NUFC transfer update on Ajer & Woodman

Newcastle United have been gifted a potential transfer boost in their pursuit of Kristoffer Ajer, which involves Freddie Woodman.

The Lowdown: Woodman had great season

Woodman has come off the back of a great 2020/21 season with Swansea City under Steve Cooper, playing in no fewer than 52 games in total over all competitions, keeping 22 clean sheets in the process (Transfermarkt).

He was vital in getting the Swans into the EFL Championship play-off final, in where they unfortunately lost out 2-0 to Brentford at Wembley Stadium.

However, with Martin Dubravka and Karl Darlow still at St. James’ Park, there is a question mark over whether there is a place for Woodman in Steve Bruce’s squad, meaning that he may be open to the possibility of selling him if a good offer comes in in the summer window.

The Latest: Woodman and Ajer could be swapped

As per Football Insider, Woodman could be used in a potential swap deal to lure Ajer away from Celtic and to the North East.

The Hoops have enquired over the availability of the English goalkeeper, and a recruitment source has told the news outlet that they are not the only club keen on securing his signature.

A part-exchange deal with Ajer is a possibility, although the Tyneside club would prefer to ship Woodman out on loan again or just sell him permanently.

The Verdict: Perfect for Newcastle

The Magpies must surely consider swapping Woodman, a player who may not get much game time come the new campaign, for a player who would vastly improve their team in Ajer.

Described as an ‘outstanding’ player back in March by former Toon ace Lee Clark, who managed him during a loan spell at Kilmarnock, Norway international Ajer is certainly ready to make the step up to the Premier League, and standing at a mammoth six-foot-six-inches tall, he should have no problems at all in coping with its physical and aerial demands.

At just 23 years of age as well, Ajer will only get better, and that is the same with Woodman at 24 – the difference of course, is Woodman has two quality options in front of him in the pecking order.

Thus, NUFC could go through with a straight swap or even sell Woodman separately for a decent amount of money given his age, and use that in any deal to buy Ajer.

In other news, find out what big piracy claim Ben Jacobs has dropped on the potential takeover and arbitration here!

Leicester are interested in Naby Keita

Leicester City have enquired about the availability of Liverpool midfielder Naby Keita ahead of the upcoming transfer window, according to reports.

What’s the talk?

Journalist Sega Diallo has revealed on Twitter that Brendan Rodgers’ side are interested in ending Keita’s three-year nightmare spell at Anfield, with the Reds open to his sale.

The 26-year-old has endured a torrid time since arriving on English shores back in 2018, suffering multiple injuries that have restricted the Guinea international to just 32 Premier League starts for his current club.

Keita hasn’t been seen on domestic duties since March 15th and has failed to make any of Jurgen Klopp’s last three matchday squads, despite there being no news of a fresh fitness concern.

His absence from Liverpool’s first-team set-up has only fuelled talk of an imminent exit, and the Foxes are reportedly one of several sides offering the former RB Leipzig man a way out of Merseyside.

Leicester must swoop

Leicester could complete one of the most impressive seasons in the club’s history if they secure a Champions League qualification spot following their maiden FA Cup triumph over the weekend.

A place in Europe’s elite cup competition would elevate the Midlands outfit exponentially on and off the field and could attract some of the continent’s top talent to the King Power Stadium, as well as convince those that are already there that their future lies with Leicester.

If Rodgers wants to compete on two fronts next season and maintain his side’s impressive Premier League form, then further strength in depth is going to be required.

Although Keita hasn’t kicked on as he would’ve hoped at Liverpool, he’s undoubtedly a top talent on his day, and Virgil van Dijk’s glowing assessment of the hard-working midfielder showcases the potential that he possesses.

“I think he is world-class; if I’m absolutely honest. I see all the moments when he has the ball, the smart moves, the smart intelligence. It’s just incredible to see, and I’m very happy for him,” revealed the Dutch defender to Liverpoolfc.com back in 2020.

