Amy Jones finds her spark for the season after rollercoaster England winter

England wicketkeeper has been integral in run to Finals Day, and still keen to improve

Andrew Miller11-Jun-2022It didn’t take long for Amy Jones to offload the emotions of a long and gruelling winter, and get back to business for the 2022 season. England’s wicketkeeper is currently the leading run-scorer in the Charlotte Edwards Cup with 245 runs at 40.83, helping to hoist Central Sparks into Saturday’s semi-final showdown with South East Stars at Wantage Road.It can’t have been easy for any of England’s players to take stock of a mega tour of the Antipodes, encompassing a multi-format Ashes series and the heartache of defeat in the World Cup final in Christchurch. But Jones’ performances since her return to action are proof of her determination to get straight back onto the bandwagon, at what remains an exciting juncture for the women’s game.”It was a big winter, quite a rollercoaster,” Jones tells ESPNcricinfo. “At times I felt like I was ageing quite quickly! But it has been great to step away for a bit of a break, see friends and family, and then come back to an English summer feeling really refreshed, and looking forward to hopefully a normal season. It’s been good fun to get back with the Sparks. It’s nice to just get back with the girls and get stuck in.”Jones’ break may have been brief compared with the months of touring that preceded it, but it was an eventful one nonetheless, encompassing a whistlestop tour of Chamonix, Lake Como and Paris (“We had a few trips cancelled last year, so we made sure we rolled several trips into one”) and then, as if to underline that sense of new beginnings, the social event of the year – the long-delayed wedding of her England team-mates Nat Sciver and Katherine Brunt.Related

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“That was a really, really special day,” says Jones, who was maid of honour, and who had also been present in the team bubble in Derby in September 2020, when the team had laid on a replacement ceremony in the midst of the Covid lockdown. “I don’t think it could have gone better. It was all just really, really fun, and great to see those two celebrate their big day. It was a long, long time waiting but yeah, it didn’t disappoint. It was an incredible day.”Jones had the best seat in the house during Sciver’s other most notable moment of the year – albeit temporarily, as the pair shared a 43-run stand for the fourth wicket in the World Cup final, as England briefly kept alive their hopes of defending their title against the runaway favourites, Australia. In the end, they fell short by 71 runs, but not before Sciver had amassed an outstanding unbeaten 148 from 121 balls – to go along with the unbeaten 109 she had made against the same opponents in their tournament opener.”She was incredible, wasn’t she? To get a hundred in a final is a great achievement anyway, but two hundreds in the last two games against the best in the world in Australia, I think just shows the class that she is. It’s a shame she didn’t get the support in the final. But it was an incredible innings.”Thanks to that performance, England were able to surrender their title with pride – a prospect that hadn’t seemed quite so likely when they slumped to a trio of defeats against Australia, West Indies and South Africa in their opening games of the tournament. Each of the matches was a cliffhanger – defeats by 12 runs, seven runs and three wickets respectively – but it was a setback that tested the team’s mettle to the limit, and demanded that they make no further slip-ups. Jones is proud of the way the team responded to adversity.Nat Sciver and Amy Jones celebrate a wicket during England’s World Cup campaign•ICC via Getty Images”At one stage we were looking like we were definitely going home early,” she says. “But each of those losses went down to the last over, so they were quite draining games on the back of a big Ashes series as well.”So it was a lot to keep getting up for each game, and still keep confidence as high as possible within the group, so it was definitely a big achievement in the end to just make the final, to be honest. That isn’t the mindset we want as a team, but you’ve got to adapt to the different situations you find yourself in. and that one was particularly challenging.”But the way the team came together, and just really looked after each other as people, was a big factor in us turning it around, and getting the wins when we needed them, up until the final. As a group, we are quite proud of how we stuck together and managed to turn it around.”There is a sense, however, that the World Cup marks the end of an era. Anya Shrubsole, the hero of the 2017 final victory, has already retired, and Jones acknowledges that a refreshing of the team is inevitable in the lead-up to the next tournament in 2025 – especially now that the impact of the ECB’s new regional contracts is beginning to expand the pool of players whose professional standards are able to match those of the players they may eventually replace.”The 50-over World Cup comes around every four years, so it does feel a bit like an end of an era,” Jones says. “You’ve seen some retirements from different countries as well, but it’s great to be able to play a big part at regional level this year, and see just how far all the girls have come within the space of a year of their contracts. It’s great that that’s paying off, and hopefully we’ll see more and more contracts as the years go by.””All the contracted girls at the Sparks are just so passionate about this opportunity. A lot of them have trained for years, outside of working hours. And now they can finally put everything into their cricket and it’s great that we’re seeing really quick improvements as well, with lots of girls challenging for spaces higher up, which is great. That’s what every team needs, in terms of England, pressure for places and competition. I think it’s brilliant.”Jones is days shy of her 29th birthday, and with 135 international appearances across all three formats, she has long since stepped out of the long shadow of Sarah Taylor to become England’s premier wicketkeeper. But she knows she needs to stay on her toes in the prime of her career, not least with such a glut of talented spinners coming through the ranks to test her mettle when standing up to the stumps.At the age of 23, Sophie Ecclestone has already established herself as the No.1 spinner in the world, while the offspinner Charlie Dean, 21, was England’s break-out star at the World Cup. Then there’s Sarah Glenn, Jones’ Sparks’ team-mate, a hugely talented legspinning allrounder who, aged 22, is set to be a central figure in the England team for years to come too.”The good thing about those three is they are all so different,” Jones says. “Glenny and Soph are two very tall bowlers but Glenny’s very skiddy, while Soph can get some bounce, which makes it exciting for me. I see a lot of Glenny at Sparks but it’s important for me to keep keeping to them all to get to know their different variations.”I absolutely love having the gloves, and I’m always trying to improve,” Jones adds, while crediting Michael Bates, the former Hampshire and Somerset keeper, for keeping her on her toes. “Having Batesy around has been key to that really. We gel really well and if I have something that’s slightly off, he’ll know what it is.”That relationship is really important for me and I’m just going to keep trying to improve. The standard of wicketkeeping across the country is pretty good now. It’s great to see, throughout the regions and the Hundred, the girls doing so well.”

From 86,000 to zero – the week Covid-19 changed cricket

As the game’s set to resume, here’s a look back at how cricket went from a full MCG to a juddering halt

Andrew McGlashan06-Jul-2020Sunday, March 8The Melbourne Cricket Ground. One of the most iconic stadiums in the world and there are more than 86,000 inside for an historic occasion. Alyssa Healy flays the India attack, Meg Lanning lifts the trophy and Katy Perry belts out her greatest hits cricket is as vibrant as you could wish.Monday, March 9When the Australians gather for a celebration with fans at Federation Square in the centre of Melbourne, on a balmy early-autumn day, amid the interviews and the afterglow of a magnificent night, there are conversations about when the squad for the South Africa tour will be named with the team due to fly out at the end of the week.That night, a small group of us who have worked together on the tournament meet on a rooftop bar to farewell each other and a memorable few weeks of cricket. To colleagues passing through and those who had flown from overseas to help put on the competition, we send each other off with: “Look forward to doing it again in October.”

As if to emphasise how rapidly things are changing (and how fortunate it was that the World Cup final went ahead) it emerges a person in the crowd at the MCG has tested positive for Covid-19. The mood is starting to shift significantly

Tuesday, March 10The cricket cycle is still non-stop and the next day it’s back on a plane to Sydney ahead of the end-of-season men’s ODIs between Australia and New Zealand. An after-the-Lord-Mayor’s-show event if ever there was one, but still international cricket. Australia are looking to bounce back from series defeats in India and South Africa, while New Zealand want to atone for the Test-series drubbing a couple of months earlier. Covid-19 is certainly a talking point, but it’s still game on.Thursday, March 12It’s the day before the opening ODI. As if to emphasise how rapidly things are changing (and how fortunate it was that the World Cup final went ahead) it emerges a person in the crowd at the MCG has tested positive for Covid-19. The mood is starting to shift significantly.As pre-match press conferences with Aaron Finch and Kane Williamson are done outside, they both speak about the increasing number of sports events being impacted. The NBA has just been suspended, the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne is on the brink of being cancelled, the IPL has been thrown into doubt as the Indian government introduces visa restrictions and the PSL announces it is going behind closed doors. There is a growing feeling of the situation moving quickly. “It would be weird to play in an empty stadium,” Finch says.Cricket Australia has been monitoring the global situation for some weeks and are gathering information on almost an hourly basis. Prime Minister Scott Morrison gives a televised national address about the evolving crisis.Social distancing done right, courtesy Yabba•AFPFriday, March 13, 9amCA announces that the series – two games in Sydney and one in Hobart – will be played to empty grounds. The women’s tour to South Africa is called off. “A lot of things have changed since last Sunday,” Kevin Roberts, the Cricket Australia CEO, says when asked about the World Cup final. The board has acted in advance of the official government measures on gatherings; those would develop during the day.12pm Walking across Moore Park a few hours before the match. Normally a bustling thoroughfare on game day, it is close to deserted. A forlorn family from New Zealand, who have flown over for the two matches in three days at the SCG, still make the journey to the ground knowing they will get no further than the gates.Inside, there are already signs of the hasty precautions being taken, including individually wrapped food and the players kept at a distance from other groups of people in the ground. However, the moment which reinforces that things are escalating quickly is when Kane Richardson is tested for Covid-19 after reporting a slightly sore throat. It is highly precautionary, given that the team has just returned on a long-haul flight from South Africa, and will later come back negative. But there is nothing normal about this day.2.00pm When Williamson and Finch go out for the toss the interviews are conducted via Spidercam to reduce the number of people huddled around the pitch. Then the teams walk out to near silence. At least Yabba, sitting in his spot in the Victor Trumper stand which replaced The Hill where he made his name, ensures there is one seat taken.

The doors remain locked for now, but 117 days after Australia and New Zealand walked off the SCG, international cricket will return.

2.30pm As the game starts, it feels like the ground rattles with its emptiness. The encouragement from the two dugouts echoes. It takes New Zealand a while to claim their first wicket, but first-bumps and ankle taps are the order of the day, although such is the newness of all this that a few stray high-fives are around. At one stage, there is the sight of international cricketers hauling themselves over the advertising boards to go and search for a ball that has been struck for six.9.30pm Pat Cummins pouches a top edge off Trent Boult to secure a 71-run victory. As the players walk off there are no handshakes. But despite the weirdness of the day there has still been chat about the cricket coming up, including the T20Is set to take place in New Zealand at the end of the month.10.00pm Both teams cancel their practice sessions for the next day, but at the post-match press conferences – done with reporters standing at a distance from the players – there is discussion about what can be learnt for the second game that is to be played two days later. Ish Sodhi talks about bowling on a wearing pitch and Mitchell Marsh reflects on his Man of the Match display. Tom Latham does an embargoed press conference as Sunday’s game will be his 100th ODI.As everyone heads home news from around the cricket world is coming in: India-South Africa is going behind closed doors and England’s tour of Sri Lanka has been called off.KL Rahul is taking all precautions at the Lucknow airport amid the COVID-19 pandemic•UPCASaturday, March 14In Sydney, it is events taking place across the Tasman that quickly force the hand of everyone. In the afternoon New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announces that anyone coming into the country – including New Zealanders – will need to self isolate for 14 days. The players make a hasty retreat to the airport to get themselves home. Lockie Ferguson has to wait an extra day after needing a Covid test for a mild sore throat.Tuesday, March 17More tour cancellations have rolled in while domestic seasons have also been curtailed. The PSL, which was trying to complete its finals, is the last domino to fall as top-level cricket comes to a juddering halt.Monday, July 6Around the globe, sport has come back to life over the last couple of months. The England-West Indies Test series is not the first competitive cricket back but it is by far the biggest leap for the game and all eyes will be on it. The doors remain locked for now, but 117 days after Australia and New Zealand walked off the SCG, international cricket will return.

Sem técnico definitivo, Botafogo estreia na Libertadores com confiança no interino

MatériaMais Notícias

Poucas horas antes de estrear na fase de grupos da Libertadores de 2024, o Botafogo ainda não anunciou seu técnico para a temporada e segue com o interino Fábio Matias.

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

O nome mais cotado para assumir o time alvinegro é o português Arthur Jorge, de 52 anos, que atualmente comanda o Braga, de Portugal. O técnico confirmou que está tudo firmado com o Glorioso e a partida contra o Portimonense, nesta segunda-feira (1), foi provavelmente a sua última à frente do time português.

— A situação é muito clara. Há um acordo entre os clubes para poder contar com os meus serviços com o Botafogo, coisa que só faria depois desse jogo porque era meu compromisso fazer essa partida, para tentar ganhar. O acordo está assinado entre os clubes e, agora, será analisado por mim, porque também me agrada. É muito provável que hoje tenha feito meu último jogo pelo Sporting Braga — disse o treinador.

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CTA = Com apenas R$30 no Lance! Betting, você fatura mais de R$85 se J. Santos marcar pelo menos um gol sobre o Junior!

Vivendo seus últimos dias como interino, o auxiliar fixo do Botafogo, Fábio Matias, se diz contente com o trabalho realizado até aqui, e revela conversa positiva com Textor.

— Todas as situações relacionadas a quem virá a melhor pessoa para responder é o John, é concentrado tudo nele. Sou funcionário do Botafogo, não de treinador. Fiz o meu melhor para o Botafogo, fazemos tudo pelo clube. Sou funcionário do clube, sou staff permanente. Em situações de crise, você tem o permanente para sustentar. Tem quarta-feira, você tem que entregar bem. Posteriormente, você tem que perguntar para o John. Se eu elogiar mais, vão achar que é conveniência (risos). Tem que deixar tudo organizado, e fizemos isso. Cabe dizer ao John como as coisas vão funcionar daqui para frente — Disse o treinador.

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— John está muito feliz do que está sendo feito, o Alessandro (Brito, head scout) é nosso interlocutor principal nas conversas. John tem confiança. Se ele não tivesse confiança, não ficaríamos tanto tempo à frente. Sem sombra de dúvidas, é um voto de confiança — completou.

Com início arrasador, Fábio Matias tem 8 vitórias e 1 empate no comando da equipe. O interino conquistou a Taça Rio, no último domingo (31), derrotando o Boavista-RJ, e empatou apenas com o RB Bragantino fora de casa, garantindo a classificação para a fase de grupos da Libertadores. Porém, Fábio Matias nega que há uma sensação de “dever cumprido”.

— O trabalho continua, independente de estar à frente como treinador. Nunca é dever cumprido, nossa obrigação é entregar da melhor forma. Tenho que dar suporte para as pessoas que estão vindo. É um início bom com todos os percalços que tivemos. Olha quantos meninos jogaram, isso vale muito. O lateral-esquerdo que jogou hoje estava na Dallas Cup, tiramos ele de lá e ele jogou, olha quanto ganho. Dever cumprido é o que você entrega e larga, eu não sou assim. Minha forma de ser é ajudar. Hoje temos dois profissionais da base, Rafael e Lucas. Além de formar jogadores, estamos formando profissionais dentro do clube para que as pessoas reconheçam o DNA do clube. O Botafogo está fazendo isso — encerrou o treinador.

Ex-jogadores questionam John Textor após acusações: ‘Tem obrigação de provar’

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Vasco enfrenta o Nova Iguaçu em condições de voltar a uma final após quatro anos

MatériaMais Notícias

Vasco e Nova Iguaçu batalham no Maracanã pela última vaga para a final do Campeonato Carioca. A Laranja da Baixada tem a vantagem do empate e o Cruz-Maltino precisa vencer se quiser voltar disputar uma decisão.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Gigante agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Vasco

Por falar em final, o Vasco não chega para uma disputa de título há quatro anos. A última vez, o Cruz-Maltino enfrentou o Flamengo, em 2019, e acabou sendo derrotado nos dois jogos.

Chegar a uma final de Campeonato Carioca não representa só uma quebra de tabu em São Januário. Isso porque seria a primeira decisão desde que a 777 Partners assumiu o futebol do Vasco.

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Em 2022, ano da compra de 70% da SAF pela 777 Partners, o Vasco já disputava a Série B do Campeonato Brasileiro. Já em 2023, o Cruz-Maltino foi eliminado na semifinal do Campeonato Carioca e na segunda fase da Copa do Brasil.

O confronto entre Vasco e Nova Iguaçu será às 16h deste domingo (17). A expectativa é de Maracanã lotado, com mais de 60 mil vascaínos, para apoiar o Cruz-Maltino.

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Patrick Boyland heaps praise on “brilliant” Everton star who gave Barry first goal

The Athletic’s Patrick Boyland was full of praise for one Everton star, who played a pivotal part in Thierno Barry’s first goal for the club against Nottingham Forest.

Everton ease past Nottingham Forest

After battling to beat Bournemouth in midweek, Everton had the chance to move up to fifth in the Premier League with victory over Nottingham Forest and David Moyes’ side duly obliged. The Toffees had the perfect afternoon against former manager Sean Dyche, with Barry capping off a fine afternoon with his first goal since arriving for £27m in the summer.

It’s been some time coming for the summer signing, who has smashed the woodwork, had VAR intervene and everything in between before finally getting the chance to wheel away in celebration at the Hill Dickinson Stadium.

It’s Moyes who should take plenty of credit. After all, it is the veteran manager who decided to stick with his goal-less forward, only to reap the rewards 90 minutes later.

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ByTom Cunningham Dec 5, 2025

Aside from the forward’s first goal for the club, it was a fine display from the Toffees all round. The hosts wasted no time before getting going, with Nikola Milenkovic’s own goal handing them the lead as early as the second minute.

It was then Everton’s to lose and Barry’s effort just before the break all but put them out of sight, before Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall added a third in the 81st minute.

For all their goalscorers, however, it was another player who received the praise of Boyland for the role he played in Everton’s second goal before the break. The Athletic reporter dubbed Iliman Ndiaye “brilliant” in the build-up as the Frenchman continued his role as the Toffees’ talisman.

Boyland heaps praise on "brilliant" Ndiaye

Boyland watched on as Everton struck Nottingham Forest on the counter on the brink of half-time, praising Ndiaye as “brilliant” when he raced past the halfway line before finding goalscorer Barry.

Barry will steal the headlines, but Ndiaye deserves plenty of credit. He has been Everton’s main man since arriving last season and has more than played his part to take Moyes’ side into the top five, for the time being at least.

By the time that the final whistle sounded against Forest, the winger had one assist to his name and had even completed 13 defensive contributions – summing up his impact at both ends.

If those at the Hill Dickinson Stadium are to secure a shock European place this season, then Ndiaye’s role will be more important than ever.

Everton launch enquiry to sign "superb" £40m South American forward for Moyes

Junior Caminero Left a Young Fan in Awe With a Simple Gesture of Kindness

It only takes a moment to make someone’s day.

That’s a fact Tampa Bay Rays infielder Junior Caminero is well aware of, and seems willing to live by, as seen in a video recently put out by MLB.

The video shows Caminero interacting with a young fan before the team’s game against the Kansas City Royals. While the fan seemed already pretty thrilled about taking a photo with the up-and-coming star, his face absolutely lit up with awe as Caminero offered him his bat.

Watch that delightful moment below.

Good work Junior, you just made a fan for life.

Moments like this are why we love baseball.

Georgia Wareham stars as Superchargers douse Fire

Clinical home performance sees Fire succumb to their heaviest defeat of the women’s competition

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay 07-Aug-2025

Georgia Wareham starred with bat and ball•Getty Images

Northern Superchargers 141 for 4 (Armitage 34*, Wareham 29*, Mathews 2-18) beat Welsh Fire 94 (Beaumont 36, Wareham 2-14) by 47 runsNorthern Superchargers got their campaign in The Hundred off to the perfect start with a comprehensive win over Welsh Fire at Headingley.Under the new leadership of former England Women’s Head Coach Lisa Keightley, Superchargers batted first and made 141 for 4. In reply, Tammy Beaumont’s Welsh Fire were bowled out for just 94, much to the delight of the 7,208 Superchargers fans in attendance.The team in purple have kept all three of their Australian overseas stars, and there were runs for both Annabel Sutherland (28) and Georgia Wareham (29*), but it was captain Hollie Armitage who top-scored, with an unbeaten 34.Welsh Fire have enjoyed two successful seasons in The Hundred, with visits to The Eliminator and The Final to their name across the last two years, and much of their success has been down to their batting – but when Sophia Dunkley and Hayley Matthews found themselves back in the pavilion with the score still in single figures, they faced an uphill task.Beaumont and Georgia Elwiss tried to undo the damage but the home side possess a balanced attack and they utilised it well, chipping away throughout Fire’s reply to maintain control at all times. It was in the end an easy win, spinners Linsey Smith and Wareham snaffling two wickets apiece, with a couple also for Grace Ballinger.Welsh Fire will have the opportunity to turn it around very quickly, hosting their first game in Cardiff on Saturday. For Superchargers it’s a visit to Trent Rockets on Sunday, where they’ll look to go two from two.Meerkat Match Hero Wareham said: “It felt like a really good hit out for the girls, it felt like we were really clinical in all facets which showed up on the scoreboard for us.”I think [when batting with Hollie Armitage] it was just about being really calm at the time, and knowing that there were actually quite a few balls left. It’s always pretty calm out there with Hollie, she keeps things pretty level. As a team we’re talking about taking the game on, and being brave through different phases of the game, which I think all the batters did really well today.”With the ball, we wanted to keep the stumps in play as much as we possibly could. The change of pace worked really well for Welsh Fire so we took that into play for us, as well, and as it showed we hit the stumps as often as we could.”

Not Saka: Arteta must unleash new Henry-type player in Arsenal "superstar"

Arsenal know their quality, and they know that they have it within them to beat Crystal Palace on Sunday afternoon and keep the hype train moving forward.

The Premier League pace-setters just feel a bit special this year, don’t they? So balanced, so graceful, so dangerous. Defensively, Mikel Arteta’s Gunners are a force to be reckoned with, an unbreakable wall, conceding so few chances.

Palace are an entertaining side, though, and they know how to score a goal. Though Oliver Glasner’s Eagles haven’t scored an overload of goals so far this season, they have created more xG (expected goals) than any other side in the Premier League.

Premier League 25/26 – xG Leaders

Club

Goals scored

xG

Crystal Palace

12

17.1

Man United

15

16.1

Liverpool

16

15.7

Man City

17

14.4

Arsenal

15

13.6

Data via FBref

The Emirates will expect three points, nonetheless. However, injuries, ever the bane of Arteta’s progress, could potentially knock the backline out of kilter.

Arsenal team news

The big concern. Gabriel Magalhaes faces a fight to be fit for the weekend clash, having left the pitch with a concern as Arsenal thrashed Atletico Madrid 4-0 in the Champions League on Tuesday night. The Brazilian centre-back scored one and assisted another.

Should Gabriel be sidelined, the likes of Piero Hincapie and Cristhian Mosquera will be ready to dovetail into an iron-clad defensive line and stave off the Palace threat.

Much has been made of Arsenal’s attacking quality this season. ‘Boring’ is what Arteta’s frontline have been called. This is nonsense, and the emphatic win over Atletico emphasises the deadly array of talent the manager has at his disposal.

In particular, this could be a big match for Bukayo Saka, who has not yet hit his prolific stride this season, three goals from nine matches in all competitions, but remains the focal point for his side, creating 2.3 chances and winning 6.3 duels per Premier League game, as per Sofascore.

However, the England international can’t do it alone. Viktor Gyokeres must carry his continental form back onto the domestic scene, while Gabriel Martinelli will fancy his chances of kicking on after coolly converting in midweek.

But Martinelli may not start this one, with another Thierry Henry-esque Arsenal talent gunning for his place.

Arteta must unleash Arsenal's new Thierry Henry

Henry is one of the greatest players in Premier League history, and possibly the finest to ever wear an Arsenal shirt. Saka could retire with a similar reputation in north London, based on the 23-year-old’s early-career exploits, but there’s another who could start to perform with shades of the long-retired Frenchman.

And that starts this weekend, against Crystal Palace.

For Eberechi Eze, it’s a big one. The silky forward takes on the club who herald him as a hero, with Arsenal having signed the Three Lions star from Crystal Palace for £67m this summer, completing their frontline.

Aged 27, Eze is one of the finest wingers in the country, effortlessly good on the ball. His dribbling ability is a thing to behold, and he is a talented playmaker besides.

He is not, it’s worth stressing, the same kind of player as Henry, whose goalscoring prowess was simply incredible, far beyond the grasp of all but a select few Premier League players across the past three decades.

But there are similarities to be pulled. In 1999, Henry joined the London club from Juventus in a club-record deal. He was a World Cup winner, linking up with compatriots Patrick Vieira and Emmanuel Petit.

Highly regarded, it took Henry a while to find his feet in front of goal. Indeed, he went seven matches without a maiden strike in England’s top flight. In spite of this, he ended the campaign with 26 goals and 12 assists across all competitions, 17 goals in the Premier League.

And it’s not like Eze doesn’t know how to score. Last season, for Palace, he posted 14 goals and 11 assists across all competitions, proving the difference as Oliver Glasner’s project took off the ground in the closing months.

Moreover, his talismanic performances for Palace last year, notching the winner against Manchester City in the FA Cup final, showcase his big-game aura, something Henry had in bucketloads during his time at the Emirates.

Eze loves Crystal Palace dearly, but that will not stop him from striking against the Selhurst Park side, and Arteta might want to capture that potential on Sunday afternoon.

Eze might not have quite the same attacking repertoire as Henry, but he’s a fleet-footed, show-stopping wide forward, with analyst Ben Mattinson going as far as to hail him as a “superstar”.

But, there’s no denying he needs to start playing a little more prolifically, with just one goal and three assists to his name across all competitions in an Arsenal shirt. Eze has played 12 times under Arteta’s wing.

Perhaps he will look to take a leaf from Henry’s book in that regard, and marry his exceptional physical and technical qualities with a sharpness in the final third.

It will come. Eze’s level of talent is unquestionable, and he has proven across a number of years his quality and ability to provide clinical results in the Premier League.

And what better way to kick that off than against his former club, who herald him as a hero but may be forced to taste their legend’s ability as Arteta and Arsenal look to take another stride toward that elusive Premier League trophy.

Bergkamp 2.0: Arsenal's "magic" star can turn Gyokeres into the new Henry

Could Arsenal’s “magic player” alongside Viktor Gyökeres replicate the club’s best-ever attacking partnership of Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp?

ByBen Gray Oct 25, 2025

Liverpool now preparing move to sign Guehi alternative in PSG star compared to Gabriel

With a growing centre-back problem, Liverpool are now reportedly preparing a 2026 move to sign a defender worth over £55m, and he’s been compared to star Arsenal colossus Gabriel.

Liverpool's centre-back problem

The Reds entered the current campaign with a plethora of attacking options.

Arne Slot has been spoiled for choice, with Hugo Ekitiké, record signing Alexander Isak, Mohamed Salah, Cody Gakpo, Florian Wirtz and others all vying for a starting place. But the same can’t be said for his back four.

The Dutchman has already been forced to play Dominik Szoboszlai at right-back, in a decision that has unexpectedly proven effective, and may yet have to turn towards an auxiliary centre-back.

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After Giovanni Leoni’s season-ending injury, Liverpool have just three senior centre-backs to turn to. One of them is Joe Gomez, who Slot just snubbed to play Ryan Gravenberch in the role against Chelsea when Konate was forced off through injury. So, to put it simply, the Reds may be in the midst of another defensive crisis.

Of course, the arrival of Marc Guehi was meant to solve that problem, until Crystal Palace pulled the plug on his Anfield switch in the final hours of the summer transfer window.

Now, with the race wide open for his signature, and Guehi leaning towards Real Madrid, Liverpool may be forced to turn towards other options.

This has already seen a number of names emerge as potential candidates ahead of next summer, when Konate is still scheduled to leave as a free agent with his contract yet to be sorted.

It’s a problem that Richard Hughes must solve and the arrival of one Paris Saint-Germain star would do exactly that in 2026.

Liverpool preparing Pacho move

According to reports in Spain, Liverpool are now preparing a move to sign Willian Pacho from PSG in 2026, if they fail to sign Guehi, with Hughes and the Merseysiders recruitment team viewing Luis Enrique’s man as an alternative.

The central defender is valued at €65m (£57m) and is one of the most impressive rising stars in his position as a Champions League winner at just 23-years-old.

Whether he’s the main man in PSG’s backline is another question, however. The Ecuador international has started just three of his side’s seven Ligue 1 games so far this season, but both of their Champions League clashes against Atalanta and Barcelona in a mixed start to the campaign.

Minutes

2,132

2,560

Progressive Passes

53

115

Tackles Won

32

26

Ball Recoveries

119

98

When compared to Konate last season, Pacho’s work out of possession stands out the most. Although he must work on progressing play in possession, the South American’s ball recovery rate would hand Liverpool another imperious figure next to Virgil van Dijk next year.

Also dubbed the “baby Gabriel” by analyst Ben Mattinson, PSG’s utility man is certainly someone with a lot of fans in European football.

Whether Liverpool can lure him away from the European champions remains to be seen, however.

Tottenham offered Bissouma to rivals twice in attempted swap for Brazilian

Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Yves Bissouma is facing a very uncertain future under Thomas Frank, following a less-than ideal start to the Dane’s tenure in charge.

Off the field, ex-chairman Daniel Levy has dominated headlines, after the polarising official was pushed to resign from his post after 24 years, with the Lewis family ushering in a new era at Spurs.

ENIC are reportedly planning to pump more cash into the club, and this windfall could be reinvested into their transfer activity in a bid to get Tottenham competing with the Premier League six for major silverware (Sky Sports).

While supporters will be wary of that old saying ‘the grass isn’t always greener’, it is a very intriguing time for the Lilywhites, but it is unlikely Bissouma will be along for the ride long-term.

The Mali international is out of contract next summer and Frank has already penalised the player for persistent lateness to training, which resulted in Bissouma missing out on a place in Tottenham’s 22-man Champions League squad.

Tottenham’s Champions League fixtures – League phase

Date

Villarreal (home)

September 16

Bodo/Glimt (away)

September 30

Monaco (away)

October 22

FC Copenhagen (home)

November 4

PSG (away)

November 26

Slavia Prague (home)

December 9

Borussia Dortmund (home)

January 20

Eintracht Frankfurt (away)

January 28

He was also left out of the side which travelled to face PSG in the UEFA Super Cup last month, with Bissouma yet to make a single competitive appearance under Frank.

The transfer windows in Turkey, Mexico, Portugal and Saudi Arabia remain open for the time being, giving Spurs a chance to offload the £100,000-per-week ace even after the UK deadline on September 1.

Tottenham are open to offers for Bissouma, according to Sky’s Michael Bridge, but Fabrizio Romano says things have gone quiet when it comes to a potential exit for the 29-year-old and Frank’s side are not actively pushing to get rid.

Given the hectic fixture schedule awaiting Spurs, perhaps Frank is planning to keep Bissouma around in case of emergency as a squad player in the Premier League, with the ex-Brighton star fighting his way back to full fitness right now after sustaining an injury.

Bissouma held talks to join Galatasaray in the summer and fellow Süper Lig side Fenerbache also held an interest, but according to West Ham insider Claret & Hugh, Tottenham’s east London rivals were offered the chance to sign him too.

Tottenham offered Yves Bissouma to West Ham twice in a swap deal for Lucas Paqueta

C&H report, via an insider at West Ham, that Tottenham floated Bissouma towards the London Stadium on two separate occasions, with Spurs also proposing a straight loan swap deal for Brazil international Lucas Paqueta.

Before they sealed a £52 million deal for Xavi Simons from RB Leipzig, Spurs were actively pursuing a playmaker — seeing two very advanced moves for Morgan Gibbs-White and Eberechi Eze fall through in very dramatic fashion.

Paqueta was being targeted by Tottenham as an alternative to the duo, but the former Lyon star ended up staying with Graham Potter.

Spurs’ attempts to agree a swap deal involving Paqueta and Bissouma apparently had “no chance”.

The 28-year-old is now attempting to recapture the form he displayed from his early Hammers days, before Paqueta was embroiled in a spot-fixing scandal which derailed his career.

He would’ve been an intriguing signing for Spurs and only the third player to join them from West Ham in 14 years, after Scott Parker and Mohammed Kudus, but Simons’ sky-high potential has the fanbase very excited ahead of the Dutchman’s imminent debut.

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