'The team isn't looking good' – Carlo Ancelotti admits Kylian Mbappe was only Real Madrid player who performed in chastening Spanish Super Cup final defeat to Barcelona

Disappointed Carlo Ancelotti admitted Kylian Mbappe was the only Real Madrid player who performed in the Spanish Super Cup final.

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  • Ancelotti praised Mbappe's performance
  • Pointed out Real Madrid's flaws
  • Barcelona thrashed Real Madrid 5-2
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    A helpless Los Blancos side completely surrendered in front of their arch-rivals as they suffered a thumping 5-2 defeat against Barcelona in the final of the Spanish Super Cup in Jeddah on Sunday. Mbappe opened the scoring for Real with an early goal but they could hold on to their lead for just 17 minutes as Lamine Yamal scored a brilliant solo goal to bring his side back into the game, after which the floodgates opened for the Catalan club.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    After the mauling at the hands of their rivals, manager Ancelotti did not shy away from pointing out the shortcomings of his players as he admitted that Mbappe was the only player who had a decent outing in El Clasico.

  • WHAT CARLO ANCELOTTI SAID

    Speaking to reporters after the match, the Italian coach said: "You have to defend well to win these games. Barcelona deserved to win, they defended better than us. The team is not looking good, but I’m not going to point the finger at anyone. Mbappe had a good game, he was probably the only one who played well. I’m not going to name names on this, but we were not good from the first minute, and did not perform."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR REAL MADRID?

    The reigning Spanish champions will be back in action on Thursday as they take on Celta Vigo in a Cope del Rey round of 16 clash at home.

Is that AB, or Gomez?

Plays of the day from the IPL game between Pune Warriors and Delhi Daredevils in Pune

Siddhartha Talya19-May-2013The catch
Virender Sehwag isn’t the swiftest on the field, but has pulled off some really good catches in his career. The one that immediately comes to mind is catching Simon Katich at fine leg in Adelaide in 2004. Today, he was made to dive again and he did it well, stretching full length as he ran to snap one from Aaron Finch and plucked it inches from the ground at square leg.The innovation
It seems Raiphi Gomez has been taking lessons from AB de Villiers. Facing his first ball today, which incidentally was the last of the Pune Warriors innings, he reverse-paddled Siddarth Kaul to the third-man boundary, switching at the last moment to place the ball past the keeper. Everyone was caught unawares, chiefly the bowler who had a look of disbelief.The drop
David Warner has had a poor IPL by his standards, and he was tentative at the start of his innings today as well. In the second over of the chase, Bhuvneshwar Kumar bowled a tempting delivery outside off that Warner edged as he tried to drive, only to be given a reprieve by Finch at slip. It was an excellent effort, though, as he dived full length to his right and almost caught hold of it with his right hand but it slipped through his fingers.The downfall
Mahela Jayawardene was well set and appeared to be anchoring Daredevils’ chase until he faced Ali Murtaza. First, he yorked himself to a full delivery from Murtuza and was fortunate not to be stumped as Robin Uthappa failed to collect. However, next ball, he chased a really wide delivery and sliced the easiest of catches to point, when he could have earned a wide had he let it be.The blow
Remember that game between India and Namibia in the 2003 World Cup, when Sachin Tendulkar smashed one back past the bowler, just to miss umpire Aleem Dar who was in the firing line? Umesh Yadav, however, thrashed one straight back at Simon Taufel today, in the final over of the game. It caught Taufel smack on the shoulder, but the umpire didn’t show any pain. He smiled at Umesh, who smiled back and held up his hand; tempers didn’t flare, though it has happened this tournament when batsmen have been at the receiving end of a wrong decision.

