Birmingham City could sign "special" star who's even better than Doyle

Birmingham City’s summer spending has now officially kicked into gear.

A spree of new signings at St. Andrew’s has finally gone through after plenty of heated transfer conversation, with Demarai Gray and Bright Osayi-Samuel both joining on free transfers, alongside James Beadle and Tommy Doyle entering the building on loan.

The pick of the bunch, however, was reportedly splashing out £10m to land former Celtic star Kyogo Furuhashi from Rennes.

Still, there will be plenty of intrigue from Birmingham fans about the number of other signings made in quick succession away from just their new Japanese ace, with lots expected from Wolverhampton Wanderers loanee Doyle in particular, who has excelled near the top of the Championship previously.

Why Doyle is an exciting signing for Birmingham

Indeed, Doyle – whilst he has found the Premier League to be his more recent permanent home with Wolves – has lit up the second tier regularly when competing there.

Playing for both Cardiff City and Sheffield United on loan, Doyle would let loose with an impressive tally of five goals and seven assists coming his way from 57 Championship outings, which included a fine free-kick being floated home to help the Blades in their pursuit of promotion during the 2022/23 campaign.

His standout Bluebirds loan stint would even see scout Jacek Kulig brand the 23-year-old as “superb” as the ex-Manchester City youth product now looks to dust himself down after an up-and-down patch of his Old Gold career to try and get back to his second-tier peak with Davies and Co.

He might well be joined by some additional competition very soon if rumours are to be believed, as Birmingham’s busy summer activity shows no signs of relenting.

Tommy Doyle

Birmingham could sign another "special" star

All competition for places will be seen as healthy next season, with Davies wanting the best possible squad he can to ruffle some Championship feathers.

Landing the services of Lewis O’Brien would be viewed as a statement in the middle of the park for sure, with journalist Darren Witcoop revealing, whilst writing for TEAMTalk last week, that the ambitious Blues still are keen on adding the wantaway Nottingham Forest man to their ranks, even with Doyle now at their disposal.

A deal would have to be won right from under Wrexham’s nose, with reports suggesting that the Red Dragons had agreed a £5m fee for the ex-Huddersfield Town man’s signature, only for wages to be an unfortunate stumbling block.

This unforeseen hurdle for Phil Parkinson’s men could see Birmingham come out on top for the seasoned Championship professional instead, with O’Brien even more of a well-versed presence than Doyle as to what it takes to become a top battler in such a difficult and taxing division.

Games

38

42

43

23

16

Goals

2

3

3

0

1

Assists

4

3

3

1

0

Touches*

50.6

58.0

56.7

54.8

56.6

Accurate passes*

24.4 (77%)

30.8 (77%)

29.5 (78%)

36.8 (87%)

30.1 (76%)

Big chances created

5

6

4

2

2

Tackles*

3.2

2.0

2.2

1.7

1.9

Total duels won*

6.1

5.8

7.5

4.0

6.1

Looking at the table above, it’s clear that the Forest outcast excels when plying his trade in the Championship as a well-rounded presence in the middle, with O’Brien desperate to get back to his Terriers best if he dons Birmingham blue shortly, as seen in him winning an imperious 7.5 duels on per Championship clash during Huddersfield’s promotion near-miss during the 2021/22 season.

Like Doyle, he has the goals and assists to back up his tenaciousness, with 20 goal contributions and counting next to his name at the daunting level. His midfield counterpart can only boast 12, on the contrary.

Once even hailed as a “special” player by his former Huddersfield boss in Carlos Corberan, this might well be the signing that makes those tipping Birmingham for greatness more secure in the fact they can challenge for those promotion spots, as Davies aims to deliver back-to-back promotions to please the St. Andrew’s masses even more.

Even more exciting than Kyogo: Birmingham City set to sign "silky dribbler"

Birmingham City are reportedly closing in on a deal to sign a star who is even more exciting than Kyogo Furuhashi.

2 ByDan Emery Jul 5, 2025

Aaryan Sawant guides England U19s into position of strength

Fonseka adds half-century as Rossouw takes five to keep South Africa in contention

ECB Reporters Network04-Feb-2025England U19s 251 for 8 (Sawant 83*, Fonseka 52, Roussouw 5-62) lead South Africa U19s 224 (James 84, Hansen 63, Jack 3-42) by 27 runsAaryan Sawant guided England Men U19s into a first-innings lead with a patient unbeaten 83 on day two of the second Youth Test against South Africa Men U19s in Cape Town.The Middlesex right-hander batted for over five hours, with the support of a Kesh Fonseka half-century, as the Young Lions reached 251 for eight at stumps.Left-arm finger spinner Nathan Rossouw impressed with five for 62 on a spin-friendly surface, but Sawant remained to usher his side into a 27-run lead.Sawant joined Foneska at 52 for two after Rossouw, who sent down 36 overs today after opening the bowling last night, removed openers Archie Vaughan (24) and Ben Dawkins (22). The pair added 70 for the third wicket with Fonseka crunching leg-spinner Chad Mason for six over cover before bringing up his fifty with a straight four from the spin of Jason Rowles.Fonseka was run out by a Bandile Mbatha direct hit as he went back for a second – the only wicket of the day not to fall to spin. The Young Lions then lost four for 16 as Rossouw reached his five-wicket haul which threatened to give the hosts a first-innings lead.Sawant steadied matters and reached the close having hit five fours and a six in his 228-ball stay, while Yorkshire debutant Alexander Wade was also unbeaten on seven from 58 balls.

