Frank McAvennie backs West Ham swoop for Jack Grealish

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West Ham legend Frank McAvennie wants the club to sign Jack Grealish from Aston Villa this summer, per LoveSport Radio.

The Sun claimed on Monday that the Hammers could rival both Tottenham Hotspur and AFC Bournemouth for his signature when the transfer window reopens.

What’s the word?

Grealish has long been linked with a move to the Premier League, with Spurs making a £25million bid for the playmaker last summer.

The offer was rejected and he has stayed put at Villa Park, though he has struggled with injuries thus far this term.

He has made a total of 25 appearances in all competitions and Villa’s form nosedived once he sustained a shinbone injury; in the 13 Championship games that he missed, Villa won just two.

Since his return, he has scored two goals in four games and his side are unbeaten, beating Derby County, fierce rivals Birmingham City, Nottingham Forest and Middlesbrough.

And McAvennie, who twice joined the Irons, playing for them between 1985 and 1987 and then between 1989 and 1992, believes Grealish has the ability to make a real difference to Manuel Pellegrini’s side.

“The boy has got talent, that’s for sure. He’s got a bit about him. He’s got a bit of swagger which is not a bad thing for West Ham,” McAvennie said. “They could do with someone like that to go in and take them to the next level.”

A statement signing

West Ham are desperately trying to reach the next level as a football club.

In the summer, they signed the likes of Felipe Anderson, Andriy Yarmolenko and Issa Diop and remain in with a shout of qualifying for the Europa League.

Bringing in a player like Grealish, and beating long-term admirers Spurs to the punch, would show that they are serious about their ambitions.

The Irons’ recruitment strategy has been far too scattergun in recent years but bringing in a young, hungry, exceptional homegrown talent is exactly the kind of deal they should be doing.

Indeed, they need players such as Grealish if they are to qualify for Europe, either this season or next.

Pundit View: Ferguson slams SFA over Old Firm controversy

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The next round of SPFL matches is already upon us, but the debate about incidents in last Sunday’s Old Firm is still raging on.

Scott Brown, Steven Gerrard and Ryan Kent are all facing punishment for their roles in last Sunday’s controversy, per BBC.

Kent has failed to overturn a two-game ban for his punch directed at Brown, and Gerrard has accepted a one-game touchline ban for his comments about referee Bobby Madden.

Brown meanwhile is yet to discover his fate, and both clubs are also being charged for failing to control their players.

And Barry Ferguson, who spent four years at Ibrox during his playing days, thinks the SFA have lost their minds.

Be sure to check out the incredible story of the man who rose from a Tanzanian refugee camp to become one of Australia’s biggest football stars in the video below…

What did he say?

“Every now and then the people supposed to be running our game outdo themselves and even though we should all be used to it by now I still end up shaking my head in disbelief,” the ex-Ger wrote in a column for The Daily Record.

“That was certainly the case yesterday when the news came through that just about everyone who was at Parkhead for the Old Firm on Sunday will now be dragged up to Hampden’s sixth floor to have their handbags taken off them.

“That’s what we saw at the end of the derby – absolute handbags – and it’s hard to believe the compliance officer has now cited Celtic and Rangers with failing to keep their players under control because of it. Dearie me.”

After agreeing that both Kent and Morelos deserve to be punished for their actions, Ferguson added one last dig: “But why on earth are the SFA still going over the videos four days later trying to find something else to get their knickers in a twist about?

“I’ve been out there in the heat of the battle so I know how high the emotions run, especially at the end of a game like that one.

“So you would like to think the authorities would show a little bit of common sense instead of making another mountain out of a molehill.”

Common sense

Ferguson has got his analysis absolutely correct here. While Kent and Morelos are worthy of their bans, spending an entire week looking for any stick to beat both clubs with is a bit ridiculous on the part of the SFA.

