Sanderson battles for Northants as Robson, du Plooy build Middlesex lead

Half-centuries from Sam Robson and Leus du Plooy gave Middlesex the upper hand on the second day of their Vitality County Championship game against Northamptonshire at Merchant Taylors’ School.Robson enhanced his impressive record at the Northwood venue, which includes four first-class centuries, by grinding out a vital 58 while Du Plooy hit an unbeaten 66 as the home side reached 250 for seven, a first-innings advantage of 43.However, Ben Sanderson kept Northamptonshire right in contention with figures of five for 58, regaining his status as Division Two’s leading wicket-taker after being briefly displaced by Middlesex captain Toby Roland-Jones.Northamptonshire were dismissed for 207, with Roland-Jones taking a season’s best of five for 49 – and the visitors’ hopes of restricting Middlesex to a lower total were not helped as Prithvi Shaw shelled a trio of slip catches.Sanderson and Lewis McManus, who had hauled Northamptonshire out of difficulties the previous evening, did enough to usher the visitors beyond the key landmark of 200 as they extended their partnership to 83.Sanderson unfurled a pair of classic drives to the boundary off Tom Helm and thoughts of a maiden first-class half-century must have entered the veteran seamer’s mind as he overtook McManus to reach 40.However, those thoughts were dashed when Henry Brookes bowled Sanderson around his legs and, although debutant Dom Leech cracked a cover boundary to raise the visitors’ 200, Roland-Jones quickly wrapped up the innings by capturing their last two wickets in three balls.In reply, Middlesex’s opening pair both survived close calls during the hour prior to lunch, although they made it to the interval unscathed on a surface with variable bounce and pace.With just a single to his name, Robson edged a rising delivery from Justin Broad through the slips, while Mark Stoneman offered a tricky slip chance off the same bowler and Shaw, going low to his left, was unable to hang on.Sanderson made the breakthrough soon after the resumption, getting the ball to swing and uprooting Stoneman’s off stump for 36, but Robson and Max Holden dug in for an afternoon of laborious progress.Robson cut the seamers with authority to keep the scoreboard moving and passed 50 from 118 balls with a sweet cover drive for four off leg-spinner Yuzvendra Chahal, whose change of ends then bore immediate fruit as he trapped Holden leg before.Northamptonshire might have removed Robson as well in the next over, with Shaw – who had also put down Holden – fumbling another opportunity, but Sanderson made amends immediately after tea with two wickets in as many deliveries.With Robson lbw to one that kept low and Stephen Eskinazi succumbing in identical fashion, Middlesex were suddenly wobbling at 129 for four but a bristling partnership of 72 between Du Plooy and Fernandes was exactly what they needed.Leech eventually brought the stand to an end with his first Northamptonshire wicket, having Fernandes taken at second slip, but Du Plooy remained to nudge his side into the lead with a crisp off-driven boundary.However, Sanderson returned with the new ball and promptly claimed two more wickets in quick succession, completing his third five-for of the summer before Roland-Jones launched a late flurry of boundary-hitting.He took two fours from successive Sanderson deliveries and had just cracked Broad to the fence to earn Middlesex a batting bonus point when the deteriorating light brought play to a close.

A late show from Switzerland! Geraldine Reuteler and Alayah Pilgrim both score in final 15 minutes to give Alisha Lehmann and Co a 2-0 win over Iceland and keep qualification hopes alive

A late flurry of goals from Switzerland ensured their European Championship dream stayed alive as they beat Iceland 2-0.

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  • Switzerland win 2-0 against Iceland
  • Hosts need draw against Finland to progress
  • Iceland crash out and Norway top the group
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    Switzerland beat Iceland 2-0 in their second group game to keep their qualification hopes alive in Euro 2025.

    The players kicked off to a lively atmosphere in Bern as Sveindis Jonsdottir launched the game into action with one of her trademark long throws. Cleared only as far as Ingibjorg Sigurdardottir, the defender rattled the crossbar and the Swiss crowd’s nerves with a terrific volley from the edge of the area as Iceland threatened to upset the hosts.

    Switzerland responded with chances of their own and Svenja Folmli’s powered header found its way into the back of the net via a deflection. However, a check by VAR found that as the corner was floated in, the forward had blocked off and fouled Glodís Viggosdottir and the goal was disallowed. The Swiss crowd thought they had again taken the lead when Iman Beney hit a rocket from 40 yards, but despite appearing to have flown into the top corner, the effort had only found the side-netting.

    Iceland began the second-half as they started the first – by hitting the crossbar. This time, Agla Albertsdottir’s free-kick from range skimmed the top of the upright and bounced over. Undeterred by the Icelandic threat, Switzerland continued to push for the winner. Winning the ball back in midfield, captain Lia Walti robbed the ball, held off a challenge and found Sydney Schertenleib who slipped in Geraldine Reuteler to fire low into the bottom left-corner after 76 minutes. The Swiss crowd, just shy of 30,000, erupted and their celebrations would not be halted this time.

    With time ticking away and the crowd growing more and more confident of victory, Alayah Pilgrim gave them yet more reason to celebrate – dispatching from distance in injury time to ensure the host’s took qualification to the knockout stages into their own hands.

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    Defeat for Iceland means they are out of the European Championships. The result also means that Iceland remain without a win in this tournament since 2013 and face a tough test against already qualified Norway to put an end to that rut.

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    THE MVP

    It is tough to look past the match winner Geraldine Reuteler, but it takes a special performance to stand-out from right backand Iman Beney was a constant threat for the hosts. Her first-half effort would have been the goal of the tournament had it not flown past the wrong side of the post. The 18-year-old has just signed for Manchester City and her new fans will no doubt be excited to see their new star shining on the biggest stage.

