Arsenal officials hold internal talks over re-signing £199,000-a-week ace

Arsenal chiefs have held internal talks over signing a £199,000-a-week player to replace a member of Mikel Arteta's squad, with this summer set to be a fascinating one.

Edu tipped for record summer spend at Arsenal this year

Sporting director Edu, according to some reports in the media, has pretty big plans for Arsenal when the transfer window reopens.

Arsenal now appear favourites to sign £60 million striker after agent talks

He’s been praised for having “everything”.

ByEmilio Galantini May 14, 2024

Indeed, Arsenal could be set for a record spend this summer, coming after they splashed over £208 million on new recruits in 2023.

Declan Rice

£105 million

Kai Havertz

£65 million

Jurrien Timber

£34 million

Leandro Trossard

£21 million

Jakub Kiwior

£17 million

Rumours suggest Edu is targeting a new striker, goalkeeper, defender and midfielder for Arsenal, but certain players will have to make way if the club are going to invest heavily in Mikel Arteta's squad for the second year running.

Many senior members of the Arsenal team could leave, starting with their academy graduates. Edu could sell Eddie Nketiah, Reiss Nelson and Emile Smith Rowe to fund a move for Newcastle star Bruno Guimaraes, who will soon command a £100 million release clause in his Magpies contract.

Elsewhere, Arsenal are willing to sell both Gabriel Jesus and Thomas Partey, with the high-earning duo thought to be attracting serious interest from Saudi Arabia. There is also the matter of sorting out Aaron Ramsdale's future in north London.

The England international has lost his place between the sticks to David Raya, and has been regularly linked with a move away from Hale End over the last fortnight as we approach the summer window's opening.

Ramsdale would be a potential coup for any side interested in bringing in a new shot-stopper. The 25-year-old is still young with many years still ahead of him, and the former Bournemouth ace already possesses bags of experience playing at the very top level.

Interestingly, Arsenal have been linked with re-signing a former star of theirs to replace Ramsdale – £199,000-per-week Juventus keeper Wojciech Szczesny. The Pole has won 10 major trophies across his career, and he could feasibly help Arsenal win more if he were to make the move back to England.

Arsenal hold internal Szczesny talks as they eye Ramsdale replacement

Fabrizio Romano has backed that Arteta will "100%" sign a new goalkeeper this summer, and now journalist Dean Jones has told GiveMeSport that Arsenal chiefs have held internal talks over a deal for Szczesny.

"It’s true that Arsenal have shown an interest in signing Wojciech Szczesny," said Jones.

"But it is hard to know if there is genuine scope for it to progress at the moment.

"They are on the lookout for a new back-up goalkeeper because Aaron Ramsdale is going to leave after this season, and Szczesny – with his experience and ties to the club – is a really good option to consider. That is why they have had initial conversations about whether it could open up.

"He is definitely not the only option for them though. I have heard of at least two other goalkeepers recently that Arsenal have sounded out about next season."

VIDEO: Rob McElhenney trades life as Wrexham co-owner for shift in football shirt shop as Always Sunny star dons iconic Netherlands jersey in hilarious clip

Wrexham co-owner Rob McElhenney ditched the lavish life of a Hollywood actor to try his hand in retail by putting in a shift in a Manchester shop.

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  • McElhenney appeared in new clip
  • Actor roped into working a retail shift
  • Wrexham owner wore iconic jersey
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The co-creator, actor and writer had the script flipped on him when he paid a visit to the Classic Football Shirts shop in Manchester. Seemingly making a purchase, the Hollywood star was pulled into work a shift at the shop, hanging up shirts, putting signs out and serving customers.

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  • WHAT MCELHENNEY SAID

    Wearing the iconic Netherlands jersey from Euro 1988, the Red Dragons chief appeared in a sketch for the shop's social media account, in which he dropped in to make a purchase, saying to the cashier: "Thank you, enjoy your shift!"

    When the employee replied: "You too," McElhenney spun around in shock and was put to work.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    McElhenney, 47, has become a famous figure in football since he and Ryan Reynolds purchased Wrexham in 2020, bringing worldwide fame to the club thanks to their media savvy and ability to bring in sponsorship and partnerships with huge companies, as well as creating the documentary series.

"Physical" Birmingham star may miss Huddersfield despite hopes of return

With just two games remaining in the Championship this season, Birmingham City's survival chances are still hanging by a thread, with Gary Rowett not helped by a frustrating injury worry ahead of his side's crucial clash against Huddersfield Town.