New Zealand home fixtures streamlined to mitigate Covid-19 risk

Tours by SA, Australia, Netherlands and India women will now be confined to a small list of venues

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Jan-2022New Zealand Cricket has announced a revised home international schedule for the remainder of the 2021-22 season, with its venue list streamlined in order to mitigate the risk of disruption by the Omicron variant of Covid-19.South Africa’s upcoming visit for two men’s Tests, as a result, will be confined to Christchurch – originally they were scheduled to play one Test there and one in Wellington.All three men’s T20Is against Australia will now be played in Napier, and Netherland’s visit for a men’s white-ball tour will be split between Mount Maunganui (one-off T20I and one ODI) and Hamilton (two ODIs).India women, meanwhile, will play their entire white-ball series (one T20I and five ODIs) in Queenstown.”These risk mitigations are based on avoiding known Covid-19 hotspots, and include limiting air travel, limiting accommodation transfers and, essentially, operating in safer environments,” said NZC chief executive David White.”We know the more domestic flights we have, and the more movement there is between hotels, the greater the chance of a match or even a series being put at risk.”Wellington is set to be hardest hit by the streamlining of venues. Apart from the second Test against South Africa, it was also set to host two of the T20Is against Australia.”It’s a real blow for those in our cricket family who have missed out on hosting events through no fault of their own.”However, the current environment demands we take every possible measure to, 1) ensure people are safe and well, and 2) deliver a summer of international cricket with the least possible disruption.”Fans who have purchased tickets at venues that will no longer host games are entitled to a full refund.

Chapple goes once more into the breach

Two decades and then some into his Lancashire career, Glen Chapple is on top of his game, skilled and motivated, and with the knowledge that only years on the job can bring

Tanya Aldred08-Apr-2014Glen Chapple doesn’t look like an institution, though that’s what he is. He is too jaunty, too smiley, his pumpkin hair slightly fairer than it once was, with that sportsman’s way of wearing clothes – smart and neat and tucked in.He sits in a coffee shop in Hale, a well-to-do Cheshire village where they still have a proper bakers with piles of syrupy hot-cross buns in the window, and where smart-looking women eat expensive salads alongside men in sports jackets.This year, for the first time, Chapple enters the cricket season the wrong side of 40, bones creaking into their 22nd season at Lancashire. His birthday was in January – he celebrated with friends in San Rocco in Manchester, where the staff forgot to pass on the champagne phoned in by Andrew Flintoff – and although Chapple won’t be quite the oldest county player this summer, he will be the longest serving. He was capped in 1994 alongside John Crawley, Jason Gallian, Gary Yates and Peter Martin, all long retired to civvy street.And yet, these last years, his twilight overs, have been his most successful. He has become the supreme seam bowler, both highly skilled and motivated and with the knowledge that only months, years, of turning and running, turning and running, can bring. In the autumn of 2008 he was appointed Lancashire captain, and in the last session of the last day of the 2011 season, he led his unfancied team to Championship glory, for the first time outright since 1934. It was and remains the highlight of his career.He doesn’t know if this summer will be his last in whites; doesn’t want to think about the next six months like that. Lying tantalisingly on the next branch, just out of reach, is 1000 first-class wickets, last achieved by Robert Croft in 2010.”I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t of some importance,” he says, supping at his latte. “I don’t generally like the idea of individual milestones but, because a thousand is becoming harder and harder to achieve, I could be the last one to do it for a while. But I need 64 wickets, and barring an exceptional season it would mean playing next year, and I would never take on another season purely for that reason so, we’ll see.”But how has he kept going, anyway, season after season, at an age when most pace bowlers have hung up their boots and let out their trousers?”I think it is luck and motivation. I’ve had the good fortune not to receive any career-ending injuries and my motivation has increased over the years, partly because of the added responsibility of captaincy. I adopted the philosophy that it doesn’t matter really who you play for, it’s how well you play. I’ve had to do that because obviously my ambition to play for England didn’t really happen. I do understand that a lot of the players who retire in their mid-thirties and who have played international cricket would have lost their drive, whereas for me it was the case of getting the most out of my body and talent.”Ah, the great disappointment. Chapple was unlucky not to be among the many hands of Test bowlers picked by England between 1992 and this winter. He played a one-day international against Ireland in Belfast in 2006, where he picked up an abdominal strain, and was 12th man for the Trent Bridge Test against South Africa in 2003, but that was it, perhaps never quite good enough at the quite the right time. Does he ever think what might have been?”Now and again but you really have to be careful not to become bitter. It has gone now and it literally isn’t the end of the world. It’s something maybe I can use to help other players avoid some of the mistakes I might have made.”It’s so difficult for young players to realise the importance of little events, the odd nets session here and there, the mindset to take into a season. Some players are old before their time and they get it, but some don’t see how quickly a career can pass you by.”I would always say I gave 100% but did I give 100% to the right things? There was always effort but was there clear thinking? Did I understand how to come out of bad form quickly enough? These are things I understand much better now.”So what advice would he give to that flame-haired young man of the mid-’90s, surrounded by big-name colleagues – Wasim Akram, Peter Martin, Michael Atherton – bowling second or third change for the majority of his career.He pauses. “I’d tell myself to have less respect for international players. I thought they were unbelievably good, a league above, and if I had believed less in that big step up everyone talks of, I would have probably been a slightly different cricketer. I was always very competitive but when it came to my ambition I always felt like I was a couple of years off it, and it was only when players younger than me started getting into the England team that I gave myself a shake and said, ‘What have I been doing?’

