Big-action Broad, and the sharp spells of utter anarchy

There was always something a little titillating about Broad’s best spells, a slightly guilty pleasure

Osman Samiuddin01-Aug-2023Most of us thought it would be Jimmy first, right? That made sense. Older, more miles in the legs, more grump in the soul. But the unexpectedness of Stuart Broad’s exit is a neat motif to his entire career in one sense, always not being what you thought he would be, or was becoming. And he may have emerged as teenaged prodigy but who could’ve expected Broad to build the career he has done while playing it entirely alongside the greatest fast bowler England has produced?Only a couple of days ago Ben Stokes went further and called James Anderson the greatest fast bowler to play the game. That’s a big call but when he is your weapon, it’s not a crazy call. At the least, Anderson is in those conversations. Nobody will call Broad the greatest fast bowler, though it is worth noting that in 2016, he – and not Anderson – was the first England Test fast bowler to be ranked No. 1 in the world since Steve Harmison in 2004.Anderson replaced him that year, which seemed not a correction but a bend towards a natural order. Anderson has since been back to that spot several times, most recently earlier this year; Broad has not.Related

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Which is just fine. Not all fast bowlers are – or must be – great. It’s enough for them to create a great spell or two which aren’t spells of great bowling so much as total life events, occasions you will remember forever but will never quite be able to make complete sense of (see: childbirth, weddings, funerals and the day Elon Musk took over Twitter); days when the world was a little tipsy and so life moved fast very slowly.A great spell or two, but with Broad we were spoilt. Entire mornings, afternoons and days lost entirely, unexpectedly and indisputably, to Broad, ones that he had conjured from scratch and, lucky us, let us in.There was always something a little titillating about his best spells, a slightly guilty pleasure. You knew you should be sitting stroking your chin at the cant of Anderson’s wrist and his reverse-reverse wobble, but all you wanted to do was to be an absolute lout watching Broad wreck stuff. Anderson satisfied the intellect, an arthouse spectacle scaled up for mass consumption like a Chris Nolan film. Broad, for all his evolution over the years, for all the roles he took on, for all his smarts, remained at heart, an out and out big-action banger, all breath-taking, set-piece stunts stitched together to make the movie.ESPNcricinfo LtdWhich is why, as tempting as it is to treat with due deference the sheer gargantuan nature of the headline numbers of his career – only four bowlers, one fast bowler, with more wickets, only one bowler with more Tests played – Broad’s best self will always live in his brief, sharp jags of anarchy into an otherwise perfectly civil day’s play.Like the two Test hat-tricks, the second of which he didn’t even realise he’d taken and the first of which (against India) came with bonus and massive DRS schadenfreude; his breakthrough at The Oval, four wickets in 21 balls; eight in 9.3 overs at his home ground; six in 7.3 overs in Durham; seven in 11 at Lord’s; the smallness of these numbers, the compression, speaks to the truer magnitude of his work. In them is a distinct mood: Broad, full lengths, nibbling away at an edge, nipping into a pad, smashing stumps, careening away in celebration, total upheaval in his trail.Is it sacrilege to say there was a little bit of Warne in Broad’s theatre around a delivery, enough that watching him was as compelling as the bowling itself, that a spell could be measured and experienced purely through his expressions? The arms flung in the air at repeated play-and-misses, the frowns and eyebrow shrugs and wry smiles, the wide-eyed disbelief and cupped-hand-over-mouth shock and, of course, the teapots. Broad’s last day will always be memorable for clapping Zak Crawley when he spilled a catch off his bowling, a sure sign that this was the end, of Broad, and, perhaps, of times.The most endearing was when, after beating a batter, or even being hit for a boundary, he would stop in his follow-through, fold one arm across the chest and hold his chin with the other, absorbing what had happened professorially. It was an unusual pose for the occupation, though in hindsight it works alongside a visualisation of one of his great early quotes, in a interview from 2010: “Tea just helps me fight”. Tea? For fighting?Which was your favourite Stuart Broad reaction?•ECB via Getty ImagesThere was always some game within the game, especially when there wasn’t, the bail-switching last week an absolute Broad classic. Is it the imagination or did umpires have to be the most switched-on bodies on the field when Broad was on one, turning him down, answering a hundred queries, humouring him, regularly being proved wrong by him, admonishing him. Parents will recognise and sympathise.After all of it, the walk back to the mark, with the intent, form and purpose of a self-important civil servant. Some days his knees pumped more on that walk back than in the run-up.He was not the first celebrappealer but there’s never been a better one and it captured something central in him. The sense of entitlement in dispensing with the need for the umpire’s adjudication that his critics loved to hate, but also the rakish hustle that his fans loved. Some of that manifested itself in a mid-career trait of wasting reviews while batting, prompting an irritated Mike Selvey to coin the L’Oreal referral (because he’s worth it).If there’s an absence of an appreciation so far of the nuts and bolts of his bowling, it is only because, 17 years from his international debut, what is not known about it? Once you have taken as many wickets as he has, it kind of stands as monument to the career by itself. Of course, he’s a giant, because you don’t get that many wickets otherwise.2:10

Broad: I wanted to finish playing at the very top

Some might argue he got that many because he played so many Tests, like it’s some sort of a caveat. Well one, taking 604 wickets is in no way an inevitable consequence of playing 167 Tests. No wicket comes easy in Tests. Two, he played as many as 167 Tests because he was good enough. And three, staying fit enough to play that many is a feat on its own. None of this was inevitable.The other thing is that once we’re slicing up that many wickets and Tests, of course there will be skews, to home conditions, to specific opponents, to bits of stats padding. That is inevitable. It applies to every player with a long career. All of that is what makes a career, it doesn’t take from it.And Broad’s has been as rich as it is long, sustained by a thirst for self-improvement. He was never still, forever learning, adapting, tinkering, experimenting, right up to the start of this, his final series. One of the by-products of that, and what sets him apart from Anderson perhaps, is the suspicion that, had he really wanted, he could still cut it amidst the helter skelter of white-ball cricket.The end came as a career had gone, with proof of his durability. When Alex Carey nicked behind, it was the fourth ball of Broad’s seventh over in that spell. At the end of day five. Of a five-Test series. In which he played every single game. In which he bowled nearly 26 more overs than any other bowler. During which he turned 37.That was overshadowed by the set-piece moment to sign-off, the last two wickets to seal an Ashes win, a wicket off his last ball and hugs with Jimmy at mid-off. It’s a shame there weren’t more wickets left because with two in 13 balls, one dropped catch and numerous plays and misses to balls he was shaping in and swinging away as much as ever, we all had that sense, one last time, that Stuart Broad is about to get on one and we best be there.

Bangladesh offer bleak look into future without Tamim Iqbal, Shakib Al Hasan and Mushfiqur Rahim

A string of bad overs with the ball coupled with a batting collapse saw them fall to another heavy defeat

Mohammad Isam28-Mar-2021If Bangladesh gave a glimpse into their international future on Sunday, it is probably best that the fans look away. In their first match without Tamim Iqbal, Mushfiqur Rahim and Shakib Al Hasan in more than 14 years, they crashed to a big defeat against a New Zealand side brimming with confidence.Two of those absentees – Shakib and Iqbal – were out of Bangladesh’s plans well in advance. Shakib didn’t come on this tour while Iqbal was only available for the ODIs. Rahim pulled out due to multiple injuries to his left shoulder and finger, sustained in the third ODI a couple of days ago. Ultimately, it was left to the captain Mahmudullah to rally the young team around him.Related

Devon Conway, Ish Sodhi star in crushing New Zealand win

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In the case of these three players, it is not just the number of years or matches that they have played that Bangladesh missed. Bangladesh have mid-ranged experienced cricketers in Soumya Sarkar, Liton Das and Mustafizur Rahman, but their impact on the field dwarfs in comparison to the big three. Despite playing for at least the last six years, they have not stepped up to take more central or senior roles in the team, a factor that came to the fore during this match.The lack of experience in the field meant that Bangladesh were handed a pretty harsh reality check. Their black hole in T20I planning – a string of bad overs with the ball and a batting collapse – came back to haunt them. New Zealand scored 101 runs in the last seven overs, with none of the overs going for less than 10 runs. Bangladesh simply did not know how to contain the big-hitters, and kept adding to their own misery by bowling three or four boundary balls every over during this period.They didn’t help their cause with the bat either. When Mohammad Naim fell to Lockie Ferguson after a quickfire 27, Bangladesh went into freefall, as is often the case whenever they lose momentum. On Sunday, they lost five wickets for 20 runs in the space of 22 balls; Ish Sodhi took four of those in his first 11 balls.Letting a team dominate for more than five overs in a T20 is akin to giving up the game altogether, and Bangladesh paid the price. Their continued inability to handle high-class legspin and big-hitting was badly exposed. Sodhi recently had a Player-of-the-Series performance in the T20Is against Australia, but more than his confidence, it was his simple plan to bowl subtle variations at the stumps which foxed the Bangladesh batsmen.Sodhi had Sarkar caught and bowled, while bowling out Mohammad Mithun, Mahmudullah and Mahedi Hasan. The lack of legspin in Bangladesh’s cricketing dictionary means that they are always caught off guard while facing the ever-changing nuances in the art.Bangladesh’s bowling suffered a similar gap in their understanding of big-hitting, as they hardly face such things in domestic T20 competitions. On good pitches that has even bounce and shorter boundaries, the bowling often comes unstuck against big hitters.The only area where Bangladesh looked to have made a slight improvement was in their intensity while fielding, but that too didn’t last the whole 20 overs. There was the odd diving over the ball or not running in hard for a catch.Sometimes, young teams tend to lift themselves on fast fielding or great catches. Had Bangladesh somehow pulled off a win today, bowling well in the last seven overs and finding a way to tackle Sodhi, they could have made a real statement of intent. As it stands though, they now have to find a way to pick up the pieces without their three best players to help them.

