McCullum: Bairstow dismissal will 'galvanise' England in Ashes comeback bid

England coach says controversial stumping call will affect spirit series is played in

Vithushan Ehantharajah03-Jul-20232:08

Has the Bairstow dismissal been blown out of proportion?

Brendon McCullum has warned Australia that Alex Carey’s controversial stumping of Jonny Bairstow at Lords will see the remainder of the series play out less amicably against a galvanised England team.The incident has dominated the news cycle following Australia’s 43-run victory in the second Test at Lord’s, which gave them a 2-0 lead over England. With the third Test starting on Thursday, captain Ben Stokes said he expected the ill-feeling to spill over into Headingley, a ground famed for its febrile atmosphere.It was here Stokes produced his second epic of the 2019 summer, drawing England level against Australia with 135 not out. It was an innings he almost replicated at Lord’s when he channelled the controversy to strike 155, with nine sixes and as many fours.Related

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What was originally pegged as an amicable series between the two teams has now developed an edge. On Monday, UK prime minister Rishi Sunak stepped in, adding his voice to those admonishing the tourists for not abiding by the spirit of cricket.While those not involved have made the loudest noises away from the field, McCullum stated the rift between English and Australian players would lead to a spikier series. He also reiterated Stokes’ view that England would have withdrawn the appeal if the shoe were on the other foot.”I imagine it will affect it, I think it has to,” said McCullum of the spirt in which the remaining three Tests will be played . “In the end, they made a play, they’ve got to live with that. We would have made a different play, but that’s life.”From our point of view, we believe that we can still come back in this series, and that’s where our focus has got to be. What I will say is it’s a galvanised unit up there [the England dressing-room] and we saw the fight from the skipper, Broady [Stuart Broad] and the boys at the end there as well, which shows how much this means to the side. We’ll lick our wounds and try and come back and rectify things.”In the end, Australia won the Test match and fair play to them. It’s just a shame that when you’ve got millions of people all around the world, and you’ve got a full house at Lord’s, and you’ve everyone’s eyeballs on this series, that for the next couple of days probably the most talked about aspect is going to be that [the dismissal] and that’s disappointing.”McCullum acknowledged his own history with acts not too dissimilar to Carey’s. Back in 2006, during the second innings of the first Test against Sri Lanka, the former New Zealand wicketkeeper ran out Muttiah Muaralitharan after he had left his crease to celebrate team-mate Kumar Sangakkara’s hundred after completing a single. McCullum addressed the incident in a 2016 Cowdrey Lecture at Lord’s, stating he would not have affected the dismissal if he could “turn back time”. He anticipates it will have an effect on Australia.Brendon McCullum said Australia’s dismissal of Jonny Bairstow would colour the rest of the series•PA Images via Getty Images

“Obviously I’ve made an apology to Murali in my Cowdrey Lecture,” McCullum said. “When I was a younger man, I didn’t quite understand the significance of what the game and the spirit of the game means to the game. It’s what the defining point of the game is compared to others, and it’s only with the benefit of time and experience that we’re able to learn that and cherish it. In time, we’ll see, but I get the feeling that it might have an effect on them.”Not since Don Bradman’s Australia in the 1936-37 series has a team overturned a 2-0 deficit and go on to win the Ashes. England can take heart from how close the two matches have been, particularly the opener at Edgbaston, which Australia won by two wickets. Should the hosts turn the tables, it would undoubtedly be their most memorable win of this rivalry.Naturally, McCullum has faith in his charges to do the remarkable, provided they learn from mistakes in pressure situations. The mood among the players remains positive, along with a palpable optimism they can do something spectacular.”3-2 has a nice ring to it,” McCullum said. “We’ve got to polish up a couple of the areas where the game has sat on a knife-edge and we haven’t been able to grab it. We knew coming into this series it was going to be tight and there was going to be those moments. If we can do that, there’s no reason why we can’t bounce back. Morale is high and we’ve played some good cricket amongst things as well, and we look forward to the opportunity.”We always say that if we are winning and things are going great, you don’t want to get too high, and if we are losing you don’t want to get too low either. We are on a path to where we want to get to and want to stick to that. Because a) it’s fun, and b) I think it gives us our best chance. Albeit we are 2-0 down at the moment, I think it gives us our best chance of winning the series.”