Vasco quita dívida da compra de Jair com Atlético-MG

MatériaMais Notícias

da roleta: O Vasco quitou nesta semana a dívida que tinha com o Atlético-MG por conta da transferência do volante Jair. O pagamento foi possível por conta do recebimento da última remessa do aporte anual da 777 Partners na terça-feira (10).

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da marjack bet: O valor pago ao Galo foi de aproximadamente R$ 3,32 milhões, referente à segunda parcela da trasferência, que estava atrasada desde do dia 25 de julho. A informção foi dada pelo jornalista Fábio Torres.

+ Transforme sua paixão pelo futebol em profissão. Descubra o caminho com o curso Gestor de Futebol!

O montante total é de R$ 13 milhões e, por conta do atraso, o Atlético-MG chegou a acionar a Câmara Nacional de Resolução de Disputas para receber o valor.

Com o pagamento, agora o Gigante está em dia com o clube mineiro até janeiro de 2024, quando vence a próxima parcela. A quarta e última parte do pagamento está prevista para abril de 2024. Jair é uma das grandes contratações desse momento de reconstrução do Vasco.

القناة الناقلة لمباراة بيراميدز والتأمين الإثيوبي اليوم في دوري أبطال إفريقيا

يستعد فريق بيراميدز لخوض مباراة قوية أمام التأمين الإثيوبي، بالمواجهة التي تجمع بينهما ضمن لقاءات بطولة دوري أبطال إفريقيا.

وتلعب المباراة بين بيراميدز والتأمين الإثيوبي، على أرضية استاد الدفاع الجوي في إطار منافسات إياب دور الـ32 من دوري أبطال إفريقيا.

يدخل بيراميدز اللقاء وعينه على بطاقة التأهل إلى دور المجموعات، بعد أن انتهت مباراة الذهاب بالتعادل الإيجابي 1-1، وهي نتيجة تمثل ضغطًا على الفريق الأزرق قبل لقاء اليوم.

طالع | قائمة بيراميدز لمباراة التأمين الإثيوبي في دوري أبطال إفريقيا

ويسعى بيراميدز لتأكيد بدايته القوية هذا الموسم، ومواصلة مشواره القاري بنجاح، خاصة بعدما نجح في كتابة التاريخ مؤخرًا بالتتويج بلقب دوري أبطال إفريقيا لأول مرة في تاريخه، أعقبها الفوز بكأس السوبر الإفريقي على حساب نهضة بركان المغربي.

ويدخل بيراميدز المباراة ولديه رغبة في تحقيق انتصار جديد يعزز مكانته بين كبار القارة، ويؤكد جدارته بمواصلة الدفاع عن لقبه القاري. القناة الناقلة لمباراة بيراميدز والتأمين الإثيوبي اليوم في دوري أبطال إفريقيا

ومن المقرر أن تذاع مباراة بيراميدز والتأمين الإثيوبي، عبر قناة ON Sports 2.

Tim Seifert is prepped and ready

He got his A game going on the slow wickets in the CPL, and being in the UAE and practising during the IPL will hold him good stead too

Deivarayan Muthu19-Oct-2021Tim Seifert could barely hold back his tears when he opened up about his experience of testing positive for Covid-19 in the first half of this year’s IPL. After recovering from the infection, Seifert found joy again. He married his girlfriend, Morgan Croasdale, and went back on the road again for stints with the Knight Riders franchises in the CPL, and more recently the second half of the IPL. He is now preparing to feature in his first ICC event for the New Zealand senior side, as their front-line wicketkeeper.”[I’ve] had some great times. Obviously, getting married,” Seifert recalled, speaking recently during his time back with Kolkata Knight Riders. “Some not-so-great times with the Covid, but it feels a wee while ago now. Obviously, a lot has happened since, and also kind of understanding that once I got over the first few days and then getting out of India, you reflect and the emotions aren’t quite there as they were at that time because you got over it.”It’s nice to be back playing and in a team environment, but also it was a great couple of months to just relax. I think the wedding and spending time with family made it even [more] special with what happened a couple of months before.”Related