He is certainly the old man of the dressing room, nearly double the age of the virtual, social-networking generation. He looks younger than his years, with his full head of hair and scatter-gun freckles, but there are times, he admits, when he wonders what he is up to

“Also, I was always experimenting in practice but you also need to be competition-focused. We thought that if you were strong and technically bowling well that was enough. We didn’t give much credence to psychology and mindset but it is massive. You find yourselves in all different scenarios on a cricket field and have to learn to take your mental state to where it should be: on a cold Monday afternoon you have to pick yourself up; at a Lord’s final, you have to calm yourself down, focus on the stumps.”If this sounds like the words of someone who has read a coaching manual or two, it is. He has passed all the certificates and spent two weeks this winter out in South Africa on the Potential England Performance Programme (PEPP) fast bowling camp as an assistant coach, which he really enjoyed. There is idle talk of him taking over as Lancashire coach if England hire Peter Moores for a second term, but at the moment he and Moores make a good team, two down-to-earth blokes who respect each other, with cricket in their lungs.”Twenty years ago I’d have thought a lot of the talk was psychobabble,” Chapple says, “and there is a part of me that still thinks it is an adult’s game, there is no room for behaving like a kid, but I fully understand that people need help. You could have someone who loves a challenge but that doesn’t mean they are composed on the pitch. You might have someone else throwing up beforehand but out there, totally on it.”Getting the team dynamic right is important. You’ve got half the team bouncing around patting you on the back, and half the team sat down contemplating and if you get the wrong two people sitting next to each other… these are all little things I find quite interesting. You need more to think about as you get older.”He is certainly the old man of the dressing room, nearly double the age of the virtual, social-networking generation. He looks younger than his years, with his full head of hair and scatter-gun freckles, but there are times, he admits, when he wonders what he is up to.”There is a generation divide – psychologists would say there is. I try and stay as young as I can but ultimately you just get on with your stuff. The lads take the mickey out of me and you accept it.”I liked being one of fittest in the team and sadly have to acknowledge that’s not the case any more. I don’t mind a bit of self-punishment, but there are days I think, ‘Why am I doing this?’ But then I have to think, ‘What else would I be doing?'”There is nowhere to hide in professional cricket any more. The passing of time is cruelly exposed by the yo-yo test, the bleep test’s more horrible brother. Age and decrepitude are measured in electronic pulses for everyone to see.”It’s horrendous, my turning is just not that good now. I’ll probably be in the last two or three in the yo-yo this season. I’ll just have to win some of the other events, as they say.”This season is Lancashire’s 150th. There is a celebratory book and a dinner at Lord’s in May. They’re back in Division One, after demotion the year after winning the championship. The rain that flooded much of southern Britain during the winter was kind to Manchester. Chapple, who missed the first game with a hamstring sprain, can’t wait to start.”I think we can win any one of the three competitions,” he says. “That’s the thing about being at a big club like Lancashire, you are always chasing trophies.”And then he is off, home to bowl ten overs in the street to his kids, a son, eight, and daughter, ten. “They need to fail a bit. I don’t mind knocking them over in the street or putting them over next door’s house.”Chapple’s boyhood dream may have eluded him, but he made the very most of the talents he was given. A third seamer who became the finest practitioner of his art, an inexperienced leader who made history as captain. And through staying at Old Trafford for more than 20 years, he played with and learnt from some of the greatest bowlers of his generation: Akram, Muttiah Muralitharan, Flintoff, Jimmy Anderson. Not a bad little career. Not a bad little bowler. Catch him while you can.

