BCCI objects to PCB's Champions Trophy tour to Muzaffarabad

A fresh twist in the 2025 Champions Trophy has thrown the ICC’s trophy tour into confusion, a day before it was supposed to begin in Pakistan, after the BCCI objected to the PCB’s plan of taking the tour to Muzaffarabad, which is the capital of Pakistan Administered Kashmir, a territory disputed by India and Pakistan.ESPNcricinfo has learned that the BCCI notified the ICC about its objection on Friday, a day after the PCB put out a post on X (formerly Twitter) announcing the dates and venues for the tour would be heading to.It could not be confirmed if the BCCI lodged its objection in writing or verbally. It is understood that no approval or rejection has been made yet and that the ICC is still in discussions on the final plan of the trophy tour.Related

  • Hybrid model for Champions Trophy? ICC likely to take call on November 26

  • Champions Trophy saga: Blame lies with ICC leadership

  • The Champions Trophy is thrilling, unpredictable, edge-of the seat stuff (and that's just the negotiations)

  • Champions Trophy: PCB wants an explanation in writing from India for refusal to travel

  • India will not travel to Pakistan for 2025 Champions Trophy

The PCB’s post did catch the ICC by surprise given that it is an ICC event, and such communication is usually announced through its channels.According to the PCB’s post, the tour is scheduled to start from November 16 but given the BCCI’s objection, it wasn’t clear at the time of writing whether it will now go ahead on that day. On their X post, the PCB said the trophy tour would also take in other popular tourist destinations including Skardu, Murree and Hunza.There is a possibility that the tour may begin in an initial phase by taking the trophy – of which Pakistan are the defending champions – to the venues that are to be used in the tournament – Lahore, Karachi and Rawalpindi – and then take in the other venues during a second phase of the tour.

This latest development adds to growing uncertainty about the tournament itself, after it emerged last week that the BCCI wrote to ICC stating the Indian government had denied permission for India to travel to Pakistan for the tournament. The ICC conveyed that decision to the PCB. In response, the PCB, which is currently readying its three venues in preparation, has said it would not agree to a hybrid model, a solution BCCI prefers which will allow India to play their matches outside Pakistan.The PCB responded to the ICC earlier this week asking them several questions about the BCCI’s communication, including when exactly it was conveyed to the ICC and what the specific reasons are for India’s inability to travel. They have also asked the ICC to provide to them formal communication from the BCCI explaining the decision and the reasons behind it.Communication between the PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi and the ICC leadership is believed to have taken place since on the matter, in a bid to resolve the issue. But the PCB is insisting on responses to the queries it has put to the ICC.The PCB has pencilled in February 19-March 9 as dates for the eight-team Champions Trophy, but the ICC has still not formally released the tournament dates and schedule.

Will Ruben Amorim be put out of his misery?! Man Utd's stance on sacking beleaguered boss revealed amid worst Premier League start in 33 years as head coach stands bullishly by back-five tactics

Manchester United's stance on relieving Ruben Amorim of his duties has emerged amid the club's worst start to a Premier League season in 33 years. Amorim's back-five tactics has been criticised after the 3-0 derby defeat to Manchester City, but the Portuguese coach remained bullish on his tactical system and even insisted that the club would have to sack him before he changes his setup.

  • United lose again in dire derby

    United suffered their third defeat of the 2025-26 season in five games across all competitions, as they went down 3-0 against rivals City at the Etihad Stadium. Phil Foden broke the deadlock in the first half with a clinical header from Jeremy Doku's assist. After the break, Erling Haaland scored a brace to seal a crucial win for Pep Guardiola's side.

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    Will United sack Amorim?

    According to the , Amorim's position as Red Devils boss is not under any genuine threat despite losing 16 of the 31 matches he has managed the club thus far. Amorim's current contract runs until 2027.

  • Amorim stays bullish on his tactics

    Despite all the criticism and the derby loss, Amorim remained firm on his stance as he claimed that he won't be changing his 3-4-3 formation anytime soon. The Portuguese manager said: "Guys, I understand that and I accept. It is not a record you should have in Manchester United. There are a lot of things – you have no idea what happened during these months – but I accept that. I am not going to change. When I want to change my philosophy, I will change. If not, you have to change the man. We will talk about that every game that we lose. I don't believe in that, in the system, or whatever. I believe in my way and I am going to play my way until I want to change.

    "My message is that I am going to give everything. I will do everything, always thinking about what is best for the club. That was always the same message. It is not my decision, the rest (on whether United change manager). Until I am here, I will do my best. I really want to win games. I am suffering more than they."

