Man Utd could land a bigger talent than Amad in "unplayable" £60m star

A recent report suggested that there are just four players deemed to be unsellable this summer at Manchester United, with almost the entire squad at risk of being shown the door, should a suitable offer arrive.

Unsurprisingly – despite recent interest from Saudi Arabia – talismanic captain, Bruno Fernandes is among that select quartet, with the 30-year-old only recently lauded as “one of the top players in the world” by compatriot, Ruben Amorim.

20-year-old wing-back Patrick Dorgu was also named, having only joined the club from Lecce in January, while man of the moment Harry Maguire appears to be another set to stay put, having been described as “perfect” for the 3-4-3 system by his manager.

The final name mentioned on that list was a player who only recently signed a new bumper contract extension, with Amad Diallo committing his future to the club until the summer of 2030.

Previously something of a bit-part player in previous regimes, the returning Ivorian now looks set to be front and centre under Amorim – and deservedly so.

Amad's record under Ten Hag vs under Amorim

There was a feeling that Amad’s chance would never come at Old Trafford, with the former Atalanta wonderkid having actually signed as far back as October 2020, before eventually arriving just a few months.

An inventive header against AC Milan on debut showcased a mere glimpse of why United had forked out an initial fee of £19m, albeit with the then-teenager going on to play just eight games under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s watch.

Sent out on loan to Rangers and then Sunderland, Amad’s subsequent return to the first-team squad was halted by injury on the pre-season tour in 2023, with Erik ten Hag seemingly hesitant to unleash the forward even when he was back to full fitness for the start of 2024.

While last season ended on a high with his first Premier League goal against Newcastle United, having netted the winner in the FA Cup thriller against Liverpool, he never seemingly earned the faith of the Dutchman, having again slipped behind Antony in the attacking pecking order prior to Ten Hag’s dismissal.

Reinvigorated during Ruud van Nistelrooy’s interim spell, which yielded two goals, the £120k-per-week winger has also been a shining light following Amorim’s arrival, having chalked up an assist from wing-back for the first goal of the Portuguese’s tenure against Ipswich Town.

Manager

Games

Goals

Assists

Erik ten Hag

24

3

3

Ruben Amorim

22

7

6

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer

8

1

1

Ruud van Nistelrooy

4

2

1

Ralf Rangnick

1

0

0

Michael Carrick

0

0

0

Total

59

13

10

High-profile goals have since followed against the likes of Manchester City and Liverpool, alongside a blistering hat-trick against Southampton, with Sunday’s consolation strike against Brentford marking his 13th goal involvement in just 22 outings under the new boss.

Injury had hampered his progress between February and April, but fit and firing again, Amad will be crucial over the coming weeks, and potentially years.

That said, it is exciting to suggest that an even bigger attacking talent could be on their way to Manchester this summer…

Man Utd could sign an even bigger talent than Amad

The last year or so has marked a real rise for Amad in a United shirt, having stepped into the limelight and stayed there, seemingly unburdened by the pressures that have shackled far too many before him.

Amad Diallo

A refreshingly positive and front-foot player, the diminutive wideman is a talent that gets the crowd off their feet. The next challenge, however, is to find real consistency, particularly on the Premier League front.

That is a quality that reported summer target, Bryan Mbeumo has showcased in abundance, with the Cameroon international having enjoyed a simply stunning campaign for the Bees in 2024/25.

Recent reports have claimed that the Red Devils are eyeing a potential move for the £60m-rated sensation this summer, with interest also being shown in another shining top-flight talent, Matheus Cunha.

It is Mbeumo, however, who has eclipsed both Cunha and Amad – as indicated below – with the France-born speedster racking up 18 goals and six assists in the league this season. To put that into perspective, not even Marcus Rashford has reached 18 goals in a Premier League campaign in his career so far.

Games

23

30

35

Goals

7

15

18

Assists

6

6

6

Big chances created

5

12

16

Key passes*

1.7

1.8

1.8

Pass accuracy*

85%

79%

74%

Successful dribbles*

1.7

1.9

1.3

Possession lost*

10.8

15.7

17.0

Fouls won*

1.0

2.3

1.2

That record of 16 ‘big chances’ created also outlines just what a weapon Mbeumo has been under Thomas Frank, with not even United’s creative hub, Fernandes, able to better that tally (14), as per Sofascore.

There’s no denying that this has been by far Mbeumo’s best season since Brentford’s promotion, although that’s not to say he hasn’t impressed previously, having registered 67 goals and assists in 140 appearances in the competition – including 18 goals in 2022/23 and 2023/24 combined.

Amad, meanwhile, has just eight goals and eight assists in the Premier League to date – albeit from only 35 games – with Mbeumo something of the benchmark when it comes to the very best that the division has to offer.

Simply “unplayable” on his day, in the words of Frank, the former Troyes man would be a worthy option as a number nine, a number ten or even in a wing-back berth, with the potential there for him to emerge as United’s new attacking figurehead.

