Mystery pitch adds to intrigue in Guwahati's Test debut

The best India can hope for is to finish with honours even, while world champions South Africa have a chance to make it a second series defeat for India in their last three

Sidharth Monga21-Nov-20252:46

How can India’s batters cope with tricky conditions?

Big picture: Can India save the series?

Back in 2015-16, when the Test contest between India and South Africa was named Freedom Trophy, or alternatively the Mandela-Gandhi Trophy, both sides committed to treat it as a marquee contest. For the first time since 1992-93, they played four Tests in a series. A major part of such a commitment is to avoid the unsatisfactory two-match series. It was good while it lasted. All of four series. This is the second straight two-match series between these two evenly matched rivals.While India are not responsible for shortening of these series, they are at the receiving end of the series’ brevity. Once again, a series win is impossible for them after 2.67 days of cricket. The best they can do now is level it; the worst will mean a second series defeat at home in the last three after 12 years of winning every home series.Related

  • Bavuma and South Africa look to silence every last doubter in Guwahati

  • Rishabh Pant's battle with Simon Harmer could define his first Test as captain

  • What type of pitch will India want in Guwahati?

  • Mystery pitch leaves SA guessing ahead of Guwahati Test

It should come as no surprise that the leaders of the time find themselves under the pump despite all the success in ODIs and T20Is. In fact, it speaks to the health of Test cricket in India that a home defeat, even if it comes against the world champions, draws such sharp reaction.After two fruitless tours of India in the last decade, South Africa would have been glad the depth of their attack was not tested in Kolkata. With Kagiso Rabada missing and Keshav Maharaj off colour, they still managed to take 20 wickets mostly through Simon Harmer and Marco Jansen.With some of the equivocality around their world champions status now dissipated, they will look to find a way once again to take 20 wickets and go away with a series win from the toughest place to tour. India will want to test that depth and make sure their country continues to stay the toughest place to tour, and not get relegated to “formerly the toughest place to tour”.3:30

Botha: New ball should play a role with early start to the Test

Form guide

India LWWWD
South Africa WWLWW

In the spotlight: Ravindra Jadeja and Simon Harmer

The first Test practically came down to a second-innings shootout between the two best spinners in the match. The margin for error was so low that you couldn’t afford even one remotely ordinary spell. Simon Harmer, now as good a spinner as any in the world, took 4 for 21. Ravindra Jadeja, after bowling a near-unplayable spell of 13-3-29-4 on the second evening, went searching a bit on the third morning. This Test will hopefully bring out more aspects of their bowling.2:45

Karim wants India to pick both Sai Sudharsan and Padikkal

Team news: Gill and Rabada ruled out

India will be without their regular captain, Shubman Gill, who faced only three balls in the first Test and retired with a neck injury. With six left-hand batters already in the XI making Harmer an even more potent threat and no reserve right-hand batter in the squad, allrounder Nitish Kumar Reddy might come back in if only for the sake of variety. There are also suggestions that B Sai Sudharsan, who made way for the extra spinner in the last Test, might come back to No. 3. Based on what they did at training a day before the Test, Axar Patel is the spinner likely to miss out. Rishabh Pant will be India’s fourth Test captain in the last 12 months.India (probable): 1 Yashasvi Jaiswal, 2 KL Rahul, 3 B Sai Sudharsan, 4 Dhruv Jurel, 5 Rishabh Pant (capt, wk), 6 Nitish Kumar Reddy, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Washington Sundar, 9 Kuldeep Yadav, 10 Jasprit Bumrah, 11 Mohammed SirajRabada is out of the second Test as well, but South Africa are bolstered by Lungi Ngidi’s return. Expect him to replace Corbin Bosch. The one question South Africa will ponder is if Wiaan Mulder, who didn’t have much to do in the first Test, should make way for a spin allrounder in Senuran Muthusamy or a specialist batter in Dewald Brevis. If that change does happen, Tristan Stubbs might have to move up to No. 3.South Africa (probable): 1 Aiden Markram, 2 Ryan Rickelton, 3 Wiaan Mulder/ Dewald Brevis/ Senuran Muthusamy, 4 Tony de Zorzi, 5 Temba Bavuma (capt.), 6 Tristan Stubbs, 7 Kyle Verreynne (wk), 8 Marco Jansen, 9 Simon Harmer, 10 Keshav Maharaj, 11 Lungi Ngidi2:53

Saba Karim: Pant will be unpredictable as captain

Pitch and conditions

This is a big occasion for Guwahati as it becomes the eastern-most Test venue in India. The inadequacy of one time zone in a country as vast as India is apparent from how this Test will need to start at 9am in order to beat the early sunset. The first session break, at 11am, will be tea; lunch will be taken at 1.20pm.It is hardly ideal that all eyes will be on the pitch of a debutant venue but it is what it is after an underprepared surface in Kolkata undid India. There has been high drama around the pitch with coach Gautam Gambhir saying it had been made to his order only for batting coach Sitanshu Kotak to say that Gambhir actually sacrificed himself to prevent throwing the curator under the bus, in the process throwing said curator under said bus.Both the captains expect this pitch to be good for batting in the early exchanges before starting to turn. Which is exactly what they said before Kolkata, except that now they have added that it should play better than Kolkata. So make of it what you will.