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    THE BIG LOSER

    Iceland remain goalless and pointless in these European Championships, crashing out with a game still to play in the group stage. While it remains grim reading for Icelandic fans, they have shown heart in their two defeats against Finland and Switzerland. They may feel they created more than enough chances on Sunday to take a point from Switzerland, but it just was not meant to be.

Shanto says Bangladesh unfazed by off-field turbulence: 'We can do special things here'

Bangladesh captain expects Shakib, whose political future is up in the air, to be fully professional during the series

Mohammad Isam20-Aug-2024

Najmul Hossain Shanto on Shakib Al Hasan: “He knows how to prepare himself”•AFP/Getty Images

Bangladesh have just been through some political turmoil, which has saw their prime minister resign, and a caretaker government take charge of the country. The unrest has even cast a doubt on them hosting the Women’s T20 World Cup in October.Bangladesh’s national side will be in action for the first time since those turbulences, as the men’s team is on a tour of Pakistan, their first fixture in two months. The two Tests form part of the World Test Championship, and captain Najmul Hossain Shanto couldn’t afford to dwell too much on the incidents back home, even as one of the consequences of the government getting toppled was his team-mate Shakib Al Hasan’s stint as member of parliament coming to an end.But Shakib hasn’t spoken publicly about it yet, instead focusing more on his cricket. Shanto, too, expects Shakib to remain himself – as professional as possible.Related

'When we came back from 26 for 6, it was a new dimension': how Bangladesh pulled off their greatest feat

Muted Rawalpindi shows little love for a Pakistan in rehab

Bangladesh pacers vs Pakistan batters: a song of ice and fire

ICC moves women's T20 World Cup out of Bangladesh to the UAE

Shakib and Mushfiqur: the yin and yang of Bangladesh cricket

“Shakib is in a good shape – in practice and preparation. He has the desire to do well,” Shanto said on the eve of the first Test against Pakistan in Rawalpindi. “He has showed his commitment in every practice session. He is a professional cricketer. We all treat him as a cricketer. He [has] played this game for so long that he knows his role; he knows how to prepare himself. I am not thinking about his political career. I hope that he will do something special in this series.”Given his all-round role, Shakib remains key for Bangladesh, although the visitors also have with them Mehidy Hasan Miraz, who is a respectable batter in the lower order. Mehidy is likely to be included in the XI too to prevent Bangladesh from having a long tail. Batting him at No. 8 might allow Bangladesh to play three fast bowlers and two spinners, including both Shakib and Mehidy. Shanto hinted that one of those quicks could be Nahid Rana, considered Bangladesh’s fastest bowler with speeds up to 150kph.”There’s a chance of him playing. He is in good shape,” Shanto said. “We will have our normal combination, it seems. Pacers will have an extra advantage on this wicket, so we will look at that when thinking about our XI. [Shadman Islam] is batting very well. He is preparing well. He made runs [recently against Pakistan A] in Australia.””It is true that we haven’t been batting well in the last few months”, Shanto on himself and Litton Das’ form•AFP/Getty Images

Bangladesh are in dire need of a batting revival. The understanding that Rawalpindi could be a favourable pitch for batters is giving them encouragement. Shanto said that they have done enough preparation to get better, which also includes his own form, as both Shanto and Litton Das have been in the headlines after playing poorly in the T20 World Cup a few months back.”We are not looking to do anything extra, but it is true that we haven’t been batting well in the last few months,” he said. “We didn’t go well in our last Test series [against Sri Lanka, in March-April]. Having said that, I think we are well prepared for this Test series. The players have used the opportunities to prepare properly. They believe that we can do better with the bat.”I have always looked to develop my skills as a batter. Every practice session has been about improving in those areas where I lack. I am hopeful that it will help me in the matches [against Pakistan].”Shanto, meanwhile, remained positive that Bangladesh have enough reason to be confident for the series opener in Rawalpindi, especially with their fast-bowling unit.”Records can change. It won’t be easy [for Pakistan],” he said. “We have a balanced side. We believe we can do special things this time. We are excited to play here. We have developed a good pace-bowling unit, we have four quality spinners, [and] we covered all the bases that will help us make the team tomorrow. The seamers get a bit of benefit here, so they are excited to do well in this condition.”

Nottingham Forest readying transfer play to sign "talented" Man City star

In an attempt to weaken their top-five rivals, Nottingham Forest are now reportedly readying a big transfer play to sign a Manchester City star who’s not short on potential suitors.

Leicester clash now a must-win for Nottingham Forest

After one win in their last five Premier League games, Nottingham Forest are in danger of derailing their season at the worst moment possible, with just three games remaining to claim Champions League qualification.

A 1-1 draw against Brentford last time out at least ensured that they avoided three consecutive defeats in all competitions, but Nuno Espirito Santo will be well aware how important victory against Leicester City is this weekend.

The Nottingham Forest manager told reporters in his pre-match press conference: “We are always aware of the quality of our opposition, and this is the responsibility of the players no matter what situation the team is in.

“Both sets of players are going to give their all, and as long as we are the better team, we should be proud. We expect a tough match and it’s an East Midlands derby and it means a lot for all of us at the club.

Nottingham Forest believe they can sign "exceptional" £50m star this summer

The Tricky Trees are keen to sanction reinforcements.

