West Ham must swoop for Christian Pulisic

West Ham United are a team somewhat in disarray domestically this season, despite their flawless performances in the Europa Conference League.

The Hammers are teetering just one point from the relegation zone, with goalscoring proving a real problem that David Moyes cannot seem to fix.

His summer additions were expected to bolster all areas of the field, but the £35.5m move for Gianluca Scamacca should have revolutionised their attack alongside Michail Antonio.

However, despite scoring the seventh-most goals last season in the Premier League, they have only managed 12 goals in 15 league matches this campaign.

The main reason for this underperformance can be tied to the drop-off in form from Jarrod Bowen, who last season scored 12 and assisted 12, but has only managed two goals this season.

To kickstart the 25-year-old back into action whilst bolstering his attacking options further, in January Moyes could heed the words of Craig Burley and Shaka Hislop, who discussed the Christian Pulisic’s future on ESPN FC.

The former began by claiming:

“I believe a club like for example a West Ham, a team just sitting around [the European places]. It is a step-down but it’s a step down to – I think – getting regular game time, whether that’s in England or Spain or Germany or wherever.”

Hislop would agree, as he noted:

“That step down to another club, a smaller club, Craig mentions my former club West Ham, which I think would be a great fit for him, might be exactly what he needs if is to be playing, if he wants to start and start regularly.”

The emergence of these comments is particularly poignant given that earlier this week Tutto Juve reported that Chelsea were willing to sell should they receive a worthy bid.

Given how he has performed so far at the World Cup, the Irons must surely consider him a viable option for a January transfer.

It was his goal against Iran that sent his country through to the knockout stages of the competition, with the injury sustained while poking home highlighting his bravery and desire.

This stands in line with the comments of his former boss Thomas Tuchel, who labelled Pulisic “hungry to score”.

His winner marked the third fine performance on the run, where he is averaging an impressive 7.27 rating. It seems that when he becomes a big fish in a small pond, he thrives.

This is exacerbated through his 1.7 key passes, combined with 2.0 shots per game which outline him as a constant attacking threat, via Sofascore.

The 24-year-old has spent a large amount of time around senior football despite his age and thus could offer plenty to a toothless West Ham side in need of a creative force to reignite them.

Moyes could do worse than to listen to these pundits and pounce upon the Blues’ reported willingness to offload.

Journalist hails Burnley star Benson

Journalist Andy Jones has hailed Manuel Benson’s performance in Burnley’s defeat at Sheffield United in the Championship on Saturday.

The Lowdown: Defeat for the Clarets

The Clarets made the trip to Bramall Lane for an important league clash, with the Blades set to provide Vincent Kompany’s side with a stern test.

A highly entertaining game eventually saw Burnley fall to a 5-2 defeat, despite being in front twice in the opening 45 minutes. Benson scored both of his side’s goals in the defeat, as his impressive run of form this season continues.

The Latest: Journalist lauds Benson

Taking to Twitter, Jones singled out the 25-year-old for praise after his influential performance, making this admission on Benson at the interval.

“Manuel Benson is in the form of his life.”

The Verdict: Huge player this season

With each passing week, the more Benson’s influence in a Burnley shirt seems to grow and he was impressive on Saturday, standing out for the away side in a high-tempo encounter.

Not only did he score twice but he also enjoyed a 94% pass completion rate, completed one key pass and made one tackle, according to SofaScore, in what was an imperious all-round display.

It’s now six Championship goals for the season for Benson, having only started four matches in the competition, and the hope is that this is only the start of his brilliance.

Predicted Newcastle XI, team news v Bees

Newcastle United finally picked up their second league win of the season last week as they eased to victory over the ten men of Fulham.

They now face a wholly different challenge today, though, as they welcome another west London opponent in Brentford to St James’ Park.

This marks a game where neither side is in rip-roaring form, with the Bees having just one win from their last six in the Premier League, and the Magpies winning only once in the top flight since the opening day.

Eddie Howe has been dealt some injury boosts and a few big setbacks over the week, which may force him into some changes.

With that in mind, here’s the Newcastle XI that we’re predicting for today’s clash…

We expect to see just the two changes from the side which won 4-1 at Craven Cottage last week.

Nick Pope will continue in goal, hoping to maintain his impressive club form despite his recent England struggles. He will sit behind an unchanged defence, with Dan Burn continuing to deputise at full-back whilst Fabian Schar and Sven Botman thrive as a partnership.

There’s just the one tweak in midfield, as despite a fine performance from Sean Longstaff against the Cottagers, the return of Joelinton will surely see the 24-year-old drop to the bench.

Facing Thomas Frank’s hard-working side – who ran 13.8km more than the Manchester United team they obliterated in August – perhaps the relentlessness of the Brazilian might offer slightly more than Longstaff, who has been known to have some “poor” displays, as journalist Adam Musgrove once claimed.

A second injury boost should see the sensational Allan Saint-Maximin return to the starting line-up, replacing Jacob Murphy from last week. When available, the Frenchman is arguably the first name on the Newcastle team sheet.

On the opposite flank will surely be Miguel Almiron, whose sensational brace lit up Craven Cottage a week ago. He will continue on the right-hand side, hoping to maintain his goalscoring form.

That leaves the centre-forward role, where injuries strike once again in a negative way. Aleksander Isak will remain sidelined but is reportedly closing in on a return.

Callum Wilson impressed last week, and although he managed to score, he was replaced after 60 minutes. Although he will likely start today, whether he can last a full game remains to be seen.

Wolves make enquiry for Victor Nelsson

Wolverhampton Wanderers have made an enquiry to sign Galatasaray defender Victor Nelsson, according to the Daily Mail.

The Lowdown: Boly set to leave

Bruno Lage will be in the market for defensive reinforcements to find a suitable replacement for Willy Boly, who is expected to complete a move to fellow Premier League rivals Nottingham Forest in the coming days amid interest from the Midlands.

The 31-year-old has now entered the final year of his contract at Molineux and is yet to feature this season, but it sounds like Wolves have already identified his ideal successor.

The Latest: Wolves make Nelsson contact

According to the Daily Mail, Wolves have ‘asked about a deal’ for Nelsson, as a result of Lage ‘wanting to bring in another defender’ before the end of the window.

It’s stated that the Old Gold are ‘keen’ on the £20m-rated colossus, having established himself and proven his worth in Turkey since arriving there last summer.

The Verdict: Get it done…

It would be a massive coup for Wolves to land Nelsson, so they need to do everything possible to get this deal over the line.

The centre-back, dubbed a ‘monster’ by football talent scout Jacek Kulig, was an absolute rock at the heart of Galatasaray’s backline last season, averaging 3.9 clearances and winning 3.2 of his aerial duels per Super Lig game, via WhoScored.

Nelsson is also expected to be named in Denmark’s squad for the World Cup later this year so would bring bags of high-level experience and leadership qualities to Molineux.

Australia's top order: What are the selectors' options?

There are a number of permutations Australia’s selectors are mulling over as a decision on the first Test squad looms

