Arsenal considering bid to sign £100k-p/w star, Arteta thinks he’s perfect

Arsenal are considering an "official" offer to sign one club's £100,000-per-week star, with manager Mikel Arteta thinking he's perfect for them.

Arsenal chasing new midfield signing for January

Despite having to operate under some constraints, with Financial Fair Play being a concern and the budget somewhat limited after a lavish summer of spending (Miguel Delaney), Arsenal are still keen to bolster their ranks in January.

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The Gunners are finally becoming active.

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Fabrizio Romano recently claimed Arsenal signing a new right-back is a possibility this transfer window, while other media sources suggest they haven't given up on their chase for a new midfield signing.

Thomas Partey's injury problems have been a thorn in Arteta's side this season, so much so that Arsenal have been linked with the likes of Aston Villa star Douglas Luiz in the build up to January.

The Brazilian looks unattainable, though, given his star presence as Unai Emery's side look to secure a coveted top four Premier League place.

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17

Alternative options are being mooted by sections of the press, with Belgian journalist Amadou Onana claiming this week that Arsenal have even opened talks to sign Everton star Amadou Onana.

According to the reporter, Onana is keen on joining Arteta in January, and this is a transfer which could develop fairly quickly.

Following Tavolieri's claim, a separate report from Belgium has backed up Arsenal's talks for Onana, while sharing their own bit of detail on the potential transfer.

Arsenal plotting "official" Onana bid

Indeed, According to news outlet Nieuwsblad, Arsenal are considering an official bid for Onana and Arteta is personally "very charmed" by him. The Gunners head coach apparently sees him as the "ideal reinforcement" for Arsenal's midfield, given his pace, power, physicality and good feet.

Everton midfielder Amadou Onana.

They back that talks have been opened over the 22-year-old, with Arsenal pushing for Onana's signature and serious about bringing him in. However, the Toffees are believed to be demanding around £52 million to let him go mid-season.

On around £100,000-per-week (SpotRac), Onana is a star player at Everton, having played 16 league games under Sean Dyche as a mainstay of his midfield.

Former Belgium boss Roberto Martinez has also called the 6 foot 3 powerhouse a real one to watch.

“I know that sometimes when we speak about players, it’s very difficult to measure their potential," said Martinez in 2022.

"I think we are talking about a 20-year-old boy, who is probably one of the most talented at that age in European football, and that’s how excited we are in Belgium."

Leeds "working on a deal" to sign Ben White 2.0

It has been a tale of outgoings rather than incomings at Leeds United, with the Championship promotion hopefuls having yet to strengthen their ranks with the close of the window now fast approaching.

The Yorkshire side notably waved goodbye to long-serving full-back, Luke Ayling earlier in January, with the 32-year-old – who had signed from Bristol City back in 2016 – sealing a loan move to Middlesbrough with just six months remaining on his existing deal at Elland Road.

The experienced Englishman was not the only full-back that manager Daniel Farke nudged toward the exit door, with the club also taking the decision to cut short Djed Spence's loan move from Tottenham Hotspur, with the 23-year-old having made just five league starts in the first half of the season.

These notable departures have seemingly heightened the need for Farke and Co to bolster the backline before the window slams shut in just a weeks time, with strength in depth needed if the club are to continue their bid for automatic promotion.

According to recent reports, the Whites could look toward the Premier League to find potential additions this month, having been linked with a loan move for a figure who could emulate the success of a certain Ben White in a Leeds shirt.

Leeds "working on a deal" for Premier League ace

As per journalist Pete O'Rourke, the Elland Road outfit are said to be "working on a deal" to sign Everton defender, Ben Godfrey, with the Englishman potentially in line to make a temporary move to Yorkshire in order to reunite with his former Norwich City boss, Farke.

Everton's Ben Godfrey

In his attached piece for Football Insider, O'Rourke goes on to reveal that talks have already taken place between Leeds and the Toffees regarding an initial loan deal that would include an obligation to buy, with Sean Dyche said to have given the 'green light' regarding the 26-year-old's exit.

As per the same publication, the £75k-per-week centre-back – who moved to Merseyside on a £20m deal back in 2020 – had previously looked set to join Serie A side, Atalanta, prior to that switch collapsing, thus allowing Farke to pounce to snap up his former asset.

