Surrey out of bottom two as Batty inspires last-ditch win

Surrey have dragged themselves out of the bottom two of the Championship first division after Gareth Batty and Stuart Meaker ensured a last-ditch win against bottom club Hampshire

Vithushan Ehantharajah20-Jul-2016
ScorecardGareth Batty produced a matchwinning return•PA PhotosIt is hard to remember a Championship win that asked more of a bowling side. The pitch, for much of this game, looked like it would take the points and a few bowlers with it. Most of the Ageas Bowl pitches have. But with great focus and effort, and the sort of performance from Gareth Batty that will be remembered well beyond his career, Surrey sent Hampshire down for an innings and 13 runs.Batty was not so much leading from the front as picking up those around him, yapping under the helmet and then getting the job done himself. A century in the first innings began his work before two for 78 in the Hampshire reply was bested by a sensational six for 51 in the follow-on. Throw in Stuart Meaker’s reverse swing addled 18 overs of four for 40, and you wonder where the doubt in obtaining a result came from.But with 10 overs left in the day, hope had all-but gone. At the end of Batty’s 24th over (56th of the match) he walked duck-footed to mid off, shoulders slunk, cap in hand, dreading what might be. Of all long-form cricket’s gut punches, the handshakes after a drawn fixture take the most out of a skipper who has spent the last few hours on top. And Batty’s side had been ahead for the last three days.Summoning one last push, Batty returned to take two in his next over. Lewis McManus, having started the day with bat in hand, looked like he would finish it, too. But, after six hours and 21 minutes of crease time across both innings, he was finally dismissed to a fast arm ball. Three balls later, Andrew’s outside edge was found with a perfect off spinner. It was left to Meaker to finish things off. Late movement into the right hander did for Gareth Berg, before Mason Crane was the recipient of a bouncer that would haunt the most weathered opening batsmen, let alone a 19-year-old number 10.Surrey currently sit outside the relegation zone, 10 points away from Nottinghamshire, who have replaced them in the bottom two. Even if Hampshire were to win their game in hand with full bonus points, they would only go one ahead of Surrey. It bears reiterating: rarely will you see a side work so hard to achieve a four day win of this magnitude.On the evening of day two, Surrey’s players went to bed preparing themselves for what they knew would be six of the toughest sessions of cricket many of them will have experienced in their lives. So, too, did Hampshire. But Surrey, staying at the Ageas’ Bowl own hotel, will have drawn their curtains looking out onto the very field that would ask for as much energy and sweat as they could give and not necessarily provide anything in return.They needed 18 wickets to win the match: at least 18 chances to be created, certainly 18 to be taken to ensure that they are in control of their own destiny with five matches left to play. And while their own first innings of 637 for 7 taunted Hampshire throughout this match, it sent Surrey to sleep that night with a stark reminder of the unforgiving nature of this road. The skip was taken out of Crane’s step after 51 overs of toil.Even Surrey’s captain Gareth Batty was concerned, believing he was “thrown under the car” by Will Smith and Hampshire’s senior bowlers – Gareth Berg had the next greatest workload with 30 overs. “That wouldn’t be happening under my watch.”That part of Batty’s mantra as captain is to look at what is best for the individuals has, at times, seen him make calls that, from afar, confuse a touch. But given the task at hand, across two of the hottest days of the year, it was this sensitivity that ultimately saw Surrey triumph in extraordinary fashion.With 11 wickets to get on day four, the first ball to do something off the straight was the run out of Brad Wheal. Lewis McManus, who finished the first innings unbeaten on 133, was desperate to retain the strike when Aaron Finch, prowling the off side outfield, hurled down the stumps at the nonstriker’s end from all of 50 yards. Theirs was the longest partnership of the innings, clocking in at 37.1 overs. Surrey now needed 10 more wickets in the next 84 overs, having just taken the same amount from 133 overs.The first two to fall took 19 overs with them: Jimmy Adams tempted into one that left him late from Meaker, Tom Alsop edging Batty to first slip. For a while, that was their lot. The bowlers were cycled through, each getting a burst: an over or two at first to state their case. As “overs remaining” ticked to 44, Mark Footitt was removed from the Pavilion End after a spell of four that seemed to settle Smith and Ryan McLaren. The all rounder looked totally at ease while Smith, 18 from 112 balls at this point, was putting the finishing touches on a fort he had no intention of relinquishing.Batty brought himself on to bowl and, with various changes of pace, found a sliver of light shining through a gap in the closed drawbridge. Somehow a fizzed delivery snuck off Smith’s bat and between his legs to bump into his leg stump. Surrey were in. Adam Wheater, tea interval on the mind, left a reverse swinging delivery from Meaker that almost sent his off stump back to the pavilion with him.After tea, Batty came into his own. It was not so much the spin, but the changes in pace: the appreciation that keeping the interest of those around the bat – there were up to six for Batty – required enough fluctuations in delivery to put a batsman’s timing out of sync. Sean Ervine was hurried into guiding a ball to Aaron Finch at leg slip. Ryan McLaren pressing forward early and popping a catch up to Dominic Sibley at bat-pad.But so the overs ticked on, with four wickets still to get. But so Batty ticked on and these four wickets were claimed.He was naturally punchy in victory, using the opportunity to not only champion his young team, having grumbled away the opportunity to talk about his own century and eight wickets in the game, but to stick up for his coach, Michael Di Venuto, who has spent the aftermath of many a four day game fighting fires on Twitter.To Di Venuto’s credit, he looks to interact and appease each tweet sent his way, countering calls for change with the insistence that the hard work behind the scenes will soon be evident on the field. Most of the comments to Di Venuto comes from an honest place: fans worried about the plight of their club and wondering, out loud, what could be done differently. A handful have question Di Venuto’s merits as a coach. One or two have made their attacks personal.”I think it’s disrespectful. Unjust. The two run outs [Burns to remove Ervine and Finch to remove Wheal] – that’s from him working on us hitting the stumps. He takes all credit there. Nobody else. We’ve been very close in a couple of games and not got over the line. I think it’s very unjust for the man’s record, both as a player and a coach.”In victory, Surrey are bullish and you get a sense, from the way they have acquitted themselves throughout this match, that whatever they have left to give will be left on field before the season is up.”There have been a lot of people lobbing knives at us but we have pulled a few out of our back,” said Batty. “I say to them,- I hope you are enjoying the win tonight.”

Beale Must Keep Faith With £5.7k-p/w Rangers Gem

Glasgow Rangers’ 1-0 victory over Aberdeen on Sunday gave Michael Beale an indication of which players have long-term futures at the club, while giving him a clearer idea of who may leave Ibrox during the summer transfer window.

Ianis Hagi and Ridvan Yilmaz performed fairly well, both receiving Sofascore ratings of 7/10 as they gave Beale a glimpse of what the future holds.

If he can nurture the talent already at the club, coupled with making a few signings during the summer, next season could be exciting.

The most important decision yesterday, however, was giving a start to goalkeeper Robby McCrorie, who deserves to keep his place during the remainder of the season.

He made four saves and looked extremely comfortable on the ball, while failing to show any rustiness which was incredible given he hadn’t made a first-team appearance since August 2021

With Allan McGregor surely leaving upon the expiration of his contract, the 25-year-old should be given a chance to stake a claim as the new number one.

Who will be in goal for Rangers next season?

McCrorie has been at the Ibrox side since he was a teen, making his way through the academy ranks before gaining senior experience with a succession of loan moves.

Spells at Berwick Rangers, Greenock Morton and Queen of the South were vital for his development, keeping 18 clean sheets during these stints and his performances earned him another temporary move to Livingston, allowing him to gain Premiership experience.

The Scot was given his first taste of action at the Gers in August 2021 as the club were missing several players due to a Covid-19 outbreak and he was tasked with filling in for McGregor and Jon McLaughlin, who both caught the virus and missed crucial ties against Alashkert in the Europa League and Celtic on league duty.

Soccer Football – Champions League Qualifying – Rangers Training – The Hummel Training Centre, Glasgow, Scotland, Britain – August 15, 2022 Rangers’ Robby McCrorie during training Action Images via Reuters/Craig Brough

The 6 foot 2 titan was outstanding over both of these matches as the Light Blues recorded two vital 1–0 victories, and he kept clean sheets in both matches while making three crucial saves, remaining the last Rangers ‘keeper to keep a clean sheet against Celtic.

The win over Aberdeen maintains his record of not conceding a goal for the club and with Steven Gerrard having previously described both him and his brother Ross as “model professionals”, it's clear he's a fine character.

Although the 25-year-old has had to bide his time over the previous 18 months, Beale may finally be giving the stopper a well-deserved run in the first team, faith that could well result in the manager unearthing a special talent next season.

Kevin Pietersen signs up with Dolphins again

Batsman Kevin Pietersen has re-signed with Dolphins for the 2016-17 Ram Slam T20 challenge

Firdose Moonda20-Jul-2016

Kevin Pietersen was the second-highest run-getter, behind Quinton de Kock, at the Ram Slam T20 Challenge last season•Getty Images

Kevin Pietersen will return home, to KwaZulu-Natal, to play for Dolphins in South Africa’s T20 competition in the upcoming season. Pietersen, who was born in the province’s capital Pietermaritzburg, has signed a five-match deal with the franchise, which will see him compete in the second half of the tournament. He will also be available for the knockouts should the team qualify.This will be Pietersen’s second stint with the franchise, after he had contributed significantly to their run to the final last summer. Pietersen made seven appearances for Dolphins and finished as the second-highest run-getter, behind Quinton de Kock, with 401 runs, including two hundreds and two fifties, at an average and strike rate of 80.20 and 172.84 respectively.”I’m as excited as anything to have signed with Dolphins again,” Pietersen said. “I had such a wonderful time with them last season and I really enjoyed the team, the camaraderie and the competition so it was a very easy decision to sign again for this season’s T20 competition. It will be great to getting back onto the cricket field again and I’m really looking forward to seeing everyone in Durban again as well.”Apart from being the highest profile player so far to be part of South Africa’s T20 tournament – which continues to struggle to attract international names due to the declining Rand and the scheduling – Pietersen is one of only two internationals alongside Imran Tahir to be named in Dolphins’ squad for the upcoming season.Dolphins had lost their South African stars David Miller and Kyle Abbott to Knights and Warriors respectively, in an off season, which also included the departure of three other players – Jonathan Vandiar and Daniel Sincuba – the CEO Pete de Wet and coach Lance Klusener.That has left newly-appointed coach Grant Morgan with the task of rebuilding the franchise. Morgan has already worked with Pietersen, during a stint at Royal Challengers Bangalore in the IPL, and hoped Pietersen could make a big impact for Dolphins as well.”I was privileged enough to spend some time with Kevin during my time at Royal Challengers Bangalore in the IPL back in 2009. Kevin was captain of that side and made an indelible impact on all the players, especially the youngsters,” Morgan said. “He is a world-class player in all formats of the game and in T20 he is no doubt one of the best there has ever been.”

Tottenham Transfer News: £17m Playmaker Can Replace Son

Tottenham Hotspur have endured a difficult season and are on course to miss out on qualification for the Champions League next term.

Spurs are currently six points behind fourth-placed Manchester United, who have a game in hand, with three matches left to play this month.

Ryan Mason is currently in charge of the club on an interim basis before a permanent manager is appointed by chairman Daniel Levy in the summer and the off-season could be key to the side's success in 2023/24.

Whilst getting a head coach in is paramount to Tottenham's hopes of improvement next term, the summer window provides the chairman with an opportunity to improve the squad.

One position that the club could add in is out wide as Heung-min Son's regression this season has opened the door to a player coming in to challenge for his spot in the XI next season.

Who is Kang-in Lee?

Kang-in Lee, who is set to be available for €20m (£17m), is a reported transfer target for Spurs this summer, according to Spanish outlet AS (via Sport Witness), and currently plays for LaLiga outfit RCD Mallorca as a left winger or attacking midfielder primarily.

Tottenham Hotspur forward Heung-min Son.

At the age of 22, he is a young prospect who could come in as a long-term addition to the squad and someone who could be the eventual heir to Son's place in the team, particularly given the South Korean hero's drop in form this year.

The current Tottenham attacker scored 23 goals and created ten 'big chances' for his teammates in the Premier League last term but has only managed ten goals and six 'big chances' created in 2022/23.

Lee, meanwhile, has scored six goals and provided 12 'big chances' for others in 29 LaLiga starts this season, after scoring once and creating two goals in 30 appearances in the previous campaign.

These statistics suggest that the 22-year-old, who South Korea legend Sang-cheol Yoo claimed "absorbs knowledge like a sponge", has been developing his skills and improving his end product, whilst an ageing Son has been on a downward trajectory in the same timeframe.

The Mallorca star has also shown immense promise in terms of both scoring and creating goals in a major European league and has plenty of time left ahead of him to continue to grow, which is why Levy bringing him in this summer could be an excellent piece of business.

He could learn from his compatriot next season with the view to him, hopefully, taking over as the heir to the 30-year-old's position on the left flank and becoming a crucial component of Tottenham's attack.

Gakpo 2.0: Liverpool Could Land £26m Sensation

Liverpool are preparing for an important summer in the transfer market following a disappointing campaign this season and Jurgen Klopp will be looking to identify the next generation of success at Anfield.

The Reds are now looking unlikely to qualify for Champions League football next season after sharing the spoils with Aston Villa at Anfield on Saturday afternoon, and will instead compete for an opportunity to deliver the Europa League in Dublin, one of the few trophies the Liverpool boss is yet to win.

Indeed, the Anfield faithful will be under no illusion that the club are about to splash the cash at the levels of their fellow top six teams like Chelsea and Manchester United, however, it will be expected to make much-needed improvements to refresh and revive the squad to bring success back to the red side of Merseyside.

Liverpool have been linked with numerous midfielders over the last few months as the club are set to part ways with Naby Keita, James Milner and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain this summer, paving the way for a complete transformation in the centre of the pitch.

One player who has been linked in the last few days with a move to the club is Feyenoord captain Orkun Kokcu, a player who could follow in the footsteps of Cody Gakpo by swapping the Eredivisie for the Premier League.

Who is Orkun Kokcu?

The Turkish midfielder has been a revelation for Feyenoord in the Eredivisie and has played an integral role in their title charge this season.

Like Gakpo was at PSV Eindhoven, Kokcu captains his side and could bring his outstanding leadership qualities to the centre of the pitch at Anfield if he can continue to dominate in English football.

The former has already taken to the Premier League like a duck to water after swapping the Netherlands for English football, having scored six goals and registered three assists in 20 top-flight outings.

The hope will be, therefore, that Kokcu could replicate that tally, but judging by his numbers this term he stands an excellent chance.

Indeed, over 30 Eredivisie appearances, the 22-year-old midfielder – dubbed a "leader" by talent scout Jacek Kulig – has scored eight goals, registered two assists and created ten big chances, as well as averaging a whopping 90.7 touches, 2.8 key passes and 60.5 accurate passes per game.

Not only that, Kokcu ranks in the top 4% of his positional peers across the world's next eight best divisions outside of the 'big five' leagues for shot-creating actions, passes attempted, progressive passes and progressive carries, proving that he is an immense attacking talent and could be a huge asset to Klopp and his forwards next season.

orkun-kokcu-feyenoord-premier-league-liverpool-transfers

According to CIES Football Observatory, Kokcu has a market value of €30m (£26m) and if Feyenoord are willing to part ways with their midfielder for a similar transfer fee, it would be much cheaper than pursuing other similar midfield targets like Jude Bellingham who is reportedly commanding a fee of £130m and Mac Allister who will cost the Reds £70m.

With that being said, it remains to be seen whether Liverpool can strike up a good deal for the "hidden gem" – as per Charlie Morley – this summer, but if they could secure his services for a fraction of the price of Liverpool's other top targets it will give them the opportunity to reinvest in other areas of the pitch.

Reporter Drops Interesting Bellingham Update at Liverpool

Liverpool choosing to snub their pursuit of Jude Bellingham could help to accelerate the progress of discussions with other midfield targets at Anfield, according to journalist Ben Jacobs.

What's the latest news involving Jude Bellingham?

As per ESPN, Liverpool pulled out of making a move to try and sign Borussia Dortmund sensation Bellingham in order to focus on rebuilding their squad this summer.

The report states that the Reds would've been committing a large portion of their spending power in the forthcoming transfer window to the deal and wouldn't have been able to strengthen adequately ahead of 2023/24 in other areas.

Transfer guru Fabrizio Romano has since updated the world with the news that Bellingham looks set for a move to La Liga giants Real Madrid on Twitter, stating: "Real Madrid are already preparing the official bid for Jude Bellingham. After personal terms agreed on long-term deal 2 weeks ago, proposal will be sent to BVB and it will include add-ons. Timing also depends on Bundesliga title race; Real will be respectful with Dortmund."

In 2022/23, the 19-year-old has made 42 appearances in all competitions for his current employers, registering 14 goals and seven assists, as per Transfermarkt.

Speaking to Football FanCast, journalist Jacobs has indicated that he expects Liverpool to have a busy transfer period this summer.

Jacobs told FFC: "I sense with the whole, pulling out of the race for Jude Bellingham was not only Liverpool not wanting that to eat up a large proportion of their budget and the saga drag out. It was also a situation whereby they will have known that there were other gettable targets that they could focus their attention on and as a consequence, I expect Liverpool have lined things up and, in the early part of the window, be really quite busy."

Who else have Liverpool targeted in terms of midfielders?

Liverpool have targeted several midfielders ahead of the summer as Jurgen Klopp looks to beef up his engine room with some fresh legs.

As per Football Insider, Chelsea midfielder Mason Mount has been mooted as a possible target and it is said that the Blues will sell him in the transfer window if they cant get him to agree to a contract extension.

ryan-gravenberch-bayern-manchester-united-transfer-gossip-frenkie-de-jong

Bayern Munich anchorman Ryan Gravenberch is also someone of interest to Liverpool and is believed to be open to a move to Anfield due to frustration over a lack of regular minutes, according to The Mirror.

PSV Eindhoven enforcer Ibrahim Sangare has also attracted attention from the red half of Merseyside, signifying that Liverpool fans are in for an exciting few months ahead as they plot a squad restructure ahead of 2023/24.

Surrey out of bottom two as Batty inspires last-ditch win

ScorecardGareth Batty produced a matchwinning return•PA Photos

It is hard to remember a Championship win that asked more of a bowling side. The pitch, for much of this game, looked like it would take the points and a few bowlers with it. Most of the Ageas Bowl pitches have. But with great focus and effort, and the sort of performance from Gareth Batty that will be remembered well beyond his career, Surrey sent Hampshire down for an innings and 13 runs.Batty was not so much leading from the front as picking up those around him, yapping under the helmet and then getting the job done himself. A century in the first innings began his work before two for 78 in the Hampshire reply was bested by a sensational six for 51 in the follow-on. Throw in Stuart Meaker’s reverse swing addled 18 overs of four for 40, and you wonder where the doubt in obtaining a result came from.But with 10 overs left in the day, hope had all-but gone. At the end of Batty’s 24th over (56th of the match) he walked duck-footed to mid off, shoulders slunk, cap in hand, dreading what might be. Of all long-form cricket’s gut punches, the handshakes after a drawn fixture take the most out of a skipper who has spent the last few hours on top. And Batty’s side had been ahead for the last three days.Summoning one last push, Batty returned to take two in his next over. Lewis McManus, having started the day with bat in hand, looked like he would finish it, too. But, after six hours and 21 minutes of crease time across both innings, he was finally dismissed to a fast arm ball. Three balls later, Andrew’s outside edge was found with a perfect off spinner. It was left to Meaker to finish things off. Late movement into the right hander did for Gareth Berg, before Mason Crane was the recipient of a bouncer that would haunt the most weathered opening batsmen, let alone a 19-year-old number 10.Surrey currently sit outside the relegation zone, 10 points away from Nottinghamshire, who have replaced them in the bottom two. Even if Hampshire were to win their game in hand with full bonus points, they would only go one ahead of Surrey. It bears reiterating: rarely will you see a side work so hard to achieve a four day win of this magnitude.On the evening of day two, Surrey’s players went to bed preparing themselves for what they knew would be six of the toughest sessions of cricket many of them will have experienced in their lives. So, too, did Hampshire. But Surrey, staying at the Ageas’ Bowl own hotel, will have drawn their curtains looking out onto the very field that would ask for as much energy and sweat as they could give and not necessarily provide anything in return.They needed 18 wickets to win the match: at least 18 chances to be created, certainly 18 to be taken to ensure that they are in control of their own destiny with five matches left to play. And while their own first innings of 637 for 7 taunted Hampshire throughout this match, it sent Surrey to sleep that night with a stark reminder of the unforgiving nature of this road. The skip was taken out of Crane’s step after 51 overs of toil.Even Surrey’s captain Gareth Batty was concerned, believing he was “thrown under the car” by Will Smith and Hampshire’s senior bowlers – Gareth Berg had the next greatest workload with 30 overs. “That wouldn’t be happening under my watch.”That part of Batty’s mantra as captain is to look at what is best for the individuals has, at times, seen him make calls that, from afar, confuse a touch. But given the task at hand, across two of the hottest days of the year, it was this sensitivity that ultimately saw Surrey triumph in extraordinary fashion.With 11 wickets to get on day four, the first ball to do something off the straight was the run out of Brad Wheal. Lewis McManus, who finished the first innings unbeaten on 133, was desperate to retain the strike when Aaron Finch, prowling the off side outfield, hurled down the stumps at the nonstriker’s end from all of 50 yards. Theirs was the longest partnership of the innings, clocking in at 37.1 overs. Surrey now needed 10 more wickets in the next 84 overs, having just taken the same amount from 133 overs.The first two to fall took 19 overs with them: Jimmy Adams tempted into one that left him late from Meaker, Tom Alsop edging Batty to first slip. For a while, that was their lot. The bowlers were cycled through, each getting a burst: an over or two at first to state their case. As “overs remaining” ticked to 44, Mark Footitt was removed from the Pavilion End after a spell of four that seemed to settle Smith and Ryan McLaren. The all rounder looked totally at ease while Smith, 18 from 112 balls at this point, was putting the finishing touches on a fort he had no intention of relinquishing.Batty brought himself on to bowl and, with various changes of pace, found a sliver of light shining through a gap in the closed drawbridge. Somehow a fizzed delivery snuck off Smith’s bat and between his legs to bump into his leg stump. Surrey were in. Adam Wheater, tea interval on the mind, left a reverse swinging delivery from Meaker that almost sent his off stump back to the pavilion with him.After tea, Batty came into his own. It was not so much the spin, but the changes in pace: the appreciation that keeping the interest of those around the bat – there were up to six for Batty – required enough fluctuations in delivery to put a batsman’s timing out of sync. Sean Ervine was hurried into guiding a ball to Aaron Finch at leg slip. Ryan McLaren pressing forward early and popping a catch up to Dominic Sibley at bat-pad.But so the overs ticked on, with four wickets still to get. But so Batty ticked on and these four wickets were claimed.He was naturally punchy in victory, using the opportunity to not only champion his young team, having grumbled away the opportunity to talk about his own century and eight wickets in the game, but to stick up for his coach, Michael Di Venuto, who has spent the aftermath of many a four day game fighting fires on Twitter.To Di Venuto’s credit, he looks to interact and appease each tweet sent his way, countering calls for change with the insistence that the hard work behind the scenes will soon be evident on the field. Most of the comments to Di Venuto comes from an honest place: fans worried about the plight of their club and wondering, out loud, what could be done differently. A handful have question Di Venuto’s merits as a coach. One or two have made their attacks personal.”I think it’s disrespectful. Unjust. The two run outs [Burns to remove Ervine and Finch to remove Wheal] – that’s from him working on us hitting the stumps. He takes all credit there. Nobody else. We’ve been very close in a couple of games and not got over the line. I think it’s very unjust for the man’s record, both as a player and a coach.”In victory, Surrey are bullish and you get a sense, from the way they have acquitted themselves throughout this match, that whatever they have left to give will be left on field before the season is up.”There have been a lot of people lobbing knives at us but we have pulled a few out of our back,” said Batty. “I say to them,- I hope you are enjoying the win tonight.”

Pochettino Could End Chelsea’s Curse With £69m "Machine"

Chelsea's infamous no.9 curse is one which arguably heralds back 19 years, across 11 different forwards and 15 permanent managers. No matter who the club buys, they cannot seem to shake the inevitable failure that awaits them in west London.

Many can argue about the definition of success but few have hit the levels set by Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink, and even then he only had two truly top seasons. Hitting 23 league goals in both the 2000/01 and 2001/02 campaigns were suggestive of a true star set to be born, yet he would depart in 2004, kickstarting nearly two decades of failure.

High-profile and consistent goalscorers like Hernan Crespo (25 goals), Gonzalo Higuain (five goals) and Radamel Falcao (one goal) all failed to hit the mark, whilst others like Fernando Torres suffered key injuries that meant they would never be the same.

Bringing Romelu Lukaku back to Stamford Bridge even proved to be a failure, having unloaded £97.5m to tempt him there only to send him back out on loan the season following.

It could be argued that the only one who has threatened to shatter this hoodoo is Tammy Abraham, who was forced out the door to accommodate higher-profile names.

Perhaps, in an effort to finally end this miserable cycle, their only choice is to bring back the 25-year-old to prove himself worthy, under the guidance of the incoming Mauricio Pochettino.

How has Tammy Abraham played this season?

A potential return to the Blues has recently been touted after he revealed conversations with his former teammate Reece James whilst speaking to the Italian media this week. He noted: "I still talk to a lot of Chelsea players, James always tells me to come back… We grew up together as a group and have known each other for years."

This came months after transfer guru Fabrizio Romano had revealed more quotes, sparking further uncertainty regarding a future that may well end up back in his first club. After all, the €80m (£69m) buy-back clause that lingers is suggestive that his return is almost expected at some stage.

Given how his game has developed in Italy under former Blues boss Jose Mourunho, and the maturing that the young forward has endured in the capital, it could see him take English football by storm after what was an admirable first season in the top flight.

As part of Frank Lampard's youthful outfit, the 25-year-old hit 15 league goals and assisted a further six. That is a tally that has only been surpassed once across their last seven seasons, with Eden Hazard the only man to score more in a league campaign across that period.

At the time, former professional footballer and coach Stephen Elliot even saw fit to brand him a "goal machine". What Chelsea wouldn't do for one of them now, given their tally of 36 goals is the joint-fourth-lowest in the division.

That alone should speak volumes for his pedigree, without even mentioning his form of last season.

In a debut year in a new country, the 6 foot 3 finisher scored 27 goals in all competitions for a side that claimed a European title and finished sixth. Abraham would admit that Mourinho's tutelage had turned him into a "monster".

With his development complete and a warm welcome home to Stamford Bridge awaiting, perhaps Pochettino, who has a history of helping strikers explode, could end this 19-year curse with another English forward.

fernando-torres-chelsea

Before the Argentine arrived at Tottenham Hotspur, Harry Kane had scored just three league goals the season prior. 31 goals came in his first year across all competitions, and the England captain has not looked back since.

Chelsea are craving a forward with this kind of killer consistency, and there is no reason why Abraham cannot be that man.

فان دايك يثير الشكوك بشأن مستقبله مع ليفربول بعد رحيل كلوب

اعترف قائد فريق كرة القدم الأول بنادي ليفربول الإنجليزي، فيرجيل فان دايك، أنه يواجه مستقبلًا غامضًا في أعقاب رحيل مدربه الألماني يورجن كلوب، المنتظر في نهاية الموسم.

قائد ليفربول يحتاج لمزيد من التوضيح بشأن وضع عقده في النادي، وهذا ما كشفه خلال تصريحاته عقب الفوز على نورويتش سيتي بخماسية في كأس الاتحاد الإنجليزي.

فان دايك انضم إلى ليفربول في يناير 2018 قادمًا من ساوثهامبتون مقابل 75 مليون جنيه إسترليني، قبل أن يحصل على شارة القيادة بداية من الومسم الحالي خلفًا لـ جوردان هندرسون.

طالع أيضًا.. أسطورة آرسنال عن قرار رحيل كلوب: اعتبروني مشجعًا لـ ليفربول

ويرحل يورجن كلوب عن فريق ليفربول بنهاية الموسم الجاري، بعدما أعلن عن ذلك في مؤتمر صحفي، ليضع حدًا لمسيرته التي استمرت مع الريدز منذ أكتوبر 2015.

وينتهي عقد اللاعب الهولندي بعد عام ونصف، بعد التمديد في صيف 2022، لكنه أكد في تصريحاته، أنه ينتظر بفارغ الصبر، الخطوات التالية للنادي بشأن عقده الجديد.

وقال فان دايك في تصريحات نقلتها صحيفة “ليفربول إيكو” البريطانية: “هل سأكون جزءًا من المشروع الجديد؟ هذا سؤال هام؟، لكن لا أعرف”.

وأضاف: “لدي عام ونصف في عقدي مع ليفربول، وسيكون أمام النادي مهمة كبيرة بعد رحيل يورجن كلوب، أشعر بفضول لمعرفة ماذا سيحدث معي وكيف ستتغير الأمور، ولكن متى؟. لا يمكنني قول الكثير عن ذلك”.

وأكمل: “ستنتهي حقبة يورجن كلوب وما زلت جزءًا منها، ولهذا السبب لا أحب التحدث عنها، تركيزي الرئيسي عن كيفية إنهاء هذا الموسم، ونأمل ان نحقق النجاح الذي نحلم به جميعًا، وبحلول ذلك الوقت، ربما سيكون هناك المزيد من التوضيحات حول ما يريد النادي في المستقبل، ومستقبلي تحديدًا”.

وواصل: “يمكننا أن نتحدث عن الوضع وما سيحدث في العام المقبل كل أسبوع، لكننا لا نحتاج لذلك الآن، والسبب هو التركيز في إنهاء المهمة الموسم الحالي، ولكن على النادي نفسه التفكير فيما سيحدث بعد ذلك، وأنا في الانتظار”.

واختتم: “لا أعتقد أن السماح لأخبار كلوب بالتأثير على اللاعب يكون إهانة لاحترافيته، نحن جميعًا بشر، ويشعر بعض اللاعبين باختلاف تجاه إعلان المدرب رحيله، وهذا طبيعي، والارتباط بهذا المدرب لن يكون سهلًا أبدًا، لكنني لا أعتقد أن ذلك سيؤثر على مستوى أي لاعب في الملعب حتى نهاية الموسم”.

Arsenal "Confident" Of New Deal For "Explosive" £15k-p/w Ace

Arsenal are “confident” that they will agree a new long-term contract with forward Reiss Nelson, according to journalist Fabrizio Romano.

Is Reiss Nelson leaving Arsenal?

The Gunners winger is an academy graduate at the Emirates Stadium having worked his way up through the various youth ranks to get promoted to the first-team back in 2019, and despite having made 65 senior appearances since, his future has recently been up in the air.

The England U21s former international’s contract is set to expire at the end of the season meaning that he will become a free agent on the market should he not put pen to paper on fresh terms, and his potential availability has been alerting a trio of potential suitors.

The Athletic report that Premier League rivals Brighton and Hove Albion, West Ham United and also AC Milan are all interested in striking a deal for the 23-year-old, despite him making zero starts in the top-flight this season, but it now seems to be the case that he won’t be going anywhere during the upcoming transfer window.

Have Arsenal offered Nelson a new contract?

Taking to Twitter, Romano revealed that Arsenal are closing in on an internal agreement regarding fresh terms for Nelson. He wrote:

“Arsenal proposal to Reiss Nelson: four year contract, option included for one more season — as revealed two days ago. Short term deal proposal was rejected in April, talks are now advancing for [a] long term contract. Parties are confident.”

Arsenal forward Reiss Nelson.

Arsenal will know that Nelson hasn’t featured as much as he would have liked this season as a result of his thigh injury sustained in the early stages of the campaign, but he’s proven what he’s capable of when given the chance to play and he’ll be a key player for the future of the club so retaining his services is completely the right decision.

The Gunners’ “explosive” right-winger, as lauded by football talent scout Jacek Kulig, has posted five goal contributions (three goals and two assists) in ten top-flight appearances this term whilst averaging 8.45 shot-creating actions per game which is higher than any other of his fellow teammates, via FBRef.

The Europa League participant, who pockets £15k-per-week, also provides Mikel Arteta with versatility having operated in eight different positions since first emerging onto the scene, and with Aaron Ramsdale and Bukayo Saka having both recently committed their futures in N7, it seems as if Nelson is about to follow in their footsteps.

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