Johnson's BBL and T20 World Cup hopes hinge on back scan

Johnson suffered a stress fracture in the IPL but it wasn’t formally diagnosed until the lead-up to Australia’s tour of the Caribbean

Alex Malcolm10-Oct-2025While Australia have been sweating on Pat Cummins’ scan results, another of the country’s fast bowlers, Spencer Johnson, faces an equally nervous wait this week to see if a stress fracture he suffered in the IPL has heeled enough for him to play in the upcoming BBL and push for a T20 World Cup berth.There had been a little bit of mystery around Johnson’s absence from Australia’s T20I side across the last three series, especially following the retirement of Mitchell Starc from the format.He was ruled out of the Caribbean T20I tour with a back injury and also wasn’t selected for the T20I and ODI series against South Africa in August but the extent of injury was not specified until September when Australia’s chair of selectors George Bailey revealed Johnson was unlikely to play until the new year.Related

Australia's pace depth: Who's in the Ashes mix if Cummins and co run aground?

Maxwell hopes to be fit for back-end of T20I series against India

Labuschagne dropped from Australia ODI squad, Renshaw earns call-up

Johnson, who has played five ODIs and eight T20Is, is hopeful he might be able to return sooner but he cut a frustrated figure at a BBL kit launch event in Melbourne on Thursday.”The back, to be honest, feels fine,” Johnson said. “Stressies are one of those things where they feel good, but it’s just just a waiting game. I’ve got a scan in over the next couple of days, and pending that result, we’ll be able to find out hopefully a return to play there. I think it should be around the Big Bash in some capacity, whether it’s at the start or manage through that. It’s frustrating, but it is what it is.”Part of Johnson’s frustration had come from not identifying the injury earlier, mainly because he had never had a stress fracture in his back previously. Johnson has been a late bloomer into professional cricket after a lot of injury other injury concerns.He initially wrote off his back pain in the IPL as a disc issue, something he had dealt with previously, and did not get in scanned because it settled quickly.”I started to get a bit of back discomfort, and sort of wasn’t too bad, because I was only really training at that stage,” Johnson said. “And when I got back to Australia, I was trying to build-up for the T20 series in the West Indies. I think just the increased load stirred it up a little bit a little bit more. And we got a scan, and unfortunately, there was a stress [fracture] there. A little bit uncommon for a 29-year-old.”It’s a bit of a strange one, because initially they thought it was an old fracture that had just sort of scarred and then I think more recently the more scans we’ve done, they’ve thought it’s probably a fresher one.”Spencer Johnson suffered a stress fracture during the IPL•PTI The injury could not have come at a worse time for the left-arm quick. Having missed the 2024 limited-overs tour of England due to injury, he bounced back with a superb T20I series at home against Pakistan including a maiden international five-wicket haul in Sydney. Injuries to Australia’s big three opened the door for Johnson to play in the Champions Trophy and he took 2 for 49 from 10 in the rained out clash with Afghanistan.But missing the last four white-ball series, including the ODIs against South Africa, and the upcoming one-dayers and T20Is against India leave him with a tough climb back to be part of the T20 World Cup, particularly with fellow left-armer Ben Dwarshuis performing so well for Australia in recent times.”It’s never a great time being injured,” Johnson said. “Unfortunately, especially this calendar year, there’s plenty of white-ball cricket. Regardless of the back I was planning on staying here in the winter and making sure this summer was a big one, hopefully for Australia. Unfortunately, it wasn’t to be. But there’s still plenty of cricket to play post Christmas and a T20 World Cup and something I’d love to be a part of.”For now he will continue rehabbing his back in Adelaide, diligently doing pilates and swimming to keep up his shoulder mobility and strengthen his core. He has been leaning on Australia and Brisbane Heat team-mate Xavier Bartlett for recovery advice, as Bartlett has come back from multiple stress fractures.He will also need to do a bit of remedial work on his action when he returns to bowling and will liaise with national pace bowling coach Adam Griffith, Heat bowling coach Andy Bichel and South Australia coach Ryan Harris on what is required.”The beauty of being a part of the Brisbane Heat set up, the SACA, and then even Cricket Australia that I’ll be sort of leaning on all three Rhino, Andy Bichel and Griff and everyone’s sort of on the same page,” Johnson said. “I’ve got plenty of ideas of what I want to do and keeping everyone on the same page and doing a lot of the work at the SACA is what I’ll do. It’s been nice to be at home at the minute.”

Forget Delap: Cobham star who "lives & breathes goals" is Chelsea's future #9

While Chelsea made plenty of good signings in the summer, it would be fair to say that they’ve had mixed starts to life in West London.

Joao Pedro, for example, might have slowed down a little in recent weeks, but has already amassed an impressive tally of seven goal involvements.

On the other hand, Jamie Gittens has largely struggled this season and looks quite some distance off being good enough to start week in week out.

Someone who falls somewhere in the middle is Liam Delap, but if he doesn’t start performing soon, one of Cobham’s most exciting prospects could eventually take the nine shirt off his back.

Delap's start at Chelsea

When Chelsea were the ones to secure Delap’s services for around £30m in the summer, there was an understandable level of excitement from the fans.

After all, here was a young, physically imposing centre-forward who, in his first proper season of top-flight football, had just scored 12 goals and provided two assists in 37 appearances for a poor Ipswich Town side.

Expectations remained high at the Club World Cup as the former Manchester City academy ace provided an assist against LAFC and scored his first Chelsea goal against Esperance.

However, it would be fair to say that, so far, those expectations have not been met this season, as in six games, totalling 227 minutes, the 22-year-old has failed to score a goal or provide an assist.

Now, he was unfortunate to pick up a hamstring injury in the game against Fulham, but in the other games he has appeared in, he has not looked particularly threatening.

Moreover, upon his return from injury against Wolverhampton Wanderers, he stupidly got himself sent off, picking up two yellow cards in the space of 22 minutes.

With all that said, there is still plenty of time for Delap to turn things around and make this season a successful one.