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With Liam Cooper out of contract this summer and Charlie Cresswell deemed not "mentally ready" to play for the club, the signing of Godfrey would represent a wise move for Farke this month.

Ben Godfrey could be the next Ben White

Leeds previously reaped the rewards of signing an exciting talent on loan from the Premier League back in 2019, with the aforementioned White arriving from Brighton and Hove Albion to help steer Marcelo Bielsa's side to promotion.

Much like Godfrey – who can operate at centre-back, full-back or in central midfield – the Poole-born star offered real versatility and flexibility to Bielsa's side, albeit while predominantly featuring at centre-back during that 2019/20 campaign.

The 6 foot 1 machine started all 46 Championship games that season, scoring once and providing two assists, with former Leeds man Danny Mills hailing him as "one of the best defenders" in the division at the time.

Such was White's success, the Yorkshire side were even believed to be willing to fork out £25m to sign him in that summer of 2020, yet Brighton's £50m price tag ultimately proved a major stumbling block, as he stayed put at the Amex.

While the current Arsenal man arrived at Elland Road as an emerging talent, unlike the 26-year-old Godfrey, the latter man could still make the most of that drop into the Championship, having made just three appearances in all competitions for his current side to date.

Daniel Farke and Ben Godfrey

A further benefit of Godfrey's arrival would also be his familiarity with Farke, with the German manager previously heaping praise on the then-youngster during their time together at Carrow Road, after converting him from a midfielder to a central defender:

“I have the feeling when he gets used to this position and can have more games to learn the decision-making in the last row because it is different, he has all the ingredients to be an outstanding centre back, world-class."

The 6 foot brute's lack of game time at Goodison Park is a stark indication that he hasn't realised that 'world-class' potential, yet under the guidance of Farke, he could well follow in White's footsteps by making a real name for himself at Leeds.

Ben Godfrey's record under Daniel Farke

Having joined Norwich from his hometown club York City back in 2016, Godfrey went on to make 78 appearances for the club in all competitions over the next four years – 72 of those outings coming during Farke's stint at the helm.

The one-time Shrewsbury Town loanee was particularly impressive during the Canaries' promotion charge in 2018/19 after scoring four goals and providing two assists in 31 second-tier appearances.

31 games (26 starts)

4 goals

2 assists

1.8 tackles & interceptions per game

90% pass accuracy rate

0.3 key passes per game

63% ground duels won

57% total duels won

7.03 avg. match rating

Stats via Sofascore

That was followed by a further 30 league outings the following season following the club's promotion to the Premier League, Godfrey evidently doing enough to catch the of those at Everton, leading to his £20m summer switch.

With that move having since failed to work out, however, the two-cap England international may be in need of a familiar face like Farke to revive his fortunes, with the Leeds boss previously stating that the defender could have a "great, great career".

That familiarity doesn't always necessarily mean that a move will be a success, yet with Godfrey previously playing his part in a Norwich side that claimed automatic promotion under Farke's watch, he could well bring that experience to those at Elland Road.

Luis Reece century gives Derbyshire the edge on opening day

Reece notches first ton in more than a year before bad light, rain halt play

ECB Reporters Network19-May-2019Luis Reece scored his first County Championship century in more than a year as Derbyshire edged the first day of the Division Two match against Glamorgan at Derby.Reece made 111 and Alex Hughes an unbeaten 63 to take Derbyshire to 253 for 5 before a combination of bad light and rain ended play early.It was a mixed day for Glamorgan who summoned Andrew Salter from Wales in the morning to replace Kieran Bull after he was ruled out with a back spasm, although Michael Hogan impressed with figures of 2 for 45 from 16 overs.Billy Godleman’s decision to bat on a cloudy day might have backfired had Glamorgan been able to find a consistent line and length after an excellent opening spell from Hogan. The fast bowler beat the bat several times before a full-length ball trapped Godleman on the crease in the ninth over but Glamorgan’s inability to apply any sustained pressure allowed Reece and Wayne Madsen to rebuild the innings.Daniel Douthwaite, straining to impress on his Championship debut, leaked 31 runs from four overs, and it was only when Hogan returned that Glamorgan were able to exert some control.He tempted Madsen in his 150th first-class match for Derbyshire into a loose drive at the final ball of the morning and Glamorgan were rewarded for a more disciplined approach when Tom Lace edged Lukas Carey to third slip.But Reece and Hughes showed judgement and patience to regain the initiative, helped by a couple of wayward overs from David Lloyd and Hogan with Reece completing his first red-ball hundred since April 2018 from 159 balls.It was a timely return to form for the opener whose previous four Championship innings this season had yielded only 49 runs, but his departure shortly before tea saw another shift in the balance of the day. Douthwaite tempted him into a top-edged pull that was taken at fine leg and Glamorgan had another success to celebrate in the penultimate over of the session.The fourth-wicket stand with Hughes had put on 104 in 22 overs but only four more runs were added before Marnus Labuschagne yorked Harvey Hossain with the last ball of his first over.The Australian all-rounder almost bowled Matt Critchley who was also surprised by a bouncer from the leg-spinner but when the weather closed in, Derbyshire had secured a second batting point with Hughes following his unbeaten century in the previous four-day game at Bristol by completing 3,000 first-class runs for the county.

