Tottenham talking about hiring "class" Iraola alternative who Guardiola loves

Tottenham chiefs are internally discussing the possibility of appointing a highly-rated alternative to Andoni Iraola, with current boss Ange Postecoglou currently hanging onto his job by a thread after an underwhelming Premier League campaign.

Spurs' managerial shortlist to replace Ange Postecoglou

The Australian has led Spurs to seventeen defeats in the top flight alone, and a total of 21 losses in all competitions, which makes for inexcusable reading from the perspective of a ‘big six’ side.

£4m-per-year boss "emerging" as favourite for Spurs job after Iraola blow

There’s another frontrunner coming into play.

4 ByEmilio Galantini Apr 15, 2025

There is a serious case to be made that injuries to key players throughout 2024/2025 have really debilitated Postecoglou’s options, making it a huge task to make any success of this Premier League campaign, but the sheer number of losses is far too reminiscent of relegation form.

Nottingham Forest (home)

April 21st

Liverpool (away)

April 27th

West Ham (away)

May 3rd

Crystal Palace (home)

May 10th

Aston Villa (away)

May 18th

Tottenham’s entire campaign is now riding on their Europa League quarter-final second leg away to Eintracht Frankfurt, with the tie currently level 1-1 on aggregate and Postecoglou set for his most important game as manager on Thursday.

As tensions between the fanbase and Spurs ownership reach breaking point, chairman Daniel Levy is under serious pressure, and his next managerial appointment will need to be the right one, if they do indeed decide to part company with Postecoglou.

The arrival of CEO and ex-Arsenal chief Vinai Venkatesham will also play a major role in who they appoint, with the new boardroom member and Levy already having a number of managerial candidates on their agenda.

According to recent reports, Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola is a top target for Tottenham, but the Spaniard is now more inclined to snub their advances and remain at the Vitality Stadium for another season (The Telegraph).

This means that Fulham manager Marco Silva is now emerging as a frontrunner for the Spurs job (Alex Crook), but there are other names on Levy’s agenda.

Fulham manager Marco Silva.

Inter Milan’s Simone Inzaghi, ex-Borussia Dortmund boss Edin Terzić, free agent Thiago Motta, Crystal Palace’s Oliver Glasner and Brentford head coach Thomas Frank have all been cited as names to watch out for in the last two months, but an update has surfaced on the latter.

Tottenham internally discuss appointing Thomas Frank

According to GiveMeSport, Tottenham have held internal talks over appointing Frank, who could be another alternative to Iraola, with the 42-year-old increasingly likely to remain at Bournemouth right now.

The Dane guided Brentford to promotion from the Championship in 2021, after beating Swansea City 2-0 in the Play-Off final at Wembley, and Frank hasn’t looked back since then.

The 50-year-old has since transformed Brentford into a solid Premier League side, despite operating on a shoe-string budget and losing key players, having taken charge of 311 matches for the Bees overall as a legendary figurehead.

Frank’s earned a reputation for being a “class” manager in that period, not to mention gaining the respect of his elite peers, like Man City’s Pep Guardiola, who called him “one of the best” in the business.

“They are an extraordinary team,” said the City boss.

“What they do always makes sense. Every corner is a headache. They are compact. This season, they have a high press. Thomas is one of the best.”

Other reports state that Frank is also expected to leave Brentford this summer, making him potentially available for hire.

Sean Williams has been around the block and then some (but he's not stopping now)

The Zimbabwe veteran started his international career two decades ago, but his appetite for the game is undimmed

Firdose Moonda24-Sep-2025When Sean Williams made his international debut on February 25, 2005, precisely one T20 international had been played up to that point. Twenty years later Williams will be in action on the day the 6000th T20I, across men’s and women’s cricket, will be played. It will also be his 39th birthday, as he continues his run as the world’s longest-serving active international cricketer.Since his debut, only two players, Hamilton Masakadza and Sikandar Raza, have been capped more times for Zimbabwe and only one, Brendan Taylor, has scored more runs. Williams has played against 28 international teams in 17 countries. Only two other players – Collins Obuya and Paul Stirling – have been up against more opposition. When Williams says he has “seen the full cycle”, you have to believe him.He is currently part of the Zimbabwe T20I squad that will compete in the Africa regional qualifiers in their quest to reach the 2026 World Cup. Cricket is completely different to what it was two decades ago, when he received his maiden international call-up.”I was playing a first-class game at BAC [Bulawayo Athletic Club] and my dad was throwing balls to me on the side of the nets. He was throwing from quite a wide angle and I didn’t understand why. I was actually getting quite frustrated,” Williams says. “About 10 or 15 minutes later I got a phone call from the national team manager to say I’d been selected against South Africa. And my old man told me he was doing that to prepare me for Makhaya [Ntini]. It was quite stunning, I remember that very clearly.”Related

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Williams: 'Definitely a big skill gap' between Zimbabwe and Australia

Cricket might not love Zimbabwe, but the game would be poorer without them

Williams hopes to 'lead by action' for Zimbabwe's future cricketers to learn from

