Sunderland now want to sign £2m star who "surprised" Klopp ahead of Leeds

Sunderland and Regis Le Bris are thought to be plotting a move to sign a new defender who once “surprised” Jurgen Klopp, ahead of rival interest from Leeds United.

Sunderland transfer latest after Le Fee deal announced

The Black Cats are still riding the wave following their dramatic Championship playoff final victory over Sheffield United last month.

With Premier League football now on offer at the Stadium of Light, Sunderland are expected to be busy in the transfer window and have already made Enzo Le Fee’s loan move permanent. Talking after penning a four-year contract on Wearside, Le Fee shared his delight.

Alongside Le Fee, Sunderland aren’t planning to stop there, with Sky Sports reporter Keith Downie even claiming the club could break their transfer record again after Le Fee.

Dream Sunderland XI after promotion: Henderson & £40m sensation return

Sunderland’s starting XI could soon have a new look as they embark on their Premier League adventure.

ByKelan Sarson Jun 6, 2025

Le Bris and co will also be looking to get value for money in the summer market, potentially looking to take some Championship stars with them to the top flight. Now, a fresh report has stated that Burnley, Leeds and Sunderland all have their eyes on a second-tier player.

Sunderland plotting Japhet Tanganga move with release clause shared

According to GiveMeSport, Sunderland are plotting a move to sign Millwall defender Japhet Tanganga alongside the Clarets and the Whites.

It is claimed that Tanganga has a release clause in his current contract to leave for just under £2m, a figure which could represent great value for money considering the Lions have previously wanted £12m for their star centre-back.

The 26-year-old has impressed for Millwall after making his loan move permanent at The Den in 2024, and he has previous Premier League experience after coming through the Tottenham academy.

Games

61

Goals

4

Yellow cards

10

Red cards

1

Minutes played

5,370

He made 27 appearances for Spurs in the top flight, with Jose Mourinho hailing Tangana for a display against Liverpool back in 2020.

“Can we say Tanganga is a new player? Can we say that? He never played a match for Tottenham in the Premier League. Today he played and today he proved that he can play for us. It’s a pity that he’s not a striker, it’s a pity that he’s not a midfield player, but he’s one more player that we have. So I think Mane and Salah, they know who Tanganga is.”

Meanwhile, Klopp was also caught off guard by Tanganga, saying: “I didn’t know about him, I was obviously surprised when he came up. He was good, impressive for sure.”

Tottenham now hold talks over signing "real deal" MLS defender

Summer has officially begun with a mini-transfer window open until June 10, allowing Tottenham Hotspur to go and strike early recruitment deals ahead of the 2025/2026 season.

Tottenham make transfer plans amid Ange Postecoglou uncertainty

Lilywhites boss Ange Postecoglou is apparently set to learn his fate as Spurs boss this week (ESPN), with supporters still anxiously waiting for chairman Daniel Levy’s decision after an incredibly mixed campaign.

Once-£137m forward wants to join Tottenham after Europa League win

They’re seen as favourites.

10

By
Emilio Galantini

Jun 4, 2025

Postecoglou ended the club’s long 17-year wait for a piece of major silverware by guiding them to victory in the Europa League final, at Man United’s expense, but the Australian also led them to a record-breaking 22 Premier League defeats in a single season.

Tottenham’s best-performing regulars in the Premier League – 2024/2025

Average match rating

Son Heung-min

7.00

James Maddison

6.98

Pedro Porro

6.95

Dominic Solanke

6.84

Dejan Kulusevski

6.83

via WhoScored

Before Spurs can make real headway on their summer recruitment drive, Postecoglou’s future must be resolved, and reliable club insider Paul O’Keefe recently shared that Levy has in fact made a call on when to do next – without formally communicating it just yet.

With Levy set to communicate his decision sooner rather than later, Spurs can then start getting to work on their transfer plans, if their potential search for a new manager doesn’t take centre stage for too long.

News emerged on Tuesday that Son Heung-min could leave Tottenham this summer after 10 years at the club (The Telegraph), despite Tottenham triggering a one-year extension clause in his contract.

Heung-min Son for Tottenham

If the South Korean star does leave, Spurs will acquire a fee for his faithful service, but they’d also need a replacement for him. In light of this news, it is no coincidence that Bayern Munich star Leroy Sane is being repeatedly linked with a move to north London.

Dejan Kulusevski is also out with a long-term injury and could take some time to get fully match fit again, so the need for a new winger is pretty prevalent.

Sergio Reguilon is confirmed to be leaving Tottenham as well, with Destiny Udogie now their only senior natural left-back.

