Chelsea have just found a star who’s a lot like Fabregas and Hazard

da bet esporte: Cole Palmer is at it again, and again and again. Once the Chelsea star found the net with his first goal of the game against Brighton on Saturday afternoon, few would have expected the floodgates to open in such a manner.

da 888casino: Palmer has surprised many throughout this time at Stamford Bridge but the way in which he scored his first two goals over the weekend was rather unremarkable.

He was in the right place at the right time to find the net from Nicolas Jackson’s cut-back and then stroked home a penalty, as he so often does.

What he did next was scintilating, it was staggering. Palmer racked up two more – one a simply ridiculous free-kick – to score four goals before the half-time whistle had even been blown.

By his standards, this had been a quiet opening to the season on the goalscoring front but he now has six goals in as many matches in the Premier League this term.

It’s safe to say he’s on his way to replicating some Chelsea greats of the past. Like Eden Hazard, he is Chelsea’s new talisman.

Eden Hazard's time at Chelsea

On his day, the Belgian was one of the best players in the Premier League. His ability to dribble past opponents with ease, his ability to unlock a defence and his ability to find the net was pretty much unmatched at the time of his peak.

Like Palmer, he could dazzle an opposition, leave them in his dust and to wonder what on earth had just happened.

Remember that goal against Arsenal? Of course you do. Hazard has received the ball close the half way line before dancing beyond Francis Coquelin, leaving Laurent Koscielny in his wake and then finding the back of the net.

Off went Hazard, gleeful and smug at what he had just done. Well, Palmer possesses a similar sort of look after he’s just scored. He’s got that cheeky grin, he’s got that famous celebration and he’s becoming every bit as important as that man Hazard was.

During his time at the Bridge, the winger was a marvel, scoring 110 goals and supplying 85 assists in 352 outings for the club. It’s not a bad record, is it?

Eden Hazard’s Chelsea career in numbers

Season

Games

Goals

Assists

2012/13

62

13

21

2013/14

49

17

8

2014/15

52

19

12

2015/16

43

6

7

2016/17

43

17

7

2017/18

52

17

13

2018/19

52

21

17

Stats via Transfermarkt.

Chelsea may have finally found their new talisman in Palmer but they’ve also now stumbled upon a player who’s argubly rather more similar.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast's Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Chelsea's Hazard and Fabregas hybrid

Over the summer, Chelsea did plenty of business. Isn’t that a surprising turn of events? We jest, of course, but one of the most interesting names to arrive was Jadon Sancho.

During his days at Borussia Dortmund, he was “astonishing” in the words of Owen Hargreaves, amassing 53 goals and 67 assists in 158 games. There was a particularly remarkable campaign during 2019/20 where he scored 17 times and supplied an equal number of assists in Bundesliga action.

It was that red-hot season that led him to become one of the most sought-after players in Europe. It was that year and the subsequent term that led Manchester United to pay a whopping £73m for his services. Unfortunately, it never quite happened for him at Old Trafford.

Sancho joined Chelsea this summer on an initial loan deal having found the net on just 12 occasions in United red, and supplying six assists. Those are awful numbers for someone who was so prolific in that third of the pitch during his days in Germany.

Not enjoying the best of relationships with Erik ten Hag, the English winger had to get out and he duly did over the summer. Moving to west London, he is enjoying quite the start to life under Enzo Maresca, emulating a certain Hazard and another former Blue in Cesc Fabregas in the process.

Indeed, over the weekend Sancho became just the third Chelsea player to get an assist in each of his first three Premier League outings, joining Hazard (2012) and Fabregas (2014) in the process.

Interesingly enough, Sancho combines the best of those two players. Like the Belgian, he’s a wonderful dribbler of the ball, ranking in the best 3% of positionally similar players over the last year for succesful take-ons per 90 minutes with 3.76. Like Fabregas, he’s a tremendous creator, ranking among the top 18% of wingers for progressive passes.

Cast our mind back that dazzling 19/20 season and those creative numbers were sky-high, supplying 0.63 assists per 90, enough to rank him in the best 2% of wingers in the Bundesliga that term.

Fabregas ended his Premier League career with a staggering 118 assists in 350 games so the Englishman has some catching up to do. That said, you can clearly see where the parallels lie.

Some may have laughed when Chelsea signed Sancho on deadline day but he is quickly proving the doubters wrong. He already looks like a fine addition to the pack.

Chelsea's 8/10 star was just as unplayable as Palmer vs Brighton

He completed six dribbles and won 7 duels

ByJoe Nuttall Sep 28, 2024

Thiago Alcantara set to return to Barcelona again as Hansi Flick lines up permanent coaching role for silky ex-Liverpool & Bayern Munich midfielder

Former Barcelona midfielder Thiago looks set to rejoin the club in January as part of Hansi Flick's coaching set-up.

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  • Thiago played for club 2009-13
  • Temporarily joined Barca staff post-retirement
  • Set to return in January
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to , the 33-year-old could become part of Flick's backroom team as soon as January after spending a short amount of time in a similar role over the summer following his retirement from playing. Thiago was reportedly hired initially to help Flick achieve a smooth transition (due to his command of German and English) — evidently, he impressed the 59-year-old German coach enough to be brought back into the fold.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The coaching duo previously worked together at Bayern Munich, where Thiago spent a large part of his career (2013-20) pulling the strings from central midfield. The Spaniard won a staggering seven consecutive Bundesliga titles during this period, and Flick was in charge for the final trophy-winning campaign before Thiago departed for Liverpool.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Thiago severed his ties with Barca in August after only a month in his new coaching role, reportedly desperate for a fresh challenge after hanging up his boots. However, he looks set to be back on the scene just months later. The final four years of the La Masia academy product's playing career at Liverpool were hampered by injury, and it appears the experienced international midfielder believes he still has something to offer the game.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR THIAGO?

    Flick's team of assistant coaches at Barca currently consists of Marcus Sorg, Toni Tapalovic, and Heiko Westermann. It's unclear exactly where Thiago would slot in here; when he departed the club in the summer he was replaced by experienced youth coach Arnau Blanco and reports suggest Barcelona are happy with the work his replacement has been responsible for, so it doesn't look like Thiago's return would threaten his position.

Three Sri Lanka Women players test positive for Covid-19

The squad will undergo another test before their opening match against Netherlands on Tuesday

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Nov-2021Three Sri Lanka players taking part in the Women’s World Cup Qualifier, which began in Harare on Sunday, have tested positive for Covid-19.According to an ICC release, the entire team was tested after one player showed mild symptoms. Two of the players who tested positive are experiencing mild symptoms, while the third is asymptomatic. All three are in isolation and are under medical care.The other members of the squad have returned negative tests, but the squad are isolating as a precaution and will undergo another test ahead of Sri Lanka’s opening match against Netherlands on Tuesday.Related

Pakistan, Bangladesh to kick off Women's ODI World Cup Qualifier in Harare

Covid-19 cases in PNG camp forces team to withdraw from Women's World Cup Qualifiers

“We have playing squads of 15 at the event, which allows for injuries and illness, including COVID-19 to be managed, and in addition teams have had the option of bringing traveling reserves with them.” Said ICC head of events Chris Tetley. “As you would expect, the remainder of the squad are being closely monitored and they will all be re-tested ahead of taking to the field on Tuesday.”The event bio-security plan provides us with protocols to manage positive tests effectively with the intention of enabling the event to proceed whilst keeping all other players and participants safe.”This is the second instance of Covid-19 related to a team taking part in the World Cup Qualifier. Papua New Guinea were forced to withdraw from the tournament, after a spate of infections within their camp left them short of players who could clear the Covid test that would allow them to fly to Zimbabwe.

To sub, or not to sub?

Game-changing injuries during Australia’s joust with South Africa have aided the case for substitutes in Test cricket. Once a taboo, the concept is gaining momentum

Daniel Brettig28-Nov-2012Ponder for a moment an alternative conclusion to the Adelaide Test, one that arrives after both teams are able to call on substitutes to maintain a full complement of 11 fit players. Jacques Kallis and James Pattinson still limp off with injuries incurred while bowling, but instead of remaining on the scoreboard they are replaced – Kallis by Ryan McLaren and Pattinson by Mitchell Starc. The addition of fresh bowlers alters the course of the match.McLaren’s bustling medium-fast follows up from Kallis’ initial breakthroughs, and also reduces the role played by a profligate Imran Tahir, to restrict Australia to a slimmer first innings – Michael Clarke drags McLaren onto the stumps having made a mere 147. Thus chasing a reduced target, South Africa entertain as many thoughts of winning as survival until Starc delivers a swerving spell with the second new ball midway through the final day, dismissing McLaren among three victims in as many overs.Starc’s left-arm footmarks also create more purchase for Nathan Lyon, who finds sharp spin and variable bounce out of the rough to ensure South Africa are bowled out with an hour and a little more than 100 runs to spare. Kallis, meanwhile, is passed fit for the Perth Test, and Pattinson’s recovery period is revised to give him a chance of playing against Sri Lanka at the MCG on Boxing Day.Such a scenario will be outlandish to some and anathema to others, but with every glimpse of a batsman grimacing in pain at the crease and every camera shot of a bowler limping from the field, the radical concept of allowing substitutes in Test cricket slips closer to the realm of the possible. Whether that is also the realm of the necessary still depends on one’s point of view. Medical practitioners and physios around the Australian game are at the vanguard of global lobbyists for the concept, while players and coaches are softening in their resistance – bowlers moreso than batsmen.Older cricketers, and captains, are reluctant to tamper with the venerable and venerated concept of 11 versus 11, irrespective of injuries, conditions or the changing tactical fashions of other sports. Paul Marsh, the Australian Cricketers Association chief executive, spoke for many of his members when he stated that any such change would “tear at the fabric of the game”. Following the Adelaide Test, South Africa’s captain Graeme Smith spoke warmly from this perspective about the respect engendered among combatants for playing the last game that leaves nowhere to hide for five days.”I think that’s the whole challenge of Test cricket really,” Smith said. “When you watch Peter Siddle bowl at the end of his tether in the last 12-18 balls of the day to someone who’s batted all day, that’s what Test cricket is all about. I don’t think there’s a sport out there that really tests you for as long mentally, emotionally and skill-wise other than Test cricket, and I think maybe rules like that might soften the blow a bit. That’s why people who look back over time can be proud of what they’ve achieved, that they’ve been able to handle what this game is all about.”Smith’s views are emblematic of the opposition to any concept of substitutes. Nonetheless, the views of medical men are creeping towards wider acceptance, albeit slowly. The concept of a cricketer being subbed out of a first-class match is already in place under exceptional circumstances in Australia, as Ricky Ponting and numerous New South Wales-based team-mates for Australia were replaced in Sheffield Shield matches to avoid injury and a scheduling clash ahead of the first Test in Brisbane. Ponting’s hamstring was deemed too tight for him to complete a match for Tasmania against South Australia in Hobart, while Michael Clarke and Mitchell Starc played only three days of four at Allan Border Field so they could join the rest of the squad at the Gabba.This year, Cricket Australia’s playing conditions committee – of which Marsh is a member – agreed in principle to the use of a single substitute for either injury or tactical reasons in Shield fixtures. It was viewed as a radical step at CA, and ultimately too radical at the ICC’s headquarters in Dubai, from which word filtered back to Jolimont that enforcing such a law would risk the first-class status of the Shield. That edict killed the concept for the 2012-13 summer, but a serious discussion on it is evidence of progress in the mind of the Cricket New South Wales team doctor and sometime Australian team medical officer John Orchard, among the most vocal advocates of the change.”I think everyone who’s in the preparation and injury side of looking after cricketers is unanimously in favour of it, and we’re getting much better penetration into the cricket part of the structure – there are now a significant number of coaches and even players who are in favour,” Orchard told ESPNcricinfo. “It wouldn’t have even been on the agenda five years ago and now there are people lobbying on the cricket side, not just the injury side.”

