Deckchairs in demand as Sussex show they are here to stay

Hove’s trendier influences encroach on timeless day but on-field efforts take upper hand

Alan Gardner11-Apr-2025There’s an old Stewart Lee routine about the attractions (or otherwise) of moving out of London to live in the countryside, which in its mock juxtaposition of urban decay and rural tranquility riffs on the ludicrous notion that “visible otters” might be a guaranteed part of the estate agent’s package.County cricket can find itself viewed in similarly absurd terms. As a refuge from modernity it is still hard to beat but, with many counties now playing the majority of their cricket at increasingly developed stadiums, some of the prerequisites of the pastoral idyll are missing. If there isn’t a grass bank, a whitewashed pavilion and spectators allowed on the field at tea, is it really the throwback to a bygone era that was advertised?For “visible otters” you might well substitute “available deckchairs”. Luckily at Hove there are still plenty of those – although not many were still untenanted as a crowd of 1,500 sunned themselves on day one of Sussex’s first home fixture since returning to Division One of the Rothesay County Championship. A century stand between Dan Hughes and Tom Clark during the morning session bore the “Good Old Sussex By The Sea” stamp of approval, though a post-lunch collapse of 6 for 53 undid some of that hard work and it took the rustic ball-striking of No. 11 Sean Hunt to eventually secure a batting point.Even here, a short hit from the trendier postcodes of Brighton, there was proof that the game doesn’t exist in a time warp. The latest Sixes Social Cricket venue, where you can sink a few pints while taking aim at virtual bowlers in the indoor batting cages, has just opened at the 1st Central County Ground – replacing Tony Greig’s Café beneath the Sharks Stand. With schools on holiday for Easter, gaggles of children were in attendance, displaying their affiliations to Minecraft and Brighton & Hove Albion as well as Sussex. On the wooden benches by the dressing rooms were a set of tattoos and a man-bun that would not have looked out of place in a nearby hipster coffee joint.There were also a number of spectators wearing the Somerset dragon, perhaps keen to make the pilgrimage and see how The Sussex Cricketer has changed since their team last played a Championship match here in 2015. The local boozer by the entrance to the ground is now a glass-fronted bar beneath a multistorey residential development – but still a decent location to discuss the battles lost and won after Somerset had hauled themselves back into this contest by taking seven wickets during the afternoon session, then stumbled against the Sussex tail before wobbling to the close five down, Fynn Hudson-Prentice claiming 4 for 13 in a spell that included the dismissal of Tom Banton a week on from his record-breaking 371.Sussex, without the services of Ollie Robinson after he sustained a foot injury in the draw against Warwickshire, opted to bat first under blemish-free blue skies and the promise of runs in the sun. Despite losing Tom Haines in the sixth over, bowled through the gate aiming a drive at Lewis Gregory, the partnership between Hughes and Clark suggested that Sussex were in the mood to back up the big scoring of their opening-round trip to Edgbaston, with a dollop of luck and some wayward bowling helping them to 122 for 1 at lunch.Hughes, Sussex’s Australian opener, looks like a cricketer from another age with his clipped moustache and classical push-drives. He was dropped at second slip on 9 by Kasey Aldridge, the Somerset allrounder then adding to his lackadaisical start with a spell of three overs that cost 23. Clark rattled along to 40 off 38 balls but the reintroduction of Gregory and Josh Davey gradually saw the visitors get a handle on the scoring, before Migael Pretorius struck in consecutive overs after the interval to remove both Sussex 49ers – Clark fiddling behind, Hughes lbw shuffling across.With Tom Alsop nicking to slip in between, Sussex had lost three wickets in 10 balls; that became four in 32 when James Coles was caught behind aiming an expansive drive at Gregory. Hudson-Prentice rarely hinted at permanence while adding 38 in partnership with his captain, John Simpson, Aldridge eventually dispatching him with a jaffa that hit the top of off, having switched to the Cromwell Road End with good effect. Danny Lamb fell lbw three balls later as Somerset again strove to take the upper hand.They, too, were missing the services of an England seamer, with Craig Overton rested early in Somerset’s run of five matches in as many weeks. Only Davey maintained the required level of discipline on a surface that offered initial assistance before easing as the ball softened, and Sussex were able to bolster their position from 180 for 7 via half-century stands for the eighth and tenth wickets. Jack Carson looked in good touch before edging Jack Leach to slip, Simpson then falling straight after tea when spooning Davey to cover. Hunt neatly combined the benefits of old-fashioned and new-fangled by clumping 33 off as many balls before losing middle and off stumps to Gregory.Jayden Seales had looked a thoroughly modern tailender in helping Hunt to add 52, and he swiftly proved his worth with the ball, shaping one away from Archie Vaughan to find a low outside edge that was scooped up by the diving Coles at third slip. Coles was in action again when Hudson-Prentice drew Sean Dickson into a flirt with his opening delivery, and it was two in two when Tom Abell was squared up and hit on the back leg. Hudson-Prentice then made Hove feel like Shangri-La La Land as he had Banton caught behind and nightwatcher Davey lbw to cap an enthralling day.