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With no room at the top of the Trinbago Knight Riders order, Seifert, who usually opens for New Zealand, slotted into the middle order for a second successive CPL season. In a game against St Lucia Kings on a deteriorating Basseterre track, where finding the fence was particularly difficult, Seifert made it look ridiculously easy, cracking eight boundaries in 16 balls, scoring 40 not out.He walked in to bat after Kieron Pollard had holed out for nine off 11 balls, with Knight Riders still needing 56 off 21. Seifert took 14 runs off the 18th over, 20 off the 19th, and narrowed it down to six to win off the last ball. He couldn’t get the job done, though, and he admonished himself for it, flinging away his gloves in frustration after swinging and missing the final ball.”To get us so close, it was awesome as a player to get your team in the situation to win the game again,” Seifert said, “but also you get so close that you want to win it and then you don’t. It was awesome for my confidence, but gutted I couldn’t get that six off the last ball.”Still, that innings provided evidence of his adaptability and experience of playing on spin-friendly tracks, qualities that could serve him well at the T20 World Cup in the UAE.Seifert gets stuck into one during his 24 off eight balls against Jamaica Tallawahs recently•Getty ImagesSeifert often doubled up as Knight Riders’ finisher along with finisher and his captain there, Pollard. Seifert had the best seat in the house – at the non-striker’s end – when Pollard walloped 33 off a nine-ball stretch in the last two overs of the innings in a whirlwind 62-run fifth-wicket partnership they put on against Jamaica Tallawahs.”I started off my career in that middle order for Northern Districts and my first few tours with the Black Caps was in the middle order as well,” Seifert said. “Obviously been at the top of the order, but I’ve had that experience in the middle order.”Yeah [batting] with one the best finishers in the world – it was great. It was just awesome to go out there and work away off his brain – when to attack and when not to attack, and pick the balls to go. It was awesome to be at the other end watching these massive sixes. Sometimes you try to hit them as far, but you know you’re definitely not [hitting as far]!”Seifert missed the 50-over World Cup in England in 2019 with injury and subsequently needed two surgeries and a bone graft out of his wrist to fix his little finger. Around that time, the feedback from the team management was that he needed to improve his keeping. He reached out to his idol Brendon McCullum, who has since overseen his progress as a keeper.”He talked about the coach he used over in Australia,” Seifert said, “but things just didn’t work out [for me to train with him]. So Baz said, ‘He taught me, so I can kind of teach you.’ It’s nothing dramatic that we changed – just nailing down those basics, and I’ve found huge improvement over the last 12 months in my keeping.”Seifert is hoping to harness the time spent with McCullum and work his way into the New Zealand Test side as the second wicketkeeper.”Tom Blundell has done a great job, so he’ll probably take over the reins [from the retired BJ Watling] and it’s definitely something I want to do – pushing for that second wicketkeeper’s spot for Tests. I think in any conditions my game has improved behind the stumps, and it has been awesome to talk to Brendon no matter where I’m travelling around the world, about the conditions he faced.”One scoop or two? Seifert says he doesn’t practise the stroke too much, “but it’s a great thing to have”•Getty ImagesMost recently at the IPL, Seifert received his maiden cap from McCullum, as Sunil Narine wiped away imaginary tears beside them. Seifert managed only two off four balls against Punjab Kings, but he believes batting against team-mates, mystery spinners Narine and Varun Chakravarthy, on practice pitches that tend to spin more than the ones rolled out for games, has prepared him for the World Cup.”I think it has been great being over here [in the UAE], preparing, and watching what the wickets are doing,” Seifert said. “Played one game here [at the IPL], but been looking at what the scores are… I think that has been crucial and hopefully I get to see the result in the World Cup with that experience and knowing what’s going to happen, but also at the same time, the wickets could change.”Not only facing Sunny [Narine], Varun and Akeal [Hosein, net bowler] here – we’ve got some great net bowlers that are great spinners and slower bowlers as well.”Sometimes the training wickets can be a little bit more tired than in the game, which is a positive as well. I don’t think the preparation could be any better, but hopefully the results come out where you get the job done and that’s on the field.”One of Seifert’s staple shots in white-ball cricket is the scoop, which often invites risk, but he has learnt to embrace it. “I haven’t done a huge amount of [work on the scoop] in the nets,” he said. “It’s more of back-yourself. When you’ve got a gut feeling of them [opposition attack] just going to hit a yorker or bang it away on a length, it’s a gut feel that this is what they’re going to do. I don’t really practise it too much, but it’s a great thing to have.”Sometimes you get out doing that but that’s just the risk you take, because if you do hit that for four or six, that definitely changes his length and puts them under pressure. So [it’s] like any shot – doesn’t always come off, but definitely feels good when it does.”If it does come off more often for Seifert, he could set the scene for the middle order and push New Zealand closer to their first goal of reaching the semi-finals.”I think there are a lot of teams that have a good chance at this World Cup, so hopefully we do well and we just play our best cricket and get to the semi-finals,” he said. “Another little tournament starts in itself [after the semi-finals]. We’ve got a tough pool, especially on these Asian kind of wickets, but we have the players and skill sets to beat these guys as well. We just hope we play our best cricket on the day and the rest will tell.”

Can Issy Wong hit 80 clicks?

Meet the teenage Warwickshire player who might end up as one of the fastest bowlers in the women’s game

Valkerie Baynes21-Mar-2020Issy Wong doesn’t just make solving a Rubik’s Cube in a matter of seconds easy, she makes it like the simplest thing in the world too.When a spectator at last year’s Kia Super League Finals Day was spotted with a Cube – that 3-D puzzle that ranks alongside Pac-Man and Space Invaders as the quintessential icon of a 1980s childhood well spent – someone in the Southern Vipers’ dugout dropped their team-mate right in the spotlight: “You should see Wongy, she can do it in 30 seconds.”So there she was, a teenager who had barely played a handful of games for the Vipers, on live TV, reeling her way through a complex puzzle as her team cheered her on. For the record, she solved it in 33 seconds, smashing her previous personal best of 35.

“I think we can call that performing on the big stage,” Wong says with a laugh. “I was the most nervous I’ve ever been, I was shaking like a leaf in the wind.”Asked how she does it, she responds with the most astute of analogies.”With most things, if you know what you’re looking for, it becomes a lot clearer, so there’s certain patterns, certain things you can look for, and once you see that, that’s almost like a trigger for the next pattern of moves,” she says. “Like in cricket, if you see a half-volley outside your off stump, you know the next step is a cover drive. It’s almost the same thing but on a much smaller scale.”Wong is not just quick with a puzzle in her hand. Put a cricket ball in it and she is seriously rapid too. She hovers around the 70mph mark at the age of just 17, and has her sights set on going much faster.”It’s obviously a long way off at the moment, but the 80-clicks mark has never been hit by a girl yet, so it’s certainly an ambition of mine over the next few years,” she says. “Hopefully I can keep getting stronger, keep getting quicker. I just want to keep going, and that’s in the back of my mind.”Clever, ambitious and precociously talented, Wong has created quite the buzz among some high-profile peers, and the excitable chatter accompanying her emergence on the elite scene has been recognised with a call-up to play for Birmingham Phoenix in the Women’s Hundred.Tony Marsh/CricpixThere, presuming the tournament goes ahead despite the current uncertainty over what impact the Covid-19 pandemic will have on the English season, Wong will be captained by New Zealand captain Sophie Devine.”Issy Wong is a name that really stands out for me,” Devine says. “I’ve heard a lot of her name thrown around the last year or two. Any bowler that can bowl at some decent clicks is certainly going to catch your eye over a lot of people.”Word of mouth is that she hits the deck hard and hurries batters up, which I think is a really exciting thing in the women’s game.”We’re seeing a lot more of it now – bowlers bowling with real pace. And she’s certainly going to offer something slightly different for us in having that extra pace. She’s obviously a pretty smart cricketer as well, so there’s lots to work with there.”Born in London to English parents – her father has Chinese heritage – Wong acknowledges the cricketing traditions of her mother’s native Yorkshire, but her only real connection with the sport lies with her grandfather “who played a bit when he was younger”.”When I was in trouble and it was a bit awkward, I always used to say, ‘So Grandad, how’s the cricket going?’ to change the topic,” she says. “But apart from that no one in my family really played.”The Wongs moved to Warwickshire when Issy was five, and she started playing the game at an after-school club. One of the coaches suggested she join her local club, which she did around the age of seven and from there she joined Warwickshire.Progressing through the county’s youth pathway, she was part of the Warwickshire women’s side that lifted the county T20 trophy last year, and then she was named in the England Women’s Academy squad.Now in her final year at Shrewsbury School, where she became the first girl to play for the 1st XI in 2019, Wong plans to delay going to university so that she can focus entirely on cricket for a few years “and see where that could take me”.Paul Greetham, Warwickshire’s high-performance manager, describes Wong as a “major success story” of the county age-group system.”From a very early age she had this obvious desire to bowl quicker than anybody else, particularly, and as her batting’s developed, she’s learnt she can hit the ball quite a long way as well, so she’s always had a bit of X-factor about her, and always shown a high level of ambition without coming across as arrogant or cocky,” Greetham says.Tony Marsh/Cricpix”I can remember as a 12- or 13-year-old she was stating that she wanted to be the fastest women’s bowler ever. She’s always had that about her.”The other thing that I think sort of set her apart is that she always seemed very comfortable playing amongst boys, and she wasn’t just satisfied with playing alongside them, she wanted to beat them. I’ve always admired that about her.”A smooth run-up and energetic attack on the crease, combined with a good technical bowling action, lend Wong the speed that has so many people talking about her, but Greetham believes desire plays a big part too.”Not everybody’s got that,” he says. “She still is a developing athlete. I genuinely think she can get close to 80 miles an hour at some point, and I don’t think there has been a female seamer that has reached those heights. She’s got that ambition to do it. “Bowling aside, at this early stage of her career there is still the prospect of Wong developing into an allrounder given the enjoyment she derives from hitting the ball a long way and her lack of inhibition when it comes to hitting in the air.”My batting is, um, hit and miss, I’d say,” Wong says. “When it comes off, it’s, I think the word is ‘entertaining’. I’m certainly more of a bowler, but looking to keep developing my batting and hopefully develop into an allrounder as I get older.”Greetham believes her batting can reach a high level. “I think she’s better than a lower-order batter,” he says. “I think she could develop into definitely a middle-order batter, there’s no two ways about that. She’s got enough about her and she loves batting as well.”Should the English season get underway in some form or other, and the inaugural Hundred goes ahead as planned, Wong will have the opportunity to expand her cricketing education among some of the best in the business.”It will be a big step for her in terms of who she’ll be playing with or against,” Greetham says. “Any 18-year-old would be relatively inexperienced, but the thing that she won’t be is daunted. She’ll just see it as another game of cricket and one that she wants to have an impact upon.”It seems Issy Wong is making something of an impact on the game as a whole already.

Steven Kwan Trade Speculation: Best Landing Spots for Guardians OF in MLB Offseason

Phillips: Ranking the Top 10 MLB Trade Candidates This Offseason

Steven Kwan was a name frequently floated at the 2025 MLB trade deadline, but ultimately he wound up remaining with the Guardians, who made a dramatic late push to reach the postseason.

Now that the offseason is here, it’s likely that the trade rumors surrounding Kwan will re-ignite. The 28-year-old is entering his fifth MLB season, and although he’s under control through the 2027 season, Cleveland may be better off looking to flip him now while his value is still sky high.

It’s not difficult to see why teams would be interested in bringing Kwan aboard this offseason. He’s won the Gold Glove at left field in each of his first four seasons in MLB and is a reliable contact hitter. He would be a huge addition for any team looking to add some stability to the lineup, as well as a steady hand in the outfield.

So, what teams would make sense as possible landing spots for Kwan? Let’s take a look at some fits.

New York Yankees

Kwan is the exact type of player the Yankees have been sorely lacking. New York, as is often the case, led MLB in home runs with 274, 30 more homers than the next best team. For all the power they have in the lineup, they lacked a reliable contact hitter. Yankees batters ranked third in MLB in strikeouts in 2025, and although they were first in OPS (.787), the team was 10th in batting average (.251).

Defense was also a major concern in New York, particularly in the outfield. Jasson Dominguez started the bulk of games at left field, but he had a disastrous year in terms of his defensive production. Dominguez ranked dead last, 33rd of 33 qualified left fielders, in outs above average (-10) and was also last in defensive runs prevented (-9). Plus, with Cody Bellinger potentially leaving in free agency, the need for a reliable defensive outfielder is even more pressing.