Tottenham hold talks over signing New England left-back Peyton Miller

According to New England Revolution journalist Seth Macomber, who covers them for The Blazing Musket, MLS sensation Peyton Miller is now attracting serious interest from the Lilywhites.

As per Macomber, Tottenham have held talks with New England about signing Miller, with Levy and co displaying a real interest in signing the teenager.

The versatile full-back, who can play nearly anywhere on the left-flank, has been called the ‘real deal’ by American critics and is now a regular for New England after becoming the second-youngest player to both appear and start in an MLS match for them.

He could be an adept back-up option to Udogie, and his meteoric rise in the last two seasons looks to have really impressed Tottenham scouts.

Tottenham star clear he wants to join club as they hatch £84m transfer plan

Tottenham Hotspur face a significant summer of changes, both in the dugout and at squad level, with the future of a key player seeming far away from north London.

Ange Postecoglou facing Spurs exit after dismal campaign

Spurs could still qualify for the Champions League next season by winning their first major trophy since 2008.

Tottenham: Robinson thrilled after hearing Levy could appoint 52-year-old

Spurs are said to be closing in on his arrival.

2 ByEmilio Galantini May 13, 2025

All eyes are on the Europa League final in Bilbao on May 21, which has the potential to save Tottenham’s season in a crunch, all or nothing encounter against Premier League rivals Man United, who’ve also endured a horror-show season.

Ange Postecoglou led Spurs to their 20th top-flight loss of the season against Crystal Palace last weekend, breaking their all-time record for most recorded Premier League defeats in a single campaign, with the 59-year-old under intense scrutiny.

Son Heung-min

7.05

Pedro Porro

6.98

James Maddison

6.98

Dominic Solanke

6.88

Dejan Kulusevski

6.83

via WhoScored

More and more credible media sources are reporting that Postecoglou could leave Spurs regardless of whether they win the Europa League, and he’s likely to be joined by some big-name players.

Cristian Romero linked with Spurs summer exit

One of them, star defender Cristian Romero, is a top target for Atlético Madrid and Diego Simeone.

Some reports even suggest that Romero has already agreed terms on a move to Atletico, but both the Lilywhites and La Liga side are yet to find any common ground when it comes to the 26-year-old’s final price tag.

According to information from Marca, there is still negotiating to do when it comes to Spurs and Atlético shaking hands on a fee.

Cristian Romero clear he wants Atletico move amid £84m plan

As per the Spanish newspaper, relayed by Sport Witness, Romero is clear he wants a move to Atlético from Tottenham, but the Premier League side value him at around £59 million and are very unlikely to go anywhere below £42 million.

It is unclear whether Simeone’s men will reach their minimum figure, but they’re set to open talks, and are planning a spending spree worth up to £84 million this summer.

Taking into account they wish to use this cash on a host of other targets, despite Romero’s obvious quality when at his very best, Atlético want to whittle his price down as much as possible.

“He’s the best centre-half at the club,” said pundit Paul Robinson about Romero in 2022, to Football Insider.

“I think they probably tried to get one in during the window but it didn’t work out. But in Romero they have got a phenomenal defender. He makes others around him better.

“What they have got isn’t enough. They need more, but he is certainly the best that they have got. He could play in any side in the top four of the Premier League. He is a Champions League player, a top player.

“If Spurs are going to go places Romero is the type of player they will need to keep and build around.”

Berta has Arsenal in "pole position" to sign cut-price Brazil international

Arsenal sporting director Andrea Berta has reportedly been a busy man just days into his tenure as Edu Gaspar’s replacement, and it is now believed the Italian has Mikel Arteta’s side as favourites to sign a Brazil international.

Andrea Berta's first priority as new Arsenal director

While a lot of rumours are centering around Berta’s transfer activity, his reliably reported number one priority right now is tying star winger Bukayo Saka down with fresh terms.

Leroy Sane set for imminent Arsenal transfer decision after "concrete talks"

The German is set to leave on a free as things stand.

ByEmilio Galantini Apr 2, 2025

The £195,000-per-week forward’s current deal expires in 2027, and Saka displayed his importance to Arsenal almost immediately after returning from a hamstring injury which sidelined him since December last year.

Everton (away)

April 5th

Brentford (home)

April 12th

Ipswich Town (away)

April 20th

Crystal Palace (home)

TBD

Bournemouth (home)

May 3rd

Saka scored on his immediate return in a 2-1 Arsenal win over Fulham earlier this week, with Fabrizio Romano confirming that the agreement of a new contract for him is “top” of Berta’s to-do list at the Emirates Stadium.

“I wanted to start with the top priority, which is absolutely Bukayo Saka,” said Romano on the Here We Go podcast.