Stats and trivia

  • Kolkata was the first Test and the first toss that South Africa won in India since 2010.
  • Nobody other than Bosch and Muthusamy in the South Africa squad averages over 40 with the bat in Test cricket. None of them averages 50 in first-class cricket overall.
  • Before he took over the Test captaincy, Temba Bavuma averaged 34.53. As captain, he averages 57.

For Nonkululeko Mlaba, cricket was a means to a better life but then she fell in love with it

South Africa’s leading wicket-taker in this World Cup talks about her early years in the game, and why she watches a lot of cricket these days

Firdose Moonda27-Oct-2025Many, if not most, elite sportspeople turn their passion into their profession but occasionally things work the other way. Nonkululeko Mlaba is an example of someone for whom cricket was a job first, and the joy came later.Mlaba grew up in the township of KwaMashu, north-west of Durban, in the province of Kwa-Zulu Natal on South Africa’s east coast. Like many of the areas the apartheid government demarcated for black Africans, KwaMashu was densely populated and severely under-resourced, and residents were deprived of access to good-quality housing, roads or sports facilities. Democracy arrived in 1994, and Mlaba, born in 2000, grew up with a certain level of hardship.As a child, she “didn’t even know there was a sport called cricket”, but once she was introduced to it, she got involved casually. She played at Lindelane Cricket Club in the neighbouring township of Ntuzuma, where she bowled pace until her coach, Sandile Caluza, turned her into a spinner.”I didn’t understand it at first and I was so mad,” Mlaba says, “but I started to enjoy it more because I didn’t have to run to bowl. I could just walk in and bowl.Related

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  • From 69 all out to statement win – South Africa restore World Cup credentials

“But it wasn’t easy. When I first started bowling spin, my fingers were sore. I felt like the webbing was going to split and it was really hard.”In her teens, Mlaba trained at one of Cricket South Africa’s hubs, development facilities established across the country to unearth talent outside the elite schooling system. The one Mlaba was at, the INK hub, which served Inanda, Ntuzuma and KwaMashu, is among the most successful. It was where offspinner Nondumiso Shangase, who is also part of the World Cup squad, and allrounder Andile Simelane, who has played nine T20Is for South Africa’s men’s side, emerged. The hub continues to do its job of talent-spotting, but the more pressing question is what comes next.Mlaba had just completed her schooling when the Kwa-Zulu Natal union expressed an interest in her making the step up to provincial cricket. Though KwaMashu is only 16kms from Kingsmead, the difficulties in using public transport and the dangers of travelling at certain times of the day meant she was unlikely to be able to devote as much time to training as she would have liked. The gap had to close.The board stepped in, and in partnership with corporate sponsors, funded an apartment for Mlaba and Shangase to live in in the upmarket suburb of Musgrave, and also provided them with a monthly stipend. Much closer to Kingsmead, their new base was convenient and secure. It was also a golden ticket to building a career, as they effectively now had jobs. If that hadn’t been offered to her, what else could Mlaba have done?”I don’t know,” she says. “At that phase of my life, there was pressure. I was out of school, I needed to try and get a job, provide for my family. For most people, you study and then you work. Cricket really helped us a lot. It helped us to not really focus on trying to do other things, and money they gave us, we gave to our families to buy groceries. Because you know with black tax…”

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“Black tax” is a term used by South Africans of colour to describe the financial responsibility they have to provide for extended families whose opportunities were limited by the structural inequalities of segregation. “With black tax, you have to help make the family home better than what it was before,” Mlaba says.”Now since we’re playing on TV, you need to make sure that you pay that 1.2 [R1200 or about US$70] for DSTv [Digital Satellite Television, a broadcast service] for your family to be able to watch and support you. As much as you have a future, you still need to think about them as well. You can save but at the same time, if there’s an emergency at home, you’re going to have to take from your savings. It’s just how it works.”Cricket gave Mlaba the opportunity to become a bread-winner. Only then did she really start to enjoy the bread.Not long after making the move to Durban, she was picked for South Africa’s T20I squad on a tour to India in 2019. Shortly after that, she was included in the squad for the 2020 T20 World Cup. South Africa lost narrowly in a rain-affected semi-final to Australia in what was an early indicator of their potential to challenge the best. They didn’t succeed in upsetting the eventual champions but the building blocks of the belief that they could were put in place there.The overall experience had a profound impact on Mlaba, who was 19 then. “I changed after that World Cup,” she says. “I was still young there and I didn’t really know what I was doing. I was just bowling the ball. After that, I started to take my game seriously. I started to work on my skill, I started to work on variations and I actually fell in love with the game.”Mlaba and Shangase: the room-mates who became World Cup team-mates•Alex Davidson/ICC/Getty ImagesIt helped that South Africa did not have another left-arm spinner. Former player and current Under-19 coach Dinesha Devnarain urged Mlaba to fill that gap in the market. “She told me that in South Africa we were struggling to find the left-arm spin bowlers, so I had to take it seriously. She kept telling me that I must keep working and keep pushing.”While turning the ball came naturally to Mlaba, she had to work on things like changes of pace and line. A stint with Paul Adams ahead of and during last year’s T20 World Cup helped her tweak her action and taught her better alignment.”I’m still learning,” Mlaba says. “I’m still young and I still have a lot to fix in my bowling, even in my action, but the more I get the game time, the more I get to understand my game. These days, I try to bowl the quicker one, the one that does not turn and attacks the stumps, so I have both. I already have the turn, and I try to also have the straighter ones. I even watch a lot of cricket now. I never used to watch cricket, but now I watch cricket. And then I can pick up some things that can work for me as a bowler.”In the last year, Mlaba’s hard work has paid off handsomely. She was the second-highest wicket-taker at the 2024 T20 World Cup in the UAE, where South Africa finished as runners-up, became the first South African to take ten wickets in a women’s Test, and is now their leading bowler at the ongoing ODI World Cup.Mlaba: “I’m still young and I still have a lot to fix in my bowling, even in my action, but the more I get the game time, the more I get to understand my game”•Pankaj Nangia/Getty ImagesWhile she has been celebrated at home, where she won the top prize at the CSA’s awards earlier this year, Mlaba has yet to attract any interest from leagues abroad, which would be the next rung on her career ladder.She thinks she knows why it’s out of reach. “I’ve asked a few people, and maybe if I can work on my batting, I’d have a chance of being picked, but not everyone is going to be an allrounder, I’m a bowler and maybe one day I’ll transition into an allrounder but for now my main focus is bowling and doing that as best as I can. I don’t want to put myself under pressure because I want to play for the outside leagues. If they pick me, I’ll be happy but if they don’t, it’s not stopping me from working. I’m still going to work.”The job now is to get South Africa to their first ODI World Cup final. To do that, they will have to beat England, the side they have lost to in the last two semi-finals of this tournament. There’s pressure to perform but also acceptance that South Africa are still a work in progress, a team who have neither a historically well-developed pipeline like Australia and England, nor a massive population and the ability to sink a lot of money into the game like India do. South Africa are building from the ground up and if there was one person who embodies what that looks like, it’s Mlaba.”Because of that [being one of the faces of successful transformation], sometimes I feel like I need to step up but then I also remind myself that cricket is a funny game. Today you might get the results you want, tomorrow you might not. I just want to try and do my best and help the team. I just want to use the chances that I have and showcase my talent.”