Birmingham injury news

Since replacing Tony Mowbray in March after the former Sunderland manager had to step down for medical reasons, Rowett has been handed the task of steering Birmingham to safety. So far, it's been a difficult task too. The interim boss has taken charge of six games, winning just twice, suffering defeat three times and drawing once. As a result, safety is now far from guaranteed with Birmingham in a perilous position.

19th

Blackburn Rovers

49

20th

Plymouth Argyle

48

21st (safety)

Sheffield Wednesday

47

22nd

Birmingham City

46

23rd

Huddersfield Town

44

24th

Rotherham (relegated)

24

Looking at how things stand, Birmingham's clash against Huddersfield on Saturday is as big as it gets for Rowett and his side. Win and they'll push clear of the Terriers and potentially into safety if the results above them go their way. Lose, however, and Birmingham could be at least four points adrift of safety come the end of the weekend.

The challenge of the Terriers has become even more difficult after Rowett's injury update too. Despite the manager's previous confidence that Lukas Jutkiewicz could play a part in Birmingham's final two Championship games, the forward is still a doubt ahead of the weekend.

Rowett revealed the news, saying via Birmingham Mail: "I know Jukey really well, he is definitely one that can help us around the group as well. The first thing he said to me is, 'If I'm not available, I want to travel with the team'. That shows a lot about him. Jukey is always that go-to one to get you out of trouble.

"We're hoping that he can recover. You'll see him limping around but he'll still want to play. I'm hoping he can still play some part of the season but I don't want to put too much pressure on that with the injury that he had."

"Physical" Jutkiewicz is a big miss

Expierience can quickly prove to be the key in any relegation battle and Jutkiewicz certainly brings that at 35-years-old. If Rowett wanted a chance to fall to any Birmingham player, Jutkiewicz would be high up on his list. Nonetheless, Birmingham must escape the drop without the help of their veteran forward, unless he manages a late return against the odds.

Rowett worked with the forward in his previous spell at Birmingham and was full of praise for Jutkiewicz, telling Birmingham Mail in 2016: "The second goal a good ball into the box, when Jukey is getting the ball crossed into him and he's in the middle of the goal not many teams are going to be able to stop him.

"That's a real strong start for him in his Blues career, four goals in something like eight or nine appearances. He was a real handful and physical presence at times."

Newcastle eye move to sign Nike-sponsored star in possible club-record deal

Newcastle United have been named as one of the clubs tracking a rising star in what could turn out to be a record deal for the Magpies this summer.

Magpies may require midfield rebuild

After a disappointing season under Eddie Howe, Newcastle could be busy this summer and the focus could well be midfield.

With the Premier League's financial fair play rules continuing to loom large, there is speculation that Bruno Guimaraes may be the crown jewel sacrificed ahead of the new campaign, with the Brazilian having a £100m release clause in his contract and attracting interest from across Europe.

Newcastle move into front row for free agent as club can't agree new deal

The Magpies may have found the perfect addition to their squad.

By
Ben Browning

Mar 20, 2024

There is also concern over Joelinton, whose contract runs out in 2025 as things stand, leaving this summer as the last chance to receive a fee for the ex-Hoffenheim man, whose absence through injury has coincided with Howe's side's poor form.

However, despite all the concern with financial fair play, Newcastle continue to be linked with big-money moves for new additions this summer. Should there be money to play with, the Magpies may have already found a way to spend it.

Record signing on the way?

The latest man to be tied to Tyneside is Ukrainian starlet and Nike-sponsored man Georgiy Sudakov, who is garnering high praise across Europe.

Already capped 12 times for the Ukraine, the 21-year-old has been a regular for Shakhtar Donetsk this season, starting all eight of their games across the Champions League and Europa League.

Heorhiy Sudakov for Ukraine.

Now, TuttoJuve journalist Mirko Di Natale has claimed that Newcastle are one of five English clubs keeping tabs on Sudakov. The Magpies, along with Arsenal, Liverpool and both Manchester clubs have 'requested information' on the youngster ahead of a potential summer move.

A midfielder by trade, he is on the watchlist of plenty of Europe's elite, and has already admitted that the club has turned down offers for him to move away from Ukraine.

"[Shakhtar director] Sergei Anatolyevich Palkin informed me about offers from Juventus and Napoli. Shakhtar rejected Napolis €40m bid”, he explained.

However, he has been given a promise that he will be able to leave in the next two transfer windows, and that played into his new contract being signed.

“I was a little upset at the beginning [that I wasn't sold], but then I understood the club. I still haven’t given my all and the club want to get as much money as possible from my sale,” said Sudakov.

“Therefore, I agreed to extend it by six more months until winter 2028 because the previous agreement was valid until summer. Palkin has said I can go to Europe in six months or a year and trust him and the President.”

