Six reasons Man Utd should sack Ruben Amorim amid reign riddled with errors, mismanagement

Ruben Amorim claimed after Manchester United's defeat at Brentford that he is never worried about losing his job and that is just as well because, sooner or later, he is going to get his marching orders at Old Trafford. The results speak for themselves. His team have lost 17 of their 33 Premier League matches while winning just nine times. If you want to find a United coach with a worse win percentage in the league, you have to go back to before the Second World War.

While United's fan base is far more supportive of coaches than at most other top clubs, patience with Amorim is running thin. After the limp surrender at the Gtech Stadium, social media was awash with calls for the Portuguese to be sacked. The pundit class were also baffled as to how the Portuguese could continue to struggle on with results as bad as they are.

"You look at it and he only has a win percentage of one per cent more than Graham Potter, who has been sacked. How is he still in the job?" asked Martin Keown on the . "We can talk about the owners backing him, but ultimately it's just not working," said Micah Richards. "I don't see where Manchester United go with this unless they change manager," added Ashley Williams.

They are not the only ones. GOAL lays out six reasons why United need to end the Amorim experiment right now…

  • Getty Images Sport

    He refuses to change

    While all good managers should have a vision and a philosophy, adapting to your players' strengths and trying to make the most of them is part of the job. Amorim, though, has refused to stray from his 3-4-3 formation and he has made his stubbornness his unique selling point. In his first press conference he proudly declared "there is no second way", and the drudge of terrible results since has not made him reassess his methods. Last week he claimed that not even the Pope could convince him to change his mind about how his team should play.

    He has had more than enough time for his players to get used to the formation and his style, including a whole pre-season campaign and now full weeks of training sessions due to a lack of European football. But his message is not getting through and Amorim is resembling a captain who is refusing to change direction as his ship heads towards an iceberg.

    Amorim has repeatedly stated that the only way for United to change their way of playing is to get rid of him. And he is giving them no other option.

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    Alienating top players

    The suspension received by Casemiro for getting sent off against Chelsea gave Amorim a choice between Kobbie Mainoo and Manuel Ugarte. Yet again, he ignored the homegrown midfielder who many fans saw as the club's future and picked the Uruguayan, who has none of the technical ability of the England international.

    That Amorim refused to give Mainoo his first league start of the season was hardly surprising. He has never rated a player who is among the most talented in the squad, largely because he doesn't fit into his rigid system. Mainoo knows this, which is why he asked for a loan move towards the end of the transfer window. 

    That he requested a loan rather than a permanent move says it all: he does not want to leave United, but he sees little future for him while Amorim is in charge. And when he made the request he likely assumed that the coach would not be sticking around for much longer anyway.

    Mainoo is far from the only talented player who Amorim has alienated. He forced Marcus Rashford out of the club and then did the same with Alejandro Garnacho. He also gave up on Rasmus Hojlund, even though the striker was willing to fight for his place. The club and coach need to part ways before he drives away any more stars.

  • Getty Images Sport

    No momentum

    Amorim revealed the day before the Brentford game that all week he had been stressing to his players the importance of building momentum. The win over Chelsea gave the team the chance to win back-to-back league games for the first time under their manager, and for the first time since May 2024.

    "It was everywhere," he said. "I think if we as a team don’t understand the momentum now, we have a big problem. So for me since we started the first training session we started talking about that. We need to understand the opportunity we have to win the next game [and build momentum]. The responsibility is on us. We need the sense of urgency that we need to win, no matter what."

    But despite him hammering the message home, it did not get through. And Amorim is right. United have a massive problem if they cannot string two wins together for more than a year. Without any momentum there is firstly no prospect of picking enough points to get close to securing European football. Worst of all, though, there can be no hope of any lasting improvement.

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    Basic mistakes

    Amorim has said on a few occasions that his system is not the problem and in certain instances you have to agree with him. It is not a system problem which has led to Andre Onana and Altay Bayindir gifting the opposition goals, sometimes directly from corners. Harry Maguire cannot blame being in a back three for playing Igor Thiago onside at Brentford or for allowing Erling Haaland to destroy him in a race in the Manchester derby.

    Nor can Bruno Fernandes' failure to score penalties at Brentford and Fulham be linked back to the coach's tactics. And yet, worrying things keep on happening on Amorim's watch and he has to take responsibility for them. 

    "The goals today, we worked on during the week. That is frustrating," he said. "I see the guys in training. I feel sometimes in the games, when things are really hard, they are not the same. But that is the pressure of the club." 

    There might be an element of truth to players' caving in under the weight of expectation which comes with representing United. But it is the coach's job to help them cope. And Amorim is not succeeding on that front.

PCB chief on Champions Trophy: 'I still have positive expectations'

Mohsin Naqvi confirms that the PCB hasn’t heard from the ICC on the BCCI’s stance on not travelling to Pakistan

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Nov-2024The PCB is yet to hear from the ICC about the questions regarding India’s unwillingness to travel to Pakistan for the Champions Trophy next February.The PCB wrote to the ICC a week ago, asking the governing body for details and clarity on the BCCI’s decision, which was conveyed to the ICC. The PCB has asked for a written response from the BCCI as well as the date when it informed the ICC about its stance.Despite the lack of a response, PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi said on Monday that he retained “positive expectations” about the tournament, the first ICC event Pakistan will host since 1996.Related

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“We have sent them [ICC] the questions we had,” Naqvi said at a press interaction at Lahore’s Gaddafi Stadium. “We are still waiting for their response. I believe that sports and politics are separate and no country should mix the two. Even now I still have positive expectations about the Champions Trophy.”Naqvi also said that the PCB intended to stick to its stance – of not using a hybrid model for the tournament – and will not shift from it. But he did say he was willing to talk to the BCCI about the situation in a bid to break the deadlock.”At this moment, every team that has qualified for the Champions Trophy is ready to come,” he said. “Nobody has any issues. I will say today also, if India has any concerns, speak to us about them, we can ease those concerns. I don’t think there is any reason for them not to visit.”When asked whether the PCB would consider the option of boycotting the event should hosting rights be taken away from it, Naqvi said: “Pakistan’s pride is of primary importance.”

