USMNT player ratings vs Brazil: Christian Pulisic and Matt Turner lift U.S. to statement draw ahead of Copa America

After a battering at hands of Colombia, Christian Pulisic and the USMNT bounced back by going toe-to-toe with the Selecao.

In 11 days, there will be no room for moral victories for the U.S. men's national team. Once the Copa America kicks off, results are king – no matter how you get them.

No matter what it takes, the only thing that will matter is actual, tangible success.

But on Wednesday night, in their final pre-Copa friendly, the U.S. earned a result that will allow them to leave Orlando with their heads held high. They didn't beat mighty Brazil, but they didn't back down and, in that context, it felt like a job well done.

After conceding an early goal to Rodrygo, Christian Pulisic's stunning free-kick helped the USMNT earn a 1-1 draw in Orlando. The score doesn't tell the whole story, though. The U.S. didn't sit and bunker; they showed no fear staring down an elite Brazil team.

After the recent 5-1 humbling at the hands of Colombia, this was exactly the performance the USMNT needed. A win would have been nice but, even without it, it feels like the U.S. is back on track after going toe-to-toe with one of the competition's favorites.

"We want to be able to beat teams like this, but we do think it's a positive step," Berhalter said. "Our record against Brazil hasn't been great and to have the guys put all the results away and just focus on working together, playing hard and doing their role was refreshing because that's what we're going to need to be successful moving forward."

GOAL rates the USMNT's players from Camping World Stadium…

  • Getty

    Goalkeeper & Defense

    Matt Turner (7/10):

    Needed to do better on the ball for Brazil's opener. Made a whole bunch of saves when called upon, though, which is the trade-off with a goalkeeper like Turner.

    Antonee Robinson (7/10):

    Got up and down that left-hand side, as he always does. Was extra helpful with that given Brazil's wingers refusing to track back.

    Tim Ream (6/10):

    Great on the ball, but looked a bit slow off of it. That can be expected when you play a team like Brazil, though.

    Chris Richards (6/10):

    Had one fantastic tackle that was correctly rewarded by VAR. Was solid otherwise as well.

    Joe Scally (7/10):

    Brazil targeted him all game long and he stood strong every time. One heck of a defensive performance that will help make his case at right-back.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty

    Midfield

    Yunus Musah (5/10):

    Fell asleep on Brazil's opener. Did well going forward, but needs to be more aware defensively if he wants to be a No.6 at this level.

    Weston McKennie (5/10):

    Wasn't as aggressive as we're used to, particularly on Brazil's goal. Didn't get on the ball as much as the USMNT would like either.

    Gio Reyna (7/10):

    Surprisingly did a lot of good defensive work, in addition to his attacking contributions. Didn't quite create "the" chance, but had a few decent moments.

  • Getty

    Attack

    Christian Pulisic (8/10):

    What a goal. Pulisic drew the free kick and then smashed it in himself to headline another big performance against a big team. Could have had a second, too, if not for a big save by Alisson.

    Ricardo Pepi (5/10):

    Just didn't quite do enough. Never really got much of a chance, which won't help as he pushes for a starting spot.

    Tim Weah (7/10):

    Did what he always does: go vertical. Weah simply makes opponents uncomfortable, which he did plenty against this ridiculously good Brazil team.

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

    Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

  • Getty

    Subs & Manager

    Folarin Balogun (6/10):

    Got loose one time, but couldn't quite create enough space to prevent his shot from being blocked.

    Johnny Cardoso (7/10):

    Was an emotional game for the Brazilian-raised midfielder. Made his presence felt in midfield both on and off the ball.

    Brenden Aaronson (6/10):

    Forced a big save out of Alisson. Struggled with the physicality of Brazil a bit, but was decent enough.

    Tyler Adams (6/10):

    Important minutes for Adams, who continues to build towards full fitness as the Copa looms.

    Shaq Moore (N/A):

    Played just a few minutes with the U.S. looking to lock up the win.

    Gregg Berhalter (8/10):

    A hugely important game for Berhalter. Got the tactics right and clearly had the team ready to play without fear. On another day, the U.S. leaves this game as winners, and Berhalter deserves his credit for that.