Kane Williamson steps down as New Zealand Test captain

Kane Williamson has stepped down as New Zealand’s Test captain after six years in charge and will be replaced by Tim Southee for the upcoming tour of Pakistan.Williamson, who led New Zealand to victory in the inaugural World Test Championship final against India at the Ageas Bowl in 2021, will continue as ODI and T20I captain and also reiterated his desire to keep playing all three formats.”Captaining the BLACKCAPS in Test cricket has been an incredibly special honour,” Williamson said. “For me, Test cricket is the pinnacle of the game and I’ve enjoyed the challenges of leading the side in the format.”Captaincy comes with an increased workload on and off the field and at this stage of my career I feel the time is right for this decision. After discussions with NZC, we felt that continuing to captain the white-ball formats was preferable with two World Cups in the next two years.”Related

  • Kane Williamson opts out of New Zealand central contract for 2024-25

  • Tim Southee 'was right for our environment' – New Zealand coach Gary Stead

  • Williamson wants to continue playing all three formats

  • Ish Sodhi gets Test call for New Zealand's tour of Pakistan

After taking over from Brendon McCullum in 2016, Williamson led New Zealand in 40 Tests: winning 22, losing ten and drawing eight games. He averaged 57 and scored 11 hundreds as captain, both of which are records for New Zealand. He now hands over the leadership to Southee, who will become New Zealand’s 31st Test captain when they play the first Test against Pakistan in Karachi on December 26.”I’m excited to support Tim as captain and Tom [Latham] as vice-captain,” Williamson said. “Having played with both of them for most of my career, I’m confident they’ll do a great job. Playing for the BLACKCAPS and contributing in all three formats is my number one priority and I’m looking forward to the cricket we have ahead.”Southee, who has previously captained in 22 T20Is and one ODI, said: “It’s been a surreal few days and it’s just a massive honour to be appointed as Test captain. I love Test cricket, it’s the ultimate challenge and I’m really excited by the opportunity to lead the team in this format. Kane’s been an outstanding Test captain and I’m looking forward to working with [coach] Gary [Stead] on how we can build on that.”New Zealand coach Gary Stead hailed Williamson’s leadership and said that Southee would bring in a fresh perspective as a bowler-captain. “Kane’s guided the Test team through an immensely successful period which is testament to his ability to bring people together and work towards a common goal.”He’s certainly led from the front with his own performances and that was very much the case during our push to win the World Test Championship. We hope by lessening his workload we can continue to see the best of Kane Williamson for longer on the international stage, and we know he will remain a key leader in this group.”Tim’s a quality leader with a good cricket brain,” Stead said. “We’ve seen his captaincy skills on display with the T20 side and I’m sure he’ll continue to bring an aggressive style, whilst still maintaining the core fundamentals of how this BLACKCAPS team operates in the Test arena. He will also come from a slightly different perspective in being a bowler which I’m sure will also bring with it new ideas and fresh thinking.”

جوندوجان: مانشستر سيتي بدأ حقبة جديدة ووقعت مع فريق طفولتي

أصدر إيلكاي جوندوجان، نجم نادي جلطة سراي الجديد، بيانًا رسميًا قام به بتوديع نادي مانشستر سيتي وجماهيره بعد الرحيل يوم أمس الثلاثاء وبشكل رسمي عن السيتيزن.

جوندوجان انتهت رحلته مع مانشستر سيتي بشكل رسمي يوم أمس الثلاثاء، حيث فسخ الدولي الألماني السابق عقده مع السيتيزن بالتراضي والذي كان متبقي عام واحد فقط على نهايته.

ووقع جوندوجان مع نادي جالطة سراي في صفقة انتقال حر وبعقد مدته عامين يمتد إلى نهاية موسم 2027 المقبل بالفعل.

أقرأ أيضًا .. قائمة مانشستر سيتي في دوري أبطال أوروبا.. موقف مرموش والصفقات الجديدة

وأكد جوندوجان عبر حسابه الرسمي في تويتر، أنه وقع مع فريق طفولته الذي حلم بالانضمام إليه، موضحًا أنه سيبقى ممتنًا لمانشستر سيتي ولجماهيره.

وقال جوندوجان: ”أعزائي مشجعي مانشستر سيتي، أود أن أكون صريحًا معكم. سبب رحيلي بسيط للغاية: ما زلت أرغب في لعب كرة القدم قدر الإمكان، لأنها أكثر ما أحبه. سأبلغ الخامسة والثلاثين قريبًا، لكنني ما زلت أشعر بلياقة بدنية عالية، وأعتقد حقًا أنني أستطيع مواصلة الأداء بمستوى عالٍ مع فريق في دوري أبطال أوروبا”.

