New videos explain why Championship game between Blackburn and Ed Sheeran's Ipswich was abandoned ten minutes from full-time

New videos have emerged which explained why Saturday's Championship fixture featuring Blackburn Rovers and Ipswich Town had to be abandoned just ten minutes before full-time at Ewood Park. Blackburn were leading 1-0 against ten-man Ipswich, who are part-owned by singer Ed Sheeran, when the referee stopped the game due to torrential rain and, after checking the pitch conditions, called it off.

Yellow weather warning was issued

Before the game kicked off, a yellow weather warning was issued by the Met Office. Despite the rain, the match went ahead as scheduled and it was goalless in the first half. The visitors were reduced to ten men after the break as Jacob Greaves was shown a red card for a clumsy last-man foul on Yuki Ohashi. Minutes later, Todd Cantwell scored from the penalty spot to hand his team the lead. As Rovers were racing towards a win, the game had to be halted due to the deteriorating condition of the playing surface.

AdvertisementVideos show why referee abandoned the match

A video shared by journalist Alex Jones on X revealed that the referee tested the pitch condition by rolling the ball on a couple of occasions. In the video, the ball can be seen getting stuck due to a waterlogged pitch. Meanwhile, UK broadcaster ITV have shown the moment the referee brought play to a halt.

Stadium announcer delivers bad news to home fans

Addressing the fans at Ewood Park, the stadium announcer said: "Thank you for your patience. Game abandoned. A decision will be made by the officials whether the match will be replayed in due course."

Getty Images SportWhen will the match be played?

The replay date for the Championship clash has not been announced yet, and it is not yet known whether it will be fulfilled in its entirety or from just the point the initial match was stopped.

Mayank Agarwal, Rishabh Pant among the runs as India tick most boxes in warm-up game

Prithvi Shaw too struck a 31-ball 39 while it was another single-digit score for Shubman Gill

ESPNcricinfo staff16-Feb-2020India finished their first red-ball game of the tour with most boxes ticked, as openers Mayank Agarwal and Prithvi Shaw, and wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant were all among the runs in a second innings where the visitors put up 252 at a run rate of 5.25.On the first day, India had been reduced to 5 for 3, with all their opening options for the Tests out cheaply. Following a dominant bowling performance on the second day, Agarwal and Shaw struck at nearly nine runs an over to take India to stumps on 59 for 0. That partnership ended on 72 on Sunday with the wicket of Shaw, out for 39 off 31. For Shubman Gill, the third frontline opening option in the squad, it was another single-digit score. He made 8, trapped leg-before by Daryl Mitchell, to follow his first-ball duck in the first innings.That brought Agarwal and Pant together, who added 100 in just over 18 overs before Agarwal retired out. Agarwal’s 81 will be particularly relieving for the Indian team – it is his first fifty on tour in any format since arriving with the India A team on a shadow tour a month ago. In his last first-class match against New Zealand A, he bagged a pair, and in the ODI series that followed, he had made 32, 3 and 1. The runs came in good time too, off 99 balls, with ten fours and three sixes.Pant also struck at a good pace, scoring a 65-ball 70. The wicketkeeper has lost his spot in the XI in both limited-overs formats for India over the last month and Wriddhiman Saha’s return means he has been a back-up option in Tests too. His last Test was in August 2019, and last match at recognised level was a month ago during the home ODI series against Australia. The runs and practice going into a major series will encourage India who had a century from Hanuma Vihari in the first innings, a 93 from Cheteshwar Pujara as well.

David Beckham posts cute throwback picture as Inter Miami owner wishes England luck for Euro 2024

England legend David Beckham shared a series of throwback photographs on social media to wish the Three Lions luck ahead of Euro 2024 knockout stage.

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Beckham shares throwback photos on InstagramWishes England luck ahead of Euro 2024 knockout stageThree Lions face Slovakia on SundayWHAT HAPPENED?

Gareth Southgate's side have made it to the round of 16 comfortably by topping their group where they remained unbeaten. However, fans and pundits alike have slammed the team's performance as they won just once and drew against much weaker teams like Denmark and Slovenia.