As Napoli's rejected bid shows though, he won't come cheap. According to Di Natale, his release clause will likely have to be met, which sits in excess of 100m euros (£85m). That would make Sudakov comfortably Newcastle's record signing, surpassing the £58m that they shelled out for Alexander Isak in 2022.

Newcastle's record signings

Player

Club left

Year

Fee

Alexander Isak

Real Sociedad

2022

£58m

Sandro Tonali

AC Milan

2023

£55m

Anthony Gordon

Everton

2023

£45m

Harvey Barnes

Leicester City

2023

£38m

Bruno Guimaraes

Olympique Lyonnais

2022

£35m

Of course, they are not the only side keen on his signature, but should they find themselves with a gaping hole in midfield and funds raised from a big sale, Sudakov could find himself tempted with the promise of regular Premier League minutes.

New Zealand a tough start for England's new Test approach

Big picture

What is it about New Zealand and the dawn of new England eras? Perhaps it’s that blend of high quality and low jeopardy – the sense that you’re in for a proper test of your mettle, but without all the off-field noise and distraction that might accompany, say, an Ashes or an India series. It’s a match-up that matters, as has already been demonstrated in the riveting T20 tussle earlier this month, but not so much that you’ll be condemned for all eternity if you make a few mistakes along the way.Where better, then, for Joe Root and Chris Silverwood to bed into their new captain-coach partnership? The pocket-size coastal venue of Mount Maunganui, with its curious pimple of a hill on the one side and an industrial estate on the other, would not pretend to rival the Gabbatoir or the ‘G for shock-and-awesomeness, but if, in two years’ time, the core of the England players on parade this week can rock up in Australia with battle plans primed, then once again they are likely to look back with gratitude on this friendly rivalry that has been bubbling up over the past few seasons.After all – and as might have been mentioned a few times since the World Cup final – it was England’s encounters with New Zealand in 2015 that triggered their last great personality transplant, as the coy young things who had been baked to oblivion in the Cake Tin that February were encouraged a few months later to throw a few shapes and see what they might be capable of if they shed their inhibitions. A fair bit, as it transpired …The challenge on this trip, however, may be to rediscover the joys of decorum, for England have made more than a few mistakes where New Zealand are concerned in recent Test encounters. They haven’t won a Test match in the country in six attempts since 2008 – and even then they had to come back from 1-0 down to win the series 2-1. And in their last-but-one encounter at Auckland in 2018, England were lucky to make it to 58 all out, after Trent Boult and Tim Southee had reduced them to a record-threatening 27 for 9 on the first morning of the series.Throw in the battering-ram attributes of the effervescent Neil Wagner, alongside Colin de Grandhomme’s wobbly wiles and Mitchell Santner’s angular spin, with Lockie Ferguson’s already-familiar rapidity lurking on the fringes, and it’s clear that New Zealand, once again, come armed with an attack that most sides in the world would be grateful to call their own.And that’s before we factor in the jewel in the Kiwi crown, the returning Kane Williamson, the imperturbable barometer of their batting fortunes – a man who has racked up two centuries in his last four Tests against England (as well as two ducks, remarkably), and whom Jofra Archer this week warned may be every bit as hard for England to dislodge as Steve Smith proved to be during the summer’s Ashes. And if that does turn out to be the case, then England’s blank in the NZ wins column isn’t going to be filled in any hurry. Ten wins and one defeat in New Zealand’s past 15 home Test matches suggest a win isn’t really on the cards anyway.

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New Zealand v England is available in the US on ESPN+. Subscribe to ESPN+ and tune in to the Test series.

And talking of lessons learnt in Kiwi encounters of the past, it was on the aforementioned 2008 tour that the oft-maligned Peter Moores made perhaps the single greatest judgement call of his ill-fated tenure as England coach, and chose to jettison the misfiring Steve Harmison and Matthew Hoggard, the fading heroes of the 2005 Ashes, in favour of the rising stars, James Anderson and Stuart Broad – and they’ve not done too badly in the intervening years.It’s a moot point as to whether New Zealand’s low-key environment assisted England’s tyros on that occasion – certainly Broad has rarely seemed fazed by his surroundings, even if Anderson’s previous overseas unleashings, in such unforgiving venues as Johannesburg (2004) and Brisbane (2006), seemed to suggest that he benefited from a chance to forget the circumstances and focus solely on his skills.But now, more than a decade later, New Zealand is bound to hold a special place in the memories of at least two more of England’s young bucks, as Dom Sibley braces for his maiden England cap and Ollie Pope, his Surrey academy sidekick, prepares for a recall that will feel every bit like a debut, after the fraught beginnings he experienced against India last year, not to mention the shoulder dislocation that left him sidelined for much of last summer.Whatever transpires, it promises to be challenging and educational, but above all, good-natured. The personnel may have changed a touch on both sides since July, but the core players on both sides will forever share a special bond after those extraordinary scenes at Lord’s four months ago. Nothing but a bit of blind luck has managed to separate the sides across the 50-over and 20-over formats so far. What price on Test cricket’s third tied Test in the coming weeks?

