Trent Alexander-Arnold DROPPED by Arne Slot after right-back announces decision to leave Liverpool – with Conor Bradley stepping in to prepare for next season

Liverpool boss Arne Slot has confirmed outbound Trent Alexander-Arnold will not start against Arsenal, with Conor Bradley to take his place.

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Alexander-Arnold to leave LiverpoolDropped for Arsenal clashBradley preparing to fill gap next seasonFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Alexander-Arnold announced his departure from Liverpool last week as he nears a move to Real Madrid as a free agent. With the Reds having clinched their Premier League title a fortnight ago, their clash against second-placed Arsenal does not mean a lot, and Slot has revealed that Alexander-Arnold will not be in the starting line-up.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

It is still uncertain whether Liverpool and Slot plan to sign a new right-back to cover the departure of Alexander-Arnold. However, the Dutch coach has now indicated that Bradley will be the main option heading into next season.

Getty Images SportWHAT SLOT SAID

Speaking to the media on Friday, Slot said: "Conor will start on Sunday because he needs more games under his belt to prepare for next season. Let's not compare him with Trent, they are two different types of players.

"For me he is already there ahead of development than being at Chelsea for the first time. Unfortunately, he hasn't been fit all season but to become a good player you have to be fit all season but we have a lot of confidence in him as a very good full-back for Liverpool."

WHAT NEXT FOR LIVERPOOL?

Arsenal will give Liverpool a guard of honour at Anfield on Sunday having failed to chase down the Reds in a one-sided Premier League title race.

FC Harlem welcome Toulouse FC star Mark McKenzie as Club Ambassador and Honorary Board Member

FC Harlem have announced the addition of the USMNT center back as an official club ambassador, strengthening their connection to professional soccer

  • McKenzie joins FC Harlem leadership
  • USMNT defender emphasizes importance of urban youth development programs
  • Toulouse star plans regular involvement despite European club commitments
  • WHAT HAPPENED

    In an official social media post, FC Harlem officially announced that Toulouse Football Club defender Mark McKenzie has joined the organization as a club ambassador and honorary board member. The partnership connects one of American soccer's most prominent Black professional players with a youth development organization specifically focused on creating opportunities in underserved urban communities.

    “What’s going on, everybody? Mark McKenzie here. Very excited that I’ll be a club ambassador and honorary board member of FC Harlem. FC Harlem is a club that represents everything that I stand for and is going to bring the beautiful game of soccer to inner cities, especially in the U.S.,” McKenzie said on the club’s social media post.

    “I’m very excited to see FC Harlem joining MLS Next next year, and I’m very excited for the youth who are going to get a chance to play football at the highest level. And that’s going to send a powerful and positive message to all throughout the US that the game is fair to everybody.”

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  • WHAT MARK MCKENZIE SAID

  • Ethan White

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    FC Harlem have established themselves as a pioneering organization in urban youth soccer development, working to address systemic barriers to participation in traditionally underrepresented communities. McKenzie's involvement represents part of a broader movement of professional players reinvesting in grassroots development, with Tim Weah part of USL side Brooklyn FC's ownership group.

  • WHAT’S NEXT?

    For FC Harlem, the focus will be on their first season in the MLS Next Pro and the various other tournaments that youth players can and will be allowed to participate in because of that. The 2025 season will be the club’s first in the youth-specific tournament despite being active since 1990.

Even better than Adingra: Sunderland pushing to sign "amazing" £17m forward

Sunderland confirmed their latest addition of the summer transfer window on Thursday when they unveiled Simon Adingra as a new player for Regis Le Bris.

The Ivorian forward, who has scored eight Premier League goals in the last two seasons, is a right-footed winger who can operate on either flank and will provide competition at the top end of the pitch.

Adingra joins Chemsdine Talbi, Noah Sadiki, Habib Diallo, Reinildo, and Enzo Le Fee in making the move to the Stadium of Light ahead of the upcoming Premier League season.

There is more still to come from the Black Cats before the deadline at the start of September, though, as they are reportedly eyeing another new forward option.

Sunderland pushing to sign new winger

Despite having just signed Adingra and Talbi in the last few days, Le Bris and his recruitment team are hoping to bring in another wide option to improve the team.