Williams didn’t face Ntini in any of the three ODIs he played in South Africa in his debut series but he did get a taste of the big time. South Africa’s team included Graeme Smith, Herschelle Gibbs, Mark Boucher, Albie Morkel and Ntini. In contrast, the Zimbabwe squad had one recognisable name – Tatenda Taibu – and a group of youngsters who were trying to rebuild after the 2004 white-player walkout. Williams was too young to be involved in that rebellion, and he did not entirely grasp how significant the issues in the game were at the time, but even as a newcomer he could tell something was off.”It was difficult,” he says. “I’ll never forget walking through the Sandton Towers [hotel in Johannesburg] and we were going to our team meeting room and when we walked past people, they were like, ‘Where’s [Andy] Flower? Where’s [Heath] Streak? Who are you people?’ It was quite something to walk past.”Flower had left Zimbabwe the year before, after his involvement in the black-armband protest during the 2003 World Cup, and his brother Grant was part of the group of 13 who protested then-captain Streak’s sacking. Streak, of course, was also not around. Zimbabwe was a mess, in cricket and more generally. The accelerated land-reform programme that sought to redistribute farms from white to black ownership was in full swing, inflation was high (though it would get worse) and so was unemployment. A ban was placed on dual citizenship and many who had the opportunity to take up another nationality, especially that of the United Kingdom, did so.Williams himself did not qualify to apply for a British passport but he flirted with moving there after he did a stint in England, with a club cricket team in Newcastle. The late Kevin Curran, then involved in the coaching structures in Zimbabwe, urged him to return, and it was what Williams wanted anyway. “I enjoy being at home,” he says. “And I ended up wanting to play for Zimbabwe no matter what.”Williams on his way to an unbeaten 70 against West Indies at the 2007 World Cup, which was a dismal one for Zimbabwe•Paul Gilham/Getty ImagesEven when Zimbabwe’s results became so poor that they opted out of Test cricket for six years between 2006 and 2011. One consequence of that was that Williams, who averaged over 40 in first-class cricket in five of the seven years between 2006 and 2012, ended up waiting until 2013 to get his Test cap. From an international perspective, he concentrated on ODIs (he played one T20I in 2006 and his next one in 2013) and in particular on how Zimbabwe could perform on the global stage.He was part of the squad in the 2007 ODI World Cup, where they didn’t win a game, and then the 2011 tournament, where they won two out of six matches, against lower-ranked opposition. “It was an absolute struggle when we got to those World Cups,” he says. “I felt very nervous when I played, and also that quite often you could predict the outcome of our games.”The only outlier in that time was Zimbabwe’s stunning win over Australia in the 2007 T20 World Cup in Cape Town (and Williams was not part of the playing group then). It took them seven years and two more tournaments before they won another match at the T20 World Cup – against Netherlands in 2014.By then Williams was playing across all formats and Zimbabwe were stabilising. They made a Test comeback in 2011, when they also had a stable coaching structure with Alan Butcher in charge and Grant Flower and Streak in specialist roles as batting and bowling coaches. Those three were not involved as the 2015 World Cup loomed, but experienced coach Dav Whatmore was put in charge. Williams rated him highly and praised the environment he created which led to that tournament being a high-water mark for him.Brendan Taylor (right) and Williams are among Zimbabwe’s top five run-getters in ODIs•AFP”In my book, it was the No. 1 tour I’ve ever been on for Zimbabwe,” Williams says. “The guys were pretty awesome with each other, we got on well, had honest chats, understood each other’s roles, understood our own personal roles and just got on with it. We really felt the World Cup vibe, and we had first-class treatment. It was quite special, actually, and probably the happiest I’ve ever been in the changing room. And then we also had multiple people contributing, Brendan scoring hundreds, I was chipping in and there were other guys around.”Taylor was the fourth-highest run-scorer overall at the tournament, and Williams was 13th. Zimbabwe only won one match but came close against Pakistan and closer against Ireland, in a game Williams could have successfully finished. Zimbabwe were 300 for 6 in the 47th over, chasing 332, and Williams was on 96 when he hit Kevin O’ Brien to John Mooney on the midwicket boundary. Mooney appeared to be on the boundary cushion but Williams was walking off and had stepped out of the field of play as the check was happening.”It was quite sad in the end, even though it goes down as one of my best tournaments,” he says. “That game against Ireland, obviously it was a heartbreaker and there was all that controversy with my catch [with Mooney] standing on a rope. You can actually hear the umpire on the audio saying, ‘Please stop the batter, stop the batter.'”Had Williams waited for the third-umpire check, not only might he have been able to continue batting, he would probably have also got his first ODI hundred. Instead, it was the end of Zimbabwe’s campaign. On Williams’ return, he married his partner, Chantelle, who was in attendance when he finally reached that first century, in the decider of a five-match series against Afghanistan, which Zimbabwe ultimately lost. “It was a really strange feeling because Afghanistan annihilated us in that game. We were 172 all out [chasing 246] and it was a very difficult game. But I was in Bulawayo, which was quite nice. I had my wife there, and her sister.”In a busy Test year for Zimbabwe, Williams has already scored 648 runs, with one hundred and four half-centuries in eight matches•Matthew Lewis/Getty ImagesThat his milestone came amid strife was representative of what was going on in Zimbabwe Cricket. The time between the 2015 World Cup and the country’s suspension from the ICC in the second half of 2019 was fraught. Zimbabwe shuffled between coaches and battled poor results. Between November 2015 and July 2019, they played six Test series and lost five, 16 ODI series and lost 14, and eight T20I series and lost five, with the other three drawn.The nadir came in March 2018, when they lost to the UAE at the ODI World Cup Qualifiers for the 2019 tournament. In a rain-affected match Zimbabwe had to chase 230 in 40 overs and were looking good on 206 for 5 in the 37th when Williams was dismissed on 80 and the tail was unable to finish the job.”That was awful,” Williams says. “I knew the moment that happened that the coaching staff was done. That was inevitable. And I wasn’t sure about the next coaches because when you have [Lance] Klusener and Streaky and guys like that in your changing room, with that type of experience, I didn’t know if [we were] going to be able to get better than that. Especially Lance. We went through hell again for quite a while. There were a lot of issues internally with our team trying to recover from that.”Streak and his staff were sacked and Streak was later banned for eight years for breaching the ICC’s anti-corruption code. Zimbabwe’s suspension meant they were unable to participate in qualification for the 2020 T20 World Cup (which was moved to 2021 because of Covid) and their cricketing structures were hanging on by a thread. Williams, who by then had a daughter, considered walking away but with the pandemic came an opportunity to pause and reframe his ideas about how he wanted to play in the last phase of his career.Dav Whatmore’s tenure as Zimbabwe coach in 2015 was one of Sean Williams’ most productive periods as an international cricketer•Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty Images”I thought about how we as Zimbabwe played, throughout my time, and I realised we approached games as though we always needed to save face,” he says. “We’d say things like, ‘We need to make sure we bat 50 overs’ or ‘We need to make sure we play five days.’ When you try to play like that, it’s mentally exhausting, it’s physically exhausting. And you end up having meetings and just saying the right things and not actually doing anything but just playing cautiously and negatively and always on the back foot. I didn’t enjoy playing like that at all.”My dad used to always tell me, ‘You’re better than you think you are. Stop taking so long. Just hit the ball.’ And that’s when I thought, let me change this and try to be a little bit more dynamic, a little bit more free and a little bit more expressive. And that way, you start playing a little bit more exciting cricket. It gave me quite a clear understanding of what I needed to do and wanted to do at the time. Then I started to train that way.”The post-Covid period has been a boon for Williams. In the last five years he has scored four of his six Test hundreds and averages 58.80 in the format. In ODIs he has made five of his eight centuries in this time and averages 53.77. He plays with the fearlessness of someone with nothing to lose, in part because he has already lost so much.In April 2022, his father, Collin Ray, died, and in September 2023, Streak, a long-time mentor of Williams, also passed away. In that same period, Williams welcomed his second daughter. “Those were the most difficult times. I found that playing cricket was a space I could go to and kind of let the mind be on one thing. It’s been a saving grace for me,” he says. “Both of them [Collin and Streak] were the people I would call straight after a game or straight after something when I’m frustrated and when I’m happy. They were there through all of it.” He also discovered cold-water plunges as a way to focus and get the best out of himself. He says the therapy was “an absolute winner. It helped me get my mind back into cricket and just start making decisions because I didn’t have other people to make them for me.”Williams was caught on the boundary for 96 against Ireland at the 2015 World Cup. Replays later showed that the fielder, John Mooney, had touched the boundary line when taking the catch. Ireland won the match by five runs•AFPThe aspect of his game that he has not been able to work on as much is his bowling, as he juggles fatherhood with cricket and nurses a long-standing back problem. Bowling hasn’t come as easy for him over the years, he says. “I’ve had a little bit of an awkward action, long delivery stride, and kind of cut myself off quite quickly. I’m trying to put a little bit more emphasis into my bowling now. I just try to spin the ball a little bit more and have a little bit more control and clever field sets to try and do things a little bit differently again.”Williams has also defined his role better, especially as he starts to bowl a little more in white-ball cricket. “I’m not necessarily a wicket-taking bowler, but I try my best to be a complementary bowler. Hopefully Blessing [Muzarabani] or Richard [Ngarava] on the other side can take wickets or something.”And for those bowlers, Williams also has some advice about how to be bolder, especially in the longest format. “Even in our bowling, we’ve always done the same thing on the field and we’ve lost. So let’s try something different, and if we lose, what difference does it actually make? If we’re fielding, for example, let’s have a short-ball plan for an hour. If we get hit doing it, so what? Let’s try.”It has been an extremely tough period for Zimbabwe’s Test side, who play as many matches as Australia in 2025 (11 Tests) despite not being part of the World Test Championship. They are on a six-match losing streak with one win this year. Still, Zimbabwe Cricket believes in playing Test cricket in order to both validate themselves as Full Members and expose players to the highest level in order to improve. Williams buys into that but thinks it’s up to him and some of the other more experienced players, such as Craig Ervine and Taylor, to usher the younger generation through this period.”Our Test run has been tough. Over the last ten matches – and I have played nine of them – we’ve been against pretty good teams, if not some of the best teams. We won one and we drew one. And in the rest of them, we had four innings defeats. Dealing with that as a unit is tough because it’s a battering,” he says. “It’s up to the core players to try and change that environment a little bit. There’s a very big skills gap between us and the rest and also a lack of general understanding of the problem-solving of the game. We need to be more proactive rather than reactive to things and people understanding their own roles and space in the team are crucial to going forward.”Williams is trying to return to bowling more now and hopes to be a “complementary bowler” to wicket-takers Blessing Muzarabani and Richard Ngarava•Michael Bradley/AFP/Getty ImagesFor now, Zimbabwe have to put that aside because their focus for the next two years is on the white-ball game. They will co-host the 2027 ODI World Cup with South Africa and Namibia, and thanks to automatic qualification, will play in a 50-over World Cup for the first time in 12 years. Williams will be past 40 by then and he doesn’t want to tempt fate.”I can’t really speak about 2027 because I don’t know what will happen between now and then. Playing cricket and having a family is tough. It’s been tough on Chantelle and she has done very well to keep it all together because she deals with what I bring back too. And the girls are getting bigger. It’s always Dad this, Dad that, so when I am at home, it’s hard to manage cricket and family life. But obviously, I’d like to be there. I also think having us senior players around is a great thing. We don’t want too much to go on to the youngsters because they’re trying to find their feet in international cricket,” he says.In the immediate term, Zimbabwe are also aiming to reach the 2026 T20 World Cup, after being the only Full Member to miss out on the 2024 tournament. They have brought back Taylor, who served a three-year ban for failing to report approaches to fix matches, and Williams, having last played in May 2024, came back this month in the home series against Sri Lanka to boost their squad.He has embraced the challenge of giving everything to help put Zimbabwe back on the global cricketing map. “I’m a little bit nervous coming back because I haven’t been around T20 for a while now, but I am going to try to get into that role as quickly as possible,” he says. “After all, I would have liked to have gone to more World Cups.”He would also like to leave his mark on the format that barely existed when his career started, and which dominates the landscape as his career is coming to a close. “The biggest change in cricket that I’ve seen has been T20 cricket coming in,” he says. “It changed a lot here at home. It also changed things for opportunity. Guys got to start going to these leagues and start really having the opportunity to improve their skills. And the biggest change in cricket that I’ve seen in Zimbabwe is how we have performed after the 2019 suspension. We’re coming right and I’ve seen the full cycle.”

Predictable Hazlewood the face of the banker bowler's resurgence

The Australia fast bowler has bowled about 70% of his balls in the hard lengths and from his height, those are a handful for batters

Sidharth Monga27-Oct-2023The new ball has taken worse battering at this men’s World Cup than at any in the past. At 5.42 runs an over (before Pakistan vs South Africa), this World Cup has cost teams a good six runs more in the first powerplay than the next-highest World Cup for batting against the new ball.It is amazing, because on an average, the ball has swung and seamed more than it did in the last World Cup. However, it has done less than it was doing earlier in the year. Perhaps the batters are just relieved after what they have been facing for the last little while or they are trying to make the most of the new ball before it gets scuffed up as it has been doing in this World Cup.Whatever the reason, it is an opportunity for the really good bowlers to stand out. Among those who have bowled at least ten overs inside the powerplay so far, the second-most economical bowler is someone who, not long ago, was not considered a limited-overs bowler. Josh Hazlewood missed the 2019 ODI World Cup, and wasn’t fought over in IPL auctions. Now he is going at 4.35 an over with the new ball and averaging 21.75 with it. Jasprit Bumrah is going at an unbelievable 2.9 an over, and averaging 29.Related

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Either Hazlewood’s workload was being managed or people thought he was too consistent, and thus predictable, in formats where variations were all the buzz. Whatever the reason back then, it is that predictability and consistency that have made Hazlewood the face of the resurgence of the banker bowler. An era that rewards a bowler who can put the ball where he wants is a welcome era. This kind of bowler is not picking up wickets by the truckload, but almost always maintaining an economy better than the going rate and hardly ever has a horrible day out.Pat Cummins, who takes on the role of mixing his lengths in the middle overs, is thankful for such a consistent bowler in the line-up. “He’s been consistent his whole career, he’s been a gun,” Cummins said on the eve of their match against New Zealand. “So, I don’t think him being predictable has ever been a problem. He, I think, even in some of those times when he wasn’t in the team, was ranked No. 1 or 2 in the world. So, he’s fantastic.”He can now bowl at any time [new ball, middle overs or at the death]. But you’re going to get quality up front and, as you said, consistent. Just rarely gets hit off his length and just again another real luxury having someone like him in the team.”In this World Cup, despite taking the new ball, Hazlewood has been bashing the hard lengths, which, when done from his height, can be a handful. Hazlewood has bowled about 70% of his deliveries in the hard length band. For every five of those stock balls, he has bowled one bouncer.Josh Hazlewood goes into Batista mode with his celebrations•Getty ImagesHazlewood has drawn a false response every four balls, which is right up there with Bumrah. It is when he has got into the fuller side of the hard length that Hazlewood has been most effective, drawing a false response every three balls, going at 3.49 an over and taking half of his six wickets. Yet, he has resisted going to the well too often. More than half of his deliveries have been in the shorter side of that hard-length band.That is always the temptation with these bowlers: should they actually bowl fuller more often? The answer probably is that they have great numbers in that fuller part because they do so only when there is assistance in the conditions. That short of a good length – seven-to-nine metres to be precise – comes with the handicap of being employed when there is not much in the pitch.In Dharamsala, one of the three venues with encouraging swing and seam movement, in a day game, you could expect Hazlewood to get more into the six-to-seven-metre band. What’s remarkable with bowlers such as him and Bumrah is that they will go more aggressive without overpitching. You won’t expect half-volleys from them even if they go searching.In the process, if Hazlewood does walk away with a bag of wickets – law of averages would suggest such a match is not a million miles away – he will have earned it.

Where was the planning, Sri Lanka?

This was always going to be a hugely challenging tour, but it didn’t have to be so shambolic

Andrew Fidel Fernando13-Mar-20221:53

Jaffer: Sri Lanka will learn a lot from this India tour

Sri Lanka captain Dimuth Karunaratne thought fast bowler Dushmantha Chameera would be available for this match. In fact, Karunaratne said Chameera would be rested for the Mohali Test, specifically so that he would be ready for Bengaluru.It made some sense. Chameera had played eight T20Is in a row (five in Australia, three in India) and had picked up an ankle injury, which is unsurprising for a bowler of his pace. Give him a break. Keep that powder dry. Have him steam in with the pink ball, under lights.

Jasprit Bumrah’s day-two comments

On his 5/24 in the first innings: “When you play all three formats you have to look after your body and you sometimes miss out on the home Tests. This is the time when I got the opportunity and to be able to contribute towards the team’s success is always a great feeling.”
On the pitch: “If there is some help for the bowlers when you score runs on such a wicket gives you a lot of confidence. You will not get flat wickets everywhere you play, so whenever it’s a challenge, you are always looking forward to that challenge. Nobody is complaining about the wicket, yes everybody is finding a way and looking forward to contribute because they know if they score good runs on a tough wicket then that will give them a lot of confidence and when they play on a relatively flat wicket that will give them strength. So that is the mood in our camp.