وأضاف جوندوجان في حديثه: ”وليس هذا فحسب، بل أتيحت لي الآن فرصة الانضمام إلى نادي طفولتي المفضل، في بلد يعني لي الكثير”.

وأوضح: ”يريد مانشستر سيتي بداية جديدة بعد حقبة رائعة وهو أمر أفهمه تمامًا وأحترمه. لن أنسى أبدًا ما قدمه لي هذا النادي العظيم على مدار سنوات طويلة”.

وأردف جوندوجان: ”كانت معظم فترات وجودي هنا رائعة للغاية وناجحة بشكل لا يصدق. سيظل النادي ومدينة مانشستر لهما مكانة خاصة في قلبي”.

وتابع: ”أود أن أشكر جميع زملائي في الفريق، والرئيس، وكل من يعمل خلف الكواليس، وكل مشجع  وبالطبع بيب، الذي جعل هذه الفترة الرائعة ممكنة”.

واختتم: ”أغادر مانشستر سيتي بامتنان كبير، شكرًا لكم، نيابة عن عائلتي بأكملها”.

Surrey irked as strong winds prevent any meaningful play at Old Trafford

The Vitality County Championship match between Lancashire and Surrey looks certain to end in a draw after only 21 balls were bowled on the third day of the game at Emirates Old Trafford.Surrey had progressed to 15 without loss in their first innings when rain forced an early lunch to be taken at 1.10pm. During the interval, the entire square and bowlers’ run-ups were covered in anticipation of heavy showers, and safety concerns about strong winds prevented the covers’ removal, though no rain was falling when the game was due to restart.Surrey were understood to be confused by the lack of movement with the covers. Head coach Gareth Batty walked out to the middle during this period, clearly irked the defending champions were unable to build on Friday’s work after dismissing Lancashire for 202 inside 73 overs. The expected rain eventually arrived at 2.30pm. Play was eventually abandoned after a 4pm inspection.ECB match referee Mike Smith defended the stance from Old Trafford head grounds manager Matt Merchant that removing the covers would have been dangerous given the conditions, which was backed up by the home club’s safety officer.”After lunch, when it was dry, the head grounds manager, Matt Merchant, said that it was so windy that it would put the health and safety of his staff at risk to ask his staff to remove the covers,” Smith explained. “We didn’t want anyone to be hurt, either by being lifted in the air or slapped by the flat sheets in that wind.”Lancashire’s safety officer thought that was a reasonable position but we did say that the flat sheets should be removed if the wind dropped to an acceptable level. However, we didn’t get to that stage because the rain returned and curtailed the rest of the day’s play.”I haven’t come across such a situation before. But I understand that they were not going to be using the flat sheets at Edgbaston because Gary Barwell, the head groundsman, said he would not be asking his staff to put the flat sheets on in that wind. And it is dangerous to be manoeuvring very heavy flat sheets in wind like that.”Should weather allow any cricket to take place on the final day, the match is now likely to become a battle for first-innings bonus points as Surrey’s batters build a reply to Lancashire’s first innings. Dom Sibley is currently 6 not out and Surrey skipper Rory Burns is unbeaten on 5.

FIFA Club World Cup 2025: Fixture schedule, group standings, knockout round, tickets, format & everything you need to know

The ultimate guide to the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup.

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FIFA has rolled out a brand new format for the Club World Cup, with the 2025 edition marking the beginning of an overhaul that will shake up club football across the globe.

In recent years, the Club World Cup has been a highly exclusive tournament, with just seven teams from six confederations taking part in a straight knockout competition, and this year it is completely different as 32 teams feature.

Here, GOAL brings you all you need to know about the FIFA Club World Cup 2025, including format, teams, how to watch and more.

Watch every FIFA Club World Cup game free on DAZNStream now

  • Where to watch FIFA Club World Cup 2025

    The 2025 Club World Cup will be available to watch globally and for free on DAZN.

    Watch Club World Cup 2025 free on DAZNStream now

    FIFA announced the broadcast deal with DAZN on December 4, 2024 and FIFA president Gianni Infantino is pleased with the agreement. “From the outset, FIFA wanted to have the best 32 clubs in the world competing in a merit-based, inclusive tournament to crown the only official ‘FIFA world club champion’," said Infantino.

