Leeds could sign a bigger talent than Archie Gray before the deadline

For all the positive strides that Leeds United have made under Daniel Farke this season, it appears likely that the Yorkshire side will have to endure the lottery of the playoffs if they are to secure promotion at the first time of asking, with competition fierce for the places above.

An automatic route back into the Premier League is not out of the question, however, even amid the imperious form of fellow relegated side, Southampton, with a strong start to 2024 having seen the Whites close the gap on high-flyers, Ipswich Town.

Leeds United manager Daniel Farke.

To maintain this recent momentum, the Elland Road outfit are likely to require further reinforcements this month in order to strengthen Farke's hand, with one sparkling top-flight talent believed to be on the German's radar.

Leeds want to sign young Premier League sensation

According to a report from Football Insider earlier this week, Leeds are believed to have 'registered their interest' in Liverpool playmaker, Mateusz Musialowski, with the club having been 'making checks' regarding the 20-year-old's availability.

The report revealed that as many as seven clubs had expressed an interest in signing the Polish talent this month, with the Championship side seemingly 'firmly in the race' for a player who is out of contract at the end of the season.

Leeds United transfer target Mateusz Musialowski in action for Liverpool.

While the Anfield academy ace is yet to secure a first-team appearance under Jurgen Klopp, a move to Elland Road could be the perfect opportunity for this dazzling diamond to showcase his quality at senior level.

Mateusz Musialowski's style of play

Leeds do, of course, already boast their own sparkling youngster in the form of Archie Gray, with the 17-year-old – who has made 30 appearances in all competitions this season – only recently signing a new 'long-term' deal with the club.

The versatile wonderkid – who can feature at right-back or in central midfield – had been the subject of interest from Liverpool, ironically, in recent times, with a fee of £40m having been even been mooted, with that a marker of just what a talent the Englishman truly is.

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In Musialowski, however, Farke could potentially acquire a figure who can go on to even greater heights than Gray, with the Poland U21 international having earned rave reviews amid his performances at youth level to date.

Described as a "Little Messi" by compatriot Jerzy Dudek, as well as being likened to former Chelsea and Belgium hero, Eden Hazard, the 5 foot 9 playmaker has certainly caught the eye in recent years, notably registering eight goals and assists in just 11 games for Liverpool's U21 side this term.

Lauded for his "ridiculous quality" by journalist Lewis Bower last year, the in-demand gem also came to wider attention following a breathtaking solo goal for the Reds back in 2021, even edging out his more senior colleague's to claim the club's Goal of the Month award.

The manner in which the then-teenager weaved his way past a sea of bodies before rifling home a fierce effort on goal made it evident as to why those comparisons with both Messi and Hazard have come about, with Farke no doubt relishing the prospect of having a potential world-beater on his hands.

Managing to make that step up from playing with an academy to thriving at first-team level – as Gray has done effortlessly – is no small feat, yet all the evidence points to Musialowski being able to flourish if afforded a prominent role at Leeds, should a deal be wrapped up this month.

Clássico pelo Gauchão vale quebra de enorme tabu para o Juventude

MatériaMais Notícias

Na próxima segunda-feira (5), Caxias e Juventude jogarão pela nono rodada do Campeonato Gaúcho às 20h (de Brasília) em mais um clássico das principais equipes de Caxias do Sul.

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>Classificação de momento no Campeonato Gaúcho

Além da possibilidade de adentrar o G4 da competição estadual, espaço que classifica para a fase semifinal, vencer o confronto que acontecerá no estádio Centenário significaria a quebra de uma grande sequência de partidas atuando como visitante no clássico.

A última vez que o Papo ficou com o triunfo no estádio do Caxias aconteceu no distante ano de 2003 quando, em 8 de março, os eternos rivais protagonizaram um dos duelos mais emocionantes e que terminou em 5 a 3 para o Alviverde pela primeira fase do Gauchão da época.

De lá até aqui, foram seis encontros válidos pelo estadual com o SER saindo vitorioso em quatro oportunidades além de dois resultados de igualdade. O empate, aliás, foi o resultado do último encontro nessas condições na temporada de 2018.

Leeds could land dream James partner in £50k-p/w Premier League "wizard"

While three wins from three has proven the perfect way to start 2024 for Leeds United, manager Daniel Farke will still be aware that there is much work still to do in order to bridge the gap between his rampant side and Ipswich Town in second.

With seven points separating the Whites and Kieran McKenna's high-flying outfit – with Southampton also now firmly in the picture – the Yorkshire giants really will need to put a consistent run of form together over the coming weeks and months if they are to mount a proper push for automatic promotion.

