Not just Sterling: £40k-per-week dud's Chelsea career is over under Maresca

Chelsea’s activity in the transfer market has caught the eye in recent years, splashing the cash to try and return to Premier League glory in the near future.

Todd Boehly has certainly invested big money into the first-team setup, handing Enzo Maresca the tools to be a success at Stamford Bridge, with the Italian having a wide selection of players to choose from.

The 46-year-old has often relied upon Moises Caicedo at the heart of his midfield, with the Ecuadorian starting every single game in the league since his appointment.

He may have cost an English record £115m back in the summer of 2023, but given his regularity in the first team, it has been money well spent, looking to be worth every penny.

The same can’t be said for another player, who’s massively failed to deliver in West London after his own big-money move to join the Blues a couple of years ago.

Raheem Sterling's stats for Chelsea

Back in the summer of 2022, Chelsea forked out £50m to sign winger Raheem Sterling from Manchester City, looking to inject added quality into the club’s front line.

However, the move has been a disaster for both parties, struggling to make the desired impact – ultimately leading to his loan move to Arsenal for the current campaign.

The Englishman scored nine times during his debut campaign at the Bridge, going one better with 10 in the following campaign – but after the arrival of Maresca, he ended up falling down the pecking order.

During his three-year period in West London, the 30-year-old has scored just 19 times in 81 appearances, an average of just one goal in every 4.2 matches – simply not at the level for a top-level attacker.

Given his £325k-per-week wages, coupled with his lack of impact for the Blues, it would be a surprise to no one to see him moved on in the summer, with another player also needing to be shipped out.

The player who should never play for Chelsea again

Given the influx of transfers made over recent years, it was always likely that sales were going to be needed, with Sterling just one player who has to be sacrificed after his lack of positive impact.

However, it’s made the jump much harder for academy players to stake their claim in the first team, with the club desperately wanting success after such high spending.

Chelsea striker Armando Broja.

One player who’s been unfortunate in his development is striker Armando Broja, who at one stage looked as though he could lead the line for the Blues going forward.

The Albanian international joined the club at the age of nine, developing through the ranks, before getting his first-team opportunity in the 2022/23 campaign.

The 23-year-old only managed to score three times across his two seasons in the first team at the Bridge, eventually losing his place due to an ACL injury.

Broja has since spent two separate spells out on loan at Fulham before linking up with Everton for the current campaign – but injuries have once again reared their head.

Armando Broja for Everton

The striker, who earns £40k-per-week, has only made six appearances for the Toffees, with his last outing coming back in January after not featuring until December following his summer move.

After just one start and zero goals at Goodison Park, people have started to voice their displeasure at his lack of impact, with one writer claiming he’s been a “complete waste” of a loan addition.

Games played

6

Minutes played

179

Goals scored

0

Touches

77

Shots taken

4

Chances created

2

Passes completed

27

Given his continuous struggles away from West London, coupled with his lack of action when fit, Maresca needs to brutally part ways with the forward this summer to cash in while the 23-year-old still has some value.

Broja and Sterling need to be the first two players out of the door, with their subsequent departures handing the boss the funds to build on his impressive first season in charge of the Blues.

Chelsea sold "exceptional" star in 2021, now he's a big upgrade on Colwill

Chelsea made a huge mistake in allowing one player to depart Stamford Brideg back in 2021.

ByEthan Lamb Mar 4, 2025

The old BBL drill that helped Maxwell pull off a miracle against Afghanistan

Says he relies on his hands for placement and gives himself “a few options for different lengths”

ESPNcricinfo staff09-Nov-20234:00

Harmison on Maxwell’s 201*: ‘It has to be the greatest innings in ODI cricket’

One of the reasons why Glenn Maxwell’s hardly-believable double-century against Afghanistan in Mumbai is being billed as the greatest ODI knock of all time is because of how he was suffering from back spasms and severe cramps in the lower half of his body, and he still managed to hit a total of 21 fours and 10 sixes to lead Australia to victory, mainly by using his arms and upper-body strength.Maxwell attributed that ability to a pre-match batting drill he used to practice around eight-nine years ago in the BBL, to hit some big boundaries.”One of the things I used to work on before every BBL game – going back about eight or nine years – was foot drills where the first 12 balls I’d face I’d stay dead still but try and hit them as far as I could,” he told the . “Whatever the length, I basically had to hold my top body for as long as I could to get the right trajectory to feel like I hit a six. Working on that upper-body movement without using your legs is actually a good way of finding out where your ideal heave point is. Going back to that [innings against Afghanistan], I obviously had to tinker a little bit with actual bowlers not just bowling half-volleys outside off stump but bowling different areas. Jut relying on stuff I had worked on in early years and try to adapt as quickly as I could.”Related

