Nottingham Forest move to sign £17m star with 2 goals in Champions League

Nottingham Forest are making a strong move to sign an international forward with Champions League experience.

Nottingham Forest back in Champions League spots after 2-1 win at Tottenham

Nuno Espirito Santo’s side showed their top four credentials by winning 2-1 at Spurs on Monday evening. Forest went into the meeting at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium outside the top five Champions League spots after wins for Manchester City and Chelsea over the weekend.

However, early goals from Elliot Anderson and Chris Wood settled the nerves and ensured the Reds would go back up into the Premier League top four.

Talking after the win at Tottenham, Espirito Santo said: “We have a clear way to play and when we found ourselves in our identity. We had goals [against Tottenham] but also they created chances in the second half and we had to hold on to what we had. We’ve been able this season to compete well and fight for every ball.”

Attention now turns to the weekend and an FA Cup semi-final at Wembley against Pep Guardiola’s Man City side as Forest look to add silverware to what has been an outstanding season.

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Away from the pitch, owner Evangelos Marinakis looks to be making preparations ahead of the summer transfer window where Forest could be readying themselves for Champions League football.

Now, Forest are moving behind the scenes to sign a player who has Champions League experience.

Nottingham Forest making strong moves to sign Alexis Saelemaekers

According to reports in Italy, relayed by Sport Witness, Nottingham Forest are interested in signing Alexis Saelemaekers from AC Milan.

The 25-year-old is currently on loan at AS Roma, however Forest are making a strong move to sign Saelemaekers, with Milan wanting €20m (£17m) to sell for good. Should Forest qualify for the Champions League, the report states that it could be crucial in a move for Saelemaekers.

A Belgium international, Saelemaekers can play as a right or left winger and is valued at €20m by Transfermarkt. Interestingly, the attacker also shares the same agency as Forest right-back Neco Williams and has actually scored twice in the Champions League in his career.

Alex Grimaldo

Bayer Leverkusen

Dejan Kulusevski

Tottenham

Kenan Yildiz

Juventus

Jacob Ramsey

Aston Villa

Roma boss Claudio Ranieri hailed the Forest target earlier in the season, saying: “Saelemaekers is an international player, a good player who can play different roles. I needed him on this wing to execute certain plays, and he is doing well in interpreting what I want from him.

“So, this is my comment: he is fine like this. But this does not mean that it will always be like this, because, from game to game, coaches make choices, maybe change their minds and evaluate other solutions.”

Now, it looks as if a move to the City Ground could be one to keep an eye on over the coming months, providing things go to plan for Forest in the final stages of the season.

WATCH: USMNT's Mark McKenzie receives emotional messages of support from family ahead of 2025 Gold Cup

The USMNT defender has been buoyed by heartfelt messages from his family as he prepares for the 2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup

  • Family support provides emotional boost amid tournament pressure
  • Defender enters competition following successful first season with Toulouse in France
  • Part of the 26-man squad that Pochettino has taken to the Gold Cup
  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT HAPPENED

    Mark McKenzie received a series of touching video messages from family members expressing their pride and support ahead of the USMNT's 2025 Gold Cup campaign. The 26-year-old defender, who completed his first season with French club Toulouse after transferring from Belgian side Genk, shared that the emotional messages arrived just as the team began their tournament preparations, providing him with additional motivation to perform at his best in the tournament.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    McKenzie enters the Gold Cup as one of the more experienced international defenders on the USMNT roster, having been part of two CONCACAF Nations League championship teams in 2021 and 2024. He, alongside Chris Richards and several others, will be hoping to become key figures as the USMNT battles out to win the Gold Cup on home soil.

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT’S NEXT?

    The USMNT will kick off their 2025 Gold Cup against Trinidad and Tobago on June 14 before facing Saudi Arabia on June 20 and then they’ll face Haiti in their final group stage game on June 22.

فيديو | في الوقت القاتل.. الاتحاد يهزم النجمة ويواصل صدارة الدوري السعودي

حقق فريق الاتحاد، فوزًا قاتلًا على نظيره النجمة، بهدف دون رد، في المباراة التي أقيمت بينهما اليوم السبت، ضمن منافسات بطولة الدوري السعودي “دوري روشن”.

وتواجه فريقا الاتحاد والنجمة، في الجولة الثالثة من عمر مباريات الدوري السعودي، ذلك على ملعب الملك عبد الله ببريدة.

وسجل هدف الفوز لفريق الاتحاد، لاعبه الفرنسي نجولو كانتي، في الدقيقة الأخيرة من الوقت بدل الضائع للمباراة، وتحديدًا في 90+6.

