Ahead of Rob Edwards’ arrival, The Athletic’s David Ornstein has already shared one problem that the new Wolverhampton Wanderers boss will face in the January transfer window.
It has been a disastrous start for those in the Midlands, who recently sacked manager Vitor Pereira after less than a year in charge. Since returning to the Premier League in 2018, their top-flight status hasn’t looked as at risk as it is now. They currently sit eight points adrift of safety after 11 games and remain the only side in the league yet to pick up a win.
Turning things around from here will be far from easy, but it’s Rob Edwards who looks set to be handed that very task. The Middlesbrough boss wasn’t in the dugout for Boro’s victory over Birmingham City on Saturday and the club confirmed that he’s set to join Wolves, much to their reluctance.
The Championship side said in a statement: “Middlesbrough Football Club have, subject to the completion of an agreement with Wolverhampton Wanderers FC, given head coach Rob Edwards permission to speak to Wolves.
“We initially rejected an approach from Wolves on the basis that Rob signed a three-year contract with MFC less than six months ago. Following discussions with Rob we were disappointed to learn that he wanted to speak with Wolves regarding their head coach vacancy. We have now agreed terms with Wolves, subject to completion of the relevant paperwork.”
Gary O'Neil favourite is on borrowed time at Wolves after Edwards arrival
Rob Edwards could look to immediately ditch this Wolverhampton Wanderers flop when he enters the Molineux dug-out.
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Edwards now also has the chance for some Premier League redemption, having been relegated with Luton Town the last time that he was in England’s top tier. Guiding Wolves to safety from this point would more than put those demons to bed.
With a new manager on the way, Wolves should be ones to watch in the January transfer window, but the reality is that they’re already facing one frustrating problem.
Ornstein reveals first transfer problem for Edwards at Wolves
Speaking on NBC Sports ahead of the manager’s arrival, Ornstein revealed that Edwards may only be able to sign homegrown players at Wolves in the January transfer window.
It’s a move that will immediately limit the new manager, but one that – according to Ornstein – will be made to prepare Wolves for any potential Championship campaign next season.
Just who arrives as a result is the big question. Edwards could yet return to Middlesbrough in an attempt to lure some of his former stars to the Premier League, but whether they’d join a side who look destined for relegation remains to be seen.
Every Premier League and EFL manager sacked in the 2025/26 season
Corbin Burnes is the best available pitcher on the free agent market and his next home may come with the added bonus of being extremely friendly to those who climb the mound.
USA Today baseball insider Bob Nightengale writes today that the sought-after starter is expected to soon sign a deal exceeding $250 million—the richest on record for a pitcher—with the San Francisco Giants being the heavy favorites to land his services.
Burnes's agent Scott Boras has been in serious conversations with the Boston Red Sox about Burnes, but it's appearing more and more that Buster Posey will jump into his front office gig with a major splash.
Boras also offered up another one of his trademark quips.
"I think Corbin Burnes is kind of like Elvis," he said. “He’s got that burning love for a No. 1 starter. You’re really feeling it today and every morning, I might add."
Nightengale points out that this would come on the heels of a wild Winter Meetings, where teams ponied up a collective $1.3 billion for free agents, a stunning figure when compared to last year's dealings that accounted for only $138 million. To this point three players have individually earned contracts north of $180 million.
Burnes, 30, is coming off a sensational season for the Baltimore Orioles in which he posted a 2.92 ERA and 1.096 WHIP. He finished in the top-10 of Cy Young voting for a fifth consecutive year and made his fourth straight All-Star Game. The Giants are looking to solidify the top of their rotation after an 80-82 campaign in 2024.
