Aylish Cranstone, Kalea Moore fifties take South East Stars across the line

Heather Knight’s freak run-out sparks Western Storm collapse at Beckenham

ECB Reporters Network21-May-2022

Aylish Cranstone swings to leg•Getty Images for Surrey CCC

A century stand by Aylish Cranstone and Kalea Moore saw the South East Stars chase down 146 against Western Storm, winning by seven wickets in the Charlotte Edwards Cup at Beckenham.Cranstone scored 66 not out from 49 balls with six fours and put on an unbeaten 108 for the fourth wicket with Moore, who made 57 not out from 48 balls, including five fours. Claire Nicholas took 2 for 17.Georgia Hennessy was the Storm’s top scorer with 50 from 52 balls with six fours. Her opening partner, the England captain Heather Knight, chipped in with 35, while Bryony Smith took 2 for 22.The Stars won the toss and chose to field, but they toiled for the first half of the innings, with the visitors reaching 49 without loss after the powerplay.Yet having advanced to 81 for 0 the Storm stuttered, the breakthrough coming in the 12th over when Knight was run out by Alice Davidson-Richards, who deflected a violent drive by Hennessy onto the stumps at the non-striker’s end with Knight stranded.

Hennessy brought up her 50 with a driven single off Smith, but she was out to the next ball she faced when she was caught and bowled by the same bowler. Smith then took her second wicket when she had Sophie Luff caught by Freya Davies for 12 at mid-on.Danielle Gibson scored the first six of the match when she smashed Alice Capsey over cow corner, but she was out to the same bowler for 11, caught on the boundary by Phoebe Franklin. Fi Morris was then run out by Moore for 7 and Davidson-Richards trapped Natasha Wraith lbw for 5 with the penultimate ball of the innings, leaving Katie George to hit the final ball to boundary.Related

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The Stars’ chase got off to a rocky start when Nicholas claimed two wickets from successive balls in the fourth over. Smith was caught by Luff and Capsey bowled for a golden duck. The hosts were on 39 for 2 at the end of the powerplay and in the next over Franklin was caught for 8 when she hit Knight to Gibson.Davidson-Richards had damanged her hand, giving Moore an opportunity to move up the order. “It was a last-minute thing, me coming in,” she said, “but quite frankly I took the opportunity and I’m glad I did. It was actually a really nice wicket to bat on and with Aylish I felt very, very comfortable because she’s so experienced. I thought if, us two keep ticking we’re going to be perfectly fine.”Cranstone skied George’s final ball of the tenth over, but the chance was dropped, leaving the Stars on 72 for 3 at the halfway point. Smart running between the wickets helped Cranstone and Moore complete their 50 partnership; Cranstone reached her half-century with a driven two from Nicholas and Moore passed the same landmark in the penultimate over with two off Hennessy.Cranstone then hit the winning runs when she swept Hennessy for four with the final ball of the 19th over. “I thought if I keep ticking here, she can hit the bad ones,” Moore said, “although I must say, I don’t think I’ve run so many twos in my life.”We always know we can back each other to run, so with such a big boundary we always knew we could hit twos. It’s a very happy dressing room. It’s good that we bounced back from Wednesday and as team we did very well overall.”

Giggs' stunner, Welbeck revenge: 7 classic Arsenal v Man Utd FA Cup matches

Arsenal v Manchester United is one of the biggest grudge matches in English football.

A fixture often filled with heated exchanges, late tackles and plenty of drama, the two have met hundreds of times, with each Premier League still showing remnants of when their rivalry was at its fiercest.

A decent chunk of those meetings have been in the FA Cup.

Arsenal and United both have rich histories in the competition – especially when they’re paired together. Here, we’ve recalled the seven best FA Cup clashes between them.

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1 ByRoss Kilvington May 12, 2025 7 Man Utd 4-0 Arsenal (2008) Red Devils batter much-changed title rivals

Arsenal were on course for a first league title in four years when they met United in the fifth round of the 2007/08 FA Cup, and as such, manager Arsene Wenger opted to rest a host of first-team players. It proved to be a poor decision by the Frenchman.

To nobody’s surprise, the likes of Justin Hoyte, Armand Traore and Nicklas Bendtner couldn’t keep up with United, who ran out as comprehensive 4-0 winners thanks to a brace from Darren Fletcher and goals from Wayne Rooney and Nani.

Arsenal’s season began to unravel soon after. They went on to win just one of their next eight games in the Premier League as their title hopes slipped through their hands and into United’s, who went on to be crowned champions.

6 Arsenal 0-1 Man Utd (2004) Scholes strike defeats Invincibles at Villa Park

Arsenal were in the midst of an unbeaten league season and on an 18-match unbeaten run in the FA Cup when they took on United at Villa Park in the semi-finals in 2003/04.

United, seemingly incensed by their rivals’ good form, were up for a fight – and gave the Gunners just that.