“My feeling is that the ICC will have to think about its credibility, that are they an organisation for all the world’s bodies”Mohsin Naqvi

Naqvi was asked about the event’s trophy tour, which began on Saturday in Islamabad but with an altered route after the BCCI had raised objections with the ICC.The PCB had announced the original route last week, which would have taken in Muzaffarabad, capital of Pakistan Administered Kashmir. That destination was taken off after the BCCI’s complaint but has not yet been cancelled. The trophy tour returns to Pakistan in January, after visiting the other seven participants in the Champions Trophy.”My feeling is that the ICC will have to think about its credibility, that are they an organisation for all the world’s bodies,” Naqvi said. “And that route has been rescheduled, we haven’t been told about any cancellation.”Naqvi said he hoped the ICC would announce the tournament schedule soon so that the PCB can continue its preparations for the event.

Neser out of Australia A game with hamstring injury

Australia’s Test bowling depth has taken a blow with back-up seamer Michael Neser ruled out of the remainder of the Australia A game at the MCG with a hamstring injury after claiming four wickets on the opening day to rip through India A’s top order.Neser was bowling his 13th over, having already taken 4 for 27 with some stunning swing and seam bowling in the morning session, when he pulled up sharply following his second delivery of the over. He immediately began limping off the ground in a clear sign that he knew exactly what the issue was.A Cricket Australia spokesperson confirmed shortly after that Neser had injured his left hamstring and would not bowl again in the game. He will go for scans to assess the extent of the damage.Related

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It is understood Neser had experienced some soreness in the same left hamstring after the last Sheffield Shield game he played on October 23 when he bowled 48.5 overs for Queensland against South Australia. That soreness saw him ruled out of the domestic One-Day Cup game against South Australia two days later.He returned to training without any issues after a short break and was fine in the lead-up to this game. But the fast bowlers have had issues with the outfield at the MCG this season as it has been top dressed with sand following the Australian Football League season.Australia fast bowler Mitchell Starc suffered cramps in both the Shield and ODI games he has played here over the past two weeks and complained about how heavy the outfield was to run on. Australia and New South Wales team-mate Sean Abbott also noted how heavy his legs felt after the Shield game.Neser had also come into the summer off an injury in the winter. He suffered a calf injury while playing in England and was on bowling restrictions in the pre-season right up until the first Shield game of the summer in Perth.He was unlikely to be in Australia’s Test squad for the first Test in Perth against India with Scott Boland set to be the sole back-up quick in what is expected to be a 13-man group. But there was an expectation that Neser could be needed at some point during the series. There is a nine-day break between the first two Tests but Australia are wary that there is only a three-day gap between the second and third Test in Adelaide and Brisbane. There is a seven-day break between the third and fourth Test and then another three-day break between the fourth and fifth Test.Abbott and Nathan McAndrew would be among the contenders if Australia needed another fast bowler for a Test match beyond Boland.There is some positive news from Western Australia with Jhye Richardson getting through a WA Second XI game last week and bowling 25 overs in the match for the first time in 12 months. He might be able to make a Shield return before the BBL break but it would be a big ask for him to be ready for a Test match given his long build back off a raft of injury issues.Lance Morris has also not played a red-ball game this season coming off stress fractures in the winter and a quad strain. But he is in line to play an ODI on Sunday when Australia’s big three are rested. He was also a chance to play a Shield game before the BBL provided he could build his loads up adequately.

Bigger English talent than Trafford: Man City still pursuing £50m sensation

After a poor season in 2024/25 for Manchester City, they have made huge strides in improving their squad ahead of the new campaign. Pep Guardiola’s side have been busy in the 2025 summer transfer window, already signing six new players in a bid to improve their fortunes next season.

Two of those are goalkeepers, with James Trafford and Marcus Bettinelli signing to provide competition for Ederson. Rayan Ait-Nouri has so far been the only defensive signing, joining from Wolves, and midfielder Tijjani Reijnders moved to the Etihad Stadium from Italian giants Milan, as did young talent Sverre Nypan. In forward areas, Rayan Cherki signed from Lyon.

England'sJamesTraffordduring the warm up before the match

Now, City seem to be lining up another reinforcement at the back.

Man City’s next transfer target

There has been no messing around this season from Guardiola and his side, who seem to be getting set for a much better season, despite the poor performances in the Club World Cup. They have signed players across the pitch, with another defensive addition up next.

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At least, that could be the case if they can pull off a move for Newcastle United defender Tino Livramento. According to a report from Dean Jones on the Transfers from Paradise podcast, via Manchester City News, they are ‘persisting with their interest’ in the England under-21 international.

This could be a tough deal to do. Jones explained that ‘Newcastle don’t want to sell the player’, although that won’t stop City from trying, and they ‘still think it might’ be possible to pull a deal off.

Newcastle's Tino Livramento

As for the price for Livramento, City might need to pay as much as £50m this summer.

Why Livramento would be a good signing

It has been a rapid rise to the top for London-born full-back Livramento. The 22-year-old, once described as a “sensational” player by former Magpies superstar Alan Shearer, offers an attacking threat and the ability to play on both sides of defence.

In 80 games for the club across his time in the North East, Livramento has bagged one goal and registered two assists. His versatility has been clear to see, too. He has played 42 times as a right-back and 19 times on the opposite side, offering excellent tactical flexibility.

Throughout Livramento’s time with the Magpies in the Premier League, there are some standout stats courtesy of Squawka. For example, he has created an average of 0.9 chances each game in each of the last two seasons. On top of that, he averaged 5.9 ball recoveries in 2023/24 and 6 the following season, per 90 minutes.

