Revealed: Real Madrid’s response to shock Trent Alexander-Arnold transfer talk as ex-Liverpool defender generates early exit rumours

Real Madrid’s response to the shock transfer talk being generated by ex-Liverpool defender Trent Alexander-Arnold has been revealed.

  • Moved to Spain when bidding farewell to Anfield
  • Faces fierce competition for place from Carvajal
  • Blancos convinced they made "landmark signing"
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The England international right-back only made his way to Santiago Bernabeu in June as career-long ties with Liverpool were severed. Real parted with a small fee in order to acquire Alexander-Arnold before he hit free agency.

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    The 26-year-old is considered to epitomise everything that a modern day full-back should be, as he looks to surge forward at any given opportunity and slot seamlessly into a midfield role that puts ball-playing qualities to good use.

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    Alexander-Arnold does, however, face fierce competition for places in Spain from club captain and six-time Champions League winner Dani Carvajal. Blancos boss Xabi Alonso has been favouring experience at the start of the 2025-26 La Liga campaign.

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    Questions are already being asked of how long Alexander-Arnold will stick around in Madrid, with a hasty return to the Premier League being speculated on. report that there is no substance to those rumours.

    They claim that Alexander-Arnold is “gradually integrating himself into the daily work” of life with the Blancos. Real remain convinced that they have completed a “landmark signing” for the long-term future.

The end is near? Manchester United and Real Betis tipped to seal Antony transfer only for Spanish club to 'withdraw offer' for Brazilian winger

Real Betis have reportedly withdrawn an offer for Antony, just hours after English media claimed they had reached a deal with Manchester United.

  • Betis and Antony yet to agree to terms
  • Spanish club reportedly back out
  • Want-away forward excelled in previous loan spell
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Sky Sports reported that a bid had been accepted by the Red Devils and that Antony had been cleared to travel to Spain for a medical and contract negotiations. However, it has since been claimed by BBC Sport that Betis have withdrawn their offer as they cannot afford the transfer fee or the wages the Brazilian desires.

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    The Brazilian winger has agitated for a return to Betis since his loan spell ended. Manuel Pellegrini reciprocated the interest, reiterating his desire for the 25-year-old to come back to the club despite the two teams' apparent inability to agree on a deal. The Red Devils were hoping to command a fee of €40m for the player's services.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Despite this current confusion, Antony's future clearly still lies outside of Manchester. Upon his return to the club for pre-season, he was one of five want-away players forced to train separately from Amorim's squad. 

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  • WHAT NEXT FOR ANTONY?

    Betis have haggled with United over the terms of Antony's return throughout the summer and there could yet be another twist in this saga. A return to Betis would offer Antony a chance to rebuild his career with a club and manager that value his talents. The 25-year-old chipped in with nine goals in his 26 appearances during the loan spell; a healthy return that offers United fans a glimpse of what might have been.

Tall tales from Cape Town and Jozi

When you’re in South Africa, it’s all about scaling the heights

Sidharth Monga29-Jan-2018December 31
Hardly anyone out and about in Cape Town. Walk up Table Mountain on the gentlest trail route, the Pipe Track, which goes around the mountain. Still has breathtaking views of the sea and the Twelve Apostles. Called Pipe Track because along it run pipes that were built in the 19th century to carry water from Disa Gorge in the mountain’s back table to various parts of Cape Town.Drink cold, sweet water from a fresh stream. Look at the cable car in the distance. Admire the adventurers who don’t need the cable car to get to the top. Watch enviously as parasailers fly like birds in the clear blue sky.January 1
Two hikers – one of them a tour guide and an expert climber – fall from just below the upper cable car station of Table Mountain. The same spot I looked at yesterday. Hundreds of visitors wait as the cable car goes on a rescue mission. Read that friendly looking Table Mountain can at times be deadlier than even Mt Everest. Major cause of fatalities is underestimating weather changes , travelling without protection from cold, and without water or route maps. Realise I went up without all three. Feel a cough settling in.January 2
India have barred fans from watching and media from filming their nets. Security at Newlands says it is the team management’s instructions. Remember defending this team in England on a BBC lunchtime talk show on the sidelines of a tour game in Derby against the same charges. Such bans on watching net sessions come about in these countries only when India are in town. Either the team takes the love it gets for granted or fans of Indian cricket are too intrusive when allowed to watch the nets. As is usually the case, the truth is a mix of both.January 3

Evan Flint has been doing Newlands pitches for close to a decade now. Loves talking about Travis, his Staffordshire terrier. Often brings him to the ground. Faf du Plessis has asked for a certain pitch, which is difficult to deliver thanks to the long drought in Cape Town. Flint uses bore-hole water to grow grass on the pitch. His first duty today: fix the Indian flag. India’s patriotic support staff points out that the flag is inverted: green is on top, saffron bottom.

Delirious with fever. Try to be like organically minded Capetonians and not take paracetamol, and let it subside naturally. Unable to sleep, google about fever

January 4

India choose to not train on the day before the big Test. Sanjay Bangar, the batting coach, is driven in for a press conference more than one hour after the scheduled time. Local media lets him know what they think. The Indian media, which has seen worse, are blase.Faf du Plessis says this is the most difficult selection he has had to make as captain. Turns out later it is a fiery spell from Dale Steyn in the nets the day before that has made it difficult. Original plan might have been to go with three seamers – Steyn not among them – but things could change.Delirious with fever. Try to be like organically minded Capetonians and not take paracetamol and let it subside naturally. Unable to sleep, google about fever. Learn that if fever stays, it could be fatal or damage brain cells. Pop a couple, unwilling to lose life or, more importantly, brain cells on eve of big Test.January 5
India make shock selection of Rohit Sharma over Ajinkya Rahane. Were forced, it will emerge later, to pick Jasprit Bumrah ahead of Ishant Sharma, who hasn’t fully recovered from an illness. Fulfill promise of playing Hardik Pandya after grooming him for the last year. On a green pitch, Bhuvneshwar Kumar gives India the perfect start, but AB de Villiers counterattacks stunningly to help South Africa to 286. India lose three before stumps, shots born of discomfort against bounce. Did they miss some extra training days?Watch not from press box but viewing gallery outside commentary boxes. Disconcerting cold wind but better than being behind glass. Miss presence of Robin Jackman, who would sit here between commentary stints, smoking, solving crossword after crossword.January 6

Pandya delivers on promise with bat, scoring 93 after India are reduced to 92 for 7. Ridiculed because of silly comparisons with Kapil Dev, Pandya is more like MS Dhoni the Test batsman. Walks down wicket to cut seam, doesn’t mind wearing a few, finds a way. South Africa still strong with 77-run first-innings lead.The Gumtree wall in Johannesburg: put your flyer up today and it’ll be papered over twice by tomorrow•Sidharth Monga/ESPNcricinfo LtdHave my West Indies hat snatched away by Michael Holding. Not proud of the regional team anymore.Wind him up with: “But Mikey, they are the defending World T20 champions.””I am talking flippin’ cricket.”January 7
Rains all day but not the kind that will fill water tanks in the drought-hit city. Annoying drizzle that doesn’t allow any play. Spend time talking cricket with Daryll Cullinan. Tell him how Newlands allows people to whom the ground meant a lot to have their ashes spread on outfield. Says he wants his ashes spread on the pitch of his school ground.Learn how Makhaya Ntini developed his jump away from the stumps in his delivery stride. Used to bowl in tackies as a youngster because he couldn’t afford cricket boots. Had to avoid landing on hard pitch.January 8
With moisture trapped underneath, the Newlands pitch becomes unplayable again, after having flattened out on day two. South Africa are bowled out for 130 but India fail to chase 208. Lots of hope as innings begins, but on this pitch, really difficult. Paying price for mistakes on day one. So much build-up, so much anticipation – they don’t give themselves the best chance to compete.January 9
Cape Town could be the first big city in the world to run dry. Households are allowed 87 litres of water per person per day. Showers restricted to two minutes. Collect overflow of showers in buckets to flush toilets with. Advised to not flush after peeing. “If it’s yellow, let it mellow.” Forget washing cars or watering lawns, although the rich suburbs are full of manicured green gardens.