Advertisement(C)Getty ImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

While former Three Lions stars like Gary Lineker openly called England's game 'sh*t' while analysing their performance on a podcast, ex-captain Beckham has extended his support towards Harry Kane and Co by wishing them luck on social media ahead of their big round of 16 clash.

WHAT DAVID BECKHAM SAID

On Instagram, Beckham shared four photographs of himself at the various stages of his life supporting and playing for the national team. In the caption, he wrote, "Loving @euro2024 so far. Good luck tonight boys."

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR ENGLAND?

The Euro 2020 runners-up will be back in action on Sunday evening as they look to put up a convincing performance against Slovakia and further advance in the tournament.

Mushfiqur Rahim rested for final Zimbabwe ODI as Bangladesh prepare for Pakistan

“Mushfiqur will not be playing as we want to see one of the youngsters in this game”

Mohammad Isam04-Mar-2020Mushfiqur Rahim, the only Bangladesh player to have opted against travelling to Pakistan, will not be considered for the third, and final, ODI against Zimbabwe on Friday as the team wants to prepare for the one-off ODI against Pakistan in Karachi early next month, chief selector Minhajul Abedin has said.”Mushfiqur will not be playing as we want to see one of the youngsters in this game, before they are picked for the Pakistan ODI next month. We don’t want to hand them a debut there,” Minhajul said, confirming that there wouldn’t be any changes to the existing squad for the last game of the series.The senior wicketkeeper-batsman, who didn’t make the journey for the first two legs of the three-part tour stressed last week that he would not change his mind on the matter despite BCB president Nazmul Hassan’s tough stance against him, where he said that Mushfiqur was “contract-bound” to tour with the rest of the team.Minhajul said that the BCB had met Mushfiqur over the weekend for discussions and that Mushfiqur hadn’t budged.”We saw in separate newspapers that he may go and then he may not go. So we asked him to tell us directly, and he has let us know,” Minhajul said.Hassan, who had stated before announcing the tour dates in January that every player had the right to choose whether he wanted to tour Pakistan or not, made a U-turn after Bangladesh’s win over Zimbabwe in the one-off Test match – where Mushfiqur scored an unbeaten 203 – expressing his dismay at Mushfiqur’s decision.”We are expecting that he would go. Not only him, but every contracted player should go,” he had said. “Players have to think about the country, and not just themselves. This is what I personally feel. The country comes before everything else.”Everyone should keep it in mind. We will remind them that the contracted players must play as they are told, when selected. It never occurred to me that one has to tell them this, too.”

David Ornstein reveals the Man Utd man already impressing Sir Jim Ratcliffe

With Sir Jim Ratcliffe and INEOS' investment at Manchester United now confirmed, there will likely be huge changes this summer. Despite a poor start to the season, one man has already caught the eye of the new owners.

Things on the up at Old Trafford

Whilst sitting in sixth place in the Premier League may be below the levels expected of a club of Man United's stature, things finally appear to have turned a corner after a troubling opening to the season.

The early passages of the campaign saw the Red Devils struggle for consistency in the league and drop out of Europe in embarrassing fashion. This poor start was emblematic of what has been a bleak few years at United. Constant battles between fans and ownership have left the team and management attempting to play both sides, usually with very little success.

Latest Man Utd transfer news: De Jong back on radar; 21y/o hands in request

Here are all the latest Man Utd transfer rumours from Old Trafford as we enter the final weeks of the window.

ByHenry Jackson Aug 12, 2024

Adding insult to injury has been the failure of high-profile signings to hit the ground running. The combined £158million spent on Antony and Jadon Sancho has yielded virtually no return, with the latter now back in Germany and his Brazilian counterpart yet to register a league goal for the Red Devils this season.

Antony of Man United

Despite this, the horizon appears bright at Old Trafford with six wins from their last seven games in all competitions and marquee signing Rasmus Hojlund scoring seven goals during this period. With Ratcliffe keeping a close eye on the club during the takeover process, it is reported that one individual has already caught the attention of the man now pulling the strings at United.

Ratcliffe impressed by Erik ten Hag

David Ornstein has shared that sources within the new ownership are already heaping praise upon the Red Devils' manager for his work this season. Ratcliffe, whose £1.25billion purchase saw him buy a 27.7% stake in the north west outfit, is eager to implement change at Old Trafford – not least with a new sporting director – but looks set to continue with Erik ten Hag in the dugout.

Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag watches on.

Since arriving in England in April 2022, the Dutchman has endured a tough time, working to overcome the negative culture both on and off the pitch that had hampered so many of his predecessors. His first season in charge saw the Red Devils finish third whilst also lifting the EFL Cup, their first silverware in six years.

His tenure at Old Trafford has also seen him scoop three manager of the month honours, racking up just shy of two points per game in the process. With a win percentage of over 60%, the Dutchman boasts a higher figure than any of his predecessors in the post-Ferguson era.

Erik ten Hag

97

59

60.82

Ralf Rangnick

29

11

37.93

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer

168

91

54.17

José Mourinho

144

84

58.33

Louis van Gaal

103

54

52.43

David Moyes

51

27

52.94

Despite having a taste of success in England, ten Hag has always felt under immense pressure from both the fans and ownership. Hopefully, this vote of confidence from Ratcliffe and INEOS will be the boost United need to continue their good form and rise up the table.

Tottenham eyeing move for 26 y/o after claim he’s willing to sign for Spurs

Tottenham are said to be eyeing a 26-year-old defender, coming after reliable reports he'd be willing to make the move to north London.

Spurs set sights on another centre-back signing after Dragusin

While the Lilywhites sealed a much-needed deal for centre-back Radu Dragusin from Genoa in the January transfer window, it is believed Spurs are aiming to sign another central defender later this year.

Tottenham moving early to sign World Cup "playmaker" for Ange this summer

Plans for later in the year are already underway.

ByEmilio Galantini Feb 8, 2024

Indeed, manager Ange Postecoglou is said to be plotting a further restructure of his backline, with the likes of Napoli defender Leo Ostigard, Bologna's Riccardo Calafiori and Everton starlet Jarrad Branthwaite all sporadically linked in the last month.

Eric Dier left north London for Bayern Munich on loan in the January window, and with his contract set to expire in June, the Englishman won't be returning to play a role under Postecoglou next campaign.

Radu Dragusin

Arrival (permanent)

Lucas Bergvall

Arrival (buy-to-loan-back)

Timo Werner

Arrival (loan)

Alejo Veliz

Exit (loan)

Djed Spence

Exit (loan)

Ashley Phillips

Exit (loan)

Sergio Reguilon

Exit (loan)

Japhet Tanganga

Exit (loan)

Eric Dier

Exit (loan)

Ivan Perisic

Exit (loan)

Tottenham may need to source a long-term replacement for Dier, as even with the addition of Dragusin, Postecoglou has gone from potentially having four natural senior centre-back options to just three.

As we've seen from van de Ven and Romero's injuries this term, just a couple of blows can leave Spurs desperately short in certain areas. Signing another defender could therefore be the right idea for technical director Johan Lange and the wider recruitment team.

Fulham star Tosin Adarabioyo is another option who's regularly mentioned in regards to a potential switch. Tottenham have been repeatedly linked with a move for Tosin since last summer's transfer window, and the colossal 6 foot 5 defender could now also join as a free agent given his contract expires in June.

Tottenham eyeing summer Tosin move

According to Calciomercato, Spurs remain in the hunt to sign Tosin but face stiff competition from both AC Milan and London rivals West Ham. The Englishman, who's been called "magnificent" by members of the media (Muhammad Butt), has made 11 appearances under Marco Silva this season but spent the vast majority of early 2023/2024 out with a groin injury.

Fulham defenderTosin Adarabioyo.

Perhaps most interestingly, a very reliable transfer source in football.london journalist Alasdair Gold said late last year that Tosin would be up for joining Tottenham if Postecoglou's side came calling.

“We’ve spoken about Tosin Adarabioyo at Fulham, Spurs have certainly retained an interest there," he explained on the Gold and Guest Talk Tottenham podcast.

"He’s an interesting one, like Eric Dier, he’s available in the summer, I understand that if all parties were able to agree a deal he would be up for the move to Spurs, but financially it probably wouldn’t benefit him as much."

Formerly of Man City and Blackburn Rovers, signing a player of his proven Premier League ability for free would arguably be a prudent move by Lange and co.

Jamie Carragher hails Harry Kane as 'best striker England have ever had' and claims Bayern Munich talisman would have smashed Alan Shearer's Premier League goals record if forward had remained at Tottenham

Jamie Carragher has hailed Harry Kane as the “best striker England have ever had”, with the Bayern Munich superstar putting on another finishing masterclass in the Champions League. The former Tottenham Hotspur frontman has been told that he would have smashed Alan Shearer’s all-time Premier League goals record had he chosen to remain in his homeland.

Clinical Kane downs Chelsea

England captain Kane was at his clinical best when bagging a brace for Bayern in their European showdown with Chelsea. He converted from the penalty spot before putting the seal on a convincing 3-1 win at the Allianz Arena.

AdvertisementGettyTrophy curse lifted in Germany

Kane headed to Germany in 2023 after deciding that his trophy curse could not be lifted at Spurs. He has become a Bundesliga and Supercup winner in Munich, with remarkable individual standards being maintained.

Passed up Premier League goal record

The prolific 32-year-old is Tottenham and England’s all-time leading scorer, with Carragher of the opinion that another entry in the history books would have come his way had he opted to stay in north London.

GettyThe GOAT! Carragher's opinion of Kane

Ex-Liverpool and England defender Carragher told : “He is one of the greatest goal scorers the game has ever seen. I believe he’s England’s best ever objective scorer. He’s carried it out in the Premier League with a team that aren’t one in every of the top groups. He’s gone overseas now with Bayern Munich. All eyes are on him and there is large stress.

“You think of strikers England have had in the past and there have been some great ones, but he’s scored more goals for England than Alan Shearer. If he’d have stayed in the Premier League, he’d have got that record too. His numbers are off the scale. He can come deep, he can get on the ball and he can play people in. He’s the best striker England have ever had.”

From Kingston to Karachi: England's ten greatest away wins

As England play their 500th overseas Test, we look back at some of their highest points on tour

Andrew Miller16-Jan-2020As England take the field for their 500th overseas Test at Port Elizabeth (which was, coincidentally, the scene of their first in South Africa in 1899), ESPNcricinfo takes a look back at ten of their finest away wins, out of a current tally of 149.Kingston 1989-90The gold standard of England’s overseas Test wins. It wasn’t simply that this result was unexpected, it was beyond the bounds of possibility, as wild a sporting upset as you could wish to encounter. England’s record against West Indies going into the first Test of 1990 was played 15, lost 14, drawn 1. They hadn’t won a Test against them since 1974, and they arrived in the Caribbean off the back of a 4-0 Ashes drubbing with a squad that had been ravaged by Mike Gatting’s rebel tour of South Africa. But in Graham Gooch’s first outing as full-time England captain, he inspired a rag-tag army to surpass themselves. Angus Fraser claimed 5 for 28 to skittle West Indies for 164; Allan Lamb produced a majestic hundred to ensure that advantage didn’t go to waste. Despite an anxious wait for rain to clear in the closing stages, Wayne Larkins sealed an incomprehensible win by nine wickets.Sydney 1894-95Only three teams in history have won a Test match after following on, and Australia have been on the receiving end on each occasion – most recently at Headingley in 1981 and Kolkata 20 years later, but also way back in the mists of time on Andrew Stoddart’s tour of Australia in 1894-95, when declared the first Test at Sydney to be “probably the most sensational match ever played either in Australia or in England”. Australia recovered from 21 for 3 to rack up a massive 586, with Syd Gregory’s ninth-wicket stand of 154 with Jack Blackham remaining an Australia record to this day, before chiselling England out for 325 by the close of day three. The follow-on proved arduous for the Aussies as Albert Ward’s 117 kept them in the field for 181 further overs, but a target of 177 ought to have been achievable. However, heavy overnight rain coupled with a steaming hot sixth day gave the pitch an attack of the vapours, and Bobby Peel required no second invitation – despite apparently needing to be stuck under a cold shower to ease the effect of his own overnight watering. “Give me the ball, Mr Stoddart, and I’ll get t’boogers out before loonch!” he is said to have declared. He wasn’t wrong. Australia collapsed from 130 for 2 to 166 all out, losing by ten runs with two minutes of the session remaining.Alec Stewart acknowledges the applause•PA PhotosBridgetown 1993-94The events in Barbados in April 1994 are proof, if nothing else, that long before the World Test Championship was introduced to provide officially sanctioned “context”, each individual Test match counted for something irrespective of the series scoreline. At 3-0 down with two to play, England were dead and buried on their 1994 tour. Their one chance at salvation, in the previous Test in Trinidad, had been scorched by Curtly Ambrose in their 46-all-out debacle, and after being routed by a West Indies Board XI in a practice match in Grenada, the prospect of a third blackwash in ten years was a clear and present danger – especially as they headed for Fortress Bridgetown, a venue where West Indies hadn’t lost since 1935. But then the miracle started taking shape. Alec Stewart and Mike Atherton added 171 for England’s first wicket, with Stewart going on to the first of his twin hundreds, before Fraser pounded through West Indies’ defences with a career-best 8 for 75. It couldn’t change what had gone before, but in a decade featuring just nine away wins, this was right up there with the best.Adelaide 2010-11Andy Flower, rarely one to let his guard slip, declared this to be nigh on the “perfect” England win, and despite the hyperbole, it’s hard to deny he had a point. This was a masterful initiative-seizing victory, a strike right at the heart of a rattled Australia team who had seen a routine win in the first Test at Brisbane quashed by the small matter of England’s second innings: 517 for 1. And Australia’s response to that indignity was calamity: a scoreline of 2 for 3 on the first morning as James Anderson snaked his way through the top order before Alastair Cook continued where he’d left off with another dry-as-dust 148. Enter Kevin Pietersen, who slapped a sun-baked attack for a punitive double-hundred, before Graeme Swann took his cue on the final day with five match-sealing wickets. To make it all the more perfect, the outfield was drenched by a thunderstorm barely half an hour after the finish.Kevin Pietersen celebrates his second double-century•Getty ImagesMumbai 2012-13It may all have ended in tears and recrimination, but like ABBA or Fleetwood Mac, Cook and Pietersen sure made some beautiful music when the mood took them. Two years after Adelaide, they reprised the same rhythm with another chalk-and-cheese alliance, and this time the impact on their opponents was even more stark. India had eased to victory in the opening Test in Ahmedabad, though not before Cook’s 176 in the second innings had shown his team the requisite bottle for Indian conditions. But when he repeated that dose in the first innings at the Wankhede, this time Pietersen was waiting to turn on the style. Newly “reintegrated” to the England team after the textgate row of the summer, he disintegrated India’s resistance with an astonishing onslaught – his 186 from 233 balls included a firestorm of boundaries against spinners R Ashwin and Pragyan Ojha. And talking of spinners, who should be waiting to ice England’s cake? Their own spin twins, Swann and Monty Panesar – the perfect combo for the conditions – who wrapped up the contest with 19 wickets between them.Sydney (and Melbourne) 1954-55Blows to the head aren’t generally advised in this day and age, but one of the most famous blows of all time is widely acknowledged as the catalyst for one of the great series turnarounds. Two years after winning the Ashes back on home soil for the first time in 19 years, Len Hutton’s prospects of retention weren’t looking too promising after an innings thumping in the opening match of the 1954-55 series, in Brisbane. His key fast bowler, Frank Tyson, claimed 1 for 160 in that match, and his tour took another turn for the worse when he was knocked out by a Ray Lindwall bouncer in the second Test at Sydney. But from that moment on, the joke was on Australia. “I was a little cranky,” Tyson later admitted, as he blew through Australia with six second-innings wickets, to turn a 74-run deficit into a famous 38-run win. Two weeks later in Melbourne, he was in an even crankier mood – nothing could survive his second-innings 7 for 27, as Australia were wrecked for 111.The England squad celebrate after winning the first Ashes Test•Getty ImagesBrisbane 1986-87Okay, so the quality of the contest was a notch below the usual standards – Australia really were at a low ebb in this post-Lillee, pre-Warne era. But who could failed to be swayed by the optics? Like the cackle of Emperor Palpatine in the trailer for the latest Star Wars, the first Test at Brisbane heralded the rise of an Australian nemesis whose best endeavours had been buried for so long, you could only assume he was finished. But no! Back he strode to his throne of Ashes – revoltingly mulleted and broader at the midriff than in his heyday, but still possessed of an eye like a dead trout. Merv Hughes bore the brunt of Ian Botham’s 14th and final Test century, as England seized an initiative that carried them to glory with a Test to spare. Can’t bat, can’t bowl, can’t field indeed…Johannesburg 2004-05England’s tour of South Africa in 2004-05 was a bruising, shattering bunfight – ideal preparation, in hindsight, for the ultimate test that awaited that summer against Australia, but at the time it seemed likely that the two teams would punch themselves to exhaustion. England might have been 2-0 up after two, but for South Africa’s epic rearguard at Durban, and instead it was 1-1 with two to play after a Jacques Kallis masterclass had set up an innings rout in Cape Town. Cue the craziest contest of the lot at the Wanderers, where Marcus Trescothick transformed a faltering third innings with a blistering 180 – including 58 priceless runs for the tenth wicket with Steve Harmison. The only trouble was… who was left to take the wickets? Harmison the bowler was on his last legs, and the rookie Anderson was out of his depth at this early stage of his career. Up stepped the shop steward, Matthew Hoggard, with an inspirational 7 for 61, including a first-ball outswinger to Kallis that has to rank among the greatest deliveries in English Test history.Nasser Hussain and Graham Thorpe celebrate victory in the dark•Getty ImagesKarachi 2000-01″Stay in the game at all costs!” Nasser Hussain’s exhortation was writ large across this magnificent heist, as his team of honest toilers gained their rewards at the end of an exhausting series dominated by slow and at times thoroughly tedious batting. But with the series deadlocked at 0-0 with just minutes left to play of the penultimate evening in Karachi, Ashley Giles unpicked the lock with the vital scalp of Inzamam-ul-Haq and England sensed their moment to strike. Pakistan lost their final seven wickets in just under 30 overs on the final day to leave England with a race against time – 176 runs before nightfall. Pakistan’s captain, Moin Khan, mocked their optimism, knowing full well that the encroaching winter darkness would save them before long, but umpire Steve Bucknor refused to give in to his time-wasting and insisted that play had to go on. Graham Thorpe anchored the chase with a masterful 64, as victory was sealed with an inside edge past the stumps, and through a Pakistan infield that could no longer see where the ball was going.Port of Spain 1973-74In a week when debate has raged about the relative merits of England’s great allrounders, here’s a compelling submission from the forgotten master, Tony Greig. His decision to join World Series Cricket in 1977 – and the concurrent rise of Botham – mean that his derring-do is too easily overlooked, but when his game was on song he was every bit the colossus. Needing victory to square the series in the final match of their 1974 tour of the Caribbean, Greig used every inch of his 6ft 6in frame to unleash his lesser-spotted offspin to devastating effect. He racked up 8 for 86 to restrict West Indies to a first-innings lead of 38, then added a further 5 for 70 in the second innings as the hosts, chasing 226, collapsed from 63 for 0 to 199 all out. It was the end of the road for Garry Sobers and Rohan Kanhai, two Caribbean greats, who never played again. But England wouldn’t win again for another 16 years, as Clive Lloyd and his mean machine prepared to roll into the region …