However, should he continue to underwhelm, he could eventually see one of Cobham’s most exciting prospects take the nine shirt from him.

The Cobham gem who could replace Delap

When it comes to producing Premier League-quality prospects, few academies can truly rival Chelsea’s Cobham.

In The Pipeline

Football FanCast’s In the Pipeline series aims to uncover the very best youth players in world football.

There are, once again, several youngsters in the setup who could see themselves become first-team regulars over the coming seasons, and the one who could rival Delap for the number nine shirt is Chizaram Ezenwata.

The 17-year-old gem joined the Blues from Charlton Athletic in October 2023 and has established himself as one of the most dangerous attackers in the academy.

For example, in just eight appearances this season, totalling 641 minutes, the Bexley-born marksman has already scored seven goals and provided one assist, which comes out to a goal involvement every game, or every 80.12 minutes.

The youngster isn’t just on a hot streak either; in 20 appearances last season, totalling 1,279 minutes, he managed to score 12 goals and provide three assists, which works out to an average of a goal or assist every 1.33 games, or every 91.93 minutes.

Ezenwata’s U18 record

Appearances

26

Minutes

1913′

Goals

19

Assists

4

Goal Involvements per Match

0.88

Minutes per Goal Involvement

83.17′

All Stats via Transfermarkt

With numbers like that, it is easy to understand why U23 scout Antonio Mango has told Chelsea fans to “get excited” about his development, and why Como scout Felix Johnston has described him as someone who “lives and breathes goals.”

The young poacher isn’t just making his mark at club level either.

For example, in seven appearances for England’s u17s he scored five goals, and in five appearances for the u18s, he has already scored twice.

Ultimately, Ezenwata is unlikely to challenge Delap for a place in the team this season, but if the former Ipswich man does not improve soon, next year could be a different story entirely.

Chelsea's Yamal rival can surpass Palmer & Caicedo to become the world's best

The incredible prospect could be an even bigger superstar than Palmer and Caicedo for Chelsea.

ByJack Salveson Holmes Nov 11, 2025

Where does Ravindra Jadeja rank among the best bowlers in home conditions?

An in-depth study of bowlers at home, comparing them with other bowlers in the country; and home and away comparisons

Anantha Narayanan11-Oct-2024This article is about bowling on home grounds – by all bowlers, including visiting ones. A similar article on batting was published a couple of months back. The areas I have covered here are: How bowling at grounds has varied across countries and time periods.
How individual bowlers have fared with respect to other bowlers while playing in their home country. It is important to customise this to each bowler’s exact career span.
How bowlers have fared at home as against away.
One major difference in my coverage of the bowlers vis-a-vis of the batters is that I have covered the three interlocking aspects of bowling – the bowling average, strike rate (balls per wicket – BpW), and accuracy (runs per over – RpO) separately. This is warranted since these are distinct measurable components and will throw up many significant insights when they are handled separately. The other notable difference is that the batting article considered only batters in the top seven. This bowling one, on the other hand, looks at all wickets that fell to bowlers.Let us first consider how tough or easy bowling in each country was, by period.The batting analysis article had graphs by country. Here, I have provided only a summary graph, since the shapes of the bowling graphs are more or less similar to the batting ones. There is a difference of between 10% and 15% between the two values. There are two reasons for this variation. The batting average is only for Nos. 1-7. The bowling average recognises all dismissals, including those of Nos. 7-11. Also, the batting average takes run-outs and the similar methods of dismissals as dismissals. The bowling average only considers dismissals credited to bowlers.Here are a few randomly picked values for comparison, to illustrate this.Across all Tests, the batting average is 36.1. The bowling average is 31.7
Between 2000 and 2012, the batting average in Australia was 41.1, while the bowling average was 36.0
Between 1877 and 1939, the batting average in England was 32.1, while the bowling average was 28.1
Between 1970 and 1984, the batting average in New Zealand was 33.6, while the bowling average was 29.5
Between 1945 and 1969, the batting average in the West Indies was 42.1, while the bowling average was 36.9
The difference in all these instances is around 14%. Very few difference values exceed 15%.

The bowling averages are around 15% less than the batting averages for the top seven batters, and more importantly, follow similar movement patterns for most countries. The overall average is nearly 32, with the highest point for most countries coming in the first decade of the 21st century; batting flourished everywhere during this period. In the West Indies, the highest bowling average came just after World War II; over the last couple of decades the averages there have dropped, largely due to the decline in the batting quality of the host team in this period. In New Zealand, the highest bowling averages were in the years before and after World War II – in both those periods, the home team was quite strong.The two highest home bowling averages ever, of 37.7 and 38.2, were achieved in Pakistan, in the first two periods of the millennium. Here is a sampling of scores in the country in this period: 546 for 3, 528, 643, 675 for 5, 600, 679 for 7, 410 for 1, 636 for 8, 588, 603, 599 for 7, 591, 644 for 7, 765 for 6, 606, 555 for 3, 476 for 4, 252 for 0, 556 for 9, 657, 579, 612 for 9, and 565 – these 23 tall scores in 47 Tests do tell a story.Overall, bowlers had their best era in New Zealand during the post-war period. A sampling of sub-150 scores from the country then reveals the story – 42, 54, 125, 125, 132, 26, 74, 145, 77, 142, 133, 89, 149, 48 for 8, 129, 140, 101, and 148 – all 18 coming in 35 Tests. It was a tough time and place for batters (however, it must be said that most of these scores were those of the home team).Arguably the most balanced pitches are in Australia. Note the numbers. Leaving out the initial period, the averages are nicely grouped between 30.5 and 36.0. England has a similar grouping, but with slightly lower values. India too is similar, but with slightly higher numbers than Australia. Barring their first periods, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have the best numbers in terms of balance between ball and bat.Bowler comparisons at homeHere I compare the numbers of a specific bowler in his home country, and the numbers all other bowlers achieved in that country during his career span, irrespective of the length of the bowler’s career – be it 188 matches or 14.Readers might justifiably ask me why I have put all bowlers, home and visiting ones, in one basket for this. Would it not have been better to separate the home and visiting bowlers? Let me answer it this way: There have been times when the bowling of the home team has been weaker – New Zealand in the 1950s, India in the 1980s, and so on. There have been times when the home team has been stronger – Australia around 2010, India recently, etc.Putting all bowlers together lets me take care of all such situations. Also, I do not want to make statements like “XYZ was better in comparison to his fellow bowlers, but not when compared to visiting bowlers”, which do not convey much. The bottom line is: how does a bowler’s performance at home compare with all bowlers who bowled there from his first Test there to his last? And that has been done effectively in this exercise.The table below is ordered on the ratio between the average of other bowlers in the bowler’s home country and the home average of the bowler. The qualification cutoff is 60 home wickets. Why 60? Because that number allows for a good chance that the bowler will have played around 15 home Tests. A total of 172 bowlers qualify.