وجاء هدف كانتي، بتسديدة قوية من داخل منطقة الجزاء، ليحصد لفريقه 3 نقاط ثمينة ويواصل انتصارته في الدوري السعودي للموسم الحالي. هدف فوز الاتحاد القاتل على النجمة في الدوري السعودي

وبتلك النتيجة، يواصل فريق الاتحاد صدارته لـ ترتيب جدول الدوري السعودي، برصيد 9 نقاط من 3 انتصارات متتالية.

طالع | ترتيب الدوري السعودي

بينما على الجانب الآخر، فريق النجمة، الصاعد حديثًا لدوري روشن، يحتل المركز السابع عشر (قبل الأخير) بدون نقاط.

يذكر، أن نادي الاتحاد هو صاحب آخر لقب لبطولة الدوري السعودي في الموسم الماضي 2024-2025.

Hard-working Shikha Pandey lives her dream

What she lacked in natural flair, she made up with grit to become an India allrounder and an officer with the Indian Air Force

Annesha Ghosh20-Aug-2017Cricketer. Blogger. Air Force officer. Engineer. Astronaut. World Cup winner. Shikha Pandey aspired to be all of the above in one lifetime. So far, at 28, she has achieved four out of those six titles.Following her childhood idols Sunita Williams and Kalpana Chawla into space might today be a distant dream, but she missed winning the World Cup by a narrow nine runs last month.”Nothing is as bad as unfulfilled potential,” Pandey says, reflecting on India’s defeat to England in the Lord’s final. “Sarah Taylor missed a stumping. Heather Knight, their best fielder, grassed a catch. Jenny Gunn dropped a sitter. When you get so many chances and yet you don’t do it, it hurts. You realise that the 80% output doesn’t correspond to the 100% input. But that is how it is.”Batting in the 47th over, with India needing another 14 to win, Pandey and Deepti Sharma took three runs off the first two balls, after which Pandey hit a short ball to point and started out for a single that wasn’t there. She had to turn back halfway down the pitch and couldn’t make it home, though the throw back to the keeper wasn’t accurate.”I could have done it for India,” she muses. “Perhaps the pressure of playing in the final, perhaps, as my father said after the match [over the phone], I should have taken it easy.”A lot has happened in the three weeks since that dismissal and defeat. For one, her Twitter bio now contains a personal email contact in place of her jersey number. Days after the game, a photograph of her wearing her Indian Air Force uniform surfaced for the first time in the public domain. It accompanied a tweet from the IAF handle, congratulating Flight Lieutenant Shikha Pandey, the first female officer from the Services to represent the national cricket team, on being awarded the Chief of Air Staff commendation on her first day at work after the World Cup.The adulation and increased media interest around the team appear to be ceaseless, but there’s little indication that Pandey’s objectivity will be clouded by it all. “I don’t believe much in destiny,” she says. “Whatever I’ve achieved in life till now, my hard work has got me to it.”When handed a plastic bat and ball as a six-year-old, Pandey didn’t know much about the Indian women’s team. The names of two female fast bowlers, however, weren’t unfamiliar to her. Australia’s Cathryn Fitzpatrick and Jhulan Goswami – the latter then an idol, now also a colleague and friend.”To open the bowling with Jhulu has been a dream come true, but to see her work so hard in the nets, even at 34, amazes me,” Pandey says.Goswami, who handed Pandey her India cap on debut, says the same about the younger bowler. “She’s one of the most hard-working cricketers I’ve played alongside in my career. Whatever feedback I give her, Shikha will think it through and try to implement it to the best of her ability.”Shikha Pandey was run out when India needed 11 runs from 15 balls to win their first Women’s World Cup•PA ImagesThe two have played 45 international matches together, their seam-and-swing pairing most memorably twice in this World Cup – first to knock out New Zealand in the league phase and then Australia in the semi-final.After going for 48 runs for two wickets in the first two games of the World Cup, Pandey was dropped for the next two. Against South Africa, she swung herself back into form with a three-for, following it up with the wicket of captain Suzie Bates off her first delivery in the next game.”My bowling against New Zealand and Australia probably helped validate my belief I was doing justice to my selection in the side,” Pandey says, having worked to move the ball both ways so that she didn’t stagnate as a “unidimensional medium-pacer”.”The quality of a comeback tells you something about a sportsperson’s temperament,” India coach Tushar Arothe says. “Hers made me proud.”Arothe echoes what many of Pandey’s coaches – past and present – have pointed to as being the key to her steady rise despite a late entry into competitive sport. “Her passion for the game is immense. She wants to contribute to the team in some way or the other.” To Goswami, it is in