Watch from the viewing gallery outside commentary boxes. Miss presence of Robin Jackman, who would sit here between commentary stints, smoking, solving crossword after crossword

Go past fresh-water stream every day on my way to Newlands. People drive there with containers and fill them up with water. Some cheeky restaurants refuse to serve tap water in the name of conservation. I’m forced to buy bottled water in a city known for its tap water.Day zero has been advanced from April 29 to April 22. When day zero arrives, tankers will bring water to neighbourhoods and people will have to fill their containers. Much like coloured townships had to do during apartheid.January 10
Fly to Johannesburg. Seated in row ahead of Sunil Gavaskar. First question: did the team train yesterday? Cullinan also believes India should have used the day by batting on the same surface. Must be some truth to this old-world wisdom, no matter how fashionable it is to mock it. For the record, those who didn’t play in the XI did train the day after the Test but not on the match pitch.Both on wrong flight and should have gone to OR Tambo, me to catch the Gautrain to Centurion, Mr Gavaskar to fetch Mrs Gavaskar, who is flying in the same day. “Anyway, as Mr Dalmiya used to say, that is the that,” he says.January 11

Gautrain from Rosebank to Centurion, venue of the second Test. Comfortable, and cuts down travel time by half over the road trip, yet not crowded. Possible reason: cuts cost only to 25%; an Uber costs about R240, Gautrain R55 one way.Hugh Masekela, the father of South African jazz, died in January•Getty ImagesNo chewing gum allowed in trains. Inspector forces people to throw gum in bin in case they have taken it past the entrance undetected. India needs chewing-tobacco inspectors. Everywhere.January 12
“It’s funny how things change in a matter of weeks, or just about five days. Before the first Test no one thought that he should be in the XI, and now suddenly people are looking at the other option.”Virat Kohli’s words about Rahane’s exclusion and the clamour for his inclusion on the eve of the second Test. If the media knew Rahane wasn’t playing the first Test, there would have been a definite outcry. If Kohli is talking about the team management and support group, you wonder if anybody challenges him with contradictory views at all.January 13
Centurion. Possibly the best cricket-viewing experience. People don’t go up into the stands here. They are at street level. Grass banks, decks, pool, it has everything for a comfortable day of cricket. Definitely the best press box in the world, right behind the bowler’s arm. So low that sometimes it feels a bouncer could reach you. Okay, maybe on the bounce, but still.Not on this pitch, though. It is definitely slower and lower than the usual Centurion pitches. South Africa win the toss but lose the advantage with two run-outs in the final session. R Ashwin bowls 31 overs in the day for under three an over and three wickets. South Africa fume behind doors.January 14
Lungi Ngidi. Son of domestic workers. Is on Test debut, and runs out Cheteshwar Pujara even before getting to bowl. When he does bowl, he has Kagiso Rabada at the other end. Were rivals in school cricket. Once, Rabada helped St Stithians bowl Ngidi’s Hilton out for 90, but Ngidi had them 90 for 8 with one player in hospital and another fearing a broken arm. Now the two of them, young, confident black men in an apartheid-ravaged country, are bowling for South Africa in tandem. One is the No. 1 Test bowler in the world, the other looks like a veteran of Test cricket already. Ngidi nearly gets Kohli lbw with the first ball of a new spell after others have spent whole spells trying to beat his outside edge.

“I have to ask you something. It’s not cricket.” Sunil Gavaskar in the corridor outside the media centre. “You were eating papaya in the morning. Did you eat the seeds too?”

January 15

Famous Highveld electric storm. Haven’t ever been to a match in Centurion without a storm hitting. The lightning is spectacular. As we wait, “I Love Pretoria Girls” by Desmond and the Tutus plays on the PA. When asked why they love Pretoria girls, the band once said: “They have got your back in sticky situations.”In a sticky situation of 3 for 2, de Villiers has got South Africa’s back once again as he takes them to 90 for 2 at stumps.January 16
“I have to ask you something. It’s not cricket.” Sunil Gavaskar in the corridor outside the media centre. “You were eating papaya in the morning. Did you eat the seeds too?””No,” I say, amazed he observed such a thing from his commentary box. Then again, he is known for making these small observations.”I was told I could eat them, but now someone has told me it might be unhealthy.”Go to Google again, and relieve his mind, telling him he is fine.India are not fine, losing three wickets, including Kohli’s, by stumps.January 17
Kohli is hurt, badly hurt, at having lost this Test and with it the series. Press conference unseemly, but at the end of the day, he is not captain for his press conferences. Good to see he is hurt, though. So hurt he is ready to sledge you should you question his selections and convictions. For too long India have been blase about away defeats.Looking up the hollow core of the iconic, once-notorious Ponte City skyscraper•Sidharth Monga/ESPNcricinfo LtdJanuary 18