Therefore, a move for the £120,000-per-week workhorse would make perfect sense for Leicester. Keita could play alongside Tielemans, or allow the Belgium international to be rested for certain games and also ease the creative burden on James Maddison.

It’s a move that could be perfect for both parties, and the Foxes must sanction an audacious swoop for Liverpool’s unwanted man.

And, in other news…Leicester handed a huge pre-Chelsea injury blow, Rodgers will be gutted – opinion

Kirtley demolishes Derbyshire as Sussex win by an innings

Sussex completed an innings demolition of hapless Derbyshire thanks to adevastating burst by paceman James Kirtley

Bruce Talbot15-Jun-2001Sussex completed an innings demolition of hapless Derbyshire thanks to adevastating burst by paceman James Kirtley.He took the last four second innings wickets in just 11 balls for just fiveruns as Derbyshire were bowled out for 118 20 minutes after lunch on thethird day.It gave Sussex a third win of the season in Division Two – as many as theymanaged throughout last season – by an innings and 34 runs and lifted theminto third place.Kirtley finished with figures of 6-45 a week after he took 5-60 in the winover Worcestershire.He said: “We needed to polish them off so to do it like that was good fun;it was the icing on the cake after what we had achieved in the previous twodays.”Derbyshire, resuming on 33-1, lost both Luke Sutton and Matt Dowman toKirtley in the first three overs of the day.And any hopes they harboured of saving the game disappeared when a directhit from Jason Lewry at extra cover ran out Michael Di Venuto after a mix-upover a risky single with Rob Bailey.Bailey and Graham Welch held up the hosts with a stand of 42 in 20 overs.But Lewry bowled Welch with the second ball of a new spell and Karl Krikkenwas lbw to off-spinner Mark Davis in the next over to leave the visitors107-6.Kirtley then took centre stage. Bailey, who top-scored with 33, edged toslip, Trevor Smith was caught off the glove trying to get out of the way ofa bouncer and Tim Munton was bowled second ball.Liam Wharton then fell lbw for a golden duck to leave Kirtley on a hat-trickwhen Sussex head to Trent Bridge next week.

Guardiola set for Foden contract boost

Pep Guardiola could be set to receive a huge boost at Man City in the coming weeks, with reports suggesting that Phil Foden is close to signing a new contract with the club.

According to Daily Mail journalist Ian Ladyman (via City Xtra on Twitter), the 20-year-old sensation is on the verge of signing a new deal at the Etihad, which will see him earn a six-figure-a-week salary.

The England international has been in superb form for the Citizens so far this season, contributing seven goals and five assists in 28 Premier League appearances, which has helped him average an impressive 7.07 rating from WhoScored.

In all competitions, the City academy graduate has managed 14 goals and eight assists this season, which is comfortably his best season to date, and also emphasises just how important he has been for Guardiola’s side so far this season.

According to Sportrac, Foden is currently the lowest earner in the Manchester City senior side, earning £12k per week, so this new contract definitely feels deserved for the youngster, and should also secure his long-term future at the Etihad, which will undoubtedly be a huge boost for Guardiola

After a superb display against PSG in midweek, which helped City reach their first-ever Champions League final, England teammate Declan Rice was full of praise for Foden on social media, dubbing him “very, very special”.

Whilst Foden’s current contract isn’t set to expire until the end of the 2024 season, City are clearly keen to tie him down for the significant future with a new bumper contract, which will surely see him spend the majority of his career with his boyhood club, unless City are presented with an extraordinary transfer offer.

Foden’s performances this season have certainly warranted a new contract, and City fans will be hoping that he can celebrate this news by helping them secure the Premier League title and the Champions League trophy in the coming weeks, to add to his already significant trophy collection with the Citizens.