PA Media have shared what they know from Newcastle about Sandro Tonali's injury

Midfielder Sandro Tonali was conspicuous by his absence as Newcastle trained on Monday morning ahead of Tuesday night’s Champions League clash with Jose Mourinho’s Benfica.

The 25-year-old Italy international did not take part in the open section of the session in front of the cameras at the club’s Darsley Park base.

Tonali, a £55million signing from AC Milan during the summer of 2003, was replaced by Jacob Ramsey with 20 minutes of Saturday’s 2-1 Premier League defeat at Brighton remaining.

The Italian has become a key member of Eddie Howe’s midfield alongside Brazilians Bruno Guimaraes and Joelinton since returning from his 10-month ban for gambling offences in August last year.

Tonali, a Carabao Cup winner with the Magpies in March, played all but a few minutes for his country in their World Cup qualifying victories over Estonia and Israel during the last international break.

Head coach Howe will hope to have him at his disposal on Tuesday evening as Newcastle attempt to add to the three points they collected from a 4-0 victory over Union Saint-Gilloise in Brussels earlier this month after losing their opening fixture to Barcelona at St James’ Park.

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Farke must unleash “wonderkid” who’d be perfect for Nmecha’s new Leeds role

Leeds United moved out of the relegation zone in the Premier League this week with an impressive 3-1 win over Chelsea at Elland Road on Wednesday night, in a game that was underpinned by Daniel Farke’s structural changes.

The German head coach, who has typically deployed a 4-2-3-1 or a 4-3-3 formation during his time at the club, opted to start with a 3-5-2 system against Enzo Maresca’s team.

It worked wonders for the Whites as they went on to claim all three points, thanks to goals from Jaka Bijol, Ao Tanaka, and Dominic Calvert-Lewin.

Why Leeds United's formation change worked so well

Changing from a 4-3-3 to a 3-5-2 worked so well for the Whites because it allowed Jayden Bogle, who assisted the second goal, and Gabriel Gudmundsson to push higher up the pitch with three centre-backs providing enough cover defensively.

It also meant that the Whites could play with two strikers, instead of leaving one isolated on their own, and that led to Calvert-Lewin and Lukas Nmecha causing plenty of problems.

The two centre-forwards combined to win 13 duels against the Chelsea defenders and won four fouls, without committing any, per Sofascore, which shows that they were a nightmare to deal with throughout the game.

Nmecha, in particular, has benefitted from having Calvert-Lewin’s physicality alongside him. The German forward, who has scored four Premier League goals, has lost 69% of his ground duels this season, per Sofascore, which shows that he struggles with the physical side of leading the line on his own.

Having another, more physical, striker alongside him means that he can focus on making runs in behind and pressing opposition defenders, which is what makes it such an effective pairing, or at least what made it so effective against Chelsea.

In The Pipeline

Football FanCast’s In the Pipeline series aims to uncover the very best youth players in world football.

Whilst Nmecha and Calvert-Lewin got the job done on Wednesday, Harry Gray could be perfect for the new role that Nmecha is now playing for Leeds.

Why Harry Gray should be unleashed in Lukas Nmecha's new role

Bringing young players into the first-team is difficult in any circumstance, but even more so in the Premier League with all that is at stake in a relegation battle.

Academy talents are not used to the physicality of professional football and may need time to adapt, particularly strikers, which is why this new role that Nmecha has could be perfect for Gray.

Farke must finally unleash the 17-year-old centre-forward for his Premier League debut in the coming weeks because playing alongside an experienced striker like Calvert-Lewin could be an ideal introduction to regular football at senior level.

Gray, who was described as the club’s “newest Wonderkid” by talent scout Jacek Kulig and his contributor Joe Blackburn, has scored a whopping ten goals in 11 games in all competitions for the academy this season, per Transfermarkt.

Appearances

3

Goals

2

Conversion rate

50%

Assists

1

Dribbles completed per game

2.0

Ground duel success rate

52%

Aerial duel success rate

38%

As you can see in the table above, the teenage forward has scored two goals in three EFL Trophy games, playing against League One and League Two sides, but has struggled with the aerial duels in those games.

This suggests that he would not be well-suited to playing as a lone striker in the Premier League for Leeds, as he would need to duel with towering top-flight centre-backs and hold the ball up under intense pressure, which is also where Nmecha struggled earlier this season.

Therefore, playing alongside Calvert-Lewin, who won six of his nine aerial duels against Chelsea (Sofascore), could be the perfect way for him to be introduced into the first-team this season.

