Em noite de golaços, Grêmio perde para o Huachipato na segunda rodada da Libertadores

MatériaMais Notícias

O Grêmio perdeu para o Huachipato, do Chile, por 2 a 0, na noite desta terça-feira (9), pela segunda rodada da fase de grupos da Libertadores. Os golaços na Arena do Grêmio foram marcados por Loyola e Montes.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasFinançasLucro ou prejuízo? Veja saldo dos clubes da Série A com operação de jogos nos EstaduaisFinanças09/04/2024Futebol NacionalPower Ranking #3: os melhores times do momento no futebol brasileiroFutebol Nacional08/04/2024Fora de CampoGrêmio provoca o Inter após conquistar o hepta do GauchãoFora de Campo07/04/2024

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⚽ COMO FOI A PARTIDA?
O Grêmio começou pressionando o Huachipato e, logo de cara, quase abriu o placar com Soteldo, que acertou uma bola na trave. No entanto, os chilenos souberam se aproveitar das dificuldades do Tricolor e abriram o placar com Loyola.

Cristaldo empatou a partida, mas o gol foi anulado por estar em posição irregular. O meia ainda teve mais três chances.

Já que Cristaldo não aproveitou, o Huachipato foi letal. Ainda no primeiro tempo, após cobrança de lateral, Rodrido Ely afastou a bola, e Montes pegou de primeira, de fora da área, para fazer mais um golaço da equipe chilena na Arena do Grêmio.

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No segundo tempo, o Grêmio precisou se lançar ao ataque. Já o Huachipato teve chances para ampliar. Ao final, o placar se manteve intacto.

📆 O QUE VEM POR AÍ?
Agora, o Grêmio volta a entrar em campo para estrear no Campeonato Brasileiro. O Tricolor viaja até o Rio de Janeiro, onde vai enfrentar o Vasco, em São Januário. A bola rola neste domingo (14), às 16h.

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Futebol NacionalGrêmioLibertadores

Vinnie Pasquantino Wins Home Run Derby With Series of Hilarious Tweets

Kansas City Royals first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino is enjoying his All-Star break elsewhere, but he may have won the Home Run Derby night with an unbelievably funny sequence of posts on his X account as he watched with the rest of us.

The fourth-year first baseman got all his thoughts down on the internet and provided some colorful commentary as the drama unfolded at Truist Park in Atlanta.

Pittsburgh Pirates star Oneil Cruz put on a show in the first round, smashing 21 home runs including a 513-foot bomb. He smacked line drives so hard that the youth fielders shagging balls could only run to get out of the way. In case any fans questioned that incredibly savvy business decision, Pasquantino assured everyone that he feels the same way when playing against Cruz:

Later, he had a hilarious post about Seattle Mariners star catcher and Major League home-run leader Cal Raleigh putting on a show just like he has the whole season:

In case anyone thought he was serious—don't worry, it was just a joke:

He also made an incredibly honest admission when he noticed Paul Skenes with Spanish-speaking stars Elly De La Cruz, Ketel Marte and Fernando Tatís Jr.

He had some thoughts on Raleigh advancing on an extremely close longest home run tiebreak over Athletics slugger Brent Rooker:

He took to X a couple weeks ago to make a joke about being the batter for two of Shohei Ohtani's fastest pitches thrown, too. Never change, Vinnie. Never change.

He’s the next Bruno Guimaraes: Newcastle to launch move for £30m “monster”

Newcastle United will need to show they can pick up results on the road consistently to continue their fine start to December.

At St James’ Park so far this month, which is the Magpies’ dependable fortress, Eddie Howe’s men have collected a draw and a win, with only two losses from eight matches coming their way on their own turf this season so far.

In stark contrast, three losses have been tallied up away from home, with only one away win next to their name sticking out as a worrying fact.

In their defence, the only success on the road this season saw them emphatically get the better of Everton 4-1 in the Premier League, which might well stand them in good stead against Bayer Leverkusen and Sunderland to come.

Howe will hope his team’s up-and-down nature has been rectified by the time the January transfer window swings back open, with a potentially busy month ahead for the Toon in terms of incomings.

Newcastle looking to sign new midfielder

The unpredictability of January could also see Newcastle offload a couple of players, too, with reserve centre-forward option William Osula alleged to be keen to move away from St James’ Park.

There are also rumours bubbling away about fresh faces joining the building, with former Leicester City ace Bilal El Khannouss just one of many options catching the Toon’s eye in the middle of the park. On top of him, a cut-price £13m move for Ferencváros TC star Alex Tóth could be on the agenda.