After scoring the eventual winning goal in the 31st minute, Paul Scholes put in an awful challenge on Jose Antonio Reyes, which, while unpunished, left the Spaniard with ligament damage.

Roy Keane also got away with a number of questionable challenges, while Freddie Ljungberg broke his hand as the Gunners’ hopes of a famous treble were literally hacked short.

5 Man Utd 1-2 Arsenal (2015) Welbeck returns to dump United out

Just one day after Radamel Falcao completed a big-money loan move to United in September 2015, Danny Welbeck, a product of the Red Devils’ academy, left the club to join rivals Arsenal in a £16 million move.

“We let him go because of Falcao,” United manager Louis van Gaal said following his departure.

Six months later, Welbeck returned to Old Trafford for the first time and scored the winner, which he celebrated wildly, to steer Arsenal into the semi-finals of the FA Cup and end United’s realistic hopes of silverware for the season.

With Falcao left on the bench, United responded quickly to Nacho Monreal’s opener through Wayne Rooney, but imploded as Welbeck’s strike was followed by the sending-off of Angel Di Maria, who literally saw red after confronting referee Michael Oliver.

The Gunners then saw off Reading and Aston Villa to secure a second successive FA Cup triumph.

4 Arsenal 0-0 Man Utd (2005) Vieira seals tense final despite United domination

United completely dominated the 2005 FA Cup final, but it was Arsenal who prevailed as winners by way of penalties.

The Red Devils had four times as many shots as their opponents, eight times as many shots on target and 12 times as many corners, but couldn’t find a breakthrough, with Wayne Rooney coming closest when he hit the post in the 66th minute.

In the shootout, Paul Scholes saw his effort saved by Jens Lehmann, before Patrick Vieira stepped up to score the winning spot-kick with what was his last kick of a ball in an Arsenal shirt. Arsene Wenger conceded after the game that his side “were a bit lucky”.

3 Man Utd 0-2 Arsenal (2003) Giggs misses and Beckham booted as holders progress

Arsene Wenger rested Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp when Arsenal met United in the fifth round of the 2002/03 FA Cup, but it proved not to matter as replacements Francis Jeffers and Sylvain Wiltord proved too much for the Red Devils in what was a typically ill-tempered affair at Old Trafford.

After three yellow cards in the opening seven minutes, United had the chance to take the lead when Ryan Giggs ran through on goal and rounded Arsenal ‘keeper David Seaman. However, with an empty net, the Welshman put the ball over the bar.

The miss proved to be pivotal, as shortly after, midfielder Edu put the Gunners in front with a deflected free-kick before Wiltord doubled their advantage just after the break.

The aftermath of the game was then overshadowed by an extraordinary dressing room incident that left David Beckham requiring stitches courtesy of Sir Alex Ferguson’s flying boot.

Arsenal went on to win the trophy, beating Southampton 1-0 in the final.

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ByRoss Kilvington Nov 5, 2024 2 Arsenal 3-2 Man Utd (1979) The Five-minute Final ends in Gunners glory

The 1979 FA Cup final was decided in five minutes of pure, unadulterated chaos.

Arsenal had taken a 2-0 lead by half-time thanks to goals from Brian Talbot and Frank Stapleton, and with 86 minutes on the clock, looked set to avenge their loss to Bobby Robson’s Ipswich Town in the previous year’s final.

However, United then inexplicably drew level, scoring twice in two minutes through Gordon McQueen and Sammy McIlroy, the latter of whom took advantage of some truly awful defending from the Gunners.

Almost as soon as McIlroy had finished celebrating, Alan Sunderland stole in at the back post to score the winner for the Gunners, clinching their first trophy in eight years. Utter madness.

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1 ByAlex Caple May 25, 2024 1 Arsenal 1-2 Man Utd (1999) Giggs wondergoal settles epic semi-final replay

In the last-ever FA Cup semi-final replay, the fixture got a fitting send-off in 1999 thanks to Arsenal and United, who gave us a game for ages at Villa Park.

David Beckham had given United the lead early on before Dennis Bergkamp levelled for Arsenal in the second half. After Roy Keane was sent for an early bath, Phil Neville then conceded a penalty in the 90th minute to hand the Gunners a chance to win the game.

But Peter Schmeichel saved Bergkamp’s spot kick and the tie went into extra-time, where Ryan Giggs would score the winner with one of the greatest FA Cup goals of all time, dribbling through four Arsenal defenders before slamming the ball into the roof of the net.

In 2019, Gary Neville described the match as the “best game of football I have ever played in.”

“It was the only time in a match where I ever smiled when I was playing – the only time I have done that in a pressure moment as it was enjoyable as well as exciting,” he said, adding: “You know when you just feel: ‘This is something special.'”

The best grudge matches in English football

These teams don’t need to share a postcode to hate each other…

ByBarney Lane Nov 27, 2024

مران الزمالك | تدريبات بدنية.. وفقرة فنية لخماسي الفريق استعدادًا لـ المصري

يواصل الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي الزمالك تحضيراته القوية استعدادًا للمواجهة المرتقبة أمام المصري البورسعيدي، المقرر إقامتها يوم 1 مايو المقبل على استاد الجيش ببرج العرب، ضمن الجولة الثالثة من المرحلة النهائية لمسابقة الدوري المصري الممتاز.

وشهد مران الفريق، اليوم الخميس، الذي أُقيم على ملعب النادي، تركيزًا كبيرًا من الجهاز الفني بقيادة البرتغالي جوزيه بيسيرو على تجهيز اللاعبين بدنيًا وفنيًا بأفضل صورة ممكنة، استعدادًا للقاء المرتقب.

إيقاف معلق مباراة الزمالك وحرس الحدود في الدوري المصري

وخاض الثنائي أحمد حمدي ومحمود جهاد تدريبات بدنية خاصة على هامش المران، تحت إشراف مايكل جوزيه مدرب الأحمال، في إطار خطة الجهاز الفني لرفع المعدل البدني وتجهيزهما للمباريات المقبلة.

في الوقت ذاته، أدى محمود حمدي “الونش” مدافع الفريق تدريبات منفردة في صالة الجيمانيزيوم، حيث يخضع لبرنامج بدني خاص لتجهيزه بالشكل الأمثل للفترة المقبلة، وذلك بعد تأكد غيابه عن مواجهة المصري بسبب الإيقاف لتراكم البطاقات الصفراء.

كما خصص الجهاز الفني فقرة فنية خاصة لمدافعي الفريق، حيث شارك كل من حسام عبد المجيد وصلاح مصدق وأحمد حسام ومصطفى الزناري، إلى جانب نبيل عماد “دونجا” لاعب الوسط، في تدريبات فنية تحت إشراف نونو فيريرا المدرب المساعد.

وركزت الفقرة الفنية على بعض الجوانب التكتيكية، أبرزها استغلال الضربات الرأسية، وتنفيذ بعض الجمل الفنية الدفاعية التي يسعى الجهاز الفني لتطبيقها في مباراة المصري.

ويحتل الزمالك المركز الثالث في جدول ترتيب الدوري المصري الممتاز “النيل” برصيد 38 نقطة.

£50,000-a-week Everton player now in active talks over £16.5m January exit

A £50,000-a-week Everton player is now believed to be pushing to leave the club during the January transfer window, having grown frustrated with his time on Merseyside.

Everton manager latest

The Blues had a weekend off after their Premier League clash at home to Liverpool was postponed due to bad weather, in what would have been the final meeting between the two rivals at Goodison Park. The hope is that Everton having a breather could allow them to recharge ahead of a busy festive period, in what is a crucial run of fixtures for Sean Dyche, as he continues to battle to save his job. While he is safe for the time being, it hasn’t stopped other managers being linked with replacing him.

Everton manager Sean Dyche

The Blues are reported to have contacted former Porto boss Sergio Conceicao about coming in at Goodison, but it is claimed that he would prefer to take charge at West Ham instead, with Julen Lopetegui currently under huge pressure at the London Stadium.

Meanwhile, a reunion with David Moyes at Everton doesn’t appear to have been ruled out, with the Scot also seen as an option to come in and take charge for the second time. It is a move that could be met with a mix of positivity and negativity among the fanbase, with some rating him highly after a great first spell there, but others wanting a younger, more attack-minded manager brought in.

Everton player pushing for January exit

On the transfer front, a fresh claim from Tuttomercatoweb [via Sport Witness] states that Everton striker Beto wants to leave the club in January, due to his lack of playing time this season. Serie A side Torino are looking to get a deal over the line – one that could cost as much as £16.5m – with a loan move with an option to buy being mooted.

Roma are also mentioned as potential suitors, but it is Torino who are holding talks already with Beto and his agents.

Beto has been a hugely disappointing signing for Everton since arriving last year, scoring just seven goals in 48 appearances, not producing the level of ruthlessness that was expected of him in the final third when he joined.

For that reason, it makes sense to sanction his exit in January, assuming Dominic Calvert-Lewin stays put, amid doubts over his own future at Goodison. Losing both strikers would make no sense, even if replacements came in, not allowing them time to get used to their new surroundings at a crucial point in the season.

Granted, Everton are in no rush to sell Beto, considering he is contracted at the club until the summer of 2027, but he hasn’t shown anywhere near enough consistent quality in a Blues shirt.

Beto’s Premier League stats this season

Total

Appearances

9

Stats

1

Minutes played

181

Goals

1

Assists

0

Dribbles per game

0.4

Key passes per game

0.0

Pass completion rate

47.6%

Should the right offer come along, Everton have to consider accepting it, receiving good money for a failed signing and keeping Calvert-Lewin until next summer before making a decision on him at that point.

Forget the platitudes about grit and passion and fight – Mauricio Pochettino and USMNT were undone in Nations League not by rhetoric, but familiar tactical shortcomings

Criticism of USMNT's effort and "want to win" are largely off the mark, yet there remain a litany of tactical issues to be addressed

Welcome to the U.S. men's national team panic sphere, where this team is suddenly "in crisis." It's a tragic place for a soccer team to reside. It doesn't really anything. What it does do, though, is fuel the kind of nonsensical rhetoric so often found around this most puzzling of footballing entities.

On Thursday night, the U.S. lost 1-0 to Panama in the CONCACAF Nations League semifinals. It was a pretty bad one. Mauricio Pochettino got his tactics wrong. Panama defended very, very well. Throw in some poor goalkeeping from Matt Turner at the death, a couple of puzzling non-subtitutions, and it was the perfect storm – a picture-book international smash and grab from the Panamanian perspective.

The U.S., as a result, will not play for the opportunity to defend their Nations League crown. Instead, they will face Canada in a not-really-that-happy-to-be-here third-place match at 6 pm ET Sunday at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. This, in the eyes of many, means the U.S. soccer world is ending. There have been cries for more "intensity" and "grit" and "passion."

There are references to the good old days, when mid-table Premier League players such as Landon Donovan and Clint Dempsey, plus a plucky bunch of MLS fillers and European exiles willed their way to a series of dramatic, heroic failures by simply shouting at each other and wanting it more.

And so the rhetoric rumbles on around the national team. These are common themes, this central idea that American ideals – a "pull yourselves up by your bootstraps" style of soccer – is needed to push this overtly European looking side to victory.

Even Pochettino said after the loss that the USMNT "need to find a way to compete better. I don't like to say that. We are the USA, but you can't win with your shirt. You cannot win because you play here or there. You need to show and you need to come here and be better and suffer and win duels and work hard."

But that continuous insistence on "fight" is a vast oversimplification of a far more complex problem. These are a lot of good footballers who really do want to win when they step on the pitch. The Panama fixture was far more indicative of a lacking player pool and poor tactical nous – weighed down by an expectation of excellence that is unrealistic to place on a series of talented yet flawed players.

Getty ImagesThe burdens of the past

The United States has a puzzling history when it comes to its men's national soccer team. Like many nations, it has a series of signature moments. There was the famous 1-0 win over England at the 1950 World Cup, the "Dos a Cero" over Mexico 52 years later, Donovan's winner against Algeria, Tim Howard's 16 saves in defeat to Belgium.

Soccer is relatively new in this country, its culture still brewing, but there are still touchpoints to be found.

What it lacks, though, is a clear soccer identity. And that is the problem. There is no recognizable game-model to fall on, or signature style to harken back to. Spain keep the ball and pass you to sleep. Germany run and press. Brazil are more technically skilled. England – also quite good at losing in big moments – are stronger.

But modern football requires a top-to-bottom set of principles as to how a team should play with the ball. Instead, the U.S. seems to run off platitudes. They are going to "fight harder" than you. They just "want it more." They have that "dog" in them. And, ironically, for some time, that was enough. The United States made a living in the early to mid 2000s off being the plucky underdog side that could dig in, win its tackles, defend the box, and hit on the break.

For a generation of players, that was a calling card. Mix that intensity with a few talented individuals playing above the level of everyone else, and it worked a charm. Donovan, Dempsey, Howard, Michael Bradley – total Champions League appearances, 10 – were treated like national heroes. These guys became known for their fighting spirit, mostly because it was the way they could win.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportChange, change, change

The irony is, playing off emotion can only last for so long. It also relies heavily on the assumption that each wave of players thinks, acts and responds in the same way. But these are abstract qualities that don't exist in every footballer.

The U.S. was, in some senses, lucky that a group of players with similar mentalities came through at the same time. There was a collegiality here that really counted for something. Still, look at the results, and there isn't much to fall back on. The actual material stuff in the trophy cabinet holds little value.

The USMNT have won the Gold Cup – a competition that is increasingly a glorified set of summer friendlies between reserve teams – seven times. Elsewhere, they have slightly overperformed in the occasional World Cup, but always lost at the expected time (thus explaining the hunt for an elusive "signature win.") Tim Howard's performance against Belgium is remembered fondly in American circles, but came in a 2-1 loss to a vastly superior team.

Expectations, we are told, should be different now. In this generation – and no, it is not "golden" – the U.S. has its most talented group of footballers ever. Position for position, on quality alone, they would likely beat any other era of American side.

Getty Images SportA program revamp and the expectations

The difference, now, is that there is pressure on a manager to get it all right. And the U.S. has tried and failed for some time. That famous loss to Trinidad and Tobago that ushered out the "dog" era came with a new face in the dugout and a litany of new names worked into the mix. But even that soon turned stale.

The last 18 months of the Gregg Berhalter era felt like a sporting funeral procession. There was an understanding among many observers – often unspoken – that the former Columbus crew manager was not good enough to carry the U.S. through another World Cup cycle. He was considered, in some ciricles, fortunate to be in charge for Copa America.

And he proved as such in 270 minutes at that tournament. The U.S., of course, went out in the groups, losing to – and here's the kicker – Panama, in one of the more underwhelming major tournament performances from a host nation in recent memory. Berhalter went unceremoniously, and there were very few who felt particularly bad about it.

A new face had to come in. So arrived Mauricio Pochettino, experienced club manager, expected to play savior. The early signs were good. A win over – you guessed it – Panama opened his reign with promise.

A comprehensive defeat in Mexico was cast aside and tagged down, fairly, to a litany of injury issues and player absences. Jamaica were handily done away with in November, before January camp was negotiated with the kind of sigh appropriate for a 10-day period in which nothing of consequence ever happens.

Getty Images SportPanama and what went wrong

The Nations League is a curious thing. For non-host nations, there are implications associated with seeding and World Cup qualification. For the USMNT, hosts of the 2026 World Cup along with Canada and Mexico, it serves as more of a pin in an imaginary board, a date circled on a calendar.

There is a vague importance to all of this, if only because there is a game to be played – and the USMNT had never lost in the tournament. This new generation had another shot to prove that it could shake off the burdens of the old.

Pochettino himself stressed the importance of defending the Nations League title, both near and long-term.

"I want to win the competition," he said earlier this week, "because that is going to help us to build our confidence and trust in the way that we are going to need. At the same time, we need to be intelligent, to try to discover the best players and to build a strong core of the team that has the possibility to fight for big things. That mentality is about now, winning."

"The objective is the World Cup, and I think we are translating the idea that we need to compete in our best way and win the tournament because I think it's important for the future. In one year, we want to compete for the big trophy: the World Cup."

And as a result, Pochettino, groovy, shouty, and all, sincerely tried here. There was a formation in place, with footballers assigned to play them. What looked like a five at the back on paper turned into something resembling a 4-2-3-1 in possession. Yunus Musah looked like a right back on the team sheet, but spent a good portion of the game playing as an extra center midfielder or floating in the high right half space. There were, to be sure, ideas.

But Panama were good – very good. Like any shrewd opponent playing away from home, they set up to lose. Two banks of five parried away every U.S. attack with relative ease. They never really tried to keep the ball, and ensured that they didn't have it in areas where they could be pressed.

They completed 320 passes to the USMNT's 645. And when Cecilio Waterman, a 33-year-old forward who plays his football for Coquimbo Unido of the Chilean League, was given his chance in the 94th minute, he buried it. This was counter-attacking football in all of its whimsy.

Former USMNT legend Marcelo Balboa warns Mexico ahead of CONCACAF Nations League: 'Canada is the team in the region that is in the best form right now'

The former USMNT player stated that Mexico should not be overconfident in the match against the Canucks.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Mexico and Canada will face off this Thursday for a spot in the Nations League Final.

  • El Tri is on a three-match winless streak against the Canucks.

  • Mexico reached the Semifinals after defeating Honduras, while Canada did the same against Suriname.

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  • Getty Images

    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Marcelo Balboa, former USMNT star and Club León player, warned the Mexican National Team not to be overconfident in Thursday's match against Canada, calling them "the team in the region that is in the best form."

    In light of this, Balboa urged Mexico not to overlook Canada.

    "The key is that the Mexican National Team can play a great match, but Canada has a strong squad and individuals who can change the outcome in an instant," Balboa said in an interview with the Mexican newspaper El Universal.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Mexico had their final training session on Wednesday in the Sports Dignity Health Stadium ahead of the match against Canada on Thursday. Javier Aguirre was able to count on a full squad after goalkeeper Carlos Moreno reported late due to issues with his visa. The former USMNT player, who also played in Mexican football with León, stated that this match will be "the early final" and that neither team "should be overconfident."

  • Getty

    WHAT MARCELO BALBOA SAID

    "It will be the early final of the Nations League, the best semifinal, but neither team can be overconfident -anything can happen on the field," Balboa said.

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    DID YOU KNOW?

    Mexico dominate the head-to-head matchup against Canada with 21 victories, while have won 5 times, with 10 draws recorded. Despite dominance, they have not been able to defeat the North Americans in their last three encounters.

    As of today, Javier Aguirre has coached 61 matches with the Tri, achieving 38 victories, 10 draws, and 13 losses. This represents a 61 percent win rate and a 66.6 percent points earned rate.

West Ham now readying £25m move to sign new English centre-back in January

West Ham are now preparing to make a £25m offer to sign a new defender in January, but will have to fight off rival Premier League interest to secure their target in the winter window, according to a fresh report.

West Ham leaking goals

Julen Lopetegui’s side have somewhat stopped the rot in the Premier League in recent weeks, with a win over Wolves followed by draws with high-flying duo Bournemouth and Brighton. However, they are still one of the leakiest teams in the Premier League, with their 30 goals conceded the sixth most.

The arrivals of both Max Kilman and Jean-Clair Todibo are yet to have the desired effect at the London Stadium, and Lopetegui remains under massive pressure with his side languishing in 14th place, below Manchester United and just eight points clear of the drop zone approaching the halfway mark of the campaign.

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Movement is expected in January, with a new striker high on their list following Michail Antonio’s season-ending leg injury, while Niclas Füllkrug is yet to have any serious impact since his move from Borussia Dortmund over the summer and Danny Ings is clearly not trusted by the West Ham boss.

They have also been linked with a move to sign former Chelsea man Hakim Ziyech, who could be available in the winter window after announcing his intention to leave Galatasaray. Now, they could be set to unite him with another former Chelsea talent.

West Ham ready bid for Tomori

That comes according to a fresh report from Italy, which claims that the Hammers are readying a £25m bid to sign Fikayo Tomori in January. The England international has slipped down the pecking order at San Siro, starting just six games this season and not having been named in a starting XI for over two months.

Though he still has two and a half years left on his £71,000 a week deal, it is claimed that he could depart as early as the January window as Milan look to cash in before his value drops any further.

To that end, it is claimed that “Newcastle, Aston Villa and West Ham are ready to come forward” with an offer to take the former Chelsea man back to England in the coming weeks, with “Milan asking for 30 million euros” to part ways with the defender.

Max Kilman

Fikayo Tomori

Starts

17

6

Pass Accuracy

92.3%

97.3%

Tackles and interceptions per 90

2.29

2.42

Blocks per 90

1.76

1.13

Aerial duel % won

69.7%

57.7%

Yellow Cards

3

1

It has been a major fall from grace for Tomori, who was dubbed “better than [Matthijs] De Ligt” when he first arrived at San Siro by ex-Italian defender Paolo Ziliani.

“Tomori at €28million is a bargain”, he explained. “For anticipation, speed and agility he is better than De Ligt, who cost Juve €85.5million.”

A change of scene could be just what he needs to reignite his career, and West Ham could well offer him a return to London in the New Year in a move that could pay dividends if he could return to the peak of his powers.

Presença de área e determinação: conheça o atacante Zé Vitor, provável reforço do Vasco para a Série B

MatériaMais Notícias

O Vasco segue ativo no mercado nas semanas que antecedem a estreia na Série B do Brasileirão. Como a CBF estipulou que a janela de transferência do primeiro semestre fechará no dia 12, o clube carioca busca no mercado opções e está de olho em destaques dos Estaduais. Entre eles, está o atacante Zé Vitor, do Marcílio Dias, que tem nove gols no Campeonato Catarinense e está próximo de ser anunciado.

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Para analisar o momento e as características do atleta, o Lance! conversou com dois jornalistas que acompanham de perto a equipe catarinense do Gigantão das Avenidas. Cacá Oliveira, do site Esporte Campeão e da rádio Univali FM, de Itajaí, e Polidoro Júnior, da Agência de Notícias catarinense Mix Mídia.

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Revelado pelo Tubarão, Zé Vitor começou sua carreira no futsal como pivô, sempre próximo do gol adversário. Natural de Paulo Afonso, interior da Bahia, o jogador foi parceiro de ataque de Getúlio, que hoje integra o elenco cruz-maltino, tanto no futsal, como no futebol de campo. Antes de assinar com o Marcílio Dias, ele teve uma experiência no IK Frej Täby, da Suécia, e na última temporada foi emprestado ao Ituano.

Na equipe catarinense, encantou a torcida com a presença de área e se tornou o terceiro maior artilheiro do século XXI com 22 gols (nove deles em 2022), atrás apenas de Schwenck (27) e Leandro Branco (32), segundo levantamento do portal Esporte Campeão. No ano, estufou a rede em nove oportunidades, sendo vice-artilheiro Estadual – Alex Sandro, do finalista Brusque, está à frente com 10 tentos.

– Ele é finalizador. Centroavante, camisa 9. Tinha dificuldades quando saia da área. Melhorou muito nesse quesito inclusive. Não teve lesão. Ano passado foi emprestado para o Ituano e participou da campanha do título da Série C, mas como reserva. Aqui no Marcílio ele virou referencia. Torcida adora ele. Inclusive uma informação legal, ele se tornou o 3º maior artilheiro do século do Marcílio – revelou Cacá Oliveira.

+Carlos Brazil lembra dificuldades no mercado e exalta jogadores do Vasco: ‘Extremamente comprometidos’

O centroavante chegou ao Marcílio Dias em 2020 e por pouco não conseguiu o acesso à Série C. A equipe foi eliminada pelo Altos-PI no confronto decisivo. Para o jornalista, a torcida do Vasco pode esperar um jogador muito determinado em campo, sendo uma aposta, na grande chance de sua carreira.

– O titular é o Raniel. Mas o torcedor do Vasco pode esperar um jogador determinado e com raça, foi isso que ele sempre demonstrou no Marcílio. É artilheiro. Será a primeira oportunidade em um time grande. Pode ser a grande chance da carreira dele – disse.