‘The ask of the modern player, which is to come out like a sprinter in T20 and bowl four overs of smoke, two days’ rest then another four overs, and then adjust from that to the marathon efforts of bowling 40 overs in Test cricket with maybe only week or 10 days’ break in between, bodies all over the world are having a problem with that.’Sports physician John Orchard

The central plank of Orchard’s argument for substitutes in Test matches is that it must be seen as a natural counterbalance to the wildly contrasting demands now placed on international cricketers via the poles of Test matches and Twenty20 fixtures. In terms of training, preparation, and execution they are as divergent as a marathon and a sprint, creating a chasm between formats down which increasing numbers of players are falling with injuries.”In the days when you only had one major form of the day, the matches were spaced out nicely and you could treat Test cricket as a marathon and train like a marathon runner, bowl lots of long spells in the nets and lots of long spells in Test cricket,” Orchard said. “It was a sport which didn’t have many injuries. But the ask of the modern player, which is to come out like a sprinter in T20 and bowl four overs of smoke, two days’ rest then another four overs, and then adjust from that to the marathon efforts of bowling 40 overs in Test cricket with maybe only week or 10 days’ break in between, bodies all over the world are having a problem with that.”It’s not that one country’s got poor injury management and poor physios and poor doctors, it’s just that the human body’s not designed to do that. We’ve suddenly entered a high-injury era for cricket, where every country has got players playing T20 and Test cricket, and in no country are the bowlers standing up and coping well with it. You can try your preparation in all sorts of ways, but that adjustment is becoming very different to make.”There are numerous variations on what form the substitutes system might take. The concept of replacing a player only when injured appears flawed and open to exploitation, as rugby has discovered with its blood rule. A single substitute available across the course of the match, essentially a 12th man freed up to play, is the most measured option, already debated by CA and advocated by the likes of the Victorian coach Greg Shipperd. Orchard’s suggestion is the most far-fetched, allowing bowlers to be subbed out once they have reached a certain number of overs, in the manner of baseball pitchers.”If cricket joined other sports and embraced substitutions you could make cricket a little bit closer to T20 cricket,” Orchard said. “If you had players who could bowl 15 overs in an innings in Test cricket and then get subbed out and bring in a fresh bowler, it would be a radical change but it would be in response to another radical change, which is T20 cricket. When T20 was first suggested and played it was considered a bit of a joke, hit and giggle, now it is treated very seriously and it is here to stay.”You certainly are getting some old-school people in cricket saying we should limit T20 because it is ruining Test cricket, and in one sense they’re correct but in another they’re out of date. No one is going to limit T20 cricket when it is getting bigger crowds and it’s bringing in more money than the traditional forms of the game. You’re never going to stop players playing in tournaments that earn more money than their Test cricket.”Bringing subs in is a radical solution, but it is one that has to be debated more and more. It is really a matter of how long we’re prepared to sit back and watch injuries have a greater and greater impact on cricket matches, before people get sick of outcomes of Test matches being decided by who happens to have the least injuries rather than who has the better side.”The sight of the injured combatant fighting through pain and physical restriction to do his best for his team is among sport’s most compelling, but it is a drama that invariably leads to a long delay until that player may return to action for the sequel. Kallis’ efforts with the bat in Adelaide have more than likely ruined his chances of playing in Perth, while Pattinson’s team-oriented inclination to try to keep bowling after he first felt pain, ignoring it until he could barely breathe, is likely to have lengthened his rehabilitation time by a significant amount.”If changes are made to allow subs, people will miss the innings of your Jacques Kallis coming on and playing with a hammy and in obvious pain,” Orchard said. “That’s great to watch in terms of human courage, and some of the most famous innings over the years have been batsmen under duress, and that is something you would miss if you brought in subs.”But on the other hand we have Pat Cummins have his debut [in Johannesburg last year], get injured and play through with the injury, help win the Test match in a great display of courage, but we’re now behind the ledger in terms of how much cricket he’s missed with injury since then, opposed to how great it was to watch him in that Test. We’re missing him more going forward for the fact he played through in that Test.”Ultimately, the possibility of substitutes in Test matches will rise or fall based on the views of the players themselves. They are the most vocal advocates for Test cricket itself, and if they begin to lose interest in its physical risks and psychological demands then change may not be long in coming. Australia’s captain Michael Clarke offered a carefully divergent view from Smith, stating that international cricket had become far more of a squad game. Even though he loves the breadth of the challenge posed by a Test match, Clarke is a little less wedded to the concept of 11 v 11.”To me it’s such a hard game, it’s Test cricket, it’s the pinnacle, the hardest game in the world, the greatest game in the world,” Clarke said. “There’s going to be injuries, especially when you have to work as hard as both teams have had to work over the first two Test matches of this series, but you’ve got to find a way.”We look forward to a third Test with maybe some new faces on both sides. International cricket is not just about 11 players, it’s about a squad. That’s why Australia’s been so successful for a long period, because of the strength of first-class cricket in Australia, players manage to come into the team and have success. [11 versus 11] is how it is, so I accept it.”

