Mason Greenwood set deadline to save Marseille career after being dropped to the bench as ex-Man Utd forward makes extra effort to impress Roberto De Zerbi after public criticism

Mason Greenwood has been set a deadline in which to save his Marseille career, with the ex-Manchester United forward being dropped to the bench.

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Moved to France in the summer of 2024Has registered 15 goals in Ligue 1Generating transfer talk ahead of next windowFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

On the back of a 2024 transfer to Stade Velodrome, Greenwood enjoyed a bright start to his spell in French football. He remains Marseille’s leading scorer this season, with 15 goals recorded through 26 Ligue 1 appearances.

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Greenwood has, however, slipped down the pecking under Roberto De Zerbi. His demanding coach has said of the 23-year-old’s recent efforts, which have led to him being removed from starting XIs: “I expect more from him. He has to do more, because what he is currently showing is not enough.”

DID YOU KNOW?

Marseille included Greenwood among their substitutes for defeats to Lens and Paris Saint-Germain heading into the March international break. They will be back in action against Reims on Saturday, with Greenwood making an early return to training ahead of that contest – which has pleased his boss.

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR MASON GREENWOOD?

are, however, reporting that Greenwood only has until the end of the season in which to earn the trust of the manager. If he fails to do so, and with exit talk already raging, then the one-cap England international – who is switching allegiance to Jamaica – will be moved on in the summer transfer window.

Gurbaz cleared of fracture, expected to be fit for Afghanistan's T20 World Cup opener

The wicketkeeper-batter was struck on the left foot by a Shaheen Shah Afridi yorker during the warm-up game

ESPNcricinfo staff19-Oct-2022Rahmanullah Gurbaz is expected to be fit to play in Afghanistan’s T20 World Cup opener against England in Perth on Saturday after scans cleared him of a fracture.Gurbaz, 20, was struck on the left foot by Shaheen Shah Afridi’s inswinging yorker during Afghanistan’s warm-up match against Pakistan on Wednesday at the Gabba, which ended as a no-result because of rain.He was carried off the pitch after medical attention and was later pictured wearing a protective boot on his left foot. He was sent to the hospital for scans, and the Afghanistan Cricket Board said in a statement that he had been cleared of a serious injury.”Team doctor stated that the results are clear with no bone fracture,” the ACB said. “He will be assessed in the next two days and is expected to be available for our England fixture on Saturday.”Gurbaz had struggled at the previous T20 World Cup, in 2021, making 85 runs across his five innings. He has since been promoted to open the batting on a regular basis and his availability will be a significant boost for Afghanistan ahead of their first game.

Knockout punches

Our pick of the best World T20 batting performances is heavy on semi-finals and finals performances

Kanishkaa Balachandran25-Feb-2016Marlon Samuels, 78 off 56 balls, West Indies v Sri Lanka, final, Colombo, 2012
West Indies, batting first, were crawling along at 32 for 2 after ten overs. Enter Samuels, who played the innings of his life, biffing Sri Lanka’s best bowler, Lasith Malinga, for three sixes in the 13th over and for a further 18 runs when Malinga returned for a new spell. West Indies posted a seemingly modest 137, thanks to Samuels’ onslaught, but it was a winning total.Alex Hales, 116 not off 64 balls, England v Sri Lanka, Chittagong, 2014
The target was a steep 190 and England were reeling at 0 for 2 at the end of the first over. A full-strength Sri Lanka attack wasn’t good enough to silence Hales, who bludgeoned 11 fours and six sixes. Three of those sixes came off one over from Ajantha Mendis that cost 25, decisively swinging the match away from Sri Lanka. It was England’s first T20 hundred and guided them home by six wickets.Michael Hussey, 60 not out off 24 balls, Australia v Pakistan, semi-final, Gros Islet, 2010
Chasing 192 for a place in the final, Australia looked out of it when they needed 34 off the last two overs. Their hopes rested on a set Hussey, batting on 24 off 14 at that point. He proceeded to take charge against Mohammad Amir, haring 16 off the penultimate over, and then launching a brutal onslaught on Saeed Ajmal in the 20th, smacking three sixes to clinch the unlikeliest of victories.Yuvraj Singh, 70 off 30 balls, India v Australia, semi-final, Durban, 2007
Yuvraj was in red-hot form coming into the semi-final, having hit Stuart Broad for six sixes in an over in the previous game. He tonked another five against Australia, including one off Brett Lee over square leg that proved to be the biggest hit of the tournament. India surged in the middle overs thanks largely to Yuvraj’s 21-ball fifty. It eventually took them to 188, and a 15-run win.Shahid Afridi, 51 off 34 balls, Pakistan v South Africa, semi-final, Trent Bridge, 2009
A refreshingly mature innings from Afridi: aggressive yet methodical, featuring eight fours and no sixes. South Africa pulled things back after the Powerplay, but Afridi didn’t let the pressure build on Pakistan, finding the gaps and pushing twos. He then tore into Johan Botha, hitting four fours in an over. He put Pakistan on course for a competitive 149 and later tormented South Africa with the ball, capping a fine day for him.