+Aplicação tática, velocidade e boa finalização: conheça o atacante Erick, provável reforço do Vasco

Na última temporada, o Vasco sofreu por causa da fragilidade física e técnica de seu elenco. A Série B costuma ser uma competição muito intensa fisicamente, com muita disputa, e Zé Vitor pode trazer isso lá na frente, segundo o jornalista Polidoro Júnior.

– Zé Vitor é um atacante literalmente de área. Ele mira o gol constantemente. Não é um atacante que sai da área para tabelas com os homens de meio de campo ou quem se aproxima. Um jogador bem agudo, forte fisicamente. Um jogador perigoso. Você sabe que se tocar a bola nele algo bom irá acontecer. Acredito que ele tenha característica para jogar no Vasco. Vai depender do trabalho do técnico com os homens de frente – analisou, e emendou:

+ Confira e simule a tabela do Campeonato Carioca

– Mas é um jogador que pode ser útil na Série B. Tem características ofensivas, de luta, qualidade no toque final. E tem a cara da Série B que é de muita raça, confronto, disputa. Acho que se ele for para o Vasco, vai se dar bem. É um jogador focado, se lesiona pouco. Você sabe que com ele em campo sempre algo de bom irá produzir. Acho que ele vai vestir a camisa do Vasco e trazer alegria ao torcedor – finalizou.

Simon Harmer, Sam Cook leave much-fancied Lancashire dancing for rain

Essex need one more wicket on final morning after enforcing follow-on

Paul Edwards21-May-2022
In the opening weeks of this season a few people of good judgement appeared to assume Lancashire were going to win the County Championship. This match has offered a powerful corrective to such weirdly confident views. For whatever the vagaries of Manchester’s weather – and the forecast is for rain – Lancashire have been quite outplayed in this game and had Essex managed to take one more wicket this evening, Emirates Old Trafford would resemble the tomorrow. Instead, it is all aboard for a short voyage on the good ship .None of which should obscure the memory of an Essex team that has brimmed with confidence and dynamism these three days. After enforcing the follow-on – the first time Lancashire have suffered this indignity since 2017 – Tom Westley’s bowlers took seven of their opponents’ second-innings wickets and claimed an extra half-hour in the hope of completing their victory today.Tom Bailey and Hasan Ali obligingly holed out in the deep to leave James Anderson defending stoutly against Simon Harmer in the hope that it will hose it down for hours. “I just love this game and I don’t understand it at all,” a member of Lancashire outstanding live-stream operation said.Related

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Harmer, on the other hand, understands cricket’s engaging eccentricities all too well. He knows that it can treat you “dreadful crool”, as Eliza Doolittle might say, and that he has probably deserved more than the six wickets he has bagged from the season’s opening five games. Today, an Old Trafford pitch that offered sufficient help was just what he might have ordered to revive his season and he filled his rather large boots with figures of 5 for 85 from 40 overs.One or two Lancashire batters, notably Dane Vilas, took the attack to the South African Test offspinner but no-one played him with certainty. Vilas, who made 62, perished lbw on the back leg in a chaotic last hour that saw five Lancashire wickets go down. Matt Parkinson and Hasan also succumbed to Harmer’s flight and spin but Anderson and Luke Wood stood firm as the home dressing room hummed with the apocalyptic predictions of amateur meteorologists.And yet, if Lancashire survive, it will be a Dreyfus-esque injustice. For most of the morning – indeed, for most of the game – things have proceeded much Westley might have wished. You will recall that Lancashire resumed, hale and hearty, on 32 for 5. Wood then hit a couple of fours before edging a drive to Adam Rossington off Sam Cook, who also had Bailey lbw in his next over. Hasan survived two balls before edging Shane Snater to Harmer at second slip and Lancashire then needed another 11 runs to avoid posting their lowest total against Essex in the 125 years it has taken the sides to play 161 matches.Their minds uncluttered by such minutiae, Phil Salt and Parkinson put on 43 in 14 overs with Salt pulling Snater into the temporary stand for six. But it was a reflection of Essex’s command in Lancashire’s two innings that losing the ball, either in the building site or the seating, was more or less their greatest inconvenience. Otherwise, events unfolded roughly as they willed them.After making 44 in two hours Salt was leg before to a ball from Matt Critchley that seemed hurry on off the pitch in the manner of a topspinner. Next over, Parkinson smeared Harmer to the sub fielder, Aaron Beard at deepish square leg and Westley opted for traditional orthodoxy rather than the left-field funkiness when it came to enforcing the follow-on. Then again, the humiliation inflicted on opponents by asking them to have another go is probably underestimated. It certainly seems so this evening.

