Kohli's slump: two factors that might have had a role to play

His current rough patch has lasted a lot longer than anyone might have imagined

Aakash Chopra23-Aug-2022″Form is temporary, class is permanent. And Kohli is class.””He isn’t out of form. Just short of runs.””It’s not that he isn’t scoring runs, it’s just that the century hasn’t come. Anyway, it is just round the corner. This series. This tournament. This match.”The chatter started as the wait became longer for the elusive 71st international hundred, but now it has reached a point where the conversation is no longer just about the next century anymore.Related

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What is ailing Virat Kohli?

Ian Bishop: 'Concerned that many types of bowlers are getting Virat Kohli out'

There’s no doubt in anyone’s mind about Virat Kohli’s class and his skills, and even if he doesn’t score another run in international cricket from here on, he will still be regarded as one of the greatest to have played the game. A man who did superhuman things and mastered all three formats like almost no others.Still, there’s also no hiding from the fact that the bat that worked like a magic wand isn’t obeying his commands anymore. There are more misses than hits. The aura of invincibility has faded and his presence doesn’t instil the same fear in bowlers’ minds as it used to earlier.But let’s be honest: this has happened to everyone who has played the game before him. That is why you are always remembered for how you lived and not for how you died.Okay, I shall now leave the metaphors behind and focus on the issue at hand.Kohli hasn’t scored enough runs lately. It has been a rough patch that has lasted a lot longer than any of us thought it might – Kohli included, perhaps. There are dozens of theories floating around about what might have gone wrong and how and when this dreadful spell might end. I am guilty of indulging in a couple of them, which I shall elaborate on later in this article.When a player goes through a rough patch, the conversation has only two places to go – is it a technical problem or a mental one? In my limited experience, both are intertwined; often one leads to the other and nobody can determine what came first, chicken or egg.Here’s a cycle of events: a slight technical glitch creeps into your game unknowingly but you ignore its presence because you’re able to handle it for a while with a superior (read, positive) mindset. Until it becomes too much to handle and you lose your rhythm, which results in the mindset not being the same anymore. You then start introspecting and doubt becomes a constant companion. Such a chain might start with a cocky mindset that allows a mistake to creep in in the first place too. Anyway, you get the drift.

Then you start working on both aspects. Technical first, because it’s tangible, and then the mindset: positive thoughts, visualisation, and so on. Eventually you find a way out of the hole… for a while, and then you don’t. This is a basic cycle in a cricketer’s career, repeated many times over, and ending in a final goodbye.I’m in no way suggesting that Kohli’s story is remotely close to its final pages. In fact, considering all that he has achieved, his commitment to his fitness and his fighting spirit, the chances that he will be able to produce an encore are high. But it’s also important that it happens soon enough, for the sake of his and India cricket’s immediate future. After all, there is a World Cup starting in about eight weeks.So is it a technical problem that Kohli is facing? Is it his commitment to the long front-foot stride (the same commitment that got him thousands of international runs) or is it the front foot going too far across now, making him prod at balls outside off? (Remember, Ricky Ponting’s front foot went a lot further across.) Or is it that he doesn’t have a strong back-foot game through the off side and bowlers have finally figured it out?Graeme Smith didn’t cover-drive much. Virender Sehwag didn’t pull or hook. And there are many more such examples. But these limitations did not stop those players from becoming very successful international cricketers. Yes, Kohli is edging more frequently than he used to, but is it the only mode of his dismissals? Once again, I’m not suggesting that there isn’t a technical issue – nobody is perfect – but the length of this dry spell suggests there’s more to it.There are two things that have happened in the last two years that had not happened before with Kohli. There were long disruptions in cricket due to Covid, and also, Kohli expressed a desire to take breaks, which he did not do when he was at the peak of his powers, when he more or less wanted to play every day, if that was possible. Bio-bubble fatigue is real and it drains players in ways they have never experienced before, and long breaks are things most current players don’t know how to handle either.For the longest time, the only way to get back into form for a top player was to play as much cricket as possible, even if it meant playing at a slightly lower level. Everyone went through that drill till about a decade ago. But nowadays, poor form is followed by breaks from the game. I’m not an expert and won’t pretend to be one but we really don’t know whether that’s the best approach towards regaining form and/or confidence. Times have changed and ways of dealing with issues like this might have changed too.

The second thing that changed with Kohli – and it only happened after he had not scored enough for a while – was his approach to starting new innings. The foundation of Kohli’s batting was absolute commitment to his method, in a manner that was almost robotic. But in the last couple of years he seems to have tried various approaches. So much so that you hardly remember what his foolproof old method was. He has gone very hard and he has gone very cautious too. I’m not saying that he has not followed his tried-and-tested method at all but that the deviations from that method have been too frequent.The problem isn’t as grave if you keep getting out for single-digit scores. In those cases you would be able to identify the issue a lot easier. But if you’re getting starts and are committing mistakes much later in the innings (and very often at that), you fail to identify the problem. It’s not the first ball outside off that you’ve nicked but the 70th or the 100th, and that points towards it being more a mental problem. Of course it’s a technical flaw but it’s the mental discipline, or lack of it, that triggers that flawed response.In theory cricket is a team sport, but you are on your own more often than not. While you’re a part of the team’s successes and defeats, you also inhabit an alternative universe of your own performances. And it gets very lonely there.For much of his career Kohli walked a path less travelled – the one that took him to the very top. Now he has to walk a path that almost everyone else has travelled (including himself early in his career). This path might lead him back to the old glory days or he might not achieve the same heights ever again.It’s a disturbing thought but one that must be considered nevertheless, for that’s the only way to live a liberated life. The enjoyment of playing the sport does not lie in coming out all guns blazing or defending endlessly but in playing at your own pace; the pace that you set for yourself without thinking about the outcome, for that’s what you were most comfortable with. That’s when every ball becomes an event – the most important event of your life at that point of time. And that’s when you become one with the sport itself.The current Indian team set-up is ideal for Kohli to be liberated from expectations, including some of his own, because the unwavering focus is on the team outcome. This set-up won’t judge him for the fifties and hundreds he scores or doesn’t but on how he has been able to contribute to upholding the team philosophy, and that’s a lovely place to be in.Kohli has paid a huge price for his own success, which has included not only others judging him by the lofty standards that he set but also Kohli himself trying to replicate the player he was three years ago. You have almost been able to touch and feel his struggle, and there isn’t a cricket lover who hasn’t wished for it to end. Sport should be a source of joy, not agony, for player and viewer alike. We hope that the break he has taken does the trick and the bat becomes his wand again.

Prithvi Shaw or Shubman Gill, and other questions India face ahead of warm-up game

Bumrah’s form, Jadeja-Ashwin conundrum among the key issues India look to sort out during their three-day tour match against a New Zealand XI

Karthik Krishnaswamy in Hamilton13-Feb-20202:06

‘Opening the innings isn’t new to me’ – Shubman Gill

India have won each of their last seven Tests, each of them by an innings or 200-plus runs. Given this, they should start the red-ball leg of their New Zealand tour at peak confidence, particularly since their opponents are coming off a 3-0 whitewash at Australia’s hands. But injuries and a couple of cases of iffy form have thrown uncertainty into India’s preparations. Here are the key issues they’ll look to sort out over the course of their three-day warm-up game against a New Zealand XI, which begins on Friday in Hamilton.A new opening combinationSince they began opening together, no one has scored more Test runs for India than Mayank Agarwal and Rohit Sharma, and both average in the 90s in this period. New Zealand conditions were always going to be a bigger test for both of them, but now India won’t have Rohit, who’s out with a calf injury.Agarwal, meanwhile, has run into some ordinary form, picking up a pair for India A in an unofficial Test against New Zealand A in Christchurch, and following up with scores of 32, 3 and 1 in the ODI series. More than the scores, he will be concerned by the nature of his dismissals. In the second ODI in Auckland, he was caught on the crease and squared up by a Hamish Bennett delivery that didn’t move all that much, and in the third ODI in Mount Maunganui, he was bowled by one that straightened past his outside edge when he played across the line to Kyle Jamieson.Prithvi Shaw punches the air after a century on debut•Associated PressAgarwal will probably still start the Test series, given the weight of his runs in India’s home season, but who will partner him? Prithvi Shaw has already played two Tests and scored a century on debut, and was set to start for India on their 2018-19 Australia tour, before an injury, and then a suspension, put him out of the game for a significant spell. Shubman Gill is yet to play Test cricket, but he’s made 83, 204* and 136 in his last two red-ball games for India A, in New Zealand, and averages 73.55 in first-class cricket. How well Shaw and Gill do in the warm-up match could determine who partners Agarwal in the first Test in Wellington.Cracks in the pace machineIf all its components were fit and firing, India’s pace attack would be the least of their worries going into the Test series. But Ishant Sharma won’t play the warm-up match, and might miss one or both of the Tests too if his ankle injury doesn’t heal in time.Jasprit Bumrah, meanwhile, will be playing his first red-ball game since the second Test of India’s tour of the West Indies in August-September 2019. He bowled like a demon on that tour, moving the ball whichever way he pleased, at high pace, in the air or off the deck, and taking 13 wickets at the ridiculous average of 9.23, including a hat-trick. Just when he seemed to be at the peak of his powers, though, he sustained a stress fracture of the back, and his displays in white-ball cricket since his return have suggested he isn’t quite back at that level just yet.Ishant Sharma has been laid low by a grade-three tear in his ankle•BCCIIshant and Bumrah are probably India’s most important quicks away from home. Their fortunes over the next three weeks could hinge on how Bumrah copes with a red-ball workload over the next three days in Hamilton, and how Ishant performs in his fitness test in Bengaluru on Saturday. Even as India sweat over those questions, they will keep a close eye on how Umesh Yadav – who performed brilliantly in the 2019-20 home season but hasn’t yet made the same kind of impression overseas – and the pacy but uncapped Navdeep Saini bowl in Hamilton.The Jadeja-Ashwin questionIn India’s last overseas Test series, in the West Indies, they picked Ravindra Jadeja as their lone spinner and left out R Ashwin. As impressive as Ashwin was with the ball in the home Tests against South Africa and Bangladesh, Jadeja probably remains India’s No. 1 choice, with his contributions with the bat particularly hard to ignore.If the first-choice pace trio of Ishant, Bumrah and Mohammed Shami were all at full fitness, India may not have had any need for lengthy deliberations over their combination. But if they have to carry a fast bowler who’s not quite 100% fit, they might need to think of playing five bowlers, which opens a door for Ashwin.Another reason to ponder five bowlers is the nature of New Zealand’s pitches, which, over the recent past, have tended to not deteriorate on days four and five, leading to high-scoring third and fourth innings. There will likely be help for the fast bowlers on days one and two, though, so India have two ways to think about their selection: they might look for first-innings batting solidity and pick six specialist batsmen, or look ahead to an expanded second-innings workload and pick a fifth bowler.

Man City women's player ratings vs Aston Villa: Khadija Shaw brings up a century of goals with brilliant quadrupe and Vivianne Miedema impresses as WSL leaders earn commanding win

Khadija Shaw surpassed a century of goals for Manchester City as she scored four times to inspire her side to their 10th successive Women’s Super League victory in a thumping 6-1 win over Aston Villa. The Jamaica international took her tally to 103 goals in just 120 appearances in all competitions for the Cityzens, who are now six points clear at the top of the league table.

With both teams taking to the field for their final league fixture of 2025, it was Villa who started the better as Rachel Daly threatened to connect with the in-form Kirsty Hanson’s low cross, but the captain narrowly missed the ball as she slid into the six-yard box. 

However, City were soon able to bypass the visitors’ impressive high press, taking the lead when Shaw converted Vivianne Miedema’s first-time cross for her 100th goal. And the 28-year-old scored her 101st just moments later when she raced into the penalty area, before cutting onto her favoured right foot to find the far corner.

Showing no signs of complacency in the second half, City pushed hard for a third and they thought they had it when Miedema bundled home after Shaw hit the woodwork, but the goal was chalked off after Kerstin Casparij was adjudged to have been offside in the build-up. 

However, the Blues eventually made it 3-0 when Netherlands international Miedema’s wonderful through ball found Aoba Fujino, who was emphatic with her finish past Villa goalkeeper Sabrina D’Angelo. So often a threat on the road, having drawn at Arsenal and won at Manchester United, Natalia Arroyo's Villans were rewarded for their consistent pressure when defender Lucy Parker headed home from substitute Missy Bo Kearns’ corner.

But City – who were able to bring on captain Alex Greenwood for her first appearance since October – soon restored their three-goal cushion when Miedema capped off a brilliant performance with a goal – the forward tapping home from Fujino’s neat cross. And for the icing on the cake, Shaw then scored her third and fourth goals of the afternoon as Andree Jeglertz's side secured their 13th straight victory in all competitions. They will now finish the year six points ahead of second-placed Chelsea and eight clear of third-placed Arsenal.

GOAL rates City's players from Joie Stadium…

Getty Images SportGoalkeeper & Defence

Ayaka Yamashita (5/10):

The 'keeper almost gave a goal away with a careless pass into City team-mate Yui Hasegawa, which – fortunately for both players – came to nothing.

Kerstin Casparij (7/10):

On her 100th appearance in all competitions for City, the Netherlands right-back was a threat going forward, forcing a good second-half save from Villa's D'Angelo.

Jade Rose (6/10):

The defender made an important block late on to prevent Villa striker Daly from finding the back of the net.

Rebecca Knaak (5/10):

Fresh from signing a new two-year contract extension in midweek, the centre-back was cautioned for a mistimed tackle on Villa's Daly.

Leila Ouahabi (5/10):

The left-back was up against inspired Villa wing-back Chasity Grant, who won the battle between the two players.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportMidfield

Laura Blindkilde Brown (6/10):

Neat and tidy on the ball, the England international supplied City's forward line well enough, watching on as Miedema and Shaw did the damage.

Yui Hasegawa (7/10):

The midfielder played a key role in City's second, winning possession in the middle of the park before setting Shaw on her way.

Getty Images SportAttack

Aoba Fujino (8/10):

One of City's best performers this season, the Japan international was electric down the right flank, netting her side's third with a superb finish before assisting Miedema.

Vivianne Miedema (9/10):

Displaying plenty of guile between the lines, the WSL's all-time top goalscorer showcased her all-round game by recording assists for Shaw and Fujino, before netting herself.

Lauren Hemp (7/10):

The scourge of Villa, having previously scored seven WSL goals against them, the winger registered the pre-assist in the build up to Shaw's opener.

Khadija Shaw (10/10):

Reaching and then surpassing a century of goals in City colours, the striker was simply remarkable inside the penalty area. She has now scored 12 WSL goals in just 11 games this term.

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Alex Greenwood (6/10):

Returning to the City fold for the first time since October following a period on the sidelines, the captain helped her side see out their victory.

Grace Clinton (6/10):

Replacing Laura Blindkilde Brown after the hour mark, the midfielder thought she scored City's sixth, but it actually deflected in off player-of-the-match Shaw.

Kerolin (5/10):

A second-half substitute, the winger replaced Lauren Hemp and was unable to make an impact on the match.

Iman Beney (N/A):

Emerging from the bench late on, the Switzerland international was not on the pitch long enough to influence things.

Sydney Lohmann (N/A):

Like Iman Beney, she didn't receive enough minutes in order to star.

Andree Jeglertz (8/10):

In what felt like a key moment in the game, considering Villa were spirited in the opening 45 minutes, the manager got his half-time team talk spot on as City were ruthless in the second half.

مدرب منتخب مصر: حمزة عبد الكريم أفضل من ثنائي الأهلي.. ويوضح تفاصيل عرض برشلونة

يرى أحمد فوزي، مدرب حراس منتخب مصر 2008، أن حمزة عبد الكريم اللاعب الناشئ يعد أفضل من ثنائي الفريق الأول للنادي الأهلي.

وقال فوزي خلال تصريحات عبر قناة “الكلاسيكو” المذاع على قناة “أون”: “حمزة عبد الكريم عقليته عقلية لاعب كبير، ينام بدري ويصحى بدري ويتبع نظام حياة مختلف”.

وأضاف: “أتمنى من النادي الأهلي أن يعطي لحمزة عبد الكريم فرصة، فهو لاعب كويس جدًا وهو من أبنائي”.

طالع | مدرب منتخب مصر يكشف حقيقة رغبة برشلونة في ضم لاعب الأهلي

وتابع: “وجهة نظري أن حمزة عبد الكريم أفضل من ثنائي الأهلي جراديشار ومحمد شريف”.

وأكمل: “قبل ماتش سويسرا في كأس العالم بقطر للناشئين، كان هناك مندوب من برشلونة ومعه تفويض رسمي وطلب أن يقابل حمزة، وكابتن محمد إبراهيم مدرب المنتخب تواصل معه”.

وأردف: “كان يوجد عرض آخر للاعب الإسماعيلي إبراهيم النجعاوي، من نادي في سويسرا بـ 600 ألف يورو تقريبًا، لكن النادي الإسماعيلي رفض ولم يعجبه الرقم، وتقريبًا الإسماعيلي كان يطلب مليون يورو، وهذه الأرقام ليست موجودة بالخارج لهذه الأعمار الصغيرة”.

واستطرد: “الكابتن إكرامي الشحات لا يُقارن، من رأيي في الملعب والتمرين لا يُقارن بأحد، وهناك حسين السيد من أفضل ثلاثة حراس في تاريخ الزمالك، وعلى قصر قامته كان ارتقاءه أفضل بكثير من الحراس”.

وزاد: “عبد الواحد السيد أفضل من محمد عواد، عبد الواحد السيد موهوب أكثر، وأرى أن محمد عواد لا يجب رحيله عن الزمالك، فنيًا أرى أن الزمالك يحتاجه، والمهدي سليمان ظلم نفسه بوجوده مع نادي الزمالك لأنه كان رقم واحد في الاتحاد السكندري”.

وأتم: “محمد الشناوي أفضل من أبو جبل، وأبو جبل لما وقع لم يتحمل الضغط، ومحمد عبد المنصف ظلم كثيرًا، كان متواجدا في فترة صعبة جدًا في نادي الزمالك”.

Rock and Roll It Podcast: The fun of watching Rohit and Kohli bat

The crew get together to analyse the recently concluded ODI series between Australia and India

ESPNcricinfo staff26-Oct-20252:03

Chopra: Kohli and Rohit keep adding confidence

Dustin Silgardo, Sidharth Monga and Karthik Krishnaswamy get together to share their joy at watching Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli at their best in Sydney against Australia and the emergence of Harshit Rana and Washington Sundar as all-round options in white-ball cricket.

الدوري الإنجليزي يوافق على قانونين مهمين.. ومعارضة ضد ثالث

وافقت أندية الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، أليوم الجمعة، على تطبيق حد الرواتب وقانون الاستدامة قصيرة وطويلة الأجل، وذلك بدءًا من موسم 2026-2027، لكنها رفضت حد الإنفاق، حسب بيان رسمي اليوم.

وأوضحت الرابطة أن حد الرواتب يعني أن الفرق لا يمكنها إنفاق أكثر من 85% من إيراداتها على الرواتب ورسوم الوكلاء، بينما يقيس قانون الاستدامة والمرونة قدرة الأندية على الوفاء بالتزاماتها المالية قصيرة وطويلة الأجل.

وأشارت إلى إنه في ضوء ذلك، لم يحظ حد الإنفاق بدعم كاف لإقراره، وكان سيقيد إنفاق الأندية بخمسة أضعاف ما يكسبه الفريق صاحب المركز الأخير من حقوق البث التلفزيوني وجوائز مالية على فرقه.

وأفادت أنه بناءً على موسم 2023-2024 (آخر موسم تتوفر عنه أرقام دقيقة)، كان هذا يعني أن الأندية لا يمكنها إنفاق سوى 550 مليون جنيه إسترليني (630 مليون يورو).

اقرأ أيضًا | إعلان موعد انطلاق الدوري الإنجليزي 2026/27.. وتأثير كأس العالم

وأكدت الرابطة في بيانها: “يهدف الحد الأقصى الجديد للرواتب إلى تعزيز تكافؤ الفرص للأندية الطموحة، ويقرب النظام المالي للدوري الإنجليزي من الحد الأقصى الحالي للرواتب في الاتحاد الأوروبي لكرة القدم، والذي يعمل بنسبة 70%”.

وحظى قانوني حد الرواتب وقانون الاستدامة قصيرة وطويلة الأجل بدعم إجماعي من الأندية، ولكن لم يحظ حد الإنفاق إلا على 7 أصوات مؤيدة، في حين هناك ضرورة إلى الحصول على 14 صوت من الأندية من أصل 20.

وعلى الرغم من أن تحديث لوائح الإنفاق الحالية ضروري لنمو الدوري، إلا أن العديد من الجهات المرتبطة بالدوري الإنجليزي هددت بالفعل باتخاذ إجراءات قانونية في حال تطبيق هذه الإجراءات.

وأكدت رابطة لاعبي كرة القدم المحترفين قبل أيام أنها ستلجأ إلى القضاء في حال لم يأخذ الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز بعين الاعتبار آراء اللاعبين عند تحديد أرباحهم المحتملة.

Rice thinks he's "unreal": West Ham have dream Kilman replacement out on loan

West Ham United look to be in absolute free fall at the moment.

Not even the new appointment of Nuno Espirito Santo has been able to stop the Premier League losses from piling up in East London, with the forlorn Hammers at least thankful to Wolverhampton Wanderers for picking up no wins to keep them off the very foot of the division.

Still, West Ham only have the one dire win from nine league matches themselves, as the ex-Nottingham Forest boss grows increasingly concerned that he is steering the ship straight down to the Championship.

Max Kilman has received plenty of pelters in recent weeks for his disastrous performances at the back, with the £40m recruit looking anything but a stable presence defensively in the daunting Premier League.

Kilman's woes at West Ham this season

With Kilman in the heart of defence this season, West Ham have leaked a shambolic 20 goals already in league action, which is the worst defensive record in the entire division.

He isn’t helped by his regular partner being Jean-Clair Todibo, who has just one clean sheet in claret and blue from 30 Premier League appearances, but the ex-Wolverhampton Wanderers man is very much on borrowed time when focussing in on the number 3’s woes, having been descrobed as “shocking” by one West Ham content creator during the 2-0 loss to Brentford last month.

Igor Thiago for the Bees completely bullied the weak 28-year-old all night long, with Kilman’s feebleness in the air, and when going in for duels one major concern. Indeed, he won only two of his eight duels against Keith Andrews’ visitors.

He did improve on this weak area against Leeds United last time out, with 100% of his aerial duels successfully won, but he still isn’t in the West Ham fans’ good books off the back of a debut season in East London that saw him collect just six clean sheets from 38 league outings.

His ex-Old Gold manager in Gary O’Neil has even opened up to state that one of Kilman’s biggest problems is his frustrating nature to “switch off” during games, with Nuno now potentially wanting to get rid having seen how shoddy the 6 foot 4 defender has been already during the early stages of his West Ham managerial career.

Thankfully, in the long term, West Ham could already have an in-house replacement for the £40m flop.

West Ham's "unreal" Kilman replacement

Nuno could look towards the next generation emerging up the ranks at West Ham to try and breathe life back into his side’s disastrous season, with Freddie Potts one face who could be deserving of a senior shot soon.

Alongside Potts, Kaelan Casey also looks ready for some first-team action imminently, having already been labelled as an “outstanding” asset to have at Swansea City by his short-term boss Alan Sheehan, after not looking fazed by the challenge of Manchester City in the EFL Cup.

Casey vs Man City

Stat

Casey

Minutes played

90

Interceptions

0

Clearances

14

Blocked shots

2

Recoveries

3

Total duels won

5/5

Total tackles won

2/2

Last man tackles

1

Stats by Sofascore

Looking at his numbers above, Sheehan was right to shower the 21-year-old with praise, with Swansea in danger of being on the receiving end of a drubbing without Casey stepping up to the mark, as seen by the number 26 registering a mammoth 14 clearances all across the 3-1 defeat, on top of winning every single duel and tackle that came his way.

With a full EFL season soon to be under his belt, it’s clear that Casey could soon be fast-tracked to the first team picture back at the London Stadium, having already lined up for three senior games for his boyhood employers.

He also has 106 games next to his name for the Hammers U18s and U21s, with Declan Rice once even labelling Casey as an “unreal” talent off the back of him scoring 11 goals as a dependable defensive figure in youth football.

Kilman will know that he’s on borrowed time in East London, and if Casey returns with even more impressive showings to boast about – like his imperious night against City – he will soon surely be demoted down the pecking order for the 21-year-old to shine.

How Jarrod Bowen really feels about leaving West Ham after £53m Tottenham claim

The England winger is reportedly attracting interest from north London.

ByEmilio Galantini Oct 31, 2025

Ratcliffe now makes Man Utd enquiry to sign "world-class" Champions League winner

Manchester United have made an enquiry about the signing of a “world-class” player with six league titles and a Champions League win to his name.

Sesko promises more to come at Man Utd

The Red Devils secured a vital 2-0 win at home to Sunderland in the Premier League on Saturday, easing some of the pressure on Ruben Amorim in the process.

It was a good day for Benjamin Sesko, who scored his first Old Trafford goal, and speaking after the game, he said there is hopefully much more to come from him at United.

“It feels amazing. It feels even better because I’ve helped the team to come to the end and to win the game. In the end, it’s important to win the game, trying to help the team as much as possible. The goal, the atmosphere afterwards was unbelievable. It’s something that I’ve been dreaming about, jumping high at the stadium like that, and yeah – [my] dreams came true.

“In the end, this is my job; trying to score as many goals as possible, trying to win the games, trying to help the team in every single situation, and hopefully [there are] more moments like this [to come].”

United’s win was a much-needed boost for anyone linked with the club, but that’s not to say that new signings aren’t needed, with one world-renowned player now mentioned as a potential target.

Man Utd make enquiry for "world-class" ace

According to Sport in Spain, Manchester United and Sir Jim Ratcliffe have enquired about signing Barcelona goalkeeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen, with Premier League rivals Newcastle United and Tottenham also in the mix to sign him.

The 33-year-old German is out of favour under Hansi Flick, meaning a move elsewhere is likely, with a loan option to buy possible in the January transfer window.

FC Barcelona's Marc-AndreterStegenlifts the trophy with teammates afterwinning LaLiga

Ter Stegen has arguably been one of the leading ‘keepers of his generation, winning six La Liga titles and one Champions League crown during his time with Barca, also being lauded by Germany manager Julian Nagelsmann.

“We have made the decision (Neuer will start in goal). Unfortunately Manu got injured but it’s just a strain and he will only be out for ten days, so I won’t be changing my decision. I also said in a conversation with Marc [Andre Ter Stegen] that I’m happy that we have two world class goalkeepers. I explained to him that it was important that he was there for the two games.”

Ter Stegen’s key trophy wins

Season

Champions League

2014/15

La Liga

2014/15

La Liga

2015/16

La Liga

2016/17

La Liga

2017/18

La Liga

2020/21

La Liga

2024/25

Admittedly, Senne Lammens produced an encouraging performance for United against Sunderland, not least keeping a clean sheet, but if the chance of signing a player of Ter Stegen’s calibre arrives, the Red Devils should take it.

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Bracey, Akther emerge from Glamorgan's stranglehold

Seventh wicket stand of 96 keeps honours even after Mason Crane takes three on opening day

ECB Reporters Network29-Jun-2025Gloucestershire 279 for 7 (Akhter 58, Bracey 57*, Crane 3-55) vs Glamorgan A seventh wicket stand of 96 between James Bracey and Zaman Akhter gives Gloucestershire hope at the end of a hard-fought and fluctuating opening day in the Rothesay County Championship Division Two clash with Glamorgan at Sophia Gardens.Glamorgan looked to have taken complete control of proceedings shortly after tea with leg-spinner Mason Crane (3 for 55) ripping through the visitors’ middle-order but Gloucestershire’s early evening counterpunch ensures that at 279 for 7 they have a foothold in this absorbing contest.Having asked the visitors to bat beneath cloudy skies Glamorgan’s seamers failed to threaten in the early exchanges as Gloucestershire’s openers, Cameron Bancroft and Joe Phillips, serenely progressed to a half-century partnership midway through the morning session. It was a masterclass in low-risk batting, the pair expertly rotating the strike and simply waiting for the bad balls to arrive before duly dispatching them to the boundary.With the Glamorgan quicks struggling to create chances and sustain pressure, Sam Northeast, turned to Ben Kellaway’s spin after just 25 overs of the morning session, a decision which soon paid dividends. With his ninth delivery, Kellaway removed Phillips for 38, the Gloucestershire man’s leg-glance superbly caught by Chris Cooke’s behind the stumps to give Glamorgan their first breakthrough with the score on 77.Buoyed by that success, leg-spinner Mason Crane was introduced to work in tandem with Kellaway and found some instant grip and turn. However, Bancroft and Oli Price stood firm to guide the visitors to lunch on 90 for 1, with Bancroft having progressed to an unbeaten 45. A satisfying morning’s work having been asked to bat.The former Australia Test-star looked in ominous form and when he steered Timm van der Gugten to the third-man fence shortly after lunch he brought up his fifth consecutive County Championship score of 50 or more. At that stage, you could have forgiven Glamorgan for fearing the worst, in his last two red-ball innings against the Welsh county, Bancroft had registered 184 and 163 and came into the match off the back of scoring 58 and 176 in Gloucestershire’s thrilling draw with Derbyshire last week.Therefore, the relief among the home players and supporters was almost palpable when van der Gugten trapped the shuffling Bancroft LBW in his next over without any further damage inflicted, the Gloucestershire skipper departing for exactly 50 to leave the visitors on 97 for 2.Miles Hammond joined Ollie Price and put on 43 for the third wicket, but both men struggled for rhythm and fluency, particularly against the accuracy of Crane, and when left-hander Hammond prodded at a googly, he could only guide it straight into the hands of Kiran Carlson at first slip.It was the first of three wickets to fall for just 8 runs, Crane picking up Graeme van Buuren caught behind for 4, before Price’s stodgy stay came to an end with a mistimed pull shot off James Harris which picked out Carlson at mid-wicket. It rather summed up Price’s struggles, his 24 runs coming off 93 deliveries and the visitors were suddenly at a rather precarious looking 148 for 5. By tea, they had limped to 156 for 5 – the afternoon session had yielded just 66 runs in 32 overs for the loss of 4 wickets.It appeared Glamorgan’s stranglehold would continue when Crane picked up the wicket of Ben Charlesworth shortly after tea. The tall left-hander pinned LBW for 16 by a sharp turning leg-break and with Gloucestershire having slipped to 179 for 6, Glamorgan were now firmly in the box seat.However, the ever-dependable Bracey and Akhter had other ideas, launching an early evening counter-attack which added 96 runs in 24 overs. Akhter the chief aggressor, blazing 58 from just 67 balls with 10 fours before falling LBW to van der Gugten (2 for 45) in the penultimate over of the day. Bracey remains unbeaten on 57 and will hope he can find some more willing allies tomorrow and push Gloucestershire’s first innings total towards 300 and beyond.

As bad as Barnes: Newcastle must drop ace who lost the ball every 4 touches

It’s been an up-and-down start to the year for Newcastle United, and they suffered more adversity on their first Champions League appearance of the season when welcoming Barcelona to St. James’ Park.

Newcastle’s European campaign began with defeat. Marcus Rashford was at the double, scoring two spectacular strikes after a closely-contested opening half that will have left Eddie Howe rueing missed chances.

The manager made the bold decision to leave Nick Woltemade out of the starting line-up after the 23-year-old scored a debut winner against Wolves last weekend. Anthony Gordon deputised in his place.

It might have proved a shrewd call but for some shoddy finishing, with Harvey Barnes culpable of that and more on Tyneside.

Harvey Barnes let Howe down vs Barcelona

With Gordon up top, Barnes reprised his role on the left flank. It’s not been the finest start to the season for the 27-year-old, who has gone five games across the Premier League and Europe without registering a goal involvement.

And against the slick and stylish La Blaugrana, he toiled, not only missing a good chance to score but failing with every one of his crosses and not even attempting to win a duel, statistics courtesy of Sofascore.

Jules Kounde whipped in a neat delivery for the Three Lions star, who powered home with a header from around 12 yards out. Barnes should have closed down the French defender, who had space and time to find his target.

Woltemade will expect to start against Bournemouth in the Premier League on Sunday, and Barnes will be sweating over his starting berth, with the goalscoring Gordon sure to be eyeing up a return to his natural position out on the flank.

However, Barnes wasn’t the only one who flattered to deceive, with Joelinton failing to pack a punch in the engine room.

Why Joelinton must be dropped

At times, it can seem inconceivable that Joelinton should be dropped from Newcastle’s starting line-up, so powerful and influential is the South American in the centre of the park.

But it doesn’t always work, and he was reduced in stature against silky opposition.

Chronicle Live weren’t too unforgiving in their post-match assessment, handing the Brazilian a 6/10 rating, but they did acknowledge he lacked his usual bite and brutish efficiency against a well-oiled and cohesive La Blaugrana midfield.

However, such analysis was perhaps generous. Joelinton left plenty to be desired against the Spaniards.

Joelinton lost the ball seven times, having taken 27 touches across his hour on the field. That equates to marginally under a concession of the ball every four touches, which is hardly the sharp and composed midfield play needed against a team such as Hansi Flick’s Barcelona.

After picking up a yellow card in the first half, Joelinton walked a tightrope, and it showed. He only won three of his six contested ground duels and made just one tackle all evening.

All told, it hasn’t been a fantastic start to the season for the hulking midfield presence, though he did catch the eye against Wolves last weekend and now Howe will expect him to return to form.

Minutes played

62′

Goals

0

Assists

0

Touches

27

Shots (on target)

1 (0)

Accurate passes

13/19 (68%)

Key passes

0

Dribbles

0/0

Tackles

1

Clearances

2

Duels won

5/8

With more technically dynamic options such as Joe Willock and Lewis Miley waiting in the wings, perhaps it would be a good idea to place the 29-year-old on the bench against the Cherries, allowing Howe to freshen things up and ensure his midfield does not become too rigid and predictable in its patterns.

Joelinton is a crucial part of this team, but this is a team of many parts, and players are ready to step up and add different dimensions when the need arises.

In this sense, there’s substance to both Barnes and Joelinton stepping to the dugout ahead of the weekend.

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