Kwan would alleviate the Yankees’ defensive inefficiencies in left field, while also providing them with a consistent hitter who isn’t always swinging for the fences.

Los Angeles Dodgers

The Dodgers and Guardians nearly agreed to a Kwan trade in July, but the deal never came to fruition. Now, fresh off its second consecutive World Series win, L.A. may circle back around in order to get that deal over the finish line.

The two-time All-Star could fill the Dodgers’ void in left field. Michael Conforto was Los Angeles’s primary left fielder in 2025, and he struggled both on offense and defense. Kwan would be a marked improvement over Conforto, in just about every facet. Last year, Kwan slashed .272/.330/.374 with 11 home runs, 56 RBIs and 21 stolen bases. He struck out at a healthy 8.7% clip, the best mark of his career and fourth-best in all of MLB.

In terms of a return, there’s perhaps no team in baseball better equipped to take on a star-caliber player like Kwan. The Dodgers have the best farm system in MLB and would certainly be able to offer Cleveland a suitable return in exchange for the All-Star outfielder.

Blue Jays

The Blue Jays made their somewhat improbable World Series run by putting the ball in play. Toronto assembled a roster of capable hitters, not many of whom will hit the stitches off the ball. The Jays prefer a more old-school approach, getting runners on base and driving them in, rather than relying on the long ball.

It served them well throughout the season and into October, and Kwan would be another great fit for that style of play. Only the Royals struck out less often than Toronto in 2025, and as previously mentioned, Kwan is rarely the victim of a strikeout. He would also provide the Jays with some much-needed baserunning. The Blue Jays ranked 28th in stolen bases last season with a total of 77 steals. Kwan alone swiped 21 bags last year, so his speed on the base paths would certainly address a need in Toronto.

Thierry Henry to succeed Mikel Arteta as Arsenal boss? Gunners legend told he 'deserves' Premier League job after proving his 'unbelievable knowledge'

Former Arsenal forward Thierry Henry has received strong backing to take over the managerial reins at his former club and eventually succeed Mikel Arteta. Ex-Manchester United and France striker Louis Saha believes Henry’s passion for the game and footballing intellect make him a worthy candidate for the top job at the Emirates Stadium.

  • Henry is a club legend at the Emirates
  • Boasts of a sensational record under Arsene Wenger
  • Tipped to take over the reins of Arsenal after Arteta
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Arteta has been at the helm of Arsenal since December 2019, and during his time, he has brought a level of consistency and structure to a club that was struggling to find its identity. The Spaniard delivered an FA Cup in his debut season, offering a glimpse of promise. Since then, Arsenal have emerged as consistent challengers for the Premier League title but have fallen just short, finishing second in the league in each of the past three seasons.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Despite the progress made under Arteta, particularly with the development of young players and a clearly defined style of play, a section of the fanbase remains frustrated by the lack of major trophies. The absence of any cup finals since that 2020 FA Cup win has led some to wonder whether a change in leadership could be the catalyst needed to finally turn potential into silverware.

  • TELL ME MORE

    A hero of the club's most successful modern era, Henry’s contributions as a player are etched into Arsenal folklore. Between 1999 and 2007, and again briefly in 2012, the French striker amassed 377 appearances, scored 228 goals and provided 101 assists. His efforts helped the Gunners to two Premier League titles and three FA Cups, while he came agonisingly close to claiming the Ballon d’Or in 2003, finishing second. It is this legendary status that fuels much of the support for Henry's return, this time as a manager.

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    WHAT SAHA SAID

    Saha, who played alongside Henry for France, passionately defended his former teammate’s managerial potential.

    Speaking to BoyleSports, who offer the latest Premier League odds, Saha said: “I would like to see Thierry Henry manage in the Premier League and I think he deserves it. He loves football so much, and lots of other coaches have got opportunities when he hasn’t.

    “Some guys retire and get big Premier League jobs and I don’t always understand it. I think Thierry should get an opportunity and he has experience now. He has improved as a manager and did really well with the French under 21s, despite not lifting the trophy in the end. His knowledge is unbelievable and it would be great to see him managing Arsenal one day.”

'I'm always ready' – Rehan Ahmed is on the move, and has a World Cup trophy in his sights

The 17-year-old legspinner is one of the players to watch out for as England try to match their title-winning feat from the 1998 Under-19 World Cup

Andrew Miller04-Feb-2022The kids are all right, you know.Amid the existential gloom of England’s Ashes misadventure, and the potshots at a county system that no longer seems capable of coaching a functioning technique into a generation of Test wannabes, there is an alternative narrative taking shape in Antigua this week.One in which a batch of fearless teenagers, raised on the derring-do of the greatest white-ball team in England’s history, and decked out in the same sky-blue shirts in which their heroes won the most thrilling World Cup final of all time, have surged into their own global final with a series of captivating performances.On Saturday, England’s Young Lions take on India in the country’s first appearance in the Under-19 World Cup final since their victory over New Zealand in 1998. And win or lose, if this latest contest comes close to living up to the epic semi-final against Afghanistan on Tuesday, it is safe to assume that more than a few of the combatants will be ready to follow in the footsteps of Graeme Swann, Owais Shah and Rob Key, the three most notable members of that trophy-lifting team from the previous millennium.One or two, however, would already appear to be on the fast track, not least the precocious Leicestershire legspinner Rehan Ahmed, who can loosely claim to have taken his first Test wicket at the age of 11, and whose extraordinary three-wicket over against Afghanistan – in the crunchiest match situation that he can yet have encountered in his young career – became the moment that his team-mates could finally dare to believe.Rehan Ahmed’s three wickets at the death turned the semi-final against Afghanistan around in England’s favour•ICC/Getty Images”Those are the games you live for,” Rehan tells ESPNcricinfo. “I’d much rather have a game like that and win, than an easy win. It was fun to be part of it.”England’s 15-run winning margin does little justice to the raw jeopardy of the contest’s closing overs – pound for pound, it was arguably the most compelling 50-over contest since World Cup final. With four overs remaining, England seemed finally to have settled it with room to spare. Afghanistan needed 43 more runs with four wickets standing, and Rehan for once looked to have played a bit-part role, after an uncharacteristically loose first spell and a solitary wicket in his second.But then, all hell broke loose, and all bets were off. The first ball of James Sales’ next over was skied to point for what seemed like the match-settling wicket, only for the batter to be reprieved by a front-foot no-ball. The resulting free hit skidded away for five no-balls as well, and when a nervous Sales was cracked over long-on for six, 20 runs had been skelped from the over to transform the match situation.Related

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What happened next was a credit to the players’ composure and burgeoning professionalism – but also, you sense, to the never-say-die attributes of the senior team on whom they have modelled their approach to the game. The notion, for instance, of an England captain tossing the ball to his legspinner with 19 runs needed from 12 balls might never have crossed the mind of a previous generation. But that is what Eoin Morgan memorably did in an ODI in Grenada in 2019, when Adil Rashid responded to his captain’s faith with four wickets in five balls, and as Tom Prest had hinted in the build-up to the Under-19 final, this was a tactic he had no qualms about emulating.”At the start, I didn’t bowl as well as I wanted to, but I knew I had an over in there somewhere,” Rehan recalls. “We have so many bowling options but I told Presty, ‘look, I want to bowl at the death; even if they need three runs in the last over, give it to me and I’ll still bowl it’. I told him I’m ready whenever he needs me.”

“I know I’ve got some kind of natural cricket skills, but if I don’t work as hard as I should, then there’s no point in being talented. Even if I’m not the most talented, if I work the hardest, I’ll still be in a good position”

His first ball alone justified the faith. The dangerous Noor Ahmad failed to connect properly with a high-bouncing googly, and James Rew sprinted in from long-on to hold on to a magnificent catch. Three balls later, Izharulhaq Naveed also went for broke, and Sales on the midwicket boundary atoned for his jitters with another hugely composed take. One ball later, it was all but over – another wicket-taking googly, Rehan’s fourth of the innings – ripped into middle stump to dispatch Bilal Sami for a duck. Though Josh Boyden still had to close the match out, Rehan’s three wickets for a single run had put the game way before Afghanistan’s last pair.”If I was to bowl a ball that could save my life, I would just bowl my googly,” he says. “I just love bowling it. I’m trying to bowl it quicker, so that even if they do pick it, they have less time to react to it. It’s a wicket-taking ball. In practice, I’ll focus my legspin against the batters, and then afterwards I just bowl four overs of googlies, top of middle, top of off… I’m very confident in my googly.”

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He is very confident in general – infectiously so – and with ample justification too, given the strides he is already making. But even at the age of 17, Rehan’s game is underpinned by a work ethic that players a decade older would kill to have recognised at such a tender age.”I know I’ve got some kind of natural cricket skills, but if I don’t work as hard as I should, then there’s no point in being talented,” he says. “Even if I’m not the most talented, if I work the hardest, I’ll still be in a good position.”To say he has been on England’s radar for a while would be understating it. In July 2016, Rehan hadn’t even celebrated his 12th birthday when he was spirited down to Lord’s by the MCC head coach Steve Kirby, whose job it was to round up net bowlers to assist preparations ahead of England’s Test series against Pakistan.Rehan Ahmed, just 13 then, in action against Test-class batters at Lord’s•Getty ImagesFinding himself short of adequate legspinners to replicate the methods of Pakistan’s star bowler Yasir Shah, Kirby put out feelers with his scouts on the league scene, including with Gemaal Hussain, his former Gloucestershire team-mate, and one of Rehan’s team-mates at his club in Nottinghamshire, Thoresby Colliery CC.”Gemaal was like, ‘are you ready’?” Rehan recalls. “And I was like, ‘I’m always ready’!”I wasn’t initially meant to bowl to the England boys [but only to the Pakistan players], but I bowled a couple of legspinners to Kirby, then I bowled the googly. He didn’t pick it. And he was like, ‘you can come bowl to the senior guys’.”As much as I tried to stay calm and bowl to them like normal people, I just couldn’t, because I was bowling to Ben Stokes and Alastair Cook and people with Ashes hundreds, and bowling in the same nets as people with five-fors and Test-match wickets. It was crazy.”But you nicked them off, didn’t you?Rehan grins: “Well, yeah, that did happen… yeah.””I bowled Ben Stokes a couple of legspinners and a googly and he snicked off; he wasn’t the happiest so I didn’t celebrate… I just took the ball and walked back to my mark. But when I snicked off Alastair Cook, that was a bit more like it. He wasn’t as bothered. But I didn’t celebrate because he’s probably the best player in Test cricket. So I was just lucky to do that.”The impact that Rehan made was so telling that MCC politely declined any media coverage, rightly suggesting that too much attention at such a young age would be detrimental. But when Rehan was brought back to Lord’s in 2017 for the visit of West Indies, he sensed a new-found respect from the players in his sights.”When I bowled to Pakistan, they didn’t take me seriously and I got a few more wickets against them,” he says. “But West Indies played me like an actual bowler, which was a big difference, and I learnt so much more. They just showed a different standard. When I bowled to Jason Holder, it was just a different class. He was the No. 1 Test allrounder at the time, and it was just crazy.”

“I never had much coaching when I was younger. It was mainly YouTube and a few tips from my dad. But you can take everything as a learning, whether it’s watching someone bowl badly or watching someone bowl well”

Word was spreading beyond the confines of the nets too. “Steve Kirby just dropped it on me during one of the sessions, saying I’m gonna meet Shane Warne,” Rehan recalls. “I thought I was just going to sit down with him and have a chat – that was already amazing – but when he said ‘come on, let’s go have a bowl’, I couldn’t feel my toes!”It is shocking to think that Rehan hadn’t yet turned three when Warne played his last Test in January 2007. But thanks to YouTube, his legend lives on, and in fact, it was Rehan’s hours spent studying Warne’s variations that helped to inspire a diminutive young seamer to first give it a rip.”I never had much coaching when I was younger,” he says. “It was mainly YouTube and a few tips from my dad. But you can take everything as a learning, whether it’s watching someone bowl badly or watching someone bowl well. Even the other day [against Afghanistan], I took my first spell as another learning curve. You never look down on yourself after a couple of bad balls or a bad spell. It’s always about having belief till the end.”But as his game continues to progress, the coaching support around Rehan becomes increasingly valuable. He speaks particularly highly of Richard Dawson, the Young Lions head coach whose name has entered the frame for the interim Test role, and whose methods are sufficiently hands-off to allow him to develop at his own pace.”He’s been a massive help,” Rehan says. “He’s not a big technical coach; he’s more of a feel coach, which I don’t mind. I much prefer it when people tell me how to do stuff, rather than telling me what to do and what not to do… like front leg, front arm, this and that. With Daws, he says if the outcome’s good, you don’t need to worry about anything else. Focus on the outcome – if you’re landing in a good area, your action must be good enough.”Sometimes I’ll force myself to bowl full tosses, just to see if I have control of the ball,” he adds. “In nets, I’ll see if I can hit the top of middle on the full, or bowl a half-tracker. Because if someone’s going well, you want to get them off strike, if he’s whacking the good balls, you need to learn how to give them one, so it’s not just about bowling in one area for every batter.”

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It has been a remarkable journey for Rehan already, and he doesn’t even turn 18 until August. But if the World Cup final marks his first major foray into the limelight, then the events of the past 12 months – including his first season of List A cricket for Leicestershire, and even a call-up to the squad for India’s tour match at Durham last summer – have all added to the sense that he is ready for whatever is coming next.Rehan Ahmed has four-fors in each of his three outings at the Under-19 World Cup so far•ICC via Getty”Joining Leicestershire was probably one of the best decisions that I could have made at the time,” he says, having initially been part of Nottinghamshire’s youth system. “Notts is a massive county – and obviously you never close doors – but I felt at Leicestershire there were more coaches available at more times. When you see Paul Nixon coaching the Under-10s, you’re like, yeah, this is the county for me.”Though he didn’t play in the County Select XI fixture against India, he did more than just gawp at the superstars in his midst. “Just being around the whole Indian team, you see [Virat] Kohli walking up there and Rishabh Pant hitting it, and Rohit Sharma playing – it was just crazy. But then I came on a substitute and I took a catch of [Cheteshwar] Pujara. He just guided it to me at leg slip, and I took the catch, and he’s walking off giving me a death stare, and I’m just smiling because I’ve caught Pujara out.”And it will be India in his sights once more on Saturday, albeit a generation of players that he may yet get a chance to mix with on a more regular basis as their careers progress.”They’re a very good batting side,” he says, after watching Yash Dhull’s century, and 94 from Shaik Rasheed put their semi-final against Australia out of reach. “If they bat first and we try and restrict them to a low score, it could happen… but it doesn’t really matter. They have bowled teams out for 50 before, so they have a decent attack as well.”Either way, Rehan is convinced that the events of England’s semi-final, and the fact that they were forced to dig so deep – first with the bat, as George Bell and Alex Horton transformed their target with an unbeaten 95-run stand, and then with the ball – can only serve as a huge confidence boost to the whole squad.”Belly is one of the best players I’ve seen in pressure situations,” Rehan says. “Even though he’s quite a nervous guy, he always finds a way. When I was batting with Belly, I was like, ‘he’s going to do it again’. If Belly’s there, you never lose hope.”That last game, Horts came out and he still smashed a fifty from No. 8. It just shows that we’ve got batting to the bottom. [Jacob] Bethell is in unbelievable form, Prest is in unbelievable form, [Will] Luxton is batting so well. [James] Rew is doing his own thing. Everyone’s contributing.”It’s just about doing our own skills the best we can, because it’s the biggest game of all our lives right now.”

Jermaine Blackwood writes history in his own way

He spoke about wanting to bat time and make an impact, and did it in style in a historic Test