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Cummins hails Maxwell's 201* as 'the greatest ODI innings that's ever happened'

When asked what helped him prepare for such unorthodox shots, Maxwell said: “I think it has a lot to do with the positions I get myself in on a golf course where I’m stuck behind a tree and I’ve to throw my wrists around or flick it around. It’s little things like that. I feel like it allows you to be inventive and tests the boundaries.”Maxwell also revealed on the podcast that the worst cramps in his body were in his calf muscle, and that at one point the middle toe on his right foot “starting to bend back” and combined with the back spasms, his “body was starting to shut down”.When he fell to the ground at one point and lay flat because of cramps just after completing a single, he was attended to by the team physio who said that going off the field would be worse because Maxwell’s body would cool down and coming back down the long staircase from the dressing room at the Wankhede Stadium would become very tough. The physio then advised Maxwell to slow things down since the batter also “couldn’t control my breathing,” and told him to hydrate himself more and bat on.Not only against Afghanistan, but during his record-breaking 40-ball century against Netherlands, and further back in the past in white-ball cricket, one of Maxwell’s trademark ability is to find the gaps in all corners of the ground, irrespective of the line and length of the ball, and the bowlers.”Once I get in, I feel like I can set myself early enough in my mind and have a good idea of where I’m trying to hit it,” Maxwell explained. “I feel like my hands can get me out of trouble if the ball is not quite in that areas and do I give myself a few options for different lengths.”

Alex Lees posts third century in a row as Durham pile on the runs

Durham 433 for 8 (Lees 195, Clark 82) lead Gloucestershire 316 by 117 runsAlex Lees gave the England selectors a gentle nudge after scoring his third century in as many innings to guide Durham into a strong position against Gloucestershire in their LV= Insurance County Championship clash.Lees anchored the innings with a flawless knock of 195, posting his highest score as a Durham player since his move to Seat Unique Riverside in 2018. Graham Clark provided the perfect complement with 82 as the two shared a stand worth 195 after the hosts were reduced to 109 for four in reply to Gloucestershire’s 316.The two batters rebuilt the innings and propelled Durham ahead in the game, having skittled the visitors’ tail within the first half-hour of day two. It allowed Brydon Carse to tee off late in the day to push the hosts into a 117-run lead at the close with two first-innings wickets remaining.Resuming on 280 for six, Gloucestershire put their foot down before the arrival of the new ball. Zafar Gohar smashed three boundaries off Carse’s first over, while Josh Shaw cleared the rope with a huge strike over long-on against Parkinson to earn a second batting bonus point.Durham answered fire with fire as Carse responded with a hostile spell to make the breakthrough. Shaw could only glove behind to Robinson down the leg-side and the next ball was too good for Matt Taylor. Zaman Akhter survived the hat-trick ball and another barrage from Carse before the arrival of the new ball.Ben Raine then wrapped up the innings within three deliveries with the new Kookaburra in hand by bowling Gohar and pinning Dominic Goodman lbw, securing maximum bowling points for the hosts.Shaw made quick inroads for the visitors to remove Michael Jones, but Lees responded by taking the attack to the Gloucestershire bowlers. The left-hander shared a stand worth 67 with Scott Borthwick before the Durham captain picked out substitute fielder Jack Taylor as he aimed to clear the short boundary, presenting Shaw with his second wicket.Lees worked his way to his fifty from only 56 balls, but Durham had issues at the other end when David Bedingham emulated his captain’s dismissal falling three balls before the lunch break. Ollie Robinson continued the procession after the interval as fell caught and bowled to Goodman, leaving Durham in trouble at 109 for four after losing three wickets for 32.The home side required patience at the crease and Lees duly delivered without taking any risks on his march to three figures. He showed composure in a slow grind through the nineties before bringing up his third hundred of the term after striking Gohar straight down the ground to the fence.Clark offered a useful foil at the other end to support the former England opener. After a period of consolidation, the two batters upped the ante and cranked up the pressure on the Gloucestershire bowlers.James Bracey turned to a variety of options, but could not stop the onslaught from the fifth-wicket stand, especially from Lees who powered his way to his highest score of the season by passing 150 with three-straight pulls to the boundary against Akhter.Ben Charlesworth took the ball in the 70th over and finally broke the stand for 195 when Clark drilled the ball straight to Chris Dent at short mid-wicket, falling narrowly short of a deserved century. Carse and Lees guided the hosts to their third batting bonus point before the new ball.Matt Taylor found his rhythm from the off with the new ball to end Lees’ brilliant knock for 195 and then Raine first ball to give the visitors hope of skittling the hosts late in the day. But, Carse stamped his authority in the final hour, reaching fifty from 45 balls and smashing three sixes in the process, ensuring Durham ended the evening in command closing in on maximum batting points.

