Naseem Shah smiles at Test cricket on a rollercoaster day

He delivered more overs than any other bowler, was faster and better than any other, but was the most expensive of the three specialist quicks

Danyal Rasool27-Dec-2024Like blindly following the recipe book for an exotic dish, it was hard to say what Naseem Shah was cooking up at first this morning. He began groggily, throwing the ball up in search of swing as if this was a Rawalpindi winter day and not a Centurion summer one. He barely broached 135kph, and was much too wide, so any away movement only meant an extra lunge for Mohammad Rizwan. If something was brewing, it was difficult to tell what that might have been.But it was that kind of morning session, a bowling effort on psychedelics, balls just floating into the ether, hovering there briefly as if the laws of gravity had briefly been suspended, and barely kissing the surface before dancing away into the wind. On a pitch where banging the ball into the surface has been the most proven way to get results, Naseem was rejecting conventional wisdom, no discernible logic behind this iconoclasm. Mohammad Abbas, 13 years his senior, tried following the rulebook to a tee, bless him. But at his pace, with little work going into the ball off his wrist, even the Centurion surface struggled to give him a leg up.So Shan Masood took him off after a four-over burst. Naseem has built up quite the oeuvre of glorious failure, the universe seemingly conspiring to refuse to give him what he was owed. But he knows, better than most, how frugal with the distribution of joy the world can sometimes be, and he will have known that on this occasion, his empty-handedness was well-deserved.Related

Stats – Corbin Bosch's boss-mode outing in the Boxing Day Test

Pakistan lose their way after Bosch bash hands South Africa advantage

“You have to learn to adjust in new conditions,” Naseem admitted after the match. “It’s not easy but you have to be disciplined and adjust to different conditions quickly. The pitch here is at a bit of a height and the ground at a depression, so I think you have to adjust as a bowler, and it took me a few overs to do that.”But there was something Test cricket saw in Naseem, something it liked. In a country that has recently seen its express quick either lose their pace, or their interest in Test cricket, or both, Naseem still has it all.By his second spell, he was pushing up as high as 145.9kph, he had dragged his lengths back. The rebellious streak was gone, the spell was beginning to come of age, and the recipe book was being faithfully followed. When it still wouldn’t produce a wicket, Naseem dealt with the setbacks with wistful smiles rather than visible agitation. After all, he had seen from the dugout the fickle nature of Test cricket’s generosity; Kagiso Rabada had bowled better than any of the Pakistan bowlers without being rewarded for it.David Bedingham had ridden his luck against Naseem, surviving a review off the first ball of Naseem’s return spell. Pakistan, to be fair, managed their reviews about as efficiently as many lottery winners do their prizes, but it did signal a shift in intensity from a bowler whose ceiling remains a formidable force to handle. Bedingham soon paid the price for his insouciance when a shade of extra bounce, thanks to improved lengths and higher pace, became too hot to handle, and Naseem had begun to put a spell of proper old-ball Test match fast bowling together either side of lunch. Kyle Verreynne was goaded into a similar shot, and outdone by a similar delivery.By now, the crowd by Castle Corner had broken out into a chorus of grudging respect; South African spectators cannot help, it would seem, but respect a fast bowler operating at the top of his game. Chants of “Naseem! Naseem” began to go up every time he walked back to the mark, but it was the afternoon, and they were well lubricated by now, so you may be able to put some of the generosity down to that. Apparently, SuperSport Park sold more than 1 million Rand worth of alcohol on day one; the eye test would suggest day two wasn’t far behind.

“You have to learn to adjust in new conditions. It’s not easy but you have to be disciplined and adjust to different conditions quickly.”Naseem Shah