'Piojo out!' – Costa Rica fans demand manager Miguel Herrera’s exit after back-to-back World Cup qualifying draws

Los Ticos currently sit outside the World Cup 2026 qualification zone

Herrera insists he will not resignCosta Rica drew against Nicaragua and HaitiThey currently sit second in Group CFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱AFPWHAT HAPPENED?

Costa Rica’s World Cup qualifying campaign hit turbulence this week, and frustration is already spilling over in San José.

On Tuesday night, the blew a two-goal lead against Haiti, stumbling to a 3-3 draw at the Estadio Nacional. What started as a routine victory unraveled in the second half, exposing defensive frailties and sparking fury in the stands. Fans booed loudly at the final whistle, many chanting “¡Fuera Piojo!” as head coach Miguel Herrera made a quick exit down the tunnel.

However, the former Club América boss insists he won’t walk away from the Costa Rica National Team. 

“Resigning would be the coward’s way out. If the federation decides otherwise, that’s their call. I’m not making decisions in the heat of the moment. We have a month to regroup, and I intend to build a squad that will fight for the result we need," he said. 

The Mexican manager spent most of the night barking instructions from the touchline, urging more urgency from his players, but his sideline theatrics did little to calm an increasingly hostile crowd.

AdvertisementAFPTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Costa Rica now sit on just two points in Group C, tied with Haiti and behind leaders Honduras. The dropped points have complicated their path to the 2026 World Cup and left Herrera under growing scrutiny.

AFPWHAT MIGUEL HERRERA SAID

After the 3-3 draw with Haiti, Herrera didn’t hide his frustration in the post-match press conference:

“We were 2-0 up and in 20 minutes we let it slip – not just the score but the way we were playing. I can’t understand it. We gave away silly chances, stopped keeping the ball, and handed the initiative to them,” Herrera said.

He added, “I don’t get why the players stopped doing the things that were working so well. Keylor saves a penalty, and there’s no reaction; no one is fighting to clear the ball. I can’t understand it. I don’t know why we lost that determination.”

AFPWHAT NEXT FOR COSTA RICA NATIONAL TEAM?

face a critical October window for qualifying, traveling to San Pedro Sula to play Honduras before hosting Nicaragua at the Nacional – fixtures that could determine Herrera’s future in charge.

Fabrizio Romano reveals why Leicester chiefs failed to sign Maresca target

Journalist Fabrizio Romano has revealed why Leicester City missed out on completing the signing of their primary transfer target, with manager Enzo Maresca in particular a big admirer of the player.

Leicester transfer news & promotion hopes

The Foxes are sitting pretty ten points clear at the top of the Championship currently, so there was never a huge need to bring in new players during the January transfer window. Granted, some fresh faces certainly wouldn't have gone amiss, but this is a squad who look capable of returning to the Premier League without reinforcements between now and the end of the season.

That's not to say that Maresca wasn't trying to conduct some business in January, however, with Inter Milan midfielder Stefano Sensi reportedly flying to England to complete a move to the King Power Stadium, having stood out as a big target for many weeks during the winter. It failed to come to fruition in the end, however, with the Italian returning to his homeland.

There were also some players who were linked with a move away from the Foxes, with defender Harry Souttar seen as a target for Premier League side Everton. He ended up staying put, though, which is no bad thing, while the league leaders also resisted interest from Leeds, refusing to strengthen a rival.

A fresh update has now emerged regarding exactly why Maresca couldn't get his hands on Sensi.

Fabrizio Romano makes Stefano Sensi admission

Taking to X, Romano explained why Leicester failed to sign Sensi, with Foxes chiefs failing to come to an agreement with Inter Milan over the loan fee and the structure of the payments.

Leicester manager Enzo Maresca.

"Stefano Sensi completed medical at Leicester City but the problem was between the two clubs on loan fee and payment terms. Maresca wanted Sensi since day one of the window but deal OFF, as reported. Sensi will return to Milan on Friday."

It was clearly disappointing for Leicester to miss out on the signing of Sensi in the end, considering he would have been a sprinkling of extra quality on top of an already strong Foxes squad. The 28-year-old has made three appearances in Serie A so far this season, showing that he is good enough to play for a European footballing giant in Inter, while former teammate Kwadwo Asamoah has lauded him in the past, saying:

"Stefano Sensi? He’s a quality player, he makes a difference, and I already noticed that at Sassuolo. I’m happy with that work he’s doing for the team."

The hope is that Leicester potentially return for Sensi once the summer transfer window arrives, at which point they may have sealed a return to the Premier League. That could appeal greatly to the 28-year-old, who was seemingly happy to move to the Championship, let alone the top flight.

Leicester target waiting to board flight as report reveals hold up

The Foxes face a race against time…

ByTom Cunningham Jan 31, 2024

Maresca will no doubt be frustrated by the situation, given how much he rates Sensi as a footballer, so it would be no surprise if he demanded a move for him later on in the year.

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