Lancashire set to be without Liam Livingstone after hamstring injury sustained while playing twice in 24 hours
Matt Roller08-Jul-2025
Liam Livingstone was injured after playing back-to-back games on Friday and Saturday•Getty Images
Lancashire coach Steven Croft believes a “stupid” schedule contributed to a hamstring injury that will sideline Liam Livingstone for the rest of the T20 Blast group stages, as counties weigh up a potential reduction in the volume of cricket that they play for 2026.Livingstone pulled his hamstring during Lancashire’s win over Derbyshire on Saturday afternoon, their second T20 fixture in the space of 24 hours after winning at Northamptonshire on Friday. Their team bus only arrived back in Manchester at 3.30am on Saturday morning due to traffic on the M1, and they were back on the field at 3pm later that day.Saqib Mahmood also left the field during Saturday’s game, and Croft – who took over from Dale Benkenstein on an interim basis in May – said that the schedule was “a bit of a mess”. He told LancsTV: “They’re some of the world’s best players out there… It feels pretty stupid and silly, and is putting the players at risk. We saw two players walk off the field through injury.”Related
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On Livingstone, Croft said: “It might have gone at any time, but getting minimal sleep and such a quick turnaround to play elite sport is a tough one… I probably wouldn’t say it’s all down to the schedule – it might be – but it’s not helped one bit for that player who’s walked off, and looks like it might be a bit of a lengthy time on the sidelines.”It is something that seriously needs to be looked at… We’re aware that we’ve got four competitions in the country, so you can’t really extend the season any more. That is the county grind, as people say… You feel like if something doesn’t happen, we’re not going to get the best players on the park.”The Professional Cricketers’ Association (PCA) has lobbied for a reduction in back-to-back T20 fixtures, where the same team plays twice on consecutive days. But they are still commonplace in the Blast, in which the majority of fixtures are played from Thursday to Sunday, and there are signs that any changes to the men’s domestic schedule for 2026 will only be incremental.The Blast appears set to return to three groups of six – rather than two groups of nine – next year, with each team playing 12 matches (including two inter-group fixtures) rather than 14. The quarter-finals and Finals Day will also be brought forward to July from September, meaning the competition will finish before the Hundred rather than being split in half by it.There is less clarity on the future of the County Championship: counties are discussing a handful of options for next year’s format, some of which involve a reduction to 12 matches per team while others maintain the existing number of 14. Somerset and Surrey have both publicly backed a 14-match season, with an eight-team Division One and a ten-team Division Two.”There is so much potential for the competition to grow its fanbase,” Surrey’s chair, Oli Slipper, and chief executive, Steve Elworthy, said in a joint statement, noting the strong attendances at The Oval this year. “The red-ball game needs all the counties to get behind it, to prioritise it and to promote it. It is a unique and historic sporting competition, and we should embrace it for the benefit of the whole game.”The review into county scheduling is being run by the Professional Game Committee, a subcommittee authorised by the ECB board and chaired by Warwickshire chair Mark McCafferty. A decision on the 2026 schedule is anticipated later this month, and any changes would require the support of 12 out of the 18 first-class counties.
Corinthians e Grêmio se encaram em um duelo válido pela 15ª rodada do Brasileirão. A partida estava atrasada e será realizada nesta segunda-feira (18), às 21 horas (de Brasília. Veja abaixo onde assistir!
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+ Veja a classificação e simule os resultados do Brasileirão
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O Timão busca voltar a reencontrar as vitórias na competição nacional. Nos últimos cinco jogos, a equipe paulista perdeu em duas ocasiões e empatou outros três confrontos.
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Enquanto isso, o Grêmio vive uma batalha pelas primeiras colocações da tabela. Contudo, fora de casa, o Tricolor Gaúcho deixou a desejar. O Imortal perdeu os últimos quatro desafios longe dos seus domínios no Brasileirão.
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CORINTHIANS X GRÊMIO 15ª RODADA DO CAMPEONATO BRASILEIRO
Local: Neo Química Arena, São Paulo (SP) Data e hora: segunda-feira, 18 de setembro de 2023, às 21h00 (horário de Brasília) Árbitro: Paulo César Zanovelli da Silva (Fifa-MG) Assistentes: Luanderson Lima dos Santos (Fifa-BA) e Celso Luiz da Silva (MG) Árbitro de vídeo: Emerson de Almeida Ferreira (MG) Onde assistir: Premiere e no tempo real do Lance!
CORINTHIANS
Cássio; Fagner, Caetano, Lucas Veríssimo e Fábio Santos; Moscardo, Maycon e Giuliano (Renato Augusto); Rojas, Yuri Alberto e Wesley. Técnico: Vanderlei Luxemburgo.
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Desfalques: Roni (trauma no tornozelo); Paulinho (recuperação de cirurgia no joelho); Bruno Méndez e Gil (suspensos)
Pendurados: Cássio, Lucas Veríssimo, Caetano, Fagner, Fausto Vera, Gabriel Moscardo, Matheus Bidu, Maycon, Roni, Guilherme Biro, Ruan Oliveira e Yuri Alberto.
GRÊMIO
Gabriel Grando; João Pedro, Rodrigo Ely, Kannemann e Reinaldo; Villasanti, Pepê, Ronald e Cristaldo; Ferreira e Suárez. Técnico: Renato Portaluppi.
Desfalques: Carballo (lesão ligamentar no joelho direito); Geromel e Jhonata Robert (transição física)
Pendurados: Bruno Alves, Mila, Rodrigo Ely e Everton Galdino.
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Celtic moved back to the top of the Scottish Premiership table on Sunday with a 2-1 win over Kilmarnock in the first game after the international break.
Goals from Daizen Maeda and Kelechi Iheanacho sealed all three points for the Hoops, who had found themselves drawing 1-1 heading into stoppage time.
Iheanacho, who came off the bench to make his debut for the club, scored from the penalty spot in the 96th minute to secure the victory for Brendan Rodgers.
Despite the fact that Celtic won the match, there were a few worrying performances across the board for Celtic, who have scored one goal from open play in their last three games in all competitions.
Rodgers has plenty of options to choose in most positions, perhaps apart from centre-forward, and players know that they need to step up and deliver consistent displays to keep their spot in the side.
With this in mind, Reo Hatate is one of the players who needs to up his game in the coming weeks to retain his position in the starting line-up moving forward.
Why Reo Hatate needs to improve his performances
The Japan international failed to impress against Kilmarnock after being selected to start alongside Callum McGregor and Benjamin Nygren in the middle of the park.
Hatate is in the team to be a threat at the top end of the pitch by scoring and creating goals, as a dynamic midfielder who is not the type to sit back and defend.
Unfortunately, the 27-year-old star was fairly anonymous at the top end of the pitch throughout his 70 minutes of game time, with no shots on target and no ‘big chances’ created for his team, per Sofascore.
Since his exceptional goal against Aberdeen, shown in the clip above, near the start of August, Hatate has failed to produce a goal or an assist for the Scottish giants in the middle of the park.
His performances across the two legs against Kairat, in which Celtic failed to score a single goal, were particularly disappointing for a player of his quality in midfield.
Reo Hatate vs Kairat
1st leg
2nd leg
Minutes
90
105
Shots on target
1
0
Pass accuracy
84%
68%
Big chances created
0
1
Duels won
0/8
3/15
Fouls committed
3
4
Possession lost
16x
25x
Stats via Sofascore
As you can see in the table above, Hatate did not do enough to help the team offensively or defensively, as he was dominated in duels whilst being incredibly wasteful with the ball at his feet.
It is frustrating to see the Japan international turn in consistently underwhelming performances because he has the quality to do better. Last season, he scored ten goals and created 14 ‘big chances’ for Celtic in 27 starts in the Premiership, per Sofascore.
This shows that he is capable of producing more quality in the final third, which is why Rodgers should expect him to do more if he wants to keep his place in the side.
Thankfully, for Celtic, the Northern Irish head coach has been brewing the club’s next Hatate over the last 13 months or so in the form of Luke McCowan.
Market Movers
Football FanCast’s Market Movers series explores the changing landscape of the modern transfer market. How much is your club’s star player or biggest flop worth today?
The Scottish midfielder was signed from Dundee for a fee of £1m in the summer of 2024 and he has proven himself to be a useful squad member, whose value has soared during his time at Parkhead.
Celtic are brewing their next Reo Hatate
As aforementioned, Hatate is in the Hoops team to deliver quality in the final third by scoring and assisting goals, which is exactly what McCowan was born to do.
The left-footed midfield star has been a bit-part player for the most part throughout his career in Glasgow to date, but his performances when called upon suggest that Rodgers is brewing a talent who could take Hatate’s place as a regular starter.
Per Transfermarkt, McCowan’s value has soared to £2.2m, more than double what the club paid for him. That is higher than new signing Sebastian Tounekti, who is valued at £1m, despite the Tunisia international’s impressive debut with five completed dribbles against Kilmarnock.
The Scottish midfielder has proven his worth by delivering quality performances on the pitch in the Premiership when called upon by the Scottish giants since the start of last season.
His value soaring above Tounekti’s, who is an exciting new signing for the Hoops this season, is a testament to the quality he has shown for the club to date.
McCowan has already scored one goal in one start in the league so far this term for the Hoops, with his strike against St Mirren on the opening day to claim all three points for the team.
The former Dundee star, who was described as “tenacious” by writer Kai Watson, ended the 2024/25 campaign with eight goals and eight assists in 16 starts in the Premiership for Dundee and Celtic combined.
24/25 Premiership
Luke McCowan per 90
Percentile rank vs CMs
xG
0.31
Top 3%
Goals
0.46
Top 4%
Shots on target
1.26
Top 3%
xA
0.40
Top 3%
Assists
0.46
Top 5%
Chances created
2.51
Top 5%
Stats via FotMob
As you can see in the table above, McCowan racked up 0.92 goals and assists per 90 in the top-flight last season, which shows that he consistently delivered when called upon in the final third.
This suggests that he has the potential to overtake Hatate as the starter in that midfield slot, because the Japanese flop has only scored one goal and failed to provide any assists in six starts in all competitions this season, per Sofascore.
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Therefore, Rodgers may be brewing the successor to Hatate’s place in the XI in McCowan, who could become a regular if the Japan international does not improve his performances.
The ongoing Test at Trent Bridge is Zimbabwe’s first in England since 2003
ESPNcricinfo staff23-May-2025
The ongoing Trent Bridge Test is Zimbabwe’s first in England since 2003•AFP/Getty Images
Zimbabwe Cricket (ZC) chairman Tavengwa Mukuhlani has said the team’s ongoing Test against England is a “defining moment” that “underscores the importance of inclusive participation in the game’s most revered format.”The Trent Bridge Test is Zimbabwe’s first Test in England since 2003, and their first international game across formats in the country since 2004. After the four-day Test, Zimbabwe will also play a four-day game against South Africa in Arundel from June 3 to 6.”Zimbabwe’s return to Test cricket in England marks a proud and defining moment – not only for our team but for the global cricket community,” Mukuhlani said in a statement. “It reflects our continued growth as a cricketing nation and underscores the importance of inclusive participation in the game’s most revered format.Related
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“Test cricket remains the ultimate measure of skill, character and endurance. For it to thrive, all Test-playing nations – especially smaller teams like ours – must be afforded meaningful opportunities to compete regularly, including against top-tier opposition.”This match against England is more than just a contest – it is a celebration of Test cricket’s enduring power to inspire, challenge and unite. It reaffirms our conviction that the red-ball game must remain at the heart of cricket’s future, with teams like Zimbabwe playing a full and active role at its core.”After a tough first day, on which England scored 498 for 3 before declaring on 565 for 6 on the second morning, Zimbabwe responded positively with opener Brian Bennett scoring a hundred off 97 balls. It was the fastest Test hundred by a Zimbabwean and he is only their third batter to score one against England.Since making their Test comeback in 2011, Zimbabwe have played 40 matches in 14 years – an average of just under three Tests a year – but they have 11 Tests lined up in 2025.
The tour will take place from mid-February following the WPL which is being moved a new January window
Andrew McGlashan30-Mar-2025India Women will play a day-night Test against Australia at the WACA in Perth next March in what is expected to be the first international at the fully redeveloped venue.The Test, from March 6 to 9, forms part of a tour that also includes three T20Is and three ODIs which begins in mid-February following the WPL. India previously played a day-night Test on the Gold Coast in 2021. The MCG, which hosted the Ashes Test this season, was not an option due to work that is due to be taking place at the ground.Related
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The WACA hosted a Test against South Africa in February 2024, which was a day game, where Australia won by innings and 284 runs with Annabel Sutherland making a double century. The ground has been undergoing extensive building work in recent seasons which is hoped to be completed by next year’s Test.With the WPL moving to a new window in January, Cricket Australia has been forced to adjust when they play their major women’s series which means it now falls outside of the school holiday period although the schedule has been worked to have as many games as possible around weekends.T20Is will again be hosted at major venues with the SCG staging the first game (February 15), Canberra the second (February 19) and Adelaide Oval the third (February 21). The third ODI at Junction Oval in Melbourne on March 1 is planned to be the first day-night international at the venue which is due to have lights installed over the winter although there is currently opposition from local residents to plans.When the India tour starts it will have been more than a year since Australia played at home following this season’s Ashes.The ODI World Cup, which will be staged in India from late September, means there are no early-season internationals. Australia and India are set to meet in a one-day series in India ahead of that tournament.The World Cup, which could finish on November 2, will also have a knock-on effect to the WBBL, the dates for which will be announced later in the year, with that competition starting later than usual and running into early December, very close to the start of the BBL.India A are also due to tour Australia for a second consecutive season, before the senior side, with those fixtures to be confirmed at a later date.Australia Women 2025-26 home schedule vs IndiaFebruary 15: 1st T20I, SCG (N) February 19: 2nd T20I, Canberra (N) February 21: 3rd T20I, Adelaide (N) February 24: 1st ODI, Allan Border Field (D/N) February 27: 2nd ODI, Hobart, (D/N) March 1: 3rd ODI, Junction Oval, (D/N) March 6-9: Test match, WACA, (D/N)
With West Ham United scrambling to welcome the reinforcements they need to avoid the drop, they’ve reportedly been offered the chance to sign a Champions League-level striker.
Potter: "Hurting" West Ham need unity
It was another defeat for West Ham in midweek and arguably their most frustrating yet as they crashed out of the Carabao Cup to Wolverhampton Wanderers. Just when the Hammers looked on course to pick up a much-needed victory, Jorgen Strand Larsen struck twice late on to compile Graham Potter’s misery.
Things reached boiling point at full-time to make matters worse, with captain Jarrod Bowen caught in an ugly confrontation with a disgruntled fan in the aftermath. And whilst he has since apologised, there’s no denying that it summed up just where West Ham find themselves at this current point in time.
Potter also admitted that his side are “hurting” after how they’ve started the season and called for unity, telling reporters: “We’re all in pain so we need everybody to help. We need everybody’s support. We need to push forward and on to the next match.
“The team’s suffering at the moment, we all are, we’re all hurting. I can assure you no-one’s happy. Our supporters have been fantastic. They are hurting because of the results we’ve had and Jarrod obviously cares about the club and the team.
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“It’s just an exchange of views by people who care. Everyone is hurting, rightly so because we haven’t had the results we’d like. Jarrod has been a fantastic captain and servant for the club.”
Those at the London Stadium are in need of a solution and with just three days left of the summer transfer window, reports are suggesting that they’ve been offered exactly that.
West Ham offered Boniface deal
According to GiveMeSport, West Ham have now been offered the chance to sign Victor Boniface from Bayer Leverkusen. The Nigerian striker stole the headlines for all the wrong reasons recently when he failed a medical at AC Milan to end any chance of that move taking place. Now back to square one, the Hammers could swoop in and offer the forward a last-gasp move.
Despite how desperate all parties are for Boniface to get his move away from Bayer Leverkusen, West Ham could still be forced to pay a premium price. Milan’s recent agreement was reportedly a straight loan with an option to buy worth as much as £21m and the German club are unlikely to change that demand.
For a player once described by Xabi Alonso as “powerful” and “quick”, however, West Ham would be wise to at least seal an initial loan move as the transfer window comes to a close.
Aston Villa’s growth under Unai Emery has been one of the Premier League’s standout stories of recent times.
The Spaniard has not only restored European football to Villa Park but also instilled a new sense of ambition.
Yet, Emery and the club’s hierarchy recognise that their squad is still evolving.
This summer has already tested Villa’s ability to balance growth with financial sustainability.
The departure of academy graduate Jacob Ramsey to Newcastle was a painful reality check under PSR rules, while the arrival of striker Evann Guessand from Nice provided depth but not necessarily a guaranteed game-changer.
Adding further quality up front remains a clear priority. Ollie Watkins, who hit 16 league goals last season, is attracting outside interest, but Emery has been unequivocal that his talisman is not for sale.
The challenge now is to find someone who can complement Watkins – offering competition, cover, and potentially a successor if he does move on.
In that search, Villa appear to have identified a striker who not only carries enormous potential but also evokes memories of two very different forwards who left their mark in claret and blue: Jhon Durán and Christian Benteke.
Villa make Nicolas Jackson their top target
Fabrizio Romano has reported that Aston Villa are pushing hard to land Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson, making him Emery’s top attacking target.
Chelsea’s initial valuation of £80m has softened, with Ed Aarons of the Guardian suggesting the Blues are now prepared to accept a fee closer to £65m.
That figure still represents a major investment for Villa, but Emery’s belief in the player appears firm.
The two share history from Villarreal, where Jackson was first introduced to senior football, and their relationship is understood to be strong.
Talks are ongoing over the structure of the deal.
Chelsea’s willingness to negotiate is partly shaped by squad dynamics: Jackson, despite scoring 24 goals and supplying 10 assists in 65 Premier League matches, per Transfermarkt, has slipped down the pecking order behind new arrivals Joao Pedro and Liam Delap.
Villa, however, see untapped potential, but the competition is fierce.
Newcastle, still searching for Alexander Isak’s replacement, and Bayern Munich, searching for a reliable deputy to Harry Kane, are both interested.
For Villa’s recruitment staff, Jackson’s profile is exactly what they have sought: a player who has proven he can deliver in the Premier League but who remains young enough to develop further.
What Nicolas Jackson could bring to Aston Villa
The comparisons with Aston Villa strikers of the past decade tell their own story.
Nicolas Jackson is viewed as a bridge between the youthful rawness of Jhon Durán and the physical dominance once provided by Christian Benteke.
Duran’s time at Villa was brief but explosive.
Just 21 when he left for Al Nassr in a £70m deal in January, the Colombian forward had already scored seven goals in 20 Premier League appearances, per Transfermarkt.
Fans loved his unpredictability: thunderous strikes from distance, fearless runs, and a relentless willingness to shoot.
Jhon Duran
Yet he was still unpolished.
According to FBref, his progressive carries were relatively low (0.99 per 90 compared to Jackson’s 1.90), and his passing accuracy (70.6%) suggested areas for development.
Jackson, at 24, feels like the next step on from Duran.
His numbers highlight a more rounded attacker: 3.08 shots per 90, 2.80 shot-creating actions, and a pass completion rate of nearly 76%. He can still be erratic – disciplinary lapses are proof of that – but he has already combined raw energy with improved efficiency.
In many ways, he offers the qualities Villa wanted from Duran but with the added benefit of two seasons’ experience at Chelsea.
The other reference point is Christian Benteke, whose three-year spell at Villa Park between 2012 and 2015 remains fond in the memory.
Signed for less than £7m from Genk, Benteke bulldozed his way to 49 goals in 101 appearances.
He was Villa’s battering ram: a centre-forward who thrived on crosses, bullied defenders in the air, and carried the team in difficult moments.
Jackson is not a like-for-like Benteke successor.
He does not rely on aerial dominance to the same extent, nor is he tasked with leading a one-dimensional attack as Benteke once was under Paul Lambert. But the essence is there.
At 1.87m, Jackson has the frame to occupy defenders physically, and his 79th percentile ranking for touches in the attacking penalty area (5.72 per 90) shows his knack for positioning himself in dangerous spaces.
Like Benteke in 2012, he is not yet the finished article but has the platform to become a talisman.
What unites Duran, Benteke, and now Jackson is the idea of potential. Duran was raw and thrilling but left too soon. Benteke arrived as an unknown and blossomed into a Premier League goalscorer. Jackson sits between the two: already proven at a high level, but still with room to grow into a player who can define an era at Villa Park.
The financial risk is clear. £65m is a significant outlay for a club already trimming costs elsewhere, and Jackson’s red cards raise questions about temperament.
Chelsea'sNicolasJacksonlooks dejected after AFC Bournemouth's Justin Kluivert score
But Villa know what is at stake.
To cement themselves among the Premier League’s elite, they cannot afford to stand still. And if Jackson fulfils even part of the trajectory Benteke once set, the investment will feel justified.
As scouting analyst Jacek Kulig described, Jackson is an “extraordinary” talent. For Emery, that talent represents more than just goals. It represents continuity – from Duran’s brief spark to Benteke’s dominant reign – and a forward line that can carry Villa into their next chapter.
O São Paulo apresentou nesta sexta-feira (21) Dorival Júnior como o seu novo treinador para o restante da temporada. E entre os assuntos debatidos em sua primeira fala neste retorno ao clube (onde passou entre 2017 e 2018), o novo comandante do clube não poderia deixar de falar sobre Alexandre Pato, que se recupera de contusão no Reffis e negocia um contrato de produtividade para também sacramentar sua volta ao Morumbi. Confira:
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