For Crawley and Pope, the struggle gets real

Both England batters tried to rein in their natural games but failed in different ways

Vithushan Ehantharajah10-Jul-20252:23

Pope: We’re constantly trying to get batting balance right

It was in Multan, ahead of the first Test of 2024’s tour of Pakistan, that Zak Crawley, as he presented Ollie Pope with his 50th cap, joked that the pair run Clapham, referencing their adopted south London neighbourhood. Which is funny because no one runs Clapham. The whole point of Clapham – especially if you’re in your mid-20s, like Crawley and Pope are – is to give you the impression you run Clapham.Really, Clapham runs you. Enticing you for the early years of the rest of your life – a 2021 census revealed 59% of residents are aged between 20 and 39 – as it did for Pope and Crawley. With it comes a false sense of agency and a flawed understanding of adulthood.You end up doing what you had been doing at university, but for more money. And thus the highs feel greater, making you square that you’ve held on to joy for this long so you’ll never grow old, until one day you do and the place spits you out for the next crop of wide-eyed, energy-filled vessels. Before you know it, you’re in a dogfight with the place to stay relevant. To stay young. To stay put. And only when you give in to the grind – that, maybe, you’re too old for Infernos and Café Sol, and the common is actually a great way to get your 10,000 steps – does it keep you around.Related

  • Reddy credits Cummins and Morkel for bowling improvement

  • Bumrah and Root show their class on bizarre Bazwalling day

  • Root holds the fort with 99* as India put brakes on Bazball

  • England sweat on Ben Stokes as spectre of injury looms

On Thursday, north of the river, both SW residents were in a domain that, as vice-captain and senior opener, is very much their own. But one which was playing awkward and unreliable underfoot, squeezing them to offer more against an India attack making their beds at the Home of Cricket. Both struggling in very different ways. One by choice as a team built on their kind of stroke-making and effervescence deliberately fizzled towards a quietly respectable 251 for 4 on day one of this Lord’s Test.Test cricket has been kind and cruel to both, though crueller to Crawley than to Pope, and not without good reason. Collectively, though, they have been lucky.Both have more caps than Jonathan Trott. By the end of the series, Crawley (57 and counting) will have more than Darren Gough (58), and Pope (59) will pass Graeme Swann (60). And to already know they will leapfrog modern greats without fighting against ingrained, unflattering reputations acquired so deep into a Test career is a luxury. One afforded to an opener and a No. 3 who benefit from a never-more-forgiving England set-up. Which, all told, has only compounded the scrutiny on them and worn patience thin, even with the acceptance that they occupy challenging positions for batters in this country. Though even that makes it worse.Crawley’s 43-ball 18 was basically an AI-generated innings of a waywardly dominant player at his worst. The control percentage was 51.2 (playing a false shot to 21 of the deliveries he faced) and spoke of the Russian Roulette nature of his stay, except with bullets in three of the six chambers. By contrast, fellow opener Ben Duckett “boasted” a control percentage of 60 during his 40 balls.The sixth over of the day provided a snapshot of the wrestle between Crawley and his game that seems to have emerged since a calm 65 set England’s first Test chase in motion. Against Akash Deep from the Nursery End, he adopted four different starting points and triggers; a foot outside, a foot inside, one impulsive charge, another pre-meditated shuffle and dart which almost cost him leg stump.2:23

Pope: We’re constantly trying to get batting balance right

The positive spin on that is Crawley was trying to give Akash Deep something to think about, aiming to unsettle his rhythm, encroach on his radar. But at 1 off 18, the flailing arms were of a man trying to keep his head above water, not swimming meaningfully against the tide.There was no real consolation that he could do little about his dismissal, managing to edge a pearler down the slope from Nitish Kumar Reddy after living so charmed. Lucky to still be there, unlucky to have nicked it. The delivery justified the intent behind the approach. You’re going to get a good one, and he got a great one to end a bad, bad knock.For Pope, however, this was a peculiar riddle of guts and bunkering down sandwiched between being dropped first ball – it would have been a hell of a catch from Shubman Gill at second gully – and getting out first ball after tea, inexplicably driving at a delivery too short. That was the 17th time out of the 62 where Pope has resumed an innings at the start of a session and been dismissed in its first ten deliveries.For context, Root – unbeaten at lunch on 24, at tea at 54, and overnight on 99 – has “done a Pope” just 15 out of 126 times since Pope’s debut in August 2018. That, really, is the reliability England fans crave from their No. 3, without even yearning for the qualities of Root, who everyone accepts is now done with the role.

The dressing room will appreciate Pope’s pluck, but the public will only see another start spurned. For Crawley, however, the fight to justify his place gets a little harder. To stay, to remain. A player that has thrived off the environment no longer seems to be thriving

And yet, amid familiar twitches outside off stump where, wicket aside, he was scoreless from 17 of 19 deliveries, was clearly a bit of caution. He was only beaten by six of the 75 balls in that region. The 87 he took to reach 30 was the second-slowest after a 108-ball effort against New Zealand in December 2018. There was struggle, but it was not shirked.Restraint came to the fore in the middle session, which he and Root saw out for just 70 runs in 24 overs. During the 41st over, after Root had almost played Akash Deep on to his stumps, Pope was in the zone at the non-striker’s end shadowing a charge down the pitch. It was not all that dramatic, akin to the way one might shimmy to leap off a hill, the express intention to scare a friend by momentarily listening to the mischievous voice in your head.Three overs later, Pope tried it off Akash, failing to work a single to the leg side. Back it went in the box. Perhaps surprisingly given how often members of this team use the charge to momentarily relieve pressure, like a boxer windmilling punches when they are backed into a corner. For Pope, this was growth.”I did it once – it can mess up the lengths a little bit,” Pope said. “But for me, I think it’s something I’ve not done as much over the last year or so, mainly because I feel like I’m just trusting my defence a little bit more. I don’t feel I need to try and hit them off their lengths the whole time.”Ollie Pope was distraught after being caught behind•Getty ImagesNipping conditions curbed that enthusiasm. Even outright, he kept schtum against Bumrah, at one point facing 28 deliveries of a five-over spell in which Root faced just two. Of the 42 deliveries Bumrah bowled when both were at the crease, Pope faced 32 to Root’s ten, but only managed two more runs than Root. Not that this was the plan, of course. This was a man who usually flies too close to the sun realising his limits.”I don’t think that would be a smart conscious choice of me,” Pope joked when asked if he was shielding Root. “He just hit a pretty good area and I guess with the field up I couldn’t sneak down to the other end. Root’s good at nicking the ones like that.”You’ve just always got to be switched on, so it wasn’t a conscious choice, but I was happy to try and absorb the pressure.”It’s tempting to say this was a teaser of a new Pope, but that idea was shot to earth by a narrative-skewing dismissal that clipped England’s wings, too.Having toughed it out, he should have gone on. And there is something so typically Pope that having started the series with a century that seemed to lock in his place for this series and the Ashes to come, he is now averaging 36.40 from five innings.The dressing room will appreciate Pope’s pluck, but the public will only see another start spurned. For Crawley, however, the fight to justify his place gets a little harder. To stay, to remain. A player that has thrived off the environment no longer seems to be thriving. It might be time to move.