“Bukayo Saka is out of contract in summer 2027, so it’s not something urgent, it’s not a worrying situation for Arsenal. But in general, Arsenal want to give a new contract to Bukayo Saka.

“So some contacts have already started. Now Bukayo and his agents will have the opportunity to meet with Andrea Berta to understand the strategy from the new director, and that’s always something important. You can start the conversation already months ago, of course, but then you need to speak to the new director to understand the view, to understand the project, and this is what’s going to happen with Bukayo Saka.”

Amid their attempts to make Saka commit, the next priority for Berta will be Arsenal’s summer transfer window.

According to some reports, Berta is considering the signing of an alternative to Saka on the right-hand side, as part of a potential seven-signing summer spree where they could spend around £300 million (GiveMeSport).

Arsenal have also been repeatedly linked with a move for Wolves star Matheus Cunha, a player who could deputise for Saka on the right given his excellent versatility.

Arsenal in "pole position" to sign Wolves star Matheus Cunha

The Brazil international has starred on the right-wing, left-wing, in centre-attacking midfield, as a second-striker and at centre-forward for Wolves this season, with Cunha enjoying the season of his life.

Wolverhampton Wanderers'MatheusCunhain action with AFC Bournemouth's Marcus Tavernier and Lewis Cook

He’s bagged 15 goals and four assists in 29 appearances this term, and Premier League sides are taking interest given the £62.5 million release clause inserted into his new contract.

According to CaughtOffside, Berta has Arsenal in “pole position” to sign Cunha as things stand, and the director’s connections with him through their time together at Atlético Madrid are tipped to play a key role in convincing the 25-year-old.

In a further boost for Arteta, the outlet reports that Wolves will sell Cunha for even less than his release clause in a potential cut-price deal – so this move is looking more and more like a no-brainer given the player’s outstanding form throughout 2024/2025.

Cheteshwar Pujara on R Ashwin: brilliant, relentless, always learning

The India batter pays tribute to his offspinner team-mate, who stands on the verge of his 100th Test

Cheteshwar Pujara04-Mar-2024Imagine you are facing R Ashwin.As a batter, the basic challenge begins with his high-arm action, which creates a bit more bounce than spinners who are not tall do. The key to defending any good spinner is to get on top of the ball, especially when you are looking to defend on the front foot, otherwise you end up allowing the spinner room to trick you and dominate. The challenge most batters face against Ash is, when you feel like you are getting on top of the ball, he bowls that in-between length where you are not sure whether to play on the front foot or back. And then you end up not picking the right length. And even if you step out of the crease, he will pitch it on a length where you are not able to drive easily.With the loop and the drift Ash can generate, you have the task of overcoming an opponent whose mission is to scramble your mind and make you commit mistakes.Related

  • Root on facing Ashwin: 'Don't play the previous ball'

  • R Ashwin on Pujara: 'Mirugam will never lose an argument; his game is an extension of that'

  • How Ashwin stopped worrying about technique and started loving his old game again

  • R Ashwin: 'I've always been good at assessing batsmen, but now I think I've taken it to another level' (2021)

  • How R Ashwin tweaked his line and used dip, drift and changes of pace to become the world's best Test spinner

There’s no respite. If you’re comfortable batting against him from over the stumps, he will change to round the stumps, from where he is able to create that angle where, if the ball goes straight, there’s an edge in play even if you are looking to defend.He puts a lot of effort into each delivery. He’s not just looking to pitch it; he is putting his body behind the ball. Because of that he gets those revs, and on some pitches, because of those revs, even if the ball doesn’t spin, it goes away from the right-hander, but it goes at a speed where, if you are slightly late on it, you pay the price.

I wish I had his incredible memory. His mind is always ticking. Away from cricket, he is a voracious reader, enjoys chess online, and is open to learning new things