The Daily Mail’s Craig Hope has added more fuel to the fire by revealing that Howe and Co are set to make a move for rising AZ Alkmaar star Kees Smit, with the reported transfer fee floating about for his services coming in at the £30m price range.

The inconsistent Toon have long been admirers of the well-rounded Dutchman, and with Manchester United and Liverpool circling, this would be seen as a statement move in January, as Newcastle prepare to spend the big bucks once more. Hope has already described the youngster as “one of Europe’s most exciting teenagers” so this one is certainly something to kick and scream about.

How Smit can be Howe's future Guimaraes

Howe will hope, by landing Smit, that he wins himself a future Bruno Guimaraes, which will be music to the ears of the devoted Tyneside fanbase, after the much-loved Brazilian only affirmed his legendary status at the club more with that audacious strike versus Burnley.

The 28-year-old is now synonymous with Newcastle, with his corner kick effort sailing straight over the head of Martin Dubravka, further backing up comments by his manager that he is a “difference-maker”.

Of course, Smit has some way to go before he’s pulling off screamers like Guimaraes’ ingenious effort regularly in the Premier League, but the 19-year-old does have a powerful effort up his sleeve, with his ability to conjure up a moment of magic from a very early age also seeing scout Jacek Kulig laud him as a “super talent.”

Indeed, this sumptuous effort in the U19 Euros in the summer shows off a star who is incredibly confident and assured in front of goal, with Smit now up to ten goal contributions in the senior ranks at AZ. Newcastle’s beloved captain is up to 27 goals and 29 assists himself in the senior picture at St James’ Park, with Howe hopeful that Smit could reach these levels in time, so he can replace the 28-year-old down the line.

It’s not just their output in terms of goals and assists that makes the two talents in question similar, however, with Smit’s energy and determination centrally also placing himself on the same pedestal as the industrious South American, which has led to the AZ number 26 even being branded as a “duel monster” by analyst Ben Mattinson, a tag regularly placed on Guimaraes’ shoulders.

Smit’s league numbers for AZ

Stat (* = per 90 mins)

24/25

25/26

Games played

18

14

Goals scored

0

2

Assists

0

2

Touches*

38.8

62.7

Accurate passes*

23.3 (85%)

42.7 (89%)

Key passes*

1.3

1.8

Big chances created

3

3

Ball recoveries*

3.3

5.7

Total duels won*

2.9

3.3

Stats by Sofascore

Smit has certainly grown into being more of a lively performer centrally this season in the Eredivisie, when looking at the table above, making 5.7 ball recoveries and winning 3.3 duels per game.

In constract, the Newcastle skipper has made 5.1 ball recoveries, but he does blow Smit out of the water in the duels department, having won a fierce 5.4 duels so far this campaign in the demanding Premier League.

Still, with the upward trajectory the table outlines, he could reach Guimaraes’ commanding levels very soon, as Howe prepares to win himself a standout talent for the future in January, by securing Smit’s coveted services.

Newcastle star was entering Obertan territory, now he's their "best player"

This Newcastle United star is now beginning to turn around his underwhelming Premier League season.

ByKelan Sarson 4 days ago

Umran is worried about his body, but won't compromise on his speed

“Speed is my biggest strength, and I want to continue to maintain that strength,” Umran Malik, who is making his comeback from a hip injury, says

Rajan Raj07-Dec-2025

Umran Malik is making his comeback in the domestic circuit•PTI

Umran Malik will not compromise on his speed. It’s his “identity” and his “natural ability”, and though he is on a comeback trail after over a year out with injuries – a hip issue the last – he will keep bowling as fast as he can since it’s a point of difference between him and other quicks in the country.”Every fast bowler in the world knows that injuries are going to be a part of his career. But speed is my natural aspect. How can I compromise with that? Speed is my biggest strength, and I want to continue to maintain that strength,” Malik told ESPNcricinfo on the sidelines of Jammu and Kashmir’s Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy match against Hyderabad in Kolkata on December 4.”You can’t bowl at 150(kph) straight away. You reach that speed gradually. I don’t want to show my speed to anyone, but I want to show my wickets. But it is also that after ten years [of bowling at a competitive level], I want to bowl at 140 [from 150] and not come down to a speed of 130 from 150.”Before turning out in the latest edition of the Ranji Trophy and the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy tournaments, Malik had last played in in March 2024 in the IPL that year, for Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) against Mumbai Indians (MI). He was with Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) in IPL 2025 but could not play a single match.Coming back from a serious injury takes a toll on the body as well as on the mind, and Malik’s focus has changed a bit now.”After spending time at NCA [BCCI’s Centre of Excellence] and talking to many experts, I have started to understand my body better,” he said. “I now know what things need to be managed better if I want to avoid injury.”Though KKR have let go of a number of their players, including some big-ticket stars, Malik has been retained ahead of IPL 2026.”I know that for many Indian fast bowlers, it is not that difficult to be part the IPL. It’s probably easy for me too, but I’m not just thinking of taking part in the tournament,” he said. “Money is not a concern. The first and last thing is that my fitness and form should be such that I play every match for the team and take wickets. If I can’t do this, then what will be my value as a player?”I will work as hard as I have to. I will learn where I make mistakes. I will take care of myself and want to make my comeback memorable.”Those who have watched him bowl this season have found a slightly different Malik, who has maintained his speeds while also appearing to bowl within himself a bit.At present, Malik’s eyes are focused solely on the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, but it is with an eye on the future, starting with the IPL.