'It's 2025' – Cricket Australia CEO pushes for a solution to bad light stoppages

Todd Greenberg believes the game can’t afford to have players leaving the field when conditions are less than ideal

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Apr-2025Todd Greenberg, the new Cricket Australia chief executive, says the game must find a solution to bad light stopping play, stressing that the paying fans need to be put at the forefront.Greenberg has recently been involved in his first round of ICC meetings, held in Harare, since replacing Nick Hockley at CA last month.While there are a range of significant issues in Greenberg’s inbox, watching players walk off the field when the light starts to fade is something that does not sit well with him as cricket competes for attention.Related

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“My view has always been we are in the entertainment business and so if we’re in the entertainment business that means we’re trying to make sure as many fans can enjoy their cricket as possible,” he told the Daily Telegraph.”The frustration that goes when we walk off with bad light is we may be one of the last industries left that would do that. We need to find ways to innovate and figure out solutions so that doesn’t happen in the future.”The issue of bad light has been brought more into focus in the era of day-night Test cricket, which use pink balls, although they are only regularly played in Australia. Various solutions have been thrown around to combat poor light including switching between different coloured balls although that has generally been viewed as a step too far.Traditional daytime Tests can continue under floodlights where they are available, which has seen more play possible than would have been the case in the past, but umpires will take the players off when artificial light takes over too much from natural light – a rough guide often used is when the shadows of the light towers are clearly visible on the field.Greenberg, who was previously in charge at the Australian Cricketers’ Association, acknowledged that players would have to be a key part of coming up with a new approach to poor light.”I’m a realist and I understand why [play stops for bad light] and I understand the difficulties, but ultimately we want to give fans the best outcomes and there is nothing more frustrating than having to go off for bad light, particularly in an environment where we can play under lights be it with different coloured balls or different technologies,” Greenberg said.”The players are part of the solution and we need to communicate really well with them. I’m a realist to know that it won’t be solved overnight, but geez, it’s 2025 and we can play in different conditions, I’m certain we can come up with a way to solve some of those challenges.”

Cricket Scotland reaches 'amicable resolution' with former player Hamza Tahir

Left-arm spinner had retired last year citing racial discrimination

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Apr-2025Cricket Scotland says it has reached an “amicable resolution” with its former player Hamza Tahir, who had alleged he was the victim of racial discrimination when announcing his retirement from international cricket last year.Tahir, a left-arm spinner who made a total of 49 appearances across ODIs and T20Is, announced in June 2024 that he would be pursuing an unfair dismissal case after losing his Cricket Scotland contract earlier that year.Speaking at the time at a press conference in Edinburgh, alongside another former Scotland player Majid Haq as well as anti-racism campaigners, Tahir claimed he had to “work twice as hard to be on the same level as others” within the international set-up, adding that “enough was enough”.Tahir’s retirement followed separate complaints by Majid and another former Scotland player Qasim Sheikh, whose allegations in 2022 prompted an independent review, Changing the Boundaries. This listed 448 examples of racism and discrimination within cricket in Scotland, while finding the governance and leadership of cricket in the country to be institutionally racist.The findings of that report, however, have since been queried, with only five incidents detailed within the report progressing to disciplinary measures.In a statement, Cricket Scotland acknowledged Tahir’s claims of unfair treatment, adding: “Both parties are pleased to confirm that a claim of unfair dismissal has now been brought to an amicable resolution.””In a demonstration of positive action, Cricket Scotland and Hamza Tahir have agreed to work together to show their collective commitment to improve player equality and ensure there is no place for discrimination in Scottish cricket.”There will be no further comment made by either party on this matter.”