Harris and Handscomb continue their fine form for Victoria

Pair share 165-run unbeaten stand with Harris 88 not out at stumps in his last match before the Pakistan Test tour

Alex Malcolm19-Feb-2022

Marcus Harris drives through cover•Getty Images

Marcus Harris made another statement ahead of the Test tour of Pakistan while Peter Handscomb continued his outstanding form as Victoria made the most of a beautiful day-two batting surface at Junction Oval after bowling Queensland out for 349.Harris and Handscomb shared an unbeaten stand of 165 with Harris cruising to 88 not out, coming off his Marsh Cup century last week while Handscomb finished 74 not out at stumps following on from his brilliant match-saving Sheffield Shield century against South Australia.Earlier in the day, 22-year-old Queenslander Jack Clayton made a century on Shield debut while James Bazley made his highest first-class score of 64 to help Queensland post a decent first-innings total.But the afternoon belonged to Victoria’s senior pros as Harris and Handscomb batted with typical control following the early loss of Travis Dean. Both men struck nine fours and Harris added a six as Queensland’s spin duo of Mitchell Swepson and Matt Kuhnemann couldn’t break through after Victoria’s part-time offspinner Matthew Short had earlier claimed four wickets.Harris’ staggering record at the Junction Oval continues. If he reaches 96 unbeaten on day three he will have 800 runs at an average of 100 at the ground, and if he can find 12 more runs for his century it will be his fifth at the Junction Oval in just nine innings. Handscomb is gunning for his third Shield century of the season after revealing during the week that a slight technical adjustment with his feet and hip alignment had been the catalyst for his run glut this season.Earlier, Clayton showed he has the makings of a top-class Shield player after handling Victoria’s experienced attack on debut. He unfurled some outstanding pull shots off the quicks and the spinners bringing up his century of 216 balls. He fell to a pull shot not long after picking out square leg off Will Sutherland who finished with three wickets. Sutherland and Short threatened to clean up the tail. Handscomb took a phenomenal reflex catch at slip to hand Short his third scalp. But Bazley and Kuhnemann added 53 for the final wicket to push Queensland’s first innings just shy of 350, with Bazley making his second career half-century. Scott Boland finished with 0 for 24 from 19 overs having delivered 10 maidens.

رسميًا | يويفا يعلن عقوبات رباعي ريال مدريد بعد شكوى أتلتيكو مدريد

أعلن الاتحاد الأوروبي لكرة القدم، قراره بشأن شكوى أتلتيكو مدريد تجاه احتفالات لاعبي ريال مدريد، عقب مباراة الفريقين في دوري أبطال أوروبا.

وتأهل ريال مدريد إلى ربع النهائي بركلات الترجيح أمام أتلتيكو مدريد، واحتفل اللاعبون عقب الفوز والتأهل.

وخضع فينيسيوس جونيور، كيليان مبابي، داني سيبايوس وأنطونيو روديجر للتحقيق بسبب تصرفاتهم عقب المباراة، من قبل الاتحاد الأوروبي لكرة القدم.

وقرر “يويفا” حسم التحقيق مع روديجر ومبابي بالتهديد بالإيقاف لمباراة واحدة في حال تكرار المخالفات في العام المقبل، بالإضافة إلى غرامات بقيمة 40 ألف يورو و30 ألف يورو على التوالي.

اقرأ أيضًا | أنشيلوتي: قضية برشلونة لا تفسد المنافسة.. ولن أقول أنني سأغادر ريال مدريد

وفرض “يويفا” غرامة على سيبايوس قدرها 20 ألف يورو، بينما لن تتم معاقبة فينسيوس.

وبالتالي جميع اللاعبين سيكونوا قادرين على اللعب ضد آرسنال في المواجهة القادمة لريال مدريد بدوري أبطال أوروبا، والمقرر لها الثلاثاء المقبل.

