Newcastle now offered chance to buy "unique" £20m ace from Juventus

Newcastle United will be keen to end the season on a high and could begin the summer window on the same footing after being offered a chance to sign a talented star from the continent, per reports.

Newcastle United look to make summer window statement

With the end of the Premier League season around the corner, the Magpies will maintain the hope that they can finish in the Champions League slots to set up a statement window under Eddie Howe.

Making an early start, Newcastle are reportedly keen on Liverpool forward Diogo Jota and Besiktas star Semih Kilicsoy to strengthen their forward line.

Liverpool striker Diogo Jota

West Ham United, Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest are also keen on the latter, while the former could be used as a makeweight in any deal involving Alexander Isak heading in the other direction.

Lyon’s Rayan Cherki could add some creativity at St James’ Park and is set to leave Ligue 1 for less than £25 million after striking an agreement with his current employers. Unsurprisingly, a clutch of top-flight sides are also keeping tabs on his situation, creating the potential for a chase that could go the distance.

Internally, Howe could be set to wave goodbye to several experienced stars who have yet to commit to new deals in the north-east. Sean Longstaff is a target for Everton and may follow the crowd through the exit door should circumstances align.

Newcastle United’s expiring contracts in 2025

Callum Wilson

Jamal Lewis

Jamaal Lascelles

Mark Gillespie

John Ruddy

Fabian Schar has committed his future for another year to solidify the backline. Per recent developments, he could now be set to compete with one of Serie A’s most recognisable defenders for his place in the side.

Newcastle United to be offered Juventus star Federico Gatti

According to Chronicle Live, Newcastle have been offered the chance to sign Juventus star Federico Gatti for £20 million as the cash-strapped giants look to raise money to put towards summer reinforcements.

Intriguingly, Juve are due to pay £20 million for Lloyd Kelly if they qualify for Europe, which could create a scenario where two players are effectively exchanged without either club losing financial capital.

12 duels won: Newcastle star is now as undroppable as Isak & Tonali

The Newcastle United star who is now as undroppable as Alexander Isak and Sandro Tonali.

ByDan Emery Apr 3, 2025

Newcastle scouts are said to be excited by Gatti’s versatility and ability to feature in a back three. Unfortunately, the Italy international has been ruled out for the remainder of this term due to a knee injury.

Labelled “unique” by Leonardo Bonucci, the Rivoli-born man has registered one goal and two assists in 40 appearances across all competitions.

Imposing himself in the Italian top flight, Gatti has also won 90 duels and 23 tackles within the Juventus backline, helping his side stay alive in their hunt for a Champions League slot.

However, financial problems could gift Newcastle the perfect chance to swoop in, providing they can navigate their own collision course with PSR regulations.

Arshdeep becomes first India bowler to reach 100 T20I wickets

He got there in his 64th T20I, getting rid of Oman’s Vinayak Shukla. Here’s a stats highlight of Arshdeep’s T20I career

Shubh Agarwal19-Sep-2025In a flash…Having made his T20I debut in July 2022 against England, Arshdeep has completed 100 wickets in only three years and 74 days. It is the second-quickest for a fast bowler after Bahrain’s Rizwan Butt, who reached the milestone in two years and 240 days. No other bowler has completed 100 T20I wickets in under four years.Arshdeep, however, pipped Butt in terms of balls bowled and matches played for a fast bowler (see graphic below). Overall, Arshdeep is only behind Rashid Khan, Sandeep Lamichhane and Wanindu Hasaranga on that parameter.In terms of average, Arshdeep’s 18.37 is the best for a seamer from a Full Member nation and the third-best behind Butt (16.68) and Oman’s left-arm quick Bilal Khan (16.95) overall.Vinoo Mankad, Kapil Dev, Arshdeep SinghVinoo Mankad was the first India bowler to reach 100 wickets in Test cricket, getting there in his 23rd Test. In ODIs, Kapil Dev was the first India bowler to bag 100 wickets, getting there in his 77th game in 1986. Arshdeep has reached the 100-wicket mark in his 64th T20I. Among the Full Member sides, only South Africa, West Indies and Zimbabwe don’t have a bowler in the T20Is 100-wicket club.ESPNcricinfo LtdA consistent wicket-takerArshdeep has picked up 43 wickets in the powerplay in T20Is, averaging 20.06 at an economy of 7.50 in that phase. No other bowler has more wickets than him in powerplays since his debut.Arshdeep is also very reliable at the death. His 48 wickets in the last four overs are nine more than the next best, Hong Kong offspinner Ehsan Khan. In terms of fast bowlers, next in line after Arshdeep is Pakistan’s Haris Rauf.Defying tough home conditionsThe surfaces in India have generally been high-scoring in T20I cricket and while Arshdeep’s economy at home has suffered, his wicket-taking ability still remains unmatched. Only six fast bowlers have over 20 T20I wickets in India. While Arshdeep (28) is third on the wickets’ list, behind Bhuvneshwar Kumar (34) and Hardik Pandya (31), his average of 21.00 is the best among them.Left is rightThirty-eight of Arshdeep’s 100 wickets are of left-hand batters, comfortably the highest for any bowler since Arshdeep’s debut. In fact, only six other bowlers have more than 20 left-hand batters’ wickets in this time frame.In the powerplay, Arshdeep averages only 13.36 against left-hand batters as compared to 25.37 against right-hand batters. His 19 wickets in the powerplay against left-hand batters are the joint-highest, alongside Tim Southee.There are seven batters Arshdeep has dismissed three or more time in T20Is. Four of them are left-hand batters, all from the top order. His numbers against Rilee Rossouw stand out. Arshdeep has dismissed Rossouw three times in five balls without conceding a run. Former New Zealand offspinner Nathan McCullum had earlier done that against Zimbabwe’s Charles Coventry: 5 balls, 3 dismissals, 0 runs.A star in T20 World CupsThe 2024 T20 World Cup has been the most productive competition for Arshdeep so far, bringing him 17 wickets in eight innings. His contribution was overshadowed by Jasprit Bumrah’s brilliance, but Arshdeep’s economy of 7.16, coupled with an average of 12.64, was vital in India’s title run. His nine wickets in the death overs were the joint-highest for any bowler.He also picked up ten wickets in the 2022 T20 World Cup, becoming the highest wicket-taker for India in both the World Cup editions he has featured in.

