SKY shows no limit with tailor-made response to tricky Afghanistan assignment

Batter has uncanny ability to read situation and respond with requisite power and placement

Sidharth Monga20-Jun-20241:18

Manjrekar: SKY showed his value on a tricky pitch

India may have won comfortably in the end, but the first half of the first innings didn’t look so comfortable. Despite Rishabh Pant’s breezy cameo, the first seven overs brought India just 54 runs. Then Suryakumar Yadav happened.These weren’t conditions for touch players to be able to go at T20 pace. Because the pitch was slow, it became easier to set fields: without pace on the ball batters can’t access the whole field. Two kinds of batters succeeded: those who have the ability to put the ball into unconventional areas and those who had the power to clear the shorter straight boundaries.Surya can do both. Surya did both. Often both are connected. Before Suryakumar, too, Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli tried the sweep, but they kept playing it to the deep fielders even though there could only be two men back. Suryakumar’s wide array of sweeps meant he deliberately missed the fielders with his version. Anyway, bowlers are wary of his sweep, plus when he manages to get success, he can draw a ball too full, which is the natural response to a sweep.Most noticeably Suryakumar did that to the pace bowler Azmatullah Omarzai. He swept a ball from wide outside off, turned the rest of the over into overpitched deliveries, and then went down the ground. Surya scored only 14 behind the wicket in this innings, which is an unusually low percentage for him. The slowness of the pitch required him to his use his muscle more, and so he did.Suryakumar Yadav went attacking all around the ground•ICC/Getty ImagesThe same probably happened with Rashid Khan, whom Suryakumar said he doesn’t pick out of the hand. And yet he knows which shots are on, and plays them regardless. He came into this match having scored 86 runs off 58 Rashid deliveries without getting out to him. He only improved the record with 16 off six in this game. Rashid, too, was guilty of going too full, which didn’t quite succeed in hampering the sweep.Suryakumar read the conditions superbly, telling Hardik Pandya they needed to do the bulk of their scoring before the ball went old. That this innings came on the back of his 49-ball fifty against the USA, which was again precisely the innings that the situation required, makes it remarkable. The intent here also meant Rashid bowled himself out as early as the 14th over. Pandya took most of that final over, but Rashid did come close to getting a fourth wicket.Related

Suryakumar: 'Rashid is the best in the world, you have to be a step ahead of him'

In the pantheon of the typical Suryakumar masterclasses, this one might not end up being much more than a footnote. That in itself is a tribute to the T20 genius he is, a perfect marriage of skill and intent. What looked like a struggle for Rohit and Kohli suddenly began to look like good batting conditions. Not only did the run-rate jump from 7.71 before his arrival to 9.6 while he was at the wicket, he also scored 53 of the 96 runs that came while he was at the wicket despite playing fewer than half the balls. Except for Pant, who can hit balls finer than most batters, thus scoring behind the wicket, nobody came even close to Suryakumar’s strike-rate in tough conditions.Watching Suryakumar bat in this fashion right after Rohit and Kohli, you wonder if it is just a question of intent. That pair’s intent has improved but they just don’t have the vast scoring options that Suryakumar has. As with other Indian batters, left-arm spin does remain an unfavourable match-up for Suryakumar, a variety of bowler Afghanistan didn’t have. And that is a small weakness that you are allowed to have when you are so good.

Ben Stokes' England hurl themselves into riotous embrace of Baz-ball

As it hurtled towards its astonishing finish, Trent Bridge felt less like a Test match than a manifesto

Osman Samiuddin15-Jun-2022Well, that happened.Five hundred and fifty-three played 539 played 284 played 299 for 5. England beat New Zealand. They got some World Test Championship points and are no longer bottom of the table. They won the series. Jonny Bairstow was player of the match. All this happened.But ? That was something else. That was sensory overload. That was a fever dream. That was all the vibes and feels of sport packed into a small ground in a small city in the middle of England best known around the world for an outlaw who may or may not have existed. That was a ride which, whenever it seemed like it might be dying out, instead got a little wilder. Ben Stokes sat, red-faced from the sun, from pouring every bit of himself out all over this Test, half an hour after the game and said he couldn’t get his head round what had happened. England chased down 299 on the final day with 22 overs left, having not begun until 15.4 overs into the morning. They went at 5.98 an over. If Stokes, one of the creators of this, was having trouble comprehending, what hope any of us?Related

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  • England's twin pace attack as Jamie and Craig Overton prepare to make history at Headingley

