8/10 Sheffield United star just made himself as undroppable as Brewster

Sheffield United picked up the league double in the Steel City Derby on Sunday lunchtime as Chris Wilder’s Blades got the better of Danny Rohl’s Sheffield Wednesday by a single goal.

As is often the case in a contest that has huge bragging rights on the line, the clash itself was cagey and attritional at points, with only five shots on target registered by both sides at Hillsborough.

Thankfully for the promotion-hungry Blades, one of their on-target efforts would trickle in courtesy of Rhian Brewster, with the number seven one standout performer that would help his side go joint top of the Championship with Yorkshire foes Leeds United.

Brewster's game-changing performance vs Wednesday

Indeed, Wilder would elect to start the ex-Liverpool forward for this full-blooded affair ahead of Callum O’Hare, which was a decision that proved to be a masterstroke come full-time.

The injury-prone attacker is enjoying his finest spell in a Blades shirt to date at the moment, with this late tap-in taking his second-tier goal haul for the campaign up to two alongside his three assists.

Not the most memorable strike in terms of quality, but the effort – which was all Tyrese Campbell’s making down the wing – would still send the Blades masses into pandemonium at Hillsborough, knowing their title charge remains on.

But, although Brewster would steal all the headlines at the end with this invaluable contribution, there were other faces in South Yorkshire who stood out even more, including this defender who could now be deemed as undroppable moving forward.

The Sheffield United star who is now undroppable

Whilst certain positions in Wilder’s XI are fixed now, with Michael Cooper an absolute shoo-in in-between the sticks among other names, the right-back position is still very much up for grabs.

With both Harry Clarke and Alfie Gilchrist absent for the Steel City Derby, Wilder would hand Femi Seriki only his fourth start of the Championship season to try and make up for these woes, which was another close call the United boss got spot on.

Minutes played

90

Touches

54

Accurate passes

17/20 (85%)

Key passes

1

Accurate long balls

3/4

Successful dribbles

4/6

Clearances

4

Tackles

4

Total duels won

11/21

The 57-year-old wouldn’t have felt any worry with Seriki at the right-back spot despite the occasion, having seen him win five duels against Bristol City just the league match before, only for him to put in even more of a determined and dogged effort against Rohl’s hosts when glancing at the table above.

Across the course of the 90 minutes, the Manchester-born 21-year-old won a steep 11 duels for his side when they were under the cosh, on top of also relieving danger with some sprints in attack, leading to four successful dribbles also coming his way before the high-stakes game was done and dusted.

Having battled back from his own injury concerns, the up-and-coming Blades prospect will hope he’s gifted an extended run in the main team now as Wilder’s first-choice right-back, with Sheffield Star journalist Danny Hall even gifting Seriki a high 8/10 rating post-match.

United will know the win wasn’t clinched in the prettiest of manners, but another three points being tallied up on the board keeps the title race ticking over for another day, as the red and white half of South Yorkshire aim to take Leeds all the way.

Cost £5.1m, now worth 194% more: Sheffield United struck gold on elite star

Sheffield United will persist with this centre-back happily away from going back in for Luke Woolfenden.

ByKelan Sarson Mar 14, 2025

Tottenham in pole position to sign "top" Postecoglou target in £60m forward

Tottenham Hotspur are believed to be leading the race to sign a “top” target for manager Ange Postecoglou, and it is believed they’ve already completed work on potentially getting a deal done for him this summer.

Tottenham identify attacking targets as Spurs players face exits

According to recent reports, there are a few attacking players who face uncertain futures at Hotspur Way.

£400k-per-week forward has privately refused to rule out joining Tottenham

Spurs appear to have been given a transfer boost.

1 ByEmilio Galantini Feb 19, 2025

While Tottenham are keen to make Mathys Tel’s deal permanent, and have the option to do so for around £45 million on a six-year contract, the final decision will rest on the teenager’s shoulders.

Ipswich Town (away)

February 22nd

Man City (home)

February 26th

Bournemouth (home)

March 9th

Fulham (away)

March 16th

Chelsea (away)

April 2nd

Timo Werner is also at Spurs on loan from RB Leipzig, after chairman Daniel Levy and co negotiated an extension on his 23/24 loan to include an option to buy set at around £8.5 million, but the German is most likely returning to his parent club at the end of the season (Bild).

Tottenham are also open to selling Richarlison, who has suffered from repeated injuries this term, while club captain Son Heung-min could be axed by Spurs as well following a lacklusture run of form (GiveMeSport).

Given the potential shortage of attacking options they face next season, not to mention their serious lack of depth in general, it is believed that Tottenham are already identifying forward targets for the summer window.

One of them, according to journalist Graeme Bailey and The Boot Room, is Crystal Palace forward Eberechi Eze.

Eberechi Eze for Crystal Palace

The 26-year-old has been a star player at Selhurst Park over the last few campaigns, earning a call-up to Gareth Southgate’s England squad for Euro 2024 last year, and Eze’s continued that excellent form with six goals and six assists in all competitions this term.

