Liverpool: Crook doesn’t expect signings

TalkSPORT reporter Alex Crook doesn’t expect Liverpool to make further additions to the attacking department this summer, providing Mohamed Salah stays put. 

The lowdown: Salah saga

On the verge of entering the final 12 months of a deal at Anfield (Transfermarkt), the long-term future of Salah remains in doubt, particularly after the Reds sold Sadio Mane to Bayern Munich with the Senegalese star in a similar position.

Despite reports suggesting that Liverpool won’t cash in on the 30-year-old during this transfer window, with claims that Salah wants to more than double a £225,000-per-week deal in Merseyside and owners FSG reluctant to break their wage structure for one player, a departure as a free agent in 2023 currently seems inevitable.

Jurgen Klopp has already added Luis Diaz and Darwin Nunez to the ranks as part of the succession plan, and one informed source has now claimed that the incomings in the frontline are over for the time being…

The latest: ‘Murmurings…’

Speaking to Give Me Sport, Crook has suggested that Liverpool will refrain from making further signings unless Salah decides to move on before the September 1 deadline.

He said: “I don’t think they’re overly in the market for another attacker because they’re fairly well stocked in that department assuming that Salah stays.

“There are still one or two murmurings that he won’t, but I expect him to be there at least until the end of the season.”

The verdict: Well stocked…

Klopp was certainly afforded an embarrassment of attacking riches last term as the Reds competed in every possible fixture during the 2021/22 campaign, falling narrowly short of a never before seen quadruple.

Ultimately, despite the glistening firepower at his disposal, the German boss had to settle for a domestic cup double of the FA and Carabao Cups, trophies that were won in no small part down to the exploits of the now-departed duo Takumi Minamino and Divock Origi.

As things currently stand, the Anfield attacking ranks are made up of Diogo Jota, Roberto Firmino, Diaz, Nunez and Salah, although new arrival Fabio Carvalho and youngsters such as Curtis Jones, Harvey Elliott and Kaide Gordon could well be called upon more frequently next term.

Albeit the likes of Nunez and Carvalho are relatively unknown in the Premier League, those aforementioned options are more than enough for Klopp to plot another challenge for silverware as FSG and Julian Ward continue in their behind-the-scenes attempts to tie Salah – who was hailed as ‘unstoppable’ by ex-Kop icon Dean Saunders last season – down to an extension on Merseyside without breaking the bank.

Leeds: Hay drops Perkins transfer claim

Phil Hay has revealed that Leeds United are now targeting the signing of attacking midfielder Sonny Perkins this summer.

What’s the talk?

In a recent article for The Athletic, the Leeds United correspondent revealed that Victor Orta is continuing to pursue a number of up and coming talents in the summer transfer market, with the Spaniard having now turned his attention to West Ham United’s Sonny Perkins.

Hay goes on to state that, with the Whites’ sporting director having spent steadily on youth prospects in recent seasons, it looks as if the 43-year-old will continue in this fashion in the coming months, with the 18-year-old starlet being one of Leeds’ primary targets to strengthen their U23 squad ahead of the new season.

“The next Declan Rice”

Considering just how exciting a prospect Perkins looks to be, it is easy to understand why Orta would be keen on a move for the England U18 international this summer.

Indeed, the £720k-rated talent highly impressed for both West Ham’s U18 and U23 sides this season, scoring four goals and providing one assist over his four U18 Premier League appearances, as well as bagging ten goals and registering one assist over 20 outings in the Premier League 2.

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These returns saw the teenager earn regular call ups to David Moyes’ first-team squad, with the midfielder – who can also operate up top – making three senior appearances for the Hammers in 2021/22 – two in the Europa League and one in the Premier League.

Furthermore, the hopes of those in the know at West Ham are extremely high for Perkins, with ExWHUemployee even suggesting in October of last year that the youngster could go on to become the club’s next Declan Rice.

Regarding the future of the 18-year-old, the Irons insider said: “One player to pay attention to is a West Ham youngster called Sonny Perkins. This is someone I’ve spoken about on the podcast before as a talent, and he’s really beginning to stand out now at academy level, really getting rave reviews.

“Obviously, he’s performing on the international stage as well for his age, and he is one to keep an eye on. From what I’ve heard in the academy circles, he could be the next Declan Rice. So just keep your eye out for his progression within the next few years.”

As such, should Orta go on to get a deal over the line for the Hammers starlet this summer, it would very much appear to be yet another fantastic piece of business by the Leeds sporting director – with Perkins undoubtedly possessing the ability to make a real mark on the Whites first-team in not too distant future.

AND in other news: Journo reveals Leeds are “planning talks” with “unbelievable” talent, Marsch must act

Aston Villa eye Rangers defender Bassey

Gabby Agbonlahor has shared a big ‘issue’ for Glasgow Rangers after some transfer news that he has now heard involving Calvin Bassey.

The Lowdown: Transfer interest in Bassey

The Daily Record reported over the weekend that scouts from an English club were sent to watch the 22-year-old in their Scottish Cup final victory as they ponder a move.

The Times since confirmed strong interest in the defender from Aston Villa.

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As per Football Insider, the Ibrox club are lining up new contract talks with Bassey and will offer him a ‘massive’ pay rise in order to try and convince him to stay, but calls from the Premier League may be too hard for him to turn down.

The Latest: Agbonlahor reacts

Speaking to Football Insider, Agbonlahor has now claimed that Rangers will have an ‘issue’ in not being able to offer Bassey as much money as a club in the English top flight, admitting that he does not see the 22-year-old signing a new deal and staying at Ibrox beyond this summer.

The former Villa striker – who contributes as a pundit for Sky Sports – replied when asked if the defender will sign a new deal with the Gers: “I don’t think he will, to be honest.

“The problem with Rangers and Celtic is they can’t pay the money that teams in the Premier League can. Goldson’s trying to move for financial reasons.

“What can Rangers offer Bassey? That’s the issue. He could probably get double the money at Aston Villa.

“I’m sure he would be reluctant to sign a new contract and see what is out there for him, to be honest.

“There will be clubs out there for him, 1000 per cent. He’s quick, calm on the ball, strong and good in the air.

“I’d take him at Aston Villa tomorrow. A lot of clubs in the Premier League will look at him.

“I’m surprised that Leicester let him go, to be honest. That’s very strange.”

The Verdict: Departure seems inevitable

Unfortunately for the Light Blues, it seems inevitable that Bassey will move on if Villa or another club in the Premier League were to put in a serious offer for him.

The 22-year-old has already shown that he is made for the big stage with his impressive performance in their Europa League final defeat to Eintracht Frankfurt, making three interceptions and two tackles on the night, while his display was described as ‘astonishing’ by BT Sport pundit Owen Hargreaves.

Nonetheless, with a new contract on the table, Bassey’s future now lies in his own hands, and it looks set to be a big couple of months over the summer for the Nigeria international.

In other news, find out who has now emerged as a Gers target

India dance to Kumble's beat

After a week that included skill-based training, yoga, meditation, a buddy programme and even drum-rolls, it was evident that the Indian team had made strides both on and off the field

Shashank Kishore in Bangalore04-Jul-2016Late on Sunday evening, India’s squad of 17 for the tour of the West Indies was asked to assemble at the team room in their Bangalore hotel for what was to be a “team-bonding activity”. If the players expected a serious game involving pen and paper, they were in for a surprise when Anil Kumble, the head coach, announced the drum circle, an activity aimed at “discovering creativity” and “energising participants.”Having fun can help ride tough times – MS Dhoni

MS Dhoni stressed on the need to “have fun” and “back each other” in his motivational speech to the Indian team on the penultimate day of their training camp.
“Most of us started cricket when we were five. I think this is the period where Indian cricket will move forward,” he said. “Last two-three years, we were talking about the youngsters getting into the Test arena. Now, we have a set of batsmen and a pool of bowlers. That is why this coming phase will be very interesting.”
Dhoni emphasised bringing back the fun element to their game. “Make sure you have a lot of fun, because in Indian cricket, it is something we don’t do often. Cricket is too much for us. For a lot of us, if you take cricket out of our personal lives, there is not much left. But it is important to have fun.”

The agenda, it was later explained, was to get the whole group in sync with the beats, much like they would have to in the West Indies. It started with a pep talk from MS Dhoni, who urged the players to “enjoy cricket and not be consumed by the pressures associated with being an Indian cricketer”. Over the next hour or so, they jammed to the beats of a popular musician.”We were surprised by Anil ,” Kohli said. “We thought it would be a serious session, but it turned out to be a fun session. This is very important for the team. Sometimes, when we are focused on our individual game, we forget the importance of team bonding. We wanted to improve our camaraderie and understanding. This is important because the performance on the field can be better if everyone understands each other better. Everyone enjoyed it a lot and we had fun. It is going to be a long season, and these sorts of activities are required.”Shikhar Dhawan had been one of the first to congratulate “Sir” Kumble on Twitter when he was appointed head coach, and he somewhat summed up the mood in the camp when he said, “Kumble sir is too old now, easy to face”, before walking off with a grin.Going by what has happened over the last week, this much was certain: Kumble’s shoulders must be sore, if not creaking, given the number of hours he has spent bowling in the nets.One of the first to arrive at the ground, Kumble planned the net sessions meticulously, with the bowlers gearing up to bat first, before role reversals. It was no different on Monday, the final day of the team’s week-long camp in Bangalore.Kumble rolled his arm over again, his enthusiasm to beat the bat a constant, and the joy on his face when he eventually did suggest not too much had changed since his playing days, except maybe his waistline. After each ball, he would walk back to where an umpire might stand, and monitor the fast bowlers’ landing. So while Mohammed Shami, Umesh Yadav and Bhuvneshwar Kumar earned appreciation each time they beat the bat, they were also politely informed that they were pushing the crease in their quest for pace.Bhuvneshwar said he was happy to have a bowler as head coach. “When you have a coach who is a batsman, he talks more to the batsmen. He talks to the bowlers as well, but those practical things don’t come. I am not saying he can’t give feedback, but with a coach like Kumble, who is a bowler and has played for India for so many years, you can get more practical things from him rather than from a batsman. That is something I am really looking forward to, and it’s one thing I will take from him being a coach.”Each of the batsmen spent considerable time at the three nets – one for the spinners, one for the quicks, and another for throwdowns, with batting coach Sanjay Bangar hurling the ball down with his sidearm for more than two hours.There was one nervy moment at the pacers’ net, when R Ashwin walked off clutching his elbow after being hit by a lifter from Shami. He eventually returned, and didn’t bat any further. Kumble later said Ashwin had suffered nothing more than a “bruise.”

The intensity picked up when the frontline batsmen geared up for their stints. Dhawan, batting with a slightly open stance after a chat with the video analyst, nicked a few before waltzing down the track to the spinners. Kohli, walking out with three bats, seemed unhappy with his footwork while sweeping the spinners, and asked them to pitch the ball in the same area till he was satisfied. Then he hopped over to the pace bowlers’ net and was welcomed with a peach from Varun Aaron that squared him up and took the edge. At the throwdown net, he spent close to 20 minutes simply leaving the ball.By the time his first camp as head coach had drawn to a close, Kumble had engaged his team in a drum circle, in sessions of yoga and meditation, and a buddy programme to help them open up to each other.”I certainly believe that as a coach of a young team, you need to be hands on and you need to really get your hands dirty as well – train with them, be a part of their training,” he had said last week. “And be with them more like an elder brother, in every aspect, not just on the field, but also off it.”The players seemed to have listened, judging by how quickly they went from “Sir Anil” to “Anil “.

The cult of Kane

He is small. He is quiet. He is flabbergastingly good. Little in sport is more enchanting than this confluence of raw talent and tireless refinement

