'People don't realise how hard it is to win in Australia'

Ray Illingworth looks back on leading England to a hard-fought Ashes win in 1970-71, and dealing with Aussie crowds and umpires

Interview by Richard Gibson18-Dec-2010″All I ever said to the lads was: ‘Have a pint or two if you feel like it but just make sure you’ve had enough sleep and are fit for play in the morning'”•Getty ImagesHow big an achievement was winning the Ashes in Australia in 1970-71?
People don’t realise how hard it is to win in Australia. A lot of sides have beaten Australia at home but not a lot beat them over there. I am talking about full sides, not without the Packer players and the South African situation. When Mike Brearley went back to Australia against a full side they lost 3-0. I think in living memory there has only been Douglas Jardine, apart from me, who has won the Ashes out there. People have defended them, like Len Hutton did in 1954-55, but not won them back and I am quite proud of that. They were pretty long tours as well, you know. Four and a half months, including New Zealand afterwards, is a really hard slog. So when it all comes to a climax in the last match, as it did in Australia, it’s a wonderful feeling. We didn’t take any inviting for a drink that night, I must say.You were 1-0 up with one Test to play. Australia were chasing 223 to win the final match. That last day must have been special…
They only wanted around 100 with five wickets left on that final day of the series. With Greg Chappell and Rodney Marsh in, it only needed one of them to get a quick 30 or 40 and the game was gone. But we won it quite comfortably in the finish. I don’t think I ever had another feeling like that.Would you say you were a tight unit as a touring group?
It was a really good set of blokes. I never had any problems at all that way. All I ever said to the lads was: “Have a pint or two if you feel like it but just make sure you’ve had enough sleep and are fit for play in the morning.” They were all responsible people, and when I see the trick cyclists and psychologists and everything they’ve got these days, I always feel that, if they are all required, you’ve picked the wrong people in the first place. John Snow would have sent them round the twist, wouldn’t he? We were a good side and we all got on well together. That was the secret. We tended to switch room-mates so you didn’t get too cliquey. Swapping about every couple of matches ensured we got the northerners and southerners mixing together. All I ever had to say to them was, “Come on, lads, here we go again, so let’s go.” No more than that.The only time I spoke to them any differently was in the dressing room during the first of the Sydney Tests. At tea on the fourth day I felt the game was there for winning, so I went into the back room and said to them: “I can’t quite put my finger on what is missing, I can’t say that no one is trying because that isn’t the case, but there is a difference between trying and giving that little bit more. I would like you to all imagine you are playing in a one-day Lord’s final. Imagine they need eight runs to win and the last over is being bowled.” We went back out and in 40 minutes the game was as good as over.That 1970-71 series has a reputation as one of the most heated in history. Is that fair?
It was never like that between the actual teams. The teams always got on all right. We had a system whereby, if we had been in the field, then as soon as we were back in the dressing room, the Aussies would come in and have a drink with us and vice versa. I can remember once in Sydney the dressing-room attendant coming in to complain: “Aren’t you buggers going? I want to shut up shop. I’ve got a home to go to even if you haven’t.”But there was a lot of hostility, wasn’t there? How much of it was down to the umpire Lou Rowan?

“When I see the trick cyclists and psychologists and everything they’ve got these days, I always feel that, if they are all required, you’ve picked the wrong people in the first place”

