Catching in focus as Women's T20 World Cup enters the ring of fire

Nearly 70% of the matches at the tournament will be played under lights, and one venue will pose a specific challenge

Vishal Dikshit03-Oct-2024Megan Schutt, Lea Tahuhu and Fran Jonas in the recent T20Is in Australia, Laura Wolvaardt in the recent T20Is in Multan. S Sajana at short third in the opening game of WPL 2024. Karishma Ramharack at midwicket in the WCPL 2024 opener.Young or experienced, in the 30-yard circle or in the deep, and in any part of the world, the common thread that binds all these names is that all of them put down fairly straightforward catches that went high into the night sky when the floodlights were on. And all these players – picked randomly from a large sample size – will feature in the Women’s T20 World Cup starting October 3.The lights are going to be flicked on in the UAE for that tournament, in which 13 of the 20 league games will start at 6pm local time, and if we include the three knockout games also slotted for 6pm, it will be 16 games out of 23, nearly 70%, to be played entirely under lights. The challenge is that if your eyes aren’t used to following the white ball against the night sky with the lights blinding your vision at times, you won’t be very well equipped to track the ball going up or coming down.ESPNcricinfo LtdAnd even though more and more women’s T20s are being played under lights these days, day-night and night games are less common than in the men’s game. Since the start of 2021 (games for which ESPNcricinfo has data), close to 41% (2046 out of 5019) of men’s T20s have been played partially or completely under lights (day-night or night games) but the corresponding number for women’s T20s is just 18% (319 out of 1779). On average, just one out of five women’s T20s have used floodlights in this period.The encouraging sign is that over 51% (54 of 105) of women’s T20Is between Full Member teams since the last Women’s T20 World Cup (in 2023) have been day-night or night games, which is close to the men’s figure of 57.5% (80 of 139). But the discouraging figure is that since the start of 2021, women have dropped more catches (25.2%) compared to men (17.75%), with similar numbers even in T20 internationals.Related

Sloppy fielding and low energy deflate England's campaign

'It can be tough to do both skills full out' but Kapp will do it for South Africa

FAQs: The first ever women's T20 World Cup at a neutral venue

Young ones to watch at the Women's T20 World Cup

Could this be the closest-ever Women's T20 World Cup?

Hayley Matthews, the West Indies captain and two-time WCPL champion for Barbados Royals, had said in August that the first few games of this year’s WCPL (all played under lights) saw “quite a bit [of] dropped catches from all the teams” because “we haven’t played under lights in a really long time.” When a fair few such chances slipped through in India’s Women’s Premier League (WPL) this year, UP Warriorz coach Jon Lewis, who also coaches England Women, had said even though it was primarily the Indian domestic players responsible for the fielding lapses, it was “a little bit of lack of experience for a lot of players especially under the lights.”A lot of the players – domestic or international – were also not used to the grounds they were playing at in Delhi and Bengaluru in the WPL, and unfamiliar with the dimensions and the deep pockets. “Understanding the angles” takes you some time to get used to as well, as former India quick and Mumbai Indians bowling coach and mentor Jhulan Goswami said.Unfamiliarity with the grounds in the UAE for the T20 World Cup could be another obstacle for at least half of the ten participating teams because Australia, India, England and West Indies have never played T20Is in that country, and the last T20Is played by South Africa, New Zealand and Pakistan there were at least seven years ago.Throw in balls going high off top-edges with the floodlights on, and it won’t be easy.”I think whether women or men, if you’re playing under lights, it is a completely different story altogether, only because the background from which the ball comes is different,” Malolan Rangarajan, part of the RCB coaching staff in the IPL and WPL, and head coach of St Kitts and Nevis Patriots in the CPL, tells ESPNcricinfo. “When you’re talking about catches being dropped, there’s something called depth perception. When the sky is blue or white, the depth perception is completely different to when the sky is dark and black.”Even though the ball is in contrast to the colour of the sky, the most important thing for a fielder to understand is how high the ball is and at what speed it is coming down [at]. Since it is a darker colour [at night], one needs to get used to it. And once you get used to it…I am not saying it is more difficult or easier. A few fielders might say they find catching the ball easier under lights and a few of them might say it’s difficult.”While teams like Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan and South Africa played their most recent T20Is under lights and a lot of West Indies players got similar game time during the WCPL, the India squad didn’t hold even one training session under lights in their month-long preparation before the T20 World Cup, and they jumped straight into the warm-up games in Dubai starting at 6pm.The ring of fire around the Dubai International Stadium poses a unique challenge to fielding teams•Tharaka Basnayaka/Getty ImagesThe other challenge in this tournament is the unique design of lights at the Dubai International Stadium. As can be seen above, the ground doesn’t have floodlight poles but a lights all around the edge of the roof, commonly known as the “ring of fire”. Is catching going to be tougher here then?”Only for the high catches because there they have a circular ring of light,” former India Women fielding coach Biju George, currently with Delhi Capitals in the IPL and WPL, tells ESPNcricinfo. “So it’s very difficult to pick the ball. If you have four, five or six floodlights, there are spaces where you are not hindered by the light but in Dubai at every angle, at any point of time, the ball is going to disappear in that space. So your judgment should be spot on.”The flip side, however, is that the ring of fire may not blind you as severely as the conventional floodlights in Sharjah, where the contrast of the block of lights against the dark sky might be starker because it’s a more open stadium.”Fielding under four or six poles of lights is completely different to this ring of fire, as they like to call it,” Rangarajan says. “If you ask me personally, it is easier to still catch the ball when there is a ring of fire, as opposed to when you have one pole with about 20-30 lights and once the ball goes in that [area] it is almost impossible [to catch]. No matter how experienced you are, those few milliseconds or seconds when the ball goes inside, when it’s a pole [of floodlights], it is much more difficult.”Everything will have a downside, but I think, holistically speaking, the lights which are like Dubai Stadium comparatively will be easier for catching high balls, 100%. This is a point only because it is unusual to have lights like that, and that’s why people find it difficult because they’re not used to it. But it doesn’t blind your eye.”The teams at the T20 World Cup won’t be entirely thrown into the unknown. They have all played two warm-up games each before the main tournament, all starting at 6pm, to get used to to the conditions at night. But it may not be enough because the venues for the main matches are Sharjah and the Dubai International Stadium whereas the warm-ups were at the two Academy grounds and the multi-sport Sevens Stadium in Dubai.According to George, who was with DC during the IPL in 2020 and 2021 in the UAE, there are still ways to plan around the ring of fire, by identifying your best fielders, the best positions for them, and the pockets the top opposition batters are likely to target.”First thing is you have to find out who your inner-circle fielders are, who your outer fielders are,” he says. “And second, you have to find out, for every team as an opposition team captain or coach, where the batters’ hotspots are, where they tend to get their runs, where they tend to get out. So I make sure that the best catchers are there.”