  • No fear: England have dared to dream under their new brains trust

  • Fever-pitch cricket keeps contest bubbling in spite of placid deck

The finish was some end-days bonfire, burning history as we knew it. Targets this big don’t get chased down like this on a final day. Okay, they do – shoutout to West Indies’ 1984 chase of 342 at Lord’s and Pakistan’s famous chase in 2014 – just not quite like this and not that often.But this entire Test was played on the rumblings of something more seismic, not unlike that ODI series circa 2015 between these two teams where they transformed the white-ball game. Maybe we should’ve clocked the impossibility of that Daryl Mitchell six dropping right into a pint glass in the crowd – that feels like a decade ago – and taken it for a portent. Impossible was going to happen. In some way it was appropriate that an e-auction in India ran at the same time, an e-auction that feels as game-changing.We’d heard about Baz-ball, this curious and vague mix of no-fear cricket played with campfire spirit where everyone – team-mate or opposition – is a mate and to be accorded due respect. But that was white-ball cricket, the culmination of which was the 2019 World Cup where – and this is dumbing it down – England brought the berserker and New Zealand the feel-good.But this was Test cricket where Baz-ball had been untested. Unless you consider Brendon McCullum’s Test captaincy and, I’d venture to say, a record of 11 wins, 11 losses and 9 draws makes it difficult to say anything of it. McCullum’s 145 in his last Test, the fastest in Test history, is often invoked as a crystallisation of pure, high-grade Baz: New Zealand are 32-3, then 72-4 and McCullum? Hold my beer.What doesn’t get mentioned as often is that New Zealand lost that Test comfortably. McCullum slogged to the leg side in the second innings, a ball after he’d hit a six, and left New Zealand, effectively, minus 30 for four.6:35

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Stokes had a wonderful game with bat and ball, and also with words. He got to the nub of what Baz-ball may be with a wonderful turn of phrase that ad copywriters for sports brands are kicking themselves for not having coined first. “Run into the fear,” he said, “of what the game was”.England ran hurled themselves into the fear of New Zealand’s 553 – that is what made this game. Stokes’ 33-ball 46 was the subject of a little discontent, specifically the dismissal: slog-sweeping having already hit a six, with England still 148 behind and only the wicketkeeper and bowlers to come. But he reasoned that he played it according to what he felt the game needed and, in his mind, the game didn’t need a normal Test-match innings. And then, of course, with Bairstow, he scared the crap out of the fear of a last-day, 299-run chase.All philosophy, we know, is great until real life has its say. Cricket has a geography that will make this happen. The surface dictates everything that plays out on it. And this was a very unusual English surface: pace, bounce, small boundaries and an outfield made of glass. It was made for this type of ambition. (As an aside, maybe this is the template England never knew they needed to build a fortress at home. Unlike, say Australia and India, touring England has not been a daunting prospect for so many teams, as results attest). But facing R Ashwin and Axar Patel in Chennai, or Pat Cummins and co at the G will require a more nuanced ambition.Eras change gradually and stealthily, not over the course of five days. They’re built as much on mistakes and missteps as the good times. And this is one Test. McCullum and Stokes are two men. Cricket isn’t a game of two XIs. It is a game of systems and infrastructure and money.But for the duration of the Test, nothing was more tangible than the prospect of a light being switched on, and probably not just for England but for the sport.Strange things happened that played into this. On the fourth morning Joe Root quietly dropped a batting manifesto, urging current players to not be afraid of rewriting the coaching manual. Only if he had said this at the centre of Lord’s could it have sounded more like the Queen saying Republicanism is the way forward.Maybe it was the heady delirium of post-captaincy decompression talking. Maybe it was the dressing room mantra filtering out. But these weren’t empty words. Three overs into that morning, Root would reverse-scoop Tim Southee for six. He was burning flags here.

