Celtic can finally axe James Forrest by signing £7m "artist"

Saturday was a special day for Celtic for multiple reasons after they clinched the Scottish Premiership title with a 5-0 win over Dundee United at Tannadice Park.

The Hoops ran out comfortable winners on the day, thanks to two goals apiece from Nicolas Kuhn and Adam Idah and an own goal from Ryan Strain, to secure their fourth title in as many seasons.

It was the club’s 55th top-flight league title and that means that they are now level with their city rivals on 55 league titles, with a chance to overtake them next season.

Brendan Rodgers has now won four league titles in four full seasons at Parkhead, split across two spells, and will be looking to make history with that 56th title in the 2025/26 campaign.

Celtic managerBrendanRodgerscelebrates after winning the League Cup

One player who has already made history in a Celtic shirt, however, is James Forrest after he claimed the 26th trophy of his career at the club on Saturday, making him the most-decorated player in the club’s history.

The one-club man has been in the first-team for 26 trophies won, an incredible accomplishment, but he may not be as involved next season, as his powers on the pitch are waning.

Why James Forrest may not play as much next season

The 33-year-old star is heading towards the latter stage of his career and could find himself on the fringes of the squad next term if the Hoops look to make additions in the summer transfer window.

Forrest’s contract at Parkhead does not expire until the summer of 2026, which means that he is unlikely to move on ahead of next season, but he could spend the final year of that deal on the periphery of the group.

Celtic winger James Forrest.

The Hoops academy graduate is currently on course to end the season without a single goal to show for his efforts at the top end of the pitch, having managed at least one goal in all 15 of his previous campaigns in the first-team.

There are, of course, a few more matches left to be played for the Hoops, including the final of the SFA Cup against Aberdeen at Hampden Park, but Forrest has played 25 games in the Premiership and the Champions League to date without finding the back of the net.

Appearances

19

4

Goals

0

0

Shots

28

2

Big chances missed

3

0

Big chances created

3

1

Assists

4

1

As you can see in the table above, Forrest has had 30 shots and missed three ‘big chances’ without scoring a goal in those two competitions, whilst he has only created four ‘big chances’ for the team in that time as well.

At the age of 33, it is not a surprise to see the winger’s influence on the pitch diminish. However, if Celtic want to push on and achieve more success in Europe, they should look to bring in another forward who has the potential to offer more, particularly in Europe.

Celtic's January interest in Norwegian winger

The Daily Record recently reported that the Hoops tried to sign Sarpsborg winger Sondre Orjasaeter to bolster their wide options in the January transfer window.

It also claimed that the attacker, who carried his passport around in case a move to Parkhead did materialise, is valued at £7m by his current club, although it remains to be seen whether or not the Hoops would be willing to pay that much for him.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

During the January transfer window, Football Insider revealed that Rodgers wanted more quality options to call upon in the wide areas and that the club were due to ‘accelerate’ a swoop for the Norwegian starlet.

Journalist Mark Hendry later reported that the Scottish giants had an opening bid rejected by Sarpsborg for the young forward, and the Hoops ended the window without a deal for the 21-year-old talent.

Brendan Rodgers

After the club failed to sign the winger in January, Rodgers should push for the Hoops to bring Orjasaeter, once dubbed an “artist” by Havard Flo, to Glasgow in the summer window because he could be an upgrade on Forrest on the flanks.

Why Celtic should sign Sondre Orjasaeter

As aforementioned, the 33-year-old Celtic veteran’s powers are waning, and he should not be relied upon as much as he has been this season, particularly with his four appearances in Europe.

The Hoops will need more quality in the final third if they want to progress in the Champions League and compete in the latter stage of the competition, which is why they should target Orjasaeter and other additions to bolster their squad.

James Forrest

Whilst the Norwegian star is not a proven Champions League performer who would be guaranteed to make a big impact for the Bhoys on the European stage, the 21-year-old talent’s performances for Sarpsborg suggest that the potential is there for him to offer more than Forrest.

Orjasaeter has been in impressive form for his club at league level since the start of the 2024 campaign, showcasing his qualities as both a scorer and a creator of goals.

Appearances

28

4

Goals

5

0

Big chances missed

5

1

Big chances created

12

4

Key passes per game

1.9

1.8

Assists

5

1

Dribbles completed per game

2.4

2.3

As you can see in the table above, his teammates have let him down at times by only scoring six goals from the 16 ‘big chances’ that he has created on the wing.

These statistics suggest that he has the quality to offer more than Forrest in the final third, as both a scorer and a creator of goals, if he can translate that form over to Scottish football.

At the age of 21, Orjasaeter is also 12 years younger than the Scottish ace and could be a long-term addition for Celtic, with the potential to develop and improve throughout his time at Parkhead.

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This is why the Hoops should push to get a deal done for the young ace this summer, because they could improve their team and allow Forrest to become less of a frontline option, seeing out his career and contract without being relied upon in the Premiership or the Champions League.