Ruthless England spinners expose India's batting woes

While hosts were indecisive with the bat, England bowlers were good at varying pace and length

Sruthi Ravindranath09-Dec-2023A batting-friendly Wankhede surface. Shorter boundaries. At the pitch report, the broadcasters said it should be a “belter”. But a great display of control and adaptability from England’s bowlers – and misjudgements from India’s batters – took all of that out of equation.It was a case of India’s batters being indecisive on a pitch where there wasn’t much turn. Players from both sides admitted that the ball was “skidding on” but it was also about the England bowlers being so good at varying their pace and lengths. For Charlie Dean, there were “no real demons” in the pitch. For Deepti Sharma, it was a “tricky pitch”.Offspinner Dean was told on Saturday morning that she’d have to open the bowling as a match-up for the left-handed Smriti Mandhana. She ended up doing more than was expected of her. She was also coming into the game having missed the first T20I with a stomach bug. But her impact was felt instantly as she put India in trouble in the span of just eight deliveries.Related

  • Sciver-Brunt, Wyatt and Ecclestone star in clinical England win

  • Wyatt puts her name up in lights ahead of the WPL auction

  • Dean, Ecclestone, Glenn help England clinch series with thumping win

After playing the first delivery – a length ball on off stump – straight back to Dean, Shafali Verma, next ball, played a similar delivery for the turn and looked to guide it into the leg side. She was pinned straight in front and departed for a duck. That also made it Verma’s 20th dismissal to an off-spinner in 43 T20Is.Mandhana looked somewhat settled, having hit a couple of boundaries off the quicker bowlers. Heather Knight, after giving the ball to Lauren Bell and Nat Sciver-Brunt to bowl the second and third overs, gave the ball back to Dean to bowl to the left-hander. Mandhana, expecting the ball to turn, rocked back to cut a length delivery outside off but got rapped on her pads instead and was given out by the umpire. Even a review couldn’t save her.”There were quite a lot of wickets today in the game,” Dean said after the match. “I wouldn’t have any complaints on the pitch myself. Of course I wouldn’t, I’m a bowler, I didn’t get a chance to have a bat out there but that’s good. A lot of our guys were saying it’s skidding on a bit but no real demons in the pitch. I guess just pressures and weaknesses in certain areas.”We executed our plans really well and so did India, to be fair they set really aggressive fields. They had to because of the way that game was dictated.”Harmanpreet Kaur injected some positivity into the innings by scooping fuller deliveries off Sciver-Brunt for back-to-back boundaries over fine leg. But Sciver-Brunt quickly changed her length, getting a length ball on off to nick sharply back into Harmanpreet’s knees to seal her dismissal. She went for the DRS but got three reds, and India had burnt both their reviews by the fifth over.And the misery continued for India. There was Deepti going for a drive only to edge the ball to the wicketkeeper. With the introduction of another spinner – Sophie Ecclestone – came another wicket, a brilliant caught-and-bowled dismissal that sent Richa Ghosh back for 4.It was then legspinner Sarah Glenn’s turn as she pulled back her length to remove Pooja Vastrakar. Vastrakar, having played Glenn out in the eighth over, charged down the track early to play for turn but the ball went through her bat and pad to hit the off stump. India at that point, were 45 for 6, Jemimah Rodrigues their only hope.Ecclestone, with her subtle variations and stump-to-stump deliveries, made sure to squeeze India in the middle overs, where they did not hit a boundary for 40 balls. It was Rodrigues who broke the pressure with two quick boundaries, in hopes of giving India a boost. But it all came crashing down when she was out lbw trying to play one into the leg side against Glenn, who changed her length after two tossed up deliveries.It did not take too long for England to finish proceedings as they bundled India out for 80, their lowest T20I score against England.According to Deepti, who was playing her 100th T20I, the pitch wasn’t exactly “difficult” to play on.”It wasn’t a 70- or 80-run wicket; we could have scored a bit more, around 110-115,” she said. “But it happens sometimes when conditions are not in your favour. You try to play well as a team but everyone can have an off day.”I think it was not difficult. We just had to play to the merit of the ball. We had a lot of takeaways but it was not as difficult. We will see what we can take away to make it better in tomorrow’s game.”India have lost 10 out of their 16 wickets to fall across the two T20Is to spinners. England had their plans in place and exploited India’s weakness with relative ease. With the next T20 World Cup set to be played in Bangladesh – where slower bowlers will play a big part – in less than a year, England will be glad their spin department is shaping up well.India’s batters, meanwhile, will have to work on changing their patterns against spinners.

