Cheaper by the dozen for Simon Harmer as Essex flatten Hampshire

Offspinner’s 12-wicket haul sees Essex to an innings win and up to third in the table

David Hopps at Chelmsford17-Jun-2019

Simon Harmer continued his prolific wicket-taking form•Getty Images

The debate over whether Simon Harmer is the finest spin bowler in Essex’s history has sounded premature for a player contesting only his third Championship season, but the evidence is growing at a rapid rate. Twelve more wickets, at a cost of only 61 runs, dispensed of Hampshire before tea on the second day at Chelmsford. Harmer was irrepressible, but in considerable part that was because Hampshire were dire.No county can host a result within five sessions and feel entirely comfortable about the outcome and a post-match conversation between the Essex groundstaff and the ECB’s cricket liaison officer, Stuart Cummings, a former Rugby League referee, was inevitable, but there was no sense whatsoever that they saw anything too untoward about a surface that had also been used for a women’s ODI between England and the West Indies last Thursday.During that match, a West Indies player was reportedly sick on the pitch. Presumably on a length. For a spin bowler operating from the River End.Hampshire’s two innings spanned only 63.5 overs as Harmer rushed Essex towards victory as inexorably as a river flows to the sea. He is now the leading Championship wicket-taker with 42 and the Chelmsford pitches do encourage him, as did the rough created by Hampshire’s left-arm seamer Keith Barker.But as well as he bowled, Hampshire’s supposed Championship challenge – they began the round in second place – should surely be categorised under Fake News. They met Harmer with an air of defeatism disguised as counterattack. Even Harmer felt obliged to politely chastise them, saying: “There was turn and bounce with the new ball. They needed to be more patient before taking me on. When it flattened out it would have been easier.”Joe Weatherley, showing the circumspection Harmer advocated, batted through the second innings for 29 from 80 balls. The India international Ajinkya Rahane made a pair and lasted only three balls in the match, twice edging Jamie Porter to the wicketkeeper; decisive breakthroughs because he might have had the wherewithal to play Harmer with aplomb. As for Rilee Rossouw, he succumbed to two of the wildest slogs imaginable.Adi Birrell, Hampshire’s coach, summed things up fairly enough. “Harmer bowled fairly well but the ball wasn’t turning square, it wasn’t impossible to bat,” he said. “Joe Weatherley batted through. He applied himself and needed someone to bat through with him.”It is a painful and hurtful result. Hopefully it is a defeat in isolation. We can’t afford to let this affect us. It was a very bad two days.”Essex had begun the day on 147 for 3 but were themselves bowled out before lunch, as they lost seven wickets for 67 runs, seven to lbw decisions with Kyle Abbott the main recipient as he jagged the ball back sharply.Observe Harmer from behind the arm and he flows into the crease. Watch him from side-on, however, and he is a more unprepossessing sight. Dare it be suggested, his run is little more than a gentle waddle, but the snap of his fingers fills his action with energy.He was on by the fourth over, initially because pace bowler Sam Cook had limped from the field. In the time needed to sneak off for a cheap haircut close to the ground, Hampshire’s second innings had been snipped back. When Harmer is bowling, do not attempt this if you have a luxuriant head of hair.Facing a first-innings deficit of 96, Hampshire lost seven wickets for 32 in only 13.5 overs before finally coming to grief 15 minutes before tea. They were in danger of registering their lowest score against Essex – they made 54 at Southampton in 1931 – but at least that ignominy was avoided.Harmer began by having Sam Northeast stumped; advancing down the pitch he contrived to let the ball squeeze between bat and pad and his ponderous efforts to regain his ground allowed Adam Wheater enough time to stretch to his right to gather and complete the stumping.In the same over, Rossouw paddled his first ball for four then tried to slog over long-on and edged a simple catch into the off side. Aneurin Donald slog-swept a non-turning delivery to midwicket before Harmer took two wickets in his seventh over, having James Fuller lbw, leaving a ball that turned out of the footholds, and finding gentle turn as Barker, reaching forward, edged to first slip.Harmer rounded off the victory as Mason Crane was caught in circus-trick style with the edge running down Adam Wheater’s chest at which point he expertly volleyed it, left-footed, to forward short leg. Never criticise all those pre-match football kickabouts ever again.This was Harmer’s third 10-wicket haul for the county, and fourth of his first-class career. He has taken four five-wicket hauls in his six innings bowling at Chelmsford this year. Essex, who have comfortably won all three of their Specsavers County Championship at home, have moved within seven points of Hampshire, and boast a game in hand.If they beat the leaders Somerset at Chelmsford next week, they will begin to believe a repeat of their title triumph of 2017 is not beyond them. When Harmer has the ball in his hand, anything is possible, but surely Somerset will play him better than this.

West Ham pushing to sign "electric" Kudus clone in late move

West Ham United have not enjoyed an auspicious start to 2024 having crashed out of the FA Cup against Championship side Bristol City and drawn against Brighton & Hove Albion and Sheffield United in the Premier League.

That said, there is plenty for David Moyes' side to be optimistic about heading into the business end of the 2023/24 campaign, with the club having advanced to the knockout stage of the Europa League and currently perching in sixth place in the Premier League, above the likes of Manchester United and Chelsea.

Moreover, Kalvin Phillips has recently been welcomed to the fold from Manchester City, joining on a six-month loan deal, to add some depth and mettle to the centre of the park.

That said though, offensive phenoms Jarrod Bowen and Lucas Paqueta are both currently nursing injuries and Moyes appears eager to secure an exciting finish to the transfer window.

West Ham eyeing late January swoop

With Phillips now in the bag, it's clear that the Irons' interest lies in landing a new attacking outlet, with Argentine playmaker Pablo Fornals a late target for Spanish side Real Betis.

As such, West Ham could use the funds from Fornal's sale to complete a swoop for teenage winger Ibrahim Osman, with the Guardian reporting that West Ham are considering returning for the Nordsjælland starlet before the end of the month. A bid has already been rejected but the Hammers may well return to the table with another ofer.

The Danish outfit are understood to be holding out for a €20m (£17m) package and the London club will now need to ensure they recuperate funds from player sales before sealing the deal.

Why West Ham want Ibrahim Osman

Osman, aged 19, has posted four goals and five assists across 29 appearances in all competitions this season and has caught the eye with his blistering pace and influence in attacking sequences.

Indeed, as per Sofascore, Osman has scored one goal and provided four assists from 16 games (14 starts) in the Danish Superliga this term and has averaged 1.2 key passes, 3.1 ball recoveries, 5.6 successful duels and 2.6 successful dribbles per game.

Osman does lack a certain incisiveness in his finishing ability but is of a lean, athletic build with pace and an innate weaving quality that could be shaped and harnessed in east London.

The likes of Arsenal and Brighton have reportedly been monitoring Osman and there's possibly a sense of urgency in wrapping up a deal from Moyes, with manager Johannes Thorup candid in admitting that the rising star will be hard to keep a hold of after such promising early endeavours on the major stage.

He said of the 5 foot 9 whiz: “He is a fast winger and striker, and I have huge expectations for him to be skilled. He has the pace which is important for us to have on at least one of our strikers. I don’t want to say that he has to take over for someone, but people can probably figure out that there is a player who is really good for us in the Super League, who might be really hard to keep.”

Given that West Ham star Mohammed Kudus bloomed from the same academy, it might be wise for Moyes to secure the next version of the Ghanaian machine, with the summer signing very much riding the crest of a wave since arriving at the London Stadium.

Ibrahim Osman could be Mohammed Kudus 2.0

The Hammers welcomed Kudus to the club from Ajax in a £38m deal in August to bolster the offensive fold after winning the Europa Conference League last season.

As per FBref, Kudus ranks among the top 1% of attacking midfielders and wingers across Europe's top five leagues over the past year for goals scored, the top 13% for successful take-ons, the top 3% for tackles and the top 14% for blocks per 90.

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The 23-year-old was featured sporadically across the opening weeks of his Claret and Blue career but has excelled in plundering nine goals from 24 appearances in all competitions, starting just 17 times.

He's even been described as a "generational talent" by African journalist Gary Al-Smith and brings dynamism and deadliness in abundance, and if West Ham can secure the services of a similar player it would only improve the offensive efforts.

Given that Kudus (right wing) and Osman (who prefers the left) operate on alternate flanks, this could be a signing that would birth a fear-inducing partnership for opponents, with Osman absorbing the fruits of his fellow Nordsjælland academy graduate's labours.

While Osman is far less clinical than Kudus – though it would seen he has more of a natural creative flair – the Hammers star does share some exciting similarities, averaging 5.8 ball recoveries, 7.1 successful duels and 2.6 successful dribbles per fixture in the Premier League.