Chances created

0.9

0.9

Crossing accuracy

19.23%

21.15%

Forward passes

15.8

16.8

Duels won

5.6

4.5

Clearances

2.6

3

Interceptions

1.8

0.8

Ball recoveries

5.9

6

Over the summer, Livramento was a key member of England’s successful under-21 European Championship-winning squad. He made five appearances and played every minute, even grabbing an assist in the Three Lions’ first game.

Tino Livramento against Arsenal.

If City do bring the 22-year-old to the Etihad Stadium, he will be the second under-21 Euros winner they have signed. Trafford has also lifted the trophy, back in 2023, where he made a historic late double save to win England the trophy.

There is certainly a case to be made that Guardiola’s side would be signing an even bigger English talent than Trafford in Livramento, if they bring him to the club. Notably, the former Burnley goalkeeper cost £27m, almost half of what City would need to pay for the Newcastle star.

He is also far more experienced in the top flight. The Cobham academy graduate has almost 100 Premier League appearances under his belt, making 93 already. That is far more than the number of games Trafford has played, with just 28 to his name so far.

Described as ‘an England right-back’ in the future by Newcastle star Kieran Trippier, Livramento is a player with huge potential. He could certainly be viewed as a bigger talent than City’s new number one, given the experience he has and the far costlier fee.

Alexis Mac Allister challenges Tino Livramento

This could be a fantastic addition for City to help strengthen their side for now and in the future.

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Rizwan, Shakeel tons define Pakistan's day of gains

Bangladesh survived 12 overs before stumps but will have to return to face a relatively new ball on Friday

Karthik Krishnaswamy22-Aug-2024A 240-run fifth-wicket stand between Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan formed the centerpiece of a dominant second day for Pakistan as they declared at 448 for 6, leaving Bangladesh to see off a tricky hour or so before stumps. Bangladesh did so, with openers Shadman Islam and Zakir Hasan surviving 12 overs, but they will have to come back and face Pakistan’s four-pronged seam attack on day three with a ball that is still relatively new.Pakistan looked to up their scoring rate when they resumed after tea, with Rizwan announcing their intent by stepping out and clouting Shoriful Islam for a big six over long-on. The shot triggered a bout of cramps, and Rizwan continued to hobble as he collected 37 off 42 balls after tea to finish unbeaten on 171 when Pakistan declared.Pakistan’s aggressive intent after tea cost them one wicket, when Shakib Al Hasan’s guile undid Agha Salman’s attempt to hit him against the turn, bringing about a sliced catch at backward point. But it also brought quick runs, as Shaheen Shah Afridi slogged two sixes on his way to an unbeaten 29 off 24.Rizwan came out and kept wickets when Bangladesh’s innings began, but cramps forced him to leave the field after 7.3 overs, with Sarfaraz Ahmed taking over behind the stumps. In all, Rizwan was on the field for all but 4.3 overs of the day’s play.Having added 44 on day one, Shakeel and Rizwan batted on for the best part of two sessions before Bangladesh finally broke their stand, with just over 15 minutes to go for tea.The visitors’ long-awaited moment of inspiration came from Mehidy Hasan Miraz, who dangled up a teasing offbreak that dragged Shakeel onto the front foot to defend, then dipped and turned sharply past his outside edge, leaving him reaching for the ball and dragging his back foot out of the crease. Litton Das completed the dismissal with lightning glovework after collecting the ball somewhere around the seventh-stump line.This was a dismissal with a margin of millimeters; the tip of Shakeel’s toe was on the crease when the bails began to flash.There had been only millimeters in it an over earlier, too, when Shakeel – who had routinely left his crease against the fast bowlers to negotiate movement – shouldered arms to Hasan Mahmud and Litton, alert to the possibility, threw down the stumps. Then, Shakeel had plonked his bat into the crease and landed a fraction of a second – a fraction too small for the frame rate of the TV cameras to capture definite proof – before the bails lit up.Litton had been involved in most of the small sprinkling of nervous moments that Shakeel and Rizwan endured during their 63.5 overs together. He had moved alertly to his left to create a diving opportunity when Rizwan lobbed up a bat-pad half-chance off Mehidy, but hadn’t been able to finish the job. He had missed an even tougher chance, down the leg side, off Rizwan’s glove when he had tried to sweep Shakib.That these moments were so infrequent, and so far from being genuine chances, reflected how well Shakeel and Rizwan batted as they brought up their respective third Test hundreds. It also reflected how much the conditions had eased up since the start of the Test match, when Bangladesh had made full use of the new ball and early moisture to reduce Pakistan to 16 for 3.Proof of the transformed conditions – though the tiredness in the Bangladesh seamers’ limbs also contributed, no doubt – came when Bangladesh took the second new ball, ten overs after lunch. Both batters had brought up their centuries by then – Rizwan going from 91 to 97 by stepping out and launching Shakib for a big six over wide long-on, then whipping him over midwicket for four to reach three figures – and they greeted the return of the fast bowlers with a series of gorgeous strokes.Rizwan eased Hasan Mahmud through cover point in the 82nd over, and in the next over Shakeel stood tall to drive Shoriful on the up through cover.The batters embraced when Shakeel played that shot, perhaps recognising the fact that it was his first boundary of the day, and his unhurried, unbothered manner while going through 123 balls without one.Shakeel made up for that in the overs that followed, pulling Shoriful and Nahid Rana disdainfully when they tried to bounce him, and whipping Rana off his hips when he veered too straight.Rana had tried the short-ball ploy in the first session too, and occasionally made both batters look awkward. But it came at a cost: his five overs in the morning went for 32 runs.Rizwan scored most of those runs, including back-to-back falling ramps over the slips off bouncers angling into his body to go from 46 to 54. In Rana’s next over, he showed more of his range against the short ball, hooking him for a six over backward square leg.Rizwan was by far the quicker scorer of the fifth-wicket pair during the first session, adding 65 off 100 balls. Shakeel had less of the strike, and made quieter use of it, scoring 32 off 77 without adding to his five boundaries from day one. By lunch, Rizwan had overtaken Shakeel having started the day 33 runs behind.Their methods may have been different, but their effect on Bangladesh was similarly dispiriting. Shakeel’s defence, in particular, looked unbreachable at times; he was beautifully balanced at all times, and invariably met the ball right under his eyes with the bat’s full face.As the day went on, Bangladesh’s spinners began to take on a greater share of the workload, and both Shakib and Mehidy put a difficult first day – they had gone for a combined 36 from their six overs – behind them and performed an admirable holding job. Much of their day-one despair had been related to Pakistan’s clinical use of the sweep. They responded by attacking the stumps far more, and bowling a touch quicker than they had earlier, with protection in the deep square on the leg side. Both used drift cleverly, and Mehidy on occasion extracted sharp turn too.