Adè van Heerden. Miss South Africa. Present at the launch of the Pink ODI, to be played on February 10 at the Wanderers, to raise funds and awareness to fight breast cancer. Is a doctor and was a lieutenant at the Military 2 Hospital in Cape Town. Also an ultramarathoner, where she runs 89km. India match perfect for her to get involved in cricket: her dad loves Indian food and has built four at home, and when her dress tore on the day of the Miss World pageant, she borrowed one from her friend and Miss India, now Miss World, Manushi Chhillar.January 19
Catch Tu Nokwe perform at The Orbit in Braamfontein. Learnt music when her father would take her and her sisters along when he performed with his swing jazz band at weddings. Her mother was a soprano. Nokwe acted in , the TV series and movie on the famous Zulu king. Sings, plays guitar. Her music is contemporary African, with jazz and funk influences. Used to teach music to township kids before moving to London. To listen to her renditions of apartheid songs – songs with secret meanings that only slaves could understand – is to be transported to the country South Africa once was.January 20
Back to Johannesburg for good. They love making fun of Cape Town’s water situation. Funnily enough, four years ago, during the India cricket tour, Johannesburg had a drought and day zero was not too far away. Then it rained out of the blue. Was told of an African belief that it rains when great men die. If it doesn’t rain, the dead man was probably not great. It rained every day for five days back then. An ODI was washed out. The night before the rain began, Nelson Mandela died.January 21
Go up the fascinating Ponte City in Berea. Tallest residential building in Africa, built in 1975. Originally constructed for wealthy white people but became home to liberal travellers who were against apartheid. Am told black women rented flats here and in other buildings around, but would pretend to be maids to avoid police. Homosexuals were accepted. Mixed-race babies were common. The place fell into the hands of criminals in the 1980s and was reduced to a slum. Garbage piled up in the hollow central core. Gangs operated from the building. Law enforcement could not enter, and used to fly past in helicopters to keep an eye on things. Legend has it that the windows with black curtains had gangsters behind them, red ones prostitutes, and white ones families.When the building was reclaimed in the early 2000s, hoping to get it ready in time for the football World Cup, they discovered, among other things, dead bodies in the garbage. The place was called Suicide City at one point because of how many people jumped off. Then “Coca Cola building”, because of the sign advertising the soft drink on top. The sign now is for Vodacom, and Ponte City is also known as the Vodacom Building. Running joke: the Vodacom signal is weakest here.

Legend has it that the windows with black curtains had gangsters behind them, red ones prostitutes, and white ones families

Is now a proper residential building with strict rules. Fingerprint recognition at entry gates. No visitors apart from registered residents post 7pm. Wary of letting things get out of hand again.January 22

Gumtree. A classifieds wall in Hillbrow, one of Johannesburg’s “grey” areas – a reference to the mix of black and white. People of this inner-city neighbourhood paste flyers with their requirements on the wall. And then on top of older ones. Most of them are for rooms to let. Balconies to let too, which have been enclosed to become rooms, like in Bombay flats.January 23
Pitch for the third Test, at the Wanderers, is hard, green, and has cracks. If India were to stick a requirement for a pitch on Gumtree, it would be for something like this. It brings their pace bowlers into play big time. Of course it is challenging, but Kohli and India look forward to the challenge. Also talk about how they have never lost at Wanderers. “Something about this ground,” Kohli says.January 24
India bring Rahane back, and make the bold move of batting first despite the pressure their batsmen are under. They bat with courage and skill to end up with 187, which is definitely above par. South Africa rue two dropped catches that allow Kohli’s otherwise excellent knock to go past 50. Cheteshwar Pujara goes 53 balls without opening his account but ends up with a highly valuable fifty.Hugh Masekela died yesterday. Father of South African jazz. Known for anti-apartheid songs. “Bra” Hugh’s music plays on the PA during breaks. Rains in the evening. Must have been a great man.January 25

Hashim Amla goes one better than Pujara and Kohli: plays with the control of Pujara and strike rate of Kohli. His 61 keeps South Africa on the path to a lead but then they collapse to give up the advantage and end with just a seven-run advantage. Quality of pitch now being questioned. Not fair to label just Nagpur and Pune extreme.January 26

M Vijay is hit five times in one session but fights through for 25 runs. Kohli is rapped on the gloves. In the evening, Dean Elgar is hit four times, the fourth one causing a suspension of play. South Africa caught between a rock and a hard place. Can save Test if they don’t show keenness to continue, but if the match is abandoned, the Wanderers could lose all fixtures for one year. Leave matters in match referee’s hands. Play set to resume next day. Only fair because India have already braved dangerous pitch and are now sensing a rare Test win. Time to pause and think of skill required to negotiate high-speed bowling on good surfaces, let alone this one, with exaggerated bounce and seam movement.January 27
After Amla and Elgar bring back memories of India’s last Test at the Wanderers, when South Africa nearly chased down 458, India rush back into the game, inducing a collapse of 9 for 53. Elgar fights bravely and carries his bat with 86 runs. Kohli’s belief in his team and his methods is vindicated, but after the euphoria, there is a feeling of missed opportunities. What if Rahane had played earlier? What if Bhuvneshwar Kumar, India’s second-best batsman and best bowler in the series, had not been dropped for the second Test? What if India have prepared better? What if they had got their slip catching in order? We will never know.

Carlo Ancelotti set for huge payday! New Brazil boss to become world's highest-paid international manager after agreeing Real Madrid exit

Carlo Ancelotti will become the highest-paid international manager after agreeing a big contract with Brazil upon his departure from Real Madrid.

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  • Ancelotti leaving Madrid for Brazil
  • Tasked with guiding Selecao to World Cup
  • Italian will sign lucrative contract
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Ancelotti will leave Madrid at the end of the season, having agreed to take over as Brazil coach at the end of May with the aim of guiding the Selecao to next year's World Cup.

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    According to , the 65-year-old will earn £8 million ($11m) per year with the South American nation, more than any other coach at international level.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Ancelotti leaves Madrid after a disappointing season that will likely end without a trophy, with last weekend's 4-3 loss to Barcelona leaving them seven points behind Hansi Flick's side in La Liga with three games to go. Brazil, meanwhile, are fourth in World Cup qualifying after 14 matches, trailing leaders Argentina by 10 points.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR ANCELOTTI?

    The Italian manager will see out the campaign with Madrid before bowing out at the Santiago Bernabeu, with Xabi Alonso expected to take his place after confirming his exit at Bayer Leverkusen.

Vancouver Whitecaps thrashed 5–0 by Cruz Azul in Champions Cup Final

Sepúlveda, Rivero, Faravelli, and Bogusz scored for La Máquina in a dominant display.

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  • Cruz Azul won their first international title since 2014
  • The club qualifies for the 2029 Club World Cup and the 2025 Intercontinental Cup
  • Vancouver missed the chance to become the first Canadian team to win the Champions Cup

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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Jesper Sørensen’s Vancouver Whitecaps were overwhelmed by a dominant Cruz Azul, who claimed their seventh title in the tournament, tying Club América as the most successful club in Champions Cup history.

    A brace from Ángel Sepúlveda, along with goals from Ignacio Rivero, Lorenzo Faravelli, and Mateusz Bogusz, powered La Máquina to a commanding win at Estadio Olímpico Universitario.

    With this loss, the Whitecaps missed the chance to become the first Canadian team to win the tournament and will not take part in the 2029 Club World Cup or the 2025 Intercontinental Cup.

    The Canadian side fell behind early – Rivero opened the scoring in the eighth minute – and never recovered. By halftime, they were already down 4–0. Sepúlveda completed his brace in the 50th minute, sealing the 5–0 scoreline and underlining a night in which Vancouver never found their footing on the pitch in Mexico City.

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    The Champions Cup remains in Mexico as Vicente Sánchez's Cruz Azul claimed the title with an impressive rout at Estadio Ciudad Universitaria. As a result, Cruz Azul secured their place in the 2029 Club World Cup and the 2025 Intercontinental Cup.

    On the other end, Sørensen’s side failed to become the first Canadian team to win the regional championship, and the MLS continues its title drought in the competition, which dates back to 2022.

    For Cruz Azul, this victory is hugely important. It silences recent criticism surrounding the potential departure of Sánchez and speculation about the arrival of manager Guillermo Almada, who has now officially parted ways with Pachuca.

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    DID YOU KNOW?

    Cruz Azul lifted the Champions Cup trophy for the first time since the 2013–2014 season.

    The last time they won the tournament, they defeated Deportivo Toluca on away goals after a 1–1 aggregate score over two legs – a format used at the time. The away goals rule gave the edge to claim the title.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR WHITECAPS?

    Sørensen’s team will need to bounce back quickly from this heavy defeat, as they visit the Seattle Sounders next Sunday. Despite the setback, the Whitecaps remain atop the Western Conference with 32 points and two games in hand.

'They have a good shot' – Dallas Cowboys kicker Brandon Aubrey expresses optimism for USMNT chances at 2026 World Cup

The former MLS star and current NFL kicker has shared his positive outlook for the USMNT’s prospects at the upcoming 2026 FIFA World Cup

  • Aubrey highlights quality of current USMNT player generation
  • Former Toronto FC defender mentions connection with Brenden Aaronson
  • NFL kicker sets realistic expectations for tournament performance
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    WHAT HAPPENED

    Dallas Cowboys kicker Brandon Aubrey recently discussed his thoughts on the USMNT's chances at the 2026 World Cup, expressing confidence in the team's potential while maintaining measured expectations. The 30-year-old previously played professional soccer with Toronto FC after being drafted by them before eventually retiring in 2018. He has since joined the NFL and Cowboys as a placekicker, and emphasized the strength of the current player pool and the significant advantage of playing on home soil.

    “I think they have a good shot,” Aubrey said on . “They have a lot of really good players, especially in the important positions. You’ve got Pulisic, anything could be possible with him. I played with Brenden Aaronson at Bethlehem Steel, so I’m a huge supporter of his. I want to see him get more minutes. I know he’s right on the cusp there coming off the bench a lot of times.

    “I love watching him. [Matt] Turner is another fun story, a convert from baseball. I like them, I think they have a shot of winning, especially with home-field advantage. I don’t think we can expect them to win, but I expect them to be out of the group and hopefully win that first knockout stage game.”

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  • WHAT BRANDON AUBREY SAID

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Aubrey's career trajectory is incredible, going from a first-round MLS SuperDraft pick who struggled to establish himself in professional soccer to becoming one of the NFL's most accurate kickers with the Dallas Cowboys. His continued interest and insight into the national team highlights the interconnectedness of American sports culture and the growing prominence of soccer within it.

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    WHAT’S NEXT?

    The USMNT will continue preparations for the 2026 World Cup under head coach Mauricio Pochettino and will come together in September next for international friendlies against South Korea and Japan.

Hazlewood cuts through West Indies after Head's game-changing hundred

Shamar Joseph’s fine debut continued with a five-wicket haul, but Australia were set for a convincing victory

Andrew McGlashan18-Jan-2024Australia couldn’t quite complete a two-day victory in Adelaide, but are unlikely to be detained long in wrapping up a win. Josh Hazlewood dismantled West Indies’ top order in ruthless style after Travis Head’s hometown century secured a handy lead on a tricky surface against a spirited visiting attack.From what was a much even contest midway through the day, with Australia six down and still 20 behind, they pulled away as pre-series prediction had suggested they would, although with the bat were made to earn their position of strength. The game hurtled along, particularly when Head switched on the afterburners.But though West Indies did not begin their second innings until into the last session – with Shamar Joseph completing a memorable debut by claiming a five-wicket haul – there was the looming fear about what could happen against the new ball.And it came to pass as Hazlewood, who finished the day on 4 for 18, had taken out the top four while conceding just two runs; in fact, he had three wickets before even being scored off. He struck with his first ball of the second innings when Tagenarine Chanderpaul’s technical challenges were exposed with an edge to Alex Carey. Soon after, captain Kraigg Brathwaite could consider himself a little unfortunate when a firm clip off the pads was snapped up by Head at short leg on a day where he could do no wrong.Alick Athanaze gloved a loose hook – and burned a review – the ball after Australia had wasted the DRS for a caught-behind appeal. Kavem Hodge, one of West Indies’ three debutants, edged a drive to second slip as the innings sank to 19 for 4.Shamar Joseph became the tenth from West Indies to pick up five on Test debut•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

Kirk McKenzie briefly counterattacked with some crisp strokeplay, especially through the off side, before chipping Cameron Green to cover. At that stage, 40 minutes remained in the day, and it was far from out of the question if Australia’s bowlers would rattle through the rest.Justin Greaves, who had earlier bowled well on debut, and Joshua Da Silva, provided some resistance, only for Greaves to fall on what became the final ball of the day. Australia successfully reviewed for an lbw for Nathan Lyon, with the ball hitting leg stump from around the wicket. With West Indies still 22 behind, Pat Cummins appeared to briefly ponder asking for the extra half an hour, although there was no certainly the umpires would have granted it.Earlier, the fact Australia had the lead they did was almost entirely down to Head. West Indies had chipped away during the morning session, and when Carey was caught behind, they still trailed. But Head sped into the 90s with a flurry of runs against Shamar Joseph, and brought up his century from 122 balls when he dispatched left-arm spinner Gudakesh Motie through the covers.It was his first Test century since the World Test Championship final against India in June, and the first time he had passed fifty since the Headingley Test in the Ashes next month. Head had entered in just the second over of the day, and dominated on a different level to any other batter in the game. After reaching his century, he flicked the switch and carted Shamar Joseph for consecutive sixes over the leg side.Josh Hazlewood struck with his first ball in the second dig•Getty Images

Head and Mitchell Starc added 54 for the seventh wicket to take Australia ahead. After Starc had fended Shamar Joseph to short leg, Cummins provided support in another useful stand until Head picked out deep midwicket aiming for another six.But while the result will likely end horribly one-sided, it should not detract from the performance of Shamar Joseph, whose fifth wicket came when he speared one through Lyon with the second new ball. He walked off to a standing ovation, and gave the crowd a bow.In his first over of the day, he was taken for consecutive boundaries by Green, but responded by finding the outside edge next ball with a perfect delivery which moved away a fraction and sent the bowler on another sprint celebration across the Adelaide Oval outfield the morning after he had become a story around the world.Shamar and Alzarri Joseph maintained early pressure on Head and Usman Khawaja, the latter happy to bide his time but the former keen to be aggressive although not always at his most fluent. Once Green fell, West Indies quickly went to a short-ball plan against Head, although the surface did not quite have the pace in it to be hugely problematic.Head went past 3000 Test runs with a lofted drive over the covers as the partnership started to dominate. Khawaja was shaping up well, putting a couple of pulls away strongly through midwicket, while Head also deposited Greaves into the stands over square leg.But just as concerns were growing as to whether West Indies could maintain the pressure, the medium pace of Greaves lured Khawaja into driving a wide delivery, and the edge was well held at second slip for his first Test wicket.Mitchell Marsh struggled early in his innings, multiple times edging short of the cordon, and had 1 off 22 balls before he laced a cover drive off Shamar Joseph. However, it wasn’t a sign of a change in fortune. After another edge fell short of third slip, and Greaves moved up even closer, wearing a helmet, and brilliantly held the opportunity off Kemar Roach.Australia were 129 for 5 and West Indies had a glimmer of staying in the game – but a few hours later, they were just trying to make the third day.

Revealed: Why Alexander Isak has been training alone at Newcastle amid intense Liverpool & Al-Hilal transfer speculation

The reason for Alexander Isak training alone at Newcastle has been revealed, as intense transfer speculation links him with Liverpool and Al-Hilal.

  • Swedish striker missed friendly with Celtic
  • Has been seen working away from Magpies squad
  • Nursing injury concerned that is being managed
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Sweden international striker is said to be attracting interest from heavyweight outfits in the Premier League and Saudi Pro League. Big-money offers are reportedly being readied, with Isak said to come with a £120-130 million ($176m) price tag.

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    Newcastle are understandably reluctant to sell, as they prepare for more Champions League action, but Isak was sent home from a pre-season friendly clash with Celtic as more questions were asked of his future on Tyneside.

  • WHAT HOWE SAID

    Magpies boss Eddie Howe said at the time: “Alex has trained this week and he's fine, but we didn't want to take the risk with him today. Alex was with us all the way through Austria, but today, with all the speculation and things that are going on, I decided to send him home.

    “It's purely the last thing Alex wants if he's not playing, is to be sat in the stand. Being under that scrutiny, I don't think that's fair to the player. So, if he wasn't going to play today, which we mutually agreed, he needs a little bit more training time, then it's best that he's not here.”

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    Pictures then emerged of Isak training away from the rest of the first-team squad at Newcastle. That situation only served to fuel the rumours regarding a supposedly imminent move elsewhere being lined up.

The off-side king

Younis Khan peppered the off side with plenty of boundaries en route to his unbeaten 147

S Rajesh13-Jan-2006The pitch was flat, the conditions were excellent, the bowling attack was toothless, and Younis Khan capitalised, scoring his third century against India in successive Tests. The feature of his unbeaten 147 was his magnificent driving through covers and point: a staggering 89 runs came in that region, while three-quarters of his total runs were scored through the off side. And the ease with which he played the Indian attack can be gleaned from the fact that his in-control factor – that’s the number of deliveries he middled or left alone – was an astonishing 95%, which meant the Indians hardly had an opportunity to nail him.Through the second half of the day, Younis found an able ally in Mohammad Yousuf. The two added 190 in just 40.3 overs, that’s a run-rate of 4.69 per over. What made the partnership even better was the manner in which the two batsmen complemented each other: of Younis’s 88 runs, 67 came on the off side (76%), while Yousuf scored almost 60% of his runs (56 out of 95) on the leg side.For the Indian bowlers, it was a hopeless battle. The first-day pitch should have offered some assistance to the fast bowlers, but Ajit Agarkar and Irfan Pathan hardly drew any false strokes – the not-in-control factor against them was a mere 5.5%. At 8%, it wasn’t much better for India’s spin duo of Anil Kumble and Harbahajan Singh, who both went at four an over.

A paradise for seam bowlers

In Tests at Leeds since 1995, fast bowlers have taken 279 wickets at 31.07, while spinners have only managed 34 at nearly 46 apiece

S Rajesh23-May-2007


Headingley hasn’t been kind to spinners in the last decade, but Monty Panesar managed six wickets in his only appearance here last year
© Getty Images

Despite little opportunity to practice and get used to conditions, West Indies performed creditably at Lord’s to ensure that the series is level after one Test. The challenge is to lift that standard in the second Test at Headingley, a venue where they were mauled inside two days by an innings and 39 runs the last time they played there, in August 2000.If the weather stays fine, it’s highly unlikely that Leeds will produce another stalemate – the eight Tests here have all produced a winner, while ten out of 11 Tests between these two sides has also produced a decisive result. (Click here for a list of all Tests at Headingley, and here for all batting and bowling stats at the venue.)The venue has often been called a seamer’s paradise, but captains have still preferred to bat first after winning the toss – in 66 Tests, only 12 times has a captain chosen to field; on the 54 occasions when the team has batted first, they’ve won 21 times, including the last three matches. Overall, the toss hasn’t had too great an impact on the result – only 26 out of 49 results have gone in favour of the team calling correctly – but the last four Tests have all been won by the team winning the toss.Recent numbers do show quite clearly, though, that seam and pace is the way to go here: in ten Tests since 1995, pace has accounted for 279 wickets at an average of 31 runs per wicket, and on 15 occasions bowlers have taken five or more wickets in an innings. (Darren Gough alone has achieved it three times during this period.) Spinners, on the other hand, have managed a paltry 34 wickets at nearly 46 apiece in Tests since 1995. Only once has a spinner taken more than three in an innings – India’s Anil Kumble nailed 4 for 66 and finished with match figures of 7 for 159 in 2002. The only other slow bowler who has managed more than five wickets in a match during this period is England’s current specialist spinner – Monty Panesar had match figures of 6 for 166 against Pakistan last year. The last spinner to take a five-for here was John Emburey, against Australia in 1985.



Pace and spin at Headingley in Tests since 1995
Type Wickets Average 5WI/ 10WM
Pace 279 31.07 15/ 0
Spin 34 45.85 0/ 0

Most of the England batsmen in the current line-up have pretty good records here: Andrew Strauss has a hundred and a half-century in four innings, for an average of 56. Kevin Pietersen and Ian Bell both got centuries the last time they played here – against Pakistan last year – but for Michael Vaughan his county ground hasn’t been as lucky: in six innings he has only scored 201 runs at 33.50.The most interesting stats at this ground, though, belong to Andrew Flintoff: in his first four innings, he failed to get off the mark. In his next three innings he passed 50 each time, and made 94 in his last appearance here in 2004. Unfortunately, he won’t have a chance to extend that excellent run this time.

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