To aid that challenge, Farke is likely to require further reinforcements to help bolster a squad that was depleted by numerous departures over the summer, albeit with the only activity so far this month having been further outgoings, in the form of Djed Spence, Darko Gyabi and Luke Ayling.

Although that peripheral trio were happily shown the door by the Elland Road side, there may be fears that the squad has so far been weakened rather than strengthened in the winter window – despite the positive news that teenage sensation Archie Gray has signed a new 'long-term deal' at the club.

The hope will be that fresh faces will arrive before the close of the window at the start of next month, with numerous targets having already been mentioned in recent weeks, including a sparkling talent who is currently operating in the Premier League.

Leeds eyeing ex-Sheffield United man

According to Phil Hay of The Athletic, while Farke and co are prioritising the signing of at least one new full-back – amid the departures of Spence and Ayling – there could also be a fresh face to bolster the attacking ranks, in the form of Bournemouth's David Brooks.

As per Hay's recent report, Leeds believe an 'extra attacking midfielder' may prove 'useful' between now and the end of the season, with Brooks – who left Yorkshire rivals Sheffield United back in 2018 – said to be a 'player of interest'.

David Brooks

The Cherries are, however, wary of allowing the 26-year-old to depart on loan this month, although Hay suggested that such a stance could 'soften' as the window edges towards its climax, offering hope that a deal for the Wales international could be wrapped up.

Although the 5 foot 8 playmaker has been restricted to just two league starts this season, he will likely be raring to go to prove his talents once again with a consistent run of game time.

How David Brooks would fit in at Leeds

For much of the campaign so far, Farke has experimented with more unorthodox options in the number ten berth, with former Swansea City striker Joel Piroe featuring predominantly in that role, while fellow forward Georginio Rutter has also taken on that challenge in recent weeks.

Being able to acquire a more natural fit in that role behind the striker, such as Brooks, would certainly be a wise move, with the "Welsh wizard" – as described by the Bournemouth Echo's Jack Tynner – typically operating in an attacking midfield berth or on the flanks in his senior career to date.

Once on the books at Bramall Lane – where he registered 11 goals and assists in just 37 games for the Blades – the Warrington-born ace has now almost spent six years at the Vitality Stadium, albeit having seen much of that spell cruelly hampered after being diagnosed with cancer back in October 2021.

To his credit, Brooks has bravely fought his way back to establish himself as part of Andoni Iraola's first-team squad, producing a respectable haul of two goals and one assist in 16 games in all competitions this season, despite largely being utilised off the bench.

For Leeds, if a deal is to be struck, they will be hoping to coax out the type of performances that the 27-cap international had shown prior to his spell on the sidelines, notably registering 11 goals and assists in the Championship in 2020/21, as well as previously scoring seven goals and contributing five assists in the Premier League in 2018/19.

Brooks' 2020/21 Championship record

32 games (25 starts)

5 goals

6 assists

6 'big chances' created

1.1 key passes per game

79% pass accuracy rate

1.4 fouls won per game

1 successful dribble per game

Stats via Sofascore

Evidently a player who can unlock a defence with a piece of creative magic – having created nine 'big chances' in that debut season at Bournemouth – as well as also being able to find the back of the net himself, Brooks would provide another weapon to Farke's attacking arsenal.

The hope would be that he could also strike up a partnership with his international colleague, Daniel James, with the former Manchester United man currently flourishing under the one-time Norwich City boss.

Daniel James' season by numbers

It is fair to say that James has finally found a home for himself this season after a turbulent last few years, with the oft-maligned winger having established himself as a key figure for the promotion hopefuls.

Leeds forward Dan James.

The 26-year-old had endured a difficult two years or so after joining from the Red Devils in 2021, scoring just four goals in his debut season at Elland Road, before being shipped off on loan to Fulham last term – where he netted just three times in 23 appearances.

With the likes of Jack Harrison and Luis Sinisterra no longer at the club, however, James has taken his chance under the new regime, scoring nine goals and registering six assists in 25 league games – the best return of his senior career so far.

Farke can then combine the winger's "raw pace" – as hailed by Ryan Giggs – with Brooks' majestic midfield quality, with the latter man having previously been lauded by former Bournemouth boss Eddie Howe for his "creative flair" as he can "do a little bit of everything".

Leeds eyeing £4m-rated gem who's "like Riyad Mahrez" to partner Summerville

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Robbie Walls

Jan 18, 2024

The £50k-per-week talent may still be in the process of getting back to his prior elite levels, yet surrounded by familiar faces – such as James, Joe Rodon and Ethan Ampadu – he could well flourish in the second tier at Elland.

Not just then a dream partner for James, Brooks could also represent a dream January signing for the Yorkshire side.

