Lanning and Spirit outgun Perry and Phoenix at Lord's

Meg Lanning won the battle of the Australians at Lord’s, scoring her first half-century in the Hundred as London Spirit overcame Birmingham Phoenix, despite Ellyse Perry’s innings of 65 in reply.The 16,641 crowd – the fifth-highest in the history of the women’s Hundred – were treated to a competitive affair in the sunshine, momentum shifting this way and that as the big names on both sides took it in turns to stand up and be counted.Phoenix – off the back of 11 consecutive defeats in the Hundred – looked set to spring a surprise and take it deep, and perhaps even pull off a memorable upset, but the required run-rate got away from them and three late wickets for Sarah Glenn sealed the deal for Heather Knight’s side, who have now won two from two this season.”It felt like it got a bit more tricky as it went on,” Lanning said. “Birmingham Phoenix took the pace off a little bit, and the wicket was pretty conducive to that, so it felt like it was a bit more difficult than we had thought but it ended up a competitive total.”With the ball it was about bowling pretty straight at the stumps and taking pace off the ball. We thought Phoenix used that really well so we wanted to do that right from the start, and we were able to hold our nerve when Devine and Perry were going. We just had to hold our nerve and we knew a chance would come.”Earlier, Spirit – wearing a special shirt to mark their partnership with Transport for London – set off like a train. Lanning, Georgia Redmayne and Cordelia Griffith all found the boundary with regularity. Griffith’s consecutive sixes off Emily Arlott, one whipped into the Mound Stand with no shortage of flair, a particular highlight.Off the back of her winning half-century at Utilita Bowl on Wednesday, England captain Knight added to her side’s momentum and ultimately Phoenix would have been happy to restrict Spirit to 147 for 9, with a bigger total looking likely earlier in the innings.The smart money would likely have been on Spirit to defend their total with relative ease but Perry and New Zealand captain Sophie Devine jangled a few nerves with their partnership of 89, especially when Devine dispatched Sarah Glenn for two sixes over the leg-side.The equation with 20 balls left was 40 runs required for Phoenix, but the boundaries dried up and Glenn’s last set of five ensured London Spirit ended day five of the Hundred top of the table with a 100% win record.

Al-Hilal set 5-day deadline for Bruno Fernandes to agree to £100m Man Utd exit

Manchester United are set for a summer of significant changes and things are starting to take shape regarding one key issue that could alter the dynamics of their engine room.

Manchester United set for midfield overhaul

Becoming an early runner in the Red Devils’ quest to rejuvenate their midfield this summer, Crystal Palace star Eberechi Eze has been mentioned as an ambitious Old Trafford target following his return of 16 goal contributions last season.

Admittedly, there could be plenty of change on that front by the time Ruben Amorim leads his side out for the first time in the Premier League next term, and rumours are beginning to fly off the shelf regarding the scale of Manchester United’s rebuild.

Bruno Fernandes

Internally, talk surrounding Bruno Fernandes and a potential move to Al Hilal hasn’t been pleasant for supporters. Regardless, Amorim has a gut feeling his captain could stick around despite reports to the contrary.

While fans await a resolution, it is important to note that Fernandes isn’t the only midfielder who could leave Amorim short at an early stage in the transfer window.

Kobbie Mainoo could leave Manchester United for £70 million if appropriate interest arises for his services. Ultimately, selling fan favourites won’t be something the Red Devils want to do habitually, but everyone has their price and Mainoo’s sale would count as pure profit as the club looks to align with PSR guidelines.

Matheus Cunha has arrived from Wolverhampton Wanderers, offering some excitement in a period where supporters could see several first-team regulars sold off to fund a long-overdue rebuild.

Bringing the average wage down will be a priority for Sir Jim Ratcliffe, making an exit for Casemiro an obvious solution at the Red Devils amid his £350,000 per week salary.

With all that said, there has now been a significant update on the engine room front that could make Manchester United’s thinking alot clearer when it comes to the level of work needed to alter their midfield, per recent developments.

Bruno Fernandes close to agreeing Manchester United exit

Taking to social media platform X, journalist and commentator Ben Jacobs has noted that Al Hilal now believe they are ‘close’ to finding an agreement with Fernandes but have told the United star he has just this week to decide.

The journalist explained: “Al-Hilal now believe an agreement with Bruno Fernandes is close after a week of positive meetings. Fernandes is currently deliberating with his family.