Without doubt he was the main culprit. It was the only time I ever felt that an umpire wasn’t being
completely honest. The fact that we didn’t get a single lbw in six matches proves the point. Lou Rowan was a very officious sort of character. It was a really silly thing that he did. He got it completely wrong. The game could have got out of hand. For example, we played the first Test in Brisbane and there was one young kid sat with his legs dangling over the wooden boundary fence. Rowan stopped the game and walked 70 yards to tell the lad to get his legs the other side. Yet this was the same guy who told me the ground was fit to continue when 30 or 40 bottles had been thrown on the field. It didn’t just happen once, it happened a couple of times. I called the players to the middle and we sat down while they cleared the bottles and cans off. We agreed to start again and then it all began again and that is when I took them off. People forget that I stayed on the field the first time. Rowan was making it appear as if it was nothing, but the bloke who moved the sightscreen was hit on the back of the head by a bottle and was taken to hospital. That could have been Snowy or another of our players. I told them to make an announcement over the loudspeaker that when the ground was cleared, we would go back. “If it starts again we shall come off again,” I said. “If we have to forfeit the game, we have to forfeit the game. But there is a principle at stake here.” Rowan laid it down that we would have to forfeit unless we went back but I was adamant that we would only go back when it was ready for us to go back.The inaugural ODI occurred during that tour…
Yes. We had a rained-off Test at Melbourne and we could have started halfway through the fourth day. But the feeling was that there was no point in beginning a Test with a day and a bit to go. So we cancelled that day and arranged a one-dayer for the day after. It was all arranged overnight and we got 45,000 people there. A Test match was then added to the series, which we weren’t happy about because it meant we played five Tests in six weeks in the hot part of the summer. The other grumble for us was that the Aussies were promised a full match-fee and we weren’t promised anything, so that nearly caused a strike. You can imagine that David Clark, the tour manager, went out with a flea in his ear. He had just spoken with Don Bradman, Sir Cyril Hawker [president of MCC] and Gubby Allen, who were out there watching. They went ahead and did it without speaking to me as captain. When I was told, I warned them that if someone got injured, there would be no one to call up from England. I also warned them that unless we got something for our trouble, they would have a strike on their hands, so they rang Donald Carr and he agreed we should get something. We finished up with 25 quid for the extra match. That’s great, isn’t it? Even the Aussies were on £200-£250 as a fee. Our amount was a pittance.How much did the adrenaline of the Ashes help your team?
The crowd are very much on your backs out there. Some of it is quite funny, you know. Certain things like, “I wish you was a statue and I was a bloody pigeon.” If you laugh with them, it can help. The old Sydney hill was very much about taking it rather than getting the pin. If you did, they would just give you more stick. Have some fun, give them a wave and you’d have no trouble.Snow had a wonderful series. How crucial is a genuine fast bowler in any England team’s bid to win an Ashes in Australia?
Wonderful was the right word. My biggest disappointment was Alan Ward breaking down more or less before we had played, because he was quick and got bounce. Unfortunately we never had the advantage of having him. I used to talk to John Edrich and Geoff Boycott quite a bit about things and I asked them: “Where do we go from here? Because we have got to get somebody.” John told me to go for this young lad [Bob Willis], 6ft 6in, sharp and able to bowl it in the right areas. I remember asking him: “Are you sure, John?” And the reply was: “I don’t think he will let you down.” So I went on John’s say-so.Do you see similarities between Willis and Steven Finn?
Very much so. Funnily enough, the first time I saw Finn bowl on TV I turned to the wife and told her he should go to Australia because he could do what Bob did for us.”I think in living memory there has only been Douglas Jardine, apart from me, who has won the Ashes out there… I’m quite proud of that”•Getty ImagesShort balls can cause problems in Australia as John Snow proved.
When he famously hit Terry Jenner, that wasn’t even a bouncer. If he had stood straight up it would have hit him on the chest. What he did was get you playing back to a length and under your armpit and then he made it change direction off the seam, so he would get people turned around, knocking it into the slips. That was his great strength. That was why there was such an argument when he hit Jenner. I was at short leg and picked him up, and as he was helped off, Lou Rowan marched over to Snowy and warned him for bowling a bouncer. I told him that even if he considered it a bouncer – which I didn’t – he had only bowled one. He went over to Tom Brooks, the other umpire, who wouldn’t support him on it. But what worried me most was Snowy – because of his temperament and the fact I knew he was upset by the whole bloody thing – who was mouthing off: “That’s not a bouncer”. I feared he was going to start letting fly, so I tried to calm him down. The next ball was inevitably a bouncer and was followed by Snow’s confirmation: “That’s a bloody bouncer.”Geoff Boycott was incredible for you on that tour, wasn’t he?
He will tell you that he played better on that tour than at any time in his life. He played magnificently. It was a shame he couldn’t play in that last Test. Not that he would have scored many on that pitch. It had been covered for two days, we had non-stop rain and it went all over the place. If I had won the toss, we would’ve bowled them out for 50. In fact, I was on the verge of declaring at around 170 for 7 or 8 on the first day, for the simple reason that I knew we had to get some wickets that night. I knew with sun on the pitch the next morning it would change, and just as I had my head in my hands, thinking about whether to do it or not, we were all out. We got the two openers out that night for less than 20 and it made all the difference in the match. If they had been there the next morning, it was a different game.Was one of the sweetest things about 1970-71 the sense of overcoming the odds?
Absolutely. I still have a piece at home, written by Richie Benaud. He said something about Ray Illingworth going home victorious when nearly all the breaks have gone against him, what with injuries, the itinerary, one thing or another.

Monty emulates Bedi

Monty Panesar became the first spinner to take six wickets in a first-innings of an opposition’s batting at Lord’s since Bishan Singh Bedi took 6 for 226 in 1974

S Rajesh and HR Gopalakrishna20-May-2007Monty Panesar has captured the imagination of cricket lovers throughout the world, and over the last two days he gave further proof of his talent, becoming the first spinner to take six wickets in a first-innings of an opposition’s batting at Lord’s since Bishan Singh Bedi took 6 for 226 in 1974.For a spinner to take six wickets is the first innings is unusual, but it’s even more uncommon for five of those dismissals to come through the lbw mode. Thanks to Asad Rauf’s brave umpiring – three of those dismissals were pad-first cases, when the batsmen played with their bats behind their pads – Panesar achieved a feat that’s only been done four times before, and never by a spinner. Terry Alderman, Curtly Ambrose, Richard Johnson and Mohammad Zahid are the only others to have nailed five lbws in a single innings.

Bowlers who have nailed five lbws in a single innings

Bowler Figures Against Venue & year

Terry Alderman 33.5-6-105-5 Pakistan Melbourne, 1989-90 Curtly Ambrose 22.4-10-45-8 England Barbados, 1989-90 Mohammad Zahid 20-3-66-7 New Zealand Rawalpindi, 1996-97 Richard Johnson 12-4-33-6 Zimbabwe Chester-le-Street, 2003 Monty Panesar 36.1-3-129-6 West Indies Lord’s, 2007 Panesar also became the first England bowler in 12 years to take six in a single innings at Lord’s – the last one to do it was Dominic Cork, when he took 7 for 43 in 1995 against … you guessed it, West Indies again.After Panesar did his bit, though, England still needed quick runs to try and force victory, and they found their man in Kevin Pietersen, who blasted a 138-ball 109. He’d missed out in the first innings, but he made up for that lapse this time around, against one of the friendliest West Indian attacks to have ever toured England. Usually happy to test the batsmen with short deliveries and bouncers, this West Indian attack had neither the pace nor the inclination to push the batsmen on the back foot: off the 138 balls Pietersen faced, only two were bouncers.The result was Pietersen had ample opportunity to plonk his front foot forward and drive on either side of the wicket. As the table below shows, 78 of his 109 runs came from front-foot drives.

How Pietersen got his runs in the second innings

Stroke Balls Runs Fours

Front-foot drive – off side 33 48 9 Front-foot drive – on-side 34 30 1 Other strokes 71 31 1 The 135 runs he scored in this match has pushed Pietersen’s average back over 50 – he now averages 50.50 from 24 Tests with seven centuries. (Click here for Pietersen’s cumulative career average.)

Usama Mir, Brett D'Oliveira to the fore as Worcestershire halt losing run

Leicestershire bowled out for 112 as visiting legspinners share six wickets

ECB Reporters Network18-Jun-2023

Usama Mir claimed 4 for 22 as Leicestershire were skittled•Getty Images

Worcestershire Rapids kept alive their hopes of qualifying for the knockout stages of the Vitality Blast by ending a run of four straight defeats in the North Group with a comfortable six-wicket win over Leicestershire Foxes.The home side, bottom of the table with just two wins from nine matches, were dismissed for just 112 in 18.1 overs as legspinner Usama Mir finished with a T20 career-best 4 for 22 and fellow wristspinner Brett Oliveira took 2 for 17.Skipper D’Oliveira’s unbeaten 51 then saw his side home in the 17th over to raise their points haul to 10 as they bid to build on their four back-to-back wins at the start of the competition and clinch a top-four finish.Australian wicketkeeper-batter Peter Handscomb, not originally part of the Foxes’ Blast plans but drafted in as injury cover with batter Lewis Hill and overseas pace bowler Naveen ul-Haq among those absent, top-scored with 36 from 20 balls and Rishi Patel made 27 from 22 but the next-highest score was Wiaan Mulder’s 11.Having been put in on a slow pitch, the Foxes looked set to post a competitive total despite losing Nick Welch to the fourth ball of the innings, racking up 56 runs in the powerplay for that one loss.Welch miscued a big drive against Dillon Pennington but after Patel had launched a free hit over the long-on boundary following a Josh Tongue no-ball, Handscomb showed the Foxes what they had been missing by plundering two sixes and three fours.But everything fell apart for the home side just as soon as the Australian was out in the eighth over, bowled by D’Oliveira’s first ball as he was beaten trying to work to leg. The second-wicket pair had blitzed 64 in 39 balls but no other partnership exceeded 13 as one wicket followed another in rapid succession.The next over saw Mir – brought back by the Rapids as a replacement for the injured Michael Bracewell – dismiss Colin Ackermann and Patel in the space of three deliveries as the Foxes skipper was caught behind off an inside edge and Patel was leg before trying to slog-sweep after hitting two sixes in his 22-ball 27.Louis Kimber was bowled giving himself room to drive Mitchell Santner before Rehan Ahmed holed out to long-on. Mir took two in two balls, having Tom Scriven caught in the deep and bamboozling Mike Finan with a first-ball googly.Mulder’s ramp was well caught by a diving Pennington before the rout ended with Callum Parkinson trying to lob a ball from Pat Brown over D’Oliveira at extra cover only to be foiled by an athletic leap and one-handed catch.The last nine wickets fell for 46 as the Foxes were out in 18.2 overs, which can only be described as miserable, much as Mir and D’Oliveira had bowled well, requiring the visitors to score at less than six an over to win the game.Although the sky was darkening as they began their innings, the Rapids knew they could afford not to take risks so long as they kept in front of the DLS calculation, with just five overs needed to be bowled by the Foxes to make it a match.It thus did not matter that their 37 for 1 from the first six looked modest next to the home side’s 56 for 1, Jack Haynes the one loss as he clipped a ball from Matt Salisbury into the hands of Kimber on the leg side.Leicestershire gave themselves a faint glimmer of hope as Santner found the fielder on the long-off rope and Adam Hose bottom-edged a ball from Rehan into his stumps, the Rapids losing wickets in consecutive overs, but at 66 for 3 from 10, they were still in front on DLS with thunder rumbling nearby.Kashif Ali became a second victim for Rehan when he edged to short third man in the 15th over but by then only 21 runs were needed from 35 balls. Rain now was falling but the umpires sensibly kept the players on the field long enough for Ben Cox to sweep Ackermann for four and D’Oliveira to hit Finan for a mighty six over long on and a lofted four over extra cover to clinch victory with 22 balls to spare.

Tottenham want ANOTHER Man City star! Spurs enquire about signing Manuel Akanji after summer-long Savinho pursuit as AC Milan rival Thomas Frank's side for defender

Tottenham are interested in signing Manuel Akanji from Manchester City and have opened talks over landing the centre-back.

Spurs make approach for AkanjiAC Milan also interestedCity asking for £15 million ($20m)Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Per Fabrizio Romano, Spurs are interested in signing Akanji from City as they seek to bolster their defence before next week's transfer deadline. Spurs have been in talks with City throughout the summer as they attempt to sign winger Savinho, and have now launched an approach for his team-mate. 

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Spurs are said to have two other names on their shortlist and are hopeful of adding a new defender to their squad, but they face competition from AC Milan to sign Akanji. City are demanding around £15m; the Serie A club have yet to reach an agreement with the Switzerland international over personal terms, however. 

DID YOU KNOW?

Akanji was on the bench for City's first game of the season, against Wolves, but he was not in the squad for their defeat to Spurs. Last season, the 30-year-old made 26 appearances in the Premier League, although his game-time was somewhat hampered by an adductor injury. 

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Spurs and City are likely to continue negotiations over the next few days ahead of Monday's transfer deadline, given that the former would like to sign both Savinho and Akanji. 

Vasco desembarca nos Estados Unidos, onde disputará amistosos

MatériaMais Notícias

A delegação do Vasco desembarcou na manhã deste sábado em Fort Lauderdale, na Flórida. Dando sequência à pré-temporada sob comando de Maurício Barbieri, o Cruz-Maltino disputará amistosos contra o River Plate na terça-feira, dia 17, e contra a Inter Miami no dia 21, ambos nos Estados Unidos.

+ Confira a classificação e as próximas partidas do Vasco no Campeonato Carioca

Das contratações para 2023, somente o zagueiro Robson que não vai embarcar para os Estados Unidos. O Vasco informou que o zagueiro segue no Rio, aos cuidados do Departamento de Saúde e Performance, readquirindo condicionamento físico. Veja a lista completa aqui.

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Enquanto os principais jogadores do Vasco estão à disposição para os amistosos, a equipe alternativa terá a oportunidade de representar o clube no início do Carioca, a partir deste sábado. Emílio Faro ficou no Rio de Janeiro e comandará a equipe – saiba mais informações clicando aqui.

'I am happy' – Ruben Amorim ready to start new season at Man Utd but admits Red Devils will 'suffer' despite Bryan Mbeumo & Matheus Cunha additions

Ruben Amorim says he is "happy" with his Manchester United squad but admits they will have to "suffer" in the upcoming season.

  • Mbeumo & Cunha join Man Utd
  • Amorim "happy" with current squad
  • Admits they will have to "suffer"
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Following the capture of Wolves' Matheus Cunha and Brentford's Bryan Mbeumo, United head coach Amorim was asked about what he thought of the players at his disposal. The ex-Sporting CP boss stressed the Red Devils need to be "careful" in the transfer market, that he is content with his current options, and that they will bond through the suffering.

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    WHAT AMORIM SAID

    He told reporters: "We need to be really careful when we sign players. If we start the season with this squad, I am happy. We are going to suffer but that feeling of bonding is really important. The spirit is positive."

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Amorim and United are under huge pressure to perform next season after an abject 2024/25 campaign. The Red Devils failed to win a trophy, losing meekly to Tottenham in the Europa League final, and finished 15th in the Premier League. It could be argued they need a lot of quality additions but Amorim appears to be taking a glass half-full approach.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    United are about to play in the Premier League Summer Series in the United States over the next week or so. How they fare against West Ham, Everton, and Bournemouth may be a good indicator of how well they will perform next season.

برشلونة يعلن خضوع تير شتيجن لعملية جراحية

أصدر نادي برشلونة بيانًا، بشأن إجراء الدولي الألماني، مارك أندريه تير شتيجن، حارس مرمى الفريق الأول لكرة القدم لعملية جراحية صباح اليوم.

وكانت العلاقة بين الألماني والإدارة قد دخلت في مرحلة سيئة خلال الأسابيع الماضية، خاصةً بعد رفضه مغادرة الفريق مؤقتًا، رغم الإصابة، ولم يكتفِ بذلك، بل نشر بيانًا عبر حساباته الرسمية حدد فيه فترة غيابه بثلاثة أشهر، في خطوة أزعجت النادي ماليًا وإداريًا، لأنه لم يعُد إلى إدارة النادي وأيضًا هذا يقلل من قدرة النادي على تسجيل صفقات جديدة بسبب قواعد “اللعب المالي النظيف”.

وبحسب اللوائح المنظمة للميزانيات في رابطة الليجا، فإن برشلونة قد يتمكن من استخدام 80% من راتب الحارس للتعاقد مع بديل، ولكن بشرط أن تتجاوز فترة غيابه 4 أشهر، وهو ما لم تؤكده إدارة النادي حتى الآن.

اقرأ أيضًا | موندو: برشلونة جدد عقد لاعبه حتى 2030.. وراشفورد سبب تأجيل الإعلان

وتعاقد نادي برشلونة مع الحارس الإسباني خوان جارسيا، قادمًا من نادي إسبانيول بعقد طويل الأمد حتى عام 2031 بعدما تم تفعيل الشرط الجزائي الخاص به والذي يقدر حوالي 25 مليون يورو.

وبعد إتمام الصفقة، تم إبلاغ شتيجن بأنه سيكون الحارس الثالث للفريق خلال الموسم المقبل، خلفًا لـ جارسيا الذي سيكون أساسيًا وفويتشيك تشيزني الذي سيكون بديلًا له.

وجاء بيان نادي برشلونة: “خضع لاعب الفريق الأول، مارك تير شتيجن، بنجاح لعملية جراحية أخرى لعلاج آلام أسفل الظهر، تحت إشراف الخدمات الطبية للنادي في عيادة بوردو ميرينياك الرياضية”.

وأتم البيان: “لن يكون اللاعب متاحًا للمشاركة خلال الفترة الحالية، وستحدد مدة تعافيه من الإصابة وموعد عودته للملعب”.

Adam Rossington hundred lays platform for title-chasing Essex

Wicketkeeper finds form to go with fifties from Westley, Critchley as hosts take charge

ECB Reporters Network19-Sep-2023

Adam Rossington made his highest first-class score for Essex•Getty Images

Adam Rossington ended his horror season with a century as Essex took command on day one of the LV= Insurance County Championship clash with Hampshire and boosted their title bid.Wicketkeeper Rossington came into the match having only scored 188 runs in a season disrupted by injury and poor form but pushed through the gears to reach 104 – his best for Essex. Matt Critchley added a ninth Championship fifty to his impressive season after Tom Westley reached 1000 runs for the campaign on his way to his own half-century.Essex ended the day on 310 for 6, Critchley still going strong on 83 after his 177-run stand with Rossington.Essex began this penultimate round of fixtures 18 points behind leaders Surrey, and the final challenger to the London side’s pursuit of back-to-back titles. They started by winning the toss and electing to bat first.Third-placed Hampshire will have a strong role in determining the location of the Championship as they face Surrey in the final round, after potentially making a decisive mark on Essex’s ambitions.This could be Alastair Cook’s final match at the Cloud County Ground, Chelmsford, with his current two-year contract ending at the end of this season. His future is uncertain as he approaches his 39th birthday this winter. If this does turn out to be his finale, it didn’t start well as he was bowled around the wicket by a textbook Mohammad Abbas beauty.His opening partner Nick Browne dangled his bat outside off stump to nick behind as Essex slumped to 18 for 2, but Westley and Dan Lawrence combined to improve the hosts’ position.yWestley needed 15 runs to reach 1000 first-class runs this season, something he had only achieved once before – in 2016, when he Ryan ten Doeschate and Browne also piled up four figures. That was the last time at Essex player had achieved the feat.In fact, only three Essex players – Stuart Law and Paul Grayson in 2001 and Andy Flower in 2003 – have ever scored 1000 runs in Division One since the Championship split into two in 2000.Westley joined the trio with a flick into the leg side with his 25th delivery. He ticked along nicely, as he has throughout the season, unleashing the odd straight drive or trademarked flick off the pads on his way to his seventh half-century.But he didn’t score another run as he drove Kyle Abbott to third slip. It ended a 64-run stand with Lawrence – who is definitely making his last home appearance ahead of his move to Surrey. Lawrence fell three overs later to Liam Dawson, having struck back-to-back boundaries, edging to first slip, with the left-arm spinner also picking up the skittish Paul Walter lbw to leave Essex 132 for 5.The Essex slide was short-lived as Critchley found his flow quickly, reaching his half-century in 70 balls. It wasn’t a boundary-a-thon though. He only scored two fours and a sliced six down the ground off Dawson, with 28 singles milked along the way.Critchley, Rossington and Walter had all been awarded their Essex county caps at lunchtime. Like Critchley, Rossington celebrated with fifty – his first of a frustrating season. It came in 83 balls and was brought up with a six over long on – which also moved his alliance with Critchley past 100.He raced past Critchley’s scoring with his second fifty coming in 56 balls to bring up his second ton for Essex, since moving from Northamptonshire at the beginning of last summer. Rossington’s assault ended on 104 as he attempted to yahoo one over midwicket and was caught behind, but Essex cruised to the close – which came to an early due to bad light, having earlier been on and off for rain.

Botafogo terá estande em feira de negócios da CBF em São Paulo

MatériaMais Notícias

O Botafogo terá um estande na CBF EXPO, considerada a maior feira e congresso de futebol da América Latina. Além de participar dos paineis e palestras por meio de seus executivos, o Clube também terá um ponto interativo para relacionamento com os visitantes.

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+Parceiro do Botafogo, Molenbeek bate Grupo City e se torna o mais valioso da segunda divisão da Bélgica

O clube será representado por Thairo Arruda, diretor geral da SAF e um dos braços direitos de John Textor, proprietário do Alvinegro.

– É um evento estratégico para a SAF e interessante por apresentar o novo posicionamento do Botafogo no mercado nesse novo modelo de gestão. Estaremos presentes com um estande interativo, ativações de marketing e nos debates sobre o produto futebol – destacou Thairo.

O clube enxerga o evento como uma boa oportunidade de criar parcerias e conexões com empresas e outros executivos do continente.

Worth more than Solomon: Farke hit the jackpot with "dangerous" Leeds star

Leeds United are currently competing to land promotion from the Championship back to the Premier League at the second time of asking this season.

The Whites are two points clear at the top of the table and four points ahead of Burnley in third place, which means that they have a good grasp on an automatic promotion spot.

Daniel Farke’s side fell just short of promotion in the 2023/24 campaign when they lost 1-0 to Southampton in the play-off final, having finished third in the second tier.

The West Yorkshire outfit beat Millwall 2-0 on Wednesday night to put themselves clear of Sheffield United and Burnley, who were both held to draws on Tuesday night.

Manor Solomon forced an own goal from Jake Cooper in the third minute of the match, before Ao Tanaka wrapped up the three points with five minutes of normal time to go.

Whilst it may not go down as a goal or an assist, it was another contribution to a goal for Tottenham Hotspur loanee Manor Solomon, who has been in terrific form this season.

Manor Solomon's form this season

The Whites swooped to bring the Israel international to Elland Road last summer after the likes of Georginio Rutter and Crysencio Summerville were sold, as their departures left the team needing to find goals and assists from elsewhere.

Solomon had a fairly quiet start to life with the Championship side, with zero goals and one assist in eight appearances, but has now emerged as a reliable performer for Leeds on the left flank.

The 25-year-old winger has started 21 of his 30 appearances in the second tier for the Whites, which shows how much Farke has trusted him, and has recorded seven goals and seven assists in that time.

Solomon is also, somewhat, unfortunate to have only recorded seven assists because he has created 12 ‘big chances’. This suggests that his teammates have let him down at times with their wasteful finishing, as they have not made the most of the high-quality opportunities that the Spurs loanee has created for them.

24/25 Championship

Manor Solomon (per 90)

Percentile rank vs att. mids & wingers

Non-penalty goals

0.34

Top 14%

Assists

0.34

Top 7%

Expected Assisted Goals

0.34

Top 1%

Shot-creating actions

5.10

Top 1%

Successful take-ons

2.60

Top 3%

Progressive carries

4.80

Top 6%

Stats via FBref

As you can see in the table above, the former Fulham man ranks incredibly highly among his positional peers in the Championship in a host of key attacking metrics.

These statistics illustrate how productive the Leeds star is in the final third and as a dribbler who can get his team up the pitch, which also may be why the club are reportedly interested in signing him permanently.

Leeds interested in signing Manor Solomon

The Whites currently have Solomon on a season-long loan deal that is due to expire in the summer, and they do not have an option to make it permanent ahead of the 2025/26 campaign.

Journalist Ben Jacobs recently confirmed, however, that the club do want to sign the Israel international on a permanent basis if they get promoted to the Premier League this year.

He told GIVEMESPORT: “The priority is to get promotion and then assess what targets are possible. Leeds are more focused on finding a playmaker and trying to buy Manor Solomon, while Cameron Archer remains on their radar.”

Jacobs has revealed that they will try to buy him, as well as Southampton centre-forward Cameron Archer, but they must first focus on landing automatic promotion out of the Championship in the next two months.

The Tottenham forward is currently valued at €9m (£7.5m) by Transfermarkt, but it remains to be seen exactly how much Leeds will need to pay to land the exciting forward this summer.

Farke, meanwhile, has already hit the jackpot with another Leeds attacker who is already worth even more than the £7.5m that Solomon is valued at – Joel Piroe.

Leeds struck gold with Joel Piroe

The German head coach arrived at Elland Road in the summer of 2023 and immediately decided to recruit a new centre-forward to bolster his squad.

Market Movers

Leeds eventually swooped to sign Dutch number nine Joel Piroe from Championship rivals Swansea for a reported fee of at least £10m ahead of the 2023/24 campaign, after he had scored 19 goals in the league in the previous season.

The Dutchman, however, made 23 of his starts as an attacking midfielder for Leeds last season, compared to 14 as a striker, and contributed with 14 goals and three assists in all competitions across both positions.

This term, Farke has relied on him as the go-to centre-forward option for the club, in his natural position, and his output at the top end of the pitch has improved as a result of that decision.

Piroe, who was described as “dangerous” by journalist Josh Bunting, has racked up 15 goals and six assists in all competitions for the West Yorkshire outfit, which means that he has already produced more goals and more assists – with two months of the season to go – than he did in the 2023/24 campaign as an attacking midfielder.

The left-footed star’s market value has increased as a result of his impressive form on the pitch for Leeds in the last two years, and his improvement in the current campaign, as it has soared beyond the £10m that was initially paid for him in 2023.

At the time of writing (14/03/2025), Transfermarkt values Piroe at €14m (£11.7m) and this means that his value has gone up since Farke brought him to Elland Road from Swansea last year, and that he is worth significantly more than Solomon.

The Whites have, therefore, hit the jackpot with the 25-year-old star because he has been a terrific performer on the pitch, whilst his value has soared off it.

At the age of 25, Piroe also still has plenty of time left to develop and improve over the years to come, which means that there is time for his value to skyrocket during the remainder of his spell in Yorkshire.

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He is already worth even more than Solomon is at the moment and could be worth millions more, potentially, if Leeds are promoted to the Premier League and he can translate his goalscoring form over to the top-flight.

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