Gravenberch replacement: Liverpool want "one of the best" midfielders

Storm Darragh has soured Merseyside’s collective mood, but Liverpool will still sit at the top of the Premier League table by the end of the weekend.

Such is the strength of Arne Slot’s side, such is the brilliant start to the campaign that has seen Liverpool cede ground in just three of their 14 fixtures thus far.

The table-toppers will now rest and recover ahead of more gruelling action, but there’s an undeniable sense of frustration that the Reds have been prevented from righting the wrongs of midweek, enduring defensive issues in a 3-3 draw at St. James’ Park.

The Merseyside derby will have to wait and perhaps it’s for the best, in some ways. Ryan Gravenberch has been indomitable in the engine room this season but suffered from burnout against Newcastle United.

Matches (starts)

26 (12)

14 (14)

Goals

1

0

Assists

0

1

Touches*

28.8

73.8

Pass completion

83%

89%

Key passes*

0.6

0.6

Dribbles completed*

0.9

0.9

Ball recoveries*

2.8

5.4

Tackles + interceptions*

1.5

3.9

Total duels (won)*

2.8 (47%)

5.5 (63%)

He’s started every Premier League and Champions League match this season and is widely regarded as one of the highest-performing midfielders in Europe.

It’s no wonder that Real Madrid have caught his scent.

Real Madrid's interest in Ryan Gravenberch

As reported earlier this week, Real Madrid are interested in Gravenberch after the Netherlands midfielder’s stunning start to the season, making major headway since the middling results of 2023/24.

Liverpool midfielder Ryan Gravenberch

Reports of Madrid’s interest in Gravenberch serve to heighten the concerns around Liverpool’s midfield depth, and though it’s unlikely that FSG would allow the high-flying Dutchman to leave for anything other than a staggering sum, it highlights such fears all the same.

Even so, Liverpool could do with another deep-sitting option in the centre of the park, and might have found the perfect candidate to complete a robust mix of talent.

Liverpool want a new midfielder

According to Spanish sources, Liverpool are interested in signing Barcelona’s Frenkie de Jong, with the intrigue arising from Los Blancos’ desire to sign Gravenberch in a mammoth deal.

Barcelona's Frenkie de Jong

This season, De Jong has been on the fringe due to an injury and consequent complications, but he has a proven record across a span of years and could certainly add a dimension to Slot’s ball-playing system.

A long-time Manchester United target, Gravenberch’s countryman would be a welcome asset to Liverpool’s first team, though whether FSG would agree to the £51m outlay is another matter.

What Frenkie De Jong would bring to Liverpool

There’s no denying that Liverpool looked a bit leggy against a roaring Newcastle side on Wednesday, and Gravenberch’s struggles really did emphasise the need for a foil.

Liverpool head coach Arne Slot

Wataru Endo, 32, has played a bit-part role this term, and though he’s effective in late moments, combative and tough, the Japan star leaves plenty to be desired on the ball. Elsewhere, the young Tyler Morton is a part of the first-team squad but scarcely used. Gravenberch needs support.

And he could find it in compatriot De Jong, who has struggled for fitness and form this season but is known to have one of the richest passing ranges across the continent.

As per FBref, the 27-year-old ranks among the top 1% of central midfielders across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for pass completion, the top 4% for progressive passes, the top 7% for passes attempted and progressive carries and the top 20% for tackles per 90. Quite the dynamic player.

Waxing lyrical about the star’s qualities, former Barca boss Xavi said last season that he’s “one of the best players in the world.”

When fit and firing, this is true. And, moreover, De Jong would be able to assume the role that Gravenberch is playing for Liverpool. The Liverpool sensation ranks among the top 10% of Premier League midfielders this season for passes attempted per 90 and the top 19% for pass completion.

Gravenberch, like De Jong, is an adept driver, penetrating through the centre and influencing attacking transitions with slick and purposeful passing. This is crucial for Slot’s tactical set-up, allowing for sturdy and controlled central play but also providing a switch from which forward transition can be initiated with rapidity.

He’s gone from strength to strength under Slot’s wing and it’s hard to imagine that De Jong wouldn’t at least showcase some impressive qualities within the Anfield brood.

Barcelona midfielder Frenkie De Jong

Though he’s struggled for fitness this term, starting just one La Liga fixture, De Jong has completed 224 appearances in total for the Catalan giants, notably lifting one league title and one Copa del Rey trophy.

And last season, across 20 league matches, De Jong not only completed 94% of his passes but averaged 1.1 key passes per game and came out on top in 59% of his duels, as per Sofascore.

Patently, there’s a world-class player in there who could make a real difference to Liverpool’s exploits under Slot’s management going forward.

Of course, as alluded to earlier, there’s no reason why FSG shouldn’t engineer a deal with Barcelona for the midfield maestro even if Gravenberch stays put, as will probably, hopefully, surely, be the case.

Liverpool have a demonstrable title-winning quality about them, having raced into such a commanding lead across the opening months of the campaign.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

But Gravenberch’s perceived burnout against Newcastle calls for further talent to rotate with him and allow for greater depth. Liverpool should make their move in 2025.

Ignored by Klopp: £32m Liverpool flop is now outscoring Salah in 2024

Klopp sold a star at the beginning of his Liverpool era, and now that very flop is outscoring Mohamed Salah in 2024.

ByAngus Sinclair Dec 6, 2024

'You can't win with your shirt' – USMNT's Golden Generation dealt another harsh reminder that 2026 World Cup dreams rest on their shoulders, not Mauricio Pochettino's

The USMNT's supposed "Golden Generation" keeps wasting golden chances, and the players must hold themselves accountable

LOS ANGELES – "We need to play with personality, we need to play relaxed, we need to play with intensity. When we do these things, we're a really good team. But when we don't, we're an average team."

A spot-on analysis of the USMNT's CONCACAF Nations League performance, right?

But here’s the thing: that quote isn’t from Thursday night. It’s not even from Mauricio Pochettino. Indeed, former U.S. boss Gregg Berhalter said those words in September 2022 after the USMNT’s loss to Japan, just weeks before the World Cup. On that day, with so much at stake, the U.S. failed to rise to the occasion. Nearly three years later, that same theme feels more relevant than ever.

This is a talented group of players, for sure, but those words are a cautionary tale of what can happen when attitude and intensity are missing. Pochettino, the U.S. manager brought in to reignite a meandering program, repeatedly bemoaned his side's lack of both after Thursday night's 1-0 loss to Panama in the Nations League semifinals.

Berhalter is long gone, Pochettino hired as his high-profile replacement. The Argentine's arrival was supposed to be the wake-up call this team needed. He was brought in to be the leader, the one that can finally coax a much-needed mentality shift out of this talented group of American stars. It's what makes moments like Thursday's so frustrating: this team is too good to lose these games, yet they seem to find ways time and time again.

At some point, that isn't all down to coaching. That's not down to the rah-rah speeches in the locker room or the training sessions or the tactics. At some point, it comes down to one question: does this team have it or not? And until they discover it, their hopes of even putting in a really good showing at next summer's World Cup look slimmer and slimmer.

The USMNT's supposed "Golden Generation" keeps wasting golden chances and, at some point, the players that make up that generation need to look in the mirror and figure out why. Pochettino is a fantastic coach, one who can help take a team to a new level. He can't save them from themselves, though, and this group's future will be defined by their ability to look in the mirror and reflect that desire on the field.

Getty ImagesAnother letdown

Every player in a USMNT shirt must be weary of seeing Panama. For whatever reason, this team just has the USMNT's number. Even when outplayed, Panama finds a way to win it, and the USMNT finds a way to lose.

On Thursday, the winner came from Cecelio Waterman, whose perfectly placed shot caught Matt Turner flat-footed. Waterman's subsequent celebration with Thierry Henry made the moment legendary, but the goal itself was already historic. For the first time, in this fourth edition of the CONCACAF Nations League, the USMNT won't lift the trophy in the end. They won't even make the final.

"Just lacking a bit of aggressiveness and creativity in the final third," Christian Pulisic said after the match. "We're still building our identity. This is a tough loss. We've won this tournament a couple of times now and it didn't go our way this year, but we just have to keep going from here."

It's not just this loss, though. It's the one in the Copa America in 2024 when Tim Weah was sent off to, ultimately, send the U.S. to their doom. They had a chance to avoid it days later against Uruguay, but couldn't muster much of anything as they were bounced from the tournament in the group stage.

It's the one at the Gold Cup in 2023. That U.S. group was without nearly all of their stars due to the nature of that tournament (with the top teams going with their B squads) but the feeling was largely the same. Penalty kicks were their undoing that time around. Who knows what could have happened if it got there on Thursday night?

To their credit, the U.S. has stepped up to the occasion multiple times. They've lifted this trophy three times for a reason, beating good Mexico and Canada teams to do so. They played hard as hell at the 2022 World Cup, too, showing well, in particular, against England.

That performance against was defined by their intensity and tenacity, but those haven't always been apparent in the years since. They should be non-negotiable but in the wake of Thursday's loss, Pochettino hit on those themes again when explaining away this latest setback.

AdvertisementAFPThe lack of intensity

Berhalter's quote from 2022 fit the theme of Thursday night. And Pochettino essentially echoed the same sentiments after the match.

"I don't think we approached the game or started the game in the right way," he said. "That's why I feel so disappointed and we all feel disappointed. In the first half, we played too slow, too comfortable on the pitch. We didn't show aggression with the ball and there are consequences to not showing aggression with the ball. We also didn't show agression in a defensive way. Even if we didn't concede too much, only two or three shots and one on target going into that last action, but we knew we had to be aggressive with the ball and have a mature approach to the game. I think we didn't show that."

It's about competitive spirit, about desire, about fight. And the USMNT was lacking in all of those areas.

"It's the responsibility of everyone and we need to find a way to compete better," Pochettino said. "I don't like to say that. We are the USA, but you can't win with your shirt. You cannot win because you play here or there. You need to show and you need to come here and be better and suffer and win duels and work hard. If not, it's not going to be enough. We are going to play, but competing demands that level. At the international level, it's not going to be enough."

The stats support Pochettino's words. Panama won 44 duels to the USMNT's 34, which is the most telling stat. Virtually every other data point was in the USMNT's favor except for that one – and that's the one defined solely by effort and attitude. Talent doesn't win 50-50s, commitment does. Panama simply had more of it.

"The difference was the way that they fought for the game," Pochettino said. "They were hungry. Every single ball was the last one for every single player of Panama. That's something you can feel from the touchline. You feel that that was the difference."

It is reminiscent of Berhalter's point. The USMNT has struggled to find the line between intense and comfortable, composed and aggressive. It's something the best teams can do. The best teams find moments to switch on and attack. They bury teams before they get a chance to be buried themselves. It's a skill. The question is if it's one that this group of players can learn.

In fact, after Pochettino's hire was announced last fall, Pulisic specifically addressed what he wanted the Argentine manager to bring to this squad.

"Hopefully a culture that is willing to fight, that is willing to take risks, you know, win," Pulisic said. "There’s a lot of things that need to change, just the mentality and the culture of the group. I think we have the quality, but hopefully, that’s the first thing he’s going to want to change."

Pochettino has to be the one to teach them and guide them, but they also have to be willing to absorb, learn and execute. It's clear that's not yet happened. Yes, of course, the USMNT were unlucky with saves, posts, and VAR calls against Panama, but a better team wouldn't have let it get to that point.

Pochettino, though, wasn't without blame on Thursday. He, too, could have been better.

AFPPochettino's part in it all

USMNT star Tyler Adams made it abundantly clear: when a team loses in the way the USMNT did, the blame doesn't fall on the coach.

"I've never blamed the coach in my entire career," Adams said. "A loss depends on the players, and that's the bottom line, unless a coach goes out and tries something completely random and it wasn't what the coach was following or if there was a lack of communication. There was no lack of communication in what was happening today. We knew exactly what we had to do. We knew what we needed to be competitive. I don't think we were as competitive as we needed to be."

Pochettino was brought in for a reason. He's paid more than any USMNT coach in history for a reason. Every time the USMNT takes the field, Pochettino is expected to make a difference and, on Thursday, he couldn't find a way to do it.

His counterpart, Thomas Christiansen, sure did. It wasn't rocket science, of course, but the Panama coach drilled his players on shrinking the field and limiting the U.S. attack. He kept them hungry and gave them a game plan that worked. There was no big secret to it and, in some ways, that makes it all the more impressive.

Pochettino, meanwhile, never really turned the tide. Yes, the injury absences of top players such as Antonee Robinson and leading strikers Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi also played a part. So, too, did the width of the field – literally more narrow than the pitch will be at SoFi for the World Cup next year. You could question at the roster selection, too.

Still, Pochettino had options at his disposal and he didn't deploy all of them. Patrick Agyemang and Jack McGlynn were thrown into the game in the second half, but Gio Reyna and Diego Luna were not. The game was crying out for them, and Pochettino admitted he was preparing to turn to them in extra time. They never got there, so he never got that chance.

"The last three times that we faced Panama in an official competition we were not capable of beating them," he said. "Why? I think that is a question mark, but it's a question mark that we, all together, need to find a solution."

It's a question that Pochettino arguably could have answered in real-time. Now, he and the players will be left wondering as they prepare for what's next.

ImagnLooking ahead

Chalk this up as yet another learning moment in a long line. Panama and Uruguay in the summer, Canada and Mexico in the fall and, now, Panama again in the spring – the USMNT seemingly has had ample education in what not to do.

"You always learn more from the setbacks than you do from other games," said veteran Tim Ream. "You can say we would have won, but you're just papering over the issues that I think everybody saw in terms of getting behind and aggression and all of that. There are always teaching moments, always learning moments in every game, every training, every day you step on the field.

"We have to look at that and make sure that we take on board exactly what he wants and exactly what he needs. That starts with duels and aggression and intensity."

The good news is that the USMNT will have a chance at some level of redemption on Sunday. Canada awaits in the Nations League third-place match – with Mexico facing Panama in the finale – offering the U.S. another crack at a good team. There will be no trophy lift, of course, but a win could lift morale. There will be no excuses in that one. If the U.S. fails to show up on Sunday, the knives will, rightfully, come out.

In the hours until then, the U.S. will have to dissect this latest loss, just as they have previously.

"We're not going to have the chance to win a trophy right now," Matt Turner said, "but I think you can go one of two ways from a result like this: you either come back on Sunday, put together a good result, and you have a good feeling going into the summer or you can implode, really. I don't foresee that coming… We can't let performances like this slide."

Maybe, on Sunday, those lessons will take hold. Maybe this time around the U.S. will discover that, as Pochettino says, it takes more than just a shirt to win a game. And if these players learn that lesson, they'll learn another one: Pochettino can't save this team on the road to the 2026 World Cup – only they can.

Rajapaksa, Hasaranga, Madushan win the Asia Cup crown for Sri Lanka

In the final, Pakistan were outclassed with the bat, outsmarted with the ball and outdone in the field

Danyal Rasool11-Sep-20223:18

Maharoof: ‘These young lions will be treated like heroes’

A tournament that began for Sri Lanka with tumult at home and turbulence in the UAE has ended with them taking home the Asia Cup trophy. Pakistan were the side at the receiving end of this thumping, outclassed with the bat, outsmarted with the ball, outdone in the field, and out-thought in the captaincy department by an electric Sri Lankan performance which wrapped up a commanding 23-run win.Bhanuka Rajapaksa formed the backbone of the Sri Lankan innings, rescuing his side from 58 for 5 with an unbeaten 45-ball 71 that saw them post 170. It was followed by a spirited showing in the field as Sri Lanka outmatched Pakistan’s intensity, with Wanindu Hasaranga and Pramod Madushan taking seven wickets between them during a listless batting performance.It had begun so smoothly for Pakistan, with Naseem Shah’s opening-over wicket appearing to set the tone for Pakistan. Haris Rauf was in similarly breathtaking form, never more so than during an extraordinary sixth over where he threatened the stumps nearly every ball. By then, both Pathum Nissanka and Danushka Gunathilaka had been accounted for, and Dhananjaya de Silva and Dasun Shanaka would soon follow.A revival led by Rajapaksa and Hasaranga helped Sri Lanka force themselves back into the game and a spirited finish ensured they’d post a competitive score. It was assisted by some ordinary ground fielding and catching by Pakistan; their best fielder, Shadab Khan, had a notoriously poor outing. Sri Lanka, by contrast, showed in the field how desperately they wanted this. Pakistan were stifled through the first half and then blown away in the second.The Sri Lanka players celebrate their victory•AFP/Getty ImagesBabar Azam’s side never quite sure how to pace their innings, with an unrelenting Sri Lanka refusing to let them grind through the gears. In the end, it was a mismatch between a side that had brought their A-game and one that never quite found theirs. Long before it became official, it was evident Sri Lanka would win their sixth Asia Cup trophy, capping a sensational tournament by saving their best performance for last.Naseem Shah’s first over
Whatever gift Shaheen Afridi possessed that got batters out in his first over seems to have been bestowed on Naseem in his absence. In a mesmeric start where the 19-year old found high pace almost right from the off, Kusal Mendis was done in for a golden duck by a near unplayable delivery. It made a beeline for the stumps, at searing speed, and the hapless Mendis could do little about it. The inswinger went through the gap between bat and pad, and uprooted off stump after clipping the thigh. It was Pakistani fast bowling at its scintillating best.The umpire’s call
First, there was a slice of luck, and then the glorious skill. Off the fifth ball of his innings in Rauf’s scintillating sixth over, the bowler sent down a near unplayable leg-stump yorker at the in-form Rajapaksa. The batter played all around it, with the ball crunching into his foot. The umpire deemed it not out, only to have his decision upheld by the barest of margins, with Hawkeye deeming it to be umpire’s call on impact. To the naked eye, it looked out from just about every angle.With Pakistan on top, it was a colossal moment in the final, and Rajapaksa wouldn’t let it go to waste. What followed was an innings of high class, that saw through a period of consolidation while Hasaranga at the other end took on a more proactive role. Sri Lanka were slowly chipping away at Pakistan, and without taking too many risks, Rajapaksa had brought up a 35-ball half-century.2:25

Maharoof: ‘Probably the best I have seen Rajapaksa bat’

Most memorable of all though, was the way he took on Naseem at the end, a bowler who had begun so sensationally in the Powerplay. A flick of the wrists deposited him over backward square leg in his penultimate over, before a four and a six off the innings’ final two balls ensured Sri Lanka had all the momentum with them at the break.The Sri Lankan first over
There might never have been a game that saw such a contrast at the start of each bowling performance. While Naseem was unplayable to begin Pakistan’s work, Dilshan Madushanka was anything but. It wasn’t until the sixth ball that the innings even began with the left-arm seamer starting off with a no-ball and following it up with four wides, one of which went down to the boundary for an extra four. Pakistan had nine to their name without a legal ball being bowled and a free hit to follow. But Madushanka would come back smartly to allow just three more through the over, and Sri Lanka ensured it was a blip rather than a harbinger of what was to follow.The entire second innings
There was so much to enjoy about Sri Lanka in the field it’s almost impossible to pick out individual moments. Madushan’s two-in-two to remove Babar and Fakhar Zaman set the tone. It also helped that an off colour Mohammad Rizwan never really figured out how to manipulate his innings according to the needs of the target.Shanaka was especially canny about using his bowlers, perhaps in stark contrast to Pakistan who mysteriously opted not to have Mohammad Nawaz bowl out his quote. Throwing the ball to the offspinner de Silva just as the left-hander Nawaz came in to bat at No. 5 proved a masterstroke, with a couple of sensational dives in the field saving valuable runs off the first two balls, followed up by four dot balls that saw the asking rate balloon to 14.Sri Lanka caught like a side possessed, too, whereas the only montage you could make of Pakistan’s fielding would be about their sloppiness. In the end, there was a yawning chasm between the performances the two sides put in, with the result a fair reflection.

Saved by Salah: Slot must drop 4/10 Liverpool star ‘who did nothing’

Arne Slot’s men are eight points clear at the top of the Premier League. Eight points. Oh Jurgen Klopp, where for art thou? What the German would have given for that sort of a start to the season when he was at Liverpool.

Alas, the new regime with Slot at the helm is going rather well without the old boss. There were some hiccups on the road at St Mary’s on Sunday afternoon but just as they have done during the infant stages of the 2024/25 campaign, the Reds found a way.

Twice Southampton scored but ultimately Liverpool and indeed Mohamed Salah prevailed.

It took a succession of mistakes from Alex McCarthy and Flynn Downes that led to Dominik Szoboszlai’s opener before a neatly taken strike from Salah and a penalty from the Egyptian saw all three goals rather gift-wrapped a month out from Christmas.

It wasn’t plain sailing for the Merseysiders, far from it. Adam Armstrong scored before the break, following up on his spot kick that had initially been saved by Caoimhin Kelleher.

They did actually go ahead in the second period too when Mateus Fernandes fired home following an incisive break away by the hosts.

The inevitable Salah, however, rescued his side.

Salah's performance in numbers

Over the last few weeks, there has been a battle at the top of the league between two of the most prominent names in the Premier League; Erling Haaland and Salah.

It’s safe to say the Egyptian superstar has come out on top. Haaland has scored just twice in his last seven top-flight games while Liverpool’s star man has found the net on six occasions in his last five matches. He is a phenom. He is world-class. He could well be the man who determines where the title heads next May.

Salah might not have been at his fluid best in the first half against the Saints but he came alive in the second half and contributed with an excellent late showing on the South Coast.

His first goal was beautifully taken, latching onto a ball in behind from Ryan Gravenberch. The Reds winger needed just one touch to nudge the ball past McCarthy who was hopelessly out of position.

His second was far simpler, executing from the spot much to the delight of the travelling support. Salah darted over to the away end, tore away his shirt and bellowed loudly into the night sky. This was his moment, yet again.

The attacker was a constant nuisance throughout and hit the post late on with one of his seven shots throughout the contest. He also completed two of his three dribbles and supplied a key pass during another mightily impressive display.

Pass success

Jones (100%)

Duels contested

Fernandes (13)

Most duels won

Szoboszlai (6)

Most touches

Robertson (104)

Most key passes

Robertson (5)

Defensive actions

Harwood-Bellis (9)

Tackles

Szobszlai & Fernandes (4)

Shots on target

Salah (4)

Expected Goals

Salah (1.64)

Dribble attempts

Onuachu (3/3)

He was perhaps let down by the man next to him; Darwin Nunez.

Darwin Nunez's performance in numbers

With Diogo Jota out with an injury, Nunez has had an excellent chance to showcase to Slot exactly what he’s all about. Sadly, beyond his goal against Aston Villa last time out, he’s only showing his negative side so far.

We’ll let Jamie Carragher sum things up. Speaking during commentary of the game on Sky Sports he remarked that the striker “wasn’t involved in one thing in the game”.

The stats rather sum that up too as Nunez registered just one shot on target and failed with his one and only dribble attempt.

The 25 touches the Uruguayan managed were also one fewer than goalkeeper Kelleher while his tally of ten passes (67% success rate), was the worst of any Liverpool starter on the field at St Mary’s.

Minutes played

89

Touches

25

Accurate passes

10/15 (67%)

Shots on target

1

Dribble success

0/1

Key passes

1

Ground duels won

2/6

Aerial duels won

0/3

Possession lost

9

Fouls

1

Tackles

1

Liverpool really needed an out ball and they did get that in Salah but Nunez did little to assert himself on the likes of Taylor Harwood-Bellis and Downes who was playing out of position at full-back.

That point of view was echoed by GOAL’s Tom Maston who handed the forward a 4/10 and wrote that he ‘struggled’ against the out-of-position Downes and ‘cut a frustrated figure at times’.

Hounded for an “embarrassing” moment by BBC reporter Jim Spence in the first half where he went down too easily, that was perhaps one of the most memorable moments of the game from the former Benfica ace. It’s safe to say he was saved by Salah on Sunday afternoon.

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Hafeez stars after England collapse twice

ESPNcricinfo staff11-Nov-2015Both teams observed two minutes of silence before the start of play to mark Armistice Day•Getty ImagesMohammad Irfan bowled Jason Roy with the second delivery of the match•Getty Images… before Anwar Ali trapped Joe Root, also for a duck, in his first over•Getty ImagesAnwar then claimed his second scalp when Alex Hales edged to slip for 10•Getty ImagesFrom 14 for 3, Morgan repaired the damage with a fluent innings•Getty ImagesJames Taylor played a supporting role in a restorative half-century stand•Getty ImagesSpot the difference: Mohammad Irfan and James Taylor show some anguish•Getty ImagesTaylor manipulated the field well during his half-century•Getty Images… but he was involved in the run-out of Jos Buttler for 1•Getty ImagesTaylor’s innings ended when Azhar Ali caught him at midwicket off a gleeful Shoaib Malik•Getty ImagesBilal Asif was bowling for the first time since being cleared of throwing•AFPYasir Shah removed Moeen Ali as England’s collapse gathered pace•Getty ImagesChris Woakes helped get England beyond 200 but they were dismissed with two balls undelivered•Getty ImagesWith Pakistan chasing 217 to win, England needed early wickets – and Reece Topley duly obliged•Getty ImagesYounis Khan salutes the crowd after being dismissed for the final time in ODIs•AFPMohammad Hafeez controlled Pakistan’s chase with an impressive innings•Getty ImagesBabar Azam helped keep Pakistan steady after Shoaib Malik’s dismissal left Pakistan 111 for 4•Getty ImagesHafeez recorded his 11th ODI hundred as Pakistan cruised to a six-wicket win•Getty Images

Bangladesh 'have a lot to improve in ODI side,' says Tamim

The fact that Bangladesh batters didn’t score any hundreds and Zimbabwe had four made “a huge difference,” he says

Mohammad Isam11-Aug-2022Bangladesh’s ODI side has to address a number of areas for improvement, according to captain Tamim Iqbal. Their streak of five consecutive series wins was broken by Zimbabwe, who chased down two challenging totals – 291 and 304 – in the first two ODIs, before petering out in a 105-run loss in the third game on Wednesday.Tamim, who has been in charge of the side since January last year, said that a loss against a lower-ranked side would sting a bit more and hoped that this would ram home the message for improvement in the side.”Talking about improvement is often boring, and it usually comes up when we have lost a match or a series,” Tamim said. “If we had lost to Australia or India, say [Virat] Kohli or [Steven] Smith had played such knocks against us, we wouldn’t have really taken it to heart. They are top players. They are top teams. We didn’t have much to do. I am not belittling them. [Sikandar] Raza, [Regis] Chakabva and [Innocent] Kaia played unbelievably well, but it proved that we have a lot to improve in our ODI side.Related

Mustafizur four-for, fifties from Anamul and Afif give Bangladesh consolation win

“Ireland, whom we are playing at home and away next year, are also capable of doing similar things. But it doesn’t change the fact that we are a serious ODI team. We are a fantastic ODI team. We had a great run but the graph usually comes down. I am not going to blame the batters or the bowlers separately. We didn’t do well as a unit, which includes planning and execution. There are a lot of areas to work on to reach the top.”Tamim said that four centuries from Zimbabwe’s batters and none from Bangladesh put the two teams apart. Zimbabwe were led by Raza’s twin centuries, with Kaia and Chakabva also hitting hundreds in the big chases. Tamim also praised Zimbabwe for winning the series despite playing with a depleted side.”We couldn’t utilise our chances, they utlilised their opportunity,” he said. “They didn’t have the best possible team. Two of their main fast bowlers were injured, and two batters didn’t play. Credit goes to Zimbabwe. Two individuals took the game away in the first two matches. We didn’t have hundreds, they had four. It was a huge difference.”Tamim said that he wasn’t pleased with his own performance too, despite being one of the few batters showing an intention to score a big one quickly. He struck two half-centuries and was run-out for 19 in the third game.”Though I scored some runs, I am not at all happy,” he said. “It is such a good wicket. You just have to tackle the first ten overs. So getting a 60 and a 50-odd wasn’t enough. It was the difference between the two teams. They had four hundred and we had none.”Tamim believes that unless Bangladesh start scoring big like some of the better teams, they will struggle even on good batting pitches like Harare. “It is one of our team goals to score 350, something that we have not done before. The par score will be 300 in the World Cup in India. Apart from Mirpur and some venues in India where you can win games scoring 260-270, most of the venues are 290-310. This is what’s happening now. Soon you will see us try to reach what others are reaching.”Bangladesh won the third ODI thanks mainly to Afif Hossain’s unbeaten 85 off 81 for which he batted with the tail in the death overs. But Tamim warned that the media shouldn’t start labeling him one way or the other, which might affect his rhythm.”Don’t give any names to him yet. It is too early for him,” Tamim said. “He has a unique quality of taking the game away under pressure. He will do the same thing and sometimes get out, and then we will question him.”But I don’t want him to lose this quality, which is to want to dominate with the way he bats. It is a fantastic quality to have. It is still very early days for him, and I am pretty sure he will have a fantastic career, but it is too early to give him names.”

India hit back after being bowled out for 201

ESPNcricinfo staff05-Nov-2015M Vijay and Cheteshwar Pujara led India to some stability with a 63-run, second-wicket partnership•BCCIDean Elgar’s part-time spin provided the breakthrough for South Africa, accounting for Pujara•BCCIKagiso Rabada then struck to remove Virat Kohli for 1 and India went in to lunch at a shaky 82 for 3•BCCIElgar’s strikes hurt India further and the hosts were soon struggling at 154 for 7•BCCIRavindra Jadeja, along with R Ashwin, added 42 for the eighth wicket to push India’s score towards 200. The home side was finally dismissed for 201•BCCIIndia’s spinners pulled things back – Ashwin dismissed Stiaan van Zyl and Jadeja bowled Faf du Plessis – to leave South Africa at 28 for 2 at close of play•BCCI

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