Tottenham in pole position to sign Eberechi Eze from Crystal Palace

His contract includes a release clause around £60 million, meaning Levy and co can bypass talks with Palace and head straight to the player for terms, if they decide to pay that fee.

Postecoglou and Tottenham view Eze as a “top” target heading into the summer, and Bailey reports that they’re currently leading the chase for his signature above fellow interested sides.

This follows Spurs already laying groundwork to get a deal done for later in the year, with Manchester City, Liverpool and Arsenal all named as other suitors. Fulham boss Marco Silva has also lavished praise on Eze this season, branding the Palace sensation a joy to watch.

“Everyone who loves football should enjoy seeing Eze on the pitch,” said Silva.

“He is a top, top young player and has so much quality with everything he does on the pitch. Even though he is on the opposite team, I really enjoy watching him play, the great talent that he has to work with. For Crystal Palace, it is of course much better to have him there with them.”

Oliver Glasner, meanwhile, has drawn attention to Eze’s “unbelievable” finishing ability.

“Who’s a better player than Eze? For me he’s absolutely top, if he was luckier this season he would have five or six goals,” said Glasner.

“He’s always dangerous because he has the quality and ability at 1-1, he’s such an unbelievable finisher, in some situations he can improve, he’s a guy who can always score and he’s someone who everyone likes.

“This is why he’s on the pitch because he’s able to score goals.”

'I'm confident I can play there' – How Sebastian Berhalter’s MLS breakout with Vancouver Whitecaps, encouragement from his famous father, fuel his USMNT dreams

GOAL sat down with "Gregg's son" to talk about his journey, from nearly quitting the sport to beating Lionel Messi and Inter Miami

There was a point a few years back in which Sebastian Berhalter thought he might just be done with soccer. It seems so out of character for him to admit this, particularly now. Fresh off a performance in which he stared down Lionel Messi and Inter Miami without a worry in the world, the Vancouver Whitecaps midfielder can acknowledge he was staring down the thought of life after the sport.

This was during his year-long spell with Austin FC. After a mini-breakout with the Columbus Crew, he was loaned to Austin. Following an 18-appearance season in 2021, the Texas club declined an option to sign Berhalter.

He was a player without a home, and one without an obvious plan.

At a crossroads, he did what most kids would do: he talked to his dad. in Sebastian's case, however, that just happened to mean talking to a former U.S. men's national team player and coach, and the man who now leads the Chicago Fire. But, in that moment, Gregg Berhalter was none of those things.

In that moment, he was a listener, a sounding board, a father for a son in need.

"I think saying this is crazy," Sebastian Berhalter tells GOAL, "because anyone who knows me thinks I love soccer more than anyone they've ever seen. But, at that point, I was just so down, you know? I just thought, 'Maybe I'm not good enough.' I felt like I had to turn something around… That was the biggest moment of my career: almost not wanting to play anymore."

And that conversation was a seminal moment for what has become a stellar season and revitalized career.

"I remember talking to my dad and being like 'Dude, I don't even know anymore,' " Sebastian says. "He said to me, 'Whatever you do, I'll support you. If this isn't you, then this isn't you.' Him saying that made me realize that I had to get my act together. Let me figure this out. I really wanted to do this.

"That's not to say I wasn't working hard before, but I think it actually calmed me down. I kind of dialed it back and started to realize what I needed. It was all about turning the hardest moment of my career into the most important part of my career."

Berhalter is now playing the best soccer of his life, and playing in the most meaningful games of his life. Handed a lifeline by the Vancouver Whitecaps in 2022, Berhalter has repaid that faith slowly but surely, culminating in a CONCACAF Champions Cup run for the ages. The highlight, of course, was Berhalter running circles around Miami's former Barcelona stars, providing two goals and two assists across the two legs to lead the Whitecaps to the finale.

Having taken a huge leap forward as a player, Berhalter is now helping set a tone for a Whitecaps team that may just be the best in MLS. A CONCACAF Champions Cup final is on the horizon, but more could be on the way. Berhalter spent so much of his life living and dying with the U.S. men's national team's results, especially when his father was the USMNT coach. Could he soon be putting on that shirt for himself?

So much has changed. At one point, Berhalter was wondering if he'd ever make it. Now, it's fair for the rest of us to wonder how far he can go.

CHICAGO FIRE FCThe beginning

This story isn't about Gregg Berhalter, but you can't acknowledge the son's tale without that of his father.

From the start, Berhalter's life was surrounded by soccer. He was born in London while his Gregg was playing for Crystal Palace. His mother, Rosalind, was a star player in her own right, winning four national titles at the University of North Carolina. Soccer is what the Berhalter family does. From the beginning, it's what he's wanted to do, too.

It didn't take him long to realize, though, that he would be viewed through a different lens, due to his last name. In some cases, it would get him the benefit of the doubt. In others, it would be used against him. As a teenager, the midfielder struggled with that. Now, he realizes the value of it all.