Better signing than Rothwell: Rangers in race to sign "exciting" £10m star

Russell Martin and his Glasgow Rangers players are already hard at work in pre-season as they prepare for their European qualifier later this month.

The new Gers head coach will be looking to progress through to the next round of Champions League qualifiers, and will want the best possible squad available to him at Ibrox.

max-aarons-transfer-gossip-leeds-united-djed-spence-tottenham-hotspur-farke

Max Aarons and Lyall Cameron have already been added to the team during the summer transfer window so far, but the Light Blues will not stop there.

According to Sky Sports reporter Mark McAdam, central midfielder Joe Rothwell turned down LaLiga teams to join Scottish Premiership giants on a permanent deal.

The former Bournemouth star has put pen to paper on a three-year contract at Ibrox and could make his debut against Panathinaikos later this month.

What Joe Rothwell could bring to Rangers

Rothwell will bring an experienced head in the middle of the park that Rangers do not currently have. Nicolas Raskin (24), Mohamed Diomande (23), Bailey Rice (18), and Connor Barron (22) currently make up Martin’s midfield ranks.

This means that the 30-year-old maestro, who has played 204 games in the English Championship, could be a mentor to the younger players in the squad, and give valuable advice to the likes of Barron and Rice, as he has been there and done at a good level in the game.

The midfield whiz, who spent the 2024/25 campaign on loan at Leeds United, will also offer quality in possession through his impressive passing range.

Rothwell is a metronomic midfielder who likes to constantly get on the ball to progress play for his team with progressive passes and passes into the final third, helping to create chances for his teammates.

24/25 Championship

Joe Rothwell per 90

Percentile rank vs midfielders

Passes completed

63.74

Top 6%

Long passes completed

6.44

Top 2%

xA

0.22

Top 4%

Key passes

2.44

Top 1%

Progressive passes

6.64

Top 8%

Passes into the final third

7.40

Top 2%

Stats via FBref

As you can see in the table above, the experienced star provided plenty of quality on the ball in the 2024/25 Championship campaign with Leeds, who won the title to secure promotion to the Premier League.

He played in a ball-dominant title-winning side and showcased his ability to consistently progress play and create chances in the middle of the park, which suggests that he could thrive in a ball-dominant Russell Martin team chasing the Premiership title.

Whilst Rothwell, who is also capable of scoring screamers, looks set to be a terrific addition to the squad, Rangers are eyeing another midfielder who could be an even better signing.

Rangers in the race to sign former Liverpool gem

According to Liverpool-focused outlet DaveOCKOP, Rangers are one of a number of teams in the race to sign RB Salzburg central midfielder Bobby Clark in the summer transfer window.

The report claims that Liverpool could be due a sell-on clause fee as a result of the English starlet moving on from the Austrian side this summer, just a year on from his Anfield exit for a fee of £10m.

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It adds that Rangers, Leicester, West Brom, Sunderland, Koln, Eintracht Frankfurt, Hamburg, Birmingham, Leicester, and Southampton are all eyeing up a move for the midfield talent.

DaveOCKOP reveals that the former Newcastle United youth prospect is expected to look for a fresh opportunity to play elsewhere next season, and that there is a concrete chance that he will leave Salzburg.

Bobby Clark

However, it currently remains to be seen how much of the £10m that was paid for him last summer Rangers would need to pay to secure his services.

Why Rangers should sign Bobby Clark

The Scottish giants should push to win the race for the English midfielder this summer because he could be an even better signing for the club than Rothwell in the long run.

Clark is ten years younger than the signing from Bournemouth, at the age of 20, and this means that he has far more potential, both in terms of development and his viability as a long-term option for Martin in midfield.

Liverpool player Bobby Clark warming up.

If the Gers can land a deal for the Salzburg youngster, he could be a starting option in the middle of the park for the next decade if all goes well, whereas Rothwell is heading into the latter stages of his playing career.

Clark is not the finished article in the present, like Rothwell, though, after he only started seven of his 17 appearances in the Austrian Bundesliga last season, but he did show a lot of promise in the OFB Cup, the domestic cup in Austria.

24/25 OFB Cup

Bobby Clark

Appearances (starts)

2 (2)

Touches

217

Pass accuracy

85%

Key passes

8

Dribbles completed

12

Dribble success rate

63%

Ball recoveries

22

Duels won

30

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, the English midfielder thrived as a starter in the cup across two appearances in the competition, creating eight chances and winning a staggering 30 duels.

Whilst it is an incredibly small sample size, it does show the kind of quality that he could provide if Martin is able to help him take the next step in his development after failing to earn regular starts with Salzburg.

Clark, who was hailed as “exciting” by reporter Lee Ryder, also showed a lot of promise during his time at Liverpool, with one goal and two assists in 14 first-team appearances for the Premier League giants, which earned him a £10m move to Austria.

The 20-year-old gem produced 18 goals and 11 assists in 64 games for Liverpool’s U18 and U21 sides combined, further illustrating the kind of attacking quality he can provide at his best.

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Therefore, Clark could be an even better signing than Rothwell because he could be an incredibly exciting midfield talent if Martin can unlock his immense potential as a dynamic, attack-minded, midfielder, who still has many, many, years left ahead of him to develop and improve.