وكان روديجر أشار بإشارة الذبح تجاه الجماهير خلال الاحتفال، واعتبرت احتفالات اللاعبين استفزازية وغير لائقة بحسب شكوى أتلتيكو مدريد.

West Indies Women to tour Pakistan for three ODIs ahead of World Cup Qualifiers

West Indies Women are set to tour Pakistan for three ODIs in November ahead of the ODI World Cup Qualifiers in Zimbabwe.The matches will be held from November 8 to 14 with all games scheduled to take place at the National Stadium in Karachi. West Indies will then fly directly to Zimbabwe, with the Qualifiers to begin on November 21.Earlier this year, Pakistan Women had toured West Indies for three T20Is and five ODIs, and Johnny Grave, Cricket West Indies’ CEO, said West Indies’ visit to Pakistan this time would serve as ideal preparation “in different conditions” ahead of the Qualifiers.

West Indies Women in Pakistan, 2021

  • First ODI: November 8

  • Second ODI: November 11

  • Third ODI: November 14

“This reciprocal tour to Pakistan is an important part of our preparation plans ahead of the World Cup qualifying tournament that is scheduled to take place in Zimbabwe in mid-November,” Graves said. “This tour to Pakistan will give the team the chance to play in different conditions compared to the Caribbean and have more high level competitive cricket ahead of aiming to secure one of the three qualifying spots available for the Women’s Cricket World Cup next year.”The West Indies players are currently in Antigua for a high-performance training camp as part of their preparation for the World Cup Qualifiers, where they will be one of ten teams to compete for three spots in the tournament proper, to be held in New Zealand next year.Related

  • Security alert: New Zealand call off Pakistan tour minutes before first ODI

  • England withdraw from October tours to Pakistan

  • Zimbabwe to host Women's ODI World Cup qualifier

Meanwhile, Grave sounded confident of the security measures to be provided by Pakistan for the West Indies side, after the New Zealand and England’s men’s teams and England Women, recently pulled out of their Pakistan tours.””The security plan arranged by the PCB is the same high level that the West Indies men’s and women’s teams received when they last toured Pakistan in 2018 and 2019, respectively,” Grave said. “Independent security advisors, Eastern Star International (ESI) have confirmed to both CWI and WIPA [West Indies Players’ Association] that they are satisfied that the risk is manageable and can be mitigated to an acceptable level of safety. We will now take a final recommendation to our Board of Directors before the Selection Panel confirms the squad.”

'Still up in the air' – Alex Carey and Josh Inglis neck and neck to replace Tim Paine

Carey makes 101 off 93 for South Australia, but Australia assistant coach Andrew McDonald does not know yet who will play the first Test against England

Alex Malcolm28-Nov-2021As clear as the decision was on Tim Paine’s successor as Australia’s Test captain, the decision to find his successor behind the stumps remains up in the air according to assistant coach Andrew McDonald, as Alex Carey and Josh Inglis appear neck and neck in the race to be named for the first Test against England.It was announced on Friday that Paine would be stepping away from cricket indefinitely for a mental health break on the same day Australia announced Pat Cummins would replace him as captain.But in the 48 hours since the Australia selectors, George Bailey, Justin Langer and Tony Dodemaide, have been mulling over the choice of Carey and Inglis to make their debut in Brisbane with McDonald none the wiser as to which way they are leaning.”I think it’s really still up in the air,” McDonald said. “I think if it was clear then there would have been an announcement, so I’m sure that the selectors will be taking all the information in the last game today, I think, domestically before we switch out our focus into the Test match.”We’ve got plenty of time before the first Test match, but I’m sure once they’re clear that there’ll be an announcement because we’ve got an Australia game and obviously Australia A game as well. So the preparation will split into sort of two camps from [December 5] onwards, so that’ll be something that will become clearer I would say over the next few days for us as coaches and then communicated externally.”Carey made a statement today scoring 101 off 93 balls in the Marsh Cup clash with Queensland at Adelaide Oval. It was his second limited-overs century of the season after making 128 not out against Western Australia. He also scored a match-saving 66 not out against Queensland in a Sheffield Shield clash in October batting at No. 5 but his form with the bat in red-ball cricket has been abysmal with the bat since with scores of 0, 7, 6, 2, and 3 in his last five Shield innings. However, his century today certainly came at the right time.Related