England aim to extend winning run against subpar Pakistan

Pakistan’s batting has been their biggest problem, and they need Muneeba Ali to come good to fix some of that

Andrew Fidel Fernando14-Oct-20252:50

Winless Pakistan up against unbeaten England

Big picture: Can Pakistan put up a fight?

England have won all three matches so far this World Cup. Pakistan have won three matches ever in a World Cup, and are currently on a three-game losing streak in this one. Whichever way you slice this – individual stats, head-to-head, tournament record, cricketing pedigree – it feels like a serious mismatch on paper. England are making a strong World Cup charge, having pretty much smoked each of their oppositions so far. Pakistan, meanwhile, haven’t really got close to any of their oppositions.It has been the batting that has been Pakistan’s biggest problem, as usual. Their totals so far have been 129, 159, and 114. Only Sidra Amin has hit a half-century (though she’s got there twice). The Khettarama surfaces tend to be sluggish, but even by Colombo’s standards, Pakistan’s batters have been too staid, going long stretches without boundaries. They have something of an advantage in this tournament – they play all their matches at one ground. But it still doesn’t feel like they are in a position to capitalise.Where Pakistan are already at a stage where they need to salvage something out of this tournament, England have their sights on a semi-final spot. They will also feel they have the bowling to inflict another low score on Pakistan. On Saturday, the world’s top ODI bowler Sophie Ecclestone delivered one of the spells of the tournament to take Sri Lanka down. Fellow spinners Linsey Smith and Charlie Dean have also taken six wickets apiece so far this tournament.Related

  • 'For Theo' – a century for Sciver-Brunt, a celebration for the Sciver-Brunts

Form guide

England WWWLW (last five ODIs, most recent first)
Pakistan LLLWL

In the spotlight: Muneeba Ali and Nat Sciver-Brunt

Although Amin has found success in this tournament, Pakistan’s other form batter, Muneeba Ali hasn’t quite made her mark yet. She had come into the World Cup with some decent form, having hit 76 and 44 in the pre-tournament series against South Africa, and had averaged 44.60 in the World Cup Qualifier in Lahore, in April. Pakistan have lost early wickets in each of their games so far. Runs from Muneeba will solve at least some of their batting woes.Pakistan need runs from Muneeba Ali•PCB

Nat Sciver-Brunt, meanwhile, strode to a fifth World Cup ton (her tenth in ODIs overall) on Saturday, and in the closing stages of that innings, unfurled some of the best batting this venue has seen in the tournament. She has partner Katherine Sciver-Brunt and their baby Theo along for this section of the World Cup, and was desperate to put on a show for them against Sri Lanka. Sciver-Brunt is never really far from form, but now that she has a hundred under her belt here, oppositions will be especially wary.

Team news

It’s possible that legspin-bowling allrounder Syeda Aroob Shah could enter the XI.Pakistan (probable): 1 Sadaf Shamas, 2 Muneeba Ali, 3 Sidra Amin, 4 Sidra Nawaz (wk), 5 Natalia Pervaiz, 6 Eyman Fatima, 7 Fatima Sana (capt), 8 Rameen Shamim/Syeda Aroob Shah, 9 Diana Baig, 10 Nashra Sandhu, 10 Sadia IqbalEngland could go in with an unchanged XI for the fourth match in a row.England (probable): 1 Tammy Beaumont, 2 Amy Jones (wk), 3 Heather Knight, 4 Nat Sciver-Brunt (capt), 5 Sophia Dunkley, 6 Emma Lamb, 7 Alice Capsey, 8 Charlie Dean, 9 Sophie Ecclestone, 10 Linsey Smith, 11 Lauren Bell

Pitch and conditions: More rain (perhaps), more spin (for sure)

Colombo’s weather continues as usual. The northeast monsoon has made less of an intrusion than feared at the start of the tournament, though there is always the chance it could impose itself. The pitch will take turn.

Stats and trivia

  • Three of Sciver-Brunt’s hundreds have come against Pakistan, the opposition she averages a fearsome 92.33 against.
  • Muneeba has a decent record against England, having made 47 and 44 in her two innings against them.
  • England have won all 13 completed matches against Pakistan. The smallest margin of victory in terms of runs was 37, and in terms of wickets six.

Quotes

“Pakistan have been involved in some really exciting games of cricket, and they’ve had teams on the back foot a little bit.”

Frank can fix creativity woes with Spurs star who's "impossible to defend"

Over the last couple of weeks, Tottenham Hotspur have massively struggled to deliver within the final third, which has resulted in numerous disappointing results.

Thomas Frank will no doubt have huge questions to answer in the near future, with the Derby Day defeat against Arsenal the latest failure in his tenure after taking the reins in the summer.

The Dane made a bold decision to switch to a 5-4-1 system at the Emirates to try and nullify the threat posed by Mikel Arteta’s side, but ultimately, it was ineffective as seen by the 4-1 scoreline.

Such a decision also restricted the Lilywhites massively within attacking areas, as Richarlison’s long-range effort was the only moment of note in the final third.

Numerous figures from the club’s recent Premier League outings highlight the struggles in attacking areas, with an immediate solution desperately needing to be found by the manager.

The stats behind Spurs’ recent struggles in attacking areas

As previously mentioned, Sunday was an afternoon to forget for all Spurs supporters, with the defeat arguably the worst of Frank’s tenure after his appointment in June.

The defensive setup massively nullified their own attacking threat, resulting in an embarrassing 0.07 xG produced, with only one shot on target registered, excluding the goal.

In total, the Lilywhites only managed to notch a total of three shots, whilst also registering just four touches in the Gunners’ 18-yard box during the 90-minute contest.

However, the club’s struggles have also been evident in other outings, with the defeat to Chelsea on home soil at the start of the month also showcasing their struggles in front of goal.

Frank’s men failed to find the back of the net in the London derby, again only notching one shot on target and amassing a total xG of just 0.10 in the loss.

No player in the squad was able to complete a cross against Enzo Maresca’s men, which no doubt would have contributed to the lack of quality within the final third.

The Spurs star who can solve Frank’s attacking woes

Spurs’ lack of quality in front of goal has undoubtedly produced a cause for concern, especially given the numbers produced under Ange Postecoglou last season.

The Lilywhites managed to score 64 goals in the Premier League during 2024/25, an average of 1.7 per 90, despite recording a measly 17th-placed finish in England’s top-flight.

Such a tally was the sixth best in the division, but Frank’s men have been unable to replicate such levels over the last couple of months of the new season.

His men have netted 20 goals in the 12 league outings to date, an average of 1.6, with Richarlison sitting as their top scorer on five goals – a quarter of the whole team’s tally.

However, the manager could find an immediate solution to the Lilywhites’ issues in attacking areas by unleashing Brennan Johnson over the next few weeks.

The Welsh international netted 18 goals across all competitions last campaign, but has often struggled for starts under the Dane after the investment from the hierarchy.

Mohammed Kudus arrived in a £55m transfer from West Ham United, which has seen the Ghanaian international often fill the void on the right-hand side of the attack.

However, Johnson is deserving of a recall to the starting eleven, with his numbers from last campaign showcasing the threat he carries within the final third.

His goalscoring tally from 2024/25 was by far and away the highest of any player in the first-team squad, with his underlying figures reflecting his all-round quality.

The 24-year-old achieved a total xG and xA per 90 of 0.51, the third highest in the squad, which further highlights his ability to star alone or find a teammate in dangerous areas.

Brennan Johnson – stats in 2024/25

Statistics

Tally

Rank

Games played

51

2nd

Goals scored

18

1st

xG & xA per 90

0.51

3rd

Chances created

22

4th

Crosses per 90

1.4

2nd

Dribble success

56%

2nd

Shots per 90

2.2

3rd

Penalties won

2

1st

Stats via FotMob

Johnson, who’s been labelled “impossible to defend” by one analyst, also ranked fourth in the first team for chances created – which could provide Richarlison with the ammunition to improve his own tallies.

Other tallies, such as 1.4 crosses completed per 90 and how dribble success of 56% both placed him in second position, with the winger having the all-round quality Frank’s men have hugely lacked.

There’s little denying that Johnson is a player who has divided opinion in North London, but his figures from last season highlight the quality he does possess with the ball at his feet.

If Frank is to find an immediate short-term solution to his side’s struggles, he may need to recall the Welshman back to his starting eleven against Fulham on Saturday afternoon.

Paratici could fund mega Semenyo move by selling "disaster" Spurs flop

Tottenham Hotspur should ruthlessly cash in on this flop to help fund a move for Antoine Semenyo.

2

By
Dan Emery

Nov 25, 2025

Arsenal player ratings vs Chelsea: Mikel Merino and Bukayo Saka stand up to rescue a point as off-colour Gunners miss huge chance to strengthen grip on Premier League title race

Mikel Merino salvaged a 1-1 draw for Premier League leaders Arsenal, but they will feel like this was two-points dropped against a Chelsea side who were reduced to 10 men after just 38 minutes when Moises Caicedo was sent off. In an extremely feisty London derby that was littered with early yellow cards, it was no real surprise to see a dismissal, with Caicedo seeing red for a brutal tackle on Merino seven minutes before the interval.