تشكيل الأهلي أمام الزمالك في السوبر الإفريقي.. وسام أبو علي يقود الهجوم

أعلن السويسري مارسيل كولر، المدير الفني للنادي الأهلي، تشكيل الفريق الأساسي لمباراة اليوم أمام الزمالك، التي تجمعهما ببطولة كأس السوبر الإفريقي.

ويلتقي الأهلي مع الزمالك، على أرضية استاد المملكة أرينا في الرياض بالسعودية، في نهائي كأس السوبر الإفريقي 2024.

ويقود مباراة الأهلي والزمالك اليوم طاقم تحكيمي بقيادة الليبي معتز إبراهيم الشلماني.

طالع أيضاً.. سكولاري يرد.. من الفريق الذي سيشجعه بين الأهلي والزمالك؟

يذكر أن الأهلي صاحب الرقم القياسي في التتويج بلقب كأس السوبر الإفريقي، حيث نجح في التتويج به 8 مرات، كان آخرها في عام 2021. تشكيل الأهلي اليوم أمام الزمالك في السوبر الإفريقي

حراسة المرمى: محمد الشناوي.

خط الدفاع: رامي ربيعة – ياسر إبراهيم – محمد هاني – يحيى عطية الله.

خط الوسط: مروان عطية – أكرم توفيق – إمام عاشور.

خط الهجوم: بيرسي تاو – وسام أبو علي – حسين ‏الشحات.

Crystal Palace can finally upgrade Edouard with "outrageous" academy gem

Crystal Palace fans have well and truly been put through the wringer since the turn of the year.

Not only have they had to watch their side get hammered 5-0 by Arsenal to then watch them lose 4-1 to their arch-rivals Brighton & Hove Albion, but now they are set to be without their star players for some time.

Michael Olise is set to miss over two months of action with a hamstring strain, while Eberechi Eze will be out for at least three weeks with a thigh injury, meaning the Eagles' already lacklustre goal tally could look even meeker by May.

One of the players tasked with improving that tally is former Celtic ace Odsonne Edouard, and while he's having his most prolific season since joining the club, he simply isn't good enough to fire Palace up the table.

Odsonne Edouard Crystal Palace

However, the answer to Roy Hodgson's goal-scoring problem could come from the club's own academy, as there, they have an 18-year-old goal machine on their books.

Odsonne Édouard Palace career in numbers

The Frenchman joined the Eagles in a deal from Scottish giants Celtic on deadline day 2021 for a fee of around £14m, and while there was some hope that he might be able to recreate his form from north of the border, that hope quickly dissipated.

In his first season, he scored six goals and provided three assists in 28 Premier League appearances, but in his second season, that dropped to five goals and two assists in 35 appearances.

2021/22

2022/23

2023/24

28

35

17

6

5

6

3

2

0

0.32

0.2

0.35

Now, in his third campaign at Selhurst Park, he has managed to score six goals in 17 appearances, meaning that, across his time with the South London outfit, he has averaged a goal involvement every 3.63 games, which just isn't enough to justify his place in the team.

Luckily, Steve Parish and Co won't have to get their wallets out to sign his replacement; they can promote from within.

Zach Marsh could replace Odsonne Édouard

Zach Marsh joined Palace's youth set-up from Watford in March 2022, and since then, he has been a force of nature for the junior sides.

He signed his first professional contract with the south Londoners nine months later, which was then extended in November.

It's easy to understand why the Eagles were so keen to tie the talented youngster down to an extension when looking at his record with the club's youth teams.

In all, the "absolute monster", as Palace content creator HLTCO described him, has made 39 appearances across the club's U18 and U21 sides, scored a remarkable 29 goals and provided 16 assists to boot, meaning he is averaging 1.15 goal involvements every game.

39

29

16

1.15

The "outrageous" talent, as described by HLTCO, has already racked up six hatricks this season and even made his first appearance for the senior side in a pre-season friendly against Crawley.

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While he is still undoubtedly raw, Marsh's frankly ridiculous goal record speaks for itself, and if the club start looking for a new number nine in the summer, they should really consider promoting the academy talent first, as he seems ready to explode.

Champions League at the Racecourse?! Inside Wrexham’s huge ambitions for the women’s team and how ‘very normal’ Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney have boosted a European dream

The men's team have had a well-documented rise through promotion to League Two and now League One, but the women are also taking huge strides forward

When Wrexham co-owner Rob McElhenney was asked for his highlight of the 2022-23 season, most would have expected him to pick out the moment that saw the men's team clinch the National League title and promotion back to the English Football League after 15 years away. But his actual answer was a glimpse at how the plans he and Ryan Reynolds have for this football club are not limited to the men’s team.

"It was Rosie Hughes scoring that goal at the end of that game," McElhenney said on the podcast, referring to the 2-1 win over Connah’s Quay it secured for the women's team in front of a record-breaking crowd at the Racecourse Ground. "For me, it wasn’t just a celebration of the women, it was a celebration of the town itself and emblematic of what we hoped would happen, how you all show up for each other. We weren’t sure when we opened up ticket sales for the game that it would have as much interest as a men’s game, and it was because the community rallied around. It was not just about the win, it was that moment, 10,000 people showing up for another member of the community. I just found it beautiful."

That occasion was light years away from what Gemma Owen saw around the town when she was growing up as a football-mad young girl. Back then, there weren’t many other girls playing the sport at all, leaving her to do what most did by kicking a ball around with the boys on the street, and there certainly weren’t female role models that she could see.

Fast-forward to today and, as the club’s head of women’s football, she is playing a major role in Wrexham’s ambitious project which is changing all of that. “I’m in a position now where we can show young girls of the age that I was at that time, 'Well, actually, look what's out there for you now. Look at the opportunities that are there for you',” she tells GOAL. “It's been a fantastic 12 years so far and the last two or three have been crazy, but very enjoyable. I can't wait to see what comes next.”

Gemma Thomas/Wrexham AFCBuilding on a strong foundation

Things have certainly changed for Owen since Reynolds and McElhenney’s investment. After starting off as a volunteer coach over a decade ago, she has worked a number of roles in the organisation and is proud to say that the women’s department had been progressing nicely even before the Hollywood intervention, with her helping the club build “a foundation of promoting women in sport” through visits to schools and summer camps before starting the women’s and girls’ sections. There are players in the first team today that were in that first Under-12s team, even.

Reynolds and McElhenney’s support has helped take this to another level, though. “The first conversation I had was with Humphrey [Ker, executive director],” Owen remembers. “It was great to sit down and have a conversation with him initially about the investment that they wanted to put in and the support and backing that they wanted to give us – and by backing, I don't just mean financial. I mean in terms of exposure and putting that spotlight on us. That was evident from the beginning.

“Credit where credit's due, they've more than done that and they continue to do that. They've been very, very supportive of what we're doing. They are putting that spotlight on us, whether that's through the documentary, whether that's social media posts, there's lots of that and they really want to involve themselves. They don't stand off. They let us get on with our jobs, don't get me wrong, but in terms of wanting to know the players, wanting to know them as people, wanting to know us as staff, we can't ask for much more from them, we really can't. They are fantastic, both of them.”

AdvertisementGemma Thomas/Wrexham AFCBig steps forward

It's an attitude that has resonated across the club, as shown by the numbers of fans that have come out to support the women’s team – most notably in that game at the Racecourse that McElhenney referenced. It’s also helped the side to enjoy real success, with them winning promotion to the top-flight in Wales last summer, at the same time the men made the jump up to League Two.

“Resources have been quite a big thing and I'm sure that will continue to increase and improve as we move along, but being able to have more specialised staff as well,” Owen explains. “We've brought in strength and conditioning staff and we've brought in performance analysis staff, we've got goalkeeper-specific coaching. That's been a big change for us and a big addition, addressing those areas with people who are specialists has been fantastic. I think that's genuinely allowed us to kick on from where we were last year, even.

“Obviously, going semi-professional has added a big push really and a big drive for us,” she adds, with Wrexham the first of three clubs to do so ahead of the 2023-24 season, along with long-time Welsh giants Cardiff City and Swansea City. “That's in the sense of paying the players, which I think is important, and the increased level of contact time that we have with them. It's still not full-time, it's still not maybe where we aspire to be in terms of that, but it's very different from where we were even just a year or two years ago. I'd say that's allowed us to really push on and kick on.”

Getty'Very, very normal people'

Naturally, dealing with Hollywood actors while overseeing a women’s team that has long possessed an amateur status is a little surreal for Owen. “It’s a bit weird, I’ve got to say,” she laughs. “I've had some conversations with them and they're brilliant. They're absolutely brilliant.

"They've really immersed themselves in the football club and that's across the whole football club, not just the men's team. They've been really supportive of what we're doing and they really do want to propel us. That could be financial, it could be exposure, publicity-wise, they're very good at that. They're very good at putting the spotlight on us. But they do it because they believe in what we're doing. They want to make us successful in whatever part that they can play, just as much as they do with the men's team.

“They're both fantastic people, great to talk to you. they're very normal. It's quite a strange thing to say, I guess, because of the stature that they have and the things that they're involved in, but when you talk to them, they're just very, very normal people who are very excited to actually be here, which is brilliant. I can't fault them.”

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Gemma Thomas/Wrexham AFCClosing the gap

Reynolds and McElhenney’s desire to do more for the women’s team is evident in series three of 'Welcome to Wrexham', which landed on and in May, and follows the fortunes of the side on their return to Wales’ top-flight. In that first campaign back at the highest level, the Red Dragons showed that they are “not a million miles off” the likes of Cardiff and Swansea, finishing third behind only those two at the end of the year.

There is still a gap to bridge, as evidenced by the eight points between themselves and the Swans and the 17 adrift they were of title-winning Cardiff, but Owen believes they are already “very close” after just one season at this level. “It's important for us to, firstly, go in there and compete with those teams and, secondly, overcome them, which is not an easy feat by any stretch,” she says. “That's certainly where we want to be.”

Leeds’ forgotten £15k-p/w talent could finally start v Rotherham

Leeds United will aim to stroll to yet another win on Saturday when near Yorkshire neighbours Rotherham United make the swift journey to Elland Road, the Whites full of confidence currently in both the Championship and FA Cup.

Beating Plymouth Argyle 4-1 on their travels saw Daniel Farke's men show their class in the Cup, whilst a gritty 1-0 win last time out in the second tier away at Bristol City demonstrated Leeds' hunger and fight to push on for automatic promotion.

Mateo Joseph failed to ever really get going up top in the Pilgrims away day hammering despite the goals flowing late on, and considering Patrick Bamford also didn't really offer much as well as a second-half substitute, Farke could be tempted to experiment with who he chooses as his lone striker for the clash with Leam Richardson's basement club.

Mateo Joseph's game vs Plymouth in numbers

The promising Joseph wasn't at the races whatsoever in the demolition job Leeds managed to dish out to Plymouth in extra-time, hauled off by Farke with the game still finely poised at 1-1.

Joseph would hit the woodwork with one of his three efforts on goal, but it was still a lacklustre display from a player who should be grasping the opportunity to be in the Leeds first-team mix with more vigour.

Mateo Joseph's numbers vs Plymouth

Minutes played

81

Touches

32

Accurate passes

13/21 (66%)

Shots on goal

3

Duels won

4/11

Possession lost

12x

Stats by Sofascore

As you can see, it was a night to forget for Joseph in Devon.

Farke was, therefore, thankful for the likes of Crysencio Summerville and Georginio Rutter showing the sub-par 20-year-old how it's done late on with two game-clinching strikes finding the back of the net from the spellbinding duo.

With Bamford also not really offering a lot in a brief cameo at Home Park either – only amassing 17 touches of the ball from a flat 49-minute spell – Joe Gelhardt could well be encouraged by his fellow strikers misfiring if Farke feels like making a bold call for this weekend's game against the Millers.

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ByDan Emery Feb 7, 2024 Forgotten man could start versus Rotherham

If there's ever a game for Farke to fearlessly chop and change his starting Xi, it could well be this coming Saturday with Rotherham rooted to the foot of the division on a pitiful 19 points.

As such, Joe Gelhardt – who was touted to be the next best thing at Leeds after breaking into the first team under Marcelo Bielsa – could come into the side. Indeed, he was a bright spark for the travelling Whites down in Devon on Wednesday.

Leeds forward Joe Gelhardt.

Gelhardt would win one more duel than Bamford in the contest when introduced into the game in the 81st minute, whilst also hitting the woodwork in similar fashion to Joseph but from one less effort.

The fading £15k per week man, who has only started two games this season for the promotion-chasing Whites, could well be gifted a rare opportunity from the get-go off the back of such a lively substitute offering at Home Park.

Gelhardt scoring three senior goals from 50 appearances also puts him ahead of Joseph, the Leeds U21 hotshot yet to find the back of the net in the first-team fold in contrast.

Whilst the likes of Rutter and Summerville continue to fire on all cylinders, Farke could look to tweak with his sole striker position subtly with both Joseph and Bamford barely threatening away at Plymouth.

Gelhardt could well reignite his faltering Whites career as a result, Rotherham potentially on the ropes further with the pacey and tenacious centre-forward being let loose.

Australia still searching for perfect game – Starc

In an ominous note to whoever they meet in the semi-finals, Mitchell Starc believes there is more to come from Australia as they aim to peak in knockouts

Andrew Miller at Lord's29-Jun-2019If Mitchell Starc’s performances are a barometer of Australia’s World Cup prospects, then you might as well hand them the trophy here and now.With his second five-wicket haul of the tournament – and his fourth of four or more – Starc marched past the 22 wickets in eight games with which he sealed his Player of the Tournament title in the 2015 campaign, and has moved to within three of overhauling the all-time record for a World Cup campaign, the 26 that Glenn McGrath claimed in another of Australia’s five World Cup wins, in the Caribbean in 2007.And yet Starc remains unmoved by the prospect of individual milestones. Asked what it would mean to overhaul the great McGrath, he replied: “Not much if we don’t win the World Cup.” With every passing performance, the odds on that turn of events lengthen.For New Zealand, there was a bleak inevitability to Starc’s interventions at Lord’s. His first spell may have been wicketless but it came against a pair of openers whose only instinct was survival – and seeing as he chipped in with a 96mph thunderbolt in his third over, it seemed from the sidelines to be a prudent course of action.WATCH on Hotstar (India only): Starc dazzles with a five-for But with his team-mates keeping up those restrictive methods, Starc was able to return with a vengeance for his latter spells. Recalled for the 26th over, just as New Zealand had started to realise that discretion means little without a touch of valour, he struck with his fourth ball to dislodge the main man, Kane Williamson.Ten overs later, he repeated the trick – this time sinking Tom Latham at midwicket – and with four overs still up his sleeve, there was now no reason not to keep him going in search of a clean kill. By attacking the stumps with lethal pace and late swing as a bonus, he once again displayed a method that, so far, only India’s star-studded batting has managed to counter.”[Attacking the stumps] is part of my game-plan,” said Starc. “Again, it was a worn wicket today, so we were all fortunate that Finchie won the toss and we got to bat first. I believe they bowled well at the start. But I guess we keep learning from the opposition when we do bowl second, and I guess that fuller length and that straighter line for me, attacking those stumps, it is pretty much part of my game-plan.”I think as a bowling unit today, we were fantastic to keep such a good side to under 160. So it was a great performance by everyone.”ESPNcricinfo LtdThe simplicity of Australia’s methods with the ball make their earlier struggles to find serviceable back-ups to Starc and Pat Cummins something of a mystery. But with Jason Behrendorff adding another oppressive left-arm option to their ranks, and with Nathan Lyon’s Test-honed killer instincts delivering another inch-perfect spell on a worn surface, there was never any real opportunity for New Zealand to free their arms and catch up with an escalating rate.Starc, however, does not yet believe they have stumbled upon the magic formula for guaranteed success.”I think the fantastic thing about our 15 guys is we’ve got guys that can open the bowling. We have got several guys that make up good combinations. We’ve had all 15 part take part so far in the tournament. Guys are ready to go if called upon. The guys that were picked today did another fantastic job, [but] I don’t think we’ve quite played the perfect game, if you like.WATCH on Hotstar (US only): Full highlights”We’re finding ways to scrap and to restrict teams, and we keep improving every game. But I think the turning point was probably that Indian game where we had a good chat as a bowling group and a batting group and we’ve just continued to improve as a whole group of players from that game, so it’s been fantastic.”Until the start of the World Cup, Starc had been an onlooker as Australia set about their quiet resurgence of white-ball fortunes. He missed the 3-2 series win in India with a pectoral muscle strain, and was still on the road to recovery when they went on to beat Pakistan 5-0 in the UAE in March. But having returned to Australia’s set-up he has recognised a side that had renewed belief.WATCH on Hotstar (India only): New Zealand’s innings”From all reports, it’s been a fantastic feel around the group in the UAE and India,” he said, “and to play some fantastic cricket heading into that April break, was probably the momentum that the group was after heading into this tournament.”So I think our chances are as good as any other team. We’ve always spoken about peaking towards the back end of the tournament, and we’re still searching for that perfect performance. We’re not quite there yet. We’re showing glimpses of what we are capable of with the ball and with the bat and in the field, but we have still got room to improve, and that’s exciting for this group.”And if we can do that – well, we’ve got to play our best game in the semi now and hopefully better that in the final – and that’s what tournament play is all about.”

Man City players told they 'aren't cheats' by celebrity fan Noel Gallagher as Oasis guitarist responds to 115 financial charges hanging over Pep Guardiola's side

Noel Gallagher says Pep Guardiola and his Manchester City players "aren't cheats", while responding to the 115 charges levelled against the club.

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  • Man City hit with 115 Premier League charges
  • City deny charges of alleged financial irregularities
  • Noel Gallagher defends Guardiola & the players
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    It's coming up to 18 months since the Premier League hit City with 115 charges for alleged financial irregularity – something they vehemently deny. And every time Guardiola's side win more silverware, most recently a record fourth-straight Premier League title, the doubters continue to mount. Now, ex-Oasis guitarist and City fan Gallagher has given his take on the matter.

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    WHAT NOEL GALLAGHER SAID

    He told The Athletic: “It’s a tough one with City. I was getting abuse at the Champions League final recently. They were Liverpool lads, my age, late fifties, calling me a ‘cheating b*****d’.

    “I was like, ‘You need to relax’. It (branding City as cheats) is a coping thing for fans of other clubs. When I talk about City, it’s not long before someone jumps in: ‘What about all these charges?’.

    “The players aren’t cheats and neither is the manager. If the club have done whatever they are alleged to have done, that’s the club. But I don’t see why, when City have won four titles in a row and Pep has built two vastly different teams, it should hang over the team. And the team are astonishing.”

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    While Gallagher may have a point, much of City's success may be down to their alleged rule-breaking – giving them an unfair advantage. Therefore, there is always likely to be an asterisk especially when these charges are far more serious than financial fair play breaches from Nottingham Forest and Everton. They were hit with small points deductions but possible relegations and trophies being stripped could be on the cards for City.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Some reports suggest City and the footballing world will have to wait at least another year before any verdict is handed out. Part of the delay is the sheer number of charges and the fact that the financial allegations go as far back as 2009. This will rumble on for quite some time.

Beleaguered Afghans face stiff task to get campaign up and running

Underdogs need to overcome internal issues if they are to carry the fight to an England team who are now hitting their stride

The Preview by Andrew Miller17-Jun-20193:50

Hussey: How Afghanistan play Archer and Wood will be key

Big pictureNow here’s a contest that England would once have feared. A surely-can’t-lose clash with an aggressive band of ball-striking badmashs, backed up by some of the best and most varied spin bowlers in the world game.Sides of a bygone England era might have taken a fatalistic approach to such a line-up, and found a way to be cowed by expectation. But not, you suspect, this current team. Even with the prospect of two major absentees from their first-choice batting line-up – Jason Roy has been ruled out with a hamstring tear and Eoin Morgan is still recovering from a back spasm – there’s little chance of any let-up from a side that seems now to be hitting its stride in the tournament, following that early stumble against Pakistan.Besides, there’s something about Afghanistan that just doesn’t feel right just now. Their rise through world cricket’s ranks has been a joy to behold, and the heart that they showed in winning the qualifying tournament in Zimbabwe last year – despite losing each of their first three games – is proof that this group of battlers can never be entirely written off.But in four World Cup matches to date, they simply haven’t been at the races. Their campaign has been a litany of incremental controversies, from the sacking of the captain, Asghar Afghan, on the eve of the tournament, to the eviction of their opener Mohammad Shahzad for an injury that he claims did not exist, to the dropping against South Africa of their one in-form batsman, Najibullah Zadran. None of them constitutes a shocking scandal in its own right, but the net effect is destabilisation and demoralisation. Just when the players need to be trusted to strut the same stuff that has got them to the World Cup in the first place, they are finding themselves dragged down by in-fighting and incompetence.Afghanistan’s natural exuberance seems to have been drained in recent outings as well. Case in point, their dispiriting display against South Africa in Cardiff on Saturday. Faced with a team in every bit as much strife as their own, they traded a dogged start with the bat for a shambolic finish, losing their last nine wickets for 69 in 19 overs despite having given the impression – through the number of times they shouldered arms to South Africa’s seamers – that seeing out 50 overs was the most important aspect of their day’s work.England have encountered one team of this ilk in the tournament already, of course. Quite apart from sharing a border, Afghanistan and Pakistan share an ability to turn it on (or off) from one day to the next. If a batsman of the destructive qualities of Hazratullah Zazai can get stuck for any period of time, then a spinner of Rashid Khan’s world-beating quality could find himself with enough runs to do a number on another highly fancied side.But the odds do seem stacked against them on this occasion. England’s depth with bat and ball (even in the midst of their injury woes) is designed to mitigate against flurries of opposition aggression, and they will surely believe that this will be the victory that puts them on the brink of a place in the semi-finals. Afghanistan still have the potential to claim a major scalp before their own campaign ends, but it would be one of the greatest World Cup shocks of all time if this England team, at this moment in time, were the side to succumb.Form guideAfghanistan LLLLW (Last five completed matches, most recent first)
England: WWLWW
in the spotlightIs there something amiss with Adil Rashid – Morgan is adamant he’s fine (see below) – or does he simply need an extra injection of confidence to get his game back to the levels that England so desperately want? Despite talk of a shoulder injury that might have tempted the management to give him a break, he has played in every game of the campaign to date, with Moeen Ali the spinner to miss out in each of the last two games. Rashid’s returns have been poor without being appalling – two wickets at 101.50 and an economy of 6.15 – but crucially, he’s not been offering the all-round wicket threat that Morgan in particular so values as a captain. Perhaps a flurry of cheap scalps will help him to rip that googly with renewed intent. Assuming his shoulder doesn’t fall off in the process, of course.At this somewhat critical stage of their World Cup journey, it’s time for the experienced heads in the Afghanistan squad to take control – and few have more experience, and crucially, current form, than the wily allrounder Mohammad Nabi. With bat and ball, he’s been an example of what could still be possible for this team – his three-wicket over against Sri Lanka ought to have set up a shot at victory in Cardiff last week, and while his batting in the main event hasn’t yet caught fire, he was one of the few to take the fight to England in their warm-up at The Oval last month, with three big sixes in his 44.Hazratullah Zazai and Noor Ali Zadran run between the wickets•Getty Images

Team newsAfter his unexpected absence against South Africa, Najibullah seems sure to slot back into Afghanistan’s middle order … though who knows what the management is thinking at present. Asghar Afghan didn’t exactly justify his recall with a five-ball duck against South Africa, and may be the man to make way once again. The prospect of spin may bring Mujeeb Ur Rahman back into the reckoning.Afghanistan: (possible) 1 Hazratullah Zazai, 2 Noor Ali Zadran, 3 Rahmat Shah, 4 Hashmatullah Shahidi, 5 Gulbadin Naib (capt), 6 Najibullah Zadran, 7 Mohammad Nabi, 8 Ikram Alikhil (wk), 9 Rashid Khan, 10 Mujeeb Ur Rahman, 11 Hamid HassanRoy’s absence has been confirmed after his hamstring tear against West Indies – he will miss the Sri Lanka match as well, with James Vince set to slot straight in at the top of the order. Morgan’s fitness was also under a cloud after he suffered a back spasm, but he was moving freely in the nets on the eve of the game and may yet feature. Liam Plunkett missed training with a stomach complaint but is not thought to be a serious concern.England (possible) 1 Jonny Bairstow, 2 James Vince, 3 Joe Root, 4 Eoin Morgan (capt), 5 Ben Stokes, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Chris Woakes, 8 Adil Rashid, 9 Liam Plunkett, 10 Jofra Archer, 11 Mark Wood.Pitch and conditionsAfter the same strip served up 336 runs for India against Pakistan on Sunday, the straw colour of the surface augurs well for further big hitting, and the hint of footmarks augurs the return of two spinners to England’s attack. Judging by what he’d seen on Sunday, Morgan anticipated good carry for the quicks, allied to a bit of turn. The weather promises an overcast start and the potential for showers in the afternoon, and the eve of the game featured steady rain as well. Another bowl-first day would seem to be in prospect.Strategy punt Afghanistan’s spin-heavy attack offers another opportunity for England’s batsmen to reaffirm their new-found credentials as masters of white-ball slow bowling. From 2011 until the end of the 2015 World Cup, England averaged 30.2 against spin while facing Asian opponents in ODIs. Since then, that figure has rocketed to 54.4. Consequently, their win percentage against Asian teams has rocketed in the same period. From 40.8% between 2011 and 2015, that figure is now a much healthier 70.5%. One of Afghanistan’s established strategies in recent times has been to unleash the offspin of Mohammad Nabi against the left-handers in the opposition ranks. However, England’s senior left-handers – Morgan and Ben Stokes – have largely negated such tactics with their prowess against the ball turning away from them. Both Stokes and Morgan average above 60 against offspinners in ODIs since the 2015 World Cup, and have done so with a strike-rate over 90 against that bowling type.Stats and trivia England won their only previous ODI encounter with Afghanistan, a rain-affected nine-wicket win in Sydney at the 2015 World Cup. With England having already been eliminated from the World Cup following their defeat against Bangladesh in Adelaide, that fixture marked the final ODI appearance of a number of England stalwarts – Ian Bell, Ravi Bopara, James Tredwell and James Anderson. This contest provides a match-up between the two most prolific ODI bowlers since the 2015 World Cup … and they are both legspinners called Rashid. England’s Adil tops the charts with 131 from 87 games, but Afghanistan’s Khan (128 at 15.86) has an average that is almost half that of his counterpart.Quotes”Adil has probably been at his best in the last two games. He’s been unlucky. He’s had two dropped catches. I think that might have been the turning of how his figures look, but actually how it’s coming out of the hand is very impressive. The shoulder’s fine. Thank you.”
“Not only for us it’s difficult, every team is struggling here. But specifically for us, like we played the last four games, we face four different kind of conditions. But we are trying to learn from them, and we shall be in good form now.”
Gulbadin Naib, Afghanistan’s captain, on the challenge of playing in English conditions and weather.

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