Andrew McGlashan22-Oct-2025There’s a one-day series going on against India, but the main topic of conversation in Australian cricket is what the selectors will do with the squad for the first Ashes Test in Perth. Decision day is looming with one more round of Sheffield Shield to be played and while a few things are becoming clearer the big calls are still to be made.The fitness of Pat Cummins looms large over everything. But on the assumption he misses at least the first Test, which is all-but certain, and Scott Boland slots into the attack, the major talking points around the final XI will remain the top order. Here we run through three potential scenarios that George Bailey, Tony Dodemaide and head coach Andrew McDonald will be pondering. There is also a chance that the squad announcement won’t clarify everything, with the final calls not taken until the eve of the first Test.Option 1: One in, one outIf the only spot vacant is an opener, then Marnus Labuschagne’s irresistible claims for a recall will see him go in at the top alongside Usman Khawaja as he did in the World Test Championship final against South Africa at Lord’s. That was a last-ditch move from the selectors, basically honouring Labuschagne’s role in getting them to the final, and he was dropped the Test after. He will be in much better form heading into the Perth Test should the role come his way again.”He can open…he can bat three. He’s versatile,” Steven Smith said. “We’ll see where it all stands when the team gets picked. I mean, it’s not too different to batting three, to be honest. He could be in first ball. So, it’s essentially the same thing.”This team also means Beau Webster’s bowling is retained which would take the pressure of Cameron Green to send down too many overs as he continues to work his way back with the ball even if his withdrawal from the India ODIs was described as a conservative decision. It keeps Green at No. 3 where he finished the West Indies series with scores of 52, 46 and 42 in tough batting conditions.Webster has missed the first two rounds of the Sheffield Shield after rolling his ankle but will feature against Victoria in Melbourne and last week Bailey confirmed he would be part of the Test squad.Could Jake Weatherald make his Test debut?•Getty ImagesOption 2: Marnus at No. 3, Webster unluckyWhile it’s often said there is very little difference between opening and No. 3, Labuschagne’s position is No. 3. If there was a decision made that he has to return in that slot, then an opener is still needed. That creates a few scenarios.Sam Konstas has been unconvincing in two Shield rounds, but a big score against Queensland, at a Test venue in the Gabba, would be an interesting twist. Uncapped Jake Weatherald has played arguably the most significant innings so far among the contenders with 94 off 99 balls in a low-scoring contest against Western Australia. Matt Renshaw started the season with a century for Queensland and has since earned an ODI recall. Would runs against India in the next two games be of any significance? And then there’s Mitch Marsh…This balance of top order would see Green move back down to No. 6 and require the selectors to have complete confidence in him being able to operate close to, if not completely, unrestricted as a bowler so that he can ease the burden on the three frontline quicks. If that was the case, Webster would very unfortunately be sidelined.Steven Smith averages 67.07 at No.3 but hasn’t batted there since 2017•Getty ImagesOption 3: Positional shiftsThis XI is the same as option one but with a subtle shift in the order. Smith returns to No. 3 and Green drops one spot to No. 4, where he made 174 against New Zealand early last year before his back injury. It’s an outcome endorsed by a number of pundits, including Mark Waugh, who believe that it is Green’s natural position.”I think he can bat anywhere,” Smith said of Green. “As he showed in the West Indies, I thought he batted really nicely at three. You know, he’s got a really good technique, good temperament. The beauty with our line-up, I think everyone can sort of slot in at different spots and be versatile.”Smith, meanwhile, has averaged 67.07 from 29 innings at No. 3 but, while on Tuesday he said he wasn’t “too fussed” about batting orders, he may be reluctant to shift again after the opening experiment.What would you do? Have your sayWhat could changeWhichever batting line-up Australia settle on for Perth, there’s a very good chance it’s not the one which finishes the series in Sydney. If Khawaja struggles early on it will raise questions about whether Australia need to bite the bullet and find opener. And what happens if Labuschagne is picked to open and starts poorly in the first two Tests? There are also, probably unfairly given his early success, still a few questions asked about whether Webster’s technique will stand-up long term in Test cricket. Josh Inglis is a versatile batter who the selectors value highly and he would come into the mix should anyone struggle or be injured.

Defensive Australia burnt by India's spin trio in Chepauk furnace

Hazlewood: Australia need to come up with new plans against spin-heavy attacks

Deivarayan Muthu08-Oct-20231:19

Tom Moody: Australia did not have a plan for that sort of pitch

Chepauk was such a furnace on Sunday afternoon that it almost felt like 45 degrees in an air-conditioned press box. The spectators spread towels over their heads in the open stands. Australia’s batters took impromptu drinks breaks, and found shelter under umbrellas, with ice towels on their necks, during those breaks.Soon after the powerplay, Steven Smith and David Warner traded their helmets for caps. Chennai’s suffocating heat and humidity was getting to them. India’s spin trio of Ravindra Jadeja, Kuldeep Yadav, and R Ashwin then suffocated them even further.India’s spinners bowled 16.5 overs worth of dot balls in their collective 30. They picked up six wickets among them for just 104 runs. They kept hitting Test-match lengths on a black-soil turner that also offered some variable bounce. Australia’s batters just couldn’t put the spinners off those lengths. Their lone specialist spinner then struggled in the evening once dew set in, leaking 53 runs in his eight overs while going wicketless.Australia did find some momentary breathing space when Warner and Smith forged a 69-run partnership for the second wicket after Mitchell Marsh had fallen for a duck. Hardik Pandya offered both batters drive balls, but the pressure was relentless from India’s spinners. Jadeja was a popgun firing darts on a good length around off stump. Kuldeep, too, attacked the stumps with his stock balls and wrong’uns. Ashwin let rip his carrom ball and reverse carrom ball, raising puffs of dust from the surface.Related

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Australia’s batters kept waiting for the loose ball, which never came. They couldn’t find other ways to counter the spinners either. They attempted just 13 sweeps for seven runs and stepped out to just nine balls against the spinners, managing only 11 runs, according to ESPNcricinfo’s logs. Sure, hitting good-length balls against spin was particularly tough on this track, and the straight boundaries are bigger than the square ones at Chepauk, but batters had to manufacture something to stay in the game here.Australia ended up with 199, which was about 50 runs short of a par total, according to their captain Pat Cummins. Their batters now face the unenviable task of dealing with a similar black-soil turner in Lucknow, where they will play back-to-back games next week against South Africa and Sri Lanka. South Africa will also have three spinners at their disposal – left-arm fingerspinner Keshav Maharaj, left-arm wristspinner Tabraiz Shamsi and offspin-bowling allrounder Aiden Markram. Though Maheesh Theekshana and Wanindu Hasaranga are both injured, Sri Lanka have the services of left-arm fingerspinner Dunith Wellalage, legspinner Dushan Hemantha and offspin-bowling allrounder Dhananjaya de Silva.Australia need to come up with new plans against spin-heavy attacks, Josh Hazlewood has said. “Yeah, I think in particular batting in that first innings, that was probably as extreme as the conditions are going to get, I think, in terms of spin and playing spin throughout the middle and trying to find ways to score, keep that run rate ticking over without losing wickets,” he said at his post-match press conference. “So, there’s probably a good sort of examination on our batters to get that up first, probably against the best spinners in the tournament, arguably. Hopefully it gets a little bit easier from here on in and they’ll come up with some new plans and go from there.”Glenn Maxwell was knocked over by Kuldeep Yadav spinning one in sharply•Getty ImagesAustralia have a spin problem on the bowling front too: they have picked just one specialist spinner for an ODI World Cup in India. Ashton Agar, who helped them win a bilateral series in India in March earlier this year, is nursing a calf injury while legspinner Tanveer Sangha is only a travelling reserve with the squad.In the warm-up match against Pakistan in Hyderabad, Australia tested Maxwell out in the powerplay against the left-handed Fakhar Zaman and even coaxed out overs from Smith, Marnus Labuschagne and Warner, but they didn’t use those part-timers against India.Zampa conceded three fours in his first over on Sunday and lacked wicket-taking threat. Maxwell, who was introduced into the attack in the last over of the powerplay, well before Zampa, didn’t trouble India’s batters either. The ball also skidded onto the bat under lights in dewy conditions, making life even more difficult for Australia’s spinners.Hazlewood refused to admit that Australia are light on spin and echoed the thoughts of the team management, backing Maxwell to come good as a frontline spin option.”No, I don’t think so,” Hazlewood said. “I think our quicks are our strength probably upfront as we saw tonight. And then I think Glenn Maxwell is a frontline spinner, in particular in India. He’s bowled a lot here throughout IPL and throughout one-dayers. So yeah, I consider him a frontline spinner. So, we’ve got two spinners and three quicks as, you know, a lot of the other teams do so no, I don’t feel that we’re short at all.”Whether Australia have enough spin-bowling resources for the World Cup is still up for debate, but if their batting line-up plays to potential, they can actually throw the spinners off their lengths. Warner, Maxwell, and Alex Carey have a variety of sweeps in their repertoire. Smith and Labuschagne can manipulate the spinners into the gaps while Cameron Green’s big reach could open up scoring opportunities. Marcus Stoinis, who was Lucknow Super Giants’ spin-hitter in IPL 2023, batted for almost an hour and even had a decent workout with the ball in the lead-up to the game at Chepauk.Can they turn Australia’s campaign around in Lucknow?

Jos Buttler dredges deep but can't block out reality as England come crashing down

Tide finally goes out for England despite wicketkeeper’s valiant attempt to avert defeat

Andrew Miller16-Aug-20216:25

Harmison: England openers have reached an all-time low

There is, as everyone is probably aware, a rather explicit message written onto the top of Jos Buttler’s bat-handle. It’s meant to serve as a reminder not to take this game too seriously, to keep a grip on his freedom of expression while navigating the sport’s ups and downs. It wasn’t meant to be a comment on the state of the game as he faced up to his opening delivery.For Buttler had an awful lot to ponder as he braced for the incoming Ishant Sharma in what was already an agonising rearguard. His arrival at the crease had been telegraphed by Jonny Bairstow’s departure from it 20 minutes earlier – pinned plumb lbw by Ishant on the very stroke of tea, to leave England listless at 67 for 4, with another 38 overs to come.Before Buttler had faced a ball, Joe Root was gone too – that man of every key moment of the day, Jasprit Bumrah, finding his edge with a snorter before Root could find his post-prandial footing. And as Root traipsed back to the pavilion, with 213 runs for the match banked but still 205 left out there, way, way beyond England’s collective reach, Buttler could at least take solace in the clarity of his renewed job spec. Block for your life, and then block some more.For it’s not always been obvious quite how Buttler’s meant to approach his Test batting. Circumspection has gnawed away at his natural, ball-striking game – and for all the advice staring up at him from that handle, a Test average of 33.65, and a strike-rate of 56, speak of a player trapped between mindsets, unable to unleash because the pitfalls of doing so can be bottomless in this format.Related

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At Trent Bridge last week, he played an awful, agonised prod to the 18th scoreless delivery of his innings, to trudge off – sixth out – for the third of England’s four first-day ducks. It epitomised how trapped his game was feeling in a team that’s been set up to fail, with neither faith nor foundations on which to build a substantial whole.Three years ago, in the corresponding series against India, Buttler’s counterattacking game came good for England on numerous occasions, often from similarly backs-to-the-wall situations. But India’s bowling was not as relentless as it is now, and nor were England – with a spine of unimpeachable Test experience stretching from Alastair Cook at the top through Ben Stokes and Root in the middle, right down to James Anderson and Stuart Broad – quite so nakedly clueless as they have been in the clutch moments this year.Jasprit Bumrah reacts to Virat Kohli dropping Jos Buttler•Getty ImagesBut here, the narrative of England’s struggle was set in stone from the first ten balls of their reply. Ducks for Rory Burns, caught off a leading edge as Bumrah hooped one back from outside leg, and Dom Sibley, ripped asunder by a staggering ball from Mohammed Shami, served due notice of what was to come for England. And Buttler’s only role – lonely but essential as it was – was to present a firm bat, straight back down the line, and hope not to snick one.Not for the first time, his stay didn’t start promisingly. Virat Kohli informed Buttler shortly after his arrival that “this was not white-ball cricket”, but Kohli himself then missed a glorious opportunity to provide his own punchline by dropping a clanger at slip as Buttler nibbled – in loose, lofty, one-day fashion – at a short and wide one outside off.But by degrees, he began to epitomise the hope that can spring eternal in Test cricket even on the darkest, most soul-searching days. For two-and-a-half hours of stoic crease occupation, first with Moeen Ali, and then – after Sam Curran’s awkward week had been ended with the first king pair by an England batter at Lord’s – with the impressively obdurate Ollie Robinson, he presented the broadest bat he could muster, and dredged his technique and ticker for every residual ounce of gumption he could find.And as India’s quest for wickets slowed with the final hour approaching, the countdown was truly on. With 16.4 overs to come, the graphics gurus at Sky Sports offered a cheeky nod to the zeitgeist by flashing up the fact that there were “100 balls remaining in the day”, and Buttler, self-evidently, needed to face the vast majority of them.On the fourth day, a huge and ironic cheer had rung around Lord’s when Cheteshwar Pujara – with what hindsight now proves to have been a pricelessly dour innings of 45 from 206 balls – notched up his 100th delivery, for the cost at the time of 12 runs. And for as long as Buttler was lingering with similar resolve, the great escape was still on – much as it had been all those years ago at Cardiff in 2009, when “Brigadier Block”, Paul Collingwood, had seemed to be England’s only hope until Monty Panesar and that man Anderson held the line in the frantic denouement.Buttler and Kohli have something to say to each other•AFP/Getty ImagesBut suddenly, and inexorably, the end hove into view. Robinson, who had been greeted by Kohli as a “boring big mouth”, had once again displayed a rare aptitude for the Test battle before being found out by arguably the ball of the day from Bumrah, a stunning pacy offcutter that foxed even umpire Richard Illingworth as it smashed him on the back leg, halfway up the stumps.And with that, the spell was broken. Moments later, in the same over that could have delivered his 100th ball, Buttler prodded outside off to the relentless Mohammed Siraj to trudge off for 25 from 96. And as the tide went out for England with Anderson’s wicket three balls later, the shoreline showed a familiar pattern of beached, inadequate performances – and a familiar name poking fractionally higher than his team-mates.For even on a day when he failed by his own relentlessly high standards – and even on a day when he accepted personal responsibility for the abject hour of bowling chaos that had gifted India their route back to the ascendancy – it was Joe Root, rather than Buttler, who stood out in the final analysis with his 33 calmly crafted runs. His contribution was an echo of what could have been, even into the teeth of an outstanding, unyielding India attack, had there been an iota of similar knowhow from the men around him.”I expected us to be able to bat out the last two sessions and it’s disappointing that we didn’t,” Root said at the close. “There’s no hiding from it, we need to get better. The guys all know that. Everyone is hurting. It’s very raw right now. I feel the same as every single player in that dressing room, it is a missed opportunity. But it is not time to panic.”It might, however, be time to let out a rather large oath.

Cal Raleigh Joins Ken Griffey Jr., Mickey Mantle in MLB History With 50th Home Run

Cal Raleigh made MLB history on Sunday by hitting his 49th home run this season and becoming the record-holder for most home runs hit in a single season by a catcher.

Well, Raleigh followed up one historic game with another on Monday as he crushed his 50th homer of the year. With this home run, he joined two MLB legends in two separate records.

Raleigh is now just the second Mariners player in franchise history to record 50 or more home runs in a single season, joining Ken Griffey Jr. on the short list. Griffey logged 56 home runs in both the 1997 and '98 seasons with Seattle. Raleigh could be on his way to reaching, or surpassing, that Mariners record held by Griffey for nearly three decades.

Additionally, Raleigh is now just the second switch hitter in MLB history to record 50 or more home runs in a single season, joining Hall of Famer Mickey Mantle, per Mariners PR. The late MLB legend has remained the only switch hitter ever to hit this milestone since he did so in both 1956 and '61—that was until Monday night when Raleigh hit this mark. Mantle hit 52 homers in '56 and 54 in '61, so Raleigh could surpass both of Mantle's home run numbers in a single season.

There's still about a month left of the MLB regular season. Let's see what other history Raleigh makes.

'It was an easy decision' – Arne Slot lifts lid on reasons behind restoring Mo Salah to Liverpool squad as he hails Egyptian's 'threat' in Brighton win

Liverpool manager Arne Slot shared his thoughts on talisman Mohamed Salah after Saturday's 2-0 Premier League win over Brighton at Anfield. Slot started with Salah on the bench but turned to the forward in the first half after defender Joe Gomez was forced off injured. Salah went on to pick up an assist in the game in what was his final appearance for the Reds before heading to the Africa Cup of Nations with Egypt.

Salah grabs assist on Liverpool return

Salah made his first appearance for Liverpool since criticising the club and his manager after the team's draw with Sunderland. The Egypt international has said he feels he has been "thrown under the bus" by the Reds and was subsequently left out of the club's Champions League trip to Inter in midweek. The situation has led to speculation that Salah could depart in the January transfer window, with Saudi Pro League clubs keen on the 33-year-old. However, he was back in action for Liverpool against Brighton on Saturday and provided an assist for Hugo Ekitike's second goal as the Merseysiders picked up all three points and moved into sixth place in the table.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportSlot speaks out after Liverpool win

Slot gave his verdict on Salah's performance and his decision to recall him to the squad after the match. He told Sky Sports: "I think he was a threat. The first ball he touched, he almost made an assist for Mac Allister. He was constantly involved in the fact we had Mo. Pleasing to see but not a surprise. It was an easy decision to put him in the squad. I have said many times before what has been said between us will stay between us. We needed him and he assisted to the 2-0 which is nice for us. We have been so many times this season on the wrong side of the set-piece battle. He goes to the AFCON and that means for us another player down. This is what we knew before the season started. Hopefully one or two players can come back from injury."

Salah makes history with latest assist

Salah added another record to his collection with his latest assist. The Egypt international has broken Wayne Rooney's record for the most Premier League goal involvements for a single club. Salah now has 277 goal involvements for Liverpool in the Premier League (188 goals, 89 assists), beating Rooney's previous landmark of 276 for Manchester United (183 goals, 93 assists).

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Slot thrilled with Liverpool win

Slot also spoke about his team's form after bagging a first home Premier League win since November 1st. He added: "Very pleased. I think you could see today what it means for the players if you have to play many games. We had three days rest and were facing a team that had a week to prepare. You could see the problems during the game with injuries but the mentality was great." 

The Liverpool boss also praised match-winner Ekitike after he followed up his two goals against Leeds with another brace, adding: "[He played] very well. But I think I can see the players we have brought in this season have progressed. They are getting stronger and stronger and fitter and fitter. I can see them getting stronger in the duels they play. Hugo is an example of that, but others are examples of that too."

Vítor Pereira xinga Fábio Santos de covarde e expõe elenco do Corinthians

MatériaMais Notícias

Vítor Pereira segue envolvido em polêmicas quando o assunto é Corinthians. Desta vez o alvo é Fábio Santos, que concedeu entrevista afirmando que o profissional português era uma pessoa difícil de lidar no cotidiano do Timão.

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➡️ Tudo sobre o Timão agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Corinthians

O treinador chamou o ex-lateral de “covarde” e questionou suas falas. Além disso, ele cutucou o atual técnico do Corinthians, António Oliveira.

– Andou oito meses sorrindo para mim e para minha comissão técnica, de aparente boa relação com todos. Agora, após esse tempo todo, dar essa entrevista covarde. Lamento dizer isso, só de um covarde pode se esperar esse tipo de entrevista – disse, ao jornal “Record”, de Portugal.

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Fábio Santos afirmou que Vítor Pereira era um gestor “horrível”, apesar de ter “trabalho bom dentro de campo” no Corinthians. O treinador seguiu rebatendo as declarações do ex-jogador.

– Infelizmente, para esse senhor, e mais alguns, a única preocupação era renovar contrato e irem renovando ano a ano para terem acesso a uma reforma dourada, passando a maior parte do tempo no departamento médico. Comigo não é assim, vai para a corrida quem tiver andamento, quem tiver pernas para correr, e ele até me devia estar agradecido pela época que fez porque eu geri da melhor forma aquilo que ele nos podia dar e, devo dizer sem qualquer problema, que fez uma época conseguida. Basta compararem com a anterior à nossa chegada e com a seguinte à nossa saída.

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– Tenho alguma curiosidade em saber o que pensam dessas declarações o Balbuena, o Fausto Vera, o Gil, o Renato Augusto, Yuri Alberto, o Du Queiroz, o Mantuan, Adson, o Mosquito, o Piton, o Raul Gustavo, o Renan, o Cássio, o Marcelo Carpes. Tenho a certeza que as respostas não serão as mesmas e estarão incrédulos como eu – concluiu.

SOBROU PARA ANTÓNIO OLIVEIRA

Em recente entrevista coletiva, o atual técnico do Corinthians citou sua sogra, assunto polêmico quando se trata de Vítor Pereira. O português deixou o Timão no fim de 2022 com a justificativa de cuidar da parente. Pouco tempo depois, acertou com o Flamengo.

– É hora de deixar de falar do meu nome porque apesar das minhas explicações e do drama familiar que vivo há vários anos, nunca aceitaram a minha saída. E esse drama familiar mantém-se pelo que é lamentável que ainda agora tenha voltado a ser tema – disse VP, que está sem clube no momento.

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António OliveiraCorinthiansFábio SantosVitor Pereira

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