He was as bad as Salah: Liverpool star proved why FSG must spend millions

Liverpool defender Trent Alexander-Arnold stepped up to save the day for his side on Sunday with a terrific strike to beat Leicester City 1-0 at the King Power Stadium.

His second-half goal means that Arne Slot’s side are now only three points away from winning the Premier League title, which they could celebrate at Anfield against Tottenham Hotspur next Sunday.

As you can see in the highlights above, it was an emotionally charged celebration by the England international, who ripped his shirt off to passionately celebrate in front of the away supporters.

He is out of contract at the end of this season, with Real Madrid monitoring his situation, and refused to comment on his future when interviewed after the game.

One Liverpool player who has already committed his future to Anfield, however, is winger Mohamed Salah, who recently put pen to paper on a two-year contract extension.

Unfortunately, though, the former Chelsea and Roma forward’s performance against Leicester on Sunday was not one of his finest outings in red.

Mo Salah's struggles against Leicester

The Egypt international set the tone for what was to come in the opening minutes of the game when he found himself unmarked in the box and saw his low effort hit both posts and roll back out for a Leicester defender to make a clearance. It simply was not his day in front of goal.

Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah

Salah played the full 90 minutes against the Foxes and took seven shots on goal, six more after the initial effort that hit both posts, and failed to find the back of the net from any of them, only hitting the target once.

The left-footed magician missed four ”big chances’, more than any other player on the pitch, and will surely be gutted to have come off the pitch without a single goal to show for his efforts in the final third.

Minutes

90

xG

1.05

Shots

7

Shots on target

1

Big chances missed

4

Key passes

3

Big chances created

1

As you can see in the table above, Salah did create one ‘big chance’ for his teammates, though, which was not rewarded with an assist, as he was involved in plenty of actions – without success – in the Leicester box.

Salah has scored 27 goals and provided 18 assists in the Premier League so far this season, but this showing against the Foxes was a far cry from what supporters have seen from him throughout the rest of the year.

The Liverpool superstar was not the only player who underperformed in the 1-0 win over Leicester at the King Power, though, as Conor Bradley failed to take his chance to impress.

Conor Bradley's performance against Leicester

The Northern Ireland international was given the nod at right-back ahead of Alexander-Arnold, who is still coming back from injury and was not deemed ready to start.

Liverpool’s academy graduate played the opening 71 minutes of the game before being taken off for the English defender, who then went on to win the game for the Reds.

Bradley got off to the worst possible start early on in the game, just as Salah did with his miss, after he dawdled on the ball in his own box and was tackled by Wilfred Ndidi, who then failed to get a cross in before slipping out of play. That set the tone for the rest of what turned out to be a nervy showing.

Minutes

71

Tackles

0

Interceptions

0

Pass accuracy

79%

Big chances created

0

Duels won

6/14

Possession lost

17x

As you can see in the table above, the 21-year-old defender went on to lose the majority of his physical duels, whilst he also gave the ball away 17 times without creating any of the nine ‘big chances’ that Liverpool fashioned.

These statistics show that Bradley was just as bad as Salah due to his lack of quality on the ball and his weakness defensively, as both players underperformed on the right flank.

Chalkboard

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

FSG must, now, take note of this performance from the right-back because it proves that the board must spend millions on a new right-back if Alexander-Arnold does not put pen to paper on a contract extension.

Why FSG must sign a new right-back for Liverpool

The England international provided a timely reminder of the kind of quality that he can produce at his best. He is a full-back who has the ability to win a match on his day with his use of the ball as both a scorer and a creator at the top end of the pitch.

Liverpool will lose a huge attacking outlet in their squad if he moves on this summer as a free agent, and Bradley is yet to prove that he has what it takes to fill that void.

The young full-back’s lack of quality on the ball in the win over Leicester was just the latest sign that Liverpool must have plans for another right-back to come in and offer an attacking threat next season, should Alexander-Arnold move on.

Appearances

29

15

Goals

3

0

Big chances created

14

1

xA

6.72

0.58

Key passes per game

1.9

0.3

Assists

6

1

As you can see in the table above, the English dynamo offers significantly more than Bradley does with the ball at his feet, with 14 times as many ‘big chances’ created in the Premier League.

The Reds were linked with an interest in Bayer Leverkusen defender Jeremie Frimpong, who is valued at £34m, earlier this year, and the Dutch defender has scored 29 goals and provided 44 assists in 186 games for the German club.

He may have the kind of quality that Liverpool need to replace Alexander-Arnold with, due to his ability to score and assist goals from right-back, and that further proves that FSG will need to splash the cash and spend millions if they want to land a high-quality replacement for him.

