The many moods and tempos of Jaiswal and Gill

Both are versatile batters and they missed out on big scores in Ahmedabad, but they were never going to miss out two Tests in a row

Karthik Krishnaswamy11-Oct-20251:39

‘Jaiswal has to blame himself for the run-out’

A little under an hour of the Delhi Test had elapsed when Yashasvi Jaiswal decided he had had enough of letting Anderson Phillip bowl on his terms. Phillip, at that point, had bowled 5.3 overs and conceded just ten runs.Jaiswal had mostly been away from the strike when Phillip had bowled. He had faced only four balls from him, and shouldered arms to all of them. He had batted watchfully against the other two West Indies seamers as well, and was on 10 off 36 balls. He had left alone 12 of those balls.Now, he decided he was done with all that. Phillip bowled this one full, angled a fair way away from off stump, and may have perhaps expected another leave. Instead, out of seemingly nowhere, came a straight wallop of fearsome wind-up and flat, lethal trajectory. This was no drive with head over the ball; this was an elemental hit with head thrown back. Phillip, following through, was fortunate head was a foot or so wide of the ball’s path.Related

  • Stats – Gill level with Kohli, Jaiswal only behind Bradman

  • Jadeja, Kuldeep strike after Gill ton propels India to 518

Everything about that shot, and the passage of play leading up to it, was pure Jaiswal. He can leave every third ball he faces. He can make a stadium sit up with a shot of pure violence. He can bat in all sorts of moods and tempos, often in the same innings, to the point where it becomes impossible to define the kind of batter he is in Test cricket.In one sense, though, it’s very, very easy to define him. Jaiswal is a run-scorer. Send him out with bat in hand, anywhere in the world, against any kind of attack, and you can be pretty sure he’ll find a way to score runs.One of many, many ways. Jaiswal has now gone past 70 on 14 occasions in Test cricket, and those innings have come at strike rates ranging from 40.38 – when he made 84 off 208 balls while attempting to save the MCG Test last year – to 141.17 – when he smashed 72 off 51 balls during India’s push to make victory possible in a heavily rain-affected Test against Bangladesh in Kanpur.Those 14 innings have ticked all but two of the ten strike-rate “decades” from the 40s to the 140s. Only the 120s and 130s are still waiting to be achieved.Over the course of three sessions on Friday and a small fraction of one on Saturday, Jaiswal scored 175 at 67.82, and that strike rate, so close to his career strike rate of 66.33, was an indication of just how comfortable he was on a flat Delhi pitch against a modest West Indies attack, scoring briskly while never looking in a hurry or getting too greedy, batting through a whole day’s play without ever looking weary or seeming to suffer dips in focus.We’ve become so used to this that we almost take it for granted, and forget that he’s not yet 24.2:57