“A key factor in whether Fernandes agrees will be if the move is also right for his family. It will be more than just a football decision. Hilal want a final answer by Friday. No formal approach or bid yet to Manchester United, but Hilal’s belief is a sale will be sanctioned if Fernandes asks to leave. MUFC still insist they don’t want to sell their captain.”

£50m star who's "like Ryan Giggs" must not play for Man Utd again

This Manchester United star’s time is surely up at Old Trafford.

ByKelan Sarson Jun 2, 2025

Now deliberating with his family, the end of this week is believed to be the cut-off point where a decision will have to be made one way or another, creating a tense five days before a final outcome is met.

Becoming a modern-day icon at Old Trafford, Fernandes has registered 98 goals and 87 assists in 290 appearances for the Red Devils, winning an FA Cup and the Carabao Cup during his time in Manchester.

Nevertheless, he is now 31 and won’t have the luxury of being able to compete in European football next year, hence why reports suggest the Premier League giants could be tempted to sell for a fee that could reach £100 million.

Tough decisions need to be made to place Manchester United back at the top, and this one will weigh heavy on Amorim as he battles between raising funds to buy reinforcements and retaining key stars.

Pereira directly asks Wolves to sign "great" £22m Brazilian he knows well

With the transfer window now open, Vitor Pereira has reportedly asked Wolverhampton Wanderers chiefs to sign a Brazilian defender who has a release clause worth £22m.

Matt Hobbs leaves the club

Whilst Wolves will be keen to get their summer business underway as soon as possible, especially after losing Matheus Cunha and watching on as Rayan Ait-Nouri attracts interest from Manchester City, the departure of Matt Hobbs may delay things. Without their sporting director, the Midlands club are set to restructure behind the scenes ahead of Pereira’s first summer in charge.

The club released a statement on Hobbs’ exit, which read: “Wolves can confirm that sporting director Matt Hobbs has left the club by mutual consent as part of a wider restructure of the football department.

Wolves now keeping tabs on £25m winger who is similar to Antonio Valencia

The Old Gold are looking to add some attacking flair this summer.

BySean Markus Clifford Jun 5, 2025

“Hobbs, who joined Wolves in 2015, has spent the past decade working across a number of key football roles at the club, including chief scout, head of recruitment and most recently as sporting director.

“The club extends its sincere thanks to Matt for his contributions throughout his time at Wolves and wishes him the very best for the future. Further updates on the new football leadership structure will follow.”

Of course, it’s not the only change taking place in the Midlands. Having already lost Cunha to Manchester United, reports are now indicating that Wolves are likely to lose Ait-Nouri to Manchester City in the coming weeks.

Wolverhampton Wanderers' RayanAit-Nouri

Losing arguably their two best players in the same summer, Wolves must now get things right on the incomings front. Pereira will be desperate to see his first season in charge build on the progress that he’s already made at Molineux and that means a mid-table finish instead of another nervy relegation battle.

The one positive is that Wolves should have money to spend and money that Pereira is already reportedly keen to put to good use.

Pereira asks Wolves to sign Renan

According to UOL, as relayed by Molineux News, Pereira has now directly asked Wolves to sign Robert Renan, who he worked with during his time in Saudi Arabia and at Corinthians. The 21-year-old defender now reportedly has a release clause worth £22m at Zenit St. Petersburg and, after spending the season on loan at Al-Shabab, could yet be on his way to the Premier League.

Games

25

Wins

13

Draws

5

Defeats

7

Still just 21 years old, Renan has found himself at the centre of impressive praise for how he’s risen through the ranks in recent seasons. That includes from U23 scout Antonio Mango, who praised the defender for his “great mobility and acceleration” in 2023.

Two years on from that praise, the young centre-back has only upped his game, which could leave him in line for his biggest opportunity yet. Pereira knows him well and Wolves have money to spend, which means that Renan’s arrival could make perfect sense for all parties this summer.

Having reportedly requested the Brazilian’s arrival, it will certainly be interesting to see whether Pereira gets his wish at Wolves in the coming months.

