Big upgrade on Ugarte: Man Utd want to sign £20m "machine" before Cunha

Manchester United have wasted no time in the transfer market to aid Ruben Amorim in being a success at Old Trafford, already making a move to sign one player.

Matheus Cunha has been a player constantly linked with a switch to join the Red Devils over recent months, with a deal seemingly edging ever closer ahead of the final game of the Premier League campaign.

It’s been widely reported that the club have been in advanced talks with Wolves over a deal for the Brazilian international ahead of the summer despite the failure to win the Europa League.

Wolverhampton Wanderers' MatheusCunhacelebrates after Rodrigo Gomes scores

The 25-year-old has a £62.5m release clause within his current contract, but that doesn’t appear to be an issue after agreeing a deal to pay such a figure out in multiple instalments.

However, despite the movement with a deal for Cunha, it appears as though one deal could be completed before him, with another deal edging closer to completion.

The latest on United’s hunt for new additions this summer

After such a dismal year in the Premier League throughout 2024/25, new additions are to be expected at United to try and right the wrongs of the current campaign.

The likes of Ronald Araujo, Ederson and Viktor Gyokeres have all been strongly linked already ahead of the off-season, as the hierarchy look to bolster various areas of the pitch.

However, despite the interest in the aforementioned players, Palmeiras star Richard Rios could be the first summer signing, according to one Spanish outlet.

Their report claims that he’s seen as a key part of the revival at Old Trafford, and could be available for a fee in the region of just £20m – an absolute bargain.

It also claims that, despite the move for Cunha, the 24-year-old could be set to be the first addition to the new project led by Amorim to lead the club back to their former glory.

Why Rios would be an upgrade on Ugarte

Midfielder Manuel Ugarte was seen as a huge signing last summer after joining in a £50m deal from PSG, looking to be a key part of the rebuild conducted by former boss Erik ten Hag.

The Uruguayan has started 22 league games to date, often having a stop-start period in the North West and being unable to string up a real run of games over the last few months.

He was benched for the Europa League final defeat against Spurs on Wednesday night, not even being brought on by Amorim – potentially highlighting his form of late in the first-team.

It remains to be seen if he will be part of the manager’s long-term plans at the club, but a deal for Rios could further limit his game time and offer Amorim a quality option in the middle of the park.

The Colombian, who’s been labelled a “machine” by analyst Ben Mattinson, has managed to match or better him in numerous key areas this campaign – highlighting why his £20m fee would be a bargain.

Rios has registered more goals and assists throughout 2024/25, handing the side an added attacking option from a deep-lying role, something which is needed given their lack of threat this season.

He’s also managed to complete more of the passes he’s attempted, registering more key passes per 90 – handing the players ahead of him the chance to bolster their own tallies.

Games played

27

29

Goals & assists

6

3

Progressive carries

1.1

0.8

Progressive passes

2.5

3

Pass accuracy

91%

89%

Key passes

1.1

0.5

Blocks made

2.2

1.6

Interceptions made

1.4

1.3

The 24-year-old’s talent out of possession is just as impressive, making more blocks and interceptions per 90, offering the added defensive presence they need, given their lowly league standing.

£20m in today’s market is a bargain price, especially for a player of Rios’ quality, with his skillset certainly bolstering the options currently at Amorim’s disposal.

As seen by the stats produced in recent times, he’s managed to better Ugarte in such a role, possibly being a key player in their ambitions of pushing back up the league table in 2025/26.

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He'd be amazing with Osimhen: Man Utd in advanced talks to sign PL star

Manchester United are in desperate need of added reinforcements in attacking areas this summer to give themselves the best possible chance of returning to the heights they’ve previously achieved.

The Red Devils still occupy a place in the bottom half of the Premier League with just a couple of games remaining, highlighting how disappointing they’ve been throughout 2024/25.

Ruben Amorim has brought the feel-good factor back to Old Trafford, but their tally of just 42 goals in 35 matches showcases how disappointing they’ve been in the forward areas.

Manchester United manager RubenAmorimbefore the match

Rasmus Hojlund and Joshua Zirkzee have been the two senior options at his disposal, but have only registered seven combined league goals and contributing to their lack of form in the final third.

As a result, it will be no surprise to see the club delve into the market to try and improve the situation, with work already being done behind the scenes ahead of the summer.