Nagraj Gollapudi12-Jul-2020Dom Bess mocked him in the first innings. Jermaine Blackwood had charged England’s offspinner on Friday to hit hard into the hands of James Anderson at mid-off. Bess imitated swinging a golf club, as if out of a bunker in the golf course adjacent to Ageas Bowl. Blackwood’s audacity was not to the Englishman’s liking.Blackwood’s inclusion in the team was a clear indication that West Indies were uncertain about their top order, and would need to bench their lead spinner Rahkeem Cornwall, who had taken ten wickets in West Indies’ last Test, in November against Afghanistan. But could Blackwood be trusted?Recently Andy Roberts told Michael Holding (on the latter’s You Tube channel) that it was one thing to score in domestic cricket, where Blackwood emerged as the top run-scorer in the West Indies Championships (which got him into the squad), and another to dominate a famed fast bowling attack like England’s. Roberts was not certain how long Blackwood could curb his natural instinct, to attack.Roger Harper, the West Indies chief selector, though, had said he was impressed by Blackwood’s maturity. Blackwood himself wanted to snap the moniker of being a “ball beater”. He said he knew how to bat a situation and his main aim in England would be to bat time.ALSO READ: Jermaine Blackwood: ‘More determined, more focused after being dropped’He had even trained with the most valuable player in T20 cricket, someone known for keeping his cool with both bat and ball in high-pressure situations in franchise cricket – fellow Jamaican Andre Russell. Yet, the manner in which he charged Bess when West Indies needed him to play time and build an innings, made Bess’s subsequent description of it to host broadcaster Sky Cricket as a “rogue” shot seem apt. Blackwood had lasted 22 balls for his 12 runs.Sunday offered Blackwood another shot at redemption. West Indies had been flattened by one of their own – Jofra Archer, formerly of Barbados now of England. Archer first sent John Campbell to ice his big toe on the right foot with a scorching yorker first ball of the morning. Kraigg Brathwaite and Shamarh Brooks were defeated by pace.Overnight, the Caribbean would have slept with hopes of a historic win. By the time it woke up the dream seemed nearly crushed at 35 for 3 with two sessions left.Blackwood’s innings began somewhat restlessly. On 5 he attempted to cut Bess from close to his body. He had already played 20 balls. The ball jumped on him, but Stokes, at slip, had moved swiftly to his right already, and saw the ball fly past his flailing, outstretched left hand. Blackwood was getting edgy. In the next over, against an over-pitched delivery from Wood, Blackwood would ease to his first boundary, off his 26th delivery.He had started to settle down, in mind and on the pitch. Even as England attacked him and Roston Chase with short deliveries in the second session, both men held firm. They knew the ball was soft. The pitch was flat. The sun was shining. They rotated the strike instead of indulging in fancy strokeplay.Both men were patient, vigilant, and enjoyed their element of luck. On 20, Blackwood gloved a short delivery from Stokes that was climbing on to his hips, but Jos Buttler fumbled, failing to even gather the ball neatly. The umpire erred too, signaling the run a leg bye. Stokes held his head, moaning in disappointment.Jermaine Blackwood and Jason Holder chat in the middle•AFP via Getty ImagesBlackwood did not get distracted. Archer came for his first spell post lunch and fired a fuller length delivery into the Jamaican’s legs. If he missed, it would be plumb. Instead Blackwood flicked his wrist deftly to time a lovely boundary. He was now waiting for the ball instead of showing any rush of blood. He was even presenting the full face of the bat. When Stokes fired up the pace into the high 80s mph and produced a bouncer, Blackwood ducked quietly and then nodded his head as the frustrated England captain uttered a few words.Stokes was not giving up. Next over, he attacked Blackwood in the channel. The batsman poked, but Rory Burns, at short gully could not even spot the ball as it zipped passed even before he could get both hands together for the reverse cup. That was the second time Blackwood had survived a close call in a matter of two deliveries. On the last ball off the previous over, by Archer, Chase had pushed the ball to the left of Zak Crawley at cover and set off. Blackwood did not move as both batsmen found themselves at the same end. Luckily Crawley fumbled, too, allowing Blackwood to finish the run. To his credit, Blackwood did not allow that incident to dent his confidence. Knowing there was no third man, he played an expansive upper cut for four when Archer then banged in a short delivery.To understand the worth of Blackwood’s innings you need to look at how he responded to the situation after Chase left. Blackwood showed the maturity that Harper had witnessed in first-class cricket. He did not let his intent drop as he drove Bess through the covers in the over after Chase was out. Buttler chirped in his ears, “move to 49” to try and distract the Jamaican. But Blackwood was batting in his own bubble now. He would clear the milestone and continue to punish the loose deliveries.England has always brought out the best from Blackwood. In seven matches, including this one, he has scored 605 runs at a more than healthy average of 55, including one century and three half centuries. His control percentage on Sunday was in the 70s, but Blackwood has always got a start in the fourth innings against England, including making 41 in that famous Headingley triumph in 2017.

“If England laughed on Friday, Blackwood walked back to the silent claps of the West Indies camp on Sunday. In normal times, he would have got a standing ovation.”

In the first hour of the final session, Blackwood was aware that England would peg him back with the short stuff, but also attack his stumps. Archer did that to perfection. But Blackwood, by now, was wise to the bowling plan. He remained in his crease but was light footed, ducking and weaving the barrage of short deliveries that were fired at him. Stokes kept ringing in Blackwood’s ears from slip and on following through. Blackwood did not do ego.With the finish line in sight, Stokes fired another short delivery at Blackwood, who arched back to pick an easy four past the empty third man area. He was now five short of a match-winning, and possibly series turning, century.Stokes pitched fuller. As he had done frequently throughout this innings, Blackwood went for the shot. He believed it was there to be hit. It was an airy, punched drive, hit with the full face, but was plucked by Anderson at mid-off. In a game of risk and reward, this time Blackwood paid the price. But it was not a high price to pay like two days back. If England laughed on Friday, Blackwood walked back to the silent claps of the West Indies camp on Sunday. In normal times, he would have got a standing ovation.Back home in the Caribbean, several thousands would have deservedly given him one. West Indies head coach Phil Simmons had asked Blackwood to play time and put pressure on bowlers. Blackwood carried out that task for four hours in his 154-ball stay.He is no more the ball-basher. In a historic Test match played behind closed doors, Blackwood emerged as the unlikely hero. Writing history in his own way.

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