Form guide

(last five completed matches, most recent first)New Zealand WLWWW
England WLWDL

In the spotlight

There’s no getting away from it. Big numbers are expected of Dom Sibley, and for the first time in a long time, “balls faced” will be an acceptable benchmark as England pivot away from the “positive cricket” mantra preached by Trevor Bayliss, in favour of some old-school grit and grind at the top of the order. Sibley’s technique is not among the purest in the game, but then neither is that of his opening partner Rory Burns – let alone Sir Alastair Cook’s, the man whose boots England still need to fill. And like Cook, some of Sibley’s best shots are those that he chooses not to play. If he’s leaving the ball well, everything else falls into place. His stats for Warwickshire in 2019 were immense – 1428 runs at 68.00 with five hundreds. That’ll do nicely.There’s time enough for Root to reverse his mid-career dip, but where there was once a Big Four among contemporary Test batsmen, there’s now clear daylight between the best and the rest. And with his Player-of-the-Tournament-winning exploits at the World Cup, New Zealand’s captain, Kane Williamson, has cemented his right to be spoken of in the same breath as Virat Kohli and Steve Smith. He was playing Test cricket throughout that improbably bowler-friendly tournament, calibrating every innings to the most minute degree, and gauging exactly how many runs his team needed to be competitive. And even though his home summer has been disrupted by a hip injury that led to his omission for the T20Is, he will surely not have mislaid that calculating mindset. There’ll be no more valuable wicket than his.

Team news

New Zealand have resisted handing Ferguson a Test debut – and he has been released for domestic cricket – sticking to the tried and trusted trio of Tim Southee, Trent Boult and Wagner supplemented by Santner’s left-arm spin and de Grandhomme’s medium-paced wobble.New Zealand: 1 Tom Latham, 2 Jeet Raval, 3 Kane Williamson (capt), 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Henry Nicholls, 6 Colin de Grandhomme, 7 BJ Watling (wk), 8 Mitchell Santner, 9 Tim Southee, 10 Neil Wagner, 11 Trent Boult.England showed their hand last week with their selection for their first-class warm-up against New Zealand A in Whangarei and Root confirmed the XI. Sibley will debut alongside his fellow Surrey and Whitgift starlet, Sibley, with Pope embedded at No.6, 18 months after his first coming against India. The key selection is Sam Curran’s left-arm seam (and No. 8 thumping) ahead of his fellow allrounder Chris Woakes, whose record with the Kookaburra didn’t give the selectors much reason to consider him. Archer, such a ubiquitous presence for England already, is set to play his first international outside of the UK and Ireland.England: 1 Rory Burns, 2 Dom Sibley, 3 Joe Denly, 4 Joe Root (capt), 5 Ben Stokes, 6 Ollie Pope, 7 Jos Buttler (wk), 8 Sam Curran, 9 Jofra Archer, 10 Jack Leach, 11 Stuart Broad.

Pitch and conditions

The pitch looked a bit green with more than 24 hours of preparation still to go, but that may just have been a precaution to keep it from drying out in strong winds. Both sides say they expect it to deteriorate a little and offer a bit for spin. Both also reckon it may be tough to get the ball to swing, conventionally or otherwise.

Stats and trivia

  • This will be Bay Oval’s maiden Test match, and only the 10th first-class fixture to have been played on the ground since its debut in April 2015.
  • There have been just 10 ODIs at the venue too, including England’s solitary appearance on their last tour in 2018. England won by six wickets with Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler sealing a low-key run-chase.
  • Since the start of 2018, Tom Latham (65.75), Henry Nicholls (64.35) and Kane Williamson (63.26) all average over 60. Between them they have made 11 centuries and 10 fifties in 11 Test appearances.
  • For all that he has been a fixture on the global T20 circuit for the last few years, with gigs in venues as far-flung as Hove, Khulna, Hobart and Jaipur, Jofra Archer played his first overseas first-class match at Whangarei only last week.

Quotes

“I’m pretty sure we can’t have a super over in a Test so we should be all right.”
Trent Boult doesn’t have any lingering scars from this year’s prior encounters with England, honest..
“It’s a good chance to see where we’re at and for us as a bowling group to be quite creative and do things slightly differently to how we’ve done it before. And to grow as a side, come up with different ideas of how we’re going to get wickets when it does go flat.”
Joe Root, England’s captain, is ready for a tough test of his team’s character.