Gray’s return of 14 goals in 20 U21s games and eight goals in 11 U18s matches for Leeds, per Transfermarkt, shows that he has the technical and goalscoring qualities to potentially make an impact for the Whites, but it is the physicality that is questionable.

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This change in formation from Farke, though, may alleviate those concerns because of how the two-striker system works, and that is why the manager should unleash the teen sensation in Nmecha’s role in the coming weeks.

A.J. Hinch Had Perfect Joke About Javier Baez and Phil Cuzzi Before Tuesday's Game

Tensions flared during the Detroit Tigers game against the San Francisco Giants on Monday, as Javier Baez was ejected from the contest after arguing a called third strike from home plate umpire Phil Cuzzi.

Baez was irate and needed to be restrained by his teammates before he eventually went into the clubhouse.

Baez, who is a utility player in Detroit, is expected to start at third base for Tuesday evening's game, despite having been in center field on Monday. And he'll be seeing plenty of Cuzzi at the hot corner throughout the game, as he'll be serving as the game's third base umpire.

Tigers manager A.J. Hinch discussed the situation with reporters ahead of the game, and he comically compared it to parenting.

"It's like parenting," he said, via Cody Stavenhagen of . "I got to put them two in a corner and tell them they've got to sort it out and play nice."

Hinch seems to think the situation is pretty humorous, and hopefully Baez and Cuzzi can adopt that approach, otherwise they could be in for a pretty awkward run-in over at third base when Baez takes the field in the first inning.

Amorim can forget Sesko by unleashing Man Utd's "homegrown Osimhen"

Manchester United drew 2-2 away to Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday lunchtime. It took a late Matthijs de Ligt goal to secure a point, after being 1-0 up at half-time. Not only did United let the three points slip out of their grasp, but striker Benjamin Sesko picked up an injury.

The Slovenian didn’t start the game in North London, coming on in the second half. He suffered a knee problem late in the clash after a tackle by Mickey van de Ven prevented him from getting a shot off.

Ruben Amorim said after the game that he is “concerned” about the striker’s issue.

It is currently unclear how long the 22-year-old will be out injured for, but Amorim has three different options to replace him.

1 The logical option

There is only one other number 9 in the United squad: Joshua Zirkzee. The Dutchman is a superb technical player who is brilliant at bringing his teammates into the game with holdup play and silky footwork.

He ended his debut campaign at United strongly, with ten goals and assists, including a crucial header in the Europa League away from home against Lyon. However, he’s fallen out of favour under the Portuguese manager this term.

It certainly hasn’t been easy for the Dutchman in 2025/26. He’s only made five appearances across all competitions, playing 90 minutes in total and not starting a game. He hasn’t even had a chance to prove himself this term.

However, with his ability to link play together and facilitate the likes of Bryan Mbeumo, the 24-year-old could be a game-changer for United. He’s their only other senior number striker and has shown great promise when given a chance.

2 The wildcard option

The suggested wildcard shout is, ironically, something Amorim has done more often this season than the logical option. That consists of bringing Mason Mount into the starting lineup and playing a flexible front three consisting of the Englishman, Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha.

Although he has been struck down with injury a lot for United, the 26-year-old clearly has an abundance of quality. When fit, he has been a trusted lieutenant under Amorim, playing 29 games for the Red Devils boss, scoring four times and assisting one.

In fact, those strikes certainly highlight the quality the number seven brings to United’s side. Look at his finish against Athletic Club in the Europa League last season, taking the ball on the half turn and curling his effort home. That is classic Mount.

This solution would offer Amorim lots of energy up front, with all three players excellent pressers. United fans would also witness fluid rotations in possession, although the lack of a natural number 9 might make them less of a threat in the box.

3 The academy option

Using players from the academy has always been a huge part of the DNA at Old Trafford. Well, in light of Sesko’s injury, Amorim could turn to 17-year-old Chido Obi to help fill the void left at centre-forward.

The former Arsenal youngster has played first-team football in the red of United since his move to Manchester last summer. He’s featured eight times under Amorim, even starting away to Brentford in the Premier League.

It is at academy level that the former Gunners star has made a real impression. Obi has scored six goals for United’s U21 side and has bagged 12 times in ten games for the U18s. It is no surprise that Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta previously described him as a “massive goal threat.” Gunners podcaster Will Balsam once even described the prodigy as a “homegrown Osimhen”.

Obi has played against senior sides in the EFL Trophy this season and has made a real impression, grabbing three goal involvements in as many games. Against Barnsley, he got a goal and an assist, having two shots on target, creating one chance and winning three duels.

Touches

20

Shots

3

Shots on target

2

Ground duels won

3

Key passes

1

Goals

1

Assists

1

Picking the Denmark U20 striker to replace Sesko could be seen as a risk from Amorim. Yet, the Red Devils boss clearly trusts and rates the striker, having given him regular minutes in the top flight last season.