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Not just Rice: 9/10 Arsenal star just proved he could start for Madrid

Well, we aren’t sure even the most die-hard Arsenal fans saw last night’s result coming.

The Gunners played host to European juggernauts Real Madrid in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final, and to say it was the best performance of the Mikel Arteta reign wouldn’t be hyperbole.

They just about edged the first half and then utterly dominated the Spanish giants in the second to come away with a sensational 3-0 victory.

It was a stellar display to a man, although a couple of starters just about stood out, including Declan Rice and someone who proved he wouldn’t look out of place starring for Los Blancos.

Arsenal vs Real Madrid

Arsenal

Statistics

Real Madrid

3

Goals

0

1.51

Expected Goals

0.50

2

Big Chances

0

2

Big Chances Missed

0

12

Total Shots

9

11

Shots on Target

3

9

Shots in the Box

5

490

Passes

435

9

Free Kicks

8

All Stats via Sofascore

Rice's magical game vs Real Madrid in numbers

Arsenal fans like to sing that they got Rice for half price when they paid a club-record £105m fee for him in 2023, and while some may see it as a joke, last night suggested it is not.

The former West Ham United captain was incredible from the first whistle to when he came off, covering every blade of grass and still providing a consistent threat through well-timed runs.

He opened the scoring with a Roberto Carlos-esque free-kick – with him in the stands, mind – and then somehow scored an even better one 12 minutes later, placing it so perfectly in the far corner that Thibaut Courtois had no chance of saving it.

On top of winning the game for the North Londoners, the Englishman is now the first player to score two direct free-kicks in a UCL knockout game.

Unsurprisingly, such a sensational display impressed the press, with the Express’ Charlie Parker-Turner awarding him a 9/10 at full-time, which was more than backed up by his stats.

Rice’s game in numbers

Minutes

80′

Expected Goals

0.47

Goals

2

Expected Assists

0.08

Touches

43

Shots on Target

4

Dribbles (Completed)

1 (1)

Lost Possession

4

Clearances

1

Interceptions

1

All Stats via Sofascore

For example, in his 80 minutes of action, he scored two goals, produced a combined expected goal plus assists figure of 0.55, took 43 touches, took four shots on target, completed 100% of his dribbles, lost the ball just four times, made one clearance and one interception.

In all, it was the sort of showing that proves Rice more than belongs at the very top of the game, just like his teammate who also shone last night.

Arsenal's other stand-out player

As mentioned above, there were sublime displays across the pitch for Arsenal last night, but when it came down to it, the other starter who impacted the game as much as Rice was Bukayo Saka.

Player ratings courtesy of Sofascore

It was the Hale Ender’s first start since his hamstring injury in late December, and while he didn’t score, he was undoubtedly the best attacker on the pitch.

What made him so devastatingly effective in the first half was his ability to cut in and use his left foot or run to the byline and use his right – David Alaba just didn’t know what he was going to do.

Then, in the second half, he was the one who won the two free-kicks for Rice, as the Real players couldn’t do anything but foul him.

He ended up winning 100% of his duels on the night and did so well that former professional turned pundit Daniel Sturridge claimed that he “proved” he’d be good enough to star for Real Madrid.

He left quite an impression on others in the media as well, with Parker-Turner awarding him a 9/10, while content creator Joe Thomlinson simply described his showing as “utterly ridiculous.”

Ultimately, it might only be half-time in the tie, but Arsenal deserve all the plaudits they’re getting at the moment, and it was just another night in which Rice and Saka reminded the world that they are some of the very best in the business.

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The wait is Over: Six balls and a lifetime later, Jofra Archer returns with a bang

Four years after his last Test appearance, England’s fast bowler scripts a perfect return to the big time

Vithushan Ehantharajah11-Jul-20250:50

Manjrekar: Great comeback story for Archer

There was a touch of anxiety in the England camp on Friday morning, when eight of the Test squad set off on Lime bikes for the near four-mile journey from the team’s Royal Garden Hotel to Lord’s.The one-day squad did similar to beat the traffic for an ODI against West Indies at the Kia Oval last month, but this was different. Once you are through the picturesque Kensington Gardens, you enter the realm of the main roads, tangling treacherously like competing interests as Paddington becomes Edgware Road.In May, the NHS reported a surge in A&E admissions for people who had suffered trapped legs in falls, colloquially known as “Lime Bike Leg”. Imagine the uproar if an active member of England’s XI in this third Test did himself a mischief on the commute, when even Brendon McCullum chose to walk in this morning?Jofra Archer was one of the “Lime Bike Eight”. And maybe it was only right for there to be a hint of jeopardy on his final journey before returning as an active Test cricketer.When he walked out to bat, it was Archer’s first competitive act in England whites in more than 1500 days. And it is no reach to suggest that each day had carried an associated risk, such as simply commuting to work, which might have added to the wait.Jofra Archer claimed a wicket on his Sussex return after four years out of red-ball cricket•PA Photos/Getty ImagesIt was not just those five days across a 25-month period in which he underwent surgery on his elbow, lower back and hand. Nor the 77 matches he has played in the four-year period since that 13th Test cap in Ahmedabad back in February 2021. Every time Archer got out of bed in the morning during this period, including this Friday, there will have been a fleeting moment of wondering whether he was about to feel the wrong thing in the wrong place.So, really, what was a bike-ride to work, other than a final journey for Archer: a man already incarcerated by hours of doubt, contained within the months of rehabilitation, and years of uncertainty over getting back to Test cricket. The air on his face as he ventured back to where this all began, against Australia in 2019, weeks after hisSuper Over heroics at the same venue in the World Cup final, must have felt like liberation.Even more so as he steamed down from the Pavilion End. Out came the first ball, played judderingly by Yashasvi Jaiswal. The crowd, already swelling with pride, swelled even more, yearning to burst.