Pink ball will bring fast bowlers into the game – Virat Kohli

India’s captain has called day-night matches ‘a new way to bring excitement to Test cricket’

Varun Shetty in Indore13-Nov-20191:35

Virat Kohli differentiates between the pink and red ball

India are “very excited” about playing a pink-ball Test, their captain Virat Kohli has said ahead of the two-match series against Bangladesh. India and Bangladesh are the only Test teams other than newly-promoted Ireland and Afghanistan who haven’t yet played a day-night Test. They will both experience the format for the first time when they play the second Test in Kolkata.”It’s quite exciting,” Kohli said. “I think it’s a new way to bring excitement to Test cricket. We are all very excited about that. The pink ball I played yesterday, I felt it swings a lot more as compared to the red ball because there’s extra lacquer on the ball which doesn’t go away too fast. And the seam holds upright quite a bit.”I think if the pitch has extra help for the bowlers then the bowlers will be in the game, especially fast bowlers, throughout the course of the Test match. I don’t quite know how the old ball behaves with the dew and the lacquer going off. It will be interesting to see how much the old ball does. With the pink ball, with the pitch having enough, the life in it will be a very important factor.”The first day-night Test, between Australia and New Zealand, took place in December 2015. India have been the No. 1 ranked Test team for the majority of the period since then, but they have been generally reluctant to play with the pink ball.A brief domestic trial was met with lukewarm responses from the players, and on their tour of Australia last year, India declined to play a day-night Test in Adelaide. New BCCI president Sourav Ganguly, however, was keen on staging a day-night Test in Kolkata, and he met Kohli and found him to be on the same page.”Kohli is agreeable to it,” Ganguly said last month. “I see a lot of reports in newspapers that he is not, but that is not true. The game needs to go forward and that is the way forward. People should finish work and come to watch champions play. I don’t know when that will happen, but it will.”Which pink ball would you like?•Getty ImagesAt the moment, India sit on top of the World Test Championship with wins in all the five games they’ve played, and are strong favourites to win the first Test in Indore. By the time the day-night game comes along in Kolkata, they could have further consolidated their position on the table.In many ways, including the fact that Bangladesh are without two star players, it seems like the ideal time for an experiment that Kohli expects to be challenging. Some batsmen trained with the pink ball at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bengaluru ahead of the series, but for most part, the players will have to try and sneak in pink-ball practice sessions whenever they can. They did this on Tuesday, alternating between red and pink.”I hadn’t played with the pink ball before,” Kohli said. “I was given an opportunity to try and I wanted to, so that was my mindset behind playing with the pink ball. I think everyone else did it as well. You require extra concentration to pick the pink ball suddenly when you’re playing with the red ball. It [the alternating] was to work on the reflexes a little bit as well. Because when you play with the red ball in the net and you arrive at the pink ball, it gets very difficult to pick it up, which can be the case in the game as well. It sort of gives you the match scenario and how it might be difficult to pick it early on. To get into that zone was the reason behind it.”Kohli did emphasize, however, that despite the limited opportunities available to prepare for the day-night Test, the focus is still very much on the first Test in Indore.”In Test cricket I don’t think you can afford to take focus away at all, not even one session, not even one over,” he said. “With the red ball you need to be absolutely precise in your focus, every game that you play, every ball that you play, every situation that you are in. Our prime focus is tomorrow’s Test match. When the pink-ball Test match arrives, as I said we will be quite excited about it.”

Wolves’ teenage sensation could be Joao Gomes’ dream future partner

Wolverhampton Wanderers seem to just keep getting better every week, and Gary O'Neil will be extremely pleased with how his team bounced back from their 2-0 defeat to Brentford last weekend.

On Saturday, Wolves picked up an impressive 2-1 victory away to Tottenham Hotspur, where they were unfortunate to only net twice as they missed two big chances.

Luckily, Joao Gomes was on call to score a brace from midfield, his first of the campaign. The 5-foot-9 ace rose highest in the box to nod home unchallenged in the first half, and he gave the visitors the advantage again, starting a counterattack and sprinting the length of the field to score a first-time cutback.

AFC Bournemouth managerGaryO'Neilapplauds the fans during a lap of appreciation after the match

However, there is a young talent in the ranks that could rise through the academy and become the perfect partner for the Brazilian midfielder.

Joao Gomes' performance in numbers

Gomes isn't particularly known for being a goal-scorer or influencing the game in the final third, so he was most definitely an unlikely hero.

