Not enough to compete, India must complete games – Ravi Shastri

The series is lost but Ravi Shastri is not “throwing the towel in” yet, and neither are the Indian team. Shastri has singled out his batsmen for not being as mentally strong as they could have been, giving away the advantage to England in situations they should have capitalised on, but despite England holding a series-winning 3-1 lead with only the fifth Test to play, India’s coach believes his team will compete hard in the match at the Oval that starts on Friday, and rectify mistakes made in the first four Tests.The five-Test series got off to an exhilarating start after England held their nerve on the fifth morning at Edgbaston to win by 31 runs. England then obliterated India at Lord’s in a matter of a few sessions. India bounced back collectively to hurt England at Trent Bridge and keep the series alive.In Southampton India had England reeling at 86 for 6 on day one. Still, stunningly, it was India who were left bruised in the end as Sam Curran played another belligerent knock to wrest back control, just as he had done at Edgbaston in the second innings when England were stuttering at 87 for 7. India’s five-man bowling attack failed to stop Curran both times, and paid the price.On the third day, England were in trouble once again and lost quick wickets either side of the lunch break to slip to 92 for 4, but their lower order resisted admirably and hit back to raise a big lead on a worn pitch. India had no answer to Moeen Ali, who kept pitching the ball in the footmarks and getting it to turn and bounce sharply. It was something India’s lead spinner R Ashwin failed to do, which Shastri said was the difference between the sides.But Shastri was still not giving up. “The fact of the matter is that you had a chance,” Shastri said after India’s training on Wednesday. “The scoreline says 3-1 which means India have lost the series. What the scoreline doesn’t say is India could have been 3-1 or 2-2. And my team knows it. They would have hurt, and rightly so, after the last game. But this is a team that will not throw in the towel. It will compete. It will come out there to compete and not look to be on the first flight home, rest assured.”After losing the series in Southampton, India captain Virat Kohli was blunt in his appraisal, saying his team could not be satisfied just with competing, and had to learn how to cross the line. Shastri reiterated that sentiment. “We have run teams close overseas, we have competed. But now it is not about just competing. We have got to complete games from here. And the endeavour is to learn, understand where you made the mistakes, take it head on and try and correct.”Virat Kohli chats with Ravi Shastri•Getty Images

Shastri said India were on top and looking to take a sizeable lead when Cheteshwar Pujara played a ” (a Mumbai cricket term loosely equivalent to bloody-minded)” innings to notch his first century of this tour. But the rest of the batting did not show the same resolve. “It is being aware of being in a good position and then capitalising and not doing something silly to open the door for the opposition. I thought at 180 for 4 there was a definite chance of a 75-80 run lead, and that would have been crucial. So that hurts.”Shastri felt the Southampton defeat would hurt more than the one at Edgbaston because India were in charge of the fourth Test at different points. “At Edgbaston, it could have gone either way. We had our share of luck as well because at one time England were in the driver’s seat. We managed to come back. We were chasing the game there all the time. But here, this would hurt more because you were ahead of them. And there was a stage you could have been really ahead of game after the job the bowlers did on day one.”At the start of this series, Shastri had told ESPNcricinfo that Kohli’s team had the “potential” to be one of the best travelling sides. He said he was making that statement based on India’s spirited performance in the 2-1 series defeat this January in South Africa, where India won the final Test in Johannesburg and were in contention in the first two Tests too, in Cape Town and Centurion.Not everyone is convinced India are improving as a travelling unit overseas though. Speaking to , former India opener Virender Sehwag said India had learned the art of winning overseas under Sourav Ganguly. Back then, India were a stronger batting unit with bowlers who couldn’t consistently take 20 wickets, and Sehwag felt it was the other way round now, with India having a strong bowling unit but a weaker batting group. “Best travelling teams are made by performances on the ground and not by sitting in the dressing rooms and talking about it. One can talk whatever they want to talk about but unless the bat does the talking, they can never become the best travelling team,” Sehwag said.Shastri still maintained India could win overseas. He pointed out that India had won three series and nine Tests overseas since 2015. Incidentally, Anil Kumble was India’s coach for one of those series, against West Indies in 2016, which India won 2-0. Shastri was in his first stint with the team during the 2-1 win on the 2015 tour of Sri Lanka. In Shastri’s second stint, India have won one series overseas, in Sri Lanka (2017), and five Tests.”If you look at the last three years, we won nine matches overseas and three series. I can’t see any other Indian team in the last 15-20 years who had that kind of run in such a short period and you have some great players in those teams.” Shastri said. “So the promise is there. It is just [about] getting tougher mentally. You have got to hurt when you lose such matches, but that is when you look within and come out with the right kind of answers to combat such situations again and get past the finishing line. One day you will, as long as you believe.”