But in the days before the Bengaluru Test, it came to light that Chameera’s injury might need long-term management. He still have played in Bengaluru, but the team’s focus this year is the T20 World Cup, and they absolutely could not risk losing their pace spearhead in that format.So what ended up happening is that a team that had already lost one of their fast bowlers, after Lahiru Kumara strained a hamstring in Mohali, carried Chameera in the squad right through the series, for no good reason, taking up the place of someone else, such as Asitha Fernando.It doesn’t seem like there was much of a plan.

****

In this series, Sri Lanka have Charith Asalanka batting at No. 5. He lit up Sri Lanka’s T20 World Cup, and has largely been excellent at No. 5 in the ODI set-up, so that he is a talented player with a potentially long trajectory is clear. But is he a Test No. 5 at the moment? In 70 first-class innings, he has a single century.His selection might be palatable if Sri Lanka had no others to fill his place, but in this squad, this very squad, is an experienced Test batter, who, if history is anything to go by, relishes playing India. Perhaps you’ll say Dinesh Chandimal averaging 50 against this opposition is skewed by that once-in-a-lifetime 162* he hit in Galle, way back in 2015. But its not. His body of work against India, and particularly India, is impressive.In 2017, when Sri Lanka last toured here, Chandimal hit 366 runs at an average of 61, which was second only to Virat Kohli’s. In that series he hit twin fifties in a big loss in Nagpur, and then a vital first-innings 164 in the (trigger warning) “pollution Test” in Delhi, which Sri Lanka went on to draw. R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja played all those matches, and Mohammed Shami two of them.There is no tougher assignment in Test cricket than a series in India. To succeed here, against this attack, against the SG ball, requires skill, application, and, vitally, experience. Chandimal has had a couple of modest pandemic years in the Test side, but despite that has 11 Test tons, and a career average touching 40. He was left out for a batter averaging less than 28 in first-class cricket. Sri Lanka’s multi-day competitions have been some of the softest in the full-member cricket world over the past decade.If there was a plan, it doesn’t seem like much of one.

****

In the first innings in Bengaluru, Kusal Mendis opened the innings with Karunaratne. The thinking, probably was that Mendis is a decent starter against spin, and can also better counter the offspin of R Ashwin, who was likely to open the innings. Mendis was out to Jasprit Bumrah, having faced zero deliveries of spin.On day two, Sri Lanka burned two reviews in the space of 10 overs, then missed one they should have taken soon after. Having served his six-month disciplinary suspension, Niroshan Dickwella has promptly reclaimed his role as one of the worst review-advisors in Test cricket.Have Sri Lanka put their best possible XI on the field?•BCCIAnd in this match, the bowlers have sprayed the ball around on a track that should suit them, batters have played muddled little innings, wafting at balls away from their body, not committing to defence or attack. And they have caught exceedingly poorly, having dropped at least six catches across their two innings.Sri Lanka were never really going to challenge this India team, perhaps, but as sublime as the hosts have been, Sri Lanka have also generously provided their own shambles.They have played, in short, like a team that hasn’t had a head coach since December, and are still scrambling to find one. Like a side with many high-profile and well-meaning advisors, but no cohesive vision. (Tom Moody, Aravinda de Silva, Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara and Muttiah Muralitharan are all now part of the set-up, but three of them have big IPL jobs, and Murali and de Silva have businesses; none are on the ground with the team full-time.)They have made decisions on the fly, thrown underprepared players into the toughest possible Test-match situations, and have made startling selection calls. And they may end up losing their second successive Test inside three days.

West Ham looking to "reignite" talks for 23-year-old they were once "close to signing"

West Ham are believed to be in the market for three major signings this January, and could now turn back to a familiar face in pursuit of fresh quality.

The Irons are preparing for what could be a vital transfer window in their quest to ensure Premier League survival. Looking to back new boss Nuno Espírito Santo, with West Ham currently sitting in the relegation zone after a torrid start to 2025/2026, David Sullivan and co have identified three key areas to reinforce.

Nuno’s would seriously benefit from signing a striker and a centre-back in January, while they’re also exploring options in midfield to add depth and quality in that area of the squad (Sky Sports).

In attack, West Ham are apparently targeting an athletic, mobile centre-forward who can provide a different profile to their current options. Al-Ahli’s Ivan Toney is believed to be a target for Nuno’s side in that regard, while reports suggest that Santiago Gimenez of AC Milan is also on West Ham’s radar.

The same can be said of ex-Tottenham striker Troy Parrott, who’s currently enjoying the season of his life at AZ Alkmaar, having also fired the Republic of Ireland to the World Cup play-offs recently.

West Ham’s results in the Premier League so far

Sunderland 3-0 West Ham

West Ham 1-5 Chelsea

Nottingham Forest 0-3 West Ham

West Ham 0-3 Tottenham

West Ham 1-2 Crystal Palace

Everton 1-1 West Ham

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

West Ham 0-2 Brentford

Leeds 2-1 West Ham

West Ham 3-1 Newcastle

West Ham 3-2 Burnley

Parrott’s brace against Portugal, which led Ireland to a 2-0 win over Cristiano Ronaldo’s side, and a hat-trick against Hungary confirmed his country’s place in the draw, with clubs like West Ham apparently taking notice of the 23-year-old’s exceptional form.

The midfield area also requires attention, with West Ham reportedly targeting additions to bolster their options in the number eight role. The club has been linked with moves for the likes of Chelsea starlet Andrey Santos as they look to add technical quality and energy to the middle of the park.

Defensively, West Ham are pursuing reinforcements at centre-back.