Pandey’s “drive for self-improvement” that her passion shines through.Goswami is unlikely to continue playing till the next 50-over World Cup, and she believes Pandey’s “sense of responsibility” could help her become the next leader of India’s bowling attack, a role she briefly played at the World Cup Qualifiers earlier this year in Goswami’s absence.Mansi Joshi, the 24-year-old medium-pacer who made her debut during the Qualifiers and later replaced Pandey in the XI for those two World Cup games, recounts a piece of advice Pandey gave her before her debut.”I’d been going for runs in our warm-up game against South Africa. Shikha di explained how important it is to have a plan B in place against batsmen when they go after us. That came good for me in the World Cup too.”Pandey’s Twitter handle – @ShikhaShauny – reveals one of her role models in the game. “Growing up, I liked Javagal Srinath and Andrew Flintoff, but especially looked up to Pollock because he was a fast-bowling allrounder who could bat.”But more than Pollock, Srinath or Flintoff, she attributes her choice of being a medium-pacer to Sachin Tendulkar. When nine, she read in a magazine that Tendulkar’s lack of height thwarted his aspirations of becoming a fast bowler. Four and a half feet tall then, she pledged to bowl quick some day.Tendulkar was a precocious talent, Pollock a thoroughbred with fine cricketing genes, but Pandey is neither. She inherited a love for the sport from her father, Subas, a Hindi school teacher with the central-government-run Kendriya Vidyalaya. Originally from Uttar Pradesh in north India, Subas had to routinely move towns because of his job. Pandey was born in Ramagundam, in Andhra Pradesh (now Telengana), but her earliest cricketing memories are from when the family moved to Vasco da Gama, in Goa, in 1997. Most of these revolve around her father engaging her in catching practice for hours. At times, she recounts, he would throw over a thousand catches in a session.Shikha Pandey meets her idol and future India team-mate Jhulan Goswami at a camp in Guntur in 2010•Shikha PandeyGoa has been home to the Pandey family for over two decades now, and it was there that she took her first steps to becoming a professional cricketer.”Goa gave me opportunities – including that of representing the state team – I may not have got elsewhere. I owe this place a major part of my achievements.”At 15, Pandey made her foray into leather-ball cricket and went on to become the first player affiliated with the state board to represent India. Within months of her initiation into the formal set-up, she caught the eye of former Mumbai player and selector Surekha Bhandare, who was then touring the state with her team.”The girl had all the makings of a future India player. The raw talent in her was hard to go unnoticed,” remembers Bhandare, who urged Subas to send his daughter to Mumbai, promising to nurture her skills and assuring him of a job for her thereafter.After Pandey won the state-wide third rank in the class-ten board (secondary school) exams, studies took precedence over cricket for the next three summers. It was only in her second year as an undergraduate in electronics and electrical engineering that she began pursuing the sport with serious intent.During a prolific 2007-08 domestic season, she picked up a four-wicket haul in the then Rani Jhansi Trophy, the inter-state two-day tournament, on her Goa senior women’s debut. Her first wicket was a caught-and-bowled to dismiss Tamil Nadu’s Thirush Kamini, then already an India international. She also scored three half-centuries for the Goa Under-19 side, which fast-tracked her selection into the zonal squad the same season.After that Pandey juggled cricket and college, spending her mornings doing gym sessions and course work, and in the afternoons travelling 12km to Mapusa, where she trained with former Goa cricketer and Sports Authority of Goa coach Nitin Vernekar.The only girl at the boys’ facility, Pandey describes the phase as being vital to her growth as a cricketer. “Facing U-16 and U-19 boys honed my reaction time against pace bowling. I also picked up a few vital lessons on negotiating spin.”Her focus on the game did not affect her academic performance, for which she particularly credits her lecturer in Applied Mathematics, Ujwala Phadte, who helped ensure Pandey’s grades were not inversely proportional to her on-field returns. On completing her engineering degree in 2010, Pandey declined placement offers from three multinational companies in favour of taking a year off to further her cricketing ambitions.The decision, backed both by Subas and her older sister, Vibha, paid off when her first “international wicket, albeit unofficial” was Charlotte Edwards – in a 2010 tour game for the Board President’s XI against the visiting England side. The same year, in the inter-zonals, she bagged the wicket of Mithali Raj, “a yardstick for every bowler’s mettle”, and was included again in the Board President’s XI against West Indies in 2011.Mithali Raj and Shikha Pandey seal victory at Wormsley•Getty ImagesVibha, herself an electrical engineer, believes that her sister’s refusal to give up on her dreams allowed her to take a path different from most middle-class career tracks. “Finish engineering, land a job and get a good salary; I took the conventional route, as most people would. But Shikha had higher aspirations, and she took them very seriously.”In July 2011, Pandey’s disappointment over not making the India squad for the England tour, despite being among the 20 probables, was offset somewhat by another long-cherished dream, to serve as a fighter pilot, nearly coming true. She passed the common entrance exam and joined the Indian Air Force as a trainee, and in June the following year was commissioned as an air traffic control officer.During her two years at her first fighter base, in north India, the shortage of cricket turfs made her move base down to Palam in New Delhi. With the support of the Services Sports Control Board and the Air Force Sports Control Board, however, she has been able to sustain her cricketing dream.”I could continue playing in the domestic tournaments because my seniors approved my leave applications. Their cooperation has been the reason I am able to join my teams in time and get adequate preparation.”The 2013-14 domestic season offered her the most realistic chance of getting closer to achieving the dream of playing for India, but she had played for only 30 to 40 days that year. To make up for the lost time, after training with her team-mates till six in the evening, she would hit the indoor nets at the Goa Cricket Association. The extra work paid off and after taking 22 wickets and 209 runs in the season, international debuts across formats followed, first in the World T20 and then on India’s 2014 tour of England.Pandey hit the winning runs in India’s unexpected win in the Test in Wormsley – their first five-day game in eight years – and received a stump as souvenir from her captain, Mithali Raj, with the inscription: “It was nice to have a match-winning partnership with you. Here’s to the many more.”Called up as last-minute cover for batsman Punam Raut, Pandey made 28 not out in an unbroken 68-run stand with Raj, chasing 181, and got first-hand knowledge of “what it feels like to be batting overnight in Tests, especially when you’re sent in as a nightwatchman!”Later that year, she became the first India women’s player to take three wickets and score a fifty in an ODI.”Sudha Shah, then India coach, suggested I go in at No. 4.” The innings, Pandey says, made her believe she was ready for the grind of international cricket. “It gave me the reassurance I have the potential to serve the team with the bat too.”She has had her share of highs and lows in her subsequent performances but regards the tour of Australia in January-February 2016 as a test of character for herself and the team.”If you work hard for something, it will come to you – probably it will take a little time, but the wait will be worthwhile”•AFP/Getty ImagesPurnima Rau, the former India and Goa coach, who was the South Zone selector when she first saw the promise in Pandey, believes her journey as a medium-pacer began with this series. “The role she took up in Australia, even in Jhulan’s presence, was a serious statement of intent. She got those wickets regularly because she was penetrative.”Pandey was India’s leading wicket-taker on the tour, with nine wickets at 20.77, a performance that put her on the radar of WBBL franchise Sydney Sixers, although contract negotiations eventually didn’t work out.In the months that followed, Pandey finished as India’s second-highest wicket-taker in the ICC Women’s Championship, the second highest overall in the World Cup Qualifiers, and the highest in the Quadrangular series in South Africa.”I have worked a lot with Devika di [Palshikar, former India allrounder and current Goa coach] in the past year. She’s the one who has instilled confidence in me through her coaching last season.”Like others, Palshikar says that the source of Pandey’s success lies in her willingness to work hard. “But there are holes that need to be plugged,” she says. “Consistency with the bat is one of them.””Right now I consider myself a bowling allrounder,” Pandey says. “But if you work hard for something, it will come to you – probably it will take a little time, but the wait will be worthwhile.”Will she add “World Cup winner” to her considerable list of achievements? Take note of the words she recorded in a 2011 entry on her blog, which encapsulate her journey so far: “I dream higher every time I fall.”

ليكيب: ضربة قوية لـ آرسنال بسبب مدة غياب ساليبا

كشفت تقارير صحفية مدة غياب لاعب فريق آرسنال، ويليام ساليبا، عن الملاعب، إثر الإصابة التي تعرض لها في مباراة ليفربول، في وقت سابق من شهر أغسطس الماضي، في بطولة الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز.

وواجه ليفربول خصمه آرسنال على ملعب “أنفيلد” في قمة منافسات الجولة الثالثة من الدوري الإنجليزي، 2025/26، حيث حقق فوزًا بهدف دون رد.

وتعرض المدرب ميكيل أرتيتا لضربة مبكرة في تلك المباراة، بعدما عانى ويليام ساليبا من إصابة أجبرته على الخروج في الدقيقة الخامسة من عمر الشوط الأول.

اقرأ أيضًا.. آرسنال مهدد بفقدان نجمه بسبب قضية قانونية

وحسبما ذكرت صحيفة “ليكيب” الفرنسية، فإن ويليام ساليبا عانى من إصابة على مستوى الكاحل خلال عمليات الإحماء قبل انطلاق المباراة ولكنه قرر المشاركة، قبل أن يتجدد ألمه ليضطر إلى الخروج.

وأوضحت أن ساليبا سيضطر إلى الغياب عن آرسنال لفترة تتراوح ما بين ثلاثة إلى أربعة أسابيع، مما يمثل ضربة قوية لـ آرسنال على مستوى الدفاع.

وسيخوض آرسنال عدة مباريات خلال شهر سبتمبر، حيث يلتقي مع نوتينجهام فورست، مانشستر سيتي، نيوكاسل يونايتد في الدوري الإنجليزي، أتلتيك بلباو في دوري أبطال أوروبا ونورث فايل في كأس كاراباو.

مدرب برايتون قبل مواجهة مانشستر سيتي: قادرون على الفوز

تنطلق بعد لحظات مواجهة مانشستر سيتي مع برايتون، ضمن منافسات الجولة الثالثة من عمر الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز على ملعب الأخير.

ويسعى مانشستر سيتي إلى تحقيق الفوز على برايتون، من أجل استعادة التوازن عقب الخسارة الاسبوع الماضي على ملعب الاتحاد أمام توتنهام هوتسبير بهدفين دون رد.

طالع.. سبب غياب فودين وريان شرقي عن مباراة مانشستر سيتي وبرايتون

ومع ذلك تحدي مدرب برايتون، فابيان هورزلر، مانشستر سيتي في لقاء اليوم، حيث يرى بأن فريقه قادر على تحقيق الفوز على السيتيزن.

وقال هورزلر في تصريحات إلى شبكة “سكاي سبورتس”: “لدينا حاليًا فريق به عدد كبير من اللاعبين، لذا علينا اتخاذ قرارات صعبة، في النهاية نسعى دائمًا لتقديم الأفضل للنادي واتخاذ قرارات تساعدنا على الفوز بالمباريات”.

وأضاف: “الأمر الرئيسي هو تحسين نتائجنا، أداؤنا جيد، ونحن تنافسيون، الآن علينا تحقيق النتائج؛ الحفاظ على نظافة شباكنا، وأن نكون حاسمين، وأنا متأكد من أن النتائج ستأتي”.

وأتم: “إنها مباراة مختلفة، نحن في مرحلة مختلفة من الموسم، ولكن بالطبع لدينا دائمًا الثقة بأننا قادرون على تحدي أي فريق والفوز عليه، وهذا ما لدينا اليوم”.

Scored winner vs Rangers: 49ers may now land bargain deal for "special" ace

da leao: With the summer transfer window approaching, the 49ers now reportedly have the chance to seal a bargain deal to sign a player who previously scored the winning goal against Rangers.

Rangers could land bargain deal

da imperador bet: The Gers may have endured a season to forget – resulting in the dismissal of Philippe Clement – but that didn’t stop them from getting one over on arch-rivals Celtic last time out. Defeating the Bhoys late on courtesy of Hamza Igamane’s winning goal in a 3-2 thriller, the Gers at least came away from the Old Firm derby having left their mark.

However, any celebrations won’t last too long, with the Gers already turning their focus towards the summer transfer window and ensuring that they’ve got more than just an Old Firm derby victory to cheer in the Scottish Premiership next season.

The arrival of the 49ers should certainly provide the Scottish giants with a much-needed boost in pursuit of that. And although their first task will be finding a permanent replacement for Clement, recent reports suggest that they could then turn towards a bargain deal.

Rangers News has highlighted that the 49ers have the chance to sign Dejan Ljubicic in a free deal this summer once his contract comes to an end at FC Koln in Germany’s second division, with the Austrian already on the 49ers’ radar.

Blow for Rangers and Ferguson as 17-goal ace could now miss chunk of action

This is not what Barry Ferguson wants to hear.

ByHenry Jackson Mar 18, 2025

A player that the incoming owners already know after previously attempting to seal his signature at Leeds United, Ljubicic looks set to be one to watch when the summer transfer window swings open.

Meanwhile, those at Ibrox are also well aware of the midfielder’s quality, having watched on as he scored the winning goal for Rapid Vienna against Steven Gerrard’s Rangers side in the 2018/19 Europa League group stage.

"Special" Ljubicic could partner Diomande

In Ljubicic, Rangers would be welcoming a defensive midfielder who could provide the foundation for the likes of Mohamed Diomande to thrive further forward. Rangers already reaped the rewards for his attacking exploits against Celtic when he gave them a 2-1 lead over their rivals and could see his full potential unleashed by Ljubicic’s arrival.

The 27-year-old is certainly appreciated at Koln, having earned the praise of manager Gerhard Struber, who told reporters last summer: “Dejan is a player who has performed great for FC in recent years and can help us very, very well on the way back to the Bundesliga. Great. Simply great. The overall package is special. I’m very happy for him.”

Dejan Ljubicic for FC Koln.

Having been wheeling away in celebration at the detriment of Rangers as many as six seasons ago, the defensive midfielder could finally make up for his winning goal by kicking the 49ers era off with a bang at Ibrox.

Change is afoot at Rangers, from the ownership to the management and perhaps a few fresh faces. Whether the Gers’ official Clement replacement decides to welcome the bargain of Ljubicic this summer remains to be seen, however, as they look to make their mark.

Siraj, Bumrah bowl India to victory in record time

Lasting just 107 overs, this was the shortest Test ever to produce a result

Hemant Brar04-Jan-2024

Jasprit Bumrah celebrates the wicket of Keshav Maharaj•AFP/Getty Images

Jasprit Bumrah’s 6 for 61 paved the way for India’s seven-wicket win on the second day of the second Test in Cape Town, helping them level the two-match series 1-1.After South Africa were bowled out for 176 in their second innings, India chased down the required 79 runs an hour after lunch. Lasting just 107 overs, this was the shortest Test ever to produce a result. It was also India’s first Test win at Newlands in seven attempts. Mohammed Siraj, who picked up 6 for 15 to skittle out South Africa for 55 in the first innings, was named the Player of the Match.But before all that, Aiden Markram scored a stunning hundred – 106 off 103 balls. It was the first time in Test history that a batter scored a hundred where none of his team-mates reached 20 in either innings; Kyle Verreynne’s 15 in the first innings was the next best for South Africa. Unfortunately for Markram and stand-in captain Dean Elgar, who retires after this Test, it ended in a losing cause.Related

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Stats – Cape Town the shortest completed Test ever

Rohit calls out ICC for supposed double standards in rating pitches: 'Hope they keep their ears and eyes open'

South Africa didn’t have a great start to the day. Resuming on 62 for 3, they lost a wicket in the first over itself. David Bedingham was looking to be positive and went for an on-the-up drive against Bumrah only to edge it to the wicketkeeper.Verreynne didn’t last long either. Trying to pull Bumrah, he skied one towards mid-on where Mohammed Siraj took the catch. Bumrah completed his five-for when he had Keshav Maharaj caught at gully, leaving South Africa 111 for 7.Markram, though, seemed to be in a different zone altogether and played some stunning shots on this treacherous pitch. Of his 106 runs, 47 came in the arc between backward point and extra cover. Whenever the India seamers pitched the ball slightly full, he brought out the cover drive. When it was on the shorter side, he got on the top of the bounce and punched it through cover-point, forcing India to put a sweeper cover in place.Markram reached his fifty off 68 balls, and took just 31 more to reach his seventh Test hundred. En route, he smashed Prasidh Krishna for two sixes and two fours in a 20-run over. He and Kagiso Rabada added 51 for the eighth wicket; Rabada’s contribution was 2.He also enjoyed a slice of luck when KL Rahul dropped him off Bumrah on 73. Eventually, it was Siraj who sent Markram back when, going for yet another big hit, the batter holed out to long-off.Rabada fell in the next over, and 14 runs later, the innings came to an end.Rohit Sharma and Yashasvi Jaiswal knew they needed to attack straightaway to deny South Africa a sniff. Not many shots came from the middle of the bat, but they had added 44 in 5.4 overs when Nandre Burger removed Jaiswal. Trying to pull a short ball, Jaiswal slipped and his pad brushed the stumps. While the bails didn’t come off, he was caught at deep-backward square leg.Shubman Gill became a victim of low bounce, and Virat Kohli was caught down the leg side, before Shreyas Iyer hit the winning four.

Chelsea player ratings vs Newcastle: Nicolas Jackson, what are you doing? Striker's moment of madness proves costly as Blues suffer major dent in Champions League qualification hopes

The forward's red card proved Enzo Maresca's side's undoing as a slow start on Tyneside dealt them a big blow

Nicolas Jackson's red card dealt Chelsea's Champions League qualification hopes a sizeable setback as they fell to a 2-0 loss at high-flying Newcastle on Sunday.

The Blues suffered the worst possible start when Romeo Lavia was caught dilly-dallying on the ball and, moments later, Sandro Tonali swept in Jacob Murphy's low cross in the second minute.

The away side could not handle Newcastle's pace, power, and directness, and to make matters worse, Jackson was sent off for recklessly elbowing Sven Botman in the head 10 minutes before half-time.

Chelsea were much-improved in the second half following the introduction of Reece James, and had it not been for the quick reflexes of Nick Pope, Marc Cucurella's low drive would have levelled proceedings. Bruno Guimaraes, meanwhile, perhaps should have put the game to bed when fed into the six-yard box, but his wild strike flew high over the bar.

The 10 men of Chelsea made a real fist of it as the home crowd grew increasingly anxious, and Pope was once again called into action as he made a smart stop to deny Enzo Fernandez. But not long after James headed just over the bar, Guimaraes' deflected effort from 20 yards looped over Robert Sanchez to seal a crucial home victory.

GOAL rates Chelsea's players from St James' Park…

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    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Robert Sanchez (6/10):

    Fired off a couple of unhelpful passes to his team-mates when under pressure, but other than that was competent enough. Not much he could do for either goal.

    Moises Caicedo (7/10):

    Had his hands full with the pacey and lively Gordon, but pulled off some expertly timed tackles at right-back.

    Trevoh Chalobah (7/10):

    Much like team-mate Colwill, very little got by the centre-back. The decision to send him out on loan at the start of the season seems all the more baffling.

    Levi Colwill (8/10):

    Barely put a foot wrong. The defender made some crucial tackles and interceptions that helped steady his side's leaky ship.

    Marc Cucurella (6/10):

    The Spaniard was a fairly calm and composed figure, particularly as the game wore on. Did fairly well against the in-form Murphy.

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    Midfield

    Romeo Lavia (4/10):

    Tried to be too cute on the ball early on and was caught in possession; seconds later it was 1-0 to Newcastle. Did not offer enough bite and quality in midfield.

    Enzo Fernandez (6/10):

    Kept on plugging away and fashioned a couple of good chances, but couldn't pull his team back into the contest.

    Cole Palmer (6/10):

    Tried hard to find weak points in Newcastle's defensive armour but for all his probing, the England star couldn't quite unlock the home side's backline.

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    Attack

    Pedro Neto (6/10):

    The fleet-of-foot wideman gave Newcastle's defence something to think about, but maybe wasn't enough end product.

    Nicolas Jackson (2/10):

    Completely lost his head with a brainless swinging arm to the head of Botman. The striker is now out for the rest of the Premier League season. Utter stupidity.

    Noni Madueke (5/10):

    Didn't get many chances to shine, but when he was on the ball the winger did not do a great deal with it and was understandably withdrawn at the break.

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    Subs & Manager

    Reece James (6/10):

    The 25-year-old was a key part of Chelsea's second-half revival.

    Jadon Sancho (5/10):

    Offered little when he came on, other than some poor crosses and some stepovers.

    Malo Gusto (5/10):

    The right-back was brought on to provide a bit more go-ahead but his main contribution was for Newcastle's deflected second goal.

    Enzo Maresca (6/10):

    His side were harried, pressed, and hassled from the get-go as Howe's team won the tactical battle in the first half. However, the call to bring on James worked well after the interval, though the Blues didn't create enough openings on the whole.

Two outstanding teams, one grand spectacle in store in Pune

Both teams are in the top three at this stage, and the winners of this game will feel very secure about their future

Shashank Kishore31-Oct-20235:40

Manjrekar: South Africa still don’t look convincing

Big picture – Not a must-win, but a win-for-momentumIt started with a World Cup quarter-final that turned into a proper scrap in Mirpur in 2011. It marked the arrival of a cricket rivalry that isn’t talked about a lot, but often gives us games that ain’t good for the heart – just like the rugby World Cup final from a few nights ago.Auckland 2015 and Birmingham 2019, the two most recent men’s ODI World Cup fixtures since the rivalry sprung to life, were both thrillers of different kinds. One a semi-final with everything on the line, and the other a league fixture, like Wednesday’s will be. This one will dictate how the top half of the points table shapes up heading into the last bit of the league stage.All told, for three straight men’s World Cups in a row, the New Zealand games have been must-wins for South Africa; in fact, South Africa have lost five World Cup games in a row to New Zealand. In Pune on Wednesday, the stakes aren’t as high, given both teams are still pretty comfortably placed for the semi-finals, but it’s one both sides will want to win for momentum’s sake at the very least.Related

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New Zealand endured back-to-back losses to India and Australia as their smooth sail of a campaign – they had started with four wins on the trot – hit a rough patch amid a growing list of niggles. South Africa have been gung-ho, proving their only loss – to Netherlands – was an aberration, their batting depth looking increasingly menacing and bowling effective enough, as they were expected to be.Their one-wicket win over Pakistan in Chennai the other night saved them from that dreaded word that had begun doing the rounds even as their lower order collapsed, before Keshav Maharaj and Tabraiz Shamsi saw them home. A favourable result in Pune will further underpin their status as one of the dominant teams at this World Cup. That they aren’t great chasers, though, is a suggestion they haven’t been able to dispel.Results and all that aside, the match promises an explosive cocktail of firepower with the bat, and thrill with the ball. There’s aesthetics in the form of Devon Conway, Rachin Ravindra and Rassie van der Dussen, big-hitting from Henrich Klaasen, David Miller and Glenn Phillips, and the genius of Quinton de Kock to boot.With the ball, there’s pace royalty in the form of Kagiso Rabada, the swing of Trent Boult, the hustle of Gerald Coetzee, and the bounce of Marco Jansen – each of them brings a unique flavour that makes fast bowling thrilling. If all of them play, it’ll truly mark a spectacle.Now for a good pitch and great weather to make it all come together.Form guideNew Zealand LLWWW
South Africa WWWLW3:51

Van der Dussen: ‘We’re blessed that we’re in a great space now’

In the spotlight – Temba Bavuma and Rachin RavindraIn a top order that has mostly been in top gear, Temba Bavuma seems some sort of a weak link at the moment for South Africa. He has had starts in three of his four innings, but hasn’t been able to top 35. As such, Bavuma is an accumulator, but has seemed anxious at different times to break out of that mould. It hasn’t worked yet. While there is no threat to his captaincy, he’ll want a big score to feel a bit more at ease.Will he? Won’t he? Kane Williamson has walked around with more questions on his fitness and participation during this campaign than he has at any other point in his career. Williamson is not fit yet, but in his absence, Rachin Ravindra has made the No. 3 spot his own. Williamson’s presence as part of the leadership group has lent a lot of calm and tactical nous, but he would be itching to return and make an impact. As for Ravindra, he is already making plenty of it.Team newsKagiso Rabada missed the previous game because of a niggle, but is understood to be fit and is expected to return to the XI. That’ll mean South Africa will be left with a tricky call on whom to leave out. Gerald Coetzee and Tabraiz Shamsi both had important roles to play in their win over Pakistan in Chennai, but one of them will probably have to make way, depending on the pitch.South Africa (probable): 1 Temba Bavuma (capt), 2 Quinton de Kock (wk), 3 Rassie van der Dussen, 4 Aiden Markram, 5 Heinrich Klaasen, 6 David Miller, 7 Marco Jansen, 8 Keshav Maharaj, 9 Kagiso Rabada, 10 Gerald Coetzee/Tabraiz Shamsi, 11 Lungi NgidiNew Zealand have an injury list that’s slowly growing. Lockie Ferguson bowled all of three overs before walking off with a heel injury against Australia. Mark Chapman is recovering from a minor calf strain. Tim Southee was on the mend for a broken finger, but might be ready to return. Williamson has resumed training, but he has been ruled out of the game against South Africa, while Ferguson will take a fitness test before the toss.New Zealand (probable): 1 Will Young, 2 Devon Conway, 3 Rachin Ravindra, 4 Tom Latham (capt, wk), 5 Daryl Mitchell, 6 Glenn Phillips, 7 Mitchell Santner, 8 Jimmy Neesham, 9 Matt Henry, 10 Trent Boult, 11 Tim Southee/Lockie Ferguson2:29

Latham: ‘Focusing on the things that we do well’

Pitch and conditionsPune is unusually hot and dry for this time of the year, but the surfaces have been good for batting, with even bounce and excellent carry. In the two games so far, dew hasn’t had too big an effect, but it should be humid. The toss might not be too big a factor if the dew stays away.Stats and trivia Conway has been dismissed twice in six games by left-arm spin at this World Cup. South Africa have Maharaj in the mix. In all, Conway has hit 17 runs off the 21 balls from bowlers of this variety. It’s only a small sample size but worth looking out for nonetheless, especially given that he loves the sweep shot, and Pune has relatively bigger squares. Ravindra’s tally of 406 runs is already the most by a New Zealander in his maiden World Cup. The standout aspect has been his game against spin – he has scored 210 against them at a strike rate of 109. His eight sixes are the most against spinners in the tournament so far. South Africa’s seven 300-plus totals in a row batting first in ODIs – including four this World Cup – is the longest streak in the game. They have hit the most sixes and fours, and have the most hundreds (six) in the tournament. South Africa’s pace pack has taken 44 wickets at an average and a strike rate of 23.3 and 23.5, respectively. Their wickets tally and their bowling strike rate are the best for a team in this World Cup.Quotes”We’ve got a few guys to get through a few fitness tests, and I guess once we train, we’ll have a clearer idea of what the XI looks like. So fingers crossed all those guys can get through a bit of work today at training and be ready to go tomorrow.”

“It feels like that question could have been asked a few days ago as well – with regards to Pakistan. So no, no chat really about that. I mean, that’s all in the past. We don’t really carry any of that with us.”

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