The latest on United’s hunt for new forwards this summer

Countless names have already been thrown into the mix for the striker position over the last few weeks, with Viktor Gyokeres, Liam Delap and Hugo Ekitiké all being mentioned with a switch to join United.

Delap, in particular, was seen as their number one option ahead of the window, with his £30m relegation release clause potentially seen as somewhat of a bargain.

Ipswich Town'sLiamDelapapplauds fans after the match

However, Wolves star Matheus Cunha appears to be the most likely forward to make the move to Old Trafford this summer, that’s if Fabrizio Romano’s latest update is to be believed.

He stated that the Red Devils are leading the race for the 25-year-old’s signature this summer, with talks already at an advanced stage – as personal terms should now be a formality.

The reliable journalist also claimed that the hierarchy have no issues with paying his £62.5m release clause, with a move edging closer to completion.

Why United’s target would be amazing alongside Osimhen

Nigerian striker Victor Osimhen has been another name widely linked with a switch to join United in the summer, handing Amorim the ammunition he needs.

Galatasaray's VictorOsimhenreacts

The 26-year-old is currently spending the year on loan at Galatasaray from Italian side Napoli, enjoying an excellent spell in front of goal – netting 33 goals in 37 games.

Such a record would be hugely welcomed by the Red Devils manager if he completed the move, forming a superb partnership with Cunha in the final third.

The Brazilian would be signed to operate in a number 10 position behind the striker, with his stats from 2024/25 certainly aiding Osimhen’s quest for goals in the Premier League.

He’s managed to register 2.0 chances created per 90, along with 2.15 successful dribbles per 90, evidently aiming to get the ball forward at any given opportunity – subsequently aiding Osimhen in the process.

Wolverhampton Wanderers' MatheusCunhareacts

The Brazilian’s figures within attacking areas are simply remarkable, with his skillset handing himself and the Nigerian the best chance to help United’s frontline.

Cunha, who’s been labelled “phenomenal” by journalist Eduardo Hagn, has registered 3.6 shots per 90 – also having the tools to find the back of the net given his tally of 15 Premier League goals to date.

He has also won 6.4 duels per 90 this campaign, making 4.6 recoveries per 90 – fitting perfectly into Amorim’s system at Old Trafford by working tirelessly in and out of possession.

It would be a huge investment to bring the pair to the Theatre of Dreams this summer, but their talents are there for all to see based on the figures they’ve produced in recent months.

Games played

31

Goals & assists

21

Shots taken

3.67

Pass accuracy

79.3%

Duels won

6.4

Recoveries made

4.6

Chances created

2.0

Successful dribbles

2.15

If they could land both players, it would create a deadly partnership at Old Trafford, with the aforementioned duo having the chance to make themselves heroes as they aim to play a key role in their revival.

He'd be unplayable with Amad: Man Utd make £42m talisman their top target

Manchester United have wasted no time in targeting reinforcements for Ruben Amorim’s side.

ByEthan Lamb May 10, 2025

Stats – All the records Gill broke during his historic 269

Shubman made the highest score by an India captain in Tests, as well as the highest by an India batter outside Asia

Sampath Bandarupalli03-Jul-2025

Shubman Gill now has the highest Test score by an India batter in England•Getty Images

269 – Shubman Gill’s score in the second Test against England at Edgbaston, the highest by an India captain in Tests, surpassing Virat Kohli’s unbeaten 254 against South Africa in Pune in 2019.Gill’s 269 is also the highest by an India batter in Tests outside Asia. Sachin Tendulkar’s 241 not out at the SCG in 2004 was the previous highest.It is also the third-highest score by an India batter in away Tests, behind Virender Sehwag’s 309 in Multan and Rahul Dravid’s 270 in Rawalpindi on the tour of Pakistan in 2004.Only two Indians had scored double-hundreds in men’s Tests in England before him – 221 by Sunil Gavaskar in 1979 and 217 by Rahul Dravid in 2002, both at The Oval.Overall, Gill’s 269 is the seventh-highest score for India in Tests.ESPNcricinfo Ltd93.28 – Gill’s control percentage during his 269 at Edgbaston. According to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball logs, only two batters have had a higher control percentage while scoring a hundred in men’s Tests in England since 2006 – 96.45 % by Ian Bell during his 119* against Sri Lanka in 2011, and 94.6 % by Jamie Smith during his 111 against Sri Lanka last year.Related

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Gill walks Kohli's path in flawless display of batting