****

It was no surprise Archer’s follow-up was near perfection. One of his understated super-strengths is unerring accuracy. During his early, pre-England days with Sussex, he could sit into a holding pattern, hammering out the same length, over after over. His former coaches, Jason Gillespie and Jon Lewis, often reiterated the importance of marrying such precision with patience. And though Archer often indulged his frustrations with the odd short ball, he understood the value in testing a batter’s substance with his restraint.Related

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His patience has certainly come in for a serious examination. From messaging Ben Stokes “Zim?” ahead of the one-off Test against Zimbabwe earlier this summer, to turning out for his old school team, Foundation, in December 2023 – much to the surprise of men’s managing director Rob Key ­ Archer has veered towards the impetuous in the final stages of this comeback.You can understand why. England’s plans to get him back as a three-format bowler have come in two phases – heavily planned and .Ahead of the 2022 Pakistan tour, he bowled for England Lions against the full side in the UAE, the first steps on a roadmap that required a good deal of politicking.Earlier that year, Key and SA20 commissioner Graeme Smith had struck a gentleman’s agreement that, within reason, all centrally contracted England players would be granted an NOC for the inaugural competition. In turn, a stint for Archer with MI Cape Town was worked out for the new year, which led neatly into a series against South Africa that marked Archer’s first England appearance in close to two years.Everything was on course until another stress fracture in his elbow ruled him out of the 2023 Ashes. From that point on, England decided to be less proactive and more reactive. Though the coaches and medical staff hive-minded a PDF on Archer’s next steps – common practice for all their bowlers – it was only after regular assessments, at each of his homes in Brighton and Barbados, that the next plan was put in place.3:04

Root: ‘Great to see Archer smiling, enjoying his cricket’

The 2024 T20 World Cup was a personal success, even if England were as underwhelming as a team could be in reaching the semi-finals. A fixture against Scotland in Barbados brought Archer’s two worlds together, and felt, outwardly, like a springboard. Cheered on by kids from his former school, he admitted to tearing up, even if the game ended as a no-result.ODIs against Australia later that summer brought the enticing prospect of an Ashes series to the fore. It felt, at the very least, that a corner had been turned: even when Archer returned to the IPL with a thumb injury, the light at the end of the tunnel was illuminating the final steps.He missed the ODIs against West Indies at the start of this summer, but stepped up his bowling loads. Barring that text to Stokes, he bided his time, ticked a box with a first County Championship match in four years for Sussex against Durham, and did enough in the intervals during the second Test at Edgbaston last week to show England’s hierarchy he was ready. On the eve of the match, he gave his captain such a beasting in the nets that Stokes was late for his captain’s pre-match press conference, as he went back in for another hit.

****

Who knows what would have happened had Bashir not been there. Archer might have run all the way through the Lord’s Grandstand, into another dimension. And those in the ground who had cheered his return, then hugged each other at this crowning moment, would have followed.The beauty of true fast bowling is not about destroying stumps or ending batters, but creating worlds in an instant. And wherever Archer had ended up – whether he’d stopped at square leg or not at all, he was at the centre of it.The visceral screams. The straining of his face. The thrusting of his limbs, as if more outlets were needed for his emotions. His gold chains bounced on his reinforced chest and shoulders, as if they were extensions of the man, rather than the impediments they were first made out to be when he arrived on to the international scene.It’s worth noting there are now two chains around Archer’s neck. In ancient Egypt, the wealthy would be buried with their gold, which they would then exchange for passage into the afterlife. Such has been Archer’s toil in this realm already, the extra one has the feel of a souvenir of his journey through purgatory.Archer was a regular attendee at England training sessions while rehabbing from his elbow injury•PA Photos/Getty Images