They’ve reportedly made a £15.8 million bid to sign Lecce and Portugal Under-21 centre-back Tiago Gabriel already (La Gazzetta dello Sport), though the Italian club has rejected this opening offer and is holding out for around £22 million.

West Ham currently have the second-worst defence in England’s top flight, and despite their glaring need for a forward, Nuno’s backline also demands attention.

West Ham looking to 'reignite' Charlie Cresswell talks

Now, according to ExWHUemployee, they could turn back towards Toulouse defender Charlie Cresswell as an option.

The former Leeds United defender was apparently ‘close to signing’ in the summer window, and West Ham are looking to ‘reignite talks’ over signing Cresswell in January as they attempt to shore up their leaky defence.

Cresswell represents the type of defensive reinforcement West Ham desperately need to address their relegation concerns.

The 23-year-old has demonstrated strong leadership capabilities and excels in aerial situations, while also contributing offensively with three goals last season.

Standing over six feet tall, he’s physically imposing and wins his defensive battles, providing the commanding presence that’s been missing from West Ham’s backline. His move to Toulouse has proven highly successful, with the defender establishing himself among France’s top young centre-backs and helping Toulouse to keep 10 clean sheets in 2024/2025.

His quality has translated to international football too, where he earned praise for his leadership during the recent Under-21 European Championships (GiveMeSport). The England youth international played a key role in his country’s successful title defence, showing he can deliver on the big stage.

Cresswell being homegrown and valued at around £18 million in the summer makes this deal all the more appealing to West Ham, especially considering their limited winter budget.

Saída de medalhões do Corinthians mexe com comando do vestiário

MatériaMais Notícias

As saídas de Cássio, novo goleiro do Cruzeiro, e Paulinho, que se despediu do Corinthians após coletiva realizada na manhã desta quarta-feira (29), abrem uma lacuna no vestiário. Ao lado de Fagner, a dupla era responsável por vestir a braçadeira de capitão e liderar o clube, seja dentro ou fora de campo.

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Sem a presença dos veteranos no dia a dia, a equipe comandada por António Oliveira terá que formar novas referências, mesmo que os principais candidatos tenham pouca experiência como atletas do Corinthians.

Questionado a respeito do tema, Paulinho afirmou que existem jogadores no atual elenco com perfil de liderança e indicou alguns nomes para assumir essa responsabilidade.

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Dentro de um grupo, pode-se formar vários (líderes). Mas eu vejo o Raniele, o próprio Garro. O Fagner, que é uma referência dentro do clube, é uma liderança. Ele é uma liderança na forma que vive a vida. O próprio Carlos Miguel pode surgir para isso. Liderança é normal surgir, mas não tem que ser forçada. Liderei calado nos últimos anos porque outros faziam melhor


explicou Paulinho

Mesmo com o futuro incerto no clube, o lateral-direito Fagner será responsável por conduzir essa reformulação no vestiário da equipe. Com contrato até o fim da temporada, o jogador negocia sua permanência com a diretoria corintiana, mas as partes ainda não chegaram a um acordo.

O técnico António Oliveira é um dos principais responsáveis por fazer lobby pela permanência do lateral-direito. Para o treinador português, o jogador tem que ser preservado.

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– Todos nós gostávamos muito do Cássio, mesma situação com o Paulo. As novas lideranças emergem. Como eu falei, elas não são impostas. Esse grupo não tem essa dificuldade, é um plantel de gente que gosta de aprender uns com os outros. Agora, sem Cássio e Paulinho, quero que preservem o Fagner. Ouço muito, mas é uma pessoa extraordinária, que se entrega de corpo e alma. Na minha opinião é top 3 do Brasil na posição. É um ídolo do clube por tudo o que já viveu e pelo respeito que tem do grupo – disse António Oliveira.

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CorinthiansFagnerFutebol NacionalPaulinho

John Campbell returns to West Indies ODI squad; Layne, Springer called up

Six years after he last played an ODI, West Indies opener John Campbell has earned a recall for the three-match series against New Zealand starting on Sunday. Fast bowler Johann Layne and seam-bowling allrounder Shamar Springer received their maiden call-ups to the ODI side, while quick Matthew Forde, who returned from a shoulder dislocation for the T20Is against New Zealand, also returned.The trio replaced spinners Akeal Hosein and Gudakesh Motie, and left-arm quick Ramon Simmonds, who was injured, from the squad that played Bangladesh last month. Alzarri Joseph, Shamar Joseph and Jediah Blades also were sidelined by injuries.Campbell replaced fellow opener Brandon King from the Bangladesh series. King returned scores of 44, 0 and 18 in the series West Indies lost 2-1. His T20I form has also tapered off, with four single-digit scores in his last five outings across the Bangladesh and New Zealand series.Campbell was recalled following his strong performances in red-ball cricket, including an impressive century in the second Test against India in Delhi last month. He was Jamaica’s leading run-scorer in the Super50 Cup last season, with 278 runs in seven outings at a strike rate of 102.20. Notably, none of the top ten run-getters in that competition scored at a faster pace.Layne’s call-up follows his Test debut on the tour of India last month. While he has impressed in red-ball cricket, he has only 12 List-A appearances and 13 wickets to show in the format. Against New Zealand, Layne will complete the seam attack that features Jayden Seales and Romario Shepherd apart from Springer, Forde and Justin Greaves.Ackeem Auguste, who made his ODI debut in Bangladesh, kept his spot alongside Keacy Carty and Alick Athanaze in the 15-member squad led by Shai Hope.New Zealand and West Indies play the opening ODI in Christchurch on Sunday followed by the second and third matches in Napier and Hamilton, respectively.