Reading batters has always been a key part of what Ash does. He is always one step ahead, alert to the smallest cues. He is constantly observing the batter, his trigger, where the backlift is coming from, which stump he is on. So if a batter is looking to sweep, Ash will go a little fuller and try and block him by bowling the quicker delivery, almost a yorker length, and get an lbw. Ideally as a batter you will read the ball once the bowler has released it and then determine your shot, but not many batters have the ability to do so.No detail is too small for his sharp mind. He has spoken previously about how he obsessively pored over videos of Steve Smith several months before India’s tour of Australia in 2020-21. Before the Melbourne Test, I remember we chalked out the plan of having a leg gully against Smith because there was a bit of moisture, which made the ball hold a bit. And that is the reason Ash ended up bowling with the new ball. Part of the plan was also that he would come round the stumps to create the angle. And the plan worked – I caught Smith at leg gully.I have also been privileged to enjoy from up close Ash’s duels against Joe Root, another fine player of spin. If you look at his record, Root has always been a proactive batter – he will either try to play the sweep or reverse sweep, or try to rotate the strike so he doesn’t have to face six balls off any particular bowler. I’m not saying that Root doesn’t defend well, but overall, his game plan is to put bowlers under pressure.To counter that, Ashwin’s tactic has been to keep Root on strike by taking out the short leg or other close-in fielders, leaving just one slip, and placing a fielder at square leg to prevent the single. It doesn’t matter whether you are playing on a flat pitch or on a turner, Ash wants Root to defend those six balls and see how he reacts. Even on a slow pitch, where the ball might not carry to slip, I have seen Ash keep a short third and a deep point just to block Root – or any other batter who plays the reverse sweep. It is a battle of wills between two top players, which makes for an engrossing contest.In Adelaide in 2018, Ashwin and Pujara put on 62 important runs for the seventh wicket in the first innings, helping India get to 250. Ashwin also took six wickets in the game•AFP/Getty ImagesWhen you are playing the longer format, bowling fitness is the most important thing, and Ash is probably one of the fittest I have known. If he ends up bowling 30, 35, 40 overs in a day, when he bowls again the next morning, his body might be a little fatigued, but he still has the stamina to carry on. He has the hunger to wake up and do it again and again.That doesn’t happen without hard work or without bowling countless balls in practice. Ash is very sharp at that. He knows how to prepare before a series, whether it’s in India or overseas.We became close friends by talking cricket. Most times we are on the same side, but you can never win an argument against him. He is very smart, and his vocabulary is probably among the best in the cricketing fraternity. (I know he says the same about me: that I am someone who will never give up in an argument.)But Ash is not a bad loser. We play table tennis and tennis – two things in which I enjoy having an edge over him! – and he is a good sport.

It is easy to presume that as the lead spinner, especially on home pitches, Ash will deliver most times. But the pressure of that expectation can be immense

I wish I had his incredible memory. That is probably because he has a mind that is always ticking. Away from cricket, he is a voracious reader, enjoys chess online, and is open to learning new things. He has evolved and survived for a long time despite playing multiple formats, and that is mainly because of his innovative mind: he is not afraid or shy to try out new things, even at the cost of failing in the process.The first time I saw him was, if memory serves me right, in an Under-17 tournament organised by the National Cricket Academy, where he was playing along with Anirudh Srikanth [the former Tamil Nadu batter]. Both were playing as opening batters then. As we know now, Ash is a very capable batter. No doubt his match-winning knock and spell at Chepauk in 2021 are to be cherished, but his heroics in the Sydney Test in 2021, where he batted with a bad back, will be talked about for a long time. He replaced me following the first drinks break after tea on the fifth day as India battled for a draw. I remember him telling me at tea not to be worried and that he would bat despite his back.When your back hurts, it is very tough to leave the ball, especially the bouncer, because you can’t duck properly. Sometimes even to defend against spinners is more challenging, because you have to have a big stride. But he batted admirably once Hanuma [Vihari], who had torn his hamstring, battled through the initial period of their partnership.More than making individual runs, he has contributed to valuable partnerships. Take our stand in the first innings in 2018 in Adelaide, which was crucial to our win in that Test, which set up the series.Ashwin, Pujara, Virat Kohli and Wriddhiman Saha celebrate the wicket of David Warner in the Bangalore classic of 2017•BCCIWhen it comes to my favourite Test involving Ash, there are too many to just single one out. There’s Bangalore 2017. Adelaide 2018. Sydney 2021. All these were against Australia. Overall, and Ash would agree, those of us who played the Bangalore Test believe it ranks high among the most memorable ones.Australia were 1-0 coming into the game, and India fell behind immediately after Nathan Lyon ran through our first innings with an eight-wicket haul. It was not the typical Chinnaswamy pitch that usually tends to be on the flatter side, at least in the first innings. In that Test there was variable bounce and the pitch was helpful to spinners from day one. Australia held the upper hand for most of the Test, though we pulled it back in the second innings to set a target of 188.The pressure was on Ash to deliver in that fourth innings. It is never easy when you know that you have a very small total to defend. And while every bowler stepped up, it was his spell that proved crucial. He picked up six wickets. It is easy to presume that as the lead spinner, especially on home pitches, in favourable conditions, he will deliver most times. But the pressure of that expectation can be immense.Having just become the second quickest bowler to 500 Test wickets, Ash now deserves another equally significant landmark – of 100 Tests. He’s probably a little late getting there for various reasons. But I am really happy for him. He is someone who has always been ready to take the challenge on and do the hard yards for the team. He deserves it the most.