"Being Gregg's son, to have your dad be someone in the sport that you play – not a lot of kids get to have that," he says. "If I'm 'Gregg's son' to people, that's fine. He's had a great career and is a great coach, so if people want to just call me 'Gregg's son' for the rest of my career, that's fine with me because it's something I'm super proud of."

That's a view forged through maturity. The 24-year-old admits it wasn't always so easy.

"Growing up, though, it was tougher," he says. "It gave me a little chip on my shoulder. I felt I always had to prove it double. It made me feel like I had to have that 'dog' in me and not care what anyone else said. I wanted to show I can do it myself. Since turning pro, though, I'm just grateful that I have someone who can give me that feedback. He's someone that I'd much rather have on my side than not have!"

Gregg was careful not to overstep, or overload his son. Soccer was frequently the topic at dinner, as you'd expect at the Berhalter house, and Sebastian says he was fortunate to be surrounded by family who loved the game as much as he did. His father, meanwhile, looked to foster that love by striking the balance that all coaches seek to find.

“There are a lot of fond memories,” Gregg said earlier this year. “My first coaching job was a U10 club team in California when I was playing for the Galaxy. I ended up coaching him in his first experience in club soccer. I remember when he was disobeying, I would make him run laps around the field and he would get so mad at me. We didn’t have a lot of words on the way home from training.

“A really fun memory was at Hammarby. His coach got sick and I ended up coaching his team in this mini-tournament over a weekend and we actually won the tournament. It was a great moment for the team and him personally. It was a fun moment.”

After Hammarby, Berhalter's teenage years were spent in Columbus, where Gregg was then serving as coach of the Crew. Berhalter, as is the case with many teenagers, wasn't out to emulate his father. He was drawn to the team's two star midfielders: Wil Trapp and Federico Higuain.

"Wil just had this composure," Sebastian recalls. "He was like 21 or 22,and was captaining the team. What a good role model. And then Pipa could do anything with the ball. That was something I wanted to add to my game, too. Between those two, I had a good balance of how I wanted to play when I got older."

Berhalter would follow Trapp's path, becoming a homegrown signing for Columbus after spending one year at his parents' alma mater, North Carolina. He made his debut during the MLS is Back tournament in the summer of 2020, making nine appearances en route to an MLS Cup triumph later that season.

It seemed to be a bright start to a long stay in Columbus. Not quite. That tough year in Austin followed. Then came the trade to Vancouver for a less-than-overwhelming $50,000 in General Allocation Money.

It's quite clear now, though, that the Whitecaps got themselves a steal.

AdvertisementImagnThe breakout

The most impressive moments of the Whitecaps' triumph over Inter Miami actually came when they were losing. After a 2-0 first leg win at home, the Whitecaps conceded early in the second leg. For the neutral, it felt like a Miami barrage was coming. This was a team featuring Lionel Messi, Luis Suarez, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba. They surely smelled blood in the water.

The barrage came, but not from Miami. Berhatler assisted Brian White six minutes into the second half. He teed up Pedro Vite two minutes later. In the 71st minute, with Miami all but dead and buried, Berhalter made sure to get one of his own, capping what was almost certainly the best 20-minute stretch of his career so far. The other team had Lionel Messi but, for those 20 minutes, the Whitecaps had Sebastian Berhalter and, somehow, that meant more. And it ended in an 3-1 Vancouver win.

"Going into the games, I knew I could do it," Berhalter said. "It wasn't just about stepping on the field in that moment. It's something that I've always believed in. I don't want to sound arrogant, but I knew that I could have an impact. Playing those guys is cool, but you try not to look at them because Messi is Messi, but you try to take him as any other player. He's just another player on the field. You have to win the ball from him and you can't let him score.

"It's something that I knew I could do, but it's not just two games of proving that to myself. It's been six years of hard work to get to where I can do that."

Berhalter's right: His development is about more than just those two games. He scored against Pumas, too, helping the Whitecaps topple the Mexican giants in the CONCACAF Champions Cup quarterfinals. Between the two Miami legs, he added a goal against Minnesota, too. In each of his two most recent matches, he's added assists, making it four in his last three matches.

Per FBref, Berhalter is in the 94th percentile or better in assists, expected assists and shot-creating actions when compared to midfielders across similar leagues. He's in the 78th percentile in progressive passes and 72nd percentile in passes attempted. He's not just pulling strings, either, as he's also listed as above average in each of the key defensive metrics, too, headlined by an 84th-percentile mark in tackles.

Some credit surely goes to Whitecaps coach Jesper Sorensen, who has turned the team into a juggernaut early in his first season. Under previous coach Vanni Sartini, Berhalter was more of a role player, even playing some games at wingback. Under Sorensen, Berhalter has become a midfield maestro, one key to everything the Whitecaps are doing in the center of the park.

“He’s a guy that’s really good at taking information,” Sorensen said. “My experience is that it’s just not the willingness to learn and adapt to new things. It’s also if you’re actually capable of doing it, and Sebastian is very capable of processing the information he gets and then actually acting upon it. I think he’s a great professional, always in good shape. He always takes very good care of himself.

"On top of that, he’s a guy that’s curious, always wants to learn new stuff, wants to improve himself, so that’s a very good thing.”

Berhalter's success has fans in Vancouver dreaming of continental glory. It also has fans of the USMNT wondering if there could soon be another Berhalter wearing that crest at some point soon.

(C)Getty ImagesUSMNT dreams

Berhalter laughs when asked to describe his USMNT fandom.

"It's like the one time in my life that I get to feel like an ultra," he says.

Growing up, with his dad playing for and coaching different clubs, Berhalter understood that his team loyalty could change relatively quickly. Not with the USMNT, though. He was always a fan, even before his father took charge of the program in 2018. In 2022, as Gregg coached the biggest games of his life, the 21-year-old Berhalter was in the stands, on the knife's edge with every touch just like every other American in Qatar.

"Getting to go to that World Cup was special," he says. "Seeing your dad coach and seeing some of the best teams in the world was something I'll never forget. I was just so proud of that group and I'm proud of how everything was handled. It really was such a surreal feeling, being there with my family."

Gregg's time in charge of the USMNT ended last summer after an early Copa America exit. He was succeeded by Mauricio Pochettino, who now faces the difficult task of preparing the U.S. for a 2026 World Cup on home soil. With just more than a year to go before that World Cup kicks off, there isn't much time for experimentation – and there's absolutely zero time to waste.

Still, Pochettino has shown a willingness to give MLS players their chance. Diego Luna has emerged as a potential starter. Brian White, Berhalter's teammate in Vancouver, earned himself a CONCACAF Nations League chance with a January goal. Patrick Agyemang – who scored against Canada in March – Jack McGlynn and Max Arfsten have been involved, too, proving there is no MLS bias for Pochettino.

Having asserted himself as one of MLS' best so far this season, Berhalter has a case to be in that mix, too. It's early, of course, but, on form alone, the 23-year-old midfielder has an argument. Whether it happens is another story.

"I don't think there's a fan that's watched more games than me in the last six years," Berhalter says. "I've watched every single game over the last six years. Being around it, getting to go to the World Cup, yeah, I'm confident I can play there. I think I can do it, but I also have so much appreciation for all of those guys and that team. It would be an honor to play there.

"To me, it's like gravy. If it comes, that's amazing. If not, you still do your thing for your club. The most important thing is doing well and winning games and providing what the team needs. I think I am a confident player and I think can be in there. I think I can help, and I think I can do good things."

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Getty Images SportThe work ahead

As the moment, the Whitecaps are the best team in MLS. They've amassed 27 points from their 12 MLS matches, losing just once along the way. Care to guess which team beat Vancouver?

On March 22, Gregg and the Chicago Fire took down the Whitecaps, 3-1. With bragging rights on the line in the first Berhalter derby, father got one over on son.

“It’s kind of funny when you’re scouting the opponent and you’re watching the games, and you’re like, ‘Oh that’s a nice little midfielder,’ and it happens to be your son,” the elder Berhalter said. “It’s kind of funny. Sometimes you watch it from a wide angle, you’re seeing all this movement, but then the familiarity of his movement and watching him for so many years stands out.

“I’m definitely proud of him and how he’s progressed in his career and being able to watch closely in the last five years to see what type of player he’s become is really nice. I know it’s down to his hard work and his mindset.”

That's the part of this that Sebastian Berhalter wants everyone to understand: the work to get here has been very hard. Despite his last name, he wasn't handed anything, and his path wasn't easy. There were times when he felt alone and unsure of himself and – even if those moments seem far away now – they were defining.

"It's not just been overnight," he says. "It didn't happen over two games against Miami, you know what I mean? This has been a grind since I was 13 or 14 years old. I looked at myself at 13 and said, 'That's what I want to be when I'm older.' From that moment on, I started working, sometimes a little too much, but the consistency and determination, that's what means the most to me. That's what I'm most proud of.

"It's not an assist or a goal against Miami. For me, I'm proud of the work that I've put in as a person and as a player, because it made me learn a lot about myself."

Sebastian is still learning about himself and, in truth, fans are still learning a lot about him. He's being recognized more as the hype around Vancouver builds. That recognition, as he says, is gravy. The hard work got him here, and it now it has him believing it will take him where he still wants to go.

Curran, Stokes, Williamson list highest base price at IPL auction

Sam Curran, who was player of the final and the tournament at the 2022 World Cup, is among 21 men who have listed the maximum reserve price of INR 2 crore (approx US$ 246,000) for the 2023 IPL auction.Not a single Indian player is listed in the 2 crore bracket which includes marquee names like England Test captain Ben Stokes, Australian allrounder Cameron Green, New Zealand captain Kane Williamson and Nicholas Pooran who stepped down recently as West Indies white-ball captain.Related