Liverpool now closely pursuing "terrific" 165 career-goal Isak alternative

Liverpool find themselves on the cusp of Premier League glory and have now turned their attention to a prolific striker on the market, per reports.

Liverpool set to cement themselves as champions ahead of busy summer

Since arriving at Anfield, Arne Slot has earned due adulation as his side canter towards a second top-flight title of the modern era, which will undoubtedly raise levels of expectation heading into next season.

Virgil Van Dijk and Mohamed Salah have committed their futures to Liverpool and have played a major role in upholding standards while on Merseyside. Still, Trent Alexander-Arnold’s uncertain situation threatens to become a sizeable blow should he depart for Real Madrid.

Work has to be done in the market this summer if the Reds want to retain their impending status as Premier League champions next term. Their rivals will likely tool up in the off-season to bolster squad depth in the face of a heavy fixture schedule.

Looking to make a statement, Liverpool are confident they can beat Manchester United to Hugo Ekitike after finding out that a fee of £80 million could secure his signature from Eintracht Frankfurt.

Bournemouth’s Dean Huijsen is a known Reds target amid his rapid rise to prominence, and talks have been held with his camp over the last few weeks.

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For now, finishing the season with a flourish will be the priority before celebrations begin after Liverpool win the title. Slot and company will enjoy the moment, though there is plenty of work going on behind the scenes to ensure they aren’t knocked off their perch.

Planning for the future, the Reds boss now has a prolific marksman in his sights who could be the man to spearhead their attack come 2025/26.

Liverpool ready to strike for Aston Villa's Ollie Watkins

According to Football Insider, Liverpool are closely monitoring Aston Villa striker Ollie Watkins amid fears that they could be priced out of a move for Newcastle United star Alexander Isak. Marcus Rashford moving to Villa Park on a permanent basis could free up the England international, who has dropped to the bench in recent weeks as opposed to being a regular starter.

Ollie Watkins’ key statistics in Premier League – 2024/25

Goals

14

Assists

6

Non-penalty XG

12.68

Chances created

21

Shots on target

35

Touches in opposition box

154

Labelled “terrific” by Phil Jones, Watkins has scored 165 goals in 455 career games and is firmly in his peak, which has also brought Arsenal to the table.

The outlet claim Luiz Diaz could be sold to create room for the former Brentford man on Merseyside. Liverpool may be tempted by a bid north of £60 million, with the Saudi Pro League emerging as the Colombian’s most likely destination.

Either way, there could be sizeable changes on the way at Anfield as the Reds go all out to retain their spot at the top of the English pyramid next campaign.

Bethell hoping to dodge Barbados boos on West Indies homecoming

England allrounder set to feature on white-ball tour to country where he grew up

Matt Roller03-Oct-2024Jacob Bethell is targeting a spot in England’s Champions Trophy squad through performances on their white-ball tour to the Caribbean – and joked that he is hoping to avoid being booed when he plays against West Indies in Barbados, where he grew up.Bethell, who turns 21 this month, made his T20I and ODI debuts against Australia in September and felt as though his first taste of international cricket “reaffirmed that I was ready” to make the step up. He kept his place in both squads for the Caribbean tour, which comprises three ODIs and five T20Is and includes three fixtures at Kensington Oval at the start of November.”That’s where my heritage is, so all my friends have already bought tickets,” Bethell said at the cinch PCA awards, where he was pipped to the Young Player of the Year trophy by Jamie Smith. “They’ll be in the stands waiting for me when I get there. I’m slightly worried about how the West Indian fans are going to accept me.Related

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“I’m hoping I don’t get booed too much. I’ve seen Steve Smith in his last few games and every time he walks out to bat, it’s like the end of the world. I’m hoping that’s not the case in the West Indies! I’m only saying that as a joke: there’s a whole lot of support coming around so I can’t imagine it’s going to be anything but that.”Bethell was born and raised in Barbados but moved to the UK aged 12, attending Rugby School on a sports scholarship. He is one of three players in England’s 14-man squad with links to Barbados, along with Phil Salt – who attended Harrison College, the same school as Bethell, while living there as a teenager – and Jofra Archer, who was born and raised there.After the tour, Bethell will head to Australia to play for Melbourne Renegades in the BBL, and hopes that he will remain part of England’s white-ball plans. “There’s obviously the India series for England [from January] and the Champions Trophy, which is something I’ll be looking to put in performances in the West Indies to then get selected for,” he said.Bethell’s first seven international appearances were a mixed bag. He hit 44 off 24 at Cardiff – which included 20 runs off four balls facing Adam Zampa – and helped to square the T20I series in partnership with Liam Livingstone, but had a quieter time in the ODIs, with 85 runs and four wickets across five matches as England’s No. 7.He found the experience “full on” but felt “at home” against Australia’s bowlers, who included Zampa, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc. “You’re ‘on’ all the time,” Bethell said. “I found it hard to switch off at times, but on the whole, it was pretty much everything I expected. It’s hard cricket, mixed around busy travel and a lot of off-field expectations.”A perfect example is Southampton: we were staying on the ground, and you’re sleeping 50 yards away from where you’re walking out to bat, so I found it quite hard to switch off then.”One thing that was really pleasing was you see the level. You’re playing against the top players in the world – and obviously [50-over] world champions – but it was a level that I didn’t feel uncomfortable at, especially with the bat. I felt really at home, so it just kind of reaffirmed that I was ready for it, and ready for what’s to come.”He will predominantly play white-ball cricket this winter, but Bethell’s aspirations extend across all formats. “It’s nice to tick off two of them, but definitely the best one is yet to come – hopefully,” he said. “Test cricket has always been my dream. I know it’s taken a different shape in the last three years but definitely, that’s still my dream: to play Test cricket for England.”At the minute, I’m still very adaptable in red-ball. I haven’t really found a place where I’ve gone, ‘Right, this feels like home’ in terms of a place in the batting order, but I think that could be anywhere from opening the batting to No. 7 – especially with bowling offspin, I’m hoping that I can get into a team being a genuine allrounder.”

Lauren Winfield-Hill: 'The journey has changed for women's cricketers'

Opener finds new lease of life on domestic circuit, as wife takes centre stage for England

Andrew Miller04-Nov-2022Winfield-Hill was player of the match on Tuesday night. Nothing new there, you might think, in a redemptive year for the England international, one in which she has redefined her love of the game to cement her status as one of the very best in her chosen sport.The Winfield-Hill in question on this occasion, however, was not Lauren Winfield-Hill – Cricket World Cup winner in 2017 and twin-trophy winner in a stellar summer just gone – but her Australia-born wife Courtney, whose power-packed hat-trick lit up Headingley in England’s 72-4 victory over Brazil, in the opening match of the women’s Rugby League World Cup.It’s early days in a tournament that culminates in a double-header with the men at Old Trafford on November 19. But, if the home-soil success of England’s cricketers in 2017, as well as this summer’s women’s Euros winners is anything to go by, the coming month could yet be one in which Courtney Winfield-Hill’s own world-class credentials are sent mainstream, after five years of under-acknowledged trailblazing with Leeds Rhinos in the Women’s Super League.And if that does come to pass, then it will complete for the Winfield-Hills one of the most serendipitous sporting stories imaginable – a joint venture that began in adverse circumstances with the Covid outbreak in March 2020, and has traversed some dark days of soul-searching in the interim. But either way, a remarkable sporting power couple appear now to be proving that all the sacrifice is worthwhile.”I can’t grumble,” Lauren Winfield-Hill tells ESPNcricinfo, and with good reason after her own litany of recent successes. A starring role in her first season for Oval Invincibles helped the Hundred’s inaugural champions to defend their title in 2022, before she topped the averages in the Rachael Heyhoe Flint Trophy, including a player-of-the-match performance in the final in September, to become the first women’s cricketer to lift three trophies in consecutive final appearances at Lord’s.Now, while her wife is blazing a trail back in her adopted home in Blighty, Lauren’s form has sent her in the other direction for another crack at the Big Bash – this time for Melbourne Stars, where she is currently their leading run-scorer with 150 from 132 balls all told. That tally includes 47 from 49 in her most recent outing against Adelaide Strikers, where her steadying presence allowed the young guns Alice Capsey and Tess Flintoff to cut loose in startling fashion at the other end.Lauren Winfield-Hill sweeps during her unbeaten 74 against Northern Superchargers•Getty Images”I feel like I’ve just built myself back up,” Lauren says. “I wasn’t in a good place mentally after Covid, even just as a human being… I could barely even live in the house with my wife, because I was just freaking out at random stuff. But every competition I’ve played this year has just been another layer, going up all the time, and now I’m out here in Australia with a new team, different pressures, different expectations. It’s been really nice to be able to have nothing to change any more, and just to keep going like I did at the start of the summer.”In a different era, this week could have been one of crushing disappointment. On Wednesday, the ECB announced their new tranche of women’s central contracts, and Lauren was a notable absentee, though not an unexpected one after a frustrating run of insubstantial scores in her final months in the ODI side.After 11 double-figure innings in 13 starts, but no half-centuries, she was axed in March, midway through England’s gruelling World Cup campaign in New Zealand, and has since seen the coming generation – Capsey and Sophia Dunkley to the fore – seize their opportunities.And yet, as her performances outside of the England set-up have demonstrated, there’s a whole different avenue opening up for the women’s game – serving up opportunities that could not be further removed from her own early years as a player.”The main thing I feel right now is comfort,” she says. “There was probably always a sense that if you didn’t play for England, you weren’t a cricketer. You’d go from hero to zero, almost overnight, if you lost a contract or were deselected.”It used to be the case that, if you weren’t playing international cricket, the standard that you dropped to was, well, I’m not really going to bother getting out of bed for that. But now you know that you can play some really good cricket in some really cool competitions, even if you’re not in favour with England, and that gives you a lot of fulfilment and a lot to still be excited about, beyond just international cricket.”The journey has changed, hasn’t it?” she adds. “I never intended to come out to the Big Bash, it only came about off the back of me doing well in the Hundred, and I was like, oh, this is a nice surprise. And now there’s me and Capsey, playing on the same team, though she’s at the start, and I’m closer to the end. But how cool is it that we’ve both had this opportunity at the same time, and doesn’t matter that she’s 18 and I’m 32? We’re both in the same place right now.”Courtney Winfield-Hill has switched both countries and sports to star for England in the Women’s Rugby League World Cup•Getty ImagesPerhaps the only note of disappointment for Lauren now is that she cannot be around for her wife’s big moment. England play Canada in the Rugby League World Cup on Saturday with Papua New Guinea to come the following week, before a probable semi-final against either Australia or New Zealand in Lauren’s home city of York on November 14. After that, who knows what’s in store?”[Being away during the tournament] did feel like a really big decision for me and for us,” Lauren says. “We’re both in the sporting field, and when this opportunity came about with the Big Bash, we both knew that such things won’t present themselves forever. A lot of her family are over to support her and that’ll be really cool, because they haven’t seen her play a lot. Obviously, my family and myself have been there a lot, so I think it’d be nice to share that with them.”In spite of this absence at the sharp end, however, Lauren’s role in Courtney’s journey could not be more integral. Seven years ago, when their paths first crossed, it was as team-mates at Brisbane Heat in Lauren’s first crack at the Big Bash. Back then, she was the 25-year-old overseas star, an England player awaiting her breakthrough moment, and as their relationship developed during the course of the 2015-16 season, it was clear that hers was the career that demanded the investment.So Courtney – a talented seam bowler in her own right – was the one to up sticks from her native Queensland and build a new life in Yorkshire. She called time on her own playing days and moved into the coaching set-up at Northern Diamonds, but it soon became clear that the other Headingley Stadium, backing onto the cricket ground, was her truest calling.In 2018, she pulled on her rugby boots for the first time in two decades, and by the time she’d been named the Super League’s Woman of Steel in 2019, it was clear she was quickly making up for lost time. Her England chance, however, is directly attributable to Covid – specifically the postponement of the World Cup in 2021, which allowed her to complete her five-year residency qualification in time for this year’s delayed event, and to make it worthwhile for the England selectors to fast-track her in their plans.”The stars have just aligned, haven’t they?” Lauren adds. “How is she in England, married to an English girl, playing for England in rugby league? You wouldn’t have written that narrative five or six years ago, but it’s amazing. I don’t think it was something that she ever thought was going to be possible, but opportunities present themselves in different spaces.”I’m quite biased, but I’ve always said Courtney’s far too good an athlete to not ever reach the top,” she adds. “I’d never say this to her face, obviously, her head will grow. But she’s fearless. She’s a great athlete, and the narrative of her story is just awesome. She’s 35, and she’s debuting in a World Cup, in a sport that she hadn’t played since she was 12. It’s pretty cool.”Not everything about the Covid experience was quite so cool though, and Lauren freely admits the constraints of the pandemic tested their relationship to the max – almost from the moment of their marriage in Queensland in March 2020. Within 24 hours of the start of their honeymoon on the idyllic Hamilton Island, the entire country went into lockdown, and the Winfield-Hills were faced with a marital acid test.