Two kinds of Jasprit Bumrah magic

One was an intended bit of magic, while the other was a reward from the cricketing gods

Karthik Krishnaswamy30-Dec-20211:23

Cullinan all praise for ‘disciplined’ Bumrah, Siraj and Shami

Look through this website’s list of the 20 balls of this century, and ask yourself this: how many of them did exactly what the bowler had planned at the top of his mark?Most are simply a happy confluence of delivering the ball with a great degree of physical and technical skill – perfect wrist and seam positions, or high RPMs along the perfect axis – onto a good area, getting a little bit (or a lot) of help from the pitch, and maybe the batter not quite being up to dealing with what happened next.And that’s no slight on those balls or the bowlers who delivered them. Test cricket is mostly about hitting good lines and lengths over and over again, doing so at high pace or while giving the ball a big rip, and hoping that the excellence of the process will bring about good outcomes.Related

  • Falling short: Has Bumrah's bouncer lost its bite?

  • Red-hot India look to wrap up series at favourable Wanderers

  • Joy of defensive game key to KL Rahul's Centurion success

  • Relentless Shami, Bumrah help India go 1-0 up with first win in Centurion

  • Kohli: Shami among 'best three seamers in world at the moment'

Sometimes, though, a magic ball is really a conjuror’s trick. Jasprit Bumrah to Shaun Marsh, for example. A moment of genius almost entirely orchestrated by the bowler.He has only played 25 Tests, but Bumrah has already built up a collection of these moments. There was Keaton Jennings in Southampton, wrung completely out of shape by what seemed to be the world’s first sighting of a new weapon – Bumrah’s inswinger to the left-hander. There was Ollie Robinson at Lord’s, feet cemented in place with a series of short balls, and back pad thudded into with a slower offcutter from around the wicket.And then, on Wednesday, as day four of the Centurion Test drew towards an exhausted close in fluctuating light, Bumrah delivered two in the space of 14 balls. First, a perfectly good leave from Rassie van der Dussen rendered not-so-good by wicked break-back exaggerating the angle from wide of the crease. A beaming Bumrah clapped his hands as he ran towards his team-mates, a thing he does when he is especially pleased with himself. You probably did the same thing at the same time.6:41

Polite Enquiries: Will an actual fishing trip stop Kohli fishing outside off?

Bumrah didn’t clap after delivering what turned out to be the last ball of the day, a searing yorker that nightwatchman Keshav Maharaj had no answer to. He turned around instead, and stared at the non-striker Dean Elgar, who had said something to Bumrah earlier in the over when Maharaj had punched him off the back foot through the covers.Before Bumrah’s late burst, India had spent 103 frustrating minutes attempting to break a stubborn third-wicket partnership between van der Dussen and Elgar, throwing everything at the pair, often getting the ball to deviate sharply or confound the batters with steep or low bounce, but not quite managing to create that one chance.With rain expected on day five, there may have been a sense of anxiety among India’s players. Bumrah had blown it all away.As much as he is a bowler of great balls, Bumrah is a great bowler too. A supremely persistent hitter of good lines and lengths, who happens to hit those areas harder, and at greater pace, and with more backspin on the ball than most.His one wicket on day five was a triumph of this sort of persistence, though it contained a brand of magic of its own.Bumrah had harried Elgar all morning, mostly testing his outside edge and on one occasion getting him to edge thickly between second slip and gully. But as is often the case, making Elgar look uncomfortable and dismissing him were proving to be entirely different things. He had survived the first 9.5 overs of the day alongside Temba Bavuma, and moved to 77 in the process.Jasprit Bumrah celebrates after dismissing Rassie ven der Dussen•Associated PressThe sky over Centurion was clear, but rain was still forecast for the afternoon. Elgar had already been reprieved once in the morning, Mohammed Shami dropping him off his own bowling.Then Bumrah, delivering from around the wicket, got one to veer sharply towards the stumps. Elgar, having been made to worry constantly about balls in the corridor outside off stump, found himself in the wrong position, head well outside the line. The ball kept a touch low too, and Elgar, hopping across his stumps and playing all around the ball, was struck on the front pad, right in front.Was this movement in the air, or off the deck? It turned out to have been both. Bumrah was probably looking for the inswinger, but the seam came out of his hand ever so slightly wobbly. Then the ball seemed to hit a crack and deviate, and as it did so, the seam emerged miraculously unscrambled, canted towards fine leg, with the ball’s rough side facing the leg side.There wasn’t a whole lot of distance between where the ball pitched and where it hit Elgar’s pad, but the ball swung inwards over that brief duration, ensuring Elgar was in no danger of inside-edging it.Not an intended bit of magic, but a reward from the cricketing gods.