Spurs dominated the ball throughout the game, racking up 71% possession, which meant that the 23-year-old had to remain focused throughout the game and attend to his defensive duties with added concentration.

The 23-year-old was relentless from the first whistle to the last, making six tackles, the highest number on the field. James Maddison was relatively quiet for his standards, thanks to Gomes' tenacity in the middle of the park.

Gomes put in a very similar performance to yesterday's in the 4-2 win away to Chelsea recently, where he also made six tackles, with his defensive ability vital to O'Neil's team.

However, his potential future partner could affect the game at the other end of the field.

Wolves' next midfield sensation

Matthew Whittingham is a player that not many Wolves fans will have heard much about previously, but he is certainly one of the most exciting talents in the academy.

The 19-year-old came through Manchester City's youth setup before moving to the Old Gold in the summer, where he was instantly introduced to the U21 squad.

Whittingham is a left-footed midfielder who can play anywhere in the midfield, which makes him perfect for O'Neil's 3-4-2-1 formation that demands versatility and a well-rounded skill set, especially in the midfield two.

Wolves' academy manager Jon Hunter-Barrett was thrilled with his signing, and he described exactly what the gem can offer:

"He's a pretty all-rounded player, but he offers a lot of versatility, in terms of being able to initiate the attack as well as sustain possession, create and score."

Whittingham's Career Stats

Competition

Matches

Goals

Assists

U18 Premier League

32

8

11

Premier League 2

5

1

1

EFL Trophy

3

0

0

UEFA Youth League

3

1

0

Stats via Transfermarkt

The table above certainly supports those claims, with his goal contribution record at Man City being particularly impressive.

Having a midfielder who can score goals reliably is what could take Wolves to the next level and turn them into a team that challenges for Europe, and Gomes' defensive security would allow the boss to field a slightly more attacking player alongside him. The balance that Whittingham and Gomes could bring has the potential to be both frightening and extremely solid once the former is given his debut in the years to come.

After all, O'Neil must trust the youngster enough to call him up to the matchday squad against Arsenal in December, which is a testament to the promising star. Whittingham has all the attributes to become Gomes' partner in the near future.

Cristiano Ronaldo can make ‘dream’ come true for Khvicha Kvaratskhelia – but Georgia are ‘not afraid’ of CR7 & Portugal in crucial Euro 2024 encounter

Cristiano Ronaldo can make a “dream” come true for Khvicha Kvaratskhelia at Euro 2024, but Georgia are “not afraid” of facing Portugal’s GOAT.

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Last-16 places up for grabsPortuguese already throughMay decide to rest all-time greatWHAT HAPPENED?

With qualification spots still up for grabs in Group F, the battle to secure places in the last 16 is set to go down to the wire. Portugal are already assured of their progression into the knockout stages after picking up victories over Czechia and Turkey.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT KVARATSKHELIA SAID

Georgia have just one point to their name, but victory over Portugal could take them through and Napoli star Kvaratskhelia has said of potentially facing Ronaldo with so much on the line: “He was an idol for me. I'm happy to see him on the field. It was a dream I had [to face him], and we’ll see what happens.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Zuriko Davitashvili is also hoping to face Ronaldo in the heat of European Championship action, but has said of heading into that contest with no fear: “It's a pleasure to face him, but I'm not afraid. I'm looking forward to it, and we want to show that we can play well against these teams.”

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GettyWHAT NEXT?

There is every chance that Ronaldo will be rested by Portugal on Wednesday, with Roberto Martinez in a position to rotate his squad. Kvaratskhelia will be hoping that the 39-year-old takes to the field at some stage, with there a post-game shirt swap lottery to take into account.

Ryan Higgins ignites Gloucestershire as Cheltenham rocks to the Festival spirit

They will be waltzing in Montpellier Gardens tonight. Even the public reading of will have to be postponed. There may even be a knees-up at the Bowls Club and raucous chanting in the Pittville Pump Room. Until the 2019 Cheltenham Festival this classiest of English towns was, with the exception of its racecourse, not comfortable with mayhem Then Gareth Roderick’s six took care of Leicestershire last week and this evening David Payne’s bouncer to Adam Finch, Worcestershire’s last man, was deflected via edge or glove to second slip where the substitute fielder, George Hankins, scooped up the catch.Gloucestershire had won by 13 runs. At once Payne set off a manic lap of honour in which he was pursued by team-mates including James Bracey, the substitute wicketkeeper, who had taken four fine catches during the day. Also sprinting like a madman escaping the asylum was Ryan Higgins whose four wickets had brought his total in the match to seven in addition to his 112 runs. And there was Ethan Bamber, who was loaned to Gloucestershire for the festival and, given his thespian connections, knows a fine stage when he sees it. Two weeks repertory in Cheltenham probably suited him fine. Bamber’s dismissal of Ben Cox, caught by Higgins at mid-on for 42, began a collapse which saw Worcestershire lose their last six wickets for 61 runs and finish three good hits short of their target, which was 246.But Payne and his mates were not alone. On the balcony of this great old pavilion, the coaches hugged and down below in the stands and bars supporters who really should have known better did little dances of delight. No doubt their health insurance will cover any mishaps. One player, though, remained motionless on his haunches for some time. Joe Leach, the Worcestershire captain, knows this result all but ends his team’s chances of promotion. So there was stillness and movement. There was silence and noise. And to think that nine hours earlier the biggest event taking place on the College Ground was the watering of the hanging baskets.Ah yes, the early morning. Let us rewind to the time before Gloucestershire had collected the 23 points which takes them up to joint-second in Division Two with Glamorgan. In the first 45 minutes of the day’s play Gloucestershire’s last two wickets had added a further 35 runs in 12 overs, five of which were sent down by the legspinner, Brett D’Oliveira in preference to Leach, his team’s best bowler. Who, one asked, would Bamber have preferred to face? The decision seemed barely explicable at the time, and those runs, which seemed important then, were to look absolutely priceless seven or so hours later.Anyway, Worcestershire needed 246 and one of the most vital innings in their season had the worst possible start when Daryl Mitchell nicked David Payne’s first ball to Bracey. But Chris Dent, whose captaincy was masterly on this final day, had to rotate his attack carefully because Matt Taylor’s side strain prevented him bowling. Perhaps realising this, Riki Wessels carried the attack to Gloucestershire, driving both new-ball bowlers for fours and clouting Payne over long on for six with a shot borrowed from short-form cricket. When Higgins came on, Wessels moved into overdrive, taking 17 runs off his first two overs and forcing Dent to bowl Tom Smith from the Chapel End just before lunch. A calming over, we thought – perhaps Dent did, too – but Wessels’ attempt to cut the left-arm spinner’s third delivery only nicked the ball to Bracey. Having made 42 off 44 balls Wessels ambled off to have lunch, perhaps reflecting, unduly harshly, that he had brought his downfall on himself.The afternoon’s cricket contrived to be both tense and, in its way, rather tranquil. Higgins returned to his usual tight-fisted ways, conceding eight runs in seven overs and claiming the wickets of Ed Barnard and Ross Whiteley. That left Worcestershire on 100 for 4 but further decline was resisted by the gentle class of Ferguson and the obduracy of Cox during the twenty overs until tea. Ferguson cut both spinners and seamers alike when possible and reached his fifty after three hours’ concentration a few balls before the break.Ferguson, you see, does not do flash. Even in T20 cricket his shots have a trace of orthodox classicism about them. So imagine, if you will, the gentle grace with which he batted this afternoon at Cheltenham and the concern it aroused among home supporters sitting under the giant red and white gazebos which Gloucestershire had considerately erected for supporters seeking to avoid the heat. A silence settled on the ground and remained there for many overs. This was one of those days when the detailed plans of the coaches are bound tightly to the simple hopes of supporters.Worcestershire took tea on 146 for 4 and one imagines that a few in the crowd enjoyed patum peperium. Cox and Ferguson added a further 36 runs after the resumption only for Bamber to make the breakthrough. Three overs later, Benny Howell took the vital wicket of Ferguson when a rather tired cut-cum-force off the back foot edged a catch to Bracey. Ten minutes later, D’Oliveira had gone too, caught by Hankins at slip off the underappreciated Howell. Worcestershire were 198 for 7. Can it be, asked the spectators, and tried to keep a tight grip on their wits.Leach and Wayne Parnell added 31 runs and the balance of the game shifted. Worcestershire supporters, whose presence so enriched this game, began to nurture their own hopes. Then Higgins trimmed Parnell’s off bail and knocked back Dillon Pennington’s middle stump, all in the space of three balls. Finch came in and three overs later Payne rain in to bowl to him. Half an hour later there was a curious spike in sales of sal volatile in the Cheltenham chemists’ shops.Glamorgan and Gloucestershire now lead a group of six counties covered by 20 points. They will effectively be fighting over two promotion places when the Championship returns next month. Any readers with a clear idea of which of these fine teams will win promotion in September are encouraged to write in.But none of that bothered Dent’s players as they went over to the marquee and drank a well-earned beer or two. They returned over the outfield they have adorned so nobly this fortnight and must now prepare for T20 games. But they will remember the matches against Leicestershire and Worcestershire for as long as they play cricket. Indeed, days like this are why they play the game.And there was even a reminder that Cheltenham College is, after all, a school when a page torn from an exercise book drifted onto the pavilion balcony. It read as follows: “Senior School Punishment Ledger: Note to Graves (C) Upper Sixth: Write out 200 times: The County Championship is the greatest glory in English domestic cricket. We do not need The Hundred.”The paper blew away before anybody could grab it. But maybe everyone had seen enough.

Rayudu announces retirement after World Cup snub

Batsman thanks IPL franchises and India captains he has played under in an email to the BCCI

Nagraj Gollapudi03-Jul-2019Nearly two months after not being considered for the World Cup squad, India middle-order batsman Ambati Rayudu announced his retirement from “all forms and levels” of cricket. Although Rayudu was named among five standbys for the World Cup, he was ignored twice when the selectors and the Indian team management opted for Rishabh Pant and Mayank Agarwal as replacements for the injured pair of Shikhar Dhawan and Vijay Shankar.Rayudu’s decision comes a day after India qualified for the semi-finals. Rayudu, 33, sent an email to the BCCI top brass on Wednesday morning where he summed up his career as a “wonderful journey”.”I would like to bring to your kind notice that I have come to decision to step away from the sport and retire from all forms and levels of the game,” he wrote in the email, accessed by ESPNcricinfo. “It has been a wonderful journey of playing the sport and learning from every up and down it brought up on for the last 25 years at various different levels.”Last November Rayudu had retired from first-class cricket in a bid to focus on his limited-overs career, following a successful return to the India ODI set-up after injury troubles.It was a curious decision, and came on the back of the Asia Cup where he had made two half-centuries – one at No. 3 and another while opening – while replacing the captain Virat Kohli, who was rested for the tournament. On the eve of the home ODI series against West Indies, Kohli had said Rayudu was the right person for the No. 4 position “because he’s experienced and he has won many games for his state and in IPL cricket. He has a great one-day record already for India, so I think the batting order is sorted as far as we’re concerned.”Rayudu responded to the confidence reposed in him by scoring a half-century and a century – both at No. 4 – against West Indies. However, midway into the ODI series in New Zealand in January, Kohli’s confidence in Rayudu seemed to have wavered as he re-opened the No. 4 debate saying India were still looking to solidify that vital middle-order spot. Incidentally, Rayudu had taken India past the finish line with an unbeaten 40 that day to help India take a 3-0 series lead. He finished the series by scoring 90 and taking the Man-of-the-Match award in the fifth and final ODI.However, in the three-match ODI series against Australia at home in March, Rayudu failed with scores of 13, 18, 2. It did not help that Rayudu was suspended from bowling in international cricket when he opted not to submit a test of his action after it was reported in mid-January.A weak IPL (282 runs in 17 innings) did not help him either before the Indian selectors, along with Kohli, opted for Tamil Nadu allrounder Vijay Shankar ahead of Rayudu. MSK Prasad, the chairman of selectors, said Vijay brought “three dimensions” to the team and hence was an appropriate choice.Rayudu’s immediate response was a cheeky tweet, referring to his “3D glasses”, which seemed to be a jibe at the selectors for ignoring him.In all, Rayudu, who made his ODI debut against Zimbabwe in 2013, featured in 55 ODIs, scoring 1694 runs at an average of 47.05. A short career, but it had its fair share of controversies. Last June Rayudu was withdrawn from India’s ODI squad for the UK tour after he failed the yo-yo test, part of the fitness guidelines mandatory for selection.Rayudu had also been pulled up in domestic cricket on several occasions for breaching the player’s code of conduct. As a 16-year-old, Rayudu was touted as one of the future stars as early as 2002, when he smashed an unbeaten 177 to seal a one-wicket win against England Under-19 in Taunton. He subsequently lead India at the Under-19 World Cup in 2004, a side that had a number of future India internationals like Robin Uthappa, Suresh Raina, RP Singh, Irfan Pathan, Dhawan and Dinesh Karthik.In 2007, Rayudu signed up with the controversial Indian Cricket League, leading to a BCCI ban which was eventually lifted when he took up the amnesty. Upon return in 2011, Rayudu switched from Hyderabad to Baroda to Vidarbha to Andhra before retiring with Hyderabad in India’s domestic circuit. Rayudu was thankful to all the domestic teams and the two IPL franchises – Mumbai Indians and Chennai Super Kings – for allowing him to grow as a cricketer.He also acknowleged the various captains, especially Kohli, whom he said had given him the support at the right time. “It has been a honour and privilege to have represented our country. I would like to thank the captains i have played under, MS Dhoni, Rohit Sharma and especially Virat Kohli who always had shown great belief in me throughout my career with the Indian team.”

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