The joys of 130: Vernon Philander talks about being medium pace and loving it

The formidable former South Africa bowler talks about swing and seam, the particular arts that set the medium-pacer apart

Interview by Yash Jha30-Jul-20252:41

‘Seam movement is a bigger threat than swing’

Vernon Philander is not the most archetypal presence in South Africa’s pantheon of quick bowlers, but though far from Allan Donald and Dale Steyn in methods and attributes, he was up there with those more storied practitioners as far as results went: he was the second fastest to 50 Test wickets, and finished with a little under four per match from his 64 Tests, at a phenomenal average of 22. A master of cut and movement – both early and late – he speaks here about what sets a skillful medium-pacer apart from a pace merchant.What does it make you feel when you see a generation that is obsessed with the speed gun and fast bowlers only talking 140-plus or 150-plus?
I feel as a medium-pacer, your biggest asset is obviously control, number one, but you have to keep adding some elements to your game. So for me, I obviously have fantastic control in trying to get the ball to shape away from the right-hander, but you also need to bring in the element of doubt, you know, where you’re going to nip one back and challenge batters, the way they think, the way they set up. It’s finding out what is going to make you effective as a bowler and you have to implement that into your skill set.Being a medium-pacer, it takes a great deal of training. It’s playing around. Because you’re a touch slower, it means that you have to sharpen your skill set in different ways, and for me, it is challenging the batters in terms of the way they’re thinking.These days we see that batters come out of their crease [against medium pace], so, you know, dragging the keeper up from time to time in order to shift those batters back. Develop a sharp bouncer. Those are little skill sets that you add, and then you’re going to have to go and execute it.Related

'Hold, hold, hold, then click' (2014)

Women's cricket is the ideal playground for swing

Philander: Deadly at home, phenomenal with new ball (2020)

Big Vern reels in the big fish (2018)