Fortaleza x Vitória: onde assistir, horário e escalações do jogo pela Copa do Nordeste

MatériaMais Notícias

O Fortaleza recebe o Vitória na Arena Castelão neste sábado (23), às 20h30 (de Brasília), pela 7ª rodada da Copa do Nordeste. O jogo terá transmissão de DAZN (streaming) e Nosso Futebol (pay-per-view). Os mandantes ocupam a vice-liderança do Grupo B com 8 pontos, enquanto os visitantes são vice-lanternas do Grupo A, porém com a mesma pontuação.

continua após a publicidade

➡️Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

Confira abaixo todas as informações que você precisa saber sobre o confronto do Fortaleza com o Vitória (onde assistir, horário, escalações e local).

✅FICHA TÉCNICA
Fortaleza x Vitória
7ª rodada da Copa do Nordeste

Data e horário: sábado, 23 de março de 2024, às 20h30 (de Brasília)
Local:Arena Castelão, em Fortaleza (CE)
Ondeassistir:DAZN (streaming) e Nosso Futebol (pay-per-view)
Árbitro:Márcio dos Santos Oliveira (AL)
Assistentes:Maxwell Rocha (AL) e Esdras Mariano (AL)

continua após a publicidade

⚽PROVÁVEIS ESCALAÇÕES

FORTALEZA (Técnico: Juan Pablo Vojvoda)
João Ricardo; Tinga, Kuscevic, Tomás Cardona e Bruno Pacheco; Zé Welison e Kauan; Machuca, Moisés e Pikachu; Lucero

VITÓRIA (Técnico: Léo Conde)
Lucas Arcanjo; Zeca, Camutanga, Wagner Leonardo e PK; Willian Oliveira, Léo Naldi e Rodrigo Andrade; Osvaldo, Matheuzinho e Alerrandro

continua após a publicidade

Tudo sobre

Copa do NordesteFortalezaOnde assistirVitória

One short but no picnic for India: How Brook's onslaught changed the Test

Unfettered attitude to risk and reward both makes and breaks a memorably chaotic innings

Vithushan Ehantharajah22-Jun-2025

A dejected Harry Brook walks back on 99•Getty Images

Harry Brook does not really celebrate centuries. He has always considered that a bit uncouth. Though only 26, he’s an old soul, very much from the “but that’s your job” school of thought when it comes to lauding your output as a batter.Even so, it was hardly surprising that his reaction to missing out on a ninth Test century revealed a cocktail of emotions. Annoyance, as he gave himself a facepalm, head tilted to the sky. Anger, revealed by the dramatic arch of the back, as if about to spit an expletive to the moon.The milestone would have been nice, of course, particularly as one of Yorkshire’s own, and given that he had probably deserved one in front of his home ground when he all but took England home here in the 2023 Ashes. But most of all, you felt his reaction reflected the dereliction of duty he felt, with this current match situation very much in the balance.Related

  • Bumrah shoulders heavy load to underscore what India will miss

  • Brook 99 and Bumrah five-for set up one-innings thrash

  • Bumrah draws level with Kapil Dev; Brook gets lucky again

  • Pope determined to deliver 'runs after runs after runs' following Headingley ton

England were still 73 behind, but now with only three wickets left to make up that difference. Such is the talent in his hands and feet that many in the England dressing room were quietly wondering about the healthy position they might be in if he were to go on for another hour. But then, Prasidh Krishna dug one in short, and the narrative changed.Brook’s periscope pull felt straight to Shardul Thakur at deep fine-leg. It was an ego pull compared to the idiotic one he had played to midwicket in the last over of day two when on nought, only for it to be scrubbed from the records after Jasprit Bumrah was found to have overstepped. But thankfully for England, this dismissal did not derail the momentum of their innings, as they finished just six behind India’s 471.The novelty of getting out on 99 might grow on Brook, particularly as it is the first time he has been dismissed in the 90s across 322 professional innings. His tenth century across formats for England might not have drawn more than a cursory removal of the helmet and raise of the bat, but Headingley’s congregation had been waiting patiently for their boy’s moment. They had to make do with some cursory applause instead as he slumped off, now aiming any expletives at the ground beneath his feet.Brook’s innings was a helix of brilliance and nonsense, a contradiction of dominant gallops out of the crease and anxiety-reducing risks that contributed to the 13 boundaries that littered his day-three work. It was good without being great, but all the more memorable for the bad bits.5:39

Manjrekar: ‘All possibilities open’ in the last two days

He had every right to feel aggrieved at it being cut short, but Brook already owed a debt of gratitude to Bumrah’s overstep, without which it would have ended after nine deliveries. He breathed again after 62 balls, when a sliver of an edge off Ravindra Jadeja was missed by Rishabh Pant behind the stumps.Brook’s control percentage across his 112-ball innings was 80%, which seems high until you accept that he was technically in control of the shot that brought about his dismissal – ironically, he had rolled his wrists on the shot to keep it down, when the better option might have been to launch it skywards and clear the stands. The deliberate wristy flick off his 103rd ball that broke through Yashasvi Jaiswal’s hands at fourth slip was also executed “perfectly”.Bumrah was the unfortunate bowler for that one. He had sent Brook to bed last night with the stench of leather in his nostrils having fizzed a warning shot of what was to come on Sunday. Brook, though, came with a clear focus – he was not going to get got, he was going to go get.Krishna was pumped square, then dumped into the stands at straight midwicket at the end of the very first over. “Phwoar, where did that come from?” Ollie Pope later revealed he had said to himself, while watching from the other end.When Bumrah showed up again, Brook had two sighters before jumping out of his stance to land the first blow of this round. Having started again on 0 off 12, his first ten balls of the third morning had brought him back up to speed with 19 runs.The calculation of his second-new-ball assault was just that. Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj were given the honours, and both were treated accordingly. Bumrah was, at least; Brook defended a few, found the odd single, and survived the error of the Jaiswal drop. Siraj, however, suddenly found himself embroiled in a ruckus.A dismissive slap through mid-on, a lash to point and an attempted charge-and-slap that only brought two was followed up with a hard-length ball, a stare and a few words for Brook. It’s worth noting Brook is not much of a talker. “He doesn’t want to chat,” revealed Pope of Brook’s habits out in the middle. “He might want to know which way it’s swinging, but that’s it.” And yet, his response was profound, thumping a ball from outside off so deep into the long-on stand that even Siraj was lost for words. That took him to 91, rounding on the inevitable century that never materialised.It is worth isolating Brook versus Bumrah, even if the bout did not end up affecting the scoreboard meaningfully, in either the runs or wickets column.The catch off a no-ball and that drop off a legal ball came after 28 deliveries in all, with just 11 runs scored. But one of those deliveries – that charging four at the start of the day, Brook’s only boundary off Bumrah – was perhaps his most meaningful. “If I can do this to you,” Brook seemed to be saying, “imagine what I can do to the rest of your attack?”Jasprit Bumrah reacts after Yashasvi Jaiswal reprieves Brook•Getty ImagesBrook didn’t do it again, but the message had been heard loud and clear. Even by Bumrah.”He makes you think as well,” Bumrah said at the close. “You know he can play an aggressive shot and sometimes he can shut shop as well and try to negate if somebody’s bowling a good spell. So yeah, he played really well.”I think fate had decided 99 for him!” he added. “He assessed conditions and, you know, he fancies his game and plays an aggressive style of cricket.”If all that sounds familiar, it is because England’s batters, their captain and their head coach constantly talk about doing exactly that. Rarely, though, do they get it right. And even here, Brook did not.But for a bowler of Bumrah’s ilk to notice the intent, even amid the flaws, speaks to a very real truth. Joe Root is the sole great, Ben Duckett the most expressive, and Ollie Pope their only centurion in this Test so far, but Harry Brook is the totem of this English batting group.

Man Utd women's player ratings vs Lyon: Phallon Tullis-Joyce's error proves costly as Marc Skinner's selection gamble fails to pay off in Champions League defeat

Phallon Tullis-Joyce's surprising error proved costly for Manchester United on Wednesday as their hopes of qualifying automatically for the Champions League quarter-finals were dealt a real blow in a 3-0 loss to Lyon. The United States goalkeeper failed to make what looked set to be a comfortable save from Tabitha Chawinga's header with just 12 minutes on the clock and the Red Devils couldn't get back on level terms, with Lyon dominating the game and wrapping things up late on when Melchie Dumornay's stunning brace sealed all three points.