BySean Markus Clifford May 10, 2025

“Looking back at our last game, we insist we have to be more clinical, improve on set pieces, create more and defend properly. Everything we have done during the week we have to bring to the game. This is what we have to evaluate if we’re going to the fundamentals that we want to.”

What Champions League qualification would do for Nottingham Forest in the transfer window this summer cannot be overstated, especially as they reportedly go in pursuit of signing one particular Manchester City midfielder.

Nottingham Forest readying McAtee move

According to The Boot Room, Nottingham Forest are now readying a big transfer play to sign James McAtee from Manchester City this summer. The midfielder is reportedly keen to leave the Etihad in pursuit of a starting place elsewhere, opening the door for those at the City Ground to make their move.

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola reacts withJamesMcAtee

That said, Forest aren’t alone in the race for his signature. Reports have also revealed that the likes of Bayer Leverkusen are also interested in the City graduate and see him as an ideal player to replace Florian Wirtz.

Of course, the advantage that the Bundesliga club have is that Manchester City are one of the reported clubs chasing a deal to sign Wirtz this summer.

Described as “talented” by football talent scout Jacek Kulig, McAtee is likely to have a decision to make when the summer transfer window arrives. However, whether that ends with a move to Nottingham Forest remains to be seen.

Arsenal face Ademola Lookman competition as Napoli eye Atalanta winger after Victor Osimhen is sold amid new Galatasaray bid

Ademola Lookman has emerged as an option for Napoli as they prepare to add attacking options amid Victor Osimhen’s possible move to Galatasaray.

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Napoli view Lookman as a priority targetArsenal also exploring a move for Atalanta winger27-year-old valued at around €50mFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

With a significant cash injection expected from Osimhen heading out the door this summer, the Serie A giants are planning to strengthen both their attacking and wide options, and reports one of the names on their radar is Lookman. The Atalanta winger, who dazzled in the 2024 Europa League final with a hat-trick, is reportedly being lined up as a crucial signing alongside a striker.

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Lookman's stock has been on high since his legendary hat-trick in the 2024 Europa League final. The 27-year-old winger is under contract with Atalanta until 2027 and is currently valued at around €50 million (£43m/$49m).

Napoli are interested in bringing the Nigerian international to fill the void left by Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, but they aren't alone in the chase. Arsenal have long admired Lookman and are exploring the option to bring him back to the Premier League, while West Ham and Atletico Madrid are also said to be monitoring his situation.

DID YOU KNOW?

Despite the interest from English clubs, it has been reported that Lookman is not currently interested in a Premier League return, which could give the Serie A giants an edge.

Still, Napoli are keeping other options on the table. If a move for Lookman doesn’t work out, they are reportedly ready to shift their focus to Liverpool’s Darwin Nunez and Bologna’s Dan Ndoye as backup targets.

AFPWHAT NEXT FOR LOOKMAN AND NAPOLI?

Napoli may make an official move once Osimhen’s transfer is finalised, but competition for Lookman’s signature is expected to heat up in the coming days. Atletico have reportedly begun early talks with his camp and are willing to meet Atalanta’s asking price. With Arsenal, West Ham, and Napoli all in the race, Lookman’s next move could lead to a bidding war, which is what Atalanta would be hoping for.

ألونسو ردًا على سؤال بشأن هجوم ريال مدريد: سأقع في مشكلة.. ولن أبالغ مع فينيسيوس

أكد تشابي ألونسو، مدرب نادي ريال مدريد، على قوة ليفانتي، قبل مواجهة الفريقين يوم غدًا الثلاثاء، ضمن منافسات الجولة السادسة من بطولة الدوري الإسباني للدرجة الأولى.

ريال مدريد يسعى إلى تحقيق الفوز على ليفانتي، من أجل مواصلة تصدره لبطولة الدوري الإسباني والاستمرار في الانتصارات.

ويتصدر ريال مدريد الدوري الإٍسباني برصيد 15 نقطة وبالعلامة الكاملة من 5 انتصارات.

اقرأ أيضًا .. فالدانو يحذر فينيسيوس: عليك إقناع ألونسو.. وما تفعله عدم احترام

وبدأ ألونسو مؤتمره الصحفي في لقاء اليوم والذي نقلته صحيفة “آس” بالحديث عن لقاء ليفانتي، حيث قال: ”أي مباراة خارج ملعبنا ليست سهلة وليفانتي خصم شرس ولديهم مدرب مميز، غدًا علينا القيام بالكثير من الأمور بشكل جيد وأن نلعب بجودة عالية وإيقاع متسارع وتركيز عال”.

وعن الكرة الذهبية وما إذا سيكون هناك مفاجأة بعدم فوز نجم باريس سان جيرمان، عثمان ديمبلي، بالكرة الذهبية، أجاب ألونسو: ”الأمر ليس من شأني، لست جزءًا من لجنة التحكيم الخاصة بالجائزة ولم أفكر كثيرًا في هذا الأمر، أفكر فقط في ليفانتي”.

وأضاف: ”نحن أفضل ونتحسن لكننا ما زلنا في مرحلة البناء، في المباراة الماضية لعبنا بشكل جاد وفعال وهذا يخبرنا بالأشياء الجيدة التي نقوم بها، لم نكن هناك في هذا المستوى إلا لفترة قصيرة، ويجب أن يكون لدينا طموح للمزيد، نحن متعطشون ونريد الحصول على الكثير من النقاط ولهذا يجب أن نفوز بالعديد من المباريات”.

وأوضح عن اعتراض بعض اللاعبين على تغييرهم في المباريات: ”كنت لاعبًا وعندما كان يتم استبدالي لم أكن سعيدًا، لقد تعاملت مع الأمر بشكل طبيعي ولا أبالغ في هذا”.

