Will Chelsea sign a new centre-back? Enzo Maresca addresses Blues' transfer plans as defensive injuries bite

Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca revealed if they are planning to sign a new defender in January amid injury crisis.

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Chelsea missing two key defendersUnlikely to sign new players in JanauryJuventus eye move for DisasiFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱AFPWHAT HAPPENED?

The Blues are missing the services of two first-team defenders Wesley Fofana – who has been out injured since early December – and Benoit Badiashile who is expected to return by the first week of February. Amid the injury crisis in the backline, Maresca revealed if the club are planning to make new signings in the January transfer window.

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Speaking to reporters, the Italian coach said: "At this moment I think we are OK. The timing [for Fofana] is between 12 and 16 weeks which is three months and the season could be finished. If he can come back early we will all be happy. [But] we have Benoit who is close to being back, we have Josh who is doing well, Axel and Levi [Colwill] who can all do well in the position."

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Per , Juventus are eyeing a move for versatile Chelsea defender Axel Disasi as the Serie A giants look to bolster their defence in the January window. The Premier League club are reportedly ready to let the player leave on a temporary move so that he gets game time in the second half of the season.

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The West London side will be back in action on Saturday as they take on League Two side Morecambe in an FA Cup third-round clash at Stamford Bridge.

USMNT striker Ricardo Pepi comes off bench to score 16th goal of season for PSV in just 11 minutes

Ricardo Pepi came off the bench as a substitute to score his 16th goal of the season in PSV's win over NAC Breda.

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Pepi scored again11th of season in ErediviseSecond in Golden Boot raceFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱AFPWHAT HAPPENED?

It took U.S. international Ricardo Pepi just 11 minutes to score what would be the game-deciding goal in a tightly-contested win over NAC Breda.

PSV had originally gone behind on a 26th-minute goal from the opposition, only to fight back before halftime. The Dutch leaders found themselves up 2-1 at the break, with Guus Til scoring both goals to overturn that early deficit. Pepi, who came on at the 79th minute, then sealed the game in stoppage time, perfectly timing his run through the backline to get onto the end of an Ismael Saibari assist. It was a good thing, too, as an even later goal from NAC Breda's Kacper Kostorz pulled them within one, but that was as close as the side would get in PSV's 3-2 win.

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With the goal, Pepi now has 16 goals on the season in all competitions with 11 of those goals coming in the Eredivisie. It ends a relative goal drought for the American star, who had gone two games scoreless entering Saturday's match. With the goal, Pepi is in sole possession of second place in the Eredivisie Golden Boot race, trailing only FC Twente' Sem Steijn. However, Steijn's 15 goals have come in 1,472 minutes, while Pepi has netted his 11 in under 700 league minutes.

In addition to his Eredivisie goals, Pepi has scored four in the KNVB Cup and one in the Champions League this season.

DID YOU KNOW?

Pepi's international compatriot Richy Ledezma also featured in the match, starting and playing the full match in the win.

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR PSV?

PSV will face a massive test on Wednesday as they host Liverpool in their eigith and final Champions League match of the league phase. They'll have it all to play for, too, as they can either advance to the knockouts seeeded, advanced unseeded or miss out altogether based on this week's results.

Everton hiring 2 new specialists including an expert in academy recruitment

Everton are believed to be hiring two new specialists at the club, including an expert on scouting youth players, according to an exciting report that has emerged during the international break.

Everton transfer & manager latest

The Blues continue to be linked with possible new signings, with FCSB centre-back Joyskim Dawa linked with a move to Goodison Park. He has averaged a hugely impressive seven clearances per game in the Europa League this season, which is more than both Michael Keane and James Tarkowski have managed in the Premier League.

Meanwhile, Silas has also been mentioned as an option for Everton, with the attacker currently on loan at Red Star Belgrade from Bundesliga side VfB Stuttgart. He has 56 goal contributions in 132 appearances for the latter, showing that he could be a strong source of end product for the Merseysiders.

As for Sean Dyche’s future as manager at Goodison, the Englishman looks to be safe in his job for the time being, but rumours continue to emerge regarding potential successors.

One significant rumour that has dropped has suggested that Dan Friedkin wants David Moyes to return as manager on an interim basis, prior to making way for Jose Mourinho at the end of this season. The latter would be a significant appointment if it happened, given his status as one of the leading coaches of his generation.

Everton make key in-house appointment

Now, a fresh report from Goodison News has claimed that Everton are hiring two new specialists at Finch Farm, with Mark Quayle named as their new academy national recruitment lead, signing a “rolling contract”. He was lead scout for the 13-18 age group at Goodison Park, highlighting his expertise with young players, and he has now received a promotion.

The update also states that Everton are intending to hire a “performance analyst for the first team”, giving the Blues the best possible chance of turning things around after such a disappointing start to the Premier League campaign.

Dan Friedkin at AS Roma.

It is so encouraging to see shrewd decisions being made as The Friedkin Group slowly look to increase their influence at Goodison, as they aim to oversee a far more successful period in the club’s history, following three relegation battles in a row in the league.

The fact that Quayle has spent a period at Arsenal as a youth scout in the past further suggests that he is an expert in his field, and the hope is that he can flourish even more in this new position, looking to make his influence grow further at Everton, unearthing young gems in the process.

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A top-quality performance analyst alongside Dyche would also be welcome, providing the manager with key information, as the new owners look to get the Blues in a position where they have everyone pulling in the same direction, which certainly hasn’t always been the case during the Farhad Moshiri era.

Yastika's promise, Perry's problems: what we learnt from the Australia-India ODIs

Both sides improved their death overs batting in the series but were plagued by fielding errors

Annesha Ghosh28-Sep-2021End-overs acceleration: Australia, India improve
Midway into their successful chase in the second ODI, Australia captain Meg Lanning told the host broadcaster that her batters were aiming for nine runs per over at the death (overs 40.1 to 50). By Australia’s own standards, not least with four wickets down, Lanning’s assertion sounded ambitious, for they have scored at 7.24 in the last 10 overs since the end of the 2017 World Cup.But on the evidence of Australia’s acceleration in that chase of 275, Lanning’s faith in her team’s batting mojo proved well-reasoned. Building on Tahlia McGrath’s brisk 74, the hosts, steered by Beth Mooney and Nicola Carey, piled up 87 in the last 10 in that game, and 79 in the third match, bettering their overall death-overs scoring rate of 7.30 this year, across six ODIs.By contrast, the other 2017 World Cup semi-finalists have been slower in the end overs this year. Defending ODI champions England have struck at 6.17, India 5.55, and South Africa 5.45. In the ongoing series, India tallied 63, 61, and 53 at the death, their best haul also coinciding with their only win in three matches. Though theirs remains inferior to the top-two ranked teams’ this year, India’s rate in the last two ODIs surpassed the team’s goal of six runs per over in the final ten, and was key to them reaching the 250-run mark twice in as many games, including during their record chase of 265 in the third ODI on Sunday.Yastika provides answers, but poses questions
Playing only her third innings for India, left-hander Yastika Bhatia had brought up her maiden international fifty only two balls prior when she shuffled outside the off stump, lined herself up for the widish back-of-length Annabel Sutherland delivery and whip-pulled it for a cracking four to deep square. That one shot alone crystallised the confidence, composure, and technical aptitude the 20-year old has showcased on the Australia tour so far, making 64, 3, and 34 in the ODIs and a 42-ball 41 in the one-off practice game.For a batting line-up bereft of consistency and middle-order solidity through the best part of this year, Bhatia could be a long-sought, long-term fix. But for an XI that has, aside from their offspin-bowling allrounders Sneh Rana and Deepti Sharma, fielded three quicks and at least one frontline spinner so far this series and mostly two quicks and three recognised spinners in England and the home series against South Africa, Bhatia’s impressive debut poses a conundrum.She appears to have positioned herself as an automatic pick for India’s next ODI assignment – the tour of New Zealand in 2022 shortly before the World Cup – and perhaps also for the pink-ball Test against Australia starting Thursday. Where does, then, Harmanpreet Kaur, who sat out all three ODIs with injury, slot in (when fit)? And if match-winning contributions of Rana, the “find of the England series,” and Sharma on the ongoing tour are anything to go by, dropping either robs the lower-middle order of security and alters the attack’s balance.Ellyse Perry struggled for control with the ball•Getty ImagesPerry struggles; young Australia quicks impress
In the absence of Megan Schutt and Tayla Vlaeminck, Ellyse Perry took the new ball for Australia. The ODIs were Perry’s first new-ball stint since she limped out of the 2020 T20 World Cup with a hamstring injury. But the control and efficacy that’s underpinned her bowling through the best part of her career, were far from view as she finished wicketless.Of the 87 runs Australia conceded in extras across the three matches, 67 came in wides, 26 of which were Perry’s doing. Though she clocked 120kph several times, and made good use of the bouncer – even hitting the India captain Mithali Raj’s helmet in the first ODI with one – her unease with finding the right lines was especially pronounced against the left-right opening combination of Smriti Mandhana and Shafali Verma. Her wayward bowling often let them off her hook in the powerplay when the other quicks created pressure from the other end.The ODIs, however, showed just how well-stacked Australia’s feeder line is, thanks to the WBBL and WNCL-groomed Darcie Brown, Stella Campbell, Hannah Darlington, and Test-capped McGrath. Brown, the leading wicket-taker in the ODIs with five wickets in two games, troubled the opposition with potent short balls, high pace, and tight lines, while McGrath took four wickets in three games to add to her momentum-shifting 74 and 47 with the bat in the second and third ODIs.The 19-year-old Campbell, who debuted in the third ODI, impressed with consistent pace north of 118kph and the use of her tall frame, and Darlington, too, offered decent support. The return of Sutherland, who picked 3 for 30 in the third ODI, was a reminder of the penetration she adds to the attack when not grounded by injury.India’s fielding woes; Australia not flawless
It’s hard to predict which Indian fielding unit might show up on a given day. A feature of their 11 matches across three ODI series this year, their volatility has ranged from Harleen Deol’s boundary-riding-gravity-defying peak to sitters shelled by the rookies and experienced players alike in a collective act of infectious frenzy.Shafali, when not substituted out by Jemimah Rodrigues after completing her batting duties, has left little for conjecture why she’s needed hiding in the Australia ODIs when fielding in the circle or beyond. Richa Ghosh, who replaced the designated longer-formats wicketkeeper Taniya Bhatia, added a vital quick-scoring element to India’s lower-middle order and showed flashes of brilliance with the gloves, too. But she made glaring errors in the last two ODIs, most notably with a single-conceding overthrow at the start of the final over of Australia’s successful chase on Friday and by dropping a sitter in the next game. Overall India dropped at least seven chances across the last two matches.Though far more alert, athletic, and well-oiled as a fielding group, Australia, for their part, made costly errors, too, a sticking point most tellingly in their record-snapping defeat in the third ODI. Carey, Sutherland, Molineux found themselves among those to err under pressure, and two games earlier, Lanning, too, had shelled a straightforward catch, at slip.For an ODI side that rode a world-record unbeaten streak spanning nearly four years, some room for improvement did emerge after all.

Robert Sanchez dropped: Chelsea boss Enzo Maresca explains decision to bench goalkeeper for Filip Jorgensen against West Ham

Chelsea goalkeeper Robert Sanchez has been dropped from the starting XI for their Premier League clash against West Ham on Monday.

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Sanchez dropped from starting XIHas been criticised for mistakesJorgensen makes third league startFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

For just the third time in the league this season, the goalkeeper has been dropped to the bench as coach Enzo Maresca, allowing Filip Jorgensen to make just his third appearance in the top-flight since he joined from Villarreal last summer.