Unlike batting, where Don Bradman was miles ahead of the others, with bowlers, it is an evenly spread field. Indeed, an unlikely bowler tops this table. Australian left-arm spinner Bert Ironmonger, with a ratio of just over 1.73, is at No. 1. He played 14 Tests, all at home, and took 74 wickets at a very low rate of 18. He outbowled his peers by a huge margin. Ironmonger was the bridge between two great legspinners – Clarrie Grimmett and Bill O’Reilly. Not many will have foreseen this specific entry.The second bowler is more predictable. Imran Khan, who was a master at home, is a hair’s breadth away from Ironmonger in second place. He averaged 19.21 and the others 33.11. Then comes Sydney Barnes. Another master at home, with amazing numbers: 13-plus, against 23 by the other bowlers. A modern great, Pat Cummins, is in fourth place, with a sub-20 average, which is way below 33, the value his peers have managed in Australia during his career. An underrated tall fast bowler, Bruce Reid, rounds out the top five with a 1.68 ratio. Muthiah Muralidaran is only a third decimal point behind. The next four bowlers will not surprise anyone – all were outstanding at home.Devon Malcolm achieved almost perfect parity in this comparison (with an average of around 34.4). As also S Venkataraghavan (30.4). An interesting, and expected, point is that 150 of the 172 bowlers have performed better than their peers.Carl Hooper, the batting allrounder; Trevor Bailey; and Ashley Giles are at the bottom of the table. No surprises there. Giles and Bailey were usually their sides’ fifth bowler, and Hooper was used to give rest to Wes Indies’ fast bowlers. He bowled a lot, though, and picked up a sizeable number of wickets.The next table is ordered on the ratio between the strike rate (BpW) of other qualifying bowlers in the country concerned and the bowler’s home strike rate and the strike rate of the other qualifying bowlers. the same cut-off of 60 home wickets is used.

Waqar Younis was a destroyer at home, requiring only 39 balls per wicket. That is a huge contrast to the 64 balls that all other bowlers, including Wasim Akram and Imran Khan, needed per wicket in Waqar’s time in Pakistan. Colin Croft was an equal, only fractionally behind; their figures are almost identical.A surprising entry is legspinner Walter Robins. He was leaps and bounds ahead of the other bowlers when he bowled at home – which was almost his entire career. Then comes Fred Trueman, a devastating fast bowler at home, who needed only 45 balls per wicket. Completing the top five is Imran. Let us not forget that his peers included Waqar for a certain period. The other end of the table is populated by Hooper and a couple of English spinners who needed a fair number of balls to take a wicket.Moeen Ali needed almost the exact number of balls per wicket as the other bowlers, around 55. In this table, 135 bowlers have performed better than their peers.The next table is ordered on the ratio between the economy rate (RpO) of qualifying bowlers in the country in question and the home RpO of the individual bowlers in question. The cutoff is: a bowler needs to have bowled at least 750 overs at home. A total of 144 bowlers qualify.

Having watched Bapu Nadkarni bowl, with metronomic accuracy, I am happy that he leads this table. Trevor Goddard had an identical home economy rate to Nadkarni, 1.59, but his contemporaries were slightly more successful than Nadkarni’s, to push Goddard into second place. Ironmonger is in third and is followed by two great bowlers of the 1930s, Hedley Verity and Bill O’Reilly.It is interesting to note that the top six bowlers played before 1960. The only modern bowler to feature in this list is Ravindra Jadeja, who is impossible to get away in home conditions. Though he has conceded 2.37, a fair bit more than the bowlers above him on the table, other bowlers in his time have conceded over 3, resulting in a high ratio of around 1.3. Karsan Ghavri brings up the rear with a ratio of 0.83. Two surprising entries in the last three are Bob Willis and Jeff Thomson, both top bowlers for their countries. Maybe the accent in their time was on taking wickets.Mitchell Johnson is the only bowler to have conceded the same number of runs per over (3.33) as his peers. On the RpO metric, 95 bowlers have been more economical than their peers.Home vs away comparison for a bowlerUntil now we have seen how the individual bowler compared with all the bowlers who bowled in his home country during his career. Now we move on to some relevant comparisons within a bowler’s career. These tables provide comparisons between the home and away values for the bowler.The first table is ordered on the difference between bowler’s away average and home average. The cutoff is 50 home and 50 away wickets – 149 bowlers qualify.

Another unlikely bowler heads this table. Bailey is, arguably, not among the first few bowlers you would think of who have the best performance away vis a vis performance at home. He was extravagant at home, conceding nearly 36 runs per wicket. On the road, he was a terror, conceding only 23. He was devastating in South Africa, taking 19 wickets at an average of 12.1. Tony Greig required nearly ten more runs per wicket at home than he did away. He was very effective in the West Indies, taking 24 wickets at 22.6. John Snow needed over eight more runs per home wicket. That is indeed surprising, given his home pitches should have been conducive to pace. Snow took 27 wickets at 18.7 in only four Tests in the West Indies.Sydney Barnes (17.96) and Joel Garner (19.74) are the only bowlers in this group to have sub-20 away averages. Shoaib Akhtar’s home average was almost the same as his away one (around 25.7). Forty-two bowlers have performed better away than at home.At the other end, Dilruwan Perera was very good at home and ordinary on the road. As were Hooper and Abdul Qadir, who found Australia and India tough, needing well over 60 runs per wicket. Qadir’s overseas wickets cost him nearly 50 runs each – the highest in this elite group, barring the true outlier, Hooper.The next table is ordered on the difference between bowler’s away and home strike rates (BpW).