Hit or Miss: Every USMNT transfer from the 2023-24 European season

GOAL break down a season's worth of transfers, which ones proves successful, and which ones missed the mark…

It was a season of change for many of the U.S. men's national team's most important players. With the Copa America looming, and the 2026 World Cup coming rapidly after that, this season was a big chance for players to take a swing in the transfer market.

Several of the team's top stars made massive moves, giving them the opportunity to further their careers at club level, while others on the outside looking in with the USMNT took big steps of their own in an attempt to battle their way into Gregg Berhalter's Copa America player pool. With the 2022 World Cup firmly in the rearview mirror, players had the freedom to take risks. Some worked out. Others? Not so much.

By and large, most of the USMNT's top stars did quite alright for themselves during the two most recent transfer windows. There were a few, though, that now find themselves at a major crossroads after whiffing on their big swing.

There's still time to fix those misses, and who knows how long this season's hits will keep hitting. Either way, we'll look back at this season as a massive one for the USMNT as several stars made career-altering decisions…

GettyChristian Pulisic (AC Milan)

No doubt about this one; Christian Pulisic was one of the signings of the season not just for the USMNT, but for all of Europe.

The American became a Serie A superstar this season, emerging as one of Italian soccer's most dangerous forwards. He was AC Milan's second-leading goal contributor and looks ready to thrive for years to come after finally putting that Chelsea mess behind him.

Verdict? Hit

AdvertisementGettyGio Reyna (Nottingham Forest)

A nightmare, to say the least. Gio Reyna never got going at Nottingham Forest as he played just 230 minutes during his loan spell. His time at the City Ground couldn't end soon enough, as Reyna now heads back to Borussia Dortmund in no better position than where he started.

What comes next? To be determined, but it's safe to say that Reyna didn't advance his career at all during his short Premier League star.

Verdict? Miss

GettyYunus Musah (AC Milan)

Yunus Musah wasn't always in Milan's starting XI, but the young midfielder got plenty of run. From big starts in the Champions League to important Serie A minutes, Musah saw enough of the field to make this first season a success.

The 21-yar-old still has plenty of developing to do, but he isn't in over his head at San Siro. He'll look to claim a starting spot going forward, but this was a good debut season for a player who is well on his way to the top.

Verdict? Hit

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Getty ImagesMalik Tillman (PSV)

This season was a big test for Malik Tillman, and he passed with flying colors. He proved himself with Rangers last season, but a loan move to PSV from Bayern Munich was a step up, and Tillman thrived, contributing to a combined 20 goals in all competitions.

PSV were quick to make the move permanent, giving Tillman a second season to develop in the Eredivisie before a potential future move up the food chain.

Verdict? Hit

Arsenal legend confirms talks with Mikel Arteta over sensational return

Arsenal legend Santi Cazorla has revealed he has had talks with Mikel Arteta over a fairytale return to the club.

Article continues below

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Cazorla a Gunners legendIn talks with Arteta over returnStill playing for Real OviedoWHAT HAPPENED?

Cazorla is 38 but is still playing and is aiming to win promotion to La Liga with Real Oviedo through the play-offs. They face Eibar in a two-legged semi-final before the big showpiece to decide who goes up. And he has now revealed that the door is open for him to make a sensational return to the Gunners.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Cazorla played for Arsenal between 2012 and 2018, winning the FA Cup twice, and also battled through severe injury setbacks to get back to playing during his time with the Gunners. Of course, during that period, he and Arteta were team-mates.

WHAT CAZORLA SAID

Cazorla told : "I have a very special affection for Arsenal," Cazorla tells. "I spent six wonderful years there and I know how much all the people love me there.

"Of course, I was fortunate to share a dressing room with Mikel Arteta and now he is the manager. We had conversations about that but right now I am not focused on anything other than contributing to this club, Oviedo, and continuing to enjoy football as a player.

"After that, we will see what the future holds for me. It is clear that Arsenal is a club that has always left the door open to me to return. But right now, I have enough on my mind with the play-offs and trying to enjoy the last days of my playing career."

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Oviedo TwitterWHAT NEXT?

Cazorla's focus is solely on winning promotion with Oviedo. After that, a fairytale return to north London may well be on the cards, depending on whether he hangs up his boots or not.

Romano confirms Spurs in for "fantastic" £50m Bentancur partner

Ange Postecoglou has stressed that his Tottenham Hotspur side are done and dusted regarding business in the January transfer window, but a last-gasp bid could yet materialise.

Spurs manager Ange Postecoglou.

The crux of Spurs' problems have been solved through the acquisitions of Radu Dragusin and Timo Werner but there is certainly room for another player, with Fabrizio Romano himself speaking on the possibility of another signing.

Spurs transfer news – deadline day

The esteemed transfer specialist – speaking to GIVEMESPORT – has confirmed that Aston Villa star Jacob Ramsey is a "player of interest" as the transfer window draws to a close.

A few days ago, The Athletic's David Ornstein revealed that Tottenham have joined Bayern Munich and Newcastle United in pressing for the 22-year-old's signature.

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The Villans, who don't want to sell, need to stay compliant with Profit and Sustainability rules and a ballpark figure of £50m has been mooted.

Imagine Jacob Ramsey & Rodrigo Bentancur

Ramsey has spent much of the 2023/24 campaign ebbing and flowing from fitness but is undoubtedly an exciting player and has even been predicted to bloom into a “top-class” Premier League player by pundit Jamie Carragher.

Last year, however, Ramsey grew into his skin as a starring member of Aston Villa's squad and posted six goals and seven assists across 21 starts in the top-flight, as per Sofascore, completing 84% of his passes, averaging 1.2 key passes, 2.0 tackles and 4.6 successful duels per game.

A dynamic and intelligent player, endowed with slick interchangeability in his play, Ramsey ranks among the top 5% of positional peers across Europe's top five leagues over the past year for goals and assists both and the top 3% for progressive carries per 90, as per FBref.

A "fantastic" player, as has been claimed by talent scout Jacek Kulig, Ramsey could flourish at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium but he would need a sturdy bedrock to keep a hold of the engine room and allow him to strut his stuff – luckily, Postecoglou can offer such a partner in Rodrigo Bentancur.

Having finally put 2023's injury issues behind him, Bentancur, aged 26, has started the past four matches in succession and has been vital with his all-encompassing midfield work.

Strengths

Weaknesses

Passing

Discipline

Blocking

Intercepting

Tackling

Source: WhoScored

By protecting the rearguard and allowing Ramsey to wreak havoc between the lines, pushing toward the danger area and combining with the likes of Heung-min Son and James Maddison, Postecoglou could add yet another layer of dynamism to his protean unit.

Bentancur's goalscoring instinct isn't to be sniffed at either – as his six goals last season can attest to – and Ramsey could use his creativity to hand the Uruguayan a steady supply of supplementation when venturing forward.

Indeed, the £75k-per-week ace has been dubbed a "technically immense" player by broadcaster Adam Smith and could use such sublime skills to hand his side an even greater chance of realising success this season and clinching a spot back in the Champions League.