Former wicketkeeper Katey Martin, who played three ODI and six T20 World Cups for New Zealand and now does commentary around the world, believes you have to tweak your training methods when there are such unknowns with respect to fielding while on tour.”To be honest, a lot of it’s actually out of your control,” she said of playing at new grounds. “So it really is just making the most of those [training] opportunities when you do get to train under lights to do a lot of fielding practice. So sometimes you might end up doing more fielding practice than you would do skills because it’s just the effect of being able to get used to the conditions and teams will turn up to grounds and they’ll have the coaches just literally go around in a circle and then players are on the boundaries. They just take catches in different pockets, just as people get used to it and then obviously cover catches and close [catches].”For me, fielding is all about attitude. So if you’ve got the right attitude, you’re switched on and you have a good understanding of what’s happening in the game, I think you can anticipate.”With plenty of training hours under their belt thanks to recent games or preparatory camps, all ten teams will hope they have the best tools and plans in place. And if they have the attitude of the kind South Africa’s 18-year-old Seshnie Naidu showed with a wonder grab on her T20I debut in Multan not long after being picked in the World Cup squad, we may not see that many chances going down.

Sunil Joshi: 'I'd pick Kuldeep in India's World Cup squad but not Chahal'

India’s former chief selector talks about why the left-arm wristspinner has had recent success, and what his right-armer colleague needs to do to improve his bowling

Nagraj Gollapudi31-Jan-20232:02

Sunil Joshi: ‘If India are playing three spinners vs Australia, then Kuldeep Yadav should play’

In December, Kuldeep Yadav bagged the Player-of-the-Match award for his five-for in the only Test he played in the series in Bangladesh. He followed it up with match-winning spells in ODI series at home against Sri Lanka and New Zealand, and forced his way into the India squad for the first two Tests against Australia, starting in Nagpur next week. While Kuldeep has found his mojo again, his good friend and spin twin, Yuzvendra Chahal, seems to have lost his. Once a constant in the limited-overs bowling attacks, Chahal, who became India’s leading wicket-taker in T20Is on Sunday, has for a while now struggled with his bowling rhythm, technique and confidence, which has forced the team management to bench him often.Former India left-am spinner Sunil Joshi, who was part of the Indian selection panel between 2020 and 2022, has followed both Kuldeep and Chahal’s careers closely. In the following chat, Joshi breaks down their techniques, explains what makes them effective or not, and makes his pick for the World Cup squad.Recently in Bangladesh, Kuldeep Yadav was the Player of the Match in Chattogram. And he had impressive performances in ODIs against Sri Lanka and New Zealand. What is making him so effective?
A couple of things Kuldeep has really worked hard on. I have closely watched him since my time as coach at Uttar Pradesh, where he played a few games during the 2019-20 season after he was dropped from the Indian side.I saw Kuldeep closely in the [2020-21] England series, during the Chennai Test matches: his body was much more open-chested and his [right] hand was falling away from the point of target. Your non-bowling arm should follow towards the batsman, and your bowling hand should be as close as possible to the head. If you imagine a clock, your bowling arm should come from just before 12; if it comes from 1 o’clock, then the trajectory will be flatter. If your non-bowling arm is straight, automatically your bowling hand will get closer to the head. That is another adjustment Kuldeep has done.He has worked on the arm speed, which was a bit slower. You can now see the spring in his bowling run-up. He has ensured the run-up has become smoother, more consistent, the arm speed is good. His body is going towards the batsman in the follow-through, and the line of attack he is bowling [has got better]. There are more revolutions on the ball.A classic example [of all this coming together] is the wicket of Dasun Shanaka [in the Kolkata and Thiruvananthapuram ODIs earlier this month] – the way he bowled him, that’s the line we’ve been discussing time and again with Kuldeep and he understood that’s what is required.He varies [how he uses] the crease as well. Earlier he was bowling close to the middle of the crease. Now he bowls wider, from the middle, and from close to the stumps as well. As a left-arm wristspinner, every time you bowl away from the crease, especially to a right-hander, if you don’t get the line right, it is going to be difficult. When you go close to the stumps, you end up bowling middle-and-leg. It’s a perfect angle where you can go close to the stumps and take the ball away from the left-hander. For bowling a right-hander, the perfect video, I would say, is [to watch] the Dasun Shanaka wicket in Thiruvananthapuram, where Kuldeep got him through the gap between bat and pad.Related

Is Yuzvendra Chahal in need of a plan B?

Kuldeep Yadav: 'I am not afraid of failures now'