Marc Skinner took quite a risk with his team selection, making some eyebrow-raising calls to leave all of Jess Park, Ella Toone, Dominique Janssen and Julia Zigiotti Olme on the bench. Citing the desire to add physicality to the midfield as the reason for his choices, it certainly didn't work in the first half, with United unable to get anywhere near the visitors for the most part.

The Red Devils had just one touch in Lyon's box before the break, when Melvine Malard headed well over, with the French side running the show. That said, OL didn't create too many clear cut opportunities, bar a header for Ada Hegerberg, with some last-ditch defending from Jayde Riviere in particular able to thwart them on a couple of occasions.

It was no surprise when Skinner made changes at the break then, and the introductions of Park, Toone and Zigiotti helped them get into the game. However, the Red Devils still weren't doing anything to hurt Lyon in anyway, with some nice passing sequences occurring to get them into the final third, but there no end product to cap it all off.

Instead, it was Lyon who became more ruthless and clinical as the game progressed, to put it to bed for good. It was Dumornay, the star of the show, who made it 2-0 with a superb strike from the edge of the box, before a powerful finish from closer range really put the gloss on things late on.

Ahead of next week's final league phase fixtures, United are not out of the race for an automatic qualification spot to the next round of the Champions League, with a play-off berth already secure. But it's out of their hands now, and with them sat in an unfavourable position when it comes to seeding for those play-offs.

GOAL rates United's players from Leigh Sports Village…

Getty Images SportGoalkeeper & Defence

Phallon Tullis-Joyce (4/10):

Had to do better with Chawinga's header that broke the deadlock. That moment left United at a disadvantage so early, with them unable to recover.

Jayde Riviere (6/10):

Did some great last-ditch defending, thwarting Hegerberg and Heaps brilliantly on two separate occasions.

Maya Le Tissier (5/10):

Looser in possession than usual and struggled to win many duels, though did improve as the game went on.

Gabby George (6/10):

Better on the ball than most and came up with some timely interventions.

Anna Sandberg (5/10):

Wasn't able to impose herself on the game in an attacking sense, but did keep Brand relatively quiet.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportMidfield

Hinata Miyazawa (5/10):

Allowed Chawinga to get away far too easily so she could score the opening goal. Was more influential in possession once the half-time changes were made, often involved in some of United's better play.

Simi Awujo (4/10):

Struggled to win duels and was poor in possession at times. Off at the break.

Lisa Naalsund (4/10):

Lucky not to be sent off after a late tackle towards the end of the first half while already booked, though it was a loose pass from a team-mate that put her in a bad position. Another taken off at half-time.

Getty Images SportAttack

Melvine Malard (4/10):

Had a great chance to level the scores just before the break, but didn't show the ruthlessness she has in front of goal most of the season.

Rachel Williams (4/10):

Completely isolated up top, with no service at all before being taken off at half-time.

Fridolina Rolfo (4/10):

Gave the ball away far too easily and struggled to be an effective outlet.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

AFPSubs & Manager

Jess Park (5/10):

Couldn't win many duels but was good on the ball and added impetus to the attack.

Ella Toone (6/10):

Played some good passes to get United into the game more.

Julia Zigiotti Olme (5/10):

Another impactful half-time sub, though a rash challenge soon after coming on could've been costly.

Dominique Janssen (N/A):

Took Sandberg's spot at left-back for the final 15 minutes.

Leah Galton (N/A):

A late sub.

Marc Skinner (4/10):

Raised plenty of eyebrows with his team selection and it didn't work at all, with Lyon totally dominant in the first half. Changed things at the break, making three half-time substitutions, but the damage was already done, with United unable to really create anything to level the scores before OL put the game to bed. Need to rotate was understandable given the small squad but perhaps could've been done in a smaller measure here.

'It WILL happen!' – Diego Simeone reveals which club he wants to manage after Atletico Madrid as iconic Argentine plots next move

Diego Simeone has openly admitted that he wants to manage Inter once he leaves Atletico Madrid, insisting his long-held ambition to take over the Nerazzurri "will happen one day." The Rojiblancos boss made the revelation ahead of Atleti's Champions League clash with Inter, fuelling speculation over his future as pressure rises in Madrid and admiration grows in Milan.

  • Simeone opens up on his love towards Inter

    Ahead of Atletico decisive Champions League meeting with Inter, Simeone created headlines by revealing his desire to manage the Italian giants in the future. The Argentine coach discussed both the match and Inter’s strengths, while simultaneously acknowledging his emotional connection to the Nerazzurri from his days as a player. His comments arrived at a delicate moment for Atletico, who have been inconsistent in Europe, struggling for momentum despite a handful of strong results and needing to protect their home advantage.

    In the build-up to the fixture, Simeone analysed Inter as one of the most complete sides in the competition and highlighted their attacking structure, depth, and character. At the same time, he contrasted Inter’s Champions League dominance – a perfect 12 points – with Atletico’s mixed league-stage campaign, which includes emphatic wins but damaging defeats to Liverpool and Arsenal. The pressure surrounding Atleti’s European fate, combined with Simeone’s remarks about his long-term future, ensured his comments rapidly became the focus of media attention in both Spain and Italy.

    The backdrop of Simeone’s remarks also includes growing scrutiny over Atletico’s season trajectory, with injuries to key players and fluctuating performances adding uncertainty. Inter’s arrival in Madrid heightened the sense of urgency for Atlético, who must secure positive results to stay on track for the knockout rounds. In that context, Simeone’s admission about his dream job became as significant as his tactical assessment of the match ahead.

  • Advertisement

  • AFP

    Simeone 'will' coach Inter 'one day'

    When asked directly about his future ambitions, Simeone made his intentions clear, stating: "It doesn’t depend on just me, but in my coaching career I can imagine myself managing Inter one day." He reinforced that belief by adding: "I think it will happen one day."

    During the same press briefing, Simeone showed deep admiration for Inter’s current side, offering a detailed breakdown of their quality. He said: "Inter play very well, they have character and a very clear attacking pattern. They have an incredible squad. They dominated the entire match against Milan, had scoring opportunities and could’ve won. They certainly played to win. As for in the Champions League, their numbers speak for themselves.

    "For a team like Inter, losing the derby means putting it behind you straight away and moving on, because this is a very strong side, the favourites to win the Scudetto, and will go far in the Champions League too."

    "Every match is important for us, regardless of the opponent. We are in the ascendant phase of our campaign. We’ve got to improve in various areas, but we are aware of that and working on it."

  • AFP

    Chivu's work at Inter praised by Simeone

    Simeone’s connection to Inter stretches back to his playing days, when he played a pivotal role in their 1997–98 UEFA Cup triumph, leaving a legacy built on leadership, discipline, and relentless competitiveness. His bond with the Nerazzurri has remained strong, with fans fondly remembering the midfielder who characterised their late-90s spirit alongside stars like Ronaldo and Javier Zanetti. That affection, combined with Simeone’s own admiration for the club, has kept his name attached to Inter speculation for more than a decade.

    Inter, now coached by Cristian Chivu, are regarded as one of the continent’s best-built sides and remain unbeaten in the Champions League this season. Simeone refused to outline what Chivu has changed tactically, saying: "It is difficult to explain what you can see every day, so I won’t come here and tell you how Chivu has changed Inter." However, he made it clear that he respects their development, their structure, and their Scudetto-favourite status under the former Inter defender.

    Chivu’s appointment marked a new era for Inter after Simone Inzaghi’s departure to Al-Hilal, and results have quickly vindicated the decision.

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

    Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

  • Simeone has contract at Atletico until 2027

    Simeone remains under contract with Atletico Madrid until 2027, meaning any move to Inter will only materialise once a vacancy opens or if the Argentine initiates a departure. With Inter thriving under Chivu and competing for major honours on multiple fronts, no immediate managerial change appears likely. Nevertheless, Simeone’s comments will intensify long-running speculation and ensure his name remains linked to the Nerazzurri job whenever an opening emerges.

مجموعات كأس العرب 2025 بعد انتهاء مرحلة الملحق

أسدل الستار على مباريات الملحق المؤهل إلى دور المجموعات من بطولة كأس العرب 2025، التي ستقام في قطر، وذلك من خلال التصفيات النهائية.

وحسم منتخب الكويت أولى البطاقات من التصفيات بالفوز على موريتانيا، اليوم الإثنين، ليتواجد في المجموعة الأولى رفقة مصر والإمارات والأردن.

وتأهل منتخبا فلسطين وسوريا على حساب ليبيا وجنوب السودان على الترتيب، في المواجهات التي أقيمت اليوم في المرحلة النهائية من التصفيات.

ونجح منتحب البحرين في التأهل على حساب نظيره جيبوتي، بعد الفوز بهدف دون رد في اللقاء الذي أقيم اليوم الأربعاء على ملعب عبد الله بن خليفة في العاصمة القطرية الدوحة.

وتأهل منتخب عمان على حساب الصومال بركلات الترجيح 4-1، وانتصر جزر القمر على اليمن بركلات الترجيح، وفاز منتخب السودان على لبنان بهدفين مقابل هدف.

وتقام بطولة كأس العرب، بمشاركة 16 منتخبا بداية من دور المجموعات للبطولة.

ويتواجد على رأس قائمة المنتخبات المشاركة، منتخب مصر، ويقوده جهاز فني بقيادة حلمي طولان ومعه أحمد حسن مديرًا للمنتخب وعصام الحضري مدربًا للحراس، وذلك بقرار من اتحاد الكرة المصري.