Ravi Bopara ton keeps Essex on top in clash with Nottinghamshire

Stuart Broad takes stunning catch to end Bopara’s innings

Jon Culley at Trent Bridge02-Jul-2019Confidence runs high in this Essex team, who will surely extend their bubbling run to five wins in six matches here against a Nottinghamshire team whose morale is at the other end of the spectrum.Their day had begun with a disappointment of sorts as Nick Browne, who had plans to reset himself and push on for the fourth double-hundred of his career, fell to the fifth ball of Stuart Broad’s opening over without adding to his overnight 163. Pretty much everything else worked out in their favour.A second hundred of the season from Ravi Bopara, who extended his 62 to 135, was the cornerstone for another session and a half of steady accumulation to which all his partners contributed before Ryan ten Doeschate declared with a lead of 306.Psychologically, Nottinghamshire must have felt beaten already, faced with needing to score substantially more than they have managed in all but two of their second innings efforts this summer simply to oblige the Essex openers to pad up again. They can take something, however small, from managing to survive the remaining 46 overs in the day at only five down but the reward is unlikely to be better than a stay of execution.Victory will see Essex sitting on the shoulder of leaders Somerset in the Division One table after a run of five wins in six matches. Their next two matches, before there is another pause in the Championship programme and Twenty20 takes centre stage, are at Chelmsford, which has been their stronghold. If they fancied their title chances before this match, they will be still more bullish now. This was their first win away from home.In his own estimation, Bopara’s innings was not one he felt he would remember particularly, which says something about what he has come to expect of himself. Too many singles was the gist of his summing-up, too often a fielder in the right place. Yet at times he still looked in gorgeously good touch. This was his 31st first-class hundred in his 217th match, in his 18th season. It is four years since he last pulled on an England shirt, a casualty of the last World Cup. Yet having made his Essex debut as a 17-year-old he feels he can anticipate a long extension to his county career.He reached the 31st first-class hundred of his career from 184 balls. In common with much of the Essex innings, it was unhurried, necessarily watchful at times. Broad still posed a threat, even as the hours and minutes ticked by and the workload he was required to carry turned into the toughest pre-Ashes workout he has been put through so far. Bopara was 115 not out when he was beaten twice in the same over by his erstwhile international teammate.Broad can never be faulted for effort in a Nottinghamshire shirt, yet he astonished even seasoned admirers as Bopara’s exhibition ended on 135. Running out of partners, and with the apparent objective of a 300-run lead achieved, Bopara let himself more consciously off the leash, only for his progress to be halted immediately by an outrageous catch by Broad himself.Fielding at long-on, legs surely heavy from the 33 overs he had bowled, Broad eyed the trajectory of a steepling shot as Bopara took a full swing at a delivery from Jake Ball and instinctively set off along the rope, gathering speed as the ball began to descend.Thoughts crossed the mind of quite a few watching that this is an Ashes summer and that his strike-bowling partner in crime had limped off the field at Sedbergh School earlier in the day, giving rise to unwelcome anxiety for the national selectors. No such considerations were in Broad’s mind, clearly. Instead, he flung himself full length with his right arm outstretched and, to general astonishment, came up holding the ball.”It was probably one of the best catches I have seen, especially after he had bowled 30-odd overs,” Bopara said later. “It was an unbelievable catch but as I saw him running around I thought to myself, ‘It’s Broady. If anyone is going to pull it off, he can’ because I’ve seen him take a few one-handed blinders before. So well done to him, it was a great catch – and he bowled really well too.”Broad grinned from ear to ear as his team-mates rushed to mob him, happy to join in a moment or two of light relief.Reality returned quickly though. Having spent 170 overs in the field, of which their newly-signed overseas recruit, the Indian off-spinner R Ashwin, bowled no fewer than 60, they faced another 46 in which to avoid the ignominy of a three-day defeat.They lost Steven Mullaney, who had been unable to bowl because of a sore knee, without chipping anything off the deficit, the captain bowled shouldering arms. Thereafter Chris Nash was leg before to Peter Siddle, Ben Slater was run out after a woeful mix-up and Joe Clarke tickled one down the leg side to be caught behind. Samit Patel was caught at slip. All in all, a familiar story.Ashwin’s personal marathon amounted (jointly) to the most overs bowled in an innings by a Nottinghamshire bowler since Andy Afford clocked up 61 against Surrey here in July 1994. His three wickets were a decent return, in the circumstances. He has been signed as a get-out-of-jail card, in essence, in the hope that he’ll find late summer pitches to his advantage. However many overs he bowls, however, his returns may not be enough.

Ornstein: Ratcliffe wants another Man Utd addition with Man City links

Jim Ratcliffe and Manchester United are going after Newcastle's Dan Ashworth as they seek a new sporting director to work above Erik ten Hag, or indeed whichever manager is in charge next season.