Things Pakistan say, things Pakistan do, and the gap between them

Hesson has been given the licence to change the image of the T20I side, but it was the same picture with different characters

Danyal Rasool22-Sep-20251:39

Chopra: Clear difference in Pakistan’s intent with the bat

There is something of a discrepancy between the things Pakistan say and the things Pakistan do. Since Mike Hesson took over as their white-ball coach in May, he has ostensibly been given the licence to remake their T20I squad in the image of his philosophy. Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan have been cast out into the cold until they can, in Hesson’s words, “improve in some areas” – primarily to do with strike rate.He made clear that batting depth would be prioritised over fast-bowling expertise, and called Mohammad Nawaz “the best spin bowler in the world” earlier this month. Pakistan, meanwhile, made clear that batters who demonstrate intent from the outset will not live in fear of their place or be penalised for low scores as long as they stick to the game plan required of them.Those, anyway, are the things Pakistan say, and would presumably have said again if they didn’t keep cancelling press conferences in the Asia Cup. And then, against India in their first Super Four game of the tournament came the things they did.Related

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Abhishek smashes 74 off 39 as India ease past Pakistan

Pakistan could not have found themselves in a position more conducive to the cricket they insist they want to play. India put down three relatively straightforward chances in the first ten overs. Sahibzada Farhan, a beneficiary of that largesse in the first over, had just smashed Axar Patel for a six that took him to a fifty off 34 balls.Far from the post-powerplay quicksand that India had enveloped them in the group fixture last Sunday, Pakistan had only accelerated since the fielders spread out. Thirty-six runs came in overs seven to ten, with that six off Axar the fourth off an India spinner in the last three overs. In the first six overs, Jasprit Bumrah had been taken for 34 off three, his most expensive T20I powerplay figures. It took Pakistan to 91 at the halfway mark in their innings, comfortably their highest ever ten-over total against India.It established the perfect base to launch the sort of gung-ho attack that is the logical conclusion of this new-look Pakistan’s stated ambition. The drinks break brought a wicket when Saim Ayub top-edged Shivam Dube for Abishek Sharma to take an excellent catch, but it shouldn’t have mattered. Lost wickets are a consequence of high-risk batting, and this was just the second that fell. There were more power-hitters to follow.But, like a child breaking free from their minder, unable to believe how far away they’ve managed to cut loose and suddenly catching a fright, Pakistan spent the seven overs post drinks reverting to the mediocre, comfortable environment that has now become their home. Having seen such limited recent success against India, it was almost as if their position of advantage was in itself a trap India had sprung, a threat they couldn’t see but somehow must still guard against.Sahibzada Farhan gave Pakistan a brisk start but slowed down after ten overs•AFP/Getty ImagesHussain Talat, with a career T20I strike rate of 117 heading into the game, came into the side in place of Hasan Nawaz, who has a career strike rate of 158. Dube overstepped and gave Talat a free hit off the second ball of his innings, but those don’t mean much if you lack the ability to hit freely. Talat hacked at air, and the discrepancy between what Pakistan said and what they were doing began to reveal itself.The momentum Pakistan had built began to slip away, and along with it, the bravado which presented the only realistic route to victory against a better side. India’s bowlers found their lengths, and Pakistan allowed them to set up camp there. Talat scored 10 off 11 balls, while Farhan, who had also dried up at the other end, miscued an offcutter from Dube high into the Dubai sky.This time, it was captain Salman Agha who walked out to bat, another Pakistani inconsistency in human form making its way to the middle. For all the dim view Hesson appeared to take with a former Pakistan captain’s scoring rate, Agha’s strike rate of 111 is lower than all Pakistan batters with a minimum of 500 T20I runs, bar Salman Butt and Misbah-ul-Haq. Yet, he has been anointed the face of this progressive T20I side that Pakistan are adamant they have laid the foundations for.And so, Pakistan began to revert to type, and into their comfort zone. The seven overs immediately following drinks produced 38 runs, the lowest for any side all tournament. It included a 39-ball spell without any boundaries; in the final ten overs, Pakistan hit just two fours and four sixes. Nawaz saw off Varun Chakravarthy’s final over, the 16th of the innings, with four consecutive dot balls, at the end of which he was on 7 off 13. He wasn’t in the side for his “best spinner in the world” bowling abilities either, given he did not send down a ball during India’s routine chase. Meanwhile, Nawaz, along with Agha and Talat, Pakistan’s Nos. 4-6, scored a combined 48 runs in 43 deliveries.Faheem Ashraf came out in the penultimate over and muscled his first ball for a six•AFP/Getty ImagesAgha tried to defend that approach after the game, saying the pitch made it difficult for a new batter to settle. But then, again, those are the things Pakistan say. When the more naturally belligerent Faheem Ashraf emerged in the penultimate over, he had no such problems. The first ball was muscled over square leg for six, and the eight in total he faced produced 20 runs. That was three more than Agha, who came to the crease in the 15th over, faced 13 balls and could muster just one six; and just one fewer than Nawaz, who used up an additional 11 balls. Meanwhile, Mohammad Haris, used as a basher up top or a bludgeoner lower down, never got to bat, nor did Shaheen Shah Afridi, who has been Pakistan’s best slogger this tournament.Four years ago, at this very ground, Pakistan lost to Australia in a T20I World Cup semi-final after scoring 176. In the first 11 overs, Babar and Rizwan were exceptionally defensive, and produced just 75 runs, thus leaving their team-mates an almighty task to be competitive at the backend. It ignited a debate that has brought Pakistan cricket to a point where both men are out of the side because timidity up top is no longer acceptable.Against India on Sunday, with 91 runs off the first ten overs, Pakistan solved that problem. In the second half, though, they were able to scratch together just 80, which, ironically, feels very much like a ten-over score Babar and Rizwan might have put up. The upheaval will be of little use if all Pakistan ultimately do is transfer their diffidence to the other half of the innings.What will worry Pakistan supporters is not a defeat to India; those are commonplace and have, of late, become exercises in damage limitation. Nor does an India game offer any indicator of how far Pakistan are in their journey of improvement – such is the gulf between the two sides in quality. This, however, was a litmus test in how committed Pakistan are to the idea that high risk and high strike rates are the only way to be competitive at the top table of T20I cricket.For ten overs in Dubai, Pakistan threw themselves into the notion with the zeal of a convert. As the rest of the evening unfolded, it began increasingly to look like one of those things Pakistan just say.