India's quicks cause damage after Gill's epic 269

2 – Visiting batters with double-hundreds at Edgbaston in Tests before Gill. Graeme Smith scored 277 in 2003, while Zaheer Abbas scored 274 in 1971. Gill’s 269 is the eighth-highest score by a visiting batter in Tests in England.7 – Number of batters, including Gill, with hundreds in their first two Tests as captain. Three of the previous six were Indians – Vijay Hazare, Sunil Gavaskar and Virat Kohli. Jackie McGlew, Alastair Cook and Steven Smith are the others.5 – Batters with double-hundreds in both Tests and ODIs. Gill joins a list dominated by Indians – Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag, Rohit Sharma and Chris Gayle.4 – Scores higher than Gill’s 269 after being put into bat by the opposition. It is the highest for India.376 – Runs India scored after the fall of Nitish Kumar Reddy at Edgbaston – the most they have added for the last five wickets in a Test innings.3 – Number of 200-plus partnerships involving Ravindra Jadeja for the sixth (or lower) wicket in Tests. Only Adam Gilchrist (six), BJ Watling (five) and MS Dhoni (four) have been part of more such stands. Two of Jadeja’s three such stands have come at Edgbaston.7 – Yashasvi Jaiswal has a 50-plus score in each of his seven Tests against England. Viv Richards and Mark Taylor also had a 50-plus score in each of their first seven Tests against England.

Trent Boult: 'It felt bizarre to have a Test on down the road and not play in it'

The New Zealand and Rajasthan Royals seamer talks about the club vs country debate, getting Kohli out first ball, and looks ahead to the World Cup

Matt Roller10-May-2023Trent Boult jumps out of the pool, grabs a towel and his Phoenix Suns basketball jersey, and wanders over to perch on a deckchair next to me. Behind him, his wife, Gert, and their three young sons are relaxing in the early-afternoon sunshine in Jaipur.It is the sort of scene that Boult pictured last year, when he requested a release from his national contract with New Zealand Cricket (NZC). There would not have been anything stopping him bringing his family to India as a contracted player, but after a decade as an all-format international cricketer, Boult decided it was time to take ownership of his own schedule.Related

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Trent Boult hoping he's not done with Test cricket just yet