Brandon King is rising once again, but as middle-order batter

From 196 for 5 in a chase of 309, King’s composed knock at No. 4 almost took West Indies over the line against India

Deivarayan Muthu23-Jul-2022.That was Ian Bishop on commentary after King had rumbled to a 59-ball century in the CPL 2019 qualifier. King’s 72-ball 132 not out, which is still the highest individual score in CPL history, moved Johan Botha, who was the coach of Guyana Amazon Warriors at the time, to tears and signalled the rise of a new star in West Indian white-ball cricket.After a breakout season, King was immediately called up to West Indies’ white-ball squads to face Afghanistan and India in India in 2019. King’s CPL star quality, however, faded out in international cricket, and he was dropped from the West Indies set-up after those stints in 2019 and 2020.Having then made his comeback on a tour to Pakistan in December 2021, King is rising once again, but as a middle-order batter.Related

Old-school Hope does his job for West Indies, the way he knows best

Dhawan, Siraj, Thakur star in thrilling win as India go 1-0 up

'Really proud' Pooran lauds West Indies' fighting spirit: 'Feels like a win for us'

Pooran: West Indies must 'believe that we can fight'

King had started his career as a middle-order batter for Jamaica, and after having two productive first-class seasons, he was picked for a similar role in the West Indies A side in August 2019. He also began his CPL career in the middle order for St Kitts & Nevis Patriots before Botha transformed him into a hard-hitting opener at Amazon Warriors.Though King enjoyed some success at the top – he has also batted at No. 3 for West Indies B in the Global T20 Canada – his dream was always to become a middle-order batter for West Indies, like his hero Ramnaresh Sarwan.King wears jersey no. 53 as a tribute to Sarwan, and against India at the Queen’s Park Oval on Friday, where Sarwan has played a number of excellent hands, King produced one of his own – although he couldn’t take his team over the line against India.He came out to bat at No. 4 after West Indies were 133 for 2 in their pursuit of 309. Shamarh Brooks had just holed out for 46, and two overs later, King watched Kyle Mayers chase a wide ball and nick it behind for 75. When Nicholas Pooran and then Rovman Powell also fell, West Indies were 196 for 5 in the 37th over.King, however, didn’t panic and just focused on taking the chase deep along with the lower middle order. He loves pace on the ball, and has been vulnerable to spin in the past, but he worked his way around that potential weakness on a Port of Spain surface that slowed down considerably in the second innings.King took 34 off 39 balls against Yuzvendra Chahal and Axar Patel before Chahal ultimately trumped him. When Axar was just finding some grip and turn, King unsettled him by dashing out of the crease and clattering him with the turn over extra cover. Then, when Chahal erred too full with his wrong’un, he sank to one knee and slog-swept him over midwicket for a six.

“It’s not too much about beating India. It’s just about our batting formula and how you want to play cricket.”Brandon King on a close loss in the first ODI

When the asking rate shot past ten, King decided to take another chance against Chahal, but the spinner hid a wide legbreak away from his reach and had him skewing a catch to deep cover.West Indies needed 57 from 33 balls at that stage, and they eventually lost by three runs despite late blows from Romario Shepherd and Akeal Hosein. However, West Indies’ comeback, after they were swept 3-0 by Bangladesh earlier this month, made Pooran feel like it was a win.In a way, it was a win for King too, who showed that he could cut it against India’s IPL stars. It was a win for King’s first West Indies captain Kieron Pollard, who was vocal about protecting him and other bright talents from “vultures that are out to take down their careers”.Fittingly, Pollard was in attendance at the Queen’s Park Oval to see King blossom in international cricket. On another day, King could have finished it off for West Indies, but he took his dismissal and the other early wickets in his stride.”Even though they [India] scored 300-plus, it was a lovely batting wicket,” King said at the post-match press conference. “It wasn’t a wicket where you had to take a lot of risks – just rotate the strike and take the game as deep as possible. That’s all I tried to do.”We always believed that if we bring the game down to the last five overs, we have the guys that can chase down any total, and I think [Romario] Shepherd and Akeal [Hosein] showed that today that we’re always in the game. [We] would have liked it if some of the early wickets didn’t fall and we could’ve had some of the batsmen there at the end; but it’s part of the game.”West Indies still have many holes to plug in their batting – with or without the likes of Shimron Hetmyer and Evin Lewis – but Friday’s chase was a sign of their progress, and perhaps, a cause for alarm for India.”It’s not too much about beating India,” King said. “It’s just about our batting formula and how you want to play cricket. Bringing down the game to the last ball chasing 300-plus was good for us. On another day, we would get over the line.”