It is now down to the board to spend the money required to bolster Slot’s squad if Alexander-Arnold decides to end his time at Anfield this summer.

Nunez upgrade: Liverpool likely to see £50m bid accepted for "mini-Salah"

Fabrizio Romano has confirmed Darwin Nunez is expected to leave Liverpool this summer.

1 ByAngus Sinclair Apr 20, 2025

World Cup's the (toughest) stage for accidental captain Kusal Mendis

The next two weeks could define the Sri Lanka captain’s growth trajectory in a role he has no option but to grow into

Shashank Kishore25-Oct-20232:42

Maharoof: ‘Hope Mendis the captain remains the same batter’

The earliest memory Kusal Mendis has of watching cricket is the 2003 men’s World Cup. As an eight-year-old, he had heard tales of the magic Aravinda de Silva weaved with the bat. Aravinda was well past his prime by then, but he had done enough to fuel Kusal’s burning desire to emulate him.A few months short of his 18th birthday, Kusal won the Schoolboy Cricketer of the Year award. The recognition that came along with it helped him meet his boyhood hero, who is believed to have told him he should aspire to be the captain one day.When Kusal burst onto the scene at the Under-19 World Cup in 2014, he was earmarked for big things including captaincy. It has taken nearly a decade for Kusal to get that job, but it has come under circumstances he wouldn’t have envisaged.Related

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As such, international cricket can be a hard place to learn on the fly and Kusal perhaps had valid reasons for not wanting the job in the lead-up to the 2023 World Cup. Far from a sustainer of good form, he had only slowly been emerging from that frustrating ‘one step forward, two steps back’ pattern that has been a constant in his seven-year international career.But amid an ordinary start to a campaign many were cautiously optimistic about, largely because of the conditions, Kusal has been thrust into the role. Dasun Shanaka, an admirable leader who had backers for his style of rallying a team in doldrums together, had been ruled out for the rest of the tournament with a quadriceps injury.As such, Shanaka’s batting had tailed off so alarmingly that even a late surge against South Africa in chase of 429 merely seemed to limit damage than offer hope of him returning to his ferocious ball-striking ways. That he was a reluctant bowler didn’t help.Kusal Mendis has the captaincy added to his batting and wicketkeeping duties•ICC via Getty ImagesSo, two losses in – the one against Pakistan deflating them, one where they failed to defend 345 – there were rumblings of a potential change. As it turned out, Shanaka’s injury may have saved the selectors from a tough call. It’s under this backdrop that Kusal led Sri Lanka for the first time last week, against Australia in Lucknow.It is an understatement to say he has had to hit the ground running. It is not quite a dreamy scenario. These are difficult circumstances that will need Kusal to not just manage his own form and expectations around his batting, but also figure out plans and work around all the other external challenges that come with the captaincy.His spontaneous response at his first press conference after captaincy on what he expects from the team was a giveaway of how quickly things have unfurled. “I hope the bowlers know their roles,” Kusal had said when asked about formulating specific plans. He wasn’t feigning ignorance. He had barely had a few days to settle into the job, forget about easing into a role or building a team with the players he’d seen or backed.It has been a week since that game. Sri Lanka have since gone on to scrap a win against Netherlands and find themselves in a logjam for points in the middle. On Thursday, they play England, who are equally desperate for two points. It is only bound to get tougher and Kusal knows there’s only so much wriggle room. If he wants, Kusal has plenty of sounding boards in the dressing room, like Dimuth Karunaratne or Angelo Mathews. But in the heat of the battle, he will have to be his own man.On Tuesday during Sri Lanka’s first training session in Bengaluru under lights, Kusal was largely by himself, focused on his own idiosyncrasies – like his shadow swing, playing an imaginative forward defence, ducking and weaving bouncers, playing a straight drive. In his own little bubble, or the ‘zone’ as they say, until he was tapped by the team manager.Then he walked across to observe proceedings from a little close, joining head coach Chris Silverwood to watch Mathews go through the motions. Mathews, of course, was Sri Lanka’s captain when Kusal debuted as a precociously talented batter in 2015. How the wheels had turned now. Here he was assessing Mathews from the eyes of a leader, not the boy-wonder who could barely mumble a few words to him.

