Fulham loanee hoping for Tottenham return

On loan Fulham ace Lewis Holtby says that he is keen to return to Tottenham and battle for his future at the end of the season.

The German international left White Hart Lane to become a part of the Cottagers’ relegation scrap in January, and has been impressive under the guidance of Felix Magath – despite the club’s lowly position.

Holtby has struggled to establish himself at Spurs under Andre Villas-Boas and Tim Sherwood, and with a number of signings expected this summer, there has been talk of a permanent move away from north London.

But the versatile midfielder says that for now he is focusing on helping his current side avoid the drop, but that he is hoping to return to Tottenham to battle for first-team action:

“There is little sense in talking about other clubs since I have a long-term contract at Tottenham,” he told Goal.

“The status quo is that I will go back to Spurs after the summer holidays. I can’t tell you what is going to happen until then. My agent takes care of everything and as far as I know his mobile is always turned on.

“I loved playing for Tottenham and I would like to fulfil my contract there. But at first it is important to avoid relegation with Fulham.

It is rumoured that Louis van Gaal will replace Sherwood in the White Hart Lane dugout this summer, and Holtby says he is an admirer of the Dutchman:

“Louis van Gaal is an exceptional coach, you can’t deny that.

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“He led big teams to big success. I don’t know whether he will be the new coach and of course it is not for me to decide.”

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Sunderland ace snubbed on International stage

It appears that Sunderland Winger James McClean was overlooked for the Republic of Ireland’s latest World Cup 2014 Qualifiers.

In their first outing last Friday they suffered an embarrassing 6-1 defeat at the hands of Germany, and this lead to calls to include the Sunderland ace in their next fixture against the Faroe Islands.

However, the manager Giovanni Trapattoni had other ideas and decided that he did not need to call upon the midfielder for the 4-1 victory.

The player has been heavily watched by the Sunderland medical staff whilst on international duty as they want to monitor the situation with his groin injury.

It is believed the 24 year old would have been able to feature on Tuesday night, in Torshavn, but was deemed surplus to requirements.

However, the former Derry City star signed by old boss Steve Bruce is set to appear in the 146th Tyne-Wear derby.

The player will be looking for a chance to shine in this fixture but his international future still looms over him, before the Republic of Ireland squad meet up again.

Martin O’ Neill revealed to the Daily Mail that “’James himself was hoping he might have got a shout for the Republic’s second game but they went with what they had.”

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It is hoped that McClean will be given another chance to show that he is worthy of wearing the Ireland shirt and replicating his club form, for his country. The Black Cats are not worried about risking the midfielder though against their fierce rivals Newcastle on Sunday.

Sunderland fans bash club over Pickford mess up

Sunderland fans have found another reason to bash their previous ownership, after reports suggested the Black Cats won’t get a penny if Jordan Pickford makes a huge move this summer.

According to reports, both Manchester United and Bayern Munich are targeting Pickford, but Sunderland will not receive a portion of the deal, as they did not agree a sell-on clause when they sold him to Everton.

The young stopper swapped Wearside for Merseyside last summer, after an incredible season earned him a nomination for the PFA Young Player of the Year award.

Despite grabbing an initial fee of £25million in the deal though, it seems the Black Cats made a big mistake by not demanding a portion of any future sale.

[brid autoplay=”true” video=”256266″ player=”12034″ title=”Watch Three reasons we love to hate… Spain”]

The report claims Munich are eyeing the young Englishman as Manuel Neuer’s successor, and Manchester United could turn to him if David De Gea joins Real Madrid.

The previous ownership a the Stadium of Light took plenty of deserved criticism, and fans are bashing them again for not including a sell-on clause.

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It’s safe to say the club could do with some extra funds right now, and you can find some of the best Twitter reactions down below…

Man United fans believe Arsenal will beat Tottenham in latest North London derby

Tottenham Hotspur host Arsenal in the latest episode of the North London derby at Wembley on Saturday, and Manchester United fans have made some surprise predictions ahead of the clash that will shock Gunners fans.