Ashworth has apparently agreed terms with United already and told Newcastle that he's "going", but the Red Devils still need to prise him away from the Magpies, and he faces a significant period of gardening leave.

Dan Ashworth speaking with Steve Cooper.

With CEO Omar Berrada already committed after defecting from local Premier League rivals Manchester City, Ratcliffe is assembling his new hierarchy at Old Trafford. Even before he's been appointed, there are suggestions that Ashworth could look to bring in head of recruitment Sam Jewell from former club Brighton to work alongside him.

Wilcox is United's latest target

Now, another candidate for a behind-the-scenes role has emerged, this time Jason Wilcox at Southampton. The Athletic's David Ornstein reports that the Saints director of football is aware of the active interest from United.

United are yet to approach the Championship club but they are nonetheless hard at work on a deal for a figure who's "extremely highly regarded" in Manchester. The plan is for Wilcox to report to Ashworth as part of a revamped set-up.

Wilcox has made an impressive start at Southampton

Like Berrada, Wilcox used to work at Man City, working his way up from manager of the under-18 team, to head of academy coaching and then academy manager. He left the Etihad at the end of last season to take up his role at St Mary's even as reigning treble winners City made an effort to keep him.

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Wilcox walked into an unenviable situation at Southampton following their relegation from the Premier League, with a raft of high-profile players leaving. However, they have responded well and have a strong chance of immediate promotion, having recently rattled off a 25-game unbeaten run. They're currently third in the table and have a game in hand on second-place Leeds in the automatic promotion places.

Player

Joined

Fee

Romeo Lavia

Chelsea

£55m

Tino Livramento

Newcastle

£33m

James Ward-Prowse

West Ham

£31m

Nathan Tella

Bayer Leverkusen

£21m

Mohammed Salisu

Monaco

£13m

Intelligent recruitment has played a part in their success. Wilcox looked to former club City to sign Taylor Harwood-Bellis on loan and he's played 25 games as part of a backline that's kept nine clean sheets, while Ryan Fraser has chipped in with ten goal contributions since his temporary switch from Newcastle. January loan signings Joe Rothwell and David Brooks and have got off to strong starts after joining from Bournemouth, with the former scoring twice and the latter setting up a couple in his early outings.

The task at United would of course be very different, but decision-makers clearly believe that Wilcox possesses the fundamental skillset needed to thrive at a top-level club too.

They used to laugh when someone from Andhra wanted to play for India – Venugopal Rao revels in retirement

The 37-year old called time on a two-decade long career, which brought 7081 first-class runs at an average of 40.93, with 17 centuries and 30 half-centuries

Shashank Kishore31-Jul-2019Earning Greg Chappell’s praise and being in the same dressing room as his batting idol Sachin Tendulkar are two of Venugopal Rao’s fondest memories as an India cricketer. On Tuesday, the 37-year old middle-order batsman called time on a two-decade long career, which effectively ended in 2017.Over the last two years, while he has continued playing corporate cricket for MRF, retirement has been a constant thought. He took a final call during his World Cup assignment as a commentator for a regional sports channel. A formal announcement came through the Andhra Cricket Association, the team he represented for a majority of 121 first-class matches that brought 7081 runs at an average of 40.93, with 17 centuries and 30 half-centuries.For now, he has no T20 offers in the pipeline. He is looking forward to his future in Telugu commentary and perhaps some coaching too “if something comes up”.”In the early 1990s, they used to laugh whenever someone from Andhra desired to play for India. To be one of only two cricketers from the region (MSK Prasad being the other) to play for the country proved that you can achieve your goal,” Venugopal told ESPNcricinfo. “To come from a fishing village near Visakhapatnam, where my father worked for a modest salary of INR 7000 to support five children, and play was a big thing. All credit to my parents.”It is nearly fourteen years to the day when Venugopal made his India debut. Tendulkar was still recovering from a tennis elbow, Sourav Ganguly had been suspended for an over-rate offence, VVS Laxman was not an automatic pick and MS Dhoni was asked to open the batting. India needed a middle-order batsman and Venugopal was one of two debutants alongside Suresh Raina.”Playing Muttiah Muralitharan on debut was an unforgettable experience,” he said. “As batsmen, we grew up playing spin, but I felt nothing quite prepared you to face him. He was an exceptional bowler. I have fond memories of that game [even though India lost].”