'I am six foot three, 100 kgs' – Mitchell is easing himself into Rayudu's role at CSK

Mitchell hasn’t got himself a big score yet, but his approach has aligned with that of CSK’s, like when he took Sunil Narine down in the KKR game

Deivarayan Muthu13-Apr-2024Bat up the order? Yes, sir.Demolish spin in the middle? No problem.Turn up at the death and smash sixes? Sure.Floating in the batting line-up is one of the most difficult jobs in T20 cricket, and Ambati Rayudu did it for two of the most successful franchises in the IPL – Mumbai Indians and CSK. He is now retired, but Daryl Mitchell is easing himself into that role for CSK.Mitchell himself has been New Zealand’s do-it-all man for a while. He opened the batting for them in his first ICC tournament – the T20 World Cup in the UAE in 2021 – and in the ODI World Cup last year he was the most prolific middle-order batter. His versatility tempted CSK to bid up to INR 14 crore for him at the last IPL auction.Related

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There has been a bit of outside noise around Mitchell not getting a big score yet this IPL. The directive, though, from coach Stephen Fleming to the middle-order batters is clear: make small but quick contributions across the board to reach a big total. Mitchell has produced some cameos so far, helping CSK to three wins in five matches. The approach makes sense because CSK have batting depth all the way down to No. 10 or No. 11. Why not make full use of it?”I am six foot three, I am 100 kgs. So, it’s making sure I use my size and my base and finding ways to put pressure back on the spinners in my own way,” Mitchell told reporters in Chennai before CSK’s third home game, against KKR. “And also learning off other players around the world. We have obviously got a guy called Kane Williamson in our team back home.”He is a pretty good player of spin and I have learned a lot off him, but also watching other players all around the world to see how they go about different conditions, and you’re trying to adapt that to your game.”On Monday against KKR, Mitchell was bumped up to No. 3 instead of Ajinkya Rahane, who had spent a substantial amount of time off the field with a niggle. CSK were 27 for 1 in the fourth over, chasing 138 on a sluggish, grippy Chepauk pitch. The new ball was still doing a bit and captain Ruturaj Gaikwad had decided to anchor the chase in the absence of Rahane.

“It doesn’t worry me where I bat in the order. I am a competitor at heart, that’s what drives me. So, whatever role I’ve got to do for the team to help us try and win games of cricket, I’ll do that”Daryl Mitchell

It was over to Mitchell to take risks and disrupt KKR’s bowling. Sunil Narine, with 538 (!) T20 wickets, was up against him, with a wide long-on in place. Mitchell didn’t care. He charged at Narine, used his reach to meet an into-the-pitch offbreak early and launched him into the stands beyond long-on.That shot forced Narine to dart a slider at middle stump, but Mitchell reverse-swept from the stumps and picked it away to the right of short third and left of deep point. He took 13 off Narine’s first over.When Mitchell stepped out to Narine once again in his next over, he did not meet the pitch of the ball and was bowled for 25 off 19 balls. But the damage had been done. Mitchell had scored 17 of those against Narine off just eight balls at a strike rate of 212.50. It wasn’t quite Rayudu vs Rashid Khan, but Mitchell’s attacking intent aligned with CSK’s approach.”It’s just, again, trying to be as present as you can in that moment,” Mitchell said of his game plan against spin. “And working out what their threats are to you as a batsman and trying to find ways to put pressure back on them. That’s the nature of the game that we play. Sometimes it can look ugly, but you get the runs and get the job done and other times it looks beautiful. So, it’s just working out what’s the surface doing, what are the bowlers trying to do to get me out, and I will keep trying to find ways to put pressure back on them as well.”Daryl Mitchell has chipped in with the ball too, and manned the hotspots in the outfield•AFP/Getty ImagesMitchell has batted in four different positions in five innings so far for CSK. But if Rahane is fit to play in Mumbai, where the pitch is usually quicker and bouncier than Chennai’s, or if Shivam Dube is to be pushed up to counter spin, Mitchell might have to slide down the order on Sunday.”It doesn’t worry me where I bat in the order,” Mitchell said. “I am a competitor at heart, that’s what drives me. So, whatever role I’ve got to do for the team to help us try and win games of cricket, I’ll do that. Whether it’s opening, batting at No. 3, No. 4, No. 5 or No. 6.”Mitchell has also pitched in with the ball and has manned the hotspots in the outfield. CSK’s team management believes that Mitchell has the game to succeed across conditions, which is why they also picked him for their affiliate, Texas Super Kings, in the MLC, even before he had made his IPL debut for them.The last time Mitchell and the Wankhede came together, he cracked 134 and gave India a scare in the ODI World Cup semi-finals last year. His role at CSK in the IPL is different, and another rapid cameo with a risk-taking appetite would do for them against an MI side that also drips with batting depth and power.Life after Rayudu isn’t looking too bad after all for CSK.