Cheteshwar Pujara ton sets up Sussex as Steven Smith settles for walk-on part

Visitors cash in after captain lays foundations to build 104-run first-innings lead

Paul Edwards05-May-2023
At its best, the batting of Cheteshwar Pujara reminds one of the building of cathedrals. There is a monumental patience about the business, an alliance of forbearance with time that makes any major achievement all the more admirable. There is purpose, too, and aggression where possible, and these qualities were apparent as Pujara made his third century of the season at New Road this afternoon. But above all there was method and a resolve to ride out the mettlesome duels with Worcestershire’s seamers in the morning session, thereby gaining increasing licence to attack them later in the day.The result of Pujara’s tough-minded devotion was plain in the evening session when he put on 117 in 20 overs with Fynn Hudson-Prentice, who made 59, and a further 38 in six with Ollie Robinson, whose 21-ball 33 came straight from the McCullum-Stokes school of tactical thinking. Those partnerships gave Sussex a lead of 104, which was a fine effort given they had been 213 for 6 when Oli Carter had his off stump rumbled by a fine outswinger from Matthew Waite. Pujara eventually fell for 136 to the worst shot of his innings, a tired waft off Josh Tongue, but by then it was testing to recall the first session of the day when he and Steven Smith had worked hard for 75 minutes to put on 61, a partnership that did little but keep their side in the game after Worcestershire had taken two early wickets.Ah yes, Smith, I wondered when we would get to him. Once again, the interest of sports editors had been sufficiently piqued by the near certainty of the Australian batting to send their very best writers to New Road and perhaps Saturday will be another morning on which Smith will be the context for another international cricketer’s fine achievement. But Pujara made over a hundred runs more than his team mate in this innings and it must be a curious world in which one decides what is important about a day’s cricket before one discovers whether it has truly mattered very much.We only had to wait ten balls before we got our chance to assess Smith’s form, for the day had begun in grisly fashion for Sussex, who lost Tom Alsop leg before wicket to Joe Leach’s sixth delivery of the morning when succumbing to the virus of trying to work the ball just in front of square instead of playing it to mid-on. Next over, Ali Orr was dropped by Jack Haynes off Ben Gibbon and then caught by Gareth Roderick three balls later. Those dismissals more or less restored the game to parity and they also brought Smith out to join Pujara, thus uniting two of the best and most contrasting batters in the world.Pujara and Steven Smith bump fists during their partnership•Getty ImagesSmith’s innings of 30 off 57 balls was interesting but unexceptional, although that latter quality will have little to do with the number of column inches it commands on Saturday. This is an Australian summer, after all, and we should be grateful that still matters amid the slew of competitions that pay riches yet count for nowt. So Smith began with a characteristic light-sabre leave and followed it with a sinless forward defensive. There were five fours but they were balanced with about as many false shots, a lovely ease through midwicket off Tongue making up for a swish to an off-side bouncer off Gibbon. The most typical boundary was a pull off Tongue in which Smith’s whole body pivoted on the stroke and the bat made as if to follow the ball to the rope. The innings itself offered glimmers of unconventional greatness but they might have been apparent only to those who knew this batsman had made 30 Test centuries, some of which had defined Ashes series.Anyway, Smith had batted 88 minutes when he faced the final delivery of the innings’ 39th over, which was bowled by Tongue from the Diglis End. The ball seamed back and hit Smith just above the knee-roll of his pad in line with middle and leg stump at best. Peter Hartley’s decision to give the batsman out was therefore neither a near-formality nor a shocker. In a Test match, the batter would surely have reviewed the decision and the technology might well have suggested umpire’s call. There was, though, an equal chance that Smith would have got away with it.Tongue was untroubled by such speculation. He gave the dismissal a double salute with his clenched fists and was quickly mobbed by his delighted colleagues. Before lunch, James Coles’ ten-cent drive to a ball from Gibbon saw him caught behind for 14 and Worcestershire supporters’ enjoyment of their lunch might then have been enhanced by New Road’s gracious assumption of its May splendour. The horse chestnut in front of the corporate hospitality marquee has been giving it large on the catwalk for a couple of weeks but now the poplars, limes and beeches at the Diglis End and in front of the cathedral are also buying their new-season frocks.The ruthlessness of Pujara’s batting frequently punctures such blithe optimism. During his stand with Smith, he had already eased the ball backward of square off his legs and played a cover drive. Both strokes outshone his partner. Either side of a 45-minute break for rain, he now added back cuts and pulls that took the game away from Worcestershire, one or two of whose bowlers suffered under the strain of it all. Pujara has now reached fifty for Sussex eight times in two-and-a-bit seasons and on each occasion he has gone on to make a century. Nor were his delights quite over. Eight balls before bad light interrupted play deep into evensong, he moved himself to sixth slip and next ball he grabbed a thick-edged catch off Jake Libby, a cricketer whose adhesion is his trademark. Ed Pollock and Azhar Ali took their side safely to stumps, which were finally drawn past seven o’clock, but there is serious work ahead for Brett D’Oliveira’s top order this weekend.