And, in other news… Txiki should seal Man City swoop for “world-class” striker who left Pep speechless

We will have to work hard to win, says Ganguly

Indian captain Sourav Ganguly on Thursday expressed happiness over thecomposition of the 15-member squad for the coming Zimbabwe tour and said the team would have to work hard to win matches and set right the dismal overseas record

18-May-2001Indian captain Sourav Ganguly on Thursday expressed happiness over thecomposition of the 15-member squad for the coming Zimbabwe tour and said the team would have to work hard to win matches and set right the dismal overseas record.”Yes, Yes, pretty much”, Ganguly said,when asked by reporters in Bangalore whether he was happy with the selection of the team. Asked about India’s poor record abroad, he said, “I am fed up of answering that question. We have a bad record. It is time we started changing it”.On India’s prospects in Zimbabwe, he said “We want to do well and solve the problem. We have to play and work hard to win.”Asked about India losing the series to Zimbabwe last time around, Ganguly said, “We lost the Test match which we should have won.”Regarding the conditioning camp at Bangalore, he said, “The boys werepretty focused from the beginning” and expressed happiness over the camp.Meanwhile, the Indian team manager Chetan Chauhan said in New Delhi that the side would break the jinx during the tour of Zimbabwe beginning next week. “We are aware of our poor record since 1986 (when India under Kapil Dev defeated England). But this time, we will definitely break the jinx,” Chauhan told ‘Star News’.The former Indian opening batsman said the confidence level of the team was high after it beat world champions Australia 2-1 in the home series. “The Zimbabwe tour is a real challenge. But I am fully confident that we will do well.”Chauhan said the team was a combination of young and experienced players. Commenting on the dearth of all-rounders in the side, the team manager said the country was on the look out for one ever since Kapil Dev departed. “We hope that we will soon find an all-rounder of Kapil’s calibre.”

Ings swoop could elevate West Ham

Danny Ings is the latest striker to be linked with a move to West Ham ahead of the summer transfer window…

What’s the word?

According to talkSPORT’s transfer guru Alex Crook, the Irons have an interest in the 28-year-old Southampton talisman, he revealed:

“They’ve got an interest in Danny Ings at Southampton as well, although, my understanding is that he has a gentleman’s agreement with Saints that he will only leave if either of the two Manchester clubs come in for him.”

Ings will enter the final year of his current £75k-per-week deal this summer and the upcoming window could present an opportunity for the south-coast side to cash in before risking losing him for free.

He is currently valued at €20m (£18m) by CIES Football Observatory, whilst it remains to be seen what sort of fee could tempt the Saints into a sale.

Statement signing

With the Hammers firmly in contention to qualify for Europe this season, it is no secret that David Moyes will want reinforcements if they are to give a good account of themselves next term.

It is even more obvious that a new striker is required after the club’s owners – GSB – failed to provide the 58-year-old with a replacement for Sebastien Haller, who departed for Ajax in January, leaving Michail Antonio as the only senior forward in the squad.

That decision has already proved disastrous as the 31-year-old is facing further time on the sideline, as usual, and he cannot be relied upon for the entire duration of one season.

Tammy Abraham is one name that has been firmly linked with a move to the London Stadium in recent weeks.

[snack-amp-story url= “https://www.footballfancast.com/web-stories/read-latest-west-ham-transfer-rumours-gossip-latest-moyes-gsb-london-stadium” title= “Read the latest West Ham news, transfer rumours, gossip and more!”]

Club legend Trevor Sinclair claimed to talkSPORT that the Chelsea outcast “would be a great match for West Ham,” and that “it’s what they need with Antonio’s injuries.”

Whilst the 23-year-old has plenty of goalscoring credentials and is a top player in his own right, it is thought that the Blues will aim to raise around £40m from his departure in the summer, which is double what Ings is currently worth and it’s the Saints man who has proven his ability over a larger timeframe.

Of course, age is not on his side but the 5 foot 10 marksman has found the net 11 times this term, more than any Hammers star, and has bagged 44 goals in only 96 appearances since joining Southampton.