I think also because you’re bowling in that sort of 130-135 range, batters sometimes feel they have to be playing at deliveries, and that’s where you can also pick up wickets, because they feel they have to keep prodding at it. You can drag batters wider. So it’s a fantastic pace to bowl at, and if you have the skill set to go with it, it makes it so much more rewarding.In Test matches we still see pitches where the ball will seam, or you’ll have conditions where it will swing, but in white-ball cricket, do you think it’s becoming increasingly more difficult for the medium-pacer to survive?
I think, yeah, we have to call a spade a spade. I think the wickets are a lot flatter in the T20 format as well as the ODI format. So again, I will say as a bowler in that sort of speed range, you have to keep adding to your game. You have the opportunity of playing around on a crease, creating different angles, not having the same release point, because that’s where batters are getting so smart these days – they’re lining you up because you’re releasing the ball from one point.The stock ball is so important. You need to be able to trust your stock ball. You need to be able to trust your action. I do feel a lot more has to be put in in the way that these guys are training, number one, in order to trust [their] action.To be operating in that sort of 130-135 range, I do feel you can bring all the elements of seam bowling into play.Philander took eight wickets in his debut Test, in Cape Town in 2011, including 5 for 15 in the innings where Australia were shot out for 47•Gallo Images/Getty ImagesIn Tests too, how important are surfaces for that speed range? Because when you consider this obsession with speed, it is somewhere linked with the assumption that if it’s a flat surface, the quicker bowlers will be able to get something out of it.
I think the one big key is consistency. And I think if you’re operating in that sort of speed, you need to be consistent. You need to string good overs together.The big [advantage when it comes to] knocking top-order batters over is, after a while they will start playing [at the ball], because they feel it’s a touch on the slower side, whereas guys operating in the 140-plus arena, batters will play them on instinct. So they’ll often just leave a good-length ball [at high pace]. But operating at 130, 135, often batters feel that they have to start prodding at balls.But again, it boils down to the consistency of landing the ball in a good area and asking the same question time and time again. Look, I think also we have to admit that bowling in that sort of speed range it’s going to take a little bit of harder work in terms of knocking batters over. But I do feel once there is a bit of assistance in the surface and you can be consistent, you can be a massive threat and compete right up there with the guys bowling 140-plus.The likelihood of finding flatter surfaces in the time you were playing Test cricket was far greater. In the last few years we’ve seen much more spicy pitches in Test cricket. Can you remember any instances where you found yourself on the flattest deck possible and what you thought to yourself about how you would go about operating there?
Yeah, I certainly feel that I retired a bit too early, looking at the surfaces these days! I think it’s also, you know, being able to identify your particular role within a spell. I had a wonderful opportunity of operating with Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel, and it’s understanding what your role within that bowling set-up is. I think when the wickets are getting a touch slower and obviously less responsive, my job then becomes to keep it really tight, to go at two an over, and really do those investment periods for a long period of time.So again, it boils down to understanding what your role is and how you need to adapt your game to make yourself effective in various conditions around the world.The fast and the wily: to Dale Steyn’s fierce pace and movement, Philander added his ball-whisperer’s nous•Hindustan TimesYou stood out for the seam movement you used to create through your Test-playing days. At the pace you operated at, did you feel seam was more important than swing?
Yeah, I think initially when I started out, I used to have this beautiful awayswinger, but I felt that it became less and less effective because batters were so good. They could see the ball moving out of the hand and they can start leaving the ball once it swings early. So I had to go and reinvent or re-adapt my game.And that’s where the seam movement really started – to try and get batters to nick one back. That’s where the element of doubt was planted. And then they start playing it, those ones leaving them right at the end.So yeah, I [switched] more to seam bowling rather than swing bowling. And I also do feel that it was a lot more effective than to watch a new ball swing by. You basically waste a new ball, you know, by not making batters play upfront.When the ball moves off the seam, it leaves batters with a lot less reaction time as [compared] to when the ball is swinging, because they can actually see the ball swinging out of the hand. So I do feel the seam movement is a much bigger threat than the ball swinging through the air.What about workload? While there might be one line of thinking that it’s lesser toll on the body than for an outright quick, you will probably be asked to bowl longer spells than the outright quick. So how did you weigh that up?
You still have to run in, you still have to bowl the ball just like [the faster bowlers] did. It doesn’t mean you’re working less hard than them. But yeah bowling and operating in and around those speeds, you know that you’re going to be bowling more overs than the blokes operating at 140-plus. So yeah, you do prepare yourself to be bowling longer spells.”If you can get your wrist firmly behind the ball, you get the ball to move later through the air as well”•Getty ImagesWhen I started out, our workloads used to be pretty high. We used to bowl overs and overs and overs. So it was a lot less gym back then but yeah, more overs, obviously, in the nets. So we could keep up with the workload required from us. And yeah, in a Test match, if you’re going to be bowling my pace, I’ve got 20-plus overs behind my name at the end of the day. It’s a challenge that you enjoy.Again, I think I thoroughly enjoy the challenge of bowling with the new ball and making life hell for the batters up front, because I do feel there’s a window of opportunity when a batter walks to the crease and [you’re] operating at that sort of speed. If you can get it right, batters always feel that they have to play at it. And there lies the opportunity of picking up wickets.Was there a particular brand of ball that you preferred bowling with? And how much of a difference did it make?
Yeah, I really enjoyed the Kookaburra ball, because it remained quite hard for a long period of time. I think also in South African conditions, Australian conditions, New Zealand conditions, I used to get the ball to jag quite sharply off the seam, as opposed to the Dukes ball. I think I really enjoyed the Dukes ball, but for about probably 20 overs to 25 overs it stays hard and then it loses that and it becomes really soft. So batters can then capitalise. But if you have to ask me a preference of ball, it has to be the red Kookaburra.The thinking is that swing bowling operates at its best at a particular speed, commonly thought to be around that 130kph mark. How accurate was that, in your opinion?
Yeah, I do feel that operating in that 130-135 kilometre range, you extract all the elements of seam and swing bowling that is on offer. And again, I think I can vouch for it, having bowled that sort of speed myself.I mean, if you’re going to be bowling faster, you know, there’s a lot more velocity that goes behind the ball. But it’s also the position that you release the ball from. I think for me, it’s always about that wrist position behind the ball. If you can get your wrist firmly behind the ball, you get the ball to move later through the air as well. So, yeah, I mean, there’s quite a few elements that [are involved] in getting the ball to swing.