  • Australia likely to ditch three-day intrasquad game due to bad weather

  • Inglis receives some Dutch intel ahead of journey into unknown

  • Pat Cummins confirmed as Australia's new Test captain

  • Paine out of Ashes after taking indefinite break from the game

“It’s white-ball cricket, but any form is good form as we like to say,” McDonald said. “Obviously we’ve got Josh Inglis in camp with us at the moment, so he starved for match opportunities. Alex Carey was named in Australia A squad as a keeper as well. So we’ve got some options.”And that’s the beauty of it, it’s always better to have options than no options. So look forward to whichever way that goes and the start of someone’s career.”Carey does have a distinct advantage over Inglis having already played three years of international cricket, including in the cauldron of a World Cup in 2019. He has captained Australia in ODI cricket as recently as this year and has led Australia A twice in first-class matches. He had long been seen as the natural successor to Paine both as a wicketkeeper but also as a leader.Inglis hasn’t yet played an international for Australia but has come with a rush into national calculations over the last few months. He took Carey’s spot as the second wicketkeeper in the T20I squad for the World Cup and is currently with the team in quarantine on the Gold Coast. But he has not played any official fixture since Australia’s T20 World Cup warm-up game against New Zealand after one Shield match against South Australia prior to heading to the UAE.Carey’s toughness and temperament has long been his great strength and he bats No. 5 in South Australia meaning he is exposed to tougher batting conditions than Inglis is batting at No. 7 in a very strong Western Australia team.Alex Carey celebrates a 90-ball century against Queensland•Getty Images

While both men have solid first-class records with the bat, the debate among the selectors appears to be around their glovework with a clear preference to pick the best gloveman for the role, as was proven by Paine’s four years in the team having been recalled from near obscurity in 2017.Inglis is regarded among the players and coaches on the domestic circuit as a slightly superior gloveman, although Carey’s work can’t be undersold as he does hold the record for the most dismissals in a Shield season with 59 in 2016-17.The pair could be set to face off on opposite sides if the three-day trial game in Brisbane starting on Wednesday goes ahead although the weather could force Australia’s hierarchy to reconsider their plans. After washing out England’s first practice game, heavy rain and thunderstorms are forecast in Brisbane on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.Meanwhile, Jhye Richardson looks increasingly likely to play a part in the Ashes series at some stage after taking 23 wickets in his first four Shield games this season. Although he does still appear to be behind the big three of Cummins, Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc in the pecking order for the first Test at least.”Really positive return clearly on the back of some shoulder issues last year, so it’s great to see him up and running,” McDonald said. “George Bailey, has been casting a keen eye along with Tony Dodemaide following that form line very, very closely.”There’s no doubt that he’ll be putting some pressure on across the summer, whether that’s the first Test match, whether that’s later on in the summer, but, you know, there’s three very handy ball is in front of him at the moment.”

Pep Guardiola claims he is 'not proud' of his raging dressing room tirades as Man City boss admits he is sometimes 'unable to control himself'

Pep Guardiola does not feel "proud" of his raging dressing room tirades but the Manchester City boss sometimes is "unable to control himself".

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City's new documentary shared dressing room clipsGuardiola was seen having a go at Foden and RodriThe manager admits he needs to tone himself downFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The Catalan tactician’s passionate side is showcased in a teaser for the club’s upcoming documentary, , which highlights his relentless drive and fiery motivational methods. One standout clip features the 53-year-old shouting at his squad: "That's why no one did four Premier Leagues in a row! That's the reason why! Because it's so difficult!"

AdvertisementAFPTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The 90-minute documentary also reveals moments when frustration boiled over, including during matches against Nottingham Forest and Crystal Palace. Rodri’s red card in the former and Phil Foden conceding a late penalty in the latter led to Guardiola seething in the dressing room.

WHAT GUARDIOLA SAID

However, reflecting on his actions, Guardiola admitted: "I’m not really proud sometimes, right after the game, when I’m angry for my emotions to pass it on to the players."