Ex-Premier League forward Clinton Morrison once compared Ings to Robbie Keane for his “first-class” movement, whilst his current manager Ralph Hasenhuttl has lauded his exploits as “unbelievable”.

Also dubbed a “monster” with “confidence flowing in his veins,” a player of Ings’ calibre could be exactly what’s needed in East London to take the Irons onto that next level.

Moyes must ensure this season wasn’t a one-off and he will need a prolific and consistent goalscorer to aid that goal. David Sullivan and co must not let him down this summer and sanction a move for the former Liverpool star.

He should be a far cheaper option than Abraham and that’ll undoubtedly tempt GSB’s tight pockets.

AND in other news, Irons handed major injury doubt ahead of run-in, Moyes will be hugely concerned…

Robin Jackman: My happiest years and the Wilmot walk-off of 1972

Pace bowler Robin Jackman played for Surrey, England and Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) between 1966 and 1983

John Ward08-May-2001Pace bowler Robin Jackman played for Surrey, England and Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) between 1966 and 1983. He is now a television commentator and covered the recent tour of Zimbabwe by Bangladesh. He was pleased to be back in the country where he spent what he calls the happiest years of his cricketing life, as he told CricInfo. He recalls in particular the match where he recorded his maiden first-class 50, which was also the notorious ‘Wilmot Walk-off’ match – Rhodesia v Eastern Province at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo, 1972/73. Robin’s 119-run partnership with Paddy Clift during that first innings remains the record for the ninth-wicket in Zimbabwean first-class cricket.The scores were: Eastern Province 301 and 283/9 dec; Rhodesia 261 and 318/6, needing 324 to win. Lorrie Wilmot, the Eastern Province captain, led his team off the field with the final over of the match unbowled and refused to continue. The umpires awarded the match to Rhodesia in accordance with the laws of the game, but this decision was arbitrarily overturned by the South African Cricket Association – which cost Rhodesia the Currie Cup.”This was my first year playing for Rhodesia, a period that went right through to 1980,” said Jackman, taking up the story. “This was the walk-off game, which we have never, ever forgotten – nor forgiven. We feel that it actually lost us the Currie Cup, and during all the time that I played we never managed to win it. We had a good side and we didn’t play as well as we should have done at times.It was certainly a sensational match. Mike Procter was batting particularly well in the second innings with 66 not out. Paddy Clift, with whom I featured in a record partnership in the first innings – he finished on 75 not out – was there with eight in the second innings when Wilmot took the team off. I’m surprised that first-class record still stands. Jackman and Clift – I’m quite proud of that!”Eastern Province batted first and scored 301. Wilmot had a really good game, getting runs in both innings [85 and 129]. We were in a reasonable amount of trouble, but managed to get to 261, so we had a deficit of 40. Then Wilmot got a hundred in the second innings and they declared just short of 300, for nine wickets. I remember I got three wickets in the second innings, and so did Richie Kaschula. We were set a big target, 324 to win.”Duncan Fletcher didn’t open, as he did in the first innings; Stuart Robertson opened with Jimmy Mitchell. Both were pretty aggressive players. Peter Carlstein played particularly well for 53, and Brian Davison scored a lightning 32, I do recall that. It was a long time before today’s one-day internationals where you reckon that over 50 overs on a good pitch you’re certainly going to score 250 or 260. Here we were being asked to get 300-odd [in 66 overs, as it turned out] and it was a hell of a performance that we got anywhere near to it.”We were 318 when they walked off over a discrepancy over the last 20 overs. I think the most irritating part about it all was that the umpires in charge, who were Ian Forrest and Chris Sweeting, according to the laws of cricket awarded the game to us because our batsmen didn’t come off; Clift and Procter stayed at the crease. The umpires called “Play” and Eastern Province weren’t there to play, so they awarded the game to Rhodesia, as it was then.
Mike Procter
Photo © Stamp Publicity (Worthing) Ltd
“Subsequent to that, it went down to the South African Cricket Association, who decided to deduct the points we should have gained from our victory, and that ultimately cost us the Currie Cup. I think that was the most irritating thing. If Lorrie Wilmot wants to do whatever he wants to do, who am I to stop him, but as far as I am concerned, if you read up the laws, basically what the SACA had done was to take away the decision on the umpire. That’s like saying, “Hang on a second, I was given out caught behind in the first innings when I didn’t hit it; would you mind changing that?” That’s if you want to exaggerate it and be ridiculous.”So it was very sad. There were many celebrations that night because we thought we had won the game, but that all changed. It was all about the 20 overs in the last hour. As the South African Cricket Annual says:’In brief, the over before drinks began 61 minutes before stumps. Umpire Sweeting is alleged to have told the bowler (Pittaway) and signaled the scorers that it was the first of the 20 mandatory overs.’ [In fact, my investigations indicate that, when asked by Wilmot, Sweeting merely replied “I think so,” and then spoke to the senior umpire Forrest during the drinks break.]”Drinks followed this over, 55 minutes before the scheduled close and during drinks the umpires held a discussion and the reserve umpire was dispatched to advise the scorers that the first over after drinks was to be considered the first of the last 20. Wilmot insists that when so advised he protested to the umpires and when 19 overs had been bowled after the actual drinks interval, his team considered that the 20 overs had been bowled and he led his team off the field.”At that stage Rhodesia only required six runs for victory and Procter (66 not out) was really on the rampage. The umpires, after calling Play three times, observed that there was no reaction from the Easterns camp, uprooted the stumps and awarded the game to Rhodesia by default.”The case was heard by the South African Cricket Association who ruled the match was a draw and on appeal, after considering statements by both captains and umpires, and officials of the Rhodesia Cricket Union, confirmed their original ruling.”That was the bit that was so disappointing to all of us. But it was a game I won’t forget. I remember John Dye, who used to play for Kent and Northamptonshire, played in that game. He and I were the overseas professionals of the two teams. It was a rare old game of cricket.”Robin adds his comments on the Rhodesian players of that era:”We had a good side. Jimmy Mitchell was an attacking opening batsman. I see Jack Heron didn’t play in this side, and I rated him very highly.”Duncan Fletcher opened in the first innings but not the second. I always thought he was a wonderful utility cricketer because he batted everywhere from one to ten and bowled goodish seamers. He was always a handy all-rounder to have around.”Stuart Robertson I thought was a wonderfully elegant left-handed batsman. Peter Carlstein was full of talent, he really was. He played for South Africa when he was only 19, a really fine player. I see in the first innings be was caught and bowled by Bezuidenhout for nought; that must have just about destroyed him! ‘Bezzie’ wasn’t even a full-time bowler.”Mike Procter – you don’t have to say any more about him; one of the greatest all-rounders who ever played the game. Brian Davison, who now lives in Tasmania, was a very hard-hitting and aggressive batsman, a very competitive cricketer and person.”Jack du Preez played for South Africa as a leg-spinner and was a very useful batsman as well. Howie Gardiner was one of the tallest wicket-keepers I have ever seen or played with, was