Anderson strikes on comeback to propel Lancashire

England great claims two wickets on return to cement dominance over Derbyshire

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay17-May-2025James Anderson took two wickets in his first four-day game for nearly a year as Lancashire took control of the Rothesay County Championship match at Emirates Old Trafford.The former England fast bowler finished with two for 24 from his five-over spell with the new ball but did not return to the attack on an evening when Lancashire’s spinners emphasised their team’s dominance.Replying to Lancashire’s 458, Derbyshire were 112 for four at the close with Brooke Guest on 14 and nightwatchman Jack Morley unbeaten on four after a day on which the home side had put their recent poor performances behind them.The morning’s play had set the tone for the day. Resuming on 250 for five, Lancashire’s sixth-wicket pair, George Balderson and George Bell, began brightly, taking five fours off the first six overs and scoring the 50 runs needed for a second bonus point in less than 12 overs.That early aggression set the tone for the morning. Balderson’s 11th four of the session took him to his half-century off 70 balls although 50 off those runs had been scored off 43 deliveries this morning.Seven overs later Bell reached his first half-century off 101 balls with six fours and the sixth-wicket partnership had added 133 runs when Balderson inside-edged a drive onto his stumps and was bowled by Jack Morley for 73 eight minutes before lunch. Despite that setback, Lancashire lunched on 380 for six, having added 130 runs in a 32-over session.Shortly after the resumption, Bell was caught at slip by Wayne Madsen off David Lloyd for 57 but Tom Hartley and Tom Bailey piled the pain on Derbyshire’s bowlers by adding 61 for the eighth wicket before both were dismissed in the space of three balls.Hartley was caught and bowled for 42 when he miscued a hook off Martin Andersson and Bailey was brilliantly caught for 29 by Caleb Jewell, who grabbed a one-handed catch at short extra-cover off Morley.Anderson Philip was then caught behind off Andersson for nought to end the home side’s innings on 458 and the crowd spent the tea interval anticipating the sight of one of the best fast-medium bowlers in the game’s history displaying his skills for Lancashire yet again. Aitchison was the most successful Derbyshire bowler with three for 87.The visitors’ reply began with a flurry of boundary fours but Anderson was not to be denied. He straightened the last ball of his third over to bowl Jewell for 16 and then extracted plenty of life from what had seemed a slow pitch to have Lloyd caught behind for 27 when he could not evade a short delivery and the catch looped up, probably off the glove, to Matty Hurst.Having taken two for 24 in five overs, Anderson was then removed from the attack but Lancashire’s other bowlers kept the pressure on Derbyshire’s batsmen. The visiting skipper, Wayne Madsen, was caught at the wicket for 14 when attempting to cut the left-arm spin of Hartley and the day ended with another success for the home side when Harry Came was deceived by Luke Wells’s googly and bowled for 31, playing no shot

Carroll, Balotelli & Liverpool’s 15 worst signings of all time

The five-time champions of Europe have become synonymous with terrible transfers in recent years – Goal picks out their biggest flops

Liverpool are one of the most successful clubs in world football yet the five-time champions of Europe have not won the English title since 1990.

There are several reasons for their infamous league drought but there is no doubt that the Reds' often disastrous dealings in the transfer market have played a massive part.

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Indeed, whereas once Liverpool were renowned for shrewdly strengthening title-winning sides, now the Merseysiders are synonymous with flops and failures.