Five overs before the close of the previous day’s play he had played this hockey-flick of an on-drive from outside off stump, which was par for the course for a 20-year-old white-ball aspirant, not so much for a 119-Test red-ball veteran; his second boundary of the innings was a wristy pull he had engineered off a ball that was neither short nor too straight. Throw in the sweep off Southee that almost dismissed Root and this was veering away from just a cheat-day innings into – at least for this moment – a more substantial overhaul.I mean, Alex Lees hit 19 boundaries in this Test, including a six. That’s as many as he had hit in his four Tests before this, a (brief) career hitherto defined by a heroic refusal to put bat on ball let alone find the boundary. He began England’s chase with three boundaries in the very first over, arguably the single-most WTF moment of this Test.It was so infectious that New Zealand applied a post-hoc interpretation of it to their strange third innings, which is where they lost direction of this game. After gifting England seven wickets on day four, they said it was all part of a plan to be positive. It was as if they were reminding England that Baz-ball was their template, that Baz was one of them after all, and who better to do it than us? And by setting England a target on the final day of 299, who’s to say they didn’t get that right? Nine times out of ten, maybe more, that gets them home. Only last year they had set England 275 to win in 73 overs and England crawled to 170 from 70 overs. The chase wasn’t realistic, Root had said. Fear ran into them.Even the administrators got it. That is how powerful the moment was. Nottinghamshire offered free entry to all on the final day, certain in the knowledge that the moment would not let them down.Brendon McCullum brought to the role of England Test coach the promise of a no-fear brand of cricket•Philip Brown/Getty ImagesProbably by now, you’re noting – with concern – how we’re a little light of bowlers in this celebratory group hug. The Test began with a maiden from Jimmy Anderson and it’s tempting to say that was as good as it got. It wasn’t. The one strand of normalcy was the enduring excellence of Trent Boult. He didn’t stop, not when New Zealand had a full attack, not when late on the fifth day, with Kyle Jamieson out and Tim Southee struggling, he was effectively part of a two-man attack. He swung the ball, he seamed it, he cut it, he white-balled it and, though the end obscures it, he wasn’t that far from winning it on his own.Also, 12 dropped catches will change the way a Test plays out. Which only adds to the unique, already mythical nature of this spectacle. It could have played out a million different ways, and yet it did in the one way that made least sense.It might make sense by the time we hit Headingley. Or it might turn out it was all some dream. In either case we go there with these final words from Stokes. Asked how England would tackle the final Test – no dead rubbers in the WTC, thank you ICC – Stokes said: “Come harder.”That sounds, uniquely, like both a promise and a warning.

'I was on the sidelines for three years, so now that I have the chance I want to take it'

Tabraiz Shamsi maps his journey from seam bowler to front-line spinner for South Africa in the limited-overs formats

Firdose Moonda17-Apr-2020While the 2019-20 summer was forgettable for South Africa as a whole, it was also the season Tabraiz Shamsi came into his own. It was a time of both personal and professional change: he played in all South Africa’s white-ball matches – six ODIs, and eight T20Is – to firmly establish himself as Imran Tahir’s successor in the limited-overs formats, and welcomed his first child into the world, days before a countrywide lockdown in response to the coronavirus pandemic. From his home, Shamsi spoke about his early days as a seam bowler and his hopes for the rest of his career. Were you bowling wristspin when you were selected for the provincial age-group teams?
At that stage, yes. But when I started out playing cricket in high school, I was a fast bowler, or at least I thought I was. I bowled seam up. And when I was doing trials for the under-14 team, the coaches told me I wasn’t quick enough to be a fast bowler. I was quite heartbroken because I was watching guys like Allan Donald and Shaun Pollock. The truth was that I was running up and bowling cutters and the coaches suggested I become a spinner. The A team coach told me to become an offspinner and the B team coach a legspinner, so I asked each of them why I should become that kind of bowler. The A team coach said being an offspinner is easier and that annoyed me. Why should I take the easier option? So I decided to become a wristspinner.ALSO READ: ‘I didn’t know fatherhood was this hard – it’s non-stop’ Who was your mentor when you decided to change your bowling style?
No one, really. I watched a lot on TV and I did whatever came naturally to me. When I was bowling seam up, I only had a slightly longer run-up, which is why even now, my run-up is quite long and I am not too technical about things. At the time I was watching guys like Brad Hogg, because he was the only other left-arm wristspinner around, and also Saeed Ajmal and how he spun the ball in to the right-hander. And then of course, Shane Warne.Is there a lot of planning that goes into your bowling now?
Yes, I do a lot of work with our analyst, Prasanna Agoram, who adds a lot of value to our set-up. He gets all the footage and I study it, especially to see how the batsmen bat and where to pitch the ball. That’s why I say technically I am not fussed, because if I am worried about how high my arm goes, then I won’t land the ball where I want it. Mostly I watch the batsmen to see where they hit the ball, to see how I should bowl to them, and then I like to do those things in practice.”Quinton de Kock doesn’t speak much, but I know what he wants and he is very clear in his instructions”•Getty Images This summer you had the opportunity to put your observations into practice at international level more than in any other season. What was that like?
Since joining the national side, I have been on the backburner, played here and there, and I understood why I didn’t play a lot because of the job Imran Tahir was doing. Now, it’s nice to be able to play consistently and learn all the time and even to make mistakes. Like I said before, I look forward to going out there and trying things and getting a few things wrong because I have an opportunity in the next game to go out there and fix it. And then when things work, it provides a bit of reassurance that I’m on the right track, so it has been good to see that.That said, do you consider yourself to be South Africa’s front-line spinner in white-ball cricket?
I don’t ever think that a spot is mine but I want to make the most of the opportunity. I had to wait for three years on the sidelines and that wasn’t nice, so now that I have the chance, I want to take it. We’ve spoken a lot about role definition and I know that I don’t have to bowl variations every ball, for example. I have to be able to do both roles – attacking and containing. And I saw it during the Australia ODI series. Even when I didn’t take wickets, I saw that I was able to win games by keeping things tight.The Australia ODI series was the first trophy South Africa won in a difficult summer. What was the mood like in the change room this season?
What happens in the administration is not our domain. What we found is that even though guys had not played a lot of international cricket, we all knew each other really well. We had been playing provincial and franchise cricket together and most of us started around the same time, so we had known each other for about ten years and we knew each other’s games well. It’s almost like it worked to our benefit that the opposition didn’t know that much about us. It was disappointing not to win more, but the guys really gelled well.And we are not scared of playing big teams. This season we played India, England and Australia, and even though we didn’t do as well as we would have liked, we learnt a lot. I am really excited for the T20 World Cup under Quinton de Kock – I think it’s going to be a big one for us.ALSO READ: ‘This feels like the beginning’ – Tabraiz ShamsiWhat is it like being captained by de Kock?
I’ve known him a long time, because we played provincial cricket when he was 15 and I was about 16 or 17 and then we lost touch. He doesn’t speak much, but I know what he wants and he is very clear in his instructions.How do you see the next few years of your career going – are you focused on South Africa or will you still look to play in various leagues?
The way I started was because of the leagues. I got the opportunity to play in the CPL and the IPL before I played for South Africa. I think it’s good to play in leagues because you learn a lot. It’s always good to go and pick up a few things from other players and learn how they get players out. If I get the opportunity, I will still go, provided it doesn’t interfere with South Africa commitments. How did it happen that you brought magic tricks into your celebrations?
Magic has been a hobby of mine since I was young, and when I was in high school, around the ages of 14 and 16, I wanted to become a magician. Then I was selected for the provincial under-17 and under-19 sides, so I had to put magic on the backburner, but it’s always been something that’s intrigued me – like how to make things appear and disappear – and so I’ve kept working on it a little.South Africa are not due to play again until a tour to Sri Lanka in May, but that is doubtful with the current pandemic. With so much uncertainty around, what role do you think sport can play at a time like this?
As sportspeople, I think we can spread a positive message. Many people listen to sportsmen and so it’s up to us to encourage them to do the right thing. We can also play a role in supporting our healthcare workers. I really feel sorry for them. Everyone is scared but they are the ones that have to go out there and help others.

Tigers' Akil Baddoo Made a Case for the Best Defensive Inning Ever vs. Blue Jays

Detroit Tigers left fielder Akil Baddoo had himself an incredible inning Sunday against the Toronto Blue Jays as he single-handedly helped starter Jackson Jobe out of a first-inning jam.

With two runners on and no outs, Baddoo made a tremendous leaping grab at the wall to save what would have been extra bases for Toronto's Daulton Varsho. Both runners on base had to retreat, giving the Tigers their first out with no damage done.

Alejandro Kirk was the next batter up for Toronto and he made good contact with a ball that headed Baddoo's way. The ball looked like it was bound to drop for a base hit, but Baddoo made a diving grab and immediately fired the ball to second base to beat Bo Bichette back for a double play.

Back-to-back incredible catches—one at the wall and one diving forward—to result in three outs instead of multiple earned runs. Maybe the best defensive inning ever? Some Tigers fans certainly thought so:

The stellar defensive effort certainly earns Baddoo a thank you from Jobe, who may have been in for a long afternoon otherwise.

Baddoo is in his fifth Major League season, all with the Tigers. He started this year in the minor leagues after dealing with injuries before he was called up from Triple-A Toledo on Wednesday.

Sunday marked just his second appearance for the Tigers this season and he started it off with an inning you'd have to see to believe.

ليفربول ينافس برشلونة وآرسنال على صفقة جديدة

أستأنف ليفربول مشواره في دوري أبطال أوروبا أمس الأربعاء، لكنه تعرض لهزيمة مخيبة للآمال برباعية لهدف واحد أمام آيندهوفن على ملعب أنفيلد.

وتعرض ليفربول للهزيمة في تسع من آخر 12 مباراة في جميع المسابقات، وهي أسوأ سلسلة له منذ الفترة بين نوفمبر 1953 ويناير 1954.

وتعد هذه الهزيمة الثقيلة هي الثانية على التوالي خلال أسبوع بعد الخسارة المخيبة للآمال لفريق ليفربول أمام نوتينجهام فورست بثلاثية نظيفة في الدوري الانجليزي.

ويواصل ليفربول بحثه عن صفقات جديدة قبل دخول سوق الانتقالات الشتوية، ويرتبط النادي بالعديد من المواهب الهجومية.

ووفقاً لصحيفة “بيلد” الألمانية فقد انضم ليفربول لسباق الأندية المهتمة بالتعاقد مع أسان أودراوجو نجم لايبزيج أحد أبرز المواهب الواعدة في ألمانيا.

أقرأ أيضاً.. مدرب مفاجئ على طاولة ليفربول لخلافة سلوت

وأصبح ليفربول ينافس أندية آرسنال وبرشلونة على ضم صاحب الـ19 عاماً، الذي تبلغ قيمته 100 مليون يورو وشارك في جميع مباريات البوندسليجا الـ12 هذا الموسم.

وظهر لاعب لايبزيج لأول مرة مع منتخب ألمانيا خلال فترة التوقف الدولي في نوفمبر وسجل هدف خلال الفوز ضد سلوفاكيا بسداسية نظيفة، ولكنه تعرض لإصابة في وتر عضلة الفخد الخلفية اليسرى.

ويستمر عقد أودراوجو مع لايبزيج حتى عام 2029 ولا يرغب النادي الألماني في التفاوض حول مستقبل اللاعب في منتصف الموسم، ومع ذلك ستكون مهمة أي نادي للتعاقد معه صعبة ومكلفة وقد ترتفع قيمته التسويقية في عام 2026.

Erick 'balança' com nova proposta do Corinthians, mas Athletico-PR faz jogo duro na negociação

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O Corinthians retomou as conversas com o Athletico-PR e subiu a proposta para contratar o volante Erick. Contudo, o Timão vem esbarrando em entraves para concluir a negociação. A informação foi revelada pela jornalista Monique Vilela e confirmada pelo Lance!.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasMercado do EsporteRanking mundial de patrocínio máster: Corinthians fatura mais que Benfica e Inter de MilãoMercado do Esporte08/01/2024CorinthiansEmpresário de Gabigol rebate presidente do Corinthians: ‘Não abrimos negociações’Corinthians07/01/2024CorinthiansCom quatro reforços, Corinthians se reapresenta e inicia testes físicos no CTCorinthians07/01/2024

➡️ Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

Após o Furacão recusar uma troca por Fausto Vera e uma tentativa por empréstimo, a diretoria alvinegra enviou uma proposta de 6 milhões de euros (R$ 32 milhões na cotação atual) ao clube paranaense para contratar Erick.

O Athletico mantém a postura de não querer negociar o volante, mas o Corinthians aposta no projeto esportivo apresentado ao jogador para convencer o Furacão a vendê-lo.

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– O Athletico não tem a intenção de vender, mas o projeto agrada o Erick, que já havia pedido sua liberação. Estamos negociando. Eles têm o direito de não querer vender e nós temos o direito de querer sair. Isso não quer dizer que falte respeito de ambas as partes. É uma questão de projeção profissional e financeira. E o Athletico seria muito bem remunerado por isso – disse Miguel Calluf, agente de Erick, ao UOL.

+ Veja como ficou a tabela do Brasileirão após a última rodada

Reforçar o meio-campo é uma das prioridades do Corinthians para 2024. A nova gestão já assegurou a permanência de Maycon por mais um ano e contratou o volante Raniele e o meia Rodrigo Garro.

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Lendas do São Paulo batem lendas do Milan em noite de festa no Morumbi

MatériaMais Notícias

No duelo de lendas no Morumbi, o São Paulo goleou o Milan por 4 a 1 com um hat-trick de Dodô. Os outros gols foram marcados por Válber, para o Tricolor, com Ricardo Oliveira fazendo o dos Rossoneros.

➡️ Tudo sobre o Tricolor agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! São Paulo

O amistoso foi em comemoração aos 30 anos do título mundial de 1993, quando o São Paulo bateu o Milan por 3 a 2 em Tóquio, no Japão. Cafu, Kaká e Amoroso jogam pelos dois times – Ídolos dos dois clubes, Cafu e Kaká jogaram o primeiro tempo pelo São Paulo e o segundo pelo Milan. Amoroso entrou na etapa final e atuou uma parte pelo Tricolor e outra parte pelo Rubro-Negro.

O JOGO ⚽

O São Paulo teve mais volume de jogo no primeiro tempo e conseguiu boas triangulações com Válber, Müller e Kaká, sendo este último o principal articulador das jogadas. O gol de Válber, inclusive, saiu de uma boa trama entre eles e contou com uma ajudinha do goleiro Dida, que falhou. O Milan acabou chegando ao empate na genialidade de Seedorf, que achou um lindo lançamento para Ricardo Oliveira mostrar que ainda tem um faro de gol afiado.

No segundo tempo, o Tricolor ampliou sua superioridade, principalmente com as entradas de Aloísio Chulapa, Richarlyson, Amoroso e, principalmente, Dodô, o “Artilheiro dos Gols Bonitos”, que fez logo dois e mostrou ainda estar em boa forma.

FICHA TÉCNICA:

SÃO PAULO 4 X 1 MILAN

Local: Morumbi, em São Paulo (SP)
Hora: 18h
Competição: Amistoso “Encontro de Gigantes”
Árbitra: Edina Alves Batista
Auxiliares: Fabrini Costa e Lilion Bruno
Cartões amarelos:
Cartões vermelhos:
Gols: Válber, aos 12 minutos do primeiro tempo (SAO); Ricardo Oliveira, aos 21 minutos do primeiro tempo (MIL); Dodô, aos cinco minutos do segundo tempo (SAO); Dodô, aos 24 minutos do segundo tempo (SAO); Dodô, aos 30 minutos do segundo tempo (SAO).

São Paulo (Técnico: Darío Pereira)

Marcos Bonequini (Zetti) (Flávio), Cafu (Cicinho), Fabão (Ivan Rocha), Lugano e Júnior (Elivélton); Valber (Hernanes), Josué, Raí (Jorge Wagner) e Palhinha (Amoroso); Müller (Dodô) e Kaká (Richarlyson). 

Milan (Técnico: Costacurta)

Dida, Panucci, Costacurta, André Cruz e Zaccardo; Brocchi, Emerson, Angelo Carbone e Seedorf; Serginho e Ricardo Oliveira.

Forget Price: £3m “lion” is West Brom’s best signing since Corberan left

Every West Bromwich Albion manager who has taken on the reins since Carlos Corberan’s exit in late 2024 is undoubtedly trying to achieve success with the Spaniard’s legacy weighing heavily on them.

Corberan would turn the Baggies into regular promotion contenders in the Championship, which made his departure to Valencia last year very much sting.

To make matters worse, the wheels would come off West Brom’s 2024/25 season at a worryingly quick pace after he moved on to La Liga, with his successor in Tony Mowbray only managing to collect a paltry five victories from 17 matches before being dismissed.

Now, the pressure is on Ryan Mason’s shoulders to deliver, and the strain is already beginning to show, with two recent Championship defeats on the spin for the perpetual promotion nearly-men even seeing some Baggies natives begin to grow restless with their new 34-year-old boss.

It hasn’t been completely bleak since Corberan returned to Spain, however, with a lot of star quality still on display from some new signings.

West Brom's mixed recruitment since Corberan left

In the direct aftermath of Corberan leaving, though, there were some underwhelming flops to stomach.

Namely, Adam Armstrong would relocate to the Hawthorns on loan and fail to live up to this well-known image of him being a prolific performer in the EFL’s top league, with just a forgettable three goals falling into his lap from 16 outings in the West Midlands.

Tammer Bany, who was purchased this January for a whopping £3.3m, has also failed to get up and running in England as a post-Corberan purchase.

But, there have been some success stories to hold onto.

Isaac Price is very much the first name that springs to mind in this regard, having signed for the Championship outfit a matter of days after Mowbray was unveiled.

While he was a Mowbray capture, he has very much come into his own this season under the fresh methods of Mason, with a stunning five goals and two assists next to his name in all competitions.

Other members of Mason’s first team are also in with a shout to be the best buy since Corberan moved on, with Chris Mepham one worthy candidate, as the Welsh centre-back has become an everpresent member of his new manager’s defence to soften the blow of Torbjørn Heggem exiting for Bologna.

But, it’s a different defensive monster who could be well handed the honour…

West Brom's best signing post-Corberan

While Price has dominated a lot of West Brom conversations this campaign with his goal and assist output, he has also been prone to a quiet day at the office, frustratingly.

Indeed, the Northern Ireland international would go the entirety of September without collecting a single goal or assist.

During this same month, it could be argued that Nathaniel Phillips was very much settling into his new Hawthorns environment, on the contrary, with the decision to bring in the Premier League-experienced defender for just £3m already looking to be an ingenious move.

The 28-year-old is yet to miss a Championship game this season, and for good reason, with the 6-foot-3 colossus very much living up to his billing as a “lion”, as he was lauded by his former Anfield coach in Pepijn Lijnders.

Indeed, in West Brom blue and white so far, Phillips has won a commanding 5.5 duels on average across his 12 league clashes to date.

Games played

12

Goals scored

1

Assists

0

Touches*

81.9

Accurate passes*

56.6 (86%)

Ball recoveries*

4.3

Clearances*

7.4

Total duels won*

5.5

Clean sheets

3

Looking at the table above in greater detail only further reinforces how much of a sterling purchase Phillips has already been, with his brute strength when rising up for duels also gifting him one goal at his new club, already, away from also cutting an assured presence on the ball with 56.6 accurate passes averaged per tense match.

EFL pundit Sam Parkin would likely agree with Phillips being one of West Brom’s best signings in recent memory, with him labelling the former Derby County loanee as “absolutely sensational” after he collected a clean sheet versus promotion rivals Stoke City.

Mason will need both Price and Phillips performing to their maximum to try and get his side out of their current sticky patch of form.

But, while the first of those named has shone in spurts and looks a top talent for the future, Phillips has been the real deal from minute one of his West Brom journey, with 19 Premier League appearances also under his belt, standing the Baggies in good stead if they can finally break their second-tier hoodoo.

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Arsenal let "best in the world" go for £0, now he looks like another Saka

Arsenal have become a far smarter club when it comes to the transfer market over recent years.

Mikel Arteta and Co have overseen a host of incredible additions to the squad that have turned them from a mid-table side into consistent Premier League and Champions League contenders.

Yet, the North Londoners lag behind their rivals when it comes to the selling side of transfers.

However, at least they don’t lose future stars for nothing anymore, like they did with a current world-class talent who is playing as well as Bukayo Saka.

Youngsters Arsenal released too soon

As with all big clubs, there are a number of international superstars that Arsenal let go as youngsters, only to regret that decision later.

However, unlike a lot of other clubs, they have gone on to re-sign one of them in a statement deal: Eberechi Eze.

The club released the summer arrival as a teenager and after spending time with Fulham, Reading and Millwall’s academies, he’d finally get a professional contract with QPR, where he’d be spotted and signed by Crystal Palace in the summer of 2020.

During his time south of the river, the Greenwich-born dynamo would rack up a brilliant haul of 40 goals and 28 assists in 169 appearances, which was enough to convince his former side to bring him home.

Another player who came back to North London after being released by Arsenal, although to the wrong side, is Harry Kane.

Released after just one season with the Gunners, the young Englishman would go on to join Tottenham Hotspur a few years later, and by the time he left the capital, he had scored 280 goals and provided 63 assists in 435 games.

The England captain is now tearing it up for Bayern Munich, and he’s not the only former Arsenal prospect doing so.

The former Arsenal youngster now looking like another Saka

There are actually two former Arsenal gems plying their trade for Bayern alongside Kane, and one of them is, of course, Serge Gnabry.

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However, while getting rid of the German international was a mistake, the Gunners did at least get a fee for him, which they did not for Michael Olise.

Yes, before spending time in the academies of Chelsea, Manchester City, and Reading, the dynamic youngster spent a short period at the famous Hale End of the North Londoners, before leaving for nothing.

It was during his time with Reading that Crystal Palace spotted him, and in 2021 he earned an £8m move to the South London side.

During his three seasons with the Eagles, the French international scored 16 goals and provided 25 assists in 90 appearances, which caught the attention of Bayern, who agreed to pay £50m for him last summer.

Now, when we say that the 23-year-old is playing ‘like Saka’, we don’t necessarily mean in playstyle, but more in how important he is to his team from an output perspective.

For example, despite missing almost four months of action last year, the Englishman still racked up 26 goal involvements in just 37 appearances for Arteta’s side.

Olise’s Bayern Record

Appearances

62

Minutes

4410′

Goals

24

Assists

26

Goal Involvements per Match

0.80

Minutes per Goal Involvements

88.2′

All Stats via Transfermarkt

In comparison, the former Eagles star scored a staggering 20 goals and provided 23 assists in 55 appearances, totalling 3842 minutes.

In other words, he averaged a goal involvement every 1.27 games, or every 89.34 minutes, and as he’s already racked up seven goal involvements in seven games this season, it would be fair to say Oliver Glasner has been proven more than right when he claimed the Frenchman was “one of the best talents in the world.”

Ultimately, Arsenal have a brilliant team this year, but just imagine how dangerous they’d be with Saka and Olise in the squad.

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9/10 Newcastle star proved why he's Howe's new Isak & it's not Woltemade

The season is deepening, moving toward patterns more tangible than those the early weeks comment on a team. For Newcastle United, this is the case.

Newcastle started the 2025/26 campaign poorly, but Eddie Howe’s side were rocked by upheaval across the summer transfer window and lost their talisman, Alexander Isak, after a long attritional battle with Liverpool.

Isak, 26, scored many goals for the Tynesiders. Too many to name. One of which, though, came against Liverpool in the Carabao Cup final, and so for all the negativity and understandable criticism that came with that unwanted transfer saga, Isak’s legacy lives on.

But he’s a Newcastle player no more, and Howe knew it was crucial that a fitting replacement was brought in.

Well, while Yoane Wissa still waits to make his bow after his transfer from Brentford, having injured his knee on international duty, Nick Woltemade has enjoyed a fast start to life in England, impressing once again in the Champions League on Wednesday evening.

Newcastle spent well on Woltemade

There are some out there who seem to think Newcastle overspent when welcoming Woltemade from Stuttgart in a club-record £69m deal.

Here’s the thing. Newcastle’s summer struggles for a striker were well-documented, to say the least. The Magpies have landed themselves one of the most exciting young strikers in the business, and if that makes them ‘fools’, as some have suggested, then so be it.

And against Union Saint-Gilloise in the Champions League, the German, 23 years old, added to his goal tally, getting the last touch after Sandro Tonali’s strike took a deflection.

Six games into his Newcastle career, the intelligent, rangy striker has three goals, and he has also shown off a deft technical game that will only improve as he and Howe’s system get more comfortable with each other.

He has what it takes to make Isak but a distant memory at St. James’ Park and across Newcastle. Woltemade is the real deal, but he’s also young and unpolished.

Newcastle, actually, have another player who could be their next version of the Swedish sensation, and he showed he’s getting back to his best with a rip-roaring performance in Belgium.

Howe's new version of Isak

Class is permanent. This Howe knows. And so while Anthony Gordon toiled his way through the 2024/25 campaign and started off the current campaign on the wrong footing, he, and all involved at Newcastle, knew that time and hard work would see the England international rise back to his former, Player of the Year-winning form.

Anthony Gordon looks dejected for Liverpool

Gordon is 24 and considered one of the most talented wingers in the Premier League, with his rapid pace and persistence in driving play forward and making things happen in the final third, setting him apart from his positional rivals. He has described himself as a “nightmare for anyone” pitted against him.

But last season’s return of only six goals in the Premier League simply wasn’t good enough for a wide forward of his calibre.

Well, we’re still in the early phase of the new campaign, and Gordon hasn’t clicked into gear on the domestic front, but his performances in the Champions League suggest he is rising back to his best, awarded a 9/10 match rating by the Shields Gazette after converting two penalties and proving a livewire throughout.

Minutes played

90′

90′

Goals

1

2

Assists

0

0

Touches

28

62

Shots (on target)

1 (1)

3 (2)

Accurate passes

14/16 (88%)

24/31 (77%)

Key passes

0

0

Dribbles

1/3

5/8

Tackles

0

1

Ground duels

3/6

9/17

Journalist Henry Winter said his performance was “quick and clinical”, and if Gordon can capture and sustain that essence over the coming months, he could rise and provide a leading presence for Newcastle, much akin to Isak over the past few years.

Woltemade is talented and will score goals across the season. Wissa will too. However, Gordon, when firing on all cylinders, offers something more dynamic and complete, inspiring his teammates while applying prolific pressure himself. Across the 2023/24 season, in all competitions, he notched 28 goal involvements.

His contribution to Harvey Barnes’ conclusive fourth goal underscores that very point. Gordon has the full package, all right, and there is every confidence he will carry this form back into the Premier League and help Howe’s side make headway, 15th in the Premier League after six matches.

But to say Gordon has been abject across the opening weeks simply wouldn’t be true. He has endured some heavy moments, no doubt about that, but has also recorded six successful duels per game, also completing 71% of his dribbles.

With a bit more refinement in the crucial moments, Gordon might finally hit the heights envisaged and become the talisman Newcastle need now that Isak has left. After all, he has been chased by Liverpool too, with the Reds considering paying £100m for the Three Lions star’s services.

There is still work to be done. Gordon hasn’t enjoyed a good start to the Premier League season, sent off against Liverpool, but also missing three big chances in front of goal and lacking the clarity and composure he is capable of producing and sustaining.

But class is permanent. This Howe knows. And Gordon, too.

The 24-year-old has shown in the Champions League that he is ready to step up to the plate now that Isak has gone and assume the responsibility as Newcastle’s talisman.

Woltemade might be a number nine with the talent to match Isak, but Gordon, when on his A-game, is Newcastle’s main man.

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