There are a few options for the United boss, and it will be fascinating to see which route he takes if Sesko is sidelined for a long period.

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باريس سان جيرمان يصدر بيانًا ناريًا ضد كيليان مبابي

أصدر نادي باريس سان جيرمان بيانًا ناريًا فيما يخص نجم فريق ريال مدريد، كيليان مبابي، بسبب تصاعد النزاع القضائي بينهما، بعدما عُقدت جلسة استماع بين الطرفين أمس.

وتصاعدت حدة النزاع القضائي بين باريس سان جيرمان وكيليان مبابي والتي بدأت منذ رحيل الفرنسي بشكل مجاني إلى ريال مدريد في صيف 2024.

وطلب مبابي من باريس سان جيرمان الحصول على تعويض يتجاوز 260 مليون يورو، بينما طالب الطرف الآخر بمبلغ قدره 60 مليون يورو كتعويض، إلى جانب مبلغ آخر يبلغ 180 مليون يورو (لمطالعة التفاصيل كاملة من هنا).

من جانبه، أصدر باريس سان جيرمان بيانًا رسميًا، جاء به: “مثلنا اليوم أمام مجلس Prud’hommes في باريس من أجل الاعتراف بالأضرار الكبيرة التي لحقت بالنادي نتيجة للانتهاك الخطير من قبل كيليان مبابي فيما يخص التزاماته التعاقدية الملزمة قانونًا والمبادئ الأساسية لحسن النية والولاء”.

وأضاف: “يود النادي أن يؤكد مجددًا أنه، على مدار أكثر من عام، بذل كل ما في وسعه من أجل التوصل إلى حل ودي يُمكن جميع الأطراف من المضي قدمًا، بما يتماشى مع علاقة التعاون والثقة التي ينبغي أن تكون بين النادي ولاعبه”.

وواصل: “وساهمت المناشدات العديدة المقدمة في إطار هذا النزاع في التوصل إلى اتفاق ودي، وهو ما سعى إليه النادي دائمًا بحسن نية، ولكن على الرغم من هذه الجهود المتكررة، واصل السيد مبابي مهاجمة النادي في كل مناسبة، بما في ذلك خلال الإجراءات المتخذة اليوم، وهو وضع مؤسف للاعب نفسه وللكرة الفرنسية ككل”.

وأردف: “لقد قدمنا أمام المحكمة أدلة تثبت أن اللاعب تصرف بطريقة غير مخلصة عن طريق إخفاء قراره بعدم تجديد عقده لمدة 11 شهرًا تقريبًا، بين يوليو 2022 ويونيو 2023، وبالتالي حرمان النادي من أي إمكانية لترتيب عملية انتقاله”.

واستكمل: “وتساءل اللاعب بعد ذلك عن الاتفاق الذي تم التوصل إليه مع النادي، في أغسطس 2023، والذي ينص على تخفيض راتبه إذا قرر الرحيل بحرية، من أجل الحفاظ على الاستقرار المالي للنادي بعد الاستثمار المالي الاستثنائي الذي قامت به الإدارة”.

واسترسل: “وقد تسبب هذا الإخفاء، إلى جانب الطعن في هذا الاتفاق الواضح والموثق، في أضرار جسيمة لـ باريس سان جيرمان، وهو ما ينوي النادي المطالبة به أمام السلطات المختصة، كما أن هذا السلوك يُظهر، إلى جانب اللامبالاة بالوضع المالي للنادي، إساءة للثقة التي منحها إياه باريس سان جيرمان، والتي حرص اللاعب على تعزيزها بتصريحاته، كما حدث في 3 يناير 2024، عندما صرّح في المنطقة المختلطة بعد مباراة باريس سان جيرمان في بارك دي برانس (لم أتخذ قرارًا بعد، ولكن بالاتفاق الذي توصلت إليه مع الرئيس هذا الصيف، ومهما كان خياري، فقد نجحنا في حماية جميع الأطراف والحفاظ على استقرار النادي في مواجهة التحديات المقبلة، وهو الأهم، قراري يُعد ثانويًا)”.

وشدد: “كما ينفي النادي بشكل قاطع أي نوع من المضايقات أو الضغوط، مشيرًا إلى أن اللاعب شارك في أكثر من 94% من المباريات الرسمية لموسم 2023/2024، وأن غياباته كانت لأسباب رياضية، واتخذ هذه القرارات المدرب الذي فاز مع الفريق بدوري أبطال أوروبا، والذي لطالما التزم بميثاق كرة القدم الاحترافية”.

'Patinho feio' e 'cabelo rosa': Diniz aposta em novatos nas laterais da Seleção Brasileira

MatériaMais Notícias

A Seleção Brasileira deve entrar em campo contra o Uruguai com duas novidades nas laterais: Yan Couto e Carlos Augusto devem ser os escolhidos por Fernando Diniz para o clássico sul-americano nesta terça-feira (17), pela Eliminatórias, em Montevidéu. Ambos estreiam como titulares com a Amarelinha e são pouco conhecidos pelo público do país, mas querem se firmar na posição de olho em 2026.