When Warwickshire kept their title triumph strictly professional

Acknowledgement without revelry seems to have been what Tom Dollery’s class of ’51 preferred

Paul Edwards18-Jun-2020July 24, 1951
Scorecard
July 31, 1951
Scorecard
Should you be walking along the wide concrete concourse which runs around and beneath the stands at Edgbaston, you will see many reminders of Warwickshire’s recent triumphs. Pictures of Brian Lara, Dermot Reeve, Allan Donald and Ian Bell enliven the dull walls and recall the county’s four championships and other trophies in the past quarter-century.But images revisiting the team’s more distant glories are harder to find. There is, for example, no comparable photograph of Fred Gardner, although maybe that is to be expected. “He is better known on the cricket fields of England as a plodding, conscientious and even tedious opening bat with an attenuated back-lift and a monumental patience,” wrote JM Solan of his hero in 1959. “His almost ascetic abstention from scoring has occasionally roused affectionate irritability in those under whom he has served.”Yet Solan, the cricket correspondent of the also knew that Gardner had played a host of valuable innings for Warwickshire and that his three centuries in 1951 had helped his side to one of the most significant title wins in the post-war era.But acknowledgement without revelry seems to have been what Warwickshire’s class of ’51 preferred. Their skipper, HE “Tom” Dollery, had been the first professional to be appointed to that post by a county club and two years later he had overseen the assembly of a squad, all of whom were paid to play cricket.The only amateur to represent Warwickshire in 1951 was the wicketkeeper, Esmond Lewis, and his one match took place nearly a fortnight after the title had been decided. And when appeared under Dollery’s name the following year, its author quickly scotched any idea that his book would be a vanity project: “It is not, in any sense, a ‘how we did it’, an account of special stratagems which enabled Warwickshire to win the County Championship in 1951. Modesty, if nothing else, would forbid the writing of such a book – modesty and the fact that Warwickshire look forward to 1952 in the knowledge that honours are hard to win and even harder to retain.” There was shrewd prescience in those final words. Dollery’s county did not finish higher than sixth in any of the next seven seasons.ALSO READ: Gillette Cup took Sussex captain’s fancyOthers were more effusive. Warwickshire’s 1952 annual report called the title win “a success in the best traditions of the game for a team playing perfectly together as a co-ordinated entity under the man who proved himself the greatest professional captain the game has known and one of the greatest natural cricket leaders of all time.”Norman Preston, the editor of Wisden, made Warwickshire’s skipper one of his cricketers of the year and considered his achievement again in his Notes: “Dollery showed that a paid player can become a captain in the real sense of the word. By his astute work, Dollery has raised the status of the professional just as Hobbs did in the days when every county had one dressing room for the paid and another for the unpaid.”Warwickshire’s captain probably appreciated Preston’s compliments, not least because they slightly shifted the attention away from him and towards the tightly-knit group of blokes who had played by far the best cricket in the country. But he also knew he had been a trifle fortunate. Six of his team had remained fit for all 28 championship matches and two others, the wicketkeeper, Dick Spooner, and the middle-order batsman, Bert Wolton, had missed only one game. Spooner and Wolton were two of five Warwickshire batsmen who scored over a thousand runs in a wet summer but none were invited to play for England against South Africa in a series the home side won 3-1. Wisden also noted that no Warwickshire cricketers were asked to play in July’s Gentleman v Players game, although that rather overlooked the obvious point that Dollery’s gentlemen were only eligible to represent the Players in any case.Perhaps even more usefully, Roy Tattersall’s form helped ensure that the selectors would not call on the leg-spinner, Eric Hollies, who was thus free to take 149 championship wickets that summer and to bowl an average of almost 50 overs in each match, even when hampered by an ankle injury later in the season. The balding medium-pacer, Charlie Grove, was the only other bowler to take 100 wickets and he formed a potent new-ball combination with the New Zealander, Tom Pritchard, who bowled perhaps 15mph quicker. Pritchard managed only 38 wickets in the first 13 games but took 36 in the next four and finished with 93 in a season curtailed by a shoulder injury.So instead of representing their country or appearing in an increasingly anachronistic contest, Warwickshire’s cricketers stayed fit and pledged themselves to the bear and ragged staff. Even their first names suggested a lack of pretension. There was Bert, Fred and Eric and there was Tom, Dick and Charlie. Gardner’s ponderous batting may have irritated the captain on occasions: “Get out or I’ll send someone in to run you out,” read one memorable message; but the captain knew the value of a man described by Donald Trelford as “the apotheosis of works league cricket, the most stolid and slowest of openers, his face like an unsmiling Bob Hope”. Perhaps so, but only Spooner and Dollery himself contributed more runs to the cause in 1951. It was “an extraordinary team of ordinary cricketers playing purposeful cricket,” said Dollery.”They didn’t seem ordinary to me,” responded Trelford in his wonderful essay, written over 30 years later and shining with childlike love. “Not Pritchard. Not Spooner, the left-handed opener who was also a in the old sense… He had a brisk walk between overs, hurrying with his body bent forward, his peaked cap and his big nose to the fore, gloved hands behind his back.”Warwickshire keeper Dick Spooner•The Sphere/Wisden Cricket Monthly/Getty ImagesAnd Warwickshire’s title-win was notable in other respects. Other counties, notably Yorkshire, who finished distant runners-up in 1951, pointed out that only Gardner and Grove out of Dollery’s regular squad had been born within the county boundaries. (Hollies came from Old Hill but that was in Staffordshire until 1966.) There were three New Zealanders and three others from the north-east. That latter trio included Alan Townsend, who made just 789 runs but pocketed 39 slip catches, some of them absurdly fine.In any case, Warwickshire felt their recruitment strategy was not something for which they needed to apologise. They were not poaching players from other first-class counties – Ray Weeks, the slow-left armer, came from Camborne – and at the previous year’s AGM the President, Dr Harold Thwaite, had said the policy was “breeding a spirit of emulation in Warwickshire youth in town and village”. It was a typically confident claim from an official at the club which was to launch its own football pool in 1953. That project, modelled in part on Northamptonshire’s scheme, was criticised by the moral establishment but by 1972 it had raised £2m, half of which had been spent on Edgbaston.Such enterprises were invaluable to the counties in the 1950s, a decade in which attendances at championship matches declined and the pressure for a briefer format of the game grew, even in the committee-rooms at Lord’s. But in Warwickshire’s great summer neither popular entertainments nor the weather could deter supporters who saw their team go to the top of the table on June 1st and stay there. The county also visited Stratford and Coventry but the crucial matches against Lancashire and Yorkshire which finally confirmed the dominance of Dollery’s team were both played at Edgbaston in late July. And ironically, perhaps, for a team without stars, Dollery scored a century in both contests.Over 25,000 spectators crowded into the ground on the Saturday of the Lancashire game but saw the home side put out for 184, Tattersall taking six wickets. Cyril Washbrook’s seven-hour 209 not out gave his team a lead of 149 and left Warwickshire with a draw as their only objective. They were 113 for 5 on the last day when Wolton joined Dollery in a stand of 68. Two other time-consuming stands with Pritchard and Grove followed and when the draw was agreed Dollery had completed his first hundred of the season.A quick trip to Taunton gave Warwickshire one of their six two-day wins in 1951 and the team returned to the Midlands to meet Yorkshire, four of whose players, Len Hutton, Frank Lowson, Willie Watson and Don Brennan were at the Headingley Test.For nearly two days it was a respectable contest. Yorkshire grafted their way to 249 in 126.4 overs on Saturday but Dollery’s second century in a week and fifties by Spooner and Jimmy Ord established a 113-run advantage. Two down with only ten runs to show for their efforts on Monday evening, Yorkshire collapsed to 97 all out the following morning, Hollies taking 5 for 47 and Weeks 3 for 3 on a wearing pitch. Leslie Duckworth’s superb history of Warwickshire cricket puts the attendance at 8000 on Tuesday and the total for the three days, including members, at 55,000. Certainly the number of paying spectators, 43,000, beat the record that had been set against Lancashire a week earlier. It was the home side’s fifteenth championship victory of the season and their first double over Yorkshire since 1890. Just over a fortnight later the title was sealed when Worcestershire won at Scarborough.The Birmingham Post produced a supplement to mark the local victory and asserted that the title “had been coming these last few seasons”. But the Manchester Evening News could have said much the same during most of the 1950s and on many occasions in the 80s and 90s. Theproblem was that the pennant never arrived at Old Trafford in those decades. Dollery, however, having complained at the AGM that his team were being labelled champions even before the clocks had gone forward, went about the business of proving the predictions absolutely correct. “The skipper”, wrote Trelford, “had the air of a man wholly at ease with himself, a true yeoman, a natural leader.” Match from the Day

خاص | موقف أحمد حمدي من الاستمرار مع الزمالك.. وخطة بيضاء

تتواصل التحركات الإدارية داخل نادي الزمالك لحسم ملفات عدد من اللاعبين قبل حلول فترة الانتقالات الشتوية، في ظل الوضع المالي الصعب الذي يمر به النادي هذا الموسم.

وبينما تترقب الجماهير قرارات مهمة بشأن اللاعبين الحاليين، يظل موقف أحمد حمدي من أكثر القضايا التي أثارت تساؤلات داخل القلعة البيضاء خلال الأيام الماضية.

اقرأ أيضًا.. خاص | بعد إيقاف القيد.. جروس يصدم الزمالك بسبب “الزهايمر”

وعلم موقع بطولات أن هناك حالة من الغموض تحيط بمستقبل أحمد حمدي، خاصة بعد حالة الغضب داخل النادي بسبب موعد زفافه الذي أقيم منذ أيام، بالتزامن مع غيابه المستمر عن حسابات الفريق.

وينتهي عقد أحمد حمدي مع الزمالك في يونيو المقبل، ما يمنحه أحقية التوقيع لأي نادٍ آخر بداية من يناير القادم دون العودة لإدارة الزمالك، وهو ما يزيد من تعقيد الموقف.

حتى هذه اللحظة، لم تتحرك إدارة الزمالك لفتح باب التفاوض مع اللاعب لتجديد عقده، ما يعكس عدم وجود اتجاه واضح لاستمراره داخل الفريق بالموسم المقبل.

وبحسب ما علم “بطولات” يفكر الزمالك في بيع اللاعب خلال الشتاء إذا وصل عرض مناسب، رغبة في تحقيق أي استفادة مالية، خاصة في ظل الأزمة المالية الحالية.

ويرى مسؤولو النادي أن أحمد حمدي خارج الحسابات الفنية منذ فترة طويلة، ولا يشارك في التدريبات الجماعية أو قوائم المباريات هذا الموسم، وهو ما يجعل رحيله أقرب من استمراره داخل الفريق.

Alex Bregman Leaves Red Sox Game With Injury Friday

Boston Red Sox third baseman Alex Bregman left the team’s game Friday afternoon against the Baltimore Orioles in the bottom of the fifth inning with an injury. 

Bregman nailed a ball down into left field, but had to hit the brakes hard while rounding first, and in the process appeared to hurt himself. He walked off on his own power, but clearly knew something was up that needed to get looked at by the training staff.

Take a look at that here: 

It’s hard to tell what exactly was in pain, but a slight limp, especially after a sprint, would imply something related to the lower body. 

The Red Sox later announced the injury was right quad tightness. It's still not known the severity of the injury.

Information is not yet available about Bregman’s injury and how serious it is, but Boston being down another infielder would make for a very complicated infield situation. Triston Casas is out for the season after a gruesome injury at first base. Boston asked Rafael Devers to play first, but Devers was vocally uninterested after voicing earlier displeasure at being relegated from third base to DH this spring to make room for Bregman. That even prompted trade speculation. It’s easy to imagine how delicate it might be to request Devers go back to third if it turns out Bregman’s injury is something that keeps him out for an extended period of time. 

Marcelo Mayer, currently doing everything right for Triple A Worcester, can play third. 

Coming into the day, Bregman was slashing .297/.381/.554 with an OPS+ of 159. He led the Sox with hits (58) coming into Friday.

تشكيل مانشستر سيتي المتوقع أمام نيوكاسل يونايتد اليوم في الدوري الإنجليزي

يحل فريق مانشستر سيتي، ضيفًا على خصمه نيوكاسل يونايتد مساء يوم السبت، في إطار منافسات بطولة الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، بعد انتهاء فترة التوقف الدولي لشهر نوفمبر.

تأتي تلك المباراة في خضم منافسات الجولة الثانية عشر من بطولة الدوري الإنجليزي، موسم 2025/26، على ملعب “سانت جيمس بارك”.

طالع | تشكيل مانشستر سيتي الرسمي أمام نيوكاسل في الدوري الإنجليزي.. موقف عمر مرموش

ويمتلك مانشستر سيتي 22 نقطة حيث يحتل حاليًا المركز الثاني في جدول الدوري الإنجليزي، بينما يحتل نيوكاسل يونايتد المركز الرابع عشر برصيد 22 نقطة.

ومن المتوقع تواجد النجم المصري عمر مرموش على دكة بدلاء مانشستر سيتي، في ظل اعتماد المدرب بيب جوارديولا على إيرلينج هالاند وجيريمي دوكو في التشكيل الأساسي، إلى جانب فيل فودين. تشكيل مانشستر سيتي المتوقع أمام نيوكاسل يونايتد في الدوري الإنجليزي

حراسة المرمى: دوناروما.

خط الدفاع: ماتيوس نونيز، روبن دياز، جفارديول، نيكو أوريلي.

خط الوسط: برناردو سيلفا، نيكو جونزاليس.

خط الوسط الهجومي: ريان شرقي، فيل فودين، جيريمي دوكو.

خط الهجوم: إيرلينج هالاند.

ويُمكنكم متابعة أحداث مباريات اليوم لحظة بلحظة من مركز المباريات من هنـــا

Game
Register
Service
Bonus