26.1 C
Lagos
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Home Blog Page 234

La Liga side negotiating with Tottenham for the return of £30m star

0

Villarreal is in direct negotiations with Tottenham to bring Giovani Lo Celso back to Spain.

 

The 26-year-old has been on the transfer list at Spurs for a while and the London club hopes to sort a move for the Argentine this summer in order to bring in some cash and free up space in their squad.

 

Lo Celso spent the second half of last season on loan at Villarreal and was impressed during the spell under Unai Emery. According to Fabrizio Romano, the Argentine is top of the tree on the Villarreal coach’s list of targets but talks are still ongoing, as there are other clubs also interested.

 

That interest is coming from Italy and more specifically, Napoli being one of the interested parties. Area Napoli report that the Naples club have identified Lo Celso as the man they would want to sign if Piotr Zielinski joins West Ham in the coming weeks.

 

Villarreal is in direct negotiations with Tottenham for Gio Lo Celso. He’s still top of the list for Emery but talks are still ongoing, as there are other clubs also interested.

According to Marca Villarreal are interested in a permanent switch for the 26-year-old but if Spurs look to recoup their transfer fee of roughly £30m from back in 2020, it could cause a problem for Unai Emery’s team.

 

That’s where one of the Italian clubs can pounce and take advantage of the La Liga’s sides weak bargaining position.

Chelsea consider transfer swoop for player Erik ten Hag decided against signing for Man United

0

Chelsea is reportedly considering a transfer move for Villarreal defender Pau Torres this summer after appearing to miss out on the signing of Sevilla defender Jules Kounde, who is heading to Barcelona instead.

Torres has shone in his time in La Liga, as well as in major European competitions such as the Champions League and the Europa League, and it would be intriguing to see what he could do in English football.

 

The Spain international is now one of the options being eyed by Chelsea as an alternative to Kounde, according to 90min, with other big names like Milan Skriniar and Dayot Upamecano also mentioned in the report.

 

Manchester United’s recruitment team identified Torres as a good option for the club this summer, only for new Red Devils manager Erik ten Hag to push to sign Lisandro Martinez from Ajax instead, according to a recent report from the Telegraph.

 

 

It would certainly be interesting to see if Torres could come and be a success at Stamford Bridge and get the chance to compare him to Martinez at Man Utd.

 

One imagines MUFC could live to regret not going for the more proven option in defence if Martinez struggles and if Torres were to end up proving ideal to fix Thomas Tuchel’s problems at the back.

 

Kalidou Koulibaly joined CFC this summer, but further additions are surely needed after Antonio Rudiger’s move to Real Madrid and Andreas Christensen’s switch to Barcelona.

Exclusive: When Gianluca Scamacca will be announced by West Ham and what transfers could be next

0

Gianluca Scamacca will sign his contract to become a West Ham player today, says Fabrizio Romano in his latest exclusive column for CaughtOffside.

 

The Hammers are closing in on the Italy international, who is set to have a medical with the club, with an announcement to follow soon afterwards.

 

It’s an exciting move for David Moyes, who is finally landing the prolific striker he needs in his squad, and Romano has updates on other potential West Ham targets as well.

 

The reporter states that West Ham’s move for Scamacca has come as talks over Armando Broja broke down, while the likes of Amadou Onana could be targeted by the east Londoners next.

 

 

 

“Gianluca Scamacca will undergo medical tests and sign as new West Ham player today, then an official statement will follow soon,” Romano explained.

“Another target up front was Armando Broja, but is a deal off for West Ham as things stand, as Chelsea have not accepted the £30m proposal.

 

“I believe that West Ham’s priority now is to focus on Eintracht Frankfurt left-back Filip Kostic and Lille midfielder Amadou Onana, but also other possible targets.”

 

This has the potential to be a very exciting summer for West Ham, who have made great strides in Moyes’ second spell in charge of the club.

 

Scamacca looks a particularly promising purchase after his prolific form with Sassuolo in Serie A, and that fresh goal threat could really take WHUFC to the next level as it’s really the only thing they’ve lacked in the last couple of years.

Transfer News 25/7/2022

0

Bayern Munich sign Mathys Tel from Rennes

Mathys Tel flew to Germany on Monday to complete the deal with Bayern Munich. The player underwent his medical and he’s now set to be announced by his new club as a new signing. The striker, born in 2005, will move to Bayern for €20 million, with €8.5 million of potential add-ons. Tel will sign a five-year deal until 2027.

 

 

Barcelona and Chelsea fighting for Kounde

 

Barcelona and Chelsea are again dueling for the same target. After the Spanish club won the race to sign Brazilian winger Raphinha from Leeds United earlier this month, the two clubs are at it again over Jules Kounde. Barcelona have received indications from Kounde’s camp that the player would be prepared to accept the personal terms Barcelona proposed and Xavi himself personally called the player. Chelsea still don’t have final agreements with either the player or Sevilla in place.

 

Napoli are close to signing Simeone

 

Napoli are still working to sign a back-up for Victor Osimhen, with current backup Andrea Petagna in talks to become a new AC Monza player. Talks are on with Hellas Verona for the transfer of Argentinian striker Giovanni Simeone, report Calcio Mercato. This will be a crucial week for the possible move after the player expressed his desire to move to Napoli.

 

Salernitana want to sign Dries Mertens

Over the weekend Napoli have officially announced that club legend Dries Mertens won’t extend his contract with the club and will leave Napoli after eight years. The club and the player didn’t find an agreement to extend his deal for a further season despite the fact he wanted to be there. Now Mertens is looking around for some options, including Lazio and Salernitana that would be interested to keep Mertens in the same league where he performed so well over the past decade.

 

Rennes are in talks for Theate

 

Rennes have submitted a proposal to Bologna to sign Belgian center-back Arthur Theate, as Sky Italia reported. Talks are ongoing to reach an agreement after missing out on both Kim Min-Jae and Morato. The Korean defender he’s now set to become a new Napoli player after that the Italian side won the race last week.

 

Chelsea ‘trying to hijack’ PSG transfer at 11th hour with Timo Werner swap deal proposed

CHELSEA could react swiftly if their move for Jules Kounde is successfully hijacked by Barcelona.

Chelsea are reportedly trying to hijack Paris Saint-Germain’s move for Nordi Mukiele, despite the French side already agreeing a £13million fee with RB Leipzig. The Blues have seemingly been forced into swift action with their Jules Kounde pursuit hanging in the balance, and offering Timo Werner back to the German side could make the difference.

 

Much of Chelsea’s summer has been spent chasing centre-back recruits after losing Antonio Rudiger and Andreas Christensen at the end of June. Kalidou Koulibaly’s arrival from Napoli was an impressive statement, and they wasted no time in moving onto Sevilla defender Kounde.

 

Despite agreeing a £55million fee for the Frenchman, Barcelona told him to sit tight and, after activating a financial ‘lever’ last week, they are reportedly on the verge of hijacking the deal. Kounde sparked concerns that his move to Stamford Bridge could be off when he rejoined Sevilla’s pre-season tour on Thursday.

 

 

Hedging their bets, Chelsea are now plotting an audacious move to hijack Mukiel”s switch to PSG. Footmercato claim that the Blues want to include Werner in a swap deal, which would see the German return to his former club.

 

Whichever way the move turns out, it is likely to be concluded quickly with PSG hopeful that the 24-year-old can join up with their squad by Wednesday. A £13m fee had already been agreed with RB Leipzig, and Mukiele was poised to undergo a medical before signing his contract in Paris.

Transfer news, rumors: PSG to complete Mukiele deal, Tel to Bayern Munich, Mertens leaves Napoli, more

0

What’s better than a cup of coffee and the latest transfer news? Join in as CBS Sports provides the latest updates from around the world and what they mean to your favorite teams. Paris Saint Germain are close to completing a move for Nordi Mukiele deal with RB Leipzig, while Mathys Tel will be announced as a new Bayern Munich as soon as Monday. Chelsea and Barcelona are fighting for Jules Koundé and Napoli are eyeing Giovanni Simeone as a new striker, while Dries Mertens has officially left the club. Let’s get to latest:

In the six-yard box
The biggest transfer stories of the day. These are the deals that are happening, or at least on the verge of getting done.

 

PSG to complete the Mukiele deal
Paris Saint-Germain has agreed to a deal in principle with RB Leipzig for the transfer of Mukiele. The French right-back will move to France in the coming week, and the two sides are now working to complete the deal in the shortest time possible. PSG will pay almost €12 million guaranteed, plus add-ons up to a total of potentially €16 million and the player will sign a five-year deal until 2027. He’s expected to fly to Paris in the next few days before the end of the current week.

WWE Announces New Head Of Creative

0

There’s a new head of WWE creative in town and the game could have just changed for pro wrestling.

 

WWE revealed today that Paul Levesque (fka Triple H) will be in charge of all responsibilities when it comes to WWE’s creative process. With Vince McMahon announcing his retirement from all of his WWE duties, Triple H was named the replacement for John Laurinaitis as the head of talent relations, and according to WWE, he’s now in charge of creative, as well.

 

The full announcement, which also reveals that Stephanie McMahon is the new Chairwoman of the Board, can be read below:
Vince McMahon suddenly announced his retirement Friday evening before “WWE SmackDown” took place, and Stephanie McMahon kicked off the show to send a “thank you” to her father.

Vince’s retirement amidst a storm of allegations that he handed out more than $12 million in hush money to female employees regarding sexual misconduct over the course of the last 16 years, allegations that led to an internal investigation by the WWE board and numerous external investigations regarding WWE’s handling of the situation. Laurinaitis, who was allegedly also involved in the sexual misconduct allegations, was put on administrative leave last month and is not expected to return to the company.

McLaughlin anchors 4x400m as US team gets another gold in Oregon

0

After Sydney McLaughlin’s sizzling 50.68 to win the women’s 400m hurdles, the question on everyone’s minds was: What could she do in a flat 400m?

 

McLaughlin answered on Sunday (24) during the final track event of the World Athletics Championships Oregon22 with an impressive 47.91 anchor leg to deliver the women’s 4×400 gold medal to the US.

 

The split was one of the fastest in history as the US team won their 10th gold medal in the event with a world-leading time of 3:17.79, eighth-fastest on the world all-time list and the quickest on US soil.

 

McLaughlin got the baton with a 0.73 lead and stretched it into a 2.95 cushion, finishing so far ahead that camera shots couldn’t include the other runners in the frame. McLaughlin’s split was the fastest since Allyson Felix ran 47.72 in 2015.

 

Jamaica placed second in a season’s best 3:20.74 and Great Britain was third in 3:22.64, also a season’s best.

 

By running in the first round, Felix increased her World Championships medal haul to a record 20 medals — 14 gold, three silver and three bronze. Six gold medals and a bronze have come from the 4x400m. Felix had hung up her spikes after winning bronze in the mixed 4x400m, which was thought to be the last track race of her career, and was already home when she got the call to run the women’s relay. Felix didn’t hesitate to book a ticket back to Eugene.

 

While McLaughlin is used to running alone by now, she appreciates being part of a team. “Team USA is really like a family,” she said. “Allyson came out of retirement to get us here, so we wanted to do this.”

 

At the age of 22, McLaughlin is one of the youngest members of the US team, yet she was the oldest on the relay and a veteran from gold-medal-winning squads in 2019 and the Tokyo Olympics.

 

Dalilah Muhammad, 32, was initially on the start list, but suffered an injury in warm-up and was replaced by Abby Steiner. Steiner, who is about three months younger than McLaughlin, became the first athlete to win gold medals in the 4x100m and 4x400m since Felix in 2017. It was her 57th race of the season.

 

The lead-off runner was 19-year-old Talitha Diggs, the national champion in the 400m and daughter of four-time Olympian Joetta Clark. Diggs is also the niece of Jearl Miles Clark, who won three gold medals on the 4x400m at the World Championships. With Steiner running the second leg, 21-year-old Britton Wilson, another 400m hurdler, was tapped for the third.

 

“It was unreal,” McLaughlin said. “We had such a young team. All these girls are from teams out of college. It was put together at the last minute and to see them all come together after such a long collegiate season, I am so grateful to be part of it.”

 

McLaughlin said there was no better way to end the World Championships for the US, which won 33 medals, the most in history, including 13 gold medals.

 

“I am so proud,” McLaughlin said. “This is the next generation of Team USA stepping up to the plate. We have to continue pushing the boundaries of what we can do. I am grateful for this opportunity. I have become comfortable and we have a bright future ahead of us.”

 

The US team claimed their third straight victory in the event and have won seven of the last eight.

 

“Everyone did their part, as it was phenomenal,” Diggs said. “Three of us are collegiate runners, so I am done for the season.”

 

Diggs, the NCAA champion from Florida, opened with a 50.50 split, to give the US a 0.09 lead over Great Britain’s Victoria Ohuruogu, younger sister of Christine, the Olympic and world champion. Steiner, who posted a 48.88 split to help Kentucky move from fourth to first at the NCAA Championships, ran 49.99 to extend the lead to 0.17 over Jamaica, which had moved into second. Britton Wilson, who had a 49.56 split for Arkansas in the NCAAs, bettered that with a time of 49.39 to open up a sizable gap.

 

And then McLaughlin grabbed the baton.

 

“The crowd was insane,” Wilson said.

 

The other runners to break 50 seconds were Jamaica’s Janieve Russell on the second leg (49.90) and Stephenie Ann McPherson running third (49.95).

 

“It was an exciting finish and I expected it,” Russell said.

 

Jamaica won the 10th medal at the World Championships and Great Britain won a ninth, returning to the podium after a fourth-place finish in 2019 snapped a streak of seven straight medals.

 

British anchor leg Laviai Nielsen said the rest of her team set out the relay very well. “I could not think to lose the position they worked so hard for,” she said. “So I just had to maintain my position and when I saw Jamaica in front of us, I was like: ‘Maybe it is possible to chase them,’ but it was just too big a gap.”

Record number of countries win gold at World Athletics Championships Oregon22

0

The World Athletics Championships Oregon22 have provided ideal conditions for the best track and field athletes in the world to shine on a global stage, with exhilarating and record-breaking performances by both individual athletes and national teams.

 

More than 1700 athletes from 179 countries (plus the Athlete Refugee Team) have competed in Oregon, watched by almost 150,000 ticketed spectators, and producing three world records.

 

In terms of performance, this will go down as the most universal edition in the history of the global event.

 

The record for the number of countries winning gold medals at one championships has been broken, with 29 countries taking turns on the top step of the podium, compared with 26 in 2017.

 

More countries than ever before have had athletes reach the finals of events in Oregon. The list of 81 countries is up from 76 countries in Doha in 2019, with Liberia, Niger, Pakistan, Samoa, Philippines and Guatemala reaching a final for the first time in World Championships history.

 

Underlying the diversity and global reach of track and field, every continental area features at least two world champions, while Peru, Kazakhstan and Nigeria won their first ever gold medals, and India and Burkina Faso also had their best ever medal performances (silver).

 

The USA team broke the record for the most medals at a single championships, earning 33 in total, 13 of them gold.

 

That tally was strengthened by medal sweeps in the men’s 100m, 200m and shot put. Jamaica, meanwhile, achieved a medal sweep of its own, taking all three medals in the women’s 100m.

 

Peru’s Kimberly Garcia has been the top individual performer of the championships, landing double gold in the women’s race walks. Had she been entered as a separate team, she would place seventh on the medals table.

 

Beyond the dominant performers, there have also been many close finishes and competitive finals. Just two hundredths of a second separated the medalists in the men’s 100m. The women’s 10,000m also produced a close and thrilling finish, and the men’s shot put once again provided an exciting crescendo. Even the men’s 35km race walk went down to the wire, with just one second separating gold from silver.

 

“Tonight we had a spectacular ending to a ground-breaking championships – with two world records and stunning racing in a passionate sold-out stadium to add the final flourish to the first world outdoor championships held in the USA,” said World Athletics President Sebastian Coe. “We have had more countries win gold than ever before and more countries reach finals than ever before. This wouldn’t have been possible without the hard work of our Local Organizing Committee, the commitment of the state of Oregon and the local authorities, and the dedication of our Member Federations, officials and volunteers. I thank them all for making this an unforgettable world championships, but most of all I thank the athletes, who have once again put on the greatest show on earth.”

 

Other performance milestones achieved in Oregon include:

 

  • world records from Sydney McLaughlin in the 400m hurdles (50.68), Tobi Amusan in the 100m hurdles (12.12) and Mondo Duplantis in the pole vault (6.21m)
  • 13 championship records and 30 world-leading performances
  • 3 world records, 19 area records, 92 national records, 1 world U20 record
  • The fastest ever marathons at a major championships
  • The first time that three women have broken nine minutes for the 3000m steeplechase
  • Allyson Felix extended her record medal total to 20 after gold in the women’s 4x400m and bronze in the mixed 4x400m

 

Broadcast and social media

Our US broadcast partner NBC reports that this championship has already reached more viewers (13.7 million) than any previous World Athletics Championships with three days of ratings still to be reported (Friday-Sunday).

 

Coverage on the NBC broadcast network for the first weekend (average of 2.0 million viewers) ranked as the most-watched World Athletics Championships since Osaka 2007 and represented a 159% gain compared to NBC’s coverage of the 2019 edition. These numbers are expected to be even more impressive when the final three days of competition are reported early this week.

 

The World Championships has also spurred substantial growth and interaction across World Athletics’ social media platforms, attracting 400 thousand new followers, more than seven million engagements and more than 41 million video views, bringing the total following for our official social channels to more than 9.1 million across five platforms.

 

Legacy

World Athletics and parkrun have combined to help the Eugene and Springfield communities in Oregon open parkrun events, as a legacy of the World Athletics Championships Oregon22.With one existing parkrun event already in Oregon, this will increase the number of opportunities for citizens and visitors of the state to be active and social in the great outdoors.

 

The first event from this collaboration is planned to launch in the coming months, paving the way for many more across the state and beyond.

 

There are currently 53 parkrun locations in the United States. More than seven million people have participated

Carl Lewis Rages From His Couch Over U.S. Relay ‘Clown Show’ as Sprinters Bungle Yet Another Tokyo Event

0

The nine-time Olympic champ and supreme anchorman—watching from home—has publicly flipped out as four more of the fastest men in the world just blew it again for Team USA.

 

Carl Lewis called it a “clown show.” Michael Johnson said it was “embarrassing and ridiculous.” And they were right.

 

The U.S. men’s 4 x 100 relay team failed even to qualify for the final at the Tokyo Games on Thursday after trailing in a distant sixth in their heat. The result means that, in an event they once dominated, Team USA has not even medalled in five consecutive Olympics.

 

Ostensibly, the team’s failure was blamed on a bungled baton exchange between Fred Kerley and Ronnie Baker at the second to third leg handoff, with Baker needing three attempts to grab the baton, but the truth is the team never really looked much of a threat. The first leg was run by Trayvon Bromell, who arrived in Tokyo as the fastest man in the world but failed even to qualify for the 100m final. After a disappointing display on Thursday, he admitted: “I didn’t do my job.”

 

Watching the race from his home in Houston was Carl Lewis, whose nine Olympic gold medals include two from the relay. Lewis, now 60, anchored the American team as they set world records at both the Los Angeles Games in 1984 and in Barcelona eight years later.

 

Never one to mince his words, America’s greatest Olympian took to Twitter after the race: “The USA team did everything wrong in the men’s relay. The passing system is wrong, athletes running the wrong legs, and it was clear that there was no leadership.

 

“It was a total embarrassment, and completely unacceptable for a USA team to look worse than the AAU kids I saw.”

 

In a subsequent interview with USA Today, Lewis picked apart the performance. He asked why, for example, Baker, a straight-line 100m specialist, had been asked to run the third leg, around the bend. “I’ve never seen Ronnie Baker run a turn in my life,” he said. “Go back and watch the third leg. Look at him. He looks like he’s running on ice because he’s never run a turn.”

 

“It’s totally avoidable,” he added. “And America is sitting there rooting for the United States and then they have this clown show. I can’t take it anymore… It is not hard to do the relay.”

 

“This was a football coach taking a team to the Super Bowl and losing 99-0 because they were completely ill-prepared.”

 

It’s easy, of course, to talk about some sort of U.S. relay “curse.” The American men last claimed the 4 x 100 title at the 2000 Sydney Games, anchored by Maurice Greene. The closest they have come since then was a second-place finish to Usain Bolt’s Jamaican quartet in 2012, only to have to return their silver medals after Tyson Gay failed a drugs test.

 

But it’s clear that the runners were pretty much all in the wrong slots in Tokyo. Apart from Baker being asked to run the turn, Bromell had not run the opening leg of a relay since 2015. Kerley had never run No. 2 at a major championship—and as the fastest American in the 100m in Tokyo, he should have been anchoring the team.

 

Talking to reporters in the mixed zone after the race, Baker admitted the team had “not much” practice in the run-up. Cravon Gillespie, who was asked to anchor the team despite not even qualifying for the 100m in Tokyo, told NBC Sports the team didn’t even get together until two days ago. “We definitely have to get more practice in,” he said.

 

It was that lack of preparation that irked another great American runner, the four-time Olympic champion Michael Johnson, who tweeted: “This isn’t rocket science.”

 

“Trying to get two people running full speed to exchange a baton within a 20-meter zone requires practice! Especially when you haven’t won this event since Sydney 2000 due to drops and zone violations! Embarrassing and ridiculous.”

 

The relay quartet should not take all the blame after what is looking like a disastrous Game on the track for Team USA. There were upsets in the 100 and 200 finals and, on Thursday, in the 110m hurdles, where the hot favourite Grant Holloway, who seemed to begin his gold-medal celebration before the race was run, was beaten to the line by Hansle Parchment of Jamaica.

 

And in the later 400m final, another event traditionally dominated by American runners—including Johnson—Team USA once again finished outside the medals as the elegant Bahamian Steven Gardiner cruised to victory.

 

This could end up being the first Olympic Games the United States has ever competed in with no American man bringing home a gold from the track.

U.S. Sprint Legend ‘Accused of Racism’ After Questioning Nigerian World Record

0

‘UNACCEPTABLE’

 

“Just because it’s not an American WR doesn’t mean the times were incorrect,” one critic tweeted.

 

Four-time Olympic gold medallist Michael Johnson says he was “accused of racism” after publicly questioning the accuracy of times recorded at the World Athletics Championships in Oregon.

 

Nigerian athlete Tobi Amusan looked visibly stunned when she saw her winning time of 12.12 seconds in the 100m hurdles semi-final on Sunday. Her run at Hayward Field had obliterated the existing world record—set by American Kendra Harrison in 2016—by 0.08 seconds. World Athletics awarded her a $100,000 prize for breaking the record.

 

But in his analysis for the BBC, sprint legend Johnson questioned the accuracy of the timings in the event. He highlighted the fact that out of the 24 athletes who had competed in the three semi-final events, 12 recorded new personal bests. The recorded level of competition was so high that a time of 12.52 meant competitors wouldn’t even make the final, despite it being a time that would have won the world title at six previous world championships.

 

Amusan went on to win the final with an even faster time of 12.06, but it did not count as an official world record due to a +2.5m/s tailwind blowing during the event. What made Amusan’s runs even more astounding was her unusual choice of footwear: She was spotted wearing Adizero Avanti Tyo Tinman Elite shoes designed for distance running rather than sprinting. The spiked cleats have a soft sole containing a high-tech layer of carbon rods and foam, which led some to wonder if the super shoes—which Amusan said she wore after suffering tendonitis in the arch of her foot—had given her an unfair advantage.

 

“I don’t believe 100h times are correct,” Johnson tweeted after the event. “World record broken by .08! 12 PBs set. 5 National records set. And Cindy Sember quote after her PB/NR ‘I thoroughly I was running slow!’ All athletes looked shocked,” he added.

 

Some social media users criticized Johnson, labeling the American athlete “bitter.” One tweeted: “Just because it’s not an American WR doesn’t mean the times were incorrect.” Another fumed: “Michael Johnson are you naturally this dumb or do you have to put in effort? Why don’t you channel your energy to recovering from your stroke you Black racist! Toby Amusan is a world record holder and there’s nothing you can do about that.”

 

Johnson later addressed the backlash, tweeting: “In questioning the times of 28 athletes (not 1 athlete) by wondering if the timing system malfunctioned, I was attacked, accused of racism, and of questioning the talent of an athlete I respect and predicted to win. Unacceptable. I move on.”