What's holding back Rashid Khan, the ODI bowler?

His numbers against top sides are not those you’d expect from such a skilful bowler, and holding him back till the 15th over of a middling chase – as was the case against India – hardly helps

Matt Roller13-Oct-20232:49

Why Rashid isn’t at his best against the big teams in ODIs?

It was an incongruous sight. As Rohit Sharma raced to 76 off 43, making light of Afghanistan’s 272 for 8, Rashid Khan prowled around the outfield under the Bishan Singh Bedi Stand at Delhi’s Arun Jaitley Stadium. India were cruising to an eight-wicket win, yet the opposition’s best bowler was at deep midwicket.By the time Rashid finally came into the attack to bowl the 15th over, India were 125 for 0. He dismissed both openers, having Ishan Kishan caught at cover and bowling Rohit after being taken for three consecutive boundaries, but those wickets served only to underline the peculiarity: why did Afghanistan use five other bowlers before Rashid?Jonathan Trott, their coach, could only suggest it owed to Hashmatullah Shahidi’s “gut feel”, saying: “That’s a captain’s prerogative. There is a case, when the ball gets a little bit older, for Rash to bowl with it, and it gets a little bit more turn; it doesn’t skid on as much.”And yet, Trott could not help but make his own view clear: “Certainly, you want a guy like Rash in the attack as soon as possible,” he said, conceding that the game was effectively over as a contest by the time Rashid had bowled his first over. “It’s always something we’ll look at.”Related

Trott hopes Rashid & Co bring 'joy and happiness' to post-earthquake Afghanistan

It was the latest installment in Rashid’s unusual and underwhelming World Cup career, which is now 11 matches old. At 25, he already holds elite status as a white-ball bowler: at some stage next year, he will overtake Dwayne Bravo as the leading wicket-taker in T20 history. And yet, that success has generally eluded him in 50-over cricket.In aggregate, his ODI record is superb: he has 174 wickets at 19.91 in 96 matches. But over 100 of those wickets have come against Ireland and Zimbabwe; in his dozen appearances against nations in the top six of ICC’s rankings, he has taken only 13 at 44.30 each.In T20, nobody has played Rashid better than Shane Watson. Watson faced 73 balls from Rashid across 11 matches, scored 108 runs and was never dismissed by him, most memorably scoring a match-winning century for Chennai Super Kings against Rashid’s Sunrisers Hyderabad in the 2018 IPL final.Watson believes that Rashid’s struggle to convert his T20 form into 50-over cricket owes to the specifics of the format: with only four fielders permitted outside the 30-yard circle in the middle overs of an ODI, he has less protection in the deep. “When batters feel like they need to take Rashid Khan on, that really does bring him into the game,” Watson told ESPNcricinfo.Rashid Khan dismissed Ishan Kishan and Rohit Sharma after coming on in the 16th over of the chase•ICC/Getty Images”With four people out, batters do not have to take a risk: they find it easy to be able to find the boundary or rotate the strike. Everyone knows that Rashid Khan is the major weapon for Afghanistan, so the game plan will always be around making sure they negate him. And if he gets it slightly wrong, there are low-risk boundary opportunities available with four men out.”When facing Rashid, Watson shifted his stance across so that he covered his off stump. “It was a bit like facing Shahid Afridi,” he recalled, “because they’re a lot faster through the air [than most wristspinners] and more direct… they’re not really trying to get you out through flight, more from the ball skipping off the wicket.”The ball where he gets most of his wickets is his wrong ‘un… so I would set up to be able to hit the ball dead straight or into the leg side, with the ball mainly coming in. He’s not a big turner of his legspinner. I thought, if I was on off stump, I was comfortable knowing that he wasn’t really going to spin the ball past me on the outside of the bat.”Throughout their T20 encounters, Watson noticed that when Rashid went wicketless early in his spell, he would “start chasing wickets” by bowling fuller than his natural length. “He’s going to try and bowl more miracle balls… try to bowl a bit slower, or a bit fuller, which means there are more scoring opportunities for the set batters.”That pattern played out on Wednesday night. After Rashid was cut for four by Rohit, his next ball was a fraction fuller and straighter, and was dispatched over the leg side for four more. His follow-up was a googly, targeting the stumps; Rohit swung it away over the leg side for six.

“The ball where he gets most of his wickets is his wrong ‘un. So I would set up to be able to hit the ball dead straight or into the leg side, with the ball mainly coming in.”Shane Watson spills out his secret of tackling Rashid Khan

On Sunday, Rashid will come up against an England side who will look to put him under pressure. All of their batters have played with or against Rashid in international or franchise cricket; four years ago, they plundered 110 runs off his nine overs in Manchester, including 11 sixes.It seems implausible that Shahidi will hold him back as long as he did against India – even if that decision fitted the general pattern of Rashid’s ODI career, which has seen him bowl only two powerplay overs this year. “Once the ball has stopped swinging, I’d be getting him on,” Watson said.”Afghanistan has to take early wickets to try and get into the middle order, and he’s absolutely their best wicket-taking opportunity. Even if it’s just one or two overs in the powerplay, get him into the game early. You’d prefer to ask a few questions, compared to getting him into the game when it’s nearly too far gone.”Rashid’s schedule has been relentless this year – he has featured in six different franchise leagues – and he has been carrying a back niggle for several months. His status as Afghanistan’s most prominent cricketer means that he cannot simply switch off when he is not playing.This week, he announced that he would donate his match fees for this tournament to the relief effort following the devastating earthquake in Afghanistan, and his foundation has launched a fundraising campaign for its victims. Cricket can never be his sole focus – even during a World Cup.And yet there are few sights in the sport that can bring more joy than Rashid at his best, grinning after beating a batter or wheeling away with his arms outstretched in celebration. Afghanistan will hope they prove to be the defining images of his 2023 World Cup.

Southern Brave have 'no excuses' after Will Smeed, Will Jacks centuries leave title defence on line

Southern Brave wristspinner Jake Lintott reflects on two powerhouse innings against champions

Jake Lintott17-Aug-2022We are disappointed with how we’ve played in the first half of the group stages, with one win and three defeats in our first four games. There’s no excuses: we’ve just been a little bit off the pace.We had a week off after our first game and struggled to find our rhythm against Birmingham Phoenix. We played London Spirit two days later, who have gone really well. We did a lot of things right but just left ourselves a bit too much to do. On Sunday, against Oval Invincibles, we were pretty poor.Will Smeed and Will Jacks both scored hundreds against us and played really well, but we’re not naive: that doesn’t just happen randomly. It’s not a case of being unlucky that we’ve had two great innings against us. We tried to stick to plans against them but we probably fed their strengths. We have to be better moving forwards.Injuries don’t help any team. At the draft, the seam attack that was put together featured Jofra Archer, Tymal Mills, Chris Jordan and Craig Overton. At various stages, all four of them have been unavailable. Clearly, we’ve been a little bit unlucky there but we still feel like we have the players to win games. It’s quite simple from here: we have to have a proper shot at winning every game if we’re going to qualify.As I see it, there’s no reason why we can’t. It only takes one person to play a special innings or bowl a special spell, and things can change really quickly. Our overseas players – Quinton de Kock, Tim David and Marcus Stoinis – haven’t quite fired yet but they are all world-class performers and will come good at some point, hopefully sooner rather than later.We play Manchester Originals on Thursday, who won their first game last night after starting with three defeats. They have a really strong batting line-up on paper and it’s really important that we plan well before then. Joe Maiden, our analyst, sends through all the opposition information a couple of days before a game, which will outline each batter’s strengths, weaknesses, where to bowl, where not to bowl, all of their preferences.Will Jacks walks off after making 108 not out against Southern Brave•Getty ImagesSome people won’t spend long looking at it and others will spend a lot of time on it. I’m quite thorough, just because I came into the professional game late: analysis is such a big thing now, and it’s all I really know. For others, who have played for 10 or 15 years, they are happy to focus on themselves. I’ll go through everything with Graeme Welch, the bowling coach, and then we’ll have a meeting with him, Joe and Mahela Jayawardene to make sure our plans marry up.It’s quite a thorough process, just making sure our plans are ready so that if we execute them on the night, we can really shut batters down. Sometimes you find things out that you didn’t know about batters and that means it’s worth looking into: you might find out that, randomly, a particular batter struggles to score against wide cut-balls.Manchester’s line-up is very strong: Jos Buttler and Phil Salt opening up, plus some quality overseas players like Andre Russell and Tristan Stubbs in the middle order. It’ll be a good test for us, and an opportunity to put things right. Personally, I’m really looking forward to the challenge of bowling against some of the best players in the world.The standard this season has been very high. Every team is star-studded and going up against the world’s best is a great gauge of where you’re at. A lot of the overseas players this year are big names which adds pressure, but I have to try and break the game down so that I’m really clear with my plans.It’s easy when you’re in the flow of the game to end up just bowling without thinking, and that’s when you can make mistakes. I’ve been a little bit disappointed with certain deliveries, but that’s part and parcel of bowling wristspin. I’ve still got a lot of confidence in myself that I can make a big impact on games moving forward.I’m really looking forward to playing against Jos. We trained together at Somerset when we were much younger, and we played a bit of school cricket against each other: he went to King’s College, Taunton, and I was at Queen’s. He was still as formidable then as he is now. I haven’t come across him much since then but Thursday should be a really good challenge, bowling to one of the best batters in the world.

Douglas Luiz slammed for 'disrespecting his team-mates' by going AWOL as Juventus director takes aim at wantaway midfielder

Juventus general manager Damien Comolli was furious with Douglas Luiz's antics as he refused to report for training with his team-mates.

  • Luiz skipped pre-season training without permission
  • Attempting to force a move after woeful season
  • Apologised to team-mates and staff for his behaviour
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Luiz has been desperately trying to leave the Italian club just a year after joining from Aston Villa. In a bid to force a move, the midfielder refused to report to the club's headquarters for training this week. The Serie A club are offended by Luiz's actions and have decided to take disciplinary action against the Brazilian. Comolli clarified that the situation was resolved after Luiz apologised to the club.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    The Brazilian made only 19 Serie A appearances for Juve last season and one appearance as a substitute in the Club World Cup this summer. Marred by injuries as soon as he joined the Italian club, the Brazilian is unable to find a new club. Premier League club Nottingham Forest have reportedly submitted a loan bid with an option to buy for the 26-year-old, but Juve's demand of €40 million (£34m/$46m) may be a hurdle for the English club.

    Comolli, who is aware of the midfielder's plight, empathised with him but asserted that he should apologise to his team-mates and staff. The general manager is very clear that no player is leaving until the club receives a worthy offer.

  • WHAT COMOLLI SAID

    When asked about Luiz going AWOL, Comolli said: "The player disrespected his team-mates. Everyone must respect the shirt they wear. He then apologised to everyone, players, coaches, and me.”

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    WHAT NEXT FOR JUVENTUS?

    Luiz will be hoping for a quick resolution to his situation, with a Premier League return a possibility. Juve are also trying to offload Timothy Weah, who rejected a move to Nottingham Forest earlier this summer, but a move to Marseille has emerged as a possibility.

Dolphins overcome Khushdil-Shaheen scare for consolation win

Shaheen returned to bat despite hurting his knee but could not win the match for Lions

ESPNcricinfo staff22-Sep-2024Dolphins ensured they did not bow out of the Champions Cup without a win, as they beat Lions by 16 runs in the last league game of the tournament.With Lions needing 81 from five overs with three wickets in hand, a Dolphins win seemed a mere formality. But Khushdil Shah and Shaheen Shah Afridi, batting with an injured knee, threatened to pull off a heist. The pair hit seven sixes and two fours in the next four overs to reduce the equation to 23 needed from the final over. But Abbas Afridi held his nerve to give his side a consolation win.It must have been a no-brainer for Dolphins to bat after winning the toss; the teams batting first are yet to lose a game in the tournament. Dolphins lost Sahibzada Farhan in the sixth over but Muhammad Hurraira and Muhammad Akhlaq added 77 in 10.1 overs to set the platform.Hurraira scored 47 off 41 balls and Akhlaq 52 off 50. After the two fell in quick succession, Umar Amin took over. Despite Lions making regular breakthroughs, he found enough support from the lower middle order to steer Dolphins ahead.By the time Amin fell, for 75 in the 42nd over, Dolphins had 275 on the board. Even though they were all out in the last over, they had posted a challenging 326.In response, Abdullah Shafique and Rohail Nazir gave Lions a steady start of 78 in 13.3 overs. Nazir was the aggressor, scoring 62 in 70 balls.After 22 overs, Lions were well placed on 125 for 1 but Saud Shakeel dismissed Nazir and Omair Yousuf in his back-to-back overs. That derailed Lions’ chase.Lions needed 100 in the last ten overs with four wickets in hand. Then, a Faheem Ashraf delivery hit Shaheen on the left knee and he had to retire hurt. He returned at the fall of the next wicket, in the 45th over, but struggled with running between the wickets.That did not seem to matter as he and Khushdil dealt in boundaries. Shaheen hit Mir Hamza for back-to-back sixes in the 47th over. Khushdil went one better against Abbas in the next. But despite their best efforts, Lions fell short of their target.

Saiba quanto o Corinthians faturou e quanto deixou de ganhar após o fechamento da janela europeia

MatériaMais Notícias

da poker: Mesmo recusando propostas por Moscardo e Yuri Alberto nos últimos dias, o Corinthians não passou ileso à janela de transferências europeias. O período de contratação das principais ligas no Velho Continente encerrou na última sexta-feira (1º), com o Timão tendo negociado Murillo e Adson na reta final.No total, o clube alvinegro já ganhou R$ 196,87 milhões em vendas de ativos e mecanismos de solidariedade nesta temporada.

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da betobet: O valor arrecadado é mais que o dobro previsto para 2023, que era R$ 90,1 milhões. Dessa quantia, R$ 148,1 milhões foram em negociações com equipes de Europa, o que representa 75,2% do total embolsado.

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Nem mesmo o poderoso mercado do Oriente Médio foi tão letal ao Corinthians do que a ‘boa e velha’ Europa. O único atleta corintiano que deixou a equipe para a praça asiática neste ano foi Róger Guedes, vendido por R$ 19,5 milhões ao Al-Rayyan, do Qatar.

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As vendas para o futebol europeu começaram no fim de junho, com o Zenit, da Rússia, fechando a contratação em definitivo do atacante Gustavo Mantuan, que esteve emprestado pelo Timão desde o meio do ano passado, por 2 milhões de euros (R$ 10,4 milhões).

Na semana seguinte, o time de São Petersburgo firmou negócio por Pedro no valor de 9 milhões de euros (R$ 46,7 milhões). O clube do Parque São Jorge recebeu a maior parte do valor à vista, mas até fevereiro de 2023, quando o atleta vai se apresentar ao time russo, tem mais duas parcelas para embolsar. Como tem 17 anos, a revelação corintiana só poderá se transferir para a Europa quando atingir a maioridade.

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Os dois negócios aconteceram antes da abertura da janela de transferências da Europa, que aconteceu no dia 1º de setembro nos principais países do futebol europeu – com exceção da Inglaterra. Mas foi no fim de agosto, pouco antes do período encerrar, que outros dois jogadores deixaram o Corinthians para se transferir para o Velho Continente.

No dia 23, o Nantes, da França, anunciou a contratação do atacante Adson. O Timão recebeu 5 milhões de euros (R$ 27 milhões) pelo negócio. Já no dia 31, o zagueiro Murillo foi negociado com o Nottingham Forest, da Inglaterra, por 12 milhões de euros (R$ 64 milhões) – o valor pode chegar a 14 milhões de euros (R$ 74,6 milhões) se o defensor atingir algumas metas no seu primeiro ano na equipe inglesa.

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E o Corinthians poderia ter recebido ainda mais dinheiro vendendo ativo para times europeus se não tivesse recusado propostas por Gabriel Moscardo e Yuri Alberto.

O volante recebeu uma oferta de R$ 21 milhões de euros (R$ 111,8 milhões) do Chelsea, da Inglaterra. O valor pode chegar até R$ 25 milhões de euros (R$ 133,1 milhões) com bonificações atreladas a cumprimento de metas. O Timão recusou a investida, que aconteceu na semana do encerramento da janela de transferências. Isso não significa que o negócio não pode acontecer. A ideia é que ele avance até o fim da temporada, com a promessa corintiana se transferindo para a equipe londrina no ano que vem.