Alessia Russo warns Lionesses there's 'still work to be done' as Arsenal star congratulates 'sister' Ella Toone on reaching England milestone

Alessia Russo has congratulated England team-mate Ella Toone on earning 50 caps, but insists there is still work to be done for the Lionesses.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Russo and Toone featured in France winMan Utd star now has 50 capsRusso says more to come from LionessesWHAT HAPPENED?

Russo and Toone teamed up to help England beat France in Saint-Etienne, with the former scoring the winning goal. It was three huge points for the Lionesses as they closed the gap to their Channel rivals to just two points in Group A3 and kept their Euro 2025 qualification hopes alive.

AdvertisementWHAT RUSSO SAID

The 25-year-old took to Instagram to reflect on the win, saying: "A huge +3 in France! Still work to be done. Also shoutout to my sister for 50 caps, proud of you always [Ella Toone]."

Getty ImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Toone became the 51st Lioness to earn her 50th cap on a positive night for Sarina Wiegman's side. After suffering defeat four days before against the same opposition, England needed a huge win to remain within touching distance of the group leaders. The European champions look to have finally found their form with both Russo and Toone playing a key role in the 2-1 win.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty/GOALWHAT NEXT FOR AND ENGLAND?

With the two international matches for June out of the way, England now have a month to prepare for games against the Republic of Ireland and Sweden. Two wins could see them close the gap even more to France. The games also allow Toone and Russo to keep fit ahead of what is set to be another exciting WSL campaign.

Man City player ratings vs West Ham: Phil Foden and Rodri are the history boys! Magnificent midfielders produce more magic to secure record-breaking, fourth-successive Premier League title

City's two outstanding players of the season saved their best for the last game to wrap up yet another league crown

Even before the final day of the season, Manchester City's Premier League title bud had been built upon the backs of Rodri and Phil Foden more than anyone else. So it was fitting that the two midfielders should have the final say and fire Pep Guardiola's side to a record-breaking fourth successive domestic crown, something that had never previously been achieved in 135 years of English football.

Guardiola had insisted West Ham would put up a fight and envisaged a similarly angsty game to when his side went 2-0 down to Aston Villa on the final day in 2022 before rallying to win. But there were very few signs of nerves when City steamed into the lead after 79 seconds, Foden whipping the ball into the far corner with his left foot from distance for the sort of goal he has been scoring all season.

Guardiola's side had total dominance and it was only a matter of time before they got their second, with Jeremy Doku being denied and Rodri missing the target. But Foden duly delivered again, side-footing home a Doku cross in the 18th minute.

Erling Haaland missed two sitters which should have put the game out of sight and then shortly before half-time, out of nowhere, Mohammed Kudus conjured a stunning bicycle kick to reduce the deficit. There were visible nerves around the ground, but Rodri soon settled them early in the second half by scoring a third goal with a daisy-cutter from outside the box.

The party was then able to truly start, as the City fans did the Poznan and the chants of 'Champions Again' got louder and louder.

GOAL rates Man City's players from the Etihad Stadium…

Goalkeeper & Defence

Stefan Ortega (6/10):

Rarely saw the ball, with his fingers or feet, save for picking out Kudus' screamer. But it always felt like the goal was in safe hands.

Kyle Walker (6/10):

Led by example in defence, making an early block to halt a rare visitors' attack and kicking on from then.

Manuel Akanji (5/10):

A bit too casual in possession and was the first to be taken off.

Ruben Dias (6/10):

Kept Antonio quiet and helped the attack out by stepping in.

Josko Gvardiol (7/10):

No goals this time but he was excellent at bringing the ball into midfield, keeping the play flowing and out-muscling his opponents.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesMidfield

Kevin De Bruyne (7/10):

A typical all-action performance, involved in all City's best attacking moves.

Rodri (8/10):

Controlled the game in his usual way and was always looking for a goal. It was fitting that his effectively wrapped up the title.

Bernardo Silva (7/10):

Worked his socks off and was at the heart of the creative play, setting up two goals.

Getty ImagesAttack

Phil Foden (9/10):

It wasn't just the goals, but they sure help. He should be patenting his top-corner strikes from outside the box such as his first goal.

Erling Haaland (4/10):

The reverse of his usual displays. Surprisingly good at the build-up play, having a hand in the first two goals. But he was dreadful at shooting, wasting two great chances in the first half.