وعن تألق ألفارو كاريراس مع ريال مدريد، أردف ألونسو: ”كان متفائلاً، لكن شخصيته وروحه التنافسية فاجأتني بشكل سار، يرتكب أخطاء قليلة جدًا ويتمتع بعقلية رائعة، من المذهل مدى تأثيره الفوري ولدينا أيضًا فران جارسيا وديفيد ألابا وفيرلاند ميندي في هذا المركز، لكن أداء كاريراس ممتاز”.

وعن فينيسيوس جونيور وغضب الأخير من استبداله ضد إسبانيول تابع تشابي: ”في اليوم الذي خلف مباراة إسبانيول، كان جميع اللاعبين سعداء بالفوز وهذا ما نحتاجه، أن نكون فريقًا جماعيًأ، الجميع يفهم الدور الذي نريده للفريق والذي علينا أن نضيفه”.

واستمر ألونسو في الحديث عن فينيسيوس، حيث واصل: ”أنا سعيد بما يقدمه فينيسيوس وما زلنا في البداية، لا يزال هناك الكثير مما يجب تقديمه ويجب أن أشعر بأهميته”.

وفتح ألونسو الباب أمام مشاركة جود بيلينجهام وإدواردو كامافينجا بشكل أساسي، غدًا، حيث قال: ”نعم، يمكنهما المشاركة غدًا وتدربا بشكل أكبر مع الفريق”.

وأضاف: ”النتائج تعزز الثقة بالنفس عندما نفوز خارج أرضنا، لكن لا توجد أسرار، أن يكون الفريق متحدًا ويجب أن يلعب الجميع بروح جماعية ليستفيد الفريق”.

وأوضح عن ثلاثي خط الهجوم المفضل له في ريال مدريد: ”هذا سؤال معقد سيوقعني في مشكلة، أنا سعيد ونحن بحاجة للجميع، يجب أن نتطور في بعض الجوانب، هذا واضح لكن هناك قاعدة تبنى وأسلوب يوضع وسيكون الفريق قويًا لبقية الموسم، كان بإمكان البعض تسجيل المزيد من الأهداف والبعض الآخر ينتظر الهدف الأول. لكن الجميع يتطلع إلى ذلك”.

وعن صعوبة خلق الفرص ضد إسبانيول على الرغم من الاستحواذ أجاب ألونسو: ”في المباراة السابقة، واجهنا صعوبة في إيجاد المزيد من الحلول في الثلث الأخير، لكننا تحدثنا محاولين تصحيح ما يمكننا فعله، يجب الاستعداد لجميع مراحل المباراة، البيانات تبقى بيانات لكن تفسيرها قد يختلف”.

وعن ما يتوقعه ألونسو من كامافينجا أردف: ”أنا متفائل بعض الشيء بشأنه لأنه لم ينضم للفريق إلا منذ فترة قصيرة، أعرفه من خلال رؤيته ومن طريقة قراءته للمباريات، لديه إمكانات هائلة وموهبة كبيرة وهناك مكان له في مشروعي، لديه الرغبة”.

وعن عدم استبعاد كاريراس وأوريلين تشواميني من تشكيلة ريال مدريد الأساسية ومشاركتهم في جميع المباريات اختتم ألونسو: ”إنهم مهمون ولم نلعب سوى ست مباريات، لكل شيء وقته وسيدخلون في قائمة المداورة، لا تسألني متى لكنهم سيرتاحون، حتى الآن كانت فترة قصيرة منذ بداية الموسم، وسنرى مع مرور الوقت”.

Babar Azam back as Pakistan's white-ball captain

Babar Azam has been appointed captain of the Pakistan side in white-ball cricket, the PCB announced on Sunday. As reported by ESPNcricinfo a few days ago, the announcement means Shaheen Shah Afridi’s one-series stint as T20I captain comes to an end.”Following unanimous recommendation from the PCB’s selection committee, Chairman PCB Mohsin Naqvi has appointed Babar Azam as white-ball (ODI and T20I) captain of the Pakistan men’s cricket team,” the PCB posted on X.Babar had reluctantly stepped down as captain after the PCB made clear they wanted to name a replacement in November, which led to Afridi’s appointment. At the time, Afridi was the hot favourite to take over as ODI captain, too, though subsequent events meant those prospects receded.For Babar, this is unlikely to be seen as anything other than vindication after the manner of his ouster following Pakistan’s indifferent World Cup. Former PCB chairman Zaka Ashraf had presented his decision to remove Babar as fait accompli, leading Babar to put out his statement of resignation. That, a mere four months and one white-ball series later, the PCB found itself turning back to Babar places him in a significant position of strength.The majority of the four newly appointed members to the selection panel were understood to be in favour in reinstating Babar, though he did have certain preconditions before he accepted the captaincy once more. In discussions with the PCB, he wanted guarantees he would not be removed again on a whim following the T20I World Cup in June, asking for a longer stint at the helm. In addition, ESPNcricinfo understands he has asked for much greater control in matters of selection than he believed he previously had.The PCB’s brief dalliance with Afridi is unlikely to have done his morale much good. The writing was on the wall for him since Naqvi refused to back him at a press conference in Lahore on Sunday, saying at the time a final decision would be made after Pakistan’s training camp with the military ended. But it appears there has been a rapid loss of faith in Afridi’s leadership abilities when he led Pakistan in one series and his PSL franchise Lahore Qalandars. Pakistan lost the T20I series against New Zealand 4-1, and Qalandars won just one game out of ten and finished bottom of the PSL table. Part of the appeal of appointing Afridi, still 23, as captain was he could learn on the job and continue in the role for an extended period of time.Babar’s first assignment since his reappointment is a five-match T20I home series against New Zealand next month.