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    When are United playing next?

    With no European games in midweek, Amorim's side will be back in action on Saturday as they take on Chelsea in another mammoth Premier League clash.

'Everything is good between us' – Christian Pulisic and Mauricio Pochettino claim to have turned the page on acrimony, as USMNT star's execution speaks louder than words

The duo discounted the significance of their conflict, as convincing international break put a turbulent summer in the past

Christian Pulisic needed a moment. He had been excellent against Japan, running the game in a performance he would later dub the best for the USMNT under Mauricio Pochettino. But this is a results-based sport, and all of the pretty turns, nice passes and deft dribbles in the world can't beat a cold, hard stat.

And after an hour, it looked as it would never come. Pulisic had done everything right except, well, materially impact the game. 

Finally, fortunately, that singular moment came. It was the kind of thing he has done so many times on a football pitch: a turn away from a defender, drop of the shoulder, charge forward, poked pass. Folarin Balogun delivered the finish, sealing the USMNT's 2-0 win. But Pulisic got the assist, and it really was goal. Balogun careened away in celebration – this was big for him, too.

Pulisic, meanwhile, celebrated in his own right, a casual punch of the air, and an expression of relief. Balogun wanted the goal. Pulisic the assist. 

And so we can finally all be friends again. This summer was chaotic on so many levels. Pulisic did something entirely reasonable in sitting out of the Gold Cup, but left himself open for criticism from the largely hyperbolic masses. Yet with 70 minutes of excellent work – and one fine assist – he went a long way torward burying it all.

No, it's not done yet. Yes, there might still be some residual chatter here. But the U.S. has its star man back, and for all of the hot air directed toward Pulisic, the human being, Pulisic, the footballer, makes this team infinitely better.

His return couldn't be more welcome.

Getty ImagesWhat a summer it was

The broad idea here has always been that, at some point, Pulisic would have the chance to let his game do the talking. This is the curse and benefit, of course, of having a transcendent star. Pulisic is too good to bench. Pochettino was going to have to call him back in. The challenge for the player was to prove that his impact was worth burying the hatchet.

And what a summer it was. Pulisic decided that he didn't fancy playing in the Gold Cup. Fine. He was then told that he couldn't play in the pre-Gold Cup friendlies, despite his offer to do so. Sure. It could have ended there, but there were podcasts and counter-podcasts, contrasting opinions from the guys who are, perhaps, just a little bit jealous that their version of the USMNT never got this level of attention.

By the time Tim Howard, Landon Donovan, Alexi Lalas and many more had stretched out a non-issue into weeks, it all just seemed a bit petulant. Of course, Pulisic played his role here. There is such a thing as moral high ground, and Pulisic could have taken it. There would have been, in theory, little harm in shutting up.

That is not allowed, because content has to happen. Pulisic had a dig back, explained himself, and then complained in his high-profile documentary. There was scattered speculation that Pulisic might not even make the September roster.  Pochettino didn't commit either way. 

AdvertisementGetty Images'I haven't talked with Christian'

It was, then, something of a relief when the roster came out and Pulisic was on it. Pochettino made the right choice. He enjoyed his summer of control and clarity. Now, it seemed, it was back to reality for the Argentine. He had to loosen the reins a little bit. 

The ensuing days after the roster drop served, effectively, as a showcase of how to assert authority as a head coach. He played everything as simply as possible. Yes, he and Pulisic were buddies again. No, there was no real falling out. And, perhaps most enlighteningly, no, they had not talked.

That seemed admittedly odd. If there was a feud between the two highest profile figures in American men's soccer, why hadn't they figured it out behind the scenes? Does he not talk to his guys regularly?

Pochettino had an answer there, too. There was, if his words were to be believed, never any drama in the first place. 

"I haven't talked with Christian," Pochettino said upon on the roster release, "but I think we have nothing to talk about. It's all behind us, everything that happened in the summer. And I think we all need to look forward. We have a plan for every single player, and the plan for Christian now is to call him and to see him in this camp."

Yet for all of Pochettino's good vibes, there was still an ominous sense about this whole thing. How much would Pulisic play? Would he start? Would he be allowed to go all 90? He could only manage 30 minutes of Milan's final game before the international break. There was talk that he had a knock that limited his participation. Would that carry over? 

No one had any real, substantive answers there, either. Pochettino wouldn't give away his team – why should he? 