Bailey is in second place here. The leader, O’Reilly, needed over 20 balls fewer away to take a wicket. Bailey clocks in at just over 18 balls. The problems Australian legspinners face at home are underlined when we see that Richie Benaud is in third place, requiring over 17 balls more at home per wicket than he did away. Snow, who was among the leaders on the bowling average metric, is in fifth place; Goddard snags fourth place.Wes Hall (around 54) and Saeed Ajmal (around 65) have virtually identical home and away strike-rate values. Only 40 bowlers in this analysis have better away figures than home ones.Vinoo Mankad required nearly seven overs more per wicket while bowling overseas to take a wicket than he did at home. Qadir too was quite ineffective on the road. Hooper figures near the bottom on this table too. If Mankad and Hooper bowled at both ends unchanged in, say, Australia, barely four wickets might fall in a day.The next table is ordered on the difference between bowler’s away accuracy (RpO) and home accuracy. The cutoff is that a bowler ought to have bowled 500 overs each both at home and away. A total of 184 bowlers qualify.

Again, an unexpected bowler tops the table. Max Walker has a difference of more than half a run per over while bowling in Australia against outside. So has Neil Wagner. And one cannot keep out Bailey, who was quite accurate at home but was far more difficult to get away overseas. Two relatively recent English fast bowlers, Willis and Darren Gough, were more extravagant in England. Finally, let us doff our hat to Alan Davidson, who conceded only 2.19 at home and 1.82 away.It is clear that the differences between the home and away RpO values are somewhat lower than the differences on the other parameters. No fewer than a third of the bowlers have variations of 0.10 RpO on either side.Three West Indian bowlers are at the bottom end of the table. Shannon Gabriel, Fidel Edwards, and Daren Sammy found the going tough overseas, conceding well over half a run per over more than they did at home.Javagal Srinath (2.86), Paul Reiffel (2.63), and Morne Morkel (3.11) have identical RpO values at home and away. Seventy-eight of the 184 bowlers have bowled more economically in their away matches than they did at home.ConclusionThe analyses have thrown up a few surprising names. The top bowlers are not at the top, unlike with the batting tables. Bailey is the standout bowler, when it comes to performing at home compared to away.A final comment on Jasprit Bumrah. It is clear that he would have been right up there on the first two tables. But as I write this, he does not qualify. At the end of the recently concluded Kanpur Test, he had taken only 44 home wickets in ten Tests.The complete data files for all the players who qualify for the tables in this article can be downloaded by clicking here.The quirky stats section
In each article, I will present a numerical or anecdotal outlier relating to Test or ODI cricket. This time the theme is: “The finer points of Test partnership records”. First, the records for each wicket, and the duration for which these records have stood.1st wicket: 415 runs by Graeme Smith and Neil McKenzie vs Bangladesh, Feb 2008 (16y 8m)
2nd wicket: 576 runs by Roshan Mahanama and Sanath Jayasuriya vs India, Aug 1997 (27y 2m)
3rd wicket: 624 runs by Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene vs South Africa, Jul 2006 (18y 3m)
4th wicket: 454 runs by Joe Root and Harry Brook vs Pakistan, Oct 2024 (2d)
5th wicket: 405 runs by Don Bradman and Sid Barnes vs England, Dec 1946 (77y 10m)
6th wicket: 399 runs by Ben Stokes and Jonny Bairstow vs South Africa, Jan 2016 (8y 9m)
7th wicket: 347 runs by Clairmonte Depeiaza and Denis Atkinson vs Australia, May 1955 (69y 5m)
8th wicket: 332 runs by Jonathan Trott and Stuart Broad vs Pakistan, Aug 2010 (14y 2m)
9th wicket: 195 runs by Pat Symcox and Mark Boucher vs Pakistan, Feb 1998 (26y 8m)
10th wicket: 198 runs by Joe Root and James Anderson vs India, Jul 2014 (10y 3m)The longest-standing record is the Bradman-Barnes one for the fifth wicket, which has stood for over three-quarters of a century, followedby the seventh-wicket stand by Depeiaza and Atkinson. That record is unlikely to be broken in the near future. The recent 199-run Chennai masterclass between Ashwin and Jadeja is a testament to the difficulty in breaking the late-order records.It is interesting to note that no fewer than six records have been broken this century. In an 18-month period during 2014 through 2016, three were broken, two of them within a month of each other.The record that is likely to stand longer than Brian Lara’s 400 not out is the partnership of 624 runs, the only time over 600 runs have been scored in a stand in a Test innings.England batters hold three of the records, while Australia, Sri Lanka, and South Africa have two each. Both the Sri Lankan partnerships were in excess of 550 – the only two on the list. No partnership record has been scored against New Zealand nor have they scored one.Surprisingly, India do not hold any partnership record. The 413-run record between openers Pankaj Roy and Vinoo Mankad against New Zealand in 1956 was broken in 2008.Talking Cricket Group
Any reader who wishes to join my general-purpose cricket-ideas-exchange group of this name can email me a request for inclusion, providing their name, place of residence, and what they do.Email me your comments and I will respond. This email id is to be used only for sending in comments. Please note that readers whose emails are derogatory to the author or any player will be permanently blocked from sending in any feedback in future.

Rangers flop who was even worse than Butland is now on borrowed time

Glasgow Rangers will not win a trophy in the year of 2025. That was confirmed when they were beaten 3-1 at Hampden Park in the semi-finals of the League Cup on Sunday.