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+ Veja tabela e classificação do Brasileirão-2023 clicando aqui

Yan entrará na vaga de Danilo, machucado e já cortado. Diante da Venezuela, o garoto do Girona-ESP entrou ainda no primeiro tempo para substituir o titular lesionado. Formado pelo Coritiba e campeão mundial sub-17 em 2019, o lateral deixou o Brasil muito cedo e hoje, aos 21 anos, pertencente ao grupo City, quer se tornar conhecido dos brasileiros, muito além do seu cabelo rosa.

+ Você quer trabalhar no seu clube do coração? Matricule-se no curso Gestor de Futebol e entenda como!

– Gostaria que povo brasileiro me reconhecesse mais, tivesse esse laço mais íntimo. Espero começar a construir isso agora, para ter uma trajetória na Seleção. Talvez nem todo mundo acompanhe, cheguei com 18 anos (na Europa), esse ano tive uma mudança de mentalidade, esse ano estou mostrando meu futebol, minha melhor versão.

– A cor preferida da minha irmã é rosa, quando eu fiz o cabelo ela ficou muito feliz. Mas eu fiz mais o cabelo para falar para minha família que esse ano era meu, queria fazer uma grande temporada, estou conseguindo jogar agora na Europa, na minha melhor versão. O cabelo não é para me achar nem nada, sou muito tímido, é mais para eu olhar no espelho todo dia e ver que sou uma nova pessoa, e que posso mostrar em campo meu melhor momento.

Carlos Augusto tem semelhanças com Yan além da estreia como titular na Seleção. Formado no Corinthians, o lateral-esquerdo deixou o Brasil sem fazer muito seu nome por aqui e acabou indo cedo para a Europa rumo ao Monza-ITA, que na época disputava a segunda divisão do país. Depois de três anos por lá, ele chamou a atenção da Inter de Milão, onde está desde o meio de 2023. Quem diria que ele já foi “patinho feio”.

+ Lesões forçam Fernando Diniz a montar ‘nova Seleção Brasileira’

– Sempre fui o patinho feio na base. Até fiquei trocando de posições, atacante, meia, zagueiro, fiz tudo. Quando você vem ao lado desses jogadores, pensa que aquilo foi um aprendizado, foi bom para crescer como pessoa. Só tenho que agradecer por esses momentos.

Aos 24 anos, Carlos ganhou a posição de Guilherme Arana, seu antigo companheiro de Corinthians. Apesar de no Brasil ainda não estar entre os mais conhecidos, na Itália ele foi convidado até para defender a seleção, mas não aceitou. Certo mesmo é que o futebol italiano acabou sendo essencial para sua carreira, inclusive na chegada à Seleção.

– Eu fui chamado, mas nem pensei na hipótese de aceitar. Cresci no Brasil. Por respeito aos italianos, não me via como italiano, meu coração sempre foi brasileiro, nem pensei na hipótese de ir.

+ Diniz prepara três mudanças na Seleção para enfrentar o Uruguai; veja provável time

– Minha transição para o futebol italiano foi essencial para a minha carreira, não tive sequência no Corinthians, ir para lá me ajudou a pegar confiança, crescer como pessoa, entender o futebol italiano, que é mais tático. Quando jogava no Brasil, me falavam que eu era defensivo. Na Itália, dizem que sou ofensivo. Espero trabalhar as duas partes para ser o mais completo possível.

Com trajetórias semelhantes e estreando juntos como titulares da Seleção Brasileira, ambos têm a chance de brilharem e ocuparem uma posição que tem tido dificuldade para firmar novos jogadores. Tanto o lado esquerdo quanto o direito não têm titulares absolutos e essa pode ser a chance de dois jovens se firmarem pensando na Copa de 2026.

Big Salah upgrade: Liverpool prepare £86m bid for "one of the world's best"

Liverpool have lost three games in a row. It’s a marker of how high Anfield has risen over the past decades that this has been met with hysteria across England and dejection across the red halves of Merseyside streets.

By one point Liverpool trail Premier League pace-setters Arsenal, who have already been defeated by Arne Slot’s side this term. Liverpool have broken records with their spending across the summer transfer window, and they won the top-flight title at a canter last year.

But we can’t ignore the tactical imbalances and issues in bedding new players in. Teething problems have lingered far longer than anyone would have anticipated.

Many games have been entertaining, but Liverpool have lost the control and confidence they oozed throughout the 2024/25 campaign. Will Slot rekindle that flame? So many late goals across the past two months, flying both directions, is evidence that improvements are needed.