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A maximum of 87 players can be bought at the auction (squad strength of 25 each) of which 30 can be overseas names. The auction is scheduled on December 23 in Kochi.A total of 991 players (714 Indian and 277 overseas) are part of the initial long list which the IPL shared with the 10 franchises on Thursday. The IPL will prune this down based on input from the franchises, who have until December 9 to get back to the tournament authorities.A break down of the IPL 2023 auction long list•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Agarwal, Rahane part of Indian group
In what is a first, not one Indian player is listed in the highest reserve price band of 2 crore. The list of 19 capped Indians mainly comprises discarded national players including Ajinkya Rahane, Ishant Sharma and Mayank Agarwal.Rahane was released by Kolkata Knight Riders having bought him for 1 crore in the last auction. His base price this time is 50 lakh. Ishant, who had gone unsold in 2022, is asking for 75 lakh.Agarwal was the first player to be retained ahead of the mega auction last year by Punjab Kings and was also handed captaincy of the team. However, a below par season, both for the player and the franchise, forced Kings to release Agarwal, who had been paid 14 crore last season.Agarwal has listed his base price at 1 crore. Left-arm fast bowler Jaydev Unadkat, who has been among the highest-paid players at IPL auctions, has listed his base price at 50 lakh. Unadkat, who has been in stellar form having led Saurashtra to the Vijay Hazare Trophy final, where he is the leading wicket-taker, was released by Mumbai Indians, who had bought him for 1.3 crore in 2022.Focus on Curran, Stokes, Green
The most keenly awaited part of an IPL auction – mega or mini – has been the order in which a player’s name comes out for bidding. And usually franchises pay a lot of attention, and money to the marquee names*. It is fair to assume that Curran, Stokes, Williamson and Pooran will be part of this set along with probably Agarwal.Overseas allrouders have always been a mega hit at mini auctions and the in-form trio of Curran, Stokes and Green will fancy a fat pay cheque as an early Christmas present on December 23. While Green has never featured in IPL, the England duo have significant experience.Currran last played in the tournament in 2021 for Chennai Super Kings before a stress fracture in his lower back forced him to miss a lot of cricket. The Super Kings had bought Curran for 5.5 crore and will once again aim to buy him though rival franchises like Sunrisers Hyderabad and Punjab Kings, who go in with the two biggest purses, will have a better chance of landing the England allrounder who is a proven match-winner both with ball and bat.The year 2021 was also the last time Stokes played the IPL. Representing Rajastthan Royals, Stokes left the season at the halfway stage due to an injury. Royals had bought Stokes for 12.5. crore in 2018 and had retained him for the next three years. In 2022, Stokes opted out of the IPL.As for Green, he recently said despite the massive workload confronting Australian players leading to, and immediately after, IPL 2023, he was excited to participate in the tournament. Green turned a lot of heads during Australia’s white-ball series in India just before the T20 World Cup where he scored 118 runs at a strike rate of 214.54 while opening the batting. Coupled with his bowling the 23-year old could prove to be a big asset in T20 cricket.Notable misses
Dwayne Bravo looks to have said goodbye to the IPL (at least as a player). Having been released by the Super Kings ahead of the auction, his name was not among the 991 put forward in the long list.Bravo is a three-time IPL winner and the tournament’s highest wicket-taker (183). MS Dhoni’s team had brought him on in 2011 and had kept faith in him through to 2022. But at 39 years of age and battling injuries, it is likely that the West Indian will now shift to a backroom role much like his great friend Kieron Pollard has at Mumbai Indians.Among the 14 overseas countries, Australia with 57 players have the most in the auction. But two of their very best – Steven Smith and Marnus Labuschagne – are missing from the list. Although given how neither of them had any takers last year, and are likely to be heavily involved in Ashes preparation with the series starting June 16, it may not be too much of a surprise that they’ve chosen to skip the IPL. Australia’s Test and ODI captain Pat Cummins has pulled out as well.The 2 crore band: Nathan Coulter-Nile, Cameron Green, Travis Head, Chris Lynn, Tom Banton, Sam Curran, Chris Jordan, Tymal Mills, Jamie Overton, Craig Overton, Adil Rashid, Phil Salt, Ben Stokes, Adam Milne, Jimmy Neesham, Kane Williamson, Rilee Rossouw, Rassie van der Dussen, Angelo Mathews, Nicholas Pooran, Jason HolderThe 1.5 crore band: Sean Abbott, Riley Meredith, Jhye Richardson, Adam Zampa, Shakib Al Hasan, Harry Brook, Will Jacks, Dawid Malan, Jason Roy, Sherfane RutherfordThe 1 crore band: Mayank Agarwal, Kedar Jadhav, Manish Pandey, Mohammad Nabi, Mujeeb ur Rahman, Moises Henriques, Andrew Tye, Joe Root, Luke Wood, Michael Bracewell, Mark Chapman, Martin Guptill, Kyle Jamieson, Matt Henry, Tom Latham, Daryl Mitchell, Heinrich Klaasen, Tabraiz Shamsi, Kusal Perera, Roston Chase, Rakheem Cornwall, Shai Hope, Akeal Hossein, David Wiese

Deepak Chahar out of remaining South Africa ODIs with back stiffness

In another ill-timed fitness issue for India, Deepak Chahar has been ruled out of the final two ODIs against South Africa with a stiff back. Spin-bowling allrounder Washington Sundar was brought in as a replacement.A BCCI media release said Chahar would head to the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bengaluru, where he would be monitored by the medical team. The extent of the injury or the timeline for recovery is yet to be ascertained. Chahar had returned to competitive cricket only in mid-August, after a six-month injury break that included back trouble.His issue gains greater significance given India play their first T20 World Cup game in Australia on October 23, and have already lost pace spearhead Jasprit Bumrah to injury. They are yet to name a replacement for Bumrah, but Chahar was one of two fast bowlers named in the reserves, along with Mohammed Shami.Chahar was set to fly to Australia at the end of the South Africa series along with other reserve players. The World Cup squad has already flown out, to Perth, for a short training camp. They currently have seamers Chetan Sakariya and Mukesh Choudhary with them as net bowlers in Perth, where they will be based over the next week or so before travelling to Brisbane for warm-up fixtures against Australia and New Zealand.The selectors are likely to announce Bumrah’s replacement, widely tipped to be Shami, over the next two days. Shami is currently undergoing post-Covid rehab in Bengaluru, where he is believed to have undergone mandated cardiovascular tests before being passed fit.This injury is the latest setback for Chahar this year. First, he tore a quadricep muscle during India’s T20Is against West Indies in February. Then, he picked up a back issue while undergoing rehab for the quad injury at the NCA. He missed the IPL that followed and did not play again until India’s tour of Zimbabwe in August.Washington himself is working his way back to full match fitness. He will make a return to competitive cricket after two months, having injured his shoulder during his stint with English county side Lancashire in August. He had to drop out of the Zimbabwe series due to that injury, and last played for India in the West Indies series in February, when he picked up a hamstring strain. During the IPL, he had issues with a split webbing. He had also caught Covid-19 this year.India trail South Africa in the ODIs 1-0, so both remaining games are must-win for them. Chahar had sat out the first ODI, in Lucknow, as well. The second and third ODIs will be played in Ranchi and Delhi on Sunday and Tuesday respectively. Washington is the second spin bowling allrounder in the squad, alongside the uncapped Shahbaz Ahmed.Updated India ODI squad: Shikhar Dhawan (capt), Ruturaj Gaikwad, Shubman Gill, Shreyas Iyer (vice-capt), Rajat Patidar, Rahul Tripathi, Ishan Kishan (wk), Sanju Samson (wk), Shahbaz Ahmed, Shardul Thakur, Kuldeep Yadav, Ravi Bishnoi, Mukesh Kumar, Avesh Khan, Mohammed Siraj, Washington Sundar

VIDEO: 'F*ck sake' – Wrexham chief rinsed by Red Dragons stars including Paul Mullin & James McClean as he seeks support for London Marathon attempt

Wrexham director Humphrey Ker has been jokingly taunted by Wrexham stars such as Paul Mullin and James McClean ahead of his London Marathon attempt.

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  • Thousands taking to the streets in English capital
  • Reynolds & McElhenney's fellow director taking part
  • Wrexham stars making playful jokes at Ker's expense
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Ker, who has worked alongside Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney at SToK Racecourse since a remarkable takeover was completed by Hollywood actors in 2021, is due to race 26 miles across the English capital on Sunday.

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    He has been busy fundraising, with prominent figures in North Wales vowing to provide sponsorship money for good causes. Many have, however, seen the funny side of 42-year-old Ker agreeing to join thousands of other professional and amateur runners in taking on a marathon challenge for 2025.

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    WHAT HUMPHREY KER & WREXHAM STARS SAID

    Ker has, in a light-hearted video, given fans a glimpse of the support – or lack of – that he boasts behind the scenes at Wrexham. The likes of Mullin and McClean have joked that the club’s community director may “die” while attempting to successfully navigate the streets of London.

Everton reach agreement with Dyche replacement who’s beaten them six times

Everton have reportedly reached an agreement with a new manager who has beaten them six times in his career, following the sacking of Sean Dyche.

Dyche sacked by Everton

On Thursday, almost out of the blue, it was confirmed that Dyche had been dismissed at Goodison Park, having told The Friedkin Group earlier in the week that he had taken his team as far as he could.

The Englishman lasted in the Everton job for just under two years, having arrived in late January in 2023, and overall, it was a hugely disappointing spell. Granted, he managed to steer the Merseysiders away from Premier League relegation twice, but that’s nothing to shout about for a club of their size.

Everton manager Sean Dyche

This season hasn’t been good enough for the Blues, both in terms of results and performances, with Dyche’s team languishing in 16th place in the table, as well as playing arguably the dullest football in the division, scoring only 15 goals in 19 league games. Only bottom-place Southampton (12) have scored fewer.

Even before Dyche’s sacking, other managers were being linked with replacing him, including former Juventus boss Massimiliano Allegri, but it looks as though someone else is already the front-runner to succeed the 53-year-old.

Everton reach agreement with top manager target

According to journalist Graeme Bailey on X, Everton have reached an agreement with David Moyes on an initial short-term deal until this summer. This follows from the reliable Paul Joyce claiming that Moyes is “of interest” to the Blues and the Scot is the “first choice” target.

While not necessarily perfect, Moyes does feel like the safest option to come in and steady the ship at Everton, having enjoyed such an impressive spell at the club first time around, not least finishing fourth in the Premier League during the 2004/05 season.

The 61-year-old knows the club inside out, and with a move to a new stadium happening at the end of this season, being relegated to the Championship doesn’t even bear thinking about. Bringing in a manager who is an expert at knowing the Premier League and how to grind out results is, therefore, imperative, and Moyes ticks that box emphatically.

Not only that, but he has shown what a competent manager he is when coming up against Everton throughout his career, beating them six times overall, while Micah Richards lauded him after guiding West Ham to UEFA Europa Conference League glory.

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There may be some Everton fans who feel that a Moyes reunion won’t work, or want a manager with more progressive ideas, but he feels like a strong choice at a critical point in the club’s history.

Washington Sundar takes four on debut to put Lancashire on top

Rob Keogh, Lewis McManus put heat back on bowlers at Wantage Road

ECB Reporters Network19-Jul-2022

Washington Sundar took four wickets to threaten Northants’ batting•Getty Images

Washington Sundar marked his County Championship debut for Lancashire by taking four wickets – including one with his second ball of the day – on a sweltering opening day against Northamptonshire at Wantage Road.Rob Keogh and Lewis McManus both scored half-centuries to put the heat back on Lancashire’s bowlers after the visitors had threatened to run through Northants’ batting.Some tight and disciplined bowling from Lancahire’s attack had reduced Northants to 124 for 5 in temperatures approaching 40 degrees, Will Williams picking up two scalps.But Keogh led the counter-attack, striking six boundaries as he passed 5,000 career runs in first-class cricket. He found a willing partner in McManus and the pair shared a 77-run partnership in 18 overs to take Northants past 200.Related

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Lancashire made further inroads before the close as Washington finished the day with figures of 4 for 69. He removed Keogh thanks to a stunning one-handed slip catch from Luke Wells, while Tom Taylor was trapped lbw attempting a reverse-sweep.McManus reached his fourth half-century of the season shortly before the close as.Northamptonshire finished on 218 for 7.”I think I bowled well with some good lines, and [there were] a couple of amazing catches as well,” Washington said. “I feel very good coming over here. Making my debut for Lancashire is a huge thing for me. Getting my cap in the morning from Mark [Chilton] is a great thing. The boys were really supportive. They fielded very well as well, so I’m feeling very good.”I’m sure there’s going to be a huge learning for me and I want to give back a lot for Lancashire. They’ve shown faith in me and I want to perform my very best and win a lot of games for them and keep them happy with a lot of good performances. I’m looking forward to understanding myself more with the red ball especially in these kinds of conditions and coming up against different a set of players with different styles.”Obviously the conditions are quite different from what it is in India and a few other places. I’m looking forward to learning a lot about the culture with the kind of cricket that’s played over here and seeing lots of different styles of batsmen and bowlers and learn more about cricket as well. I think I’ve brought some sun from my home!”Rob Keogh made a useful half-century•Getty Images

Earlier on a day reduced to 72 overs because of the extreme heat, Northamptonshire’s top order failed to capitalise after winning the toss and deciding to bat, despite most batters getting good starts.New red-ball captain Will Young saw off the new ball but fell cheaply for two to Washington’s second delivery when the batter edged behind off an attempted cut shot.Ricardo Vasconcelos, who stood down as captain ahead of this game, survived a scare in the first over when he edged behind, but was soon into his work, driving down the ground for four and playing through extra cover for another boundary.He had moved onto 23 when he survived a strong appeal when Luke Wood got one to nip back. The left-arm pacer got his man in his next over though when Vasconcelos flashed loosely outside off stump and steered the ball straight to second slip. It was a testing, fiery spell either side of lunch from Wood who troubled the batters by pitching the ball up, mixed in with some well-directed short deliveries.Emilio Gay, fresh from a century at Canterbury last week, made the most of the fast outfield with five boundaries before lunch. He also stepped down the pitch to dispatch Washington high into the Lynn Wilson Stand.Northamptonshire went into lunch on 63 for 2 but scoring slowed considerably after the interval in the face of some disciplined Lancashire bowling which soon reaped rewards when Procter was adjudged lbw to Williams for 19, struck on the pads attempting to work a ball to leg. Williams picked up a second wicket when Gay drove loosely and Rob Jones took a sharp catch at second slip.Keogh played positively from the outset. He got off the mark with a well-timed clip off his toes for four and although he played and missed consecutive balls from Williams, he was severe on the slow bowlers. He played a perfectly timed back-foot punch for four off Washington and then smashed two deliveries from Matt Parkinson through extra cover.He combined with Ryan Rickleton in a stand of 43 but the South African international fell on the stroke of tea for 22 when Washington rapped him on the pads as he played back in his crease. McManus was equally aggressive against Parkinson, sweeping him for four and smashing him down the ground for two further boundaries.But Washington duly made the breakthrough to leave Lancashire on top. McManus, who struck Wells down the ground for six in the closing overs, will be key if Northants are to try to push on towards 300 in the morning.