Rangers fans already despise the organisation for the continued harsh treatment of Morelos and for what they perceive to be bias towards their arch-rivals, and while the SFA aren’t showing bias by flagging up both clubs for what Ferguson simply called “handbags”, they are revealing their major flaw – they don’t understand the passion of the game.

Quite simply, it’s all too easy to lack “common sense”, as Ferguson put it, and a feel for the game when you’re sat in an ivory tower judging every tiny incident. The disconnect between the SFA and the players and fans in the grounds is a major concern for Scottish football as a whole, and Ferguson full well knows it.

Sunderland: What a difference a week makes

Just a little over a week ago, more than 40,000 Sunderland fans were trudging out of Wembley Stadium having seen their side lose on penalties in the EFL Checkatrade Trophy Final.

It was devastating for the players and fans, but definitely not demoralising.

Since that heartbreak, they have won at Accrington and Rochdale, and seen a six-point deficit to the automatic promotion places wiped out, which has them sitting on equal points with second-placed Barnsley, still with two games in hand.

What a difference a week makes.

Following the Wembley loss, the manager and players issued a rallying call, stressing the importance of picking themselves up and seeing out the season the right way, and winning automatic promotion back to the Championship at the first attempt.

It could easily have gone the other way — everyone feeling sorry for themselves and watching their season implode in a Middlesbrough-esque collapse.

But it says a lot for the mentality of this current Sunderland side, and the togetherness between them and their manager Jack Ross, that they have bounced back with renewed impetus.

Speaking to the press ahead of tomorrow night’s home game with Burton Albion, Ross sang the praises of his players, saying they are in a “good place” right now.

Referring to the team’s post-Wembley reaction, he said: “It is more significant for my players.

“To ask them to put so much into those two games [Accrington and Rochdale] and produce a performance level to then draw level with second place is exciting for them.

“It just heightens the importance of tomorrow evening.

“When you reach a position where the rewards of winning games are obvious in terms of where it takes you in the table then it becomes even more real.

“The players are in a good place and on the back of the two away games we have had since the cup final, that has only increased as well.”

The priority has always been automatic promotion, and the Wembley final always had the potential to be a distraction that threatened to derail their season.

As hard as it was for the masses of Black Cats fans that converged on the Capital last week, the defeat has appeared, ironically, to be a blessing in disguise, with the players clearly galvanised and playing with more intent than they were previously.

The only thing that can now prevent Sunderland from going up automatically is complacency, something that Ross is surely not going to allow to happen.

A couple of weeks ago people thought it would be the play-offs for Sunderland, but now, they may be thinking of going up as champions.

What are your thoughts of the two Sunderland performances since the Wembley defeat, Sunderland fans? Has it been a blessing in disguise for your team? Let us know your thoughts…

Why the Champions League is becoming Pep Guardiola’s Achilles heel

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A narrow 1-0 defeat was hardly a disastrous result for Manchester City in Tuesday’s Champions League quarter-final first leg and especially when certain circumstances are factored in.

Of their remaining commitments this was feasibly the only one that Pep Guardiola’s men could afford to lose and still go on to complete a remarkable season. Furthermore, not to state the obvious but this was Tottenham Hotspur away, a formidable challenge at the best of times but a test ramped up to significant proportions by virtue of the north London giants boisterously taking recent ownership of their new ground.

On the face of it then, a slender loss that needs rectifying at the Etihad next week wasn’t an apocalyptic outcome and Guardiola certainly seemed to be of that opinion, speaking only of the positives post-game and seeming genuinely sanguine. The more pragmatic of the fan-base meanwhile took stock and leaned on that trusted consolation that is always available after a first leg defeat: it is, when you think about it, merely half-time.

All of the above though doesn’t tell the whole tale. Indeed it sugar-coats the whole tale with a cherry on top.

Because what transpired on Tuesday evening – in both team selection and performance – was another example of the bravest, most innovative, progressive, and singularly minded coach in world football tying himself in knots at the prospect of a Champions League knockout tie. And it’s becoming a problem.

From the announcement of the team line-up an hour prior to kick-off it became painfully apparent that the Catalan had once again succumbed to self-doubt; erring towards a caution he is usually so dismissive of. Riyad Mahrez was surprisingly picked ahead of Leroy Sane due to the former’s more pronounced ability at retaining possession while the midfield was stocked with two holding men at the expense of team architect Kevin de Bruyne – Bernardo Silva’s absence also utterly perplexed until a muscle injury came to light some time later.

There was also one hell of a left-field choice for left field as the combative but limited Fabian Delph was chosen ahead of Danilo or Mendy, this despite the fact that the 28 year old had fallen so spectacularly off the radar of late.

Understandably the supporters were irate at the muddled cop out that appeared on their Twitter timelines and that soon enough grew to immense frustration and finally outright anger as the game played out exactly as they feared. Mahrez – as per – resided in a halfway house, between the player he is and the player Guardiola wants him to be and, with his full-back Danny Rose booked early on and surely dreading the prospect of the tricky Algerian taking him on, he instead contented himself with inconsequential step-overs before laying it off safe.

With Aguero and David Silva largely ineffectual, this left only Raheem Sterling as City’s attacking threat and it was a threat barely deployed as an energetic midfield concentrated on nullifying Sissoko and co rather than causing them untold problems as would normally be the case. To compound matters Delph was to blame for the contest’s only goal.

What was Guardiola thinking? That was the question aired in collective exasperation by City supporters as the final whistle blew. Or, more accurately, what was Guardiola over-thinking?

Worryingly, the celebrated grandmaster has form for this. Last season his history-chasing Manchester City side were absolutely flying and went to Anfield for a combustible Champions League quarter-final first leg having lost in the league only once all season.

That, of course, was to Liverpool and the ferocity in which the Reds dished out that rarest of defeats clearly rattled the outwardly impassable coach, so much in fact that ahead of his trip to Merseyside he then changed his shuffling of a pack that was previously dealing out aces on a weekly basis. Laporte was shifted across to left-back while Gundogan was employed on the right of midfield and, with both players struggling to adapt to unfamiliar roles, it was perhaps inevitable that a rampant home side would take full advantage. They did, winning 3-0.

If that was the by-product of unnecessary circumspection a year earlier the very opposite applied but alas with a familiar end result. In 2016/17 City and Monaco were the high scorers of their respective leagues and Guardiola was happy to facilitate a you-score-one-we’ll-score-one basketball approach. It was a strategy that almost came off too but with City 6-5 ahead on aggregate and just 13 minutes left of an admittedly enthralling double-header it was impossible to change streams and the Ligue 1 champions bagged a late decider.

Indeed, analysing all of the failed Champions League campaigns since Pep Guardiola last won the tournament in 2011 reveals a pattern of gung ho adventure falling short – such as Chelsea’s ‘outjumping’ of Barcelona in 2012 – followed by schizophrenic indecision. For the latter we need look no further than Real Madrid’s 4-0 hammering of Bayern Munich at the Allianz Arena in 2014.

What is particularly noteworthy about these exits is that almost without exception each side were completely dominating their leagues and had coasted through the group stages with swagger to spare. Yet at no point has the intimidatingly cerebral coach considered playing with these strengths only with a tweaking of conservatism. At no point has a happy medium been attained. He has dealt solely in extremes.

If that suggests – as seems likely – that the latter stages of the Champions League has now become an Achilles heel of Guardiola’s then another concern for City fans should be the lack of reasoned voices being listened to around him.

The moment an odd and compromised line-up was first suggested was that which should have prompted a trusted lieutenant to intervene. If only they had the power and influence to do so. When it became crystal clear that Spurs were being spared – that they were more than susceptible to being dismantled with the right tools – that too afforded a golden opportunity for sense to prevail. In the event De Bruyne and Sane scared the hosts stiff for precisely five minutes.

Even the greats have blind-spots. Unfortunately the greats very rarely listen when told where they are.

Eden Hazard’s £105 million value is a bit harsh on the Belgian

Chelsea can make a huge statement by getting the better of Liverpool in the Premier League tomorrow, as well as boosting their own top four hopes in the process. 

The Blues haven’t been at their best in the current campaign but one player who has constantly put in world-class performances is Eden Hazard. He’s the one player Chelsea fans can rely on and he’ll play a monumental part from here on in until the end of the current campaign.

Surprisingly, the Belgium international is only valued at £105 million (as per CIES, via Daily Mail), which surely must be some kind of joke as he’s arguably one of the best attackers in world football. And, the fact that Romelu Lukaku is valued at £137 million (as per CIES, via Daily Mail) makes Hazard’s value laughable.

Hazard has produced 19 goals and 12 assists this season and he’s valued at £135 million (by Transfermarkt), so it doesn’t really make sense to see him worth just £105 million.

Roman Abramovich’s masterstroke decision to sign the Belgian back in 2013 for £31.5 million has worked wonders for Chelsea Football Club, as he’s been the source of all things brilliant at Stamford Bridge over the years.

Abramovich could attract a much bigger fee for the attacker but the value won’t bother fans too much as they’d rather see him stay at Stamford Bridge this summer. Indeed, Hazard is in the peak years of his football career and he’s not far off being in the same category as Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi.

Chelsea fans, how much do you think Eden Hazard is worth? Join the discussion by commenting down below! 

QPR fans fuming at Loftus Road name change

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QPR fans on Twitter are fuming after the club announced plans to change the name of the stadium in order to help a local charity.

Fans feel that the stadium’s name should remain as Loftus Road due to the prestige and history of the ground and the memories that are associated with the stadium and the name along with it.

The Hoops moved into Loftus Road in 1917 and have seen both the highs and lows of English football at the historic ground.

The proposed name change has gone down like a lead balloon amongst the fanbase as some feel that the stadium’s name is something that shouldn’t be messed around with.

Other sections of the fanbase aren’t happy with the stadium’s naming rights being given away rather than sold.

QPR have had financial difficulties as they failed financial fair play regulations resulting in a £42 million fine.

Here’s what QPR fans had to say on Twitter…

Pl>ymaker FC’s Matchday with Max caught up with Jamaica’s women’s team. See what happened when he met the history makers in the video below…

The Verdict: Can Jack Grealish replace Wilfried Zaha at Palace?

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According to The Daily Mail, Jack Grealish is being lined up as a replacement for the potentially-outgoing Wilfried Zaha at Crystal Palace this summer – the Ivorian’s exit would leave the Eagles very short of creativity and flair in the final third and the Aston Villa man is surely seen as the player to spark some life into the attack again.

Zaha has seemingly outgrown Selhurst Park and has expressed his desire to fly the nest in the coming months in search of Champions League football, and there will surely be no shortage of suitors ready to offer him that.

While his departure shouldn’t leave a sour taste, it will leave Roy Hodgson’s side without their talisman and it will take some doing to replace the electrifying number 11.

Football FanCast’s writers give their verdicts on whether 23-year-old Grealish, who has chalked up six goals and six assists with Aston Villa this campaign and is rated at £35m by his current employers according to The Daily Mail, can become the Eagles’ next star below…

Luke Glanville

“I think that Jack Grealish can certainly help to fill the attacking void left by Wilfried Zaha and he’s a must-have if the Ivory Coast international leaves Selhurst Park. Obviously, he’s no like-for-like replacement but if the Eagles can also recruit someone like Ademola Lookman alongside Grealish, who is clearly ready to return to the Premier League one way or another, they can cope with Zaha’s loss.”