Defensively and in midfield, Slot’s side have left plenty to be desired. But they are also being let down up top, with the 33-year-old Mohamed Salah’s struggles telling of the need for a new right-sided forward.

Why Liverpool need to sign a Salah heir

Salah has entered his ninth campaign as a Liverpool player, but he has been part of the problem engulfing Slot’s side so far, scoring three goals and supplying three assists across all competitions but drifting through games and lacking even a small measure of his trademark vim and vigour.

Salah has seldom gone through dry spells in front of goal in the Premier League, but his last-minute penalty at Burnley is his only strike since the opening day win over Bournemouth.

Still, he’s one of the greatest forwards in the competition’s history, and the veteran will retain full confidence in his ability to return to form. He practically led Liverpool to the title last year, after all.

Alan Shearer

441

260

Harry Kane

320

213

Wayne Rooney

491

208

Mohamed Salah

308

188

Andy Cole

414

187

It’s painful to consider, but there is also the possibility that Liverpool have extended Salah’s contract by two years so that they can receive a payment from suitors in 2026. There’s a sizeable chance Saudi Arabian outfits will return for the Egyptian King at the end of the season, tempting him with a glinting late-career pay packet.

Should Salah leave, Liverpool will need a high-level replacement, and the English giants appear to have focused their sights on Bayern Munich’s Michael Olise.

Well, if Spanish sources are correct, Liverpool have been informed by Bayern Munich that a bid worth €150m (£131m) could be enough to sign the 23-year-old next year. The Anfield side would rather pay closer to €100m (£86m) for Olise’s signature.

Olise was widely regarded as one of the best attacking midfielders in the Premier League when at Selhurst Park, and he has only improved since moving to the Bundesliga.

Though Bayern are looking to bank a pretty penny for the France international’s sale, FSG and Reds sporting director Richard Hughes has shown they are willing to break the bank for the right signing.

What Michael Olise would bring to Liverpool

Olise, crucially, is a proven Premier League star. He left Crystal Palace and signed for Bayern Munich during the summer of 2024 for about £50m, and that looks a real coup for the German giants.

Pundit Micah Richard remarked while Olise was an Eagle that he “is going to be a superstar”. Richards was right. Awe and adoration in south London has been transported and developed over in Germany, with Olise having hit 54 goal involvements from 65 matches with Die Roten, including five goals and six assists from just ten fixtures in 2025/26.

He doesn’t boast the same devastating goalscoring ability as Salah, but Liverpool’s summer investments in Isak and Hugo Ekitike tell of a goalscoring shift back to the centre. In other words, this is the perfect profile to replace the ageing winger at Liverpool, whose underlying metrics are not at the same level as Olise.

Goals scored

0.65

0.39

Assists

0.43

0.50

Shots taken

2.98

3.47

Shot-creating actions

3.85

6.56

Touches (att pen)

8.43

6.32

Pass completion (%)

70.2

80.7

Progressive passes

3.80

7.50

Progressive carries

4.00

5.02

Successful take-ons

1.15

2.48

Ball recoveries

3.00

3.81

Salah has not been at the races this season, but scaling it back across 12 months, the depth of Olise’s top form in Germany is emphasised.

Across all competitions, Liverpool’s star forward scored 34 goals and assisted 23 more, after all.

Olise hasn’t cracked the same clinical heights, but he is “one of the best talents in the world”, in the eyes of Palace manager Oliver Glasner, who helped take the ace’s game to the next level.

With Salah having completed only 13% of his dribbles in the Premier League this season, as per Sofascore, averaging a measly 0.9 successful ground duels per match too, there’s been little to write home about, and Slot’s hesitance to deploy Federico Chiesa or Jeremie Frimpong on the right during Liverpool’s big matches makes a telling comment on his thoughts about a big-money signing in the shape of Olise.

Might it be that Liverpool part with their club legend at the end of the season? The news that Hughes is already sounding out a move for an elite talent such as Olise highlights the desire to sign such a player.

And given that he knows the Premier League well, with 36 direct contributions in the competition, the young and ever-improving Olise may well be the perfect addition to ease the fateful day when Salah hangs up his Liverpool boots.

Klopp sold Liverpool star for £9.5m, now he's outperforming Salah & Wirtz

Liverpool must rue selling a star who is outplaying Florian Wirtz and playing like Mo Salah.

ByDan Emery Oct 6, 2025

Man Utd can hire Amorim upgrade who Fergie dubbed the PL's "best manager"

It felt as if there was an unspoken agreement among Manchester United supporters last season. No matter the on-field turmoil, no matter the new lows reached, the Old Trafford faithful would remain behind manager Ruben Amorim regardless.

Parachuted in mid-way through the campaign, despite his desire to join this summer, the Portuguese coach was almost afforded a free hit last time out, with a notable Europa League run also helping to cloud the club’s Premier League undoings.