“Flicking through the camera roll on my phone, it’s a good feeling, to be honest,” Boult says, reflecting on nine months as a freelancer. “When I made that decision, it was [for] two reasons. One, to get to spend more time with my kids and be around the house; and then two, to get the chance to play in some leagues and play a bit of cricket around the world.”Since September 2022, Boult has played a dozen games for New Zealand across formats, five of them at the T20 World Cup in Australia. He has missed home series against India, England and Sri Lanka, and tours to India and Pakistan, instead playing in the Big Bash, for Melbourne Stars, and the ILT20, for MI Emirates, and, after a two-month break, in the IPL for Rajasthan Royals.”My boys had the chance to come to Dubai. They came to the Big Bash for Christmas – I’ve always wanted to bring them to India and I’ve had the chance to do that with Rajasthan [Royals] as well,” he says. “It’s been cool. It’s freed up a lot of time to spend with them.”But it has also put his international career on pause. NZC made clear to Boult that his decision would mean other players – contracted players – were prioritised in selection, and while he retains ambitions in all formats of the game, he has not played a Test match in nearly a year.In February the unavailability of Kyle Jamieson and Matt Henry left New Zealand scrambling for replacements ahead of the first Test against England in Mount Maunganui. Boult, who lives a short distance from Bay Oval, was the obvious replacement; instead Blair Tickner and Scott Kuggeleijn were drafted in for Test debuts.Boult turning down a central contract means that he has potentially shut the door on his Test career•Getty Images”It felt bizarre,” he reflects. “It really did. I was hoping that I would get a call-up… Test match cricket was on, a couple of kilometres down the road, and I wasn’t part of it. I’ve played nearly 80 Tests and had some pretty great times in the black cap, but they said that if I chose to move away from that contract, my time in it would be limited.”And I’m pretty sure they’ve never had anyone play Test cricket that isn’t contracted – so that probably makes it hard as well. But hey, I made that decision. I’m happy with where I’m at, and I’ve been lucky to experience some cool times over the last couple of months.”It invites an obvious question: has Boult played his last Test match? “Hopefully not, no,” he says. “There are some big Tests coming up next year: Australia and South Africa are due to travel to New Zealand. And Test cricket is still my favourite format.”It is what it is: I’ve made my decision. I’ve been lucky enough to have a 13-year career in the black cap, and hey, I’ve still got a big desire to play in the World Cup as well. We’ll see how that unfolds: there’s still a bit of movement in the landscape at the moment.”Boult has played in five World Cups across formats and has three runners-up medals to show for his efforts. “We’ve been agonisingly close to lifting some pretty prestigious silverware,” he says. “I remember after the 2019 final, I said to Kane [Williamson] that we’ve got to be there again, come 2023 in India.”It’s a shame with what’s going on with his knee but he’ll be working as hard as he can to try and get there. It’s snuck up on us, really: it’s only a few months away. It’s such a great tournament. One hundred percent I’ve got that desire to be out there.”We’re a great one-day side. We’ve got some players that have travelled to India and experienced the conditions a lot, and that’s what it comes down to in World Cups. You can’t buy experience, and you can’t replace players that have toured for however many years across these conditions.”Boult has 64 wickets across five World Cups in both white-ball formats•Getty ImagesIf it seems unjust that Boult wishes to pick and choose which series he does and doesn’t play, consider this: New Zealand’s men played 46 games of international cricket last year, their largest number in a calendar year. In 2023 they have already played 29 and will break that record comfortably.”I’m trying to cast myself back to eight or nine years ago, when tours seemed to be a month long,” he says. “You’d play a couple of Tests and three one-dayers, and that was about it. And I can’t remember the last tour I went on that was under almost eight weeks, really. They’re too long.”And if you play all formats, there were years there where I was at home for probably three or four weeks. I was away on the road both touring in New Zealand and internationally for ten months a year. Doing that while raising a family, getting married – all the things that normal people do – just makes it a bit more challenging.”The sport has changed over the last 12 months, with the launch of new leagues in the UAE, South Africa and the United States – all of them featuring several teams backed by IPL franchises – disrupting the status quo. Some players have started to discuss year-round contracts with franchises; international cricket’s supremacy is being threatened.”It’s an interesting time for both franchise and international cricket, I reckon,” Boult says. “The leagues – there’s a lot of movement happening in that space, but the golden question is what it’s going to look like in a couple of years. International cricket, I think, is going to suffer in some aspects.”The worry for the younger cricketer is simply the choice of chasing money and playing less cricket for more money, basically. First of all, you have to be a good enough player to be able to be selected to play in multiple franchise tournaments; and you have to be a pretty good cricketer to have a ten-year international career.”There’s a place for both of them to exist. You need to have an international presence and ability to be able to come and play in an IPL and be able to deliver. And you’re only a couple of bad performances away from being pushed out of a franchise as well, so you’ve got to be careful.””You’ve only got to get one ball to swing, then you’re in the batter’s head”•AFP/Getty ImagesNot that Boult is likely to be “pushed out” by Rajasthan Royals anytime soon. In the long term, it would be no great surprise if he agreed a deal to play for their teams in the Caribbean and South Africa too. “I can’t really make those decisions until they are put in front of me, I suppose,” he says.Since Royals signed him ahead of the 2022 season, Boult has led their seam contingent, opening the bowling and being given a clear role: to attack with the new ball, and strike early. He has taken 11 wickets in the first over of an innings in the last two IPLs; the next most by a single bowler is five.”As soon as I start thinking about it, I don’t get any wickets,” he says with a grin.”What I’ve really enjoyed coming to Rajasthan is being given that role: ‘You’re here to get us wickets in the powerplay. Go do it.’ It’s a real freedom to express what I feel I can do.”I like to swing the ball, I like to pitch it up and get a bit funky with a couple inswingers, a couple outswingers, whatever it is. I’ll tell you what I’m just thinking in general really, and that’s just: be as accurate as possible. I’ve always thought that, as a bowler, I’ve got full control of dictating the play. Nothing can happen until I deliver that ball. And if I deliver a beauty, then it’s going to be even harder for him.”Without giving away too many secrets, I basically try bowling an inswinger every ball. If it swings in, it swings in; if it doesn’t, it goes the other way, and everyone thinks I’m trying something else. That’s the beauty of being a left-armer. I’ve had many chats with Wasim Akram, Chaminda Vaas – all the guys I’ve idolised. You’ve only got to get one ball to swing, then you’re in the batter’s head.”One of his first-over wickets this season stands out from the rest. “My kids had just got here,” Boult says. “I was on 99 [IPL] wickets, it was about 700 degrees, and I was bowling to probably the best opening pair in the whole tournament.” The Chinnaswamy Stadium roared as Royal Challengers Bangalore’s openers walked out to bat – then fell silent.”To put one straight into Virat’s knee first ball was pretty cool. I don’t really normally give it too much celebration, but I quickly gave it a big turnaround to the family up in the hospitality area. I remember waking up at about 4am that morning, because my kids were jet-lagged.Boult has struck twice in the first over in the IPL three times since 2020 – Abhishek Sharma (in picture) and Rahul Tripathi were his latest victims•BCCI”I said, ‘Come on boys, you need to go to sleep. Daddy’s got a big game today. I’m playing against one of the best batters in the world.’ My oldest son said, ‘Are you going to get him out?’ I said, ‘Probably not’ – and I actually managed to! I couldn’t believe it.”I don’t really remember too many of my wickets in terms of who, when and where, but I remember my debut IPL wicket was Mahendra Singh Dhoni and he absolutely melted one to cover in the 17th [20th] over at Chepauk Stadium. The crowd went silent as well, but that wicket there [Kohli’s] was probably equal to a silence of a ground that I’ve ever heard as well.”The adulation that both men – Dhoni and Kohli – receive in India is staggering, but overseas players are also conspicuous compared to back home. Boult can walk down the road in Mount Maunganui without much attention, but in India, he is the centre of attention when he steps outside of the team hotel.”When the IPL was in a bubble, the best part about it was that you were locked into one area,” he says. “It was a lot easier – the logistics were a lot easier – but to have it back around the country playing at different grounds in front of big crowds, it’s what the IPL’s all about.”But the home-and-away format does have its challenges, particularly when travelling with a young family. Coincidentally, two days before our conversation, we were on a flight from Mumbai to Jaipur together; Boult was asked for selfies and autographs throughout the journey, even when unfolding a pushchair on the tarmac.”And [carrying] a nappy bag, and everything else!” he interjects. “It can get a bit much. The travel days are pretty tricky with three little boys running around with you, but it just shows the craziness of cricket over in this country; the culture, that everyone follows it, everyone loves it.”They just want a piece of all cricketers. But no, it’s good fun. I’ve been so lucky: it’s probably my ninth year, I reckon, at the IPL…”I’ve been bloody lucky to get the opportunities that I have.”

When was a Test series last drawn 0-0 before West Indies vs Sri Lanka?

Also: what is the lowest run-aggregate for a completed first-class match?

Steven Lynch06-Apr-2021 There were 651 runs in the final ODI at Pune. Was this a record for a match without an individual hundred? asked Ray Penson from South Africa
The highest score in that exciting one-day international in Pune last week was Sam Curran’s unbeaten 95. There has been only one ODI that produced more runs but no individual centuries: in Port Elizabeth in 2001-02, Australia (330 for 7) beat South Africa (326 for 3) in a match that produced 656 runs but a highest individual score of 92, by Ricky Ponting. There have been 23 other ODIs with a total of 600 or more runs, but no centuries.Curran’s score equalled the highest by a No. 8 in one-day internationals, set by Chris Woakes for England against Sri Lanka at Trent Bridge in 2015.Both Tests in the recent West Indies vs Sri Lanka series were drawn – when was the last 0-0 draw in a Test series? asked Rishi Ramaswamy from the United States
It has been nearly six years since all the Tests in a series have been drawn – in the rather soggy two-match encounter between Bangladesh and South Africa in Bangladesh in 2015. The last three-Test series to comprise three draws involved New Zealand and England, in 2012-13.In all there have now been 40 Test series which ended up 0-0. That includes 17 of two Tests, 17 of three, and two of four matches. There have even been four five-Test series in which all five games ended in draws: India vs Pakistan in 1954-55, Pakistan vs India in 1960-61, India vs England in 1963-64, and West Indies vs New Zealand in 1971-72.Seven different England bowlers took wickets in India’s innings in the last of the recent one-day internationals – was this a record? asked Alan White from England
You’re right that seven England bowlers claimed wickets in the third ODI in Pune last week: Mark Wood took three and Adil Rashid two, while Moeen Ali, Sam Curran, Liam Livingstone, Ben Stokes and Reece Topley had one each.This actually equals the record for an ODI innings: there have been four previous instances of seven wicket-takers, by New Zealand against India in Auckland in 1975-76, New Zealand vs Sri Lanka in Dunedin in 1990-91, Netherlands vs Bermuda in Rotterdam in 2007, and Australia vs Scotland in Edinburgh in 2009.The 1878 Australian team that skittled MCC for 33 and 19. Fred Spofforth (seated, extreme left) took 6 for four in the first innings, Harry Boyle (seated, extreme right) 6 for 3 in the second.•The Cricketer InternationalWhat is the lowest run-aggregate for a completed first-class match? asked SM Nazmus Shakib from Bangladesh
The fewest runs in a first-class game is 85, in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy match between Quetta (41 all out) and Rawalpindi (44 for 1) in Islamabad in 2008-09: it was all over in 20.1 overs. There were unusual circumstances: bad weather had prevented any play on the first two days, and both sides forfeited their first innings.The lowest for a game in which all four innings were played is 105 runs, in the match between MCC (33 and 19) and the touring Australians (41 in 66.2 four-ball overs, and 12 for 1) at Lord’s in 1878. It was all over in one day – Fred “The Demon” Spofforth took 6 for 4 in MCC’s first innings, and Harry Boyle 6 for 3 in the second. WG Grace was out second ball in the first innings, for four, and made a duck in the second.”One of the most remarkable matches ever played at Lord’s was commenced at three minutes past 12, and concluded at 20 minutes past six the same day,” said Wisden, which went on to report that at the end, “a stream of at least one thousand men rushed frantically up to the pavilion, where they clustered, and lustily shouted ‘Well done Australia’, ‘Bravo Spofforth’, ‘Boyle, Boyle’ &c, &c; the members of the MCC keenly joining in the applause of that ‘maddened crowd’, who shouted themselves hoarse before they left to scatter far and wide that evening the news, how in one day the Australians had so easily defeated one of the strongest MCC elevens that had ever played for the famous old club.”How often has a first-class hat-trick involved three catches, all by the same fieldsman – not a wicketkeeper – which just happened in a match in Dunedin? asked Russell Smith from New Zealand
The instance you’re talking about was achieved by Otago’s Dale Phillips, off the bowling of seamer Michael Rae, in the Plunket Shield match against Central Districts at Dunedin’s University Oval last week. Phillips, the brother of the New Zealand Test player Glenn, was fielding at short leg.There had been four previous hat-tricks in first-class cricket involving the same fielder. The first was by George Thompson off the bowling of Sydney Smith for Northamptonshire against Warwickshire at Edgbaston in 1914, and they were followed by Cyril White (off Raymond Beesly) for Border vs Griqualand West in Queenstown in South Africa in 1946-47. More recently, Ali Waqas caught three in a row off Samiullah Khan for Sui Northern Gas in Peshawar in 2014-15, and Marcus Trescothick took three in a row off Craig Overton for Somerset against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge in 2018.There have also been five wicketkeeping hat-tricks, all of them caught, apart from Sam Brain’s three successive stumpings off Charles Townsend for Gloucestershire against Somerset at Cheltenham in 1893.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Secret Rohl talks took place while everyone thought Rangers were after Muscat

It looks as though chairman Andrew Cavenagh was fully invested in hiring Danny Rohl as Rangers’ next manager when everyone thought Kevin Muscat would take charge at Ibrox.

Rangers make Rohl their new manager

Things have moved quickly over the past 24 hours or so, with Muscat’s talks with the Gers falling through when it looked as though he was the front-runner to come in as Russell Martin’s successor at Ibrox.

Rohl has been confirmed as Rangers’ next boss instead, with the German most recently in charge at Sheffield Wednesday, and once enjoying a coaching spell at Bayern Munich, working under legendary boss Hansi Flick.

The 36-year-old has constantly been mentioned as one of the favourites to take charge of the Gers, alongside Muscat and Steven Gerrard, with the latter another who decided not to take the job and enjoy a second stint at Ibrox.

After a dire start to the Scottish Premiership season, Rangers fans will be keeping their fingers crossed that Rohl is the right choice, and it looks as though he may have been the leading option for the Scottish giants all along, following a fresh claim.

Cavenagh held secret talks with Rohl during Muscat saga

According to reports, Cavenagh held talks with Rohl last week about becoming Rangers’ next manager, amid constant claims suggesting Muscat would be the man to come in. They did then back away from the discussions when the Australian became the leading target again, prior to his move collapsing.