West Indies squad for ODIs against New Zealand

Shai Hope (capt), Alick Athanaze, Ackeem Auguste, John Campbell, Keacy Carty, Roston Chase, Matthew Forde, Justin Greaves, Amir Jangoo, Johann Layne, Khary Pierre, Sherfane Rutherford, Jayden Seales, Romario Shepherd, Shamar Springer

Tite aprova arbitragem após vitória do Flamengo: 'Decisões corretas'

MatériaMais Notícias

Tite concedeu entrevista coletiva após a vitória do Flamengo sobre o Atlético-GO neste domingo (14), na estreia do Brasileirão, e comentou as polêmicas de arbitragem. O duelo teve duas expulsões – além do técnico Jair Ventura -, um gol anulado e um pênalti marcado, todos contra o Dragão. Na visão do treinador do Rubro-Negro Carioca, as decisões foram corretas.

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➡️A boa do Lance! Betting: vamos dobrar seu primeiro depósito, até R$200! Basta abrir sua conta e tá na mão!

– Vi todos os lances agora. Foram corretas. Com exceção que eu não vi, que foi da ofensa (expulsão de Jair Ventura), um jogo acidentado muito difícil de apitar. Porém, das decisões das quais eu vi pegando as imagens elas foram corretas, a favor e contra – afirmou Tite.

– Eu falei que o árbitro tem que ter um pouco mais de sensibilidade de administrar algumas situações. Porém, eu também tenho que falar a verdade, que o árbitro falou que ele foi ofendido e aí é justificado. O Jair (Ventura) pode falar mais a respeito. Se fosse só por um momento de reclamação eu poderia externar para ter um pouco mais de calma e conduzir, mas aí teve um outro incidente – completou o técnico do Flamengo, que, no momento da expulsão, saiu em defesa do treinador adversário contra a arbitragem.

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O Rubro-Negro Carioca jogou em vantagem numérica durante todo o segundo tempo. Questionado sobre a equipe ter tentado controlar a partida – e não ter conseguido – depois do intervalo, Tite negou que o objetivo era administrar o resultado e criticou o gramado do Serra Dourada.

– Quando nós chegamos no intervalo a gente sabe que a necessidade é de continuar produzindo e empurrando o adversário para trás e buscar o segundo gol. Inclusive coloquei que administrar jogo nós já tínhamos aprendido que não era dessa forma que nós agiríamos. E nós buscamos o segundo gol. Porém, tem alguns detalhes na bola: no único lance que nós erramos, em cruzamento que teve de conclusão, o Atlético-GO foi efetivo. Então tem que olhar sob esse contexto. A partir daí ela traz cenários diferentes desde o primeiro jogo que foi acidentado. O gramado dá para ser melhor para ter um espetáculo melhor. Não dá para ter um Serra Dourada… faz tempo, mas eu joguei aqui. Serra Dourada era um prazer vir aqui. Agora a bola pipoca, e a qualidade do jogo ele te trava mais.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Mengão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Flamengo

Confira outras declarações de Tite e do auxiliar Cléber Xavier após Atlético-GO x Flamengo, pelo Brasileirão:

Não, absolutamente não (descanso é prioridade). A recuperação não tem aspecto descanso. Coração não engessa, né? Eu não posso pensar no quarto jogo, eu vou pensar no próximo. O jogo foi muito emocionante, e volto a dizer: os mesmos três pontos que disputamos aqui são os mesmos três pontos que vão dizer onde devemos estar no fim do campeonato. Briga por campeão, Libertadores… Era a primeira de 38 decisões, temos essa consciência – disse Tite.

A questão de tomada de decisão no último terço hoje tiveram duas questões bem claras no jogo: a primeira é a condição do gramado e a segunda a forma com que o Atlético-GO se defende muito bem com sua primeira linha de quatro e seus dois volantes centrais. Não tinha muito espaço de criação – afirmou Cléber Xavier.

Reitero o que o Cleber colocou, da qualidade da marcação do Atlético-GO. Na linha defensiva, marcação baixa, são extremamente agressivos e pressionantes. Teve um lance no primeiro tempo em que nós ficamos trocando passes e os caras bloqueavam. Tocou no Arrasca, bloqueava. Tocou no Pedro, bloqueava. A qualidade do trabalho do Jair nessa fase e essa pressão no homem da bola nos dificultou muito – completou o técnico principal do Flamengo.

É uma opção entre o número de atletas que a gente tem. Como o Cleiton ficou de fora hoje, o Wesley que ainda não se recuperou… Grupo grande, a gente vai trabalhar todos eles dentro da competição que é grande, são 38 rodadas. Mas ele (Matheus Gonçalves) vem treinando muito bem – comentou Cléber Xavier.

Eu sei que vocês fazem, é a função jornalística projetar, mas a minha experiência me permite pensar jogo a jogo. A gente vai para uma segunda decisão agora. Eu não consigo pensar lá na frente. Há toda uma estrutura do Flamengo para projetar as equipes. Eu não consigo pensar, a não ser refletir nos acertos e erros que cometemos. A equipe se consolidar, crescer na competição, fazer um bom treinamento, voltar hoje, ficar com a família, retomar força, treinar, mesmo que não seja treinamento com intensidade menor, por isso falei do descanso. Há formas de treinar que a gente consegue fazer sem botar intensidade – afirmou Tite.

Uma realidade que a gente vive é: amanhã analisar o adversário, fazer as correções, as avaliações positivas aos atletas, recuperar os atletas que jogaram hoje, treinar quem não jogou, e um dia depois preparar a equipe para enfrentar o São Paulo. A gente só consegue pensar a partir de agora no São Paulo. Tem momentos que agente vai conseguir pensar dois, três jogos, mas esse momento agora é pensar no São Paulo – finalizou o auxiliar do Flamengo.

