Marcus Trescothick ready to commit to touring life after England coaching appointment

Extended time away from home ended Test career early, but former opener ready for new role

George Dobell01-Mar-2021

Marcus Trescothick worked with the England squad during the 2019 Ashes, and is now a full-time ECB coach•PA Images via Getty Images

Marcus Trescothick has confirmed he is “ready to jump back” into touring life, but accepts he is still “building up” to the long trips usually undertaken by England players and support staff.Trescothick was named as the ECB’s elite batting coach on Monday. As a result, he is expected to spend time on tour with various England teams as well as working with players throughout the talent pathways during the English summer.But Trescothick, whose international career as a player was curtailed by issues with anxiety and depression that appeared to be exacerbated by periods away from home, admits adapting to the touring lifestyle is part of “an ongoing process”. As a result, he expects to spend no more than five weeks away from home on each individual trip.”It’s an ongoing process for me,” Trescothick said when asked about the issue. “I think I’ve learned to adapt and progress where I’ve gone. I’ve gradually built it from a couple of days in Spain, to then going to Spain for a week. Then I did two weeks in Abu Dhabi.”I’m gradually cutting my teeth on it just to get more confident. Every trip that I do, the more I realise how much I enjoyed the touring life. But that’s not to say I’m ready to jump back in and do six weeks or two months or three months away. That’s not what I’m ready for yet. And we’ve discussed that.”Trescothick’s role is not quite the same as previous batting coaches. While Mark Ramprakash, for example, was with the senior England teams nearly all the time – which could mean three months on tour in a single stretch – Trescothick is also is also expected, at times, to work with players at U19 and Lions level as well, and with those identified for attention in county cricket. The likes of Graham Thorpe and Paul Collingwood will remain regular faces on England tours, with Trescothick utilised for shorter spells as required.”Do I know how much touring I will do? Not exactly,” Trescothick continued. “We have discussed it and I’m ready to jump back on and do bits and pieces.”Do I want to do three months in a row? No, I don’t. I’m building up to that sort of point. The little journeys I’ve done for a couple of weeks here or a month there: that works really well.Related

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“I said I would do three, four, five weeks, I’m open to all that. It’s gradually getting easier for me. My kids are growing up and are less dependent on me and I’ve grown more and more confident to deal with it.”While Trescothick was due to arrive in India last week with the England limited-overs party, he was obliged to pull out due to a family bereavement. But he has dipped his toe in the water of his new role already. He was part of the support staff on the limited-overs tour to South Africa just before Christmas and found that, without the pressures that plagued him as a player, he was much better placed to enjoy the experience. But while the anxieties may be diminished, he says the thrill of representing his country – albeit it in an indirect way these days – remains undimmed.”I’ve loved it,” he said. “I know South Africa is a great place, but I really enjoyed my time doing those tours again. And it reminded me of the good bits that I did.”It felt different because of the stresses and strains of playing the game and the intensity that goes with it [had gone]. As a coach, you work hard but in a different way. And that’s what I’ve really enjoyed. It’s given me the opportunity to be there, enjoy it for the right reasons in comparison to what I did before.”I remember going to South Africa and walking out at the Wanderers with your [England] kit on. It feels so special. You dream of it. You look forward to it all your career. That’s not changed from being a player to being a coach.”I was given an England helmet the other week and I took it home and I was like, ‘Oh, wow’. Just small things like that. The appreciation of what a special environment you are involved in. It’s still no different for me.”

Tottenham think they can seal £60m deal for striker who wants to join Ange

Tottenham think they can seal a £60 million deal for a striker who wants to join Ange Postecoglou's side, with Spurs in the market for a centre-forward who can finally replace club legend Harry Kane.

Spurs target new striker with Richarlison up for sale

Earlier this week, reliable transfer journalist Fabrizio Romano backed reports that the Lilywhites are in the market for a fresh striking option, and potentially a new winger.

Tottenham consider swap move for £162k-a-week forward with Ange "obsessed"

The Australian is desperate for a new attacker.

1 ByEmilio Galantini Aug 1, 2024

Postecoglou was heavily reliant on Son Heung-min and his 17 goals in all competitions for the majority of Tottenham's output in the final third, so the Australian will be keen to add more attacking impetus, especially given the South Korea star is out of contract next year.

Meanwhile, reports claim that Spurs are determined to sell Richarlison this summer, despite him managing 12 goals and four assists last season as the club's second top scorer behind Son.

Tottenham's best players in the Premier League last season

Son Heung-min

7.30

James Maddison

7.17

Pedro Porro

7.05

Cristian Romero

7.04

Dejan Kulusevski

7.03

Ratings via WhoScored

The Brazilian doesn't appear to be viewed by those within Tottenham as a long-term solution to succeed Kane, who completed a multi-million-pound move to Bayern Munich last summer. Richarlison is attracting interest from Saudi Arabia, and has been all window according to some reports, so his exit could be one to watch before deadline day.

With the north Londoners in the market for a new forward, there are a few interesting names who've been linked recently. Brentford's Ivan Toney is thought to be one of them, with the England international out of contract next year and still on the lookout for a new club.

Brentford's Ivan Toney

Toney is rumoured to be keen on a move to Spurs as he seeks an exit from Brentford this summer. The 27-year-old scored 20 Premier League goals during the 2022/23 season before his hefty on-field ban for alleged gambling breaches and helped England beat Slovakia in the last 16 of Euro 2024 through his extra-time assist for Kane.

Another English top-flight striker who really likes the idea of joining Postecoglou, according to a report by TEAMtalk this week, is Bournemouth star Dominic Solanke.

Solanke wants to join Tottenham as Spurs believe £60m deal possible

Spurs have apparently been in contact with Solanke's representatives, and hold a belief that they can sign the forward for around £60 million – £5 million less than his full £65 million release clause.

Solanke wants to join Postecoglou at Tottenham, and the club also view him as their ideal pick to lead the line in the next campaign. The 26-year-old scored 21 goals across 42 appearances in all competitions for Bournemouth last season, attracting praise for his exceptional performances.

Bournemouth striker Dominic Solanke.

“He is flying at the minute and he’s looking like the player that I always thought he was going to become," said pundit John Wenham.

“I have watched him dominate Tottenham many times over the years while in Chelsea’s youth teams, and to tell the truth I’m pleased for him as I always thought he was a really good player.

“I think he will be knocking on the door of the next England squad. I know that Ollie Watkins scores a lot of goals, but Solanke is the closest England striker to Harry Kane in terms of the way he plays and what he offers in terms of his ability to hold up the ball."

Willian retorna, e Jô desfalca o Corinthians contra o Fluminense; confira provável time e relacionados

MatériaMais Notícias

O Corinthians encerrou sua preparação para enfrentar o Fluminense na tarde desta terça-feira, no CT Joaquim Grava. Para esse duelo na Neo Química Arena, pela 26ª rodada do Brasileirão-2021, o Timão terá o retorno de Willian, recuperado de desconforto muscular, mas não poderá contar com Jô.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasCorinthiansCorinthians se despede do Brasileirão sub-20 com empate na última rodadaCorinthians12/10/2021CorinthiansCorinthians conta com perfil disciplinado para evitar perder titulares pendurados para o clássicoCorinthians12/10/2021CorinthiansCBF desmembra tabela e define datas e horários de mais três jogos do Corinthians no BrasileirãoCorinthians12/10/2021

TABELA
> Veja classificação e simulador do Brasileirão-2021 clicando aqui

> Conheça o aplicativo de resultados do LANCE!

GALERIA
>Confira as fotos da nova terceira camisa roxa do Corinthians

No caso do camisa 77, o atacante foi liberado do treinamento desta terça e do jogo desta quarta para resolver assuntos particulares. No último duelo, na derrota para o Sport no último sábado, Jô foi titular do setor ofensivo alvinegro.

Além dele, seguem como desfalques os meias Roni (entorse ligamentar do joelho direito) e Ruan Oliveira (revisão cirúrgica do joelho esquerdo). João Pedro, lateral-direito contratado para ser reserva de Fagner, continua sem ser relacionado por Sylvinho. Outro que ficou fora por opção foi Marquinhos.

Em contrapartida, o técnico corintiano poderá contar novamente com Willian, que desfalcou o time na última rodada e se recuperou de desconforto muscular para poder enfrentar o Flu. Renato Augusto e Giuliano, que foram poupados dos treinamentos da última segunda-feira, estão na lista e devem jogar.

Um provável Corinthians é: Cássio; Fagner, João Victor, Gil e Fábio Santos; Cantillo; Gabriel Pereira, Giuliano, Renato Augusto e Willian; Róger Guedes.

Confira a lista completa dos relacionados para a partida:

Goleiros: Caíque França, Cássio e Matheus Donelli
Laterais: Fábio Santos, Fagner e Lucas Piton
Zagueiros: Gil, João Victor e Raul Gustavo
Meio-campistas: Adson, Araos, Cantillo, Du Queiroz, Gabriel, Gabriel Pereira, Giuliano, Gustavo Mantuan, Luan, Renato Augusto, Vitinho, Willian e Xavier
Atacantes: Gustavo Mosquito e Róger Guedes

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West Brom must sell their wanted man who’s worth more than Mowatt

West Bromwich Albion fans will be clamouring for more business through the door at the Hawthorns soon, with the majority of the transfer talk this summer being dominated by players rumoured to be exiting.

The likes of Darnell Furlong, Alex Mowatt, Kyle Bartley and more had all been spoken of as potential stars that could depart, with Bartley and Mowatt eventually signing new contracts rubbishing any speculation they would be on their way out, to the relief of those associated with the West Midlands club.

Yet, even with past worries that the squad that clinched a Championship play-off position last season could be decimated, supporters of the Baggies would likely welcome this potential sale, with the player in question far too inconsistent this campaign just gone.

John Swift's 23/24 season

According to a report by Football Insider, Middlesbrough are contemplating a move for West Brom attacking midfielder John Swift this transfer window, with the Baggies said to be open to accepting offers for the former Chelsea youth player.

That is the case after the now 29-year-old struggled for large patches of last season to find his best form again for Carlos Corberan's men, having found the back of the net an impressive six times from his opening 11 second-tier contests.

He would only manage three more goals past this lightning-quick start, however, with only one assist next to his name registered from 39 league clashes in total.

On a bumper pay packet of £22.5k-per-week as well, according to Capology, Corberan could want to clear Swift out from his camp in a similar fashion to what he did with Adam Reach, with the stale 31-year-old released recently having been on an extortionate £40k-per week salary.

Unlike Reach though, West Brom could still manage to get a fee out of their wanted man with the interest from Boro being there, as the ex-Chelsea player now remarkably worth more than the aforementioned Mowatt, when looking at Football Transfers xTV model (expected transfer value).

Swift's value in 2024

According to Football Transfers, Swift's value still stands at a pretty £1.9m, despite his form falling off a cliff towards the latter stages of last campaign.

His value might not have taken too much of a denting when you consider the 29-year-old has been in and around the EFL for the majority of his playing days and has proven himself to be a reliable performer for the most part.

If you exclude his up-and-down form as of late, Swift has impressively amassed 54 goals and 50 assists from 299 Championship career clashes.

1. Jed Wallace

£3.9m

2. Darnell Furlong

£2.9m

3. Okay Yokuslu

£2.8m

4. Karlan Grant

£2.6m

5. Conor Townsend

£2.4m

Swift just narrowly misses out on the top five most valued assets at the Baggies when looking at the table above, even despite the fact players such as Conor Townsend and Darnell Furlong only missed four regular league games between them during the 23/24 season.

The ex-Reading man, on the contrary, ended up being absent nine times, with the likes of Mowatt also doing a far more effective job – across the course of the campaign – as a creator of chances through the middle of the park than Swift.

The former Leeds United midfielder would pick up five assists for this troubles in the process, far outweighing Swift's meagre one, but finds his value comes in at a lesser £1.6m when contrasted next to the underperforming 29-year-old.

Therefore, West Brom should cash in whilst they can if Michael Carrick's men are genuinely interested, with the inconsistent midfielder's contract also up for renewal next year.

Mulumbu 2.0: West Brom risk losing vital star worth more than Diangana

West Bromwich Albion really won’t want to lose this star this summer.

ByKelan Sarson Jul 8, 2024

Outscored Son & Richarlison: Spurs target £42m ace who’s like Watkins

The Euros are coming to a climactic conclusion this weekend as England have somehow slugged their way into the final to face off against the competition's great entertainers, Spain.

The Three Lions made it past the Netherlands in the Semi-final thanks to a spot kick from former Tottenham Hotspur icon Harry Kane and a last-minute goal from substitute Ollie Watkins.

However, while the tournament has transfixed the whole country over the last month or so, Premier League clubs have been hard at work in the transfer market.

Ollie Watkins celebrates for England

In fact, based on recent reports, the latest striker touted for a move to N17 has won comparisons to England's most recent hero, Watkins, and outscored Son Heung-min and Richarlison last season.

Tottenham Hotspur transfer news

According to a recent report from Caught Offside, Tottenham have maintained their long-term interest in Feyenoord star Santiago Gimenez.

Alongside the Lilywhites, the story has revealed that their North London rivals Arsenal and Italian giants Napoli are also keen to land the Mexican's services this summer.

No price is mentioned, but a report out of Italy in May claimed that a fee of around €50m would be enough to tempt the Dutch side into selling, which is around £42m.

Feyenoord strikerSantiago Gimenez.

It might still be a sizeable investment, but given how well he played last season and his flattering comparisons to Watkins, Daniel Levy and Co should be doing all they can to sign Gimenez.

Gimenez's comparisons to Watkins

Now, before getting onto Gimenez's impressive goalscoring record, let's take a look at this comparison to England's recent hero, Watkins.

It stems from FBref, which compares players in similar positions across Europe's top five leagues. In the Mexican's case, they consider the Aston Villa ace to be the eighth most similar forward.

This conclusion is easier to understand when looking at their respective underlying numbers.

Gimenez & Watkins

Stats per 90

Gimenez

Watkins

Progressive Carries

1.79

1.74

Progressive Passes

1.41

1.54

Shot-Creating Actions

2.73

2.80

Goal-Creating Actions

0.48

0.50

Carries into the Penalty Area

1.25

1.15

Aerial Duels Won

1.44

1.37

All Stats via FBref for the 23/24 League Season

For example, they rank very similar in metrics such as progressive passes and carries, aerial duels won, carries into the penalty area, and shot and goal-creating actions, all per 90.

It's not just his similarity to the England ace that makes the "insane" Feyenoord star, as dubbed by U23 scout Antonio Mango, worth signing; he's also incredibly prolific in front of goal.

In fact, his tally of 26 goals and eight assists is better than anything a Spurs player could muster, including Son, who scored 17 goals and provided ten assists in 36 games, and Richarlison, who found the back of the net 12 times and produced four assists in 31 matches.

Ultimately, Gimenez looks to be an outstanding attacking talent, and his comparisons to Watkins and proficiency in front of goal should be all the reasons Levy and Co need to pull the trigger and bring him to N17 this summer.

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Explained: Why Thomas Partey wasn't picked to play for Arsenal against West Ham in Premier League London derby clash

Arsenal duo Thomas Partey and Mikel Merino are not in Arsenal's squad for their Premier League clash at West Ham.

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West Ham host ArsenalPartey & Merino not in squadArteta explains their absenceFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

When the Gunners' matchday squad for the Hammers clash was announced on Saturday afternoon, neither Partey nor Merino were in the 20-man group. The important duo would have certainly been included but now manager Mikel Arteta has explained their absence.

AdvertisementTHE EXPLANATION

Arteta revealed that the two midfielders have been ruled out through injury but didn't reveal what those injuries are or the severity.

He told Sky Sports: "Unfortunately, they both picked up an injury and the game too early and they couldn't be part of the squad."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Arsenal keenly felt the injury absence of captain Martin Odegaard and their results suffered during his time on the sidelines. Before the West Ham encounter at London Stadium, they were nine points adrift of league leaders Liverpool, and having more players out injured will not help in their title bid.

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT?

It remains to be seen how long both Partey, who has been playing at right-back of late in the absence of the injured Ben White, and Merino will be sidelined for. After this match, Arsenal host Manchester United in the league on Wednesday.

Dress rehearsal for T20 World Cup favourites as India, England look to clinch series

The groundwork for the marquee event in October will have been laid by both teams irrespective of the result

Andrew Miller19-Mar-20216:31

Will England field same XI? Kishan instead of Rahul for India?

Big PictureHere we go then, this is the contest that makes all the agonies and frustrations of recent months worthwhile. In the midst of a pandemic, we’ve got a treat in store. The world’s top-two ranked teams going head to head in a contest that, to judge by the ding-dong battle we’ve enjoyed so far this series, could yet be a full dress rehearsal for the T20 World Cup final in just over six months’ time.The only pity is that there will be no crowd present to create the full bear-pit atmosphere that this contest deserves. There were 66,000 spectators present to watch India’s series-leveller in game two, before the gates were slammed shut once again due to Gujarat’s surge in Covid cases – and all the signs point to a similar arrangement when the ODIs begin in Pune next week. But in keeping with the impressive intensity that cricket at all levels has managed in this lock-down era, there will be no let-up on either side when the teams stride out to the middle on Saturday.Eoin Morgan was granted his full-strength squad for this series, to the chagrin of those who believe that England’s prospects in last month’s Test series were compromised as a consequence. But he has consistently stressed the need for his team to learn their lessons fast before the mad schedule of the English summer pulls his star players in every direction. And so, while he would no doubt have been delighted to wrap up the series with a better showing in match four, it’s not simply a case of putting on a brave face when he says he is relishing this chance to road-test his troops in their highest-stakes contest since 2019.Related

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After all, England have made it their business in recent years to embrace the expectation that comes with their front-running style of white-ball cricket. And while the circumstances are somewhat different, this contest carries with it the same sort of manufactured gravitas that England conferred on their fifth ODI against Australia at Old Trafford in 2018, when the chance was there to serve their greatest rivals a 5-0 series drubbing, and Jos Buttler dragged them over the line with a thrilling century in a one-wicket win. It’s not putting too fine a point on it to suggest that that chase, and the lessons learnt within it, were instrumental in England holding their nerve in the following years’ World Cup final.As for Virat Kohli, the lessons and pointers that he too has gleaned in the past four games have been invaluable. England have won three out of the four tosses in the series to date – a significant advantage given the onset of dew under the floodlights. But Kohli’s consistent message, that he was unconcerned about his team having to do it the hard way, bore fruit on Thursday evening, when they put enough runs on the board to squeeze England until they squeaked in their mounting run-chase.The manner in which India have won their two matches has been particularly instructive. On both occasions, it has been the devil-may-care exuberance of their rookies that has sparked the team into life, with Ishan Kishan’s debut fifty in game two giving way to Suryakumar Yadav’s scintillating 57 from 31 on Thursday. But neither has had a chance to come good in the same contest yet – and nor has Rishabh Pant, although with four scores between 21 and 30, and 102 runs from 79 balls all told, he doesn’t seem far away from cutting loose in his habitual fashion.The concern once again for India has been elsewhere in their batting order. KL Rahul’s struggles just will not go away, and while he does have an IPL looming in which he can re-find his range, the manner in which England have gone for the jugular in the powerplay, with Jofra Archer and Mark Wood dovetailing with such violent intent, will be hard to replicate outside of contests against Anrich Nortje and Kagiso Rabada at Delhi Capitals in the IPL.Rohit Sharma, likewise, has not yet found his range, in spite of a first-ball six on Thursday – Archer has now bagged him three times in 15 balls in T20s, at a cost of ten runs. Shreyas Iyer has been an important source of mid-innings momentum, most notably in the two games when Kohli has been undone by Adil Rashid, but for a side that is actively targetting a fearless new approach to their batting, the feeling persists that they have at least one too many anchors in their current first-choice line-up.In the bowling stakes, the two teams have subtly different problems. India remain wedded to their five-man attack, which offers no wriggle-room on a day when one of them gets taken for a journey – as it nearly happened on Thursday to Washington Sundar. But equally, that pressure to perform on a ball-by-ball basis can create some seriously hardened competitors. Hardik Pandya was the under-sung hero in match four, as he skidded through his four overs for 16 runs, while Shardul Thakur held his nerve at the death, just as Archer was threatening to reprise his IPL range-hitting. Sometimes, when you are walking a tight-rope, that imperative not to look down can be emboldening.England have broader options, but rather less defined roles. Archer, Wood and Rashid are the clear backbones of their World Cup line-up, but with no second spinner – not even a part-time option such as Joe Root provided in 2016 – the less express seam of Sam Curran, Ben Stokes and Chris Jordan has proved a touch too hittable at key moments in this campaign. Curran’s indefinable status in the side epitomises England’s uncertainty. He bowled four overs for 22, including a wicket-maiden in the powerplay in game two, but just five for 45 as England’s sixth option in the rest of the series combined.These are, however, fairly good problems to have in the final approach to a major tournament. Win or lose in the series decider, both England and India will emerge from these five games with their plans a touch more clear, and their hunches explored in an environment that they couldn’t have ascertained against less potent opponents. The groundwork for October will have been laid by both teams, come what may.Form guide
India WLWLL
England LWLWW
In the spotlightThis could be Dawid Malan’s moment of reckoning. England’s No.1-ranked T20I batsman has endured a series of untimely fallowness in India – 80 runs from 77 balls all told, with four scores between 14 and 24, and no real sense that he was about to cut loose before he was cut short. It doesn’t feel like an over-extrapolation to suggest that Morgan hasn’t ever rated Malan quite as highly as his remarkable record might deserve, but this is the sort of dress rehearsal that can make or break perceptions. More than anything, the skipper values big-game players, so a matchwinning hand on Saturday’s stage may yet ink his name among the must-haves for October. That said, the manner of Malan’s demises in this series have been revealing – his attempts to force the pace against the spinners have come unstuck in each of his last three outings, and if that’s a sign that he’s liable to get bogged down in the middle overs in India where previously he has skipped through the gears, then his card may already be marked.Suryakumar Yadav slog-sweeps one fine•Getty Images

Suryakumar Yadav’s maiden international innings was an utter joy to behold. As carefree as his Mumbai Indians’ team-mate Kishan in match two – and all the more valuable to his team in that it came in the first innings of the match, and effectively landed a blow against the head in this toss-and-dew dominated series. The raucousness of his opening blow, a Roy Fredericks-esque pull for six over fine leg off a fired-up Archer, was so timely for his team, for it showed he would not be cowed by the express pace of England’s quicks, and signalled a charge towards, first, their best powerplay total of the series, and ultimately the top innings score too. He admitted afterwards that he had been encouraged by Kohli to keep things simple and play as he has been doing so consistently at the IPL. If he can follow that showing up with a similarly unfettered display on Saturday, it’ll take something special from England to match it.Team newsRahul’s struggles got no better on Thursday – in fact, his 14 from 17 balls was arguably a worse contribution than another short sharp duck would have been. But having been backed to battle through his form slump by Kohli, it would be intriguing to see him get the heave-ho now, even though Kishan’s potential recovery from a groin niggle sends a challenge to India’s brains trust. If there is to be a change, then T Natarajan, and his line in pinpoint yorkers, could get a chance to bolster India’s bowling now that he has emerged from his quarantine period. Sundar had his moment in the second game, but his offspin landed squarely in the hitting arc of Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow on Thursday.India (probable): 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Ishan Kishan, 3 Virat Kohli (capt), 4 Rishabh Pant (wk), 5 Shreyas Iyer, 6 Suryakumar Yadav, 7 Hardik Pandya, 8 Washington Sundar/T Natarajan, 9 Shardul Thakur, 10 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 11 Rahul ChaharIt’s hard to see England changing their formula right now (thanks for coming, Moeen Ali) although their surfeit of left-handers in the middle order did encounter a bit of a pile-up when Thakur got his wide cutters going towards the back-end of the innings. Could there be a temptation to mix up the batting order a touch? Stokes snuck in ahead of Morgan in match four and reaped the benefits of a longer lead-in with his best innings of the series, 46 from 23, but as suggested by Dinesh Karthik on , his natural fit in these conditions could be as high as No.3. Certainly, if he did grind along to a run-a-ball 20 in the early stages of his stay, he’s proven beyond any doubt that he would have the gears to go big.England (probable): 1 Jason Roy, 2 Jos Buttler (wk), 3 Dawid Malan, 4 Jonny Bairstow, 5 Ben Stokes, 6 Eoin Morgan (capt), 7 Sam Curran, 8 Chris Jordan, 9 Jofra Archer, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Mark Wood.Pitch and conditionsIt’s back to the scene of India’s victory in match two on Saturday, as the teams line up once again on the pitch where Kishan and Kohli made short work of England’s target of 166 for 3. According to Paul Collingwood, England’s assistant coach, there’s been water added to the surface since that game and the cracks have sealed back up, and he doesn’t expect it to prove as slow and low as was the case when batting first in that match. And there’s a precedent for recycling in this series already: the black-soiled surface for the last game, used in the opening match too, proved to be the best batting pitch of the series so far, with enough carry off the deck to reward shots in both innings. Although, as Kohli acknowledged afterwards, the dew factor was a bigger consideration than ever in the closing overs of the game.Stats and trivia One way or another, a lengthy unbeaten series record will come to an end tomorrow. England have won seven and drawn one of their last eight T20I series, dating back to their last tour of India in 2018. India, meanwhile, have won six and drawn one of their last seven T20I series, dating back to Australia’s victory in February 2019. Malan is still on course to break Babar Azam’s record for the fastest batsman to 1000 T20I runs – 26 innings. He needs another 65 in his next two knocks, having reached 935 from 23 to date. England have been fined 20 per cent of their match fees for a slow over-rate in the fourth T20I, a penalty that took into account the lengthy delays for two third-umpire reviews for catches by Malan and Rashid on the fine leg / third-man boundary. Both Archer and Wood have gone at less than a run a ball in the powerplay in this series so far. Archer has claimed two wickets in 48 balls, at a cost of 45 runs; Wood has picked up three in 30, while conceding 18 runs.Quotes “I’m enjoying it a lot. Even when I’m playing in the IPL or domestic cricket, I bowl a lot of overs in the death or fourth, fifth or sixth over in the powerplay. So, I bowl a lot of overs where batsmen come hard at bowlers. Kind of getting used to it now.”
Shardul Thakur says he relishes the pressure of bowling the tough overs in a T20 contest“We go into the next game with a huge amount of pressure on our shoulders as a team, because whoever wins that game wins the series. That’s great for us as a team, especially with a T20 World Cup coming up because the more pressure situations we get put into as a team the more I think we’ll benefit from it.”
Ben Stokes wants England to feel the heat as the World Cup draws ever closer.

Leicester now racing to sign £17m "machine" midfielder ahead of Everton

After keeping hold of Wilfred Ndidi, Leicester City have now reportedly made their first approach to sign a £17m midfield partner for the Nigerian this summer.

Leicester transfer news

Positives are finally beginning to emerge for the Foxes following a chaotic start to the summer transfer window, which saw both Enzo Maresca and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall swap the King Power for Stamford Bridge and Chelsea.

New Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca

Left without a manager, Leicester turned to Steve Cooper, who has since welcomed fresh faces in the form of Issahaku Fatawu in a permanent deal alongside Caleb Okoli, Michael Golding and Bobby De Cordova-Reid. However, Leicester's most underrated deal this summer, is Nidid's new contract when the midfielder looked destined to leave as a free agent.

After signing the unexpected extension, Ndidi told Leicester's official website: "I feel great, I feel excited, I feel at home. That’s the most important thing. I feel really happy to continue with the Club. My family is settled here and everyone back home, when they say Ndidi, they say Leicester also! It’s really amazing to be a part of this journey going forward.”

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Now, in a further reward, the Foxes could hand the Nigerian a new partner at the heart of Cooper's midfield. According to South American journalist Nicola Parcerias, Leicester have made an approach to sign Richard Rios from Palmeiras this summer in a race alongside fellow Premier League side Everton.

The central midfielder is fresh from the 2024 Copa America, in which he helped Colombia reach the final before suffering defeat against Argentina. Now, Palmeiras are reportedly open to negotiating his exit for around €20m (£17m), putting aside his reported eye-watering release clause of around €100m (£84m).

"Machine" Rios can provide balance next to Ndidi

After such a successful Copa America, it's no surprise to see Rios being linked with a move to the Premier League, especially as Leicester look to form a solid foundation at the base of their midfield. Returning to the Premier League, the key may well be to find a balanced partnership between a "ball-carrying machine" in Rios – as described by Ben Mattinson – and a ball recovery expert of Ndidi's nature.

Of course, Leicester must be careful not to run into any more trouble regarding the Premier League's profit and sustainability rules, but if they can avoid any sanctions and land a player on the rise such as Rios, then it should be considered incredibly solid business.

Walking a budgeting tightrope, the Foxes may yet sign the perfect partner for Ndidi before the transfer window slams shut.

Arsenal could supercharge Saka by signing £42m poacher who’s like Gyokeres

It's not been the summer many Arsenal fans were hoping for this year, as while the team have looked good on the pitch, very little has happened off of it.

Mikel Arteta's side produced the best defence in the league last season but scored five goals fewer than Manchester City. Yet, as things stand, Italian defender Riccardo Calafiori is the only addition Edu Gaspar and Co have made to the first team.

That said, there are still a couple of weeks to go until the transfer window slams shut, and so far, the club have been linked to several strikers this summer, from Napoli's Victor Osimhen to Sporting CP's Viktor Gyokeres.

viktor-gyokeres-transfer-news-leeds-united-championship

However, there was another exciting centre-forward touted for a move to the club earlier in the window, an international who's been compared to Gyokeres and would surely help supercharge Bukayo Saka.

Arsenal's striker search

Of all the goalscorers who have been linked with moves to Arsenal so far this year, Gyokeres has probably been the most prominent.

The stories started coming back in December last year but began to pick up steam in March before becoming impossible to ignore in June.

However, it's now looking unlikely that the former Coventry City ace will be moving to North London this month, with it becoming clear that Sporting are unwilling to budge on their £86m valuation of the player.

Sporting CP striker Viktor Gyokeres

That said, while this is far from ideal for the Gunners, they were linked with a striker earlier in the window who'd almost certainly be cheaper and has been compared to the Sporting ace before, Santiago Gimenez.

The Mexican international was touted for a switch to the Emirates from Feyenoord last month for a fee of potentially €50m, which converts to about £43m. Now, the 23-year-old marksman is an exciting prospect regardless of outside comparisons, but interestingly, he has been compared to Gyokeres by FBref.

Feyenoord's Santiago Gimenez

They compared players in similar positions across the next best 14 competitions over the last 365 days and then created a list of the ten most comparable players for each position. In this case, they concluded that the Swedish ace is the fifth most similar forward to the Feyenoord star.

You can see the similarities best when looking at some of their underlying metrics in which they rank closely, including but not limited to non-penalty goals plus assists, goals per shot and goals per shot on target, progressive passes and passes into the penalty area.

Gimenez & Gyokeres

Stats per 90

Gimenez

Gyokeres

Non-Penalty Goals + Assists

1.03

1.05

Goals per Shot

0.20

0.22

Goals per Shot on Target

0.43

0.45

Progressive Passes

1.41

1.57

Passes into the Penalty Area

0.49

0.59

All Stats via FBref the 23/24 League Season

However, away from what makes him similar to the Sporting ace, the Buenos Aires-born star would be an excellent signing for Arsenal, and in particular, he'd be great for Saka.

Why Gimenez would be incredible for Saka

So, there is one overriding reason why the former Cruz Azul ace would make an excellent teammate for Saka, and it's the same reason he'd be great for the Gunners overall: his output.

Feyenoord striker Santiago Gimenez.

The North Londoners' number seven was exceptional last season, racking up an outrageous tally of 20 goals and 14 assists in 47 games, and he did it without a consistent striker to the left of him, which is where Gimenez comes in.

For example, in his 41 appearances for Feyenoord last season, he scored a mammoth 26 goals and provided eight assists to boot, meaning he averaged a goal involvement every 1.20 games.

Gimenez vs Havertz vs Jesus in 23/24

Player

Gimenez

Havertz

Jesus

Appearances

41

51

36

Goals

26

14

8

Assists

8

7

8

Goal Involvements per Match

0.82

0.41

0.44

All Stats via Transfermarkt

In contrast, Kai Havertz racked up 21 goals and assists in 51 appearances, while Gabriel Jesus managed 16 in 36, equating to an average for the German of a goal involvement once every 2.42 games and an average of one every 2.25 games for the Brazilian.

Now, you have to consider the league in which they play, but even if the "unstoppable" Mexican, as talent scout Jacek Kulig dubbed him, saw his productivity drop slightly, there's a good chance he'll continue outperforming Arsenal's current striking options. Therefore, he'd be able to put away more of the chances created for him by Saka, thus helping boost his assist tally as well.

Ultimately, time is running out to bring in a new goalscoring centre-forward this summer, and if Gimenez is available for around £43m, then Edu and Co should do what they can to bring him in, as he could help fire the club to the title and supercharge Hale End's favourite son at the same time.

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Rogério Ceni terá sequência de semanas livres no São Paulo

MatériaMais Notícias

O técnico do São Paulo, Rogério Ceni, terá uma sequência de três semanas livres para treinar a equipe. Isso porque, eliminado da Copa do Brasil e só com o Campeonato Brasileiro para disputar, o Tricolor tem um período de ‘folgas’ no intenso calendário do futebol nacional.

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Depois do jogo contra o Corinthians, nesta segunda-feira (18), às 20h, no Morumbi, o Tricolor volta a campo somente no próximo domingo, dia 24, diante do Red Bull Bragantino, às 18h15, em Bragança Paulista. Depois, o time joga no outro domingo, dia 31, contra o Internacional, no Morumbi, às 18h15.

O último jogo dessa sequência de semanas livres será no dia sete de novembro, outro domingo, contra o Bahia, em Salvador. Vale lembrar que as outras rodadas precisam ser detalhadas pela CBF. Sendo assim, serão praticamente 17 dias de treinamento com três partidas entre eles.

CONFIRA A TABELA ATUALIZADA E SIMULE OS JOGOS DO BRASILEIRÃO DE 2021!

Tempo precioso para a nova comissão técnica do São Paulo, que poderá conhecer melhor o elenco, testar novas estratégias e sistemas de jogo e recuperar os jogadores lesionados, como o volante Luan e o atacante Rigoni.

VEJA AS PARTIDAS DO SÃO PAULO NESSE TEMPO DE SEMANAS LIVRES
28ª rodada
Red Bull Bragantino x São Paulo – 24/10, às 18h15 – Nabi Abi Chedid
29ª rodada
São Paulo x Internacional – 31/10, às 18h15 – Morumbi
30ª rodada
Bahia x São Paulo – 07/11, às 18h15 – Arena Fonte Nova

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