Kuldeep Yadav, drifting and dipping his way into the reckoning

How India's contenders are shaping up ahead of the 2023 ODI World Cup

Suryakumar and Kishan in India's Test squad to face Australia

Would you say he has become smarter and more consistent?
You have to give him credit. He’s really worked hard and understood what is required. And he has followed up with domestic matches. He played against New Zealand A [for India A in one Test and three ODIs]. He did well, he got wickets.The bigger talking point about Kuldeep’s increased consistency, which some former players have pointed out, is his delivery speed.
I always say that anything between 70 and 85kph is a good speed for spinners to bowl. The quicker you bowl through the air, the easier it is for a batsman to get into line. When the bowler becomes slower, when he varies [his speed], starts spinning, that’s where the batsman has to use his brain to come to the pitch of the ball, use his technique and time the ball.Kuldeep has really worked on his speed – I think it is now between 75kph and late 80s. He doesn’t bowl quicker than that. The more revolutions you put on the ball, automatically, after pitching, it will skid through.Former India head coach Ravi Shastri believes it’s Kuldeep’s work on his hip flexion and lower-body strength that has helped him impart revs like that. Do you agree?
That will happen only when he has worked on his delivery stride as well. That is why it’s much easier to transfer your body weight towards the target – when everything gets side-on, automatically you transfer your body weight [well] and your hip drive will become much better.Rhythm consists of three parts: run-up, delivery stride and follow-through. If one of these is missed, the bowler will be in an uncomfortable position. If you run too quick, everything, including the action, happens too quickly and the trajectory is flatter. If you run too slow, everything will be slow – there will be less revs on the ball and the batsman has enough time to go back or forward. If you don’t finish your follow-through, you end up bowling short. Kuldeep is short, so he cannot have a longer stride as a spinner, because automatically you collapse and are unable to transfer body weight towards the batter and derive the right speed from your hip drive. For a spinner, your delivery stride is your shoulder width – that’s an ideal length.”In whatever series he has played recently, Kuldeep’s dismissals are in the range of within the 30-yard circle. That is a great thing for a bowler because it shows you have been very consistent with your line and length”•Associated PressThat is what we can see in Kuldeep now: transfer of body weight, the hip drive, as Ravi has said, and of course, the arm speed, the front arm, and revolutions on the ball. Plus, he’s enjoying whatever subtle changes he has added into his bowling armoury and it is giving him results.What is the one area in which you want him to continue to improve?
Probably at times he can bowl round the stumps to the left-handers, because that is a blind spot [for the batter]. If Kuldeep comes round the stumps, the batsman may think that he’s going to take the ball away, but he doesn’t. If you saw yesterday [in the Hyderabad ODI against New Zealand], the way he got Henry Nicholls bowled, that’s a classic delivery. He also got Daryl Mitchell lbw. And Dasun Shanaka – fully stretched forward defence, through the gate, bowled.He is achieving this with consistent lengths. He is probably in a phase now where he can pick up wickets at any point of time and create pressure. In white-ball cricket you have to create pressure, you have to play on the batsman’s mind. Like, in Hyderabad, we saw Mitchell Santner getting Virat Kohli bowled – Virat could have played forward.In Test cricket, because of the quality that R Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja and Axar Patel bring to the table, Kuldeep is fourth in the queue. But he has shown that each time he gets called up, he can create an impact. He has been picked for the first two Tests at home against Australia in February. Do you think he will play a big role in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy?
I think so. One, because of his form – he’s been good in picking wickets. As a former cricketer, I look more closely at the way he is taking wickets: a spinner getting [the batter] out through the gate bowled, caught at slip, stumped getting to the pitch of the ball, miscuing the ball and getting caught at mid-off, mid-on. These are the areas of dismissal that a spinner would love to take.Looking at the Australian Test squad and the venues, where do you reckon Kuldeep will actually have an advantage?
If Ashwin is our first option, and if Jadeja is not available, then it should Kuldeep and Axar. If Jaddu is available and they are playing three spinners, Kuldeep should play. Don’t look at the venues or whether our spinners will do well or not at them. Look at the way Kuldeep has picked up wickets. In whatever series he has played recently, whether it is red- or white-ball, his dismissals are in the range of [being caught] within the 30-yard circle. That is a great thing for a bowler because it shows you have been very consistent with your line and length. If India have to win against Australia, Kuldeep will play a major part.

“I follow the three-T formula: technique, tactics and temperament. You have technique, but you also need to focus on temperamental and tactical parts. That is where you fox a batsman”

Let’s talk about Yuzvendra Chahal – has he become more predictable?
Over a period any bowler will go through that phase. Probably Chahal is in that phase. Someone like Chahal, who is not able to get game time in the middle, probably he should request the team management to go and play domestic cricket. Match time is very important for him to get back into form. That should be the ideal preparation for Chahal.In terms of technique, is there something he can work on?
He can really look to finish his follow-through, because at times he just pushes the ball [without imparting spin]. When you slow your arm, automatically there are less revolutions on the ball and it’s much easier for a batsman to pick him up. Why any spinner will get predictable is because the batsman will know that: “Okay, he’s doing only this [releasing the ball without spin], or probably he will go outside the off stump, so if I leave that ball, he will again come back into the stumps [line]” – which is the batsman’s strength.Chahal needs to focus more on his follow-through, hitting the right length, which is the fourth-stump line, putting more effort into his arm speed, and spinning the ball. Most important is spinning the ball. At times I have seen in the last few series, he really got hit because he was pushing the ball – the seam revolutions were flatter, there was no overspin. For any fingerspinner the wrist has to move over the top of the seam, and if it goes side ways, then the spinner will be undercutting the ball.Chahal is an attacking spinner. Somehow he lost his mojo…
He was an attacking spinner. Was.Everyone gets a little cushioning – okay, theek hai, I’ve done well now, let me relax a bit. Suddenly by the time you realise that, the pressure is on you.”Chahal can really look to finish his follow-through, because at times he just pushes the ball… there are less revolutions and it’s much easier for a batsman to pick him up”•BCCIWhen Chahal bowls the fourth-stump line, batters start attacking him.
Ideally, every ball should be on the fourth-stump line. Most of the googlies he bowls are from the middle stump. You can’t bowl a googly from the middle stump. Where did Anil [Kumble] bowl his googlies from? Fifth stump. That is where you drag a batsman to get through the bat-pad gap. You have seen how many times Virat Kohli get out to a legspinner in the last so many IPLs? Did he get out [to a googly] from a middle-stump line? No. Fifth-stump line.I follow the three-T formula: technique, tactics and temperament. You have a technique, you play for the country. But you also need to focus on temperamental and tactical parts. That is where you fox a batsman.Does Chahal need to work on his bowling speed?
More than the speed, he pushes the ball inside. You cannot [do that]. As a genuine spinner you have to get on the seam, the way Kuldeep has been rewarded. Would you pick Kuldeep and Chahal in your squad for the World Cup in India later this year?
We are talking about seven-eight months from now. Kuldeep is in a space where he is absolutely fine. He needs to be more consistent. He needs to be looking at the tactical part. He needs to know how he will approach each team and venue. The World Cup is in India but every venue has a different dimension, in terms of pitch, soil and climate. He has to prepare himself accordingly.Will you pick Kuldeep in your World Cup XV?
Of course.Both of them?
No. Given the options I have at this point in time, Jadeja will be in my squad. If he is not in good rhythm, you have a back-up in Axar. Then probably I would look at Washy [Washington Sundar] or Ravi Bishnoi, if I have to have one more legspinner, because Bishnoi is more consistent and has a quicker arm action and he’s a better fielder than Chahal.

