Alongside Ait-Nouri: Man City want "world-class" £67m full-back on the other side

Manchester City now want to sign a “world-class” £67m full-back, and he could join alongside Rayan Ait-Nouri this summer, according to a report.

City making progress in Ait-Nouri pursuit

Man City have set their sights on signing a new left-back this summer, with Pep Guardiola perhaps not overly convinced by Josko Gvardiol and Nico O’Reilly, and there has been a recent update in their pursuit of Wolverhampton Wanderers’ Ait-Nouri.

Indeed, reliable reporter David Ornstein has now revealed that City “expect” to complete a deal for the Algerian this summer, although there is still work to be done before they are able to strike an agreement with their Premier League rivals.

"World-class" star now pushing to join Man City quickly; £59m+ offer needed

There has been a development in Man City’s pursuit of a key target…

ByDominic Lund Jun 3, 2025

Ait-Nouri’s arrival would leave Guardiola fairly well-stocked at left-back, given that Gvardiol and O’Reilly featured in that area regularly throughout the 2024-25 campaign, but a new report has suggested the manager could be keen to bring in another full-back who can play on both flanks.

According to GiveMeSport, Man City now want to sign Juventus’ Andrea Cambiaso, with the Italian being shortlisted by Guardiola, who has also personally requested the defender in the past.

Manchester City managerPepGuardiolabefore the match

It could be difficult to agree a deal for Cambiaso, with his current employers making it tricky to enter talks, but the full-back, who was valued at £67m back in the January transfer window, remains of interest to the Blues.

Guardiola’s side are confident about sealing the arrival of Ait-Nouri, but the Juventus star could join regardless of whether they complete a deal for the Wolves man, given he can play in a back four or five on both sides of the defence.

Cambiaso putting in "world-class" performances for Juventus

The 25-year-old is particularly impressive in an attacking sense, as highlighted by his dribbling ability, which is important for City, considering they are likely to be the main aggressors in the majority of the Premier League games they play next season.

Journalist Zach Lowy has also been left particularly enamoured by the Italy international’s ability to create chances for his teammates in the past, singling him out for praise last April.

That said, with Gvardiol and O’Reilly already on the books, and the move for Ait-Nouri seemingly advancing well, there are doubts over whether the full-back would be a necessary signing for Man City.

£67m is a huge asking price for any player, and it may be wise to invest the money into other areas of the squad, perhaps between the sticks, having been keen on signing an Ederson replacement for quite some time, and City have a number of options in mind.

Goalkeeper

Current club

Potential cost

Gianluigi Donnarumma

PSG

£25m+

Joan Garcia

Espanyol

£21m

Diogo Costa

FC Porto

£51m

Senne Lammens

Royal Antwerp

£21m

Jason Roy knows he's one for the big stage

With some luck in the form of Hales’ self-inflicted absence and Morgan’s backing, Roy has manufactured England’s magic formula

George Dobell at Lord's 13-Jul-2019It tells you something about Jason Roy’s confidence right now that his ears prick up when he hears nobody has hit a six over the Lord’s Pavilion since 1899. “Oh, really?” he asks. “Let’s try to get an opportunity tomorrow (Sunday).”While England cricketers of an earlier vintage might have viewed a World Cup final with stifling trepidation – Phil Defreitas, for example, admitted “the occasion got to me” in the 1987 final – Roy talks of “excited energy” and eyes an opportunity to star on the biggest stage of all.And why wouldn’t he be confident? He is averaging 75.27 in ODI cricket this year. Perhaps even more remarkably, his strike-rate in that period is 119.13. He has made three centuries and six half-centuries from the 11 innings he has played.It’s no coincidence that England have won eight of the last nine ODIs in which Roy has batted. He has passed 50 in all eight of those victories and scored two centuries. Equally, it is telling that England lost both the World Cup matches that he missed through injury – against Australia and Sri Lanka – and that they lost the only game in which he has failed this summer; he made eight in the defeat against Pakistan.Only four times in his career – and not at all since January 2017 – have England failed to win once he has made 50. And he has passed that landmark 27 times. He is fast developing a reputation as one of the most dangerous batsmen in a team studded with them.

“I didn’t realise Bairstow’s dismissal wasn’t umpire’s call. I didn’t realise it was absolutely dead. That’s where the first conversation started. To get out like that was slightly disappointing and I probably showed it more than I should have.”Roy explains his semi-final anger

Just ask Australia. His assault on their bowlers – and on Steve Smith, in particular, who was plundered for three successive sixes – was brutal and served to “deflate” their entire side, as Roy sees it. He thought, for a moment, one of the sixes he hit off Smith was going to sail over the Edgbaston Pavilion – nobody has done that since the ground was redeveloped.”It was a case of staking a claim,” he says. “One big over at that stage was going to deflate them. I said to myself before the start of the game if a spinner comes on from that end and it’s full, it’s got to go. I thought it was going over. Can I hit a bigger six? Absolutely not.”That ‘staking a claim’ was perhaps more relevant in his batting against Mitchell Starc and Nathan Lyon. If Australia were to defend their total of 223, they surely needed that pair to dominate. But whereas an earlier generation of England openers would have reacted with anxiety inducing caution in such a situation, Roy decided to ensure it was the bowlers feeling the anxiety.Twice in Starc’s second over he thrashed him through the covers; in his third he flicked him off his legs for six. By the time he had bowled five overs, he had conceded 50. When Lyon came on, his first ball was driven back over his head. He was given no time to settle and no chance build any pressure.Roy’s success is all the remarkable for the contrast with his form in England’s previous global ODI campaign. After a grim run of form that saw him endured six single-figure scores in eight ODIs innings (and fail to pass 20 in nine), he was dropped during the 2017 Champions Trophy. Had it not been for Alex Hales’ self-inflicted absence, it is not impossible he may have struggled for a recall.”It does feel like another world,” Roy says of his change of fortune. “I feel like a completely different person; a completely different player. I had played some good cricket leading up to that tournament, but I got dropped, came back stronger and now I’m in a World Cup final. I couldn’t have asked for any more.”And what has he done differently?”I think I’ve just trusted my training a bit more,” he says. “I’ve not worried too much about the outcome. I’ve just got my processes in order. I’ve started well and played some good cricket.”Getty ImagesThere’s no doubt that playing with Jonny Bairstow has helped. As Eoin Morgan has pointed out previously, they manage to take the pressure off one another by scoring at a rate that allows the other to go through fallow periods. And, so destructive have they been, they can make bowling attacks wilt under the onslaught. They have made century stands in the last four ODIs in which they have opened together with strike-rates in stark contrast to England’s openers in the 1979 final: Geoff Boycott and Mike Brearley put on 129, which sounds great, but they took 38 overs to do it, which doesn’t.”It’s about playing off each other,” Roy explains. “So one guy might be struggling or we both might be going guns blazing. But it’s a case of telling him, ‘mate, it’s alright.’ Like that India game at Edgbaston, where Jonny made that hundred: he felt terrible for the first 20 balls. I told him, ‘mate, relax, you’re a gun, you’ll come out the other side. Keep that intensity to the spinners and don’t go internal.’ And he ended up banging it out of the park.”The influence of his captain is important, too. Morgan has backed Roy, on good days and bad, and encouraged him to continue to take the aggressive approach. So even after barren runs of form – not least in his debut series against New Zealand where he failed to reach 40 in five innings – Morgan made it clear he was part of England’s future plans.”He’s unbelievable,” Roy says of Morgan. “As you’ve seen on the pitch, he’s a very cool customer, very methodical and very good with his emotions. It doesn’t matter what the state of the game is. It doesn’t matter what someone’s done to him. He’s able to look forward and look past that. He looks for the best in everyone. He’s a great man-manager and a good friend of mine as well. He’s a good guy.”He admits his reaction to his dismissal in Edgbaston was over the top, but insist there were extenuating circumstances. In short, he thought Bairstow’s leg before dismissal had only been given on the basis of ‘umpire’s call’ so believed England had retained their review; a belief reinforced when the umpire, Kumar Dharmasena, incorrectly signalled for that review. As it was, there was no review and, once Dharmasena’s finger had gone up, he had to go. Even though he knew he was nowhere near the ball.”I actually got it wrong,” he says, “I spoke to Kumar and said I thought we had the review – I didn’t realise Bairstow’s dismissal wasn’t umpire’s call. I didn’t realise it was absolutely dead. That’s where the first conversation started. To get out like that was slightly disappointing and I probably showed it more than I should have. But it’s professional sport. I was on course for a century. Emotions run high.”England will need to control those emotions on Sunday. They will have to find the balance between allowing their natural positivity to flow without becoming over excited and reckless. It is, arguably at least, the biggest games in the careers of all involved. It is, arguably, the biggest match in which England have been involved for many, many years. Cricket in England needs this.”We’re dealing with it pretty well,” he says. “We went into the tournament as No. 1 and with a lot of expectation on our shoulders but it doesn’t affect any of us in the changing-room. It doesn’t matter what the outside noise is saying, the white noise as we call it. We’ve just got to go out and perform. We’re weirdly pretty relaxed. We’re in a very good place with our cricket.”Indeed they are. New Zealand are a fine side and can certainly win this match. But if they are to do so, they will surely have to dismiss Roy early.

Shakeel: Pakistan should prepare pitches 'according to opposition'

Vice-captain underlines change of approach with hosts hoping to engineer Pindi turner

Danyal Rasool22-Oct-2024There is little secret about Pakistan’s ambitions for the pitch by now. Before the second Test reached its inevitable conclusion, Aleem Dar and Aqib Javed were already on their way to Rawalpindi to oversee work on the pitch for the final Test. At the post-match press conference in Multan, Shan Masood said he’d like the surface to take turn. Two days later, giant heaters, the sort usually seen in Pakistan for open air winter wedding events, were positioned on the edges of the strip, with windbreakers encircling it for maximum efficiency. Industrial-sized fans accompanied them.None of this has gone unnoticed by an England side who appeared largely out-of-ideas for how to combat Pakistan’s spinners on a turning track in Multan. Harry Brook told a press conference he believed the Pindi surface had been “raked” by groundstaff to speed up the deterioration process that brings spinners into games early. Shortly after, England announced a playing XI featuring just one specialist seamer in Gus Atkinson, with legspinner Rehan Ahmed coming in.Pakistan have needed to adopt extreme measures to increase the odds of a turning track, because, unlike in Multan, they are attempting to make the surface behave against its nature. Unlike in Multan, there isn’t a used surface available, as was the case when Pakistan decided to recycle the same strip as the first Test for the next game. Masood said he had “never seen it take turn” in Pindi, and his vice-captain, Saud Shakeel, echoed that, while saying he was hopeful this time would be different.Related

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“If you look at the difference between Multan and Pindi, there’s a difference of climate,” Shakeel said. “Multan is warmer than Pindi, Multan is warmer and more humid compared to Pindi. Pindi favours fast bowlers slightly and has more bounce, compared to Multan. The groundsman prepares according to that, and I think that’s what causes the changes in the pitch.”But the way the pitch looks and the success we got in the second Test, we’ll try for a similar kind of pitch that favours us and helps us win this game.”Since returning from the UAE, Pakistan have agonised over how best to use home advantage. In the first couple of years, the wisdom was to shift sharply from their tactics in the UAE, reverting to seam-friendly pitches they believed would be easier to prepare. It coincided with a young crop of fast bowlers, primarily Shaheen Afridi and Naseem Shah, coming up. Early encouragement, such as a Naseem five-for against Sri Lanka and a hat-trick against Bangladesh, followed up by a two-Test series win over South Africa where Afridi took five wickets on a decisive final day in Pindi, appeared to vindicate that tactic.However, since Pakistan deliberately neutered a surface in Pindi ahead of a Test against Australia, seam-friendly pitches vanished overnight. Pakistan went on an 11-match winless run at home, their joint longest, losing seven of those games. That streak was only broken on a crumbling track in Multan last week.It appears, for now, to have led to a sharp volte-face in the PCB’s thinking. “We should look at pitches for series to series and match to match. And we’ve come to realise this quite late,” Shakeel said. “If you want to prepare for SENA [series in South Africa, England, New Zealand and Australia], you can do it during practice and first-class cricket. If there’s first-class cricket before South Africa, we could prepare those kinds of pitches there. But we should prepare pitches and conditions series-by-series, and according to the opposition.”Our comeback in the second game gave us a really good morale boost. A win is always very helpful in creating a positive atmosphere. We’ll try to give spinners an advantage once more because they struggled with that in the second Test.”Pakistan opted not to name their XI on Tuesday, as England have done, preferring a longer look at the surface. Legspinner Zahid Mahmood was ineffective despite helpful conditions in Multan, bowling only six overs all match, potentially raising the chances slightly of playing a specialist seamer.Ultimately, with England having named three spinners, that appears unlikely. “I can’t say at the moment, because we haven’t discussed this,” Shakeel said. “If there’s a spinning pitch, we may go with three spinners again.”

Injured Shreyanka Patil out of Women's Asia Cup, India call up Tanuja Kanwar

Shreyanka has fractured the fourth finger on her left hand

ESPNcricinfo staff21-Jul-2024Shreyanka Patil has been ruled out of the women’s Asia Cup after picking up an injury to her left hand. A press release from the Asian Cricket Council on Saturday said the 21-year old India offspinner “sustained a fracture to the fourth finger of her left hand.”Shreyanka took a full part in the team’s only game of the tournament so far, against Pakistan on Friday, bowling 3.2 overs and picking up 2 for 14. She was not needed to bat with India wrapping up the win in 14.2 overs and with seven wickets to spare. Tanuja Kanwar, the uncapped 26-year-old left-arm spinner who plays for Gujarat Giants in the WPL and Railways in domestic cricket, has been called up as replacement.Shreyanka made her debut for India in December 2023 on the back of impressive performances in the WPL. This year, she went on to become champion with Royal Challengers Bengaluru in a season where she took 13 wickets – the most by any bowler – at an average of 12.07 and an economy rate of 7.30. Shreyanka has played 12 T20Is for India and has gone wicketless in only two of those games. She’s also represented her country in three ODIs.Kanwar, born in Himachal Pradesh, also made a big splash in the WPL. She was bought by the Giants in 2023 for INR 50 lakh. A week before that auction she had starred with 3 for 26 for Railways in the One Day Trophy final to finish the tournament with 18 wickets while averaging 11.16 and conceding just 2.43 runs an over. Kanwar finished the 2024 WPL season with 10 wickets from eight matches at an average of 20.70 and an economy rate of 7.13. She is known for a variation where she bowls her left-arm spin from well behind the popping crease.India’s next match at the women’s Asia Cup is on Sunday against the UAE in Dambulla.

Asalanka: 'If you perform in the LPL, you should get a chance in the national team'

Kusal Mendis is in outstanding form, Pathum Nissanka has had fantastic outings, Avishka Fernando has been spectacular, and Kusal Perera has made a strong comeback. On top of which, Kamindu Mendis seems in good touch too.This is all on based on Lanka Premier League (LPL) performances, that new Sri Lanka captain Charith Asalanka regards as the gold standard in T20 cricket on the island.The LPL concluded only on Sunday, with Asalanka’s Jaffna Kings side taking home the trophy. Top order batters flourished in that competition. Asalanka has suggested that Kamindu – who also bowled with both arms during the LPL – has sewn up the No. 4 spot, having hit 287 runs at a strike rate of 157 through the tournament.Related

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But then there are still four batters vying for the top three spots. As Asalanka said: “There are four openers in the squad, and the way I’m thinking three of them will make up the top three. One of them will have to miss out.”Those four:

  • Kusal Mendis, who hit 329 runs at a strike rate of 150, and can keep wicket.
  • Pathum Nissanka, who hit 333 at strike rate of 153.
  • Avishka Fernando, who smoked 374 at a strike rate of 163.
  • Kusal Perera, who had the best strike rate of the four – 169. He made 296 runs, but in fewer innings than the others.These are stats worth thinking on before the two back-to-back matches on Saturday and Sunday, because Sri Lanka’s new captain is keen on using the LPL as a marker of T20 ability.”If you look at the LPL, it’s the No. 1 tournament we have to make decisions like this,” Asalanka said. “More than domestic T20s, the LPL is at a much higher level. As a captain, I think if you perform at the LPL you should get a good chance at playing in the national team.”Asalanka has been a captain since age-group level, whether for his school Richmond College, or Sri Lanka Under 19, and most recently the winning LPL franchise. He suggested his style of leadership is based around man-management.”From under 15 level I’ve captained teams, and there’ s been a lot of change since then. That’s what I tell my team members too – we can’t be at the same place we’ve always been at. From day to day you have to improve and that’s how you become a good player or a good captain. I’ve played under many captains, and I’ve tried to absorb as many of their good traits into my captaincy and into my life as possible.”What I really want is to get 100% out of my players, and to create a positive environment for them. We have a lot of talented cricketers, but what’s important is to get the most out of them and have them win matches. I’ve told them to play freely and when we’ve given them plans, to go out there and execute them without fear. That’s what you can expect from me as a captain.”
  • India are the best Test team irrespective of WTC standings

    India have the bowling attack to be dominant in half the world and competitive in the other half

    Sidharth Monga08-Mar-2021While the Test specialists of this Indian side have said the World Test Championship (WTC) is like a World Cup to them, the team’s captain and coach have been disdainful of it, especially the change in the points system and cancellation of some series, both forced by the Covid-19 pandemic.The root of the gripe is that the change in qualification criteria – based now on percentage of points contested as opposed to absolute points won – and a further postponement of Australia’s tour of South Africa made India’s road to the final tougher. This new system now assumes that New Zealand would have won 70% of the points on the tour of Bangladesh too, and Australia’s tours of Bangladesh and South Africa are worth 69.2% of the total points up for grabs.Virat Kohli and Ravi Shastri are fierce competitors so it is understandable they were not happy with what Shastri described as the “shifting goal posts”, but it is arguable these changes made their qualification difficult. New Zealand could well have beaten Bangladesh by the same 2-0 margin that a severely-depleted West Indies side attained recently, and gone past India. For Australia, the tours of Bangladesh and South Africa stood cancelled. It is not unimaginable for Australia to beat the current South Africa side comprehensively anywhere or beating Bangladesh in Bangladesh and thus go past India.Related

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    The Indian team leadership’s gripe with “shifting goalposts” and the WTC being relevant only to those teams who are not motivated to play Test cricket betrays a lack of understanding of the bigger picture or even an awareness of the privilege of having the means to be able to prioritise Test cricket the way India do.And yet, even if India had missed out on the final with New Zealand and Australia doing well in the tours that now stand cancelled, it can be said with fair certainty India would still have been the best Test team of this WTC cycle. They have been the best Test team in the world for quite a while longer than that.If India had failed to make the final, it would have had to do with the schedule they got. At a time when – barring recent exceptions – home Test wins have almost been a given, India’s WTC cycle featured relatively easier home series and two really tough away tours, of New Zealand and Australia. Within five days of play in New Zealand, India lost out on 120 possible points, which hurt their campaign. They compensated for it with their stupendous series win in Australia.That is perhaps why India express their dissatisfaction: they know they have been the best team in the world, they have beaten Australia in Australia in successive series, and yet their participation in the WTC final came down to a last series during which the world turned on them for the pitches they rolled out. India’s digs at the WTC might be questionable, but their Test supremacy isn’t.Two of the biggest factors in India’s recent rise are the emergence of Jasprit Bumrah and the resurrection of Ishant Sharma•AFPSince the start of the home Test series against South Africa in 2015-16, India hold a win-loss ratio of 3.2 in Tests; no other side comes remotely close. At home they have been near unbeatable, losing just two Tests out of 25 in the same period, but you could still question them and argue that it was just a finetuning of what sides before them used to do. But factor this: in close to six years, India have been blanked in only one away tour, a win-loss ratio of 1.3, which is superior to every team.The single-biggest contributing factor to India’s ascent has been the emergence of Jasprit Bumrah, the resurrection of Ishant Sharma and the refining of Mohammed Shami. Over the last few months we have seen the scary bench strength. At home, Umesh Yadav makes it a choice of two fast bowlers out of five. In conditions that aid seam bowling, Mohammed Siraj is as good a fourth bowler as you can get in the world today. What is taken for granted is two spinners in R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja who have legit claims to spots in an all-time India XI. Then they have Axar Patel, who made sure a player of the quality of Jadeja was not missed at home.Because India have this bowling strength, they have been competitive in all conditions except in New Zealand, where swing works more than seam and where you often lose a series by the time you have acclimatised to the conditions. India’s five toughest tours in this period have been the ones to New Zealand, South Africa and England, and two to Australia. Except for the New Zealand tour, India’s bowlers have competed on each tour.ESPNcricinfo LtdLook at the control numbers. India have been close enough to the hosts in terms of uncertainty created in batsmen’s response in each of these tours barring South Africa. If you are that close, you allow luck to help you. By comparison, India drew 17.9% false shots when they played at home against South Africa, who could draw only 12.6%. When New Zealand got thrashed in Australia, they drew only 12.1% false responses as against Australia’s 19%.In England in 2018, India drew more false responses from the England batsmen, which is probably why pundits felt the 4-1 win flattered England. It was said if a few things had gone India’s way here and there, they might even have won the series. That is exactly what happened in Australia in 2020-21 where Australia actually created more pressure with the ball but India were close enough to them to make that accompanying luck translate into a series win. This is the best you can hope for in an era when utter dominance – the kind West Indies and Australia enjoyed in their legendary runs – is near-impossible to attain.No other side in recent times comes this close to competing so well on their bogey tours. New Zealand, the other finalists, got completely blanked in Australia and in India. Australia, who can consider themselves unfortunate to not be in the final, have had horror tours of Sri Lanka and South Africa.All this while, at home, India have let an opposition come close to their numbers only once – Australia in 2016-17 – a dominance that can be put down to more than one exceptional spin bowler, a luxury no other team can replicate even if they can become India’s equals or even better at times with pace bowling. Barring a couple of series, India have been competitive in every series for close to six years, but at home, in Sri Lanka and in the West Indies, they have been routing the opposition as a matter of routine. Australia and New Zealand, however, have both had reverses at home: New Zealand against Australia and South Africa, and Australia against India and South Africa. It shows in how well India have done in their most-recent series against all opposition.ESPNcricinfo LtdBarring the post-pandemic course correction, this has also been an era of toss playing a big role in deciding the outcome of the matches. That’s because quite a few sides are evenly matched in most conditions in the world. India and New Zealand have been excessively dominant at home so the toss has mattered a little less, but in most other matches the toss has played a crucial part. In these times, India have lost only one match – home or away – after winning the toss. It’s a win-loss ratio of 22 after winning the toss; next-best is New Zealand’s 3.5. Perhaps more impressive is India’s win-loss ratio of 1.5 after losing the toss; only other side in credit there is England.Despite such clear dominance, with some luck – say, Jofra Archer being fit for the second Ahmedabad Test and playing instead of Dom Bess – England would have made it extremely difficult for India to be in the final. That wouldn’t have changed a thing about who the best Test side in the world at the moment is. It is India because they have the bowling attack to be dominant in half the world and competitive in the other half.Identifying the best Test team in the world is not really the purpose of the WTC. The WTC strives to provide some context and relevance to sides who are not fortunate enough to play as much Test cricket as the Big Three do. It is the ICC’s attempt to prevent Test cricket from becoming this elite three-team affair. It makes New Zealand a part of the conversation even though most of their series are two-match long and they play half as many Tests as England do. That will inspire Sri Lanka and Pakistan and West Indies.The final will still be a mouth-watering contest. You would back India against New Zealand in most conditions outside New Zealand and the first half of the English summer. It is when the ball swings in the air that New Zealand hold an edge. A midsummer final in England might give New Zealand that opportunity to make it anybody’s Test, but even if India lose, it will not change a thing about who the best Test team in the world is. Not as long as Siraj is only the fourth-best quick and Patel the third-best spinner in the Indian squad.

    Empresário revela propostas por joia do Palmeiras e o compara a Messi: 'Muito parecido'

    MatériaMais Notícias

    da imperador bet: Estêvão, joia da base do Palmeiras de apenas 16 anos, é mais um jovem do Verdão cobiçado por gigantes da Europa. Andre Cury, empresário do jogador, revelou que altas propostas já foram feitas pelo atacante e ainda o comparou a Messi, afirmando que há características em comum entre o craque argentino e a joia alviverde.

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    da fezbet: + O erro que o Palmeiras não pode repetir se quiser passar pelo Atlético-MG

    – Sim (pode sair), já há ofertas. Muito alto, aliás, mas não estamos falando desse assunto porque ele ainda é muito jovem. Ele tem 16 anos, categoria 2007. Acho que depois do Mundial Sub-17 ele vai fechar com alguém. Talvez Real Madrid, Barcelona, Manchester City… com um dos grandes se fará (uma negociação). Ele vai ser um grande jogador – disse Andre Cury, em entrevista ao diário AS, da Espanha.

    – Ele é muito parecido com Leo (Messi). Ele tem força nas bolas paradas, também é canhoto. É muito parecido. Fisicamente não porque é mais alto, é negro, mas há coisas que lembram o Messi.

    continua após a publicidade

    O jovem, apelidado de “Messinho”, atua pelo time sub-20 e assinou o seu primeiro contrato profissional com o Verdão em abril, quando completou 16 anos. O agente revelou que Estêvão chegou a ser oferecido ao Atlético de Madrid-ESP, mas a negociação pelo o que ele chamou de “Bola de Ouro” não avançou.

    – Nesse jogo que essa pessoa foi, o Estevão jogava na categoria dele, no sub-15, mas não podia jogar na categoria dele porque fez quatro gols, três bolas acertaram a trave… Com esse jogo essa pessoa ficou maluca, mas desapareceu. Ele voltou para Madrid e nunca mais ligou. O que vou fazer? Não vou ligar de novo para ser recusado. Ofereci a Bola de Ouro ao Atlético de Madrid e eles me ignoraram. Eles vão lá, olham, gostam e nada – concluiu o empresário.

    continua após a publicidade

    + João Martins recebe punição do STJD por fala sobre o ‘sistema’ e vai desfalcar o Palmeiras

    Estêvão está no Palmeiras desde 2021. O atacante foi integrado à equipe sub-17 com apenas 15 anos e acabou se destacando. Com isso, foi promovido para o sub-20, categoria em que conquistou a Copa São Paulo de Futebol Júnior, a Copinha, de 2023. O seu contrato profissional tem vínculo de três anos.

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    فيديو | المغرب يهزم فرنسا ويتأهل إلى نهائي كأس العالم للشباب 2025 للمرة الأولى في التاريخ

    حقق منتخب المغرب الفوز على نظيره فرنسا في بطولة كأس العالم للشباب 2025 بركلات الترجيح بنتيجة 5-4 ليحقق تأهلاً تاريخيًا إلى المباراة النهائية.

    وتأهل منتخب المغرب إلى دور قبل النهائي من بطولة كأس العالم للشباب المقامة في تشيلي، بعد الفوز على أمريكا 3-1 في دور ربع النهائي.

    طالع | تردد القناة المفتوحة الناقلة لمباراة الأرجنتين والمغرب في نهائي كأس العالم للشباب

    منتخب المغرب كان قد تأهل إلى دور ربع النهائي، بعد تصدر مجموعته برصيد 6 نقاط، متفوقًا على البرازيل وإسبانيا والمكسيك، وفي مباراة دور الـ16 استطاع الفوز على كوريا الجنوبية 2-1.

    وسجل ياسر الصبيري الهدف الأول لصالح المغرب في الدقيقة 32، من ضربة جزاء احتسبها الحكم بعد العودة لتقنية الفار.

    وجاء هدف تعادل فرنسا في الدقيقة 59 بعد عرضية من الجهة اليمنى وصلت إلى لوكاس ميشال الذي وضعها في الشباك.

    واستمر التعادل الإيجابي في الوقت الأصلي والإضافي من المباراة قبل أن يتجه الفريقان إلى ركلات الترجيح، ويحسم اللقاء بركلات الترجيح لصالح منتخب المغرب 5-4.

    ومن المقرر أن يلاقي منتخب المغرب، الأرجنتين في المباراة النهائية من بطولة كأس العالم، وذلك يوم الإثنين 20 أكتوبر، بينما يلتقي منتخب فرنسا كولومبيا في مباراة تحديد المركز الثالث والرابع.

    وتعد تلك المرة الأولى التي يتأهل فيها المنتخب المغربي للشباب إلى نهائي كأس العالم في التاريخ. أهداف وركلات ترجيح مباراة المغرب وفرنسا في نصف نهائي كأس العالم للشباب

    ملخص وركلات ترجيح مباراة المغرب وفرنسا في نصف نهائي كأس العالم للشباب

    Arsenal plan £51m Chelsea hijack as key target now eyes Barcelona move

    The Premier League confirmed its fixture calendar for the 2025/2026 season this week with Arsenal set for an intriguing opening game against Man United, and there is little doubt sporting director Andrea Berta will be aiming to secure all of Mikel Arteta’s top summer transfer targets by that date.

    Regarding links to some of Europe’s most sought-after strikers, United have been equally active in the transfer market, with both sides attempting to get a prolific centre-forward through the door after disappointing seasons.

    Arsenal make contact to sign trophy-laden £400k-per-week ex-Man City star

    He’d be quite the addition to Arteta’s dressing room.

    ByEmilio Galantini Jun 17, 2025

    Arsenal have been in talks with RB Leipzig over a deal for Benjamin Sesko for weeks, but as things stand, the Gunners are unwilling to match their demands of a transfer fee which could reach up to £85 million.

    With Arsenal still yet to shake hands on a contract with the player’s representatives, plenty of work is still to be done if Berta wishes to strike a deal for the Slovenia international who’s eluded Arteta’s side since last summer.

    19/20 – winter

    £0

    20/21 – summer

    £81.5m

    20/21 – winter

    £900k

    21/22 – summer

    £156.8m

    21/22 – winter

    £1.8m

    22/23 – summer

    £121.5m

    22/23 – winter

    £59m

    23/24 – summer

    £208m

    23/24 – winter

    £0

    24/25 – summer

    £101.5m

    24/25 – winter

    £0

    Sesko rejected a proposal to join Arsenal this time last year and ex-interim sporting director Jason Ayto led a mission to tempt the 22-year-old with a move to the Emirates in January, only to be told that he wanted to see out the season with Leipzig (Ben Jacobs).

    Amidst the Sesko saga, Arsenal are also trying to sign a new winger, but key target Nico Williams is now in talks to join Barcelona instead.

    Arsenal planning to hijack Chelsea deal for Jamie Gittens

    That is according to CaughtOffside, and given the Athletic Bilbao starlet is most likely to remain in La Liga with Barça, Arsenal are believed to be shifting their focus to Borussia Dortmund winger Jamie Gittens.

    Jamie Gittens in action for Borussia Dortmund.

    The “new name” target, as described by this report, is emerging as a priority signing for the north Londoners and Arteta is apparently a real admirer. They’re currently taking “concrete steps” to swoop for Gittens and holding internal talks over a move for the Englishman, who Dortmund value at around £51 million.

    Arsenal are said to be “serious” about signing Gittens and could move quickly, which comes as a real concern for Chelsea and Enzo Maresca.

    The west Londoners had three bids rejected for the 20-year-old before the Club World Cup transfer deadline (Florian Plettenberg), with CaughtOffside reiterating that Gittens has already reached a long-term agreement on personal terms to join Chelsea.

    Chelsea are widely expected to bid again for Gittens (Fabrizio Romano), but Arsenal appear to be posing a major threat in the race, so Maresca may now have a battle on his hands.

    The Dortmund sensation, called an “incredible” one-v-one forward by Nuri Şahin, bagged 12 goals and five assists in 49 total appearances last campaign – with four of his strikes coming in the Champions League.

    MLB Best Bet: Pair of Playoff Contenders Will Score Plenty of Runs

    We will be rooting for runs Monday night as the Red Sox take on the Astros at Minute Maid Park in Houston.

    Both teams are in the running for an AL Wild Card bid, and Houston will be looking to make up ground on the Rangers for the AL West title. The Red Sox are coming off a three-game win streak vs. the division-rival Yankees, and the Astros are coming off a three-game losing streak after being swept at home by the division-rival Mariners. I expect both teams to be feisty tonight.

    Cristian Javier gets the start at home tonight for the Astros. That’s probably good news for the Red Sox, as Javier has not looked like the dominant pitcher we expected this season. His 55.4% fly ball rate is third in the MLB among starters behind only Nestor Cortes and JP Sears. The Red Sox should be able to get in their knocks. Boston has been averaging 4.5 runs per game in August. Rafael Devers, Tristan Casas and Justin Turner have all been swinging the bat well and could easily go yard tonight.

    Despite coming off a brutal sweep to the Mariners, the Astros have also been hitting the ball well in August, scoring an average of 5.28 runs per game. Specifically, they have been hitting lefties well, and that bodes well for the matchup with James Paxton. Paxton is the kind of pitcher that can get hit hard if he doesn't have his best stuff. Paxton is the better pitcher in this matchup on paper with a 3.34 ERA this season, but Houston is hitting .271 (sixth) vs. lefties with a .338 OBP (fifth), .799 OPS (fourth), .461 SLG (fourth) and .190 ISO (fourth). Kyle Tucker (who should return to the lineup today after an illness) is hitting .335 with 11 homers vs. southpaws this season while Yordan Alvarez is hitting .315 with six round-trips. And let’s not forget Jose Altuve, who just notched career-hit 2,000 on Saturday. Altuve is hitting .333 with two home runs in 10 career at-bats vs. Paxton. Even if Paxton gives Boston a strong start, Houston should be able to tag their bullpen for more than a few runs. Boston’s pen has an ERA of 6.27 in August.

    It’s even money to play the over, so that’s what we are going to do.

    The Bet: Red Sox-Astros over 9 runs (+100)

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