Rohit Sharma's magnificent 100* leads India to series win

Rohit Sharma struck an unbeaten hundred and Hardik Pandya then finished the chase, to follow 4 for 38 with the ball

The Report by Sidharth Monga08-Jul-2018
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsA long tour of England can bring contingencies, and India responded gloriously to the first of those to maintain their clean sheet in T20I bilateral series of three matches. Central to India’s win was a man who might yet have to play a big part in the rest of the summer: allrounder Hardik Pandya stepped up with India missing two of their first-choice quicks to injury and dropping Kuldeep Yadav, who had taken five wickets two matches ago, because of the small straight boundaries.Pandya bowled smartly, not giving England anything to drive and changing his pace often in his personal best analysis of 4 for 38, reducing a marauding England batting to 198 when they had looked good for 225. He was there with centurion Rohit Sharma when India needed to pull themselves out of a brief slowdown when the 15th and 16th over produced seven runs and the wicket of Virat Kohli. Pandya’s 33 off 14 took off any pressure that might have been on his Mumbai Indians’ team-mate as India chased the target down with more than an over to spare.Rohit Sharma lifts one over covers•Getty Images

Selection debateThere was consternation from certain quarters when Kuldeep was left out for debutant swing bowler Deepak Chahar. The pitch looked green, and the straight boundaries were short. India reasoned they wanted a team for the day and not based on history. A few experts said you pick your best bowlers no matter the conditions. To add to India’s woes, Bhuvneshwar Kumar had a stiff back. Jasprit Bumrah was already ruled out of the limited-overs leg of the tour. This is an Indian side confident of taking a punt and going along with it. Their confidence was about to be tested.England get stuck into inexperienced attackThe pace of the three right-arm quicks posed Jos Buttler and Jason Roy no challenge. The Powerplay of 73 for 0 was the best in T20Is in England, and the home side’s second-best effort anywhere. In a knock that didn’t even last half of England’s innings, Roy equalled the England record for most sixes: seven. Pandya was among those taken apart, for 22 in his first over, his most expensive over in T20Is.Two wickets fell in the next seven overs but the runs kept coming. That Yuzvendra Chahal bowled four overs for just 30 when the going rate was higher than 10 might have raised doubts in the Indian minds. They were looking at seven overs of quick bowling with no swing available and small boundaries to defend with 132 already on the board.Pandya strikes, and keeps strikingPandya, who had come back with a two-run second over, showed he had learned from his mistake early on. He wasn’t bowling as short as he had done earlier but still didn’t give England the length to drive or to slog. He rolled his fingers on the ball to good effect, too. Eoin Morgan top-edged a slog, was dropped, but repeated it next ball for MS Dhoni to take one of his world-record five catches in the innings. Alex Hales looked to late-cut him and got the top edge. Pandya came back in the 18th over to thwart another surge from England, this time taking out Ben Stokes and Jonny Bairstow. That England fell 25 short was down entirely to these wickets.Rohit exits a slumpComing into this match, Rohit had averaged 26.08 at a strike rate of 104.1 in all T20 cricket since February 17 this year. Those were surprising numbers for a batsman of his ability in limited-overs cricket, which is probably why not many questioned his place in a line-up overflowing with batting talent. Rohit showed why by dismantling the England bowling with 11 fours and five sixes. Most of the big hitting was done down the ground because of the boundaries but when England went short, he was equal to it with his pulls. For support he had KL Rahul during a 41-run second-wicket stand and Kohli in an 81-run association for the third wicket.How ineffective the bowling, how short England were of a par score, was all evident in how all the three wickets fell to exceptional catches. the pick of the lot was the third one as Chris Jordan hung on a Kohli shot drilled back at him in his follow-through. That wicket and the consequent quiet, with Pandya promoted ahead of MS Dhoni and Suresh Raina, left India 44 to get in four overs.Pandya, Rohit end itJust then, though, Pandya hit the first two balls of the 17th over for fours, and India were back on track. Rohit duly reached his hundred, and Pandya provided the exclamation mark with a six off the fourth ball of the 19th over.