He further explained: "I am a human being; I make mistakes, but I don’t like that. In that moment, 10 men down and then giving away an unnecessary penalty, sometimes I cannot control myself either.”

DID YOU KNOW?

not only delves into Guardiola’s emotional leadership but also chronicles City’s unprecedented journey to their fourth-successive Premier League title. The documentary captures the highs and lows of the campaign, providing fans with an intimate look at the sacrifices and determination required to maintain such dominance. Guardiola’s passionate speeches and fiery reactions are two of the central themes, underscoring the immense pressure that comes with managing one of the world’s top football clubs.

Imagine him & Chalobah: Sheffield Wednesday targeting attacking "threat"

If Sheffield Wednesday break the bank and make yet another signing this summer transfer window, the number of incomings through the door at Hillsborough will rise to double digits.

Wednesday's ninth capture of the busy transfer window saw Nathaniel Chalobah enter the building on a free transfer, as the Owls look to add strength in depth all over the pitch, ahead of what many in South Yorkshire will be anticipating as a positive season to come.

Away from signing the former West Bromwich Albion midfielder, however, Wednesday are setting their sights on more new recruits up top, with one target even formerly playing alongside Chalobah at youth level.

Wednesday looking at ex Chelsea striker

Football journalist Mike McGrath is now reporting that the Owls have fielded a bid for Ike Ugbo to return on a permanent basis, but other clubs are also noted to be having a look at the 25-year-old forward.

McGrath states that there is interest from other second-tier sides and even from the Premier League, but Chalobah signing on the dotted in South Yorkshire could spur Ugbo into wanting to rejoin his former loan employers even more.

Chalobah revealed after signing for Wednesday that the current Troyes man was in conversation with the 29-year-old about the potential switch and could have played a role in the former Watford midfielder choosing Hillsborough as his next onward destination.

What Ugbo would offer Wednesday

Playing a pivotal part in Wednesday unbelievably surviving the drop last season away from chatting with Chalobah, Ugbo's apparent glowing words about the club to Chalobah surely means he'd be revelling in the idea of a reunion soon, particularly if the Owls are on the up and not looking at another campaign stuck in the relegation mire.

The former Chelsea youngster would end up netting seven goals from 19 games when loaned out to Wednesday last season, popping up with crucial strikes along the way, to help make Danny Rohl's dream of keeping the Owls afloat a reality.

The South Yorkshire titans are arguably crying out for more reinforcements up top as well, owing to the fact the experienced Lee Gregory was released this summer, alongside the youthfulness of the other options available to Rohl in Bailey Cadamarteri who is only 19 years of age and new recruit McNeill who is just 20.

Ugbo

271

84

Cadamarteri

30

7

McNeill

119

53

Michael Smith

539

148

With Michael Smith also actively on the lookout for a new club to call his own after failing to move away in January, Ugbo's added firepower – summarised above – will be very much needed if he does move back to England.

Ugbo's 11 goals last season in Championship action, with four strikes coming his way when on the books at Cardiff City earlier in the campaign, came about from just 9.88 xG being accumulated, with the 25-year-old only needing an average of 19.5 touches per game too in order leave his lasting mark.

The £15.5k-per-week striker – as per Capology – certainly lived up to his billing from football journalist Ben Steiner in 2022 of being a "threat", starring in front of goal for the Owls with Ugbo knocking on the door of a starting spot in the Canada international side.

Whilst Ugbo would offer more goals, Chalobah would also allow Wednesday to forget about the absence of Will Vaulks in the middle of the park, with the pair looking forward to potentially playing alongside each other again, after they both began their football educations at Stamford Bridge.

Chalobah could be the man who ensures Ugbo sees more of the ball in attack. It's unlikely given the former's position on the pitch that they'd be playing too many combinations but his ability to break up the play could put Wednesday and Ugbo on their way to earning more chances in front of goal.

If he did return, it really would be another cherry on the top of the Wednesday cake, as excitement builds in the air as to what the Owls could be capable of next season if everything goes according to plan.

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ByKelan Sarson Jul 11, 2024

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