Below, Goal goes through the 15 worst signings that the Reds have ever made…

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    PEGGUY ARPHEXAD | From Leicester | Free | 2000

    The life of a reserve goalkeeper isn't easy. It's difficult to make an impact. However, even taking that into account, Pegguy Arphexad's time at Anfield was dreadfully underwhelming. Signed on a free transfer in 2000, on the back of one impressive outing against the Reds for Leicester, Arphexad managed just two Premier League appearances in three years on Merseyside.

    His contribution was best summed up by Jamie Carragher's wonderfully sarcastic response to the news that his fellow pundit Gary Neville was quitting his job to take charge at Valencia.

    "Gutted!" the former Reds centre-half tweeted. "This reminds me of when Pegguy Arphexad left for Coventry."

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    IAGO ASPAS | From Celta | £7m | 2013

    Iago Aspas reasons: "In football, you can’t live forever in the past." Unfortunately for him, though, his name has been written into Liverpool folklore for taking the worst corner in the club's history.

    That shocking set-piece against Chelsea at Anfield – which saw him pass the ball straight to Willian while the Reds were pushing for a last-gasp equaliser that would have kept their Premier League title destiny in their own hands – will always be the Reds' fans abiding memory of the Spaniard.

    It was his last ever touch in a Liverpool jersey, with Aspas – who failed to even net once in the Premier League – joining Sevilla on loan just months later before eventually returning to Celta.

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    ALBERTO AQUILANI | From Roma | £17m | 2009

    In 2008, Rafael Benitez thought it would be a good idea to sell Xabi Alonso and replace him with Gareth Barry. It wasn't. But at least it didn't happen. However, Liverpool's horrified fans would have settled for Barry, given Alberto Aquilani turned up at Anfield the following year after Alonso had departed for Real Madrid.

    The injury-prone Italian was plagued by injuries and made just 18 Premier League appearances before joining Fiorentina in 2012. "Maybe I should have stayed,” Aquilani later mused, “but I wanted to come back to Italy for family reasons."

    Liverpool were happy to see him go, though, as underlined by the fact that they let him join Fiorentina for nothing.

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    MARIO BALOTELLI | From AC Milan | £16m | 2014

    No other deal better typifies Liverpool's incompetence in the transfer market than Mario Balotelli's move to Anfield in 2015.

    Having reached the end of the transfer window without having acquired a world-class striker, manager Brendan Rodgers told captain Steven Gerrard at Melwood one day: "I'm basically left with no option but to have a bit of a gamble… The gamble is Mario Balotelli."

    The captain's reaction? "Uh-oh."

    Gerrard's concern was justified, with Balotelli scoring one Premier League goal for the Reds before being loaned to AC Milan and then sold to Nice.

Croatia '98, Cameroon '90 & 15 iconic World Cup surprise packages

The World Cup is the perfect stage for an underdog to steal the spotlight, as the following unforgettable campaigns prove…

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    South Korea | 2002 | Semi-finals

    Guus Hiddink carried South Korea to the semi-finals of the 2002 World Cup when they co-hosted the tournament with Japan.

    South Korea’s progression to the semi-final was aided by some dubious refereeing decisions as disallowed goals and dodgy red cards maintained their momentum before they were beaten 1-0 by Germany in the last four.

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    Uruguay | 2010 | Semi-finals

    Uruguay reached the semi-finals in 2010 in controversial fashion. They made it through a relatively easy group containing Mexico, South Africa and a France team that was falling apart before beating South Korea in the second round.

    In the quarter-finals they faced Ghana and, with the score 1-1 in the final moments of extra-time, Luis Suarez was sent off after handling a goalbound shot, with Asamoah Gyan missing the resulting penalty.

    Uruguay made the most of their good fortune to win the shoot-out before losing 3-2 to Netherlands in the semi-finals.

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    Sweden | 1994 | Semi-finals

    Sweden had a strong team heading into the 1994 World Cup with players such as Tomas Brolin and Henrik Larsson in the squad.

    Many expected Sweden to perform well but nobody could have predicted them to reach the semi-finals, where they were only 10 minutes away from extra time when Romario struck for Brazil to settle the tie.

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    Cameroon | 1990 | Quarter-finals

    Cameroon became the first African team to reach the quarter-finals in 1990 after illuminating the tournament in Italy.