Jeremy Doku (8/10):

Always a thorn in West Ham's right side. Ran Coufal ragged throughout and set up the second goal.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesSubs & Manager

Nathan Ake (6/10):

Gave City more power after replacing Akanji.

Mateo Kovacic (N/A):

Brought on in added-time to join the celebrations.

Pep Guardiola (7/10):

Looked angry for much of the game, underlining how demanding he is of his players. And that intensity has taken him into the history books of English football.

Fim da linha! Abel Braga se despede do Internacional

MatériaMais Notícias

Chegou ao fim a sétima passagem de Abel Braga no Internacional. Após o vice-campeonato do Brasileirão, o treinador concedeu coletiva de imprensa e anunciou a sua saída do Colorado.

Abatido, ele explicou que não houve conversa com a diretoria nos últimos dias e por isso deu como encerrado o seu ciclo no Beira-Rio.

RelacionadasCorinthiansMancini justifica ‘corte’ de Michel e explica lesão de Luan no Corinthians: ‘Não posso desistir de ninguém’Corinthians26/02/2021Fora de CampoGabigol chama Thiago Galhardo de ‘moleque’ após título brasileiro: ‘Você tem que respeitar, garoto’Fora de Campo25/02/2021InternacionalATUAÇÕES: Internacional peca nas finalizações e não consegue ser campeão brasileiroInternacional25/02/2021

– Tivemos uma primeira conversa que não teve um fim ainda, porque foi antes do jogo do Bahia, na primeira vez que o presidente e o Patrício viajavam. Aquilo ficou decidido que eu ficava até o dia 25. Se até hoje não teve qualquer tipo de mudança, com certeza para mim foi o último jogo – afirmou.

Aos 68 anos, o treinador também falou sobre o ‘legado’ que deixa e aposta na geração de garotos do clube gaúcho.

– Saio dando um até breve, até logo. Não sei. Futebol a gente nunca sabe o futuro. Não sabemos o que vai acontecer amanhã. Fica o legado. Eles têm uma noção até maior do tamanho deste clube. Com esses jogadores que o Inter vai conseguir melhorar no aspecto financeiro, porque a solução de qualquer clube é isso.

Hathurusingha ordered to return to Sri Lanka after South Africa ODIs

Steve Rixon is likely to fill-in as interim head coach for the T20Is in South Africa

Madushka Balasuriya 14-Mar-2019

Sri Lanka coach Chandika Hathurusingha speaks on the phone during a training session•Getty Images

Sri Lanka Cricket is once again moving to remove a head coach, with CEO Ashley de Silva headed to South Africa for crisis talks with Chandika Hathurusingha.An SLC release also confirmed that Hathurusingha will be required to return to Sri Lanka following the ongoing ODI series in order to “discuss the Sri Lanka team’s preparation for the upcoming ICC Cricket World Cup”. Fielding coach Steve Rixon will be the acting head coach of the side during the three-match T20I series.Although the board wants to remove Hathurusingha, its hands are somewhat tied by Hathurusingha’s contract, which runs up until the end of 2020, and requires a substantial compensation to be paid in the event of early termination. As such, de Silva and the boards are expected to broach the possibility of Hathurusingha working for SLC in a limited capacity back in Sri Lanka in the short term.”[The board is] trying to give Hathuru a break to see how Rixon fares in the team,” an SLC official told ESPNcricnfo.Since taking over at the beginning of 2018, Hathurusingha has overseen a modest string of results, winning just 16 of 49 international matches in charge. His predecessors, however, had fared worse. In fact, Sri Lanka’s win rate in 2018 was better than it had been in 2017, if only marginally.While the historic Test series win over South Africa last month did buy him a short reprieve, the ensuing succession of ODI defeats, in what is Sri Lanka’s final series before the World Cup, has seen the board become emboldened to move against Hathurusingha.The board’s concerns are also thought to be only partially performance-related. According to the SLC source, Hathurusingha is said to have uneasy relations with some players and staff, while it was a prolonged spat with the new selection committee that culminated in him being removed from the role of selector-on-tour last month.Ahead of the South Africa tour, Hathurusingha had voiced concerns over the wholesale changes being made to the limited-overs squad just months out from a World Cup, one of which was the axing of Dinesh Chandimal – someone he had earmarked as central to his limited-overs squad. Hathurusingha is also said to have been unhappy at Lasith Malinga’s installation as ODI captain, a player who had until then only been at the periphery of his plans.”The board is not happy, not only with his performance, but his attitude as well. This has been coming for a while, to be honest,” the SLC official said.The current set of administrators at SLC, however, are largely the same people who had hired Hathurusingha in the first place, pursuing him for at least several months before finally convincing Hathurusingha to leave his job in Bangladesh early, in order to join the Sri Lanka team. Roughly the same group of administrators had also hired Graham Ford at the start of 2016, then elbowed him out of the job in mid-2017.No Sri Lanka coach has lasted more than two years this decade. Sri Lanka have had nine head coaches (including interim appointments), since 2011 – Ford serving the longest, across two different stints.In terms of preparation for the World Cup, this is far from ideal for Sri Lanka, with neither the selectors, the board, Hathurusingha nor the fans any closer to identifying a final squad. As a final throw of the dice, SLC are expected to hold a provincial tournament next month, consisting of four teams comprising all the players vying for a World Cup spot.”We want every player to play in each game to ensure they are fit enough to go for the World Cup. The teams will be captained by Dimuth Karunaratne, Angelo [Mathews], Upul Tharanga, and maybe Malinga or Chandimal. They will have to prove themselves to be in contention for the World Cup,” the source confirmed.

India seek balance between experiment and survival in series

While New Zealand will look to shut out the series, India will have to balance their goal of testing bench strength with the need to keep the series alive

Sidharth Monga07-Feb-20193:50

Can we expect another run-fest at Eden Park?

Big PictureOn this tour of New Zealand, India have suffered their biggest defeat in ODIs – in terms of balls left – and T20Is – in terms of runs they fell short by – but it has unequivocally been an impressive tour for India so far. Before that Hamilton debacle in the ODI came a clinical surge to an unassailable 3-0 lead in the ODI series, and the response to Hamilton was the Wellington ODI, in which India deliberately chose to bat in difficult conditions, overcame them and pulled off an unlikely defence. All this without the best white-ball bowler in the world, Jasprit Bumrah.Watch India v NZ live

Followers in the United States can watch the second T20I live on ESPN+

Now people want to see how India respond to the Wellington T20I defeat where their bowlers seemed to have a collective off day. There might also be the realisation that they need to play at least one more wicket-taking bowler and compromise a bit of depth in batting. These bilateral T20Is, though, are an opportunity to experiment. India want to test their bench strength, but now it will have to marry with the need to stay alive in the series. Their bowlers – whoever plays – will be asked to put in a better show and bowl to the plans and the fields.For the first time during this trip by India, New Zealand are in the lead, and they will want to seal the series in Auckland. They seem to be better suited to the shorter format right now. They seem to have all-round options without necessarily sacrificing one suit or the other. Colin de Grandhomme, for example, wasn’t even required to bowl in Wellington even though one of the bowlers, Scott Kuggeleijin, had a bad day. They will want a repeat in Auckland.Form guideNew Zealand (completed matches, most recent first) WWLLLIndia LWLWW
In the spotlightRohit Sharma won’t like this mini dip in his scores. After a brace of fifties in Mount Maunganui – he looked good for a double in the first of those – Rohit has had scores of 7, 2 and 1. In a way it is less frustrating to get out without a start rather than wasting one, but Rohit won’t be happy with the nature of his dismissals. Twice movement got him, and on the third occasion his favourite shot – the pull – landed in the lap of a deep fielder. Watch out for how he responds.Tim Southee is an unusual player: he is a shoo-in in Tests and T20Is, but out of favour in ODIs. He showed his worth in his first international back with figures of 3 for 17 in his four overs. He will want to continue doing that to push for a return to the ODIs too.Getty ImagesTeam newsThe only change New Zealand might think of is to possibly find a way to include James Neesham. He could replace Kuggeleijn or de Grandhomme.New Zealand (likely) 1 Tim Seifert (wk), 2 Colin Munro, 3 Kane Williamson (capt.), 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Daryl Mitchell, 6 James Neesham/ Colin de Grandhomme, 7 Mitchell Santner, 8 Scott Kuggeleijn, 9 Tim Southee, 10 Ish Sodhi, 11 Lockie FergusonIndia could go in with a few changes. One of the three wicketkeepers or one of the allrounders could be left out. They could want to play two wristspinners too.India (likely) 1 Rohit Sharma (capt.), 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Shubman Gill/ Vijay Shankar, 4 Rishabh Pant, 5 Dinesh Karthik, 6 MS Dhoni (wk), 7 Hardik Pandya, 8 Krunal Pandya/Kuldeep Yadav, 9 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 10 Khaleel Ahmed/ Mohammed Siraj, 11 Yuzvendra ChahalPitch and conditionsEden Park is oddly shaped and a tough ground to defend. This is a ground where last year Australia successfully chased down 244 with seven balls to spare. Chasing 143, New Zealand once got there in 10 overs. Yet nine matches have been won by sides batting first to six by chasing sides. A pleasant day is expected for the game.Stats and trivia India have a 2-7 head-to-head in T20Is against New Zealand. Their seven losses include all three matches they have played in New Zealand. Yuzvendra Chahal needs five wickets to reach 50. Only Jasprit Bumrah (48) and R Ashwin (52) have taken more for India. Hardik Pandya has never conceded more runs in a T20 international than the 51 he did in Wellington. It was his second-most expensive analysis in all T20 cricket.Quotes”Sometimes in T20 cricket, it can feel really nice and your figures can look really different. It was just a part of almost the perfect puzzle last night, the perfect team performance.”

Azhar took a 'clean' catch, on-field decision should have stayed – Sarfraz

The Pakistan captain drew parallel with the catch that dismissed Virat Kohli in Perth, even as the coach Mickey Arthur got one demerit point for ‘showing dissent’

Danyal Rasool in Centurion28-Dec-2018Pakistan captain Sarfraz Ahmed steadfastly maintained Azhar Ali had taken a “clear catch” to dismiss Dean Elgar in the opening hour of the third day. With South Africa wobbling at 16 for 1 in a chase of 149, having lost Aiden Markram early and dropped Hashim Amla on a morning when Pakistan’s pacers were in full control, Shaheen Afridi drew the outside edge of Dean Elgar in the ninth over. Azhar Ali dived to his right for the catch from first slip, and the soft signal from the on-field umpires was out. Elgar, himself, was prepared to walk, but third umpire Joel Wilson decided he had conclusive evidence to overturn the call.Sarfraz believed his side had been hard done by, drawing a parallel from the second Australia-India Test in Perth, where Virat Kohli was caught at second slip and the third umpire’s decision stayed with the soft signal (out) because of lack of conclusive evidence to overturn it.”I think he took a clear catch. If you talk about the other match, if you see the Kohli catch, you see a similar catch given. If the on-field decision is out, I think it should have stayed that way. The umpire said the third umpire had a clearer view of it, so they gave it not-out, but if you compare situations, I think this was a clean catch.”The rub of the green going the hosts’ way with that decision effectively sealed Pakistan’s fate. Sarfraz’s side could create no further clear-cut chances for the rest of the session, with the Elgar-Amla partnership adding another 103 runs to the score. When Elgar was finally dismissed, he had scored 50 – he was on 4 when the disputed catch was taken – and South Africa needed just 30 further runs to win.It was a decision that so enraged Mickey Arthur he stormed into Wilson’s office to remonstrate with him in breach of the ICC regulations. Later, an ICC statement said Arthur had received an official warning and fined one demerit point after accepting his guilt in the affair.”Arthur was found to have violated Article 2.8 of the ICC Code of Conduct for Players and Player Support Personnel, which relates to ‘showing dissent at an umpire’s decision during an international match’,” the ICC statement read. “After the match, the Pakistan coach admitted the offence and accepted the sanction proposed by match referee David Boon. As such, there was no need for a formal hearing.”The series now moves to Cape Town for the second of the three Tests, starting on January 3.

Rodgers could land dream Maeda upgrade in Celtic swoop for 5 ft 9 "revelation"

Celtic went through a summer of change as they lost key members of the club on and off the pitch after their treble-winning 2022/23 campaign.

The Hoops were dealt a blow in the dugout as manager Ange Postecoglou decided to try his luck down south with a move to Premier League side Tottenham Hotspur.

Jota and Carl Starfelt also both left on permanent deals from the first-team squad, whilst central midfielder Aaron Mooy confirmed his retirement from football.

Brendan Rodgers was brought in for a second spell in charge of the Scottish giants and was allowed to bring in nine new recruits to improve his squad.

Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers.

Odin Thiago Holm, Paulo Bernardo, Hyeok-kyu Kwon, Hyun-jun Yang, Marco Tilio, Nat Phillips, Luis Palma, Gustaf Lagerbielke, and Maik Nawrocki were all snapped up.

The upcoming January transfer window will provide the Northern Irish head coach with an opportunity to make further additions to his group of players, and he has already been touted with a swoop for one of the club's former players.

Celtic transfer news – Jota

A recent report from 90min named Celtic as one of a number of sides interested in a potential swoop to sign Portuguese forward Jota from Al Ittihad at the turn of the year.

The outlet claimed that Premier League teams Tottenham Hotspur and Newcastle United are both keeping tabs on the exciting attacker, who could be available at the start of 2024.

It is stated that the 5 foot 9 whiz would be keen on a move to reunite with his former Hoops manager Postecoglou at Spurs, however, the Bhoys are also keen to bring him back to Parkhead to allow him to work with Rodgers in competitive matches for the first time.

Jota, Celtic forward (now Al- Attihad)

Al Ittihad splashed the cash to land the former Benfica ace during the summer transfer window as they paid the Scottish giants a reported fee of £25m for his services.

It has been a difficult start to life in Saudi Arabia for Jota, though, as the winger was not selected to be a part of their domestic squad and has not played a league match since the 1st of September.

The right-footed magician has only scored one goal in seven appearances in all competitions for Al Ittihad, and is yet to assist a single goal for his new club.

Despite his struggles this season, Jota could still be a phenomenal signing for Celtic as he is a proven performer in the Scottish Premiership who could come in as a big upgrade on Daizen Maeda for Rodgers.

Palma was brought in to replace the Portuguese forward and has contributed with an outstanding five goals and five assists in 12 matches in all competitions since his move from Aris.

This has left Maeda on the other flank for the Hoops and the Japan international is yet to prove that he has the quality to deliver consistent end product at the top end of the pitch.

Maeda's Celtic statistics

The 26-year-old forward has started 11 of the club's Premiership matches so far this season and has chipped in with two goals and two assists.

He has lacked a ruthless edge in front of goal as the Celtic winger has missed a staggering seven 'big chances' already, which suggests that the Japanese attacker has let his teammates down as they have created enough huge opportunites for him to have more than two goals by this point.

His creativity has not made up for his wasteful finishing as Maeda has produced 0.8 key passes per game for his fellow attackers, which places him joint-tenth within the squad and shows that the current Bhoys gem does not create chances on a regular basis.

Celtic forward Daizen Maeda.

This comes off the back of his return of eight goals and five assists in 35 Premiership appearances throughout the 2022/23 campaign for Postecoglou.

The right-footed whiz missed 11 'big chances' and only made 0.8 key passes per match for his team, a creative output that placed him joint-14th within the squad alongside Sead Haksabanovic.

Maeda racked up 11 goals and seven assists in 49 outings in all competitions last season, and has managed two goals and three assists in 17 clashes this term.

This means that the Japan international is on 13 goals and ten assists in his last 66 games for Celtic, which is an average of one goal contribution every 2.87 matches.

Jota's Celtic statistics

Jota, on the other hand, enjoyed a terrific two years in Scotland, with the first one spent on an initial loan deal from Benfica before it was made permanently in 2022.

In his first season with the Hoops, the brilliant hotshot hit the ground running in Scottish football with 13 goals and 14 assists in 49 outings for the club in all competitions.

He plundered ten goals and ten assists in 29 Premiership matches for Postecoglou and only missed three 'big chances', which illustrates how impressive the gem was in front of goal.

Celtic'sJotareacts

Jota also had a reason to be frustrated with his teammates as they only rewarded him with ten assists from the 17 'big chances' and two key passes per game he created throughout the campaign.

The 24-year-old talent followed that up with an excellent return of 15 goals and 12 assists in 43 appearances for the Scottish giants throughout the 2022/23 season.

22 of those goal contributions came in the Premiership as the Portuguese talent produced 11 goals and 11 assists in 33 top-flight games for the Hoops.

In total, Jota, who was dubbed a "revelation" at Celtic by former Scotland boss Alex McLeish, amassed 28 goals and 26 assists in 92 matches for the Bhoys, which is one goal contribution every 1.7 games on average.

These statistics suggest that the Al Ittihad flop has the quality to provide far more than Maeda in the final third, both as a scorer and a creator of goals.

Jota has proven his ability in Scotland and showcased his knack of scoring and assisting goals far more regularly than the current Celtic forward, which is why Rodgers could secure a big upgrade for his attack by beating off Premier League competition to bring the dynamo back to Parkhead during the upcoming January transfer window.

Sleepless Sarfraz feels the heat after Asia Cup exit

The pressures of the Pakistan captaincy are beginning to tell on Sarfraz Ahmed. A disappointing Asia Cup campaign ended on Wednesday night in Abu Dhabi with a loss to Bangladesh, leading a frazzled and overworked Sarfraz to admit to sleepless nights during the tournament.Besides, an unrelenting workload over the last four years has now sparked discussion among management and selectors about the possibility of resting him at some stage during the upcoming home season.Pakistan won just two games in the tournament, were thumped twice by India and decisively beaten by Bangladesh in the Super Four stage. Sarfraz’s own showing with the bat was a continuation of the patchy form of the last two years.Since the high-water mark of his ODI batting in the summer of 2016 in England, he has tapered off and is now in a bona fide slump: since his match-winning fifty against Sri Lanka in the Champions Trophy, he has averaged 17.2 with the bat. His position in the order is not settled – that summer in England he batted at No. 5, a position he has batted at just once since then. In the Asia Cup, he batted at Nos. 4, 5 and 6.His captaincy, in some selections and on the field, has suffered and though his glovework was mostly tidy, it has been affected in the past.”Look, the pressures of captaincy are always there,” he admitted after Pakistan’s defeat on Wednesday night, in what was an unusually – for him – testy press conference. “Pakistani captains, whoever they are, always have pressure. Obviously, when you aren’t performing and the team is losing then there is more pressure.”The truth is that if I say I haven’t slept for the last six nights nobody will believe me but… this is part of life and it will go on. I will say again we don’t need to press the panic button.”The results, and probably Sarfraz’s workload, have contributed to the sleeplessness no doubt. Since September 2014, around the time he was becoming a permanent fixture in all three formats, only Joe Root and Virat Kohli have played more international games than him. He has missed only one series – the ODIs in Australia in early 2017 – in that time and that too because his mother was ill.Since he became captain, Pakistan have also not been picking a replacement wicketkeeper in their squads, meaning Sarfraz has had to play even warm-up matches. That may now change. ESPNcricinfo understands that Sarfraz could be rested at some point during the two home series against Australia and New Zealand – possibly in the T20Is.To that end, Mohammad Rizwan, who is in the Pakistan A team to face Australia next week, will likely stay on as a back-up through the season. Mohammad Hasan, another wicketkeeper, could also be called up as cover for Rizwan for the Pakistan A games later in the season.Asked after the Bangladesh game whether he needed a rest, Sarfraz snapped back: “This is not my job, this is the job of the selection committee and the PCB. Let them decide. I gave you an answer, it is not my job. My job is to play, I will play. I will keep playing.”

Liverpool: Once dubbed the next Sterling, Reds flop is now worse than Woodburn

Liverpool have suffered their fair share of talented youth players tantalising a glimpse of Steven Gerrard-esque potential with a prodigious introduction to life on the senior stage, only to fall utterly flat.

There have been some notable success stories, of course, with Trent Alexander-Arnold and Curtis Jones two integral members of Jurgen Klopp's ambitious squad, while talented prospects such as Jarell Quansah and Ben Doak have not yet solidified their status as starring Premier League players, though they are certainly on track.

There are, however, some bitter cases of unharnessed talent throughout the German's illustrious reign, with perhaps the most salient example that of Ben Woodburn.

How good was Ben Woodburn?

Woodburn was touted for big things in the fledgling phase of his career, but when he scored against Leeds United in the Carabao Cup in November 2016, becoming the youngest goalscorer in the club's distinguished history, Anfield erupted, certain a new hero had been born.

That goal was his only direct contribution for the Reds, making 11 total appearances and completing several loan spells, never quite performing at a level high enough to warrant a spot in Klopp's senior plans.

Unfortunately, Woodburn never really kicked on and departed to Preston North End last summer when his contract on Merseyside expired.

He would play 42 times last term but was primarily utilised as a rotation player, scoring twice and supplying three assists – one of those goals, however, did come against Wolverhampton Wanderers in the Carabao Cup.

This season, he has yet to start for the Championship high-fliers in the league but has made eight substitute appearances, also scoring in his one cup appearance against Salford City.

The Wales international isn't alone in having failed to live up to the billing at Anfield, with Sheyi Ojo another to have fallen by the wayside.

How good was Sheyi Ojo?

Bursting onto the scene at youth level with MK Dons, Liverpool secured a swoop for a 14-year-old Ojo in 2011, for a figure believed to be around £2m.

Making his Reds debut in 2016, Ojo enjoyed an exciting loan spell with Wolves in the Championship – posting three goals and four assists – before being recalled by Liverpool and enjoying some match action across the latter phase of the football year.

Indeed, the dynamic winger impressed and then some, earning five starts late into the Premier League season and registering three assists, also scoring and assisting for the Reds against Exeter City across two legs in the FA Cup.

So impressive was the starlet that he started drawing some big comparisons to Raheem Sterling, who had risen to the fore with Liverpool and joined Manchester City in a £49m deal in July 2015, which was one month before Ojo's loan move to the Old Gold.

His gliding, graceful gait, blistering pace and innate skill was reminiscent to Sterling, but what differentiated him was his natural left-footedness, hinting at a future as a first-class right-winger given the composure he had exhibited in front of goal in the early days of his career.

It didn't work out in the end though, and Ojo's really is a case of failed application and an inability to harness his natural talent and channel it into something consistent, and while he remains a popular figure on Merseyside for the flair at his feet, he has endured incessant failure over many years now.

At 26 years old, the Watford-born ace is undoubtedly a worse blunder than Woodburn; while the Welshman failed to live up to his potential, he is still only 23 and remains a member of Preston's burgeoning squad.

Where is Sheyi Ojo now?

When Liverpool cut their ties with Ojo in 2022, it had been over five years since he last donned the famous red shirt, flattering to deceive over a number of years and loan stints and failing to live up to that lofty early promise.

A spate of injuries proved detrimental to his progress across his wandering journey across various outfits, with such miserable luck severing any possibility of fresh terms with the Anfield side.

He enjoyed some success with Cardiff City in the Championship in 2020/21, scoring five goals and supplying seven assists in what stands as the most productive campaign of his career.

But after joining the club on a permanent transfer last summer after his contract expired with Liverpool, Ojo failed to replicate for former feats and only bagged twice across 39 appearances across all competitions.

Having failed last year, Cardiff decided he was best placed elsewhere, and allowed him to join Belgian outfit KV Kortrijk on a season-long loan deal, and so far, he has yet to score from seven matches, earning one assist.

Season

Apps

Goals

Assists

23/24

6

0

1

22/23

36

1

0

21/22

18

0

2

20/21

41

5

7

19/20

19

1

5

18/19

15

0

0

17/18

22

4

2

16/17

N/A

N/A

N/A

15/16

8

0

3

Including the current campaign, with Ojo now plying his trade in Belgium, the fleet-footed wideman has only clinched more than one league goal across one of his past six seasons, which is an alarming absence of prolificness and ability in the final third – buttressing claims that he has been “woeful” from the like of Ryan Deeney.

For a player who tantalised so much promise in the opening phase of his career, Ojo is undoubtedly one of the most poignant failures from Liverpool's formative ranks over the past decade, and a stark reminder of the wayward direction that the club was headed before Klopp's transformative appointment.

And while Woodburn is another who has suffered a failure to kick on from Liverpool's academy, the 23-year-old has more time on his side and still earns his place in a Championship team – and one that is thriving too.

The sheer fact that he was compared to a remarkable prospect such as Sterling, who has now ripened into one of the Premier League's most illustrious present members, highlights how much potential faded away.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus