From home-schooling, to attacking mindsets: how the WPL is changing life for young Indian women

The WPL has opened pathways that didn’t previously exist, giving budding cricketers from across the country direction and motivation

Shashank Kishore and Vishal Dikshit12-Feb-2025The route toward the international airport from Bengaluru’s CBD is dotted with a number of cricket academies. NICE – New Innings Cricket Enterprise – is one of them where Shreyanka Patil, the India and Royal Challengers Bengaluru off-spinner, trains.Long before the Women’s Premier League (WPL) took shape, Shreyanka moved out of her parental home in southwest Bengaluru to shorten her commute to the academy, which otherwise took her two hours each way. Since then, several others have followed suit, inspired by Shreyanka and Vrinda Dinesh, another academy product who was one of the big uncapped signings ahead of WPL 2024.Related

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NICE has 70 trainees in all, 30 of them girls, mostly in the 13-16 age bracket. More than a handful have come in from Bijapur, a town in north Karnataka, and Chikmagalur, a hill station popular for its temperate weather and coffee estates.At training on a weekday, when she would’ve otherwise been at school, is 14-year-old Inchara, an upcoming batter who has gone on to captain Karnataka Under-15s. Seeing her progress, Inchara’s parents have now opted to home-school her, which allows her to train more.Her fellow trainee Myra, 15, is a fast bowler who became an Instagram sensation a few months ago for bowling with Jasprit Bumrah’s action. Myra was called up by Gujarat Giants for a trial; three other franchises expressed interest and sought more videos.

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Arjun Dev and Kiran Uppoor, the academy’s head coaches, have asked her to “enjoy the attention”. They believe she will be ready for bigger things in two years. Inchara and Myra are two of many who believe the WPL has opened pathways that didn’t previously exist.”I keep joking with Inchara, saying she could be the first player to feature in the WPL before the state Under-19s,” says Dev. “We wanted Inchara’s game to be fully developed by the time she hits the U-19s, even if it means she has one or two years fewer than most others. So we’ve held her back.”Dev was referring here to the BCCI’s rule that a player can play at the U-19 level for a maximum of four years, even if they are still below the age cutoff at the end of that period. That has meant several girls who show promise at say 14 being taken into the U-19 set-up, but then falling away before they make a real impression because they were brought into the set-up before their game was finely tuned.Holding a player back, though, requires a buy-in from both the player and their parents. Dev says this has been made possible only because of the WPL’s impact: even if a player gets only two years at the U-19 level, if they perform well enough there, who knows, a WPL scout is probably tracking them…

“At a trial recently, we had 14-year-olds opening and they were 80 for 0 in 5.3 overs, and then they ended up losing two wickets back-to-back. Traditionally, a coach is likely to say, ‘you’ve got so many runs, why did you have to play a shot and get out?’ Our response is to tell them, ‘you don’t stop just because you’ve lost two wickets.'”Arjun Dev, NICE head coach

Prashant Shetty, a renowned Mumbai coach who has worked with Jemimah Rodrigues, Prithvi Shaw, and young players at the WPL like Hurley Gala, Sayali Satghare and Humaira Kazi, has seen the number of girls showing up at his academy increase by 30% since the inception of the WPL.Former India captain Dilip Vengsarkar’s cricket academy in Pune has also seen a steady rise in enrollments. They have around 200 girls training there, which has led to them hiring more coaches.Charlotte Edwards, the former England captain and Mumbai Indians head coach, says the WPL has “raised the bar” like nothing else. “For someone who’s new to Indian cricket, to see the difference from year one to year three now in the calibre of players, the impact it’s having on the domestic cricket and the quality that comes through… At the trials recently if I compare that to year one, it’s on a different level and it’s hugely exciting for Indian cricket,” she says. “There’s wonderful talent coming through year on year. We’ve just seen at the Under-19 World Cup… It’s a very exciting time for India. It’s scary for England (laughs), but it’s very good [for India].”

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“Players are realising now 75 for 3 in eight overs is better than 45 for 0″Aarti Sankaran, a BCCI-certified Level 3 coach, believes the spike in interest in Indian women’s cricket was sparked by Harmanpreet Kaur’s epochal 171 not out against Australia at the 2017 World Cup, and the WPL has built on that.Harmanpreet Kaur inspired a generation of Indians with her epic 171 not out in the 2017 World Cup•PTI “The skill enhancement is starting to come with the WPL,” Sankaran explains. “Example: players are taking their fielding more seriously. They realise simply batting or bowling alone isn’t good enough. Similarly, coaches are also changing their approach – they’re realising there’s no one-size-fits-all approach.Sankaran, a faculty at BCCI’s Centre of Excellence in Bengaluru, has been part of that change, where coaches are better equipped with things like data and technology to make better cricketing decisions.”You’ve got numbers, you know that this player is an impactful 20-ball player. How do I position this player? That decision requires the coach to have a lot of information. The evolving T20 game has brought about the change, and the WPL has set the trend.”Today when Indian coaches look at WPL and see most teams have foreign coaches holding the top position, they wonder what they should do to bridge the cap.”Dev echoes Sankaran’s views. “At a trial recently, we had 14-year-olds opening and they were 80 for 0 in 5.3 overs, and then they ended up losing two wickets back-to-back. Traditionally, a coach is likely to say, ‘you’ve got so many runs, why did you have to play a shot and get out?’ Our response is to tell them, ‘you don’t stop just because you’ve lost two wickets.'”In women’s cricket especially, the powerplay is so crucial because the power is still not the same as in the men’s game. They’re not always going to have someone like a Pollard or a Russell coming and hitting five or six sixes to win most times. It’s taken a while to change the mindset but young girls today are more welcoming of this change, where 75 for 3 in 7-8 overs is better than 45 for 0.”

Until now, women’s cricket in India was financially viable only if the player made it to the national team or the handful of back-ups that were given the BCCI’s annual retainers. Even now, domestic cricket is hardly lucrative.

The same attacking mindset extends to the bowling.”Traditionally, offspinners in domestic cricket bowl with six fielders on the off side. It would result in offspinners having great economy rates, but they wouldn’t pick up wickets. As coaches, we’ve tried to bring in a change,” Dev says. “We emphasise four-five fields. It has made girls realise the value of attacking the stumps a lot more. If the batter misses, you have a chance to pick up a lbw or bowled. It has brought in a different element to the way a bowler thinks about her game.”If you keep tossing the ball up, Richa Ghosh is not going to try and pierce the gap on the offside if you keep bowling outside off. She’s going to go and swing at a few, and she will connect with a couple. That’s the change that we want to bring in now.”It’s nice to see that a lot of younger spinners as well are kind of looking at that and saying, yeah, four or five is probably the way to go for off spinners. And because they’ve seen this in the WPL, where Shreyanka has had a lot of success this way for RCB, there’s a buy-in.”

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Training becomes “organised, meaningful, impactful”Until now, women’s cricket in India was financially viable only if the player made it to the national team or the handful of back-ups that were given the BCCI’s annual retainers. Even now, domestic cricket is hardly lucrative. That Shubha Satheesh earned more money playing two Tests for India in 2023-24 than she made playing three domestic seasons back-to-back prior to that tells you how much of a disparity there is.G Kamalini: only 16 but already a World Cup winner and a WPL crorepati•ESPNcricinfo LtdThis means players still coming through the ranks need to rely on day jobs or other sources of income. Only a select few get a chance to represent the Indian Railways, one of the few organisations that women cricketers. But, again, the WPL is changing this.A player signed at the auction earns at least INR 10 lakh per season. If they’re lucky – like the then 22-year-old Simran Shaikh who fetched INR 1.9 crore at this season’s auction in December – a domestic player can earn a lot more. Even before she won the Under-19 World Cup, 16-year-old G Kamalini was signed by Mumbai Indians for INR 1.6 crore. Prema Rawat, a 23-year-old legspinner, was signed for INR 1.20 crore by Royal Challengers Bengaluru.This potential to keep earning more has also made players mindful of investing back into their games. “When a player gets a [WPL] contract, then she can spend it on herself,” Harmanpreet says. “But before that, domestic cricketers did not earn as much, so it was not fair to expect a lot from them because we weren’t sure how much some players could spend on themselves.”Since the WPL has arrived, the franchises have also invested in the players. They are holding camps, players are getting to work with different coaches. Thanks to franchise cricket, the good players stay busy throughout the year, play a good standard of cricket, and work with good coaches. All these things have helped players a lot and the game will improve further in the coming years.”

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“They work and come because they want to be there”
Pratika Rawal, 24, could possibly be the brightest young India batter not to get a WPL gig this year. She has 444 runs from her first six ODI innings, the most by a batter at this nascent stage of their ODI career. The snub isn’t a roadblock, though, she says. There’s realisation that one auction gone by is not going to define her career path; there will be more auctions ahead that could change everything.Pratika Rawal is on a red hot streak, but for now she’s not on WPL contract•BCCIAt 17, inspired by Harmanpreet’s World Cup heroics, Rawal gave up a promising basketball career to play cricket, while also pursuing a degree in psychology in Delhi.”At that time, I was the only girl at my academy,” she remembers. “It now feels nice that a lot of kids are eager. They want to know how you can excel, the same way I was inquisitive all those years ago.”Rawal invested in a coach and trainer, primarily to stave off “laziness”. It had a transformative effect on her cricket. She first came into the spotlight in 2021, when she hit an unbeaten 161 off 155 balls to take Delhi to the knockouts of the domestic one-day competition. Earlier this year, she captained Delhi in their unbeaten run to the Under-23 T20 Trophy final.”I was a lazy person back then,” she says. “So, my routines were not that great. I was struggling a bit. I had gained a lot of weight back then. I was in search of a really good coach. And luckily, I met Deepti Dhyani ma’am. The first thing she told me was ‘trust me and you will be there. But you have to trust me blindly.’

“At that time, I was the only girl at my academy. It now feels nice that a lot of kids are eager. They want to know how you can excel.”Pratika Rawal

“First, she had to work on my waking-up routines. She worked on my personality. Then I think she worked on my diet. Then she worked on my fitness. We hired a trainer. We started working on things that are in our control. We started to be more consistent in the game. We practiced for long durations. We had sessions till 8 at night. We made gains under lights.”When I started, my game was restricted to only the leg side, then it got restricted to only off side. So, she has worked in a lot of areas that has now made me an all-round batter. She has also spoken to me about a lot of things in terms of how you process things off the field – like not being picked in WPL.”In general, Sankaran sees a sea change in the way players approach training these days. This is down to players holding themselves accountable during the off-season. “Earlier they had to merely go by what was being told to them or what they felt. Today we have concrete proof [data] and the minute you have proof and you present it to them, there’s a lot more buy-in. So then they work and come because they want to be there.”[They think] ‘if I have to be there, sustain my position, I need to do everything that keeps me going. I can no longer sit back, relax and enjoy based on the laurels that I’ve already achieved.’ So the work they put in during the off season is a lot more organised, meaningful and impactful.” And this all stems from wanting to keep, or grow, that WPL contract.

A new chapter in Lanning-Harmanpreet captaincy saga

After finishing second to Lanning in many high-stake games over the years, Harmanpreet will want to finally get one past her

S Sudarshanan25-Mar-2023Despite a bit of festive fervour to it, both Meg Lanning and Harmanpreet Kaur were focused on the eve of the inaugural WPL final. As captains of their respective national teams, they are quite used to this routine. After all, they led Australia and India in two title clashes that played a big part in the changing landscape of women’s cricket in the last three years – the 2020 T20 World Cup final that attracted 86,174 people at the MCG, and the gold-medal match in Birmingham last year, when women’s T20 cricket featured for the first time in the Commonwealth Games.Lanning and Harmanpreet have been T20I captains for a long period now. Lanning has led Australia in 100 of the 132 T20Is she has played. Harmanpreet has done the same for India in 96 of her 151 T20I outings. But when the two teams have met each other with Lanning and Harmanpreet at the helm, Australia have often had the upper hand, winning ten T20Is to India’s three. And one needs no reminding that while Lanning’s trophy cabinet is running out of space, India Women’s recent Under-19 victory is their only global title.So, Sunday’s final is not just about Mumbai Indians taking on Delhi Capitals. Harmanpreet will want to finally get one past Lanning in a high-stakes game.Both Harmanpreet and Lanning are equally passionate leaders, but they operate in very different ways. Harmanpreet is someone who wears her heart on her sleeve. Consider Alyssa Healy’s dismissal in the Eliminator. Harmanpreet was pumped up after taking the catch to dismiss the UP Warriorz captain, making it evident through her celebration how much that wicket meant for Mumbai.Meg Lanning is the leading run-scorer in the WPL•BCCIOn the other hand, Lanning is almost inscrutable. After Capitals beat Warriorz in their last league match to confirm direct qualification to the final, all she offered was applause from the dugout and hugs.Some of Harmanpreet’s headline-grabbing knocks in international cricket have come against Australia. Her 171 not out in the semi-final of the 2017 ODI World Cup – she wasn’t the captain then – against the Lanning-led Australia was what made women’s cricket in India mainstream. She has been in the midst of it all – the high of a group-stage win over Australia in the T20 World Cup in 2018 and the lows of a narrow loss in the tri-series final in 2020, the Commonwealth Games final, and more recently, the heartbreaking loss in the semi-final of the T20 World Cup last month.Harmanpreet has been an epitome of consistency in this WPL. She kicked off the competition in grand style with an enthralling 30-ball 65, and has only twice been dismissed before reaching 20. She has been the rock that’s held Mumbai’s middle order together and has struck three half-centuries, second only to Tahlia McGrath’s four, in the tournament.Lanning has had an even better tournament. She’s been the leading run-getter for most of the WPL and is the only player among the finalists to score over 300 runs. They have come at a strike rate of 141.55 even though she hasn’t really gone hammer and tongs. With Shafali Verma, she has formed a formidable opening combination.Harmanpreet Kaur is never shy of expressing herself on the field•ICC/Getty Images”Australia have been always doing well ever since I have started playing and they always have great captains,” Harmanpreet, seated next to Lanning at the WPL final pre-match press conference, said. “With Meg, they always have a good team and it’s easy for her to make those changes and come up with a good challenge. In this WPL, they have a balanced side and she is leading from the front.”The biggest thing to learn from her is that she is not someone who is dependent on players. She is someone who leads from the front, like in this WPL. That’s something you want from a leader. When a leader takes responsibility from the front, the team does well. That’s something I always see and learn from her.”She is not someone who gives up early, we will have to fight till the end and we are ready for that.”That last line could also have been in reference to the semi-final last month, where for a large part of the chase India seemed in control before Australia wrested it back to knock them out.Just like on that day, Lanning knows she has another fight on her hands. “Coming up against Harman is always a good challenge,” she said. “She has shown that she is an excellent leader and gets results, both individually and for her team. I always look forward to challenges like that. Always a great contest to come up against a team led by Harman and I am expecting exactly the same tomorrow night.”So, once again in what is yet another landmark game in women’s cricket, Lanning and Harmanpreet are face to face. While the contest on the field will be intense, it has a celebratory feel to it as well. The smiles returned to both the captains’ faces as the presser drew to a close.” [We haven’t put the ropes. You should ask those who have],” Harmanpreet retorted when asked about the smaller size of the boundaries at this tournament, drawing laughs from the room.We are less than 24 hours from the first ever WPL final. And this time, whoever wins, whether it is Lanning or Harmanpreet, it will be a win for Indian cricket.

The T10 league catches up with cricket's new normal

Sunil Narine and Mohammad Amir on life in bio-secure bubbles

Barny Read28-Jan-2021’New normals’ are being established in every corner of society as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, and cricket is no different.The international game returned to unusually bare backdrops of English stadiums last summer, when the notion of social distancing in bio-bubbles was first put forward and carried out.Nearly seven months on, these sanitary havens popping up all over the world are not only considerably less bizarre than they once sounded, but are also essential to getting any kind of play underway.It’s no different at the T10 League in Abu Dhabi and everyone entering the bubble – players, coaches and support staff alike – had to quarantine for three days upon arrival, while undergoing PCR tests every 24 hours during that period. Each member of the T10 bubble then undergoes PCR testing every 48 hours, meaning there are going to be some sore noses by the end of the ten-day tournament.Afghanistan and Ireland cricketers such as Mohammad Nabi and Paul Stirling were carefully transitioned from one bubble to another following their ODI series at the same Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, a manoeuvre involving a kind of Megabus musical chairs.Despite the oddity of it all, it has the kind of unfamiliar familiarity experienced the world over through adjusting to lockdowns, face masks and seemingly endless Zoom meetings.”It’s hard, but it’s something that you generally have to get accustomed to. You have to set your mind that you’re going to have to quarantine, it’s going to be tougher than normal and you’re going to have to come to tournaments a week earlier, sometimes two weeks earlier,” Deccan Gladiators allrounder Sunil Narine told ESPNcricinfo, fittingly on a Zoom call between games of FIFA and binging Netflix like the rest of us.”It’s getting normal, more or less, because we’ve been living in this for a while now and any cricket you’re playing – this is going to happen now. There’s things you have to do as a professional cricketer and that’s the mindset; you have to adapt.”One player glad to be off the sofa and away from his TV is Mohammad Amir, playing in his first franchise tournament since retiring from Pakistan duties at the end of last year.”After Covid [happened], if you’re getting any opportunity to play cricket, it’s a blessing from God,” Amir said on another Zoom meeting with ESPNcricinfo. “Everybody is struggling in the world with Covid and I think we are blessed to be playing cricket, rather than sitting on the sofa and watching TV.”It’s sometimes strange and you get frustrated but it will only help because you have to manage [the situation]. As a player you have to follow the SOPs [Standard Operating Procedures] and if you’re not meeting with your other team-mates, it’s not a big deal because we’re here to play cricket, not to meet other mates. Rather than getting frustrated or getting negative thoughts in your mind, just stick with the fact that we’re here to play cricket.”Narine shares the same sentiment and believes that if players want to play cricket, then the sacrifices – as irritating and draining as they may be – are worth it.”Leaving home is probably the most difficult, leaving family, loved ones home and then you’re going to have to stay in a room where you’re here to play cricket but for seven days or five days, you’re just in a room doing absolutely nothing,” he said. “There’s things you have to do and there’s things you’re going to have to accept and move forward and just live with it because it’s going to be here for a while. No-one knows when it’s going to stop so you’re just going to have to live with it and move on.”With just two days of carefully orchestrated practice sessions possible prior to Thursday’s opening night, there was ring rust on show as defending champions Maratha Arabians shelled the first of three catches in the very first over, but they were soon back in their groove thanks to UAE international Abdul Shakoor.Unlike Narine and Amir, life in the bubble is a new phenomenon for Shakoor and although he described the experience as a “difficult one”, the 32-year-old looked entirely unperturbed in smashing the first half-century in T10 cricket by a UAE player as his team clinched a last-ball win.”It was very tough,” said a beaming Shakoor post-match. “On the last day we got to practice for just one hour and it’s very difficult when you are for four days in a room to come out and do a performance like this.”For the Arabians’ Bangladesh captain Mosaddek Hossain, the result was secondary to the relief to be on the field rather than in the hotel.”It’s boring for us but it’s the new normal life and we’re adjusting to this,” he said. “When we’re staying in the room every time we’re thinking of when we’re going out to the field or for practice. When we’re coming to play, it will be very exciting for us.”

MI bring in Thakur, Rutherford in trade window ; Arjun Tendulkar to head to LSG

The MI-LSG deal will be the third trade that Thakur has been involved in over the years

Nagraj Gollapudi13-Nov-202511:57

Is time running out for Mayank Yadav at LSG?

India allrounder Shardul Thakur and West Indies’ Sherfane Rutherford have joined Mumbai Indians (MI) in the trading window ahead of IPL 2026.ESPNcricinfo has learned that MI reached an in-principle agreement with Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) to get Thakur via an all-cash trade deal, for INR 2 crore. MI acquired Rutherford from Gujarat Titans (GT) for INR 2.6 crore, the same amount for which GT bought him in the last auction.Thakur could now become a quiz question as this is the third trade involving him in the IPL; in 2017, Rising Pune Supergiant had bought him from Kings XI Punjab (now Punjab Kings), and before the 2023 season Kolkata Knight Riders procured him from Delhi Capitals. Both those trades were also all-cash deals.Thakur, who had gone unsold at the 2025 mega auction and was to join Essex in the County Championship, was picked by LSG as a replacement for Mohsin Khan at his base price of INR 2 crore. It seemed like a good investment on the part of LSG’s mentor at the time, Zaheer Khan, as he took six wickets in his first two matches in IPL 2025. Thakur, however, struggled after that, playing only ten matches and taking 13 wickets with an economy rate of 11.02.The move to MI is a homecoming of sorts for Thakur. He was a support bowler for MI from 2010-12 and was also appointed Mumbai captain in domestic cricket for this season.Rutherford is now headed to his fourth IPL side, after representing Delhi Capitals (2019), RCB (2022) and GT last season. He was also part of the MI squad in 2020 and KKR in 2024, but didn’t get a game in those seasons. He had played 13 games for GT earlier this season, for 291 runs at an average of 32.22 and strike rate of 157.29.MI set to release Arjun Tendulkar to LSGMI and LSG have also agreed on a separate trade deal involving Arjun Tendulkar, who has been playing for MI since IPL 2023. It is learnt the left-arm fast bowler, who was bought by MI for INR 30 lakh last year, has been traded to LSG. It is also learnt that MI have decided to release Tendulkar so he could possibly get more playing opportunities at LSG.Tendulkar was first bought by MI in the 2021 auction for INR 20 lakh and made his debut in the 2023 edition, when he went on to play four matches in the league. Overall, he has featured in five IPL games for three wickets at an economy rate of 9.36. In the domestic circuit he started with his T20 debut for Mumbai in early 2021 before moving to Goa before the 2022-23 season, when he made his first-class and one-day debuts.

Arsenal now eyeing another Crystal Palace star as contract talks in danger

Arsenal have now reportedly joined Liverpool in the race to sign Jean-Philippe Mateta from Crystal Palace, as contract talks continue to drag on between the striker and the South London club.

The Gunners return from the international break looking to get back to winning ways after entering it off the back of a dramatic 2-2 draw against Sunderland and it doesn’t get much bigger than the North London derby. Up against rivals Tottenham Hotspur, Mikel Arteta’s side will be aiming to prove their title credentials once again and at least maintain their four-point lead at the top.

Speaking to reporters ahead of the derby, Arteta reiterated just how big a rivalry it is, saying: “It’s just different. it’s a big city, but it’s a big rivalry; it’s a part of London that we want to conquer, and they want to do the same.

“There’s been a lot of shifts as well over the years, we’ve been more dominant and it’s just beautiful, especially when we play at home in front of our people, we know what it means to them.

“The energy that they’re going to bring, the energy that the team is going to bring in every single action, it’s just a privilege to play those kind of games. We cannot wait to get to Sunday.”

Arteta must axe Eze & unleash Arsenal star who's "very similar" to Bergkamp

With Eberechi Eze failing to catch fire at Arsenal, Mikel Arteta could seek a replacement against Spurs.

ByJack Salveson Holmes Nov 22, 2025

It marks the beginning of a crucial week for Arsenal, who have the small task of playing host to Bayern Munich just days after the Tottenham clash before then travelling to Stamford Bridge to face Chelsea. Three points from three in such a run would highlight just how serious the Gunners are about winning major honours.

In their current run, it would also be difficult for many players to turn Arsenal down and that may even be the case for Palace star Mateta.

Arsenal join race to sign Mateta

According to Caught Offside, Arsenal have now joined the race to sign Mateta from Crystal Palace in what could be their second major signing from the Eagles following their recent move for Eberechi Eze.

The Frenchman is set to become a free agent in 2027 and with contract talks yet to reach a resolution, the South London club may be forced to cash in sooner or later – allowing the Gunners to make their move.

A player who’s already been on the scoresheet at the Emirates in the past, Mateta could yet get the chance to wheel away in celebration every week in North London. Such a move would certainly be well-earned, too. From initial struggles, the 28-year-old has become one of the best strikers in the Premier League.

Minutes

959

800

Goals

6

4

Assists

0

0

Expected Goals

8.1

4.6

There’s a reason why Palace boss Oliver Glasner has dubbed his star striker “excellent” in the past and the comparison with Gyokeres shows the level that he’s operating at. If Arsenal want to ensure that their goalscoring problems are ended for good, then they should sign the Palace star.

Arsenal hold talks with £71m ex-Man Utd star after post-Old Trafford transformation

Botafogo se aproxima da contratação de Óscar Romero

MatériaMais Notícias

O Botafogo está perto de contratar o meia-atacante Óscar Romero, que está livre no mercado após passagem pelo Pendikspor, da Turquia. Aos 31 anos, o jogador deixou sua ex-equipe no último mês de fevereiro.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Fogão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso novo canal Lance! Botafogo

Segundo publicação inicial do “Ge”, o atleta paraguaio foi considerado uma oportunidade de mercado viável para encorpar o elenco. Uma das ideias da diretoria era ter uma opção para a reserva de Eduardo que pudesse assumir o protagonismo no meio-campo e revezar com o titular.

Perto do Botafogo, Óscar Romero teve passagem pelo Boca Juniors, da Argentina, antes de atuar no Pendikspor. No time xeneize em 2022 e 2023, o meia disputou 55 partidas, marcou quatro gols e distribuiu 12 assistências.

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Entre 2020 e 2021, o paraguaio jogou pelo argentino San Lorenzo, ao lado de seu irmão Ángel Romero, que hoje está no Corinthians.

Óscar Romero será o 11º reforço do Botafogo na temporada. O clube contratou o goleiro John; os zagueiros Lucas Halter, Alexander Barboza e Pablo; o lateral Damián Suárez; o meio-campista Gregore e os atacantes Jeffinho, Emerson Urso, Luiz Henrique e Savarino.

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BotafogoFutebol NacionalRomero

After Isak: Liverpool's "next Michael Owen" is destined to be the club's #9

Just when you think Liverpool have turned a corner, Arne Slot’s Reds ended up falling apart on their Premier League travels to Manchester City.

In the build-up to this showdown between two top-flight heavyweights, Liverpool had managed to collect two wins from their last two games in all competitions to ease concerns of a crisis occurring at Anfield.

However, football is a fickle old game, with the alarm bells ringing once more now, as City strolled to a 3-0 victory on their own patch.

Unfortunately, that demoralising defeat means Liverpool are already eight points behind Arsenal at the summit, as the likes of Mohamed Salah and Hugo Ekitike continue to underwhelm in attack.

The former Eintracht Frankfurt marksman was branded an “anonymous” figure by Statman Dave after failing to fire a single effort on the City goal.

Still, it’s not as if Alexander Isak is banging down the door to replace the misfiring attacker…

Inside Isak's disappointing start at Liverpool

Isak remain rooted to the substitutes bench throughout the 3-0 defeat, with the Swede hoping he can get his Liverpool career up and running after the international break.

So far, the £125m summer recruit has been sparingly used, owing to a lack of pre-season being handed to him at former employers Newcastle United, with the expensive striker yet to break his Premier League duck for Slot and Co.

It’s way too early in his Anfield career to dismiss him as an extortionate flop, though, with Isak undoubtedly a Premier League goal machine when playing at his razor-sharp best, as seen when watching his 54-goal tally for the Toon.

But, he will need to start living up to his previous billing of being the “best striker in the Premier League”, a tag handed to him by ex-Liverpool great Jamie Carragher, particularly if Ekitike continues to also fail to recapture his own goal-scoring groove.

Slot does have other options up his sleeve in this frustrating lone striker spot if needs be, with an emerging 17-year-old talent at Anfield potentially in line to be the number 9 of the future.

Liverpool are brewing a mini Alexander Isak

The number 9 jersey at Liverpool is a shirt steeped in significant history, with Ian Rush becoming synonymous with that number when scoring an all-time best on Merseyside of 346 goals.

Moreover, in more recent times, Fernando Torres took on the weighty shirt and thrived, bagging 81 strikes from 142 games.

Fernando Torres celebrates for Liverpool

Unfortunately, Isak is going down the route of being remembered more as a Darwin Nunez-style figure now donning the number nine, who mustered up a weak 40 goals in total in England.

Who will be the next legendary 9? Well, a teenager by the name of Will Wright – a young individual being heralded as the “next Michael Owen” in some circles – will be praying it could be him.

Ian Rush

654

346

Robbie Fowler

369

183

Ian St. John

424

118

Fernando Torres

142

81

Darwin Nunez

143

40

Indeed, the young striker sensation has already been branded as a “great finisher” by Reds journalist Bence Boscak when plying his trade for League Two outfit Salford City while Total Football Analysis have suggested that he has ‘many of the characteristics to be a top-level centre-forward’.

In the academy ranks last season at the Ammies, Wright fired home a stunning 40 goals, which certainly shows off a striker capable of one day reaching Isak’s Newcastle heights in the senior set-up. It’s for that reason that the aforementioned Bocask believes he is a “brilliant signing.”

He even featured in pre-season under Slot when Athletic Club travelled to Anfield, with one big chance spurned when thrust into the thick of the action.

Arsenal reportedly had their eyes on the clinical youngster before Wright decided to move to Merseyside over North London, with the hope that he could live up to his early promise and become Liverpool’s next free-flowing number nine.

Injuries have curtailed his U21 minutes as of late, with the 17-year-old now out of action until December with a knee problem.

But, when he’s back, don’t write off a sudden rise into the first team scene that’s similar to Rio Ngumoha’s explosion, with the misfiring duo of Ekitike and Isak, also kept on their toes by some fresh blood.

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It's not Mbeumo: "Unbelievable" Man Utd star looks like Amorim's new Bruno

Manchester United have kept their unbeaten run going by the skin of their teeth. The Red Devils drew 2-2 away to Tottenham Hotspur, and it took a late goal from Matthijs de Ligt to secure the point and extend the unbeaten run to five games.

Indeed, the Dutchman’s strike in the 96th minute was enough to bail his side out of yet another defeat under Ruben Amorim, although they had previously led in the game.

Bryan Mbeumo scored a header which put United 1-0 up at halftime.

However, Spurs struck back after lots of pressure in the second half. First, Mathys Tel fired home, with his effort flicking off De Ligt’s foot and into the back of Senne Lammens’ goal.

Richarlison thought he had won it in the 91st minute with a clever header, before United’s number four cancelled his goal out moments later.

It was a largely uninspiring performance from United. They played an incredibly passive game, happy to let Spurs dominate the ball. In total, Amorim’s side had just five shots, with the only two that were on target ending up in the back of the net.

Their first goalscorer, Mbeumo, continued his fine form in front of goal.

Bryan Mbeumo’s stats vs. Spurs

October’s Premier League player of the month is off the mark in November. Mbeumo has been one of the signings of the season, and now has seven goals and assists in just 12 games for the Red Devils.

His strike on Saturday lunchtime away to Spurs was one of good centre-forward play and a deft touch.

The United number 19 got in between two Lilywhites defenders, before glancing his header home into the back of the net.

That was not Mbeumo’s only positive contribution against Spurs, though. He was a constant problem for the opposition defence, having 44 touches and making three passes into the final third.

The attacker was excellent off the ball, too, and made four recoveries.

As well as the 26-year-old played against Spurs, however, there was a United player who arguably outshone him.

United’s standout player vs. Spurs

United’s draw away to Spurs was certainly frustrating. Amorim was critical of his side post-match, explaining that “we should do better, be more aggressive, feel the environment in the stadium, the three points were there.”

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

However, one player, like Mbeumo, who stood out, was Amad. It was a different role for the Ivorian from the start today, operating as the right number 10 rather than at wing-back.

However, he was his usual energetic self, posing a threat going forward and worked hard defensively.

In fact, it was the attacker’s cross from which Mbeumo scored. What a delightful ball it was, too. Amad picked the ball up just inside the Spurs’ penalty area, lifting his cross from a standing position to the back post for his teammate to guide home.

That was one of two chances he created, on an afternoon where he also played four passes into Spurs’ third.

Amad stats vs. Spurs

Stat

Number

Touches

48

Passes completed

23/32

Duels won

7

Ball recoveries

5

Passes into final third

4

Chances created

2

Assists

1

Stats from Fotmob

Amad’s excellent performance certainly stood out, with journalist Liam Canning saying it was an “unbelievable” showing from the Ivorian attacker, while lauding him as the actual man of the match.

There is certainly a case to be made that Amad is becoming Amorim’s new version of Bruno Fernandes. Often, it is the Portuguese attacker who has shouldered the creative burden at United. Yet, it has been different this season, with the captain’s three assists matched by Amad.

A reason for that could be the role United’s manager uses his skipper in. A number 10 by trade, Fernandes now plays deeper in the pivot, and with their number 16 operating high and wide at wing-back or in the pockets as a number 10. He is certainly far more involved in the final third.

This is not a bad thing for United, who have relied solely on Fernandes for too many years. But, Amad is certainly taking up more creative responsibility, and is slowly becoming their new version of Fernandes.

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'Small step forward' for Konstas but 'great opportunity' beckons for domestic batters

Australia coach Andrew McDonald said it was “too early” to judge Konstas following his 25 and 0 in Grenada

Andrew McGlashan08-Jul-20250:31

Watch – Konstas chops on for a duck

Australia coach Andrew McDonald saw small signs of encouragement from Sam Konstas in the second Test against West Indies but has indicated there will “great opportunity” for players to push their case for Ashes selection early in the domestic season and in Australia A matches.Konstas made 25 in the first innings in Grenada before following that with a duck during a brief period of batting late on the second day. He will play the final match at Sabina Park, the ground’s first day-night Test, which provides an opportunity to finish on a high and leave himself near the head of the selection queue for the home Ashes series later in the year.”Four games in, eight innings, it’s probably early for anyone to judge, really,” McDonald said of Konstas’ early Test career. “I think the challenges in Test cricket aren’t necessarily always your skill level or your technique. It’s dealing with the moments, the pressure, all the other things that externally come with that as well. He’s a player finding his feet in the environment.Related

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“[It was] a small step forward in the last game with that first innings. I thought the way he structured up his first 20-odd balls, he had the positive intent, he was moving a lot better compared to the game before where it looked like he was stuck in the middle and didn’t know whether to play a shot and it was either ultra-aggressive or ultra-defensive.”Konstas will likely feature in the four-day matches on the Australia A tour of India in late September before being available for the opening Sheffield Shield matches in early October with four rounds expected before the start of the Ashes.”There’s great opportunity in domestic cricket at the start of the season, and there always is leading into any Test series,” McDonald said. “We saw with the Border-Gavaskar Trophy last year, there was opportunity for players to put their hand up there. There’s also Australia A [against Sri Lanka A] in the Top End [Darwin] at the moment, so we’re watching that closely…so it’s really about the opportunity that presents.”First and foremost, we concentrate on what’s right here, right now. Everyone will be speculating around who can come in, what possibilities are, but we’re confident the players that we’ve got here can do the job.”Prior to the tour, McDonald said it may not be possible to draw huge relevance from this tour to the Ashes and it is a view he maintains despite it having been pace-bowler dominated rather than seeing a significant role for spin.”There’s been a lot of variable bounce and sideways movement, so it’s probably not similar to Australia,” he said. “Maybe some surfaces will be. I think Perth potentially, when it does crack a little bit, it can go up and down and a little bit sideways. But I think the first four rounds of Shield cricket will draw a better connection to the Ashes than what we’re seeing here.”What we are seeing here, though, is people getting exposed at Test level, and within that exposure, the mental challenges of Test cricket are real.”Usman Khawaja has been troubled from around the wicket•Associated PressThe continued scrutiny of the top-order was eased somewhat by Cameron Green’s half-century, but is countered by the struggles of Usman Khawaja. McDonald was keen to stress that Australia have ended as comfortable winners of both Tests. West Indies crumbled in both second innings – facing just 34.3 overs in Grenada and 33.4 in Barbados – having been on even terms after two days.”For every failure in the top-order, the middle-order’s been able to get us out of those situations and vice versa,” he said. “We’ve had times when the top-order’s prospered and the middle potentially hasn’t delivered what you’d probably expect.”Ultimately the game of cricket’s matching the bowling with the batting. At the moment we’re doing that. We’re finding ways through it. Would we like to have greater output from the top-order? There’s no doubt about that. And those players would want more runs. But they’ll come.”We’ve been able to find a way through the West Indies batting order…and they’ve been quite big victories.”McDonald added he did not foresee any changes for the final Test, which will be Mitchell Starc’s 100th, although they will assess players once in Jamaica.A decision on whether to release Marnus Labuschagne from the squad will be taken once play starts. There is an option for him to rejoin for Glamorgan in the County Championship or potentially head to Darwin for the second four-day game against Sri Lanka A which starts on July 20. However, giving him a break before the August ODI series against South Africa is also a possibility.

Cleiton defende pênalti nos acréscimos, Bragantino vence o América-MG e entra no G4 do Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

Em situações opostas na tabela, o RB Bragantino foi até a Arena Independência e venceu o América-MG por 2 a 0, na abertura da 24ª rodada do Brasileirão. Jadsom Silva, no primeiro tempo, e Lucas Evangelista, no último lance, anotaram os gols da partida. Minutos antes, Mastriani teve um pênalti defendido pelo goleiro Cleiton.

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Com a vitória, o Massa Bruta chega aos 42 pontos, ultrapassa Flamengo e Grêmio e entra no G4, ocupando o terceiro lugar na tabela. Já o Coelho estaciona nos 17 pontos e permanece na penúltima colocação, dentro da zona do rebaixamento.

+ Veja tabela e simule as rodadas do Brasileirão 2023

Cinco lances que marcaram a partida

> !COMEÇO QUENTE!Nos primeiros dez minutos de jogo, tanto América-MG quanto o Bragantino tiveram boas chances de abrir o placar. Matheus Gonçalvez chutou para fora, e a resposta do Coelho veio aos sete minutos, mas Felipe Azevedo não foi feliz na pontaria

> !MASSA BRITA NA FRENTE!A equipe de Bragança Paulista abriu o placar aos 35 minutos do primeiro tempo. Vitinho recebeu na esquerda, cortou e bateu cruzado. Matheus Cavichioli defendeu, mas deu rebote, e Jadsom aproveitou.

> !MUDANÇA DA MUDANÇA!Daniel Borges, que havia entrado no primeiro tempo na vaga de Matheus Henrique, que sentiu uma lesão muscular na coxa, deixou a partida no segundo tempo, para Everaldo. Assim, o Coelho se lançava ao ataque

> !PRINCÍPIO DE CONFUSÃO!Na metade do primeiro tempo, Benítez discutiu com Juninho Capixaba, após lance com Everaldo. árbitro Marcelo de Lima Henrique acalmou os ânimos e não distribuiu cartões.

> AÍ NÃO, MASTRIANI!Após ir ao monitor, o árbitro deu toque no braço de Matheus Fernandes e assinalou pênalti para o América, nos acréscimos da partida. Mastriani bateu no meio, Cleiton não se mexeu e defendeu a cobrança sem grandes problemas.

Como foi o primeiro tempo?

Mesmo fora de casa, o Bragantino impôs seu estilo de jogo e dificultou a saída de bola do América no campo de defesa. Com o passar do primeiro tempo, o Coelho equilibrou a partida, e ambas equipes tiveram oportunidades para abrir o placar, mas o Massa Bruta aproveitou o rebote de Cavichioli para construir a vantagem no placar.

E a etapa final?

Em busca do empate, o América-MG voltou para o segundo tempo mais ofensivo, mas pouco produziu e só teve uma chance real de gol nos últimos 45 minutos. Mesmo com a vantagem, o Bragantino seguia controlando o ritmo da partida, mas viu a vantagem em risco com o pênalti no final. Porém, Cleiton defendeu a cobrança e garantiu três pontos fundamentais para o Bragantino. No último lance, Evangelista sacramentou a vitória.

O que vem por aí?

O próximo compromisso do América-MG é na segunda-feira (25), contra o Vasco, pelo Brasileirão, na Arena Independência. Já o RB Bragantino só volta a jogar no dia 1 de outubro, contra Palmeiras, no Nabizão.

AMÉRICA-MG 0 X 2 RB BRAGANTINO
CAMPEONATO BRASILEIRO – 24ª RODADA

Local:Arena Independência, Belo Horizonte (MG)
Data e hora:19 de setembro de 2023, às 21h30 (horário de Brasília)
Árbitro:Marcelo de Lima Henrique (CE)
Assistentes:Alessandro Álvaro Rocha de Matos (BA) e Paulo de Tarso Bregalda Gussen (BA)
Árbitro de vídeo:Wagner Reway (VAR-FIFA/PB)
Público e renda:Não informado

Cartões amarelos:Everaldo (AMG); Rafael Gonçalves, Matheus Fernandes (RBB)
Cartões vermelhos:-

GOLS: Jadsom Silva(0-1, aos 35′ do 1ºT) e Lucas Evangelista (0-2, aos 55′ do 2ºT)

AMÉRICA-MG
Matheus Cavichioli; Mateus Henrique (Daniel Borges, aos 32′ do 1ºT) (Everaldo, aos 23′ do 2ºT), Éder, Ricardo Silva, Iago Maidana e Rodriguinho (Cazares, aos 14′ do 2ºT); Breno (Rodrigo Varanda, aos 14′ do 2ºT), Juninho e Martínez; Felipe Azevedo (Benítez, aos 23′ do 2ºT) e Mastriani.Técnico:Fábian Bustos

RB BRAGANTINO
Cleiton; Hurtado, Lucas Rafael, Léo Realpe e Juninho Capixaba; Jadsom (Ramires, aos 15′ do 2ºT), Matheus Fernandes e Lucas Evangelista; Matheus Gonçalves (Laquintana, aos 21′ do 2ºT), Vitinho (Luan Cândido, aos 30′ do 2ºT) e Alerrandro (Thiago Borbas, aos 21′ do 2ºT).Técnico:Pedro Caixinha

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