England search for answers against impressive world champions

Australia have shown their depth over the first two matches and will be favourites to clinch the series in Durham

Andrew McGlashan23-Sep-2024

England need victory to keep the one-day series alive•Getty Images

Big PictureAustralia have played like world champions, England have played like a team that has only just come together and are trying to figure out their next style of one-day cricket. Which is exactly the position of both sides.What will (or at least should) frustrate Harry Brook and Marcus Trescothick – stand-in captain and coach – is that England have had their opportunity in both games: at Trent Bridge they were 213 for 2 in the 33rd over before falling away to Australia’s collection of spinners and at Headingley they had the visitors 161 for 6 and 221 for 9 before Alex Carey swung the momentum.Related

Could more crushing ODI failure be just what England need?

Carey takes his chance to silence hostile Headingley

In both matches, Australia have found key performances from potentially unlikely sources, firstly with Marnus Labuschagne’s three wickets then Carey’s superb 74 off 67 balls from an opening that only presented itself due to Josh Inglis’ injury.With Australia struck down by illness ahead of Trent Bridge, it always felt as though that was going to prove a big missed opportunity for England and so it proved as Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Glenn Maxwell returned at Headingley and combined to take 7 for 119. With an eye to the future, Aaron Hardie’s performance was also significant with 2 for 26.England have some of the building blocks to make their attempts at rejuvenation a success. Ben Duckett is in excellent form, Jamie Smith is a high-class batter whatever colour ball he is facing, Brydon Carse could yet replicate the Liam Plunkett role – even if Carse says it’s never been spoken about – Adil Rashid remains world-class (although replacing him is a concern) and there is a collection of quicks with genuine pace.However, at the moment they seem unable to quite find their groove, especially with the bat, with Brook’s comments about not caring whether batters are caught attempting to clear the boundary not yet carrying the weight of when Eoin Morgan backed his team’s ultra-aggressive mantra in 2015. There is time yet for the rebuild to come together; Chester-le-Street would be a good place to start to at least ensure this series remains undecided for a few more days.Form guide(last five completed matches, most recent first)
England LLLWL
Australia WWWWW4:07

The Huddle: Smith recalls his battle with Archer in Ashes 2019

In the spotlight: Phil Salt and Steven SmithPhil Salt appears to have the task of playing the ultra-aggressive opener but he hasn’t looked entirely convincing in the first two matches. At Trent Bridge he seemed somewhat perplexed when bowled as he gave himself room against Ben Dwarshuis then at Headingley he was given a working over by Josh Hazlewood. He survived a review for a caught behind and was dropped at slip as he flayed at Hazlewood’s relentless short-of-a-length line around off stump before edging through to Carey. He will, no doubt, be fully backed to continue in the same vein but Australia’s quick bowlers are not easy to smash off their lengths.Back home, Steven Smith is at the centre of the key debate in Australian men’s cricket – or at least as much as these things raise attention during the September football final season – about where he will bat when India arrive for the Test series. For now he’s been at No. 3 and 4 in this series and would no doubt like a decent score. He looked in good touch in the opening game before offering a return catch to Liam Livingstone then was beaten by a superb delivery from Matthew Potts at Headingley. There is a good chance of a second rematch with Jofra Archer which always makes for compelling viewing.Team news: Archer in line for return, Australia hopeful illness has passedArcher would appear likely to slot back in having been given his expected rest at Headingley. Who he replaces will be interesting: Olly Stone bowled with good pace in Leeds, Potts was excellent and Carse adds some batting depth at No. 8. England felt potentially a seamer light in the last game, but without a true pace-bowling allrounder it’s hard to squeeze another option in.England: (possible) 1 Ben Duckett, 2 Phil Salt, 3 Will Jacks, 4 Harry Brook (capt), 5 Jamie Smith (wk), 6 Liam Livingstone, 7 Jacob Bethell, 8 Brydon Carse, 9 Jofra Archer, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Matthew PottsBen Dwarshuis has flown home after picking up a pectoral injury which restricted him to just four overs on debut in Nottingham. However, other than that Australia are hopeful of having a full squad to select from for the first time in the series. If Inglis is fit it creates an interesting call to make after Carey’s success in the last match. Inglis could play as a specialist batter, but there isn’t room for that, either, unless there’s some rotation. The north of England in September may require an extra pace-bowling option with Cameron Green and Sean Abbott available.Australia: (possible) 1 Travis Head, 2 Matthew Short, 3 Mitchell Marsh (capt), 4 Steven Smith, 5 Marnus Labuschagne, 6 Alex Carey (wk), 7 Glenn Maxwell, 8 Aaron Hardie, 9 Mitchell Starc, 10 Josh Hazlewood, 11 Adam ZampaPitch and conditionsTeams were forced to train indoors on Monday but the forecast for game day is a little better, albeit with the chance of showers. To say it will be mild might be stretching things. Overhead conditions could assist the bowlers although pitches at Chester-le-Street are usually pretty good for batting in one-day cricket.Stats and trivia Starc needs one more wicket to move into fourth spot alone in Australia’s ODI tally. He equalled Mitchell Johnson on 239 during the previous game. England have two ODI centuries in the XI which played at Trent Bridge – one apiece for Duckett and Salt – while Australia had 28. England have a 3-1 winning record at Chester-le-Street against Australia. In 2018, Aaron Finch and Shaun Marsh struck centuries but England comfortably chased 311 as Jason Roy made 101 off 83 balls. Only three players from that game will likely appear this time: Carey, Travis Head and Adil RashidQuotes”There have been big changes, new batters, new bowlers. It will take time. It will always take time when it is a rebuilding process. We have got every base covered in terms of bowling, batting, keeping. Everything is there for us.”
Adil Rashid on England’s new era“There’s been a big emphasis on being flexible, being adaptable, there’s so many players who have cemented their spots – Travis at the top, Mitch [Marsh] through the middle then you’ve got Smith, Labuschagne – so it’s just about filling the roles as they pop up, whether it’s with the bat or ball, just being adaptable, jump up and down the order, and be able to contribute wherever possible.”