Andrew Fidel Fernando23-Mar-2015They speak in whispers across the nation. There is high regard, but it rarely climbs to reverence. His cricket is sensational now, “But wait and watch a few years,” fans say. “Just how good do you think he could be?” No bad words are spoken. The admiration is unreserved, but like the man himself, restrained. He is small. He is quiet. He is flabbergastingly good. Welcome to the cult of Kane.It is a sports following like few others, because although Williamson can rarely be prodded to speak on his likes, his peeves, his desires or his background, his fans feel they understand him. Often, they give descriptions that are at once entirely simplistic, but profoundly appropriate. “Kane just loves to bat,” some say. “He was born to do it,” say others. Many more lead with: “He’s one player that doesn’t just rely on his talent. For a young guy he’s hit so many balls.”Little in sport is more enchanting than this confluence of raw talent and tireless refinement. Williamson is prodigious and professional; the lifelong love of the craft of batting as irrepressible as his century celebrations are muted. In an age in which maiden Test tons spark whoops, hollers, leaps and flailing, Williamson’s trip to triple figures on debut inspired only a bashful bat-raise in Ahmedabad. In 13 hundreds and a match-flipping double-ton since, he has been no less measured. But that cover drive radiates affection for the game. The back-foot punch is simple but well-rehearsed. Fans love that. How refreshing for a sportsman to convey so much while saying so little.Only so much is known of his beginnings, save to say New Zealand’s cricket fraternity was alerted a new star may be on the horizon when Williamson was piling up centuries for his high school in Tauranga. His hometown is beautiful, unassuming and disproportionately favoured by the aged: the perfect setting for cricket’s youngest old soul. “He’s only 24, but in our group, he’s already a leader,” Brendon McCullum keeps saying of him. Williamson’s locker of strokes has begun to expand dramatically. He is becoming an all-format performer of the modern age. But timeless sensibility underpins his cricket. The risks are wise and his go-to shots well worn. This is almost impossible not to appreciate.He plays in a team flaunting impetuosity and skill, but watching Williamson bat is a different experience entirely, because his work always seems a reverie. All the great players of large innings enter a batting trance they say, and when Williamson enters his, little seems to exist for him but the next ball and the next run. Once, while saving a Test against South Africa at the Basin in 2012, Williamson blew a bubble with the gum he’d been chewing all day, just as he stroked Morne Morkel through the covers.And then there is that cover drive•Getty ImagesWilliamson is dropped more often than other batsman, which Martin Crowe feels is a result of passive body language. “Fielding sides are not sharp when he is at the crease, often spilling catches that would otherwise be taken if a sharper focus was created,” Crowe says. Perhaps that is true, but his admirers need no more reason than karma. “Who deserves the luck more than Kane?” they ask.There is the fielding too, which is the surest way into a New Zealand fan’s heart. At gully, Williamson is now almost surely peerless. Fully-flung and airborne, almost every tour he takes a catch there, like a cartoon character clinging to a speeding train. These are the moments in which he is most animated – when his teammates crowd around to ruffle his hair and lift him off the ground. Dwarfed sometimes by everyone but Brendon McCullum, he seems like the beloved kid brother. When he struck that six to win a tight World Cup match against New Zealand’s most rivalrous opponents, he was kid brother to a nation.On Tuesday, as New Zealand prepared for their seventh World Cup semi-final, Brendon McCullum batted away suggestions their opponents were chokers. “Both teams have grown up in the past four years,” he said – their last World Cup meeting in Mirpur having been a dogfight of the cricketing and verbal variety. New Zealand have now embraced a philosophy of respect, selflessness and unrelenting commitment to the team cause. For men like McCullum, Tim Southee, and even Ross Taylor, whose ego had understandably been bruised by the captaincy fiasco, these virtues have been adopted over time; they were not innate.Of all the reasons to admire Williamson, perhaps this is what fans find most compelling: he will be among the youngest to take the field on Wednesday, but he ties together humility and excellence and epitomises this new New Zealand culture. He has not yet played five years of top cricket, but by just being himself, he has shown a struggling team the way.

Dominant Sangakkara gets better with age

At 35, a lifetime of learning is propelling Kumar Sangakkara’s cricket far further than his innate ability ever could. He is now churning out match-winning innings that have frustratingly eluded him

Andrew Fidel Fernando at the R Premadasa Stadium20-Jul-2013Cricketers are sometimes labeled ‘great students of the game’. Often these students are men who distinguish themselves from the peloton of cricket’s sporty jocks by a yearning to learn more about the history and the nuances of the pursuit that consumes their lives.When he first began playing for Lancashire, Muttiah Muralitharan was said to have had a more thorough knowledge of the team’s previous season than many of the cricketers who had played in those matches. Part of why Michael Hussey’s ‘Mr. Cricket’ moniker endured was because he would speak for hours on end about the game, in what seemed like laborious detail to his teammates. In his years as Australia captain, Ricky Ponting was found perusing grade cricket scorecards from around the country. All men, whose livelihoods had happily aligned with their life’s most ardent passion.At 35, a lifetime of learning is propelling Kumar Sangakkara’s cricket far further than his innate ability ever could, and into the reaches of greatness. Against South Africa, he hit the highest ODI score ever made in Sri Lanka at a breathless pace that would have done Sanath Jayasuriya or Aravinda de Silva proud. Unlike either of those men, Sangakkara is not a natural strokemaker, nor are ODIs his format of choice. Yet the records continue to tumble over and again to a man who was never the precocious teenage talent that every other great Sri Lankan batsman was, before coming of age. By the end of his career, Sangakkara will probably top more lists than the rest of them combined.A year ago, when Sangakkara became the ICC’s Cricketer, and Test Cricketer of the Year, he refused to put himself in the company of the greats, both from Sri Lanka and worldwide. “They dominated attacks,” he said, “and they were great to watch. I’m more of a worker, and I graft for my runs.” Yet 13 years into his career, he is tearing international attacks apart for the first time, and playing the match-winning innings that have frustratingly eluded him in the last decade. Having accumulated 66 from his first 91 deliveries, Sangakkara snapped in the batting Powerplay, and unfurled an array of finishing blows even a 30-year old version of himself would never have attempted – 103 came from his next 46 balls.AB de Villiers later reflected on Sangakkara’s ability to manipulate the field, but the batsman had set such panic upon the South Africa bowlers they seemed incapable of containing him regardless. Even in a Test career that gleams far brighter than his limited-overs returns, he has rarely known such uncompromising dominance. The attack left the field not just emphatically beaten, but roundly humiliated.His unbeaten 134 at The Oval last month, to lead a difficult chase against a strong England, was another innings that showcased a new dimension to his one-day game. There are 77 half-centuries to the 16 hundreds in Sangakkara’s career, and many of those fifties meant little to the team, failing, as they did, to launch Sri Lanka to victory. He has learnt now, what it takes to carry the side over the line, and his ODI average is the best it has been since the honeymoon of his career.The 46th over of the Sri Lanka innings produced a moment that exposed the core of Sangakkara’s success. Going down to one knee, he attempted an over-the-shoulder scoop off a Ryan McLaren full toss, and had his stumps splayed. In an instant he was on his feet, looking from umpire to umpire and pointing at the men on the fence with agitation. De Villiers had stationed too many outside the circle and Sangakkara had counted them mentally before taking guard. He knew the ball would not count, so the risky stroke was no risk at all. The most unique facet of his greatness is that it is foremost a triumph of the mind.Before the series, Angelo Mathews had said Lahiru Thirimanne was capable of becoming the next Sangakkara, and as the young batsmen floundered while the great frolicked at the other end, plenty remarked on the vast gulf in class. Thirimanne’s critics might be surprised to learn that at the same age, and number of ODI innings, Sangakkara averaged six runs less than Thirimanne does now. He may have only made 17 from 33 in a 123-run partnership, but Thirimanne has already hit an ODI ton against a high-class attack. Batting in a similar position to Thirimanne at the start of his career, Sangakkara did not manage that until his 86th game.”There are a lot of things to learn from Sangakkara,” Thirimanne said after the match. “As young batsmen we take a lot out of what he says and the way he plays. He’s a special player and we’re lucky he’s from our country. In matches, I use a lot of what he says.”Thirimanne will do well to adopt Sangakkara’s obsession with improvement. Unfortunately for the young man, his beautiful, bent-kneed cover-drive has already drawn parallels with Sangakkara, and his future will likely be measured on the Sangakkara scale. It is a career that is almost impossible to emulate, because his mentor is himself one of cricket’s greatest students.

The 77-year itch

Lancashire ended their long wait for the County Championship in September. Two journalists who watched every ball tell how it was done

Alex Winter18-Dec-2011After such a long wait, it probably deserved a book. Lancashire became outright county champions for the first time in 77 years in 2011 and celebrates their glorious season.Lancashire were tipped by many as relegation candidates, and there is a element to this tale of an unfancied bunch of local lads defying the odds to take the title. The book encapsulates this spirit, and the cover photograph says it all.Predictably enough for such a long-awaited achievement, the great and good of Lancashire have offered their congratulations. Forewords by Jack Simmons, Andrew Flintoff and Roy Tattersall, who died this month, reflect what this Championship victory means to the people of Lancashire and those who tried and failed to bring the title to Old Trafford over the preceding eight decades.Between them, the authors witnessed every ball of the campaign, and their accounts of every day’s play are recalled. The drama of victories over Yorkshire and Hampshire at Aigburth, and the clincher in Somerset, features prominently. The elation of the players is shared by the authors, and it takes the reader swimmingly through the book.Full scorecards and action pictures are included, and quotes from the players in the aftermath of each match – allowing for an insight into the dressing room as the campaign develops. Every player is profiled in the course the book – in between the match reports, perhaps interrupting the flow of the narrative; but the profiles highlight the true team effort that took Lancashire to the title.The coaching staff also get their own pages, as does chief executive Jim Cumbes. His profile and an article about the club’s battle to develop their ground gives one an appreciation of the constraints Lancashire were operating under – no overseas players, no home ground, no superstars.But their problems were perhaps a large part of their success, and Paul Edwards’ article “For One Summer Only” reflects this. Edwards also provides a tip of the hat to the backroom staff, including scorer Alan West; an analysis of Lancashire’s academy system, which produced a large part of the champion team; and a reflection on the Twenty20 semi-final defeat to Leicestershire in a Super Over.”Maybe it was written in the heavens,” writes Rev Malcom Lorimer in his epilogue. “Earlier in the year Manchester City won the FA Cup. When did they also win it? 1934 of course! It only happens once in a blue moon.” Lancashire fans will hope this book proves to be anything but a once-in-a-blue-moon event, but for now, this neat, well-presented, easy-to-read volume provides happiness 77 years in the making. Champions… About Bloomin’ Time
Graham Hardcastle and Chris Ostick
Max Books
240pp, £16.99

Help needed for the 'Big Three'

There was one obvious reason for the disappointing climax to an otherwise heartening Digicel Series for the West Indies on Friday. It was that Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Shivnarine Chanderpaul contributed 36 runs between them

Tony Cozier05-Apr-2009There was one obvious reason for the disappointing climax to an otherwise heartening Digicel Series for the West Indies at the Beausejour Stadium on Friday. It was that Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Shivnarine Chanderpaul contributed just 36 runs between them, and were out with as many as 104 needed from 15 overs to overtake England’s 172 for 5 off their 29.The stark reality is that for all the spirit and commitment that has characterised the gradual rise from the depths over the past two years the West Indies remain far too heavily reliant on runs from those three.The batting though, has been boosted by developments down the order. However, there are still gaping holes at No. 2, the one partnering Gayle, and No. 4, slotted in between Sarwan and Chanderpaul. The team won’t be complete until they are adequately filled.There has been just a solitary hundred in either position in the last 19 Tests since Brian Lara’s retirement following the World Cup in 2007. That was at No. 4 from the now suspended Marlon Samuels in South Africa almost a year and a half ago.In that time, Gayle’s partners have been Daren Ganga, Devon Smith, Sewnarine Chattergoon and Xavier Marshall. Others who, for one reason or another, have filled the position, are Denesh Ramdin, Brenton Parchment, Dwayne Bravo and Lendl Simmons.Ironically, 83 by Bravo, sent in against Sri Lanka last year when Gayle dropped himself down the order, and 86 by Marshall, chosen as No.4 but replacing the injured Chattergoon in the Barbados Test against Australia a few weeks later, are the best efforts.Just when Samuels appeared, at last, to have begun to fulfill his clear potential in South Africa, his naive association with an alleged bookmaker drew him his two-year ban. Marshall and Ryan Hinds have filled the breach since without one score over 30 between them.So where do the selectors look in their hunt for suitable candidates?They won’t find anyone right away in the regional tournament where familiar names with chequered pasts led the season’s scorers before the current round-Narsingh Deonarine (950 runs), Floyd Reifer (902), Runako Morton (851), Hinds (634), the Smiths, Dwayne (723) and Devon (359).Dale Richards, aged 32, was picked as the newest opener for the first Test of this series but, through injury, is yet to have his chance. That may come next month in England but his is hardly a long-term investment.Chattergoon and Marshall have slipped completely off the radar, as have Leon Johnson and Shaun Findlay, the young left-handers who were also on the trips to Toronto, Abu Dhabi and New Zealand last year.The main hope for the future rests with a few young up and comers, none quite ready for promotion to the highest level. They first need proper preparation, roles for the long promised Academy and for the resumption of ‘A’ team tours.The two likeliest are the Trinidadians, Adrian Barath, the little opener who is 19 in ten days time and is now in his third season, and Darren Bravo, just 20, the stylish left-hander who is Dwayne’s brother.The Nevisian left-hander Kieran Powell, 19, and Kraigg Brathwaite, 16, the schoolboy opener from Barbados with 32 hundreds already to his name at various levels and 78 on his first-class debut on Friday, are among the others.In the meantime, Gayle, Sarwan and Chanderpaul must continue to carry the upper order load, bolstered by the evidence that there is some stiffening down the list.The return of Dwayne Bravo’s all-round quality and ebullience was an immediate boost in the limited-overs series, as it no doubt will when he is back for the Tests.Brendan Nash, the dogged little left-hander from Jamaica by way of Australia, has brought much needed resilience to No. 6 with important half-centuries (in each innings) against New Zealand in Napier in December and in the first Test against England in Kingston in February followed by his maiden hundred in the final Test in Port of Spain.Wicketkeeper Ramdin’s hundred, his first, at No.7 in the Bridgetown Test was belated proof of his previous underachievement with the bat. So was Jerome Taylor’s in Dunedin against New Zealand.Coach John Dyson described each as a “significant breakthrough”. Pertinently, all benefitted from the presence of one of the big three at the other end.Nash had Chanderpaul twice and Gayle once in century partnerships that restored faltering innings, while Ramdin’s 166 at Kensington was fashioned in a record seventh wicket stand as Sarwan accumulated his 291.Throughout his 106 in Dunedin, Taylor’s partner was Chanderpaul.As did their rare combined failures on Friday at Beausejour, such statistics accentuate just how crucial the top three are to the success of the team and how vital it is to find support around them in the upper order.Either individually or together, they have figured in all three West Indies victories in the past 18 months-over South Africa, Sri Lanka and England. They have also been to the forefront of hard-fought draws.Taylor’s five for 11 second innings burst routed England at Sabina that led to the stunning and, as it proved, decisive win in February, but hundreds by Gayle and Sarwan initially earned a useful lead of 74.The doggedness of the last pair, Fidel Edwards and Daren Powell, sealed the great escape at the Antigua Recreation Ground just over a week later but Sarwan’s 106 and his stand of 148 with Chanderpaul that occupied three and three-quarter hours on the last day set it up.Last year, the same pair saw off the Australians’ press for victory at the ill-fated Sir Vivian Richards Stadium with second innings resistance for four and a half hours that yielded a partnership of 143, Sarwan with 128, Chanderpaul 70 to follow his 107 in the first innings, both with unbeaten stars against them.The problem, as was clear in St Lucia on Friday, is that they can’t do it everytime. They need help.

Real Madrid identify 'next big goal' as Xabi Alonso prioritises Toni Kroos replacement

Xabi Alonso's side have prioritised signing a new midfielder to replace the departed Toni Kroos as their next big move in the transfer market.

  • Real Madrid have spent heavily this summer
  • Still want a new midfielder to replace Toni Kroos
  • Are closely monitoring Spain star
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Los Blancos have already splashed out on Dean Huijsen, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Alvaro Carreras, and Franco Mastantuono this summer to strengthen the squad but still have the financial might to spend big once again, according to Diario AS. The club's "next big goal" is to bring in a player who can replace Kroos in the heart of the midfield, with Manchester CIty star Rodri very much still the favourite option.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Real Madrid have also looked at Nicolo Barella, Enzo Fernandez, and Alexis Mac Allister but have been put off all three as they are all under long-term contracts. Meanwhile, Rodri's deal at Manchester City expires in 2027, giving Madrid hope they can tempt him away from the Etihad Stadium

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    Real Madrid are closely monitoring Rodri's situation but remain wary due to his recent serious knee injury that saw the Spain star sidelined for nine months. Rodri also suffered a fresh setback at the Club World Cup, meaning Los Blancos may be forced to wait to make any move for the midfielder.

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    Kroos has readily admitted that Madrid have failed to replace him adequately. He said earlier this summer, via Mundo Deportivo: "They’re still missing a profile like mine, they’re still looking for it. There aren’t many players like that, and the ones that are there aren’t easy to get."

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