In a coaching space, being challenged by your wife is a whole different feeling. She’s supposed to think my cover drive is the best in the world!Lauren Winfield-Hill

“It was strange at first because Courtney and I are so different,” Lauren says. “We have very similar values that we care about, but we are so different. She’s that free spirit, high energy, no structure, just go with it and it’s all a bit carnage. She’s very left-field thinking and very creative, and I’m quite militant at times. So it’s great because she’s my blind spot, I can lean into that space a little bit and it usually serves me really well.”A further complication came when their work-life balances overlapped – Courtney as a coach in the nets at Northern Diamonds, and Lauren as an out-of-form batter struggling with the pandemic’s boxed-in circumstances.”At first it was all a bit, whoa, this is alternative to my thinking,” Lauren says. “In a coaching space, being challenged by your wife is a whole different feeling. She’s supposed to think my cover drive is the best in the world! ‘What do you mean, I’m gripping too tight with my bottom hand!'”It was probably a bit of ego on my part, because I didn’t want to take feedback from someone so close to me. But I guess it’s just about switching hats, isn’t it? Because we can both talk until the cows come home about cricket, high performance and the rest of it. But when you’re at home and you’re out of that space, she’s my wife, and we have a cut-off where we’ve spoken work, and now that’s it, done.”But if that was feasible in the domestic sphere, it proved nigh on impossible during England’s gruelling campaign in the 2021-22 winter, encompassing a dispiriting one-sided Ashes tour followed by the World Cup. Looking back, Lauren believes that some of her on-field struggles could well have been connected to her diagnosis, in October 2019, of Crohn’s disease – the same intestinal issue that Jack Leach has been required to manage during his England career.”I’m lucky with the support I’ve had from the ECB,” she says. “It’s only thanks to the England doctor that I was diagnosed in the first place. But the bubbles involved a lot of UberEATS and takeaways, which did make me quite sick. It’s a lot easier to manage now that I can cook and go out for good meals, and look after myself physically.”Also, when you’re not in bubbles, you sleep better. Fatigue is a big part of it and obviously, if you’re not resting and recovering from the training and playing loads, then you’re just constantly taking fuel out the tanks.Lauren Winfield-Hill started the 2022 season with 96 from 51 balls for Northern Diamonds•Getty Images”Everybody had different experiences, but I’m quite a deep thinker and I need distractions. The bubbles don’t give you that, they just give you mental combustion and lots of analysis, lots of overthinking. And lots of disconnect. I needed my people to ground me and reassure me that I’m not just a cricketer, we love you regardless. When the only thing that you’re getting any sort of feedback on is cricket, and that’s not going well, you don’t really know who you are and what you stand for.”It always sounds really corny, doesn’t it? But you’ve got to bounce your bum on the bottom to come back up. And right now, I’m playing the best cricket in my life.”Though she hit the ground running in the 2022 season with a remarkable 96 from 51 balls for Northern Diamonds in the Charlotte Edwards Cup, it was Lauren’s move from Northern Superchargers to Oval Invincibles for the Hundred that provided the stand-out evidence of her new resolve. Her first match for the Invincibles came against her old team-mates – Alyssa Healy included, whose pre-eminence as a wicketkeeper-opener had been a factor in Lauren moving south to give herself an extra role behind the stumps. By the time she’d cracked 74 not out from 42 balls in a nine-wicket win, she had amply justified the switch.”It was a massive decision at the time because I’m Northern through and through, and obviously I had been captain at the Superchargers,” she says. “But sometimes you make decisions for other people instead of decisions for yourself. I don’t think I’ve ever been more nervous for a game than I was for that first game, so it was nice to perform, and they were really happy for me, which meant a lot.Related

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“I’ve just changed the way I operate,” she adds. “I’ve become less OCD with my training routine and allowed myself to go with the flow. The bottom line is that I couldn’t adapt to anything that wasn’t how it was supposed to be. But that’s the game of cricket. God knows what’s going to happen, who knows how many you are going to be chasing, or what sort of surface you’re going to get on, or who they’re going to bowl.”So I’ve worked really hard on being more fluid in life, and fluid in the game. I’m not trying so hard to get that score that proves I’m worthy of being an England cricketer, and so I’m able to adapt and play the game in front of me. Sometimes that might just need me to be gritty, whereas previously I’d have tried to be expansive and sexy, and fail to get the job done.”Greater self-assurance comes with a greater desire to be seen as a role-model too, on the field and off. In terms of her relationship with Courtney, Lauren acknowledges that it wasn’t always easy to be upfront about her sexuality, and that the act of getting married – and taking on a double-barrelled surname – was a big factor in becoming truly comfortable about who she is.”I just think it’s important to use your platform, use your story for good, and just create awareness,” she says. “Our job is to play cricket but there’s a bit more to it than that. It’s important to show you are not afraid to be authentic, and to drive the change.”More generally, however, as a female sportsperson, Lauren can feel that change happening on her watch, and is eager to do her bit to keep the momentum going, at every level of the game.”I think people understand the challenges that female athletes have gone through, and have a respect for that, but you’ve also got to have one eye on the future of change,” she says. “For instance, it’s great to see Amy Jones up on a billboard for a big advertising campaign, but who’s looking out for the girl who’s gone to a cricket club and has nowhere to get changed, or no sanitary bin? She isn’t going to go back if you don’t keep an eye on the shop floor stuff too.”We’re not just the tag-ons anymore. In the past we might have been the curtain-raisers, but now it feels like we are up there on a pedestal as well.”One of the best things about the Hundred has been seeing all the kids after the game, and there’ll be a ten-year-old boy shouting your name and asking for your autograph. That has such an impact, because if a girl then goes into the playground and plays cricket, they don’t all go ‘urgh, it’s a girl!’ They’ll be thinking, ‘I went to watch the Hundred, and the girls are really good. Come on, let’s play!'”Lauren Winfield-Hill recently featured in the Royal London series ‘The Changing Room’, a three-part video series, in partnership with the ECB, where players and officials discuss a range of topics that impact the game of cricket including, racism, faith discrimination, and gender equality. The entire series is available to stream at www.royallondon.com/cricket

Arpit Vasavada turns rescue act to put Saurashtra on cusp of Ranji final

He scored 139 to help the team recover from 15 for 5 against Gujarat and set a challenging target

Hemant Brar in Rajkot03-Mar-2020Arpit Vasavada was born in 1988, three years after Clive Lloyd played his last international match. Still, Lloyd and his great West Indies side of the 1970s and 1980s played an instrumental role in Vasavada becoming a cricketer.The story goes like this: Vyomeshbhai Vasavada, Arpit’s father, used to follow cricket commentary on radio in his younger days, and was inspired by the feats of Lloyd’s side. “At that time only, I decided I would make my [future] child a cricketer,” Vyomeshbhai says. Coincidentally, just like Lloyd, Vasavada is also a left-hand batsman and used to wear specs, before undergoing a vision-correction surgery not very long ago.Vyomeshbhai was passionate for cricket but had little talent himself. “When Arpit was three, I used to take him on my bicycle to Madhavrao Scindia Cricket Ground,” he says. “But since I never held a cricket bat in my life, I had to look out for a coach when he grew a little older.”He was working for Indian Railways at that time and one of his colleagues there was Arvind Pujara, Cheteshwar Pujara’s father. So he decided to send his son to him, and it’s there Vasavada learnt his first cricketing lessons.Cut to the present and Vasavada needed to draw from all those lessons to rescue Saurashtra from a perilous position against Gujarat in the ongoing Ranji Trophy semi-final. Coming in at 15 for 5 on Monday, Vasavada had not only denied Chintan Gaja a hat-trick but, in Chetan Sakariya’s company, also took the side to stumps without further damage.If Gaja ruled the third day with a whirlwind 61 and a five-for, Vasavada gave the early signs on Tuesday morning to whom day four would belong. Resuming from his overnight 23, he drove Gaja through the covers for a boundary. Arzan Nagwaswalla too pitched one up in the next over and was given the same treatment. Next ball he shortened his length only to be punched in front of the point.Along with Sakariya, who proved more than a handy ally, Vasavada took the side past 100. The breakthrough for Gujarat eventually came in the form of a run-out when Vasavada called for a risky single but an Axar Patel direct hit found Sakariya short.The run-out left Vasavada on his haunches even though Sakariya was being applauded by his team-mates for his 45. “He was playing so well that it didn’t look like any bowler could get him out, so I was very disappointed,” Vasavada said at the end of the day.At 105 for 6, there was a big task ahead and Vasavada knew it. That was the reason he didn’t even raise his bat after reaching his fifty and acknowledged the standing ovation from his team-mates with nothing more than a reluctant thumbs-up.”At that time, my job hadn’t even started,” he said later. “And anyway personal benchmarks don’t matter much when the team is in such a position. What matters is if you can take the side to a strong position.”With Chirag Jani at the other end, he started the rebuilding process once again. The two were cautious initially but once the ball got soft, they started imposing themselves. Vasavada, who had consumed 108 balls for his fifty, took only 73 more to bring up his seventh first-class hundred, and the third of this season. In fact, he has converted all three of his 50-plus scores this season into a hundred.Soon after Gaja sent back Jani and Prerak Mankad with the second new ball but Vasavada carried on. Along with Dharmendrasinh Jadeja, he added 41 for the ninth wicket. But when Jadeja was dismissed, he went for quick runs, hooking Nagwaswalla for a six and a four before being caught at deep-backward square leg for 139. By then the lead had swelled to 326.All this time, his father was watching him from his fixed spot in the stands. “Now that I am retired, I come here for every game,” he says. When asked why he doesn’t sit in the invitees’ box, he reasons, “It’s much calmer here.”When Vasavada was on 93, there was a huge appeal for caught-behind as he tried to cut Axar. Gujarat went for the review after the on-field umpire deemed it not-out. The third umpire took a long time but there was no conclusive evidence to overturn the decision. Vyomeshbhai, though, was convinced his son hadn’t hit it.As soon as Vasavada reached his hundred, Vyomeshbhai started getting congratulatory calls. Those who were not following the game, Vyomeshbhai called them himself. After all, his son’s knock had made Saurashtra the favourites to face Bengal in the final.

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