To come from a fishing village near Visakhapatnam, where my father worked for a modest salary of INR 7000 to support five children, and play was a big thing

In the season that preceded his debut, Venugopal announced himself by smashing a career-best 228 not out in a chase of 501 for South Zone against England Lions in the Duleep Trophy. It was the fifth-highest chase in first-class history at the time, against a competent attack featuring Simon Jones, Sajid Mahmood and James Tredwell, all of whom went on to play for England. Yet, Venugopal believes it was a practice match that turned out to be the difference between an India cap and being on the fringes.”Before the Sri Lanka tour, we had a conditioning camp followed by a match between the 30 probables. The seniors played against the second XI. I made a 90 against the seniors, whose bowling included Zaheer Khan, Harbhajan Singh and Irfan Pathan. That knock convinced [then India coach] Greg Chappell. After the game, he had a long chat with me and the next day, I was informed of my India selection for the Sri Lanka tour.”I was very jittery, I always felt as a cricketer growing up, if someone from Tamil Nadu or Mumbai made 120 runs, I had to make 200 to be noticed,” Venugopal said. “Ahead of my India debut, I was a little nervous. Many thoughts ran through my mind. Greg had just taken up as coach, and he told me ‘Look, for me, where you come from doesn’t matter. I know you are good enough to be here, and that is why you are here.’ Those words gave me a lot of belief.”Venugopal was used as a floater between 2005 and 2006, but his career could not quite take off. He played the last of his 16 ODIs in the West Indies in 2006, with his highest of 61 not out coming against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi. He was also India’s first ever super sub. Post his short India career, Venugopal battled injuries and inconsistency to play for Andhra and Gujarat in domestic cricket. He was also part of the IPL title-winning Deccan Chargers in 2009. His last IPL appearance was with Delhi Daredevils in 2014.

Harry Kane can't keep 'playing the Erling Haaland role' – England's unconvincing win over Serbia showed that Gareth Southgate hasn't learned from past mistakes

The Bayern Munich striker cut a frustrated figure in the Three Lions' Euro 2024 opener as the manager got his tactics wrong once again

Gareth Southgate's 100 percent record in major tournament openers in still intact, just about. England sit top of Group C after their 1-0 win over Serbia, and barring an unlikely collapse, should now go on to book a spot in the European Championship knockout stages.

But none of the tournament heavyweights will fear Southgate's side based on Sunday's performance. England looked toothless against Serbia, and only ended up with all three points because Jude Bellingham took it upon himself to carry them over the line.

It was the Real Madrid man's 13th-minute goal that proved to be the difference between the two sides, as he timed his run perfectly to meet a deflected Bukayo Saka cross and power home a bullet header. England were good value for the lead, and played a frenetic pace for the first half-hour of the game, but soon ran out of steam and went into retreat in the second half, which lead to a few tense moments. Serbia could well have snatched a draw had it not been for Jordan Pickford's outstanding reflexes.

It was the kind of safety-first showing England fans have become all too accustomed to in the Southgate era, and there will be more heartbreak on the cards if he doesn't change the habit of lifetime.

Harry Kane especially, won't want to endure another 90 minutes as a spectator. Getting the best out of the Bayern Munich man will be the difference between glory and failure for the Three Lions, but Southgate still doesn't seem to have learned from his past mistakes.

Getty ImagesNot England's Haaland

You could have been forgiven for thinking that Kane wasn't even on the pitch in the first half. The England captain was completely anonymous, as his total touches count of just two underlined, with Southgate asking him to pin the Serbia defence back so that the likes of Bellingham, Saka and Phil Foden could express themselves.

It wasn't until the 77th minute when Kane got a proper sniff, as he out muscled his marker to nod a cross from substitute Jarrod Bowen goalwards, only to see Serbia goalkeeper Predrag Rajkovic brilliantly tip the ball onto the bar. Kane worked hard in more of a target man capacity in the second half, and won a number of fouls to ease some of the pressure on England, but it was a very frustrating evening for the 30-year-old.

"Kane playing the [Erling] Haaland role," former England and Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher wrote on . Much was made of Haaland's lack of involvement in general play for Manchester City last season, and Carragher was baffled to see Kane taking on a similarly isolated role.