Bazball has lit a fire under Joe Root. Will he overtake Tendulkar in about 27 Tests?

And do his achievements trump those of the others in the Fab Four?

Andrew Fidel Fernando20-Aug-2025Joe Root has an outside shot to become the most prolific Test batter of all time. He is second on the list right now. If you’re a major Sachin Tendulkar fan, you don’t have to like it. But perhaps it is better to prepare yourself for the possibility.We will be throwing a lot of numbers at you through the course of this article, so let us whet appetites with roughly when the momentous pipping of Tendulkar may occur. Since the start of this decade, Root has scored an average of 89.62 runs per Test match. If he were to continue at his 2020s runs-per-Test rate (there are zero signs that he is about to slow down), he would need roughly 27 further Tests to plonk himself atop this chart.Related

Joe Root, the Peter Pan of batting, has pulled ahead of Cook and Pietersen. Will he reel Tendulkar in?

Root marches on towards Test summit

Stats – Root second only to Tendulkar for most Test runs

According to the currently available programme, England are scheduled to play 16 Tests until the end of April 2027. By then, Root will be 36 years and four months old. By the end of the 2028 northern hemisphere summer, England will have time for 11 further Tests at least. Root would be 37 then – a very normal age for batters to play to. If he continues to an Anderson-esque 40, and continues to clobber attacks, many more records could be in trouble.First let us put a little context around the place of Root’s run tally. Have his runs come easier than those of other all-time prolific batters? If you look at career spans, Root has actually scored his runs in a tougher era for batting than the others among the top five run-scorers – Tendulkar, Ricky Ponting, Jacques Kallis, and Rahul Dravid. During Root’s career, the overall batting average was 29.83. While his own average is the lowest of the top five run scorers (by a hair), he certainly deserves his place among them.

This is great, but how does he compare to his greatest contemporaries? For that we have to dip into the Fab Four files, and remark that while Kane Williamson averages a bit more than Root, and Steve Smith plenty more, none of those others has had to sustain that excellence across as many Test matches, nor have any of them breached 11,000 Test runs. Virat Kohli has retired, of course, and Williamson doesn’t play for a team with a steady Test schedule. But then Root is the youngest of the four.None of the others has 6000 runs either home or away. Root has passed 6000 on both fronts. That Root plays more Tests per year than the others in the Fab Four explains some of this. But those runs still have to be made.

With 7329 runs at home Root is the second-most prolific home batter in history, after Ponting. He needs exactly 250 runs to top that chart.Root is also one of the most evolved batters of his generation, partly because he plays for England – a team that seems to go through more phases than others, which in turn is perhaps a function of how much cricket they play. There have been several low ebbs and new eras in Root’s career, but vitally, in the last few years, England have been blessed with the arrival of saviour coach Brendon McCullum, who came down from the mountain in June 2022 to hand down the sacred diktat of Bazball.It will surprise almost no one by now that Root has the highest Test-match strike rate of the Fab Four. But it is useful to break down his career into the Before Baz (BB) and After Baz (AB) eras – since the year of our Baz, if you’re traditional.Root is on record talking about how much he struggled to adjust to the new, hyper-aggressive batting philosophy. But his numbers have definitely had a Bazball glow-up. The career stats of the other Fab Four have been included in the graph below for comparison. Where Root was a middling Fab Four member Before Baz, his After Baz numbers taken alone put him above the others. He was prolific just before McCullum’s arrival too, enjoying his richest year in 2021. But at that stage he hadn’t ratcheted up the scoring rate, and the stats bear this out.