Chopra: Gill destined for greatness

The dismissal, in the second over of day two, came first as a shock. Did he really get out, when 200 – even 300, who knows – seemed within reach? But then it began to make sense. If it had to happen, it had to be a run-out. It had to be that particular kind of run-out. It’s one of Jaiswal’s minor vulnerabilities that he often starts running as soon as his bat meets the ball; if he misjudges how firmly he’s struck the ball or how far it is from a fielder, he’s liable to realise this only when he’s already halfway down the pitch.Jaiswal, in short, was looking like only he could get himself out. Through most of day one, the other mode of dismissal that had seemed vaguely likely was a top edge off an over-eager square cut. He had been out like this in Ahmedabad last week, but he seldom misses a chance to attempt the shot, even when he doesn’t have a lot of room to work with.And it gets him a lot of runs, and quick runs. Against pace, he’s scored 399 runs off 243 balls through his Test career with variants of the cut – cut, late cut, upper cut, ramp, dab, steer, as classified in ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data – while being dismissed five times. That’s an average of 79.80 and a strike rate of 164.19; so what if he’s achieved all that with a control percentage of just over 71?Those numbers are a small window into Jaiswal’s mind. It’s the mind of a batter who understands percentages, who knows that cutting so frequently can lead to plays-and-misses or edges, but understands that he’ll still be batting next ball if he’s played and missed, and that while top edges might occasionally get him out, the odds suggest they are likelier to send the ball flying over or past the slips cordon if he flashes hard enough.If these are indeed the workings of Jaiswal’s mind, it’s a mind fixated not on batting as a pursuit of technical perfection but on batting as a means of scoring runs.”On Jaiswal, I’ll say he’s very clever in terms of his batting,” Ravindra Jadeja said in his press conference at the end of day two. “He knows which bowler to attack and which bowler to play out. His maturity level is very good. It’s not like he looks to hit every bowler. He has a very good idea of which situation to attack in, and at which time to attack.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”I think it’s very good when a batsman knows what shot he needs to play at what time. I think this has contributed a lot to his success, and the fact that he’s made so many big scores, match after match.”Jaiswal has turned five of his seven Test centuries so far into 150-plus scores, and two of them into doubles. The highly memeable helmet-palm with which he greeted his dismissal in Delhi suggested that 175 was a long way short of the number he had set out to put next to his name when Saturday dawned.It fell to his partner, Shubman Gill, to take on the mantle of insatiable run-hooverer.Gill has always had the smarts to know where his run-scoring opportunities lie in any situation. He was just 20, and only in his third Test, when the then India batting coach Vikram Rathour asked him what his plans were if Australia went short to him after lunch on that magical final day at the Gabba.Here’s Rathour’s recollection of that conversation, from this profile of Gill by Nagraj Gollapudi:”And the kid had a great answer. He said that the end [Mitchell] Starc was bowling, it was a shorter boundary on the leg side. So he said, ‘I’m not going to pull from the other end if they bowl short, but I will pull from the end Starc is bowling if they bowl short, because I’m pretty sure that I can clear this boundary most times. If it’s below my shoulder, I’ll look to play it down, but if it’s up, I’ll look to play it over, and if it’s on this [on] side, I will leave. And if it’s on this [off] side, I will maybe play an uppercut.’ […] I told him, ‘Boss, you have it sorted. So do just that, whatever you want to do.’ He had a lot of clarity [about] what he was looking to do. And with logic – he was not just talking nonsense, he was not bluffing his way.”Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal: The mainstays of India’s batting line-up•AFP/Getty ImagesAll that ability and all those smarts, but it took a while for Gill to translate them into consistent run-scoring in Test cricket, which only really began to happen during last year’s five-match home series against England. And it was only this year, in England, that Gill got his first chance to play a full Test series, home or away, on pitches that gave him a chance to think of batting big time and again.In retrospect, it should have surprised no one that he finished that tour with the second-highest bilateral series aggregate by any India batter anywhere, anytime. It’s exactly the kind of thing everyone’s expected from him ever since he was a teenager.For all that, though, he still gives the impression sometimes that he can get bored if the contest isn’t really challenging him. Last week in Ahmedabad, he had been out immediately after reaching his fifty, attempting a reverse-sweep, an echo of his dismissal soon after reaching his hundred in Visakhapatnam last year against England.He’s showing more and more frequently, however, that he can bat in that insatiable Jaiswal way too. He followed Visakhapatnam with the grittiest half-century of his career, a match-winning fourth-innings effort in Ranchi. He followed Leeds this year, where his first-innings dismissal on 147 was one of numerous dismissals of India batters not quite making the bowlers earn their wicket, with a monumental 269 in Birmingham.And now he followed Ahmedabad with a century of ruthless, getting-the-job-done batsmanship. He played his shots, and played them freely because the situation allowed him to, and asked him to, with India building up to a declaration, but he played Shubman Gill shots. He brought out the slog-sweep when the left-arm spinners left the leg-side boundary unprotected. He brought out the back-foot jab either side of point, a shot he nowadays shelves early on if there’s movement for the fast bowlers, but any movement off this day-two Delhi pitch was minimal. He used his feet with aplomb, against spin and medium-pace, and played that pick-up whip over the leg side that he employs so profitably in the shorter formats.1:51

Chopra: WI needed a little more application

Each time he played a shot like this, it seemed less a reaction to the bowling than an expression of what he felt he needed to do at that moment, against a particular bowler who had set a particular field. But he knew exactly whom to take on and whom not to: he scored at above four an over against six of West Indies’ seven bowlers, but just 12 runs off 64 balls from Jomel Warrican, who constantly challenged India’s batters with his deceptive trajectory and the odd instance of square turn.It was the kind of innings Sachin Tendulkar and Mohammad Azharuddin routinely played in home Tests in the 1990s, or that Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman routinely played in the 2000s, or that Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli routinely played in the period from 2016 to 2019, when India played many of their home Tests on traditional Indian pitches that produced big first-innings totals.India went away from those pitches in the 2021-24 period, with the pressure of World Test Championship points, the fear of draws on flat pitches, and the fear of toss-influenced results like Chennai 2021 pushing them to prepare a succession of square turners in home Tests. After going down 3-0 to New Zealand last year and falling prey to the pitfalls of dustbowls, India are now making an effort, as Gill confirmed before this series, to try and restore the balance between bat and ball in their home pitches.Jaiswal and Gill couldn’t have asked for a better time to be batting in home Tests. They missed out on big scores in Ahmedabad, but they were never going to miss out two Tests in a row.

Stats – Glenn Maxwell, Australia's first men's ODI double-centurion

He also contributed 179 of the 202 runs that Australia’s eighth-wicket partnership put on in an amazing victory over Afghanistan

Sampath Bandarupalli07-Nov-2023201* Glenn Maxwell’s score against Afghanistan. He is the first batter to score a double-century for Australia in men’s ODIs. Shane Watson’s 185* against Bangladesh in 2011 in Mirpur was the previous highest score for Australia.1 Maxwell is the first batter to score a double-century during an ODI chase. The previous highest individual score in an ODI chase was 193 by Fakhar Zaman against South Africa in 2021.1 Maxwell is also the first player to score an ODI double-ton while batting at No. 3 or lower. Charles Coventry’s 194* against Bangladesh in 2009 was the previous highest ODI score by a non-opener. No player before Maxwell had scored a double-century while batting outside of top-four even in List A cricket.3 Batters with double-hundreds at the men’s ODI World Cup. Maxwell joins Chris Gayle (219 against Zimbabwe in 2015) and Martin Guptill (237* against West Indies in 2015).ESPNcricinfo Ltd202* Partnership between Maxwell and Pat Cummins, the highest for the seventh wicket or lower in men’s ODIs. The previous highest was the 177-run stand between Jos Buttler and Adil Rashid for the seventh wicket against New Zealand in 2015 in Birmingham.128 Balls Maxwell needed for his double-century. It is the second-fastest ODI double-ton, behind Ishan Kishan’s 126-ball effort against Bangladesh in December last year.202 Runs added by Australia after the fall of their seventh wicket, the most by any team in an ODI innings. The previous most runs scored after the fall of the seventh wicket were 196 by the Africa XI against the Asia XI in 2007.Related

  • The old BBL drill that helped Maxwell pull off a miracle against Afghanistan

  • Maxing it like Maxwell: Ten other great solo ODI batting performances

  • Maxwell 201* brings home the Australian miracle and a place in the World Cup semi-final

  • Pat Cummins hails Glenn Maxwell's 201 not out as 'the greatest ODI innings that's ever happened'

179 Runs contributed by Maxwell during his unbeaten 202-run stand with Cummins for the eighth wicket. Cummins scored 12 off the 68 balls he faced, while another 11 runs came through extras.
Maxwell’s contribution of 88.61% is the highest by a batter in a century stand in men’s ODIs (where data is available). Maxwell bettered his own contribution of 88.35% during his 103-run stand with Cummins against Netherlands in Delhi. He made 91 of those runs.

177 Difference between Maxwell’s score (201*) and the second-highest score in Australia’s innings (Mitchell Marsh’s 24). Only twice has there been a bigger difference between the two top scores in an ODI innings – 198 in favour of Rohit Sharma when he scored 264 against Sri Lanka in 2014 and 195 in favour of Guptill against West Indies during his 237* in 2015.0.2 Australia’s win percentage according to ESPNcricinfo’s forecaster after 26.5 overs, when they were 136 for 7 and still needed 156 more at 6.73 per over.ESPNcricinfo Ltd292 The target chased by Australia against Afghanistan. It is their highest at the men’s ODI World Cup. Their previous highest successful chase was 287 against New Zealand in the quarter-final of the 1996 edition in Chennai.1 Ibrahim Zadran is the first batter to score a century for Afghanistan at the ODI World Cup. The previous highest score was 96 by Samiullah Shinwari against Scotland in 2015. Ibrahim is also the fourth youngest batter to score a century in the men’s ODI World Cup.9.17 Bowling average in the first ten overs at Wankhede stadium in the second innings during this World Cup. The bowlers have picked up 17 wickets in four matches in the second innings but only five at 40.80 during the first innings during the first ten overs.

Mitchell Starc, Cameron Green and Nathan Lyon step up with devastating effect

Despite the wickets missing with Cummins and Hazlewood, it would be a shock if Australia don’t take 10 more in this game

Andrew McGlashan18-Dec-2021There are 386 Test wickets taken at an average of 23.68 missing from Australia’s attack for this Test. For the first session of the third day it was just possible to wonder whether it might allow England a way back into the match as Joe Root and Dawid Malan remained unbroken.What happened after that, however, will have enabled Pat Cummins to watch contently back at his home in Sydney following the private jet escape he was allowed to make on Saturday morning amid the Covid close-contact drama.The combined figures of Jhye Richardson and Michael Neser – 1 for 111 off 30 overs – were a reminder of the absence of Cummins and Josh Hazlewood, but Steven Smith used his resources excellently. The majority of the middle session was a masterclass of Test bowling on what, largely, remained a good wicket for batting as Root and Malan had shown. The 30 overs brought 57 for 4, and the tally was only that high because Richardson leaked a few in the final couple of overs.Most of the overs were delivered by Mitchell Starc, Cameron Green and Nathan Lyon, with each outstanding. Green set the ball rolling by removing Root for the second time in the series – it will be a handy record to keep going – and Starc produced a superb spell of 7-2-12-2. All the while Lyon wheeled away from the Cathedral End for a spell that would eventually read 19-10-30-3 when the second new ball was taken. England decided they didn’t need a specialist spinner for this Test.Related

Hazlewood ruled out of second Test with side strain

Cummins out of second Test after Covid close contact

Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon leave Australia with massive advantage to press for 2-0 lead

“We didn’t quite bowl the way we wanted in the first session, let it slip a little and probably searched a little for wickets,” Starc said. “But the way we all came out, Nath and I probably took it on a little bit ourselves, being the two experienced ones in the attack, not to say the others aren’t hugely talented and did a great job, but we’ve played a few Test matches.”I thought [Nathan] was fantastic, especially in that second session where he bowled the whole session. For us quicks to bowl in partnership with him knowing that he was going to do a fantastic job was pretty key to how well we went.”Each of the three performances deserve closer scrutiny. The runs have yet to flow for Green in this series – it is one of few little wins for England – but the bowling has been what a captain dreams off from a fourth seamer. At the Gabba he removed Root in the crucial period before the second new ball and here he broke a stubborn partnership that had lifted England’s spirits.There was a similarity in the dismissals with Root again fiddling outside off at a good-length delivery, this time sending a catch to the lone slip rather than the keeper. But there had been a build-up this time of the type a seasoned quick would have been pleased with: the first ball of the over was a brute that climbed to beat Root’s edge, two balls later he played a loose drive to point and the next delivery was the fateful snick.”He’s obviously a fantastic talent for a young fella,” Starc said. “We saw that last summer, how valuable he can be to our attack when you’ve got someone who is nearly seven foot and bowls some pretty decent clicks. He’s come into his own again this summer. An allrounder of that ability and getting key wickets it’s a huge plus to our attack. We’ll see him evolve over the next few years…once he found that rhythm today he bowled some real high-quality stuff and almost set us on our way after the first session.”Cameron Green celebrates with team-mates after taking the wicket of Joe Root•Getty ImagesStarc, with an even more senior role in the absence of his regular sidekicks, replaced Green after a five-over post-dinner spell and struck in his first over when Malan’s strength became a weakness as he edged a cut to slip. For his next wicket, Starc completely worked over Jos Buttler with the angle across the right hander, luring him into false drives before drawing the edge. Patterns are emerging for England.”We saw at the Gabba with it [the angle] going across him,” Starc said. “For me it was just trying to bowl a good length, not let him get away, and still pepper that line away from him.”The pressure that Lyon was able to apply throughout the session was a key part of the stranglehold Australia maintained. It took Ben Stokes 24 balls to get off the mark and he was 3 off 32 before finding the boundary. By then he had lost Ollie Pope whose difficulties against offspin continued although there was a degree of misfortune when a firm clip was held by Marnus Labuschagne at short leg. However, two balls previously he had been reprieved by the DRS when the ball came off his forearm to short leg.Lyon continued to enhance his pink-ball record in the night session when he worked over Chris Woakes and Ollie Robinson with classical offspin. “They left the field open on the offside, inside edge back on the stumps. This is offspin of the highest class,” Ricky Ponting said on .It was always unlikely that Smith would take the follow-on option, however tempting it would have been under lights against England’s fragile top order. These Test matches are basically all back-to-back so he can rest the bowlers and in turn put more miles in England’s. Meanwhile, having Lyon also gives him a clear final-innings route to victory.There are a lot of wickets absent from what would be Australia’s usual Test attack, but it would be a huge surprise if they don’t find a way of taking 10 more in this game.

سكاي سبورتس تصدم ليفربول بشأن رغبة محمد صلاح.. وموقفه من الدوري السعودي

كشفت شبكة سكاي سبورتس اليوم الأربعاء، عن حقيقة مغادرة محمد صلاح صفوف نادي ليفربول خلال الفترة المقبلة والانتقال للعب في أحد أندية الدوري السعودي للمحترفين.

محمد صلاح يرتبط بالرحيل عن صفوف ليفربول خلال الفترة المقبلة، وذلك في ظل الخلاف الذي حدث بين اللاعب وإدارة النادي الإنجليزي والمدرب آرني سلوت.

واتهم محمد صلاح إدارة ليفربول بعدم تنفيذ الوعود المقدمة له، إلى جانب اعترافه بأن علاقته مع المدرب آرني سلوت قد تدمرت بالكامل.

وأدت تصريحات محمد صلاح إلى استبعاده من قائمة ليفربول لمباراة إنتر ميلان يوم أمس الثلاثاء، وذلك في إطار منافسات بطولة دوري أبطال أوروبا.

اقرأ أيضًا .. وارنوك عن أزمة محمد صلاح: كأس أمم إفريقيا فرصة لتهدئة الوضع مع ليفربول

وذكرت الشبكة، أن محمد صلاح بالفعل مطلوب من قبل أندية الدوري السعودي، ومن بين أبرزها الهلال وكذلك اتحاد جدة، لكن هناك بعض الشروط التي قد تمنع حدوث هذه الخطوة.

وأضافت الشبكة، أن أندية الدوري السعودي تريد ضمانات، بأن محمد صلاح جاهز بشكل تام من الناحية الفنية والبدنية، وذلك لاتخاذ خطوة التعاقد معه.

وأوضح المصدر، أن أندية الدوري السعودي قد غيرت استراتيجيتها وأصبحت تستهدف اللاعبين الشباب بدلاً من النجوم الذين يقتربون من نهاية مسيرتهم الكروية، لكن محمد صلاح استثناء.

وأردفت الشبكة، أنه في الجهة الأخرى فإن محمد صلاح لم يبد رغبة حقيقية في اللعب في الدوري السعودي، وإنما يريد التركيز بشكل أكبر على استكمل مسيرته في أوروبا.

وتابعت الشبكة قولها، إن محمد صلاح لم يغلق باب اللعب بأحد أندية الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز ولا يرى الدولي المصري أن الانتقال إلى الدوري السعودي خطوة مناسبة حاليًا، في حين لم يتلق الريدز كذلك عرضًا رسميًا لضم اللاعب.

Álvaro Pacheco no Vasco: saiba quando o técnico português chega ao Rio e pode estrear pelo clube

MatériaMais Notícias

Álvaro Pacheco já tem um pré-contrato assinado com o Vasco. A expectativa agora fica por conta da chegada do técnico, que será no domingo, por volta das 17h40. O elenco já foi avisado por Pedro Martins, diretor de futebol cruz-maltino. A informação foi publicada pelo “ge” e confirmada pelo Lance!.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasFutebol NacionalTudo o que você precisa saber sobre a paralisação do BrasileirãoFutebol Nacional17/05/2024VascoDonos da SAF do Vasco renunciam aos seus cargosVasco17/05/2024FinançasQual o tamanho da fortuna de José Roberto Lamacchia, interessado na SAF do Vasco?Finanças17/05/2024

➡️Tudo sobre o Gigante agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Vasco

Apesar de desembarcar no Rio de Janeiro neste final de semana, Álvaro Pacheco não deve comandar o Vasco contra o Fortaleza. A tendência é de que o novo técnico cruz-maltino esteja na beira do campo somentena volta do Campeonato Brasileiro.

Por outro lado, Álvaro Pacheco vai comandar as primeiras atividades já na segunda-feira (20). Ao todo, o técnico português vai ter mais de 10 dias de trabalho no comando do Cruz-Maltino antes da estreia, que deve ser contra o Cruzeiro, no dia 2 de junho, em São Januário.

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O vínculo de Álvaro Pacheco com o Vasco será de um ano, com cláusula de renovação automática por mais um em caso de metas conquistadas. O Cruz-Maltino não precisou arcar com a multa do técnico, tendo em vista que o treinador rescindiu o contrato com o Vitória de Guimarães, de Portugal.

O Vasco volta a entrar em campo na terça-feira (21), quando enfrenta o Fortaleza. A bola rola às 21h30 para o segundo jogo da terceira fase da Copa do Brasil.

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Will Neymar reunite with Lionel Messi in MLS? Inter Miami's final stance on winter transfer swoop for Santos star revealed

Inter Miami's final stance on potentially bringing in Neymar during the winter transfer window has been revealed. His return to Santos, which was intended as a short-term comeback in the comfort of his home city, has been overshadowed by familiar injury setbacks. After a difficult spell at Al-Hilal that included a torn ACL and a mutual contract termination, he now finds himself battling pain once more while Santos fight for survival in the Brazilian Serie A.

A reunion that will not happen

The talk around Inter Miami’s winter business intensified after Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba both announced they will retire at the end of the 2025 season. This raised legitimate questions about how the club would navigate its future under MLS’s Designated Player rules, and whether a marquee signing such as Neymar would be part of their next phase. Supporters imagined a fairy tale scenario with former Barcelona team-mates Messi, Suarez and Neymar dazzling audiences together one last time, this time in pink. However, according to Miami’s leadership has made it unequivocally clear that sentiment will not drive their recruitment policy. While acknowledging the marketing whirlwind Neymar’s arrival would generate, sporting director Chris Henderson and manager Javier Mascherano have chosen to make a pragmatic sporting decision. Defensive reinforcements and a top-tier striker for 2026 have emerged as their primary targets, with interest in Neymar dropped.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportNeymar’s painful battle for fitness continues

Neymar’s second spell at Santos has unfolded very differently from the celebratory homecoming many expected. What began as a six-month plan, allowing him to rebuild confidence and reconnect with his roots, may yet stretch to 18 months if Santos manage to secure safety in the final rounds of the Brasileirao, but concerns over his physical condition remain. Manager Juan Pablo Vojvoda confirmed that Neymar had withdrawn from Santos' 1-1 draw with Internacional due to knee discomfort. Neymar summoned enough strength to play through pain in the following match, helping Santos secure a vital 3-0 win over Sport. That win lifted the club above the relegation line on goal difference, but the meniscus injury might sideline him again for a considerable time. Neymar’s current contract expires at the end of December, leaving him technically free to explore other options. However, according to , the forward appears prepared to remain in Brazil until the 2026 World Cup, provided his body allows him to contribute.

Neymar's World Cup dream is fading fast

For Neymar, everything now revolves around one goal, to ensure he is fit enough for Carlo Ancelotti’s Brazil squad next summer. But there are no guarantees for the Selecao's all-time record goalscorer. Asked specifically about Neymar’s fitness and the form of Real Madrid star Vinicius Junior, Ancelotti issued a blunt and demanding standard.

"He has to be 100%," Ancelotti told . "There are many players who are very good, I need to choose players that are 100%. It's not just Neymar, it could be [Real Madrid forward] Vinícius. If Vinícius is at 90%, I'll call up another player who is at 100%, because it's a team that has a very high level of competence, especially up front. Up front, we have really many good players."

The Italian coach went on to praise Neymar’s artistry but underlined the central issue holding him back.

"I think he's a great talent," Ancelotti said. "He's had the bad luck of having injuries. He couldn't be in good physical condition because of the injuries he's had."

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gettyLimited time and shrinking opportunities

With the domestic season in Brazil wrapping up in December, competitive fixtures will be scarce before the March international break. The uncertainty has prompted discussions about alternative pathways, including a short-term move back to Europe. Unlike Brazil, European leagues will be mid-season in early 2026, offering Neymar the rhythm and sharpness he desperately needs. However, the big question remains whether he will find any taker for his services. 

Amorim's "modern-day Berbatov" is now already on borrowed time at Man Utd

It’s been a turbulent 12 years or so in the post-Sir Alex Ferguson era at Manchester United, a period dominated by talk of ‘projects’, ‘philosophies’ and ‘transitions’.

In truth, the Red Devils have tried it all, from hiring and firing managers at will, to changing directors and CEOs, to even shaking things up at ownership level.

The result? A worst-ever Premier League finish last season, with things again hanging in the balance this time around.

So many problems, so many people to blame, although one consistent theme remains the inability to acquire a truly consistent, world-class figure to lead the line.

Not since Robin van Persie’s breathtaking debut season in 2012/13 has any United player reached 20 Premier League goals in a season, with the club veering from short-term, Edinson Cavani-shaped fixes, to long-term, expensive gambles like Rasmus Hojlund.

Man Utd’s top PL scorer by season

Season

Player

Goals

2024/25

Bruno Fernandes & Amad

8

2023/24

Bruno Fernandes & Rasmus Hojlund

10

2022/23

Marcus Rashford

17

2021/22

Cristiano Ronaldo

18

2020/21

Bruno Fernandes

18

2019/20

Marcus Rashford & Anthony Martial

17

2018/19

Paul Pogba

13

2017/18

Romelu Lukaku

16

2016/17

Zlatan Ibrahimovic

17

2015/16

Anthony Martial

11

2014/15

Wayne Rooney

12

2013/14

Wayne Rooney

17

2012/13

Robin van Persie

26

Stats via Transfermarkt

Ruben Amorim and INEOS are crying out for that next Van Persie, or Ruud van Nistelrooy or even Dimitar Berbatov to deliver the goods, with this season again another tale of frustration.

Every Premier League Golden Boot winner at Man Utd

As already stated, it was that man Van Persie – following his controversial switch from Arsenal – who last truly hit the ground running among United centre-forwards, scoring 26 league goals to fire Ferguson to his 13th and final title, while claiming the Premier League Golden Boot as a result.

The Dutchman had also received the honour the year prior during his last campaign at the Emirates, taking the award from the 2010/11 recipients of hero turned nemesis, Carlos Tevez of Manchester City and that man Berbatov.

A maverick talent in every sense, that campaign was the balletic Bulgarian at his very best in a United shirt, scoring 20 times as United romped to the title, memorably scoring that hat-trick to sink Liverpool at Old Trafford.

Far removed from the high-press, relentless talents of the likes of Tevez before him, Berbatov was all silk and intelligence, making up for his lack of pace and power by playing the game at his own speed.

While never truly prolific, the one-time Tottenham Hotspur man remains one of just five players to have won the Golden Boot while playing for United, with that list unsurprisingly completed by Van Nistelrooy (2002/03), Cristiano Ronaldo (2007/08) and Dwight Yorke (1998/99).

Whether anyone will reach such heights again at the Theatre of Dreams remains to be seen, and while patience continues with regard to Benjamin Sesko, time is swiftly running out for Joshua Zirkzee.

Why Man Utd’s new Berbatov is on borrowed time

To defend the modern or current crop, Fergie’s great sides all had a string of forwards who could carry the burden.

For every Yorke, there was an Andy Cole. For every Van Nistelrooy, a Louis Saha. Or for every Van Persie, a great like Wayne Rooney.

That depth, that competition, is no longer there, a fact perhaps best highlighted by the lack of action afforded to Zirkzee of late, with the Dutchman merely a bystander to proceedings this season.

With Sesko the leading number nine, Amorim has also deployed Matheus Cunha through the middle for trips to Anfield and the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, thus reducing Zirkzee’s hopes of featuring even further.

While the 24-year-old doesn’t appear to have been too wounded by such a status – having creditably been seen celebrating with his teammates in recent weeks – the writing does appear to be on the wall with regard to his United career.

As journalist Samuel Luckhurst put it, he was “reduced to a fleeting waterboy” against Spurs.

Once hailed as “the modern-day Berbatov” by Billy Meredith, such is his fleet of foot and deft touch, such traits have also been his undoing, with his self-proclaimed ‘nine and a half’ role seeing him become unsuited to Amorim’s 3-4-2-1 system.

At a time when the Portuguese coach is looking for his next Viktor Gyokeres, a powerful, pacy forward to run the channels – alla Sesko – the former Bologna man is anything but, instead better served linking play and dropping deep to kickstart attacks.

In a different side and in a different era, Zirkzee may well have thrived as a complementary talent to Rooney, Tevez and co, although in the age of one man up top, he does appear to be the face that doesn’t fit.

Indeed, it isn’t as if the Netherlands international has really made his presence felt when he has featured, scoring just seven times in 54 games for the club, only three of which have come in the Premier League.

Yet to score in 2025/26, albeit while totalling just 90 minutes, the £105k-per-week marksman appears destined to depart in 2026, be it in January or next summer.

From fighting his way back after being jeered off against Newcastle United in December, Zirkzee does appear to be up for the challenge, although such are the demands that Amorim places on his strikers, this might not be one he can win.

Unless something drastic does occur, INEOS’ £36m man will sadly be the latest victim of the post-Ferguson striking curse. Where will that next Golden Boot winner come from?

Forget Sesko: Man Utd's "terrible" dud is now becoming INEOS' worst signing

Manchester United made a huge mistake in spending big money on one first-team member.

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Nov 13, 2025

Casemiro's stance on new contract as Man Utd make U-turn and contact his agent

Manchester United have now made a U-turn and made contact with Casemiro’s agent over a new contract, and the midfielder’s stance on signing a new deal has been revealed.

Kobbie Mainoo has been unable to get a look-in as of late, with Ruben Amorim predominantly opting to give the former Real Madrid man the nod in central midfield, alongside Bruno Fernandes, who has been utilised in a deeper role this season.

Consequently, it is now looking increasingly likely that Mainoo will depart in the January transfer window, with the youngster potentially in line to follow Scott McTominay to Napoli, despite the fact Amorim wants to keep hold of him.

With the central midfielder’s place in the World Cup squad at stake, it is understandable that he is looking to receive more game time ahead of the summer, but Amorim is in a tricky position, given that Casemiro has been indispensable this term.

Recently, the 33-year-old has even been compared to United icon Nemanja Vidic, and it has subsequently emerged that he could be rewarded with a new contract as a result of his fine form, despite widespread reports suggesting United have been hesitant to offer him fresh terms.

Casemiro's stance on signing new contract at Man Utd revealed

According to a report from United In Focus, Man United have now performed a U-turn and contacted the midfielder’s agent about a contract extension, with transfer expert Graeme Bailey revealing Amorim’s stance on one of his star players signing a new deal.

Bailey said: “I’m told Amorim would be open to him staying, and if Casemiro is ready to take a drop in salary and work with United on a deal, it is not inconceivable that he stays.”

Not only is the manager open to keeping hold of the veteran midfielder, but the player himself is also personally receptive to the idea of remaining at Old Trafford, and positive talks have already been held.

The ex-Real Madrid star has certainly turned a corner since Jamie Carragher infamously told him he was finished at the top level and to move to Saudi Arabia or the MLS.

Indeed, the 80-time Brazil international has only missed one Premier League match this season, which was due to suspension, amassing three goals and one assist in his opening ten matches.

Of course, the five-time Champions League winner is more well-known for his stellar defensive attributes, and his ability to win back possession has been on display regularly over the past year, averaging 4.09 tackles per 90, which places the maestro in the top 1% of midfielders.

Consequently, it would make sense to offer Casemiro a new deal, but it would have to be at reduced wages, given his age, with the central midfielder currently the highest-earning player in the squad.

Man Utd's highest earners have been named and ranked Weekly wages: Manchester United FC 2025/26 highest-paid players

We at Football FanCast have gathered all the information on exactly how much the wages of each player is at Manchester United.

ByLuke Randall Sep 4, 2025

Angels' Suicide Squeeze Attempt Goes Catastrophically Wrong

On Saturday evening, the Los Angeles Angels squeaked by the Seattle Mariners, 5-4, thanks to a walk-off home run by Mickey Moniak. While the desired end result was achieved, the process left something to be desired by the home side.

They may not have needed the Moniak walk-off if the bottom of the eighth hadn't gone so poorly. L.A.'s Taylor Ward smacked a leadoff double to begin the frame with the score tied 4-4, then reached third on a wild pitch. With No. 2 hitter Jack Lopez at the plate it seemed all but assured the Angels would find a way to get a run across the plate.

But, for some reason, a suicide squeeze was called. And it went catastrophically wrong.

Lopez laid down the bunt, but the ball barely rolled an inch past home plate. Lopez, assuming it would roll foul, stayed in the batter's box. But Ward was already on his way. It led to a bizarre visual in which Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh easily tagged out the runner from third, who nearly slid into his own teammate, and then Raleigh tossed it to the first baseman to tag Lopez out just as easily.

Just a mess.

The Angels went from a runner on third with nobody out and the middle of the order coming up in a tie game to two outs and no men on. Truly impressive to go from an ideal situation to an utter disaster with merely one decision.

Los Angeles got away with it this time.

Coritiba x Bahia: onde assistir ao vivo, horário e escalações do jogo pelo Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

Coritiba e Bahia se enfrentam quinta-feira, 14 de setembro, em jogo válido pela 23ª rodada do Campeonato Brasileiro 2023. A bola rola no Estádio Couto Pereira às 20h (horário de Brasília) e o jogo será transmitido pelo Premiere.

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O Coritiba é o lanterna do campeonato, com apenas 14 pontos em 22 jogos. O time paranaense vem de cinco derrotas consecutivas e precisa da vitória para tentar se afastar da zona de rebaixamento.

+Coritiba acerta a contratação do atacante Jesé Rodriguez, ex Real Madrid

+ Vem lucrar com a Lance! Betting na partida! Aposte R$10 e ganhe R$40 com gol de Everaldo sobre o Coxa!]]

O Bahia é o 16º colocado, com 22 pontos. O time baiano vem de um empate em casa contra o Vasco e quer voltar a vencer para se manter fora do rebaixamento. O jogo marca a estreia do técnico Rogério Ceni, recém-contratado.

+Rogério Ceni é apresentado no Bahia

O Coritiba terá o apoio de sua torcida no Couto Pereira, mas terá que superar a fase ruim que atravessa. O Bahia tem se mostrado um time um pouco mais arrumado, mas terá que jogar com raça para vencer o lanterna. O resultado do jogo pode fazer o Coxa começar a enxergar uma saída da zona ou afastar de vez o Bahia da degola.

+ Veja tabela do Campeonato Brasileiro

CORITIBA X BAHIA

Data e hora:14 de setembro de 2023, às 20h (de Brasília)
Estádio:Couto Pereira, Curitiba (PR)
Árbitro: Wagner do Nascimento Magalhães (RJ)
VAR:Emerson de Almeida Ferreira (MG)
Onde assistir:Premiere

CORITIBA
Gabriel Vasconcelos; Diogo Batista (Natanael), Kuscevic, Henrique, Jamerson; Sebastian Gómez, Andrey, Bruno Gomes; Marcelino Moreno, Diogo Oliveira e Slimani.
Técnico: Thiago Kosloski.

BAHIA
Marcos Felipe; Gilberto, Kanu, Gabriel Xavier, Camilo Candido; Rezende, Thaciano, Léo Cittadini; Ademir, Rafael Ratão e Mingotti (Everaldo).
Técnico: Rogério Ceni.

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