also a good player; he made 54 in the second innings in that run chase.”The late Paddy Clift – and what a tragedy that is at such a young age – was a wonderful cricketer who played many years for Leicestershire as well as for Rhodesia, and then for Natal. And then other than myself there was Richie Kaschula, who was possibly the most accurate left-arm spinner I have ever seen.”So it was a really good side, and missing from it were the likes of Jack Heron, who also played at that time, and John Traicos. I see Heron played in the next home match and Dessie Evans also kept wicket in that next match, so obviously there was an injury or something to Howie.”It was a super side and it stayed pretty much together for several years. I remember John Shepherd coming out somewhere around 1978, and he replaced me – it was a question of which of the two of us was to play and they went for the all-rounder, which was fine. Grahame Clinton and Barry Dudleston came from overseas as well and they played a few games at the back end of the seventies.”But by and large that side played virtually through the 70s, and it was a very good and competitive team. We had a tremendous amount of fun, too, real fun. It wasn’t as professional as it is now; we didn’t get played for paying for Rhodesia, although I got paid for coming over and coaching. Everybody had jobs otherwise, and off we went and played. It was an honour and it was a tremendous amount of fun.”We went on a Christmas tour every year down to Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and Durban, a three-week tour. The games in those days were three-day games, with a rest day on the Sunday. Those were days I’ll never forget, possibly the happiest cricketing days of my life. My wife always says that the eight years or so we spent in Rhodesia were certainly the happiest we can remember.”The people were fantastic and that hasn’t changed, and here we are nearly 30 years down the road. From that point of view everybody is just as hospitable as they always used to be, and it was always great to come back. That’s why I did it for eight years. My happiest holiday place is Kariba, and I just love it here.”I disagree that I became a little less effective as the years went by, because I played for England in 1981, so I was actually getting better. I only had one winter break, 1980 because it was my benefit year, and then I got called up in 1981 to go to West Indies. I got better as I grew older, until my body eventually gave way at the age of 37.”I thought that cricket 12 months of the year was good for me, so that’s why I did it and kept doing it. It didn’t make me any more tired; I bowled more overs the older I got. I went back to Surrey and had my better years at the end of the 70s and early 80s, so it helped me more than anything to play 12 months of the year.”Robin was asked to compare his Rhodesian team of the seventies with the Zimbabwe side of today, in view of John Traicos’ view that the team of the 70s was much stronger.”To compare eras is very difficult, if not unfair, but it’s something that everybody does. If you look at that side that played in the 70s, yes, it was strong, but it didn’t win too much. If you tried to put all those people together and then play them against this current side, all of the same age, I think it would be a good contest.”There are some names that jump out of there that make you go “Wow” – Procter, Davison, Robertson and guys like that – but you must also look at a few names you’ve got around here right now – Streak; Andy Flower, who’s one of the leading batsmen in the world at Test level.”I wouldn’t necessarily agree with what John Traicos says. I think that the experience these guys have got now is crucial, but whether that 70s side would have beaten the current side when they first started to play Test cricket I wouldn’t necessarily argue. But this team now, from what I see of it, no matter who they’re performing against, are very credible and they have some excellent cricketers.”So I don’t think one can say that that side of the 70s was better than today’s team.”