'They say that I'm finished' – Cristiano Ronaldo hits back at critics and insists he 'still feels the passion' in Saudi Pro League with Al-Nassr

Cristiano Ronaldo has told his doubters that he “still feels the passion”, with the Portuguese continuing to silence those who said he was “finished”.

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  • Moved to Middle East as a free agent
  • Signed most lucrative contract in world football
  • Remains determined to land more trophies
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Portuguese superstar has made a career out of proving detractors wrong, with history-making exploits suggesting that he should never be written off. Plenty have done that down the years – particularly when CR7 severed ties with Manchester United in 2022 and opted to head for the Middle East.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Ronaldo faced accusations of moving to the Saudi Pro League purely for financial gain, as he works on the most lucrative contract in world football, but he sets the highest standards of himself and has registered 74 goals for Al-Nassr through 85 appearances.

  • WHAT RONALDO SAID

    There is no sign of the evergreen frontman slowing down at 39 years of age, and he has said in a promotional video for the new documentary all about life in Saudi Arabian football: “I came here to win, to make the league better. I want to leave a legacy. That's what I want. They say I'm finished, that I'm only here for the money… I still feel the passion. They don't believe it, but I'm here to win.”

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Ronaldo has won the Arab Champions Cup with Al-Nassr – scoring two goals in the final of their 2023 triumph over Al-Hilal – but is still waiting on the grandest of honours in the Middle East and will see his current contract expire next summer.

Bid submitted as Chelsea make opening offer to "incredibly fast" £25m ace

Chelsea have now submitted a "concrete" bid for an "incredibly fast" player in their efforts to secure more signings before deadline day next month.

Chelsea undergo busy summer transfer window with nine deals agreed

The west Londoners, financed by Todd Boehly and BlueCo, have made nine new signings so far this summer as the club show yet again that they're not afraid to spend.

Chelsea ace would consider Man Utd move as Ashworth contacts his agents

There been intermediary talks behind-the-scenes.

ByEmilio Galantini Jul 31, 2024

Tosin Adarabioyo (Fulham), Omari Kellyman (Aston Villa), Renato Veiga (FC Basel), Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall (Leicester City), Filip Jorgensen (Villarreal), Marc Guiu (Barcelona), Estevao Willian (Palmeiras), Caleb Wiley (Atlanta United) and Aaron Anselmino (Boca Juniors) have all signed for Chelsea, but more could follow them.

Belgian journalist Sacha Tavolieri claimed this week that Chelsea are close to agreeing a deal for highly-rated young goalkeeper Mike Penders, who BlueCo believe could be the next Thibaut Courtois (X).

Cole Palmer

7.48

Conor Gallagher

7.13

Nicolas Jackson

7.07

Moises Caicedo

6.85

Noni Madueke

6.84

They're offering in excess of £17 million to sign the 19-year-old, who made his senior debut for Genk last weekend in their 0-0 draw at home to Standard Liege. Meanwhile, Chelsea have also opened talks with Napoli over Victor Osimhen, with Romelu Lukaku agreeing a three-year deal to head the other way (Ben Jacobs).

A new senior forward, whether that be a striker or winger, looks to be on the agenda at Stamford Bridge. Chelsea attempted to sign Michael Olise from Crystal Palace, before the 22-year-old joined Bayern Munich, with Maresca's side holding an interest in Nico Williams and others as alternatives.

In terms of a natural number nine, Osimhen is a name that will excite plenty of Chelsea supporters, given his stellar reputation and prolific goal-record since joining Napoli from Lille in 2020.

The Nigerian has scored 76 goals in 133 appearances across all competitions at the Diego Armando Maradona Stadium, but signing him could still be a costly operation, even if Lukaku could be used as a sweetener for the deal.

A cheaper alternative could be Hoffenheim striker Maximilian Beier, and it is believed Chelsea have wasted no time in testing the water in a potential move for the Germany international.

Chelsea submit concrete bid to sign Maximilian Beier from Hoffenheim

Indeed, according to Sky Germany reporter Florian Plettenberg, Chelsea have now submitted a "concrete" bid to sign Beier from Hoffenheim, and they're joined by Aston Villa in the race for his £25 million signature.

The 21-year-old, who scored 16 goals in all competitions for Hoffenheim last season, has also been called "incredibly fast" by Hoffenheim director Alexander Rosen.

Enzo Maresca explains why star player Cole Palmer was left on the bench as Chelsea suffered Carabao Cup loss to Newcastle

Chelsea head coach Enzo Maresca says he felt there was no need to bring on Cole Palmer in the Blues' 2-0 Carabao Cup loss to Newcastle on Wednesday.

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  • Chelsea knocked out by Newcastle
  • Palmer unused substitute
  • Maresca says star was not needed
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Blues crashed out of the Carabao Cup at the last-16 stage, losing 2-0 to Newcastle despite beating them at Stamford Bridge a few days earlier. Maresca opted to include Palmer in the squad as a substitute and the 22-year-old did not even get the call to come on with his side trailing by two goals.

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    WHAT MARESCA SAID

    The former Leicester boss explained his decision to leave Palmer out, saying: "Simply because I think Joao [Felix] and Christo [Nkunku] were doing very good. The reason why [we brought him] was in case we needed Cole but Joao and Christo were doing well so there was no need to change."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Palmer's omission is probably deeper than what Maresca explained in his post-match press conference. The Blues are heavily reliant on the young England star and therefore must manage his minutes coming into a busy period. Palmer was also left out of Chelsea's squad for the Conference League and is seemingly being prioritised for Premier League action instead.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR CHELSEA?

    A big match is on the horizon for Maresca's side on Sunday when Chelsea take on Manchester United at Old Trafford. There is no doubting Palmer will be involved in that game as the London team look to break into the Premier League's top four.