Getty Images SportA South Korean disappointment

South Korea, then, seemed a decent platform for a little Pulisic redemption. When the lineup came out last weekend, everything seemed very Pulisic-coded. This was his ideal platform: a couple of defensive midfielders behind him, a No. 10 to link up with and a wide player to feed. Josh Sargent might not be the answer at striker, but Pulisic, at least, had a No. 9 to play off. 

He wasn't quite a disaster. But he may as well have been. The USMNT were outcoached and outplayed by the Koreans, who knew exactly how to exploit Pochettino's 4-3-3 in attack, and see them off in defense. Pulisic ended up playing hero ball in the end, asking for it when he wasn't open, dribbling into lanes that didn't exist, and taking shots that weren't on. 

His pass completion percentage was low. He completed just one of five dribbles, connected on none of his crosses, and cut a frustrated figure throughout. There wasn't a meltdown. This wasn't a total nightmare of a performance. But it just wasn't very good. The U.S. lost 2-0, and deserved the result in full.

Pulisic didn't speak to the media before or after last Saturday's match – thereby continuing a worrying trend. Social media overeacted, while the slew of usual talking heads criticized Pochettino's roster, lineup and tactical decisions, and the team as a whole for perceived lack of effort.

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(C)Getty ImagesTriumph(ish) against Japan

That made Tuesday's match against Japan so much more important – even if it already felt a little seismic. The day before the gae, Pochettino gave an emotional "we know what we are doing" news conference in which he addressed his side's poor string of results – he had only won nine of 17 matches as U.S. manager entering the Japan game.

His view was that final scores didn't necessarily matter. The World Cup did.

"We need to start to win when the World Cup starts,” he said. “Too many examples of teams that win during [prior] years and then arrive at the World Cup, and they don’t arrive in the best condition.” 

But that, somehow, added pressure. If Pochettino was making so much noise about tactics beforehand, then whatever system he deployed better work. The U.S. were given a leg up by Japan's team sheet.

The benched all of their big names after putting out a full strength side against Mexico a few days before (the irony that seems to have been missed is that the visitors clearly saw Mexico as a far more significant threat than the USMNT). 

And of course, things ended up looking pretty decent. A groovy back three – treated as a tactical revolution of the like never seen in soccer before – gave the U.S. a little more balance. Pulisic was given freedom to roam around and do fun things with the ball. He popped up left, right and center.

The assist to Balogun was a wonderful thing, but through 65 minutes of work he really could have found the net once or twice in his own right. The U.S. won 2-0. Pulisic was the best player on the pitch. Drama over?

Nottingham Forest now "preparing a bid" for "fantastic" £25k-p/w playmaker

Nottingham Forest are now “preparing a bid” for a “fantastic” playmaker, who has been a subject of interest for a number of Premier League clubs this summer, journalist Ben Jacobs has revealed.

Forest looking to bolster options at full-back

Ola Aina was one of Nuno’s most important players in the Premier League last season, making 35 appearances, but the manager has set out to bolster his options at right-back ahead of his side’s upcoming European campaign.

Neco Williams has also proven himself as a dependable option on the opposite flank, but given that the Wales international is more accustomed to playing on the opposite side, Nuno may look at bringing in another option at left-back this summer.

Earlier this week, it was revealed the Tricky Trees were in talks to sign Omari Hutchinson, and the forward is not the only Ipswich Town player on the shortlist, with Jacobs taking to X to state that Leif Davis has also emerged as a target.

Spain's MarcPubillin action with England's Omari Hutchinson

Nottingham Forest are “preparing a bid” to sign the left-back, who is clearly highly sought-after, with the journalist revealing Ipswich have already knocked back offers from different Premier League clubs this summer.

Nottingham Forest now ready to offer £26m for "superb" international star

The Reds want the move done as soon as possible.

ByHenry Jackson Aug 8, 2025

Jacobs has since offered a further update on Forest’s pursuit, suggesting that it could be difficult to get a deal done, given the Tractor Boys’ unwillingness to sell.

"Fantastic" Davis could be exciting addition for Forest

The Ipswich defender, who was once dubbed “fantastic” by Cartlon Palmer, poses a real threat on the front foot, as showcased by the fact Kieran McKenna’s side were heavily reliant on the full-back as a playmaker during the 2024-25 campaign.

While the 25-year-old struggled to make much of an impact in the top flight, picking up three assists all season, the attacking numbers he chalked up in the Championship and League one were remarkable.

Season

League appearances

Goals

Assists

2022-23

43

3

14

2023-24

43

2

21

As such, the Englishman could be an exciting addition from an attacking point of view, and it could be useful for Nuno to have a different type of player to choose from at left-back, given that Williams flourishes from a defensive standpoint.

There may be some concerns about the fact Forest want to sign the £25k-a-week full-back and Hutchinson, given that both players were relegated from the Premier League last season, but Davis’ attacking prowess means it could be a risk worth taking.

Higher ceiling than Wissa: Newcastle in talks to sign £80m CF this week

Newcastle United’s search for a striker has dominated the final weeks of the transfer window, as Eddie Howe looks to reshape his attack following a turbulent summer.

At the heart of the saga is Alexander Isak, who has made clear he has no intention of playing for the club again.

The Swede has not trained with the squad, did not feature in Newcastle’s opening Premier League fixture away at Aston Villa, and issued a statement on Instagram this week citing a belief that change was in everyone’s best interests.

Eddie Howe admitted in a press conference that he had been aware of Isak’s desire to leave since the end of last season, and while Liverpool remains the forward’s preferred destination, the deal will not happen until Newcastle have found a replacement.

That need has grown increasingly pressing.

Over the course of the summer, Newcastle have already missed out on a succession of striker targets. Liam Delap, Hugo Ekitike, Joao Pedro and Benjamin Sesko all moved elsewhere, leaving the Magpies short of options.

The club have also registered interest in Wolves’ Jørgen Strand Larsen, though any move there would prove expensive.

While Howe has strengthened in other areas – signing Jacob Ramsey from Aston Villa, Anthony Elanga from Nottingham Forest, Malick Thiaw from AC Milan, and Aaron Ramsdale on loan from Southampton – the striker issue continues to define Newcastle’s summer.

Newcastle hold talks over Chelsea forward

According to Fabrizio Romano, in the “last 48 hours”, Newcastle have opened conversations regarding a move for Chelsea’s Nicolas Jackson.

However, the reporter claims that both Bayern Munich and Aston Villa are also in the mix, which means that there is plenty of competition to sign the Senegal international.

Villa are pushing hard for Jackson’s signature, with Unai Emery keen to reunite with the striker he coached during their time together at Villarreal.

The news of Jackson’s exit comes after falling down the pecking order at Chelsea, with new arrivals Joao Pedro and Liam Delap deemed more credible options by manager Enzo Marseca.

Chelsea have placed a price tag of £80m on the 24-year-old, but any potential suitor will hope that figure comes closer to £70m as the window draws to a close.

Why Newcastle should sign Nicolas Jackson

Jackson has enjoyed strong levels of returns since his arrival from Villarreal, scoring 24 goals and providing 10 assists in 65 Premier League appearances, per Transfermarkt. He also netted in the Conference League final against Real Betis in May, but discipline has occasionally been an issue.

The Blues forward was sent off against Newcastle in a 2-0 defeat at St James’ Park last season and again at the Club World Cup against Flamengo.

At 1.87m tall and just 24 years of age, Jackson fits the recruitment model Newcastle have tried to maintain under Howe, targeting young players with room to develop into long-term assets.

Yoane Wissa of Brentford is another forward who has been the subject of interest from Newcastle this summer. The Congolese striker has just enjoyed the most productive season of his career, scoring 19 goals and supplying five assists in 35 appearances.

Only Mohamed Salah scored more non-penalty goals in the Premier League last term, underlining Wissa’s consistency in front of goal.

Since joining Brentford, he has registered 45 goals in 137 league appearances overall and has openly expressed a desire to join Newcastle in order to play Champions League football. The Bees, however, have rejected Newcastle’s bids, including an offer worth £40m, and are said to value Wissa closer to £60m.

The forward, who turns 29 in September, is older than the preferred age profile for recruits at St James’ Park, which is said to focus on players aged 24 and under.

He may also be absent in early 2026 due to AFCON commitments. With Brentford enduring a difficult summer that has already seen the departures of manager Thomas Frank, goalkeeper Mark Flekken, captain Christian Norgaard, and winger Bryan Mbeumo, they are reluctant to sanction another key exit.

The debate for Newcastle is whether to prioritise an immediate end product or invest in potential. Wissa’s case is built on proven returns.

Seasonal Returns – Yoane Wissa

2024/25 – Premier League

19 goals, 5 assists

2023/24 – Premier League

12 goals, 4 assists

2022/23 – Premier League

7 goals, 3 assists

2021/22 – Premier League

7 goals, 1 assist

2020/21 – Ligue 1

10 goals, 5 assists

Source: Transfermarkt

According to FBref, his 19 goals last season came with impressive underlying numbers: 2.77 shots per 90 minutes, 1.27 of those on target, and a progressive passing distance of 49.9 metres per 90, reflecting his ability to create and stretch play.

At 28, he is entering the peak years of his career and would represent a striker capable of delivering right away.

Jackson, by contrast, offers a younger, more malleable profile.

His 3.08 shots per 90 minutes, with 1.38 on target, show a player more inclined to get into scoring positions, even if his shot-on-target percentage of 44.7 is fractionally below Wissa’s 45.6.

Where Jackson stands out is in creative involvement: he averages 2.80 shot-creating actions per 90, compared to Wissa’s 2.13.

Though he lags behind Wissa in progressive passing numbers, Jackson’s ability to carry the ball – 1.90 progressive carries per 90 compared to Wissa’s 1.85 – highlights a player able to move defences through dribbling rather than distribution.

Market value also plays a role. Wissa is currently valued at £27m, while Jackson sits at £43m, but Chelsea’s asking price is substantially higher than that.

Brentford’s hardline stance means Wissa could cost close to £60m despite being older and closer to the end of his peak.

Jackson, at 24, is four years younger and represents the sort of asset Newcastle can build around and potentially resell at value in the future.

Wissa, while immediately reliable, may represent a shorter-term option with less scope for growth. For Howe, the decision will hinge on balancing short-term needs with long-term strategy.

Newcastle United manager EddieHowebefore the match

Isak’s refusal to return has left Newcastle desperately short, and with Champions League football on the horizon, the temptation to secure an experienced, proven finisher like Wissa is clear.

Yet the club’s transfer policy under its current ownership has been consistent in pursuing players who can grow with the project. In that regard, Jackson offers a player who, if developed properly, could become a central figure for Newcastle for years to come.

Better than Wissa & Strand Larsen: Newcastle "really like" £60m striker

Newcastle United are reportedly interested in signing a star who could be even better than Wissa and Strand Larsen.

1 ByWill Miller Aug 22, 2025

The urgency of the situation means Newcastle may have little time to deliberate. Every week without a replacement is a week where Howe is forced to field a side without a natural striker.

Wissa has shown he can deliver goals immediately, but Jackson represents the future. For a club determined to compete not only this season but in the seasons ahead, that future may prove more valuable than the present.

Three quick fifties and Asitha's electric new-ball spell give Sri Lanka consolation win

Rapid half-centuries from Kusal Mendis, Pathum Nissanka and Janith Liyanage put Sri Lanka on course to a substantial total, before an electric new-ball spell from Asitha Fernando wrecked New Zealand’s chase.Asitha swung the ball prodigiously in his five-over opening spell, taking 3 for 17 in that period. By the end of over seven, and chasing 291 for victory, New Zealand were 22 for 5, their chances all but dashed. Mark Chapman battled bravely for a run-a-ball 81, but had no team-mates to go with him.New Zealand soon slipped to 48 for 6, then 77 for 7, and though the last rites took some time, Sri Lanka dismissed the opposition for 150, inside 30 overs. This was the third one-sided game in the series. New Zealand had won the other two.Asitha’s 3 for 26 wasn’t quite a swing-bowling masterclass, as he occasionally struggled with his lines. But it did feature some spectacular deliveries, as he gleaned substantially more swing than any other bowler in the game. The ball to take out Rachin Ravindra’s leg stump was magnificent; Asitha angled it across the left-hander, and got it to tail in very late to slip between bat and pad. All through that new-ball spell, he had that shape to his deliveries. He struck twice in the seventh over, removing Tom Latham and Glenn Phillips, both for ducks.Pathum Nissanka scored a half-century up top in a two-part innings•AFP/Getty Images

At the other end, Maheesh Theekshana and Eshan Malinga also contributed wickets, dismissing Will Young and Daryl Mitchell respectively. All three of these bowlers ended up taking three wickets apiece. Asitha’s was the best among their final figures.Malinga also swung the ball, though not as much as Asitha, and bowled probing lines. Theekshana got turn out of a pitch that the New Zealand spinners had also enjoyed earlier in the match, particularly when they picked their way through Sri Lanka’s middle order. Though it was still Matt Henry who was most penetrative, taking 4 for 55 from his ten overs. Three of those wickets came at the death, but Henry had been instrumental in building pressure through the middle overs too.The first ingredients of Sri Lanka’s 140-run victory, however, were the fifties to Nissanka and Kusal. Nissanka’s 66 off 42 was unusual. He got to 50 off the 31st delivery he played, but as he was completing that run, appeared to pull a hamstring, and left the field at the end of the tenth over. Kusal then replaced him at the crease and reeled off 54 off 48 to salvage what has otherwise been a modest tour for him.Nissanka, especially, reveled in taking on the short ball. He crashed five sixes and six fours in his innings, coming back to the middle in the 34th over to swing at a few though he was unable to run or reach particularly far outside off. Kusal hit two sixes and five fours, having made all his runs after the initial fielding restrictions had ended.Matt Henry took all of his four wickets in the back-half of Sri Lanka’s innings•AFP/Getty Images