Villa ace Bertrand Traore was awful vs Man City

After the whole debacle of the European Super League, attentions turned back to matters on the pitch on Wednesday night when Aston Villa took on Premier League leaders Manchester City.

Dean Smith’s side came into the game on the back of a 2-1 defeat to champions Liverpool last time out, but any notion of poor form or a lack of confidence went straight out the window after John McGinn struck inside about 20 seconds.

But City turned things around with goals in either half, and Matty Cash’s reckless sending off for two yellow cards certainly put a dampener on any hopes of Villa claiming a huge victory.

While Cash certainly let Smith down by getting himself sent off when Villa had the man advantage following John Stones’ own red card, Bertrand Traore also produced a shocking display.

The winger was urged to be dropped for the game against Pep Guardiola’s side here on FFC, but the Villa boss kept faith in him, and sadly it didn’t pay off.

While City unsurprisingly dominated the ball, Traore just couldn’t get himself involved in the game, ending the match with fewer touches of the ball than goalkeeper Emi Martinez.

As per Sofascore, he had no shots on target, provided no crosses, and completed just ten passes in the 75 minutes that he was on the pitch – essentially, Traore was just a passenger that Villa carried, and his frustrating tendency to keep wanting the ball on his left foot really limited both him and his side going forward.

And, writing in his post-match player ratings for The Birmingham Mail, Ashley Preece gave him the second-lowest score of a five, saying: “Worked well with Cash after Villa had scored with the pair doubling up on Zinchenko. However, it was a real struggle for Traore as it was for most of Villa’s players after their opener.

“Traore showed some flashes with cross-field passes and some neat touches but City were always in control with El Ghazi drafted on for him on 75 minutes. Lacked a cutting edge again, sadly.”

[snack-amp-story url=”https://www.footballfancast.com/web-stories/latest-aston-villa-transfer-rumours-and-news-copy-copy” title=”Latest Aston Villa transfer rumours and news”]

With no goals in his last eight Premier League games now, it’s surely become time for Smith to make a ruthless call on Traore and drop him from the team and just take him out the firing line.

Meanwhile, Villa have been handed a major transfer boost over this player…

McAvennie urges West Ham swoop for Abraham

Speaking to the West Ham Zone, former Irons striker Frank McAvennie has told GSB to seal the signing of Chelsea forward Tammy Abraham – coming after a big ExWHUemployee update that he is now the number one striker target for David Moyes.

The Englishman, who hasn’t enjoyed the same amount of game time as last campaign, starting just 12 Premier League matches, is unlikely to commit his future at Stamford Bridge.

McAvennie urges Abraham swoop

ESPN recently reported that Chelsea have now put Abraham’s new deal talks on hold after he was expected to put pen to paper on a fresh contract last season.

The apparent reason for it’s delay was a dispute over his wage demands, and this has apparently prompted Abraham to enter the West Ham transfer radar.

Previously touted as a target, ExWHUemployee recently revealed in a big update that he is now Moyes’ first choice striking option – and McAvennie has now urged the club to get a deal done.

“I think he would be a great signing. He’s pals with Rice so that would be good,” McAvennie told West Ham Zone.

“I keep thinking they need someone who’s different to Antonio. Antonio’s a big powerhouse but I think they need someone different and Abraham will score goals – that’s for sure.

“He’s a London boy so I would think he would want to stay in London and if they can get him at West Ham, he’s a striker I would take.”

Transfer Tavern take

He has certainly proved himself prolific in the English top flight over these last two seasons, scoring 21 goals in 37 league starts since the beginning of 2019/2020 (WhoScored).

Abraham also stands at an imposing 6 foot 2 and could prove a handful for most defenders, not to mention the fact he is homegrown.

Valued at £36 million by Transfermarkt, these factors and his relatively young age of 23-years-old mark him out as a sure-fire striking candidate and arguably worth the heavy investment.

In other news: West Ham handed Jesse Lingard blow, find out more here.

Leicester eye Helander from Rangers

Leicester City are reportedly eyeing up a transfer move for Rangers ace Filip Helander, according to Sportbladet.

As per the news outlet, the Sweden international has apparently been ‘hunted’ by the East Midlands club as well as Aston Villa and other teams in the Premier League.

Helander currently only has two years left on his deal in Scotland, meaning that the Gers may not get a higher price for the 27-year-old than if they were to look to sell him in the upcoming summer transfer window.

Leicester should sign Helander

Although the Scottish Premiership is clearly a lower level of football to that of the English top flight, Brendan Rodgers’ side should still look to try and sign Helander.

The big central defender stands at a mighty six-foot-three-inches tall, meaning that he should have no problems whatsoever in coping with both the physical and aerial demands of the division.

Helander has also been as solid as a rock for Rangers so far in the 2020/21 SPFL season, winning no fewer than 6.8 of his duels per game while also averaging 2.1 clearances and 1.6 tackles, helping his team keep a mammoth 13 clean sheets in the process (Sofascore).

Leicestershire Live quote Steven Gerrard as saying that he is ‘outstanding’ positionally back in January, which is very high praise, and only adds to the reasons that the Foxes should go out and buy him.

In other news, find out what news one former target has LCFC fans talking here!

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