"Haaland strikes me as a striker who measures himself solely on the goal return, Kane does not," Carragher added in his Euros column for . "I’m not convinced playing as the old-fashioned battering ram against a physical centre-half is a role he enjoys or wants. He was not playing that way in the Euros opener because of selflessness. It was a compulsion, not a choice. The line-up demanded it from him."

Kane scored found the net 44 times in his debut season at Bayern, but he's more than just a goal-scorer. England need his creative qualities too if they are to go on and live up their billing as pre-tournament favourites.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesVictim of Southgate caution

Kane is a master of dropping deep and playing incisive passes, and those attributes go to waste when he is asked to play on the shoulder of the last defender. England were short on runners against Serbia as a result of Kane being stationed so high up the pitch, with Saka the only one to attempt to get in behind.

The Three Lions captain insisted he was happy to take one for the team, though, while suggesting that Southgate will tweak his line-up for each opponent as the tournament progresses. "I think each game will be different," Kane said to the when quizzed on his subdued display. "Today I stayed a little bit higher because they like to defend man to man, I wanted to keep them deep so Jude and Phil could play in the pockets, Trent [Alexander-Arnold] as well on the right side. Each game will be different, sometimes you will see me drop in and sometimes see me play higher up."

It was a diplomatic answer from Kane that didn't really ring true. Southgate has done a lot of good since taking the England reins in 2016, but few would describe him as a tactically flexible coach; he likes his team to be compact and tends to be reactive rather than proactive with his substitutions.

Southgate doesn't create an environment that is conducive to attacking flair and it wouldn't be a surprise if he picks the same line-up against Denmark on Thursday. He has the keys to the most talented squad in Europe, but the cautious way he uses world-class players like Kane brings to mind the famous quote from Zlatan Ibrahmovic on his time working with Pep Guardiola at Barcelona: "I'm a Ferrari, but you are driving me as if I were a Fiat."

Getty ImagesFix the imbalance

Kane was not the only player stifled by Southgate's system, though, as Foden lined up on the left side in front of Kieran Trippier. The Manchester City magician looked a shadow of his usual self and struggled to build any kind of rapport with Trippier, and consequently, England were far too reliant on Saka over on the opposite flank.

The midfield balance wasn't quite right either, with Alexander-Arnold flattering to deceive in both attack and defence. Even Bellingham, who was England's standout player and ran himself into the ground, struggled to influence proceedings as Serbia assumed control in the latter portion of the game.

Southgate has a difficult task on his hands to accommodate all of England's best attacking players, but he really should be more positive against Denmark. Foden could quite easily start in the middle alongside Bellingham and Declan Rice, with Anthony Gordon providing more natural width on the left.

In a simple 4-4-3 system, Foden can cause more damage floating between the lines with Bellingham on hand as support and Rice sitting in front of the defence, while Kane would have the opportunity to have a far greater impact in general play.

For the time being at least, Southgate should park the Alexander-Arnold midfield experiment. England limped over the line in their first game, and the better teams will tear them apart if significant improvements are not made.

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Getty ImagesFailure to adapt

There were plenty of similarities to draw between England's display against Serbia and their Euro 2020 final defeat to Italy three years ago. On both occasions, Southgate's side burst out of the blocks and seized the initiative, only to rest on their laurels and allow their opponents to gradually take control.

Typically, it took until the 69th minute for Southgate to make a change in Gelsenkirchen, by which point England were already camped in their own half. Alexander-Arnold finally came off for Chelsea's Conor Gallagher, who helped to shore up the midfield before Saka made way for Bowen, while Kobbie Mainoo came on for match-winner Bellingham in the dying minutes.

In other words, 'Mr Conservative' lived up to his nickname. Gordon, Ollie Watkins and Cole Palmer were all left twiddling their thumbs on the bench as Southgate refused to take any risks. Even Kane really should have made way, if for no other reason than to give England a fresh injection of pace in the final third.

“We had control of the game, but we expended a lot of energy in the first half,” Southgate admitted. “We also didn’t keep the ball so well in the second half, we had less control.”

If Southgate could see his players were tiring, why on earth did he wait so long to act? Elite managers always have a Plan B, and even a C,D and E; they can put out fires and adapt to setbacks. Eight years into his tenure, Southgate's in-game management is still letting him down, which doesn't bode well for England's hopes of finally ending almost 60 years of hurt in Germany.

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