Ange has found a "generational" talent at Spurs who's the new Mousa Dembele

They might not have won anything, but Mauricio Pochettino’s peak Tottenham Hotspur team was packed with talent.

The North Londoners were blessed with some truly sensational players from front to back during that period.

Harry Kane, Son Heung-min and Dele Alli were scoring for fun, Jan Vertonghen and Toby Alderweireld created one of the best defensive pairings in Europe, and Hugo Lloris was, more often than not, a rock at the back.

conor-gallagher-mousa-dembele-tottenham-opinion

However, perhaps the most underrated player – among non-Spurs fans – of them all from that period was the incredible Mousa Dembélé, and it looks as if Ange Postecoglou may have just uncovered his own version of the Belgian.

Mousa Dembélé's Spurs career

In the summer of 2012, after spending just over two seasons with West London side Fulham, Dembélé completed a £15m move to Spurs.

The former AZ Alkmaar star made an instant impact in North London, scoring on his debut – against Norwich City – and ending his first campaign at the club with 42 appearances across all competitions.

Already an established part of the first team, the Belgian “monster,” as dubbed by Eric Dier, took yet another step forward when Pochettino joined the club in May 2014.

adam-wharton-mousa-dembele-tottenham-opinion

Under the Argentine’s leadership, the Antwerp-born dynamo turned into one of the very best central midfielders in the Premier League, someone capable of winning the ball in his own half and carrying it all the way up the pitch for someone else to finish.

His immense abilities weren’t lost on his teammates or manager either, with Kyle Walker describing him as “the best player I’ve ever seen play football” and Pochettino claiming that he was a footballing “genius.”

In all, the 37-year-old made 249 appearances for the Lilywhites, scoring ten goals and providing ten assists, before moving to the Chinese Super League in January 2019 and retiring four years later.

Dembélé was an utterly sublime footballer, and while the club haven’t been able to replace him, Postecoglou may have just stumbled upon the club’s next version of the Belgian.

Dembélé’s Spurs career

Appearances

249

Starts

181

Minutes

16115′

Goals

10

Assists

10

Goal Involvements per Match

0.08

Minutes per Goal Involvement

805.75

All Stats via Transfermarkt

Spurs' next Dembélé

Now, we are aware that such a label can be both a blessing and a curse for players, but we reckon Lucas Bergvall has more than enough talent to make good on it.

The young midfielder was signed from Swedish outfit Djurgårdens for around £8.5m last winter but didn’t officially join the squad until last summer, and while it took him some time to get up to speed in the first team, he has recently been one of the club’s most impressive players.

Like Dembélé, the young Swede is seemingly a natural in a few positions in midfield, making 34 appearances in central midfield, 16 in attacking midfield and 13 in defensive midfield.

Tottenham Hotspur's Lucas Bergvall in action with Vissel Kobe'sRyoHatsuse

Moreover, while each role requires something a little different from the 19-year-old, be that a dangerous final ball from the ten position or a brilliant interception at the base of midfield, he’s shown one quality that the Belgian star was known for: ball-carrying.

According to FBref, the “generational” talent, as dubbed by journalist Mitch Fretton, sits in the top 3% of midfielders in the Premier League this season for total carrying distance, the top 5% for successful take-ons, the top 7% for progressive carrying distance, the top 10% for carries and more, all per 90.

Finally, while the “uber-complete” teenage phenom, as dubbed by analyst Ben Mattinson, certainly has what it takes to play in the number ten position in the future, it does seem like Postecoglu and Co will be able to get more out of his incredible skillset by playing him in the middle of the park, where Dembélé used to boss games.

Ultimately, while he’s still incredibly young, and a lot could happen over the coming years, it looks like Spurs might just have their next genuinely great central midfielder in Bergvall.

Leading candidate to replace Ange: Spurs want "special" Iraola alternative

The experienced manager could be just what Spurs need.

By
Jack Salveson Holmes

Mar 19, 2025

Want to do something big in the 2019 World Cup – Amir

Mohammad Amir speaks to ESPNcricinfo about life since returning from his ban, getting Kohli in the Champions Trophy final, and why he needs more rest

Umar Farooq20-Nov-20173:59

‘Playing against India and Australia gives me extra energy’


Do you remember how it felt to bowl that first ball on your comeback for Pakistan, against New Zealand?
I was playing after five years so there was pressure. Over five years, I hadn’t really played that much cricket. Before that comeback I think I had played five first-class matches [Grade 2], which is very difficult, specially for a fast bowler. In New Zealand, their conditions, which you know, are very tough. So there was pressure but thank God, I had Shahid bhai’s [Afridi] support as captain. If you have the captain’s support, then you can relax.It was good, though I couldn’t perform that well [he had returns of 1 for 31]. The first T20 was average and I thought I did all right in the ODIs. But the T20s I couldn’t do so well. Overall I just thought I was very lucky that I was making a comeback. Performance is one thing but playing again for Pakistan was the biggest thing for me, the most memorable thing.How different is Amir the bowler of 2010 to Amir the bowler now? Do you feel you have come back to a different game, or have you come back a different bowler?First, if you look around, not just at me but every single person, day by day, as he gets older, he learns things and he learns them by himself. When you are 16 or 17, you think you are right about everything. But when you are over 20, you realise the mistakes you made at 16 or 18. You learn with age. Even now I am learning things and I know what things I can do better.I think people can see that. People point out that I look more mature, that I know how to speak now. You learn these things with time but only if you want to learn. I am trying to learn things I feel I should every day. Getting older, I think, has helped me. I was young back then, now, I’m moving towards getting old! But I think things are going well.Has the game overall, and yours in particular, changed a little?Not a little, but a lot. Now there are two new balls from both ends. This 4-5 fielders restriction [outside the 30-yard circle in ODIs] wasn’t there. And cricket wasn’t as fast-paced as it is now. At that time, 290-300 was a total you could think about defending. But now even 300-plus is not secure. It’s because there’s so much T20 cricket now – there weren’t as many leagues back then. All kinds of leagues have started up – Pakistan Super League, Caribbean Premier League, Bangladesh [Premier League]. I think cricket is tougher now than before.A lot of people remember that 2010 series and the amount of swing you got, and they feel you haven’t been able to get that back since your return. Is that a technical thing that can be adjusted?I don’t think so. When a bowler gets the conditions, he will get swing. If you look at the Champions Trophy in England this year, nobody swung the ball. But when playing the Test series in the West Indies, I got helpful conditions a few times, and it did swing. When I played the Asia Cup in Bangladesh, there was something in the conditions and I got swing. When you come across a really flat pitch, where there is no swing, how can you bring swing?If you see the Champions Trophy final, even though it was a flat track, I was pushing myself a little and I got something, I got some seam as well. I bowled cross-seam, so I got bounce too.As far as this swing thing goes, I’m not sure how the idea of big swing has gotten into people’s heads. Nobody really swings it big anymore. If you look at the pitches, they’ve gone too far in favour of the batsmen. If you look at what used to be swinging tracks in Australia and New Zealand, even in ODIs in England, you get 300-plus runs [now]. In the Champions Trophy final we made 340 [338]. If you use the Duke ball in England you may get swing. In ODIs, with Kookaburra at both ends, with flat pitches, you don’t get as much.But yes as a bowler I can say that technical issues can come up because if you return after a five-year break, you can forget exactly how your shoulder and wrist positions should be. That can happen to any bowler. It happened to me, but I’m working on it and getting better. In the T20I against Sri Lanka – the last one – I got some swing. Then I played domestic cricket for Lahore Whites and the ball swung. This means the work I am doing is coming through. The main thing for a bowler is his wrist position and that, as I’ve said before, is something I’m working on. I think it will get better with time. The more I play, the more I feel my wrist and action are coming back.Mohammad Amir put his name on the Lord’s honours board with an excellent performance•PA PhotosMickey Arthur recently talked about the fact that your bowling lengths in Tests have been a bit shorter than they should be, maybe because of the limited-overs cricket you have played. Has that played a part?Yes, absolutely. When I made my comeback in Tests against England, I was playing the format after five years, so I was a little short. Before that I had played a total of five first-class games. But if you see in West Indies, I started pitching the ball further up and I got six wickets in an innings in the first Test, and got wickets in the other Tests, too. In Tests you have to pitch it a little fuller.But also over my 12-18 months of Test cricket, 16-17 catches were dropped [off my bowling] and these things matter a lot. At the end of the day, people say I am not getting wickets, but what about those dropped catches?What if, say, 10 of those 17 drops had been taken? Many times – a cricketer will understand – if you’re in the middle of a spell, you get one wicket, you get another with it. With me, catches have been dropped and as a bowler you put a lot of energy and planning into a spell to get a batsman out. If a chance is dropped, you have to try and get him out a second time and that takes 3-4 overs, and it takes energy out. People miss these things, because with a wicket, a bowler gets confidence.Had those catches been taken, my average today could have been 20 to 23. These things matter. I think people had high hopes but I know at the end of the day, in cricket you need some luck, which I think in the last year or so I haven’t had.How frustrating have the dropped catches been?It is very frustrating because of the energy a fast bowler uses – all that gets wasted. He comes running in from quite far. At the end of the day, nobody drops a catch on purpose and even the fielder gets frustrated. As a bowler, when a few catches are dropped, yeah that is frustrating. But I think ultimately it’s part of the game. Sometimes impossible catches are taken and sometimes easy ones are put down and you just wonder how that is even possible. So at the end of the day you need luck [smiles].Talk us through your emotions of the two balls you bowled to Virat Kohli in the Champions Trophy final – the dropped catch and then the wicket next ball.Everybody knows if you get Kohli, India is 50% out of the game. Until he is at the crease, India’s chances of winning are 70-80%. If you look at his chasing ratio, he is at the top of the world. He chases well, he performs well under pressure. So our plan was to get their top order – [Shikhar] Dhawan, [Rohit] Sharma, Kohli, the guys who were scoring the runs in the tournament. My plan was that I didn’t want to save runs, I wanted to take wickets. If we could get one or two from the top, we could win the match.The pitch was the kind where you couldn’t stop the runs. Even after they were six down, [Hardik] Pandya was hitting so big – the wicket was that flat. You couldn’t stop the runs flowing, you could only take wickets to win the game.My plan in the first spell was that even if I gave away 35-40 runs in the first five but took two wickets, then we were in the game. So the target was to get these two or three guys out.When Kohli was dropped, I thought half the game was gone to be honest. Because he is the kind of batsman if you give him a chance, he won’t score less than hundred. Ninety-percent of the time, you give him a chance, he gets a hundred. Recently against New Zealand, they dropped him on 15 or 20 and he scored a hundred. He doesn’t give you a second chance.I remembered Fakhar [Zaman] and how he had been out on a no-ball and had then scored a hundred. That kind of thing happens when you are walking back, it came to me immediately and I thought I hope this doesn’t happen to us now.In my mind, I thought he’ll be ready for my inswinger, because the previous ball had been an outswinger. So I thought, 80-90% he would be ready for an inswinger. But I wanted to bowl at him in the same area, and move it away again. If you look at the clips of it, you can see he shaped to play it to leg, he moved to play it to on [side], thinking I was going to bring it in. My thinking was that if I bowl again in the same area, the same ball going away, he might go to play it thinking it is coming in, and edge it to slip again, but it went with the angle to point.What is the difference playing against India and another team?There are two teams against whom my energy is always very high: India and Australia. I get a real boost that I want to do something against them. It is natural because they are two tough teams, very tough teams. You know Australia is a very tough side and India, as a Pakistani, you know everyone is thinking that if you can perform against India, your star value, your cricketing value, image and reputation goes up big time, from nowhere to very high. Even if you haven’t done anything in five games against other teams but manage to do something against India in one match, then it evens up all your performances in a year.Second time lucky: Mohammad Amir celebrates getting Virat Kohli•Getty ImagesGiven that the two sides aren’t playing regular series right now, how would you feel about ending your career without a full series against India?See I’ve always believed you have to be thankful for what you already have, that we are playing cricket, and that is enough. I am representing my country, playing against Australia, England, India, that is enough. Against India, sure, there is that edge. You perform against them, it is something that stays with you an entire career like ‘Amir did this against India, or that’. If you look at Saeed [Anwar] ‘s 194, everyone remembers it till today [because] it came against India. In India-Pakistan games, your star value increases, on both sides, and cricket benefits, cricket boards benefit. And your [ability to handle] pressure levels become very strong.These are pressure games, not about skills, I’ve always believed that. If you play against each other regularly, under all that pressure, you become so good at handling it that in other games, with lesser pressure, it doesn’t bother you, because you’ve gone through such big pressure. So you should have these games.
How have your relations with team-mates been since your return?
To be honest, it’s been very good, and a very relaxed atmosphere. We are all pretty young in the side, and we’ve played with each other at age levels. In Under-19s, if you look, me, Imad [Wasim], Umar Amin, Babar [Azam] was a year junior to us in U-19, Shadab [Khan], [Mohammad] Nawaz, this is all one group.Things are good with Saifi [Sarfraz Ahmed] in any case. There’s also Shan Masood. With Shoaib [Malik] , I’ve always held him in the highest regard. It’s been a very good atmosphere, and I’ve enjoyed it.Shoaib Malik was appointed as your mentor by the PCB when you returned. How has he influenced you?You know if there is one guy in the recent Pakistan teams that I want to look at and follow, it is Shoaib . I look at him and his personality. He is well-groomed, well-spoken now. He knows how to speak to juniors, how to speak to seniors. He is the only guy who you could look at and want to go on that path.What has the reception been like from the opposition when you have travelled?To be honest, when we went to Australia, I was expecting… Australians are famous for sledging but they were very nice to me. And I was surprised. With Mitchell Starc there were verbals, but with the rest, like Warner, Smith and Josh Hazlewood, they were all very good with me. And I was surprised – nobody bothered me in that sense. They were very good, smiling faces. I wasn’t expecting it.Since your return, you’ve had among the heaviest workloads of all fast bowlers [Only Kagiso Rabada has bowled more overs than Amir across formats since Amir’s comeback]. How tough has it been?Very, because after five years, I’ve been playing all three formats regularly after my return. When a fast bowler comes back after a break of five years without playing cricket – that is something I feel I overdid, I feel that was my mistake. I should have spoken to the selectors, to the management and said that I should play this and this cricket for the moment, that maybe I play ODIs and T20s, and Tests later, after I have played some more first-class cricket. I started playing leagues as well, so the workload increased. I don’t think I had done the training required for it. There are many players in the world who play all formats but after a break, my training was such that I couldn’t maintain my fitness.So when I had the injury in Dubai, I spoke to the management for a rest from the Sri Lanka ODIs. I wanted to take those 2-3 weeks to work on my fitness. I spoke to my trainer and had a plan. With T20s it doesn’t matter so much, because you bowl four overs and you can still train that day. But now I’m ensuring there is no break in training. In domestic T20, I haven’t given up my training because it benefits the longer version of the game. Now there’s the BPL – that is T20 – then New Zealand is ODIs and T20s, and I can keep up my training. You can still work in the gym for an hour or so when you play T20s.Now I’ve made a regular schedule for training, which I didn’t have earlier. For two years I was just playing cricket and not resting. Now I have time and am able to work on my fitness.Mohammad Amir struck in his first over upon return•Getty ImagesThere were some rumours recently that you wanted to set aside Test cricket and stick to limited overs.I don’t know where it came from. It wasn’t that I wanted to give up Tests, but I wanted to manage them. I have spoken to the team management about it also. There should be a rotation policy and one is now in place. Management and selectors have done that, which is very good. New guys are coming in, they are getting chances and playing. This is about bench strength. Look at Mitchell Starc, for example: if he plays a full Test series, somewhere along the way he will get a rest from some ODIs. This is a rotation policy. I didn’t say I would retire, I had said I have to see how to manage it and will speak to the seniors about it, like Inzi bhai, Mickey, Saifi bhai, I would speak to them about how to manage Test cricket, T20s and ODIs.So what is the plan? How will you manage it?For example, if we have one main bowler, he cannot play five Tests. If he can play 3-4, then he should rest. At the end of the day, we are humans, not machines, and bodies need rest. If I play five Tests, five ODIs and three T20s also, that would be too much. If I do play five Tests, then maybe I take a break from a couple of ODIs. Through that rotation, your body gets time to recover.So it isn’t just Tests, it could be ODIs as well?Yeah it is just about managing it. If I play all Tests, then maybe I rest for two ODIs. If I play ODIs and Tests, then I rest for T20s. That rest in the middle is not bedrest. It is where you do your recovery: your training, your swimming, it is the time where you rebuild yourself.Given that you were out for so long, have you come back and set yourself any personal goals now?As a bowler, goals never change because it’s always about the number of wickets and the name you make for yourself. Earlier, maybe I used to think, I want to get 700 wickets but now obviously it isn’t possible given the fact that I have lost five years of my career doing nothing. It’s not like I can play for another 15 years, it’s not possible. The amount of cricket we are playing these days means we don’t get enough rest so that’s unlikely. Also, there is no guarantee that I will not get injured or that I will play five years continuously.The 2019 World Cup is my main target. That is the dream of every player to feature in the 50-over World Cup. I missed it in 2011 and 2015, so this upcoming one will be my first and I want to do something in that tournament by which I will forever be remembered in the history of Pakistan cricket.Since your return, who have you enjoyed bowling with the most?[Mohammad] Abbas. At this time, Abbas is bowling the new ball really well with me. That was a problem we were having, in Tests especially, but seeing Abbas I’m very happy. He is very accurate, bowls really well within his limits. That means there is less pressure on me, because he contains it from his end and so at the other end, I can relax a little bit and go for wickets. Otherwise if runs are coming from the other end, you also have to try to stop runs from your end. You go to contain, not take wickets. I’ve really benefited from Abbas at one end.In limited overs, Junaid Khan has been outstanding and I’ve been really happy to have him there.How much do you miss Mohammad Asif at the other end?[]. To be honest, I can’t say anything about Asif. I’m happy right now. Ability-wise I don’t think there is any doubt that he was the most dangerous bowler in Pakistan cricket.As a pair when we bowled together, we were very dangerous for any side. He used to get wickets – fastest to 100 Test wickets for Pakistan [a record since surpassed by Saeed Ajmal and Yasir Shah]. So there is no doubt whatsoever about his ability. Whoever bowled with him enjoyed it. Abbas, I think, is a bowler like him, in that mould and I really enjoy having him at the other end.Recently Karachi Kings appointed Imad Wasim their captain ahead of you, despite your seniority. Do you ever see yourself as a captain in the future?I would hate for it to happen right now in my career. I’m very happy and comfortable as a player. To me, it is better to focus on one thing – I am a bowler, I want to bowl and I want to perform. Because it [captaincy] is such a responsibility, there is a time for it. Right now it’s not even my time to think about it.Every guy who represents his country has leadership material in him. If he is one of 15 guys from 200 million people who are playing and he representing his country, then he has the ability, that is why he is there. When I was asked by Mickey [Arthur] and Salman [Iqbal, owner of Karachi Kings] about me or Imad, I immediately said Imad, it should be him.I love his aggression, which I think a captain should have. He fights when he is playing and he can get his players to fight for him.Can you talk a little bit about the emotions of first, winning that Lord’s Test and taking the last wicket and then this year, winning the Champions Trophy final in England again?I realised in England, after the Champions Trophy final, that in the country where so many people had to bear so much sadness and worry because of me, in the face of that win, God got me to do that performance and I felt like I brought back some happiness to the same people in that country. That was a big thing for me, because I’ve always said it, this was a debt I owed. I had to do something by which the Pakistani nation would be happy with me. That was a day when all Pakistan fans were really happy – I think it was the happiest moment of my life.

رسميًا.. فناربخشة يعلن إقالة جوزيه مورينيو من منصبه

أصدر نادي فناربخشة التركي بيانًا رسميًا، اليوم الجمعة، للإعلان عن الإطاحة بمدرب الفريق جوزيه مورينيو من منصبه، بعدما انتشرت الكثير من التكهنات حول مصيره في الفترة الأخيرة.

وفشل فناربخشة في التأهل إلى منافسات دوري أبطال أوروبا، موسم 2025/26، بعدما خسر في مرحلة التصفيات الأخيرة.

وخاض فناربخشة الجولة الفاصلة الأخيرة ضد بنفيكا، حيث تعرض للهزيمة بهدف دون رد، ليفشل في التأهل إلى دوري أبطال أوروبا، ويكتفي بتحويله إلى الدوري الأوروبي.

اقرأ أيضًا | بكاء مورينيو بعد وفاة لاعبه السابق.. ورسالة مؤثرة

ولكن ذلك الأمر نال استياء مسؤولي فناربخشة الذين استقروا على الإطاحة بـ جوزيه مورينيو من منصبه، حيث لم يعد مدربًا للفريق التركي بعد اتخاذ قرار رحيله.

وقال فناربخشة في بيانه: “لقد انفصلنا عن جوزيه مورينيو، الذي كان مدربًا لفريقنا منذ موسم 2024/25، نشكره على جهوده مع فريقنا، نتمنى له التوفيق في مسيرته المهنية القادمة”.

وسيكون فناربخشة على معرفة بمنافسيه الثمانية في مرحلة الدوري من بطولة الدوري الأوروبي، ظهر يوم الجمعة، عند إجراء القرعة من جانب الاتحاد الأوروبي لكرة القدم.

 

 

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