Tottenham eyeing bargain January move for "pure quality" £54,000-p/w star

Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou is now keeping tabs on a midfielder who could be available for a bargain fee this month, according to a report.

Tottenham struggling to get going in the Premier League

Tottenham have recorded some impressive victories this season, defeating Manchester City 4-0 away from home at the end of November, while also putting an impressive run together to reach the semi-finals of the EFL Cup.

However, Postecoglou’s side have struggled with consistency, most recently being held back by an injury crisis in defence which left the manager with just one fit centre-back for the disappointing 2-2 home draw against Wolverhampton Wanderers.

As such, the manager may have to strengthen this month to get his side’s season back on track, and Spurs are now keen on bringing in players in a number of different positions.

With so many defenders out injured, the Lilywhites may have to enter the market for a centre-back, and they are now believed to have opened talks over a deal for Borussia Monchengladbach’s Ko Ikatura.

Tottenham now in talks over move for "incredibly fast" new defender

Ange Postecoglou is looking to strengthen his defence this winter.

2 ByDominic Lund Jan 1, 2025

Postecoglou is also personally driving a deal for a new forward, and he could look to raid one of his previous clubs, with Celtic’s Nicholas Kuhn believed to be of interest after a prolific first half of the season up in Scotland.

Now, Spurs are also being linked with a move for a new midfielder, with GiveMeSport reporting that they are closely monitoring Lyon’s Maxence Caqueret, who could be available for a bargain fee this winter. The 24-year-old, who is said to earn £54,000-per-week, may be available for a cut-price fee this month, given that Lyon are in a perilous financial position, and Tottenham are waiting in the wings to take full advantage.

There is set to be competition from other Premier League clubs, however, with rivals West Ham United, Crystal Palace and Everton also named as potential suitors.

Intriguing opportunity for Tottenham

Should Lyon be forced to cash-in on the Frenchman this month, Spurs should not hesitate to make an approach, given just how impressive he is as an all-round midfielder.

The Lyon star ranks in the 96th percentile for successful take-ons and the 91st percentile for tackles per 90 over the past year, when compared to his positional peers, highlighting his ability both on the front foot and in defence.

Olympique Lyonnais'MaxenceCaqueretin action with TSG 1899 Hoffenheim's Max Moerstedt

Football talent scout Jacek Kulig has also been full of praise for the maestro in the past, describing him as “pure quality and intelligence mixed with an amazing work rate”.

Lyon’s loss could be Tottenham’s gain if they are forced to make a sale this winter, and Postecoglou should continue to monitor how the situation continues to develop over the next few weeks.

However, given that Spurs are still struggling for numbers in defence due to the sheer number of injuries they have suffered, signing a new centre-back should remain Postecoglou’s priority this month.

Leeds have new injury concern to "crucial" player who may now miss Oxford

As Leeds United look to return to winning ways against Oxford United, they could be forced to do so without one of Daniel Farke’s key men in another blow for those at Elland Road.

Leeds injury news

Already without Ilia Gruev and Junior Firpo ahead of Oxford this weekend, injury setbacks are threatening to control the narrative of Leeds’ season once again following blows to the likes of Ethan Ampadu earlier in the campaign. Given that Farke’s side were left to mount a late Championship comeback against Preston North End to rescue a 1-1 draw last time out too, the last thing that they need is more bad news on the injury front.

With the chance to flip the narrative from a disappointing point into four games without defeat this weekend up against an Oxford side who have just shown manager Des Buckingham the door, a fresh injury blow is exactly what Leeds may have been dealt.

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As confirmed by Farke and relayed by Adam Pope, Leeds could now be without Pascal Struijk against Oxford in a fresh injury blow, whilst it also remains to be seen whether Max Wober will make the game.

Among those in the leadership group, Struijk remains a key figure within Farke’s squad and particularly his backline as Leeds look to avoid yet more promotion heartbreak following last season’s Wembley failure. In pursuit of a return to the top flight, keeping players of Struijk’s calibre fit will play a large part.

"Crucial" Struijk is key for Leeds

Starting in all 21 Championship games for Leeds so far this season, it cannot be overstated enough just how important Struijk has become at Elland Road. If the Yorkshire club are to earn promotion in the current campaign, then there’s no doubt that he will be at the centre of it. And Farke is well aware of his quality too, taking time to praise his defender at the end of October.

Farke told reporters via The Leeds Press: “He adapted well to my demands and he’s played a crucial part. We don’t have to talk about his skills with the ball. I’m very pleased with his development.”

If the 25-year-old does miss this weekend’s meeting with Oxford, then the return of Wober would certainly be a welcomed one. The defender can play as both a centre-back and as a left-back, perhaps handing the Whites an instant solution.

That said, up against a struggling side, Leeds should have no excuses. These are the types of games that they should arguably be easing past if they want to secure an automatic promotion spot and avoid the playoffs altogether come the end of the current campaign.

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