Matt Dawson

“There’s not too many players in English football that could help fill the void left behind by Zaha, let alone a player who’s been in the Championship for two years. There’s no doubting Grealish’s talent but in terms of replacing the Ivorian, he’d have an uphill task. The player has come on leaps and bounds this season but I have to doubt whether he’s the type of player the Eagles should be looking at. His dribbling ability will excite but he’s got nothing on Zaha.”

There’s some exciting changes happening at Crystal Palace next summer. Find out what in the video below…

Billy Meyers

“It’s a tough one, certainly. Many Palace fans will tell you that Wilfried Zaha’s talents cannot be replaced, as, in addition to his obvious on-field expertise, the Ivorian has a love for the club just like the supporters also share. However, there is a reason why a Champions League side in Tottenham were desperate to sign Jack Grealish back in the summer. The Englishman is an excellent player, and seeing as he is three years younger than Zaha, he could yet grow into the winger’s boots at Selhurst Park – for now, however, I don’t think he will get close to replicating what Zaha brings to the side.”

This is what Luis Suarez did to Jordan Henderson after Liverpool defeat

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Former Liverpool striker Luis Suarez played a big part in Barcelona’s 3-0 win against the Reds at the Camp Nou on Wednesday night, which put the La Liga giants on the cusp of the Champions League final.

The Uruguay international scored one and assisted one to give the Spanish club a big advantage ahead of the second leg in Anfield next week, and probably surprised a few fans of the Merseyside outfit by the manner of his celebration for the goal.

While some players refuse to go crazy after finding the net against their former employers, it certainly wasn’t the case for the 32-year-old as he looked ecstatic and slid on his knees after beating Alisson in the opposition goal.

Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson undoubtedly would have been frustrated not to start the game, but he did get his chance early on anyway as he replaced the injured Naby Keita midway through the first half.

He in particular would have been disappointed by the result at the final whistle with the uphill battle they now face to reach a second successive final, but Suarez quickly shook hands with the England international and embraced a player he once shared a dressing room with.

It was a nice touch by the often controversial attacker, who will be hoping to put the job to bed when he makes his return to Anfield on Tuesday.

Leeds fans loving the midfield pairing of Forshaw and Phillips

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Leeds United fans on Twitter have been praising the midfield pivot of Kalvin Phillips and Adam Forshaw after their showing against Aston Villa. The pairing added some much-needed grit in the centre of the park.

Phillips was initially dropped for Forshaw in the Brentford game last Monday but the Argentine opted to use the duo together for Sunday’s game at Elland Road.

Leeds looked impenetrable in the midfield and the pairing did an exceptional job of keeping tabs on Jack Grealish, limiting the amount of time he got on the ball all afternoon.

The performance at the weekend seems to have united the fanbase in the view that the duo had added something to the side that had previously been missing.

With the playoffs coming up supporters believe that Marcelo Bielsa has found the perfect lineup at just the right time as his team face the three most important games of the season next month.

Here’s what Leeds fans have been saying on Twitter…

Cracking news: Everton fans reveal their delight as Simms signs professional deal

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Ellis Simms has signed his first professional contract for Everton, the club’s Under-23 boss David Unsworth has confirmed.

Simms, who has made three appearances for Everton’s Under-23 side this term, has scored a staggering 37 times in 25 games at youth level this season.

The 18-year-old’s previous deal was due to expire this summer.

However, Unsworth has confirmed that Simms has penned fresh terms.

The Everton fans have been on social media reacting to the news, and as expected, a large number have revealed their delight.

Simms is seemingly some distance from being involved with the first team, but a strong run of performances for the Under-23s next season will surely put him in the thinking of head coach Marco Silva sooner rather than later.

In this era of ‘big 6’ dominance, has finishing 7th become as good as winning a trophy? The Pl>ymaker FC squad have their say in the video below…

A record of 32 goals in 21 games in the Under-18 Premier League this term really is something very special indeed.

A selection of the Twitter reaction can be seen below:

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