“We all get into that cycle and then we come in, we go out and then the next generation comes in. So, playing under Kusal, where he started when I was the captain, it gives me pleasure because he’s come a long way and I’ve seen him grow as a person and also as a batsman over the years.”Angelo Mathews on playing under Kusal Mendis’ captaincy

That small moment encapsulated Kusal’s challenges. Of someone keen to work on himself in bringing out his best to now having to look beyond just his own goals for the team’s sake. There are five league games left, and each one a must-win for Sri Lanka. There are bowlers to manage, plans to formulate with coaches, senior players to hand-hold, handling media and the scrutiny that comes with the job.It helps that there’s warmth and mutual admiration among the leaders within the group. For someone as senior as Mathews to swallow his ego, and be part of the group as traveling reserve tells you of his keenness to contribute. For him to sit with Kusal and ease him into a role he is still getting used to – he’s captained at the Lanka Premier League, but not at any other level of senior cricket prior to this – must help.”He has evolved so much over the last five-six years,” Mathews said when asked about his assessment of Sri Lanka’s current captain. “And now he’s showing his maturity playing fearless cricket and leading from the front. And yes, I mean, playing under him, I’ve played under so many different captains and they’ve also played under me, so, it’s a cycle.”We all get into that cycle and then we come in, we go out and then the next generation comes in. So, playing under Kusal, where he started when I was the captain, it gives me pleasure because he’s come a long way and I’ve seen him grow as a person and also as a batsman over the years which is very fantastic to see.”There is striking simplicity to Kusal’s see-ball-hit-ball approach as a batter. Captaincy may not be so simple. But the key for Kusal will be in how he manages to channel his batting without allowing the rigours of the job to affect him. It’s easier to do so perhaps in a bilateral series. But with the stakes high, the next two weeks could define his growth trajectory in a role he has no option but to grow into on the toughest stage.

KL Rahul curbs his enthusiasm to make his comeback count

In just this one innings, he has already left alone almost as many deliveries as he did across five Tests in England in 2018, and it’s already paying off

Nagraj Gollapudi06-Aug-20213:54

Laxman: This could be a breakthrough innings for Rahul’s career

At times things are simpler when you don’t have too much time to think about them. KL Rahul might agree.On August 2, Rahul had walked into Trent Bridge for India’s training session thinking he would not be playing the first Test starting two days later, even though his century against a County XI during the warm-up game, batting at No. 5, put him in contention. Mayank Agarwal – one of Rahul’s best mates, and Karnataka team-mate – batted alongside Rohit Sharma in the nets, preparing to play the Test. Then, about a quarter of an hour into the session, Agarwal was hit by a short delivery from Mohammed Siraj, and he was ruled out of the match with a concussion soon after. Things moved swiftly from thereon for Rahul, who was given extra time to bat during that nets session. Two days later, at the toss, India captain Virat Kohli said Rahul would be opening alongside Rohit.It was on India’s previous trip to England when Rahul’s technique and temperament unravelled against the England fast men. In the first four Tests, Rahul had an average of just 14.12, and overall he was bowled five times and out lbw three times, a higher tally of such dismissals than any player across both teams. Despite that wretched form, Rahul finished the tour on a high note at The Oval, with a belligerent 149 in the final innings of the series. Failures followed in Australia and in the West Indies, though, and convinced the selectors that they had to drop Rahul.Still, Rahul went about his business. He made runs in white-ball cricket, both in the IPL and for India and eventually made his way back into the Test reckoning, with the idea being to shift him from the opening slots down into the middle order. With his ability to accelerate quickly and being a 360-degree batter, the team management and Rahul agreed that he could be a good option in middle now that Rohit along with Shubman Gill, Agarwal and Prithvi Shaw were slotted as openers.But now, with an injured Gill back in India, Shaw still in quarantine after heading over to England from the limited-overs series in Sri Lanka, and Agarwal concussed, doors reopened at the top of the order for Rahul. He might have overthought and over-complicated things in 2018, but three years later, at 29, Rahul is more experienced, more assured, more responsible. Perhaps taking charge of the captaincy at Punjab Kings in the IPL has given him that extra confidence.KL Rahul readies himself for day three at Trent Bridge•Getty ImagesAll this matters only because opening in Test cricket is the most demanding of batting jobs, especially in the overcast conditions that have persisted over the first two days of this Trent Bridge Test. Rahul was posted seemingly out of his comfort zone and asked to help set the tone for India, not just for this Test but for the series.Being naturally aggressive and one of the best stroke-makers in cricket at present, the biggest challenge for Rahul – and Rohit too – was to curb his enthusiasm. But, especially as an opener in England, abstinence does pay. Ask M Vijay. In the first two Tests of the 2014 England tour, played at Trent Bridge and Lord’s, Vijay left 122 (first innings) and 101 (second innings) deliveries respectively. Vijay scored 146 in the first innings in Nottingham and then 95 at Lord’s where India went 1-0 up having drawn the first Test.In this Test, Rahul invoked his inner “Monk” – as Vijay is nicknamed by the cricketing fraternity. In this innings, Rahul left 76 deliveries, which is next only to those efforts by Vijay for an Indian batter in England since that tour. More strikingly, it is also only 10 fewer deliveries than the 86 Rahul had left alone in the entire five-Test series in 2018, when he played 10 innings and faced 450 deliveries.One important reason Rahul could leave all those balls alone was because he was absolutely confident about where his off stump was, something he struggled with three years ago. That allowed Rahul to pick the right deliveries to play. What also helped him get settled in was that, in the first hour on Thursday, the England fast bowlers bowled well outside off stump and limited fuller deliveries. Runs did not come easy but Rahul respected the conditions. He stayed patient.That helped in the animated contest he had with Ollie Robinson, who tried to disrupt his concentration by exchanging words at times. While he did not shy away from responding, Rahul seemingly stayed calm and responded most deafeningly with the bat. Robinson’s plan involved pitching consistently on a good length, on the fourth stump, and nipping the ball away with the idea to lure Rahul to push at it. Rahul did not budge; he would stretch forward and upon reading the line leave the deliveries confidently. Rahul was also aware that with Robinson’s height, he could trust the bounce.Rahul also made subtle technical tweaks as compared to 2018. According to former India keeper Dinesh Karthik, who is on television commentary for Sky Cricket, Rahul has narrowed down the wide stance he had in 2018. Along with that, Rahul had also straightened and shortened his backlift – combined with a big stride, all these changes were allowing Rahul to meet the ball quickly and with a full face of the bat.Related

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There were some errors of judgement, of course. Twice Anderson induced edges of Rahul. Twice it flew to the slips. Twice Rahul survived: first on 52 when Dom Sibley spilled one to his left, and then on 78, as Joe Root failed to grasp a thick edge with the reverse-cupped hands. England’s plan was now to bowl fuller, attack the stumps, make the Indian batters play more to create the chances. Root’s drop came in Anderson’s first over after lunch.In his next Anderson persisted with his plan. Rahul pushed an on-drive for a double and then punched an elegant cover drive for four. Anderson pushed Rahul back with a short delivery that climbed to Rahul’s shoulders. Two balls later Anderson lured Rahul with length delivery on the fourth stump, the type of ball that Rahul had previously been taking a good stride towards, having a good look at, and leaving alone. This time, though, he went for a drive and watched Anderson celebrate.For a moment Rahul stood there even as Anderson and England were celebrating. The umpire had to raise his finger to force him to retreat back to the dressing room. Rahul was furious at his mistake. Furious at getting carried away, at getting distracted.As ESPNcricinfo’s expert VVS Laxman said today, this was a “breakthrough innings” for Rahul. On his comeback in whites, Rahul showed what he has learned from his time away from Test cricket: respect the conditions, respect the format, read the match situation, and wait for the loose ball.The chance might have come courtesy unfortunate circumstances for his friend and team-mate, but Rahul has so far proven that he has earned this recall.

Gakpo upgrade: Liverpool open surprise talks to sign "magic" £70m PL star

Liverpool won at the weekend, but we have seen several times already this season that wins can prove to be false dawns as Arne Slot looks to restore consistency to his side.

Goals from Alexander Isak and Cody Gakpo snipped away the shocking run of form that had led to nine defeats from 12 in all competitions, six from seven in the Premier League, three from four at Anfield.

It beggars belief, so diametrically opposed is Slot’s second-season system from the slick and stylish outfit that defied everyone to romp to the league title last season, sealing the deal less than a year after Jurgen Klopp raised the microphone and waved goodbye to the red half of Merseyside.

Liverpool must stay grounded, as Slot said in his post-match interview. There is a long way to go.

One of the most curious aspects of the Reds’ victory was the boss’s call to drop Mohamed Salah. This glimpse into a brand new world has also played into rumours that FSG are looking to sign a wide forward in 2026.

Liverpool planning to replace Salah

Salah did not make it off the bench at the London Stadium, the first time the Egyptian has been an unused substitute in the Premier League since 2019/20, with Klopp’s title-winning campaign effectively wrapped up when the Reds played out a 0-0 draw in the Merseyside derby.

Last season, he was the best player in the Premier League. But that herculean effort has depleted the veteran’s resources, and he is struggling this year.

Goals scored

0.77

0.34

Assists

0.48

0.17

Shots taken

3.23

2.43

Shot-creating actions

4.51

3.27

Touches (att pen)

9.50

6.21

Pass completion (%)

70.6

68.1

Progressive passes

3.84

4.19

Progressive carries

4.14

3.94

Successful take-ons

1.55

0.92

Ball recoveries

2.70

2.77

As you can see, there’s been an undeniable drop-off. Liverpool’s wider crew have all slipped across the decking, but time is not on the 33-year-old Salah’s side.

To try and find a like-for-like replacement would be a fruitless task. What Liverpool need instead is a sharp and athletic winger with a flair for goal. Someone like Sadio Mane, perhaps (hardly an easy endeavour in itself).

Well, as per Foot Mercato, Liverpool have opened talks with rivals Everton for one of their star forwards, Iliman Ndiaye.

The versatile Ndiaye, 25, is both athletic and potent in the final third. Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur are also interested, and the Toffees would be looking to bank around £70m for their star man.

What Iliman Nidaye would offer Liverpool

Woah. From Everton to Liverpool? Blue to red? Nonsense, right?

It’s certainly unlikely, but Liverpool have held an interest in Jarrad Branthwaite for a while now, and Everton explored a move for Ben Doak in the summer before he signed for Bournemouth.

And Ndiaye would be worth the stress. Hailed for having “magic in his boots” by Everton writer Lyndon Lloyd, he ranks among the top 5% of positional peers in the Premier League for successful take-ons and tackles won, and the top 1% for ball recoveries per 90 (as per FBref).

Presenter Jamie O’Hara has even gone as far as to claim that the Senegalese is “one of the best players in the Premier League”.

Ndiaye shares a homeland with Liverpool icon Mane, but they have more in common than merely nationality. The Everton winger, who can play across the frontline, is electric on the ball, combative when against the flow of play and devastating in the box.

Though he’s spent most of his time on the right wing this season, Ndiaye is probably a left-sided forward at heart. Considering this, there’s a good chance Ndiaye would take Cody Gakpo’s starting berth from him at Anfield, with a more protean threat than the clinical Dutchman.

The African talent was Everton’s top scorer last season with 11 goals in all competitions, and that trend has not been bucked this year, Ndiaye with four goals and an assist across 13 games.

When Mane moved from Southampton to Liverpool for around £35m in 2016, he levelled up. Ndiaye could follow his countryman in this regard, having added a range of instruments to his toolbox in recent years and in an up-and-down Everton team.

Liverpool perhaps made a mistake in failing to replace Luis Diaz with a like-for-like successor this summer, and the ramifications have been felt through Gakpo’s somewhat limited attacking approach. He scored and assisted against West Ham at the weekend, but lacked the kind of dynamism that Liverpool’s previous left-sided wingers have offered.

Mane is certainly one of them, probably the cream of the crop. It would be unfair to expect Gakpo to play such a role, but if Ndiaye were signed, Slot would have a player who could match the Netherlands star’s output while bringing so much energy and enthusiasm to the role too.

Mane, now 34 and playing in Saudi Arabia, was once one of the world’s finest forwards, deadly across so many years at Anfield and blending clinical goalscoring with physicality and an unflappable mentality.

One scout even hailed Ndiaye as being “Mane all over again”, and given this is a proven formula in the English top flight, it’s surely one FSG will be enticed in completing.

With the greatest respect to West Ham, tougher tests lie ahead for the Anfield side, whose win at Eintracht Frankfurt in August preceded defeat at Brentford. The elation over that remarkable victory over Real Madrid had crumbled after the triad of recent losses.

Liverpool are nothing if not inconsistent this season, but that can change. It has to change. Liverpool need balance and security, but they also need to be bold and courageous, offering more flair than the likes of Gakpo have been providing.

And what could be more bold than signing a rival in Ndiaye, who would elevate the skill in Slot’s team and also balance the squad’s slanting spirit level.

Shades of Thiago: "Incredible" star had his best game in a Liverpool shirt

This Liverpool star could become the new Thiago at Anfield after his best Premier League showing for the club.

ByDan Emery Nov 30, 2025

Opinião: 'Estou mais preocupado com o futebol do Palmeiras do que com a novela Abel Ferreira'

MatériaMais Notícias

Eu não quero mais saber dessa história do Abel Ferreira e a sua suposta assinatura de um pré-contrato com o Al-Sadd.

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➡️ Siga o Lance! Palmeiras no WhatsApp e acompanhe todas as notícias do Verdão

O técnico já disse que não quer falar mais nisso, grande parte da torcida está fechada com ele e vai seguir com ele mesmo se ele estiver certo ou errado ao final da história.

continua após a publicidade

Portanto, da minha parte, essa novela chatíssima já deu o que tinha que dar.

Fico mais preocupado com a falta de futebol do Palmeiras e por mais uma vez o time passar 90 e tantos minutos sem um mísero gol, desta vez diante do fraco Botafogo-SP.

A baixa produção ofensiva e a fase ruim de alguns titulares fazem o torcedor ficar descrente de um segundo semestre de glórias, como está sendo desde 2020.

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Abel Ferreira e sua comissão técnica precisam focar e trabalhar para que o Palmeiras volte a sua melhor forma e enfim desempenhe o que esse elenco já mostrou conseguir fazer em outras épocas.

Não é uma missão fácil encontrar motivação e mais gás ano após ano, mas quem aumentou o sarrafo foram eles mesmo e o próprio técnico sabe disso.

continua após a publicidade

+ Acredita que o Verdão vai ser campeão da Libertadores? Então se liga na odd a longo prazo: 5.00!

O ponto final dessa polêmica toda será o Palmeiras voltar a jogar bola, dar mais prazer pra sua torcida e justificar o altíssimo preço de ingresso praticado no Allianz Parque.

Ripon Mondol stars as Bangladesh A win Super Over to make final

Suryavanshi scored a 15-ball 38 in chase but the middle order failed to fire before an unlikely lifeline took the game to a Super Over

Shashank Kishore21-Nov-2025

Ripon Mondol, the Player of the Match, picked up two wickets in the Super Over•Asian Cricket Council

Bangladesh A won the Super OverIn a thriller that nearly went into a second Super Over, Bangladesh A seamer Ripon Mondol knocked India A out in the semi-final of the Rising Stars Asia Cup in Doha, Qatar on Friday.Mondol delivered a superb 19th over, giving away just five runs and removing the well-set Ramandeep Singh to leave India A needing 16 off the final over; a target Bangladesh A nearly didn’t defend.With eight needed off the last three balls, Jishan Alam dropped a sitter at long-off to reprieve Ashutosh Sharma off left-arm spinner Rakibul Hasan. Even worse, he parried it to the boundary for four. Ashutosh couldn’t capitalise, though, and was bowled next ball to leave India A needing four off the final delivery.Yet, India A found an unlikely lifeline thanks to a misjudged underarm throw from Bangladesh A captain Akbar Ali. As Harsh Dubey dug out a full delivery to long-on, he’d nearly given up but somehow willed himself to run a second.Akbar collected the return and had enough time to run to the stumps to seal the game, but instead flicked an underarm throw that missed. With no one backing up, India A stole a third run to force a Super Over.India A then perhaps misfired tactically, not unleashing the tournament’s highest six-hitter, Vaibhav Suryavanshi, to open. Instead, Mondol bowled a pinpoint yorker to castle a frazzled Jitesh Sharma, who premeditated too early and got into a tangle attempting to paddle. Ashutosh toe-ended a yorker straight to extra cover as India A ran out of gas, leaving Bangladesh A a mere one run for victory.There appeared to be another twist when Suyash Sharma struck off the first delivery to remove Yasir Ali to a sharp catch by Ramandeep at the long-on fence. Akbar then took a strike with an opportunity to undo some of his earlier damage. Fortunately for him, Suyash’s misdirected googly ended up being a wide and Bangladesh A sealed victory in dramatic circumstances.Habibur Rahman Sohan led Bangladesh A’s charge•Asian Cricket Council

As a result, India A bowed out following an underwhelming campaign, where they were also beaten by Pakistan A in the group stages, while also being pushed by Oman.As chaotic as the finish was, India A would reflect on a poor finish with the ball as one of the major turning points. They conceded 50 off the last two overs alone, as left-hander SM Meherob made an unbeaten 48 off 18 balls. This included four stunning sixes in a 28-run penultimate over by Naman Dhir.Meherob’s cameo was the perfect sequel to Habibur Rahman’s 46-ball 65 up top that helped set up the game for Bangladesh A, before the middle-order briefly wobbled.India A brought up their fifty off just 19 balls as Vaibhav Suryavanshi went big, hitting two fours and four sixes in his 38 off 15 before he toe-ended a slog to long-on. Dhir struggled for timing – he was on 3 off 10 at one stage – and fell soon after.The chase was revived by Priyansh Arya and Jitesh Sharma, who made 44 and 33, respectively, to ensure India A were up with the asking rate for most parts. When Jitesh fell to leave India A 150 for 4 in 15 overs, the chase was upon Ramandeep and Nehal Wadhera, who appeared to have it under control before India A’s chase combusted in dramatic circumstances.

Forget Leoni: 19-year-old academy star could end Konate's Liverpool career

There is little to suggest that Liverpool are close to turning a corner and sustaining a respectable level of performance any time soon. What is most concerning is that the Reds and their boss, Arne Slot, have shown little sign of finding a solution to any of the many problems plaguing their campaign.

Liverpool’s Premier League title defence lies in tatters. There is a grudging acceptance across the red streets of Merseyside that Arsenal’s grip on top position is out of reach. Certainly, the gulf in quality between the two sides this season suggests that Liverpool will have to settle for a lesser prize on the league front.

Liverpool have been outclassed in successive top-flight fixtures, and change is surely needed now. Indeed, Liverpool languish in 11th place in the Premier League, having scored 18 goals and conceded 20.

Defensively, it’s been a mess, and the noise concerning Ibrahima Konate is only intensifying after the thrashing dealt by Nottingham Forest brought the French defender’s season to its lowest ebb.

Why Konate is becoming a huge problem for Liverpool

Konate, 26, was immense throughout the 2024/25 campaign, a powerful partner for Virgil van Dijk. He, of course, won the Premier League title, settling as a regular starter in Didier Deschamps’ France squad too.

Now, Konate is only offering the vestiges of that former level. What is most frustrating is that he has proven his quality before, but the loss of Trent Alexander-Arnold beside him as exposed Konate’s issues in establishing confident build-up patterns.

But these two versions of Konate are so staggeringly opposed that it is hard to accept this is the same player. Errors and baffling decision-making have been central parts of the £70k-per-week talent’s season, and you can’t help but question whether he is somewhat distracted by outside noise.

Konate is playing out the final year of his contract at Anfield, and though FSG have offered him an extension, there has yet to be a breakthrough as speculation regarding Real Madrid’s interest continues to linger.

The season-ending injury suffered by Giovanni Leoni in his first game for the club after signing from Parma for £27m this summer was a cruel blow. A detrimental blow. The 18-year-old’s absence has been keenly felt, not least because a move for Marc Guehi fell through on deadline day.

With Slot insinuating that Liverpool’s focus this winter might be on areas further upfield (heavy speculation centres on Bournemouth forward Antoine Semenyo), it might be that the Reds opt to make do at the back.

If this is to be the case, Slot must surely hand one of the club’s most talented young defenders a chance to shine.

Liverpool's academy Konate solution

Slot has shown a willingness to give youth a chance since taking over at Liverpool before the start of last season. Amara Nallo, for example, has been handed a few opportunities at senior level, albeit with those outings on the major stage leaving the up-and-comer beleaguered after red cards in both matches.

However, Nallo isn’t the only teenage centre-back who is playing himself toward senior contention, with 19-year-old Wellity Lucky inching toward a breakthrough after commanding displays for Rob Page’s development side.

Nallo

The Spain-born defender moved to England aged 11 before joining Liverpool’s academy scene, and he has gone from strength to strength in the years since joining, having now made 60 appearances for the club’s respective youth levels.

Earlier this season, the “highly-rated” defender, as he was described by Reds reporter Ben Bocsak, made his professional debut off the bench as Slot’s side were beaten 3-0 by Crystal Palace at Anfield in the Carabao Cup.

In the process, he was rewarded after being “outstanding this season” in the Premier League 2, as has been said by youth correspondent Jack Lusby.

A commanding and dominant defender with a promising ability to read and then snuff out opposition attacks, Lucky has shown that he can take his power and potential and transfer that over to contests against senior opponents. In the Football League Trophy this term, Lucky has impressed against the bustle of outfits like Crewe Alexandra and Chesterfield for the U21s.

Front-footed and fast, you could even say that he offers shades of a player like Konate, which could make adding him to the mix an attractive prospect from a stylistic standpoint.

Matches (starts)

2 (2)

Touches*

90.5

Accurate passes

61.5 (88%)

Key passes*

0.5

Dribbles*

1.5

Ball recoveries*

6.0

Tackles + interceptions*

3.0

Clearances*

5.5

Duels (won)*

5.0 (83%)

It might not have been against top-level opponents, but for Lucky to have won 83% of his duels across the two fixtures bespeaks his incisiveness in defensive phases. Moreover, his cameo against Palace last month saw him complete all 22 of his attempted passes while making a recovery too. Small factors, but promising nonetheless.

Slot continues to show a reluctance to give Joe Gomez a run of chances, and if Konate continues to flatter to deceive, it’s surely only a matter of time before things change there.

Could that open up an opportunity for a youngster such as Lucky? After all, he has earned Slot’s approval already this year, and Nallo’s struggles under the boss’s wing suggest that Lucky could be set for a promotion sooner rather than later.

To throw Lucky into the deep end would hardly be a propitious move, but if Slot can ease him into life among the big boys, this could add an exciting and fresh dimension to a defence crying out for support.

Read between the lines and you could surmise that Liverpool will prioritise a wide forward this summer. In this, the need for academy support at the rear is significant, and Lucky could be the shrewd solution to thread the connection between the club and the fanbase back together.

Forget Isak: Another Liverpool flop is quickly becoming the new Nunez

Alexander Isak has had a wretched first few months at Liverpool.

ByMatt Dawson Nov 23, 2025

Rizwan, bowlers keep Patriots alive in playoffs race

In what was a must-win game for St Kitts and Nevis Patriots, Mohammad Rizwan and the bowlers helped them get the better of Guyana Amazon Warriors by five runs in a last-over finish in Providence.Chasing a mere 150, Amazon Warriors needed 11 from six balls with three wickets in hand. Naseem Shah held his nerve and had Keemo Paul caught at long-on with the first ball. For the rest of the over, he mixed slower balls into the pitch with yorkers to give away just five. While the result ended Patriots’ three-match losing streak, their playoff chances still look bleak. They need nothing less than a win in their last league match, against Barbados Royals on Friday, but also other results to go their way.Earlier, Patriots did not have a great start and were 26 for 3 inside five overs with Andre Fletcher, Kyle Mayers and Leniko Boucher all falling in single digits. But Rizwan’s 85 off 62 balls steered them to 149 for 6.Rizwan stabilised the innings with Rilee Rossouw and took the side to 64 for 4 at the end of ten overs. He was on 36 off 30 at that point but scored 49 off the next 32. In all, he hit eight fours and three sixes and was responsible for Patriots scoring 45 in the last four overs.Patriots’ Pakistani stars Mohammad Rizwan and Naseem Shah celebrate the big wicket of Shimron Hetmyer•CPL T20 via Getty Images

Amazon Warriors had a much better start, reaching 41 for 1 after the powerplay. But they could not build on that, losing two wickets in the next four overs to be 67 for 3 at the halfway mark. Patriots pegged them back further by dismissing Hassan Khan and Shai Hope in successive overs. Dominic Drakes had Hassan caught and bowled and Navin Bidaisee castled Hope with a slider that kept low.After 15 overs, both sides were 100 for 5. But while Patriots had a set better in Rizwan, Amazon Warriors did not. With 50 needed from the last five overs, Dwaine Pretorius tried to take on Waqar Salamkheil but perished attempting a slog sweep. On the very next ball, Salamkheil could have had Romario Shepherd caught behind but Rizwan was not sure if there was bat involved. Replay showed a clear outside edge.Shepherd rubbed it in by pulling the last ball of the over for a six. Paul did the same against Naseem in the following over but could manage only a leg bye from the other five deliveries.With 21 needed from ten balls, Jason Holder had Shepherd caught at long-on with a short ball. Quenton Sampson hit two fours off the next three balls to bring it down to 11 needed from the final over. But Naseem denied them.

India cruise past 400 on second morning, Gill crosses 150

Gill was involved in a 203-run stand with Jadeja before Tongue gave England the breakthrough

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Jul-20251:52

Aaron: A statement knock from Gill

Lunch India cruised past 400 on the second morning at Edgbaston, as Shubman Gill registered his new Test high score in a 203-run partnership with Ravindra Jadeja for the sixth wicket. Jadeja fell shortly before the interval for 89, gloving a catch behind down the leg side off Josh Tongue, but Gill batted serenely to pass 150 for the first time in Tests.Gill and Jadeja added an unbroken 99 on the first evening, and reached their 100-run stand off the first ball of the day as Gill tucked Ben Stokes through the leg side. Gill played a rare false shot early on, edging Chris Woakes past second slip, but otherwise offered almost nothing while batting at a slightly higher tempo than he had on the opening day.England’s bowlers were frustrated by Jadeja’s habit of taking a step or two down the pitch before deciding whether or not to attempt a run, with Stokes and Woakes both exchanging words with him. Both Jadeja and Stokes were spoken to by the umpires – Sharfuddoula and Chris Gaffaney – and encouraged to avoid the ‘danger area’ on a good length.Jadeja marked his ninth 50-plus score against England with his trade sword celebration, and scored freely on both sides of the wicket. He and Gill exchanged sixes off Shoaib Bashir to take India past 400 – and take their partnership beyond 200 – before Tongue, unused for the first 85 minutes of the day, struck in his third over of the session.Tongue found some extra bounce with an 85mph/137kph short ball, which looped through to Jamie Smith via Jadeja’s glove, and bowled a hostile spell to Washington Sundar, India’s No. 8. But India were well on top by the lunch break, with Gill still unbeaten and batting with a combination of class and composure.

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