How to watch Man City vs Wydad AC for free: Club World Cup preview

Manchester City are seeking to retain their FIFA Club World Cup crown this summer as the tournament takes on a new and exciting format, with 32 teams competing to be named football’s best club side.

After much excitement and intrigue, the revamped FIFA Club World Cup has begun, with stars like Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Michael Olise already taking centre stage in the United States.

Pep Guardiola’s side can become the first English team to be crowned the kings of world football on two occassions with a triumph this summer, and only the second side in history to retain the title, after Real Madrid’s three-peat between 2017 and 2019.

How to Watch the FIFA Club World Cup for Free

Everything you need to know about the Club World Cup.

By
Charlie Smith

Jun 13, 2025

The eight-time Premier League champions’ quest to reach the final, which takes place at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on July 13, starts this week on Wednesday June 18 when they take on Wydad AC, who compete in Botola Pro, the top flight of Moroccan football.

City earned their place in this competition via their UEFA Champions League triumph against Inter back in 2023, while Wydad were crowned CAF Champions League winners in 2022 after a heroic 2-0 win against Egyptian side Al-Ahly.

  • Watch the FIFA Club World Cup live and on-demand here

Ahead of what should be an action-packed opening fixture for two of the four sides in Group G, here’s everything you need to know on how to watch – and who to be looking out for – when Wednesday rolls around…

Where to watch Man City vs Wydad at the Club World Cup

63 games featuring the world’s best players all in the space of a month and all in one place, for free! Sound too good to be true? It isn’t.

Indeed, FIFA revealed back in December 2024 that the extended Club World Cup will be available for free globally, with the world’s largest sports streaming platform, DAZN, showcasing every game with unique coverage which will finally settle the debate – who is the best club side in the world?

Available globally in 14 languages, DAZN is the only place to truly celebrate the groundbreaking new tournament, with easy access provided to watch the likes of Lionel Messi, Kylian Mbappe and Jude Bellingham competing on the biggest stage.

If you are already a DAZN subscriber, then the Club World Cup action is already included in your membership. For those who haven’t yet signed up, all you need is an email address to register a free account on the DAZN website, with no hidden costs or added fees. You will then be able to watch every game on the DAZN app via your TV, computer, phone or even on your games console.

Man City vs Wydad AC (Wednesday 18 June – Philadelphia – 5pm UK time, midday local time)

  • FIFA Club World Cup

    Current Champions

    Manchester City

    Founded

    2000

    Most Championships

    Real Madrid (5)

  • DAZN

    Watch all FIFA Club World Cup games free on DAZN. The biggest clubs and the best players in the world compete in the FIFA Club World Cup.

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Man City vs Wydad – Who to look out for

Bouncing back from a challenging campaign, City have strengthened their ranks significantly in 2025, with several new signings included in their Club World Cup squad, like Tijjani Reijnders, Rayan Ait-Nouri and perhaps most excitingly of all Rayan Cherki.

All three new arrivals could make their Man City debuts this week, while we are also likely to be treated to more spectacular showings from Omar Marmoush, who has scored eight goals in 22 games since moving to the Etihad Stadium in January.

Marmoush and Cherki could form an unstoppable attack which of course already includes Norwegian superstar Erling Haaland. The 24 year-old will be looking to continue his incredible scoring rate since moving to England, becoming the fastest player to reach 100 Premier League goal involvements earlier this year, reaching the landmark with 84 goals and 16 assists in just 94 matches.

Manchester City's ErlingHaalandcelebrates scoring their first goal

As for the underdogs, Wydad are the most successful team in Moroccan football history, winning 22 top flight titles, most recently in the 2021-22 campaign, when they also won their version of the Champions League and Cup Winners’ Cup to complete a historic treble.

Based in Casablanca, they had a poor season by their own lofty standards in 2024-25, finishing third in Botola Pro, but that is not to say they cannot pose a problem to their opponents in Group G this summer.

Undoubtedly their biggest threat is Dutch winger Mohamed Rayhi, who came through PSV’s academy and has been capped at youth level by the Netherlands. Rayhi scored 13 times this season and can play on either flank, but is best cutting in from the left onto his dangerous right foot.

A familiar face to MLS fans will be attacking midfielder Cassius Mailula. The South Africa international spent a year with Toronto FC before joining Wydad last summer, scoring five times and providing seven assists in his first campaign in Morocco. He will hope to be the creative force to unlock Man City’s defence on Wednesday.

Who else is in Group G?

Manchester City will fancy themselves as favourites to top Group G, but there is certainly some stern competition from Juventus, the 36-time champions of Italy, who qualified for this competition courtesy of their four-year UEFA ranking.

With two UEFA Champions League titles to their name, Juve have suffered a slight fall from grace in recent years, failing to win a league title since 2020 and finishing fourth in Serie A this season. Led by Serbia striker Dusan Vlahovic and Turkey wonderkid Kenan Yıldız, they can restore themselves as a global footballing superpower with success at the Club World Cup.

Group G Fixtures – Club World Cup

Date

Fixture

Venue – Kick off time (ET/BST)

June 18

Man City vs Wydad AC

Philadelphia – (midday/5pm)

June 18

Al Ain vs Juventus

Washington – (9pm/2am June 19)

June 22

Juventus vs Wydad AC

Philadelphia – (midday/5pm)

June 22

Man City vs Al Ain

Atlanta – (9pm/2am June 23)

June 26

Wydad AC vs Al Ain

Washington – (3pm/8pm)

June 26

Juventus vs Man City

Orlando – (3pm/8pm)

The final place in Group G has been taken by Al Ain FC, who are based in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates and compete in the UAE Pro League. They finished 5th this season but gained access to this summer’s action after winning the 2023–24 AFC Champions League.

Could Wydad kick off the Group G action with one of the biggest upsets of all time? Find out on DAZN!

Worth more than Guehi & Kerkez: Slot has hit gold on Liverpool "superstar"

Liverpool made mincemeat of the Premier League’s finest in 2024/25, winning the title in Arne Slot’s first season at the helm.