Arsenal to move for Mykhailo Mudryk?! Gunners among clubs linked with shock transfer for £89m Chelsea flop

Arsenal have been linked with a surprising move for struggling Chelsea winger Mykhailo Mudryk in the summer.

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Mudryk originally wanted by ArsenalSigned for Chelsea but has struggledGunners interested alongside JuventusWHAT HAPPENED?

The Ukraine international was signed from Shakhtar Donetsk in January 2022 for a staggering fee worth up to £89 million ($113m) including add-ons. Thus far Mudryk has come nowhere near living up to that price tag, with his most impressive showings arguably coming on his debut against Liverpool and during pre-season this term. Despite an underwhelming start to his Chelsea career, Arsenal are reportedly interested in bringing him to north London, according to Spanish outlet .

AdvertisementGetty ImagesTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The report notes that Chelsea will listen to offers for the 22-year-old winger, with a primary objective being a loan transfer to build up his development. However, the Blues could be interested in a permanent sale, where Arsenal and Serie A giants Juventus are listed as potential suitors. That said, Chelsea would look to recoup a significant portion of that £89m investment which, as the report acknowledges, would be difficult given Mudryk's recent performances.

DID YOU KNOW?

Arsenal, of course, were once seen as the primary location for Mudryk before his eventual switch to Chelsea. Mikel Arteta is thought to be a big fan from his Shakhtar playing days and only neglected to sign him after being usurped by the Blues' mammoth offer at the 11th hour. Videos had even been circling of Mudryk praising Arteta and wearing an Arsenal shirt.

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR MUDRYK?

Chelsea may hope their north London counterparts do them a favour as they did when signing Kai Havertz for a staggering £65m ($82m) last summer, and pay over-the-odds for another struggling forward. However, that eventuality would require Mudryk to build on his sorry tally of four goals in 26 appearances this term.

Will Pant continue to open in Rahul's absence?

Also, Shreyas Iyer or Deepak Hooda? Ravindra Jadeja or Axar Patel? A look at the questions India face ahead of the T20I series

Deivarayan Muthu28-Jul-2022Will Pant continue to open with Rohit?
Pant had opened the batting along with Rohit in India’s last two T20Is, scoring 1 and 26 in Nottingham and Birmingham respectively. India’s original plan for the West Indies T20Is was to reunite Rahul with Rohit at the top, but Rahul is still recovering from Covid-19 and will miss the T20I leg of the tour as well.

In the absence of Rahul, Pant could feature at the top once again, a role he had played more regularly under Rahul Dravid when they were both part of the India Under-19 set-up. Ishan Kishan, who is being groomed as the back-up opener and wicketkeeper, is the other option for India.Iyer vs Hooda
Deepak Hooda’s sprightly batting and part-time offspin could potentially help him jump ahead of Shreyas Iyer and slot into a middle order that includes Suryakumar Yadav, Hardik and Dinesh Karthik.Iyer’s vulnerability against the short ball is well-established while Hooda, like Suryakumar, is a more versatile batter against both pace and spin. Hooda could also bat at the top, if needed, and his offspin could be matched up with West Indies’ left-handers, if India can’t fit R Ashwin into their XI.Jadeja vs Axar
A fit-again Ravindra Jadeja is currently India’s first-choice spin-bowling allrounder across formats, but Axar Patel has somewhat narrowed the gap between Jadeja and himself in white-ball cricket, with his heroics in the second ODI against West Indies. If India choose to manage Jadeja, who has been troubled by injuries in the recent past, Axar is a readymade like-for-like replacement.Axar Patel has somewhat narrowed the gap between Jadeja and himself in white-ball cricket•AFP/Getty ImagesJadeja’s bowling, though, could be tested by the left-hand quartet of Kyle Mayers, Pooran, Shimron Hetmyer and Akeal Hosein. Against left-hand batters since the start of 2020, Jadeja has conceded 9.13 runs an over and picked up just eight wickets at a strike rate of 39. Axar has much better numbers against left-handers during this period: an economy rate of 8.10 to go with 12 wickets at a strike rate of 20.What could India’s spin attack look like?
In the absence of Chahal, Ravi Bishnoi, who is more of a wrong ‘un specialist than a traditional legspinner, or a fit-again Kuldeep Yadav could get a look-in. During the T20Is at home against West Indies earlier this year, Bishnoi took three wickets in as many games at an economy rate of 6.33. As for Kuldeep, he showed signs of his best during his IPL stint with Delhi Capitals, dominating the league along with Chahal.

Kuldeep suffered a hand injury before the South Africa T20Is, but has recovered since, and could play his first T20I in almost six months. Ashwin is another option, and with Washington Sundar asked to prove his form and fitness in county cricket, he is likely to get his chance at some point on this tour.Who after Harshal Patel and Bhuvneshwar Kumar?
Avesh Khan or Arshdeep Singh? Avesh had leaked runs both in Nottingham and then in Port of Spain, on his ODI debut, earlier this week. If recent form is anything to go by, India might go with Arshdeep who had kicked off his T20I career with a maiden on his way to figures of 2 for 18 in Southampton last month.

Arshdeep had also swung the new ball and nailed his yorkers with the old one during the tour games in England. And in IPL 2022, Arshdeep had bowled the most yorkers (38) – Bumrah also bowled as many – to Avesh’s 18. With Bumrah being rested, this could well be Arshdeep’s chance to impress further in T20Is.

The second coming of Upul Tharanga

Not long ago, Tharanga was struggling to put bat to ball. Now he’s the first name on the ODI team list

Sriram Veera in Dhaka12-Jan-2010It’s amazing how quietly Upul Tharanga has displaced Sanath Jayasuriya from the opener’s slot. It’s almost a bloodless coup assisted by the team management who want to look at the future beyond Jayasuriya. It wasn’t far back that Tharanga himself was struggling to put bat to ball and was dropped. Interestingly, his exit paved the way for Tillakaratne Dilshan to cement his place as a dashing opener and now it’s his turn to re-establish himself at the top.He looked into his past to redesign his future. In 2005, life was looking up for Tharanga post the dreadful tsunami; he had started to rebuild his house which was washed away during the tragedy, made his debut and became the first batsman in the history of the game to have scored five hundreds in 30 ODIs. Suddenly, the lights went out.It was the common problem that ails a sportsman: fear of failure. Runs trickled in at a premium post the 2007 World Cup and the pressure slowly built on Tharanga. He would scratch around for a while, increasingly looking more and more vulnerable. “I was just trying to survive for five or ten overs and then try get some runs and it obviously didn’t work,” he says. “I had put too much pressure on myself after World Cup and that’s where I made the mistake.”There were people who helped out in pointing the mental error, such as Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene, but it was Chandika Hathurusingha who really helped Tharanga turn around. “He was the A team coach then and I worked a lot with him. He is the guy who told me to play a natural game and not worry about getting out,” he says. “He said it looks like I am just going out there to survive and not trying to score runs.”I changed my approach; I decided that I am just going to get out and play my normal game, not get worried about whether I will get dropped now if didn’t score runs in this match. If the bad ball is there to be hit, I will hit it.”It helped that Tharanga could hark back to the memory of doing well at the international arena in the early part of his career to convince himself that he was good enough for this level.”I had played earlier for two years for Lanka, so I knew I was good enough,” he says. “My plan was simple: If I get runs for the A team, I would get a chance definitely. All I had to do was to sort out the mental side of things and my approach to batting. I made runs and then I waited for my opportunity. I didn’t get a look-in for two or three series but then I got a chance in the series against India. And I took it.”It sounds deliciously simple – score runs, get into form and wait for the selectors to call you – but the fact was that he had to wait for either Jayasuriya or Dilshan to lose form so that he can get a look in. And when Jayasuriya started to struggle, Tharanga grabbed his opportunity. It must have been a big deal for a man who grew up watching Jayasuriya bat to displace him from the team but Tharanga doesn’t want to see it that way.”No one can replace Sanath. He is a legend,” he says. “I have got a chance now and I am just focused on my batting. He was also happy when I scored runs in India and congratulated me.”Tharanga also believes that batting with Dilshan has helped him during his comeback. “The bowlers are concentrating on how to get him out and pressure is off me. In fact I think I get more loose balls now as the bowlers are under pressure after bowling to him. So it has become easy for me.”It wouldn’t have hurt that his captain now is Sangakkara, for both go back a long way. It was Sangakkara who helped him by giving SLR 50,000 (US$ 440) and some bats and gloves to get him up and running. “I decided that I can’t do anything about it [the devastation caused by the tsunami],” he says. “Yes, I lost my house and everything but I wasn’t the only one guy who lost things. There were one million people who suffered from that. There was no use sitting and crying about the loss of things and blaming life. We had to move on. It’s like starting a new life.”This is Tharanga’s second coming not only in life but in cricket as well. He has started well but he knows that his future will depend on how consistent he can become.

The shower surprise

Everybody hopes that the next three matches go the full distance, but don’t rule out contingency plans for rain intervals being discussed in team meetings

Sidharth Monga in Wellington06-Mar-2009
Blame it on the rain: The repeated shower interruptions have given the captains plenty to think about © Getty Images
So one-day cricket has become predictable, eh? It’s not the same old formulaic stuff when there’s rain around. With constant rain intervals, as at the Westpac Stadium tonight, teams have to keep thinking on their feet. Equations and circumstances keep changing with every drop that hits the green.Take a look at this scenario. Before the rain arrived the first time, India were 130 for 1 and looking at a 300-plus score. After two brief stints and three rain breaks, if the game had started, India would have had to defend 165 in 20 overs. On a pitch that Daniel Vettori said was much better than the one for the Twenty20 last week, with a wet outfield and ten wickets in hand, New Zealand would have fancied a win. So from being the favourites at one stage, India would be forgiven if they thought they escaped tonight. Such are the shenanigans of the Duckworth-Lewis system.It is always tricky to bat after a rain interval. All of a sudden the overs are reduced, the batsmen have to think of a target that is safe, and they have to change their style. Let’s not forget that they have to play themselves in before they can go for the big hits. Not to take the credit away from Vettori and Kyle Mills, but India came out a little distracted after the first rain break, and lost two wickets for 21 runs in five overs before rain struck again.The strategising for games when rain is forecast – and the forecasts in New Zealand have been fairly good so far – begins at the toss itself. Does a team want the runs on the board? Or does it want to chase a target? It is often tempting to go for the latter, but Mahendra Singh Dhoni looked at the other side of it before he chose to bat.”If it rains for the amount that you lose eight, 10 or 15 overs, the side which has batted first has a bit of advantage,” said Dhoni said, “but in the same way for the side batting, if they are given a target in 20 overs, it becomes very easy. For New Zealand today, if it was a 20-over game, they would have required around 166-odd runs, but if it was a 28-over game they would have needed about 217-odd runs.”Also the side batting first stands to gain in terms of Powerplays from a situation when the game has been reduced. Today India got 15 overs of Powerplays before the rain interval, and with the game reduced to 34 overs, got three more overs of batting Powerplay. Had the rain not intervened, New Zealand would have got only 13 overs of fielding restrictions as opposed to India’s 18. It will be one complex system that takes all this into account and then reworks the target. In a similar scenario late last year, India got 18 overs of Powerplays as opposed to England’s nine, in the Bangalore ODI that had to be reduced to 22 overs a side.Generally the shorter the match, the more it favours the fielding side. But like Dhoni said, who can predict how much it will rain? It helps, though, to have a Virender Sehwag at the top of the order to take the pressure that the duo of Duckworth and Lewis put on a batting side.India knew it would rain in Napier and they knew it would rain in Wellington. Both times they decided to bat, so it seems like a policy decision. “It’s like a gamble because you don’t know how much it would rain,” said Dhoni. “That’s a gamble you take more often, and we are a good batting side so we back ourselves on that. If we get a good start we can get a decent score if the amount of overs are reduced by 15 or 20. And definitely, in 30 overs the opposition will get a big target to chase.”Vettori would have batted too if he had won the toss, but for a different reason. “The wicket was a lot better than it was for the Twenty20 game, so we wanted to make sure we could put a score on the board,” he said. “And in a way, try and put the pressure back on India because they have done so well with batting at the start.”India’s tour of New Zealand so far has been shorn of mind games and quotable quotes, but the rain breaks have added an interesting twist to both off-field planning and on-field implementation, especially when dealing with factors beyond one’s control. It is not always fair, but like the batting Powerplays they add a whole new dimension.Everybody is hoping that the next three matches will go the full distance, but you can be sure contingency plans for rain intervals will be discussed in team meetings.

الأهلي يتعاقد مع صفقة أجنبية جديدة لتدعيم فريق الطائرة

يواصل النادي الأهلي سعيه لتدعيم صفوف فرق الألعاب الجماعية خلال الانتقالات الحالية، تمهيدًا للمنافسات المقبلة.

وعلم بطولات، أن النادي الأهلي تعاقد مع اللاعب الإيطالي أندريا سانتانجيلو، ليكون أحد أعضاء فريق الكرة الطائرة خلال الفترة المقبلة.

خاص.. كهربا يغيب عن مران الأهلي ويفاضل بين 3 عروض للرحيل

ويأمل الجهاز الفني للنادي الأهلي، أن يكون اللاعب الإيطالي قادراً على تقديم الإضافة المطلوبة في الملعب، سواء من حيث الخبرة أو الأداء الفني المميز، مما يعزز من فرص الفريق في حصد البطولات. وينتظر جمهور الأهلي ظهور سانتانجيلو بشكل قوي خلال المباريات القادمة.

ويشغل اللاعب الإيطالي مركز رقم 2، ويطمح الأهلي في إنهاء كافة التفاصيل الخاصة بالعقود والبطاقة الدولية، لقيده خلال الساعات القليلة المقبلة.

واستقر الجهاز الفني لطائرة الأهلي على السفر إلى العاصمة القطرية الدوحة يوم الإثنين المقبل، استعدادًا للمشاركة في البطولة العربية التي ستقام هناك خلال الفترة من 15-26 يناير.

يذكر أن قرعة البطولة أسفرت عن تواجد الأهلي في المجموعة الثالثة مع أربيل العراقي، ودار كليبي البحريني، والشرطة القطري.

"Working" – Journalist shares Spurs centre-back update on Tosin and Todibo

Tottenham Hotspur reportedly have their eyes on a "special" centre-back alongside the heavily linked Nice defender Jean-Clair Todibo.

Postecoglou makes defender admission ahead of January

Spurs boss Ange Postecoglou has brought attention to the club's lack of centre-back depth on more than one occasion over the last month. The Australian's currently bereft of star options behind favoured pairing Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero, with the former still out injured due to a hamstring problem.

International could push to join Spurs for one key trait Postecoglou has

The Australian is seriously tempting Tottenham’s transfer target.

ByEmilio Galantini Dec 23, 2023

Makeshift centre-back Ben Davies has partnered Romero to great effect at the heart of Postecoglou's defence in recent weeks, as Spurs win three of their last three Premier League games.

However, just one or two more defensive injuries could put Tottenham in a very precarious situation. Postecoglou expressed his desire to sign a centre-back at Spurs earlier this month, but also explained to Sky that whoever comes in must be the perfect fit.

"When you think about it, we let Davinson Sanchez go after the [summer] window closed," said Postecoglou on Tottenham signing a new defender.

"We kind of knew we were taking a bit of a risk; we couldn't get the extra centre-back that we were trying to get in, and for the early part of the year that was fine.

pierre-hojbjerg-micky-van-de-ven-tottenham-opinion

"But once we lost Micky [van de Ven], and Eric Dier's had some issues as well, we don't have another centre-back. Young Ash Phillips had just joined the club, so it's fair to say that we can't run the risk of that happening again, so that's obviously a priority for us in January.

"But again, we've got to get the right person. It's not just about bringing another body in, it's about getting the right one in and hopefully that'll happen."

In terms of named targets, one player they're already moving for is Todibo. The 23-year-old, according to reliable media sources, has held talks over joining Tottenham with the January window just days away from opening.

Tottenham eyeing Tosin move ahead of January

However, while Spurs are seriously pushing ahead for Todibo, the Frenchman is by no means the only option on Postecoglou's radar Indeed, Fulham defender Tosin Adarabioyo is another defender very much liked by Spurs.

Journalist Rudy Galetti, taking to X, says Tottenham are "working" and have eyes on Tosin alongside Todibo. The Englishman has started to feature more under Marco Silva recently whilst also impressing, and his contract is set to expire in the summer as things stand.

Tosin Adarabioyo for Fulham

Proven in the Premier League and a potentially cheaper option, the 26-year-old has also been called a "special player" by his manager.

One of Sunderland’s worst-ever signings is now playing in Australia

Sunderland have been through the wringer over the last ten decade or so, fighting against relegation from the Premier League valiantly on a regular basis before dropping out of the top flight in the 2016-17 season and never returning since.

Back-to-back relegations down to League One saw a dark cloud hang over the Stadium of Light that never looked like lifting, with the club staying put in the third tier as a big fish in a small pond for three successive gruelling campaigns before promotion was finally sealed via the playoffs in 2022.

20th position in the Premier League – 2016-17

24 points

24th position in the Championship – 2017-18

37 points

5th in League One (promoted) – 2021-22

84 points

Fast forward to now, Tony Mowbray's side are very much in the promotion reckoning this season – fighting it out for a playoff spot amongst a whole cluster of teams dreaming of making the step-up to the promised land of the Premier League possible.

With the current wave of positivity at Sunderland infectious, the hardened Black Cats faithful will have blocked out memories of past players who flopped during those tough times that saw the club fall down to the third tier.

Jack Rodwell is a name that has been understandably lost to the past, the ex Manchester City man a notable dud at the Stadium of Light.

How much Sunderland signed Jack Rodwell for

Sunderland would break the bank to bring Rodwell into the building in 2014, signing the central midfielder for £10m after a short-lived spell at the Etihad.

Rodwell would never justify that price tag when pulling on the Black Cats strip however, a move plagued by off-field issues that saw him become a pantomime villain for the Sunderland fans to routinely jeer at.

It even led to Chronicle Live journalist James Hunter – at the time of his departure from the club – labelling Rodwell as the 'worst signing in Sunderland's history' – a title Rodwell certainly won't wear like a badge of honour looking back on this period of his career.

Jack Rodwell's statistics at Sunderland

Rodwell's disastrous time at Sunderland did start with the midfielder showing signs of his quality, scoring three goals from 23 appearances during this debut top-flight season with the club.

However, when Sunderland succumbed to relegation to the Championship, Rodwell's time with the club started to unravel.

The former number eight was even demoted to the U23 ranks amidst the club's period of freefall to the second tier and lower, notably falling out with Sunderland boss Chris Coleman during that depressing time span.

Rodwell would only go on to make just three more appearances for the club in their doomed Championship relegation campaign, leaving the club after this season with his contract was torn up before the League One season got underway.

Earning a reported £70k per week – on top of costing £10m – Rodwell goes down as a colossal waste of money for what he offered the Black Cats during an ill-fated stay.

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Yet, the now 32-year-old is still playing well into the twilight of his career at Sydney FC regardless of this bruising experience.

What Jack Rodwell did after leaving Sunderland

In the immediate aftermath of his Sunderland exit, Rodwell was on the books at a number of EFL clubs – trialling with Watford, whilst going on to win deals with Blackburn Rovers and Sheffield United.

Making only two appearances for the Blades, Rodwell did fare better at Ewood Park – scoring one goal from 22 appearances for Blackburn.

Relocating to Australia however has seen Rodwell reignite his career slightly, playing for both Western Sydney Wanderers and Sydney FC in recent memory.

The 32-year-old even has a goal from limited appearances for Sydney FC to date, playing further back in the A-League as a centre-back option.

Rodwell – now valued at just £172k by Football Transfers' xTV model – has seemingly found his feet again after the move to Sunderland had the potential to swallow him whole completely and leave him disenchanted with football altogether, whilst the Black Cats continue to search for a return to the Premier League after years in the wilderness.

Wolves: O’Neil could go back in for "scintillating" £20k-p/w Sarabia successor

Wolverhampton Wanderers' summer was marked by considerable levels of upheaval at Molineux, Julen Lopetegui leaving the club after a short stay in England whilst key first-teamers such as Matheus Nunes, Ruben Neves and Nathan Collins all followed suit out of the building to Manchester City, Al-Hilal and Brentford, respectively.

It's left new boss Gary O'Neil with a tough old job to come into, many predicting Wolves to suffer even more on the pitch with relegation fancied by neutrals and Wolves fans alike.

Wolves manager Gary O'Neil

But, at this present moment in time, the West Midlands-based outfit are performing above all expectation – occupying a commendable 12th spot in the Premier League so far, recent wins include a 2-1 victory over the team who sacked O'Neil in the summer in AFC Bournemouth and a smash-and-grab Molineux win over champions, Man City by the same scoreline.

Even with these promising results to kickstart the season, Wolves will be looking to strengthen their still depleted squad when January comes along – one potential signing in the form of Facundo Pellistri could be on the cards even on just a loan basis.

Are Wolves interested in signing Facundo Pellistri?

As reported by LR Uruguay – via Fabian Bertolini – and further on Molineux News, Wolves were interested in snapping up the Manchester United talent on loan this summer with the Red Devils wanting their young £20k-per-week gem to get more game time away from Old Trafford.

Luton, Burnley and Bournemouth all put their hat into the ring to potentially sign Pellistri also – as per the report above – but a move wasn't forthcoming in the summer.

Could Wolves reignite their interest in the Uruguayan when the transfer window reopens at the start of 2024?

Impressive in spurts for Man United – Pellistri making 16 appearances to date for the Red Devils, including six in the Premier League this season – Wolves' squad would be significantly boosted with this potential addition.

How good is Facundo Pellistri?

Signing for the Red Devils in the summer of 2020, featuring for Peñarol previously in his birthplace of Montevideo, the 21-year-old is highly thought of in Man United quarters.

Scoring three times for the Man United U21's in nine matches after initially moving to England, the Uruguayan midfielder has managed to gradually work his way into Erik Ten Hag's first team plans recently – one beneficiary of the recent up-and-down form experienced by Ten Hag's men, given opportunities to the likes of Pellistri ahead of underperformers.

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Labelled as "scintillating" after a brief but impactful spell in a Europa League last-16 tie against Real Betis last season by football journalist Alex Turk – Pellistri having a part to play in Wout Weghorst's game-clinching fourth goal in a 4-1 win – the youngster has also further excelled in Cup competitions this year too.

The Uruguayan's work rate in a recent EFL Cup win versus Crystal Palace was highlighted as a major positive by football pundit Danny Webber, praising the collective "full-throttle" approach of the much-changed eleven fielded by ten Hag which saw Pellistri play the full 90 minutes.

Wolves could well look to Pellistri as a potential upgrade on Pablo Sarabia, the silky Spanish midfielder for the Old Gold is now 31 and his minutes in the first team have been cut under O'Neil's management – having started just two league games this season.

The former Paris Saint-Germain ace clearly has quality, with four assists to his name in all competitions to date in 2023/24, although three of those came in the League Cup clash with lower league side, Blackpool, having subsequently been "anonymous" against Premier League opposition – according to journalist Alex Richards.

If O'Neil and co do swoop in for the young Man United star again, Wolves would have an explosive and direct talent on their books who could usurp Sarabia's place in the squad, with the experienced asset just not cutting it at present.

If Pellistri were to impress, he could find himself knocking on the door for even more first-team opportunities at Old Trafford in the near future, or potentially move to cement a permanent stay at Molineux.

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