Danny Rohl had won his first two matches in the Scottish Premiership ahead of this last four clash with their Glasgow rivals, but he was unable to mastermind a third successive victory in all competitions.

The Light Blues did manage to get to extra time, despite being down to ten men, but two goals in extra time meant that they were knocked out of the competition.

Why Jack Butland did not cost Rangers the result

Some supporters or neutrals may want to point the finger at Jack Butland for the defeat, because he should have done better with the Callum McGregor shot that put Celtic 2-1 up.

The shot seemed to go through the former England international and down the middle of the goal, but he was unable to adjust and prevent it from finding the back of the net.

Despite that error, Butland did not cost the Light Blues the game because they were only in the match because of his impressive saves. Premier Sports TV pundit and former Hoops manager Neil Lennon even described his performance as “tremendous”.

The pick of his saves, arguably, was his fingertip stop to deny Callum Osmand’s brilliant header that looked destined for the bottom corner, whilst he also made several close-range stops in the initial 90 minutes.

A Rangers player who was worse than Butland in the game was young left-back Jayden Meghoma, and he may be on borrowed time in the starting line-up.

Why Jayden Meghoma may be on borrowed time

The Brentford loanee was caught out for the opening goal of the game when he allowed his man, Johnny Kenny, to get the jump on him from a corner.

Premier Sports TV pundit Michael Stewart noted on commentary that Meghoma “never recognises the danger”, which seems to be a fair comment when you consider that the full-back had a similar issue against Brann in Rohl’s first match.

The English defender allowed Jacob Lungi Sorensen to get the run and jump on him for a goal in that loss, which led Ally McCoist to describe his defending as “remarkable” and “diabolical”.

Meghoma was even worse than Butland against Celtic because there were several occasions where he did not recognise the danger, as Stewart put it, and put his side, and Butland, under pressure.

The teenage full-back’s performances for Rangers in the Scottish Premiership so far this season also do not suggest that he has what it takes to be the first-choice left-back moving beyond the January transfer window.

25/26 Premiership

Jayden Meghoma

Appearances

7

Sofascore rating

6.56

Duel success rate

50%

Aerial duel success rate

25%

Tackles + interceptions per game

3.0

Error leading to shot

2

Possession lost per game

12.7x

Assists

1

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, Meghoma only has one assist to his name to make up for the two errors leading to shots, and 12.7 times possession lost per game on average.

He has been questionable defensively, particularly from set-pieces, and has been wasteful in possession without creating much to make up for it, which is why Rohl should be looking to add an experienced left-back in January.

Meghoma is currently the only natural left-back in the first-team squad, as a result of the squad building by Kevin Thelwell and Russell Martin in the summer, and his underwhelming performances may convince Rohl to push for the club to bring another one in.

Therefore, the Rangers loanee’s place in the XI may be on borrowed time unless he can significantly improve his performance level over the next two months or so.

As bad as Aasgaard: Rohl must drop Rangers flop who was "so poor"

Danny Rohl must drop this Rangers flop who was as bad as Thelo Aasgaard at Hampden Park.

ByDan Emery Nov 2, 2025

A “spell on the sidelines” is needed for the “best player” at Rangers

Glasgow Rangers head coach Danny Rohl will not have been pleased with the way that his team failed to secure all three points against Falkirk at Ibrox in the Scottish Premiership on Sunday.

The German tactician revealed after the match that the players who have not done enough on the pitch in recent games will not get as many minutes in the future.

This should ease any concerns from supporters that underperforming players will not be replaced in the starting line-up in the coming matches in the Premiership and the Europa League.

The biggest Rangers underperformers against Falkirk

As you would expect in a 0-0 draw at home to Falkirk, there were several Rangers players who underperformed and should be at risk of being dropped from the starting line-up.

Bojan Miovski, for example, played the full 90 minutes and lost 73% (8/11) of his duels without scoring a goal or even creating a chance for his teammates, per Sofascore, in the number nine position.

Thelo Aasgaard also struggled in the number ten role for the Light Blues, with no shots on target or ‘big chances’ created, before he was subbed off for Danilo with 22 minutes left to play.

Ranking the worst Rangers players vs Falkirk

Rank

Player

1

Bojan Miovski

2

Thelo Aasgaard

3

Oliver Antman

4

Nicolas Raskin

5

James Tavernier

Oliver Antman, similarly to the Norway international, failed to make much of an impact on the right wing, with no shots on target or ‘big chances’ created, per Sofascore, which is why he also features on this list.

First Impressions

What did pundits and fans alike think about their new star signing when they arrived? Football FanCast’s ‘First Impressions’ series has everything you need.

Unfortunately, Nicolas Raskin also features among the worst performers against Falkirk, less than a month on from pundit Chris Sutton declaring him the team’s “best player”, as he struggled in midfield.

Why Danny Rohl should drop Nicolas Raskin

Rohl should ruthlessly ditch the Belgium international from the starting line-up for the clash with Dundee United on Wednesday night after a couple of underwhelming showings in the middle of the park.

Raskin, who has been valued at up to £20m by the Scottish giants, has not been near his best in the last couple of games against Braga and Falkirk, which should see him dropped for his sloppy play in midfield.

In the game on Sunday, per Sofascore, the former Standard Liege star lost four of his seven physical duels and only created one chance for his teammates in 90 minutes on the pitch, in what was a rather ineffective display.

Raskin

Vs Braga

Vs Falkirk

Minutes

90

90

Key passes

0

1

Possession lost

10x

9x

Ground duels won

4/14

3/7

Aerial duels won

2/3

0/0

Fouls

6

2

Dribbled past

2x

1x

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, Raskin has lost a whopping 14 of his 21 ground duels in the last two outings, committing eight fouls and being dribbled past three times as part of that.

These statistics show that the central midfielder has been too easy to play against for opposition midfielders, which led journalist Jonny McFarlane to state that “a spell on the sidelines beckons” because he is “much better than he’s showing”.

It is hard to disagree with that assessment when you consider that Raskin won 57% of his ground duels in the Premiership in the 2024/25 campaign, and he has only won 33% of his battles on the deck in the last two matches.

The 24-year-old star, who scored five goals and provided 11 assists in all competitions last term, is better than he is currently showing, which is why a spell on the bench may be beneficial for him to clear his head and recharge to get back to his best.

Therefore, Rohl should drop his “best player” from the starting line-up for the clash with Dundee United on Wednesday to see if it will spark a reaction out of him for the following game against Kilmarnock on Saturday.

Danny Rohl sends 13-word warning to his Rangers players ahead of the transfer window

The manager has has sent a pretty clear message to his players…

ByBen Goodwin Dec 1, 2025

Shades of Thiago: "Incredible" star had his best game in a Liverpool shirt

Defending champions Liverpool moved up to eighth in the Premier League table after a 2-0 win over West Ham United at the London Stadium on Sunday.

Goals from Alexander Isak, who netted his first league goal for the club, and Cody Gakpo secured all three points for the Reds for the first time since the 1st November against Aston Villa.

Arne Slot will surely be pleased with the win and the clean sheet to end a run of three successive losses in all competitions, whilst the Dutch boss will also be buzzing with the performances of several of his players.

Ranking Liverpool's top performers against West Ham

When ranking the team’s top performers against the Hammers, it is hard to look past Gakpo as the standout star because he was directly involved in both of the goals, with a goal and an assist.

Ibrahima Konate also deserves credit for his colossal display at the heart of the defence, winning 100% (5/5) of his aerial duels and making a team-high ten clearances, per Sofascore.

Both the France international and captain Virgil van Dijk kept Alisson quiet with their dominant performances, but Konate was the standout centre-back with four more clearances and three more aerial duels won than his skipper.

1

Cody Gakpo

2

Florian Wirtz

3

Ibrahima Konate

4

Virgil van Dijk

5

Alexander Isak

As you can see in the table above, Isak also has to be in the top five performers on the pitch for the Premier League champions, as he netted his first league goal for the club with a brilliant first-time finish into the bottom corner.

You will also notice that £115m signing Florian Wirtz ranks in second place, just behind Gakpo, after he caught the eye whilst playing in a central position for the Reds.

The Liverpool star who could be their new Thiago Alcantara

Recruitment analyst Jan Riha stated that the “incredible” Wirtz made him “feel about football the same way Thiago Alcantara” did at Liverpool, after his performance against the Hammers.

It is hard to argue with that assessment because his metronomic display at the London Stadium was incredibly impressive, even if it lacked the punch of a goal or an assist to add some extra flavour to his season.

Thiago ended his playing days with a 90% pass accuracy, per WhoScored, and Reds supporters got to enjoy his midfield majesty for three seasons, with plenty of exceptional raking passes and cultured through balls, as shown in the clips below against Man United in 2022.

Wirtz may not play in a deep-lying midfield role like Thiago did, but his technical ability is comparable to the Spaniard’s, and he showed it off plenty of times in the win over West Ham.

The Germany international has failed to deliver a goal or an assist in the Premier League this season since his big-money move from Bayer Leverkusen, but his display on Sunday was a step in the right direction because it was his best of the campaign.

Sofascore rating

6.51

6.9

Passes completed

25

42

Pass accuracy

82%

93%

Passes completed in oppo half

18

32

Passes accuracy in oppo half

76%

91%

Passes accuracy in own half

86%

100%

As you can see in the statistics above, Wirtz’s use of the ball on Sunday was on another level to what he has previously shown in the top-flight for Liverpool.

Playing centrally, rather than being out wide on the left or the right, allowed him to float around and knit play together with his technical brilliance, much like Thiago used to do further back on the pitch during his time at Anfield.

Slot must continue to play the German star in the middle of the park, rather than out wide, because he could flourish as a metronomic number ten who is able to buzz around the pitch and control the tempo of the match.

The hope, then, would be that the goals and assists naturally follow as he becomes more comfortable and confident on the pitch in the Premier League.

Big Konate upgrade: Liverpool have "one of the best young CBs in the world"

Liverpool have a blooming centre-back who could surpass Marc Guehi and Ibrahima Konate.

ByAngus Sinclair Nov 30, 2025

Whilst there will be understandable disappointment that a £115m attacking midfielder is yet to provide a direct goal contribution in the top-flight, Wirtz’s performance against the Hammers was his best of the season and he appears to be on the right track to become a success at Anfield.

Wilson upgrade: West Ham hold talks to sign new CF who "can't stop scoring"

They might have blown a two-goal lead on Saturday, but things are looking up for West Ham United.

Following a dire start to the season and a poor start to his tenure, Nuno Espírito Santo has now picked up seven points from the last three Premier League games.

This has seen the East Londoners pull themselves out of the relegation zone, and one of the club’s best performers during this uptick in form has been Callum Wilson.

However, even though the Englishman is in fine form, reports have started to link West Ham with someone who could be a dream replacement.

West Ham target Wilson upgrade

The transfer window is still over a month away, but that hasn’t stopped West Ham from being linked with a number of interesting players from across the country and beyond.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

Fulham’s Adama Traoré, for example, has been heavily touted for a move to the London Stadium in January, as has Norwich City’s Josh Sargent.

However, the Hammers are now interested in another, arguably more exciting goalscorer.

At least that is according to a recent report from Claret & Hugh, which claims that West Ham are keen on signing Promise David.

In fact, the report goes further, revealing that the Hammers have already made enquiries about the Union SG gem, who is valued at up to £17m.

The Canadian international might not be a known name in England, but his form in recent seasons and potential make this a deal West Ham can’t ignore, especially as he could be a perfect Wilson upgrade.

How David compares to Wilson

While it sounds simplistic, probably because it really is, the first place to start when comparing two centre-forwards is their raw output.

After all, the most important thing a striker is generally going to do is score or assist a goal, especially when it comes to a side like West Ham, who need to do all they can to build a buffer between them and the relegation zone.