Stats – Jayasuriya's record-breaking start, Galle's result streak, and Babar's fourth-innings form

All the important numbers from the second Test in Galle, where Sri Lanka secured their biggest win over Pakistan

Sampath Bandarupalli28-Jul-2022246 The margin of Sri Lanka’s victory in the second Test, their biggest in terms of runs against Pakistan in Test cricket. Their previous best was a 209-run victory in 2012, also in Galle, while defending a target of 510.29 Number of wickets for Prabath Jayasuriya in his three Tests so far. Only India’s Narendra Hirwani, with 31 scalps, had more wickets to his name than Jayasuriya in his first three Tests, while Australia’s Charlie Turner also had 29 wickets after three Tests.ESPNcricinfo Ltd10 Consecutive matches won by teams batting second in Test cricket before Pakistan’s defeat in Galle. The previous longest winning streak was eight Tests played across November and December in 2002. The last team to win batting first in Test cricket before Sri Lanka was South Africa, during their home series in April against Bangladesh.7 Number of players with a five-for in each of their first three Test matches, including Jayasuriya. He is the first Sri Lankan to achieve this feat and only the second player from Asia after Axar Patel.

4 Five-wicket hauls for Jayasuriya in his first three Tests. Turner, Tom Richardson, Vernon Philander and Axar also had four five-fors in their first three outings in Test cricket, while Rodney Hogg had a record five five-fors.6 Three-plus wickets for Jayasuriya in all six innings he has bowled so far in his Test career. Arthur Mailey also claimed three-plus wickets in each of his first six Test innings, while Sri Lanka’s Ajantha Mendis had three or more scalps in his first eight innings in Test cricket.

85.37 Percentage of matches ending in a result in Test cricket at the Galle International Stadium. Only six of the 41 Test matches that the venue has hosted in Test cricket have ended in a draw. Centurion’s SuperSport Park is the only venue that has a better percentage in terms of Test matches with a result – 88.89, with just three of the 27 Tests ending in a draw. Each of the last 19 Test matches played in Galle since 2014 has produced a result, the third-longest streak for any venue.ESPNcricinfo LtdRelated

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4 Scores of fifty or more for Babar Azam in the fourth innings of Test matches in 2022. He has scored 387 runs in four innings at an average of 96.75 batting last in Tests this year. Only four other batters have scored four or more fifty-plus scores in the fourth innings in a calendar year.

The Big Bash League team of the tournament

After 61 matches over two months, the Sydney Sixers came out as champions. Here’s ESPNcricinfo’s team of the tournament

Andrew McGlashan10-Feb-2020Marcus Stoinis (Melbourne Stars)The leading run-scorer in the competition, Stoinis produced one of the performances of the season with his unbeaten 147 against the Sydney Sixers at the MCG. His consistency was outstanding and his 83 off 54 balls in the Challenger helped secure a berth in the final. However, having been told to bash the door down with runs for an international recall it wasn’t enough to get back in the Australia fold as he competed with a host of top-order names. His bowling was limited by a foot injury.Josh Philippe (Sydney Sixers)This was a tight call alongside Perth Scorchers’ Josh Inglis, who played some hugely impactful innings, but Philippe’s knock in the final – and the way he timed his run in the backend of the tournament – swung it his way. There was an evolution to his batting during this year’s competition, highlighted by the way he turned around a run of low scores mid-season to end so strongly including his perfectly-paced fifty against the Melbourne Stars.ALSO READ: Josh Philippe leaves the nerves behind in Big Bash final heroicsAlex Hales (Sydney Thunder)After a somewhat up-and-down first half of the season, Hales hit his stride in magnificent style to help the Thunder reach as far as the Challenger when their run finally ended at the hands of the Stars. He struck some of the biggest blows in the tournament and looked like the international-class batsman he was before losing his chance of playing the World Cup. An England recall is probably about more than just runs for Hales, but he couldn’t have done much more to press the selectors.Beau Webster (Melbourne Renegades)It was a breakout season for Webster as he provided one of the few high points for the defending champions who had a miserable campaign to finish bottom. He started the tournament with a T20 average of 21.75 and finished it averaging 33.27 while his strike-rate climbed 10 runs higher. Having struck three sixes in his previous 15 matches, he collected 17 in 14 outings as his game evolved. How the Renegades use him as they look to rebuild will be interesting.Glenn Maxwell (Melbourne Stars, captain)Takes the captaincy of this side having led the Stars as they qualified top of the regular season with ease, then managed to pull the team back together for the Challenger when they had lost four games in a row, although another final defeat stung badly. Produced some compelling finishing – especially his 83 off 45 balls – although occasionally it could be questioned whether he should have come in higher up and his season did fade with a high score of 25 in his last eight innings. Bowled very effectively as well, often taking key powerplay overs.Jon Wells places the ball•Getty ImagesJon Wells (Adelaide Strikers)Was outstanding in the middle order, drawing comparisons with Michael Bevan in the way he could finish an innings and his ability to rotate the strike. Couldn’t quite get the Strikers over the line in the Knockout, although that was as much down to poor batting elsewhere than a failure on his part, but it has now been two impressive seasons back-to-back. He was overlooked for the Australia T20I squad to South Africa but he may yet have a set of skills worth looking at.Rashid Khan (Adelaide Strikers)He rarely fails to deliver for the Strikers and it was another very consistent season for Rashid who remained a banker. His hat-trick against the Sixers came in a losing cause but was a highlight moment of the season. Was occasionally taken to but his economy rate remained just a fraction over seven. Didn’t always feel as though the most was made of his striking power with the bat.Daniel Sams (Sydney Thunder)The leading wicket-taker in the tournament as he became the Thunder’s go-to bowler. Only three times did he go wicketless – one of those was the match where the Thunder were eventually eliminated by the Stars in the Challenger final – and he was the only bowler to deliver two maiden overs in the season (there were six in total). It was slim pickings with the bat when more was expected, but he more than made up for it.Daniel Sams has been compelling with his left-arm pace•Getty Images and Cricket AustraliaPeter Siddle (Adelaide Strikers)Once again, Siddle highlighted his evolution into a standout T20 performer with some nerveless displays at the death as a vital cog in an impressive Strikers’ attack. Unlike last season he was available throughout having slipped out of the Test squad before announcing his international retirement in January. Whether he remains with the Strikers is up in the air at the moment, but that shows how sought after he has become in the format.Adam Zampa (Melbourne Stars)He was outstanding either side of the ODI tour of India. He bolstered his wicket tally with eight in the last three matches and has been bowling with as much confidence as ever. He was allowed to operate in an attacking manner by Maxwell – but only went at a touch over seven an over – and along with Haris Rauf was the key weapon in the attack.Haris Rauf (Melbourne Stars)One of the stories of the season as he was picked up from Tasmanian grade cricket to fill the shoes of firstly Dale Steyn and then Pat Brown when the latter was ruled out of the tournament. He bowled with great pace – the high 140kph-mark on a consistent basis – but also showed a wicked slower ball with the contrasts proving too much for a host of batsmen. He took a hat-trick on the same day as Rashid Khan and has been locked in to return next season.

Victoria storm to 300-run victory to stay unbeaten

Steven Smith again stood alone amid the wreckage of the NSW batting

AAP12-Nov-2025Steven Smith will enter the Ashes averaging more than 100 for the summer, after his half-century couldn’t save New South Wales from a 300-run Sheffield Shield defeat to Victoria who made it four wins from four.On a dramatic third day at the SCG where both Josh Hazlewood and Sean Abbott left the ground for hamstring scans, NSW were all out for 125 chasing 425 for victory.Related

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Hazlewood has since been cleared for the first Test but Abbott is out of contention, with their issues just nine days out from Ashes opener in Perth overshadowing NSW’s woes.But by the end of Wednesday, NSW had still been convincingly beaten inside three days, after being bowled out twice in a combined 89.3 overs for the match.Sam Elliott picked up three wickets for Victoria to go with his maiden five-wicket haul in the first innings, while Fergus O’Neill bowled well for his 2 for 22.But what can’t be denied is the form Smith will enter next week’s first Test in, as he prepares to captain Australia in the absence of the injured Pat Cummins.Smith’s unbeaten 56 on Wednesday means he now has scores of 118, 57 and 56 not out to start the summer for NSW after returning from an extended holiday in America.While he flourished with the drive in the first innings on Tuesday, the bulk of his runs came square of the wicket and behind it as he played a lone hand on Wednesday.There was still one big six down the ground off Todd Murphy, when he lifted the fingerspinner over long off.But while Smith again looked in good shape, Sam Konstas’s 27 in the fourth innings made him the only other NSW batter to pass 20 in the match. On a pitch with plenty of variable bounce, six batters were either bowled or trapped lbwEarlier, Abbott took three wickets in six balls before suffering his injury at the end of a five-over spell. The seamer bowled Todd Murphy and Peter Handscomb in the same over, before Oliver Peake edged a ball back onto his own stumps in Abbott’s next over.Hazlewood also had Sam Harper caught on the pull shot, before reporting some tightness to Smith and leaving the field for scans.”Coming into this game, we knew it was going to be a big challenge,” Victoria coach Chris Rogers said.  “It’s almost one of those games where you’re playing against a bit of a superstar team. If you lose, that’s okay. It could be a good health check to see where you are.”But to come out and play with such a dominant performance, I think it gives our changing room such a lift.”

Varela elogia o Pyramids e analisa chances do Flamengo contra o PSG: 'Não acabou'

MatériaMais Notícias

O Flamengo está a um passo de conquistar o mundo mais uma vez. Mas não é um passo simples. Depois de bater o Pyramids, do Egito, por 2 a 0 na tarde deste sábado, no estádio Estádio Ahmad bin Ali, no Catar, o Rubro-Negro conquistou a Copa Challenger e se classificou para enfrentar o PSG na final do Mundial. Uma das peças fundamentais durante esse mês vitorioso do time de Filipe Luís é o lateral-direito Varela, que se consolida cada vez mais no time titular.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Mengão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Flamengo

Depois de mais uma atuação sólida com a camisa vermelha e preta, o uruguaio afirmou que o Pyramids surpreendeu o Flamengo e já projetou a grande final contra o PSG, jogo mais esperado desta Copa Intercontinental.

— Não acabou ainda. Seguimos na luta pelo jogo mais importante. Hoje foi um duelo duro, muito desgatante. No jogo passado já foi muito desgastante. O Pyramids até nos surpreendeu em alguns aspectos. A partir de agora precisamos nos recuperar já pensando na final. Antes era jogo a jogo. Cruz Azul é um grande time, muito duro. O Pyramids também já se provou antes da final. Agora sim é pensar no PSG. Sabemos da qualidade do PSG, é o melhor time do mundo. Mas acho que nosso time tem muita vontade de seguir fazendo história — destacou Varela em entrevista ao canal GE TV.

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Os gols da partida foram marcados pelos zagueiros Léo Pereira e Danilo, ambos com assistência do meia Arrascaeta. O conterrâneo de Varela, inclusive, marcou os dois gols da partida anterior contra o Cruz Azul, que garantiu ao Flamengo o troféu Dérbi das Américas. Agora, o Mengão se prepara para enfrentar o PSG, campeão da Champions League, às 14h desta quarta-feira (horário de Brasília).

A temporada de Varela no Flamengo

Titular absoluto do time do Flamengo desde a final da Libertadores, quando, diga-se de passagem, teve uma atuação impecável em Lima, Varela ganhou a confiança de Filipe Luís e atuou os 90 minutos nos últimos quatro jogos da equipe (Palmeiras, Ceará, Cruz Azul e Pyramids). Não à toa, essa é a temporada que o uruguaio mais entrou em campo na carreira, com 50 partidas, dois gols marcados e cinco assistências.

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➡️ Veja os gols de Flamengo x Pyramids: Léo Pereira e Danilo marcam de cabeça

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'Takes me two hits' – Smith already feels in the Ashes groove as captaincy looms

Smith has recently returned from New York and will play two Sheffield Shield matches for New South Wales ahead of facing England

Andrew McGlashan21-Oct-20251:14

Mitchell Starc: Smith ‘has been a great sounding board’ for Cummins

Steven Smith had his first hit against bowlers since the Hundred finished in late August on Tuesday, but declared he was already “ready” for the Ashes after his break in New York.Smith, who is set to captain Australia in the first Test due to Pat Cummins’ back injury, returned to Sydney last week and had three nets against throwdowns before facing the New South Wales attack during training at Cricket Central as he ramps up towards the start of the Ashes.Related

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He will play two Sheffield Shield matches – against Queensland at the Gabba and Victoria at the SCG before facing England – but believed he was already good to go having in recent times found downtime from the game more profitable than endless training or extra matches.Unlike earlier in the year when he was recovering from a finger injury sustained in the World Test Championship final and left the tour of West Indies, Smith did not hunt out a baseball cage in New York and only picked up a bat on his return home.”Honestly, it takes me two hits to get sorted,” Smith said. “I feel like I’m ready to go now. I feel like I’m moving really nicely. I feel in a good place.”I’ve been training quite hard. I’ve been doing a lot of lifting, trying to get a bit stronger. And I did all my strength tests yesterday and they’re all as good as they’ve ever been. So I feel like I’m going good.”Cummins has yet to be officially ruled out of the opening Test, but time is quickly running out and Smith said on Tuesday that he had still yet to start bowling. “Things can turn around pretty quickly so we’ll see where everything lands with him,” Smith said.”He’s obviously got a few things to tick off and get into his bowling, but he was in good spirits and the team’s obviously better with him in it for sure. Hopefully he can get right and if he plays three Tests or five Tests or two Tests, as many as we can get out of him, it’s the best for the team.”Steven Smith speaks to reporters as he ramps up his Ashes preparation•Getty Images