Crystal Palace make £12m+ bid to sign "wonderful" new attacker for Glasner

Crystal Palace have reportedly submitted an offer to sign a "wonderful" new attacker for Oliver Glasner.

Crystal Palace searching for Olise replacement

The Eagles have already signed a new centre-back in Chadi from Real Betis and, more recently, Palace also secured the services of attacking midfielder Daichi Kamada, who left Lazio as a free agent.

After Kamada, Fabrizio Romano has recently claimed that Glasner is looking for at least “one more" signing: “I expect Crystal Palace to do something absolutely because Oliver Glasner, apart from obviously Daichi Kamada joining, wants one more player.”

Fabrizio Romano: Crystal Palace eyeing £34m ace compared to Di Maria

Oliver Glasner wants “one more”.

ByCharlie Smith Jul 11, 2024

Attention appears to be on landing a new attacker following the departure of Michael Olise, who has officially completed his move to German giants Bayern Munich. Steve Parish spoke highly of Olise following his exit, telling the club’s official website after the move was announced:

“We are hugely proud of what Michael has achieved at Crystal Palace, a club where he has developed greatly as a player. We respect his desire to further test himself at the highest level of world football, and I would like to personally wish him the very best for his next adventure with Bayern Munich in Germany which I’m sure we will all follow closely.”

Former Watford winger Ismaila Sarr, now at Marseille, has been linked with a return to the Premier League with Palace, whereas Juventus’ Matias Soule is also believed to be a player of interest. Now, it appears as if Parish and Dougie Freedman have made a move for a potential Olise replacement, with an offer submitted.

Crystal Palace make Marcus Edwards bid

According to reports from Portugal, relayed by Sport Witness, Crystal Palace have made an offer to sign Marcus Edwards from Sporting CP. It is claimed that the opening bid is worth €15m (£12.6m), however, that isn’t expected to be enough to strike a deal, with Sporting CP wanting up to €30m.

Sporting winger Marcus Edwards.

Edwards also has admirers in Saudi Arabia in Al Nassr, however, the former Tottenham winger isn’t keen on a move, something which could help Palace in their pursuit.

The 25-year-old, who has also been linked with a return to Spurs in recent months, has impressed at Sporting CP in recent seasons, scoring 21 goals and providing 26 assists in 110 appearances. Primarily a right-winger, Edwards can also play in a variety of attacking positions so may provide plenty of versatility to Glasner's side in the final third.

Right-winger

188

40

37

Attacking midfield

17

5

5

Left-winger

17

3

3

Centre-forward

11

2

5

Previously dubbed a “wonderful player” who is a “joy to watch” by Football Talent Scout Jacek Kulig, is currently valued at €20m by Transfermarkt, so it may not come as a surprise that Palace’s opening offer looks likely to be rejected. However, a move could still be one to watch, especially after the club sold Olise for a reported £60m.

Joe Root 'desperate' for success in Australia, but can't yet commit to tour

PCA Men’s Player of the Year wants to take form Down Under, but awaits clarity on tour

Andrew Miller28-Sep-2021Joe Root says he cannot yet commit to captaining England in Australia this winter, or taking part in the series at all, even though he is “desperate” to carry his formidable run of form into the Ashes, and so improve his record in one of the few countries where he has yet to score a Test century.Root, 30, has been named as the cinch PCA Men’s Player of the Year after a stellar 2021 in which he has scored six of his team’s seven centuries in 12 Tests, including four scores of 180-plus. With a total of 1455 runs at 66.13 for the calendar year so far, he still has a realistic chance to overhaul Mohammad Yousuf’s record haul of 1788 runs, set back in 2006.However, with one Test postponement already this year, following India’s withdrawal from last month’s series decider at Old Trafford, the prospect remains that Root and England will not play another Test in 2021, as negotiations continue between the ECB and Cricket Australia over the team’s impending quarantine arrangements.Although the ECB is understood to have received an updated brief from CA with “better than expected” guidelines – including an ability to train and move freely within their hotel during their 14-day quarantine period and some flexibility thereafter – the details have yet to be shared with the players. Their confidence in the arrangements is unlikely to have been improved by the overnight news that Tasmania’s Sheffield Shield fixture against Queensland has been postponed indefinitely after four new Covid cases were reported in the state. Brisbane is due to host the opening Ashes Test on December 8.”We are still waiting for some information,” Root said. “Hopefully that will be with us soon. It’s a little bit frustrating but it’s where we are at. It’s so hard to know until we find out what the conditions are going to be like. Hopefully it’ll be coming shortly and we can start moving forward.”Root captained England to a 4-0 defeat in 2017-18, but is keen to put the record straight•Getty Images

Root has toured Australia twice in his career, as a rookie in 2013-14 during England’s ill-fated 5-0 whitewash, and again as captain four years later, when he made five half-centuries in as many Tests but a highest score of 83 in the final Test at Sydney, as Australia wrapped up another comprehensive 4-0 win.Given England’s stated aim at the start of the year, of winning back the Ashes in Australia, and Root’s own decision to stay on as captain after the 2-2 home draw in 2019, his conflict is palpable ahead of a series that ought to be a career-defining moment. However, with the squad determined to present a united front, particularly given the likely restrictions on families joining the tour, Root insists it’s hard to make a “definite decision” on whether he will be able to lead the tour.”It’s really important everyone makes a decision that they’re comfortable with,” Root said. “There’s so many different factors that fall into it, so we just have to be patient, and wait until we know what’s happening and then make a decision on the back of that.”I’m very hopeful, and think I speak on behalf of everyone that Ashes cricket – an away tour to Australia – is one of those things that you’re just desperate to be on,” he added. “The position I’m at in my career, it could be the last opportunity I get to go, so of course it’s something you’re desperate to do, to hopefully make history over there and be part of something very special. Until we have information it’s very difficult to know where everything sits.”Although Root’s average in Australia is creditable by most players’ standards – 38.00 from nine matches – it is still his lowest in any Test-hosting country bar Bangladesh, where he has played just twice, while the UAE is the only other country where he hasn’t made one of his 23 Test hundreds. Given his form this year, which has taken him back to the top of the ICC batting rankings, he knows he may never get a better chance to set the record straight.Related

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“I’m very aware of [my record in Australia], and it’s something that I desperately want to put right,” Root said. “As a senior batter in the side, you want to be the one scoring the runs, you want to be the one making those big hundreds. I have done that this year so far. But it’s the one place where I feel like I have underperformed, and I’ve not got the best out of myself. So it’s a great driver for me to go and do it this this time round. So hopefully that can be the case.”I certainly feel I’m playing some of the best cricket I’ve played. I’m playing quite nicely, and it’s been one of those years you need to make the most of. I feel I’ve got good rhythm in the way that I’m moving and good confidence at the crease. More than anything you are desperate to keep it going, keep that hunger, keep that drive to make those big scores and contributions.”Regardless of whether the tour goes ahead or not, England’s preparations for the Ashes have already been severely hampered by the ongoing uncertainty – including the likelihood that the Perth Test, currently due to start on January 14, will be have to be relocated given that Western Australia’s border is unlikely to be reopened until February at the earliest.”You look at the last two years, nothing’s really been normal, in terms of planning for anything,” Root said. “You just want to make the best of everything you can. From our point of view, everything we’ve done has been about being ready for when we are due to get to Australia, making sure that we’re as ready as we can be, that we are organised and clear on what we need to do.”How we’re approaching it, from a mental point of view more than anything at the minute, is getting your head around the challenges that a tour like that poses,” he added. “Regardless of what decision they finally make, everyone has to have at the forefront of their thinking, ‘what do I need to do to perform well?’, whether that’s with bat, ball, or collectively, as a group.”We’ve tried to ready the guys, and have conversations leading into this part of going away, so that they have an idea of what to face when we get there. As much as anything, we’ve tried to keep it as close to how you’d want to prepare for any tour, but in particular an Ashes tour of Australia.”Despite England’s own recent struggles – which include a 1-0 series loss to New Zealand, as well as trailing 2-1 against India in a series that may yet be concluded next year – Root still has faith that England can compete against an Australia team in transition, having watched India emerge victorious in their own tour last year.”India have proven [they are beatable],” Root said. “You look at their side in the last Test match in Brisbane, it was far from the side that played against us this summer, it wasn’t their first-choice team, without their captain and some very senior players, so they’ve shown the world that you can go to Australia and we’ll certainly take a lot of confidence from that. We know that when we play like we did at Headingley for example, we’ll beat most sides in the world regardless of where we’re at.”Joe Root was speaking following the 52nd cinch PCA Awards, the biggest awards ceremony in English cricket

Sean Williams has been around the block and then some (but he's not stopping now)

The Zimbabwe veteran started his international career two decades ago, but his appetite for the game is undimmed

Firdose Moonda24-Sep-2025When Sean Williams made his international debut on February 25, 2005, precisely one T20 international had been played up to that point. Twenty years later Williams will be in action on the day the 6000th T20I, across men’s and women’s cricket, will be played. It will also be his 39th birthday, as he continues his run as the world’s longest-serving active international cricketer.Since his debut, only two players, Hamilton Masakadza and Sikandar Raza, have been capped more times for Zimbabwe and only one, Brendan Taylor, has scored more runs. Williams has played against 28 international teams in 17 countries. Only two other players – Collins Obuya and Paul Stirling – have been up against more opposition. When Williams says he has “seen the full cycle”, you have to believe him.He is currently part of the Zimbabwe T20I squad that will compete in the Africa regional qualifiers in their quest to reach the 2026 World Cup. Cricket is completely different to what it was two decades ago, when he received his maiden international call-up.”I was playing a first-class game at BAC [Bulawayo Athletic Club] and my dad was throwing balls to me on the side of the nets. He was throwing from quite a wide angle and I didn’t understand why. I was actually getting quite frustrated,” Williams says. “About 10 or 15 minutes later I got a phone call from the national team manager to say I’d been selected against South Africa. And my old man told me he was doing that to prepare me for Makhaya [Ntini]. It was quite stunning, I remember that very clearly.”Related

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Williams didn’t face Ntini in any of the three ODIs he played in South Africa in his debut series but he did get a taste of the big time. South Africa’s team included Graeme Smith, Herschelle Gibbs, Mark Boucher, Albie Morkel and Ntini. In contrast, the Zimbabwe squad had one recognisable name – Tatenda Taibu – and a group of youngsters who were trying to rebuild after the 2004 white-player walkout. Williams was too young to be involved in that rebellion, and he did not entirely grasp how significant the issues in the game were at the time, but even as a newcomer he could tell something was off.”It was difficult,” he says. “I’ll never forget walking through the Sandton Towers [hotel in Johannesburg] and we were going to our team meeting room and when we walked past people, they were like, ‘Where’s [Andy] Flower? Where’s [Heath] Streak? Who are you people?’ It was quite something to walk past.”Flower had left Zimbabwe the year before, after his involvement in the black-armband protest during the 2003 World Cup, and his brother Grant was part of the group of 13 who protested then-captain Streak’s sacking. Streak, of course, was also not around. Zimbabwe was a mess, in cricket and more generally. The accelerated land-reform programme that sought to redistribute farms from white to black ownership was in full swing, inflation was high (though it would get worse) and so was unemployment. A ban was placed on dual citizenship and many who had the opportunity to take up another nationality, especially that of the United Kingdom, did so.Williams himself did not qualify to apply for a British passport but he flirted with moving there after he did a stint in England, with a club cricket team in Newcastle. The late Kevin Curran, then involved in the coaching structures in Zimbabwe, urged him to return, and it was what Williams wanted anyway. “I enjoy being at home,” he says. “And I ended up wanting to play for Zimbabwe no matter what.”Williams on his way to an unbeaten 70 against West Indies at the 2007 World Cup, which was a dismal one for Zimbabwe•Paul Gilham/Getty ImagesEven when Zimbabwe’s results became so poor that they opted out of Test cricket for six years between 2006 and 2011. One consequence of that was that Williams, who averaged over 40 in first-class cricket in five of the seven years between 2006 and 2012, ended up waiting until 2013 to get his Test cap. From an international perspective, he concentrated on ODIs (he played one T20I in 2006 and his next one in 2013) and in particular on how Zimbabwe could perform on the global stage.He was part of the squad in the 2007 ODI World Cup, where they didn’t win a game, and then the 2011 tournament, where they won two out of six matches, against lower-ranked opposition. “It was an absolute struggle when we got to those World Cups,” he says. “I felt very nervous when I played, and also that quite often you could predict the outcome of our games.”The only outlier in that time was Zimbabwe’s stunning win over Australia in the 2007 T20 World Cup in Cape Town (and Williams was not part of the playing group then). It took them seven years and two more tournaments before they won another match at the T20 World Cup – against Netherlands in 2014.By then Williams was playing across all formats and Zimbabwe were stabilising. They made a Test comeback in 2011, when they also had a stable coaching structure with Alan Butcher in charge and Grant Flower and Streak in specialist roles as batting and bowling coaches. Those three were not involved as the 2015 World Cup loomed, but experienced coach Dav Whatmore was put in charge. Williams rated him highly and praised the environment he created which led to that tournament being a high-water mark for him.Brendan Taylor (right) and Williams are among Zimbabwe’s top five run-getters in ODIs•AFP”In my book, it was the No. 1 tour I’ve ever been on for Zimbabwe,” Williams says. “The guys were pretty awesome with each other, we got on well, had honest chats, understood each other’s roles, understood our own personal roles and just got on with it. We really felt the World Cup vibe, and we had first-class treatment. It was quite special, actually, and probably the happiest I’ve ever been in the changing room. And then we also had multiple people contributing, Brendan scoring hundreds, I was chipping in and there were other guys around.”Taylor was the fourth-highest run-scorer overall at the tournament, and Williams was 13th. Zimbabwe only won one match but came close against Pakistan and closer against Ireland, in a game Williams could have successfully finished. Zimbabwe were 300 for 6 in the 47th over, chasing 332, and Williams was on 96 when he hit Kevin O’ Brien to John Mooney on the midwicket boundary. Mooney appeared to be on the boundary cushion but Williams was walking off and had stepped out of the field of play as the check was happening.”It was quite sad in the end, even though it goes down as one of my best tournaments,” he says. “That game against Ireland, obviously it was a heartbreaker and there was all that controversy with my catch [with Mooney] standing on a rope. You can actually hear the umpire on the audio saying, ‘Please stop the batter, stop the batter.'”Had Williams waited for the third-umpire check, not only might he have been able to continue batting, he would probably have also got his first ODI hundred. Instead, it was the end of Zimbabwe’s campaign. On Williams’ return, he married his partner, Chantelle, who was in attendance when he finally reached that first century, in the decider of a five-match series against Afghanistan, which Zimbabwe ultimately lost. “It was a really strange feeling because Afghanistan annihilated us in that game. We were 172 all out [chasing 246] and it was a very difficult game. But I was in Bulawayo, which was quite nice. I had my wife there, and her sister.”In a busy Test year for Zimbabwe, Williams has already scored 648 runs, with one hundred and four half-centuries in eight matches•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesThat his milestone came amid strife was representative of what was going on in Zimbabwe Cricket. The time between the 2015 World Cup and the country’s suspension from the ICC in the second half of 2019 was fraught. Zimbabwe shuffled between coaches and battled poor results. Between November 2015 and July 2019, they played six Test series and lost five, 16 ODI series and lost 14, and eight T20I series and lost five, with the other three drawn.The nadir came in March 2018, when they lost to the UAE at the ODI World Cup Qualifiers for the 2019 tournament. In a rain-affected match Zimbabwe had to chase 230 in 40 overs and were looking good on 206 for 5 in the 37th when Williams was dismissed on 80 and the tail was unable to finish the job.”That was awful,” Williams says. “I knew the moment that happened that the coaching staff was done. That was inevitable. And I wasn’t sure about the next coaches because when you have [Lance] Klusener and Streaky and guys like that in your changing room, with that type of experience, I didn’t know if [we were] going to be able to get better than that. Especially Lance. We went through hell again for quite a while. There were a lot of issues internally with our team trying to recover from that.”Streak and his staff were sacked and Streak was later banned for eight years for breaching the ICC’s anti-corruption code. Zimbabwe’s suspension meant they were unable to participate in qualification for the 2020 T20 World Cup (which was moved to 2021 because of Covid) and their cricketing structures were hanging on by a thread. Williams, who by then had a daughter, considered walking away but with the pandemic came an opportunity to pause and reframe his ideas about how he wanted to play in the last phase of his career.Dav Whatmore’s tenure as Zimbabwe coach in 2015 was one of Sean Williams’ most productive periods as an international cricketer•Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty Images”I thought about how we as Zimbabwe played, throughout my time, and I realised we approached games as though we always needed to save face,” he says. “We’d say things like, ‘We need to make sure we bat 50 overs’ or ‘We need to make sure we play five days.’ When you try to play like that, it’s mentally exhausting, it’s physically exhausting. And you end up having meetings and just saying the right things and not actually doing anything but just playing cautiously and negatively and always on the back foot. I didn’t enjoy playing like that at all.”My dad used to always tell me, ‘You’re better than you think you are. Stop taking so long. Just hit the ball.’ And that’s when I thought, let me change this and try to be a little bit more dynamic, a little bit more free and a little bit more expressive. And that way, you start playing a little bit more exciting cricket. It gave me quite a clear understanding of what I needed to do and wanted to do at the time. Then I started to train that way.”The post-Covid period has been a boon for Williams. In the last five years he has scored four of his six Test hundreds and averages 58.80 in the format. In ODIs he has made five of his eight centuries in this time and averages 53.77. He plays with the fearlessness of someone with nothing to lose, in part because he has already lost so much.In April 2022, his father, Collin Ray, died, and in September 2023, Streak, a long-time mentor of Williams, also passed away. In that same period, Williams welcomed his second daughter. “Those were the most difficult times. I found that playing cricket was a space I could go to and kind of let the mind be on one thing. It’s been a saving grace for me,” he says. “Both of them [Collin and Streak] were the people I would call straight after a game or straight after something when I’m frustrated and when I’m happy. They were there through all of it.” He also discovered cold-water plunges as a way to focus and get the best out of himself. He says the therapy was “an absolute winner. It helped me get my mind back into cricket and just start making decisions because I didn’t have other people to make them for me.”Williams was caught on the boundary for 96 against Ireland at the 2015 World Cup. Replays later showed that the fielder, John Mooney, had touched the boundary line when taking the catch. Ireland won the match by five runs•AFPThe aspect of his game that he has not been able to work on as much is his bowling, as he juggles fatherhood with cricket and nurses a long-standing back problem. Bowling hasn’t come as easy for him over the years, he says. “I’ve had a little bit of an awkward action, long delivery stride, and kind of cut myself off quite quickly. I’m trying to put a little bit more emphasis into my bowling now. I just try to spin the ball a little bit more and have a little bit more control and clever field sets to try and do things a little bit differently again.”Williams has also defined his role better, especially as he starts to bowl a little more in white-ball cricket. “I’m not necessarily a wicket-taking bowler, but I try my best to be a complementary bowler. Hopefully Blessing [Muzarabani] or Richard [Ngarava] on the other side can take wickets or something.”And for those bowlers, Williams also has some advice about how to be bolder, especially in the longest format. “Even in our bowling, we’ve always done the same thing on the field and we’ve lost. So let’s try something different, and if we lose, what difference does it actually make? If we’re fielding, for example, let’s have a short-ball plan for an hour. If we get hit doing it, so what? Let’s try.”It has been an extremely tough period for Zimbabwe’s Test side, who play as many matches as Australia in 2025 (11 Tests) despite not being part of the World Test Championship. They are on a six-match losing streak with one win this year. Still, Zimbabwe Cricket believes in playing Test cricket in order to both validate themselves as Full Members and expose players to the highest level in order to improve. Williams buys into that but thinks it’s up to him and some of the other more experienced players, such as Craig Ervine and Taylor, to usher the younger generation through this period.”Our Test run has been tough. Over the last ten matches – and I have played nine of them – we’ve been against pretty good teams, if not some of the best teams. We won one and we drew one. And in the rest of them, we had four innings defeats. Dealing with that as a unit is tough because it’s a battering,” he says. “It’s up to the core players to try and change that environment a little bit. There’s a very big skills gap between us and the rest and also a lack of general understanding of the problem-solving of the game. We need to be more proactive rather than reactive to things and people understanding their own roles and space in the team are crucial to going forward.”Williams is trying to return to bowling more now and hopes to be a “complementary bowler” to wicket-takers Blessing Muzarabani and Richard Ngarava•Michael Bradley/AFP/Getty ImagesFor now, Zimbabwe have to put that aside because their focus for the next two years is on the white-ball game. They will co-host the 2027 ODI World Cup with South Africa and Namibia, and thanks to automatic qualification, will play in a 50-over World Cup for the first time in 12 years. Williams will be past 40 by then and he doesn’t want to tempt fate.”I can’t really speak about 2027 because I don’t know what will happen between now and then. Playing cricket and having a family is tough. It’s been tough on Chantelle and she has done very well to keep it all together because she deals with what I bring back too. And the girls are getting bigger. It’s always Dad this, Dad that, so when I am at home, it’s hard to manage cricket and family life. But obviously, I’d like to be there. I also think having us senior players around is a great thing. We don’t want too much to go on to the youngsters because they’re trying to find their feet in international cricket,” he says.In the immediate term, Zimbabwe are also aiming to reach the 2026 T20 World Cup, after being the only Full Member to miss out on the 2024 tournament. They have brought back Taylor, who served a three-year ban for failing to report approaches to fix matches, and Williams, having last played in May 2024, came back this month in the home series against Sri Lanka to boost their squad.He has embraced the challenge of giving everything to help put Zimbabwe back on the global cricketing map. “I’m a little bit nervous coming back because I haven’t been around T20 for a while now, but I am going to try to get into that role as quickly as possible,” he says. “After all, I would have liked to have gone to more World Cups.”He would also like to leave his mark on the format that barely existed when his career started, and which dominates the landscape as his career is coming to a close. “The biggest change in cricket that I’ve seen has been T20 cricket coming in,” he says. “It changed a lot here at home. It also changed things for opportunity. Guys got to start going to these leagues and start really having the opportunity to improve their skills. And the biggest change in cricket that I’ve seen in Zimbabwe is how we have performed after the 2019 suspension. We’re coming right and I’ve seen the full cycle.”

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