****

Part of Archer “injury-proofing” his body has been a more muscular physique. His trunk is thicker, his upper body more welter- than lightweight.As a result, the way he delivers the ball has changed. Where once his trajectory came over his right shoulder, with the smoothest path from A to B, his release-point now comes from slightly further out. It’s not a conscious choice from Archer but a case of his body adapting to new restrictions, and finding a way to avoid the pain.Undoubtedly, Archer has lost the whippiness of his first incarnation, along with the ability to get front-on, and come over the top of his front leg in the manner that he used to. And yet it took him just four balls to unleash the fastest delivery of the series so far.He would deliver another close to it – 93.3mph, third ball of his second over. By the end of his initial spell of 1 for 16, he was averaging 89.8mph, the third-fastest new-ball spell of five or more overs since 2006.Archer returned to the IPL with a bang this season•BCCI

****

Having watched the previous delivery go by in a flash, Karun Nair barely moved his feet to this one. An impulsive twitch brought the inside half of his bat into play, which just about saved him from the nip down the slope that had done for Jaiswal. This delivery had designs on Nair’s front pad, maybe even some stumps.By now, the near-30,000 spectators inside Lord’s were transfixed. Just as Jasprit Bumrah had demanded their attention earlier in the day, here was Archer, keeping them on the edge of their seats, with only that familiar shuffle – head down, back to the top of his mark – allowing them a moment to lean back and catch their breath.The nagging length was there, his pace with the new Dukes ball was amplifying every available bit of movement and drama. This is why so many fans kept faith with the idea of Archer. That he could come again, eliciting bygone brilliance here and now.It is also why the ECB has invested so much in him. The central contracts, the round-the-clock care, the expertise of industry-leading surgeons such as Rowan Schouten (back) and Roger van Riet (elbow), and the leeway to indulge home comforts and, eventually, cede to his forceful request to enter the recent edition of the IPL.That caused some alarm. The IPL’s stipulation on entering 2025’s auction or risk being banned from the next two editions was, understandably, too big a risk for Archer, even if the ECB wanted him fresh for as much or as little of this India series and the winter’s Ashes as possible. The masterplan was into his final throes – but was Archer getting cold feet?Far from it. Sure, he was wary, as much about his luck as history and his age. But the 30-year-old’s desire to get back to Test cricket has never dimmed.Jofra Archer returned to his native Barbados for the T20 World Cup last year•Getty ImagesThe kid at home in Barbados, posting constantly about the cricket he was watching, had become an adult posting intermittently about the cricket he was watching. Stokes bit back at the suggestion that Archer had been kept around for the Headingley Test in order to persuade him to keep the format on his agenda. “Look, he didn’t need any more reason to find any more desire,” Stokes said, and he should know, having never stopped checking in on Archer through his years of rehab.Rightly or wrongly, Archer also carries guilt. Speaking during last year’s T20 World Cup, he revealed that not playing made him feel like a burden. “I’ve seen a few comments, people saying ‘he’s on the longest paid holiday they’ve ever seen’,” he said of barbs from keyboard warriors in his mentions and comments.Here, in real life, there were no haters.

****

Can you really come back if you have never been away?Since Ahmedabad 2021, Archer has played 41 matches for England. All have come in white-ball cricket, and featuring in two international tournaments in that period skewers the notion of one returning from the wilderness. Nair, the man who placed meaningful bat on ball for this final delivery of the over, has more of a claim for that narrative.Archer in his delivery stride on his return to Test cricket•Getty ImagesThere was a moment, when that final ball was gathered at midwicket, that the crescendo-ed whoops that had greeted Archer’s run-up tailed off into a drop of silence.It was a pause to catch your breath. A moment to glance at the scoreboard and realise Archer’s first over was done. A realisation that now, this Dukes, in other hands, won’t dance as smooth, sing as sweet, or sting as sharp.All those emotions from all those people soon joined as one again, as they coo-ed for an encore from Archer who, simply by collecting his cap off umpire Sharfuddoula, had already exited the stage.Archer would bowl nine more overs, closing out the day with 1 for 22, to finish as England’s most economical and threatening bowler. Like Bumrah, a singular threat, a singular thrill. But unlike Bumrah, a vindication of the excitement and anticipation that had been underpinned by trepidation.This is a new Archer. One we have seen building out in the open in patches, but behind the scenes for years.In an era when most blockbuster Hollywood productions are modern remakes of beloved classics, it is not unfair to suggest that Archer will be seen as a peak example of this trend. He is not quite the original, and probably never will be.But he remains compelling theatre, heart-warmingly brilliant and, now, an embodiment of spirit. If you need to know how deep a man must go to reclaim what he really wants, you’d do well to chart his return to the Test stage.And that’s just from one over.

Malan-Brook shoot-out intrigues, but form of England veterans remains the major focus

If England are to defend their title, input from Stokes, Root, Buttler, Rashid et al will be key

Matt Roller08-Sep-2023It resembled an old-fashioned shoot-out. With the ICC final World Cup selection deadline looming, Harry Brook and Dawid Malan walked out to open the batting together in the Cardiff sunshine. Naturally, their first task was to help England beat New Zealand in the first ODI – but the subplot was clear.At least one of Brook and Malan will be in England’s 15-man squad for India, and possibly both. England are in no rush to make a firm decision – they have nearly three weeks to finalise their travelling party – and will hope that an obvious solution presents itself, whether through form or through injury.Malan made the stronger case, scoring a fluent half-century – the eighth time he has passed 50 in his 19 ODIs – but fell to Rachin Ravindra for 54 in the first over of spin bowled. Brook, who arrived in Wales late on Thursday night and played after Jason Roy suffered a back spasm, made 25 off 41 before gloving a sharp Lockie Ferguson bouncer behind.What did it all mean? Malan’s innings encapsulated the differences between T20I and ODI cricket. He has long insisted that 50-over cricket is his strongest format and he played several crisp cover-drives to get England up and running in the Powerplay, resembling a completely different batter to the one who lacked tempo in the preceding T20Is.Brook clipped the first ball of the match for four through fine leg but only managed one more boundary, playing second fiddle throughout an opening partnership worth 80. He was thrown in at the deep end, opening in a 50-over match for the first time; this was further proof that even the best young players will have the occasional off-day.In truth, the picture has hardly changed: Malan is still a consistent 50-over run-scorer; Brook remains a hugely exciting young player. There may be some concern over Roy’s fitness, having missed most of the Blast with a calf tear, but England have every reason to be cautious rather than risking players at this stage.Jonny Bairstow was rested as a precaution with a shoulder niggle. “We didn’t want to take a risk,” Jos Buttler explained. Mark Wood was not required either: “He’s still building back up… we don’t need to rush it. Getting him fully fit and ready for travelling to India is the priority.”Dawid Malan stole a march on Harry Brook in the fight for a World Cup squad berth•PA Photos/Getty ImagesIf anything, then, Friday was a reminder that the identity of England’s fringe players is unlikely to be the difference between success and failure at the World Cup. For all the intrigue around selection – and the interest in Brook specifically – major tournaments tend to be won by teams whose senior players perform.Four years ago, at the equivalent stage in their World Cup preparations, there were two spots for England to resolve in their squad: which reserve seamer would Jofra Archer squeeze out, and who should be their spin-bowling allrounder? They backed Tom Curran and Liam Dawson over David Willey and Joe Denly – and at the tournament itself, neither of them played a game.Careers can hinge on such decisions: Willey thought his days as an England player were over after his last-minute omission in 2019 and cherishes the medal he picked up as a member of last year’s T20 World Cup squad, despite the fact he did not make an appearance.But whatever England choose to do this time around, the performance of the players who are guaranteed to feature will be far more relevant to their progress in the tournament than decisions around who should be their spare batter or their sixth seamer.Related

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Take Joe Root. He struggled to get going on Friday, making 6 off 15 balls before slog-sweeping Ravindra to deep midwicket, and the next three ODIs will be vital match practice for him in a format he has hardly played over the last four years. Whether he scores 250 runs or 500 in the World Cup will make a huge difference to England’s hopes.Much the same is true of Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler, who slipped seamlessly back into 50-over tempo in a partnership of 88 off 104 balls. England would have been runners-up but for their 110-run stand in the final four years ago: “The thing about World Cups,” Stokes said on Thursday, “is they can come down to who can handle the pressure best.”England lacked a cutting edge with the ball, with Wood kept in mothballs ahead of more important tests to come and Adil Rashid unavailable to bowl due to cramp while Devon Conway and Daryl Mitchell were building their unbroken, match-winning partnership of 180.Rashid’s eventual figures – 1 for 70 in eight overs – were ugly by the conclusion, but redeemed by the context, having to bowl to two set batters with the field up as England chased the game – that too at a ground with notoriously short straight boundaries. Again, England will not be worried so long as he comes good when it matters – as he did in Australia last year.
It is not that England don’t care about results – they were rightly proud to beat Bangladesh 2-1 earlier this year, given Bangladesh’s formidable home record – but they have accepted these shadow bouts for what they are. “Of course, we’re disappointed,” Buttler said, “but there’s a lot of quality in the team.”Tom Latham, New Zealand’s captain, joked that these two teams are playing a five-match series: four September ODIs in England, then a fifth in Ahmedabad on the opening night of the World Cup in four weeks’ time. But England’s approach has long been attuned to the futility of modern bilateral series: these games will be quickly forgotten so long as they win on October 5 … and beyond.

Something's missing, but Sunil Narine keeps finding a way

The intense scrutiny of his action has taken away the big turn, but he’s reinvented himself and remains hugely influential

Alagappan Muthu24-Sep-20212:53

Dasgupta: KKR’s plan to use fast bowlers against Mumbai’s middle order worked well

The Mohawk is still there. The bling too. And those full sleeves? Yeah, he probably wears them in the shower. Everything that makes Sunil Narine makes him box-office.But there’s something missing.He remains one of the Kolkata Knight Riders’ go-to bowlers. An architect of wickets and victories. The one he took on Thursday night was crucial to an all-round performance that keeps the play-off dream alive.But there’s something missing.He came on to bowl as early as the third over against Mumbai Indians. In his third over, the 10th of the innings, he brought down Rohit Sharma.But there’s something missing.The wicket was the result of extra bounce. Rohit had set up to slog-sweep a ball that got big on him and ended up caught at long-on.But there’s something mis–that’s it!Why is Narine relying on something as subtle as extra bounce?Think back. Back to 2012, when Kolkata Knight Riders signed this miracle worker for more than 10 times his base price. Back to those times that no one knew how, if and which way the ball would turn. There’s this curly-haired chap who always hangs out in the Mumbai dugout these days. Ask him about how he once tried to play a cover drive to a ball a bolt of lightning that ripped right through and cuh-lean bowled him.Watch the IPL on ESPN+

Sign up for ESPN+ and catch all the action from the IPL live in the US. Match highlights of Mumbai Indians vs Kolkata Knight Riders is available here in English, and here in Hindi (US only).

Narine was in his first over that night in 2013 when he made Sachin Tendulkar look like he didn’t belong. He was a spinner at the top of his game. A magician in whose hands the ball went from being just a piece of leather into a force of nature.All that has changed now. The crippling scrutiny on his bowling action – he has run into trouble at both IPL level and higher – has forced Narine to let go of some of his tricks. And it’s been tough. Perhaps even overwhelming. Why else would a player of his quality choose to withdraw from a World Cup?Eoin Morgan and Sunil Narine celebrate Rohit Sharma’s dismissal•BCCIThere are those who are skeptical of the ICC and the way they police suspect actions. Saqlain Mushtaq, for one, has often wondered how the 15-degree flex rule even came to be. And Mohammad Hafeez thinks there’s something fishy in the way some bowlers keep getting called up repeatedly and some just aren’t.Narine couldn’t be bothered with conspiracy theories. Like Joey if he could no longer say ‘how you doin’ or Courage if he could no longer be the cowardly dog, he had to find a way to reinvent himself. And so this new avatar was born.In the 2012 IPL, because of the way his balls turned big, turned quick and turned in every which way, he generated a false shot roughly once every three deliveries. Nine years later, relying on subtlety rather than mystery, Narine remains a nuisance, drawing a false shot once every four deliveries.This is how he was able to bounce back from conceding 11 off his first over to giving up just four, three and two (plus a leg bye) off his next three overs, while dismissing Rohit and sucking precious momentum out of a Mumbai innings that had gotten off to a flier.”I’m coming off a good amount of cricket,” Narine said while picking up the Player-of-the-Match award, “The Hundred, CPL and out here. It’s been a while since I’ve played so much cricket and I’m happy to be playing as much as possible. I’ve put a lot of work into my action and it’s getting better and better. So just to be able to continue the good work and hopefully I can get in good performances that contribute to my team’s victory.”But there’s something missing.And it’s okay. Because although Narine at his peak was an absolute spectacle, the one we have now might be just as good. He is a reminder that no matter what comes your way, you just never give up.

Yankees Linked to Trade Deadline Reunion With Former Left-Handed Pitcher

The Yankees are expected to be buyers at the trade deadline, and it's no secret that the team is in need of some starting pitching.

MLB insider Jon Heyman connected the team to a potential reunion with a veteran pitcher ahead of Thursday's deadline, floating the idea of New York bringing back Nestor Cortes Jr. in a trade with the Brewers.

With Jacob Misiorowski bursting onto the scene, Milwaukee finds itself with an abundance of starting pitching, a favorable position to be in heading into the deadline. With an excess of arms, the Brewers could be an ideal trade partner for the Yankees, who could bring back Cortes less than a season after he left the organization.

Cortes pitched for the Yankees from 2021 to '24, making the All-Star Game in 2022. He made 126 total appearances and 85 starts in New York, boasting a 3.61 ERA throughout his tenure with the team.

In 2025, Cortes has made just two appearances for the Brewers before landing on the 60-day IL. He owns a 9.00 ERA after a rocky start to the campaign. With his return approaching, it's possible his next MLB start won't be for Milwaukee, and Heyman indicated it would make sense for him to wind up back in pinstripes at the deadline.

Chelsea tipped to ‘easily’ sign ‘superstar’ amid ‘mind-boggling’ club stance

Chelsea have been tipped to ‘easily’ sign a ‘top player’ who could become a ‘superstar’ away from his current club.

Chelsea suffer Atalanta blow as Maresca crashes down to Earth

Chelsea’s aspirations of securing automatic Champions League knockout round qualification took a significant hit as they surrendered a half-time advantage to lose 2-1 against Atalanta in Bergamo on Tuesday evening.

Enzo Maresca’s side appeared on course for a crucial victory when Joao Pedro slid home his maiden Champions League goal in the 25th minute, capitalizing on Reece James’s delivery after a VAR review confirmed the captain had timed his run perfectly.