He has new shots to go with it, such as that reverse scoop. Kohli and Smith have also added new gears to their game over the course of the last 15 years, but Root has had to tackle entirely new modes of batting. Williamson is probably the least changed of the four, having quietly continued on his personal batting journey, even during New Zealand’s own proto-Bazball era, when McCullum was captain.What is striking about Root’s Bazball numbers, however, is that while he has become a mass producer of runs in the last few years, his runs have actually been less vital to the team’s totals than they used to be. One of the critiques of Bazball has been that it would not have worked anywhere near so well if England didn’t have an all-time great run machine such as Root in the top five. But the numbers paint a picture of symbiosis between Root’s batting and Bazball. Where between 2015 and the start of the Baz era, Root contributed 17.32% of England’s runs, in the Baz era, he has only contributed 16.10%.So while in numerical terms Root’s batting has expanded, that expansion appears to have been eased by his being surrounded by batters such as Harry Brook and Ben Duckett, whose belligerence he has learned to jive with. It’s not that Root bats in their slipstream so much as that he tends to take cues from more aggressive batters and join in on the fun, which is an unusual move for batters whose greatness has already been established.Fascinatingly, what has driven this Baz-era improvement are his numbers against seam bowling. Where once he used to be just a little above average against fast bowling and it was his numbers against spin that carried him into the realms of greatness, that situation now seems to have been reversed. Getting back into the ODI team at roughly the time Bazball was starting up (he hadn’t played the format for about a year) may also have simplified Root’s training – his cricket across formats became more singularly focused on attack. Much of that fresh aggression appears to be directed at fast bowling.

While he has added new boundary options, he has also worked on scoring off balls he otherwise might have defended. In his first 50 balls at the crease Root used to play out dots to almost 75% of his deliveries. But After Baz, that figure is down to just under 66% – a roughly 9% difference. His overall dot-ball percentage has dropped almost as much.

Perhaps what is most impressive about Root’s career, however, is how few holes it has. Of the ten countries he has played in, he averages less than 45 only in two. Perhaps his Bangladesh average of 24.50 can be excused by his only having played two Tests there, but for his critics, that Australia average of 35.68 is a bit of a sticking point.England players’ legacies have traditionally been defined by Ashes contributions. But 21st century examinations of greatness need not be hung up on colonial rivalries. Since Root debuted, South Africa has been a significantly more difficult place to score runs than Australia – the batting average there down at 27.53, in comparison to Australia’s 31.74.In South Africa, which has produced the two fast bowlers with the best strike rates this century (Dale Steyn and Kagiso Rabada), Root averages an outstanding 50.21. He also averages 51.50 in the West Indies, which since the introduction of the Dukes ball there has been more difficult for batting. During Root’s career, there has statistically not been a more difficult place to score runs (Ireland is being excluded here, having hosted just two Tests). The other two toughest countries to bat in have been India and England.

The idea that Root is England’s greatest Test batter in history is gaining traction now. Len Hutton never faced down a phalanx of spinners in Chattogram, Jack Hobbs never had to know the terror of a fast bowler carried in with the southerly at the Basin Reserve, Geoffrey Boycott never knew the vexations of a Sri Lankan carrom ball. Additionally, none of Graham Thorpe, Alastair Cook, Graham Gooch, Alec Stewart, or Kevin Pietersen had an average in the 50s.What elevates Root into the highest realms of batting greatness, however, is the sheer, dizzying scale and breadth of challenges he has overcome. Only the Big Three teams undertake serious Test schedules now, and of those teams, England play the most Tests against non-Big Three teams by a distance. With India and Australia tending to relegate non-Big Three teams to two-Test series, sides such as New Zealand, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and South Africa only play three-Test series against England any more. Root’s consistent excellence in many of the smaller countries has helped give his body of work a battle-tested completeness that other top batters of the era don’t quite have. Root, for instance, has run tallies of 500 or more in more countries than the others in the Fab Four.

The lack of that big hundred in Australia will bug him of course, and perhaps the next Ashes will be an opportunity to right that perceived shortcoming. He now not only scores more runs off the balls he is at the crease for, he bats in a more reliable top order than ever before, which in turn is less reliant on him. These are all generally great ingredients for hundred-making, and his hugely improved rate of converting fifties to hundreds over the last few years reflects this. Where until the end of the last Ashes, only 30.2% of Root’s scores of 50-plus were hundreds, since then, 55% of his scores of 50-plus have been centuriesFew batters have aced such a wide spread of tests as Root. He already deserves his place among the greatest. If he finishes atop the run charts, the adaptability and vision he has shown to embrace new modes of operation after he was already established as England’s pre-eminent batter, will have been the wind that carries him there.With inputs from Namooh Shah, Shiva Jayaraman, S Rajesh and Vithushan Ehantharajah

عمرو السولية: هدفنا التتويج بكأس العرب.. وننتظر دعم الجماهير

تحدث عمرو السولية، لاعب منتخب مصر الثاني، عن استعداداته للمشاركة في بطولة كأس العرب 2025.

ويستعد منتخب مصر الثاني، تحت قيادة حلمي طولان، للمشاركة في البطولة التي ستُقام في قطر وتنطلق بعد أيام قليلة.

طالع.. محمد النني: جاهزون لـ كأس العرب.. وهدفنا إسعاد الجماهير

ونقل مراسل بطولات تصريحات عمرو السولية خلال مران المنتخب، حيث قال: “عشت تلك الأجواء من قبل في كأس العرب وللأسف لم نصل إلى النهائي”.

وتابع: “لكن تلك المرة هدفنا هدفنا الوصل للنهائي والتتويج بالبطولة وننتظر دعم الجماهير المصرية في قطر”.

يُذكر أن النسخة الأولى من كأس العرب أقيمت عام 2021 في قطر، وتُوج بها منتخب الجزائر بعد الفوز بالنهائي، بينما اكتفى منتخب مصر بالوصول إلى نصف النهائي واحتلال المركز الرابع في الترتيب النهائي للبطولة.

"مش هنضرب الأرض تطلع فلوس".. تصريحات مُثيرة من داخل إدارة الزمالك وحقيقة التقدم بالاستقالة

كشف الإعلامي أحمد شوبير تفاصيل جديدة حول الشكاوى المقدمة ضد نادي الزمالك من جانب مدربه السابق يانيك فيريرا، إضافة إلى تطورات موقف اللاعب صلاح مصدق، وحقيقة تقدم مجلس إدارة القلعة البيضاء باستقالته.

وقال شوبير عبر إذاعة “أون سبورت إف إم”: “يانيك فيريرا يستعد لتقديم الشكوى، أو ربما تقدّم بها بالفعل ضد نادي الزمالك لأنه لم يحصل على مستحقات ثمانية أشهر، كان قد تم الاتفاق على أن يحصل على مبلغ قدره 220 ألف دولار، وأن يذهب الرجل لتسلّم المبلغ دون مشكلات، أو أن يتم تقسيطه على شهرين أو قسطين أو ثلاثة، لكنه مكث عشرة أيام في القاهرة دون أن يحصل على شيء، ثم غادر وتقدم بشكوى ضد النادي”.

وتابع: “هناك أزمة أخرى.. صلاح مصدق أصبح لاعبًا حرًا، كان قد قدّم إنذارًا، وكانت مدة هذا الإنذار خمسة عشر يومًا، فإذا لم يحصل على مستحقاته من الزمالك يحق له فسخ العقد، واللاعب بالفعل من حقه أن يفسخ عقده مع الزمالك ويصبح حرًا، انتهت المهلة ولم يتواصل معه أحد بشأن مستحقاته”.

وأشار: “المشكلة ليست أنه أصبح لاعبًا حرًا فقط، المشكلة أنه له مستحقات مالية، والمشكلة أنه سيلجأ إلى فيفا، والمشكلة أنه سيحصل على حكم، و(إحنا اللي هنبات فيه ونصحى فيه)”.

وشدد: “أشخاص من نادي الزمالك يتواصلون معي، ويقولون لي: يا كابتن (إحنا مش هنضرب الأرض تطلع فلوس). فأجبتهم: أنتم من تعاقد مع صلاح مصدق، وأنتم من تعاقد مع ميشالاك، وأنتم من تعاقد مع يانيك فيريرا، نحن جميعًا منحناكم كامل العذر، وقلنا إننا معكم وندعمكم، وتجاوزنا عن أخطاء الماضي، وأشدنا بكل ما قمتم به”.

طالع أيضًا | أزمة الزمالك تتفاقم… شوبير يعلن تفاصيل صادمة عن إيقاف القيد و5 قضايا مالية معلّقة

وواصل: “لكن، أنتم من جلب صلاح مصدق، وأنتم من جلب فيريرا، وأنتم من جلب فلان، وأنتم من جلب كونراد ميشالاك، لم يأتِ بهم أحد غيركم، وأنتم من جلب جروس، وأنتم من جلب جوميز، كل ذلك كان في عهدكم، وبالتالي يجب عليكم أن تتحركوا”.

وأضاف: “أنا لا أعلم ما هي المشكلة، والله لست أدري ما الأزمة الحقيقية، هم يقولون: لقد دفعنا أموالًا كثيرة جدًا، وضغطنا على الناس بما يكفي لنُسدّد مستحقات، ونحصل على مستحقات، ونتصرّف في الأموال، لكننا لم نعد قادرين، لقد نفد صبرنا”.

واختتم: “أخبرني أحدهم – ولا أعلم مدى صحة هذا الكلام – أن مجلس إدارة نادي الزمالك قدّم بالفعل استقالته، وأنها قد رُفضت بالفعل، وأنه جرى الحديث معهم بأنه لا يجب أن تبحثوا عن حلول، ونحن سنحاول مساعدتكم (في السنّارة مش في السمكة)، أي في كيفية إدارة الأمور وليس في توفير الأموال، فكيف ستنجحون في (اصطياد السمكة)؟ هل يمكن أن ينجح هذا في الفترة المقبلة؟ لا أعلم… الله أعلم”.

Tottenham green-light January talks for ‘top’ Man City talent, but it’s not Savinho

Tottenham have given the green-light for Fabio Paratici and Johan Lange to hold talks over signing a ‘top talent’ from Man City, but it isn’t Savinho, who was heavily linked in the summer.

Tottenham making transfer plans amid Thomas Frank pressure

Cristian Romero delivered a captain’s performance to salvage a dramatic 2-2 draw for Spurs at Newcastle on Tuesday evening, scoring twice, including a stoppage-time overhead kick that temporarily eased mounting pressure on manager Thomas Frank.

The Argentine’s heroics prevented what would have been Spurs’ fourth consecutive defeat across all competitions, with his diving header cancelling out Bruno Guimaraes’ opener before his acrobatic finish in the 95th minute rescued a point.

Tottenham struggled throughout at St James’ Park, managing just two shots on target from eight attempts while Newcastle dominated possession and created significantly better opportunities.

It was a stark reminder that Spurs need more creativity in their side if they’re to challenge for major silverware this season or seal a top four Premier League finish.

Behind the scenes, Tottenham’s hierarchy are actively preparing significant January reinforcements as Frank desperately seeks attacking solutions.

16. Burnley

2

1

3

7

-1

17. Nottingham Forest

2

1

4

7

-5

18. West Ham

2

0

5

6

-9

19. Tottenham

1

2

4

5

-1

20. Wolves

0

1

5

1

10

Media sources are convinced that a new forward will arrive during the winter window, with Spurs identifying multiple targets, including FC Porto striker Samu Aghehowa.

The Lilywhites are said to be huge admirers of Aghehowa, who’s free scored in Portugal since the start of last season and was once on the verge of joining Chelsea before he rejected the move.

Jamie Carragher says he's always imagined "master" manager joining Tottenham

The former Liverpool defender believes he’s a great fit.

ByEmilio Galantini Dec 3, 2025

Meanwhile, despite stiff competition, Spurs are also intensifying their interest in Bournemouth star Antoine Semenyo, with the 25-year-old available for £65 million during the early stages of January thanks to a release clause in his contract.

There have also been murmurs of Tottenham re-opening discussions over a potential Savinho deal after his move to N17 was blocked in the summer, but amid the uncertainty surrounding Guglielmo Vicario, it is actually another City starlet that Spurs are taking interest in.

Tottenham green-light January talks for Man City keeper James Trafford

That is according to TEAMtalk, who state that Tottenham have green-lit exploratory talks over a January deal for City goalkeeper James Trafford.

The Englishman would come as a potential replacement for Vicario, who has attracted interest from Inter Milan, and Spurs are apparently entertaining the possibility of selling him for £30 million.

Sources say that Spurs view Trafford as an ideal long-term solution between the sticks, offering Premier League experience combined with significant potential.

Trafford’s situation at the Etihad has become increasingly frustrating following City’s signing of Gianluigi Donnarumma from PSG for £26 million, relegating the young stopper to backup duty.

The goalkeeper is eager for regular first-team football, making Tottenham’s project an attractive proposition, with a TT City insider quoted saying the Spurs project would be ‘perfect’ for the ‘top talent’.

Vicario arrived from Empoli eighteen months ago for £17 million as Hugo Lloris’ successor, initially impressing with performances that even earned him leadership responsibilities within Frank’s squad.

However, recent performances have declined, with errors costing Tottenham and supporters notably jeering him when Spurs lost 2-1 to Fulham last weekend.

Vicario being caught in no mans land for Harry Wilson’s goal ultimately cost Spurs precious points at home, and Fabrizio Romano has actually confirmed Inter’s interest already, so this could have some legs to it.

How Cal Raleigh Helped Unlikely Hero Bryce Miller Win ALCS Game 1 for the Mariners

TORONTO — Necessity is the mother of intention.

The Mariners did not want to ask Bryce Miller to pitch on three days of rest for the first time in his professional life. They to do it after using a small village of pitchers to cover 45 outs Friday night to advance to the American League Championship Series.

Three days of rest is the gas station sushi of the pitching world: best to be avoided. When it’s not, the outcome is probably going to be dyspeptic. Starters on three days of rest in the wild card era were 54–73 (.425) entering ALCS Game 1 on Sunday at Rogers Centre.

It’s especially true in the modern game of rest and recovery, when most starts are made on five days of rest, not four. Miller had made 51 of his 75 career starts with at least five days.

Only knowing that do you begin to understand the beauty of what Miller did in Game 1. After a wobbly start in which all-world catcher Cal Raleigh once again rescued one of his pitchers from a burning building, Miller pitched the game of his life.

In the toughest building in the American League for a visiting team to win, against a lineup scoring nine runs per game in the postseason, Miller allowed one run (none after his first pitch) over six of the most aggressive innings you will ever see pitched in a hostile, high-stakes environment. He threw first-pitch strikes to 18 of his 23 batters, including 14 in a row at one point. 

“Here it is, hit it,” Miller practically shouted at the Blue Jays. They could not.

Miller and the Mariners won Game 1, 3–1, in what was such a statement game full of conviction that Seattle reliever Matt Brash said, “Getting those six innings from Bryce is series-changing. It was huge.”

Since Patrick Corbin of the Nationals did it in the 2019 World Series, Miller became the first of 180 postseason starters on short rest to go six innings.

The Mariners have the most aggressive pitching staff in the league. They throw more first-pitch strikes, more strikes overall and more pitches ahead of the count than any other AL team. “Count is king” is their mantra. But this? This was the kind of sharpshooting that gets someone banned from a carnival shooting gallery for being too good and cleaning out the supply of plushies.

Seattle throttled the hottest lineup in baseball by throwing 78% first-pitch strikes (25 of 32) and only 100 pitches to get its 27 outs. No team had won a postseason game with so few pitches since the Dodgers beat the Braves in Game 2 of the 2018 NLDS behind Clayton Kershaw and Kenley Jansen. To find the last time a team won so efficiently on the road, you must go all the way back 19 years, when Oakland beat Minnesota in 2006 ALDS Game 1 behind Barry Zito and Huston Street.

“This is what we do,” said Mariners pitcher Bryan Woo, part of the same 2021 draft class in which Seattle also snagged Miller. “It’s been preached to us from Day 1. It’s in our DNA.”

Miller’s midseason adjustmeant bearing fruit

Miller adjusted his mechanics during the season to avoid tipping pitches. / John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

Miller would seem an unlikely candidate to break the bad three-days vibe, not just because he was in uncharted waters but because the guy had a 5.73 ERA when he went on the IL in June for a second time because of a painful bone spur in his elbow.

It was during his hiatus, and as he rehabbed his way back, that the Mariners fixed an issue as troubling as the bone spur. Miller was tipping his pitches. Miller would hold the ball near his belt as he started his delivery and then would keep it there as he went into his leg kick. The Mariners’ staff discovered he was giving away pitches by the angle of the flange of his glove. A secondary concern with his static hand position was that it made it difficult for him to control the running game. Base stealers were 10 out of 13 against him.

Pitching coach Pete Woodworth and his run prevention crew came up with a solution. As Miller began his delivery, instead of leaving his hands at the belt he would raise and lower them in sync with his leg kick.

“Making adjustments like that can be difficult in the middle of the season,” Woodworth said. “In this case because he was working his way back, we had the time to do it in an environment without the same pressure. The other thing is that Bryce is somebody that when you suggest a change, whether it’s mechanical or something about pitch shapes, he makes adjustments very quickly.”

It worked. Miller has a 2.61 ERA this postseason in two starts. His velocity has increased from 94.5 mph before the change to 96.1 this postseason. Teams have stopped running on him (only four steals in 10 starts since the change).

Still, everything looked like it would go haywire when George Springer blasted Miller’s first pitch for a home run. Miller walked two of the next three batters. Rogers Centre was jumping. That’s when the fire alarm went off in Raleigh’s head.

Raleigh’s cool head ices out Blue Jays

The potential AL MVP called timeout. He flipped his mask atop his helmet and took the slowest walk possible to the mound. His gait was the picture of calmness, a slow moving Zen practitioner. His conversation with Miller in the middle of the mayhem was equally a display of equanimity for the purpose of one person, Miller.

Woodworth, as he almost always does, did not hurry to join the mound meeting, as most pitching coaches like to do since mound visits are capped. Why?

“Because this is Cal’s team,” Woodworth said. “I never question anything he does. I trust him completely. I don’t even know what he told him. I just know it was the right thing. It always is with Cal.”

Said Miller, “He usually doesn't have much to say. Sometimes he thinks he has jokes, and I give him a courtesy laugh, a little chuckle, and settle back down and keep going.

“No, he’s always really good with timing, when to come out and when he knows that we need to slow down and get us back in the zone. I don’t remember the convo at all, but I’m sure that’s how it went.”

Turtle-like, especially in his greenish catcher’s gear, Raleigh returned to his office behind the plate. Six pitches later, the Mariners were back in the dugout. The Blue Jays were done. Starting with Cal’s mindfulness session on the mound, Seattle pitchers set down 26 of the final 28 batters.

It was just another night among the scores of nights when Raleigh wins games in so many ways. He also chipped in a game-tying homer, his 62nd on the year. He joined Babe Ruth (1927) and Aaron Judge (2022) as the only hitters with multiple homers in the postseason after 60 in the regular season.

This homer was his fourth in just 17 at-bats against Blue Jays ace Kevin Gausman and his ninth in 14 games at Rogers Centre. Nobody had hit one of Gausman’s wicked splitters for a homer since Aug. 13, covering the last 359 of them. Over this at-bat and the previous one, Gausman threw nine splitters out of 10 pitches to Raleigh. Raleigh is too good of a hitter to see a conveyor belt of pitches like that. He crushed the ninth.

When Gausman then walked Julio Rodríguez, Blue Jays manager John Schneider pulled Gausman, who had thrown just 76 pitches. It reeked of an overreaction. Sure, the bullpen was rested. But why pull your ace so quickly? The decision blew up on Schneider when Brandon Little threw a wild pitch and then served up a run-scoring single to Jorge Polanco. The Blue Jays have made a routine of coming back at teams, especially at a raucous Rogers Centre, but there would be no more runs and no more electricity on this night—not against this staff.

Before the bottom of the ninth inning, as Seattle closer Andrés Muñoz warmed, Raleigh, knowing Vlad Guerrero was leading off for Toronto, went up to Woodworth and said, “Hey, let me run something by you. I’m thinking …” Raleigh had designs of attacking Guerrero, a great fastball hitter, with heaters rather than Muñoz’s best pitch, his slider, which is the toughest pitch to hit in baseball.

Woodworth stopped Raleigh and told him to go with whatever he thought was best.

“With Cal,” Woodworth said, “there is no second-guessing. It’s his team.”

Muñoz missed with a fastball and came back with another fastball. It was right down the middle. Guerrero took it for a strike. Muñoz retired him on a grounder with a slider. He closed the game to get Miller his well-earned win. 

“Everything felt really good, really fresh,” Miller said. “I was getting ahead, attacking. And it’s a recipe for success.”

It is the Mariners’ recipe, and it is not a secret sauce. They have a staff loaded with elite movers with outlier fastballs and a catcher who calls pitches and runs games with the total trust of those around him. 

Think of what the Mariners just accomplished. They played five hours Friday night, flew more than 2,000 miles after a two-hour ground delay Saturday, fell behind 1–0 to the league’s best home team and won the game to take away Toronto’s home field advantage. The most intentional pitching staff in baseball opened the ALCS with a convincing statement.

Phillies Make Nightmarish MLB History in Walk-Off Loss to Dodgers in NLDS

The Phillies exited the 2025 MLB postseason in one of the worst ways imaginable on Thursday night and made some history in doing so.

Philadelphia was locked in a tight battle with the Dodgers in Game 4 of the NLDS, with the score tied 1-1 in the bottom of the 11th inning. Reliever Orion Kerkering was on the mound with the bases loaded and two outs, facing L.A.'s ninth hitter, Andy Pages.

On an 0-1 pitch, the 24-year-old righty induced a grounder back to him and bobbled it. After recovering, he made the ill-fated decision to attempt to get an out at home plate, rather than the easier play at first base. He immediately regretted that decision. His throw to the plate sailed past catcher J.T. Realmuto, allowing Hyeseong Kim to score the winning run from third base, and sending the Dodgers to the NLCS.

That was just an awful sequence for Kerkering, his teammates, and Phillies fans everywhere. The error also made history.

The Phillies' loss to the Dodgers was the first postseason series in history to end in a walk-off error. That's a fact that adds insult to injury for everyone involved.

Los Angeles now moves on to its fourth NLCS in the last six seasons.

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