    "As part of that, it was imperative for FIFA to ensure that as many football fans across the world could follow the action, and this agreement with DAZN guarantees that in terms of broadcasting, the new FIFA Club World Cup will be the most widely accessible club football tournament ever."

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  • Group A fixtures, results & standings

    Group A standings

    Pos Team P W D L GD Pts
    1 Palmeiras (Q) 3 1 2 0 +2 5
    2 Inter Miami (Q) 3 1 2 0 +1 5
    3 Porto 3 0 2 1 -1 2
    4 Al Ahly 3 0 2 1 -2 2

    Group A fixtures & results

    Date Fixture
    Jun 14, 2025 Al Ahly 0-0 Inter Miami
    Jun 15, 2025 Palmeiras 0-0 Porto
    Jun 19, 2025 Palmeiras 2-0 Al Ahly
    Jun 19, 2025 Inter Miami 2-1 Porto
    Jun 23, 2025 Inter Miami 2-2 Palmeiras
    Jun 23, 2025 Porto 4-4 Al Ahly
  • Group B fixtures, results & standings

    Group B standings

    Pos Team P W D L GD Pts
    1 PSG (Q) 3 2 0 1 +5 6
    2 Botafogo (Q) 3 2 0 1 +1 6
    3 Atletico Madrid 3 2 0 1 -1 6
    4 Seattle Sounders 3 0 0 3 -5 0

    Group B fixtures & results

    Date Fixture
    Jun 15, 2025 PSG 4-0 Atletico Madrid
    Jun 15, 2025 Botafogo 2-1 Seattle Sounders
    Jun 19, 2025 PSG 0-1 Botafogo
    Jun 19, 2025 Seattle Sounders 1-3 Atletico Madrid
    Jun 23, 2025 Seattle Sounders 0-2 PSG
    Jun 23, 2025 Atletico Madrid 1-0 Botafogo
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  • Group C fixtures, result & standings

    Group C standings

    Pos Team P W D L GD Pts
    1 Benfica (Q) 3 2 1 0 +7 7
    2 Bayern Munich (Q) 3 2 0 1 +10 6
    3 Boca Juniors 3 0 2 1 -1 2
    4 Auckland City 3 0 1 2 -16 1

    Group C fixtures & results

    Date Fixture
    Jun 15, 2025 Bayern Munich 10-0 Auckland City
    Jun 16, 2025 Boca Juniors 2-2 Benfica
    Jun 20, 2025 Bayern Munich 2-1 Boca Juniors
    Jun 20, 2025 Benfica 6-0 Auckland City
    Jun 24, 2025 Benfica 1-0 Bayern Munich
    Jun 24, 2025 Auckland City 1-1 Boca Juniors

Kit launch clue?! Atletico Madrid take heart from Cristian Romero's absence from Spurs photoshoot but will La Liga club meet Daniel Levy's asking price?

Cristian Romero’s absence from Tottenham Hotspurs’ 2024-25 kit launch video has sparked fresh hope for Atletico Madrid in their pursuit of the Argentina defender. Los Rojiblancos boss Diego Simeone is pushing for a deal this summer, but Spurs are standing firm on their £60 million ($82.2m) valuation despite reports of financial pressure in North London.

Article continues below

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  • Romero missing from Spurs kit launch sparks transfer speculation
  • Atletico Madrid eye defender but Spurs demand £60m fee
  • Tottenham under pressure but unwilling to lower valuation
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Atletico Madrid have zeroed in on Romero as one of their top defensive targets for the summer, with manager Diego Simeone eager to bring the Argentine to La Liga. The defender's absence from Tottenham's new kit launch has been taken by some in Spain — particularly Mundo Deportivo — as a signal that a transfer could be on the cards. While Atleti are preparing a move, Spurs have made their stance clear.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Despite the rumours and signs, Tottenham are unwilling to let go of their vice-captain for anything less than £60 million. That has not deterred Atletico, who believe Romero is open to a switch to the Metropolitano. With Spurs reportedly under financial strain due to outstanding transfer debts, Atletico hope that persistent pressure — and Romero’s own wishes — might soften Daniel Levy’s position.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Romero, who played a key role in Spurs’ Europa League win, has reportedly caught Simeone’s attention due to his leadership and aggression, traits prized in Atleti’s system. His absence from Spurs’ promotional content was jarring given his status as one of the squad’s most senior figures. Add in the fact that Tottenham are cash-conscious this summer, and Madrid are sensing opportunity — even if Spurs are publicly unmoved.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR ROMERO?

    Atletico Madrid are expected to formalise their interest in Romero in the coming weeks. Spurs, meanwhile, are digging in and will not entertain any offers below their £60m price tag. Whether Romero pushes for the move could be crucial. If he signals a clear desire to leave, Tottenham may face an uncomfortable decision — but as things stand, Levy isn’t blinking.

Wiese fifty, Parnell three-for as Superchargers hold off Rockets

Northern Superchargers made it two wins from their two completed matches as they held off Trent Rockets’ chase to win by three runs at Trent Bridge.Superchargers were defending 142 for 5, having recovered from a devastating burst of 3 for 8 in 10 balls by Luke Wood at the start thanks to David Wiese, who made 54 from 25, and Brydon Carse (33 from 29) adding 72 unbroken from 48 balls, of which 47 came off the last 15 deliveries, including four sixes from the Namibia allrounder.After Alex Hales hit 29 from 22 balls at the top of the Rockets innings, Sam Hain (20 from 12) and Daniel Sams (27 from 14) took them close but ultimately Reece Topley (2 for 20) defended nine off the last five balls to see the Superchargers home. Wayne Parnell (3 for 21) and Callum Parkinson (2 for 27) did the damage earlier.After judging that bowling first was the best option on this pitch, Rockets could not have had a better start, left-armer Wood delivering back-to-back sets from the pavilion end and hitting the stumps three times to dismiss Tom Banton, Harry Brook and Matthew Short, each with full, swinging deliveries that he celebrated spectacularly.After sharing 180 of the Superchargers’ massive 201 for 3 against Southern Brave last time out, the trio’s combined contribution this time was 8 – all to Short. Responsibility sat with Adam Hose to lead a rebuild from 9 for 3 but after finding the boundary three times he shanked one from Joe Root – in his first appearance of the competition – and was caught at wide long-on.With Root’s offbreaks and canny left-arm spinner Imad Wasim both making scoring difficult, Root picked up a second wicket when a Saif Zaib paddle went wrong. Superchargers looked in desperate need of a strong finish at 83 for 5 after 75.Wiese provided it, hammering four sixes and three fours in a 25-ball unbeaten 54 – albeit having been gifted 10 of those runs by drops on the boundary rope by Hales and Hain – alongside a steadier innings from Carse to give themselves and the other Superchargers bowlers something to defend.Rockets lost Dawid Malan to ball 13 when he found Brook at deep square leg off Parkinson but Hales and Munro were quickly into a rhythm, Munro lofting Parkinson over deep midwicket for six before Hales adeptly found the fence four times in five balls against Short’s offspin.However, both were out in the space of four deliveries to bring Superchargers right back into it as Parnell bowled his second set, Munro slicing to deep point and Hales aiming an inelegant swipe at one that kept a tad low and scattered his stumps.It left two new batters at the crease and though Root was one of them, the former England captain lasted only eight deliveries, failing with the reverse sweep as Parkinson grabbed his second wicket. Hain lofted Parkinson beautifully over cover on the short side and Tom Kohler-Cadmore cleared the long-on boundary off Adil Rashid, leaving 51 required from the final 25 balls.Hain and Kohler-Cadmore holed out in the space of four balls. Sams cleared the leg-side boundary twice off Wiese and Lewis Gregory defied Wiese’s brilliant attempted stop to clear the long-on boundary off Parnell, Sams perished off ball 98 as he skied to long-on and the Rockets fell four short of their target.

Now worth less than Harrison: Everton hit gold selling Lukaku 2.0 for £12m

At one stage, Everton’s final-ever season at Goodison Park looked it could end in relegation down to the Championship.

Now, with the trusty figure of David Moyes back at the helm, the new era on the horizon at Bramley-Moore Dock doesn’t look as bleak.

Everton manager David Moyes before Brighton match

Instead, it looks rather promising, with the Scotsman capable of steering Everton to a top-half finish in the Premier League if positive results don’t suddenly dry up.

Still, there will be some tough decisions for Moyes to wrestle with this approaching summer, including who to keep around for the stadium relocation, as first-team personnel such as Jack Harrison could soon leave the building.

Harrison's future at Everton

The 28-year-old attacker is only present at Goodison at the moment as a loan option, with Harrison simply returning to Leeds United at the end of the season if Moyes and Co don’t want to strike up a permanent switch.

That eventually would seem unlikely, considering there were calls in January for his loan spell to be cut short midway through the campaign. That ultimately didn’t happen, however, with reports at the beginning of March suggesting Leeds are gearing up for his return to Elland Road.

As a consequence, it’s said that the Championship side have held exploratory talks about the winger heading back to MLS where he previously played for New York City.

Helping himself to just one goal this campaign in all competitions, the Toffees number 11 isn’t exactly banging down the door to stay put, with other loan faces in attack such as Jesper Lindstrom also underwhelming with only two assists next to his name from 30 outings.

Jack Harrison for Everton

Harrison could cost around £13m to win permanently – as per Transfermarkt – with Everton perhaps slightly hesitant to fork out that much money for such a hit-and-miss performer.

Amazingly, as much as the Leeds loanee has struggled in large patches this season to get going, there is a former Everton flop worth less than the hot-and-cold attacker right now.

It’s safe to say he struggled in a very similar way to Harrison at Goodison Park.

What happened to Everton's new Lukaku

Whilst Harrison has been prone to an off-day or two donning Everton blue, it’s unlikely he will be categorised entirely as a flop, with the 28-year-old winger at least offering up five goals and three assists across 64 total games.

Another winger, the lesser-spotted Henry Onyekuru, on the other hand, undoubtedly goes down as a big waste of time.

Indeed, the one-time £7m buy never went on to make a single appearance at Goodison, despite being on the club’s books for two whole years and once being heralded as the second coming of Romelu Lukaku for his exploits in Belgium.

It was a particularly troubling transfer window on Everton’s end away from Onyekuru’s cursed arrival, with the summer of 2017 seeing the Farhad Moshiri-backed Toffees splash out excessive wads of cash to land the likes of Davy Klaassen for £24m, who also exited English soil in a swift manner.

At least the Dutchman actually featured for the Merseyside outfit, however, with the Nigerian experiencing constant setbacks involving work permit issues which would result in a number of loan moves away from England occurring, rather than making a name for himself at his parent side.

Onyekuru’s overall Everton numbers

Games played

0

Goals scored

0

Assists

0

Original fee

£7m

Amount sold for

£12m

Value now

£3.3m

Sourced by Transfermarkt

Still, there would end up being a happy ending for the forgotten-about forward, with the Lagos-born attacker leaving Everton behind for a hefty £12m in August of 2019 to AS Monaco, a move that would have suited all parties swimmingly.

Everton would end up making a pretty £5m profit to at least salvage something from the whole ordeal, with the deal looking like even more of a masterstroke when you take into account his measly £3m valuation in 2025.

That’s way less than Harrison’s £13m valuation, with time still on Everton’s side to deliberate about keeping the Whites loanee around, whilst Onyekuru – who is goalless while plying his trade at Al-Fayha in Saudi Arabia – has likely put his ill-fated Merseyside stay right to the back of his mind.

Everton's £12m signing is already looking like a £40m star in the making

He could be a real star under David Moyes at Everton.

By
Angus Sinclair

Mar 17, 2025

Merino repeat: Arteta must unleash Arsenal's "wild horse" in bold new role

As an injury-hit Arsenal toiled away to relegation strugglers Leicester City last month, manager Mikel Arteta looked to his bench in need of inspiration. Up stepped Mikel Merino.

Deployed in an unorthodox centre-forward role for the first time in his senior career, the £31.6m summer signing remarkably bagged a quick-fire brace to seal the win in the closing stages.

Arsenal's Mikel Merinocelebrates scoring their first goal with teammates

With the Gunners devoid of attacking options amid injuries to the likes of Gabriel Jesus and Kai Havertz, Arteta had successfully rolled the dice, producing a tactical tweak that potentially looked like being a defining one in the title race.

Unfortunately for those in north London, that Merino moment has not provided a springboard for success, with it looking as if the Premier League crown is on its way to Merseyside, barring a shock late collapse in Liverpool.

That said, the continued centre-forward experiment has yielded results of late for the Gunners, with it potentially time to consider replicating that whacky decision with another change of position.

Mikel Merino's record at centre-forward

With Arteta having been without Havertz and Jesus against the Foxes, with Gabriel Martinelli and Bukayo Saka also out of action at the time, Merino was viewed as a worthy trial through the middle, after replacing Leandro Trossard late on.

To his credit, the Spaniard delivered, showcasing shades of Olivier Giroud to clinch three points for his side, having since added a further goal and assist against PSV Eindhoven, as well as the winner in the triumph over Chelsea last time out.

That latest effort in the cagey affair with the Blues came courtesy of a delightful, flicked header at the near post, with Arteta praising the way his compatriot is “winning matches” for his side, amid his “incredible” attitude.

As per Transfermarkt, the 28-year-old now boats four goals and an assist in just seven outings in that central role, a record that any natural striker would likely be more than happy with.

Indeed, any centre-forward would be delighted to have finished in the manner that Merino did against the west Londoners on Sunday, with the strikerless visitors potentially ruing their own lack of options through the middle, amid the loss of Nicolas Jackson and Marc Guiu to injury.

Arsenal vs Chelsea – striker comparison

Stat

Merino

Pedro Neto

Minutes played

90

90

Touches

22

35

Goals

1

0

Assists

0

0

Key passes

0

0

Pass accuracy

91%

83%

Successful dribbles

0/0

0/2

Total duels won

5/15

1/7

Possession lost

5x

11x

Stats via Sofascore

As Arteta indicated, the one-time Newcastle United man showed his “value” in that tense tussle, leading the line effectively after winning five duels and recording a solid 91% pass accuracy, while getting on the scoresheet despite registering just 22 touches.

The elegant left-footer may not prove the man to take Arsenal to the title, but he has been a more than adequate stopgap. Perhaps, Arteta should consider repeating the experiment with Riccardo Calafiori.

Arteta could now repeat Arsenal's Merino experiment

What has been so impressive regarding Merino’s impact is that he hasn’t exactly been aided by those around him, excluding the tie with PSV, with Leandro Trossard looking particularly off the boil against Enzo Maresca’s side.

The Belgian winger failed to register a single key pass nor successfully complete a single dribble during his 90-minute outing, having simply offered little in the way of a threat down the left flank.

With just four goals and five assists to his name in the league this season, Trossard has hardly ripped it up, in truth, and with the aforementioned Martinelli only just making his return from injury, an alternative solution could be considered in that left-wing berth.

It could be argued that having already thrust Kieran Tierney into that attacking role of late, Arteta could repeat the trick with Calafiori, with teenage sensation Myles Lewis-Skelly having seemingly locked down the left-back berth.

Calafiori has largely operated as a centre-back or a left-back to date, although he has previously lined up as a left winger, a point outlined by Italian journalist Daniele Vierri upon the 22-year-old’s arrival last summer:

Beautifully described as “like a wild horse on the loose” by the Telegraph’s Sam Dean, the Italy international has already showcased the threat he can pose in the final third, having popped up in an advanced position to score away in the 7-1 rout of PSV.

The former Bologna man’s potentially untapped attacking potential was also on show amid his pin-point strikes against both Manchester City and Wolverhampton Wanderers earlier in the campaign, illustrating what an outlet he could be as a more permanent part of the front line.

Much like in the case of Merino, this bold new role should certainly not be a long-term solution – not with Athletic Bilbao’s Nico Williams again a reported summer target – yet if Arteta is looking for a short-term fit, he could do worse than trial Calafiori further forward.

Let that ‘wild horse’ roam free…

£38m Arsenal star is now "one of the best signings of the Emirates era"

Arsenal have certainly struck gold with this signing…

ByMatt Dawson Mar 17, 2025

Shaheen and Zaman the heroes as Lahore Qalandars defend PSL title

Lahore Qalandars 200 for 6 (Shafique 65, Shaheen 44*, Mir 3-24) beat Multan Sultans 199 for 8 (Rossouw 52, Shaheen 4-51, Rashid 2-26) by one runThe PSL ends as it begun. A clinical Lahore Qalandars produced a stone-cold death-bowling performance to pip Multan Sultans by one run, just as they did to kick off this season four weeks earlier. The closest PSL final there’s ever been came down to the final ball, with Sultans needing four to wrench the title away from Qalandars. In the end, a heroic Khushdil Shah was run-out diving to complete the third at the non-striker’s end, and the Qalandars’ title defence was complete.It all feels like it’s come full circle; these two sides, after all, played the previous season’s final too, which threw up the same result. But for Qalandars, this is a remarkable turnaround, a side that was a laughing stock for the first half of this league’s history. They have now become the undisputed dominant force in the PSL, becoming the first side to retain the title.But all of that is secondary to the drama and madness of the final over, the final ball. The first game this season had boiled down to Zaman Khan bowling to Khushdil, with the Sultans needing four for victory, and ending up one run shy. Today, as Zaman bowled the tournament’s final ball to Khushdil, the Sultans needed four. But there was a yorker, a scuffed squeeze into the on side, a desperate scramble to steal an extra run, a run-out. And then there was bedlam.Qalandars looked to have edged Sultans out by the time the final two overs rolled around. Their death-bowling machine had clicked into gear; Shaheen Shah Afridi, Zaman and Haris Rauf had begun to asphyxiate Sultans. Tim David, Kieron Pollard and Anwar Ali fell in the three preceding overs, and with 35 required in the last 12 balls, Sultans appeared to have run out of road.But Khushdil and Abbas Afridi capitalised on a rare wayward death over from Rauf to plunder 22, setting up a grandstand finish with 13 needed off the final six balls. Zaman’s wily pace variations gave Sultans nothing until the final two balls, but a comical pair of byes after Zaman missed the chance to run Khushdil out from three yards out meant the danger man was on strike to pummel the penultimate ball away for four. But Zaman nailed his length once more, and Sultans ended up just short.An age ago, Qalandars had won the toss and unsurprisingly opted to bat, with Mirza Baig flying out of the blocks. But Fakhar Zaman at the other end was strangely subdued, eschewing the usual flamboyance for an abundance of caution. When he top-edged one to Usama Mir, he had scored 39 off 34; never in PSL history has he had a lower strike rate for an innings where he scored at least 30 runs.But Usama was only just getting started with the wickets. On a surface where he suddenly found grip and bounce, he burst through Sam Billings’ defences his next over, before Ahsan Hafeez was trapped in front for a golden duck. Sensing the potency of spin, Rizwan gave Khushdil another over, and he duly cleaned up Sikandar Raza with his first ball, leaving Qalandars tottering at 112 for 5.David Wiese was getting ready to charge out, only to look up and found Shaheen had pulled rank and was already halfway to the batting crease. Over a decisive, momentum shifting final few overs, he demonstrated why. Bolstering a reputation he has unexpectedly accrued as a middle-order power-hitter, he bludgeoned an unbeaten 44 off 15 deliveries as Qalandars amassed 85 runs in the final five overs. A takedown of Ihsanullah in the 17th over was particularly notable, the 24 that came off it setting Qalandars up for the huge finish they would achieve. He was assisted by some notably ordinary bowling as Sultans crumpled in the face of the onslaught, the difference in death bowling between the two sides proving crucial to the final outcome.But the way Sultans started, it need not have gone down to the wire. Mohammad Rizwan knew an innings of accumulation wouldn’t do today, and flew off the mark, smashing four boundaries of his first seven balls to set the tone, including a chastening takedown of Shaheen in the third over that produced 20 runs. When Wiese uprooted Usman Khan’s stumps, Rizwan was more than happy to turn over power-hitting responsibility to Rilee Rossouw.The South African is PSL royalty by now, and was happy to oblige. He underscored his quality by taking on Zaman, exploiting either side square of the wicket to crunch three boundaries off the fifth over, before helping plunder 16 off Wiese immediately afterwards. Rauf wasn’t spared, either, his first two balls hammered for four and six as Sultans stayed well ahead of the rate. A drive off Rashid Khan brought up a 30-ball half-century; Sultans had stormed to 105 for 1 by now, with half the innings to go.But Rashid wasn’t to be kept down, and as one kept low to sneak through the South African’s defences, Sultans nerves began to fray. Rossouw didn’t appreciate the Afghan’s send-off and tension crept back into the game. A stunning effort on the boundary from Wiese converted what should have been six into the dismissal of Rizwan, Qalandars were furtively dragging the asking rate back up.David and Pollard should have been well-placed to correct that, but leaving too much for the final overs against a bowling attack of Qalandars’ quality had bitten Sultans before. Pollard miscued Shaheen straight up into the air before Qalandars’ captain returned to remove David, Anwar and Mir all in the same over, and an asking rate that hovered around 11 just four overs ago was up in excess of 17 now.Khushdil and Afridi would nearly pull it off, but in the end, in a contest that went down to the barest of margins, Qalandars, and a partisan home crowd, would get their way. Players from both sides sunk to their knees while fireworks erupted above. The PSL trophy’s destination was decided. It was going nowhere after all.