Raphinha repeat: 49ers keen on signing "generational" £79m star for Leeds

Leeds United are currently one point above the relegation zone in the Premier League after picking up 11 points from their first 11 matches of the 2025/26 campaign.

Whilst it has not been a disastrous start for the Championship champions, there are already some eyes wandering to the January transfer window with a view to the club bolstering the squad with new recruits.

Adding more goals to the team may be one of the priorities for the 49ers ahead of the window, as Daniel Farke’s side have only scored 11 goals in their 11 league matches.

Noah Okafor, Joe Rodon, and Lukas Nmecha are all currently tied on two goals in the Premier League this season, making them the club’s joint-top scorers.

Leeds’ top Premier League scorers since 20/21

Season

Top goalscorer

Goals

25/26

Noah Okafor

Joe Rodon

Lukas Nmecha

2

22/23

Rodrigo

13

21/22

Raphinha

11

20/21

Patrick Bamford

17

Stats via WhoScored

As you can see in the table above, Leeds look to be on course for their first top-flight campaign without a player in double figures for goals for the first time since they were promoted under Marcelo Bielsa in 2020.

What the Whites would give to have Raphinha back at Elland Road for a second spell, as the Brazil international was a sensational signing by Victor Orta and Bielsa.

Where Raphinha ranks among Leeds signings since 2020

The left-footed forward was signed from Rennes for a fee of £18m in the summer of 2020 after Leeds had won the Championship title in the 2019/20 campaign.

It is hard to argue against Raphinha being the best signing that the club have made since their promotion in 2020, as he was a superstar for the Whites and earned them a significant profit upon his eventual departure.

The Brazilian phenomenon ranked first in the squad for ‘big chances’ created in both the 2020/21 and 2021/22 campaign, with 12 in the first and ten in the second, per Sofascore, which speaks to how important he was as a creative force.

Raphinha (Premier League)

20/21

21/22

Appearances

30

35

Goals

6

11

Big chances missed

4

6

Big chances created

12

10

Key passes per game

2.1

1.9

Assists

9

3

Dribbles completed per game

1.9

1.8

Stats via Sofascore

Raphinha, as shown in the statistics above, also provided a big threat as a scorer of goals, with a return of 17 strikes in 65 Premier League games for the Whites in total.

Leeds were relegated the season after he left the club and no players in the squad hit double figures for ‘big chances’ created, per Sofascore, which speaks to the impact that his exit had on the team.

His £55m move to Barcelona in 2022 was also a club-record sale for Leeds, which remains the case today, and this is another reason why he must be considered their best signing since 2020, due to his undeniable impact on the pitch and the money that his sale generated.

He was an exciting signing at the time of his arrival in 2020, as a technically brilliant Brazilian forward coming in from Ligue 1, and the club could recapture that level of excitement with one of their targets for the next window.

Leeds lining up move for Premier League star

According to MOTLeedsNews, Leeds United are lining up a potential swoop to sign Manchester United central midfielder Kobbie Mainoo in the upcoming January transfer window.

The report claims that the Whites were interested in a move for the England international in the summer window, but the Red Devils were unwilling to sanction an exit at the time.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

It states that ‘all signs’ point to a January exit from Old Trafford for Mainoo, due to his lack of game time this season, and that Leeds are keeping tabs on his situation with a view to a move for his signature.

However, MOTLeedsNews reveals that the main priority for the Whites is to sign a new number nine to bolster their attack, with any deal for the United midfielder on the back burner until they get that done.

If Leeds do land a new striker and go on to sign Mainoo on loan for the second half of the 2025/26 campaign, the central midfielder could be the most exciting signing since Raphinha.

Why Leeds should sign Kobbie Mainoo

In September, it was reported that a £79m price tag had been placed on the English starlet amid interest from Real Madrid, as United looked to scare teams off an attempt to sign him on a permanent basis.

£79m is £43.5m more than Leeds have ever spent on a player and £24m more than the club have ever sold a player for, which shows that Mainoo may be the most valuable player in the club’s history, even if he only joins on loan.

It would be an incredibly exciting signing for supporters and surely viewed as an ambitious move by neutrals, because the midfield star has made 80 appearances for Manchester United and been capped ten times by England, per Transfermarkt, despite not turning 21 until next April.

Mainoo, as explained by Ruben Amorim in the comments above, is in an unfortunate situation at Old Trafford because he has found himself behind club captain and Portuguese star Bruno Fernandes in his position because of the manager’s 3-4-2-1 system.

Before Amorim’s time at United, the English midfielder excelled in a 4-3-3 or 4-2-3-1 system under Erik ten Hag in the 2023/24 campaign, which bodes well for a potential move to Leeds, as they are Farke’s two preferred formations at Elland Road.

23/24 Premier League

Kobbie Mainoo per 90

Percentile rank vs midfielders

Take-ons attempted

2.71

Top 20%

Take-ons completed

1.42

Top 18%

Take-on success rate

53.4%

Top 28%

Goal-creating actions (take-ons)

0.09

Top 4%

Goal-creating actions (shot)

0.09

Top 2%

Goal-creating actions (fouls drawn)

0.05

Top 9%

Stats via FBref

As you can see in the table above, Mainoo earned his place in the England team and as a regular starter for United thanks to his impressive play in possession under the Dutch coach.

The 20-year-old midfield star, who was dubbed “generational” by teammate Rasmus Hojlund, was among the best midfielders in the Premier League at creating chances and carrying his side up the pitch with his ball control and mobility, which could helpd Leeds to improve their dismal goal tally of 11 goals from 11 games.

Mainoo, as shown in the clips above, also provided quality defensively, tracking back to make vital challenges, and showed potential as a goalscorer with five goals in all competitions, per Sofascore.

Therefore, the England international should not be judged by his failure to get into the current United team, as that is almost purely down to the manager’s preferred tactics.

Bamford 2.0: Leeds chase ST with 15 goals in 25/26, he'd save Farke's job

Leeds United are interested in signing a striker who could save Daniel Farke’s job at Elland Road.

By
Dan Emery

Nov 15, 2025

Overall, Leeds fans should be incredibly excited by the prospect of signing the young star, as he could be just as exciting a signing as Raphinha was, for different reasons, despite the fact that it would only be a loan deal.

Sam Curran added to England T20I squads as Ben Duckett takes break

England have recalled Sam Curran for their T20Is against South Africa and Ireland, while prescribing an extra week’s rest to Ben Duckett after his dramatic loss of form.Curran has not played for England in any format this year – or under Brendon McCullum’s coaching – but has been in excellent domestic form. Across 24 appearances in the T20 Blast and the Hundred this summer, he has scored 603 runs with a strike rate of 154.21 and taken 33 cheap wickets, and has been added to squads for all six of England’s upcoming fixtures.His call-up comes barely 24 hours after South Africa exposed England’s overreliance on the part-time spin of Jacob Bethell and Will Jacks in Thursday’s second ODI at Lord’s. Bethell and Jacks returned combined figures of 1 for 112 in 10 overs, and Curran’s addition to the squad gives England more flexibility around the balance of their team.Duckett, meanwhile, has been handed an additional week off before England’s tours to New Zealand and Australia this winter. He has become an all-format regular in the past 12 months and looked utterly out of sorts during an uncharacteristically scratchy innings of 14 off 33 balls on Thursday.He scored 462 runs in nine innings during England’s drawn Test series against India this summer but has only once passed 20 in his 10 innings since – eight in the Hundred (where his top score for Birmingham Phoenix was 49 not out) and two in this week’s ODIs. Duckett’s absence will likely see Jamie Smith and Phil Salt opening the batting together against South Africa next week, with Jacks or Tom Banton primed to replace Smith in Ireland.Related

  • England blown to bits-and-pieces as part-timers' bowling strategy backfires

  • Jordan Cox earns belated call-up for Ireland T20Is

  • Brook backs butchered Baker after chastising ODI debut

  • Overton's shock decision sounds alarm bells for England schedule

  • Sam Curran on England omission: 'I've got to keep banging the door down'

In one final change to their squads, England have also pulled Matthew Potts out of the Ireland T20Is in a move which will allow him to press his case for Ashes selection in the County Championship for Durham. There is a spot available in their squad for Australia after Jamie Overton’s decision to quit red-ball cricket, and Potts is a strong contender.He has slipped down the pecking order across formats and was not even involved in their squads to face India. But Overton’s effective withdrawal from the Ashes – and bolter Sonny Baker’s struggles on ODI debut – could provide a route back, and England believe he will be better served by playing for Durham in the County Championship than running drinks in Dublin.Jordan Cox, Curran’s Oval Invincibles team-mate, was added to the squad to face Ireland earlier this week but is not due to be involved in the South Africa series. Duckett will stay with the ODI squad for Sunday’s dead-rubber in Southampton.Updated England T20I squads:vs South Africa: Harry Brook (capt), Rehan Ahmed, Jofra Archer, Tom Banton, Jacob Bethell, Jos Buttler, Brydon Carse, Sam Curran, Liam Dawson, Will Jacks, Saqib Mahmood, Jamie Overton, Adil Rashid, Phil Salt, Jamie Smith, Luke Wood.vs Ireland: Jordan Cox, Sonny Baker and Tom Hartley replace Harry Brook, Jofra Archer, Brydon Carse and Jamie Smith; Bethell replaces Brook as captain.

How Thomas Muller, USMNT standouts Sebastian Berhalter, Brian White and Tristan Blackmon, and head coach Jesper Sørensen turned the Vancouver Whitecaps into improbable MLS contenders

No one expected Vancouver to contend MLS Cup when they were put up for sale at the start of the season, but they might be the team best equipped to win it

Vancouver wasn't supposed to be here. Some, in fact, didn't think they would get close. 

Look at the lists made by experts and fans alike, and most would have told you that the Canadian side could finish towards the bottom of the Western Conference. And even if that was harsh, this certainly didn't look like a sure-fire playoff team. There was a good reason for that. In November 2024, they fired their coach, a fan favorite in Vanni Sartini. A month later, the ownership group announced the club was up for sale. There was a chance that Vancouver might not even have an MLS club for long, with rumors of relocation. 

Vancouver’s head coaching job remained vacant for nearly two months, illustrating the level of upheaval at the club. They finally appointed Jesper Sørensen on Jan. 12 – a Danish manager with no prior MLS experience.

It all looked like a recipe for disaster. 

Yet nine months later, they are two wins from a historic milestone. A season that was expected to be mediocre has instead turned into one of steady ascent. The Whitecaps started strong, built on that foundation, and now sit within reach of the first MLS Cup in club history.

  • Getty Images Sport

    The stats tell the real story

    There’s always an element of luck in an MLS regular season. Teams can ride a hot start, stay afloat for months, and then fall apart when the playoffs begin. St. Louis City SC in 2023 is the textbook example – an expansion team that stunned the Western Conference but whose underlying numbers raised doubts, which were confirmed when they collapsed in the first round.

    The Whitecaps have been nothing like that. Their metrics back up the eye test. They scored a conference-best 66 goals, conceded a conference-low 38, and lost fewer matches than anyone in the West. Even their draws came in useful stretches. In short, this was a team that earned its results, not one carried by momentum or good fortune.

    The underlying numbers are good – and generally reliable. Their 66 goals came on 63.1 xG, suggesting that they, like many teams that are deadly in front of goal, slightly overperformed their mark (a discrepancy of 2.9 tends to be a sign of clinical finishing rather than pure luck). And they were equally effective at the other end. Their xG conceded was 37.3. They allowed 38 goals.

    Piece it all together, and Vancouver were a very good team performing exactly how the statistics project they really should.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty Images Sport

    CONCACAF Champions Cup run set the tone

    There were early hints the Whitecaps might be good. They opened the MLS season well and climbed to the top of the Western Conference within two months. That raised eyebrows – not least because Sørensen was a relative unknown when he was hired in mid-January. But the MLS regular season is inherently chaotic. Hot starts happen. And even with Brian White scoring regularly, there was a suspicion that Vancouver could still regress to the mean.

    What they needed was a signature run, something to prove they were more than a fast starter. Enter the CONCACAF Champions Cup, the perfect proving ground for MLS clubs. Historically, teams from the league have struggled – especially in Mexico – feeding the perception that MLS sides simply can’t win there. Vancouver shattered that narrative, earning away-goal wins in the knockouts to reach a semifinal showdown with Inter Miami.

    And at that point, the magic should’ve ended. This was Lionel Messi in knockout football, after all. Thanks for the memories – time for the big boys to take over.

    Except…

    They hosted the first leg at BC Place and stunned a full-strength Miami with a 2-0 win. Then they went to Chase Stadium and did it again, a 3-1 triumph to complete an unthinkable 5-1 aggregate rout of MLS’s best. The enchantment eventually faded – Cruz Azul, deeper and more battle-hardened, thrashed them in the final – but even that result felt surprising.

    And maybe that’s the biggest compliment you can give this Whitecaps team.

  • Imagn

    The American influence

    The through line in this Whitecaps side is a general sense of money well spent. The Whitecaps have never been flush with cash, and have, arguably, not had a singular star player since Alphonso Davies left nearly a decade ago (and even then, he was very much a man on the rise). They have consistently been a bottom 10 spender in MLS, and have been – until recently – unable to lure any big stars to the BC Palace. 

    But to say they have been expert navigators would be inaccurate, too. They are, instead, remarkably agreeable in their business. Until now. The loss of Ryan Guald – their star man and highest earner – to a long term injury really should have derailed their campaign. Instead, the system became the star, with plenty of strong individual talents throughout. White was a surprise early Golden Boot contender and earned a well-deserved USMNT call up for doing so. Tristan Blackmon certainly has his critics, but was good value for his nod for the U.S. in September, too.

    And then, we have Sebastian Berhalter. As the story goes, the son of former U.S. manager Gregg was uncertain that he even wanted to play soccer just a few years ago. Now, he is one of Pochettino's favorites, a set-piece specialist with a wonderful engine in the middle of the park. 

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

    Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

  • Imagn

    Muller's arrival

    There was no way Thomas Muller should have gone to Vancouver. Stars don't do that. They go to Los Angeles, New York, Miami, or Chicago. Vancouver is a truly lovely city, but it is not a spot that can lure European stars, not ones that have won World Cups, multiple Champions Leagues, and 13 Bundesliga titles. 

    Except this time, they did. Muller supposedly flirted with Chicago for some time, but was sold on Vancouver. He has turned out to be the perfect midseason boost. The Whitecaps were good – very good – but championship sides tend to need a lift, especially in the slog of the MLS season. And so Muller arrived to immense fanfare. 

    He was greeted by droves of fans at the Vancouver airport, and quickly brought his trademark brand of soccer to Canada’s West Coast. Muller has done what he does best – drifting into pockets of space, making the right runs, picking the right passes, and providing a cutting edge in the final third. His quality has anchored the attack while White worked his way back from a long-term hamstring injury.

Aussies at the IPL: how will they fare in 2025?

Cummins, Starc, Hazlewood and Marsh are all fit for the IPL despite missing the Champions Trophy and are among 15 Australians heading to India

Alex Malcolm17-Mar-20253:38

Who should be SRH’s fourth overseas player?

Pat CumminsAustralia’s Test skipper returns to lead Sunrisers Hyderabad again after being retained by the franchise and taking a 12.2% pay-cut after being the second-most expensive buy at the 2024 mini auction. He’s still set to earn approximately AUD$3.7 million. Cummins missed the Sri Lanka Test tour and the Champions Trophy due to the birth of his second child and an ongoing ankle issue but he declared himself fully fit in a recent interview with ESPNcricinfo. His leadership was hailed by all who played under him last season. From an Australian perspective, the selectors will be praying he gets through the IPL season unscathed and not too fatigued ahead of the WTC final in June.Travis HeadFatigue will be a major concern for Head as he returns to Sunrisers, having been retained for AUD$1.2 million, following his blockbuster season as one half of the Travishek duo. Unlike Cummins, Head played both Tests and one of the two ODIs in Sri Lanka as well as the Champions Trophy after he was the leading run-scorer in the Border-Gavaskar series. He is also going to be a key figure in the WTC final in June having been Player of the Match in the last one. Australia’s selectors will also hope he gets through unscathed. Head was carefully managed last year by head coach Daniel Vettori, who is also Australia’s bowling coach and could spend a decent chunk of the season playing as an Impact Sub meaning he will scarcely have to field.Related

Fast-bowler injuries threaten Pant-powered LSG's season

Marsh cleared to play in the IPL as batter-only for LSG despite back issue

Can Travishek, Klaasen, Reddy and Cummins push SRH to go one better?

CSK look ready for spin to win again in Chennai

RCB hope 18 is the charm as hunt for IPL glory continues

Adam ZampaZampa is one of the best T20 spinners in the world but has not enjoyed much success at the IPL. It has been difficult for him to get a game as one of four overseas players when so many domestic spinners are available and franchises have prioritised playing overseas allrounders and fast bowlers. He has only played a maximum of six games in any season he’s played at his previous three franchises in Rising Pune Supergiants, Royal Challengers Bengaluru and Rajasthan Royals. Sunrisers bought him for AUD$440000, with Vettori no doubt an influential figure in his recruitment. But Sunrisers also have local legspinner Rahul Chahar on their list. With Cummins, Head and Heinrich Klaasen locked into the XII most games there will only be one overseas slot available for Zampa to fit into. Conditions may dictate whether he plays alongside Chahar, instead of him or misses out altogether. But he has a much better chance of playing a high proportion of games in this Sunrisers set-up than he has at his previous franchises.Can Jake Fraser-McGurk fire again for Dehli Capitals?•Associated PressJake Fraser-McGurkCan Jake Fraser-McGurk avoid the second year blues? He took the IPL by storm last season. He had the second highest strike-rate for the tournament, smashing 330 runs in nine innings at 234.04, with four half-centuries after being picked up by Delhi as an injury replacement. The franchise did not retain him. They instead repurchased him at the auction for AUD$1.65 million. Only Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Starc and Marcus Stoinis cost more among Australians at the auction. Fraser-McGurk though enters this season as a marked man coming off a lean period. He had very poor BBL, even with his last innings of 95 off 46 included. He has also struggled in most of his 12 international white-ball innings for Australia since his breakout IPL to the point where he was overlooked for the Champions Trophy semi-final when Matt Short was injured. Capitals will expect big things. He thrived in the pristine batting conditions at Arun Jaitley Stadium last year. But teams will know exactly how to bowl to him this time around.Mitchell StarcDespite being player of the match in the qualifying final and the final to help Kolkata Knight Riders win IPL 2024, Starc was not retained by KKR which was in part understandable given they had paid a record price for him at the 2024 auction. Capitals pounced at the 2025 auction, outlaying AUD$2.15 million for him. KL Rahul was the only player who cost Capitals more. They will depend a lot on Starc’s strike power and experience as Capitals are light on in the fast bowling department and have lost overseas batter Harry Brook. That will make Australia’s selectors nervous as he looks set to play every IPL game ahead of the WTC final. He is durable however and the ankle issue that kept him out of the Champions Trophy was minor, with the mental and physical freshen-up clearly very valuable.Josh Hazlewood returns to RCB•BCCIJosh HazlewoodHazlewood returns to Royal Challengers Bangalore as the most expensive purchase among the Australians at the auction, at a cost of $AUD2.29 million, having missed last year’s IPL. In 2022 he had an outstanding IPL for RCB taking 20 wickets at a strike-rate of 13.90. But since then he has been injury-plagued and comes in off a summer where he suffered two calf injuries and a side strain. The second calf injury turned into a hip niggle that kept him out of the Champions Trophy. He has been declared fully fit for the IPL by CA but it was a lengthy process to get him to the start line. There will be nerves among Australia’s selectors and CA medical staff about how he will handle a full IPL before the WTC final.Tim DavidIPL 2025 looms a big one for Tim David. His stocks have dwindled as a sought-after power-hitter on the franchise circuit. He was pushed to the margins by Mumbai Indians last year and was bought for a third of his 2022 price when RCB secured him for $AUD547000. He had a very good BBL for Hobart Hurricanes and was a key factor in them winning their maiden title. He was actually used higher up the order at times, including walking out at No.5 in the seventh over against Sydney Thunder and smashing an unbeaten 68 from 38 in a successful chase. How much he will play though will depend on how RCB sets up. They have lacked middle to lower order power in recent times and he fills that hole but he will be fighting for a spot with Liam Livingstone and Jacob Bethall who both can bowl some key overs.Mitchell MarshThere will be a lot of eyes on Marsh’s return from injury at his new franchise Lucknow Super Giants under former coach Justin Langer. He was bought by LSG for AUD$623000 but that purchase was made in November before a serious decline in form saw him lose his spot in Australia’s Test team by the fifth Test of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy and miss the Champions Trophy with a back injury. The injury has settled enough to allow him to play with LSG as a batter-only but he is far from fully fit having only returned to batting in recent weeks. He will likely be used as an impact player at the top of the order and then won’t have to field. This will be his ninth IPL at his sixth franchise. He has never played more than nine games in a season and has only played more than five in three of his previous eight seasons. His 2024 IPL ended after four games due to a hamstring injury.Glenn Maxwell returns to Punjab Kings for his third stint•BCCIGlenn MaxwellGlenn Maxwell returns to Punjab Kings for his third stint. Maxwell and Punjab have been intertwined in a roller-coaster on again off again relationship since 2014 when he was player of the tournament in his first season there. He wrote in his recent autobiography that his 2017 season as captain was a disaster due to a big falling out with Virender Sehwag. In his third stint in 2020 he scored 108 runs at a strike-rate of 101.88 and failed to hit a six. He returns after a shocking 2024 IPL where he scored 52 runs in nine innings and essentially dropped himself from the RCB line-up. But Ricky Ponting is the new Punjab coach and has long had faith in Maxwell’s ability after bringing him to Delhi in 2018. He is coming off a BBL season where he was equal player of the tournament and he played one excellent cameo at the Champions Trophy but only batted twice.Marcus StoinisAnother key part of Ponting’s Australian cartel at Punjab, Stoinis was an expensive purchase at the auction at AUD$2 million. He has set himself for a big IPL, prioritising it over ODI cricket after retiring from the format ahead of the Champions Trophy when he was set to be needed in Australia’s tilt. He suffered a hamstring niggle in the SA20 but should be fit having had a six full weeks off. He’s still playing excellent T20 cricket. He made a stunning century for LSG last season, was one of Australia’s best batters in a dismal T20 World Cup campaign and smashed 61 not out off 27 balls in his last T20I innings against Pakistan in November.Josh Inglis is one of the form players in the world•Associated PressJosh InglisInglis comes into his first IPL as one of the most in-form batters in the world. He made his maiden ODI century in the Champions Trophy to help Australia chase 352 against England not long after posting a Test century on debut in Galle. Those two efforts saw him join and elite group of Australians with international centuries in all three forms with one of his two T20I centuries coming in India in 2023 against a group of IPL bowlers which included new teammate Arshdeep Singh. Ponting faces a challenge of finding a spot for him in the XI as either a specialist batter or a wicketkeeper depending on his all-round and fast bowling needs given he also has Maxwell, Stoinis, Azmatullah Omarzai, Marco Jansen and Lockie Ferguson in his squad.Aaron HardieGiven the overseas depth at Punjab, Aaron Hardie looks very unlikely to play much in his first IPL at Punjab. His stocks were rising in 2024 on the back of a couple of strong BBL campaigns and some impressive early showings for Australia in both limited-overs forms, with Punjab picking him up for AUD$228000. But his 2024-25 Australian summer was relatively lean. He only bowled in one BBL game in order to settle a quad issue prior to the Champions Trophy but he was not called in at all in the tournament as Australia did not play a seam-bowling allrounder.Xavier BartlettBartlett finds himself in a similar spot to Hardie. He was purchased at the auction by Punjab for just AUD$146000 when his stocks were extremely high in November after a sensational 2023-24 BBL and an impressive start to his ODI and T20I career. But he had a tough BBL campaign coming off a serious side strain and was never considered for the Champions Trophy despite Australia having a huge injury toll among their quicks. He arrives in India having played four first-class games in the last five weeks and just one white-ball List A game.Nathan Ellis will play for CSK•BCCINathan EllisThe Hobart Hurricanes title-winning skipper looks to be a very shrewd purchase by Chennai Super Kings for just AUD$365000. He spent four seasons at Punjab Kings but only played one game last season and looked to be severely underplayed. He continues to impress at every opportunity for Australia and was arguably their best bowler at the Champions Trophy in the absence of the big three. He might be a conditions dependent selection for CSK early in the season but it would not be a surprise if that changes after some good performances.Spencer JohnsonKKR filled the void left by not retaining Starc with another left-arm Australia quick in Johnson who cost a fraction of Starc’s price at AUD$510000. Whether Johnson can win them a title with finals performances the equal of Starc’s remains to be seen. He has done it in the BBL for Brisbane Heat but he is yet to work out how to translate that success on Indian pitches where his height and pace is nullified somewhat. He only played five matches for Gujurat Titans in the 2024 season. He took a couple of wickets against Afghanistan in the Champions Trophy but was squeezed out of Australia’s line-up for the semi-final when they opted to play two spinnners.

West Ham's offer to Kobbie Mainoo with Man United star in 'advanced talks' to leave

West Ham have emerged as contenders to sign Man United sensation Kobbie Mainoo as we slowly approach the January transfer window.

The 10-cap England international, who once burst on to the scene in impressive fashion at Old Trafford, has been starved of impactful minutes under Ruben Amorim.

With his contract still expiring in under two years, speculation understandably remains rife over his long-term future.

Mainoo was heavily linked with a summer window exit from United, with Chelsea previously named as one suitor to take the Stockport-born youngster off Amorim’s hands.

Sunderland 3-0 West Ham

West Ham 1-5 Chelsea

Nottingham Forest 0-3 West Ham

West Ham 0-3 Tottenham

West Ham 1-2 Crystal Palace

Everton 1-1 West Ham

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

West Ham 0-2 Brentford

Leeds 2-1 West Ham

West Ham 3-1 Newcastle

The west Londoners were even quoted a £70 million asking price when they enquired back in January, according to The Athletic, but the price for a permanent deal dropped to as low as £45 million at the end of last summer.

Since United made the decision not to part company before deadline day on September 1, Mainoo is yet to start a single Premier League game, and it is believed he’s been clamoring for an exit.

According to Sky Sports news in August, Mainoo asked United to green-light a loan move away to gain valuable minutes elsewhere, but Amorim was adamant that he needs the academy graduate and urged him to fight for more game time.

Fast-forward to now, and the only start Mainoo has under his belt this season came during United’s dismal loss to Grimsby Town on penalties in the Carabao Cup.

The midfielder is far from satisfied, with reliable journalist Fabrizio Romano reporting that West Ham are proposing a way out for Mainoo.

West Ham's offer to Kobbie Mainoo with Man United star in 'advanced talks' to leave

Speaking on the Here We Go podcast this week, Romano said that West Ham are “offering guaranteed minutes” to Mainoo in a bid to tempt him down south, but they’re not alone.

Indeed, Serie A champions Napoli are also battling for his signature as Mainoo still aims to leave on a temporary deal.

On the Napoli front, there is a pretty immediate danger to West Ham’s chances of signing Mainoo, with Antonio Conte’s side believed to be in ‘advanced talks’, according to another media source.

West Ham are not completely out of the running yet, it would seem, and he’d certainly add a whole new dimension to Nuno Espírito Santo’s midfield.

It wasn’t too long ago when United legend Paul Scholes claimed that Mainoo was “10 times” the player he was at 19, and the youngster’s breakout 2023/2024 campaign briefly sparked suggestions that he could be England’s next big star.

Mainoo’s match-winning display against Man City in the 2024 FA Cup final was followed by a sublime Euros with England, where he registered an historic 96% passing accuracy at one stage and became the fifth-youngest player to ever feature in a major international final — behind Lamine Yamal, Pele, Giuseppe Bergomi and Renato Sanches.

Mainoo is a gem waiting to be plucked away from United’s bench, and his enthusiasm for minutes could seriously benefit West Ham as he yearns to showcase his true ability.

Mikel Arteta claims cruel social media campaign from Arsenal fans against Noni Madueke transfer has motivated former Chelsea winger instead

Arsenal head coach Mikel Arteta has revealed that the intense protests and backlash over the summer signing of Noni Madueke from Chelsea sparked a fierce determination in the 23-year-old. Having only just returned from an extended injury layoff, Madueke is beginning to win over the Arsenal faithful, with Arteta admitting he made it his personal mission to support the winger through the challenging period.

Arsenal supporters disapproved Madueke's transfer from Chelsea

Arsenal had a blockbuster summer transfer window, signing the likes of Viktor Gyokeres, Eberechi Eze, Martin Zubimendi, Cristhian Mosquera, and Piero Hincapie. However, one particular signing received severe backlash from a large section of Arsenal fans online. 

In July, reports surfaced that Arsenal – who were also linked to Real Madrid star Rodrygo – were interested in signing Madueke from their London rivals Chelsea. The news didn't go down well with Gooners, who voiced their disapproval of the move. A fierce campaign was launched on X (formerly Twitter), with the hashtag "#NoToMadueke" quickly trending. In fact, a petition to protest against the signing of the ex-PSV Eindhoven winger was signed over 4,000 times, too.

Eventually, Madueke switched the Stamford Bridge for the Emirates Stadium in a £52 million (€60m/$70m) move. He made a good first impression in his first couple of appearances for Arsenal, but his momentum was halted after suffering a knee injury against Manchester City in September. 

AdvertisementGetty Images SportArteta's determination to help Madueke

The cruel social media campaign against Madueke saw several former Premier League stars leap to the player's defence. Anders Limpar, a part of Arsenal's title-winning squad of 1990-91, posted a lengthy message on X in the aftermath of the backlash directed towards Madueke, claiming that it was "sad when fans are making a player's life difficult."

Rio Ferdinand, one of Premier League's all-time greats, echoed the sentiments of Limpar, labelling the section of the Arsenal fan base as an "utter disgrace" for their "vulgar behaviour" on social media.

On Friday, Arteta addressed the hate Madueke was subjected to ahead of his move and claimed that he used the reaction of the fans to fuel his own desire to win them over.

"If anything, it gave me more conviction and more will to help him and do everything we possibly could to make this relationship work and to prepare everything around him in the best possible way," he told reporters.

"I think that [campaign] lasted a short period of time and immediately we had the complete opposite reaction which I think he valued, respected and it was like fuel to him. It did not affect him."

Madueke not worried about criticism from Arsenal fans

Madueke spent nine weeks on the sidelines following his untimely injury against City two months ago. He marked his return to the pitch after coming on as a 78th minute substitute in the 4-1 win in the north London derby against Tottenham Hotspur. 

This week, he reflected on the strong wave of criticism that came his way ahead of his move to Arsenal. The 23-year-old explained that he doesn't pay attention to external noise, but admitted that he was buoyed by the reception he received from the Arsenal faithful inside the Emirates Stadium last weekend.

"You are in the public eye, people can say whatever they want about you," he said. "But being in the stadium, and how the fans have taken to me in the stadium, is unbelievable. I am not really worried about all of that. It is in the distant past. The last game versus Tottenham was incredible and that gives me such a boost. I play on the side of the pitch, I can feel [the fans], I can hear them. When they are that positive about me it gives me a massive boost. Honestly, I am made up about it."

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty Images SportMadueke in line for a start against ex-employers Chelsea

Arsenal will visit the Stamford Bridge on Sunday afternoon to take on Enzo Maresca's high-flying Chelsea team. The Blues are currently second on the Premier League table, six points adrift of Arteta's troops. It promises to be a mouth-watering encounter, given what's at stake. 

After scoring his first Arsenal goal in the 3-1 defeat of Bayern Munich earlier this week, Madueke could be in line for a start against his former side, with Arteta sweating over the fitness of Leandro Trossard after he limped off the field against Bayern. 

Asked if any love will be lost between him and the Chelsea fans when he returns to the Stamford Bridge, Madueke said: "It might be a little bit hostile, it might not be, but I am a professional footballer. I have played in loads of atmospheres. I don't know if anything will faze me. I will just be focused on the task."

Holder keeps Patriots' playoff chances alive, Royals eliminated

Holder not only anchored Patriots’ innings with an unbeaten fifty but also delivered a match-winning final over

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Sep-2025

Jason Holder defended 13 off the final over•CPL T20 via Getty Images

St Kitts and Nevis Patriots kept their playoffs hopes alive by pulling off a narrow one-run victory over Barbados Royals, who have been knocked out of the race in CPL 2025. Captain Jason Holder played a starring role, not only anchoring Patriots’ innings with an unbeaten fifty but also delivering a match-winning final over with the ball, in which he defended 13 runs.Patriots sit fifth on the points table with eight points and all their matches done. Guyana Amazon Warriors are fourth with eight points and if they win either of their next two matches, they will secure the last playoffs spot, with St Lucia Kings, Trinbago Knight Riders and Antigua and Barbuda Falcons already through.While there were handy contributions from several players, Holder’s all-round performance was the key to Patriots’ success. His 53 not out guided them to 150 for 7, with Patriots recovering from 62 for 4 at the end of ten overs. This was after Mohammad Rizwan’s 39 off 36 helped Patriots get off to a modest start. Holder, along with Navin Bidaisee (30 off 23), accelerated in the latter stages as the pair added 74 runs off 46 balls for the sixth wicket, including 34 runs off the last three overs.Holder’s leadership was also evident in the bowling attack, where he claimed two crucial wickets in the death. His most dramatic contribution came in the final over, with Royals needing 14 runs to win. Rassie van der Dussen started the over with a six over long-on to bring the equation down to eight off five. Holder kept his composure and, with the equation down to two needed off the last ball, bowled a perfect yorker to trap Daniel Sams lbw, sealing a thrilling victory for Patriots.Earlier, Royals had made a strong start, with opener Brandon King (29 off 22) laying a good foundation for the chase. They raced to 44 for 1 by the end of powerplay. However, the middle overs proved costly as the top order struggled to accelerate. Patriots’ bowlers capitalised, with Waqar Salamkheil striking first with the wicket of King and Naseem Shah removing Kadeem Alleyne in the eighth over. Quinton de Kock was caught and bowled by Bidaisee in the following over and despite a dropped catch from Rizwan, Royals’ chase started to lose momentum.Van der Dussen fought valiantly, keeping Royals in the hunt with a quickfire 37 off 27 balls, but it wasn’t enough in the end. For Patriots, Salamkheil and Bidaisee also picked up two wickets apiece.

David Ornstein: Wolves may "cash in" on £105,000-a-week star in January

Wolves chiefs may “cash in” on key midfielder Joao Gomes in the January transfer window, which would be an immediate blow to Rob Edwards’ chances of keeping his side in the Premier League.

Edwards made a losing start to life as Wanderers boss last weekend, succumbing to a 2-0 defeat at home to Crystal Palace on Saturday and admitting it isn’t going to be a quick fix for the top flight strugglers.

“It’s not going to be done in a week. We knew it was never just going to be a click of your fingers and that’s it. There’s probably quite a lot there that has been the story of our season so far, fairly tight, maybe a little bit of a lack of confidence and belief, but not much in the game, and then you get punished.

“We need to try and find that first goal, and you can’t just say, ‘Right lads, we need to score first’. We’ve got to make sure that we do everything right, do the basics really well, and work hard and work harder. We’ve definitely tried to up the intensity, but it was quite a bitty week, we’ve not had all the players in.”

Edwards will know the importance of new signings when January rolls around, but equally it is vital to keep hold of key players, and a new update suggests that one star man could be on his way out of Wolves.

David Ornstein talks up potential Joao Gomes exit

Speaking to NBC Sport, journalist David Ornstein claimed that Wolves may look to sell Gomes midway through the season, in order to receive good money for him, amid rumoured interest from Manchester United.

Losing Gomes, Wolves’ highest earner on £105,000-a-week, is clearly something that Edwards won’t want to happen, but those high up at the club will be looking at the bigger picture, in terms of receiving the highest amount of money possible for him.

The 24-year-old is such an influential figure at the heart of the midfield, starting 10 Premier League games this season, and Mathues Cunha has made it clear that he would love to see him at United.

Wolves register interest in January loan deal for Real Madrid "goal machine"

The Old Gold have made an approach for a forward, following the 2-0 home defeat against Crystal Palace on Saturday.

ByDominic Lund Nov 24, 2025

Ultimately, it does feel as though Gomes’ future lies away from Wolves, unless drastic improvements are made, but selling him in January would feel like a defeatist attitude in the relegation fight.

Before Gomes: Edwards must sell Wolves star who's made them a "worse side"

Sri Lanka slight favourites in Super Four opener against Bangladesh

Sri Lanka beat Bangladesh in their group-stage game and then did Bangladesh a favour by beating Afghanistan, and go into this game with momentum on their side

Mohammad Isam19-Sep-20252:22

Maharoof: Mendis a nightmare for spinners once he gets going

Big picture: A twist to the Bangladesh vs Sri Lanka tale

Bangladesh cricket fans had to put on hold their antagonistic feelings towards Sri Lanka for a couple of days – they needed Sri Lanka to beat Afghanistan to stay alive in the Asia Cup, after all. That’s how it panned out, leaving Bangladesh fans thrilled. Social media in Bangladesh has been buzzing with self-deprecating memes, all with photos of the Sri Lankan flag or Bangladeshis wearing the Sri Lanka jersey.The rivalry that has developed over the last seven years has often been full of cringe-worthy elements, but it’s also true that the players have been able to move up an extra gear whenever they’ve been in contest with each other. So there is a lot of interest in Saturday’s match, the first of the Super Four stage.Related

  • Pathum Nissanka is raising his bar one notch at a time

  • With goals reset, Kusal Mendis finally finds his niche

  • Nasum Ahmed's bouncebackability on show again

Charith Asalanka’s side has been the more dominant in the Asia Cup. They won all three of their group games, including against Bangladesh. Curiously, Hong Kong pushed them harder than Bangladesh or Afghanistan could.Importantly for them, Kusal Mendis and Kamindu Mendis commandeered the 170-run chase against Afghanistan relieving the pressure that’s been on Pathum Nissanka. The opener has been in good form and has been crying out for support. Sri Lanka were finally able to give that to him and will take confidence from that going into the pointy end of this tournament.2:18

Maharoof: Nissanka among the best all-format openers

Bangladesh have an opportunity for course correction. Some of it is already underway, with Parvez Hossain Emon losing his place in the team. Saif Hassan, who took his spot, has looked competent but Sri Lanka will be a major test for the comeback man. Bangladesh suffered back-to-back wicket maidens to start the game when the teams last met. The balance of their bowling is another puzzle they must solve. Their fifth-bowler combination (Saif and Shamim Hossain) didn’t work in the previous game.This promises to be a closer contest than the earlier game. The stakes are higher, with the first set of points crucial. Asalanka and Litton Das will also be leading two sets of players eager to one-up each other after a brief bit of peace.

Form guide

Bangladesh WLWWW
Sri Lanka WWWWLMustafizur Rahman has been effective, but not always frugal•Associated Press

In the spotlight: Mustafizur Rahman and Kusal Mendis

Mustafizur Rahman took three wickets to help Bangladesh against Afghanistan, but the left-arm quick has been quite expensive in the Asia Cup. Especially in the group match against Sri Lanka, Mustafizur bowled his most expensive spell of the year (3-0-35-1). Bangladesh will hope the left-arm quick returns to his stingy best. Mustafizur will have the added motivation of completing 150 wickets in T20Is – he is four short of the milestone – and also overtaking Shakib Al Hasan, who has 149.Kusal Mendis carried Sri Lanka to their six-wicket win against Afghanistan with a sparkling, unbeaten 74. Mendis is also very good against Bangladesh. He is already Sri Lanka’s second-highest run-getter with four centuries across formats against them. He is undoubtedly the key wicket in the Super Four opener.2:27

Abhinav lauds Bangladesh’s spin-choke tactic

Team news: Wellalage available to play

Bangladesh could bring in either of the allrounders Mahedi Hasan and Mohammad Saifuddin to fill their fifth-bowler gap.Bangladesh (probable): 1 Tanzid Hasan, 2 Saif Hassan, 3 Litton Das (capt, wk), 4 Towhid Hridoy, 5 Shamim Hossain, 6 Nurul Hasan, 7 Jaker Ali, 8 Rishad Hossain, 9 Nasum Ahmed, 10 Taskin Ahmed, 11 Mustafizur RahmanDunith Wellalage, who flew back home following the death of his father, is set to rejoin the Sri Lankan team on the morning of the match and is available for selection.Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Pathum Nissanka, 2 Kusal Mendis (wk), 3 Kamil Mishara, 4 Kusal Perera, 5 Charith Asalanka (capt), 6 Kamindu Mendis, 7 Dasun Shanaka, 8 Wanindu Hasaranga, 9 Dunith Wellalage, 10 Dushmantha Chameera, 11 Nuwan Thushara

Pitch and conditions: Struggle for runs in Dubai

Batters have only gone at a strike rate of 109.26 in Dubai at this Asia Cup. Abu Dhabi, for comparison, has been slightly better – 119.50. The slow nature of Dubai’s pitches have certainly helped the spinners. The weather forecast is for a typical hot evening.

Stats and trivia: Litton on top

  • With 513 runs, Litton is currently this year’s top run-getter in T20Is among Full Member sides.
  • Thushara’s 4 for 18 against Afghanistan is Sri Lanka’s best figures in the Asia Cup’s T20I version.
  • Jaker has shown in the last 12 months that he has a few tricks up his sleeve but in this series, his 53 runs have required 48 balls and include only three fours.
Game
Register
Service
Bonus