Transfer Focus

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

According to Calcio Mercato, Sunderland are pushing to sign French winger Armand Lauriente from Italian side Sassuolo in the summer window.

The report claims that the Black Cats are continuing to put pressure on the Serie A outfit to strike a deal for the 26-year-old forward, whilst Sassuolo are eyeing up Canada international Tajon Buchanan as a possible replacement for him.

It has previously been reported that it will take a fee of around £17m to secure a transfer for the French whiz, who has also attracted interest from Roma and Marseille.

Why Sunderland should sign Lauriente

The Black Cats are right to be pushing to sign the Sassuolo star this summer because he is an exciting attacker who could be an even better signing than Adingra for the club.

In the 2024/25 campaign, Lauriente fired his side to promotion from the Serie B with an outstanding haul of 18 goals and five assists in 33 appearances from the left flank, which shows that he made a big impact in the final third on a regular basis.

Armand Lauriente in action for Sassuolo.

Before last season, the 26-year-old star showcased his quality as both a scorer and a creator in the Serie A in the 2022/23 and 2023/24 seasons for Sassuolo.

Appearances

66

60

xG

9.6

6.87

Goals

12

8

Big chances created

12

9

Assists

10

3

As you can see in the table above, the French whiz produced more quality in front of goal in those two seasons than Adingra provided in his two Premier League campaigns with Brighton before his move to the Stadium of Light.

Lauriente, who was previously hailed for his “amazing” free-kick for Lorient in 2021 by talent Jacek Kulig, could provide more to the team next season than the Ivorian youngster, as a winger who has proven that he can make a huge impact in the final third in a major European league.

Sunderland should sign the winger in the hope that his electric form in the Serie B propels him on to offer even more quality at the top level than he did in the Serie A in the past.

The statistics suggest that he has more potential to make an immediate impact on the pitch in the Premier League, due to his form in the top two tiers in Italy, than Adingra next term, which is why the club should push to bring him to the club this summer.

Adingra & Lauriente's dream CF: Sunderland have big interest in £21m "icon"

Sunderland are still in the race to sign this exciting attacker who could well be Armand Lauriente and Simon Adingra’s dream partner up top.

ByKelan Sarson Jul 9, 2025

Relative of £40m star says move to Liverpool is "basically a done deal"

The close relative of a “great” Liverpool transfer target has claimed that his move to Anfield this summer is now “basically a done deal”, in an exciting new update.

Florian Wirtz week at Liverpool

The Reds have already brought in Jeremie Frimpong from Bayer Leverkusen since the end of last season, but this week has the potential to be a particularly memorable one at Anfield.

Liverpool appear to be edging closer to the stunning signing of Leverkusen star Florian Wirtz all the time, with fresh reports claiming that he will be in England on Thursday, with his medical and official unveiling taking place on Friday.

While much focus is on Wirtz currently, which is no surprise considering he is seen as one of Europe’s best players currently, a move for Milos Kerkez from Bournemouth is also close to happening.

The 21-year-old has emerged as the perfect left-back to come in and be Andy Robertson’s long-term successor at Liverpool, and now a new update suggests that the transfer is closer to happening than ever.

Liverpool signing Kerkez "basically a done deal"

Speaking to Super Indirektno [via The Mirror], Kerkez’s father, Sebastijan Kerkez, claimed that his son’s move to Liverpool is “basically a done deal”, also discussing the huge influence of sporting director Richard Hughes.

“It’s only Liverpool for us and we’re not going anywhere else and we won’t talk to other clubs. Everything is done between us (personal terms) we just need to sort out some details but it’s basically a done deal. Richard Hughes brought us to Bournemouth, if he said we go to India, then we go to India, everything is agreed, just some little things.”

AFC Bournemouth's MilosKerkez

This is fantastic news for anyone of a Liverpool persuasion, with Kerkez looking tailor-made to thrive in this Premier League-winning team under Arne Slot.

Milos Kerkez’s 2024/25 Premier League stats

Total

Appearances

38

Starts

38

Minutes played

3341

Goals

2

Assists

5

Clearances per game

2.6

Tackles per game

1.4

Interceptions per game

1.2

The Hungarian caught the eye so often with his performances for Bournemouth in 2024/25, standing out as one of the best left-backs in the country and being hailed by manager Andoni Iraola.

“Milos has improved a lot from past season. He has done a great job defensively. I think he’s a player that because of his physical condition arrives so many times to the last third with the ball under control to put good crosses that the number of assists, of good balls he was having, was quite low past season, but this season I think he’s deciding much better. He’s adding quality to his deliveries.”

Big Ekitike upgrade: Liverpool dreaming of signing "the world's best CF"

Liverpool need to sign a centre-forward this summer.

2

By
Angus Sinclair

Jun 17, 2025

There is always a risk that any move won’t work out, but assuming he avoids serious injury, the £40m-rated Kerkez looks primed to be a massive player for Liverpool for many years to come.

The horrible truth about Pat Cummins

We all know he can do no wrong. Ever stopped to think just why that might be the case?

Alan Gardner15-Apr-2022Is there anything that Pat Cummins can’t do? Okay, so he’s yet to be offered the throne of Albania, and we don’t currently have evidence that he can jump from a stationary position to standing upright on the mantelpiece – but then CB Fry probably wouldn’t have been that much use on the farm either.Let’s look at the evidence. In the past month or so, Cummins has: led Australia to a famous Test series win on their long-awaited return to Pakistan, where his ability to bowl 90mph reverse-swinging bombs transcended some of the most inhospitable surfaces this side of Mars; rocked up at the IPL and opened a can of whup-ass with the bat, smoking the joint-fastest fifty in the tournament’s history; and solved the climate emergency (okay, so maybe that’s an exaggeration – but he working on it.Of course, if you’ve got anything like the same corroded world view as the Light Roller, instinctively your first response is one of deep, deep suspicion. How did this chiselled blue-eyed boy, one of the world’s leading fast bowlers and the rare Australia captain who wouldn’t deliberately offend your grandma, not to mention a UNICEF ambassador, business degree graduate, sportsman with a statesman’s mien, all-round good egg – how did he come by all these gifts without doing something diabolical in return?And that’s when you realise. He absolutely have done something diabolical in return. Maybe that missing fingertip wasn’t just the result of a childhood accident – perfectly plausible cover story – but the initial down payment on Pat’s Faustian pact.The signs were there, of course, if only we could see past the winsome smile and immaculate length. Daniel Sams knows it – just look at his face after he was torched by Cummins the other night; you can actually pinpoint the second when his heart rips in half. Justin Langer, meanwhile, had to cop it sweet during his whole contract wrangle with CA. And who was it that first posted a video of Alex Carey walking into a swimming pool while in Pakistan? Yep, lovable Patty C.(We’re not suggesting he had anything to do with “Sandpapergate”, by the way. That was clearly the work of a real evil genius. Or Cameron Bancroft.)”The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn’t exist.” So said Charles Baudelaire, the 19th century French poet who had a good nose for something fishy going on – and he would doubtless have been right on the scent here. Basically, folks, it’s important not to get seduced by the story. From now on, look at it this way: every gold-plated, spine-tingling, joy-sparking act of wonder that Cummins produces, on the cricket field or off – that’s 100% incontrovertible evidence of his deal with Satan.

****

Let’s take a moment to warm our hands at the dumpster fire that is English Test cricket. Lo and behold, turns out sacking the management (but not the captain) and binning your two greatest fast bowlers wasn’t a recipe for succeeding in the Caribbean after all – though Joe Root did at least come up with a new spin on their latest series defeat, saying his team played “brilliant cricket”. You might have felt you missed that, after two dull draws and a ten-wicket defeat, but perhaps Root was just displaying his full range of linguistic shot-making. After all, England’s batting in Grenada was dazzlingly, blindingly – you could say brilliantly – bad. “I think we’ve shown what we’re capable of as a group,” Root added, which was perhaps not so far from the truth.

****

These are heady times for Bangladesh. Their first ever win away to New Zealand, a famous Test smash-and-grab in Mount Maunganui. Their first-ever win away to South Africa, followed up by their second in a 2-1 ODI series romp – a result that consolidated their position at the top of the World Cup Super League. And now, further signs that they are ready for the big time. Okay, so they had their pants pulled down in the two Tests against South Africa… but before you could even say “bowled out by two spinners??”, the Bangladesh board moved into action, throwing shade at the local umpiring standards and calling out the opposition for sledging. Now Mominul Haque just needs to start yelling abuse into stumps mics and Bangladesh will have gone what’s known in the business as “Full BCCI”.

Mohammad Abbas targets Pakistan recall after taking County Championship by storm

After being dropped from the Test team, seamer’s surging form for Hampshire is remaking his case

Umar Farooq23-Apr-2021Until last week, Mohammad Abbas was an overlooked name in Pakistan cricket. But then at the Ageas Bowl, he reclaimed the spotlight with a remarkable performance for Hampshire against Middlesex in the LV= County Championship, to reignite his belief that his recent axing from the Test team will only be a temporary measure.After picking up three cheap wickets in an innings victory over his former club Leicestershire in the opening round, Abbas confirmed his rhythm was right back where he wanted it to be against Middlesex, as he claimed a hat-trick inside seven balls.The method he used was familiar: understated and deadly. A perfect line to a succession of batters, with just enough wobble off the seam to confound their defences. Max Holden was the first to go, to Abbas’ fifth ball of the innings, as the left-hander poked on an off-stump line and deflected a thick edge to Joe Weatherley at third slip. Nick Gubbins was pinned on the crease one ball later, as Abbas jagged a leg-stump delivery into his knee-roll, then with the first ball of his second over, he grazed Stevie Eskinazi’s outside edge as he pressed forward on off stump again.Before the end of his third over, Abbas had picked up each of the first five wickets to fall as Middlesex crashed to 14 for 5, at which point his figures were an extraordinary 2.5-1-3-5. When Sam Robson fell for 18, with Middlesex 31 for 6, he briefly looked on course to claim all ten in the match but had to settle for the final innings figures of 6 for 11. Though Middlesex put up more of a fight in the follow-on, no one could get to grips with Abbas, as he finished with match figures of 9 for 39 in 31 overs.The hat-trick, though, was the undoubted highlight. It was his first in an extensive 12-year first-class career, having previously failed to convert various opportunities in Pakistan, and Abbas believes that – with the national team still in need of a senior bowler to anchor their attack – his efforts for Hampshire could his route back to Test cricket, after admitting to a tail-off in recent international form.”It great to have a hat-trick in my profile,” Abbas told ESPNcricinfo. “These are kind of records every bowler wishes to have. I am happy that I will be able to decorate my career with this distinction.”I previously had various hat-trick chances in my career but missed it. So when this opportunity arrived, I never wanted it to let it go. With all the experience, I had an idea that the batsman might expect the ball to seam in but I thought to bowl an outswinger and it worked. I am grateful for it, and happy about it.”Ben Stokes winces as Mohammad Abbas bowls him for a duck•Getty ImagesAbbas, 31, is with Hampshire for an initial two months that covers as many as eight games, but his contract could be extended if the side reaches the league stage of the competition in August and September, which is very much on the cards after their flying start to the season.However, Pakistan could well come calling once more on the evidence of his current form. They are scheduled to play three Tests against West Indies in July and August this year, and having picked up 15 wickets at 19.20 in his debut series in the Caribbean in 2017, Pakistan’s chief selectors know plenty about his effectiveness in such conditions.However, he was dropped after a drastic slump in his form in the past two years. At the end of Pakistan’s tour of South Africa in January 2019, Abbas had picked up 66 wickets at 18.16 in 14 Tests, and at one stage he had the lowest average – 15.64 – for any bowler with 50-plus Test wickets in the last 100 years. Against Australia in Abu Dhabi, he became the first Pakistani bowler in 28 years to claim a ten-wicket haul, en route to a crushing 373-run win.Since then, however, Abbas has added just 18 more wickets in nine Tests, at an average of 37.27 and a strike rate of 94.5. He believes, however, that a combination of injury and a lack of match practice due to the Covid-19 pandemic contributed to this down-turn, as well as a dip in form from Pakistan’s attack as a whole.”I really had a great start to my career but unfortunately I got a shoulder injury,” Abbas said. “When you touch a peak and have a sudden fall you obviously need time to regain yourself. I did struggle after my return but then, in the second stint of my career, I lost the experienced bowlers at another end. Things started to break away. New management came in and I got to bowl with a fresh bowler, with Shaheen Afridi at his early stage. Musa [Khan], [Usman] Shinwari, Naseem Shah, they all were inexperienced and Yasir [Shah] also stopped taking wickets so it all comes down to me alone as a senior bowler.

“With all the experience, I had an idea that the batsman might expect the ball to seam in but I thought to bowl an outswinger and it worked”Mohammad Abbas on his hat-trick delivery

“Bowlers also need partnerships similar to in batting,” he added. “When I am bowling I usually develop chemistry and it takes time to find one. If one end is getting wickets, that is mainly because the other end is taking all the pressure of containing runs. One is attacking, the other is containing and controlling the flow of runs.”Given his central role in Pakistan’s victory at Lord’s in 2018, where he claimed four wickets in each innings to set the side up for a highly creditable 1-1 series draw, Abbas’ returns in England last summer were a disappointment, as he finished with five wickets at 35.80 in the three Tests – albeit one of those was arguably the ball of the series, a peerless outswinger to bowl Ben Stokes for a duck at Old Trafford. He fared little better on the subsequent tour of New Zealand, with four wickets at 45.00. But he believes a bowler of his type is particularly hampered by the Covid restrictions on tour.”In New Zealand, when I thought Afridi started to develop, we were suppressed with the 14-day quarantine,” he said. “It basically was a killer for a sportsperson. For a bowler, it’s about adjusting to the away conditions, understanding the length, and with pre-series prep, you get in your groove. But we were largely deprived so it was a missed opportunity for me to revive after injury.”Related

  • Mohammad Abbas, Naseem Shah return to Pakistan Test squad

  • Mohammad Abbas hat-trick and six-for leaves Middlesex feeling abashed

  • Ian Holland, Sam Northeast tons set Middlesex a mammoth target

  • All-round dominance hands Hampshire second big win of the season

Abbas’ expanding strike rate started to become a concern for Pakistan as the wicket tally started to shrink, even though he did well to contain the runs on both tours. But he was dropped for the home series against South Africa and overlooked again for the ongoing Zimbabwe tour.Pakistan left him to work on his game with the bowling coach Waqar Younis, who decided that his game didn’t need any major tweaks after injury. But in his absence, Pakistan have had a drastic change in their bowling line-up, with Afridi now the leader of the pack with a host of new faces.He accepts that a yard of extra pace might not hurt his chances of a recall, but also believes that his innate skill with a cricket ball will continue to stand him in good stead, particularly now that the Covid restrictions are limiting the use of saliva to help the ball swing.”I know I still have a lot to offer and Pakistan needs an experienced bowler,” Abbas said. “There is a lot of Test cricket coming up later this year and next year, and I think I can contribute. This ongoing County Championship is a big opportunity for me to revive myself. I know people often talk about my pace, and I had few words with Umar Gul, and he suggested me to bowl with the older ball as much as I can to generate more pace.”So it’s about getting into my method and helping me to bowl with extra pace. When you are not getting wickets as a player and as a team, your chips are down and your pace drops automatically. But once wickets are falling in your way, you start flying, and with every over you feel reinvigorated.”This county season came at the right time and I am going make the most out of it. Also, this new rule not to use saliva is basically allowing the ball to rough up pretty early than usual… like only after 15 overs instead of after 30 overs so more opportunity to take upfront wickets.”

England's kingpin returns as Ben Stokes rediscovers his poise

Thrilling innings confirms that England’s allrounder is back in a matchwinning frame of mind

Andrew Miller17-Mar-2022It was the on-drive that signalled that the old poise was back. Ben Stokes’ innings was just nine deliveries old, with not a run to his name as yet, when Jayden Seales floated an inswinger into his blockhole and, blam, out lashed that signature stroke – a perfectly perpendicular push back down the pitch, with lines so clean you could serve a pint of Red Stripe through them. Nobody moved, nor had time to move. And no stroke that Stokes had played for 18 months felt so effortless and ominous.For it’s often assumed that Stokes, England’s Superman, can just stroll into his mental phonebox whenever the cry goes up, and seize any situation through willpower alone. The truth has proven to be more complex, as his torrid recent experience in the Ashes went to show.And for that reason, there is arguably no player on this tour more likely to have benefitted from the so-called “reset” vibe, given that Stokes needs nothing more than to re-frame those lofty expectations via a ground-floor re-entry to Test cricket, rather than tumbling at the last minute through the top-floor window, as he had done in October with his thrilling, but ultimately self-defeating, declaration that he was ready for the toughest tour of all.Related

Ben Stokes century sets up England declaration before West Indies dig in

Ben Stokes vows to dig deeper after 'letting myself down' in the Ashes

Ben Stokes opted out of IPL auction because 'Test cricket is number one priority'

'I'm ready for Australia' – Ben Stokes added to England's Ashes squad

Even before the Ashes campaign had exposed the fallacy of wishing oneself to full match fitness, however, Stokes’ finest performances had long been the product of a surfeit of preparation – be it his unrivalled determination to bust a gut in training, or that uber-cautious calibration at the start of his Headingley epic, during which he eked out seven grimly chiselled runs from his first 80 deliveries.And so, for the first hour of his innings in Barbados, it was as if Stokes was giving each of his highlights-reel contenders a spring clean. Dot … dot … hammer-blow through backward point. Dot … dot … rambunctious drive through the covers. In the Ashes just gone, he had set out his stall for a similar approach, but emerged with an average of 23.60 and a strike-rate of 42.06, as if his thirst for the hard yards had become an end in itself. On this occasion, however, with each of those explosions of pure muscle-memory, Stokes was able to confirm – to the jubilant England fans in the stands but most importantly to himself – that this time the real deal was ready to burst forth.Afterwards Stokes demurred when asked if he was back to his best. “I don’t know,” he said. “It was good to spend time in the middle and get some runs, but you’re only as good as your next knock or your next bowling innings. But it wasn’t frustrating, I don’t really focus on those kind of things. I just want to put in match-winning performances and they aren’t always making hundreds or taking five-fors.”Ironically, it was the least well-timed of Stokes’ 17 boundaries that convinced him he was ready to go loco. After easing along to a sedate 23 from 55 balls, Stokes plinked a drive through mid-off from Alzarri Joseph, looked askance at the inner edge of his blade, and figured, “that’ll do”. In a sudden thrash of willow, he smashed 66 from his next 37 balls, including three sixes in four overs to put the “maul” into Veerasammy Permaul’s figures, and a preposterous one-legged swipe over long-on as Joseph was pounded from the attack in a 20-run over.In truth, after the mental turmoil that devoured his 2021, it had already been apparent that Stokes’ game-brain was back where it belongs. In words and deeds, he had repeatedly laid bare his determination to dig deeper – from his withdrawal from the IPL mega-auction because “Test cricket is the number one priority” to his post-Ashes self-admonishment for “letting people down”, and all the way through to his preposterous workload on a dead deck in Antigua – 28 overs in the first innings, and 41 all told, all while allegedly convalescing after a side strain.Ben Stokes was emotional on reaching 100•Getty ImagesBut this was the performance that assuaged all the doubts. Stokes’ 11th Test century was his first since July 2020, also against West Indies, when he lit up that summer’s second Test at Old Trafford with quite possibly the most remarkable all-round display of his career – an eight-hour 176 in the first innings; 78 not out from 57 balls as a declaration-seeking opener in the second, and a crucial partnership-breaking role across both bowling stints in a hard-fought fifth-day win.At that precise moment, Stokes was at the absolute zenith of his game – a player unsated by his transcendent summer of 2019 and, with five remarkable hundreds in the space of the preceding 12 months, seemingly focused on becoming the best pure batter in Test cricket, let alone the premier allrounder.But then, within the month, Stokes was flying back to New Zealand on an indefinite career break, as his father Ged succumbed to brain cancer, and though he returned to England colours in India the following spring, a subdued display gave way to a badly broken finger in his opening match of the subsequent IPL – an injury so problematic that he genuinely feared he might never play again.His Ashes struggles were just a glimpse into the well – they gave no real hint as to quite how deep Stokes’ despair had run during his months on the sidelines. And so all manner of competing emotions would have tumbled through his mind as he nudged that landmark single into the covers, and after gesturing with that familiar crooked-finger salute to his departed father, he fell into the embrace of his team-mate Jonny Bairstow – a man whose memories of his own father have been such a driving force throughout his own career, not least during his own emotional century at Cape Town in 2016, when he and Stokes had added 399 for the sixth wicket.”He just said ‘take it all in lad’, in his nice Yorkie accent,” Stokes said of his team-mate’s reaction. “Me and Jonny have been with each other quite a lot in the middle, when one of us has got to a milestone, same as Rooty.”In India I got 99 [in the second ODI in Pune] and it was a bit of a dagger in the heart but it was nice to get there and remember him that way. I don’t like to speak selfishly, but it was a nice feeling out there, to look up to the sky.”There are caveats galore to be factored into this England display, of course. This Barbados deck has been grotesquely flat, and the depths to which the team’s Test fortunes have plummeted in the past year cannot be glossed over by a few cheap runs in the sun. That said, England now have five centuries in three innings on this tour – which is just two shy of their tally for the whole of 2021. And their kingpin is back where he belongs, dictating Test agendas as if he’d never been away.

Wolves make first approach to sign £34m Club World Cup goalscorer

da stake casino: Turning their focus towards the Club World Cup, Wolverhampton Wanderers have now reportedly made their first approach to sign a South American star this summer.

Who Wolves could sign next after Lopez

da supremo: Wolves still have money to burn after welcoming Fer Lopez and could yet do so to make an emphatic statement ahead of Vitor Pereira’s first full season in the charge. The sales of Rayan Ait-Nouri and Matheus Cunha may have dealt the Midlands club a frustrating double blow, but they have also provided those at Molineux with the funds to pursue names such as Harvey Elliott.

£85m release clause: Wolves make first approach to sign South American gem

The Midlands club could sign the midfielder in a cut-price deal.

ByTom Cunningham Jun 26, 2025

The Liverpool youngster seems to be edging closer to the exit door at Anfield and recent reports revealed that it is Wolves who are confident of getting a deal done to secure his signature. Priced at £40m, Pereira could yet welcome a player who just dragged England into the U21 Euros final with a fantastic winning goal to add to his first effort.

His price tag may seem steep on paper, but Elliott would be worth every penny on the pitch. At just 22 years old, the Liverpool gem is already a two-time Premier League winner and has also won both the FA Cup and Carabao Cup during his time in Merseyside. What makes those achievements even more special is the fact that he is yet to reach the peak of his powers.

Wolves have an opportunity to sign an underrated youngster this summer and must do everything to secure his signature. It’s then that Elliott could also be joined by a Club World Cup star as the focus remains on welcoming exciting young talents in the Midlands this summer.

Wolves make first Wallace Yan approach

As reported by Globo Esporte and relayed by Sport Witness, Wolves have now made their first approach to sign Wallace Yan from Flamengo. The 20-year-old forward has a release clause to join European clubs worth €40m (£34m) and could yet swap South America for the Midlands as a result this summer.

Flamengo's Wallace Yan celebrates scoring against Flamengo.

The young forward has already enjoyed the feeling of scoring against English opposition too, having netted Flamengo’s third goal in a shock 3-1 victory over Chelsea at the Club World Cup.

A player who was described as “selfless” by analyst Ben Mattinson in April, Yan is full of potential and joining following former Fluminense midfielder Andre to Wolves could be the perfect way to reach that potential.

The deal won’t come cheap, but the Brazilian proved that has the quality to match Premier League opposition when he squared off against Chelsea. Now, Wolves would be wise to make their move.

'Another one for the trophy cabinet' – Spurs take hilarious jab at Arsenal after beating Gunners to lift pre-season silverware in Hong Kong after Europa League triumph

Tottenham Hotspur emerged triumphant in a heated North London derby, held for the first time no foreign soil, defeating Arsenal 1-0 at Kai Tak Sports Park in Hong Kong. The highly anticipated friendly turned into a showcase for Pape Matar Sarr, who delivered a moment of brilliance to settle the contest in Spurs' favour.

Spurs beat Arsenal in a pre-season friendlySarr scored a sensational winnerTook aim at their fierce rivals on social mediaFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

While the goal was celebrated by the Tottenham camp, it wasn’t without controversy. Arsenal players immediately protested the referee's decision to let play continue after Richarlison’s challenge. They argued that the Brazilian forward had committed a foul in winning the ball from Myles Lewis-Skelly, but the official, Lau Fong Hei, remained unmoved and allowed the goal to stand.

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Though the fixture may have been billed as a pre-season friendly, Tottenham's victory came with silverware, providing the club with more than just bragging rights. Spurs took full advantage of the occasion, lifting the trophy and taking to social media to revel in their success.

WHAT TOTTENHAM SAID

Tottenham’s media team wasted no time in mocking their local rivals with one post captioned, “Another one for the trophy cabinet,” clearly aimed at Arsenal’s well-documented struggles to add to their honours in recent years.

DID YOU KNOW?

The jibe struck a nerve, as Tottenham, often on the receiving end of jokes about their own silverware drought, have started to turn the narrative. Having gone nearly 17 years without a major honour, Spurs ended their barren run last season under Ange Postecoglou by winning the Europa League final against Manchester United.

With Tottenham lifting two pieces of silverware in a matter of months, Arsenal have now become the ‘top six’ club with the longest ongoing wait for a major trophy. Their most recent triumph dates back to the 2019-2020 season when manager Mikel Arteta guided them to an FA Cup win in his debut campaign.

Como venda de Neymar poderia prolongar passagem de Deivid e Marcos Leonardo no Santos

MatériaMais Notícias

da fezbet: A diretoria do Santos, no início da temporada 2023, traçou como objetivo arrecadar aproximadamente R$ 134 milhões entre metas esportivas e venda de ativos do clube (leia-se atletas).

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da imperador bet: Porém, o desempenho planejado pela cúpula santista dentro das quatro linhas não atingiu o sucesso desejado, o que fez com que a equipe da Vila Belmiro tivesse que vender alguns de seus principais jogadores, como Ângelo e Deivid Washington.

+ Já atualizou sua camisa de 2023? Confira os novos uniformes do Peixe!

METAS ESPORTIVAS DA TEMPORADA

Vice-campeão do Paulistão – R$ 1,65 milhão
6º lugar no Brasileirão – cerca de R$ 33,7 milhões
Quartas de final da Sul-Americana – cerca de R$ 10,44 milhões
Quartas de final da Copa do Brasil – R$ 12,8 milhões
Total: R$ 58,59 milhões

?NEYMAR PODERIA SER O SALVADOR?

Segundo informações do jornal francês L’ Équipe, Neymar fez um pedido formal à diretoria do PSG para deixar o clube nesta temporada. Caso a transação aconteça, o Alvinegro tem direito de receber uma porcentagem como clube formador do atacante (4%), de acordo com o Mecanismo de Solidariedade da Fifa.

Então, caso o camisa 10 seja vendido por 60 milhões de euros (seu valor de mercado no site “Transfermarkt”, especializado em cifras do futebol), o Peixe receberia uma compensação de 2,4 milhões de euros (R$ 12,96 milhões na cotação atual).

Neste cenário, o Santos bateria as metas de vendas de jogadores apenas com a negociação de Ângelo e a transação de Neymar, que totalizariam juntas mais de 80 milhões de reais, ultrapassando o objetivo estipulado pela diretoria.

– O orçamento de 2023 prevê uma arrecadação de R$ 76.000.000 com a venda de direitos federativos como receitas extraordinárias. A média das receitas auferidas com venda de direitos econômicos dos últimos doze exercícios (2011 até 2022) foi de US$ 20.185.000 (quadro abaixo) ou R$ 70.452.000 – diz o documento do orçamento anual.

VENDAS DO SANTOS NA JANELA DE INVENO 2023

Ângelo para o Chelsea – 15 milhões de euros. Santos possuía 85% dos direitos do jogador
Deivid Washington para o Chelsea – 15 milhões de euros. Santos possuía 70% dos direitos do jogador

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