    From stunning holders Argentina in the opening game of the tournament, despite having two men sent off, to Roger Milla’s goals and corner-flag dancing, Cameroon were the story of the World Cup.

    They were also less than 10 minutes away from reaching the semi-finals, only for a brace of questionable penalties converted by Gary Lineker helping England through following a thrilling 3-2 win.

Golden Shoe 2018-19: Messi, Mbappe, Ronaldo & Europe's top scorers

Goal rounds up Europe's leading goal-scorers from the top leagues, ordered by the number of strikes multiplied by each league's factor

Goal has tallied up all the top scorers across the major leagues and to take a look at who will be crowned this season's Golden Shoe winner.

Lionel Messi has defended his crown, although Kylian Mbappe made a close run of it at the end, with Sampdoria veteran Fabio Quagliarella coming within a sniff of the Barcelona star.

If you are looking for the 2019-20 Golden Shoe standings click here!

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    1Lebo Mothiba | Lille, Strasbourg | 10 goals (20)

    Mothiba has been impressive for the Ligue 1 side since transferring from Lille in the January transfer window.

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    2Memphis Depay | Lyon | 10 goals (20)

    The Netherlands forward got his 9th and 10th strikes of the Ligue 1 season in Lyon's final game against Caen.

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    3Nils Petersen | Freiburg | 10 goals (20)

    Petersen rounded off his Bundesliga campaign with a brace as Freiberg defeated Nurnberg 2-1 on the final day of the season.

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  • 4Karl Toko Ekambi | Villarreal | 10 goals (20)

    Despite the Yellow Submarine's struggles in La Liga, the Cameroon forward has found some consistency in front of goal.

Putellas, Graham Hansen and Miedema named on GOAL50 2021 women's shortlist

Barca's superstar pair lead the candidates on this year's list with fans around the world having an opportunity to decide top spot

Barcelona's treble-winning pair Alexia Putellas and Caroline Graham Hansen, as well as Arsenal superstar Vivianne Miedema, are among the names on the GOAL50 2021 women's shortlist. 

Also among the contenders are Sam Kerr – the Chelsea striker who almost led Australia to a podium finish at the Olympics, Kadidiatou Diani of PSG and USWNT star Sam Mewis. 

GOAL50 has undergone an exciting and dramatic overhaul. This year it will be the fans who decide who finishes top of the pile. 

Check out the contenders below, and then cast your votes to decide the winner. Voting is open from November 2 until November 16.

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    Kosovare Asllani – Midfielder, Real Madrid and Sweden

    Though she ended the Olympic Games with a silver medal around her neck rather than the gold one she would've wanted, the creative midfielder was one of the players of the tournament, shining for Sweden after a 16-goal campaign for Real Madrid.

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    Nicole Billa – Forward, Hoffenheim and Austria

    Last season's battle for the Frauen-Bundesliga title was tight between Bayern Munich and Wolfsburg but the Golden Boot race was not, with Hoffenheim's Austrian goal machine scoring 23 times in 22 games to secure European football for the club.

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    Stina Blackstenius – Forward, BK Hacken and Sweden

    2021 has been all about goals for Sweden's 25-year-old striker. After scoring 11 in 12 league games before the Olympics for Hacken, she scored five in five in Japan, won a silver medal and has only continued that fine form since returning home.

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  • Aitana Bonmati – Midfielder, Barcelona and Spain

    Known as one of the most talented young midfielders in the world for some time, the 23-year-old removed the need for 'young' in that sentence as Barcelona won the treble, named Player of the Match in the Women's Champions League final.

Diaz, Doak and a smiling Salah: What to look out for at Liverpool’s Dubai training camp

The Reds will take on Lyon and AC Milan as they prepare to attack the second half of the domestic season

It was a smiling Jurgen Klopp who touched down in Dubai on Monday, as he and his Liverpool squad arrived to a warm welcome at their team hotel. All eyes may be on Qatar right now, but for Klopp and his players the next 10 days are as important as any World Cup fixture.

The club football season resumes later this month, and Liverpool intend to be ready to hit the ground running when it does.

It is three-and-a-half weeks since the Reds were last in action, signing off for the mid-season hiatus with a 3-1 win over Southampton at Anfield. They headed into the break sixth in the Premier League table, off the pace but slowly improving, after a rotten start to the campaign.

They resume on December 22, when they take on rivals Manchester City in the fourth round of the Carabao Cup. After that comes a Boxing Day trip to Aston Villa, a home game with Leicester City on December 30 and then, to usher in the New Year, a visit to Brentford on January 2.

Plenty to prepare for, then, as Klopp’s men get down to business at the NAS Sports Complex. 

The manager will have a good chunk of his senior squad available as they undergo a “mini pre-season” in the United Arab Emirates. There will be intense training sessions, two-a-day for the most part, and two decent friendly fixtures, against Lyon and AC Milan, in the grandly-named Dubai Super Cup.

GOAL runs you through a few things to look out for in the coming days…

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    Diaz's return

    Liverpool named an initial 33-man squad for the Dubai camp, and the sight of Luis Diaz’s name on the list will certainly have had fans smiling.

    The Colombian has been out of action since injuring his knee in the 3-2 defeat at Arsenal on October 9, but he was back in full team training on Tuesday, and he should now feature at some point against Lyon and/or Milan.

    What a boost that will be for Klopp. Diaz was one of the few Liverpool players to perform at anything like his best level during the early weeks of this season, and his endeavour and quality has been badly missed.

    Last season, he arrived halfway through to give the Reds a huge shot in the arm in their quest for an unprecedented quadruple. “We needed him like water in the desert,” said assistant boss Pep Lijnders.

    Could his return to action this time around prove similarly transformative?

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    Jota and the other injury victims

    Diaz is not the only injured star set to make a return in Dubai. Joel Matip is fit again after missing close to two months with a calf problem, and should be able to train as normal with the rest of his team-mates. 

    With Ibrahima Konate and Virgil van Dijk both still in Qatar preparing for World Cup quarter-finals, Matip and Joe Gomez are likely, if fit, to be the centre-back pairing for Liverpool at the Etihad Stadium in that Carabao Cup tie.

    Diogo Jota has also travelled with the squad, but the Portugal international is still at least six weeks away from returning to light training after the calf tear he suffered against Manchester City on October 16. His presence in Dubai is merely so that he can continue his rehabilitation at close quarters to Klopp, his staff and his team-mates.

    The same goes for Arthur Melo, the Brazilian midfielder who has so far been limited to just 13 minutes of senior football since his loan move from Juventus. Arthur has a thigh problem that will rule him out until at least mid-January.

    Naby Keita, the club say, will also follow an “individual rehabilitation programme” in his recovery from a serious hamstring issue. The Guinea midfielder has not featured competitively since the Community Shield in July, but was training with his team-mates on Tuesday.

    And with his contract set to expire at the end of the season, there should be plenty of motivation for the 27-year-old to get himself into top condition.

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    Salah and the seniors

    Klopp will, at least, have a good few of his go-to players available in Dubai. Chief among them is top scorer Mohamed Salah, who has enjoyed a rare break following Egypt’s failure to qualify for the World Cup.

    Salah has, if his Instagram account is anything to go by, been ticking over fitness-wise (when does he do anything else?!) and having scored 14 goals already in all competitions this season, he will be hoping to resume refreshed and ready to fire his side towards glory once more.

    The same goes for the likes of Andy Robertson, Thiago Alcantara and Roberto Firmino, who will look to use their World Cup disappointment in a positive manner, and first-teamers such as Matip, Gomez, James Milner, Kostas Tsimikas, Curtis Jones, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Harvey Elliott and Fabio Carvalho, who should ensure training standards are high throughout.

    And they will be supplemented, too, by Darwin Nunez, who will join up with the squad on December 12, having been given a week off following his World Cup exploits with Uruguay.

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    Doak and the kids

    What this trip also provides are opportunities for a few of the club’s talented youngsters to prove their worth.

    The most intriguing name on the 33-man list is that of Ben Doak, a Scottish winger who made his debut in the Carabao Cup win over Derby County last month, two days before his 17th birthday.

    Doak, signed from Celtic in the summer, has been ripping it up for the Under-18s so far this season, and the feeling inside Anfield is that he is a player of considerable first-team potential. He will surely benefit from being at close quarters with the likes of Salah, Diaz, Milner and Co. over the next 10 days.

    The same goes for the likes of Stefan Bajcetic, Bobby Clark, Melkamu Frauendorf and Layton Stewart, all of whom featured against Derby, while left-footed midfielder Dominic Corness has been added to the squad.

    Corness joins U23s colleagues Jarell Quansah, Jake Cain and Harvey Davies, while exciting winger Kaide Gordon, still only 18, could make his long-awaited return after close to 10 months out with pelvic injury.

adidas and Italy unveil the all-new Italy 23 kits infused with Italian heritage

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The new home kit will debut January 18 in the Under 18s friendly between Italy and Spain

Almost a year after announcing the new partnership, adidas has unveiled its first Italy kits since the 1970s. The Three Stripes have replaced PUMA, who had produced the Azzurri’s kits for almost two decades, with a wide-ranging deal that covers the men’s, women’s, youth, futsal, beach soccer and e-sports teams.

For the first home and away shirts of this new era – as well as the launch campaign – adidas has gone on a symbolic journey to the heart of Italian identity.

adidas

Both of the new shirts are inspired by marble, a motif chosen as “a natural, geographical and cultural element that represents Italy.” For the home kit, the marble design covers the blue shirt in a tonal pattern. Other detailing across the shirt – including Tricolore details on the shoulders, a thin stripe in the colours of the Italian flag down each side and the word ‘Italia’ on the neck – is also inspired by Italian culture.

adidas

The marbled design is even more overt on the away shirt, which blends an “off-white” base with navy blue and gold veining across the shirt. It also features the same Italian detailing, and the same adidas technical features, as the home shirt. The font used for the ‘Italia’ badge is the same as that used for players’ names and numbers on both jerseys and is drawn from Roman engravings, continuing the marble theme.

To launch the designs, adidas and the Italian Football Federation have released “The Search – La Ricerca.” Featuring Italian legends such as Alessandro Del Piero, Martina Rosucci and Gianluigi Donnarumma alongside artist Blanco, the campaign tells the story of the search for what it means to be Italian and the role of the Azzurri jersey in Italy’s national identity.

adidas

Announcing the home and away shirts – and the start of the new partnership – adidas CEO Bjørn Gulden described the kits as “quintessentially Italian and elegant while staying true to the iconic heritage of the Azzurri.” Italian Football Federation President Gabriele Gravina echoed this sentiment, adding, “For 113 years, the Italian national football team has represented a symbol of values and style around the world, our football kit is a national heritage that goes beyond sport, because it transmits feelings that unite people of different ages, sexes and social backgrounds.”

adidas

The adidas-designed home shirt will make its debut during Italy Under 18s fixture against Spain on January 18, the first time that a youth team has launched a new jersey before the main national squad.

Italy 23 kits price & how to buy

The adidas and Italy 23 kit collection is available to buy now from the adidas web store. Here's a closer look at some of the items available:

  • Italy 23 Home kit

    Italy 2023 Home Authentic Jersey

    adidas£110.00 at adidas

    Available in XS, S, M, L, XL and 2XL.

    Personalise your Italy jersey with a player's name and number, or choose your own.

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  • Italy 2023 Home Jersey – Men’s

    adidas£70.00 at adidas

    Available in XS, S, M, L, XL, 2XL and 3XL.

    Personalise your Italy jersey with a player's name and number, or choose your own.

  • Italy 2023 Home Jersey – Women’s

    adidas£70.00 at adidas

    Available in 2XS, XS, S, M, L, XL and 2XL.

    Personalise your Italy jersey with a player's name and number, or choose your own.

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  • Italy 2023 Home Jersey – Youth

    adidas£50.00 at adidas

    Available in 7-8Y, 9-10Y, 11-12Y, 13-14Y and 15-16Y.

    Personalise your Italy jersey with a player's name and number, or choose your own.

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