The Blues controlled proceedings during the opening period, with their man-to-man pressing disrupting Atalanta’s rhythm and limiting the Serie A outfit’s opportunities.

However, Josh Acheampong did have to produce a stunning goal-line block to deny Ademola Lookman what appeared a certain opener.

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Maresca’s decision to withdraw the booked Trevoh Chalobah at half-time appeared to kickstart a dramatic shift in momentum.

Chelsea weigh up January move amid Delap injury with £22m deal already agreed

The Blues are short up front.

By
Emilio Galantini

6 days ago

James spurned an excellent opportunity to extend Chelsea’s lead early in the second period, firing wide from a promising position on the edge of the penalty area.

Atalanta immediately made Chelsea pay, with Charles De Ketelaere delivering an exceptional cross from the right flank, allowing former West Ham striker Gianluca Scamacca to rise completely unmarked inside the six-yard box and nod past Robert Sanchez.

The Belgian forward then completed the turnaround with seven minutes remaining, his deflected strike looping over Sanchez after taking a wicked deflection off Marc Cucurella’s retreating leg.

Despite late opportunities for Alejandro Garnacho, James and Pedro, Marco Carnesecchi’s goalkeeping ensured Atalanta claimed all three points.

It was a humbling night for Chelsea, merely a fortnight after they were being talked about as genuine Premier League title contenders.

There is clearly still work to do before the west Londoners can be discussed in that manner, with Maresca lamenting Chelsea’s defending in a post-match press conference.

With holes still ever present and Maresca constantly rotating his first-team due to injuries, there may still be more work to do in the transfer market next year.

Chelsea spent nearly £300 million in the summer, but they remain pretty light in midfield with the constantly-injured Roméo Lavia sidelined for yet another extended period.

As a result, the west Londoners have been tipped to move for a new midfielder in 2026, and Man United’s Kobbie Mainoo could be available.

Chelsea tipped to 'easily' sign Kobbie Mainoo from Man United

Chelsea have been repeatedly linked with the Red Devils sensation these last 12 months, with Mainoo on the fringes of Ruben Amorim’s first team and potentially poised for the exit door.

Speaking on The Good, The Bad and The Football podcast, ex-United midfielder Nicky Butt has tipped Chelsea to sign Mainoo amid his current club’s ‘mind-boggling’ stance when it comes to young stars.

The 20-year-old, who burst on to the scene at Old Trafford in 2023/2024, was once a revelation under Erik ten Hag and one of England’s rising stars.

Mainoo’s excellent form that year, including an FA Cup final goal against Man City, earned him a spot in Gareth Southgate’s England squad for Euro 2024.

He played in all but one of the Three Lions’ games that tournament, including a start in the final against Spain, so finding Mainoo in this situation at United is truly bizarre.

The talented and versatile midfielder seemingly doesn’t fit into Amorim’s tactical blueprint, with Chelsea believed to still be keen on Mainoo amid their search for world football’s most elite young talents.

This could be a match made in heaven.

Man Utd could break club-record transfer fee to sign "amazing" £100m midfielder

Manchester United could break their transfer record to sign an “amazing” midfielder, who has now emerged as one of their top targets.

Man Utd looking to sign new midfielder who could replace Casemiro

Casemiro has emerged as one of Man United’s most consistent performers this season, making 12 appearances in the Premier League, during which time he’s picked up three goals and one assist, and the Brazilian put in another eye-catching performance against Crystal Palace.

The former Real Madrid man made three interceptions and three tackles, the highest combined total of any player, as the Red Devils fought back to secure a 2-1 win at Selhurst Park, after a concerning opening 45 minutes.

Indeed, Palace went into the break a goal to the good, and it was much-deserved, having recorded an xG of 1.59, compared to 0.92 from the visitors, with Jean-Phillippe Mateta opening the scoring from the spot.

Mateta won the penalty after being played through by Adam Wharton, with the Englishman giving Casemiro the run-around in the first half.

With the Brazil international’s contract set to expire next summer, Man United are now searching for a new midfielder, and they could break their club-record transfer fee by signing Wharton, who has now been identified as a top target alongside Elliot Anderson.

That is according to a report from Manchester World, which states United view strengthening their midfield options as a priority, and INEOS are aware it will take a huge fee to sign an elite option, with Crystal Palace set to hold out for over £100m, which would smash the £89m spent on Paul Pogba.

The need to sign a new midfielder could also be exacerbated by Bruno Fernandes deciding he wants to leave next summer, while Kobbie Mainoo is now unhappy at Old Trafford due to a lack of game time.

Wharton could be "amazing" signing for Man Utd

Lauded as “amazing” by journalist Raj Chohan, the Palace maestro has put in some top performances in the Premier League as of late, impressing against United and picking up an assist in his side’s 2-0 victory over Wolverhampton Wanderers in the previous match.

The 21-year-old ranks in the 82nd percentile for assists per 90 over the past year, having averaged 0.17, while Gareth Southgate has praised his composure, saying: “He played as he’s trained, he receives well, he’s very composed, he plays forward.

“That sounds simple but it’s not a simple thing to do. He plays a lot of one-touch football, he sees a picture when the ball arrives to him.”

Wharton clearly has what it takes to reach the very highest level, so it is exciting news that Man United could break their transfer record to get a deal done.

Rafael Devers Makes Unfortunate MLB History With Brutal Start to Red Sox Season

The 2025 MLB season is only a few games old, but it has not been kind to slugging Boston Red Sox DH Rafael Devers.

Devers is coming off a strangely controversial spring training in which he seemed to publicly go back and forth with manager Alex Cora about whether or not he'd play third base. Ahead of Opening Day Cora declared officially that Devers would be the team's full-time designated hitter going forward. Whether it's the change or the weird vibes surrounding it, Devers has struggled mightily to adjust. To a historic degree, as a matter of fact.

In the first three games of the Red Sox's season, Devers has had 12 at-bats. He has recorded zero hits in those at-bats. Worse, he's struck out 10 times. And with his 10th strikeout on Saturday in Boston's loss to the Texas Rangers, Devers became the first player in MLB history to strike out 10 times in the first three games of the year, per ESPN.

Baseball players go through slumps all the time. This isn't to say the Red Sox should start ringing alarm bells. But as far as slumps go, this one is . Devers can't even get wood on the ball right now, a shocking sight given he had 28 home runs and knocked in 83 RBI in 2024.

Not exactly what the Red Sox are looking for from their $300 milion hitter, that's for sure.

He was as bad as Hato: Maresca must now ruthlessly drop 5/10 Chelsea dud

That was certainly an entertaining game, but not for the reason Chelsea would’ve been hoping for.

Enzo Maresca’s side travelled to Baku to take on Qarabağ in the Champions League, but instead of building on their derby win at the weekend, they drew 2-2.

While there were a few players who looked good on the night, such as Estevao, most of the team played seriously poorly.

In fact, some of the team, like Jorrel Hato, have almost certainly played themselves out of the team for the Premier League game against Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Hato's dire display vs Qarabağ

When Chelsea signed Hato from Ajax in the summer, there was considerable excitement from the fanbase, as the 19-year-old is regarded as one of the best young defenders in world football.

After all, before the move, he had already made over 100 appearances for the Amsterdam side and won six senior caps for the Netherlands.

However, even with this experience, he’s years away from being in his prime years, and so there was an expectation that he would make mistakes for the Blues, and unfortunately, that is what happened on Wednesday night.

Appearances

111

Starts

102

Minutes

9121′

Goals

4

Assists

9

Goal Involvements per Match

0.11

Minutes per Goal Involvement

701.61′

Points per Game

1.86

For Qarabağ’s first goal, the Dutchman was outmuscled and left on the floor for the first shot and then out of the way entirely for the rebound.

Now, one mistake in a game can be down to bad luck and happen to anyone.

Unfortunately, it was the teenager who, via a handball, gave away the penalty for the hosts’ second goal just ten minutes later.

In all, it was, as one content creator put it, a “horror” showing from Hato on Wednesday and one that should see him dropped for Saturday.

Unfortunately for Maresca, other starters also played themselves out of the team.

The Cheslea star who played himself out of the team

There really are a few players you could name here, such as Hato’s defensive partner, Tosin Adarabioyo, who looked just as inexperienced at the back.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

However, in this instance, the starter who has to be on the bench for Wolves on the weekend is Tyrique George.

The Cobham graduate was preferred to Marc Guiu and Liam Delap from the start on Wednesday night, and unfortunately, he did not repay the manager’s faith in him.

In his defence, he did not make a mistake that cost the side a goal, but he also did nothing to help them score one, which, given his position and the opposition, is just as bad.

In fact, the youngster was so anonymous that Maresca decided to hook him at halftime, and while Liam Delap didn’t set the world alight either, he was at least noticeable when the Blues had the ball.

That might sound overly harsh, but it’s an opinion shared by football.london’s Bobby Vincent, who gave the Englishman a 5/10 match rating and generously described it as ‘a fairly quiet evening’ for the striker.

Unfortunately, his statistics don’t make for pleasant reading either, as in 45 minutes of inaction, he produced a combined expected goal and assists figure of just 0.22, took a single shot which was blocked, took just 13 touches – 26 fewer than Robert Sanchez – lost the ball four times and completed just six passes.

Minutes

45′

Expected Goals

0.05

Goals

0

Expected Assists

0.17

Assists

0

Shots on Target

0

Touches

13

Lost Possession

4

Passes Completed

6/7

Dribbles

0

Ground Duels (Won)

2 (0)

Ultimately, George isn’t a bad player, but he was utterly anonymous against Qarabağ and, therefore, must be dropped for the Wolves game.

Enzo Maresca makes January claim with Chelsea star "out for a while" through injury

The west Londoners could be without him until 2026.

ByEmilio Galantini Nov 5, 2025

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