The duo have worked well as a captain-vice captain combination with Smith standing in on six occasions since Cummins’ promotion, winning five of those Tests. His tactical nous has particularly come to the fore on the subcontinent and, although Smith himself played it down, his head-to-head with Ben Stokes looms as a fascinating aspect of the early Ashes exchanges.Even if unable to play, Cummins is expected to travel with the Australia squad and Smith was confident the change of leadership would prove smooth but added he would do things in his style.”It’s nothing out of the ordinary,” Smith said. “I know how the team operates. We’re in a good place. So if it happens, I’ll look forward to it. I think the important thing is doing it my way. I think when I get out on the field, I’ve got a certain style and the way I like to do things and I need to be authentic.”I think it’s worked well when I’ve stood in over the last few years. It’ll just be a seamless sort of transition if that comes around.”Smith has rarely had a problem with the dual responsibilities of captaincy and batting: his average when captain is 68.98 against 49.90 when in the ranks. One of the six Tests where he has filled in was during the 2021-22 Ashes when Cummins was a Covid close contact in Adelaide with Smith making 93 in the first innings.”It’s interesting how the brain works, I suppose,” Smith said when asked whether he’s aware of how the captaincy makes a difference. “I feel like I kind of go to another level and try and set a standard.”I think I’ve chilled out a lot over the last probably four or five years, just a bit more relaxed out in the middle and maybe not as cranky at times. I like to listen to people, get their opinions, and then obviously make a decision when I’m in charge.”In terms of losing Cummins’ bowling, Smith was of little doubt that Scott Boland could fill the breach. “I mean, we’ve got a pretty good replacement in Scott Boland who I think is arguably one of the best bowlers in the world,” he said. “His record in Australia is outrageous, so we’re good there.”Then the other two [Starc and Hazlewood] obviously have done a wonderful job for a long time as well. So I don’t think it disrupts too much.”

Woltemade will love him: Newcastle targeting a "top 5 manager in the world"

The summer transfer window has given way to a greater obstacle: the 2025/26 campaign. Newcastle United have it all to do in the Premier League after away-day blues have left Eddie Howe’s side 14th as the November international break trundles along.

It was a testing summer, and no mistake. United staked their stance regarding Alexander Isak, but then Liverpool thrashed against that post throughout August, and the Sweden striker ended up completing a British-record move to last season’s deposed Carabao Cup holders.

Nick Woltemade has been in emphatic form for club and country this season. The club-record signing has smoothly replaced Isak at number nine, but too many Magpie forwards are flattering to deceive around him.

And this struggle falls onto Howe’s desk. The tactician needs to find a solution, no matter the issues across the off-season months.

Should Newcastle fail to improve, noise concerning Howe’s future will only intensify.

Why Howe's future is a hot topic

Newcastle are in a rut, but they can certainly climb out of it. Let’s not forget that United were beaten 4-2 at Brentford a week into December 2024, and that result had the Toon down in 12th, with five wins from 15.

But this doesn’t change the fact that Newcastle need to improve. PIF are lenient when it comes to the man who has given this club glory, but that will only stretch so far after much investment.

The crux of the matter centres on the away form. Newcastle have only won once on the road all term, and that was against Belgian side Union Saint-Gilloise in the Champions League.

10

Games

7

7

Wins

1

0

Draws

3

3

Losses

3

20

Goals scored

7

9

Goals conceded

8

2.1

PPG

1.16

The thought of another coach in the dugout hardly bears thinking about, but Howe’s a pragmatic man, and he will know that he needs to find a solution. Tweaks are not enough here; Newcastle are in need of a reset.

Should that end up stretching over to the managerial berth, technical director Ross Wilson is bound to consider a Premier League rival who has been riding the crest of a wave.

Newcastle's dream Howe replacement

It’s important to stress that Newcastle are not actively looking to oust Howe from the hot seat. This is one of the greatest managers in the club’s history, and the struggles of recent months hardly negate the immortal 2024/25 campaign.

If Newcastle do need to bring someone new to St. James’ Park, they couldn’t do much better than Crystal Palace boss Oliver Glasner, someone described as a “top five manager in the world” by one Premier League content creator.

Last week, the Mirror revealed that the Austrian coach is one of four names possibly available to PIF if they decide to commit to a mid-season reshuffle.

Glasner has achieved illustrious success with Palace, winning last season’s FA Cup and then beating Liverpool to lift the Community Shield in August. He is leading the Londoners through the Conference League campaign.

Hailed by analyst Pythagoras in Boots as being an “underappreciated” and “Champions League-level manager”, Glasner has done nothing over the past several years to suggest the contrary.

This is a shrewd and attractive tactician, whose typical 3-4-2-1 formation underscores an outside-the-box methodology that has only been on the money since he set foot onto English shores.

His slick attacking play could be exactly what Newcastle need. Moreover, this could give rise to Anthony Elanga and Anthony Gordon finding their footing once again, both wingers having toiled this term and yet to score or assist in the Premier League.

But the appointment would have the greatest effect on Woltemade, with the 23-year-old already clinical, already dangerous. Just look at Jean-Phillippe Mateta, who holds the joint-highest appearance tally at Glasner’s Palace, having scored 38 goals from 78 outings.