Such was their dominance that a late-season sojourn over in the Gulf states was permitted while rivals worked toward positive finishes to the term.

This wasn’t the case for the Anfield side; far from it. However, 2025/26 will bring a new campaign and Liverpool are acting like it, using their pull, heightened by the recent success, to sign Florian Wirtz and Jeremie Frimpong from Bayer Leverkusen, as well as Bournemouth left-back Milos Kerkez.

Liverpool like to pluck exciting talents from their divisional rivals, and this summer is proving no different. Indeed, with a fee agreed with Leverkusen for the £34m sale of Jarell Quansah and Ibrahima Konate’s future uncertain as he enters the final year of his contract, Real Madrid lurking, is it any surprise that sporting director Richard Hughes is hoping to sign Crystal Palace’s Marc Guehi?

Why Liverpool target players like Kerkez & Guehi

Liverpool might have broken the British transfer record this month (should Wirtz’s fixed £100m fee be expanded by the £16m in add-ons), but the Merseysiders tend to walk down a less-beaten path, signing up-and-coming talents from clubs settled lower down the Premier League ladder.

Take Andy Robertson, for example, signed from Hull City for just £10m back in 2017. He’s since solidified his name among the division’s all-time great full-backs.

1.

Trent Alexander-Arnold

259

64

2.

Andy Robertson

308

60

3.

Leighton Baines

420

53

4.

Graeme Le Saux

327

44

5.

Kieran Trippier

204

38

And how could we forget Gini Wijnaldum? The Dutchman was the industrious, metronomic heartbeat which kept Klopp’s system ticking, purloined from Newcastle United after their relegation to the Championship.

Shoutout Xherdan Shaqiri, too.

The point is, Liverpool run their club intelligently, identifying players proven in the Premier League and with plenty of scope for growth. Manchester United, with their Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo, may well have taken a leaf from their rival.

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp

While FSG are in a position to sign superstars like Wirtz, they haven’t lost track of their roots: Kerkez, signed for £40m, is evidence of his, hailing from the south coast, while the 24-year-old Guehi would also align with this tried-and-tested Merseyside method, having been at the centre of transfer rumours in recent days that suggest Liverpool would be willing to pay £50m to snap him up.

Slot will have had his say in identifying such players, looking to bring them to Anfield, but he is benefiting somewhat from the club’s prowess when Klopp was at the helm. Certainly, there’s one star in particular who aligns with the discussed method who should be the barometer from which to judge an addition’s success.

Liverpool have struck gold on Premier League signing

Like Kerkez and Virgil van Dijk before him, Alexis Mac Allister has proved a stunning signing for Liverpool, joining the club from Brighton & Hove Albion in a deal worth £35m two years ago.

Liverpool midfielder Alexis Mac Allister

His first term, the Argentina international, who was instrumental in his nation’s 2022 World Cup triumph, filled in as a holding midfielder after the Anfield side failed in a bid to land Moises Caicedo; since, with Slot in charge, he’s moved back into a more expansive midfield role, winning silverware in both seasons on Merseyside.

One constant, however, has been Mac Allister’s brilliance in the centre of the park. The 26-year-old has only gone from strength to strength after switching the Seagulls for the Liverbird, with pundit Joe Cole even declaring him a “superstar” who “can play anywhere”.

Matches (starts)

33 (31)

35 (30)

Goals

5

5

Assists

5

5

Touches*

74.2

55.8

Pass completion

88%

87%

Big chances created

3

6

Key passes*

1.4

1.3

Dribbles*

0.5

0.5

Ball recoveries*

5.9

4.2

Tackles + interceptions*

4.1

3.3

Ground duels (won)*

5.0 (50%)

4.3 (50%)

Take a look at the table above. What do you see? Curiously, Mac Allister has shifted roles under Slot, less active and frenetic in his play, calmed into a controlling force which channels the flow of the coach’s ball-playing vision.

The South American star perhaps said it best himself: “In terms of the change, perhaps with Jürgen I played as a lone five [holding midfielder]. So, the position was very different. I was much more defensive than anything else.

“So, the system has changed a little, but the main ideas are the same. I think perhaps the big change is in having that patience to have longer periods of possession and dominate games more and obviously that creates more chances.”

Alexis Mac Allister celebrates for Liverpool

It’s certainly showcased through the metrics: as per FBref, Mac Allister ranked among the top 20% of midfielders in the Premier League last year for goal involvements, the top 16% for progressive passes, the top 14% for shot-creating actions and the top 13% for tackles per 90.

He’s the real deal, having ballooned in value and technical quality since making the leap. It’s a rise that Slot and co will no doubt hope Kerkez will follow, and Guehi too, should he sign from Palace this summer.

The fiesty midfielder’s progress at Liverpool has even impelled Real Madrid to come knocking on the door, with reports earlier in the year suggesting Florentino Perez would be willing to fork out some €90m (£76m) for the maestro, who has been earmarked as a potential long-term successor to Luka Modric’s soon-to-be vacant locker at the Santiago Bernabeu.

Naturally, this puts him in a much higher bracket than Kerkez and Guehi, but we must caveat that with a firm ‘for now’, as the ball-playing specialist may yet find his new and potential teammates to be rivalling him on the financial scales down the line.

Liverpool know their stuff, work with a calculated eye to sign up-and-coming Premier League stars and bring them up to elite status, when certain other high-station clubs then come sniffing around for fully developed product.

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Mac Allister is a perfect representation of that, and soon Kerkez and perhaps Guehi will be too.

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Man City now eyeing shock chance to sign £84 million Arsenal contract rebel

As Manchester City go in pursuit of replacing Kevin De Bruyne and finding an alternative option to Bayer Leverkusen’s Florian Wirtz, they’ve reportedly set their sights on a shock move to sign an Arsenal star.

Man City bid farewell to De Bruyne

The crossbar may have denied him a final goal at The Etihad, but Kevin De Bruyne has plenty of other memories to fall back on in a Manchester City shirt. The Belgian bowed out in front of his home fans for the final time in an emotional farewell and undoubtedly has his place among the best players to ever play for the Citizens.