It was a big blow to Chelsea, but they dealt with it well and got themselves in front just after half-time when Trevoh Chalobah flicked on Reece James' corner and his header looped over everyone and into the far corner.

Arsenal hit back quickly, however, and got back on level terms when Merino rose to power Bukayo Saka's cross past Robert Sanchez, and you felt at that point the visitors would go on to make their extra man advantage count.

But they struggled to create any clear cut chances and had to settle for a point which keeps them six points clear of the Blues and moved them five clear of second-placed Manchester City.

GOAL rates Arsenal's players from Stamford Bridge…

  • AFP

    Goalkeeper & Defence

    David Raya (6/10):

    Got caught out a bit by the free-kick that led to the corner which Chelsea scored from. Didn't have much to do in terms of saves.

    Jurrien Timer (7/10):

    Class act as always. Amid all the chaos, especially in the first half, he was the one calm head in the Arsenal back four.

    Cristhian Mosquera (6/10):

    Surprisingly named in the XI due to the training ground injury suffered by William Saliba. Looked edgy on the ball as Chelsea pressed, but never hid and played his part,

    Piero Hincapie (6/10):

    You could see him trying to talk Mosquera through the game at times. Played the senior defensive role quite well. Almost set up a late winner with his cross into the box. Booked.

    Riccardo Calafiori (5/10):

    Stupid booking in the first half. Chelsea dealt with him quite well, so he wasn't his usual attacking threat. Replaced by Lewis-Skelly at half-time.

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    Midfield

    Martin Zubimendi (6/10):

    Booked in the opening minutes so was always walking a tightrope. Found very little as was in a constant battle with Enzo.

    Declan Rice (7/10):

    Probably the one player who showed any consistent quality for Arsenal. Produced one exceptional tackle to deny Neto. 

    Eberechi Eze (5/10):

    Never really got into the game. Looked frustrated by the constant fouls and stop-start nature of the game.

  • Getty Images Sport

    Attack

    Bukayo Saka (6/10):

    Was in and out of the game, but found a moment of real quality when he got to the touchline and picked out a perfect cross for Merino to score.

    Mikel Merino (6/10):

    Not his best game. His touch and passing range was off at times, but still popped up with a crucial goal.

    Gabriel Martinelli (5/10):

    Had one shot well saved in the first half. Looked rusty, which is no surprise given this was his first start in well over a month.

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    Subs & Manager

    Myles Lewis-Skelly (5/10):

    On at half-time to replace the booked Calafiori, but picked up a yellow himself almost immediately.

    Martin Odegaard (6/10):

    Good to see him back. Got involved, but was unable to unpick the lock in the Chelsea defence.

    Noni Madueke (6/10):

    Booed relentlessly on his return to Chelsea. On the fringes of things. 

    Viktor Gyokeres (N/A):

    Couldn't get into the game, though did look like he was about to score the winner right at the death, but Timber took Hincapie's cross off his head.

    Mikel Arteta (6/10):

    It felt like his late attacking changes didn't work. It made the game more open and Arsenal lost any control.

Portugal player ratings vs Armenia: Bruno Fernandes and João Neves net hat-tricks as Cristiano Ronaldo sits suspended in nine-goal win to clinch World Cup spot

Bruno Fernandes and Joao Neves hat-tricks helped a Cristiano Ronaldo-less Portugal qualify for the 2026 World Cup with an emphatic 9-1 win over Armenia on Sunday. The Seleccao were without their iconic forward following his red card against Ireland, but virtuoso displays from Fernandes and Neves ensured they topped UEFA Group F thanks to a thumping victory.

After their shock loss to Ireland in midweek, Portugal seemed determined to right the wrongs of what happened in Dublin, and it took just seven minutes to ease fans' nerves when Fernandes' free-kick was pushed onto the post by Armenia goalkeeper Henry Avagyan, and Renato Veiga was on hand to head into the empty net. Boos were soon ringing around Sporting CP's stadium, however, when Eduard Sperstian bundled the ball home from close range after the Portuguese defence was cut open in the 18th minute. 

Not long after supporters held a minute's applause for the late Diogo Jota, Goncalo Ramos pounced on a poor back pass by Artur Serobyan to restore the home side's advantage, and less than 90 seconds later, Neves smashed in a first-time beauty from the edge of the box on the half-hour mark. Hopes of a comeback were well and truly over when Neves bent a brilliant curling free-kick in off the bar from 25 yards out to make it 4-1 four minutes before half-time, and moments after Joao Cancelo's effort was deflected onto the post, Portugal were awarded a penalty when Ruben Dias was hauled down in the box, and Fernandes duly dispatched the subsequent spot-kick in first-half stoppage time.

Portugal's relentless march forward continued when Fernandes swept home his side's sixth in the 51st minute after good, determined work from Ramos, and the Manchester United captain had his third goal of the day when he scored his second penalty after substitute Carlos Forbs was felled in the area. The 104th-ranked side in the world, Armenia seemed ready to put this game behind them when Neves grabbed his hat-trick with an acrobatic finish nine minutes from the end, and substitute Francisco Conceicao made it 9-1 at the death.

GOAL rates Portugal's players from Estadio do Dragao…

  • AFP

    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Diogo Costa (6/10):

    Was a virtual spectator for the majority of the contest, other than picking the ball out of his net for Armenia's goal. 

    Nelson Semedo (6/10):

    Was guilty of losing his man for Armenia's shock equaliser as he switched off at the crucial moment.

    Ruben Dias (7/10):

    Won his side a penalty just before the interval and led a defence that never really looked troubled, apart from the odd opening. 

    Renato Veiga (7/10):

    Was in the right place at the right time as he calmly headed Portugal into the lead. Will need to face stronger opposition to be a guaranteed starter, though.

    Joao Cancelo (5/10):

    The former Manchester City man was shrugged off too easily for Armenia's equaliser and also made some rash challenges. May need to improve to tie down a World Cup starting spot.

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    Midfield

    Joao Neves (10/10):

    Rifled in a terrific strike from 18 yards out to give Portugal a two-goal cushion and then backed that up with an even better goal, this time with a sumptuous free-kick. Scored a classy third for one of the best hat-tricks you are likely to see.

    Vitinha (8/10):

    The Paris Saint-Germain talisman ran the show in midfield. He danced past would-be tacklers with ease and looked so calm on the ball.

    Bruno Fernandes (9/10):

    Fired in a dangerous free-kick that directly led to Portugal's early opener and took his penalties well with a stuttering run-up. Executed a first-time finish with aplomb for his second, and could have had five goals rather than three.

  • AFP

    Attack

    Bernardo Silva (6/10):

    Linked up nicely with his team-mates but left others to rip apart their overpowered opponents. 

    Goncalo Ramos (8/10):

    The striker showed good anticipation and clarity of thought to make it 2-1 with his interception goal and neatly assisted Fernandes as Portugal ran riot.

    Rafael Leao (6/10):

    His pace and power caused Armenia trouble, but he didn't get that many clear-cut chances during his 55-minute outing.

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    Subs & Manager

    Carlos Forbs (7/10):

    Won his side a penalty not long after being introduced, as his speed and agility came to the fore.

    Francisco Conceicao (8/10):

    Was full of purpose and was a proper livewire off the bench. Worked hard for his goal, which he took very well, to make it 9-1 at the death.

    Joao Felix (5/10):

    Came on for his 50th Portugal cap but didn't do a great deal right.

    Ruben Neves (N/A):

    Didn't have much of the ball.

    Matheus Nunes (N/A):

    Had too little time to make an impression on the game.

    Roberto Martinez (7/10):

    Would not have been pleased with how his team conceded but was clearly delighted by the margin and manner of the victory. His substitutes had a positive impact, too.

The new Diaz: FSG enter race to sign "world-class" £79m star for Liverpool

You could feel the elation rippling from the pitch. It was palpable. It was a reminder of what this squad are capable of doing to the best teams in the world. Liverpool had beaten Real Madrid in the Champions League for the second year running.

Following the professional win over Aston Villa to stop the rot of a four-match skid in the Premier League, head coach Arne Slot must have felt his side had turned a corner, but last weekend’s sobering loss at Manchester City showed the Reds have merely gone in circles.

Liverpool were outfought across every inch of the Etihad Stadium, and Slot will be chagrined after being outplayed by Pep Guardiola on the tactical chessboard. Granted, he’s not the first coach to lose such a battle against the Spaniard.

But the Reds are struggling to do the basics, and are such a far cry from the level of last season, when they dispatched so many opponents and won the league title with relative ease.

Tactical imbalances have been clear all season, and it’s obvious that Liverpool are missing Luis Diaz, who is doing so well with Bayern Munich this season.

If the problems continue for Slot, FSG may be forced to sign a new version of the Colombian.

Liverpool looking to replace Diaz

Florian Wirtz’s struggles since leaving Bayer Leverkusen and joining Liverpool for £116m this summer have been well documented.

The German playmaker, 22, is one of the most talented footballers out there, but he’s yet to find the physicality and fluency to succeed in the Premier League, and he might want to take a leaf from Diaz’s book in that regard.

Aside from Diaz’s potency in the final third, he is relentless in his work rate and rapid besides, adding width and dynamism down the flank. Liverpool need some of that, and appear to have found a candidate.

Indeed, according to Spanish sources, sporting director Richard Hughes has registered Liverpool’s interest in Real Madrid star Rodrygo, who has fallen well down the pecking order under Xabi Alonso.

Arsenal and Chelsea are also keen on the Brazil international, while Manchester City’s intrigue was confirmed by Fabrizio Romano this summer.

Florentino Perez wants €90m (£79m) for the versatile forward, but given his reduced role at Real Madrid over the past year or so, FSG would likely push to whittle down that hefty price tag.

What Rodrygo would offer Liverpool

Rodrygo finished the 2024/25 campaign at a low ebb. A few terms ago, the 24-year-old was regarded as one of the best wingers in the world, but a limited role at Real has precluded that tag from staying put.

This season, Alonso has handed Rodrygo only three starts across La Liga and the Champions League. He hasn’t yet scored, racking up two assists on the continent. This all points toward a divorce from the Santiago Bernabeu, for this is one of the most exciting and talented wide forwards in Europe, and he should have a role at a side that reflects that.

Liverpool could offer him this. Slot wanted to provide Rio Ngumoha with a pathway to the first team during the summer, and that is ostensibly why Diaz was not directly replaced.

This has proved a mistake, with the 17-year-old as yet untrusted to start games and feature prominently.

Rodrygo has the maturity and the world experience to not just challenge Wirtz and Cody Gakpo for a starting berth but stake his claim for a starring role deep into the Anfield pitch.

Sometimes, statistics must be viewed through a wider context. Take Rodrygo’s woes in the Spanish top flight last year, only scoring six goals and supplying six assists across 30 matches.

Poor, right? Well, Rodrygo was only afforded 12 starts by Carlo Ancelotti, and Sofascore data suggests he missed just one big chance, underscoring his clinical nature.

Real Madrid's Rodrygo

Furthermore, the South American maverick posted six goals and assists apiece from left wing last year, despite only being handed a berth on that side 12 times across all competitions. At Liverpool, it is the left which beckons, and there he could refashion that world-renowned status that has been seen on the biggest stages before.

And even after this testing period, Rodrygo’s underlying quality does not lie, evidenced through many tactical similarities with Diaz across the past 12 months.

Rodrygo vs Luis Diaz (past 12 months)

Stats (per 90)

Rodrygo

Diaz

Goals

0.31

0.47

Assists

0.23

0.20

Shots taken

2.78

2.92

Shot-creating actions

4.71

4.21

Pass completion %

85.4

83.0

Touches (att pen)

6.49

6.27

Progressive passes

4.40

4.21

Progressive carries

5.91

3.73

Successful take-ons

2.47

1.98

Ball recoveries

3.75

4.40

Tackles + interceptions

2.09

1.36

Data via FBref

It’s curious to note that the tactical differences between the two are not that great. And this in spite of Rodrygo having fallen to the Los Blancos fringes well before the managerial shift this summer.

With Alonso at the helm, it’s patent that Rodrygo will not enjoy the regular minutes that his talent deserves. After all, Luka Modric once described him as being among the club’s “world-class superstars”.

Diaz has found remarkable prolificness since switching Liverpool for Bavaria in August, and while such levels were rarely sustained at Liverpool, with the Premier League notoriously difficult, there’s no denying Liverpool miss Diaz and his athletic profile.

Rodrygo could be the perfect tonic to turn the ship around. After all, Alonso doesn’t seem to want him, and Liverpool require just the profile.

Whether the Reds manage to pull off an audacious winter swoop is anyone’s guess, but Premier League rivals are also on the hunt, and Hughes needs to pull something off if this season is to be viewed as a success.

Liverpool star is quickly becoming their biggest "disaster" since Keita

Arne Slot has a Naby Keita-style situation on his hands with this expensive Liverpool flop.

2

By
Kelan Sarson

Nov 13, 2025

Raheem Sterling victim of second burglary in terrifying attack while at home with children

Raheem Sterling's Berkshire home was the target of an attempted break-in by masked men last weekend, which happened while the player was in the house with his young family. It is the second time in the last three years that the Chelsea winger has been targeted in a burglary, with the previous incident taking place when he lived in a different area.

  • Sterling's house targeted by burglars

    Masked men are believed to have tried to gain entry into Sterling's house, situated on a development on Crown Estate land in Berkshire, to the west of London, at around 6:30pm last Saturday night. That was just before Chelsea were due to face Wolves in the Premier League, but Sterling hasn't been part of the Blues' squad this season and therefore was at home when it happened, alongside his long-term partner and their three children. He also has a fourth child from a previous relationship.

    Beyond the criminals attempting to break, other details have not been disclosed and Sterling wishes for his and his family's privacy to be respected.

    A different house located in Surrey, near to Chelsea's training ground, was previously broken into at the end of 2022, during the World Cup. That prompted the winger to urgently leave the England camp in Qatar to head home, before returning to the tournament ahead of quarter-final defeat to France. 

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    Sterling & family safe

    Reported by the , a spokesperson representing Sterling told the newspaper: "We can confirm that Raheem Sterling was the victim of a home break-in this weekend. We can also confirm that he and his children were present at home at the time. Whilst the ultimate violation of privacy and safety, we are thankful to be able to confirm that he and his loved ones are all safe. We ask that the privacy of Raheem and his loved ones be respected at this challenging time."

    Thames Valley Police have also confirmed that a "thorough investigation" is underway, appealing for possible information or witnesses of any suspicious behaviour that might be relevant.

  • Footballer burglaries a common occurrence

    Sterling is far from the only Premier League footballer to be targeted by brazen thieves in recent years. When his Surrey home was broken into in late 2022, Chelsea team-mate Marc Cucurella, and then Reading defender Scott Dann were also victims of the same burglar. The man responsible had managed to steal £1.1 million worth of belongings, but was eventually jailed in 2024 for 12 years and 10 months for conspiracy to burgle, possession with intent to supply cocaine and simple possession of cannabis. On that occasion, Sterling alone was robbed of 10 Rolex watches.

    Players in England's north west based in the 'Golden Triangle' of Cheshire, a collection of affluent towns south of Manchester, have also been routinely targeted over the years. With Jack Grealish among those targeted, it was reported earlier this month that players have been turning to former MMA fighters employed as bodyguards and security to better protect their homes.

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    Sterling's football future remains uncertain

    Sterling has been non-existent on a football pitch in 2025-26. Deemed surplus to requirements by Enzo Maresca at Stamford Bridge, the former England winger spent last season struggling to command meaningful minutes during a loan at Arsenal and was unable to secure an exit away from Chelsea during this past summer transfer window.

    Sterling, who has a contract with the Blues until 2027 and cost the best part of £50m to sign from Manchester City, hasn't actually played for Chelsea since May 2024. He will shortly turn 31, which is far from old for a footballer these days, but it is difficult to envisage how and where his career will get back on track after such a sustained period of inactivity.

    Sterling is costing Chelsea an enormous sum to not be playing, earning a reported £325,000 per week. At the start of this season, his outstanding contract was thought to be worth around £30m. His preference is rumoured to have been staying in and around London, rather than moving any great distance away, due to his son being with Arsenal' academy and an unwillingness to disrupt his family.

Thomas Frank says 24-year-old is "really growing" into a new leader at Tottenham

Tottenham boss Thomas Frank has lavished praise on a few members of his squad ahead of their Carabao Cup tie at Newcastle on Wednesday.

Tottenham prepare for Newcastle tie after 3-0 win at Everton

After his predecessor, Ange Postecoglou, ended the club’s 17-year wait for a trophy at the back end of 2024/2025, Frank will undoubtedly be judged on his charge for major silverware.

Spurs are currently third in the Premier League table and back to winning ways after victory against Everton on Sunday, and much like their north London rivals Arsenal, they’ve been excelling at set pieces.

The Lilywhites have scored from a dead ball situation on five different occasions this term in the league, the same number as Bournemouth, with it being no coincidence that the Cherries and Frank’s side occupy a place in the top three behind Arsenal.

While concerns have surrounded Tottenham’s lack of creativity from open play, with summer signing Xavi Simons off to a slow start after being signed as their new star playmaker, Frank has undoubtedly embraced this new ‘set piece revolution’ happening up and down the Premier League.

Spurs travel to St. James’ Park for their next clash as Frank looks to inspire a cup run, but they face a tricky test against the current Carabao champions who have won five out of their last seven matches in all competitions.

Tottenham also have nine players unavailable for the clash, including star defenders Cristian Romero and Destiny Udogie, with Kevin Danso set to partner Micky van de Ven at the heart of Frank’s defence once again after impressing against Everton.

Tottenham absentee list to face Newcastle

Problem

Estimated return date

Dejan Kulusevski

Knee

22/11/2025

James Maddison

ACL

01/06/2026

Radu Dragusin

Knee

22/11/2025

Ben Davies

Thigh

23/11/2025

Yves Bissouma

Ankle/Foot

08/11/2025

Kota Takai

Ankle/Foot

08/11/2025

Cristian Romero

Groin

01/11/2025

Destiny Udogie

Knee

08/11/2025

Dominic Solanke

Ankle

08/11/2025

via Premier Injuries

Frank has piled praise on Danso for his excellent form since coming to replace Romero, but the Austrian has been somewhat overshadowed by van de Ven.

The latter has proved magnificent since Frank took over from Postecoglou, with reports suggesting that Tottenham are prepared to double van de Ven’s salary in a bid to keep him out of Real Madrid’s clutches.

The Dutchman’s brace against Everton condemned the Merseysiders to their first ever defeat at the brand-new Hill Dickinson Stadium, with Frank lavishing his star centre-back in the build up to Wednesday.

Thomas Frank says Micky van de Ven is becoming a new leader at Tottenham

Van de Ven was named as part of Spurs’ leadership group earlier this season, alongside Ben Davies, Guglielmo Vicario, James Maddison and Romero, with Frank explaining how he’s since repaid the faith.

Commenting further in his pre-match press conference before Newcastle, Frank also explained how he’s gone up another level behind-the-scenes.

While van de Ven is tied down until 2029, if the 24-year-old continues in this fine form, Spurs must surely be worried about the prospect of Real swooping in to tempt him amid their hunt for new centre-backs.

That being said, the defender will command a premium, so the pending availability of free agents like Ibrahima Konate, Dayot Upamecano and Marc Guehi could sway them elsewhere.

Gus Atkinson takes five as India collapse for 224

He took three of the remaining four India wickets that India had when they arrived on Friday morning on 204 for 6

Vithushan Ehantharajah01-Aug-2025

Gus Atkinson finished with a five-for•PA Photos/Getty Images

Gus Atkinson’s fourth five-wicket haul helped England make light work of what remained of India’s first innings of the fifth Test, dismissing them for 224.Atkinson’s 5 for 33 upon his return to the XI after two months out was all the more important after news this morning that Chris Woakes would play no further part in the match after a suspected dislocated shoulder sustained in the field last evening. And the Surrey quick, on his home ground, took three of the remaining four wickets that India had up their sleeve when they arrived on Friday morning on 204 for 6.It was Josh Tongue who made the first key incision, albeit with a choatic approach that would get any surgeon struck off. His first over, opening from the Vauxhall End, went for nine, but he was able to remove Karun Nair for 57 in his second. A sharp delivery that nipped into the stumps – Nair no doubt expected something short and wide either side of them – pinned the right-hander on the back leg. Plumb in front, Nair took one of India’s three reviews with him.Washington Sundar should have assumed the responsibility at that point as an elongated tail became exposed, but he fell five deliveries later, waltzing into a short ball trap, heaving Atkinson to deep square leg, where Jamie Overton sprinted in to take a smart catch.Atkinson would then skittle Mohammed Siraj before Prasidh Krishna felt for a delivery outside off, completing a collapse of four for six in 18 balls. This is now the lowest first innings total of the series. The previous lowest was India’s 358 at Manchester.Atkinson now boasts an average of 21, the fourth best for an England seamer with fifty or more dismissals, and the second best strike rate, ever, at 34.9, for those who have taken 60 wickets.

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