Unfortunately for Wilson, even with his recent flurry of goals, this is an area in which he comes out second best.

For example, in ten appearances this season, he has scored four goals and failed to provide any assists, which comes out to an average of a goal involvement every 2.5 games.

In contrast, the “outstanding” Canadian, as dubbed by talent scout Jacek Kulig, has scored eight goals and provided no assists in 19 appearances, which comes out to an average of a goal involvement every 2.37 games.

David vs Wilson

25/26

David

Wilson

Games

19

10

Goals

8

4

Assists

0

0

24/25

David

Wilson

Games

41

22

Goals

24

1

Assists

5

0

All Stats via Transfermarkt

The comparison is even more one-sided when last season is taken into account, as the former Newcastle United forward scored just a single goal in 22 appearances for the Toon.

The Union SG ace, on the other hand, racked up a stellar haul of 24 goals and five assists in 41 appearances, which comes out to a goal involvement every 1.41 games.

With numbers like these, it’s easy to understand why Canadian reporter Ben Steiner claimed the 24-year-old “just can’t stop scoring.”

However, it’s not just output that would make the eight-capped international a wise signing, but the fact that he’s still just 24 years old.

In other words, he’s someone who could come in as an upgrade and then become the long-term striker option the Hammers have needed for some time.

Ultimately, given his consistently impressive output, age and relatively low price, West Ham should do what they can to sign David in January.

Forget Guilherme: Nuno can fix Summerville blow with West Ham academy star

Nuno might already have the perfect solution to West Ham’s Summerville problem.

1

By
Jack Salveson Holmes

Nov 25, 2025

Gous leads Falcons to last-ball victory, Royals continue to be winless

Brandon King’s unbeaten 98 went in vain as Chris Green put down four catches in the chase

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Sep-2025Antigua and Barbuda Falcons 188 for 6 (Gous 85* Wickham 26, Sams 3-29) beat Barbados Royals 187 for 4 (King 98*, Rutherford 29, Irshad 2-13) by four wicketsAntigua and Barbuda Falcons nearly lost grip of the last-ball thriller in Bridgetown with their over-reliance on singles and doubles in a tense chase of 188, but Shamar Springer hit the winning runs for them to strengthen their third spot on the points table. It meant Barbados Royals continued to scrape the bottom without a single victory to their name so far this season, as they failed to defend 187 after Brandon King’s 98 not out.Royals captain Rovman Powell thought they had enough runs at the halfway mark but two Royals fielders went on to drop six catches – Chris Green four and Daniel Sams two – which hampered their chances of getting their first victory. Royals have just one point from six games season, their qualification chances narrowing with every loss.Andries Gous was the leading man for Falcons, starring with an unbeaten 85 off 53 with five fours and four sixes, but he barely got strike in the last over, off which they needed 12. Powell rolled the dice by giving the ball to Sherfane Rutherford, who had last bowled 26 T20s ago, against England in June. Rutherford started with three wides in his first four balls before bowling hard lengths on a straight line. Three off two became two off one when Imad Wasim attempted a second after hacking the ball to long-on but a quick collection of the throw, turning around and hitting the stumps from Quinton de Kock found Imad short. Local boy Springer calmly collected two next ball and sealed Falcons’ first win away from home this season.Chris Green put down four chances•Getty Images

Openers Gous and Amir Jangoo had given Falcons a quick-fire start in the chase by pummeling 38 in the first four before Jangoo was cleaned up by a slower delivery from Sams, and Ramon Simmonds sent back Karima Gore. Green put down two chances off Kevin Wickham in consecutive overs after the powerplay and once again in the 11th one before Wickham was eventually taken by substitute fielder Kofi James at mid-off for 26. Needing 78 from 47 from there at over 9.75 an over, Gous, who had brought up his fifty off 32 balls, anchored the chase while Shakib Al Hasan and Fabian Allen holed out after hitting a few boundaries. Gous belted his fourth six in the 18th over before being dropped next ball by Green to bring it down to 19 from 12 before they sealed victory on the last ball.When Royals were put in to bat, they crawled their way to 31 for 0 in the powerplay before King took off with boundaries in every over till the halfway mark. De Kock tried to replicate it – and succeeded to an extent – but was run-out for a scratchy 27 off 28. King then took on Shakib and Imad before smashing Jayden Seales for three sixes in an over to reach 94 off 58 after 16. He faced only seven off the last 24 balls and scored only four of those as Salman Irshad sent down skiddy deliveries to rattle the stumps of Powell and Rassie van der Dussen and Falcons managed just 38 off the last four.

Dawkins, Evison drive Kent to emphatic seven-wicket win

Sharma makes 82 for Northamptonshire but second-wicket stand breaks back of chase