This blistering, breakneck pace is something that West Ham could certainly make good use of down the left flank, especially with Fornals ostensibly departing and Said Benrahma also touted with a move away after starting just five matches in the English top-flight this year, with French clubs lurking.

West Ham might have started the year off slow but there is much to look forward to over the coming months and the addition of a precocious talent in Osman would be the perfect finish to the window.

Chelsea can forget about Toney £100m target who’s "as ruthless as they come"

It would be hard to call Chelsea's season anything other than a disaster at present, as with over half of their Premier League games now played, they sit in tenth place and look a million miles off of Champions League qualification.

That said, Mauricio Pochettino has guided his side into the fourth round of the FA Cup and to a League Cup semi-final, although they'll head into the second leg of that tie 1-0 down to Championship outfit Middlesbrough.

There are plenty of problems with the Blues this year, but one of the main ones is their frontline's inability to put away the decent amount of chances they're given.

Brentford striker Ivan Toney

With this problem practically impossible not to notice, the club have been linked with a number of quality number nines this window, including Brentford's Ivan Toney, although they would be better served going after the latest name touted for a move to west London: Brighton & Hove Albion's Evan Ferguson.

Chelsea transfer news – Evan Ferguson

According to the Evening Standard, Chelsea are on the lookout for a new striker in 2024, and Brighton's Irish sensation Ferguson is one of their targets as they have been 'long-term admirers' of the teenager.

The report has revealed that while the interest from the Blues is genuine, so is the desire of the Seagulls to keep hold of their tremendously exciting talent.

Brighton striker Evan Ferguson.

This determination to keep their budding superstar for a bit longer, combined with his new contract that is set to run until summer 2029, means that if the Pensioners are to sign him this year, it'll cost at least £100m, and based on their business with the south coast side in the summer, there is every chance it could end up being more than that.

However, with the alternatives in Victor Osimhen and Toney set to cost just as much, if not more, it might be wiser for Chelsea to sign the much younger Ferguson with the expectation that he could lead the line for over a decade or be sold on for an even bigger fee down the line.

Chelsea can forget about Toney with Ferguson

Now, were Chelsea to end up with the Brentford ace instead of Ferguson, it really wouldn't be the end of the world, as the Englishman's fantastic finishing would practically guarantee that the Blues would climb up the table in the second half of the season – having scored 20 league goals last season.

However, aside from ability, two key factors make a move for the Brighton man, whom Chris Sutton described as being "as ruthless as they come", more appealing.

First, for as fantastic and game-changing as Toney can be, he hasn't played any football since he was banned for betting offences in May, and so to expect him to come in right away and play at his best is probably quite naive.

Second, at 27 years old, he is eight years the Irishman's senior, and while 27 is not old in modern football, he'll have significantly less time to make an impact at Stamford Bridge.

With that said, how do the pair's underlying numbers compare? Well, when comparing the pair's output last season – there is nothing to look at for Toney this year – there is not an awful lot to pick between the two.

While the former Newcastle United striker outdoes his competition in metrics such as goals scored, goals per shot on target, and aerial duels won per 90, he comes out second best in numerous other areas.

Stats per 90

Ferguson

Toney

Goals

0.57

0.61

Non-Penalty Expected Goals + Assists

0.57

0.56

Progressive Passes

1.32

2.41

Progressive Carries

1.04

0.43

Shots on Target

1.61

1.01

Goals per Shot on Target

0.35

0.42

Passing Accuracy

80.0%

59.55

Shot-Creating Actions

2.08

2.01

Goal-Creating Actions

0.19

0.24

Successful Take-Ons

0.75

0.49

Aerial Duels Won

0.85

3.32

All Stats via FBref for the 2022/23 Domestic Season

In comparison, the "complete" Seagulls prospect, as dubbed by talent scout Jacek Kulig, comes out on top for non-penalty expected goals and assists, progressive carries, shots on target, passing accuracy, shot-creating actions and successful take-ons per 90.

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At the end of the day, their numbers demonstrate that Chelsea would be dramatically improved with the addition of either striker, but the rustiness that is sure to be there for Toney and the eight-year age gap just makes Ferguson look like the much better long-term bet.

Juventus sack Massimilano Allegri! Manager fired after explosive rant following Coppa Italia win over Atalanta

Serie A giants have sacked manager Massimiliano Allegri with immediate effect and are expected to replace him with Thiago Motta.

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Juventus part ways with AllegriManager fired after Coppa Italia rampageMotta favourite to be appointedWHAT HAPPENED?

Allegri's time at Juventus has come to an end with two games of the season still left to play. The Juventus boss has been fired and will leave the club with immediate effect. Bologna boss Thiago Motta is the favourite to take over from Allegri after an impressive season with the Serie A side.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT JUVENTUS SAID

The club have confirmed the news after releasing a statement, which read: "Juventus announces that it has relieved Massimiliano Allegri of his position as head coach of the men's first team.

"The exoneration follows certain behaviours during and after the Coppa Italia final that the club deemed incompatible with the values of Juventus and the behaviour that those who represent it should have.

"It ends a period of collaboration, which began in 2014, restarted in 2021 and ended, after the previous three seasons together, with the Italian Cup final.

"The club wishes Massimiliano Allegri good luck in his future endeavours."

THE BIGGER PICTURE

The statement referenced Allegri's behaviour in the Coppa Italia final against Atalanta on Wednesday. Juventus won the fixture 1-0 but Allegri was handed a two-match ban and a fine of $5400 (€5000/££4200) after losing his temper in stoppage time.

The now-former Juventus boss ripped off his jacket and was sent off by the referee, where he then sarcastically applauded the decision.

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR JUVENTUS?

Juventus still have two Serie A fixtures to play before the 2023/24 season comes to an end. The Old Lady will face Bologna on Monday (May 20) and Monza (May 26) in their final clash.

As GOAL's Romeo Agresti can confirm, Juventus will appoint U19 coach Paolo Montero as their caretaker coach for these fixtures.

Juventus currently occupies fourth in the league table after a disappointing campaign. A spot in the top four is not yet guaranteed, with Atalanta following closely just four points behind. They also have a game in hand on Juventus.

Chelsea women player ratings vs Barcelona: Kadeisha Buchanan's ridiculous red card robs Blues as Emma Hayes' Champions League dream goes up in smoke

Controversial officiating sadly stole the show as European champions Barca qualified for the UWCL final, to play Paris Saint-Germain or Lyon

Emma Hayes will end her Chelsea reign without the Champions League title that she and her team so craved after Barcelona won 2-0 at Stamford Bridge on Saturday to progress to this year's final. Goals from Aitana Bonmati and Fridolina Rolfo helped the Catalans overturn a 1-0 deficit from last week's first leg, though the main talking point at full-time was the officiating.

Bonmati levelled the tie on aggregate with 25 minutes on the clock thanks to some magical footwork creating the space for a shot that deflected off Kadeisha Buchanan, leaving Hannah Hampton with no chance. But while Barca enjoyed a good spell off the back of that goal, Chelsea had their chances, Catarina Macario testing Cata Coll with a nice volley after Melanie Leupolz hit the bar with a glorious opportunity, albeit one that VAR would've come back to and disallowed as Lauren James was offside in the build-up.

It was a well-contested game all set-up for a wonderful second half that would decide the first of this year's finalists, and then the controversy began. Buchanan was booked for a clear foul on Salma Paralluelo which did not at all divide opinion – but her second yellow just four minutes later did. A tackle on Patri Guijarro was deemed a foul and, crucially, worth another card. The Canadian was in disbelief.

Barca struggled to create anything clear-cut despite the the player advantage, until Bonmati burst into the box and went down under contact from Ashley Lawrence. The defender was adamant it wasn't a foul, alas it stood after a VAR check and Rolfo was on hand to convert and put the visitors ahead.

Hayes went for it from there, throwing on forwards in search of a goal to take the game to extra-time, but it didn't come. There will be no fairy tale for Chelsea's iconic coach in the Champions League and Barca will instead head to Bilbao next month hoping to defend their European title, with Lyon or Paris Saint-Germain to be the opponent.

GOAL rates Chelsea's players from Stamford Bridge…

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    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Hannah Hampton (6/10):

    Couldn't do anything about either goal but stood up to everything else thrown at her. Distribution could've been better.

    Johanna Rytting Kaneryd (7/10):

    Worked tirelessly up and down the right and was a real livewire when she got to run at the Barca defence.

    Jess Carter (7/10):

    Did her bit at the back to limit Barca's chances.

    Kadeisha Buchanan (6/10):

    Was caught out a couple of times because of some sloppiness but never should have been sent off.

    Niamh Charles (6/10):

    Stood up well under pressure but was often under too much and needed more help.

    Ashley Lawrence (6/10):

    Starred in the first leg and tried to be as effective in both boxes again, though found herself lacking options when she got into the final third. Penalty given against her was harsh.

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    Midfield

    Melanie Leupolz (5/10):

    Lost the ball too easily and will be breathing a sigh of relief that James was offside in the build-up to her missing a glorious chance.

    Erin Cuthbert (8/10):

    Came up big in her own box and sprayed the ball around brilliantly to kickstart attacks, too. Well-rounded display.

    Sjoeke Nusken (6/10):

    Made her fair share of big contributions at the back, most notably a perfect tackle on Bronze in the box. A better pass to James in the first half and Chelsea were ahead again, though.

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    Attack

    Lauren James (8/10):

    Everything bright came through her. Held onto the ball brilliantly and often created out of nothing.

    Catarina Macario (7/10):

    Could've kept the ball better at times but generally did well to be part of Chelsea's dangerous moments. Great volley to test Coll and she delivered good set-pieces, too.

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    Subs & Manager

    Guro Reiten (5/10):

    Came on after Buchanan's red card but struggled to get into a frantic, stop-start game.

    Aggie Beever-Jones (N/A):

    Didn't see much of the ball in her 15 minutes on the pitch.

    Eve Perisset (N/A):

    On for the final few minutes.

    Millie Bright (N/A):

    Sticking the centre-back up front was one of Hayes' final throws of the dice but it didn't pay dividends, as Chelsea struggled with the numerical disadvantage.

    Fran Kirby (N/A):

    Came on with Perisset and Bright and also couldn't impact the game.

    Emma Hayes (7/10):

    Stuck with the same plan as last week and got more joy out of James on this occasion, too, to make Chelsea more threatening going forward in general. But the red card changed everything and gave her side a mountain to climb. Not much more she could've done in the situation.

Warner and Smith's grassroots lessons will boost Australian cricket – Stuart Law

The newly appointed Middlesex head coach believes Australia are at too low an ebb to ignore the clamour to recall the two banned Australia cricketers in March, when their year-long bans elapse

Andrew Miller17-Jan-2019The enforced returns of Steven Smith and David Warner to Sydney grade cricket may have unexpected benefits for Australia’s cricket as a whole, says Stuart Law, the former Test batsman, who believes a vital link between the country’s grassroots and elite levels is in urgent need of nurturing.Law, who has joined Middlesex as head coach following a two-year stint with West Indies, believes that Australia – who recently lost a home Test series to India for the first time in their history – are at too low an ebb to ignore the clamour to recall Smith and Warner in March, when their year-long bans elapse in the wake of the Cape Town ball-tampering scandal.However, while Australia’s senior teams have struggled in the absence of their former captain and vice-captain, Law expects both players to have grown as people by the time they become available again. Moreover, he believes that the young players they have been rubbing shoulders with on the Sydney club circuit in recent months will have learnt huge amounts about what it takes to succeed at the highest level.”Personally, I would [put Warner and Smith back in]; I think a lot of people will want that to happen,” Law said.”I think [them] playing club cricket this summer will not only have given them an idea of what life is really about, it’s helped the young kids they’ve been playing with to improve,” he added. “They are still very much looked up to in Australia as cricketers. They are two very fine players, and Australia could do worse than get them straight back in.”Law himself played in a golden era of Australian cricket, in which the pressure for places was so intense that he managed to feature in just a solitary Test, as an injury replacement for Steve Waugh against Sri Lanka in 1995-96, and 54 ODIs.And part of the reason for that surfeit of international-quality players, Law believes, is the education that his generation was given during their early days in grade cricket, when they would be rubbing shoulders with Test stars on a weekly basis.”Australia have got the talent, they’ve just lost track of what’s important,” he said. “That was always the case when I started playing grade cricket in Brisbane. I was a 15-year old sharing the dressing room with Allan Border, Greg Ritchie, Kepler Wessels. That doesn’t happen much anymore.”The Test players don’t play club cricket much once they are away from Test duties. They are wrapped up in cotton wool and put away, whereas kids coming through learn from guys who’ve done it before.”The scheduling of Australia’s season has not helped the Test team either, Law added. The Big Bash League invariably clashes with the Melbourne and Sydney Tests over the festive period, which prevents both new players and those in need of form from getting sufficient first-class experience, before being pitched into the international fray.”The players they have playing for Australia are good players,” Law said. “But whether they are playing enough of the right format at the right time, given the national team’s commitments, that probably leaves something to be desired.”I think the staging of the Big Bash, right in the middle of the Test summer, is probably not the smartest move. It doesn’t help keep guys in nick for four-day red-ball cricket.”We keep hearing [the BBL] is doing so well, but if that’s so, play it in February and March, don’t take up that time when the boys should be playing red-ball alongside the Tests.”With the Ashes looming in August, Law says that he will be watching keenly from his new vantage point at Lord’s, and while he expects England to begin the series as favourites, he is adamant that Smith and Warner’s returns would be a massive boost to Australia’s prospects.”There will also be the odd one or two saying they should go back into club cricket and work their way back through,” he said. “But the quality of player they are missing out on, I think Australia would be mad not to use their services straight away.”

Henriques narrowly misses ton as NSW press for victory

South Australia continued to toil in the field and also had fitness concerns over pace bowler Dan Worrell

Alex Malcolm09-Dec-2018Moises Henriques fell one agonising run short of a second Sheffield Shield century of the season as New South Wales piled up a huge first innings total against South Australia at the SCG.After Daniel Hughes and Nick Larkin plundered twin centuries on day two, Henriques piled on the runs. Both openers fell early in the morning session.Henriques cruised to 99 from just 119 balls before falling caught and bowled to the part-time left-arm spin of Redbacks opener Conor McInerney. Henriques was his first Sheffield Shield wicket.Peter Nevill made 57 but also fell to part-time spin. Jake Lehmann finished with the pick of the figures of 2 for 17 from four overs as the Redbacks used eight bowlers.Of great concern for the Redbacks was that in-form quick Daniel Worrall was assessed for a back injury. He only managed 10 overs in the innings and won’t bowl again in the match.The Blues declared 161 runs in front and asked the Redbacks to face six overs before stumps. McInerney and Jake Weatherald survived the pace of Sean Abbott and the spin of Steve O’Keefe.

"All of a sudden" – O’Hara says Ange is now transforming "awful" Spurs star

TalkSPORT pundit and former Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Jamie O'Hara says a once "awful" Spurs player could now be worth "£100 million".

Tottenham 2-0 Fulham

Ange Postecoglou's imperious Lilywhites have maintained their unbeaten start to the season; making it seven wins from a possible nine after Spurs' 2-0 victory over Fulham on Monday evening. Son Heung-min's deadly right-footed finish and another from summer signing James Maddison, 10 minutes either side of half time, sealed a record for Postecoglou – the best ever start made by a new manager in the Premier League.

Supporters, following Antonio Conte's hapless last campaign in charge over 2022/2023, are now in dreamland with Sky Sports pundit Jamie Carragher hailing Tottenham's newly-found exciting style of play under their new popular new head coach.

"Most Spurs fans are not getting too carried away about winning the title. They will be delighted with making the Champions League next season," said the former Liverpool defender.

"They started well last season under Antonio Conte but there wasn't the same excitement. Fans look forward to watching the team play again. It has been a grind for a long time for Spurs and now the style of play brings some excitement back. Tottenham play really brave football. Fans are loving watching their team again."

Postecoglou, though, moved to temper expectations somewhat when speaking to the press; saying that Tottenham can still improve on what they're doing and become an even more formidable side.

"I think I've sat here every week and said that we have a long way to go," said Postecoglou.

"That doesn't change. We are nine games in and we're at the beginning of building something. It would be so much easier for me to sit here and say 'yeah, we're a great team'. What I'm saying is we have to improve and that puts the responsibility on me to make sure we do it. We can be better, absolutely we can."

Usual suspects like Maddison and Son yet again dazzled for the north Londoners last night, but one player who was unable to contribute, due to suspension, was Mali international Yves Bissouma.

Yves Bissouma update

The £25m signing has been one of the major success stories of Postecoglou's early reign; starting every single top flight match for Tottenham before his sending off against Luton Town earlier this month. TalkSPORT pundit O'Hara, speaking to the broadcaster on Monday morning, has heralded the once "awful" Bissouma's transformation and even claims he's now worth "£100 million".

yves-bissouma-tottenham-hotspur-suspension-postecoglou-pierre-emile-hojbjerg-fulham-preview-premier-league

“All of a sudden I look at the side now and think, ‘You know what, we’ve got that kind of team back again’" said O'Hara on talkSPORT.

“[Destiny] Udogie, [Pedro] Porro, [Micky] Van de Ven, James Maddison, you’ve got a side all of a sudden. Bissouma, everyone wrote Bissouma off. Last season, he was absolutely awful. I watched him a couple of times last season and he looked like he had forgotten how to play football.