SA vs WI records galore – 517 runs, 81 boundaries, 35 sixes

The most striking statistics to come out of an incredible run-chase

Sampath Bandarupalli26-Mar-2023259 The target that South Africa successfully chased down against West Indies in Centurion, setting a new T20 world record. The previous highest also came in an international match when Australia chased down 244 against New Zealand in 2018.ESPNcricinfo Ltd517 Runs scored by South Africa and West Indies, the first-ever T20I to aggregate 500-plus runs. These are also the most runs scored in all T20 cricket – including domestic games – surpassing the 515 runs scored by Multan Sultans and Quetta Gladiators in Rawalpindi during the recently concluded PSL.0 250-plus totals by South Africa and West Indies in men’s T20Is before Sunday. South Africa’s previous highest total was 241 for 6 against England in 2009, while West Indies’ was 245 for 6 against India in 2016. There have only been five totals higher than what South Africa and West Indies each put up in all T20Is.81 Boundaries by South Africa and West Indies in this game, another T20 record, going past the 78 recorded during the PSL game between Sultans and Gladiators earlier this month.35 Sixes hit by South Africa and West Indies, the highest for a T20I, beating the 33 sixes between Bulgaria and Serbia in 2022. West Indies hit 22 sixes, the joint-highest by a team in a T20I, equaling Afghanistan’s 22 effort against Ireland in 2019.ESPNcricinfo Ltd102 South Africa’s total by the sixth over, the highest Powerplay total by a Full Member in men’s T20Is, eclipsing West Indies’ 98 for 4 against Sri Lanka in 2021.South Africa needed just 5.3 overs to reach the 100-run mark, the second-fastest team 100 in men’s T20Is (where ball-by-ball data is available). The fastest is by Romania in 5.2 overs against Serbia in 2021.15 Balls taken by Quinton de Kock to bring up his fifty, the fastest for South Africa in T20Is. De Kock already held the Proteas record with his 17-ball fifty against England in Durban in 2020.ESPNcricinfo Ltd39 Balls taken by Johnson Charles to complete his century, the joint fourth-fastest in men’s T20Is. It is also the fastest hundred for the West Indies in men’s T20Is, bettering Chris Gayle’s 47-ball effort against England in the 2016 T20 World Cup.4 The record for most 200-plus targets chased down by a T20I team, now jointly held by South Africa and India

Mustafizur Rahman, Kartik Tyagi pull off a coup as Punjab Kings suffer yet another meltdown

Kings needed eight from the last two overs with eight wickets in hand, and still lost

Shashank Kishore21-Sep-20214:52

Dale Steyn: The better team lost tonight

Punjab Kings need eight runs off the final two overs. They have eight wickets in hand. Aiden Markram, signed as a late replacement because of his scintillating form in Sri Lanka, and Nicholas Pooran, widely touted to be one of the cleanest six-hitters, have put on a half-century stand off just 28 balls. A defeat looms large for Rajasthan Royals. Surely, they weren’t thinking of a coup. Or maybe they were, because it’s Kings who, not for the first time in recent memory, contrived to turn it into a game of nerves.Mustafizur Rahman isn’t the easiest bowler to put away at the best of times. On a surface with a hint of grip towards the end, the left-arm seamer varied his slower ones masterfully, going back of a length, digging one hard into the surface, and then bowling four stunning wide yorkers from different release points. So what if he had conceded 27 off his first three wicketless overs? This was the kind of mastery he had displayed when he became David Warner’s right-hand man in a sensational MVP and title-winning performance in 2016 with Sunrisers Hyderabad.Yet for all that, Kings need just four in the final over. Eight wickets in hand. Surely, they weren’t going to bottle up the chase. Surely, it was just a matter of one blow that would seal the deal. The man delivering it was Kartik Tyagi, a rookie in every sense. Someone who is known to have the pace but can also spray it around. Life hasn’t quite been the same for the 20-year-old since IPL 2020.Watch the IPL on ESPN+

Sign up for ESPN+ and catch all the action from the IPL live in the US. Match highlights of Punjab Kings vs Rajasthan Royals available here in English, and here in Hindi (US only).

Firstly, a bout of Covid led him to miss a portion of the first half of the season. When he was finally fit, he saw another rookie in Chetan Sakariya overtake him in the pecking order. So, in many ways, Tyagi was on a comeback on Tuesday night. You can see he is nervous, the wry smile on his face after delivering a high full toss for a dot ball a dead giveaway. It’s still four off five. The camera pans to Anil Kumble, the Kings coach. Surely, he’s not yet down the ‘oh no, not again’ road. He smiles, knowing well victory is just one biff away.Tyagi now alters his line, goes full and wide; Markram drags it into the leg side for a single. Now, it’s three from four balls with Pooran on strike. He’s on 32 off 21 balls, the fluency that eluded him in the first half of the IPL has found its way back. The very fact that the team has backed him despite four ducks – even if it feels like so long ago – is a sure shot indication of how much they rate him. Here’s Pooran’s opportunity to repay that faith and close the game off without much fuss.Kartik Tyagi leaps with joy after sealing victory•BCCITyagi bowls full again, almost yorker length, gets it to tail away a touch. Pooran attempts a cute little steer behind, only to nick it to Sanju Samson. Smiles turn into a frown, but surely Kings still think the game is in their grasp. Three from three, with Deepak Hooda on strike.He has managed just one score of 20 or more in his last six outings, so in a sense, his inclusion ahead of Shahrukh Khan is another ringing endorsement of his abilities. He began the season, in April, with a bruising 64 off 28 balls against the same opponents at the Wankhede Stadium. He had hit four fours and six sixes that night. Here, all he needs to do is put bat to ball. But he ends up walking across to chase a wide ball and misses. Dot ball. Three from two.Now, Hooda really needs to find a release shot, or so we assume as he shadow practices a slog. Tyagi goes full and wide again. It would’ve certainly been called wide had he let it go. All he manages is an edge that’s taken by Samson.Three from one. Kumble is fuming now. Rahul is wiping sweat off his forehead. Tyagi, at the top of his mark, shows zen-like calm. He takes a deep breath, steams in and bowls a stunning wide yorker. Allen fails to make contact, and just like that Tyagi has delivered four successive dots. Under immense pressure, to steal two points from under the rug of the shell-shocked Kings.The century stand upfront between KL Rahul and Mayank Agarwal, the five-for from Arshdeep Singh, late wickets by Mohammed Shami – all of it seems pointless. Kings have six points from nine games. They may have to win all their next five matches to make it to the playoffs. They couldn’t have made it any tougher for themselves.

Fortaleza x Vasco: onde assistir ao vivo, escalações e horário do jogo pela Copa do Brasil

MatériaMais Notícias

Fortaleza e Vasco se enfrentam nesta quarta-feira (1), pelo jogo de ida da terceira fase da Copa do Brasil. A bola vai rolar a partir das 19h (de Brasília), na Arena Castelão, com transmissão de SporTV e Premiere (pay-per-view).

➡️ Zebra? Com R$100 no Lance! Betting, você fatura R$451 se o Vasco vencer o Fortaleza no Castelão após 20 anos

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

continua após a publicidade

Confira todas as informações que você precisa saber sobre o confronto entre Fortaleza e Vasco (onde assistir, horário, escalações e local).

✅ FICHA TÉCNICA
FORTALEZA X VASCO
COPA DO BRASIL – TERCEIRA FASE – IDA

🗓️ Data e horário: quarta-feira, 1 de maio de 2024, às 19h (de Brasília);
📍 Local: Arena Castelão, em Fortaleza (CE)
📺 Onde assistir: SporTV e Premiere;
🟨 Árbitro: Matheus Delgado Candançan (SP)
🚩 Assistentes: Alex Ang Ribeiro (FIFA/SP) e Daniel Paulo Ziolli (SP)
🖥️ VAR: Daniel Nobre Bins (VAR-FIFA/RS)

⚽ PROVÁVEIS ESCALAÇÕES
FORTALEZA (Técnico: Juan Pablo Vojvoda)
João Ricardo, Tinga, Britez, Titi, Bruno Pacheco; Zé Welison, Hércules, Pochettino; Pikachu, Machuca e Lucero.

continua após a publicidade

VASCO (Técnico: Rafael Paiva)
Léo Jardim, Paulo Henrique, Rojas, Maicon, Léo, Lucas Piton, Sforza, Hugo Moura, Mateus Cocão, David e Vegetti.

Tudo sobre

Copa do BrasilFortalezaOnde assistirVasco

Chelsea edge ahead of Newcastle in transfer race for £25m-rated 'Dutch Pedri' Kees Smit

Chelsea have reportedly moved ahead of Newcastle in the transfer race for AZ Alkmaar's 'Dutch Pedri' Kees Smit. The 19-year-old, valued at around £25 million ($33m), has attracted attention from across the Premier League, with Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United also tracking his progress in the Netherlands. However, it is the Blues who are said to be in pole position as it stands.

  • Chelsea take early lead in crowded Premier League chase

    According to Chelsea have already opened lines of communication with Smit’s representatives, even if a formal approach is yet to materialise. While Stamford Bridge is not expected to be especially active in January following an extensive summer rebuild, the groundwork is being laid for a move that could accelerate quickly should market conditions shift. Newcastle remain admirers of Smit and have monitored him closely since his breakout campaign in the Eredivisie last season. Eddie Howe is understood to view the Dutchman as an ideal long-term addition to his midfield options, particularly given the club’s desire to refresh and lower the age profile of the squad.

    However, confidence at St James’ Park has waned in recent weeks. There is a growing belief that waiting until the summer could prove costly, with AZ potentially engineering a bidding war that pushes the price beyond Newcastle’s comfort zone. Despite the financial freedom created by Alexander Isak’s £125 million ($167m) departure, Newcastle’s recruitment team remains disciplined, unwilling to overpay unless a deal aligns perfectly with their strategic vision.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty/GOAL

    Smit’s rise at AZ and European statement nights

    Smit’s reputation continues to soar in the Netherlands, where he has been the creative heartbeat of an AZ side enjoying another strong domestic campaign. The Alkmaar outfit currently sit fifth in the Eredivisie and remain one of Europe’s most respected talent incubators. This week’s Conference League victory over FC Drita offered another glimpse of Smit’s influence, with the midfielder dictating tempo and consistently unlocking defences with his vision. Within recruitment circles, there is a growing consensus that Smit represents a step above AZ’s usual graduates. Holding firm until the summer could maximise value, especially with interest from Barcelona and Real Madrid also lingering. Yet offers north of £30m ($40.3m) from England may prove difficult to resist.

  • Koeman’s Pedri comparison fuels the hype

    Perhaps the strongest endorsement of Smit’s potential has come from Ronald Koeman. The Netherlands head coach, who previously worked with Pedri at Barcelona, has drawn parallels between the two midfielders.

    "I have to be careful what I say, but I coached Pedri at Barcelona and I see things in Kees Smit that remind me of him," Koeman said in November. "The changes of direction, the use of both feet, the vision of the game, these are things I noticed in Pedri at the time."

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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

  • Getty Images Sport

    Chelsea focussed on signing the best youth talents

    The pursuit of Smit fits into Chelsea’s broader recruitment philosophy under their multi-club ownership structure. The club continues to prioritise high-upside talent, often moving earlier and more decisively than rivals. Chelsea’s ownership group recently beat Manchester United and Manchester City to the signature of Mohamed Zongo, one of Africa’s brightest emerging prospects. The Burkina Faso midfielder, who starred at the Under-17 World Cup in Qatar, will officially join Strasbourg in 2027 upon turning 18. Zongo was among the tournament’s standout performers, contributing two goals and three assists as Burkina Faso reached the quarter-finals. His performances against Germany and the Czech Republic, as well as a dominant display despite elimination against Italy, marked him out as a player of rare maturity.

    Upcoming youth signings include Sporting CP winger Geovany Quenda and striker Emanuel Emegha. Further down the line, FC Kairat wide man Dastan Satpayev and Corinthians full-back Denner Evangelista are expected to join once they reach eligibility, while Ecuadorian defender Deinner Ordonez is scheduled for a 2028 switch. 

    For Smit, Chelsea’s appeal extends beyond finances. The club’s recent track record of integrating young midfielders, coupled with clear development pathways, offers a compelling case. However, since competition for places is fierce under Enzo Maresca, it remains to be seen if Smit takes the risk of being a bench-warmer or decides to pursue a different challenge elsewhere, where he can earn sufficient minutes to continue his development.

CBF se pronuncia sobre ataque a ônibus do Fortaleza

MatériaMais Notícias

A Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF) se pronunciou, na manhã destas quinta-feira (22), sobre o ataque ao ônibus do Fortaleza, ocorrido na noite de quarta (21), após a partida contra o Sport, em Recife. Em nota, a entidade disse confiar no trabalho da Polícia e das autoridades competentes e não citou formas de ajudar no caso.

continua após a publicidade

– É lamentável e inadmissível iniciar mais um ano chamando a atenção para este tema gravíssimo que é o da violência fora dos estádios. A CBF confia no trabalho da Polícia e das autoridades competentes, para que os responsáveis por estes atos sejam punidos exemplarmente, sem prejuízo de outras medidas cabíveis – afirmou a entidade.

Na mesma nota, o presidente da CBF, Ednaldo Rodrigues, desejou uma boa recuperação aos atletas e profissionais feridos no atentado ao ônibus do Fortaleza. Ao todo, seis jogadores do Fortaleza precisaram ser levados ao hospital após o ataque ao ônibus do clube: João Ricardo, Escobar, Titi, Brítez, Lucas Sasha e Dudu.

continua após a publicidade

– Desejo pronta recuperação a todos os jogadores e profissionais da comissão técnica que foram vítimas desse crime. A CBF seguirá implacável na cobrança e nas ações para que todo e qualquer ato de violência seja varrido do futebol brasileiro – disse o presidente da CBF.

➡️ CEO do Fortaleza diz que clube só deveria voltar a jogar após recuperação de atletas: ‘Vai esperar morrer alguém?’

Confira, na íntegra, o pronunciamento da Confereração Brasileira de Futebol sobre o caso:

A Confederação Brasileira de Futebol (CBF) vem a público lamentar mais um episódio de violência ligado diretamente a uma partida de futebol, em um jogo entre Fortaleza e Sport de Recife pela Copa do Nordeste, ocorrido na noite desta quarta-feira (21), na Arena de Pernambuco.
O ônibus que transportava os atletas do Fortaleza após a partida, foi atacado por criminosos que arremessaram pedras na direção do veículo, ferindo jogadores e membros da comissão técnica.
“Desejo pronta recuperação a todos os jogadores e profissionais da comissão técnica que foram vítimas desse crime. A CBF seguirá implacável na cobrança e nas ações para que todo e qualquer ato de violência seja varrido do futebol brasileiro”, disse o presidente da CBF, Ednaldo Rodrigues.
É lamentável e inadmissível iniciar mais um ano chamando a atenção para este tema gravíssimo que é o da violência fora dos estádios. A CBF confia no trabalho da Polícia e das autoridades competentes, para que os responsáveis por estes atos sejam punidos exemplarmente, sem prejuízo de outras medidas cabíveis. E que cada vez mais episódios como esses sejam varridos do cenário do futebol brasileiro.

continua após a publicidade

Tudo sobre

CBFFortaleza

Monsoon FC anuncia ex-Grêmio como novo treinador para a temporada 2024

MatériaMais Notícias

O Monsoon FC já pensa na disputa da temporada 2024. Antes de definir o time que tentará o tão sonhado acesso à elite do futebol gaúcho no próximo ano, o Trovão da Zona Sul anunciou o seu novo comandante: trata-se de Bruno Coutinho, que assinou vínculo até o final da Série A-2.

continua após a publicidade

➡️ Siga o Lance! no WhatsApp e acompanhe em tempo real as principais notícias do esporte

Esta será a terceira experiência de Bruno como treinador. Antes de comandar o Monsoon, o jovem de 37 anos passou por Passo Fundo-RS e Monte Azul, equipe comandada por Neymar Pai e o ex-jogador, Emerson Sheik. Como jogador, Coutinho começou carreira no Grêmio e acumulou passagens em equipes da Polônia, Israel, Romênia, Japão e China.

O novo treinador evidenciou a oportunidade e está ciente da responsabilidade que terá. Em 2023, Monsoon fez história ao ser a melhor equipe da fase de classificação da Série A-2 no seu primeiro ano de disputa da competição. Contudo, o time foi eliminado nas semifinais em dois confrontos equilibrados com o Guarany.

continua após a publicidade

– O Monsoon é um clube extremamente novo, mas que já mostrou muita competitividade e maturidade logo no primeiro ano em que disputou a Série A-2. Venceu a Série B de forma invicta e conta com uma excelente estrutura para seus profissionais. Sei que tenho uma grande responsabilidade pela frente, mas estou extremamente confiante com tudo que me foi passado. Chego para somar e ajudar o clube a conquistar o tão sonhado acesso – disse Bruno Coutinho.

➡️ Zagueiro pedido por António Oliveira abre o jogo sobre interesse do Corinthians

Dois jogadores emprestados pelo Trovão da Zona Sul ajudaram suas equipes na primeira fase da Copa do Brasil. O lateral-direito João Vitor foi titular na vitória do São Luiz sobre o Ituano, por 2 a 1, quarta-feira, em casa. Já o zagueiro Garcia, de 19 anos, jogou os 90 minutos no triunfo por 2 a 1 do Real Brasília sobre o São Raimundo. Os dois times avançaram a próxima fase da competição.

continua após a publicidade

Tudo sobre

Futebol NacionalGrêmio

Game
Register
Service
Bonus