand. Hardly giving Gayle a look as the captain brought himself on in the tenth over, Vandort tickled one to Denesh Ramdin down the leg side for 24 from 40 balls.Warnapura played as he had on day one, scoring a lot of runs through gully and cover point. With no threat on a docile track, he continued to purvey the gaps in the off side with flowing drives and cuts. He went past fifty for the second time in the match with a slash through where slip should have been, just after Kumar Sangakkara (21 from 28) fell trying to work Bravo’s slower ball over the infield in the 23rd over.With a sizeable lead the Sri Lankans didn’t refrain from playing extravagantly. A few bold shots later Warnapura went chasing a very wide delivery from Bravo. Mahela Jayawardene succeeded in timing some beauties in his brisk 33 before he became Sulieman Benn’s first Test wicket, mistiming a pull to midwicket.Taylor defeated Tillakaratne Dilshan for pace, shaving a full delivery in to trap him plumb in front, to leave Sri Lanka 171 for 5 in the 41st over. Chaminda Vaas was promoted with Prasanna Jayawardene given time to nurse a hamstring pull and put on 21 with Samaraweera before edging Benn.Samaraweera shook off a first-innings duck with a purposeful 56 from 89 balls that comprised mainly tucks and flicks off some flat spin bowling into the yawning spaces. After Thilan Thushara lofted Benn down long-off’s throat at 224 for 7 Samaraweera opened his shoulders to biff a flurry of boundaries over the infield and Jayawardene called his troops in.Gayle didn’t come out to open – perhaps because of his dismal record against Vaas – and in his place Bravo, who struggled against Muttiah Muralitharan in the first innings, faced up to the hard ball. The experiment worked better than West Indies’ previous opening partnership, but only just. Instead of hanging his head after Bravo took him for two commanding boundaries Thushara pulled off a spectacular catch, tumbling at long leg, to account for Devon Smith’s atrocious attempt at hooking Vaas.Thushara struggled to locate his line with a fairly unprotected leg-side field and that allowed Sarwan early boundaries, including two perfect on-drives. There was hardly any swing so Sarwan and Bravo could shuffle and tuck the ball away; Bravo’s pick-up flicks came with a flair not seen in this Test and his cover-driving was a thing of beauty. Bravo even took the liberty of a straight six off Rangana Herath, who remained wicketless in the match. With runs under his belt and time at the crease Bravo looked a whole new batsman. He finished unbeaten on 46 from 70 balls and Sarwan was brimming with confidence on a 55-ball 34.A day that began with the hosts’ last-wicket pair combining purposefully to avoid the follow-on ended with another combination adopting an aggressive approach. It was only the second fifty-run partnership for West Indies – Sarwan also featured in the one in the first dig – and West Indies’ positive display was refreshing, especially Bravo’s in a new role.

Murali spins Sri Lanka to 69-run win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Muttiah Muralitharan lifted Sri Lanka into the Super Eights © AFP

Inspired by a genius who raised his game when the occasion demanded, Sri Lanka overpowered India in their final league match at Port-of-Spain and stormed into the Super Eights. India suffered one of their most disappointing days in recent memory, muffing up a run-chase on a pitch posing no worries, and were all but ousted from the World Cup, in what is likely to be their worst campaign since 1979.It wasn’t as one-sided a contest as the scorecard suggests. The first half of the match was a cat-and-mouse battle that everyone expected, with neither team establishing their dominance. Sri Lanka scrapped out a competitive 254 and defended it with verve and skill. Muttiah Muralitharan towered over India’s batsmen, bounding in from around the wicket and taunting them with offbreaks and that were near unplayable. He was unstoppable on the field too and pulled off a full-length lunge to dismiss the in-form Sourav Ganguly, and killed Indian hopes once and for all with a good catch at long-off to get rid of Rahul Dravid.Coming close on the heels of Bob Woolmer’s tragic demise, India’s exit will no doubt be a setback for the World Cup. Carrying the tags of ‘commercial favourites’, they will be the first to admit that they didn’t deserve to go through, having been trumped by both Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. It was no doubt a spineless batting effort today but there is little one can do when confronted by a magician like Murali.Half-centuries from Upul Tharanga and Chamara Silva had set Sri Lanka up but it was the Murali factor that proved too much for India. His first-ball topspinner that hoodwinked Mahendra Singh Dhoni summed up his influence. He fizzed one through and landed it on middle stump, Dhoni thought about the cut but could only watch in a daze as the ball crashed into his back pad. It was so plumb, and he seemed so embarrassed, that he walked instinctively. To see Dhoni walk before the bowler had completely gone up for the lbw appeal was to see the last whiff of hope evaporate.Murali earlier removed the dangerous Virender Sehwag at a crucial juncture. Sehwag’s solidity, and reading of the percentages, was reminiscent of the batsman in his prime. There was hardly any wild swinging outside off – barring one moment on 39, when Kumar Sangakkara couldn’t latch on to a full-length dive off a fierce slash off Dilhara Fernando – but a game built on assessing the situation and the bowlers. Yet, in the 23rd over, Murali’s third, he was tied up in knots. He first missed a doosra down the leg side, one that was called wide despite nearly knocking off leg stump, but was completely baffled by another that pitched on off and turned away, watching Mahela Jayawardene gobble up a catch at first slip.If Sehwag’s dismissal was the turning point, Yuvraj Singh’s fatal run-out was probably the clincher. Taking off for a single where there was none, after Dravid had nudged behind square, was all it needed for Sri Lanka to pounce. Ganguly and Sachin Tendulkar had fallen cheaply earlier – one to a poor stroke, another to an incisive delivery – and the run-chase was well and truly derailed. Dravid ploughed along amid the ruins, suffering a hamstring along the way and briefly lashing Lasith Malinga for four consecutive fours in an over, but that was nothing but a rage against the dying light. The contest was long over.

Chamara Silva continued his purple patch with 59 to boost Sri Lanka to a competitive total © Getty Images

Sri Lanka’s batting efforts were built around Tharanga and Silva. Sri Lanka didn’t ride on their senior pros, who were bogged down and snaffled out, but relied on a 22-year-old to guide them past the early tension. Tharanga wasn’t at his flowing best, understandably so considering the needle in this contest, but his half-century was the one that anchored the innings. He didn’t endeavour anything out of the ordinary and had his lucky moments, against Ajit Agarkar’s slower balls and Zaheer Khan’s in-cutters. But he interspersed them with gorgeous drives.His dismissal brought in a couple of hardworking batsmen – Silva was beaver-like in his approach, grinding out singles and improvising fours while Dilshan, always on the look-out for runs, provided support. Silva’s third consecutive World Cup fifty formed the heart of the middle overs and his cheeky glides behind the wicket irritated the bowlers. Dilshan was the more forceful, backing away and forcing the ball through the off side. Both fell in quick succession but Russel Arnold and Chaminda Vaas, adding 38 in 23 deliveries, boosted the total beyond the 250 mark.India’s bowlers turned in an impressive performance, 27 extras notwithstanding. Agarkar and Munaf Patel were the best bowlers on view and would have ended with richer hauls with a dose of good fortune. Tendulkar surprised with his banana inswing and Ganguly chipped in with an important wicket. The tension that had built up over the last few days simmered right through the first 70 overs of the match, only for Murali to cut through it in his inimitable style. A banner that read “Murali-ed” probably got it just right.

Reifer hundred takes Barbados into final

Scorecard

Floyd Reifer reaches his hundred to guide Barbados into the Carib Beer Challenge final © The Nation

Floyd Reifer, a proven performer under pressure, overcame persistent pain to pilot Barbados to a place in the Carib Beer Challenge final.Given the responsibility of batting at No. 3 for the first time in a few seasons, Barbados’ longest-serving player used his vast experience and showed steely resolve in compiling a precious century that lifted Ryan Hinds’ team to a hard-fought semi-final draw against Guyana. The left-handed Reifer, bothered by discomfort in his right wrist for the latter half of his innings, was the mastermind of Barbados’ effort in which they had the challenging task of either surviving the entire final day or attain a target of 282 on a Carlton Club pitch that remained good for batting throughout.At 249 for 5, with 45 minutes remaining, Barbados appeared to be heading for victory, but after the dismissals of Reifer and Ian Bradshaw, the run-chase was aborted with Patrick Browne and Ryan Austin batting through the final half-hour.There were other assistants along the way, but pride of place went to Reifer, whose 101, was by far his highest score of the season, his ninth first-class hundred and his fourth against Guyana and another important knock for Barbados either in a final or a semi-final.”I like big games. I like to play under pressure,” Reifer said. “Something happened today with my wrist, I can’t explain. My wrist got snapped in playing a particular shot. It was fairly painful, but I never let it stop me.”It was an innings with some luck for someone who has been at the wrong end of a few contentious decisions against him during the tournament. When he was 6, Guyana captain Reon King spilled the easiest chance of the match, a straightfoward offering at midwicket that many primary schoolboys would have fancied gobbling up.A few minutes later, the Guyanese, and even some Bajans beyond the boundary, were certain Reifer had edged a catch to slip off left-arm spinner Neil McGarrell, but umpire Goaland Greaves appeared to indicate he was unsighted by the bowler on his follow-through.Once those were history, Reifer grew in confidence to bat with the type of authority we know he can, but which he has seldom displayed in an otherwise disappointing season in which his previous highest score was 42. Eventually, he was caught low at slip to end an innings that lasted four hours and included 11 fours off 213 balls.There were telling contributions from the majority of those who batted. Browne, short of runs in recent matches, initially batted aggressively and then responsibly, occupying the crease for two hours for an unbeaten 39 after linking up with Reifer following a mini slump just before tea when three wickets fell for 14 runs.Openers Dale Richards and Wayne Blackman laid the foundation, adding 67 that offered encouragement to hometown fans. Richards reeled off eight sweet fours in 44 off 73 balls before gifting his wicket with a catch to mid-off off legspinner Mahendra Nagamootoo.Blackman, many still questioning his place in the team, doggedly resisted for three hours to make 36 off 139 balls before flicking a catch to backward square-leg. Captain Ryan Hinds made 23 in an hour, but then under-edged an attempted drive off Neil McGarrell into his stumps. Just before he went, Barbados were 172 for 2, but the next few overs the match took a twist and Guyana were back into the contest.Dwayne Smith, relegated to No. 5 in an exchange of positions with Reifer, was once again the victim of an irresponsible stroke, an attempted slog-sweep in which he skied the ball to midwicket. And on the stroke of tea, Alcindo Holder dragged a ball into his stumps to create a few worries for Bajans.By then Reifer was 67 and battling the pain, but he remained firm in the company of Browne to allow Barbados to set up a showdown against Cup champions Trinidad and Tobago in the five-day final, starting on Saturday at Guaracara Park.

Murali spins Lancashire to victory

Scorecard
Muttiah Muralitharan spun Lancashire to a 76-run victory against Worcestershire at New Road after Andrew Flintoff had led their superb fightback on the third day. It is Lancashire’s first victory since the fourth Championship match of last season at Old Trafford, which was also against Worcestershire. At the start of the final day, the match hung in the balance, Worcestershire needing a further 210 runs with eight wickets in hand. Graeme Hick and Vikram Solanki took them in sight of the total, each striking half-centuries but ultimately it was not enough. Both of their innings were boundary-crammed; Hick’s 57 comprising 11 fours and one six, while Vikram Solanki smote nine fours in his 52. Dominic Cork turned the match by removing Hick, Ben Smith and then Cahminda Vaas in quick succession. Muralitharan then mopped up the tail as Lancashire recorded their first victory of the season.**David Wigley did not bat for Worcestershire in their second innings: he was absent hurt with a broken hand; the result of an accidental beamer from James Anderson.Match drawn
Scorecard
Derbyshire and Northamptonshire shared the points at the County Ground after rain forced the match to be abandoned on the final day – although the match was heading for a draw after the home side had put up a much-improved batting performance on the third day. Northamptonshire had made them follow on, but their openers Steve Stubbings (58 not out) and Michael di Venuto (55 not out) remained unbeaten at the close. Derbyshire had showed once more their tendency to collapse: they were 175 for 7, before a defiant rearguard stand of 61 between Chris Bassano and Ant Botha. Johann Louw finished with career-best figures of 6-71, a worthy reward for more than 30 overs of hard work. Northants will have fancied their chances of making inroads into the home side again, but Stubbings and di Venuto put up sterner resistance and Derbyshire clung on for the points when the rains came.
Scorecard
A last-wicket stand of 70 between Robert Turner and Nixon McLean was not enough to save Somerset they slumped to a nine-wicket defeat at the hands of Essex. The visitors had not been expecting to bat again – and when they did, they knocked off the target comfortably, losing just one wicket in pursuit of 76 – after Somerset, in their second innings, were 65 for 4 at one stage and then 170 for 8, which was still 67 runs behind. But Somerset’s last two partnerships produced a combined total of 143, forcing Essex to take to the crease again. Will Jefferson, Ravinder Bopara and Alistair Cook knocked off the runs.

Government letter clarifies England stance

Michael Vaughan: caught in the middle
© Getty Images

England’s cricket authorities may have been given a get-out clause in their dilemma over the Zimbabwe tour, after claiming to have received a letter from the government instructing them not to go.Tim Lamb, the ECB’s chief executive, said his letter from Jack Straw, the British foreign secretary, was “tantamount to an instruction”. Under ICC rules, teams may only withdraw from a fixture if there are safety risks or if there is a Government ban.In his letter, Straw said the current situation in Zimbabwe is worse than it was this time last year, when England were faced with their World Cup crisis. “The EU, the US and others maintain targeted restrictive measures against leading members of the Zimbabwean regime,” wrote Straw. “The UK has taken a leading role on this issue. You may wish to consider whether a high profile England cricket tour at this time is consistent with that approach.”Lamb added that the letter is “couched in political language” but “as close as we’re going to get to an instruction”. He told BBC Radio Five Live he would seek further clarification from the government before a final decision is made.The ICC remain opposed to England’s stance, and Ehsan Mani, the president, once again raised the possibility of financial redress if they fail to meet their obligations. “Where governments fall short of strong and decisive action,” he said, “all members of the ICC are committed to touring.”The Zimbabwe Cricket Union, meanwhile, reminded England of the verbal undertaking they made a year ago, when the chairman David Morgan flew to Harare to negotiate over Zimbabwe’s summer tour of England. Peter Chingoka, their chairman, said: “We have a right to host England and they have a corresponding duty to honour their obligations.””I’m well aware of our international obligations,” said Lamb. “But at the end of the day our directors will make the right decision on whether to go or not.” The ECB executive board will meet for a dull debate on January 29, after Lamb has met with Mani and Malcolm Speed, the ICC’s chief executive.Lord MacLaurin, the former ECB chairman and current chief of Vodafone, England’s main sponsors, called on the government to clarify its position. “The government took the decision to take us into war in Iraq,” said MacLaurin. “The regime in Iraq is not that different from what’s going on in Zimbabwe.”

Junior cricket cancelled due to extreme hot weather

The South Australian Cricket Association (SACA) has announced that, due to extreme hot weather conditions, they have cancelled junior cricket scheduled for this coming weekend.The cancellation includes both the Under-14 and Under-16 red and white grade competitions.The SACA made the decision based on information provided by the Bureau of Meteorology, which forecasts temperatures of up to 38 degrees over the weekend, and through consultation with the SACA medical staff.At all times, the priority for the SACA is the safety of players, and the predicted combination of extreme heat and humidity places the risk of thermal injury in the very high to extreme range.For matches which commenced last weekend, and where results have not yet been reached, both sides will be awarded 7.5 premiership points, plus performance points for last Saturday.The SACA have placed information for the public on a hotline: 1900 950 598.

Martyn's ready to wait for Test chance

Damien Martyn is prepared to bide his time and wait for his Test chance to come along.On the fringe of the Australian Test side, Martyn scored a century in the opening tour game at Worcester and knows that he must keep making runs to remind the selectors of his value.The 29-year-old endured a six-year exile from Test cricket before regaining his spot briefly against New Zealand 14 months ago and then for one Test against the West Indies on their recent tour.Martyn said: “I’m the fringe player in the sense of being the sparebatsman for the Test side. It’s a very important tour and I want to do well andkeep my name up there in front of the selectors.”Nowadays it sits all right with me. In days gone by, perhaps, it didn’t sit sowell and you can get frustrated.”You are making runs and you want to get back in there but it sits well now.I’ve been given a second chance. I’m back in the squad.”I’ve just got to keep making runs. We been lucky that we have had Steve andMark Waugh, Mark Taylor and David Boon – guys who played a big amount of cricketover the last 15 years.”I missed the 1997 Ashes tour and I’d love to be out there playing in a Testmatch but if I’ve got to wait then I will.”After being out of it so long, then I’m just happy to be back amongst it anda five-Test series is better for me in terms of having a chance.”Martyn made 108 out of the Australians’ 351 all out on the first day of the match at New Road but he is not exactly classing the innings amongst his top knocks.”It wasn’t that great,” he said. “It was scratchy at times. We’ve only had acouple of nets. I was just really trying to stay out there as long as I could.”I know that hours you spend at the crease now mean a lot later on in thetour so that was my main goal today.”It’s been good. We have only been here a couple of days and we’re all a bitrusty still so just to have time in the middle was good.”I think as batsman that was our goal in this game. That’s what Steve (Waugh)and the coach wanted us to do leading up to the One-Day Internationals startingnext week. They wanted us to practise the basics and do them well.”Our main goal was to try and bat all day and use it for the practice it is – the sort of practice you can’t beat.”The wicket was slow coming from India where the wickets were flat. It’sabout adjustment to everything — conditions, the weather etc. When we do thatyou’ll see the guys hitting their straps.”It was hard to get in on that wicket but once you got in it got easier asthe day went on and there were some short boundaries.”

Bjornebye could land Rangers their own Devlin by signing “unreal” SPFL star

Glasgow Rangers were urged to dip into the market to sign Hearts central midfielder Cammy Devlin after their loss at Tynecastle in the Scottish Premiership on Sunday.

Journalist Jonny McFarlane stated that the club’s “first order of January business should be to tie up Stuart Findlay and Cammy Devlin on pre-contract deals” because they are both due to be out of contract at the end of the season.

The reporter also claimed that the Australian midfielder “dominated” Nicolas Raskin in the middle of the park with his impressive play, which is why the Gers should look to snap him up in 2026.

Why Rangers need their own Cammy Devlin

Devlin was incredibly combative in midfield against Rangers on Sunday. Per Sofascore, he won 100% of his tackles (2/2), made five interceptions, made four ball recoveries, committed only one foul, and won six of his ten ground duels.

These statistics illustrate how effective he was at disrupting play and breaking up the game to prevent the away side from gaining any momentum, which was key for the hosts in the second half as they clung on to claim all three points.

The Light Blues do not have a similar type of central midfielder in their ranks to perform that same task for Danny Rohl’s side, hence why Mohamed Diomande and Raskin were “bullied”, as writer Michael McEwan noted.

Transfer Focus

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With this in mind, recently appointed football consultant Stig Inge Bjørnebye should use the upcoming January transfer window, which opens for business next week, to bring in the club’s own version of Devlin to bolster the squad for the second half of the 2025/26 campaign.

The star who could be Rangers' own Cammy Devlin

Last month, Football Insider reported that the Light Blues are keeping tabs on Kilmarnock central midfielder David Watson, whose contract is due to expire at the end of this season.

Speaking to Football Insider, journalist Pete O’Rourke said: “Yeah, it’s a potential move that could happen for Rangers, as you said.

“The contract situation at Kilmarnock for Watson, opens the door maybe for Rangers to land the player for a cut price fee in the new year. Obviously, Kilmarnock are facing a battle to keep hold of him because no deal has been agreed to keep the player at Rugby Park and they could be forced to let him go.”

The Scotland U21 international could be an attractive target for Bjørnebye in January because, as O’Rourke explained, Kilmarnock may be forced to cash in on him next month before they lose the starlet for nothing in the summer.

At 20, Watson is seven years younger than Devlin and does not have the same level of experience in football or the Premiership, which means that he is not quite at the level of the Hearts star, yet.

However, his performances for Kilmarnock this season show that he has the potential to get there in the future, to be the midfield anchor that the Light Blues are currently lacking in the middle of the park.

The 20-year-old starlet, whose running with the ball was hailed as “unreal” by analyst John Walker, is a combative central midfielder who can also chip in with a few goals, having scored against Celtic back in September.

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Watson has already shown that he can offer more as a goalscorer than Devlin from a midfield role, with seven goals in the Premiership since the start of last season, per Sofascore, compared to the Hearts star’s zero.

25/26 Premiership

Watson

Devlin

Appearances

17

18

Goals

3

0

Tackles + interceptions per game

2.9

7.0

Dribbled past per game

1.4x

1.9x

Blocks per game

0.4

0.1

Duels won per game

5.6

8.1

Fouls won per game

2.0

2.4

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, Devlin has superior defensive statistics pretty much across the board, but that does not make Watson’s defensive contributions poor by comparison.

For example, his 2.9 tackles and interceptions per game are more than Diomande (1.8) and Raskin (2.6) have managed per game in the Premiership this season for Rangers, which shows that he would add more steel to Rohl’s midfield mix.

Given that Devlin “dominated” Raskin and Diomande at Tynecastle on Sunday, signing a young and combative midfielder like Watson, who could develop into a Devlin-level player with more experience under his belt, could make a lot of sense.

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