“Like honestly, it was so bad, it was like watching Gabby [Agbonlahor] playing in midfield. And now it’s turned, Bissouma looks brilliant. He looks like a £100m player.”

Yves Bissouma's style of play

Likes to shoot from distance

Likes to play short passes

In some good news, it's likely Bissouma will return to the line up against Crystal Palace this Friday after serving his one-match suspension.

Aston Villa: "Menacing" signing was meant to replace Benteke, but he was soon binned

Aston Villa enjoyed a well-orchestrated summer of business ahead of their first full season with Unai Emery at the helm.

The Villans recruited the Spaniard in October 2022 following the dismissal of Steven Gerrard, and it’s fair to say they haven’t looked back since.

When the former Arsenal boss arrived, the squad he inherited from the ex-Liverpool maestro was sat in 16th place in the Premier League table, hungry to build form and locate a source for progression.

Emery was that source, as he fired Villa to a seventh-place finish and a spot in the Europa Conference League, adding an extra pull to their presentation as a club in the transfer window.

Aston Villa boss Unai Emery.

Five new faces made Villa Park their home in the summer, including highly-rated and in-demand forward Moussa Diaby, who saw Emery’s project as an interesting place to progress.

With the four-time Europa League winner in charge of the club, Villa’s ability to replenish the side with star quality has been rectified, however business hasn’t always gone so smoothly in the past.

Rewind to 2015, and Tim Sherwood was hoping to steer his squad away from their relegation-threatening campaign of 2014/15, in which the Midlands side finished 17th.

To make matters worse for the Englishman, the club’s star player Christian Benteke departed that summer, yet the manager seemed to have a solution for his exit.

When did Aston Villa sign Rudy Gestede?

Days after the departure of Benteke, it was announced that Villa had signed Championship sharpshooter Rudy Gestede, in a deal worth a reported £6m.

It was a capture to be celebrated by Villa, as the Benin international was in demand, eyed by West Bromwich Albion, Hull City and Crystal Palace, with Eagles having a bid for the forward rejected in the January window, via Sky Sports.

Sherwood, meanwhile, was gleaming with his new arrival, relaying that he always “admired” the striker, dubbing him a figure that “certainly knows how to find the back of the net”.

After bidding farewell to Benteke, the Villans were content to have found a new source for goals in Gestede, but not everyone was sold by his arrival.

What was the reaction when Aston Villa signed Rudy Gestede?

Taking into consideration that Villa received a fee of £32.5m from Liverpool in the sale of Benteke, former Arsenal legend and pundit Paul Merson was not impressed by the £6m capture of Gestede to fill the void left by the Belgian.

As relayed by BirminghamLive, Merson said: “If you sell someone for £30m like Benteke, you have to bring in someone who is worth at least £12-£15m.

Gestede is a good player, and he’s done well, but you cannot go for a Championship player to take Benteke’s place.”

While there was truth to Merson’s concerns, there was also a hope that the 26-year-old could translate his form in the second tier into the top flight, in ways similar to Benteke, who arrived from Belgium and a level below the standard of the Premier League.

No one knew the threat of the Belgian forward until the end of his first season at Villa, in which he burst onto the scene by scoring 19 goals in the top-flight after netting just ten in the Jupiler Pro League for Genk the campaign prior.

rudy-gestede-villa

Unlike Benteke, Gestede was a known goalscorer in England at the point of his arrival at Villa Park, having scored 20 Championship goals in the 2014/15 season for Blackburn Rovers to catch the eye of Sherwood.

There was certainly hope that the Benin international could fill the void left by Villa’s talisman, who had netted 49 goals in 101 appearances for the Midlands side, but only time would tell if he would live up to such high expectations.

Did Rudy Gestede live up to expectation?

Once lauded as “menacing” by Sherwood, Gestede made a good first impression at his new club, scoring on his debut against Bournemouth in a 1-0 win for the Midlands side.

rudy-gestede-villa

The highs of an opening day goal were short-lived, as the task ahead of the Villans and their new striker was realised, as form was hard to accumulate which saw the manager sacked in October.

Villa were relegated in the 2015/16 campaign, and Gestede’s expectation to fill the boots of Benteke was quickly identified to be impossible, as the Benin international scored just five goals in 32 appearances for the club.

In returning to the Championship, there was again hope that the striker could rediscover his form to fire Villa back to the top flight, considering that he had scored 20 goals in the second tier the season prior to his arrival in the Midlands.

Rudy Gestede's scoring record at Villa

Season

Apps

Goals

2015/16

36

6

2016/17

19

4

Via Transfermarkt

As Merson predicted, it wasn’t the case, as the £6m forward scored four goals in 18 appearances, before being offloaded to Middlesbrough in January 2017 after failing miserably to live up to expectation.

What was most remarkable about the sale was that Villa somehow received £6m from Boro for his services, essentially seeing them get a refund on the former hitman whose time at Villa Park was both short-lived and underwhelming.

Despite suffering relegation and losing Benteke, there was something to take from the transfer as it appeared it wasn’t only the Villans that struggled to get Gestede scoring, as he managed to net only eight goals in 71 appearances for Boro.

How much did Rudy Gestede cost Villa in total?

After receiving £32.5m for the services of Benteke, the £6m fee to capture Gestede seemed to be a minimal expense when revising the impact that was hoped he could have on the club.

At Villa, the 26-year-old was handed a five-year contract worth £7.5m, broken down into a salary of £1.5m-per-year which amounted to a weekly wage of £30k, via Capology.

The reading of Gestede’s contract becomes a far more painful read when working out just how much he cost the club during his mere 18-month stay, in which he collected around £2.25m in wages alone.

Rudy Gestede

When adding his £6m transfer fee to the amount he earned in wages, Villa spent a total of £8.25m to accommodate the dud, who after scoring just ten goals, cost the Villans around £825k per goal.

It was never going to be an easy feat to replace the proficiency of Benteke, however Sherwood had a disaster in opting to sign Gestede as the replacement for the high-firing Belgian.

Rangers: Clement personally "plotting" to sign "familiar stars" in January

New Rangers manager Philippe Clement is already putting his stamp on the Gers squad as he maps out a personal January transfer plan behind the scenes.

Rangers under Philippe Clement

The Belgian got off to a flying start in his debut game as new head coach, having come in to replace the departed Michael Beale. Clement oversaw a brilliant 4-0 win over Hibernian at Ibrox, with goals from summer signing Abdallah Sima (who bagged a brace), Nicolas Raskin and Cyriel Dessers sealing an all-important victory in Glasgow. The win also ended Nick Montgomery's unbeaten run in charge of Hibs, with Clement making a real statement.

It was a ninth loss on the bounce for Hibs on Rangers turf and Clement will be thrilled by the three points, even if it was aided by some real slapstick defending from the away side at times. The former Monaco boss, speaking after his side's triumph, particularly hailed the players' desire for "dominant" and "attacking" football.

Glasgow Rangers' home stadium, Ibrox.

"You see that, although it was only two days, the players want to do the things that we showed them," said Clement to the press on Saturday.

"You see the guys that understand it fast and the guys that need more time, but I saw what I wanted to see – to play dominant, attacking football with a good pressing game. The best teams in the world make mistakes – what is important is your reaction and our reaction was good."

Clement will now be preparing for his side's crunch Europa League clash against Sparta Prague on Thursday, coming just before Rangers take on another Edinburgh outfit in Hearts this weekend.

Will Rangers sign anyone in January?

The Gers spent big on a plethora of major signings over the summer transfer window, in an effort to back former boss Beale before he was eventually shown the door. As a result, it could well be financially difficult for the Glasgow giants to give Clement what he wants. However, that hasn't stopped their new boss "plotting" some moves behind the scenes.

Rangers manager Philippe Clement.

That is according to journalist Pete O'Rourke, who provided a Rangers transfer update for Football Insider, claiming that Clement is mapping out a personal transfer plan. The 49-year-old is apparently planning to bring "familiar stars" to Scotland with him after joining.

"Rangers boss Philippe Clement is plotting to bring a number of familiar stars to Ibrox in the January transfer window," wrote O'Rourke.

"It is believed the Belgian, 49, is keen to put his own stamp on the Gers squad by dipping into the market. However, it is believed funds are tight at Ibrox following the summer splurge led by now-departed boss Michael Beale."

There has been little in the way of Gers transfer rumours, especially after a busy summer, but it will be pleasing to know Clement is, at the very least, showcasing some ambition behind the scenes. One player they have been linked with, though, is exciting teenager Mason Cotcher. Indeed, the former England Under-17 international is apparently being kept an eye on according to reports this week.

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