طالع | مواعيد مباريات منتخب مصر في كأس العرب 2025

وأسفرت قرعة بطولة كأس العرب عن تواجد منتخب مصر في المجموعة الثالثة مع الأردن والإمارات والكويت بعد أن حسم الأخير فوزه على موريتانيا. 

وستنطلق بطولة كأس العرب، يوم الإثنين 1 ديسمبر، بمواجهتي تونس أمام سوريا والمباراة الثانية تجمع بين قطر صاحب الأرض مع فلسطين. مجموعات كأس العرب 2025

المجموعة الأولى

قطر – تونس – سوريا – فلسطين.

المجموعة الثانية

المغرب – السعودية – عمان – جزر القمر.

المجموعة الثالثة

مصر – الأردن – الإمارات – الكويت

المجموعة الرابعة

الجزائر – العراق – البحرين – السودان.

وكان منتخب الجزائر هو الفائز بالنسخة الأولى من بطولة كأس العرب التي أقيمت عام 2021 في قطر، والتي شارك بها منتخب مصر وخرج من الدور نصف النهائي، واكتفى بالمركز الرابع.

وستقام مباريات بطولة كأس العرب، على 6 ملاعب وهي البيت ولوسيل واستاد خليفة الدولي وأحمد بن علي واستاد 974، والمدينة التعليمية.

وستكون مباراة الافتتاح على استاد البيت فى الأول من ديسمبر، بينما يستضيف ملعب لوسيل المباراة النهائية للبطولة يوم 18 من الشهر ذاته.

Like Palmer: Chelsea "machine" is going to be one of the world's best

It’s been a confusing month or so for Chelsea fans.

One week, the Blues are beating Liverpool or Tottenham Hotspur, and then the next, they’re losing to Sunderland or dropping points against Qarabağ.

However, while Enzo Maresca’s side are far from consistent at the moment, it is full of sensational talent.

In fact, there is at least one player who feels destined to become one of the best in the world, alongside Cole Palmer.

Chelsea's world-class stars

While it doesn’t feel like it at the moment, Chelsea are blessed with several players who could become some of the very best in the world in their position, if they aren’t already there.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

For example, while Moises Caicedo had a slow start to life in West London, he is now one of, if not the best six, in the Premier League.

The Ecuadorian is a monster when it comes to winning the ball back, has an underrated range of passing and can score his fair share of bangers.

Another star who is arguably the best in his position in the league is Reece James.

The Cobham gem is no longer suffering from injury after injury and, as a result, has been able to show the full extent of his exceptional ability on a consistent basis.

For example, in addition to being rock solid at the back, he is a genuine attacking threat due to both his impressive passing range and ball-striking ability.

Finally, while he’s out injured at the moment, Palmer is without doubt on his way to becoming one of the best players in the world.

He is the one who makes the Blues’ attack click, and in just 101 appearances for the club has already racked up a tally of 45 goals and 29 assists.

With all that said, there is another young Chelsea star who looks like he could be following in Palmer’s footsteps.

The Chelsea star on track to be one of the best in the world

While there are several exciting youngsters at Chelsea, like Jorrel Hato, Jamie Gittens, and even Alejandro Garnacho, the one who seems destined for the very top is, of course, Estevao.

The highly promising Brazilian gem was signed by Chelsea last year, but due to regulations surrounding players under 18, he was unable to join the club until this season.

However, it looks like that extra year in his homeland has done him the world of good, as so far this season, he has looked every bit the “future Ballon d’Or winner” respected analyst Ben Mattinson described him as.

Appearances

83

Minutes

5610′

Goals

27

Assists

15

Goal Involvements per Match

0.50

Minutes per Goal Involvement

133.57′

For example, he was arguably the Blues’ most exciting player in pre-season and injected some real life into the side when he came on in the season opener against Crystal Palace.

Then, when Palmer picked up an injury ahead of the West Ham game, Maresaca handed the youngster his first competitive start, and he looked incredible.

The Franca-born gem was running rings around the East Londoners and even picked up his first assist after a mazy run.

Amazingly, his first goal for the club came in that incredible 2-1 win over Liverpool last month.

He then quickly followed that up with a goal against Ajax in the Champions League and another against Wolverhampton Wanderers in the League Cup.

As if he hadn’t already made his mark on the team, he then scored his second UCL goal against Qarabağ.

In doing so, he became the first South American 18 or under to score in consecutive Champions League matches.

Ultimately, while it is still so early in his career, it certainly feels like Estevao is on the same trajectory as Palmer and will soon join him as one of the best players in the world.

Big-money Chelsea flop is fast becoming their new Danny Drinkwater

Chelsea have a new Danny Drinkwater on their books.

ByJack Salveson Holmes Nov 7, 2025

Game
Register
Service
Bonus