Everton are now "ready" to table £38m offer for "complete" overseas star

Everton are now “ready” to make an offer for a “complete” player this summer, according to a fresh claim from journalist Sebastien Vidal.

Everton pushing for signings from Spain and Portugal

The Blues know the importance of getting further transfer business over the line before their return to Premier League action, in order to be a top-half team again, rather than looking over their shoulder at the relegation zone.

Some exciting names are being linked with summer moves to Everton, including Real Sociedad winger Takefusa Kubo, who has been likened to Lionel Messi, in terms of his style of play. A new right-sided player is needed, and he could be the ideal addition for David Moyes, with contact already made over a potential move to the club.

Takefusa Kubo scores for Japan

Added midfield depth is also important for the Blues, with a dominant force needed in front of the defence, and Benfica’s Florentino Luis has been mentioned as an option.

Everton are said to have enquired about the availability of the Portuguese ace, as have Burnley and Leeds United, but they will reportedly have to pay around £22m to prise him away from the Primeira Liga giants.

Everton "ready" bid for £38m starlet

Now, according to a new update from Vidal on X, Everton are preparing a £38m offer for Como winger Assane Diao, looking to beat Nottingham Forest to his signature this summer.

At just 19, Diao is far from the finished article as a footballer, but that doesn’t mean that Everton shouldn’t be going all in on him ahead of the new season.

The Como ace has already scored eight goals in just 15 appearances for his current club, with such ruthless end product rare for teenage wide players. He also has two caps to his name for Senegal, having switched his allegiances from Spain, and scout Jacek Kulig has described him as a “complete” player.

Diao is at his most comfortable on the left wing, so he could come in as a strong backup option to the influential Iliman Ndiaye, but his versatility means he can also shine on the right flank, which is a more pressing area to add quality for Everton, hence the interest in Kubo.

Everton pushing in race to sign "superb" Douglas Luiz alternative for Moyes

Moyes is still seeking reinforcements.

ByTom Cunningham Jul 31, 2025

Hopefully, the Blues are successful in their imminent bid for the Senegalese, with the Como starlet having the ability to grow into a formidable option for Moyes over time.

Liverpool reach "full agreement" for next signing, considered "done deal"

Liverpool have made some high-profile signings this summer as they look to defend their Premier League title and now appear close to completing another statement deal, according to Florian Plettenberg.

Liverpool still have plenty to spend this window

Despite spending big on Florian Wirtz, Milos Kerkez and Jeremie Frimpong among others, Liverpool still have plenty of room to bring in reinforcements under Arne Slot and plan to have a strong end to the window after making significant early progress.

Addressing their financial reality, football finance expert Kieran Maguire has praised the Reds’ ‘Moneyball’ approach that has allowed them to flex their muscles on the market this summer.

Bayer Leverkusen's Jeremie Frimpong.

He stated: “Liverpool have been outside the top-10 spenders on player signings since 2019, but their model is a classic case of being smarter rather than bigger.

“Liverpool’s model has been to ignore the noise and only buy a player if they truly improve the squad. It’s a Moneyball, external, more analytical approach. Chief executive Michael Edwards does a brilliant job and he never buys players because of external pressure. He doesn’t get jittery when fans call for more signings.”

With that in mind, Liverpool have Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon on their radar if Real Madrid star Rodrygo is unattainable, providing evidence that they have several targets in the pipeline that could become the latest in a long line of high-value arrivals at Anfield.

£11m-a-year Brazilian star now "open" to move as Liverpool commence talks

Another boost for the Reds.

ByTom Cunningham Jul 18, 2025

Of course, departures such as Darwin Nunez potentially sealing a move to Napoli or an alternative destination alongside speculation over Luis Diaz will only create room for new additions, especially within their forward line.

Taking that into account, Liverpool are now on the verge of sealing a deal for one of Europe’s rising stars amid recent developments coming out of Anfield.

Sky Sports: Hugo Ekitike to Liverpool considered a "done deal"

Sky Sport journalist Plettenberg has now confirmed Eintracht Frankfurt and Liverpool have reached a “full agreement” over an impending Anfield transfer for striker Hugo Ekitike.

Now considered to be a “done deal” after the Bundesliga outfit accepted a bid of £82.3 million with add-ons included, the France Under-21 international is set for a medical at the Premier League champions and will sign a deal running until 2031.

Compared to Kylian Mbappe by Wesley Sneijder, Ekitike registered 22 goals and 12 assists in 48 appearances last term as his side secured qualification for the Champions League.

Following Liverpool’s prolonged search for a number nine, Slot finally appears to have found his new striker and supporters will be waiting with anticipation in the hope that his medical concludes with no final hitches.

£120k-a-week Aston Villa outfielder has now opened talks to join elite club

Aston Villa will have to sell players this summer in order to comply with PSR rules, as Unai Emery faces the prospect of losing some key figures in the dressing room.

As per a recent report from The Athletic, Villa can only register a loss of around £15 million for the 2024/2025 football financial year and remain in line with Premier League rules.

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The Villans may reluctantly cash in for below value.

2 ByEmilio Galantini Jun 19, 2025

Their marquee sales of Moussa Diaby and Jhon Duran have seriously assisted NSWE’s mission to comply with PSR for the year ending 2024/2025, as has their estimated £70 million earnings from reaching the Champions League quarter-finals last season, but they’re still walking a tightrope when it comes to PSR.

Villa’s president of footballing operations, Monchi, is reportedly working “around the clock” to secure a big-name exit before the June 30 cut-off date (Football Insider), with the Man United-linked Emiliano Martínez, Youri Tielemans and Amadou Onana among their prime contenders to be sold.

Aston Villa's president of football operations, Monchi.

A major debate is surrounding the validity of PSR and whether these tight financial restrictions create an even bigger gap between the ‘big six’ and the rest of England, with clubs like Villa forced to actively weaken themselves just to stay within certain limits.

With Villa in such a precarious position after falling short in their bid to qualify for the Champions League next season, instead having to settle for the much less lucrative Europa League prize pool, reports they could lose goalkeeper Martinez to Old Trafford are heightening.

The Argentine mainstay is rumoured to be very keen on a move to United, and he could well be the illustrious sale made by Villa chiefs in their efforts to stay within the PSR limit.

However, there are other Emery starters who could leave prior to June 30 too, with £120,000-per-week left-back Lucas Digne attracting serious interest from La Liga.

Aston Villa defender Lucas Digne in talks to join Atlético Madrid

The 52-cap Frenchman was a firm regular under Emery last season, making 45 appearances in all competitions, even if he was in and out of the starting eleven towards the back end of 24/25.

Aston Villa defender Lucas Digne

Atlético Madrid are actively pursuing a new left-back and Digne is on Diego Simeone’s radar, with Football Insider and journalist Wayne Veysey sharing news this week that he could leave for around £10 million.

Atlético are preparing an opening bid of around £8 million for the 31-year-old, who’s out of contract next summer, but this will fall short of Monchi’s desired asking price, with Villa looking to gain as much breathing room as possible between them and the PSR axe.

Digne has opened talks to join Atletico from Villa, though, so discussions between the former Everton defender’s representatives and Simeone’s side have started.

Emery being in this situation of having to sell important players, amid their efforts to become an elite-level side, is perhaps a damning indictment of PSR and how the governing bodies need to re-assess these roadblocks.

However, at least for now, Villa will need to continue dancing around it.

£70m star wanted by Thomas Frank is now tempted to join Tottenham

Thomas Frank is poised to become the new manager of Tottenham Hotspur, and he’s thought to have his eyes on some transfer targets already.

Tottenham closing in on Thomas Frank appointment after talks

Respected journalist Fabrizio Romano says Frank to Tottenham is already a done deal, with the Lilywhites set to trigger his £10 million release clause and secure Ange Postecoglou’s replacement in quick fashion.

Tottenham now offered £42m star who Mourinho held talks to sign for Spurs

The former Spurs boss FaceTimed him constantly.

2 ByEmilio Galantini Jun 11, 2025

Following chairman Daniel Levy’s tough decision to axe a manager who ended the club’s 17-year wait for a major trophy, whilst securing qualification for next season’s Champions League, Spurs have wasted no time in getting his successor through the door.

Tottenham’s best-performing regulars in the Premier League – 2024/2025

Average match rating

Son Heung-min

7.00

James Maddison

6.98

Pedro Porro

6.95

Dominic Solanke

6.84

Dejan Kulusevski

6.83

via WhoScored

Postecoglou was a popular figurehead among the squad, with James Maddison, Lucas Bergvall, Archie Gray and Pedro Porro all speaking publicly in defence of the Australian before his dismissal, so Frank has big shoes to fill.

The Dane’s experience of overperforming on a very limited transfer budget, not to mention his work under a data-driven recruitment model similar to Tottenham’s, makes him a solid candidate to replace Postecoglou.

The downsides of this prospective appointment lie with Frank’s inexperience managing an elite-level side or competing in the Champions League, and the 51-year-old has no major honours to boast of heading into the biggest job of his career.

Frank will need plenty of backing this summer from Levy and technical director Johan Lange, who he already knows very well from their time together working in Denmark, and they’ve been familiar with one another for many years.

Tottenham are set for a significant financial boost due to their confirmed place in the Champions League next season, and they’ll no longer have to adopt a sell-to-buy policy this summer as a result (Michael Bridge).

Reports suggest Frank has already identified transfer targets ahead of his arrival at Spurs, with Crystal Palace star Eberechi Eze firmly in his thinking (GiveMeSport).

Tottenham consider "bold" move for Everton defender Jarrad Branthwaite

As per TEAMtalk, Everton centre-back Jarrad Branthwaite is another player admired by Frank.

Everton defender Jarrad Branthwaite

The 22-year-old has been a star mainstay of the Toffees backline since returning to Merseyside from a successful loan spell at PSV Eindhoven during the 2022/2023 season, and England fans were left shocked when Gareth Southgate omitted Branthwaite from his Three Lions squad for Euro 2024.

Branthwaite is attracting interest from across the Premier League, and Tottenham are certainly in the mix for his services, despite Everton slapping a £70 million price tag on his head.

That is according to TT, who also claim that Frank sees Branthwaite as the ideal Spurs signing to prepare for Champions League football, with Tottenham considering a “bold” move to bring him down south.

A move to N17 is also described as “appealing” to Branthwaite, considering their state-of-the-art set-up and place in Europe’s most prestigious competition, but remaining at Everton is also tempting for him given their new stadium and promise shown under David Moyes.

The Toffees will apparently fight tooth and nail to keep hold of him for next season, so a lot will hinder on how high Tottenham are ready to bid.

Chelsea have made "very strong" transfer offer to £50m star, he likes it

Chelsea are described as the main contenders to sign a highly-rated Premier League player right now, who apparently likes the “very strong” offer presented to him by Enzo Maresca’s side during talks with his representatives.

Chelsea's transfer plans this summer amid Champions League race

The Blues are currently focused on finishing this season in strong fashion, with the prospect of Champions League football firmly on the table after last weekend’s vital 3-1 win over champions Liverpool.

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ByEmilio Galantini May 8, 2025

A spot in season’s draw will also play a key role in determining BlueCo’s transfer plans ahead of next season, and it is widely expected that they’ll be very active once again when the window reopens for business.

Chelsea are reportedly getting busy already, with a unique window open from June 1 to June 10, prior to their Club World Cup campaign.

Newcastle (away)

May 11th

Man United (home)

May 16th

Nottingham Forest (away)

May 25th

Maresca’s side could make full use of this opportunity to seal squad upgrades before the CWC begins, with Chelsea apparently prioritising the signing of a centre-back, winger and striker.

Defensively, uncertainty surrounds the long-term futures of Trevoh Chalobah, Axel Disasi and Benoit Badiashile, while some reports even suggest that Chelsea are becoming more open to selling Wesley Fofana given his injury problems.

Crystal Palace’s Marc Guehi, Ajax sensation Jorrel Hato, Everton’s Jarrad Branthwaite, Burnley ace Maxine Esteve and even former Chelsea star Antonio Rüdiger have all been mentioned as potential reinforcements for Maresca’s backline recently, but Bournemouth starlet Dean Huijsen is said to be a priority target.

Chelsea present "strong offer" to Bournemouth defender Dean Huijsen

That is according to reliable Stamford Bridge reporter Simon Phillips, who reported earlier this week that Huijsen’s agent is pushing for him to join Chelsea.

The “sensational” defender, who commands a £50 million release clause, is also attracting interest from Arsenal and Liverpool after an excellent debut campaign in the Premier League.

However, Phillips has now shared another update on the 20-year-old’s future, with Chelsea presenting Huijsen a “strong offer” to join them. As things stand, the Blues are pushing much more than their rivals for his signature, and it is believed the Spain international has reacted “positively” to their proposal.

“Chelsea are the first and only suitor to officially lay down the project and package to Huijsen and his reps,” wrote Phillips.

“To date, no other suitor has gone as far as doing this. Chelsea are absolutely pushing the most right now and are feeling confident of getting their priority centre back target for the summer.

“Huijsen and his reps have reacted positively to the proposals and project, even his father who has been keen for him to join Liverpool over the other interested parties.

“The Spanish international defender will make his final decision when the season is over, but Chelsea feel they have a very strong offer and project on the table and the overall package as well as the promise of regular first-team football, can sway the decision in their favour.”

The former Juventus starlet is set to be one of the most in-demand defenders of the summer, but Chelsea appear to be making serious headway, as they look to win the highly competitive race for his signature.

Nottingham Forest now want to sign £29m forward with 14 goals in 24/25

Nottingham Forest are now interested in signing an “excellent” £29 million forward who has scored 14 goals this season, according to a new report.

Forest drop points in race for Champions League spot

It is now no wins in their last three games in all competitions for Forest, as their fight for a Champions League spot has taken a hit. Murillo rescued a point for the Reds on Monday evening after going a goal down thanks to Eberechi Eze’s penalty. The draw leaves Forest in sixth place on 61 points, two behind Chelsea and Newcastle United and one ahead of Aston Villa, who are sitting in seventh place.

Despite the dropped points, Nuno Espirito Santo was pleased with his side’s attitude and defensive performance and believes everyone in the Champions League race will give it their all. As he said, “all the teams in this big fight will give it a go”.

Nottingham Forest willing to make big offer for £42k-p/w Juventus defender

He has made a big decision about his future.

ByHenry Jackson May 3, 2025

Nuno told BBC Match of the Day: “Let’s think about the game. It was two halves, and in the first half, we were very good. It was good for us that we achieved the goal so soon after the goal for Crystal Palace. That gave us belief to fight for the game. After last week, a good attitude.

“It’s about finding ourselves again after the past three games. We defended better; it’s so obvious, against a talented opponent in Palace.

“The final games will be nervous, tight games. Everyone is fighting for something, and Selhurst Park is always a tough place to come. All the teams in this big fight will give it a go.”

Nottingham Forest want to sign £29m forward with 14 goals in 24/25

As Nuno and his team remain focused on the race for a Champions League spot, Forest chiefs and the manager are looking towards the summer transfer window. Now, according to La Opinion A Coruna, relayed by Sport Witness, Nottingham Forest want to sign winger Yeremay Hernandez from Deportivo La Coruna.

The report states that there is a good chance Hernandez leaves the Spanish side at the end of this season, despite the fact he has just signed a new contract that runs until the summer of 2030. The winger was a wanted player in the January transfer window but stayed at Deportivo, where they inserted a release clause worth €35 million, which is roughly £29 million.

As well as Forest now showing an interest in a deal this summer, AFC Bournemouth and Brentford are also keen on striking an agreement. Teams from Italy, Germany and France are also keen on signing Hernandez, who has been dubbed “excellent” by Ben Mattinson in the past.

Apps

94

Goals

22

Assists

10

However, all the teams are not going to have it easy signing the 22-year-old, as they will need to bring a lot of money and the skill to persuade Deportivo to sell one of their brightest players.

It is unclear at this stage if Forest, as well as Bournemouth and Brentford, are willing to pay Hernandez’s release clause. The Spanish U21 international has been in fine form this season, as he’s netted 14 goals in 35 La Liga 2 games.

India's Kolkata heist vs India's Chennai triumph vs England's Edgbaston conquest

Three thrilling Tests, three wild finishes – have your pick

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Jun-2025Update: This poll has ended. The IND-AUS 2001 Kolkata Test moves into the final.Australia fall at the final frontier – Kolkata, 2001A Test hat-trick against the world’s top side at the age of 20. A follow-on. A historic partnership to turn the tables. A record individual score by an Indian. And a thrilling end in front of packed stands to level the series and end Australia’s streak of 16 wins. All that in one Test!After Harbhajan Singh hurt Australia with a hat-trick on the first day, Steve Waugh scored his maiden Test century on Indian soil to lead his team to a strong 445. In reply, India were bundled for 171 and asked to follow-on.They were then 232 for 4 – still 42 behind – when VVS Laxman was joined by Rahul Dravid and the two of them played out the entire fourth day with strips of iced towels around their necks to beat the heat and humidity; they still needed attention from the physio from time to time.The two ended up seeing off nine bowlers in a partnership that was instantly stamped in the game’s history. Laxman’s 281 lasted ten-and-a-half hours, and Dravid’s 180 nearly seven-and-a-half. They set Australia a target of 384. Australia succumbed on the last day against India’s spinners as Harbhajan finished with a tally of 13 for 196.Harbhajan too good for Australia – Chennai, 2001It was fitting that the series that had kept everyone on the edge of their seats ended in a thrilling last-day finish.After Matthew Hayden’s 203 had taken Australia to 391, India responded by racking up 501. Like he had in the first innings, Harbhajan Singh ripped through the Australia middle order in the second innings, as they ended the fourth day on 241 for 7, a lead of 131.On the fifth morning, Harbhajan wasted little time in picking up the last three Australia wickets, bundling them for 264. He returned second-innings figures of 8 for 84 and match figures of 15 for 127, finishing with 32 wickets for the series.But he wasn’t done.Chasing 155, India lost Shiv Sunder Das early, but Sadagoppan Ramesh and VVS Laxman added 58 to give India the advantage. But a middle-order collapse followed, and it was game on. But wicketkeeper Sameer Dighe, on Test debut, held his cool as he took India closer. India lost Zaheer Khan just four runs shy of a win, but Harbhajan sliced a Glenn McGrath delivery past point to give India a famous Test and series win.The two runs that brought the Ashes alive – Edgbaston 2005The drama began before the toss. Glenn McGrath hurt his ankle on the first morning of the match, and the man who replaced him nearly did it for Australia… with the bat. On the fourth day, Australia were 137 for 7 in their pursuit of 282. Michael Clarke was their only hope, and it took an ahead-of-the-time slower ball from Steve Harmison to dismiss him and make it 175 for 8. With Shane Warne, Brett Lee and Michael Kasprowicz, who took McGrath’s place in the side, remaining, England were favourites.But minute by minute, Warne’s runs hurt England after bagging ten wickets with the ball. His stoic stand with Lee, who also looked unmoved, was fanning belief. But then, with Australia 62 runs away and the pair having added 45, a little flicker of a sound broke the silence of the stadium. Everyone searched for it. Warne found it. He had trod back onto his stumps. He was hit-wicket.Most of us would have forgotten by then that it was the Australia of their pomp. On their day, even a No. 11 could raise the ceiling with the bat and Kasprowicz did exactly that. Michael Vaughan looked frustrated with every run Lee and Kasprowicz scored. Until, with three to get, Harmison’s short ball saw Kasprowicz fending, and nudging behind to a diving Geraint Jones. Billy Bowden’s crooked finger was up, Edgbaston erupted, and Andrew Flintoff consoling Lee became an iconic image.

Too much cricket? Yes, but Labuschagne gets his 'routine and rhythm' from it

Six Tests (the WTC final and the Ashes) in less than eight weeks is just about perfect for the world’s fidgetiest cricketer, it will keep him straight

Osman Samiuddin02-Jun-2023Chances are, whatever the level and nature of your engagement with cricket, you have felt, heard, or talked about its relentless grind for the last six months what now seems like forever.No sooner had Marco Jansen hit a four and six to finish the SA20 than India and Australia were squeezing out a four-Test series in a month; than New Zealand were pulling off one of the great Test wins over England; than Afghanistan and UAE were sprinting through a T20I series; than Bangladesh were beating the world champions; than South Africa were thumping the West Indies in a Test no one watched; than the TV umpire was ruling Kane Williamson in to seal one of the great Test wins; than Lahore Qalandars were winning the PSL by a single run in one of the great T20 finals; than Ravindra Jadeja was ending the IPL with a six and a four in one of the great T20 finals.The calendar’s gotten so crowded that for a lot of the world outside India, the IPL – where once it was an example of how cluttered the calendar is – is now the one pause. There’s more teams to play for, more places to play in, more leagues to fly to, more matches, all blending into one another like some super unhealthy, super bland smoothie.Related

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You know who doesn’t mind that? Who actually likes it this way? If you guessed Steven Smith, close. If you guessed Marnus Labuschagne, you were right. Somehow it feels entirely in keeping with Labuschagne, the world’s most fidgety cricketer, that he prefers not stopping. There’s never enough runs scored, bowlers beat, fields pierced, balls outside off left (or new ways to leave those balls).So, a summer in which, injury permitting, he will play six Tests in less than eight weeks, where he could end up as a world Test champion and an Ashes winner in, is probably perfect. Like the grind of the county championship, it keeps him straight. He wants in on the rat race. He wants to stay on that treadmill. This doesn’t wear him out. This is what wears him in.”Back-to-back games really helps,” he said as Australia trained ahead of the WTC final against India at Beckenham. “Playing a lot of cricket with not much break in between helps as a batter to get rhythm and feel and you’re able to learn from games rather than sort of stewing over technical things.”That’s one of the big differences. In Australia you might have a week and a half or more between games. Then you go back to training, you might have got out a certain way so you’re tinkering, changing your batting. You come to England, you play Thursday to Sunday for seven weeks straight, and that just creates routine and rhythm. If you miss out in a game, you stick to the same process, you’ve got Monday off, Tuesday you go into a training session, Wednesday you travel and Thursday you play. That rhythm creates good habits of scoring runs. That’s what really helps as a batter over here.”

“Whereas in 2019 I felt like I had to prove to people I was good enough, now for me, it’s just about making sure I do my role in the side and work out ways to score runs. Mentally, I’m as hungry as ever to score runs and want us to win this series”Marnus Labuschagne on the Ashes

Over here, in England, it’s helped him to the extent that he averages over 55 for Glamorgan since 2019. England is so familiar that Glamorgan doesn’t represent preparation for him as much as just normal routine. The country is not only where his international career took off four years ago, as the game’s first concussion sub for Smith, it is also where he believes he started on the path to first-class cricket, playing for Sandwich Town in the Kent Premier League nine years ago. He’s here now as the world’s best Test batter, with a tilt at the official world title (the WTC) and then the unofficial world title for the two countries that play for it (this doesn’t have quite as catchy an acronym).Both will be familiar opponents, the leitmotif of the modern age being that somewhere in the world, Australia, India and England are always playing each other. India and Australia were playing a Test less than three months ago, a series in which Labuschagne ended as the fourth-highest scorer on a succession of surfaces very different from what will greet them at The Oval.”You definitely learn from how you play them there,” he said. “There’s probably a bit more bounce here in England than in India, so probably just need to factor that in to how they bowl. (R) Ashwin’s tactics might change a little bit, Jadeja’s tactics might change a little bit, so just adjusting to those on the fly out there, what they’re going to try and do, making sure you’re nice and aware out there.”We’ve played two of [India’s] main seamers [Mohammed Shami and Mohammed Siraj], who are going to play, at least three actually if Umesh [Yadav] plays as well, two months ago. In terms of seeing and knowing their actions and what they do, we’re pretty clear on that. Obviously with the Dukes ball in hand, they’ll be able to showcase their skills a lot more.”The reality is – I’ve played against Ollie Robinson, Josh Tongue, against Matt Potts this year – I’ve played against all those guys, I know what they bowl, so it’s just about understanding what they’re going to do and preparing well.”In the Test series in India, Labuschagne ended as the fourth-highest scorer on surfaces very different from what The Oval will provide•Getty ImagesSo much has passed since that it’s relatively easy to forget how wobbly Australia felt when they arrived in England in 2019. Labuschagne was not part of the side. Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft were returning to Test cricket after Sandpapergate, Tim Paine was their captain, and their bowling attack was in such flux that Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Starc and Nathan Lyon only played one Test together. The composition changed regularly.They didn’t lose the Ashes but this time round, by contrast, they are more settled, with Hazlewood’s fitness the only slight unknown as the summer begins.”It’s just we’re really well organised,” Labuschagne said. “Probably in 2019 we weren’t as set on the team. There is a lot more clarity around this team which creates that consistency, it creates the preparation instead of people playing for spots and feel like they’re vying for a position. Everyone knows where they sit, and we can prepare and get ourselves ready.”Central to that sense of stability is Labuschagne himself, more so than nearly any other batter in the side. He’s not ready to get off the treadmill just yet.”In terms of the feeling it’s more about the preparation. Whereas in 2019 I felt like I had to prove to people I was good enough, now for me, it’s just about making sure I do my role in the side and work out ways to score runs. Mentally, I’m as hungry as ever to score runs and want us to win this series.”

Liam Livingstone: 'I want to keep getting better, hit more sixes, hit the ball further'

“The Beast” talks about the two-year plan that culminated with him making it into England’s squad for the T20 World Cup

Matt Roller06-Oct-20212:59

England’s big hitter on his fantastic summer, batting in the IPL, and Rajasthan Royals captain Sanju Samson

For six heady weeks earlier this year Liam Livingstone was the world’s must-watch batter. After a period of self-isolation in July, following positive Covid-19 tests in the England camp, Livingstone strode out at Trent Bridge with bleached blond hair and renewed confidence in his six-hitting ability.There he produced a 42-ball hundred, England’s fastest, followed by a purple patch of form that felt like a midsummer fever dream. Between mid-July and the end of August, Livingstone hit 43 sixes – one every 6.3 balls, including one measured at 122 metres off Haris Rauf to clear the new stand at Headingley – in 13 innings for England, Birmingham Phoenix and Lancashire, averaging 52 with a strike rate a shade over 190. Having started the year on the fringes of the England set-up, he inked his name into their starting XI for the first game of this month’s T20 World Cup.”I just rode the wave,” Livingstone reflects from Rajasthan Royals’ team hotel in the UAE. “I had quarantine when I arrived to sit back and reflect on it. I guess it’s been such a good summer for me, but I’m still not where I want to be. I want to keep getting better, keep hitting more sixes and hitting the ball further. I’ve proved to a few people what I can do, but over the next couple of years I want to keep improving.”Related

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Men's T20 World Cup 2021 – what the squads look like

Livingstone puts his form down to a eureka moment during a training session in Bristol with Paul Collingwood and Marcus Trescothick, England’s assistant coach and batting coach respectively. He had been running drinks during the ODI series against Sri Lanka and had diagnosed a flaw in his technique. He says that his power comes from his back hip and that he was “losing my front foot”, which meant it collapsed rather than driving through his swing.”Colly and Tres both said exactly the same thing in that session and it pretty much clicked from there,” he says. “It was weird: I’d had this breakthrough moment and then the same day, everyone tested positive for corona and we went into ten days of isolation. I came out, had one training session and then went straight into the Pakistan series. It all stemmed from that one training session, which is pretty scary – I’ll have to buy Colly and Tres a beer at some stage for the help they’ve given me.Livingstone made 348 runs in nine matches at a strike rate of 178.46 in the Hundred earlier this year•Getty Images”It was a great summer for me. I was really enjoying my cricket and feeling super-confident. I couldn’t have wished for it to go any better but it’s done now, it’s gone. We’re moving on to a new phase with the IPL now and the World Cup coming up and it will be an even better year if I can put in some performances in them.”Livingstone was the undisputed superstar of the Hundred’s first season, finishing the tournament as the leading run scorer, leading six hitter, and MVP. His unbeaten 92 off 40 balls in Phoenix’s final group game earned him the nickname “the Beast”, which Shane Warne yelped on commentary throughout his innings of 46 off 19 at Lord’s in the final. Livingstone used the same bat, borrowed from his Royals team-mate Riyan Parag, through the summer. “It’s still just about hanging on now – the handle is superglued and taped together,” he says.”My biggest heroes growing up were Freddie [Andrew Flintoff] and Shane Warne, from watching that 2005 Ashes series, and as I got older, I always wanted to bat like KP,” he reflects. “To have your two heroes and KP commentating and talking about you, that was so cool and pretty surreal. I filmed a six-hitting masterclass with KP on Sky and that was a little bit of a fan-boy moment.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”For the last two weeks, before I came away, everyone was like, ‘Oh, so you think you’re the Beast now, do you?’ Towards the [Hundred] final, it felt like a big build-up, but those last couple of games were probably as well as I’ve played in my career. It’s something that comes with doing well, and hopefully I can keep on entertaining because that’s the biggest motive for me: to be an entertainer on the pitch.”That was the coolest thing I found from the Hundred: kids coming up to me, saying, ‘I really want to bat like you.’ Travelling around the country, you’d see people going into service stations with Hundred cricket shirts on. It felt like it was about inspiring the next generation, seeing kids wanting to go out and smack cricket balls on the front drive rather than staying inside playing Xbox.”Livingstone’s emergence could be crucial for England, with his middle-order hitting and ability to bowl both legspin and offbreaks according to the match-ups on offer, making him close to a like-for-like replacement for Ben Stokes, whose ongoing mental-health break will extend through the World Cup. There is an element of good fortune in the timing but Livingstone has targeted this tournament for some time.ESPNcricinfo LtdIn 2019, he decided after discussions with the ECB that he should spend his winter playing short-form leagues rather than touring Australia with England Lions. He thought that at the age of 26 and two years since his only two international caps, he needed to broaden his horizons to force his way back in.”It was a two-year plan to work my backside off in T20 franchise tournaments,” he explains, “firstly to get back into the England environment, then to push my way into the squad for 2021.” Over a four-month period from November 2019 to March 2020, Livingstone played more T20s than anyone else, with stints in the MSL, BBL and PSL. “I knew it was going to be hard – [England is] probably one of the hardest teams in world sport to get into – but it’s something that I worked really hard at, trying to go away and learn.”I went to South Africa and played with Quinton de Kock. You don’t get that sort of opportunity playing [England] Lions cricket. I had to go away, get out my comfort zone and learn in different environments. The pressure you get as an overseas player is like no other, wherever you go in the world – South Africa, the Big Bash, Pakistan, the IPL – and it sets you up for when you get back to international cricket. I made that decision and I think it was the right one.”In that light, Livingstone’s performances for Rajasthan Royals since the IPL’s resumption have been a disappointment: his 25 off 17 against Punjab Kings included a 97-metre six off Arshdeep Singh, but his next three innings brought 11 runs off 18 balls and cost him his place for the game against Chennai Super Kings. He has struggled to adjust to the unexpectedly slow pitches in the UAE but insists he is staying level-headed.”That was the coolest thing I found from the Hundred: kids coming up to me, saying, ‘I really want to bat like you'”•Getty Images”It’s been a little bit frustrating, but I’ve learned that you can’t get too high when things are going well and you can’t get too low when things aren’t going well. I haven’t changed anything – I’m doing exactly what I did in the summer – and I’m not feeling too disheartened by it all. I feel like I just need to get a couple of shots away and I’ll be fine. Just because I’ve had a couple of bad games, it doesn’t mean that I’m a really bad player all of a sudden. Things can change very quickly.”In England – or pretty much anywhere in the world – you have a vague idea of what’s coming up. The pitches [in the UAE] have been so different from ground to ground and sometimes you can get caught out by not adapting quick enough. Some of them can be quite bouncy when the grass is left on, but when it’s taken off, they can be really slow. Clearing an 80-metre boundary in England is a lot easier than it is out here. That’s going to be the challenge going into the World Cup, trying to adapt as quickly as you can.”Another stumbling block – not one that is unique to Livingstone – has been adjusting to long stints “locked up” in biosecure conditions. He benefited from time around England’s white-ball squads in 2020, because large squads were being picked by necessity. It helped him feel “very comfortable in that environment”, but he flew home citing bubble fatigue during the India leg of the IPL earlier this year and will skip this winter’s Big Bash in order to spend Christmas with his family.And the boy can bowl: Livingstone’s all-round skills make him a nearly like-for-like replacement for Ben Stokes at the World Cup•Stu Forster/Getty Images”The days where you can get out and play golf feel as though they’re the biggest privileges in the world at the moment, which is a bit of shame,” he says. “I haven’t had a break for about three years. I really wanted to go back to Perth but sometimes I’ve got to make sure that I’m in the right place mentally. It’ll be nice to put the bat down and switch my mind off from cricket for a month or so.”But first Livingstone has the World Cup in his sights, and England’s bid to become the first team to hold the 50-over and T20 trophies simultaneously.”We’d be silly not to go in feeling very confident of being able to win it. I certainly think we’ve got a lot of very good players, a really good squad and a very balanced team. Who knows what the pitches are going to be like, but I guess the teams that go far will be the ones who play the smartest cricket when it matters.”Playing for your country is one thing, but representing them at a World Cup is probably the biggest thing you want to do as a sportsman. I’ll take a lot of confidence from the summer into it. It’ll be great fun and an even cooler experience if we can go on and win it. The work I’ve got to do over the next three weeks is gearing up to that: how can I best help England win a World Cup?”

George Springer Was Livid After Striking Out Following Umpire's Controversial Ruling

Blue Jays outfielder George Springer was on the wrong side of a pair of controversial decisions from the umpires during Tuesday's game against the Red Sox. The veteran was left irate after being rung up on a called third strike on a pitch that was outside of the strike zone.

But what truly had Springer irked was the decision from third base umpire Scott Barry, who ruled that his ground ball with the bases loaded was foul. During the second inning with Toronto trailing 1–0, Springer laced a ground ball down the third base line. It touched the ground in the infield before passing over the bag and landing in foul territory.

Barry, without much hesitation, declared it a foul ball, much to the chagrin of Springer. Sprigner looked bewildered at the call, and Blue Jays manager John Schneider came out to ask the officials to review the situation, only to be told it wasn't a play that could be challenged.

Because no review was allowable, Springer was sent back to the batter's box and it was ruled a foul ball. Springer struck out looking on the following pitch.

Springer slammed his bat on the ground and shotued in frustation as he walked back to the dugout following the questionable strike three call.

Having just been denied a potentially bases-clearing base hit, Springer clearly felt as if he'd been wronged twice in a span of two pitches. And for good reason, too.

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