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FlamengoTite

Botafogo x Palmeiras: relembre as tretas entre os clubes após partida do Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

John Textor, dono da SAF do Botafogo, ironizou o possível interesse do Palmeiras no atacante Júnior Santos. Essa não é a primeira vez que o clima esquenta nesta relação. Mas como tudo começou até chegar ao ponto que está hoje? Relembre com o Lance!.

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Após a derrota do Botafogo para o Palmeiras, no Campeonato Brasileiro, Textor desceu para a beira do gramado do Estádio Nilton Santos extremamente irritado e reclamou da arbitragem. O dono da SAF do Botafogo falou em “roubo”, “corrupção” e pediu a renúncia de Ednaldo Rodrigues, presidente da Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF).

➡️ Tudo sobre o Fogão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Botafogo

Não é para cartão vermelho, ele mudou o jogo. Isso é corrupção, isso é roubo. Por favor, me multem, Ednaldo, mas você precisa renunciar amanhã de manhã. É isso que precisa acontecer. Esse campeonato se tornou uma piada


John Textor.

CUTUCADA DE ABEL FERREIRA
Abel Ferreira elogiou John Textor após a vitória sobre o Botafogo, no Nilton Santos. No entanto, também deu uma indireta para o empresário.

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– Tenho a minha opinião (sobre as falas de Textor), mas se eu disser… Melhor não dizer. Já disse que é um dos melhores presidentes que está no Brasil. Mas o futebol tem disso, muitas emoções… Vocês viram o zagueiro do Botafogo chutando o microfone. São momentos intensos. Só sente quem está lá dentro. Ninguém sabe o que é ser mãe, só as mulheres. Porque sentem.

RELATÓRIO SOBRE MANIPULAÇÃO DE RESULTADOS
John Textor encomendou um relatório da Good Game!, empresa responsável por identificar manipulação de resultados e erros da arbitragem, que apontou uma decisão incorreta do árbitro com benefícios para o Atlético-MG. Na ocasião, o Galo venceu o Botafogo.

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PROVOCAÇÃO NAS REDES SOCIAIS
Após a confirmação de mais um título brasileiro para o Palmeiras, o clube provocou o Botafogo nas redes sociais. O Alviverde publicou um “relatório final” sobre a competição. Confira abaixo.

LEILA X TEXTOR
Em entreivsta ao “ge”, a presidente do Palmeiras, Leila Pereira, criticou as atitudes de John Textor. A dirigente chamou o dono da SAF do Botafogo de “desequilibrado”.

– Chega até a ser ridículo. Ele desprestigia, desvaloriza esse produto tão importante que é o futebol. Ele deveria ter mais serenidade. É uma parte de desequilíbrio do senhor John Textor.

Textor publicou uma resposta oficial. Relembre aqui.

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BotafogoJohn TextorPalmeiras

Walk-Off Wagers: MLB Best Bets Today (How to Bet on Jack Flaherty in Possible World Series Clinching Win)

In another possible World Series clinching win, the Dodgers will hand the ball to Jack Flaherty while the Yankees count on ace Gerrit Cole to extend the season.

In what could be the last baseball game of the season, we have a handful of bets ready for you, including how to bet the total in this one, a pitcher prop, and a home run prop for a Dodgers slugger.

Get ready to wager on Game 5 below!

Best Bets for World Series Game 5

  • First Five Under 4.5 (-130)
  • Jack Flaherty UNDER 15.5 Outs (-160)
  • Teoscar Hernandez to Hit a Home Run (+6300

First Five Under 4.5 (-130)

Cole and Flaherty each showcased elite stuff in the opener of this series, which makes me confident this game can go under despite the hitter-friendly conditions at Yankee Stadium. 

The Yankees ace tossed six innings of one-run ball while allowing only four hits and Flaherty pitched five-and-a-third of two-run ball, only allowing a two-run homer to Giancarlo Stanton. 

Both pitchers had the upper hand, and with the thought of an elimination game, I expect we see another pitcher’s duel early in this one. 

The Dodgers will need solid innings from Flaherty after a bullpen game in Game 4, and while he has been up-and-down this series, the team has been able to string together fine outings thus far in the postseason. 

Meanwhile, Cole has arguably been the best pitcher in baseball since the start of the playoffs, allowing seven earned runs across more than 22 innings while striking out nearly three batters to every walk dished out. 

I’m going to side with the first five under in what can be a cagey start to this elimination game. 

Jack Flaherty UNDER 15.5 Outs (-160)

Flaherty has gone under this mark in only one of four postseason starts, but given the nature of this game and the hitter-friendly conditions at Yankee Stadium, I believe we see a more tactical approach from Flaherty that can see him run up a higher pitch count. 

He only walked one batter in his Game 1 start that lasted 16 outs, down from the four he walked in his second NLCS start. 

However, given the stakes of this game, I can envision manager Dave Roberts quickly going to the bullpen that has navigated tricky waters already this season. 

Flaherty has had suspect control, but even in a strong outing, I can see him getting to his threshold faster against a Yankees lineup that is off of its best showing of the postseason, hanging 11 runs on the Dodgers in Game 4. 

Teoscar Hernandez to Hit a Home Run (+630)

Hernandez went deep in Game 2 but has drifted out farther than the rest of his sweet-swinging teammates in the Los Angeles order. 

The 2024 Home Run Derby Champion is hitting just fine this series, posting a hit in all four games in addition to the two-run homer in Game 2. 

While Gerrit Cole poses a tough test on the mound, the Yankees bullpen has proven to be vulnerable to the long ball this series, and at price, I’ll take Hernandez to get a hold of one in the hitter-friendly Yankee Stadium. 

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