Fifth-placed Spurs welcome their sixth-placed local rivals to their temporary home knowing that a draw will be enough to take them into the Champions League spots – at least until Chelsea face West Bromwich Albion on Monday night.

However, a win would extend their advantage over Arsene Wenger’s men to seven points, and considering Arsenal have only won three of their 13 Premier League matches on their travels this season that certainly wouldn’t be a surprise result.

Despite that, Man United supporters all seem to have confidence in Wenger and his side – perhaps buoyed by the fact they now have Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang in their ranks – and believe they will pick up the three points.

While one said “Arsenal will win”, another said “I think Arsenal will win”.

Here is just a selection of the Twitter reaction…

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Arsenal star confident of Champions League shock

Arsenal midfielder Mathieu Flamini believes that his side can pull off one of the shocks of the season by beating Bayern Munich over two legs in their imminent Champions League clash.

The Gunners are set to face the defending continental champions in the first of their double header with them this week, with few predicting that they can beat the German giants.

Arsenal were knocked out by Bayern last season on away goals at the same stage of the tournament, yet a new look Bundesliga side awaits them this term.

Bayern are now coached by Pep Guardiola and have been playing some of the very best football in Europe this season with a star-studded squad.

Arsenal meanwhile have been stuttering of late, with poor results having seen them slip from the summit of the Premier League.

But Flamini says that the Londoners are “ambitious” and are confident of knocking out their illustrious opponents:

“We know it won’t be an easy game because Bayern are a very strong team, but we are Arsenal, we have big ambitions,” he told the London Evening Standard.

“If we want to qualify, we have to get a good result against Bayern.

“What I will say about this season is that I see a great commitment, I see everyone working very hard on the pitch and helping each other.

“This year, Arsenal have a lot of ambition and are fighting for the league title. We have qualified in the FA Cup and we will do everything to qualify in the Champions League.

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“We know it will be a difficult game and now it is important to recover very well because we had so many games. Today, we will start thinking about Bayern.”

Click below to find out how mini can be mighty!

Injured Arsenal duo out of Norwich clash

Arsène Wenger has said that both Theo Walcott and Kieran Gibbs will not be able to play in Saturday’s game against Norwich.

Arsenal’s official website has reported on an update from Arsene Wenger on the current state of the team’s injured players, and some of the Gunners’ key players are still a way from returning.

Wenger confirmed reports Walcott will not play on Saturday saying: “Theo is out for Saturday, for sure. He has an injury to his chest and lungs. We have to treat that clinically. He’s quickly short of breath when he makes an effort but that is bruising and that will heal. It’s no major concern but it will take we think about two weeks to be back to a normal level.” Walcott suffered the chest injury when he was clobbered by San Marino’s goalkeeper in England’s World Cup qualifier last week.

Wenger also confirmed that Gibbs will not play on Saturday, after coming off the pitch when playing against West Ham due to a thigh issue. However, he may take part in Wednesday’s Champions League game against Schalke. Wenger says: “He’s not healed yet. He has a little chance to be ready for Wednesday and a bigger chance for QPR.”

However, things are not looking so good for other Arsenal stars. Wenger said that goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski was visiting a specialist yesterday about his ruptured ankle ligaments. He also thinks that first choice goalkeeper Wojiech Szczesny is still two weeks from returning, while he says that other injured stars Tomas Rosicky and Abou Diaby will not return for another few weeks.

Arsenal’s fixture against Norwich kicks off at 17:30 at Carrow Road.

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Jack Leaning hundred, Ben Compton grit give Kent a glimmer

Hampshire chip away in pursuit of victory after enforcing follow-on

ECB Reporters Network02-Jul-2024Jack Leaning and Ben Compton gave Kent a chance of saving a Vitality County Championship draw against Hampshire.Leaning led the resolve in the first innings by returning from injury to score 118, before Compton bedded in with 71 not out in the second innings.But their determination came with a backdrop of a 162-run first innings deficit, meaning Hampshire forced them to follow-on, and just eight wickets in hand heading into the final day.The duo ended the day with a 84 unbroken partnership with Kent up to 132 for 2, with the deficit down to just 30 runs.After James Vince’s swashbuckling 211 on day one, and a fast-paced day two, the third day never progressed from sedate. Leaning returned on 73, having guided the visitors around an unconvincing evening session which saw them end up six down and trailing by 299 runs.He survived Vince dropping him at first slip on 84 but was otherwise restrained and oozed leadership in his fightback while marshalling the tail.Leaning had missed the last seven weeks with a broken hand, which he suffered during the drawn match with Worcestershire in May.In that innings he had scored an unbeaten 179 and he made it back-to-back hundreds in 207 balls, the 10th of his career, sixth since joining Kent and second in his last three visits at Utilita Bowl.Around Leaning, two wickets fell on either side of the second new ball.Charlie Stobo’s sensible 28 was ended two overs before the new ball was unveiled when James Fuller pinned him leg before. And then four balls into the new cherry, Grant Stewart was rapped on the pads by Mohammed Abbas.But Matt Parkinson took more time out of the game with Leaning, and minimised the deficit with a no-thrills 24. The pair put on 44 to frustrate the hosts.But Leaning’s majestic innings was ended when Kyle Abbott splayed his stumps and Kent were bowled out for 343 when Parkinson fended Keith Barker to first slip – Barker ending with 4 for 85.The last four Kent wickets put on 137 to almost avoid the follow-on, but despite their efforts Vince was able to turn them back around.Feroze Khushi was more restrained than during his thrilling first-innings 53, but fell for a short-ball trap to top edge Barker to long leg.Daniel Bell-Drummond lasted slightly longer before Liam Dawson extracted enough turn to cannon into off-stump. But Compton found company with that man Leaning to take any sting out of the day.Opener Compton reached fifty in 114 balls with a reverse sweep.Leaning was dropped by Vince for the second time in the day but was otherwise solid to all but wipe out the deficit.Hampshire will need eight wickets and likely a bit of a chase on the final day, and might be without Barker – who pulled up during a delivery midway through the evening and didn’t return.

Chapman 104*, Neesham 45* off 25 stun Pakistan to make it 2-2

Magnificently clean hitting and a century stand between the New Zealand duo staged a remarkable comeback against the hosts

Danyal Rasool24-Apr-2023Mark Chapman had been threatening to do this all series, and with the stakes at their highest, he went out and did it. A breathtaking display of magnificently clean hitting against some of the best bowlers in T20 cricket saw the 28-year-old score an unbeaten 57-ball 104, chasing down 194 to mount a comeback for the ages to stun Pakistan. It is the second-highest total ever chased against Pakistan in T20s, and also means New Zealand finish the series level despite trailing 2-0 after two games. It is also New Zealand’s 100th T20I win, one that will take pride of place in New Zealand T20 folklore.Few would have given them hope of achieving this when they rocked up in Pakistan from halfway across the world and had just one practice session under their belt when the series began. The task was made even stiffer by the depleted nature of their side, with eight first-team players missing owing to IPL duty. Even on the day, victory looked particularly improbable when Imad Wasim struck to remove Daryl Mitchell, leaving New Zealand tottering at 73 for 4 at the halfway mark.

Chapman and Neesham turn tables

But Pakistan hadn’t yet accounted for Chapman, and in a series he finished with 290 runs having been dismissed just once, that made the world of difference. He smashed Faheem Ashraf for 14 in the 11th over to fire a shot against Pakistan’s bow, warning them the game – and series – wasn’t done yet. It was a warning they would have done well to heed, but were rendered powerless against Chapman’s onslaught. With James Neesham’s unbeaten 45 off 25 a more-than-able supporting act, Chapman took apart each Pakistan bowler, quick and slow, right-arm and left-arm.The next five overs saw 71 runs scored, and New Zealand had turned the contest on its head. By now, Chapman was nearing his hundred, but continued to attack. There was some luck against Shaheen Shah Afridi; Shadab Khan dropped an easy catch before Afridi dropped him off his own bowling on 98. That sloppiness allowed him to race back for two, and complete the 100 he so richly deserved.By now, it was a run-a-ball equation for the last two overs, and for Chapman in this form, it was a cakewalk. A little nudge into the on side sealed the deal with four balls to go, giving Pakistan a reality check – and a bloody nose – before the five-match ODI series begins later this week.Mark Chapman and James Neesham stunned Pakistan with their century stand•Associated Press

The triple-strike

Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan might have got Pakistan off to a great start, but much like New Zealand have done in almost every match this series, the bowlers hit back strongly once more. An off-colour Babar was the first to fall, in the final over of the powerplay, as he miscued an on-side slog. Mohammad Haris came in with two balls left of the powerplay and was eager to make up for lost time, only to misread an offcutter from Blair Tickner and attempt to lap over short fine leg off his first delivery. Ish Sodhi took a comfortable catch before coming on and dispatching of Saim Ayub with a wrong’un for another duck. Pakistan had suddenly lost three wickets for one run in five balls, and a good Pakistani start had been laid to waste.

Rizwan’s 98* – and Pakistan’s weird slowdown

It’s perhaps churlish to nitpick a T20 hundred, but there’s no way to avoid it. Rizwan has been a run machine for Pakistan in T20Is since 2021, as well as one of their most potent matchwinners over the years. Despite a relatively lean run by his high standards, he began with the truculence befitting the format, hurtling along even as Babar struggled and wickets tumbled at the other end. He provided the start, he held the innings through the middle, and arguably merited the century at the end.But T20 centurions are like presidents – if you really want to be one – you probably don’t deserve it. Had Pakistan continued to attack the death overs like any side maximising their run-scoring potential should, Rizwan’s hundred might have come organically. Instead, he opted for relative caution, and the final few balls were almost wholly geared towards getting Rizwan those final few runs rather than giving Pakistan every extra run they could scrape.Imad was run out trying to scrape a bye, even though he was the batter in better striking form, and because that didn’t get Rizwan on strike, Faheem Ashraf took just the single rather than the two that was on off the penultimate ball. Rizwan didn’t get to three figures anyway, but that had more to do with him scoring just one boundary off his final 13 balls.Chapman, by contrast, barely seemed to register what score he was on when batting on 98. Afridi had just one ball left, and could have been milked for a single or seen off. Yet, the batter tried a high-risk jab into the on side only to see the ball fly straight up. The century didn’t matter, and yet Chapman got it – and his side the win – anyway.

Shaheen Afridi’s first over

Ahh, how we’ve missed this. Afridi didn’t have a first-over wicket to his name all series, but on Monday in Rawalpindi, it was as if that most captivating ability had never been away. It began with a first-ball wicket – not quite the inswinger tearing through a right-hand batter’s defences, but one that moved away from left-hand batter Tom Latham, who spliced it tamely to Shadab at point. A few testing inswinging deliveries to Will Young set him for the one that angled away, kissing the outside edge and carrying through to Rizwan. New Zealand were two down in an over, and Afridi was back, but only to see a remarkable comeback from New Zealand’s Nos. 5 and 6.

Can Afghanistan's spinners upset heavyweights England?

England’s swashbuckling batting line-up makes them firm favourites as Afghanistan look to reach their first ICC final

Sreshth Shah31-Jan-2022

Big Picture

The first semi-final of the 2022 Under-19 World Cup will feature two teams, who in many ways, play just like their senior sides do. England are the side that bat aggressively, while Afghanistan have tied a web around other teams with their spinners.However, both teams have had largely different paths to the semi-final. England reached the West Indies early. They played the warm-ups, beat Bangladesh in their competition opener, and have not looked back since.Afghanistan, on the other hand, had a late arrival to the tournament, forcing them to miss both warm-up games entering the event. They lost to Pakistan, finished second in their group, and barely went over the line in the quarters.Related

  • Afghanistan defend 134 against Sri Lanka to reach semis

  • Bethell's 88, Ahmed's four-for lift England to semi-finals

Therefore, the two sides are in wildly different headspaces. England have been dominant. They rolled Bangladesh over for 97, made 320 and 362 against Canada and UAE, and chased a target against South Africa inside 32 overs.Afghanistan, though, have been tested, more than once. Against Pakistan, they could not go over the line, but they defended 200 against a talented Zimbabwe side. Lessons from both those games came to use against Sri Lanka in the first knockout game, where they successfully defended 134. That Sri Lanka game gave Afghanistan the sinking feeling of how being eliminated may feel, but most importantly, provided the redemption arc that gives them the belief that they can crawl out of any situation on the field.As expected, Afghanistan are reliant on their spinners, led by left-arm wristspinner Noor Ahmad, playing his second tournament and also in the radar for the upcoming IPL auction. Izharulhaq Naveed provides legspin, and together the two have taken 15 wickets. Throw in left-arm spinner Nangeyalia Kharote’s seven wickets, and Afghanistan have a formidable 30 overs of spin to test England.But standing in their way is England’s swashbuckling batting line-up. Their captain Tom Prest has smacked the second-highest score of the competition. Barbados-born Jacob Bethell scored an outrageous 44-ball 82 in the quarter-final against South Africa. And William Luxton, from the middle order, averages 70+ at a strike-rate of almost 120. If England’s batting plays out 50 overs, they will be favourites to take the win.That’s because Afghanistan’s batting is frail. Papua New Guinea bowled them out for 200, and the Sri Lanka game showed that playing quick seamers isn’t a strength either. And England have plenty of challenging bowlers, with left-arm quick Joshua Boyden leading the way with his 12 wickets, followed by legspinner Rehan Ahmed who have both produced match-winning spells.

Form guide

England WWWWW (most recent first)
England WWLWLAfghanistan players celebrate their win against Sri Lanka in the quarters•ICC via Getty Images

In the spotlight

Can the captain Tom Prest produce the same form that he showed against Canada and UAE? The 154* and 93 against the two non-Test playing countries showed that he is a notch above bowlers from those teams. He has used his feet to the spinners and comfortably played off the back foot against seamers who aren’t extremely quick. But the Afghan spinners will provide a whole different challenge.Suliman Safi is the lone Afghanistan batter who has put on any substantial score. The captain made 62 against PNG and 111 against Zimbabwe, but against Pakistan and Sri Lanka, he couldn’t produce a significant innings. Afghanistan, so far, seem to build their innings around him, and he is the lynchpin who could decide what score the team finally posts.

Team news

No injury news in either team, and both are expected to field their strongest XIs. If the pitch shows cracks, England could throw in spinning allrounder Fateh Singh into the mix.England (possible): 1 George Thomas, 2 Jacob Bethell, 3 Tom Prest (capt), 4 James Rew, 5 William Luxton, 6 George Bell, 7, Rehan Ahmed, 8 Alex Horton (wk), 9 Thomas Aspinwall, 10 James Sales, 11 Joshua BoydenAfghanistan (possible): 1 Bilal Sayedi, 2 Nangeyalia Kharote, 3 Allah Noor, 4 Suliman Safi (capt), 5 Ijaz Ahmad Ahmadzai, 6 Abdul Hadi, 7 Mohammad Ishaq (wk), 8 Noor Ahmad, 9 Izharulhaq Naveed, 10 Bilal Sami, 11 Naveed Zadran

Pitch and conditions

The scores have gotten lower as the tournament has moved on, and there’s a bit of rain expected. If the match is washed out, or no result is possible, then England would qualify into the final because of their better group-stage performance.

Stats and trivia

  • The last time England reached an Under-19 World Cup final, they went on to win the whole event. Afghanistan are yet to reach a final in any ICC competition.
  • With 275 runs, Prest is the competition’s second-highest run-scorer.
  • The two squads have never played each other, although they were supposed to in the warm-up game that was cancelled due to Afghanistan’s late arrival.

Alistair Nicholson steps down as Australian Cricketers Association chief executive

Nicholson’s six-year stint included the Newlands ball-tampering scandal and more recently the Covid-19 fallout

Daniel Brettig11-Oct-2020Alistair Nicholson has quit his post as chief executive of the Australian Cricketers Association (ACA) after an eventful tenure that began with the death of Phillip Hughes, rode out a spiteful MoU negotiation with Cricket Australia and the subsequent Newlands scandal, then ended with the game’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic.The ACA was always likely to need to find a new CEO ahead of the next MoU negotiation, due in expire in 2022, and Nicholson is understood to have been pondering his exit late last year before ultimately staying on to navigate issues around Covid-19.The ACA, led by the duo of its chairman Greg Dyer and president Shane Watson, will now seek a new CEO who will take up the job around the same time as CA’s own next permanent chief executive begins next year, after Nicholson’s longtime adversary Kevin Roberts was deposed earlier this year – Nick Hockley is serving as interim.”I’ve been humbled to represent our player group and I’m very proud of what we have been able to achieve in my time at the ACA,” Nicholson said. “I have had to deal with unprecedented issues in the game but always tried to maintain principles of fairness and equity, representing the players as we worked to advance the interests of the game at all times.”I step down with some sadness as I love the ACA and the game but I look forward to watching from afar and taking a break to enjoy a summer of watching cricket after a particularly demanding tenure, including most recently through COVID. The season ahead is now as well planned as possible and I have great confidence in the ACA team to steer through the years ahead.”Pat Cummins, a member of the ACA executive, summed up Nicholson: “Al is trusted by the players. We knew he would always be tough but balanced when representing us and that our stance would be based on good principles. He is welcome back in the changeroom at any time.”Replacing Paul Marsh in 2014 after playing in the AFL for Melbourne and then working for the marketing and commercial firm Gemba, Nicholson arrived at the ACA at a time when its relationship with CA was deteriorating after some years of fruitful collaboration. The next six years were seldom uneventful as he found himself at odds with James Sutherland and his replacement Roberts, who had first served as a combative negotiator for the governing body in the 2016-17 MoU dispute.Nicholson and the ACA, chaired by Dyer, ultimately preserved their fixed percentage share of Australian Cricket Revenue after successfully having Roberts sidelined from compromise discussions, but not until after the vast majority of state and national contracted players went without pay for more than a month. The deal included women as well as men for the first time, while also enhancing a raft of player development and support programs, and giving the players a direct say in how a portion of funding for the game’s grassroots levels is used.Fractures between the players and CA did not aid the environment that was bubbling around the national team and exploded into the Newlands scandal in March 2018, as Steven Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft were all banned for their part in a brazen ball-tampering attempt and subsequent cover-up. As he had done after the death of Hughes, Nicholson stayed close to the players and even called for the CA-imposed sanctions to be reduced.The subsequent review of Australian cricket culture outlined many of the sorts of complaints that the ACA, the state associations and CA’s many other partners had raised either side of the Newlands scandal, and left Nicholson working with an organisation that was in many ways humbled in its subsequent dealings. Nevertheless there were still issues to be debated, not least the harsh ban imposed upon the Hobart Hurricanes’ Emily Smith for a minor integrity infraction last summer.Old wounds left from previous battles between CA and the ACA were then laid bare by Roberts’ proposed response to Covid-19, principally pre-emptive cutbacks to staff, the states and also the players’ share of the season’s revenue. These pressure points ultimately overwhelmed Roberts, leaving the ACA to negotiate something of a “wait and see” compromise with CA.”Under Alistair’s leadership we’ve become much more professional and developed our capability to provide a much-expanded service offering for the benefit of all of our members,” Dyer said. “We’re now positioned to participate strongly in the game’s future as an enormously respected contributor at all levels of Australian cricket.”Alistair has made an incredible personal contribution to these outcomes, working tirelessly through some very difficult moments for the sport. He should be rightly proud of the players’ participation in grassroots programmes, in cricket’s position as the leader in gender equity and in the continuing dividend which the revenue share partnership model delivers.”Nicholson will exit the ACA post by the end of the year, as the board commences its search for his replacement.

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