Em relação a Yuri Alberto, a proposta foi de 18 milhões de euros por 60% dos direitos econômicos. Como divide o percentual com o Zenit, da Rússia, cada clube receberia 9 milhões de euros (R$ 47,9 milhões) e ficaria com 20% do ‘passe’ do centroavante. Os corintianos não aprovaram esse tipo de negócio. Para a direção do clube alvinegro qualquer conversa pelo centroavante só iniciará por 20 milhões de euros (R$ 106,5 milhões) pela ‘fatia’ que possui.

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Não vender Moscardo e Yuri fez com que o Corinthians deixasse de ganhar 30 milhões de euros (R$ 159,8), quase o dobro do que a equipe do Parque São Jorge já arrecadou em 2023.

Além dos atletas que o Corinthians vendeu, também foram arrecadados mais R$ 12,67 milhões em mecanismos de solidariedade pelas transferências dos atacantes Gabriel Pereira para o Al-Rayyan (QAT) e Malcom para o Al-Hilal (SAU).

O lateral-esquerdo Carlos Augusto foi negociado pelo Monza para a Inter de Milão, ambos da Itália. Nesse caso, além do valor referente ao período de formação do atleta, o Timão tem direito a 40% da mais valia – quantia superior à que o clube alvinegro embolsou quando negociou o jogador.

No total, a equipe do Parque São Jorge tem direito a 5,85 milhões de euros na transação. Na cotação atual, as cifras estão em R$ 31,15 milhões. Porém, o contrato com a Internazionale inicialmente é por empréstimo com obrigação de compra no fim da temporada, em junho de 2024, período que o dinheiro vai cair na conta do time alvinegro.

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COBRANÇA DA FIEL

Muitos protestos foram feitos pela torcida que foi contra a venda de boa parte dos atletas negociados pela diretoria corintiana. O principal motivo foi a negociação pelo valor bem abaixo da multa rescisória desses atletas.

No sábado (2), lideranças de torcidas uniformizadas foram até o CT Joaquim Grava e, em reunião com o presidente Duílio Monteiro Alves, cobraram a direção pelas negociações.

لاعبو بيراميدز بعد التتويج بالسوبر الإفريقي: نجني ثمار المواسم الماضية

عبر لاعبو فريق بيراميدز عن سعادتهم العارمة بالتتويج ببطولة السوبر الإفريقي على حساب فريق نهضة بركان المغربي. 

وتوج بيراميدز ببطولة السوبر الإفريقي للمرة الأولى في تاريخه على حساب نهضة بركان المغربي، بهدف دون رد أحرزه فيستون مايلي. 

طالع.. موعد مباراة بيراميدز القادمة بعد الفوز على نهضة بركان والتتويج بالسوبر الإفريقي

وقال علي جبر في تصريحات عبر قناة “بي إن سبورتس”: “أحمد الله على الإنجاز، سر الروح هو إن اللاعبين يحبون بعضهم ولا أحد يُفكر في من يشارك أو لا”. 

وأضاف: “كرونسلاف يورتشيتش والإدارة (عاملين) حالة جيدة للفريق، وهذا هو السر، وربنا يكرمنا ونفوز بكل البطولات”.

وتابع: “أمامنا دوري ثم إفريقيا والسوبر المصري، سنحتفل اليوم ونستعد لمواجهة فاركو في الدوري، والوقت ما زال مبكرًا على كأس إنتركونتينينتال”.

وأشار زميله وليد الكرتي: “مواجهة نهضة بركان كانت صعبة، أمام فريق فاز باللقب، كنا عازمون على تحقيق اللقب لأول مرة للنادي، ونحن نجني ثمار المواسم الماضية”.

شدد: “كلما تفوز بلقب الطموح يزيد أكثر، وإن شاء الله نقدم أداءً جيدًا ومجهودًا في الملعب، وكل البطولات تكون من نصيبنا إن شاء الله”.

فيما تحدث محمد الشيبي عن تتويج فريقه بالسوبر الإفريقي، قائلًا: “شكر جميع اللاعبين والجهاز الفني والطبي، يستحقون اللقب، واجهنا خصمًا عنده مكانة في إفريقيا من بلدي وهو غني عن التعريف، أتمنى لهم حظ أوفر”.

واختتم: “نفكر في كل مباراة على حدة، اليوم توجنا بالسوبر الإفريقي، وغدًا نغلق الصفحة ونركز في مباراة الدوري، أمامنا دوري ودوري الأبطال ثم السوبر المصري، ونحن نستحق البطولة”. 

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