KL Rahul: 'Aggression for us will be to adapt, not go kaboom from ball one'

The Kings XI Punjab captain talks about leadership, his batting and why he won’t ask Chris Gayle to take singles

Nagraj Gollapudi18-Aug-2020KL Rahul has the fastest fifty in the IPL. He has been among the tournament’s top three batsmen in the last two seasons. This year he makes his debut as IPL captain, hoping to lead Kings XI Punjab to their maiden IPL title. Rahul has led just once in his career, for India A in 2019. He spoke to ESPNcricinfo about his captaincy role model, working with team director and head coach Anil Kumble, and why Chris Gayle running singles might not always be a good sign.Keeper, opener, captain: only Adam Gilchirst has done it in the IPL. And won the title. You have big shoes to fill. How are you looking forward to the challenge?
When you put it like that it does sound quite challenging! It is a very, very new… I won’t say a job, but a new responsibility given to me. I’m looking forward to it. So far it has not made me nervous or made me question myself, so, yeah, I’m quite excited.I have always played my cricket thinking like the captain of the team, even though I wasn’t. I am always trying to read the situation, trying to see what I would do if I were a captain. So I feel it is just going to be an extension of what I have been doing. Obviously it is going to be a lot more difficult than what I am thinking right now. I will take it as it comes. I have a great team and great support staff to back me and help me get into the groove.As a captain, who is your role model?
It has always been MS Dhoni. I’m grateful that I’ve had the honour of playing under him and with him. Even Rohit [Sharma] is quite a good captain. Virat [Kohli] is a phenomenal captain. I have learned a lot from all of them and hopefully I can use all of that knowledge when I am captaining.Can you elaborate on Dhoni’s influence, with him now retiring from international cricket?
It was quite shocking. I was honestly heartbroken. I’m sure all of us in the team or whoever has played under him and with him would have wanted to give him a big send-off and wanted him to play one more time so we could have had that opportunity to do something special for him. It is what it is.He has been someone who has guided us all really, really well. And who has never expected us to change who we are. He has let us go out there and express ourselves and make our mistakes and learn from them. He has just let us be.If we were ever in doubt, or if we wanted to look to somebody for answers, he was always there. He knew when to push the players.Words fall short, man. Even the other day when I was trying [to write on Dhoni retiring] on Instagram or Twitter… I mean, what do you say about somebody like that? You don’t have enough to say about how much he has done and how many lives he has changed and for how many people he is an inspiration – not just on the field but off the field [as well] with the things he has achieved. It is phenomenal.

“In 2018, it was all about my batting and how I can get the team off to a good start. But in 2019 it became about how I can win matches for my team once I got off to a decent start”

Moving back to you and Kings XI, will you continue to open and keep?
Yeah, that is what my plan is. That is what I’d want to do. But again, it is still early times. I still will have to talk to the coach. I don’t know what Anil [Kumble] is thinking. We’ll see how the team combination sits. We do have plenty of options for wicketkeeper-batsmen. We will take it as it comes. We haven’t really spoken about what role each one’s going to play yet. The six-day quarantine in Dubai will give us enough time to get on the phone and talk to the coach and just get some planning going. In 2019 you were the tournament’s second-highest run-maker, behind David Warner. Your strike rate was 135. You made 593 runs at nearly 54, including a century and six fifties. Compare that with 2018. You were the third highest, behind Kane Williamson and Rishabh Pant: 659 runs at nearly 55, but a strike rate of over 158. Can you talk about the roles you played in the two seasons?
In 2019, if I’m not wrong, I won more games than in 2018. Yes, I did have the confidence and the freedom to go after the bowlers in 2018. I was in a different mindspace where I was looking to dominate bowling, and it was all about my batting and how I can get the team off to a good start. That was my main aim.But in 2019 it became about how I can win matches for my team once I got off to a decent start. Every year every batsman evolves and he realises what’s good for the team. My main aim became winning games for my team.ALSO READ: Who makes it to our Kings XI Punjab all-time XI?Setting up matches so the other players can come in and finish the game or to put my team in a good position – that was 2018. But 2019, my sole focus was to be there till the end and finish as many matches as I can. So that is why the difference in strike rate is there.But it is not something we as players really sit and think about. At least for me, it is not something I’m worried about. I know I can play at 160 or I can play at 100, 110, whenever I need [to]. That is how I have changed my batting: I try to play the situation. I try to see what the wicket is like, and if I am batting first what is a good score, what is a defendable or a challenging enough total, and I try to pace my batting according to that.So the added responsibility of leadership will not change the thought process on your batting?
I am sure it will make me think differently. I can’t lie. Again, I don’t think it is going to change me too much, because as a captain or as a player, my aim is to win matches for my team. This year we have an even better middle order – we have solid and more explosive batsmen, so it gives me a little more freedom than last year. It all depends on the given day. I have never played cricket with a set plan.”You know when it’s Gayle’s day, no matter how good the bowling line-up or opponent, he will take them down and he will win the match”•BCCIIn the last two years KXIP have started strongly but then fallen off the rails in the second half. Both seasons they had six victories and eight losses, and finished in the bottom three. You lost the momentum built early in the season. Do you think that is one area that would need to be addressed, particularly?
Yeah, it was something that didn’t work in our favour in the last couple of seasons. Keeping that in mind, even before the auction, that’s what me and Anil , the franchise and the support team spoke about, and this is one area where we felt we needed to fix that issue. And that’s why we went after certain players and we were very clear on who the players were that would fit our line-up perfectly. We can’t go into this season with that baggage, but we have learned that the IPL season is a long one and it is important that we peak at the right time and get momentum going with us.Kumble was at helm for India in 2016 when you struck your maiden T20I century. Can you talk about the relationship and the thought process you two share that makes you confident both of you are on the same page?
He has done so well only because he is such a sharp thinker. He understands the game. I have played a lot under him and I have known him for a while, so I know how he works. He is going to make sure the boys are training hard and have the best mindset possible. I have never thought about it, because it has just always been easy working with Anil . He makes things very simple, he makes players’ roles and responsibilities very clear, so it gives them enough time to think about it. So as a captain my load will be a lot lesser with him around.ALSO READ: Anil Kumble on IPL 2020: Managing players’ ‘mental space’ key for support staff In Chris Gayle and Glenn Maxwell, you have two of the best batsmen in white-ball cricket, two outright match-winners. You have opened a lot with Gayle and share a good rapport with him. In fact, your opening partnership is the all-time best for Kings XI. What is the role you would like Gayle to play?
To have somebody like that, just the name itself, it shakes up an opponent and has so much impact. And what Chris has done for the teams he has played with, and Kings XI, is really, really unbelievable. If you were part of the Kings XI dressing room you will know what kind of impact he has had. He is somebody who is very, very open to talking to youngsters and helping other people out. He comes in with so much T20 experience. He is by far one of the best T20 players ever. You know that when he walks in and when it’s his day, no matter how good the bowling line-up or an opponent, he will take them down and he will win the match. So to have somebody like that is a blessing.The partnership that we have shared, and the rapport we have, is brilliant. We share a great friendship away from the field as well. He is somebody who has always guided me. I have gone up to him and spoken to him a lot about T20 batting and opening the batting. He is a very deep thinker of the game – I don’t think a lot of people know that about him. They think he is just brute force and takes down [bowling attacks] and keeps scoring runs in T20s, but there is a lot of planning that Chris does well.I get to understand and see that in the middle, and that has helped me in my game personally as well. To have him again this year is great. We have spoken a bit during the lockdown; he seems to be training really hard. He is keen to do what Chris Gayle does, so that is a great sign for us.Would you like him to run a few more singles?
[]. No, not really. If he is running that means the team is not doing too well.

“Dhoni has been someone who has guided us all really well, and has never expected us to change who we are. He has let us go out there and express ourselves and make our mistakes and learn from them. He has just let us be”

What about Maxwell? This will be his second stint at Kings XI after having failed to meet expectations in the first season. He is coming off personal challenges. He will be key for you in the middle order, won’t he?
Yes, we were very clear that we needed Maxwell in our middle order. I never had a doubt that he would go to any other team. The last couple of seasons he has changed a lot in terms of how he plays his cricket. He started to win so many more games for Australia. He was somebody who would go and take down bowling [attacks], and still can. But it is amazing to see how he has changed his mindset as well.He is an allrounder that any team would love to have. He is a gun fielder. He will give it everything he’s got every game. He’ll never complain about being sore or tired. On wickets like those in the UAE, he would be more than handy as a bowler.And he has captained his Big Bash team [Melbourne Stars], so I will have somebody, again, to go up to and bounce a few ideas off in the middle, and who can guide me and help me out. It is the first time I will be playing with him in a team, but he has always been a fierce competitor and I love that about Maxi. To have somebody like that in your team, and players like Sheldon Cottrell, Gayle, who give their all to the team, and who are characters, is great.Virtually half the team, including the support staff, is from Karnataka. How will that have an impact?
The kind of performances the Karnataka team has been putting up for the last two-three years is there for everyone to see. And everybody wants Karnataka players in their line-up. They know that we come with the champion mindset, we are hungry to perform. The guys that we have in the team are a great set of players: [K] Gowtham and Karun [Nair], and Mayank [Agarwal] have been playing [together] for a while. And [J] Suchith is extremely talented, and has done really well with the opportunities he has got in the IPL. Having played with them for so many years, I understand what I can get out of them. Out of 20 players, I know what I will get out of at least [these] four players fully. I can think about the other 15 and 16 players and see how best I can use their skill sets to make sure our team wins.What is the kind of cricket you would like Kings XI to play?
We have a team that is filled with impact players, power players – Mayank and [Nicholas] Pooran and Maxwell and [Jimmy] Neesham, and we have [Deepak] Hooda and Sarfaraz [Khan]. These are all players who can play 360 degrees. I can’t think of any other team that has four, five batsmen who play like that.We will be a team that adapts to different wickets, different situations – that is what being aggressive will be for us, not going kaboom from ball one. It is about reading the situation right and trying to do what best we can on that certain day. We will always be open to learning and will keep getting better as a team.I haven’t even spoken about the bowling unit: there is youth, there is experience, there is mystery. As a captain, when I look down at the team list, it is going to be difficult to put an XI down, we have so many options. It makes things competitive and it’s good for me to pick from.

جيمس: ليفربول لديه لاعب جاهز ليحل مكان محمد صلاح

يعتقد ديفيد جيمس، حارس مرمى ليفربول السابق، أن النادي لديه بالفعل بديل ليحل محل محمد صلاح، جناح الفريق، وتحدث عن مستقبل المحترف المصري.

وأدلى محمد صلاح بتصريحات مؤخرًا أعرب خلالها عن عدم رضاه على وضعه الحالي في ليفربول، وأشار إلى انقطاع علاقته بالمدير الفني آرني سلوت.

وجاءت تصريحات صلاح في ظل استمرار جلوسه على مقاعد بدلاء ليفربول لثلاث مباريات متتالية في الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز.

بالإضافة إلى ذلك قام آرني سلوت مدرب ليفربول، باستبعاد محمد صلاح من قائمة الفريق للمباراة أمام إنتر ميلان في دوري أبطال أوروبا المقرر خوضها غدًا الثلاثاء.

وقال حارس مرمى ليفربول السابق جيمس، في تصريحات نشرتها صحيفة “ميرور” البريطانية: “لم يكن ليفربول مضطرًا للتجديد مع محمد صلاح، ولم يكن محمد صلاح مضطرًا للتوقيع مع ليفربول”.

وأضاف: “أعني، في النهاية، كانت الصفقة التي وقعها ستكون مناسبة لكلا الطرفين، وأعتقد أنه لو جاء وقت مناسب، وأعلم أن ليفربول ليس الوحيد في هذا، لكن معظم أسباب التعاقد مع اللاعبين ستكون الأرقام التي يُحققونها”.

وواصل: “لذا، يمكن تصوّر وضع لا تكون فيه أرقام محمد صلاح بالمستوى الذي يحتاجه ليفربول، وإذا وُجد طرفٌ راغب في التعاقد معه في مكان آخر، فأنا على يقين بأنه عبر الحوار، خصوصًا وأن لمحمد صلاح رأيًا في الأمر، سيكون ليفربول مستعدًا للسماح برحيله”.

وأشار: “بموجب العقد، لا أعتقد أنني أستطيع تصوّر موقف يُبقي فيه محمد صلاح في النادي لمجرد الحصول على راتبه، أعتقد أنه سيكون هناك موقف، من خلال المُحادثات، لأنني أعلم أن الحوار مع ليفربول دائمًا ما يكون جيدًا، حيث سيجلس الطرفان ويناقشان المُستقبل”.

واستطرد: “ومع ذلك، إذا بدأ محمد صلاح في فعل ما يريده ليفربول منه، وأنا متأكد من أن محمد صلاح يرغب في القيام به وبدأ في تسجيل الكثير من الأهداف، فقد يكون ليفربول مجبرًا بسبب وجود طرفٍ راغب محتمل، لأن أي نادٍ سيتحرك للتعاقد معه، والنادي السعودي منطقيًا بحكم امتلاكه للمال، قد يُقدّم عرضًا لا يستطيع ليفربول رفضه”.

وأتم جيمس تصريحاته: “أعتقد أيضًا أن ليفربول لديه بالفعل لاعب جاهز ليحل محل محمد صلاح”.

The new Trent: Liverpool shortlist “one of the best players in the world”

When Arne Slot spoke in his pre-match press conference ahead of Liverpool’s trip to Elland Road to face Leeds United, it was pretty sobering for the head coach to suggest that the focus is on securing a place in next year’s Champions League proper, and not battling to defend their hard-won Premier League title.

Slot’s right, of course, with Liverpool so far removed from last year’s indomitable success that talk of mounting a challenge against high-flying Arsenal would be scoffed at by even the most ardent supporters.

Among Liverpool’s biggest problems this season has been a struggle in the build-up, especially on the right side. Trent Alexander-Arnold’s absence is keenly felt, and sporting director Richard Hughes is looking to replace the former vice-captain’s creativity.

Liverpool looking to replace Alexander-Arnold

Liverpool have technically replaced Alexander-Arnold already, signing Jeremie Frimpong for £29.5m this summer. However, neither Frimpong or Conor Bradley boast the same playmaking ability as the 27-year-old, who plies his craft for Real Madrid after leaving Anfield at the end of his contract in June.

The £116m signing of Florian Wirtz was meant to help the passing of the creative torch, but Wirtz’s struggles have been well-documented this season, and, as analyst Raj Chohan puts it, “the build-up combination is horrible” on Liverpool’s right-hand side this season.

Those around him know Wirtz has world-class potential in the Premier League and could become a superstar playmaker, a poster boy. However, he doesn’t really operate down the right lane, and this is where Slot and Hughes need to fix Liverpool’s progressive passing.

Perhaps that’s why FSG are showing an interest in signing Bayern Munich winger Michael Olise, having shortlisted the France international this week, according to German outlet BILD.

Olise, 23, has only gone from strength to strength since swapping Crystal Palace for the Allianz Arena in 2024, and if Liverpool want to secure his signature, ostensibly as Mohamed Salah’s long-term replacement, they will need to pay over £100m.

BILD believe that Liverpool have placed Olise back onto their shortlist despite Bayern’s not-for-sale stance.

What Olise would bring to Liverpool

Alexander-Arnold’s influence at Liverpool cannot be understated. Quite simply, he is a one-of-a-kind type of player, and his departure to Santiago Bernabeu was always going to be more than just a blow to the Anfield side’s pride.

1

Trent Alexander-Arnold

64

2

Andy Robertson

60

3

Leighton Baines

53

4

Graeme Le Saux

44

5

Kieran Trippier

38

Olise might not be a right-back, but he would prove the perfect Salah replacement at right wing in that he would not try to mimic the Egyptian’s clinical output, and instead bring his own flavour to Merseyside.

At Bayern, the former Palace star has posted 29 goals and 34 assists across 76 matches. He is regarded as “one of the best players in the world” by teammate Serge Gnabry.

Physical and athletic, Olise is also near matchless when it comes to creating for his peers, setting up passing patterns and adding pressure in the final third with unplayable passing.

As per FBref, he ranks among the top 1% of attacking midfielders and wingers across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for assists and shot-creating actions, the top 4% for progressive passes, the top 12% for progressive carries and the top 5% for successful take-ons per 90.

That is not to say he’s a one-trick pony, with fearsome ball-striking qualities that the Premier League’s many defenders and goalkeepers know only too well.

He has proven himself to be a superstar in the English game, and since levelling up in Germany, Olise has fostered the playmaking brilliance that would see him reinvent Slot’s right flank and rekindle the presence of Trent at Anfield.

Huge Gakpo upgrade: £70m "superstar" now keen to join Liverpool in January

Arne Slot’s Liverpool frontline is not quite right this season.

1 ByAngus Sinclair Dec 5, 2025

Not just Yoro: Amorim must bin 5/10 Man Utd dud who was bullied by Wharton

After a dismal defeat against ten men last Monday, Manchester United bounced back with a 2-1 win away to Crystal Palace on Sunday afternoon.

The Red Devils were behind at half-time after a Jean-Philippe Mateta penalty, but two goals from set pieces were enough to ensure they would take all three points back to Manchester.

Both goals were impressive finishes from United. First, the lesser-spotted Joshua Zirkzee got himself on the scoresheet with a fantastic finish.

He controlled a Bruno Fernandes free-kick on his chest before superbly volleying low and hard into the back of the net.

That was the strike which drew United level, and the goal which won them the game, from Mason Mount, was just as good. The Red Devils’ number 7 walked onto a Fernandes layoff from yet another free-kick, driving his effort through the Palace wall and into Dean Henderson’s goal.

Despite the result and an energetic second half showing, it was far from a perfect afternoon for United. Ruben Amorim’s side could only muster an expected goals tally of 1.25 xG, and just 0.26 xG in the second half. It was an important win, but there is still a lot to improve on.

Indeed, it was a tough day at the office for some United players, including young defender Leny Yoro.

Leny Yoro's day to forget vs Palace

Young French defender Yoro did not have the best outing at Selhurst Park on Sunday lunchtime. It was his foul on Mateta, a challenge late from behind his countryman, which led to Palace’s penalty and Oliver Glasner’s side taking the lead.

Indeed, there were bright moments against the South Londoners for the former Lille star, who has struggled to find his best form for the majority of this season. He made a crucial block in the first half to prevent Palace from scoring, an important moment in the game.

Yet, it was still not the day Yoro would have hoped for. His foul on Mateta, which was ultimately quite a clumsy challenge, and the fact that he won just three duels from the six he contested, meant Amorim took him off for Noussair Mazraoui after Zirkzee’s goal.

Despite what is a tough moment for Yoro, the United squad is rallying around him. Mount was one of the players quick to support his teammate at full-time, something that football presenter Dylan Penketh said he was “glad to see” after the final whistle.

It was a disappointing day for Yoro, but he was not the only United player who struggled.

Not just Yoro: Man Utd star struggles vs Palace

Coming up against Adam Wharton and Daichi Kamada was always going to be tough for United’s pivot at Selhurst Park, and Casemiro was a player who felt the brunt of that.

The Brazilian was said to be “haunted by Adam Wharton” according to journalist Samuel Luckhurst.

Indeed, it was not an easy day against the Eagles’ energetic midfield pivot, especially in the first half. The Brazilian had 65 touches in total across the game, losing the ball 11 times and creating one chance. He also won just seven of his 15 duels.

Casemiro stats vs. Palace

Stat

Number

Touches

65

Pass accuracy

80%

Number of times ball lost

11

Ground duels won

5/9

Aerial duels won

2/6

Fouls

4

Chances created

0

Stats from Sofascore

The United number 18 received a 5/10 rating from the Manchester Evening News journalist Steven Railston. He said Casemiro did improve throughout the game, although he described his start to the game at Selhurst Park as “shaky.”

After a tougher game for Casemiro, and the fact that he is one yellow card away from suspension, it will be interesting to see if he keeps his place in the side ahead of United’s next game. Next up, they have a clash with West Ham United on Thursday at Old Trafford.

It is also a game where United are likely to have the lion’s share of possession. Perhaps Amoirm opts to bring Kobbie Mainoo into their midfield, a man who is better on the ball and more capable of retaining possession and sustaining attacks.

On top of that, the Brazilian played 90 minutes at Selhurst Park. With the game as soon as Thursday and a hectic December coming up, it would not be a surprise to see him rotated out of the side to help aid his recovery.

Haaland 2.0: Man Utd can sign "one of the best STs in Europe" for £44m

Manchester United could be about to sign a new talisman like Erling Haaland in January.

By
Ethan Lamb

Nov 29, 2025

The next Kane: Spurs have "one of the best players of his age" out on loan

So then, Tottenham Hotspur are fifth in the Premier League as international action jumps forward once again. After 11 matches, Thomas Frank’s side have been solid, but they have not been spectacular.

Frank is meticulous, looking to dot the i’s and cross the t’s when crafting a tactical system and a winning culture. At Tottenham, though, the scale of the task is vast, and while there have been encouraging signs since the summer, he needs to build a more creative and exciting outfit.

A sure-fire way to move closer toward this level of fluency would be to inculcate into the fold the latest academy star – the next Harry Kane, perhaps?

Spurs need to find Harry Kane 2.0

Of course, this is easier said than done. Kane is one of the greatest footballers England has ever produced, and his personal achievements down N17 have made him one of Tottenham’s biggest legends of modern times.

Months before leaving Spurs for Bayern Munich in 2023, Kane became the club’s all-time top goalscorer. He left having played 435 matches for the Londoners, posting 280 strikes across all competitions.

It’s fair to say that Tottenham have struggled to replace him, with Richarlison and Dominic Solanke toiling away at number nine over the past few years.

To think he was once a fringe player with little hype around his name, loaned out to a string of lower-level sides before establishing himself as “their best-ever player”, in the words of journalist Sean Walsh.

The lift that would be found through unearthing the new version would be immense, and Frank may find the answer in a current prospect out in League Two.

The Spurs talent who could be the next Kane

This young talent may not be a centre-forward, but he is a skilful and dynamic playmaker who could dovetail into a haggard midfield.

Plying his trade for Notts County in League Two, Tyrese Hall is demonstrating a technical craft that could be further developed over the coming years and established somewhere at the top of the Premier League ladder, perhaps finding a way into Frank’s Tottenham first team.

The 20-year-old has won 53% of his ground duels in League Two this season, as per Sofascore, averaging 1.6 tackles per match besides. This is an impressive metric for a young attacking midfielder.

Jermaine Defoe has even said in the past that Hall is “one of the best players at his age I’ve seen in the country.” There’s a long way for him to go, but if physicality and skill can be balanced out, Frank could have a player of surpassing ability on his hands, perhaps even the next Kane.

He’s found his feet as a central midfielder at Notts County, tailored toward creating and influencing between the lines, but Hall has a diverse skillset, and it’s seen him deployed across a host of roles for Spurs’ youth sides.

Central midfield

30

6 (5)

Defensive midfield

19

3 (4)

Attacking midfield

18

5 (3)

Centre-forward

6

3 (2)

Left midfield

3

1 (1)

Right midfield

1

1 (0)

Kane’s performances for the likes of Leyton Orient and Millwall during the springtime of his illustrious career likely helped fashion him into the player he is today, the 32-year-old with 23 goals from 17 matches for Bayern this season.

Given that the noise around Hall before his breakthrough is arguably louder, with those in the know believing he is beyond something special, there’s every reason to be excited at Tottenham, especially given that his profile could provide a tonic to the current creative woes.

Said to be “magic on the ball” by Magpies correspondent K-Ci Rennicks, Hall has taken a leaf from Kane’s book and fostered his technical craft away from home, learning fundamental skills that the development scene simply doesn’t have the capacity to match.

His creativity and flair could work wonders in the Spurs centre next season, and he might just make his mark as Kane did when bursting onto the scene way back when.

Frank can end Bentancur's Spurs career by unleashing "future £100m" talent

Tottenham Hotspur have a huge talent on their hands, but his progress is being halted by Rodrigo Bentancur.

ByEthan Lamb Nov 12, 2025

Paul Goldschmidt Sends Classy Final Message to Cardinals Fans

Paul Goldschmidt will play for his third MLB team starting this season, and his switch from St. Louis Cardinals red to New York Yankee pinstripes will be a strange sight, at least at first. Goldschmidt started with the Arizona Diamondbacks, but became a star with St. Louis, earning an MVP award, Gold Glove, and Silver Slugger during his six years with the Cardinals.

Goldschmidt, who departed St. Louis via free agency—signing a one-year deal with the Yankees—took out a newspaper advertisement Sunday to get the fans a final message. Here's what it read:

Explained: Why West Ham's relegation from Premier League would cost British taxpayers £2 million

British taxpayers will have to foot a bill to the tune of £2 million (€2.27m/$2.62m) if West Ham United are relegated from the Premier League this season. The Hammers are currently 19th in the league table after enduring a torrid season which is yet to pick up following the appointment of manager Nuno Espirito Santo as Graham Potter's successor.

  • Nuno replaced Potter at West Ham helm following poor start to season

    Nuno was handed the reins at West Ham at the end of September after former head coach Potter was dismissed. The 50-year-old, who has since taken charge of Sweden, was sacked after only eight months at the helm following a start to the 2025-26 season which saw the club lose four of their first five league games. 

    West Ham suffered defeats against Sunderland, Chelsea, Tottenham and Crystal Palace, though they did register a 3-0 win over Nottingham Forest, in what turned out to be Nuno’s final game in charge at the City Ground. The Portuguese guided Forest to seventh in 2024-25 – their highest finish since the 1994-95 campaign – but was dismissed after just three league games this season. Nuno had previously revealed his relationship had "changed" with Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis, amid his frustration over the club’s summer transfer activity.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty Images Sport

    Captain Bowen admitted club are 'in trouble' following Leeds defeat

    Nuno’s appointment is yet to lead to an upturn in form, with West Ham failing to win any of their first four games under his stewardship. After earning an impressive 1-1 draw at Everton on 29 September, the east Londoners have since suffered three successive league defeats against Arsenal, Brentford and Leeds United.

    Speaking after their latest reverse against Leeds, West Ham captain Jarrod Bowen admitted the club are "in trouble now", telling after the game: "A dressing room when you're second bottom of the league is low. The only way this will change is if we step up and show some fight.

    "We need more of that. It's easy to hide and be scared almost. It's easier said and harder to do sometimes. You have to face up to the reality of where we are and we're in trouble now.

    "We've talked as a group, but it's down to the players as well. We speak to each other, but there's only so much. It's got to come from within. We haven't been great at home, but now is the time to roll your sleeves up."

  • Taxpayer will feel brunt if West Ham are relegated

    With West Ham continuing to struggle, a new report in claims the British taxpayer would have to stump up £2m if they are relegated this season. The report claims that, under the terms of their 99-year lease for playing at the London Stadium, West Ham’s annual rent of £2.5m will be halved should the club drop into the Championship.

    The report also says control of the stadium, built to host the 2012 London Olympics, was handed to the Greater London Authority, with the London Legacy Development Corporation retiring from the operating company, E20 Stadium LLP, and being replaced by GLA Holdings Ltd. However, the most recent accounts – for the year ending March 31, 2024 – highlighted an operating loss of £20.9m in public money, given that the amount of rent West Ham pay does not cover stadium operating costs.

    And with West Ham currently languishing near the bottom of the table, the report concludes by saying that, given the club’s current form, there could be further expense to the British taxpayer because of an agreement detailed in the stadium concession agreement.

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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

  • Getty Images Sport

    Influential West Ham midfielder Paqueta sanctioned by FA

    The news comes after West Ham midfielder Lucas Paqueta was sanctioned by the Football Association (FA) for "two proven breaches" following their investigation into alleged spot-fixing. The Brazil international has subsequently been reprimanded and given a warning over his future conduct by a regulatory commission, after a hearing found he had "failed to comply with a requirement to answer questions and provide information to The FA’s investigation into breaches of the Rules." Paqueta had previously denied the two charges.

    In a statement on their official club website, West Ham said: "West Ham United acknowledges the statement published by the Football Association today, confirming that Lucas Paqueta has received a warning as to his future conduct, following two proven breaches of FA rule F3, after he was cleared of misconduct charges made against him for alleged breaches of FA rule E5. West Ham United and Lucas Paqueta are pleased that this matter is now finally closed. The Club will be making no further comment."

Bayern could now give Chelsea a "huge" transfer boost as BlueCo eye "elite" player

Bayern Munich could now give Chelsea a real transfer boost as BlueCo set their sights on an “elite” player, according to a new report.

Chelsea secure dramatic late win over Liverpool

On the field, Enzo Maresca watched on as his side bounced right back from their dismal loss at home to Brighton by overcoming Premier League champions Liverpool 2-1 last weekend.

Maresca was sent off for his jubilant celebrations after teenage sensation Estevao Willian bagged a vital winner deep into added time, with the Italian sprinting in animated fashion to celebrate alongside his players in the corner.

Chelsea 2-1 Liverpool – best performers

Match Rating

Moises Caicedo

7.8/10

Marc Cucurella

7.7/10

Estevao

7.7/10

Cody Gakpo

7.5/10

Reece James

7.3/10

via WhoScored

Moises Caicedo also opened the scoring with one of the goals of the season so far, beating Liverpool’s Giorgi Marmadashvilli from long range just 14 minutes into the goalkeeper’s Premier League debut.

It was an evening to remember for the Blues at Stamford Bridge, and one which could highlight that the title race is still wide open as Chelsea look to build upon their deserved three points against Arne Slot’s side.

That being said, according to some reports, Maresca is personally unhappy with his overall squad choices right now and feels that a few key areas need to be reinforced (Simon Phillips) — with Chelsea expected to rectify certain positions in January.

The big one is, of course, at centre-back.

Maresca publicly stated that Chelsea need another body at centre-half in the summer, but despite allegedly holding talks with Dean Huijsen’s camp and considering other names, the Blues didn’t get one over the line.

Now, Chelsea and Maresca are reportedly in agreement that signing a new defender should be prioritised for January, with a goalkeeper also said to be on their agenda.

The West Londoners held negotiations with AC Milan over a deal for France number one Mike Maignan before the Club World Cup, but a major difference in price meant that Chelsea couldn’t find an agreement.

Chelsea are ready to go back in for Maignan and offer him a pre-contract in the winter (Graeme Bailey), as his contract expires at the end of 2025/2026.

However, they face stiff competition.

Bayern could give Chelsea "huge" transfer boost as BlueCo eye Mike Maignan

One of the clubs who are competing for Maignan is Bundesliga champions Bayern Munich, but according to Football Insider and journalist Pete O’Rourke, Vincent Kompany’s side could hand them a “huge” boost by pulling out of the race.

This is because Bayern are in talks to hand long-serving keeper Manuel Neuer, who’s now 39-years-old, a 12-month extension that would keep him in Bavaria until 2027.

Chelsea could now face less competition in the race for Maignan as a result, which definitely would come as good news for Maresca.

Doubts have surrounded Robert Sanchez’s capability as Chelsea’s long-term number one, and you can make a case that they could need to upgrade with the addition of a world-class, elite-level keeper who’s capable of taking them to the next level.

Maignan, especially on a free transfer, fits the bill perfectly.

The 30-year-old Rossoneri captain has kept 64 clean sheets in 170 appearances for Milan, conceding just 173 goals in that time, which are solid numbers, and he’s just won France’s 2024/2025 Goalkeeper of the Season award.

A Ligue 1 champion with Lille and Serie A champion with Milan already in his career, Maignan’s top-level experience would also be invaluable to Maresca’s extremely young squad, making his signing an arguable no-brainer.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus