James Rodríguez e Lucas Moura se apresentam no Morumbi e 'estreiam' nova camisa do São Paulo

MatériaMais Notícias

James Rodríguez e Lucas Moura foram apresentados para a torcida do São Paulo na tarde deste domingo (6), no Morumbi, antes do início do confronto diante do Atlético-MG, pela 18ª rodada do Brasileirão. Recém-contratados, os jogadores foram ovacionados pelos mais de 50 mil são-paulinos, com direito a volta olímpica, muita festa e confetes.

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+ Lucas Moura revela posição ideal no ataque do São Paulo e exalta chegada de James Rodríguez

Ainda, a dupla lançou o novo terceiro uniforme do Tricolor para a temporada 2023. A camisa é predominantemente preta com listras verticais em vermelho e branco no lado esquerdo, cruzando o escudo do clube. O uniforme faz uma referência ao modelo utilizado por Rogério Ceni na conquista do tricampeonato brasileiro, em 2008.

Lucas foi relacionado para o duelo contra o Galo e entrou no intervalo da partida. Já James ainda não está 100% fisicamente e ainda não tem previsão para ser relacionado. O colombiano vem se preparando na expectativa de poder atuar na partida de volta da semifinal da Copa do Brasil, no dia 16 de agosto, no Morumbi.

Com a derrota por 2 a 0 para o Atlético-MG, o São Paulo permaneceu na oitava colocação do Brasileirão, com 26 pontos, perdendo a chance de retornar ao G-6. A equipe do técnico Dorival Júnior volta a campo nesta quinta-feira (10), contra o San Lorenzo-ARG, às 19h, no Morumbi, pelo jogo de volta das oitavas de final da Sul-Americana. O Tricolor terá que tirar a vantagem dos argentinos, que venceram o primeiro duelo por de 1 a 0, na Argentina.

Khushdil, Warner help Kings seal last-over thriller

Warner top-scored with 60 while Khushdil chipped in both bat and ball for Kings

Danyal Rasool21-Apr-2025

David Warner and Khushdil Shah played crucial knocks•PSL

Karachi Kings sealed a thrilling final-over two-wicket victory over Peshawar Zalmi in the last game at their home venue this tournament. A half-century from David Warner held the innings together through a chase of 149, but a stumble towards the end threatened to see them fall at the final hurdle. However,Khushdil Shah and Hasan Ali held their nerve at the death as a pair of boundaries in the final over sealed a morale-boosting win over Babar Azam’s side.Zalmi’s best bowler Luke Wood set the tone in defence of the target when he cleaned Tim Seifert up first ball, following it up with the removal of James Vince in his second over. Teenage quick Ali Raza picked up the baton, knocking back fellow emerging player Saad Baig’s leg stump when he tried to scoop him over fine leg. But untidiness from the bowling and a gritty innings from Warner kept Kings’ asking rate on track in the powerplay.The following five overs saw Zalmi apply the brakes; only 24 came between the seventh and 11th overs, but Kings struggled free of their shackles over the next three overs as Warner and Mohammad Nabi cut loose. Warner went after Saim Ayub and Raza, picking up four boundaries in those two overs while Nabi slapped Ayub for six over extra cover and Ariq Yaqoob for another boundary before his cameo came to an end.The equation, though, had shifted dramatically in Kings’ favour. With 44 required off six, they could afford more conservatism, at least while Warner, now unbeaten past a half-century, was still around. But when a slower delivery from Wood castled him for 60 off 47, Zalmi’s hopes were freshly renewed. Abbas Afridi and Aamer Jamal fell within three balls of each other, and the final over saw Karachi requiring an awkward nine to get with just two wickets in hand.However, Zalmi had bowled out all their specialists by now; they were reluctant to hand Ayub the final over. The part-time medium pace of Hussain Talat was trusted, but then easily dispatched by a boundary each from Khushdil and Hasan as Kings scratched out a victory that should have come much easier to them.Kings were well on top in the first innings. A stingy start brought about Ayub’s dismissal at Mir Hamza’s hands for four off eight, and Babar was in all sorts of trouble. He had been reprieved twice, once when an lbw was overturned off the second delivery, and also after Hamza put down a straightforward chance off his own bowling.Khushdil enjoyed a fruitful day with the ball, the tone set when he came back from a Tom Kohler-Cadmore six off to draw a miscue off the next ball. Babar and Mohammad Haris produced a gritty partnership that stopped the rot but didn’t especially pick up the run rate, and off the final ball of the tenth over, Khushdil struck to end Babar’s workmanlike innings. This time the review didn’t reprieve him after he was struck in front; he had faced 41 off the first 60 balls, and scored 46 of Zalmi’s 67.Haris picked up the rate but couldn’t quite produce his explosive best, and fell at a crucial time just as Zalmi were gearing up for the death. His 21-ball 28 had pushed the run rate past seven, and though a cameo from Alzarri Joseph got their side close to 150, Kings ensured they did just enough in each innings to come away with the two points they deserved.

Why Newcastle could be facing instant punishment from UEFA back in UCL

It’s not all good news for Newcastle United back in the Champions League amid reports that they’ve comfortably breached one of UEFA’s rules and could be facing a punishment as a result.

Where Newcastle stand financially

Whilst they were incredibly limited in 2024 when it came to spending in the Premier League, Champions League qualification and player sales quickly solved their domestic problems this summer. As such, Eddie Howe was finally in a position to welcome fresh faces again and after much toing and froing, he secured Nick Woltemade, Yoane Wissa, Anthony Elanga, Malick Thiaw and Jacob Ramsey.

Woltemade’s arrival would have come as a particular relief. The German was one of many options on Newcastle’s list of striker targets, as they were handed rejection after rejection. Eventually, it was the Stuttgart striker that arrived and, to his credit, he’s wasted no time before finding his feet – scoring on his debut against Wolverhampton Wanderers.

But after a summer of spending and the record sale of Alexander Isak, where do Newcastle stand financially? Football finance expert Kieram Maguire had his say and compared it to when Aston Villa sold Jack Grealish to Manchester City in 2021.

He told BBC Sport: “It will give them that financial flexibility that they didn’t have 12 months ago when they were forced to do nothing for a couple of windows. You don’t want that repeating, especially when the club are ambitious and aspirational.”

Ready to challenge Woltemade: Newcastle have found a "poor man's Haaland"

Howe might have a secret weapon in the final third at Newcastle.

3 ByAngus Sinclair Sep 16, 2025

So, as things stand, it looks as though PIF will satisfy the Premier League’s financial regulations. However, the same may not be said for UEFA’s financial rules. Reports are now suggesting that Newcastle could be facing further trouble away from the pitch.

Newcastle could be facing UEFA punishment

According to The Athletic, Newcastle have comfortably breached UEFA’s loss limit, which allows teams to lose up to £52m over three years. PIF recorded operating losses at St James’ Park worth around £68m in each of the last two seasons and could now be facing a similar punishment to Aston Villa and Chelsea, who were hit with fines earlier this year.

Even after the sale of Isak, the problem that Newcastle have is that UEFA have noted Elliot Anderson’s move to Nottingham Forest as a swap deal with Odysseas Vlachodimos. They’ve also reduced the sale of Allan Saint-Maximin to Al Ahli to nil profit due to the fact that the Saudi club are a shared party with the club.

Newcastle United and PIF chairmanYasirAl-Rumayyan.

Whilst the official financial reports for 2024/25 are yet to be released, it doesn’t look good for Newcastle once again. They will hope that this is the final time that they face such issues after selling big in the summer.

For now, however, it looks as though they’re set to join Villa and Chelsea on the list of Premier League clubs to be hit with a fine by UEFA, unless their accounts provide an unexpected twist.

Weekly wages: Wrexham AFC 2025/26 highest-paid players

Wrexham AFC have enjoyed a phenomenal rise up the leagues under the ownership of Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney and are now splashing the cash as a Championship side.

As a result, their annual payroll has increased dramatically to an eye-catching £18.2m, with the average Red Dragons’ player picking up more than £550,000 per season.

Wrexham's most expensive signings of all time

Football FanCast takes a look at Wrexham’s record signings.

ByCharlie Smith Dec 30, 2024

But who earns what at The Racecourse Ground? Here is what Wrexham are paying their players for the 2025/26 season, as per Capology.

Disclaimer – only the club and the players themselves truly know their wages, so take each of these figures as you will.

1

Kieffer Moore

£30,000

£1,560,000

=2

Conor Coady

£25,000

£1,300,000

=2

Jay Rodriguez

£25,000

£1,300,000

4

Lewis O’Brien

£17,500

£910,000

=5

Josh Windass

£15,000

£780,000

=5

Ben Sheaf

£15,000

£780,000

=5

Callum Doyle

£15,000

£780,000

=5

Matty James

£15,000

£780,000

=5

Liberato Cacace

£15,000

£780,000

=5

Sam Smith

£15,000

£780,000

=5

Issa Kabore

£15,000

£780,000

=12

Danny Ward

£12,500

£650,000

=12

Nathan Broadhead

£12,500

£650,000

=12

Ollie Rathbone

£12,500

£650,000

=12

Dominic Hyam

£12,500

£650,000

=16

James McClean

£10,000

£520,000

=16

Ryan Hardie

£10,000

£520,000

=16

George Thomason

£10,000

£520,000

=19

George Dobson

£8,500

£442,000

=19

Dan Scarr

£8,500

£442,000

=21

Lewis Brunt

£7,500

£390,000

=21

Ryan Longman

£7,500

£390,000

=23

Eoghan O’Connell

£6,000

£312,000

=23

Andy Cannon

£6,000

£312,000

25

Elliot Lee

£5,500

£286,000

=26

Ryan Barnett

£5,000

£260,000

=26

Callum Burton

£5,000

£260,000

28

Arthur Okonkwo

£3,000

£156,000

29

Max Cleworth

£1,200

£62,400

30

James Rainbird

£1,000

£52,000

=31

Harry Ashfield

£900

£46,800

=31

Aaron James

£900

£46,800

33

Max Purvis

£750

£39,000

Here's a detailed look at Wrexham's top 10 earners… 10 Sam Smith £15,000 per week

Sam Smith is just one of seven Wrexham players picking up £15,000 per week at The Racecourse, with the forward arriving in January 2025 from Reading.

He scored some vital goals to help Wrexham win promotion to the Championship and is under contract until 2028.

9 Liberato Cacace £15,000 per week

Liberato Cacace was Wrexham’s only 2025 signing made outside of England, with the New Zealand intermational arriving from Italian side Empoli.

The left-back cost just over £2m and put pen to paper on a three-year deal in Wales.

8 Matty James £15,000 per week

Wrexham didn’t pay a penny to sign Matty James in 2024 after he became a free agent following his Bristol City exit.

The central midfielder’s experience was key in the League One promotion run in.

7 Callum Doyle £15,000 per week

Callum Doyle is actually one of Wrexham’s most expensive signings of all time, but he’s down the list when it comes to the club’s highest paid players.

Signed from Premier League giants Manchester City for £5m, Doyle picks up £780,000 per season in Wales.

6 Ben Sheaf £15,000 per week

After starring for Coventry City over four years, Ben Sheaf swapped the Midlands for Wales, joining Wrexham on deadline day in September 2025.

He reportedly cost Reynolds and McElhenney £6.5m and is under contract until 2028.

5 Josh Windass £15,000 per week

After leaving Sheffield Wednesday at the end of the 2024/25 season, attacker Josh Windass penned a three-year contract at Wrexham.

The forward actually scored Wrexham’s first goal back in the second-tier away at Southampton.

4 Lewis O'Brien £17,500 per week

Another marquee signing following the club’s promotion to the Championship was Lewis O’Brien, who arrived from Nottingham Forest in a £3m transfer.

His £910,000 per season deal in Wales runs until 2028.

3 Jay Rodriguez £25,000 per week

Signed at the beginning of 2025 to help Wrexham to promotion, Jay Rodriguez is on a deal worth £1.3m per season at The Racecourse.

A striker with Premier League experience, Rodriguez’s contract expires in 2026.

2 Conor Coady £25,000 per week

An England international, centre-back Conor Coady signed for Wrexham from Leicester City in a deal worth £2m.

He signed a two-year contract and was made a key part of Phil Parkinson’s plans straightaway.

1 Kieffer Moore £30,000 per week

Top of the list as Wrexham’s highest paid player is Wales international Kieffer Moore.

An experienced Championship striker who has scored goals for Cardiff City, Bournemouth, Ipswich Town and Sheffield United in recent years, Moore is under contract until 2028.

Solskjaer 2.0: Man Utd could replace Amorim with "one of the best coaches"

As Ruben Amorim will attest to, it’s not a great time to be the current Manchester United manager, with the Portuguese staring down the barrel after collecting just 31 points from 31 Premier League games in charge.

Whether it is comfort to him or not, it is also worth noting that it isn’t exactly ideal to be a former United boss either, with the past few weeks having seen numerous high-profile names depart their posts.

Indeed, Jose Mourinho’s failure to steer Fenerbahce into the Champions League saw him replaced last month, with the enigmatic coach now looking set to return to his homeland amid the chance to replace Bruno Lage at Benfica.

Elsewhere in Turkey, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s own European misfortunes ensured he was relieved of his role at Besiktas that same week, with the Norwegian’s first coaching position since leaving Old Trafford having lasted just over six months.

Perhaps the most brutal of the lot, however, was Erik ten Hag’s dismissal at Bayer Leverkusen, abruptly ending a tenure that lasted – checks notes – just two games in charge of the Bundesliga outfit. Ouch.

All of those men tried, and ultimately failed, to take the Red Devils back to the top of the European and English game, with Amorim, unfortunately, in danger of following suit.

Ranking every post-Ferguson manager at Man Utd

Only three managers in United’s entire history – Ernest Mangnall, Sir Matt Busby, and Sir Alex Ferguson – have won a league title while in charge of the club, with the latter of such esteemed figures leaving a legacy that continues to burden those in his wake.

David Moyes – or ‘The Chosen One’ – was first up in attempting to fill that void, although nine months into his six-year contract, the struggling Scotsman was sacked, even with United narrowly defeated by Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarter-final.

In 51 games in all at Old Trafford, the current Everton boss won 27 games, as per Transfermarkt. For context, Amorim has won only 18 games from 47 games at the helm to date.

That pairing unsurprisingly rank lowly on this list, but bottom of the pile is the interim Ralf Rangnick. The German won 11 of 29 games in charge, but this short-term fit was ill-suited right from the off.

While his honesty in press conferences may have charmed some, the veteran coach did little to lift the toxic mood, arguably holding more focus on improving his own standing than actually improving matters on and off the pitch.

Louis van Gaal, meanwhile, endured his own turbulent, chaotic stint. A dismal recruitment record saw the likes of Angel Di Maria, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Morgan Schneiderlin – to name just a few – underwhelm, although the unique Dutchman did oversee the rise of a young Marcus Rashford, while claiming an FA Cup triumph to boot.

Sticking with the Netherlands, Ten Hag’s own success can be seen in his Carabao Cup and FA Cup heroics, as well as the nurturing of Kobbie Mainoo and Alejandro Garnacho, although few United managers have sunk to such lows – losing 7-0 at Anfield the obvious case in point.

Under Mourinho, the ‘poor man’s treble’ was claimed in 2016/17, while his 81-point tally the following season remains the best return post-Fergie. A winner undeniably, but Mourinho’s football was forgettable, with hardly a week passing without some kind of feud with Paul Pogba, Anthony Martial, Luke Shaw and the like.

The Portuguese coach had left a dark cloud over Manchester upon his exit in December 2018, but Solskjaer – perhaps the best of the bunch – swiftly lifted it, winning 14 of his first 17 games in charge while famously seeing off Paris Saint-Germain at the Parc des Princes.

Man Utd (3) vs (1) PSG – March 2019

Position

Players

GK

David De Gea

RB

Eric Bailly

CB

Chris Smalling

CB

Victor Lindelof

LB

Luke Shaw

RM

Ashley Young

CM

Scott McTominay

CM

Fred

LM

Andreas Pereira

ST

Marcus Rashford

ST

Romelu Lukaku

Subs (used): Chong, Dalot, Greenwood

A trophy may have alluded him, but second and third-place finishes marked signs of progress, with the return of Cristiano Ronaldo likely to remain a ‘what if’ moment amid the eventual collapse of his reign.

The treble winner wasn’t without fault, and nor was his football, but he was a steady pair of hands who revived the atmosphere at the club. Could a change this summer do the same?

Why Man Utd could turn to the next Solskjaer

The final days of ‘Ole at the wheel’ were dour, with defeats at home to Liverpool and Manchester City suggesting that time was up for the beloved coach in the Old Trafford dugout.

Departing without silverware, having agonisingly lost the 2021 Europa League final, Solskjaer’s stint may be looked back upon as a failure to some, yet as already noted, the progress pre-Ronaldo was clear to see.

Perhaps the Covid-era of football, and the lack of supporters, played a factor in United’s rise in those years, but the feel-good factor had undoubtedly returned, after the dark days of Jose. Even Solskjaer’s biggest critic would have been hard-pressed not to get teary-eyed at his emotional exit interview from the club.

At another time of crisis, there is a sense that United are again in need of someone to steady the ship. Someone to cultivate a positive environment again behind the scenes.

If recent suggestions are to be believed, one man who could be in line to do that job, should Amorim depart, is Sir Gareth Southgate, with the ex-England boss yet to return to the dugout after leaving the Three Lions last summer.

Of course, while Solskjaer’s return was met with glee among adoring supporters six years ago, there would be undeniable “scepticism” surrounding Southgate, as noted by Gary Neville last year, with the 55-year-old having been unable to get his country over the line in two European Championship finals.

A nearly man to some – having been described as like “Solskjaer in an international guise” by talkSPORT’s Simon Jordan – Southgate’s failure to claim silverware was ultimately his undoing. At international level, it can be seen as win or bust.

That summary of his time at the helm doesn’t tell the full story, however. Like Solskjaer, the ex-England international revived the spirit and atmosphere at a time when the national team was broken, following the Iceland debacle and Sam Allardyce’s brief tenure.

Described by Jude Bellingham as “one of the best coaches in the history of the national team but also an unbelievable human being”, Southgate is credited for England’s recent revival and for raising the level – a point notably made by Marcus Rashford:

A stoic figure and a leader on the touchline, it’s difficult to see Southgate shrinking in the United dugout. As Neville has claimed, “one thing Gareth would do is weed out the nonsense in that dressing room”.

Like Solskjaer’s time at United, the out-of-work coach had players wanting to play for him at international level. The football may not have been thrilling, but it was effective and efficient.

INEOS have gambled on Amorim, but so far that risk hasn’t paid off. A man to steady the ship – like Solskjaer not too long ago – could be just what is needed.

Who knows, in a similar vein to the Norwegian, Southgate could well surprise a few.

Amorim upgrade: INEOS eyeing "best young coach in the world" for Man Utd

INEOS could be about to land a new manager to replace Ruben Amorim in the coming weeks.

1

By
Ethan Lamb

Sep 16, 2025

Shoaib Bashir seals innings win as Sean Williams stars for spirited Zimbabwe

England 565 for 6 dec (Pope 171, Duckett 140, Crawley 124) beat Zimbabwe 265 (Bennett 139) and 255 (Williams 88, Raza 60, Bashir 6-81) by an innings and 45 runsEngland began their home international summer with a comprehensive win over Zimbabwe after bowling them out twice inside five sessions and finishing the four-day Test with more than a day to spare. Offspinner Shoaib Bashir, playing in his 16th Test, headlined the final day with his fourth Test five-for – the most by an England player before turning 22 – and second in Nottingham.The magnitude of the defeat did not wipe the smiles off the faces of the visitors and their boisterous fans, who filled Trent Bridge with noise and colour, and stayed to applaud them in a lap of gratitude afterwards. This was Zimbabwe’s first Test in England in 22 years and a strong expat crowd delighted in brave batting from Sean Williams, Ben Curran, Sikandar Raza and Wessly Madhevere.Williams fell 12 short of a century and put on 122 for the second wicket while Raza reached a 10th Test half-century and shared a 65-run fifth-wicket stand with Madhevere. Zimbabwe did not disgrace themselves as they came within 45 runs of making England bat again and showed promise ahead of home Tests against South Africa, New Zealand and Afghanistan later this year.England, meanwhile, have had their first bit of preparation ahead of a massive eight months in Tests which includes a five-match home series against India and the Ashes in Australia. They may have some concerns over their frontline seamers, who lacked some bite. Captain Ben Stokes was the most threatening on his return to bowling after hamstring surgery, and also maintained the highest pace, across his two four-over spells. In total, he bowled 11.2 in the match, while Bashir finished with nine for 143, his best match figures.Zimbabwe began the day on 30 for 2, 270 runs behind and needing a big batting performance from someone. Williams, an international veteran of 20 years who averages 66.56 in the last five years, delivered. He played a typically energetic knock, laced with boundaries. He hit 16 fours in his innings, nine through the covers and mid-off as England overpitched and occasionally offered width. He also ushered Curran through a cautious knock that spanned 104 balls for 37 runs.Stokes began the morning’s proceedings and immediately caused problems for Zimbabwe. His third ball was wide and full, Curran drove hard and edged past gully for four. Stokes would have known he’d also planted a seed of doubt and in his next over, he could have reaped the rewards. On 10, Curran drove the ball back to Stokes, who stuck out both hands but could not hold on in his followthrough. That would have stung and more so when Williams smoked Stokes through point and over midwicket later in the over.Williams reached fifty in the next over with a pinpoint straight drive off Josh Tongue, off the 42nd ball he faced. In the next over, Tongue hit Williams on the bottom forearm, with a delivery that reared up from back of a length and drew blood. Williams was treated on-field and appeared unaffected as he drove a wide Atkinson ball in his favoured region for four more.Sean Williams produced a fighting 88 to lead Zimbabwe’s resistance•Getty Images

Joe Root was used for an over for Tongue to change ends and England went double-spin with the introduction of Bashir. Williams reverse-swept his first ball for four to enter the seventies. At the other end Tongue began a short-ball assault on Curran that almost paid off. Curran, having hauled his way to 29, pulled Tongue to Stokes at midwicket but the England captain could only get fingertips to it.Curran survived again when Umpire Kumar Dharmasena gave him out lbw after he missed a sweep against Bashir but Curran reviewed. Hawkeye showed the ball was bouncing over the top of the stumps. Williams was not quite as lucky. On 88, he was hit on the pads, given out and reviewed. Replays showed the ball was clipping the top of the leg stump. Having faced 82 balls, he had been on course to reclaim the national record for fastest century that Brian Bennett’s 97-ball effort had taken on the previous day.Post-lunch, Curran adopted a more aggressive approach and drove Bashir aerially but only as far as Stokes at short cover, for whom the third time was a charm. He had no trouble holding on. That brought Raza and Madhevere together and they took on the spin and the short ball from Sam Cook with confidence. They had a couple of nervy moments: when Bashir induced Raza’s edge once and the ball ricocheted off Jamie Smith and onto the peak of Harry Brook’s cap at first slip, which saved him from being hit on the forehead. Then, Cook got a full ball to jag back into Madhevere and hit his front pad and convinced Stokes to review. Ball-tracking showed it was missing leg stump.In the end it took a moment of magic, and the return of Stokes, to separate the pair. He went short to Madhevere and found extra bounce, Madhevere attempted a cut but found an outside-edge and the ball seemed to be heading over second slip. Brook jumped, stuck his right hand up and plucked the ball out of the air, to everyone’s surprise. Madhevere looked back, astonished that he had to go while Stokes placed his hand over his mouth a la Stuart Broad, who celebrated in the same way when Stokes himself pulled off a blinder in the Ashes a decade ago on the same ground.With Madhevere went Zimbabwe’s last real hope of making England bat again and the result was only a matter of time. Tafadzwa Tsiga was bowled by Bashir when he came down the track to a ball that turned in and through the bat-pad gap. Zimbabwean emotions see-sawed as Raza reached fifty in the next over when he creamed Stokes through the covers for his eighth four but in the over after that Blessing Muzarabani slog-swept Bashir straight to Root at deep midwicket. Bashir bagged his fifth when Raza, who had added two more fours to his count, tried to heave him over the leg side and managed a leading edge which Brook pouched.Fittingly, Bashir finished things off when he struck Chivanga on the back pad as he played inside the line and was hit in front of middle and off. Richard Ngarava, Zimbabwe’s No.11, did not bat in either innings after leaving the field on the first day with a back injury.

Após eliminação, Matías Segovia pede Botafogo atento ao sonho do título brasileiro

MatériaMais Notícias

Nem mesmo a eliminação da Copa Sul-Americana faz com que o meia Matías Segovia deixe de lado a expectativa de terminar o ano com uma conquista pelo Botafogo. O atacante exigiu que a equipe direcione suas forças para buscar o título brasileiro.

Após a derrota por 2 a 1 para o Defensa Y Justicia, em Buenos Aires, o paraguaio afirmou.

+ Próximos jogos do Botafogo: veja calendário com datas e adversários

– Estamos doloridos pela derrota, mas agora nos resta trabalhar e pensar no torneio que estamos vivos ainda, que é o Brasileiro. São coisas que acontecem no futebol. Vamos sair para cima sempre – disse, à Paramount +.

O jovem lamentou a eliminação alvinegra na partida com os argentinos.

– Fizemos um grande jogo, só tínhamos que aproveitar para fazer os gols. São coisas que acontecem, já aconteceu, não temos mais o que fazer. Resta o Brasileiro e vamos para cima de tudo – frisou.

O Botafogo encara o Flamengo no Nilton Santos no sábado (2), no Nilton Santos.

ريال مدريد يحدد موقفه من بيع كامافينجا إلى نيوكاسل يونايتد

يمر فريق ريال مدريد بمعنويات عالية خاصة بعد أن نجح الفريق في الفوز بمباراة الكلاسيكو أمام برشلونة على ملعب سانتياجو برنابيو في الدوري الاسباني لكرة القدم.

وأصبح إدواردو كامافينجا حديث الساعة في ريال مدريد خاصة بعد أدائه المميز في الآونة الأخيرة وتعدد أدواره تحت قيادة المدرب الحالي تشابي ألونسو.

ولعب كامافينجا في مركز الجناح الأيمن ضد برشلونة وأصبح من أبرز لاعبي ريال مدريد خلال الفترة الأخيرة.

أقرأ أيضاً.. لاعب ريال مدريد السابق جاهز للانتقال إلى برشلونة

وكان لاعب خط الوسط الفرنسي محط أنظار نيوكاسل يونايتد، حيث تردد في تقارير صحفية أن النادي الإنجليزي مستعد لتقديم 70 مليون يورو لضم اللاعب.

ووفقاً لما ذكرته “ديفنسا سنترال” الإسبانية فإن ريال مدريد رد على اهتمام نيوكاسل يونايتد وتمسك ببقاء اللاعب وأنه ليس للبيع.

ويعتبر ريال مدريد إدواردو كامافينجا أحد أبرز لاعبيه الواعدين، وكان اللاعب يتعرض في وقت سابق لإصابات متعددة ولكنه لا يفتقر إلى الموهبة.

وأبدى تشابي ألونسو ثقة كبيرة في إدواردو كامافينجا ويؤمن بأن الفرنسي سينجح في ريال مدريد، ويملك اللاعب إمكانيات هائلة للتطور في سن الثانية والعشرين فقط.

Sam Curran leads Surrey rearguard, Jamie Porter five-for in vain

Rain delays and stubborn batting combine to deny Essex on final day

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay26-May-2025

Jamie Porter took a five-for but Essex couldn’t force victory•Getty Images

Sam Curran added 77 to a first-innings 70, in his first red-ball appearance since last September, as Surrey saw out a rain-hit final day on 289 for 7 to secure a draw against Essex at the Kia Oval.Curran’s 121-ball effort held Surrey’s batting together as seamer Jamie Porter and offspinner Simon Harmer threatened to bowl Essex to a second Rothesay County Championship win of the season.Six separate rain interruptions during Monday – all of them short, but lopping 20 overs in all from the final day’s allocation – did not help Essex’s cause. In the end, a 51-run stand between Jamie Overton and Jordan Clark proved decisive.Overton stayed just over two hours for his 47 from 102 balls, edging Porter to third slip just before 6pm from what became the last ball of the game. Clark finished 23 not out.Porter finished with 5 for 88 from 27 overs and Harmer 2 for 94 from 34 with Essex taking 11 points from the draw and Surrey, who stay second in the Division One table, 12.After the fifth rain delay Essex thought they had 14 overs – including seven with a second new ball – in which to take the last four Surrey wickets, but after eight balls yet another heavy shower ultimately reduced that equation by four more overs.Surrey had started the day on 32 without loss, having been set an unlikely 418 in the fourth innings after Essex, led by centuries from Paul Walter and 20-year-old Charlie Allison on days two and three, had reached 479 in their own second innings.Rory Burns and Dom Sibley, Surrey’s openers, were fluent early on against Essex’s seamers and took their stand to 76 before Harmer made the breakthrough with the first ball of his third over of the morning.Left-hander Burns, on 39, jumped out to drive but was beaten by appreciable spin and bounce out of the bowlers’ footmarks and superbly stumped by Michael Pepper, who had to bring the ball down from almost shoulder height.Sibley, having reached 40 with some excellent strokes down the ground, was similarly deceived by Harmer. The South Africa Test spinner, seeing Sibley advance from his crease, tossed the ball a bit wider to leave the former England man groping for it and Pepper to complete a far simpler stumping.At lunch, with only one over at that stage lost to a sharp mid-session shower, Surrey had stabilised the innings at 142 for 2 through Australian left-hander Kurtis Patterson and Curran, who got off the mark in spectacular style by hooking Porter for six over deep square leg.Another shower delayed the restart by ten minutes and, in the afternoon’s second over Patterson was beaten by a break-back from Porter, operating from around the wicket, and bowled off a thin inside edge for 40.Curran square cut Porter for four and also punched Harmer through mid-on for another boundary but Surrey’s faint hopes of chasing down their distant win target fell away when Porter removed Ben Foakes and Jason Roy in the space of three balls to leave the home side 167 for 5.Nibbling the ball away from the right-handers, at just on and outside off stump, Porter first had Foakes caught behind for 7 before Roy was superbly held, low and left-handed, by a diving Harmer at second slip. It completed an unhappy pair for former England one-day opener Roy.In between further showers, Curran and Overton steadied Surrey once again in a sixth-wicket partnership that eventually realised 77 in 24 overs.Curran, on 76, survived an impassioned appeal for a low leg-side catch behind the wicket off Porter that may not have carried. But, later in an eventful over and one ball after Overton had looked fortunate not to be given leg-before as he moved across his stumps, Allison flung himself to his left at point to clutch a Curran square drive and give Essex renewed hope with Surrey now 244 for 6.Only eight more balls were possible, however, before more rain arrived and after another subsequent delay the final mini-session of play saw Essex crowding the bat in vain while Surrey’s seventh-wicket pair kept out Porter and Harmer – until Overton fell with the draw assured.

Thibaut Courtois insists Jude Bellingham must go to the World Cup with England after missing out on Thomas Tuchel's latest squad

Thibaut Courtois is of the opinion that his Real Madrid team-mate Jude Bellingham has to play for England at the 2026 World Cup. A surprising debate has been sparked there, with the all-action midfielder being left out of Thomas Tuchel’s latest Three Lions squad. He is still recovering from injury, but questions have been asked of Bellingham’s character and how he fits into the puzzle being pieced together by a demanding German coach.

Injury and lack of game time: Why England left Bellingham out

Belgium international Courtois is in no doubt that Bellingham will form part of England’s plans when FIFA’s flagship event heads to the United States, Canada and Mexico. The expectation is that he will return to that fold when another break in domestic action is reached in November.

Bellingham should be fully up to speed by then, with the 22-year-old working his way back from summer shoulder surgery. He has taken in just five appearances for Real this season, with only one start – in a derby date with neighbours Atletico Madrid – being seen under new Blancos boss Xabi Alonso.

Courtois is convinced that Bellingham will be recalled long before another bid for global glory is taken in, telling reporters when asked if he expects a club colleague to join him at a major tournament in North America: “Yes, of course. I don’t think we can imagine England without Jude. He should be in the England squad, definitely.”

AdvertisementGettyCourtois explains why Bellingham has to grace World Cup

The Belgian shot-stopper added on the Three Lions confirming their World Cup qualification without Bellingham – with the Blancos star also absent from fixtures in September: “I don’t think it’s a problem. Jude is coming back from an injury, a surgery and he has to get his fitness in.

“He has to play. He hasn’t had so many minutes so for England and Real Madrid it is better that he is training and getting that extra physical work. Now we have a couple of tough games and hopefully he will help because he is an amazing player. He is one of our best players. I don’t know if Tuchel has called him or not. But I’m sure that even in November he will be back in the England squad. You want a player like Jude in the squad.”

Courtois went on to say of Real and England handling Bellingham with care: “He has had a long injury of four months so you cannot force them to go too fast. If you do then you can get muscle injuries and have a few weeks out and then if it happens again you can have another few weeks out. You need to have optimum fitness and then it will be OK.”

Why questions of Bellingham's character are 'nonsense'

Ex-England international Danny Murphy told GOAL recently when asked about Bellingham’s supposed flaws, which could be considered positives in the eyes of many: “I played with [Wayne] Rooney in his early England days, I played with ]Steven] Gerrard at Liverpool – they both had that fire, that extra edge to them that put them above everybody else, that belief in themselves. You can interpret it any way you want. I think the only relevant factor when you talk about people like that, young lads that have come on the scene and done what he’s done, it’s what do they produce on the pitch? How does it affect the game and how does it affect him?

“Some people are suggesting that the team would be more cohesive without him in it. It’s just nonsense. We have got lots of good players, of course. I love Morgan Rogers, he has done well the lad from Villa, he has come in and he can play. Cole Palmer, I’m one of his biggest fans but Bellingham, you don’t walk into Real Madrid in your first season and do what he did without having that belief in yourself. I hope, really hope, that he continues with that same attitude and approach because it makes him one of the best players in the world.”

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Getty ImagesEngland challenge for Bellingham, Palmer and Foden

England booked their place at the 2026 World Cup with a crushing 5-0 victory away in Latvia. Tuchel has vowed to remain loyal to those that have impressed across recent camps, with the likes of Bellingham, Chelsea talisman Cole Palmer and Manchester City playmaker Phil Foden needing to prove their worth at club level if they are to be drafted back into the fold.

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