Naseem knew, though, that this day had been generous to Pakistan; none of the other bowlers had come close to matching his quality, and yet South Africa were suddenly seven down; the woefully out of form Marco Jansen was meat and drink for Naseem. By then Naseem’s second spell was a match-turning one: 3 for 28 in five overs, and the question turned from the size of South Africa’s lead to the possibility they may not get one at all.On other occasions, in other countries, that might have been work done for a brittle, express pace bowler, but Masood felt Pakistan had no other well to turn to. He tied Aiden Markram up at one end, inducing him into a false shot against Khurram Shahzad at the other end. And still Naseem bowled, him powering on from the media end blending into the background of the day. Drinks came and went, and Naseem was still there, pace slightly down, but banging it into the pitch and asking the same questions.”Fast bowling is not easy but you have to be ready. I always try to work hard and bowl more in the nets and even in domestic cricket.”The team needed it, and obviously when the captain asks you, you have to be ready. That is my habit as a fast bowler, to accept the ball when needed. I hadn’t known it would happen, but the captain thought about which bowler would be more impactful, and asked me to bowl. My body’s fine.”However, the good balls were no longer producing edges, and the occasional loosener that crept into his spell was being put away by Corbin Bosch, exactly the sort of player who Pakistan tend to allow dream career starts. There were five overs between Naseem getting a break, and the captain turning right back to him, but now, Test cricket was playing hard-to-get with him once more.The field had been spread out for Bosch, the sniff of optimism from the early afternoon had gone. The crowd, too, began to treat Naseem as the figure of heroic failure he was becoming as the innings dragged on, playfully booing every appeal, and then shouting “review it” once Pakistan’s profligacy had squandered them all.South Africa had added 88 for the last two wickets, and, despite delivering more overs than any other bowler, faster than any other bowler, better than any other bowler, Naseem’s figures showed he was the most expensive of the three specialist quicks. It is a wonder Naseem plays Test cricket with a smile on his face, but Pakistan are fortunate he does. And perhaps, a pleasant festive afternoon when Test cricket briefly smiles back is all the reward he needs.

India's 117 all out leads to their biggest defeat in ODI history batting first

Mitchell Starc goes level with Brett Lee as the Australian with the most five-fors in ODI cricket

Sampath Bandarupalli19-Mar-2023117 India’s total against Australia in Visakhapatnam is their fourth-lowest in ODIs at home. Their lowest is 78 all out against Sri Lanka in Kanpur 1986, followed by 100 all out against West Indies in Ahmedabad 1993 and 112 all out against Sri Lanka in Dharamsala 2017.ESPNcricinfo Ltd234 Balls remaining when Australia reached the target, making it the biggest margin of victory – in this category – for any team against India. New Zealand had recorded the previous best when they beat India with 212 balls remaining in Hamilton 2019. This is also the third-biggest ODI win for Australia in balls remaining.3 This is India’s third-lowest total against Australia in ODIs behind their 63 all out in Sydney 1981 and 100 all out at the same ground in 2000. India’s previous lowest ODI total at home against Australia was 148 all out in Vadodara 2007.26 Overs that India batted before being bowled out, making it their fifth-shortest all-out innings in all ODIs and second-shortest all-out innings at home, behind the 24.1-over collapse against Sri Lanka in 1986.9 Five-wicket hauls for Mitchell Starc in ODI cricket, the joint-most by any bowler for Australia, alongside Brett Lee. Starc’s nine five-fors are also the joint-third most for any bowler in this format. He is now only behind Waqar Younis (13) and Muthiah Muralidaran (10), and level with Shahid Afridi (9).Mitchell Starc rattled India again•ESPNcricinfo Ltd222 Balls bowled in Visakhapatnam, the second-fewest in a completed men’s ODI hosted by India (excluding shortened games). The shortest was between Kenya and New Zealand during the 2011 World Cup in Chennai, which lasted only 191 balls.10 Indian wickets shared by the Australian pacers in this match, only the second instance of India losing all their wickets to pace bowlers in a home ODI. Australia’s pacers took all ten wickets in the Guwahati ODI in 2009 while bowling out the hosts for 170.4 Wickets for Starc in the first ten overs of the Indian innings. It is only the second time a bowler has taken four or more wickets for Australia in the first ten overs of an ODI innings in the last 15 years. The other instance was also provided by Starc, who took four wickets against West Indies in the 2013 Perth ODI.4 Indian batters dismissed for a duck during their 117 all out, the joint-most for them in an ODI innings. There have been five previous instances of four ducks in the same ODI innings for India, with the last of them coming against Sri Lanka in 2017.

England's freak injury list: From Stokes' locker punch to Roy's bat rebound

Jonny Bairstow will find sympathy from England’s WhatsApp chat after his ‘freak golfing injury’

Andrew Miller26-May-2021 • Updated on 02-Sep-2022Cricket has a long and proud tradition of improbable injuries, from Chris Old popping a rib while sneezing, to Trevor Franklin being run over by a luggage trolley at Gatwick Airport. And as Jonny Bairstow braces for a lengthy spell on the sidelines after a “freak golf injury”, he’ll have no shortage of sympathy on the England WhatsApp group, where self-inflicted tales of woe abound…Ben Stokes (March 2014)
Incident: Punched a locker







Archer toured India despite his unusual injury•Getty ImagesSeven years on from one self-inflicted wound, Dr Doug Campbell, a hand and wrist specialist in Leeds, was peering into another. “This is going to sound like an awful conspiracy and I know what’s going to happen on Twitter straight away when I say this,” Ashley Giles, England’s director of cricket, told the BBC. “But it’s true, it’s not a conspiracy.” Yep, back in January 2021, Jofra Archer had been cleaning a tropical fish tank in the bath-tub of his flat at Hove, when it had slipped from his fingers and shattered, leaving fragments of glass embedded in his right middle finger. The injury healed sufficiently for Archer to play in two Tests and five T20Is against India, but when he flew home to undergo further treatment on his troublesome elbow, England seized the chance to clean out the wound, which appeared to have healed fully by the time he was booked back in for elbow surgery in May. That elbow, sadly, has proved more harder to resolve.James Anderson (October 2010)
Incident: Boxing match in Bavarian forest















Sidelined: Three weeksCrawley made it to the Chennai nets at the second attempt, at least•BCCIIt’s not often that the word “socks” is the stand-out detail in an injury update. But it’s surely no coincidence that the ECB chose to highlight Foakes’ woolly-footedness when confirming his dressing-room mishap, given what happened when Zak Crawley was wearing his studs indoors in India three months earlier. On the eve of the first Test at Chennai – and the eve of his 23rd birthday, for that matter – Crawley had been walking out to the nets when he lost his footing on a marble floor that one team insider likened to a “skating rink”. The team had placed towels along most of the route to the door, but evidently not enough of them, and Crawley ended up being ruled out for two Tests after suffering a sprained wrist and joint irritation.Jason Roy (August 2018)

Incident: Bat thrown to floor

Injury: Bat rebound to face

Sidelined: One matchSelf-inflicted cricket fails come in all shapes and sizes•Getty ImagesBat-flinging tantrums are two-a-penny at all levels of cricket – what better target of a workman’s ire than his tool, so to speak? And usually the damage is limited to the implement itself, or at worst, the fixtures and fittings (just ask Matt Prior). But at the Kia Oval in August 2018, Jason Roy surpassed himself in a moment of self-defeating slapstick. Surrey’s hopes of progression in the Vitality Blast were already sliding down the pan when he was done in flight by Hampshire’s Afghan spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman and bowled for a first-ball duck. In fury he flung his bat to the floor, only for it to rebound and whack him in the face, ruling him out of their do-or-die final group fixture against Glamorgan. “I’m extremely embarrassed and apologetic to my team-mates and fans for this moment of stupidity,” Roy said in a statement. In the event, his absence mattered not. Rain wrecked the group decider, and both teams were eliminated.This article was first published in May 2021, then updated after Bairstow’s golfing injury

Top target: Tottenham preparing January move for £53m Champions League "monster"

Tottenham Hotspur are now preparing a January move to sign a £53m “monster” who plays in the Champions League, having identified him as their top target in defence.

Spurs looking to sign new centre-back amid defensive struggles

Thomas Frank is well-known for being more of a pragmatic manager than predecessor Ange Postecoglou, but Tottenham have been very poor from a defensive point of view over the past few weeks, conceding 13 goals in their last four matches in all competitions.

Most recently, Spurs came unstuck against Fulham at home, with Kenny Tete and Harry Wilson finding the back of the net within just six minutes, and the Cottagers ultimately held out for a 2-1 victory, despite Mohammed Kudus pulling one back just before the hour mark.

Following a run of one win, one draw and five defeats in the last seven outings, Frank is now under real pressure, with it recently being revealed that Xavi could be brought in if results don’t improve by the end of December.

It remains to be seen whether the Dane makes it to the January transfer window, with a tough trip to Newcastle United up next, but plans are already being formulated, and ENIC are particularly keen to strengthen in defence.

That is according to a report from Caught Offside, which states Tottenham are now preparing a €60m (£53m) move for Juventus defender Gleison Bremer, who has now risen to the top of the north Londoners’ shortlist of defensive targets.

It could be difficult to get a deal done, given that Bremer is regarded as one of the Italian club’s prized assets, but they may be tempted to cash-in if they receive a bid that is simply too good to turn down.

A whole host of Europe’s top clubs could also be set to rival Spurs for the Brazilian’s signature, with Chelsea, Manchester United, Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich being named as potential suitors.

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ByDominic Lund Nov 30, 2025 "Monster" Bremer could be ideal addition for Spurs

It is clear that Tottenham could do with some fresh options in defence, given the sheer number of goals they have conceded recently, and the Juventus star could be the ideal addition to the backline.

Lauded as a “monster” by scout Ben Mattinson, the five-time Brazil international, who is under the same agency as James Maddison and Pedro Porro, has put in some solid performances this season, most notably in Juventus’ 2-0 Serie A victory against Parma.

Gleison Bremer’s key statistics vs Parma

Number completed

Clearances

8

Ground duels (won)

3 (2)

Passes completed

46/52 (88%)

Clearances off line

1

Not only that, but the 28-year-old is also very impressive on the front foot for a defender, having picked up eight goals and four assists in 96 outings for Juventus, setting up two goals in his side’s 4-3 victory against Inter Milan earlier this season.

Bremer has spent the majority of the current campaign out injured, and missed 45 games last season due to an ACL injury, so there may be some concerns about his fitness, but the centre-back has proven himself as a top defender on his day.

Ranking MLB Division Races With Six Weeks to Go

There are six weeks left in the 2025 MLB season, and nothing has been decided.

Four division leaders are within five games of second place, and the wild-card picture in both leagues is a muddled mess. Everything is still to play for over the next month and a half, and it should be as exciting a finish as we have seen in years.

We’ve broken down each division race, ranking them based on how interesting they’ll be down the stretch.

1. NL West

The best rivalry in baseball is back in focus. The Padres and Dodgers are locked in a battle atop the division and are set to duke it out for NL West supremacy over the next few weeks. San Diego jumped into first place Wednesday night, and the teams will play six times in the next 10 days. Those games should be electric and could get a little chaotic, given the history here.

This is the latest in the season the Padres have held sole possession of first place in the NL West since 2010. They have been on fire, winning 14 of their past 17 games and getting excellent performances across the board. The team’s trade deadline acquisitions have all contributed, but while Mason Miller was the biggest name the Padres landed, left fielder Ramon Laureano (.333/.400/.600) and catcher Freddy Fermin (.355/.394/.484) have provided the most significant upgrades. The Friars are playing their best baseball of the season and peaking at the right time.

The Dodgers have stumbled, but should never be counted out. Shohei Ohtani is cruising to another MVP award and is starting to go deeper into games on the mound. The team’s loaded starting rotation is finally healthy, and there’s no doubting L.A. has the best roster in baseball. The defending champs won’t go down without a fight. Over the past few years, every time San Diego gets close, Dave Roberts’s squad seems to turn it on. The Padres have been Charlie Brown, and the Dodgers are Lucy with a football. Will that happen again this season?

Though L.A. and San Diego only play six times before the end of the season, it feels like they’re destined to see each other again in the playoffs. That would mark the fourth time in six seasons they have squared off in the postseason.

Major League Baseball has to be salivating at the prospect.

2. AL East

The Blue Jays have a five-game lead in the division and the American League’s best record, but the Red Sox and Yankees are both still within striking distance. Boston and New York hold the two final wild-card spots as well, so the next few weeks have the potential to get tense.

The Yankees host the Red Sox for four games next week, then the teams square off at Fenway Park for three games the second weekend of September. Meanwhile, Toronto travels to Yankee Stadium for three games the first weekend in September and gets Boston at home for three during the season’s final week. Those series could decide the division.

What the Blue Jays have done this season is remarkable, and their success is almost as shocking as the Orioles’ failures. The Yankees were expected to run away with the division and now look like they'll be fighting for a spot in the playoffs until Game 162. Meanwhile, Boston traded its best hitter and somehow got better. Baseball is funny like that.

Toronto has the inside track to win this thing, but all three teams have a chance, and there’s a decent shot they'll all be in the postseason.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. leads the Blue Jays with an OPS of .893. / Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

3. AL West

The Astros have won the AL West in each of the past seven full seasons (the Athletics won during the COVID-19 shortened 2020 campaign), and lead the division this year. But this might be the fiercest battle they've had in those years.

The Mariners are hot on Houston’s heels, trailing by 1.5 games heading into the weekend. Seattle went all-in at the trade deadline, acquiring third baseman Eugenio Suárez, first baseman Josh Naylor and lefty reliever Caleb Ferguson. They splurged to add punch to their offense alongside MVP candidate Cal Raleigh, who continues his historic offensive pace. Given their rotation, they should stay in the race until the very end.

Houston didn't stand pat at the deadline, as they brought back former franchise cornerstone Carlos Correa. The results of the reunion have been excellent so far, as the 30-year-old boasts a .974 OPS in his 11 games back with the team. Fellow deadline acquisitions Ramón Urias and Jesús Sánchez haven’t provided the same punch yet, but stay tuned.

The Astros will host the Mariners for three games from September 19 to 21, and those matchups could determine who wins the division. Houston may be doing it without star closer Josh Hader, who just hit the IL with a shoulder strain.

It’s worth noting that while the Rangers have fallen off the pace a bit, they’re only 3.5 games out of the final wild-card spot. The division may be out of reach at 7.5 games off the pace, but given the team’s dominant starting staff led by Jacob deGrom and Nathan Eovaldi, Texas can’t be counted out.

4. NL Central

Raise your hand if you thought the Brewers would be the best team in baseball by mid-August. Anyone with their hand up needs to put it down. Somehow, that’s precisely what has happened.

Milwaukee has reeled off 12 consecutive wins and now has the best record in baseball by six games. The Brewers also boast the best run differential in the game at +159, 44 runs more than their nearest competition (more on that later). They lead the Padres by 7.5 for the best record in the National League, so they’ve all but sewn up the top seed at this point.

The Cubs picked the wrong season to go all-in because no matter how good they’ve been, Milwaukee has been that much better. Chicago is now eight games back of the Brewers in the NL Central despite boasting the second-best run differential in MLB at +115. The Northsiders own the top wild-card spot by 4.5 games over the Dodgers and look like a postseason lock. If the Cubs want to top Milwaukee, it’s looking like they’ll have to wait for the playoffs.

The Central’s playoff intrigue doesn’t end with the top two. The Reds are still in the postseason hunt thanks to the Mets’ big-time collapse. Cincinnati is a half-game behind New York for the final wild-card spot, and Fangraphs gives them a 20% chance to make the playoffs. That’s not insignificant. The addition of Miguel Andujar at the trade deadline has been tremendous. In 10 games, the 30-year-old has three home runs, is slugging .778 and has an OPS of 1.247. The Reds are having a fantastic season and, like the Brewers, no one saw this coming. They could be dangerous down the stretch.

5. NL East

The slumping Mets have allowed the Phillies to build a five-game lead in the NL East as we enter the weekend. It’s unlikely Philadelphia will surrender that advantage.

Though the Nationals just swept them, no one should be worrying about the Phillies. They boast a dominant starting rotation with two Cy Young contenders in Cristopher Sánchez and Zack Wheeler, plus Ranger Suárez, Jesús Luzardo and a now-healthy Aaron Nola. Meanwhile, Kyle Schwarber is having a career year to pace an offense that has even more juice than it has shown. Philly addressed its bullpen woes at the trade deadline and looks like a far more complete team than we saw a few weeks ago.

The Mets, well … the Mets have had a rough go of it. They have lost 13 of their past 15 games, and the offense has gone in the tank. Francisco Lindor has been emblematic of the team’s struggles, as he’s hitting .181 with a .538 OPS over the past 25 games. New York is now barely hanging on to the final wild-card spot, opening the weekend a half-game ahead of the Reds.

The Mets host the Phillies for three games starting on Aug. 25, then travel to Philadelphia for four beginning on Sept. 8. Just before that, they go to Cincinnati to face the Reds. There are plenty of opportunities for Juan Soto & Co. to make up ground, but they need to get it together.

If the Mets bounce back, this could get interesting down the stretch. As of now, expect to watch them battle for a wild-card spot while the Phillies roll to their second consecutive division title.

6. AL Central

The Tigers have had a stranglehold on the AL Central for months, though their grip has loosened recently. Detroit led the division by 14 games on July 7, and Cleveland was in fourth, 15.5 games back. Now, the Guardians sit 6.5 games back and are closing hard.

It’s unlikely the Tigers will give up the lead, but things could get dicey if they don’t find more consistency. Detroit hosts Cleveland from Sept. 16 to 18, and goes to Progressive Field for three games starting on Sept. 23. So six of the season’s final 12 games will see the division’s top two teams facing off.

If you want intrigue, tune in to watch Tarik Skubal do Tarik Skubal things. He’s baseball’s best pitcher by a solid stretch right now, and he's leading the Tigers from the front. Detroit's offense is also excellent, ranking eighth in MLB with 588 runs scored and an OPS of .737. Despite that, the Tigers haven't locked this thing up quite yet.

As for the Guardians, their late-season magic is more than improbable. A few weeks ago, they were looking to sell at the deadline and even traded franchise mainstay Shane Bieber. On top of that, they had their All-Star closer and a starting pitcher put on leave amid a gambling investigation, and they only have two hitters in the lineup with a WAR higher than 1.6. Your guess for their success is as good as mine.

Cleveland is a half-game behind the Yankees for the American League’s final wild card slot, and it would be foolish to count them out at this point.

سلوت عن الإساءات بسبب خسائر ليفربول: لست غبيًا.. والجماهير هتفت لي

تحدث الهولندي آرني سلوت، المدير الفني للفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي ليفربول عن مباراة فريقه أمام سندرلاند، ضمن منافسات الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز.

ويواجه ليفربول نظيره سندرلاند مساء غدٍ، الأربعاء، في تمام الساعة العاشرة والربع بتوقيت القاهرة، الحادية عشرة والربع بتوقيت مكة المكرمة.

ويستضيف ملعب آنفيلد المباراة بين ليفربول وسندرلاند والتي تجمعهما ضمن منافسات الجولة الرابعة عشرة من بطولة الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز “بريميرليج”.

وقال سلوت في المؤتمر الصحفي الذي نقلته صحيفة “ليفربول إيكو” عن سندرلاند: “إشادة كبيرة بمدربهم حيث جلبوا الكثير من اللاعبين الجيدين”.

وأكمل: “لقد شاهدت مباراة تشيلسي ضد آرسنال في طريقي إلى المنزل، فريقان يعملان بجد ويقاتلان، ثم أدركت حقيقة فوز سندرلاند على تشيلسي خارج أرضه وتعادله مع آرسنال، يمكنك إلقاء نظرة على جدول الدوري لمعرفة أنهم يؤدون بشكل جيد لكن هاتين النتيجتين تظهران ذلك”.

وأضاف: “إنهم يتمتعون بالمرونة، لقد أظهروا عقلية رائعة لكن أسلوب لعبهم والمخاطرة التي يخوضونها عند عدم امتلاك الكرة وإيقاع لعبهم السريع، وجهود اللاعبين الجيدة لتحقيق نتيجة إيجابية، إنهم فريق عمل مجتهد للغاية وله هوية واضحة”.

وعن الحالة البدنية للثلاثي إيزاك وجوميز وفيرتز: “لا أعتقد أنهم يستطيعون اللعب ثلاث مرات في الأسبوع، والآن يتعين عليّ الانتظار لمعرفة ما إذا كان بوسعهم المشاركة منذ البداية يوم الأربعاء، يمكن للثلاثة المشاركة في المباريات الثلاث”.

اقرأ أيضًا | سلوت يعلن موعد مغادرة محمد صلاح لـ منتخب مصر.. ويؤكد : لست مندهشًا من غضبه

وعن تعرضه للكثير من الإساءات عبر وسائل التواصل الاجتماعي بعد الخسارة من مانشستر سيتي أوضح سلوت: “ربما كنت أتوقع المزيد بعد مباراة فورست!”.

واستكمل: “الإساءة ليست أمرًا جيدًا أبدًا، لست من مُستخدمي وسائل التواصل الاجتماعي لكنني لستُ غبيًا، فأنا أُدرك ذلك، إذا بدأت الخسارة، فأنت تُدرك أن الناس ليسوا راضين عنك، ما ألاحظه وأشعر به هو الدعم الذي يقدمه لي المشجعون في الملعب حتى في المباراة التي انتهت بالتعادل 0-0 (أمام وست هام)، كان المشجعون يغنون للفريق ولي”.

وعن مشاركة جو جوميز استطرد: “لديه مجموعة مهارات يمتلكها، عندما لا يكون يلعب، يمكنه الدخول والعزف مباشرة، لقد عملت مع لاعبين حيث إذا لم يلعبوا لفترة من الوقت فإنهم يستغرقون بعض الوقت للعودة إلى مستواهم لكن جو يمكنه القيام بذلك على الفور، لقد كان من المفيد أن دوم ساعده كثيرًا”.

وأتم حول حالة اللاعبين المصابين: “شارك كونور في تدريب الفريق أمس لأول مرة، لم يكتمل كل شيء بنسبة 100% بعد لذلك علينا إدارة الحالة جيدًا لكن لا تُعلقوا آمالكم عليه مبكرًا، نتوقع نفس الشيء مع جيريمي الأسبوع المقبل، للأسف نلعب الكثير من المباريات لذلك سيغيب عن بعضها ونأمل أن يكون كونور متاحًا للعب أمام ليدز”.

Mudryk poised for surprise January return as club eye Chelsea loan deal

Suspended Chelsea winger Mykhailo Mudryk is in line for a surprise return to action next month after not featuring for over a year, according to reports.

Mykhailo Mudryk banned for positive drugs test

Mudryk’s absence from Chelsea’s first-team setup has now exceeded twelve months, with the Ukrainian international last appearing competitively on November 28 last year before his career ground to a dramatic halt.

The 24-year-old tested positive for meldonium, a performance-enhancing substance prohibited under anti-doping regulations.

Following confirmation of his B sample analysis in June, the FA formally charged Mudryk, leaving him facing a potential ban ranging between two and four years if found guilty.

Throughout the ordeal, Mudryk has maintained complete innocence, and even voluntarily undertook a lie detector test which supported his version of events.

Ukrainian sports journalists have theorised that contaminated stem cell treatment administered during international duty may explain the adverse finding, suggesting the injection originated from cattle previously exposed to meldonium.

Chelsea sanctioned the record £88.5 million transfer from Shakhtar in January 2023, initially viewing him as a transformative attacking signing after hijacking Arsenal’s deal.

However, his Stamford Bridge career proved underwhelming even before the suspension materialised, with inconsistent performances failing to justify the enormous investment.

The club reassigned his prestigious number ten shirt to Cole Palmer following Mudryk’s suspension, signalling their acceptance of a prolonged absence.

Chelsea also reinforced their attacking options by striking deals for Alejandro Garnacho and Jamie Gittens in the summer, further blocking any potential pathway back into Enzo Maresca’s plans.

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Reports have suggested that, once Mudryk is eligible to play again, Chelsea could allow the forward to join sister club Strasbourg on loan in a bid to reignite his career.

Mykhailo Mudryk in line for January return as Sevilla eye Chelsea loan deal

Now, according to journalist JM Villalba and Canal Sur Radio, that eligibility could be as early as next month.

Speaking to the Spanish broadcaster, Villalba has reported that Mudryk will be able to play again after January 17, and this has piqued interest from La Liga side Sevilla.

Chelsea's MykhailoMudryk

The club are considering a deal for Mudryk once he comes back midway through next month, which is a surprise when factoring in how very little we’ve heard about the winger’s return timeline.

If Mudryk is indeed eligible for a January renaissance, BlueCo should certainly green-light a temporary move away for him.

He quite simply needs game time and renewed confidence following the lengthy layoff, controversy and serious drop down Maresca’s pecking order, with the Spanish top flight potentially providing that needed reintroduction to competitive action.

That being said, it should be a dry loan with no option or obligation to buy, with Chelsea poised to make a key decision about Mudryk’s long-term future.

He still has six years remaining on his current contract, giving the Blues plenty of time to do so.

Wolves star says 'yes' to joining Manchester United, INEOS working on deal

Manchester United have reportedly convinced Wolves midfielder Joao Gomes to leave his club, as they look to snap him up in a £50m deal.

Casemiro’s form may have improved for the Red Devils this season, but he is still past his best at the age of 33, and struggled in Monday’s 1-0 defeat at home to Everton in the Premier League.

Gomes has emerged as a potential option for United, coming in as a direct younger replacement for Casemiro, with David Ornstein saying Wolves could be forced to sell him in the January transfer window.

“There’ve been reports about Joao Gomes at Wolverhampton Wanderers. Sources I’ve spoken to around Molineux are sort of playing it down. They’re saying there’s no club-to-club talks at this point. And of course, if Wolves are staring at relegation come January, they might look to cash in on him then. As opposed to letting it go into the Championship when his value will decrease.”

Gomes looks to be a leading midfield option for United and now a fresh update has shed further positive light on the situation regarding him.

Big Joao Gomes to Man Uts claim

According to TEAMtalk, Manchester United and INEOS believe they will secure the signing of Wolves midfielder Joao Gomes, with the report saying they are “making behind-the-scenes moves”.

The player himself has already said ‘yes’ to the idea, so all that’s left is for INEOS to come up with an acceptable package for the higher ups at Molineux.

Transfer insider Dean Jones shared insight on a move for the £50m-rated Brazilian, saying: “Mainoo finally got a run out against Everton, but I’m not sure how much that is going to change his feelings about being wanted at the club. If they do sign a midfielder, then it’ll open the door for him to leave. We will have to see whether the Gomes one can truly open up.”

“I think that could turn into a player versus club battle that Man Utd have to deal with if they try to get him out of Wolves, because they don’t want to sell him. They will probably hike the price up, too. Man Utd don’t have much interest in loaning Mainoo out to another Premier League club at the moment, either, so that is another issue that will need to be dealt with.”

Gomes looks like a fantastic option for United, with the Brazil international similar to Casemiro in terms of style, but being able to offer more legs than his compatriot these days.

Joao Gomes vs. Casemiro 2025/26 PL stats

Gomes

Casemiro

Appearances

12

11

Starts

10

10

Minutes played

927

683

Goals

0

3

Assists

0

1

Tackles per game

2.6

2.0

Clearances per game

1.6

1.0

Pass completion rate

85.3%

83.1%

The 24-year-old is coming right into his prime and would arrive as an immediate key man for the Red Devils, with former Wolves manager Gary O’Neill describing him as a “super talent”.

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If a January move for Gomes materialises, it will be a big boost for United, allowing Casemiro to leave for free at the end of this season without too much fuss.

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Rookie Spence stars as Surrey secure their semi-final berth

Surrey 290 for 7 (Spence 68, Davidson-Richards 65*, Jones 47, Monaghan 45) beat Durham 138 (Gregory 3-24) by 86 runs (DLS)A fine career-best 68 off 63 balls from teenager Jemima Spence in only her second senior innings of 2025 featured in a rainy Surrey win as they confirmed their Metro Bank One-Day Cup semi-final place at the expense of Durham at the Banks Homes Riverside.Surrey sealed a fourth-placed finish – a position they held at the start of the day with a three-point advantage – and prevented either Durham or fellow chasers Somerset from leapfrogging them, winning by 86 runs on DLS.Nineteen-year-old Spence, batting at No.6, shared a 112 partnership for the fifth wicket with England’s Alice Davidson-Richards, who also contributed an unbeaten 65 off 61 to Surrey’s commanding 290 for seven from 48 overs.The third rain delay came with Durham 14 for one in the third over chasing a revised 276 in 41. The target was further revised to an overall 225 in 29, and the hosts were bowled out for 138 inside 23 overs. Davidson-Richards added two wickets with her seam.Vitality Blast champions Surrey will travel to face table-toppers Hampshire in the semis on Wednesday.A Surrey win would guarantee qualification, while a defeat would have eliminated them. In the end, a No Result would have also been enough. But a sixth win did it.A Durham win would have given them a good chance, though a big Somerset success over the Bears left them needing a bonus point win at the start of their chase. They finished sixth in the table.Having been inserted, Surrey started impressively as Alice Monaghan shared in first and second-wicket partnerships of 55 and 69 with Bryony Smith and Emma Jones.Monaghan and Jones both played nicely for 45 and 47 – the latter particularly so as she latched onto anything short and hit a couple of eye-catching boundaries down the ground.At 121 for one in the 22nd over, Surrey looked set to dominate. But Durham took three cheap wickets, reducing the score to 149 for four in the 27th.Scotland off-spinner Katherine Fraser had Monaghan caught at long-on with a full toss and a pulling Jones bowled off her thigh.Rain briefly interrupted play at 180 for four in the 33rd over, with Spence and Davidson-Richards now set. And upon the resumption, they kicked on superbly, sharing their century stand in 18 overs.While Davidson-Richards was classy, Spence mixed power with invention and was first to her fifty off 56 balls. Her more experienced partner followed her there off 55.Durham were disrupted by having to change wicketkeepers because of a finger problem for Bess Heath. Mia Rogers took over. They also lost key seamer Phoebe Turner to a groin injury having only bowled three overs. She slipped in the outfield.Rain returned to cut short the Surrey innings at 1.55pm.When play resumed at 3.15pm, chasing that 276 in 41 overs, Durham would have been aware that Somerset had won with a bonus point. So they had to do the same given the counties started the day level on points.But that never looked realistic.Rogers pulled Phoebe Franklin’s seam to midwicket in the first over before rain intervened again at 14 for one in the third.Durham had approximately 20 overs in which to achieve their target for the bonus point, and they started in solid fashion when needing to be spectacular.Captain Emma Marlow and Hollie Armitage shared 53 for the second wicket.But when both fell inside three overs for 27 and 31 – bowled by Kalea Moore’s off-spin and caught behind off Alexa Stonehouse’s seam – Durham were 85 for three in the 14th over and out of contention.Stonehouse struck again as the end came quickly, with Davidson-Richards bowling Bess Heath and Trudy Johnson. Leg-spinner Dani Gregory struck three times. Injured Phoebe Turner didn’t bat.

An Actual Snake Invaded the Dodgers' Dugout in Game 2 of NLCS vs. Mets

Game 2 is just not going the Los Angeles Dodgers' way.

The Dodgers quickly fell behind 6–0 to the New York Mets on Monday in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series on Monday afternoon at Dodger Stadium. To make matters worse, the team found a snake in its dugout during a break between innings.

After reliever Brent Honeywell finished off the Mets in the top of the fifth inning, he headed for the team's dugout. As he was about to step down into it, he pointed to the ground and a snake could be seen slithering on the top step. No, Padres fans, it wasn't Dave Roberts.

Yeah that's pretty unsettling. Dodger Stadium is pretty old but you'd figure they could keep the local snake population at bay.

A home run by Francisco Lindor to lead off the game and a second-inning grand slam by Mark Vientos gave the Mets five of their six runs. Sean Manaea did the rest, cruising through five innings allowing two hits and one run, which came on a Max Muncy home run.

The Dodgers are going to need that slithering reptile to turn into a rally snake if they don't want to lose home field advantage in the series.

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