A Champions League winner, a serial Premier League winner, the only player to ever match Thierry Henry’s Premier League assist record and so much more, replacing De Bruyne will be the toughest task that Manchester City have had to complete in the modern era.

Pep Guardiola, like many, was full of praise for the midfielder, telling reporters in his post-match press conference: “Messi is the best I have ever seen because Messi has done it really, really close to the box but Kevin is there. It’s just the stats, the goals, the assists, that he provides to the team in the final third and the talent.

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“That is unique, that is why he has been one of the best players this club has had in the whole history. These are big, big words because he has been a special player.”

With their farewell complete, however, Man City must now search for a replacement and with a deal to sign Wirtz unlikely at this stage, it could be an option far closer to home that emerges.

Man City eyeing shock Nwaneri move

According to The Boot Room, Manchester City are now eyeing the chance to sign Ethan Nwaneri in a shock move from Arsenal. The Hale End graduate, who is valued at £84m, is yet to sign a new deal in North London despite turning 18 years old this season and has, therefore, alerted those at The Etihad as well as Liverpool.

It would be some move from Manchester City, who witnessed Nwaneri’s quality first-hand when he scored Arsenal’s final goal in a 5-1 thrashing of Guardiola’s side earlier this season. For Arsenal, meanwhile, it would be a familiar feeling, having previously seen the likes of Kolo Toure and Samir Nasri ditch them in favour of the Blues.

The talented teenager is certainly not someone that Mikel Arteta will want to lose, especially to a top six rival.

The Spaniard was full of praise for his academy graduate earlier this season, telling reporters after Nwaneri scored his first Champions League goal: “That’s what we love about him – he’s very aggressive. Before that [goal], he had another action where he made the right choice, he went for it.

“He never [looks nervous], he’s so composed, calm and confident in his ability. At 17, scoring a really important goal in the Champions League is not very common.”

Lost the ball 19x: Arsenal must axe 3/10 dud who was worse than Odegaard

And just like that, Arsenal’s season has come to a bitterly disappointing end.

Mikel Arteta’s side started like a house on fire against Paris Saint-Germain last night, but two goals from Fabian Ruiz and Achraf Hakimi were enough to dash their hopes of only a second Champions League final in the club’s history.

Bukayo Saka managed to pull one back late on, but it all proved too much for the visitors, and once again, they came up short when it really mattered and looked utterly bereft of ideas for much of the game.

While it wasn’t a terrible performance from the North Londoners, a few players let themselves down, like Gabriel Martinelli, Martin Odegaard and another who has to be axed this summer.

Arsenal's poorest performers vs PSG

Like the team overall, Odegaard and Martinelli started the game relatively well last night, with the former forcing Gianluigi Donnarumma into an incredible save down low to his left and the latter getting past his markers several times.

However, as the game progressed, both starters began to fade into the background, with The Athletic’s Aaron Catterson-Reid claiming the captain put in a “completely anonymous display in the second half,” and the same could be said about the latter.

It might sound overly harsh, but we aren’t alone in this opinion, as Alex Turk of the Express was particularly scathing of the pair.

He awarded the Norwegian a 4/10 and the Brazilian a 3/10, writing that the former ‘goes missing in these crunch games far too often’ and the latter was both ‘invisible’ and ‘not near the level required.’

It’s a damming assessment of their performances, more than justified by some of their statistics, as, across his 95 minutes of action, the captain amassed a combined expected goal and assists figure of just 0.22, while the former Ituano gem failed in 100% of his crosses and lost 50% of his ground duels.

However, while neither player looked anywhere near their best last night, there is still some clear upside in keeping them for next season, which cannot be said about another of the Gunners’ biggest disappointments from Pairs.

The Arsenal star who has to be axed

While William Saliba and even Mikel Merino looked off the pace last night, neither of them should be moved on in the summer, which cannot be said for Thomas Partey.

The former Atlético Madrid star was absent for the first leg of the tie due to a stupid incident off the ball against Real Madrid, but it would be hard to say he added much of anything to the team in the second leg, bar some rather underwhelming long throws.

For example, while he kept the ball moving fairly well in the first half, he slowly became more and more of a problem in possession, losing the ball at an increasing rate, including for Hakimi’s tie-ending goal late in the second half.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Again, while it sounds harsh, we aren’t alone in being disappointed with Turk awarding him a paltry 3/10 match rating at full-time, while Catterson-Reid simply described his showing as “so so bad.”

Minutes

95′

Touches

61

Completed Passes

31

Crosses (Accurate)

3 (1)

Long Balls (Accurate)

4 (2)

Shots

0

Ground Duels (Won)

7 (4)

Aerial Duels (Won)

2 (0)

Lost Possession

19

Dribbled Past

1

Unsurprisingly, the 31-year-old’s statistics more than back up the scathing reviews of his display, as, in 95 minutes of action, he made just 31 passes, misplaced two of three crosses and 50% of his long balls, failed to have a single shot, lost 100% of his aerial duels, lost the ball a staggering 19 times and was dribbled past once.

It was the sort of showing that makes talk of him being offered a new contract seem utterly ridiculous, as with him turning 32 in the summer, there is no reason to believe he’ll improve, let alone maintain his form into next season.

Ultimately, while the team clearly put in the effort at points last night, there were a few too many players who weren’t at the level, including Partey, who should be thanked for his service in the summer and sent on his way.

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West Brom, Middlesbrough and Burnley in huge race to sign 23-cap attacker

With the end of the campaign in sight, the race for the Championship automatic promotion places and playoff slots is heating up, and excitement is starting to build over who will earn a shot at Premier League stardom.

Promotion hopefuls planning for top flight return

Sheffield United retain a two-point lead at this stage, but know that Leeds United and Burnley lurk directly below and will be on hand to deal a blow to their title aspirations at the first sign of complacency.

Evaluating wider competition, Sunderland, Coventry City, West Bromwich Albion, Middlesbrough and Bristol City are directly contesting each other for a place in the playoffs, creating a tense atmosphere across the division ahead of this weekend’s matches.

How the race looks with eight matches left

1. Sheffield United

83

2. Leeds United

81

3. Burnley

81

4. Sunderland

72

5. Coventry City

59

6. West Bromwich Albion

57

7. Middlesbrough

57

8. Bristol City

57

Undoubtedly, the pick of the round has to be West Brom’s home clash with Sunderland on Saturday lunchtime. The former are desperately clinging to sixth place after a run of only one win in five league games.

Tony Mowbray may even find his side knocked off their perch by Middlesbrough amid the latter’s kick-off against Blackburn Rovers on Friday evening. Either way, there is a lot of tension brewing between divisional rivals desperate for a shot at top-flight football.

On one end of the scale, Burnley would be devastated to miss out on an automatic return at the first time of asking. Meanwhile, clubs such as the Baggies and Boro have strong Premier League pedigree, even if they have spent a few years away from the dizzying heights of England’s most prestigious domestic environment.

Championship Table: Latest standings for the 2024/25 season

Latest English Football League Championship standings 2024/25.

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Intriguingly, the trio mentioned aren’t only battling on the pitch, they are also now fighting for the signature of an international player who could be available for free this summer.

West Brom, Middlesbrough and Burnley want to sign Tom Lawrence

According to The Daily Mail, West Brom are joined by Middlesbrough and Burnley in the hunt to sign Rangers midfielder Tom Lawrence, who is out of contract in Glasgow at the end of the campaign.

Competition is fierce for his signature, with Coventry City, Wrexham, PAOK, Olympiacos and Besiktas also in the mix to tempt the 23-cap Wales international elsewhere on a free transfer.

Having previously played in the Championship with Derby County, Wayne Rooney paid tribute to his “excellent” leadership skills while captain of the Rams under his stewardship.

Nevertheless, the 31-year-old’s injury struggles have limited him to just 25 appearances at Ibrox this term, during which time he registered six goals and two assists across all competitions.

No confirmation has emerged regarding Lawrence’s next steps, creating an opportunity for interested parties to present a vision that could tempt the Wrexham-born man to seek regular football in an alternative environment.

Who will win the race for his signature? It is too soon to say, but achieving promotion to the Premier League would certainly help West Brom, Middlesbrough and Burnley make a compelling case.

'I knew I could do it' – Karan Sharma battles through pain to make it UP's day in Mumbai

Karan retired hurt, saw Uttar Pradesh slide in a tricky chase, found himself back in the middle 28 balls later and starred in a thrilling win

Vishal Dikshit30-Jan-2024On a day of thrillers – Karnataka avoided an upset against Tripura, and Delhi held their nerve opposite Uttarakhand for a seven-run win – the tense finish between Mumbai and Uttar Pradesh at Wankhede Stadium had an additional bit of drama to it.Set a target of 195 in 83 overs on the last day, UP slipped from 120 for 2 to 128 for 4. The big blow came when their set batter Karan Sharma had to retire hurt with UP 50 away. He had a wrist niggle that got worse as he steered the chase and became unbearable enough to force him off the field. Promising opener Aryan Juyal had already been dismissed for 76 and captain Nitish Rana, who had counter-attacked with a century in the first innings, was also back for 6. Their hopes were now pinned on the experienced Akshdeep Nath and the dashing 20-year-old Sameer Rizvi, who had fetched INR 8.40 crore in the recent IPL auction for his hard hitting.Just eight balls after Karan had walked off, Rizvi danced down the ground against offspinner Tanush Kotian while trying to replicate the three sixes he had smashed in the first innings, but this time he couldn’t clear long-on. Now 147 for 5, a player injured, 48 more to get, UP captain Rana turned to Karan in the dressing room to ask, “ (will you go back)?” Karan was in extreme pain, so he took a strong painkilling injection. Its effect had not even started to show when Kotian trapped Shivam Sharma lbw from around the wicket.Related

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  • Ranji round four: Rana stars as UP stun Mumbai; Himmat the hero for Delhi

Mumbai were on the prowl now, at home in more ways than one. Shams Mulani, their ace spinner and top wicket-taker for the last three seasons, was on from the other end. There was a silly point, a fine first slip, and a fly second slip under the helmet and on his knees for new batter Bhuvneshwar Kumar. After blocking a flighted ball, Bhuvneshwar went back to cut a shorter one from Mulani, but it hurried on to trap him lbw. UP 154 for 7, still 41 to get.”When I went off, Nitish told me that I had to go back to bat. ‘ (you have to go no matter what)’, he told me,” Karan recalled. “He motivated me a lot to go back. When the captain says that, as a player you know you have to do it for the team. When I felt a little better and was able to defend – I was watching the ball well – I knew I could do it.”Karan had led UP for two seasons until Rana took over after moving from Delhi ahead of this season. He knew a thing or two about leading from the front in dire situations. A year-and-a-half ago, Karan had steered his team to victory with an unbeaten 93 while chasing 213 to knock Karnataka out of the Ranji Trophy and seal a semi-final berth for his team. Not long before that, he had starred with a brisk 116 off 144 in a daunting chase of 357 against Maharashtra.On Monday, Karan found himself back in the middle with a strapped wrist 28 balls after he had retired hurt. Tea was about ten minutes away and he thought he could stick it out before a 20-minute break would allow him to recover further. In the 106 balls before tea, UP scored only 29 and lost three wickets, leaving them with 35 to get in the last session with three wickets in hand. There were no clear favourites.