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Maresca's decision comes in the wake of Sanchez's costly error in their recent 3-1 defeat against Manchester City at the end of January, which occurred just days after another blunder against Wolves.

WHAT MARESCA SAID

Maresca has explained the decision to drop Sanchez, telling : "It's always a hard decision to leave out players, especially in this case the keeper, it is not an easy one but I assessed it during the week. The good thing is that we have two good keepers so we make the decision to change and we are happy with that."

Asked about Sanchez's reaction, Maresca said: "I spoke with him a few days ago, he's now also tried to help Filip so everything is fine."

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The Blues have won just one of their last seven matches in the Premier League to fall down to sixth in the table and will hope Jorgensen's presence helps ensure they will be back to winning ways by the end of the West Ham clash.

Wolves fans spot new Chris Kavanagh mistake before Man City’s goal (Video)

An incident involving a tackle on a Wolverhampton Wanderers player in the build up to Manchester City’s goal has emerged, putting a bigger shadow over referee Chris Kavanagh after Sunday’s controversy.

Gary O’Neil and his Wolves side are still without a win in the Premier League, but they will be pleased with their performance against the Blues, with their anger directed at the performance of Kavanagh rather than any of the players.

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ByConnor Holden Oct 20, 2024 Wolves’ wait for a Premier League win continues

Wolves came into the game against Pep Guardiola’s side sitting at the bottom of the table, and an easy win for the away side was expected. However, Wolves made sure that wasn’t the case, as they took an early lead and put in a very impressive display. Josko Gvardiol levelled the away side, and then a dramatic and questionable goal from John Stones in the last minute sealed the win for City.

The incident at the end of the game has been the talking point, with O’Neil believing there “could be an unconscious bias” towards the bigger teams in the league when it comes to refereeing decisions: “I can categorically tell you they don’t mean to.

“They are 100 per cent honest. I just know from a human point of view it’s tough. I feel different playing Manchester City than someone else in the Carabao Cup first round. I’m sure they feel it; they are human. I don’t know if I’m miles off; it just feels there could be.”

He added: “If I had to upset someone in the street and there’s a big and little guy in the street, I’m upsetting the little guy. There is something in there, and they don’t do it on purpose and are doing the best job they can. Maybe there’s something which just edges it in that direction when it’s really tight.”

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Meanwhile, on the positive front for Wolves, former Premier League player Nigel Re-Coker hopes the Midlands side take the same “desire” shown against Man City into their other games this season. But while Wolves may be just about calming down from Sunday’s match, a new incident has emerged in the lead up to City’s goal.

Chris Kavanagh missed a clear foul before Man City's goal

As stated, Man City claimed all three points away at Wolves on Sunday in a fashion that has been labelled controversial. Now, footage has emerged of a tackle on a Wolves player before that goal that could have been blown up for a foul and therefore seen the game end all square.

Goncalo Guedes was carrying the ball towards the City goal when, it appears, he was pushed to the ground before losing the ball. City had a couple of corners between this and the goal, so it wasn’t an incident that led directly to the goal, but it all happened within the space of a couple of minutes.

This is footage that will annoy Wolves fans even more and raise even more questions after O’Neil’s comments about unconscious bias towards the bigger Premier League teams.

'We don't play it safe' – Buttler, the confidence and the adrenaline, and bringing the hammer down

“Just keep imposing ourselves on the opposition is the way we’ve championed trying to play”

Andrew Miller31-Oct-2021Jos Buttler says he had been given the licence to “throw caution to the wind” during his exhilarating 71* from 32 balls against Australia on Saturday, as England’s batters seized on the opportunity to drive home their dominance after another outstanding bowling display.Buttler’s remarkable innings – featuring five fours, five sixes and innumerable bewildered head-shakes from his team-mates in the dugout – enabled England to cruise to victory with 50 balls to spare, and cement their standing at the top of Group 1 with their third crushing win in a row. It was an opportunity for Buttler to reaffirm the all-guns-blazing mentality that has transformed England into the pre-eminent white-ball team of the era, and lay down a marker for the rest of the tournament.Related

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Buttler's 'clinic of white-ball power hitting'

“It was a fantastic team performance,” Buttler said, after a bowling display led by Chris Woakes and Chris Jordan had limited Australia to a sub-par total of 125. “Early wickets in the powerplay really set us on our way and it was great fun to chase those runs down.”We didn’t have any scoreboard pressure. ‘Just keep imposing ourselves on the opposition’ is the way we’ve championed trying to play. We don’t try and play it safe. So if we talk that way, we have to go out and play that way as well.”To that end, Buttler credited his opening partner, Jason Roy, for setting England’s agenda, as he galloped to the pitch of his first ball from Josh Hazlewood, and slammed him through wide long-on for four – an important statement shot given Hazlewood’s ability to drum out an awkward length. Roy then repeated the dose with a big six in Pat Cummins’ first over, and when England reached 48 for 0 after five overs, Buttler knew it was time to put the hammer down.4:00

Jayawardene: Batting depth allows Buttler, Roy to go hard in the powerplay

“I think you get quite inspired by Jason at the other end when he is running down first ball against Hazlewood and running down against Cummins,” he said. “These are top bowlers and the way he can impose himself inspires at the other end. When you get to the last over of the powerplay none down, it felt like an over to really throw caution to the wind and just go for it.”Once you get in that hitting mode, it is [about] just allowing yourself to keep going. Sometimes you think ‘I’ll rein it back in a little bit’, but then you catch yourself half-hearted. So especially with the position we were in, in the game, it was more ‘I’m just gonna keep going’. And keep trying to take advantage of being in a good zone.”As Buttler’s innings progressed, so the shots became more outrageous – a brace of swings through the line for six off Mitchell Starc were followed by another heave over long-off as he failed to reach the pitch of an Adam Zampa legbreak, but trusted his eye to punish the ball high into the stands.

“I think we’re an incredibly fit team. That gives us another dimension, especially on fields like this where there are bigger gaps at times and you can push twos. It’s another area that we can push to try and play at the level we want to play”Jos Buttler

“The mental side of things is something I try to work on a lot,” he said. “Some of the practice wickets have been a bit tricky but [on Friday] I managed to have some great practice. It’s nice to put your hands through a few again, have some fun and freedom.”If you practise it, the confidence stays. Your adrenaline is going but you’re trying to remain quite level in your brain and relaxed in the top half. When guys are bowling fast, you have that level of adrenaline.”Nor was there any respite for Australia in England’s running between the wickets. Buttler twice managed to turn pinpoint yorkers into threes with deft wristwork, including a firm drive off Hazlewood to the edge of the cover boundary, and his understanding with Roy was instrumental in keeping the score ticking throughout the powerplay.”We want to put the opposition under pressure in all facets of the game with bat, ball, in the field and the way we run as well,” Buttler said. “I think we’re an incredibly fit team. That gives us another dimension, especially on fields like this where there are bigger gaps at times and you can push twos. It’s another area that we can push to try and play at the level we want to play.”Buttler on Roy: “These are top bowlers and the way he can impose himself inspires at the other end”•Getty ImagesThough Buttler is familiar with the Dubai stadium through his time in the IPL, this campaign is his first visit to the venue with England since the 2015-16 series against Pakistan, where he cracked a 46-ball century in the fourth ODI, England’s fastest of all time.”That’s obviously a while ago now but every time you come and play here, there are obviously great memories,” he said. “We were in the same dressing-room as well on that day. It just has a nice feel about it, remembering that sort of day. So absolutely that gives you confidence to know you are coming back to a ground where you have probably played your best innings at.”With three comprehensive wins from three, Buttler admitted that England could not be better placed in their push for a semi-final berth. And though they have had the advantage of chasing in each of their three games to date, he did not feel that the conditions – in particular the onset of dew in the second innings – had played an undue part in their success.”The format doesn’t allow much room for error so to be three from three – including wins against West Indies and Australia as well, no disrespect to Bangladesh – and to play as convincingly as we have has been awesome,” he said. “The games we have played, we’ve pegged back the opposition really early. We have restricted teams to under-par scores, so I wouldn’t say we’ve seen big benefits of batting second.”As the tournament goes on and the wickets become more tired, maybe the advantage will swap to batting first,” he added. “That is one challenge we are going to have to work out as a side. If we lose the toss or we choose to bat first, how are we going to approach our innings to get to a score that we think is defendable.”

Mitchell now sets sights on landing dream Bryan Mbeumo move for Newcastle

With plenty of making up to do after the summer transfer window, sporting director Paul Mitchell has reportedly set his sights on securing Newcastle United’s dream move in 2025.

Newcastle transfer news

If recent rumours are anything to go by, those at St James’ Park are certainly aware of their shortcomings in the summer and their need for reinforcements next year as a result. The likes of Antoine Semenyo and Fikayo Tomori have already been linked with moves to Newcastle in two deals that would undoubtedly improve Eddie Howe’s squad depth in positions of need.

Tomori would be a particularly interesting arrival. The AC Milan defender has unfinished business in the Premier League after swapping Chelsea for San Siro on a permanent basis in 2022. Coupled with Newcastle’s desperate need to reinforce their backline – as highlighted by their failed pursuit of Marc Guehi in the summer – the move may make sense for all parties involved when 2025 arrives.

AC Milan defender Fikayo Tomori.

Newcastle are far from perfect on the attacking front either. The Magpies have gone four games in all competitions without a goal from open play and look like a side desperately searching for an attacking spark that one particular star may provide.

According to INews, Mitchell has set his sights on signing Bryan Mbeumo in what is reportedly a dream move for Newcastle in 2025. The Brentford winger has enjoyed an electric start to the campaign and would undoubtedly help to solve the Magpies’ attacking drought in a major boost for Howe and his side.

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Still just 25 years old, ÂŁ45,000-a-week Mbeumo is due a big move having finally taken to the spotlight following Ivan Toney’s summer departure away from Brentford. Whether that big move results in an attacking solution for Newcastle remains to be seen, but as 2025 approaches, Mbeumo remains one to watch wherever he ends up.

"Excellent" Mbeumo would revive Isak

Whilst Newcastle as a whole could do with the spark that Mbeumo would inject into their side, Isak particularly needs Magpies to secure the winger/forward’s signature. To say that the Swede has struggled for form so far this season would be an understatement. Although an injury far from helped the early stages of his campaign, one goal in six Premier League games is not a good enough return for a player of his quality.

As Mbeumo often did with Toney, the 25-year-old would only elevate Isak and combine to revive the forward’s most clinical form once and for all. Meanwhile, with six goals in eight Premier League games himself so far this season, Mbeumo would also make up for any periods of disappointing form that Isak does endure.

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More clinical than ever with six goals from an expected number of around three, Mbeumo’s rise is both impressive and one that Brentford boss Thomas Frank may have seen coming having described his star man as “excellent” in January of 2022.

Steven Smith's T20 World Cup role: resurrect batting if early wickets fall, drop down the order if top order succeeds

Smith’s floating position is in part designed to overcome the challenging batting conditions on display in the UAE

Andrew McGlashan26-Oct-2021Australia batter Steven Smith believes the T20 World Cup could become a scrap to the finish line rather than a cascade of boundaries as he beds into a new middle-order role that will be key to Australia overcoming conditions if they unfold that way.The early stages of the Super 12s has seen a variety of outcomes, ranging from the blowouts of West Indies being dismissed for 55 and Scotland 60 to the relatively high-scoring contest between Bangladesh and Sri Lanka alongside Pakistan’s wicketless chase against India.Australia’s opening match against South Africa in Abu Dhabi fell somewhere between the extremes as 118 provided a challenging chase and while Smith suggested two iffy batting displays played a part, he would not be surprised to see that template on show more regularly.”Even throughout the IPL there was a lot of really scrappy cricket, not huge scores, which made the games pretty interesting and quite close,” he said. “Slightly different to a lot of T20 cricket, quite often it’s flat wickets and big scores, so you have to change slight ways you play and adapt according to what’s required on that surface. It’s been interesting so far.”Don’t think the other day 120 was indicative of the surface. Both teams bowled and fielded really well and probably didn’t bat very well but do think we’ll see plenty of scrappy cricket in this tournament.”Related

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Smith’s floating position in Australia’s batting order is in part designed to overcome those challenging conditions. In both warm-up matches against New Zealand and India, and then the opening group game against South Africa, Smith came in at No. 4 with Australia having lost early wickets in the powerplay. If the top three of David Warner, Aaron Finch and Mitchell Marsh fire collectively, Smith is likely to cede ground to Glenn Maxwell and Marcus Stoinis.”It’s a little bit different to what I’ve played previously, but my job basically is to fix it if our top order don’t come off, then if our top order do go well the likelihood is I’ll slide slightly down the order and let our big strong boys go out and attack it,” he said. “Think I’ve done it pretty well in the first couple of trial games and our first game.”A renowned worker of the ball, Smith made 35 off 34 balls against South Africa and appeared set to take Australia closer to victory before a fine running catch by Aiden Markram ended his stay.”Think you need ability to get off strike, manipulate the ball to certain areas more than just the power,” Smith said. “Some of these wickets even the powerful blokes have struggled to hit sixes so you need some smarts about you, playing the situation, and having the ability to limit dot balls.”In the months leading up to this tournament – and the IPL which preceded it – Smith was recovering from a recurrence of the elbow problem he had suffered earlier in the year. At the start of his return to batting he was limited to 10-minute net sessions as part of a graduated comeback to manage the problem, which for someone with such a love of batting even outside of matches would not have come easily.He is still managing his out-of-game workloads somewhat by not batting for three consecutive days at training but is confident he is over the problem ahead of the increased demands in the lead-up to the Ashes.”On the days I’m batting I’m batting for as long as I want to which is really nice,” he said. “I’m still taking it easy at the moment, just making sure I’m only batting two days in a row and I’ll build up again as we get closer to playing longer format stuff.”Smith is comfortable he will have adequate preparation when the team returns from the T20 World Cup which will involve two weeks quarantine although training will be permitted. It remains to be confirmed whether the Australians will have a proper match ahead of the first Test at the Gabba on December 8 but a large squad is expected to decamp into Queensland to aid the build-up.”It’ll just be hitting plenty of balls in the lead-up,” Smith said. “There’s not too much else we can do in the times of the pandemic. We are going to be having some really solid centre-wickets and training sessions where I know our fast bowlers will be firing up getting themselves ready, so they’ll be no shortage of quality practice.”

VIDEO: Done deal?! Patrick Dorgu sends transfer message as he prepares to travel to England to complete Man Utd move

Patrick Dorgu sent out a transfer message for Manchester United as he prepared to take the flight to England.

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Dorgu sent a transfer message to Man UtdPrepares to take England-bound flightMan Utd to pay €35m (£29.3m/$36m) for the defenderFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The 20-year-old left-back is all set to complete his move to Manchester United from Lecce as he prepares to travel to England on Saturday. On his way to the Lecce airport, Dorgu was approached by Italian journalist Gianlu Vico. The player conveyed his greeting to the Lecce fans and shared a short message for Manchester United as he said: "Manchester a great opportunity."

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The Red Devils are all set to shell out €35m (£29.3m/$36m) for the young full-back as they look to strengthen the left side of their backline. The left-back position has been a troublesome one for the club in recent years, due to the long-term injuries of Tyrell Malacia and Luke Shaw. Ruben Amorim will now hope that the issues will be over with the signing of the Denmark international.

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After reaching England, Dorgu will undergo a medical before formally putting pen to paper on United's contract.

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