Both batters were dismissed by wide, turning Mitchell Santner deliveries, that they were trying to drag over the deep-midwicket boundary.Santner had been among the primary architects of Sri Lanka’s middle-overs slowdown. They had been 155 for 1 (Nissanka was retired hurt also) after 27 overs, but in the following seven overs lost three wickets and made only 28. They recovered through a half-century to Liyanage, who constructed a clever innings that shepherded the lower-middle order and the tail. Liyanage made 53 off 52 balls before falling in the final over. He had hit five boundaries – two of them sixes – but largely sought to push the game deep and ensure Sri Lanka batted out their 50 overs.But New Zealand had no answers to Asitha bowling one of the white-ball spells of his career. Chapman saw out that new-ball spell, and then gained confidence once the powerplay was over, finding the boundary with the kind of ease that Nissanka and Kusal earlier had. He was especially strong through the off side, hitting all but two of his ten fours on that side of the ground.But thanks to that early collapse, they never looked like threatening the target.

Chelsea in talks to sell star with Ugochukwu, Dewsbury-Hall and Chukwuemeka

Chelsea are continuing their serious progress when it comes to selling players this summer, with talks ongoing to offload another star with Lesley Ugochukwu, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall and Carney Chukwuemeka.

"Brave" Chelsea player who Maresca loves now "wants to leave" this summer

The Blues could lose one of their best prospects.

ByTom Cunningham Aug 4, 2025

In the last 72 hours, Enzo Maresca’s side have raised around £65 million in outgoings, starting with Armando Broja, who’s completed a move to Burnley (Fabrizio Romano).

Cole Palmer

7.33

Moises Caicedo

7.02

Enzo Fernández

6.95

Nicolas Jackson

6.88

Noni Madueke

6.82

via WhoScored

Since then, Kieran Dewsbury-Hall has agreed a switch to Premier League rivals Everton and Ugochukwu has agreed to follow Broja to Turf Moor. Once all of those deals are announced, the club are expected to raise their total transfer income to far north of £200 million.

As things stand, Chelsea are around £58 million away from completely balancing their books, which is imperative considering their pact with UEFA.

Their seismic financial windfalls from winning the Club World Cup and qualifying for the Champions League next season have already put Chelsea in solid financial stead when it comes to PSR, but it is an entirely different case when it comes to FFP.

The Blues were fined for breaching FFP rules last month and must produce a ‘positive transfer balance’ if they want to register new signings for the Champions League next season, which explains their impressive hustle in agreeing a host of exit deals recently.

Amid Chelsea’s talks to sign both RB Leipzig’s Xavi Simons and Man United’s Alejandro Garnacho, the need to make sales won’t stop here.

Borussia Dortmund are in talks to sign Carney Chukwuemeka again, so there could be yet another opportunity for Chelsea to seal another quick-fire exit this week.

Alongside the aforementioned quartet who have played their last games in Chelsea blue, £195,000-per-week attacker Christopher Nkunku can still leave Stamford Bridge before deadline day.

Chelsea in talks to sell Christopher Nkunku

That is according to Fabrizio Romano, who says Chelsea are in ongoing talks over selling Nkunku after a mixed campaign.

The Frenchman still managed to rack up 15 goals in all competitions, despite not being a key player under Maresca last season, and there is a belief that United are still targeting Nkunku among other interested sides.

Called a “top player” by ex-teammate João Félix, Chelsea have apparently been forced to reduce their asking price for the ex-Leipzig sensation too, so clubs will certainly be tempted to bite the bullet.

ديلي ميل عن محمد صلاح بعد هزيمة ليفربول أمام تشيلسي: لا يستطيع ضرب باب حظيرة

تحدثت صحيفة “ديلي ميل” الإنجليزية عن أداء المصري محمد صلاح في مباراة فريقي ليفربول وتشيلسي، في بطولة الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، مساء يوم السبت.