“These points are very important and in some earlier games we couldn’t win when we thought we could. Initially, we didn’t think this match could go outright but the way things unfolded, we got those points”Karan Sharma

Nath and Karan took it easy. Karan could hardly drive anyway and was losing the grip on his bat because of the pain. “There was so much restriction because of pain, defence was my only option,” Karan said. “If my top hand is not moving, how was I going to play with the bottom hand? I could barely grip the bat. Aksh was optimistic that we would chase it down, whether with singles or by taking it deep. I thought I would play the anchor and just stand at one end because I had faith in my defence.”UP progressed slowly before Nath whipped a rare short delivery from Mulani to the midwicket fence to break the boundary drought of 86 balls. Only 20 more to get, but what’s a last-session finish without another twist?Kotian continued from around the wicket with a short leg and leg slip, and got one to spin past Nath’s inside edge and hit him just under the knee-roll. It had pitched on leg, and turned in to hit Nath. The point of contact might have been just outside leg and it might have missed the stumps, but the umpire raised his finger to spark off a fresh round of Mumbai celebrations. Nath stood there as if somebody had poured cement all over him, with a stare that could have sliced the umpire into two. After a few seconds that felt like an eternity, he finally dragged himself towards the dugout.With 19 to get and two wickets left, Karan started to farm the strike by taking singles on the fifth or sixth balls. Three runs later, he mustered some courage, gripped the bat handle as tight as he could, and deposited Kotian for two sixes over midwicket despite a deep midwicket and a wide long-on waiting for exactly that shot.Tanush Kotian picked up a five-for in the second innings, but in vain•ESPNcricinfo Ltd”When [Nath] got out I told myself that I had to do it,” Karan said. “I held the bat tight, didn’t leave any scope for leaving it loose, and the situation was such that I had to take the risk. It was better I took that chance than leave it for the other batter. Luckily, their offspinner was bowling and I backed myself to middle it no matter what. I told myself no half-measures.”UP were on top now with just four to win. On the second ball of the 70th over, Karan pushed the ball to long-on and wanted a couple but had to settle for one. No. 10 Aaqib Khan managed to survive a couple of ball from Kotian before getting a thick outside edge past slip almost to the deep third boundary, giving the batters enough time to take three and seal the win.The harshness of the sun had started to fade a bit, the shadows had started getting longer, but the light was finally shining bright on UP’s campaign that had suffered enough in two of their first three rounds because of fog, bad light and the biting cold of north India.”These six points are very crucial because fog and bad light make things very tough at home,” Karan said after UP’s first win of the season that took them to fifth in the Group B standings. “These points are very important and in some earlier games we couldn’t win when we thought we could. Initially we didn’t think this match could go outright but the way things unfolded, we got those points.”It was only the third outright win for UP against Mumbai in Ranji Trophy history (after 2005-06 and 1997-98). It revived UP’s campaign, ended Mumbai’s winning streak after three games, and it might have just been the best finish of the day.

Rory Burns readjusts to life on England fringes after putting Ashes struggles 'to bed'

Surrey captain adamant that indignity of Brisbane first-baller is behind him ahead of 2022 summer

Andrew Miller02-Apr-2022You get the impression from talking to Rory Burns that he’s not a big fan of communication. He speaks rather as he bats, with a palpable nervous energy as he weighs up the threat of each incoming question, before an under-stated response that can, with the right timing, be thoroughly emphatic all the same.Since the retirement of Alastair Cook in 2018, no England opener has played more times, scored more runs, nor averaged higher than Burns’ mark of 30.32 over a sustained run in the role. And yet, twice in as many winters, Burns has fronted up for Surrey’s pre-season media day cast in the role of the outsider.In 2021, he had lost his place on a tough tour of India, ground down by the Covid bubble lifestyle after missing the Sri Lanka tour for the birth of his daughter Cora; and now here he is in 2022 as well, back to square one once more after becoming the unwitting poster-boy of another calamitous Ashes campaign.”Did I visualise getting a first baller? No I didn’t,” Burns says, when asked – not for the last time, you suspect – to rewind to that gruesome first morning in Brisbane, as he toppled across his crease to Mitchell Starc’s full-length swinger, and was bowled round his legs by the very first ball of the series.It is already a moment immortalised in Ashes legend – alongside Nasser Hussain’s infamous bowl-first call in 2002-03 and Steve Harmison’s wide four years later. And while Andrew Strauss’s own first-over duck in 2010-11 stands as lasting proof that one early setback need not define a tour, it’s hard to argue that England’s 2021-22 challenge ever recovered its poise from that moment.Only a tenth-wicket stand in Sydney stood between Australia and their third 5-0 whitewash in five home campaigns, and Burns himself certainly didn’t recover. After a top score of 34 in the second innings at Adelaide, he was dropped for the Sydney and Melbourne Tests, before a belated return to the front line after Haseeb Hameed’s own failings had become too pronounced to ignore. Two more insubstantial scores ensued in Hobart – 0 and 26 – and that was it for Burns’ winter, as he was axed for the subsequent tour of the Caribbean with Durham’s Alex Lees handed the role of nuggetty senior pro.Burns was bowled round his legs by the first ball of the 2021-22 Ashes•Getty Images”It’s obviously not my decision,” Burns says. “It’s out of my hands so I had to deal with what I’d been dealt. What can I do now? What Jimmy [Anderson] said resonated with me the other day. I’m still looking to improve, still looking to get better. I think that I can. I’ll go again and try to score runs.”In such sliding-doors circumstances, it’s easy to imagine how Burns could have spent his every waking moment since Brisbane chastising himself for his error, and wishing he could have his time over again. But though he admits the immediate aftermath was tricky – particularly given how his quirky technique lent itself to high-level dissection in the Australian media – he’s adamant that the indignities are behind him and he’s ready to go again.”I’ve kind of put it to bed, to be honest,” he says. “It takes a little bit of time, a little bit of reflection. Taking stock of your thoughts and feelings as it goes along. With Covid and bubbles in recent times it’s been quite intense, and the Ashes was probably the most intense process we’ve been through. It’s quite a big hype train that everyone maybe gets a little too involved in at times. It can be difficult.”But I’ve got a little one at home, I’ve got my wife. They give me perspective,” he adds. “They were with me throughout the Ashes. It was nice to get away at times. I always like getting away from cricket. I had some good time off when I came home, lots of family time. I reassessed my game and tried to work on various things from a technical aspect, just little tweaks I could make to then go again.”However, if Burns’ first-baller was the start (and finish) of the Ashes proper, then a full appraisal of England’s awful tour needs also to take in the hugely restrictive circumstances of their series build-up. As if the strictures of lockdown life weren’t complicated enough, the ceaseless rain in Queensland ensured that the whole team went into that first Test with perhaps the least satisfactory preparation in Ashes history, just one day of middle practice possible in their scheduled warm-up fixture.”The odds weren’t in our favour, were they? It was always going to be an uphill battle with that prep that we did get. The run-in was suboptimal. Getting used to conditions was suboptimal. That led to its starting the series on the back foot.”It led also, Burns admits, to a fatal lack of alignment at the crease for when the big Brisbane moment came. “To be honest, in the limited practices we did have I was feeling pretty good,” he says. “Certainly technically, looking back on it, it probably crept in slightly. Preferably if that had been flagged marginally earlier that could have helped. It wasn’t.Burns was a Championship-winning captain with Surrey in 2018•Getty Images”Like I say, I’ve put it to bed, put some tweaks in. You trust in the people you trust and go again. It was tough, it proved to be tough. But I’ve rationalised it by talking to people I trust, and then getting back on the wagon.”Getting back into the England team, however, might yet prove to be a tougher challenge. Despite the encouragement of Gareth Batty, Surrey’s new head coach, who insists Burns is still the “best opener in the country”, the fall-out of the Ashes loss seems to have focussed as heavily on the dressing-room atmosphere as on the proficiency of those within it.And in that respect, the implication – encouraged by Joe Root’s and Paul Collingwood’s repeated emphasis on the renewed positive energy during the Caribbean tour – is that the mood within the squad has been improved by the removal of certain senior individuals who perhaps did not give back enough when the going got tough in Australia.”I don’t think so. That would be unfair,” Burns insists. “The talk is more on the fresh faces in the squad and they had a chance to put their own stamp on it. It would be unfair to say that.”Nevertheless, were it not for his axing, Burns might otherwise be a strong contender to take over as captain from the beleaguered Root. At the age of 31, he’s the right age for higher honours, and as Surrey’s captain in their Championship-winning season in 2018, he’s one of the very few England players of recent vintage with genuine experience of leadership outside of the international game.”I think I have to get back in the side first,” Burns says. “I’m not sure you pick your captain from outside the best XI in the country. Quite frankly Rooty is the man in position and he’s obviously doing very well with the bat and it hasn’t compromised his ability to bat. So I’ll let you draw on that what you want to draw on. I think you pick your captain from your best XI.”Related

Gough, Gibson look to the future after Yorkshire's winter of discontent

Stewart calls on England selectors to keep faith as he defends county 'breeding ground'

The opening act: Rory Burns is off, way off

Hameed: 'I always find a way back from rock bottom'

Root rested for opening rounds of County Championship

Burns’ immediate focus is on the start of Surrey’s season. First up is a trip to Edgbaston on April 7, before back-to-back home games against Hampshire and Somerset – meaning three consecutive fixtures on some of the truer surfaces on the county circuit, and potentially the chance to build up a body of work that gets his name firmly back into the frame before New Zealand’s arrival for the Test summer in June.”I don’t want to give too much away because there are county attacks looming around the corner,” he says. “But I just think, for me, those first 20 balls, [I will] tighten up fractionally. And then, as I’ve proved, once I get into an innings I generally go quite alright. So for me, [I have to] look at my starts, get in and build.”It won’t be the same [as Australia] here in April in the County Championship when things tend to be greener and slower. It’s all about adapting. That’s batting in a nutshell. Wherever you go, whichever attack you face, you have to adapt to what’s in front of you. It will be no different come next week.”Rarely has the county season begun under quite such a level of scrutiny, however, with England’s winless winter highlighting the growing gulf between the standards on England’s domestic circuit and the levels required at the very top. And it wasn’t only Burns who struggled with the step-up in Australia – his Surrey team-mate, Ollie Pope, was similarly exposed, even though his current average at the Kia Oval, 99.94, implies he could not be doing more to meet the standards to which he has been exposed.”I’m not really drawing mine and Ollie’s name into that,” Burns said. “The potential failings of county cricket are quite obvious. [In Test cricket] you face attacks of Starc, Cummins, Hazlewood, Lyon. You don’t get too many attacks that come at you like that, day in and day out, where half a mistake is exaggerated to a definite mistake. And potentially the system doesn’t fit that with the volume of cricket we now play across four formats. You’re basically struggling to get what you need in six months to produce your best teams for England.”Despite Burns’ gruff insistence that he’s ready to go again, Batty is conscious that his captain is potentially more wounded by his experiences this winter that he is willing to let on.”I don’t worry about him putting the best case across, but I worry about who might select the [England] team,” Batty says. “But that is not our concern. He’s our leader. He is our captain. He has done a wonderful job over a period of time. Now we need to give him a bit back.”He needs us to take care of him for a moment, because it is difficult. It doesn’t matter who you are, when you get left out by England and come back. So we need to make his life easier, show that we’ve got him – because we definitely do – and hopefully create an environment for him and for the rest of the boys where he can thrive, and shoot for the stars.”And for the time being, all Burns can do to rebuild that bruised reputation is to get stuck in with Surrey, and feed off the optimism that tends to accompany the early weeks of a new season.”Look around the dressing room and I feel like I’ve got about 10 years older,” he says. “I probably have because I’ve been around here so long. There are a lot of young guys, a lot of learning there. That is for us as senior players to take on, share the knowledge around the room and pass it on.”

Assista aos melhores momentos de Flamengo 2 x 1 São Paulo, pelo Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

O Flamengo derrotou o São Paulo por 2 a 1, pela 2ª rodada do Brasileiro, no Maracanã, nesta quarta-feira (17). Luiz Araújo e De La Cruz marcaram os gols da equipe de Tite, enquanto Ferreira descontou para os visitantes. Assista aos melhores momentos da partida no vídeo acima.

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Por onde anda Lopes Tigrão, ex-meia do Palmeiras?

MatériaMais NotíciasVer Resumo da matéria por IALopes Tigrão foi artilheiro da Copa Libertadores de 2001 pelo Palmeiras e teve uma trajetória marcada por oscilações e polêmicas.Após passar por diversos clubes brasileiros, encontrou estabilidade no futebol japonês, onde se destacou em duas equipes.Hoje, ele se dedica a atividades de formação e consultoria no futebol, mantendo vínculos com o Volta Redonda.Resumo supervisionado pelo jornalista!

Lopes Tigrão está entre os personagens mais curiosos e intensos do futebol brasileiro dos anos 2000. Com talento, chute forte, presença física e personalidade marcante, viveu seus melhores momentos no Palmeiras, onde se tornou artilheiro da Copa Libertadores de 2001 e rapidamente ganhou projeção nacional. O jogador, que começou no Volta Redonda e acumulou passagens por diversos clubes brasileiros, também teve um período no futebol japonês, onde reencontrou estabilidade e bom rendimento. O Lance! te conta por onde anda Lopes Tigrão?

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Sua carreira, no entanto, foi marcada por oscilações. Problemas extracampo, lesões e mudanças constantes de ambiente impediram que Tigrão atingisse um patamar ainda mais alto. Após deixar o Palmeiras, passou a circular entre grandes clubes e equipes de médio porte, vivendo fases breves e buscando retomar o protagonismo que teve no início dos anos 2000.

Mesmo assim, sua trajetória não se resume aos altos e baixos. No Japão, por exemplo, Lopes encontrou espaço para mostrar regularidade, transformando-se em peça importante em duas equipes distintas e desempenhando papel relevante no processo de consolidação do futebol japonês como mercado atrativo para brasileiros. Em seus últimos anos de carreira, voltou ao Volta Redonda para encerrar o ciclo onde tudo começou.

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Hoje, distante dos holofotes, Lopes Tigrão vive uma rotina completamente diferente, marcada por estudos, projetos pessoais e participações pontuais no mundo esportivo. A seguir, revisitamos seu caminho e revelamos onde ele está agora.

Revelado no Volta Redonda

Nascido em Volta Redonda e formado no modesto Palmeiras de Pinheiral, Lopes rapidamente chamou atenção pelo vigor físico e pela capacidade de chegar à área como elemento surpresa. No início da carreira, assumiu a função de meia ofensivo com forte presença no ataque, característica que o ajudaria a se destacar nacionalmente.

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Quando surgiu no Volta Redonda, tornou-se rapidamente um dos principais jogadores da equipe. O clube vislumbrou uma oportunidade rara: vender um atleta jovem para um gigante nacional. Em 2000, o Palmeiras fechou sua contratação na negociação mais cara da história do Voltaço até então.

O impacto de Lopes no Palmeiras

O início de Tigrão no Palmeiras foi turbulento, marcado por um caso de doping. Mesmo assim, o atleta conseguiu dar a volta por cima e viver o período mais produtivo de sua carreira. Em 2001, atingiu nível de excelência, tornando-se o artilheiro da Copa Libertadores daquela edição, com 9 gols, e peça fundamental na campanha alviverde.

No auge, Tigrão chegou a ser observado por clubes europeus e cogitado para a Copa do Mundo de 2002. Seus números impressionaram: 17 gols em 34 partidas naquela temporada. Porém, uma grave lesão no joelho contra o ASA, no início de 2002, interrompeu seu momento mais brilhante.

O pós-Palmeiras e o rótulo de “Andarilho do Futebol”

Após o rebaixamento do Palmeiras em 2002, Lopes deixou o clube e começou uma fase marcada por constantes transferências. Vestiu camisas importantes como Flamengo, Fluminense, Santos, Juventude e Cruzeiro, mas raramente permaneceu por muito tempo em uma mesma equipe.

A irregularidade de desempenho e episódios extracampo impediram uma continuidade maior. O jogador já chegou a ser considerado “incontrolável” por dirigentes e treinadores, embora permanecesse tecnicamente acima da média.

A passagem de Lopes pelo futebol japonês

No Japão, entre 2006 e 2007, encontrou um ambiente mais estável. Jogou por Vegalta Sendai e Yokohama F. Marinos, tornando-se peça relevante em ambas as equipes. O estilo direto do futebol japonês favoreceu suas características: força, arranque e finalização.

O período asiático representou uma das fases mais equilibradas e profissionais de sua trajetória, marcando um ponto de retomada após tantos períodos de instabilidade no Brasil.

Retorno e fim da carreira

Após voltar do Japão, o meia-atacante passou por Atlético Mineiro, Monte Azul, Ceará, Juventude e novamente pelo Volta Redonda. Em 2016, anunciou oficialmente sua aposentadoria, encerrando um ciclo de quase duas décadas como jogador profissional.

Por onde anda Lopes Tigrão?

Atualmente, Lopes (@lopestigrao) vive uma rotina distante da exposição que tinha nos anos 2000. Hoje, está envolvido em atividades ligadas à formação, à educação e ao futebol, com foco em desenvolvimento pessoal e profissional. Mantém presença ativa em redes sociais e investe em capacitações voltadas para direito esportivo, coaching, mentoring e treinamento aplicado ao futebol.

Lopes também atua em projetos de consultoria, oferecendo acompanhamento técnico e comportamental para jovens jogadores. Busca unir sua experiência prática com estudos recentes, aproximando-se de um perfil mais acadêmico e formador. Em entrevistas recentes, afirma que encontrou nessa área uma nova motivação após o fim da carreira.

Ainda mantém vínculos com o Volta Redonda e participa de eventos esportivos e encontros com torcedores. É comum vê-lo envolvido em iniciativas locais, além de participações pontuais em partidas festivas. Sua reinserção no ambiente esportivo, agora como mentor e educador, marca uma transição significativa e mais estável que a fase final de sua carreira como atleta.

Clubes na carreira de LopesVolta RedondaPalmeirasFlamengoFluminenseSantosJuventudeCruzeiroVegalta SendaiYokohama F. MarinosAtlético MineiroMonte AzulCearáMetropolitanoSão José

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