A waste of €80m?! PSG's investment in Goncalo Ramos showing few early signs of being worthwhile

The Portugal international arrived to much fanfare over the summer, but has only found the net in one game thus far and fallen out of the line-up

After just about surviving his first season at Paris Saint-Germain, all eyes were on how Luis Campos would rebuild at one of Europe's most demanding clubs. The French champions' lead football advisor relieved manager Christophe Galtier of his duties and sold Neymar, while he did not stand in the way of Lionel Messi departing either.

After hiring Luis Enrique, his reported fourth choice to replace Galtier, Campos went about assembling a new-look squad. One of his first moves was to sign Goncalo Ramos on a loan deal from Benfica with an obligation to buy. Although they didn't send the Portuguese side a cent this summer, Ramos will someday cost the Parisians up to €80m.

On the surface, it made some sense. PSG were rife with uncertainty in regards to Kylian Mbappe's future, but knew they were moving on from Messi and Neymar. A forward — of any description — was necessary. However, Ramos wasn't the only attacker to walk through the entrance door at Parc des Princes during the transfer window.

Of the 11 signings Campos sanctioned in a that three-month period, six were attacking players who would be made available to Luis Enrique in 2023-24. That doesn't include Xavi Simons, who was immediately loaned out to RB Leipzig but is expected back at some stage. Factor in that Mbappe eventually opted to stay, and suddenly the cupboard was far from bare.

Someone was bound to become a spare part, and right now that looks to be Ramos. The obligation to pay an initial €65m (£57m/$70m) already feels like an unnecessary financial burden that will need to be dealt with in the coming months, and is a sign that despite claiming to be more sensible spenders, PSG remain prone to the odd reckless investment as they search for a winning formula that will work outside of France.

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    Signing that made sense

    In the summer of 2022, when PSG drew up their summer target list, they included a number of big names. Manchester City's Bernardo Silva was reportedly in there. So too was Gianluca Scamacca, who eventually joined West Ham. With both players off the market, PSG turned to Ramos.

    And in many ways, it made sense, as the Parisians needed a central striker. With Messi and Neymar no longer out-and-out goalscoring threats, and Mbappe insisting on having a No.9 to play alongside rather than be deployed there himself, Ramos, who had scored seven goals as a 21-year-old in the shadow of Darwin Nunez for Benfica, seemed an investment for both the present and future.

    Campos, who had deep connections to Portuguese football, pushed for the move. But it never materialised, and the Parisians instead bought Hugo Ekitike — a talented but raw striker who had bagged 10 Ligue 1 goals for Reims the previous season.

    That sequence of events eventually benefitted Ramos immensely. The forward was handed another year of development in his homeland, and scored 27 goals, leading the Primeira Liga in non-penalty goals, and averaging 0.79 non-penalty xG per 90 minutes.

    But it was at the World Cup where he really turned heads. Portugal famously benched misfiring captain Cristiano Ronaldo for their last-16 clash with Switzerland in Qatar. In his stead, Ramos exploded, bagging a hat-trick that included a thumping near-post finish for one of the goals of the tournament.

    That showing made him one of 2023's hottest transfer targets. At various points, Manchester United, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich were all said to be interested. PSG, though, had already done the groundwork, and were always likely to beat the other interested parties.

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    A poor start

    Ramos' start to life at PSG has been mixed, at best. His full debut, the Parisians' 0-0 draw with Lorient to open the season, was marred by missed chances and underwhelming sequences. The striker was handed his side's best opportunity of the day, but nodded wide in the 78th minute to spoil what would have been a dream beginning in Paris.

    He started the next fixture, another draw in which he failed to score, and has since drifted in and out of the starting XI. His only goals in a PSG shirt have come in the 4-0 thrashing of Marseille. In his first Classique, the Portuguese replaced the injured Mbappe, and was arguably more effective than the France captain on the day, bagging a brace and leading a famous rout of their old rivals.

    This isn't a player who has forgotten how to score altogether, though. Ramos has been effective for his national team, fitting into the same side as Ronaldo — the man he once replaced — to great effect. He has found the net three times in his last two games for the Selecao, showing the kind of cutting edge that saw him become so coveted by most of Europe's best just six months ago.

    Still, for all of this success in a national-team shirt, domestic goals have proved elusive. Ramos has put just 31 percent of his shots on target, putting him in the 19th percentile among Ligue 1 forwards, according to while he is also slightly under-performing his expected goals. Something just isn't clicking.

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    Competition up front

    Ramos' struggles have only been amplified by the depth in the squad that has been built around him. Luis Enrique's initial flirtations with Marco Asensio, a free signing from Real Madrid, as a No.9 seemed guaranteed to budge the glut of PSG's other striking options out of contention. But when the Spaniard picked up an injury, a chance emerged.

    It was, at first, Ramos' spot to lose, but he swiftly played himself out of contention. Randal Kolo Muani now appears to have the central spot nailed down, with Mbappe on one wing, and Ousame Dembele on the other. And when Luis Enrique shifts to a 4-2-4 formation — something he has experimented with to varying degrees of success — both Bradley Barcola and Lee Kang-in have had their names called before Ramos.

    And while none of the Parisians' attackers have truly hit a groove in front goal, the Kolo Muani and Mbappe link seems to be working. There is, of course, the French connection there, as Mbappe and Kolo Muani have formed a solid partnership up front for the national team, and Mbappe made it clear that he wanted to play alongside a more recognisable central striking force.

    Additionally, the Kolo Muani is slightly more suited to that need than Ramos. He is more comfortable drifting into wide areas, or running channels, while he is also a sharp passer, and tidy with the ball at his feet, especially given his size.

    Things get even trickier for Ramos when the manager opts for an extra attacking player. That system typically requires Mbappe and Kolo Muani to occupy the two central roles, leaving four players to fight for spots out wide — an area of the pitch in which Ramos simply doesn't excel.

    Luis Enrique will, of course, have few complaints about the depth of his squad — and Ramos has not been frozen out entirely. But, for now at least, he finds himself far down his manager's pecking order.

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    Not playing to his strengths

    Many attacking players tend to have their favourite spots in the final third. For Mbappe, it's the left corner of the 18-yard box, ideally cutting onto his right foot. For Mohamed Salah, it's the same space, but on the right side. Cristiano Ronaldo typically drifts to the far post. Erling Haaland sort of makes the whole penalty area his, such is his size, tenacity, and general obsession with finding the net.

    Ramos' favoured area is highly-specific. He, in fact, scores the same goal a lot of the time. Of his 27 goals in all competitions last season, 19 came from inside the six-yard box. A large chunk of those resulted from runs across defenders, and ensuing one-touch finishes at the near post. It was a near-perfect formula for Benfica, who utilised the pace and crossing ability of Alex Grimaldo to find Ramos as he made that signature dart in front of opposition centre-backs. Portugal caught on, too, with one of Ramos' treble against Switzerland coming in a similar manner.

    Unfortunately for him, it's not the kind of move that PSG piece together. In general, the full-back on the left side of the pitch offers cover for Mbappe — and is seldom asked to get forward. And if there is any space at the near post, it is Mbappe's to exploit. That run, Ramos' go-to dart, is almost impossible for him to make. His preferred spot is rendered unavailable by the very nature of his most talented team-mate's playing style.

    Luis Enrique has admitted that Ramos isn't always the best fit for his team, either. "He moves very well. It's true that we're not a team that crosses a lot so maybe we don't see his best statistics, but he's a top player, who does a spectacular job," he said before PSG's recent win over Brest. In the most measured way possible, his own manager admitted that his big-money signing simply isn't the right fit.

Jadon Sancho will look to leave Man Utd in January transfer window after failing to settle differences with Erik ten Hag during showdown talks over his future

Jadon Sancho will reportedly push for a transfer away from Manchester United in January after holding showdown talks with Erik ten Hag.

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Winger dropped for Arsenal gameClaims to have been made a scapegoatReady to take on a new challengeWHAT HAPPENED?

It is suggested that the working relationship between the England international winger and his demanding Dutch coach has completely broken down at Old Trafford. With there seemingly no way back, a move that suits all parties will be sought when the next window opens.

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Ten Hag dropped Sancho from his matchday plans for a Premier League trip to Arsenal. He stated that performances in training were behind that decision. Sancho hit back in a statement of his own, with the 23-year-old forward claiming to have been made a “scapegoat”.

DID YOU KNOW?

Talks have been held between Sancho and his club boss, with the reporting that a parting of ways now appears to be inevitable. A loan deal in January is considered to be the most likely option, with that agreement including the option for a permanent transfer to be pushed through in the summer of 2024.

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GettyWHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Any switch will bring a forgettable spell at United to a close for Sancho. On the back of his £75 million ($94m) arrival from Bundesliga giants Borussia Dortmund in 2021, the highly-rated wideman has registered just 12 goals through 82 appearances and lost his place in Gareth Southgate’s England squad.

Ansu Fati's last chance? Barcelona starlet must prove himself quickly or he'll be sold to make room for wonderkid Lamine Yamal

Ansu Fati has until the end of the summer transfer window to prove that he can be a long-term option for his boyhood club

Last March, Ansu Fati's dad, Bori, got on the phone with Spanish radio show to complain about his son's relationship with the club. His grievances were all centred around one singular issue: in his opinion, his son wasn't playing enough. Consequently, Bori had advised his son to leave the club – and speculated that even Real Madrid could be a possible destination.

His outburst dragged Barcelona into yet another public relations saga about their oft-injured forward. Ansu Fati was once the next 'New Messi', a presumptive fixture in the Barca lineup for years to come. He scored more goals in his breakout season than Messi managed in first full campaign in Catalunya. He broke a handful of records set by the Argentine. Throw in the fact that Fati was another La Masia graduate, right when Messi seemed to be on the decline, and the excitement was palpable.

However, a series of injuries, and ensuing inconsistency on the pitch, have seen Fati fail to live up to the promise of his youth. And now, he finds himself at a critical juncture. Fati has recaptured some of his best form since his father's outbursts, and a solid pre-season suggests that he still has a lot to give.

But he might not get the chance. Another, arguably better, teenager has emerged and with the Blaugrana needing to raise money to fund more summer transfer activity, Xavi himself admitted that Fati could be on his way out.

So, Fati effectively has two weeks to save his Barcelona career, and prove that there's still a player in there, one that was once hailed as having the potential to be the best in the world.

GettyA glowing start to his career

Fati set expectations from his first goal alone. It was a pretty thing, the then-16-year-old ghosting across the box, and rising above an Osasuna player to flick an angled cross into the far corner. More moments followed over the course of that forgettable 2019-20 season for Barca. Fati scored seven and assisted one, averaging 0.6 goals per 90 minutes in 24 appearances. His game time was carefully managed by then-coach Ronald Koeman, but he played enough to show what he could do.

Even more exciting was his emerging relationship with Messi. The two appeared to have a crucial understanding on the pitch, the Argentine setting up arguably Fati's most impressive goal of the year with a dink over two defenders.

There was perhaps an element of overexcitement here. Fati, after all, was a teenager playing for Barcelona. He was their youngest goalscorer ever, a La Masia graduate, and the shining light in an otherwise miserable campaign. It is often the case that youngsters draw the spotlight when big teams go through lulls. Messi, at the time, was struggling (he scored 25 league goals that year.) Barcelona needed something to cling on to, and in Fati, they had found Messi's heir.

Of course, things have never really panned out that way. Fati tore his meniscus midway through his second season in Catalunya, and endured three surgeries by the age of 19. When he was finally fully fit, in August 2022, Barcelona had effectively replaced him. Robert Lewandowski, Ousmane Dembele, Raphinha, Memphis Depay and Ferran Torres all appeared to be above him in Xavi's pecking order. Ansu's Barca career was over, it seemed.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesLast year's Fati revival

Then, last season, Fati did something interesting: he started to score goals again. Xavi gently increased his minutes, tasking the 20-year-old with a larger role off the bench, and handing him the occasional start. Fati, in return, found something resembling form. He got into the right areas more often, and was more clinical in front of goal than in his sparing spells of fitness in the years since his breakout.

The result was seven goals in La Liga – his best return in four years. He added a further three assists, all while playing the most minutes of his career. And, perhaps most importantly, Fati avoided a major injury. Xavi, in turn, was full of praise for Fati.

He expressed his "confidence and total faith" in the player, and rewarded his improved showings with a start in a crucial Liga clash with Atletico Madrid in early January. These are perhaps standard things, a manager rewarding his striker for scoring goals. But for a player whose career seemed to be fading away, they were significant.

It was, in fact, strange that his father would criticise Xavi when he did. His tirade came in the middle of an extended spell of playing time for Fati, a period where the Spaniard was just recapturing his form. By the end of the season, Fati appeared to have done enough to salvage his career. A Spain call-up followed, and although his name cropped up in the back page transfer rumours every now and then, Raphinha seemed the more likely of Barca's wingers to be sold.

GettyA valuable asset for a broke club

Things have changed since then. There was an assumption around Barcelona that they would be able to make some financial moves this summer without needing a major clearout. La Liga had already accepted their 'financial viability plan' to bring Lionel Messi back to the club, while president Joan Laporta had assured fans that new signings were on the way. Throw in the activation of one more 'lever' – a sale of a large chunk of digital content provider Barca Vision to bring in €120 million (£104m/$131m) – and everything seemed set up nicely.

Barca, of course, didn't sign Messi. Meanwhile, they have operated on the cheap, bringing in free agents and spending minimally on Oriol Romeu. So, with two weeks remaining in the transfer window, no further levers available, and ambitions to further strengthen the squad, outgoings seem likely. And Fati is reportedly top of the list.

Xavi has conceded that the forward may leave. Interest from the Premier League has only fueled that speculation. has reported that Arsenal are in for Fati, with Mikel Arteta hoping to add more firepower to his front line – and offer valuable cover for Bukayo Saka. It is unclear how much Fati will fetch Xavi's side.

However, at just 20, with four years still left on his contract, Fati could command a handsome fee. And for a club needing an injection of cash to pursue further signings – namely Man City's Joao Cancelo – moving him on might be the correct, if rather ruthless, decision.

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Barcelona TwitterWhy Lamine Yamal is such a threat

The situation is perhaps made easier by the cover available to Barca in the forward line. While Ferran Torres appears to be much improved, and Ez Abde has shown flashes, another La Masia product seems ready to come into the fold. There has been hype around Lamine Yamal for some time now. The winger was called up to first team training in September 2022, shortly after his 15th birthday.

But, according to, the plan was to shield him from the spotlight, and allow Yamal to play with Barcelona Atletic, the club's second team, for much of the season. There was always the chance of the occasional appearance in the Copa del Rey, but the reserve side seemed a perfect option for at least a few months.

However, when Dembele left, Yamal was forced into action. And his performance in the Joan Gamper trophy – a 10-minute cameo that proved influential in Barcelona turning a 2-1 deficit into a 4-2 win – made him impossible to ignore.

He, accordingly, appeared in Barca's La Liga opener, and created arguably their best chance of the game- one that, in a cruel twist of fate, Fati failed to convert. Ironically, though, it has created something of a problem for Xavi.

Yamal is not, and can never be, the new Messi. Fati, of all people, knows that it's improbable. But he is, at this point, too good to ignore – and being blocked by another youngster who drew the same praise at a similar age.

From Mason Mount to Romelu Lukaku – Meet the players who played for both Manchester United and Chelsea

Goal takes a look at the top players who played for both Chelsea and Manchester United…

Manchester United are set to take on Chelsea in a crucial Premier League tie at Old Trafford. The Red Devils are coming into this tie on the back of two defeats at the hands of Liverpool and Arsenal, conceding seven goals in two matches.

Whenever Manchester and Chelsea meet, there is a lot is at stake. And this time, with just four games to go in the season, it is a must-win tie for Ralf Rangnick's boys if they want to keep their faint top four hopes alive.

The intense rivalry between the two clubs began at the beginning of the 21st century after the Blues became a force to reckon with in England.

While the rivalry is not a traditional one, the two sides have a long list of players who have donned the jerseys of both clubs.

Currently, two Manchester United players Juan Mata and Nemanja Matic started their journey in the Premier League with Chelsea.

Players from yesteryears like Juan Sebastian Veron, Mark Hughes and Ray Wilkins also played for both Manchester United and Chelsea.

Here is a look at the prominent players who have played for Chelsea and Man United.

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    Mason Mount

    Chelsea stint: 2017 – 2023

    Manchester United stint: 2023 – current

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    Romelu Lukaku

    Chelsea stint: 2011-2014, 2021-present

    Manchester United stint: 2017-2019

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    Juan Mata

    Chelsea stint: 2011-2014

    Manchester United stint: 2014-present

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    Nemanja Matic

    Chelsea stint: 2009-2011, 2014-2017

    Manchester United stint: 2017-present

Liverpool Transfer Blow On £155k-p/w Target

Journalist Fabrizio Romano has handed Liverpool a transfer blow amid their recent links to midfielder Ryan Gravenberch.

What is the latest Liverpool transfer news?

It's well understood that the Reds are in the hunt for a new midfielder but may have to scout around for a cheaper alternative to the much-coveted Jude Bellingham, who has been linked with a departure from Borussia Dortmund.

With that being the case, the Premier League club have recently been linked with a move for Bayern Munich midfielder Gravenberch.

Indeed, as per German news outlet BILD, a "delegation from Liverpool had sought talks with Gravenberch's management in the past few days" and so it seems as though Jurgen Klopp's men have a very real interest in the 20-year-old.

However, while talking on the latest episode of the Here We Go podcast, Romano explained that Bayern have already decided to keep the player, so any move will be difficult to complete.

He said: "We know that Liverpool want Ryan Gravenberch. So Liverpool are waiting for the player to speak to Bayern.

"But from Bayern's side, the decision is already made, they want to keep the player. So the only way is for the player to go there and tell Bayern: 'I want to leave.'

"But at the moment, this has not happened and Bayern are still pushing to keep the player for one more season."

Will Ryan Gravenberch join Liverpool?

Seeing as the midfielder – who reportedly earns around £155k per week – has hardly played this season, he may want to leave Germany.

Indeed, after arriving from Ajax last summer, Gravenberch has managed just 348 minutes of action in the Bundesliga.

With that in mind, the youngster may want to force an exit away from Bayern Munich. And by the sounds of it, that's the only way this deal could be completed with the German giants not keen to see the talent leave.

Bayern Munich's Ryan Gravenberch.

For now, though, it remains unclear how the player feels about the whole situation. Indeed, when quizzed about the Liverpool interest, journalist Christian Falk revealed that Gravenberch "didn‘t want to comment".

And while it's easy to argue that he could get more playing time in England and so might want to leave, you could also claim that he won't want to give up his Bundesliga dream just yet either.

After all, it was only last summer that he opted to join Munich despite being wanted by a number of top clubs across Europe.

£30k-p/w Defender Slammed As Rangers Lose Old Firm

BBC journalist Tom English has slammed Rangers defender James Tavernier amid his "atrocious" display in the club's recent defeat.

What's the latest on James Tavernier and Rangers?

It was another frustrating Old Firm clash for the Ibrox outfit as they lost to their bitter rivals in the Scottish Cup semi-final.

Truth be told, it was a pretty tight affair but Celtic just about edged out Michael Beale and co on the day to pick up a 1-0 win at Hampden Park.

With that in mind, it will be all the more frustrating for the only goal of the game to have come in the manner in which it did. Indeed, the Rangers defence went to sleep, allowing Daizen Maeda to quickly cross to Jota who headed in at the far post.

Tavernier was among those most culpable in the Ibrox backline and this was made clear by journalist English.

Indeed, as quoted by BBC Sport, he remarked: "There were four or five Rangers players culpable for the goal. A defensive lapse, switching off and James Tavernier's positioning there was atrocious.

"He's the captain and, when the ball is in the air, he doesn't have a clue where Jota is."

How bad was James Tavernier against Celtic?

The BBC reporter wasn't the only one to note just how poor this piece of defending at the back post was by the £30k-p/w right-back.

For instance, in the Daily Record player ratings, writer Andrew Newport handed him a 6/10 and said of the incident: "Sleeping at the back post as Jota pounced."

​​​​​​Unfortunately, this isn't the only time of late where question marks have been raised over the captain's defensive abilities during an Old Firm meeting.

For example, when Rangers lost 3-2 to Celtic at the start of April, former Celtic captain Tom Boyd described Tavernier as a “very, very poor defender”.

After the right-back scored a freekick in the defeat, Boyd said (via the Irish Mirror): “Joe Hart had absolutely no chance with the accuracy of it coming down off the crossbar. He might have been able to save it if he was standing there.

"But that’s all Tavernier’s got as a player. He’s good at set pieces, he’s good at penalties… as a defender he’s very, very poor.”

Unfortunately, after this latest defensive mishap on the weekend, it's not as though the Rangers captain has done much to prove these claims wrong.

Middlesex's glass looks Fuller after first win

The tale of an utterly one-sided contest was summed up neatly by the reactions of the two dressing rooms when Middlesex finally finished Hampshire off

Will Macpherson at Merchant Taylors' School01-Jun-2016
ScorecardJames Fuller impressed on his Championship debut for Middlesex (file photo)•PA Photos

The tale of an utterly one-sided contest was summed up neatly by the reactions of the two dressing rooms when Middlesex finally finished Hampshire off.Middlesex, who took maximum points having waited six painstaking, flat-decked, rain-wrecked draws for a win, sang their long-awaited team song raucously and enjoyed a couple of cleansing, hard-earned beers. Hampshire, seven days after a brilliant win over Nottinghamshire, sat down for a 20-minute, sombre-sounding debrief. They had been trounced – out-batted, out-bowled and out-fought, and only the rain had prevented an innings defeat from arriving sooner. They claimed just one bonus point but subsequently lost it, and another point too, for a shoddy over-rate. They left with one point fewer than they arrived and joined Surrey at the foot of Division One.It was the pace and carry of James Fuller, who took a five-wicket haul on his Championship debut for Middlesex, that finally did for Hampshire. Fuller was signed from Gloucestershire primarily to help Middlesex remedy their white-ball woes but, having impressed all and sundry with a simple, friendly attitude and the ability to bowl 90mph, he was handed a debut here with Steven Finn – who popped by for that post-match beer – on England duty and James Harris rested.Having had a bye in week one, this was Middlesex’s seventh consecutive game. Tim Murtagh and Toby Roland-Jones bowled brilliantly, picking up six and five wickets respectively, but Fuller’s fresher legs, and the extra bounce they helped generate, were invaluable.It was Roland-Jones, as so often, who picked up the first of the six wickets his team required, as Joe Weatherley – who looked a cricketer at ease on Championship debut – lost his off-bail. More like his director of cricket, Angus Fraser, by the day – in gait and bowling style – Roland-Jones is simply the kind of cricketer who makes his team-mates look better.In the field, it is hard to recall an error. With the bat, coming in at No. 10 when many sage judges believe he could be as high as seven, he so often adds useful runs. With the ball, he bowls long spells off an even longer run-up and can play the pacy enforcer – as he did for much of the match here – or nag on line and length.Roland-Jones was left frustrated for the rest of the day, just missing the outside edge or, when he found it, the nick not quite finding a hand. After Weatherley fell, Jimmy Adams dug in, as he had late on Monday and during the 17 overs on Tuesday, to make 78, pulling when Roland-Jones dropped short and clipping neatly off his legs, too.Adam Wheater drove nicely and the pair shared 53 before falling in consecutive overs. James Franklin made the vital breakthrough, having Adams lbw, then Wheater failed to move his feet and was caught at the wicket to become the first of Fuller’s three on the day. A brief shower brought an early lunch shortly after.Fuller’s first four balls upon resumption were as short and sharp as any in the match. With the trap set, Tino Best tried – and failed – to hook all three. The fourth was fuller and Best simply found mid-on, just as he had in the first innings. It is hard to recall notably animated celebrators Middlesex, irked at the beamer Best bowled Adam Voges on day two and angry at the way he had been speaking to their close fielders in the short period before lunch, toasting a dismissal more raucously. After his second pair in consecutive matches, Best was told exactly where to go, and it would have been noted that he did not return for a handshake at day’s end.Before then, Mason Crane had some fun, edging for the rafters, but soon slapped Fuller to point and, after Ryan McLaren – who lacked luck throughout the game – played some fine strokes to delay the inevitable, James Tomlinson edged Ollie Rayner to slip.There was much to discuss at Hampshire’s debrief. Best, in many ways, appears to be becoming an apt embodiment of the team as a whole; brilliant on the good days – such as the spectacular win over Nottinghamshire last week when he was so electric – but miserable on the worst ones (these were very much four of the worst ones), and with an injury never far away. For all those injuries, as their captain Will Smith pointed out afterwards, of this XI only Weatherley and Crane have played fewer than 100 first-class matches, yet performances remain brittle and bipolar.”It seems to be a pattern for us in this format,” Smith said. “When we have our backs to the wall, we do something, like we did last week, but it’s about having that mentality from ball one and not getting yourselves into these situations.”A couple more weeks like this, you sense, and last year’s great escape will be required all over again.

'Nobody wants to lose like this' – Mashrafe

Mashrafe Mortaza has rallied around the batsmen who took Bangladesh close, but lost their wickets as a win against India was within their grasp

Andrew Fidel Fernando in Bangalore 23-Mar-20161:23

‘Everything was all right till last three balls’ – Mashrafe

Mashrafe Mortaza has rallied around the batsmen who took Bangladesh close, but lost their wickets as a win against India was within their grasp. Mushfiqur Rahim hit successive fours in the final over to leave his team needing two runs to win, off three balls. But both he and Mahmudullah holed out to midwicket in consecutive deliveries, transforming Bangladesh’s strong position into a weak one.”I am not going to blame anyone,” Mashrafe said. “The whole dressing-room felt disappointed after the loss. We needed two off the last three balls, and we had two set batsmen at the crease and one still in the shed. It becomes very hard for everyone when we end up losing three wickets in that situation.”Mashrafe conceded that Mushfiqur could have batted more sensibly, but refused to cast aspersions on his behaviour. Having brought the equation to two from three balls with a four, Mushfiqur celebrated the shot animatedly as he approached bowler Hardik Pandya – who himself had been animated when he took the catch of Mohammad Mithun earlier in the innings.”If we were calculative at that stage, it wouldn’t have given us much risk. There were no fielders in the circle. If we had taken a single [off the delivery that Mushfiqur got out], it would have set us up in a better position. It would have helped if we thought like that. We just couldn’t do it that way.”Mushfiqur could have been more careful, but at the same time, since he got us close – maybe he celebrated because of that. There’s nothing to be negative about, because any batsman would get boosted up after those two fours.”Mashrafe did describe the loss as something that would be hard to swallow though. Bangladesh have lost all three games in the Super 10s stage of the tournament so far, and have one more match against New Zealand, after which they will head home.”The loss was a shocking thing for all of us. Nobody wants to lose like this. It is hard to explain but it is quite disappointing. And it’s always difficult to take something from it. Being a professional player, we have to play hard cricket in the last match. If we can do something there we can take something back home. We have to fight hard.”Bangladesh had done well until that stage however. India were strong favourites to win the match in front of a baying home crowd, but were outplayed in large sectors of the match.”Leave out the last three balls, we played brilliantly. We did everything to win otherwise. We came back after they had two good overs towards the end. We played well at nearly every moment.”

Spurs fans buzzing after seeing who could replace Antonio Conte

Tottenham Hotspur have compiled a list of potential replacements for Antonio Conte and it is believed Luis Enrique is at the top of the pile.

The future of the Italian in north London now seems to be hanging in the balance following their pitiful Champions League exit at the hands of AC Milan.

Reports have suggested Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy would be open to the possibility of bringing Mauricio Pochettino back to N17.

However, a recent report from The Athletic has suggested that director of football Fabio Paratici has compiled a list which has former Barcelona and Spain boss Enrique at the top.

Enrique has only been out of work for a few months after leaving his role with the Spanish national side following their World Cup exit in December.

Spurs are set to face Nottingham Forest at the weekend as their sole focus now rests on securing a spot in the top four, with all hopes of lifting a trophy vanishing after Wednesday’s European exit.

However, Enrique would arrive in north London with an impressive record having won both the league and the Champions League during his time with Barcelona.

News of Enrique being a potential option for the north London club was relayed on Twitter and the best of the reaction can be seen below…

Neal Maupay's at it again! Brentford striker riles West Ham coach Kevin Nolan as pair have to be pulled apart in heated clash

Brentford striker Neal Maupay clashed with West Ham coach Kevin Nolan during Monday's Premier League encounter.

Maupay in another angry clashHad to be pulled away from NolanBrentford beaten at West HamWHAT HAPPENED?

Maupay has been in the headlines this season for clashes with James Maddison and Kyle Walker and was involved in more angry scenes at the London Stadium. The Brentford striker was spotted remonstrating with West Ham coach Kevin Nolan at half-time, with the pair having to be pulled apart by their team-mates.

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Sky Sports commentator Gary Neville offered a bit more insight into the incident. He explained: "There was quite a bit going on at half time as the players came back out from the tunnel. The Brentford striker Neal Maupay we believe was outside the referee's room and Kevin Nolan has taken offence to it. It doesn't look like he's calmed down either."

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Maupay was on target for Brentford against West Ham. The goal was his sixth goal in his last nine games for the Bees.

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WHAT NEXT FOR MAUPAY

Brentford and Maupay are back in action at the weekend when they host Chelsea in the Premier League at the Gtech Community Stadium.

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