واستضاف ملعب “ستامفورد بريدج” مباراة ليفربول وتشيلسي، في الجولة السابعة من الدوري الإنجليزي، موسم 2025/26.

وتعرض ليفربول لهزيمة قاتلة على يد تشيلسي، حيث خسر بهدفين لهدف في لقاء خاضه محمد صلاح حتى النهاية.

وسلطت صحيفة “ديلي ميل” الإنجليزية الضوء على أداء محمد صلاح، لدرجة جعلتها تقول: “صلاح لا يستطيع ضرب باب الحظيرة”.

اقرأ أيضًا.. سلوت يدافع عن محمد صلاح بعد هزيمة ليفربول أمام تشيلسي: جعلنا ننسى كونه إنسانًا

وبالبحث نجد أن تلك العبارة دارجة في اللغة الإنجليزية تعني أن الشخص ضعيف لدرجة تجعله غير قادر على تنفيذ مهمة سهلة، مثل ضرب باب حظيرة، وهو ما يشير إلى سوء مستوى محمد صلاح حاليًا.

واستكملت الصحيفة: “من الصعب أن يتمكن محمد صلاح من تجاوز ما حققه الموسم الماضي، حيث سجل وصنع 57 هدفًا في 52 مباراة في مختلف المسابقات، خاصة مع استعداد المصري للسفر إلى كأس أمم إفريقيا منتصف ديسمبر، وهو أمر مقلق بحد ذاته لـ ليفربول”.

وأضافت: “ثلاثة أهداف وثلاث تمريرات حاسمة في تسع مباريات هذا الموسم ليست أرقامًا كارثية أيضًا، ولكن مع معاييره العالية، لا يقود صلاح هذا الفريق للفوز بنفس طريقة العام الماضي، هذا مصدر قلق كبير، خاصة مع عدم ثبات أداء زملائه المهاجمين”.

وواصلت: “سجل كودي جاكبو هدف ليفربول ليعادل النتيجة في الدقيقة 65، ولكن بخلاف ذلك، انتهت معظم فرصهم بشعور روبرت سانشيز، حارس مرمى تشيلسي، بالبهجة من عدم تسجيل الريدز للأهداف”.

واختتمت: “صنع ليفربول فرصًا أكثر من تلك التي خلقوها في إسطنبول يوم الثلاثاء ضد جالطة سراي، وللإنصاف كان محمد صلاح أكثر مشاركة، لكن افتقار ليفربول للدقة في الثلث الأخير من الملعب هو ما كلفهم خسارة هذه المباراة”.

Their next Ballard: Sunderland hold talks to sign £9m Lucumi alternative

Sunderland fans will still be in disbelief about their beloved side’s opening day heroics in the Premier League.

No nerves were present whatsoever in the Black Cats’ clinical display as Graham Potter’s downtrodden West Ham United were humbled 3-0 by the rampant hosts, gifting Regis Le Bris and Co. a dream start.

Already, the likes of Eliezer Mayenda, Daniel Ballard, and Wilson Isidor have cemented themselves further into fan favourite territory as the promoted trio all got in on the goalscoring act on Saturday.

Yet, despite a fair few of Sunderland’s promoted heroes making the step-up look like a breeze on the opening day, the transfer business through the door is showing no signs of slowing down.

Sunderland in talks with £9m defender

Of course, straight after the dust had settled on the mightily impressive 3-0 triumph, Sunderland were confirming signing number 12 of a bumper summer.

Nordi Mukiele has now officially joined Le Bris’ camp from Paris St. Germain for a fee around the £12m mark, pushing up all of the Black Cats’ summer activity to a total spend of £141.5m.

He will be raring to go in his new red and white strip, even more so after Sunderland stormed out of the blocks in style. However, he isn’t the only defensive addition being eyed up with a bid reportedly submitted for Jhon Lucumi.

Despite that, as per reports by TEAMtalk, Sunderland have also been in talks to sign FC Copenhagen centre-back Gabriel Pereira, but are not alone in their advances.

Indeed, it is further revealed that Burnley are also in discussions over a deal, in addition to interest from further afield in Germany from FC Köln.

It will cost the Black Cats in the region of £9m to land the imposing Brazilian, with the report stating that he is content to stick it out in Denmark, despite all this frenzied interest.

How Pereira could become Le Bris' next Ballard

The draw of the Premier League might well prove to be too tempting for Pereira, who would be hopeful he could become Le Bris’ next version of Ballard if he were to swap Scandinavia for the Stadium of Light.

While Mayenda and Isidor would stylishly go about their business against Potter’s men, it was Ballard who would steal the show with his dominant display all afternoon.

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Away from his towering header giving the Black Cats a comfortable two-goal cushion, the former Arsenal youngster would win a commanding ten duels in total, on top of also only misdirecting just four of his 25 passes on the tense occasion.

Pereira has chipped in with a header here and there for Copenhagen, too, with Chelsea well aware of his prowess in the air when he headed home this consolation effort versus the Blues in the Conference League last season.

It’s not just reserved for European nights, either, with the 25-year-old picking up four goals in total across the entirety of last campaign. To add context, Ballard would just come up short in this department by powering home one fewer header than his potential soon-to-be teammate.

Games played

20

26

Goals scored

2

3

Assists

1

1

Touches*

47.0

79.5

Accurate passes*

33.2 (88%)

60.7 (88%)

Ball recoveries*

2.3

3.3

Clearances*

4.0

4.5

Total duels won*

4.6

3.3

Clean sheets

2

6

The similarities don’t just grind to a halt here, though, with the £9m-rated defender also eerily alike to his English counterpart in other areas of their respective games, notably when it comes to looking assured and confident with the ball at their feet, having both averaged the same pass completion percentage at 88% last season in league action.

Yet, much like Ballard, Pereira is also prepared to put his body on the line for the cause, having been lauded for his “strong” ability to win duels and “take charge” of situations by Copenhagen head coach Jacob Neestrup when signing for the Superliga champions just last year.

The hope will be now that Pereira can take to the Premier League in the same warrior-like fashion Ballard managed against West Ham, with the feel-good vibes ramped up even more at the Stadium of Light if signing number 13 is soon to be announced.

Younger Xhaka: Sunderland could hijack move to sign "phenomenal" £30m star

Sunderland are reportedly interested in signing a star who is a younger version of Granit Xhaka.

ByDan Emery Aug 16, 2025

PCB chairman promises Gaddafi Stadium will be ready for February 7 inauguration

Mohsin Naqvi has announced that the redevelopment is “in its final stages and the last touches are being applied”

Danyal Rasool31-Jan-2025PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi has announced that the redevelopment of the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore is “in its final stages”. At a press conference held within the ground itself, Naqvi praised everyone involved in the construction of the stadium, saying it had been completed in record time.”The Gaddafi Stadium will be inaugurated on 7 February by the Prime Minister [Shehbaz Sharif],” Naqvi said. “It’s in its final stages and the last touches are being applied to it. It will definitely be completed by 7 February. We had begun demolishing this stadium in September, with the construction beginning in October. We promised it would be ready by the end of January, and you can all see how close it is to completion.”Related

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Naqvi said the National Stadium in Karachi, also undergoing significant renovation ahead of the Champions Trophy, was also on track. It is scheduled to be inaugurated in a ceremony on February 11 by Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari, on the eve of the first game it is scheduled to host – a tri-series match on February 12.Pakistan are also hosting an opening ceremony on February 16 February in Lahore, though it will not include a captains’ call and photoshoot, which the PCB put down to logistical issues. Naqvi said the PCB had invited ICC chairman Jay Shah to the event, as well as the heads of all cricket boards involved in the event.”We are also holding a ceremony on the 16th of February in Lahore. We’ve invited the heads of all cricket boards of teams who are coming, as well as all ICC officials, including the ICC chairman Jay Shah. We are eager to welcome the board officials and anyone else who is attending.”The PCB has faced extreme scrutiny over the last few months concerning the fitness of its stadiums to host the tournament. With renovation and reconstruction work on the venues left to the last few months, there were concerns about whether the PCB would manage to bring its stadiums to a state of readiness in time for the tournament. The PCB had initially set a January 25 deadline for all development of the Gaddafi Stadium to be completed, before pushing it forward to February 2.Naqvi took aim at those who had raised doubts. “Across the border [a reference to India], there are many people who are trying to find the tiniest flaw in our stadiums and arrangements, and they will get no such opportunity. We will welcome all the arriving teams and their security and welcome arrangements. The whole of the PCB is working day and night to provide a seamless tournament.”Naqvi, who has been unapologetic about the rate of spend at the PCB since he assumed the post, also offered a first glimpse of the potential financial toll the work on the stadiums had taken, announcing the PCB had sold the tickets allocated to it by the ICC back to the governing council to go some way towards making up the costs of developing its grounds.The Champions Trophy, which is set to begin on February 19, is the first ICC tournament Pakistan will host since 1996.

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