Luke Wells and Keaton Jennings patted back four maidens before lunch but it was no sort of omen. In the second over after the resumption Jamie Porter got one to straighten past Jennings’ outside edge and knocked the opener’s off pole out. Jennings looked studiously at the pitch as though he was thinking of writing a learned article about a game he had entered with an average of 174 and was now leaving with it more or less halved to 88.”Oh my God!” exclaimed someone to the left of the press box and one doubts it was an outpouring of evangelical witness prompted by the sight of Josh Bohannon striding bandily way out to the middle. Perhaps it was the more prosaic realisation that this was the first time Lancashire’s No. 3 had batted in the second innings of a match this season.Vilas’ players have had a lot of time in the field over the past six weeks or so but their dominance of matches has led to virtually the entire team needing to bat once in each match. To a degree, this is fine, of course, but it has also led to batters like Bohannon having limited opportunities to face high-quality spin on wearing pitches.Those who advocate reducing the number of first-class matches might reflect on these factors. Even in a freakishly dry spring Bohannon will get to mid-June having played seven red-ball innings; the last of these lasted an hour before he gave a bat and pad catch to Nick Browne at short leg off Harmer, who, it seems, can dismiss Test batters while reading his morning newspaper. Certainly no-one played him with much confidence today. The extravagantly offered front pads, the hurried defensive prods and the edges through the slips all said the same thing.So just as one might expect, the next Lancashire wicket fell to a seam bowler and owed everything to a batter’s error. For after defending solidly for nearly two hours, Wells pulled a short ball from Cook straight to square leg, where Paul Walter took a good tumbling catch near the ground. Wells nearly keeled over, too; no current batter is more aghast at the death of his innings. He held the bat close to his face and then began his funereal trudge home.Croft and Vilas then put on 78 for the fourth wicket but Westley throwing the ball to Harmer and waiting for the error. It came when Croft, having battled away for 39, top-edged a sweep to Cook behind square. Salt made a pleasant 31 on a day when pleasant 31s were nowhere near Lancashire’s requirements. He fell, caught at the wicket, off Critchley and a three-day finish became possible, then probable, then almost certain.But no. Anderson blocked Harmer’s fifth ball and checked his guard. The clock ticked over to seven o’clock. We’re all back tomorrow.

Tom Abell century tightens Somerset's stranglehold

Tom Abell’s tenth first-class century tightened Somerset’s stranglehold on the second day of their LV= County Championship match with Gloucestershire at the Seat Unique Stadium, Bristol.The visiting skipper took his run tally in his last four knocks to 415 with a measured 142, made from 246 balls, with 17 fours and a six, as his side took their first-innings total from an overnight 319 for 4 to 591 for 7 declared.Lewis Gregory contributed a sparkling 89 at a run a ball, smiting 10 fours and four sixes. By the close, Gloucestershire had struggled to 119 for 4 in reply, Jack Leach claiming 3 for 29 from 13 overs.Any hope the hosts had of escaping Somerset’s grip disappeared at the start of the day when Abell, still on his overnight 52, edged Zak Chappell straight to second slip where Miles Hammond somehow contrived to spill the chance.Gloucestershire’s already lengthy injury list was extended when skipper Graeme van Buuren crashed into an advertising board attempting to prevent a boundary and had to leave the field nursing a badly jarred right shoulder.Ryan Higgins assumed the captaincy as Abell and Steve Davies batted with caution through the first hour, the latter bringing up 350 with a back-foot forcing shot for four off Brad Wheal.The total had progressed to 361 when Davies was caught behind driving for 37 to give loan recruit Wheal his first Gloucestershire wicket.Gregory’s arrival saw Somerset accelerate immediately as he lifted left-arm spinner Zafar Gohar for a straight six.A swashbuckling shot through the leg side for four saw Gregory bring up 400 before another boundary off George Scott took the all-rounder past 3,000 first-class runs.Abell, who must be on England’s radar, played his part in raising the scoring rate and reached a 202-ball hundred with a single, courtesy of a misfield.Gregory smashed the next delivery from part-time spinner Jacob Bethel straight for six and by lunch the pair had added 92 off 90 balls.The afternoon session saw Gregory go to fifty with his third six, a pull off Chappell, and it was just a case of how many the visitors wanted to score.Abell was eight short of his career-best score when top-edging a sweep off Zafar to Wheal at deep square, while Gregory robbed himself of a hundred, run out by Wheal calling for a third after Craig Overton’s bottom edge past the wicketkeeper.Some lusty blows had taken Overton to 35 before Abell called a halt in mid-afternoon. There were 11 overs before tea and the first ball of the opening one saw Peter Siddle pin George Scott plum lbw.Having kept wicket for 147 overs, James Bracey found himself walking out to bat at three with hardly a break. He and Harris took the score to 33 by the interval.Bracey rode his luck at times, but also hit 6 fours in reaching 39 before pushing forward to the final ball of Leach’s first over and edging the England left-arm spinner to Overton at slip.Leach struck again as Marcus Harris, on 32, guided the last delivery of his fifth over into the hands of Tom Banton at short-leg and grabbed his third wicket when Hammond edged a back-foot defensive shot to Overton.It was an impressive effort from Leach, who bowled at just the right pace to apply pressure on an unresponsive surface.

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