The Frenchman’s newfound fluency in the final third owes to the creative impetus. Indeed, Chelsea are the only side in the Premier League to have created more xG than the Selhurst Park side this season.

1. Chelsea

3rd

20.4

2. Crystal Palace

2nd

19.3

3. Man City

10th

19.0

4. Arsenal

1st

18.8

5. Man United

7th

18.2

12. Newcastle

14th

12.8

It is not unfair to surmise that a large degree of Newcastle’s issues in the Premier League centre around creativity.

Therefore, Woltemade’s emphatic start to life as the club’s central striker is made all the more impressive, and that’s without even considering the injury to fellow newbie Yoane Wissa, Prem-proven and yet to kick a ball in black and white.

Woltemade has already established his goal threat, six goals for Newcastle since completing a £69m move from Stuttgart in August. The 6 foot 6 striker has bagged four goals from three recent caps with Germany.

This is not to suggest that Howe doesn’t have the capacity to unlock the highest levels of Woltemade’s potential, but Glasner prioritises aggressive wide play that loops into the middle of the area, with a focus on much running and high intensity.

Woltemade is only completing one dribble every two Premier League fixtures, but his Sofascore heat map underscores a mobility that escapes many other centre-forwards.

But FBref shows that Woltemade ranks among the top 18% of positional peers in the division for progressive passes and the top 8% for carries made per 90, emphasising his technical skill and his willingness to move about.

In this, the German could be the perfect head of a new tactical system at Newcastle. We all hope that Howe finds a solution and Newcastle do not need to undergo any drastic transformation, but Glasner is worth his weight in gold and could be a fantastic and uplifting appointment for the Tynesiders.

Newcastle already have the new Anderson & he's "England's next superstar"

Eddie Howe could unearth Newcastle United’s next Elliot Anderson by starting this promising star more often.

ByKelan Sarson Nov 18, 2025

Not Simons: Frank says misfiring Tottenham star was "such a handful" vs Copenhagen

Tottenham manager Thomas Frank has heaped praise on a Spurs star who was a “real handful” against FC Copenhagen in the Champions League on Tuesday, alongside player of the match Xavi Simons.

Spurs’ commanding 4-0 victory marked the perfect bounce back from their bitterly disappointing 1-0 defeat to Chelsea in the London derby just days earlier.

After an extremely lacklustre performance against their rivals, which was followed by Micky van de Ven and Djed Spence snubbing Frank’s attempt at a handshake after the final whistle, Spurs responded on the European stage in style.

From the off, Tottenham seized control — dominating possession and creating chances.

Tottenham 4-0 FC Copenhagen – Players of the Match

Match Rating

Xavi Simons

8.1

Micky van de Ven

8.1

Wilson Odobert

7.9

Pedro Porro

7.8

Randal Kolo Muani

7.6

via WhoScored

The team pressed Copenhagen high, denying them space and time to settle, and it wasn’t long before their pressure paid off.

One of the night’s highlights was van de Ven’s superb solo goal, which had shades of Son Heung-min’s famous Puskas winner against Burnley in 2019, and it was the perfect apology to Frank after the Dutchman’s post-Chelsea controversy.

The centre-back picked up the ball deep in Tottenham’s own half and drove forward with purpose, evading challenges and slicing through Copenhagen’s midfield before cooly slotting past the keeper in what was a world-class piece of quality and sure-fire contender for this season’s Puskas Award.

The standout performer, however, was Xavi Simons — whose man of the match display encapsulated what was a fantastic evening for the Lilywhites.

The 22-year-old has been widely criticised for his slow start to life at the club since joining Tottenham in a deal which could be worth a grand-total of £125 million, when factoring in wages, agent’s fees and other add-ons over a potential seven-year deal.

However, Simons ran the show against Copenhagen, chalking up his first assist since making his Premier League debut away to West Ham, and he could’ve had even more to show for his efforts.

Fellow summer signing Randal Kolo Muani missed a gaping free header from Simons’ exceptional cross on the half-turn which almost certainly should’ve been converted, which was after the Frenchman failed to take advantage of another close-range set-up from his teammate to make it 2-0.

Thomas Frank praises misfiring Kolo Muani after Tottenham win

That being said, Kolo Muani, after working his way back to fitness from a dead leg, is also beginning to impress.

The PSG loanee showcased why he should be considered Spurs’ new first-choice striker, at least until Dominic Solanke returns from injury, and Frank had plenty to say about Kolo Muani after the match.

Tottenham’s head coach admitted that the 26-year-old is still not ‘fully firing’ after their 4-0 rout of Copenhagen, but was adamant that Kolo Muani proved to be a “real handful” for Spurs overall.

Even if he did fail to score multiple chances that were put on a plate for him by Simons, Kolo Muani did assist Wilson Odobert with what was a phenomenal piece of composure.

The ex-Eintracht Frankfurt star took the ball down from a lofty height with deft control before laying it off to Odobert, who duly doubled the home side’s lead, and that is perhaps a sign of things to come.

Richarlison could, and perhaps should, be worried — especially after missing a last-minute penalty against Copenhagen as Solanke nears his long-awaited return.

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