That night in Bilbao was drab and disappointing, yet the 40-year-old teased brighter days ahead following the final league clash against Aston Villa. “The good days are coming”, he exclaimed.

Five games into the new season, however, and those ‘good days’ have yet to return. Perhaps the cries for patience need to be heeded, but this all feels very much like more of the same.

There was a willingness to ‘suffer’ in 2024/25, with the proviso that Amorim would get it right after a full summer window, a full pre-season and a full week between games. Four points from four and a Carabao Cup exit would suggest otherwise.

Unsurprisingly, the debate over the ex-Sporting CP man’s future is ramping up – could it be time for a change before too much damage is done?

How Amorim's start to the season compares

The honesty and candour of Amorim’s pre and post-match musings has been to his credit, yet while the one-time Braga boss is able to talk the talk, he has thus far failed to walk the walk.

Steadfast in his refusal to tweak a flawed 3-4-2-1 system, the latest post-Sir Alex Ferguson appointment may well fall on his sword sooner rather than later, having overseen the club’s worst start to a Premier League campaign since 1992.

Of course, that inaugural season in the new-look top-flight saw United clinch the title under Fergie’s watch, but in an era where almost perfection is needed to finish at the summit, the current crop appear so far off the pace.

With the next international break now just three games away, Amorim could be heading for a crucial juncture in his relatively brief Red Devils tenure, with it having been October last year which saw the end of Erik ten Hag.

The Dutchman had actually collected more points this time last year with six from the opening four league games, although with United slumping to 14th in the table, a defeat to West Ham United was the final straw.

Having overseen another extensive summer of investment in the region of £250m, Amorim may also find himself on the chopping block before too long – but just who could replace him?

How Man Utd can replace Ruben Amorim

There is a sense that the INEOS hierarchy have almost jumped the gun with Amorim’s appointment. Rather than taking the approach of employing a safe pair hands in the dugout, while considerable change continues at boardroom level, Sir Jim Ratcliffe and co have gambled on the two-time Portuguese title winner and his much-debated back three system.

That risk, so far, has yet to pay off, and while it is still early days in the 2025/26 season, there could well be a desire to nip things in the bud sooner rather than later, instead of simply watching another campaign drift into nothingness.

If a change is to be made in the managerial department, there have been whispers that long-time target Mauricio Pochettino could be in the equation, with the Argentine coach currently at the helm of the United States national team.

A record of seven defeats in 18 games in charge of the upcoming World Cup hosts is certainly nothing to shout about, with the post-Tottenham Hotspur period having been distinctly unkind for the 53-year-old, amid his brutal sackings at both Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea.

That being said, while his time at international level may suggest otherwise, the 4-2-3-1 manager is no busted flush. At Stamford Bridge, for instance, he overcame the chaos to steer the Blues to a respectable sixth-place finish. At the Parc des Princes, meanwhile, three domestic honours were claimed for the Ligue 1 giants.

There was a time, too, when he was even deemed by Ferguson to be the “best manager in the league” – as relayed by MP David Lammy – with Pochettino having been a revelation following his appointment at Spurs in 2014.

Formerly of Southampton, the “genius” coach – as hailed by journalist Alex Keble – steered a youthful side in north London to incremental progress, unleashing an exciting brand of football led by the likes of Harry Kane, Heung-min Son and Dele Alli.

In his five full seasons in charge of the Lilywhites, ‘Poch’ finished no lower than fifth, even while largely operating on a shoestring budget, having secured a top-four finish in four successive campaigns.

While a trophy was elusive, the one-time Espanyol boss did defy the odds to take the club to the Champions League final in 2019, having been harshly sacked by Daniel Levy just a matter of months later. As Keble stated, he was arguably “too good” for Spurs, while he was “so above Levy, the chairman didn’t know what to do.”

With Amorim currently ‘boasting’ a Premier League record of just 31 points from 31 games, Pochettino would undoubtedly be an upgrade in that department.

Indeed, the latter man has won 150 games in the competition from 294 outings, with a points per match ratio of 1.77.

USA

18

1.83

Chelsea

51

1.78

PSG

84

2.15

Spurs

293

1.84

Saints

60

1.45

Espanyol

161

1.22

Still a relatively youthful figure in the coaching world at 53, the experienced coach appears to have missed the boat on numerous occasions when it comes to moving to Manchester, having notably been in the running when both Jose Mourinho and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer were fired.

This move has been a long time coming, with Pochettino able to provide that long-term approach alongside the ability to get results at Premier League level in the short-term.

Amorim, it must be said, is a figure to get behind, but this is a results business, and well, the results simply haven’t been up to scratch.

No Dorgu, new role for Amad: How Amorim can save Man Utd job & keep 3-4-2-1

Ruben Amorim appears intent on sticking with his 3-4-2-1 formation at Man Utd, but could he at least change the personnel within it?

ByRobbie Walls Sep 17, 2025

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