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay21-Aug-2025Ben Dawkins struck a sparkling maiden List A century to steer Kent Spitfires to their second Metro Bank One Day Cup victory of the season, beating a youthful Northamptonshire side by seven wickets at Wantage Road as they chased down 244 with 32 deliveries to spare.The in-form England Under-19 opener struck an unbeaten 111 (105 balls, 12 fours, two sixes), sharing a second-wicket stand of 157 off 181 balls with Joey Evison who made a fine 82 (106 balls, 10 fours, 1 six).Young guns Aadi Sharma and Stuart van der Merwe (37) starred with the bat for the Steelbacks in a stand of 75 off 87 balls characterised by rapid running between the wickets. Sharma made an excellent 82 (90 balls, 8 fours, 1 six), his maiden List A half-century.Their stand came after Evison, who bowled his 10 overs straight through, removed Northamptonshire’s top order to finish with career best List A figures off three for 36.Matt Parkinson took two for 50 as Northamptonshire suffered a middle order collapse, before some lower order hitting from Dom Leech (36 off 35 balls), but the hosts’ eventual total of 243 all out proved insufficient.Earlier Luke Procter (15) was caught behind playing at a wide one from Evison. But Sharma was soon into his work, hooking and driving sweetly, although he rode his luck at times.James Sales fresh from scores of 117 and 98, fell cheaply, adjudged lbw to one that kept low from Evison, while Northamptonshire lost a third when George Bartlett was caught behind off Evison, cutting close to his body.That brought Sharma together with van der Merwe who tucked into Parkinson’s legspin, cutting through cover and swotting him over long-off for six.van der Merwe reverse swept Jack Leaning, taking Northamptonshire past 100, while Sharma uppercut Corey Flintoff over the vacant slip region to reach 50 off 58 balls.The drinks break brought a wicket when van der Merwe chipped Leaning straight to long-on, but Sharma continued to attack. He skipped down the pitch to deposit Leaning over extra cover and clipped Flintoff off his legs for six into the old signal box at deep square leg.The tide turned as Parkinson made a double breakthrough, three wickets falling for five runs in 17 balls. First Parkinson bowled Lewis McManus round his legs before spinning one past off-stump to take the edge of Sharma’s bat through to the keeper. Next delivery Mohammad Rizvi trapped Rob Keogh plumb lbw.With Northamptonshire 171 for seven, Leech found a good ally in debutant Aryaman Varma (30) in an enterprising stand of 59. Leech attacked the spinners, smiting Parkinson over midwicket before sweeping for six, while Varma deployed the cut shot to good effect.Leech smashed Rizvi straight to bring up the 50 partnership before Jaydn Denly struck twice in two balls, bowling Leech as he attempted to reverse sweep before bowling Yuzvendra Chahal. Fred Klaassen picked up the final wicket, Varma well caught by a tumbling Flintoff at mid-off.Dawkins started aggressively, punching several boundaries through the off-side and pulling Procter for a straight six. Denly (20) meanwhile sent a huge six flying over deep midwicket off Leech as Kent raced past 50 inside seven overs.Scoring briefly slowed against spinners Nirvan Ramesh and Chahal with the opening stand of 58 ended by a sensational one-handed diving catch by van der Merwe at cover off Ramesh.Dawkins reached 50 with a streaky boundary off Varma, while Evison collected boundaries against the spinners as he hit over extra cover, reaching his own half-century with a sumptuous cover drive off Leech.Runs kept coming for Evison as he smashed over midwicket, while Dawkins reached his ton with elan, pulling van der Merwe over midwicket for six.Evison crunched van der Merwe for a straight six before he holed out at long-on, Chris Benjamin following soon after in similar fashion off Keogh, but with the target in sight, Dawkins was there to see his side home.

Southampton can end Eckert experiment by hiring "insanely talented" manager

Southampton return to action in the Championship this weekend as they prepare to travel to Charlton on Saturday, and they appear no closer to appointing a permanent successor to Will Still.

TalkSPORT recently claimed that Sport Republic are ‘seriously considering’ appointing current interim manager Tonda Eckert on a permanent basis, after his first two matches in the dugout.

The 32-year-old head coach is set to lead the team out for a third game against Charlton this weekend, and another win would do his chances of landing the role no harm.

Why Southampton should not appoint Tonda Eckert

Eckert deserves credit for providing the team with an instant boost after Still’s departure, as he masterminded a 2-1 win over QPR and a 3-1 win over Sheffield Wednesday in the Championship.

However, it may not be the right time to appoint him as the permanent head coach because of his lack of experience in first-team management in his career so far.

Eckert had only ever been an assistant manager before his move to join the U21s as their head coach this summer, and he managed nine Premier League 2 matches before his two senior games as the current interim, per Transfermarkt.

Manager Focus

Who are the greatest coaches in the land? Football FanCast’s Manager Focus series aims to reveal all.

This means that Southampton have no evidence available to judge what an Eckert team will look like in 15, 20, or 30 games, or if he has the first-team coaching ability to lead a promotion push.

Earlier this month, Michael Carrick was named as a reported contender for the job, and hiring the former Middlesbrough boss could end the Eckert experiment at St. Mary’s.

Why Southampton should hire Michael Carrick

Unlike the German interim, Carrick would arrive on the south coast with bundles of Championship experience as a manager, which may be what the Saints need right now.

The former Manchester United midfielder, who was hailed as an “insanely talented coach” by former Boro player Lukas Engel, has been out of work since moving on from Middlesbrough at the end of last season.

Carrick also has the specific experience of taking over a team in a similar position to the one that Southampton are in now and leading them to a play-off finish, as that is what he did with Boro in the 2022/23 campaign.

Matches

16

30

Wins

4

18

Draws

5

4

Losses

7

8

Points

17

58

Points per game

1.06

1.93

League position

18th

4th

As you can see in the table above, the 4-2-3-1 tactician took over with Middlesbrough after they had a dismal start to the season, in 18th place, and led them to fourth and the play-offs.

Southampton are currently 17th after 15 matches, with 18 points on the board, which means that Carrick would arrive in an incredibly similar situation at St. Mary’s. This could make him the ideal candidate for the job, as he has very specific experience for the job that is required.

Some supporters may see that he finished 10th and eighth in his last two seasons with Boro, but the underlying numbers behind those two campaigns suggest that he was let down by his squad.

League finish

8th

10th

xPTS (Expected league finish)

73 (5th)

71 (6th)

xG

69.5

67.4

xGA

55.0

56.4

xGD

+14.5

+11.3

As you can see in the table above, Boro ranked inside the top six for xPTS in both of those seasons, suggesting that their performances were of a play-off calibre, but the players did not make the most of those performances to pick up the results needed.

This is why Southampton should not be put off by Carrick’s ‘failure’ to get Boro in the play-offs in the last two seasons, and is further evidence that he could be a major upgrade on the inexperienced Eckert.

Southampton can land Still upgrade by hiring manager who's won 13 trophies

Southampton could land an upgrade on Will Still by hiring this 4-3-3 manager.

ByDan Emery Nov 12, 2025

Therefore, the out-of-work English manager could be the perfect hire for Southampton for the position that they currently find themselves in, as he has the coaching ability and experience to drive the team back up the table to fight for the play-offs.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus