Birmingham could sign Stansfield upgrade who's scored 49 Championship goals

Birmingham City did not fancy sticking it out in League One for the foreseeable as Chris Davies’ Blues soared to the third-tier title in some style.

Amazingly, the West Midlands giants have now set a new EFL points record at the very top of the League One tree, with a mighty 111 points accumulated across the memorable campaign coming about off the back of a very impressive 34 victories.

Jay Stansfield, of course, has had a big part to play in Birmingham’s unbelievable success story, with the ex-Fulham man hopeful he can keep his potent exploits coming in the Championship next season.

Stansfield's key role in Birmingham's promotion

It would have been a major letdown if Stansfield was anything but spectacular for Davies’ men with Birmingham splashing significant wads of cash to lure him to the fallen giants.

A fee around the £15m mark doesn’t look too steep now, though, considering the 22-year-old has helped himself to a hefty 24 goals in all competitions this campaign from 46 total contests, with 19 of those strikes coming in the league as Birmingham romped home to the title.

Stansfield does have Championship experience already on his side as Davies and Co navigate the step-up too, with 12 goals already tallied up in the difficult division from 45 clashes, meaning the clinical number 28 shouldn’t suddenly lose his Midas touch in front of goal.

But, Birmingham will know their firepower needs to be improved somewhat – away from just relying on Stansfield’s magic – so they can compete with the top dogs in their path, with a statement move already reportedly on the cards to bring back a former Blues forward who is arguably even better than the standout 22-year-old.

Jay Stansfield for Birmingham City.

Birmingham interested in move for "terrific" attacker

There is also Alfie May waiting in the wings for a shot at second-tier glory, with the experienced EFL head chipping in with 16 league goals of his own for Davies’ men.

But, Birmingham would not turn down the opportunity to bring back former gem Che Adams if they could – away from the star power they already possess – with Football Insider recently revealing that a ‘blockbuster switch’ was being worked on to try and tempt the current Torino striker back to his familiar St. Andrew’s surroundings.

After all, the Scotland international has proven himself to be a reliable source of goals playing in Turin since a summer switch from Southampton, with the 28-year-old not fazed by the bright lights of the Serie A at all when collecting ten goals from 35 appearances.

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Yet, whilst it’s clearly impressive that the “terrific” attacker – as he’s been labelled by pundit Ally McCoist recently – has acclimatised to Italian life well, Birmingham will be pushing ahead to make this deal a reality based off his reputation for being a goal machine in the EFL, particularly in the punishing division Davies’ men are reentering into.

Adams’ G/A record in the Championship by season

Season

Club played for

Games

Goals

Assists

23/24

Southampton

40

15

4

18/19

Birmingham

46

22

5

17/18

Birmingham

30

5

2

16/17

Birmingham

40

7

6

Sourced by Transfermarkt

Adams has, after all, collected 34 of his 49 career Championship goals when donning Birmingham blue, with the 28-year-old’s 15-goal heroics during the 2023/24 season enough to help then manager Russell Martin clinch promotion with Southampton.

Stansfield has some catching up to do in this department, with the Blues hotshot only on that aforementioned tally of 12 strikes at the difficult level, but his game could be elevated to the next level lining up next to the Torino number 18.

Former Birmingham striker Che Adams.

This will be a fascinating transfer tale to watch unfold, with Birmingham capable of flexing their muscles once more if a move is reached to re-sign their lethal former number nine ahead of a new Championship adventure.

Wagner means business: Sky journalist drops exciting Birmingham transfer plan

The Blues are not messing around…

By
Tom Cunningham

May 1, 2025

Pereira could unearth surprise Cunha replacement in forgotten Wolves flop

Wolverhampton Wanderers all but confirmed their place in the Premier League for another season with a 4-2 win over Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday.

The Old Gold are now 14 points clear of Ipswich Town in 18th place with just six matches to go, which means that it would take a ridiculous set of results to send them down at this point.

They could lose one of their key players in the summer transfer window, though, as Matheus Cunha – scorer of the fourth goal against Spurs – has been linked with a move away from Molineux.

Why losing Matheus Cunha would be a blow for Wolves

Selling the Brazil international, who has been linked with the likes of Spurs, Arsenal, Aston Villa, and Manchester United for a fee of £75m, would be a big blow for Wolves.

This is because of the immense quality that the former Atletico Madrid magician has provided at the top end of the pitch in the Premier League so far this season.

Cunha has scored 14 goals and provided four assists in 27 appearances for Wolves, and no player in the squad has delivered more goals and assists combined than his tally of 18, which is why losing him would be such a blow to the team.

Vitor Pereira, however, may already have a surprise replacement for the Brazilian gem in the form of Fabio Silva, who is currently on loan at Las Palmas in LaLiga.

Why Fabio Silva could be a surprise Matheus Cunha replacement

After the Portuguese youngster scored four goals in 20 matches on loan at Rangers in the second half of last season, Wolves may have sent the attacker to Spain without too many expectations over his performance.

Fabio Silva

The 22-year-old starlet’s form for Las Palmas in LaLiga this season, however, has come as a surprise, after his lack of output for the Scottish giants last term, and he could return to Wolves this summer as a new player.

Silva, who was described as a “joy to watch” by talent scout Jacek Kulig earlier this season, has played as part of a front two with Oli McBurnie, which means that he could play a similar role to Cunha, playing behind the physical presence of Jorgen Strand Larsen.

Starts

21

xG

8.80

Goals

10

Minutes per goal

179

Big chances created

4

Assists

3

As you can see in the table above, the Portugal international also has a similar level of production to Cunha, with 13 goal contributions in 21 starts, compared to the Wolves star’s 18 goal contributions in 24 starts.

The Old Gold loanee, who has scored against Real Madrid and Barcelona in LaLiga, has provided a clinical edge in front of goal, outperforming his xG, whilst also delivering some creativity in the final third.

These statistics suggest that Silva has improved since joining Las Palmas, with his improved output in comparison to his time at Rangers, and that he could be ready to return to Wolves to compete for a first-team spot next season.

£23m Wolves star is going to swiftly become more important than Cunha

Wolves could be set to lose Matheus Cunha this summer…

ByRoss Kilvington Apr 15, 2025

This means that the Portuguese youngster could emerge as a surprise replacement for Cunha, should the attacker depart this summer, after his unexpected development in Spain this season.

Right man, wrong time: Why Harry Brook had to be captain too soon

England have made a mess of their succession planning after ignoring white-ball cricket since 2019

Andrew Miller07-Apr-20255:06

Roller: Managing all three formats will be Brook’s biggest challenge

The devil was in the detail of Rob Key’s statement, after the ECB confirmed the inevitable elevation of Harry Brook to England’s vacant white-ball captaincy.”This opportunity has come slightly earlier than expected,” Key said in his second sentence of the board’s press release – which is hardly the sort of glowing appraisal that you might expect from the England Men’s managing director on Coronation Day.And though Key did add that Brook had long been part of the team’s “succession planning” – whatever that may mean – his tone betrayed the shocking tangle that England have got themselves into in their once-formidable white-ball set-up.As recently as November 2022, that white-ball squad was still a genuinely groundbreaking outfit, with England’s victory in the T20 World Cup in Australia making them the first men’s team to hold both of the ICC’s white-ball trophies concurrently. Earlier that year in 50-over cricket, they extended their ODI record total to a massive, and still unsurpassed, 498 for 4 against the Netherlands at Amstelveen.Since then, however, the rot has been rapid and entirely foreseeable. Leaving their T20I fortunes to one side for a moment, the specific ineptitude of their recent Champions Trophy campaign reflected a generation of players – Brook included – who simply do not play enough 50-over cricket to know how to pace an innings.Prior to his England ODI debut against South Africa in January 2023, Brook hadn’t played a single 50-over match for Yorkshire since May 2019, two months before the team that he now leads had even broken their duck at the 50-over World Cup.His situation is mirrored by pretty much any player around whom England might hope to reinflate their white-ball fortunes – Jamie Smith, Jordan Cox, Gus Atkinson … the list goes on. And so, when Key says that his elevation has come sooner than would be ideal, it’s an admission of desperation, as much as an acknowledgment of how badly the Buttler-McCullum alliance failed to live up to expectations.For when it comes to “succession planning” … pull the other one. England have been on a wing and a prayer for the past two years in white-ball cricket. England’s preparations for the 2023 World Cup amounted to a séance, as the spirit of 2019 was summoned for one last dance (and duly failed to materialise), while the mere fact that Ben Stokes was seriously considered as a stop-gap is proof of how rapidly those standards are continuing to swirl around the plug-hole.Jos Buttler’s tenure disintegrated after the early high of the 2022 T20 World Cup•Sameer Ali/Getty ImagesIn terms of his career progression, it probably is too soon for Brook, but what’s a team to do? In an ideal world, he would have built up his 50-over experience over the next two and a half years until the 2027 World Cup, then taken over from Buttler with standards restored and legacies polished. In an ideal world, he would have had a few more chances to shore up his technique against high-quality spin: a genuine problem area, though clearly not an insurmountable one, even if his two-year ban from the IPL after his late withdrawal from Delhi Capitals’ campaign will deny him an obvious source of experience.In an ideal world, Brook would also be averaging more than 28.50 in his T20I career. In part this is a legacy of his anonymous role in that 2022 World Cup win (56 runs at 11.20 in six matches), which if nothing else was proof that experience cannot be bought off a peg. But more problematically, it reflects Brook’s lack of opportunity in white-ball cricket to date, given his extraordinarily central importance to England’s Test fortunes.This is where Key’s concerns about the timing really hit home. For all that Brook’s unveiling as white-ball captain will be a proud moment – and his sparky leadership against Australia last September suggests there’ll be plenty tactical nous on show when he takes the field against West Indies – there’s also little doubt where his true focus will be heading into a genuinely seismic nine months.Related

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England’s Test team, for which Brook is currently the No.2-ranked batter in the world behind Joe Root, has five home Tests against India looming in June and July, followed by the Ashes in Australia from November to January. It promises to be a legacy-defining period for the team’s elder statesmen – Stokes, Root and Mark Wood in particular – but also for the Bazball project itself, as the players are just about allowing themselves to call it these days.As Brook noted when pulling out of the IPL, “it is a really important time for England cricket … I need time to recharge.” No wonder he’s missing the opening rounds of the Championship to take a family holiday. All being well with his form and fitness, he is going to be the busiest player on the planet in the coming 12 months, because no sooner does the Ashes end than he’ll be leading the T20I side in the next World Cup in India. By which stage, the 2027 World Cup will be little more than a year away. Rinse, repeat … sleep whenever there’s a chance.It’s a rod that England made for their own back, from the moment they won the 2019 World Cup then spurned the format that had brought them glory. Every ounce of know-how has subsequently been re-invested in the Test set-up, at the expense of the white-ball game … with the honorable exception of Buttler, whose career was sent off on a branch-line while his generational peers got busy Bazballing.The irony is that Buttler should never have had to become a man apart in England’s white-ball set-up. Hindsight suggests that England could have won that 2022 tournament on autopilot, and pretty much did, such was the residual excellence in their set-up – as epitomised by Stokes’ matchwinning innings in the final, having not played T20Is in 18 months prior to the tournament.Now, under McCullum, there has at least been a belated attempt at unification, to ensure that the same values and knowledge that have reinvigorated the Test team are carried across formats before it’s too late. But this also means that Brook is the right choice as white-ball captain because he’s a guaranteed pick across formats, but also the wrong choice because he’s a guaranteed pick across formats. Go figure. It’s a mess, and there are no easy answers.

How Shubman Gill took down Shaheen Shah Afridi to hand round one to India

That Gill had prepared intensely against left-arm pace leading into the game showed in his audacious powerplay display

Andrew Fidel Fernando10-Sep-2023It’s not as if Shubman Gill had an obvious weakness against left-arm seam bowling. It is a small sample size, but before his innings on Sunday, Gill had hit 118 ODI runs against left-arm seam bowlers, off 108 deliveries, and been dismissed three times. An average of 39.33 against this kind of bowler pales against his otherwise spectacular average of 63.08, but it hardly represents a weakness in his technique.But if you’re an opener about to play one of the biggest matches of your career so far, and if the opposition has one of the great first-spell bowlers in the world, no one will blame you for taking the battle seriously. Gill had been intense in his preparation against left-arm seam in the approach to this match, training in repeated sessions with India’s left-arm throwdown specialist Nuwan Seneviratne.On match day (the first of two, at least), he set India on a scorching path, first picking off some poor Shaheen Shah Afridi deliveries – glancing a length ball on the legs to the fine-leg boundary, sending a half volley screaming over midwicket – before, later in that same over, stroking even one of his decent deliveries for four. This was almost a good-length ball outside off stump, but so quickly and confidently did Gill move into his checked drive, he beat mid-off.Related

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Bat, analyse, brainstorm, repeat: Gill preps hard for left-arm pace

In Afridi’s next over, Gill was imperious. Such was his confidence, he took steps towards bowler and struck him sweetly back over his head. To a bowler currently ripping up the tournament, this was a shot of sparkling audacity.There were two further boundaries in this over, the second consecutive Afridi over he had bowled only to Gill and been struck for three fours. The first of these was drilled between mid-off and cover, the second flayed in front of point.These were not easy batting conditions at this stage and, at the other end, Rohit Sharma was proving it against Naseem Shah. Of his first 20 deliveries to Sharma, 19 were dots (there had also been a wide). Naseem was bowling quicker than Afridi, sure, but extracting bounce and seam movement as well. Afridi was moving the ball through the air, but perhaps did not have his usual first-spell control. Gill had prepared fiercely enough to pounce.Against Naseem, Gill had a bit of luck. He top edged a shortish delivery outside off in the eighth over, and Iftikhar Ahmed at first slip probably should have caught it above his head, but didn’t even attempt the catch. Gill would eventually fall to Afridi, who deceived him with a legcutter and had him caught at cover.But by hitting nine fours in the powerplay (he hit 41 off 30 in that period), and dominating Afridi within this phase, Gill allayed fears that Pakistan’s quicks would deck India’s top order again. In what little play was possible under heavy skies on Sunday, Gill’s innings glittered.

Can Babar Azam steer Pakistan to the T20 World Cup title?

The captain has been Pakistan’s most dependable anchor through management changes and team reshuffles, but is that enough?

Danyal Rasool11-Oct-2021It’s the monsoon in Lahore, sweeping rain washing down the red brick of the Gaddafi Stadium complex. The drainage system, ill equipped to handle what the monsoon unleashes in this part of Pakistan, has long given up, water spilling back out onto the streets just outside the PCB’s offices in the complex. Still, the place is packed with journalists and TV reporters, because in an intimate little room nestled behind the open-plan office space, Pakistan’s T20 captain will spare a few minutes for a chat with the media.The room was obviously never built to house a dozen TV cameras, and so, instead of sitting at the head of the conference table, the biggest name in Pakistan cricket stands in a corner as questions are breathlessly volleyed at him. He repeats the usual platitudes about players needing to do their best, emphasises the importance of coping with pressure, and – bless him – expresses satisfaction that New Zealand and England are coming to Pakistan to play seven T20Is ahead of the World Cup. Babar Azam isn’t exactly the most engaging speaker, especially not in a crowd. Every word of his is scrutinised and sensationalised by the fans and the media, so being predictably dull is a rather useful skill to possess.Related

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Once it’s all done and everyone begins to filter out, Babar sits down for an interview with ESPNcricinfo. Pakistan have only recently returned from the West Indies, where they have split a two-match Test series, and the focus is now fully on the T20 World Cup. Every bit of preparation is geared towards that tournament, one that, had it followed its regular cycle of being held every two years, Pakistan would have been overwhelming favourites for.In recent years, however, that dominance has evaporated, the dip in results faithfully aligning alongside a coaching change Pakistan made following the 2019 ODI World Cup. In three years under former head coach Mickey Arthur, Pakistan won 30 of 37 T20Is. Since his successor Misbah-ul-Haq came in, Pakistan won just 16 of 34, and slipped to No. 3 in the T20I rankings. Babar acknowledges the change had an effect – something that will undoubtedly concern Pakistan given they have had yet another change of coaches since he spoke. But he also insists the full picture is more nuanced.

“Whenever a new management comes in, it takes time to adjust,” he says. “You don’t just get used to it in a day. It takes time. Even for a team to gel, it takes time. If you select a team, you’re not just going to start getting results in the second or third game. You need time, but our goal is to acclimatise as quickly as possible.”Two years ago was a different time compared to today. Things change. At the time we had a different management, different coaches. The mindset is different. But then, we also had a different team; now we have a few different players.”The concatenation of factors that has combined to deprive or disadvantage Pakistan cricket in recent times is no laughing matter, but among the multitude of gripes Pakistan supporters have, the scheduling of T20 World Cups is probably the one they are most light-hearted about. The joke goes that T20 World Cups have been structured so as to keep Pakistan away from the trophy for as long as possible. When they won in 2009, the subsequent competition was held just ten months later, but when, through the best part of this T20 World Cup cycle, Pakistan were the highest-ranked side by some distance, there was a four-year gap between tournaments, which was extended to over five years due to the Covid-19 pandemic.A quirk of fate, however, has seen a scheduling decision break Pakistan’s way. When Covid-19 cases were soaring in India, the scheduled host of this year’s event, earlier this year, the tournament was relocated to the UAE. India might remain official hosts, but no country feels more at home in that part of the world than Pakistan. Since the 2016 World T20, when they transformed themselves from T20 stragglers to world beaters almost overnight, Pakistan have won all 11 matches they played in the UAE – West Indies, Sri Lanka, Australia and New Zealand the teams vanquished along the way.During Misbah-ul-Haq’s tenure as coach, Pakistan slipped from No. 1 to No. 3 on the T20I team rankings•Getty ImagesBabar was just a promising young player in that side, one among several. And while many faded under the spotlight as pressure and expectations intensified, his star has only grown brighter. He is among the biggest names in world cricket, one of the marquee attractions of the T20 World Cup. Part of the side that ascended to the peak of T20I cricket, he now has the job of leading a team looking to ensure they will have a World Cup title to show for all their desert dominance.Babar doesn’t balk at comparisons to past Pakistan performances in the UAE; instead, he seems eager for his side to draw motivation and heart from them. “Our record there is excellent, it’s the place where we became world No. 1,” he says. “The performances we produced, both as a team and individually, show the conditions really suited us. Our record and consistency there is proof of that. These days we understand teams are playing more positive cricket, and we need to continue to do that, too.”Captaincy changes and huge overhauls of the Pakistan team have historically been common enough that they don’t register in the public consciousness, but the PCB made sure Babar’s appointment as all-format captain late last year felt different. He had been captain of the limited-overs side since 2019, but when Azhar Ali was unceremoniously dumped as Test captain after a year in the job, Babar’s ascension carried the air of a royal inauguration.An ostentatious photo shoot with the new Pakistan captain at Gaddafi Stadium was heavily promoted by the board. A video depicted him in a crisp white shirt, striped green tie and designer sunglasses, majestically stepping out of a car as he casually threw on a suit jacket and gazed pensively into the distance in front of the PCB headquarters, gelled hair aggressively slicked back. A picture in front of the balcony at the Gaddafi media centre saw him survey the stadium from a great height, as a benevolent national leader might in front of adoring crowds. Azhar Ali’s time as captain had almost been scrubbed from history; the Babar Azam era had arrived.

The initial concern with giving a young man like Babar such overarching responsibility was about the effect it might have on his batting, but those fears never really came to pass. As a Test batter, he bounced back strongly against the West Indies after a mild slump, while his strike rate in T20 cricket has improved slightly. He carries himself with the authority of a man who belongs in the role, and while there isn’t an obvious on-field spark that marks him out as a natural captain, he is reported to command significant influence in selection calls off the field.But all that happened under the previous administration. In Ramiz Raja’s short time at the helm, there have been sweeping changes at coaching and administrative level, with Misbah-ul-Haq, Waqar Younis and Wasim Khan all taking their leave. Ramiz’s public views on Babar have been noticeably cool. He pointedly refused to endorse Babar’s captaincy in his first press conference after being elected chairman, saying it was “too early to assess him”, and that his “expectations for Babar are the same as Imran Khan”. After a month of bedlam, even by Pakistan cricket’s standards, the very future of Babar, the most dependable man in Pakistan cricket, remains shrouded in doubt, especially beyond the T20 World Cup.His problems might not all lie off the field, either. Unthinkable as it might seem, the increased focus on positive cricket has seen Babar’s own performances, both with his PSL franchise Karachi Kings, as well as the national side, come under forensic scrutiny. Superficially, the numbers glitter; he was the top scorer at the PSL in each of the last two seasons, as well as the highest run scorer in the competition’s history. Internationally, he was the quickest to 2000 T20I runs, comfortably ahead of second-placed Virat Kohli, and has scored a half-century or better in 21 of his 56 innings.Babar on his partnership with Mohammad Rizwan: “We communicate well, and if he’s struggling to tee off, I go after the bowlers, and if I’m struggling, he does”•Getty ImagesBut with Babar insistent on opening the batting, both for franchise and country, questions swirl about whether his game possesses the natural belligerence required to set the tempo in those crucial powerplay overs. An overall strike rate of 130.64 with Pakistan and 121.55 at the PSL isn’t quite elite by modern opener standards. Since the 2016 T20 World Cup, 65 T20 openers have superior strike rates to the Pakistan captain, raising questions about the extent to which Pakistan are willing to walk the talk about positive cricket. To compound those concerns, his opening partner Mohammad Rizwan isn’t exactly known for his blistering power-hitting either, in spite of the record-breaking year he has enjoyed in the format.As if it were a day-one afternoon session on a placid track at Abu Dhabi, Babar digs his heels in on this point. “I became No. 1 in the world as an opener, so I’m comfortable there,” he says. “That’s where I performed so well, so I’m very comfortable opening.”Even with Rizwan? “Yes, absolutely. Look at how well that’s gone, at our performances in the past year, at the records he has broken. The year’s not done yet and he has already scored the most ever T20I runs in a calendar year. What more do you need, really?”A cursory glance at the numbers would tell you the question is very much rhetorical. Rizwan’s stats are bewildering; seven half-centuries and a hundred in 14 innings this year, while on average, the pair manage 52.1 runs per innings. On the ten occasions the two have opened, only once has neither gone on to score at least 35. When together, they have scored at 9.16 runs per over, nearly a full run better than the two other opening combinations Pakistan have tried this year: Rizwan and Sharjeel Khan (8.23), and Rizwan and Haider Ali (8.27).”There’s no better combination,” Babar says, almost offended he even needs to justify it. “We always want to start well to set the tone for the guys coming after us. That’s our mindset, and in the year we’ve been opening, we have come to understand each other’s games. We communicate well, and if he’s struggling to tee off, I go after the bowlers, and if I’m struggling, he does. We’ve built on that very well, and you’ll have noticed when we bat together we have built big partnerships.”ESPNcricinfo LtdBabar and Rizwan’s big partnerships are well documented, but so are the side’s struggles lower down the order. Pakistan have experimented with Asif Ali, Khushdil Shah, Iftikhar Ahmed, Azam Khan, Sohaib Maqsood and several other players lower down, but for one reason or other, haven’t been able to settle on a combination they can trust the same way as Babar and Rizwan up top. That heaps the pressure on the top two to stick around longer, which, Babar feels, might explain the less than explosive strike rate.”I believe if you have the momentum, you need to capitalise on it,” he says. “If we’ve started well, it’s not in my nature to think I should hold myself back or that I must bat deep at the expense of strike rate. However, if one of us is striking the ball well, we try to bat for as long as possible without changing our game. Keep our strike rate up, remain positive, but also try and hang around to take advantage of your form. You can’t worry about whether the guys below will deliver. The mindset remains the same. We plan to ensure one of us remains at the crease for much of the innings.”We’re struggling in two areas, middle order and death bowling, and have done for some time. We’ve tried different combinations and tried to assess who could suit the team if they played in certain positions. It didn’t work out, unfortunately, but that’s cricket. If you select players, you cannot guarantee that they will perform. There are ups and downs, and the players we selected were chosen because they had performed elsewhere. You need to take your chances if you want to stay in the Pakistan team. You will have to perform consistently, otherwise you get demoted to the bench.”Babar’s game might lack the monstrous power-hitting that has won the West Indies two T20 World Cups, or the all-out attack in vogue at present, which England have just about perfected, but it would be unfair in the extreme to overlook his T20 pedigree or nous. The 2020 PSL was a perfect example of the kind of situations he uses to his advantage so well: he made 473 runs at a shade under 60. While the strike rate of 124.14 fell well short of what Chris Lynn (179.74) or Ben Dunk (167.59) of fellow finalists Lahore Qalandars managed, it was Babar’s consistency for Karachi Kings that won out in the final.Babar demonstrated the importance of being the team’s anchor in the 2019-20 PSL final, against Lahore Qalandars•PCB/PSLDunk managed just 11 off 14 as Lahore were restricted to 134, and while wickets fell around him, Babar steered his side to the title with a masterful unbeaten 63 off 49, scooping both Player-of-the-Match and Player-of-the-Tournament-awards. With the UAE historically producing lower-scoring T20 games on average, both in internationals and at the PSL – the average batting strike rate there is 122.56 since 2017, with only strike rates in Bangladesh (121.89) and Sri Lanka (115.73) coming in lower – Babar’s anchoring role could end up being vitally important to Pakistan’s chances of success.Babar as a T20 batter has been dissected at length, but the narrative is probably less straightforward than “Babar in the UAE means advantage Pakistan”. He scores 116.68 runs in the UAE per hundred balls, nearly a full six runs lower than average. Of the 23 men with over 500 T20 runs in the UAE since 2017, only Ahmed Shehzad’s strike rate is lower than the Pakistan captain’s.Babar might not be the most renowned power-hitter, but he will still need to improve beyond these numbers. However, what he lacks in explosiveness he makes up for in reliability. His record points to him being perhaps the most consistent anchor in the world. T20 cricket is very much a team sport, and that means the bigger hitters around him are afforded significantly greater certainty about their role than they would normally expect. If Babar typically scores 50 in 37 balls every other innings, the players in the middle order tasked with providing the firepower have a much less variable equation in front of them to reach whatever goals Pakistan have for their batting innings.It might also explain why Babar has a lower strike rate when he has a more accomplished group of international T20 blasters around him at Karachi Kings, than with the national side.This theme of adaptability is one he frequently turns to. “You need to ensure the standards you have set for yourself are being met. When I’m batting with Karachi, I might have a lower strike rate than with Pakistan, but that will usually have an explanation behind it. It depends on the situation and conditions. Sometimes you have an idea about how the game’s going to go, and the complete opposite happens. Then you need to adjust your plans and your innings. Sometimes you lose a few wickets and then you have to hold back for a while with a view to catching up in the latter half of the innings.As captain, opener and anchor, Babar has to carry his team in more ways than one•AFP/Getty Images”If I’m still around by the tenth or 12th overs, I feel confident I’ll be more aggressive towards the death. I always try and raise the benchmark I’ve set for myself, and that includes my strike rate. You don’t set goals and just stagnate at a certain point. I’m always trying to improve day by day. When you play sports, you’re never 100% good at any specific thing. The more you improve it, the better you’ll become.”He was speaking at a time when he expected Pakistan to get another seven T20Is in before the World T20, with New Zealand’s and England’s planned arrivals, but despite that, he struck a note of decidedly cautious optimism about Pakistan’s T20 World Cup prospects.”You can’t say where we’ll finish. Right now we have small goals. The India game is first, then the New Zealand one and then Afghanistan. When you achieve the smaller goals, the bigger goal comes naturally. That’s what we’re focusing on. On the day, if you play well, things will happen the way you want them to. We need to continue in that vein. If you ask me, as a captain my goal is to win the World Cup. That’s every team’s goal, but we’ll keep our preparation up to the fullest, as well as our belief. But we can ultimately only aim to play well on the day, and hope the result then goes our way.”The platitudes are back as the conversation draws to a close, Babar playing the old hits that have helped him get everyone in Pakistan dancing to his tune. He and his band of team-mates haven’t yet convinced the critics, but if indeed his Pakistan side has new material to show off, the T20 World Cup is the perfect arena for it.

Fortaleza x Botafogo: onde assistir ao vivo, horário e prováveis escalações do jogo pelo Brasileirão

MatériaMais Notícias

O Fortaleza recebe o Botafogo neste domingo (12), pela 6ª rodada da Série A do Brasileirão 2024. A bola vai rolar a partir das 16h (de Brasília), na Arena Castelão, com transmissão da TV Globo e do Premiere.

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Assine o Premiere e assista esse e mais jogos de graça por 30 dias!

✅FICHA TÉCNICA
FORTALEZA X BOTAFOGO – 6ª RODADA – SÉRIE A

Data e horário: domingo,12 de maio de 2024, às16h(de Brasília)

Local: Arena Castelão
Onde assistir: TV Globo e Premiere
Arbitragem:  Wilton Pereira Sampaio (Fifa-GO), auxiliado por Guilherme Dias Camilo (Fifa-GO) e Leone Carvalho Rocha (GO). VAR: Rodrigo D Alonso Ferreira (SC)

PROVÁVEIS ESCALAÇÕES

FORTALEZA:João Ricardo, Tinga, Brítez, Titi e Bruno Pacheco; José Welison, Hércules e Kervin Andrade; Pikachu, Moisés e Lucero. Técnico: Juan Pablo Vojvoda.

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BOTAFOGO:John, Mateo Ponte, Alexander Barboza, Lucas Halter e Cuiabano; Gregore, Tchê Tchê e Óscar Romero; Diego Hernández, Jeffinho e Luiz Henrique. Técnico: Artur Jorge.

Tudo sobre

BotafogoBrasileirãoFortaleza

ترتيب مباريات مصر في كأس العالم 2026

تحدد ترتيب مباريات منتخب مصر، في منافسات بطولة كأس العالم 2026، بعد إجراء مراسم القرعة اليوم الجمعة، في العاصمة الأمريكية واشنطن.

أسفرت قرعة نهائيات بطولة كأس العالم 2026، عن تحديد مجموعة منتخب مصر في المونديال العالمي القادم.

وجاء منتخب مصر في المجموعة السابعة من كأس العالم 2026، بجانب منتخبات بلجيكا وإيران ونيوزيلندا.

منتخب مصر، يشارك للمرة الرابعة في نهائيات كأس العالم، بعد أعوام 1934 و1990 و2018.

طالع | نتائج قرعة كأس العالم 2026

وتنطلق منافسات بطولة كأس العالم، خلال الفترة من 11 يونيو وحتى 19 يوليو 2026، بمشاركة 48 منتخباً، في كندا والمكسيك والولايات المتحدة الأمريكية. ترتيب مباريات منتخب مصر في كأس العالم

الجولة الأولي: مصر ضد بلجيكا.

الجولة الثانية: مصر ضد نيوزيلندا.

الجولة الثالثة: مصر ضد إيران.

INEOS must sell Man Utd flop who’s getting the Mainoo treatment from Amorim

Would it be hyperbole to suggest that Kobbie Mainoo provided the best, or most significant, moment at Manchester United in the post-Sir Alex Ferguson era?

Faced with an imperious Manchester City side in the 2024 FA Cup final, Erik ten Hag’s men defied the odds to claim a richly deserved 2-1 win, a year on from having tamely been defeated by their neighbours en route to treble glory.

Alejandro Garnacho had pounced early on to open the scoring, before fellow academy graduate Mainoo popped up at the backpost to add a second, slotting home perfectly following Bruno Fernandes’ ingenious reverse pass.

The then-teenager, like the thousands decked out in red at Wembley, roared in celebration, revelling in the crowing moment of a stunning, six-month rise from relative obscurity.

The Old Trafford faithful have been wedded to United’s golden boy since then, although there has been no such warmth from new boss Ruben Amorim.

What Amorim said about Mainoo after West Ham

From the highs of that Wembley showpiece, and his subsequent role in England’s run to the final at Euro 2024, Mainoo’s impact has plummeted since then, having hardly had a look-in following an injury-hit start to 2024/25.

Seemingly fighting a losing battle from the off following Amorim’s arrival in November 2024 – having failed to start the Portuguese’s first game in charge against Ipswich Town – the Stockport native has drifted onto the periphery, with 2025/26 proving particularly frustrating thus far.

The forgotten man, Mainoo is yet to start a single Premier League game this season, playing just 171 minutes in all, having been an unused substitute for the fourth time against West Ham United in midweek.

Speaking after that dismal 1-1 draw, Amorim went on the defensive regarding his treatment of the youngster, while laughing off suggestions that the midfielder could have been an “offensive” alteration.

Asked if he understood why Mainoo’s status as a homegrown talent made him such a talking point for fans and pundits alike, the 40-year-old replied:

Mainoo, unsurprisingly, is seeking a January exit amid his bizarre fall from grace, although he surely isn’t the midfielder INEOS should be looking to move on.

Man Utd must sell flop who's getting the Mainoo treatement

Perhaps the biggest source of frustration regarding Mainoo’s situation is that Amorim isn’t exactly blessed with regard to midfield depth, with his current squad boasting just four recognised, senior midfielders to choose from.

For much of 2025/26, the ex-Sporting CP boss has selected ever-present skipper, Fernandes, alongside the ageing Casemiro, with both Mainoo and Manuel Ugarte limited to mere late cameos off the bench.

Like the FA Cup final hero, Ugarte has also become a notable talking point amid his limited role under Amorim, despite having previously worked with the 3-4-2-1 boss in Lisbon.

Indeed, it was reported last month that the ex-Paris Saint-Germain man had been criticised by his manager in front of teammates at Carrington, following the Europa League final defeat.

Like Mainoo, who enjoyed just a mere last-gasp cameo in Bilbao, Ugarte was also something of an afterthought even as United toiled, having failed to even make it off the bench on the night.

Mainoo & Ugarte – 25/26 PL stats

Stat (*per game)

Mainoo

Ugarte

Games

9

10

Starts

0

2

Goals

0

0

Assists

0

0

Big chances created

0

0

Key passes*

0.6

0.1

Pass accuracy*

87%

86%

Total duels won*

36%

60%

Balls recovered*

1.1

2.0

Dribbled past*

0.1

0.4

Stats via Sofascore

Much like Mainoo too, the Uruguayan has been forced to settle for a watching brief for much of this season, starting just twice in the top-flight, while notably being hooked at the break following an “embarrassing” display against Grimsby Town, in the view of writer Alex Turk.

Of course, there isn’t the groundswell of support for Ugarte like there is for his midfield colleague, with the decision to fork out almost £50m on the 24-year-old standing out as one of the worst decisions of recent years at Old Trafford.

Whether the £120k-per-week talent, again like Mainoo, is being helped by his manager is another matter, however, with Amorim hardly backing his man after revealing that Ugarte is “struggling” to adjust to life in the Premier League.

Either way, if it comes down to choosing between which peripheral midfielder needs to be shown the door, it should surely be Ugarte whom INEOS cash in on, with the safe and steady asset doing little to warrant a third-season stay in Manchester.

Cunha 2.0: INEOS to fast-track Man Utd bid for 'best winger in England'

Manchester United look set to make a huge move for one player in the upcoming January window.

ByEthan Lamb Dec 5, 2025

Arsenal join race for "pure quality" Champions League striker, scouts love him

Arsenal have now joined the race to sign Marseille striker Robinio Vaz, who they could be a perfect fit for their attack, but there is set to be competition from a Premier League rival.

Despite bringing in Viktor Gyokeres in the summer transfer window, the Gunners have still been left a little light on options at centre-forward this season, with the Sweden international missing the last two Premier League games, alongside long-term absentee Kai Havertz.

However, Mikel Arteta’s side didn’t look like they were missing their star strikers one jot on Sunday afternoon, making a real statement with a 4-1 victory against bitter rivals Tottenham Hotspur in the North London derby, with Eberechi Eze bagging a hat-trick.

Despite not scoring, Mikel Merino managed to impress in the absence of Gyokeres and Havertz, setting up Leandro Trossard’s opening goal, which suggests the north Londoners now have a deep enough squad to cope with any injury setbacks.

However, that hasn’t stopped Arteta & co identifying a new striker as a target…

Arsenal join race to sign Marseille striker Robinio Vaz

According to a report from Caught Offside, Arsenal have now joined the race to sign Marseille striker Vaz, with scouts of the belief he would be a perfect fit in their forward line, but there could be competition for the 18-year-old’s signature.

Chelsea have now taken the lead in the race for the striker, having already made contact with his representatives, while the Gunners are being more patient, given that the youngster is regarded as a long-term addition to the squad, rather than someone capable of making an instant impact.

The Ligue 1 side are reluctant to cash-in, but a deal could be relatively affordable for the two London giants if they choose to step up their interest, given that the Frenchman’s asking price is around the €20m – €30m (£18m – £26m) mark.

The teenager, who has made two Champions League appearances this season, has been described as “pure quality” by scout Jacek Kulig, and there have been signs he could be a difference-maker in Marseille’s push to win the Ligue 1 title.

The centre-forward has managed to impress when coming off the bench this season, and he already has four goals to his name in the league, while also registering two assists.

That said, while Vaz may have the potential to become a top-level striker, it would not be the end of the world if Arsenal miss out, considering Arteta already has Gyokeres and Havertz at his disposal, while Gabriel Jesus has now returned to first-team training.

Viktor Gyokeres has been named as one of the best strikers in the world The Best 15 Strikers in World Football Ranked (2025)

Who is the best number nine right now?

ByCharlie Smith Nov 20, 2025

Sam Robson, Joe Cracknell crack Sussex with punishing stand

Middlesex coast to chase of 256 as visitors left light at Lord’s

ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay10-Aug-2025Middlesex 256 for 5 (Robson 89, Cracknell 79) beat Sussex 255 for 9 (Carson 73, Hudson-Prentice 58) by five wicketsSam Robson and Joe Cracknell shared a blistering stand of 144 in 111 balls as Middlesex sped to victory over Sussex in the Metro Bank One-Day Cup at Lord’s.Robson, in his benefit year with the Seaxes struck a run a ball 89, with 14 fours and a six, while Cracknell also cleared the ropes and hit 12 boundaries in his 78 as the hosts chased down a target of 256 with 25 balls to spare, despite 3 for 48 for Henry Crocombe.Earlier, Sussex’s total of 255-9 was built around half centuries from Jack Carson (73 from 58) and Fynn Hudson-Prentice (58 in 73). Noah Cornwell returned 3-50 while 18-year-old Jamie Feldman, making his List-A debut took a wicket with his second ball on route to figures of 2-36.Middlesex seized the initiative early thanks to Toby Roland-Jones’ double strike, Tom Haines caught at mid-on before Danial Ibrahim was trapped in front.Hudson-Prentice’s innings got off to a bizarre start when a quick single saw a shy at the stumps which hit the non-striker Tom Clark, the ricochet carrying the ball to the fence.The all-rounder almost played on to a ball from Cornwell, swatting the ball away from danger, but a lovely off-drive soon had him motoring, a Roland-Jones delivery nonchalantly flicked over the short boundary for six.Feldman then made a dramatic entrance, having Clark caught by skipper Ben Geddes and he struck for a second time to cut short Sussex skipper John Simpson’s breezy 22.Hudson-Prentice passed 50 in 61 balls, sharing a stand of 52 with Oli Carter before being superbly caught by Jack Davies and when Cornwell ended Carter’s promising innings three runs later the visitors were 152-6.The fact they batted out their overs was down almost entirely to Carson’s splendid innings. The all-rounder ruthlessly exploited the short boundary, endangering occupants of the Mound Stand on four occasions as he sprinted to 50 at more than a run a ball before finally perishing caught at cover in the penultimate over.By then Feldman had unfurled another party piece, brilliantly running out Danny Lamb with a direct hit.Middlesex lost De Caires lbw to Ari Karvelas early in the chase, but Robson and Cracknell responded with a boundary blitz, the former clubbing one from Hudson-Prentice over the ropes as well as creaming several fours effortlessly through the covers.Carson relieved the quicks only to be swept twice to the ropes by Cracknell, who followed that by dispatching one from Crocombe into the stands as 93 came from the powerplay.Cracknell’s ninth four took him to 50 in 33 balls and Robson’s half-century took only three more as the pair forged on.The Durham University graduate took a liking to the spin of Archie Lennon too, cutting successive balls behind square, and it needed Lamb to end his revelry courtesy of Haines’s catch on the square leg fence.While Robson became more circumspect, Geddes picked up the baton, clearing the ropes and driving Lamb to the cover fence, reaching 30 before Crocombe pegged back his off stump.When Robson followed him to the pavilion seven balls later courtesy of a magnificent diving catch by Lamb at mid-on there were jitters in the home dressing-room.Davies cleared the ropes only to perish to the next ball and with the visitors employing three slips runs slowed to a trickle.Hollman though steadied the ship with a mature unbeaten 30 to see the hosts over the line.

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