Only time will tell whether the former Wednesday boss is the right choice for the Gers, but there is plenty to like about him from the off, as he likely prepares to take charge of his first game away to Brann in the Europa League on Thursday evening.

At just 36 years of age, he represents a young and long-term option for Rangers, rather than going with the safer bet of an older manager who knows about getting teams out of trouble rather than adopting an attractive playing style.

As mentioned, Rohl excelled at Wednesday, coming in when the Owls looked destined for relegation from the Championship in October 2023, only to turn their fortunes around and finish the 2023/24 campaign in 20th place.

Rohl won't like him: Rangers must drop Ibrox star with "big potential"

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Oct 20, 2025

Interestingly, it does look as though Muscat’s arrival at Rangers was never as concrete as reported by some, hence Cavenagh’s talks with Rohl last week, and hopefully, the German ends up being an inspired choice who gradually brings the glory days back to Ibrox as the months and years pass.

Quais os próximos passos e o que pode acontecer no processo entre o Vasco e a 777 Partners?

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continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasVascoSAF do Vasco: 777 Partners lamenta posição ‘beliciosa’ e ataques públicos da associaçãoVasco16/05/2024VascoFelipe Carregal diz que Josh Wander faltou 1ª reunião por causa de consulta médicaVasco16/05/2024VascoPedrinho chora e diz: “Nunca foi minha intenção dominar o futebol”; veja vídeoVasco16/05/2024

➡️Tudo sobre o Gigante agora no WhatsApp. Siga o nosso canal Lance! Vasco

Por isso, a reportagem do Lance! apurou e preparou um FAQ para o torcedor do Vasco para sanar alguns destes questionamentos. Vale destacar que a matéria será atualizada sempre que nas dúvidas surgirem e forem respondidas.

1) QUANTO TEMPO EM MÉDIA DEMORA ESTE TIPO DE AÇÃO?
R: Em média um ano e um ano e meio.

2) A 777 PARTNERS É OBRIGADA A FAZER O APORTE EM SETEMBRO?
R: Assunto não pode ser aprofundado.

2) A 777 PARTNERS, SE QUISER, PODE FAZER O APORTE EM JUÍZO OU NA CONTA DA SAF?
R: Isso será decidido pelo Tribunal Arbitral.

4) QUANDO SERÁ FEITO O TRIBUNAL ARBITRAL?
R: Será instaurado em até 30 dias.

5) SE A 777 PARTNERS NÃO FAZER O APORTE, O CONTRATO PODE SER RESCINDIDO?
R: Questão a ser discutida futuramente. O Vasco pode alegar que sim e a 777 Partners dizer que não.

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West Ham lodge potential new bid for Brazilian who they nearly signed in 2024

West Ham could now be back in for a former transfer target who they were on the verge of signing for Julen Lopetegui in 2024, according to a new report.

West Ham poised for active January transfer window

According to recent reports, the Hammers are poised for an active January transfer window amid their battle against relegation, and could sign a defender, midfielder and striker for Nuno Espírito Santo.

Reliable club insiders like ExWHUemployee have backed this up as we fast approach the turn of the year, while former West Ham scout Mick Brown has claimed that Nuno is planning a major overhaul.

West Ham have undergone a mini revival under Nuno recently, losing just one of their last six Premier League games, but it is clear they need strength in depth across the pitch.

Niclas Füllkrug is set to leave the London Stadium in January following his lacklustre stint in England, so West Ham are believed to be looking at strikers to replace him.

West Ham’s results in the Premier League so far

Sunderland 3-0 West Ham

West Ham 1-5 Chelsea

Nottingham Forest 0-3 West Ham

West Ham 0-3 Tottenham

West Ham 1-2 Crystal Palace

Everton 1-1 West Ham

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

West Ham 0-2 Brentford

Leeds 2-1 West Ham

West Ham 3-1 Newcastle

West Ham 3-2 Burnley

Bournemouth 2-2 West Ham

West Ham 0-2 Liverpool

Man United 1-1 West Ham

Brighton 1-1 West Ham

In terms of the midfield area, James Ward-Prowse, Guido Rodriguez and Lucas Paqueta have all been linked with mid-season exits, so the prospect of a new name in the engine room hasn’t been ruled out either.

Meanwhile, Toulouse defender Charlie Cresswell is back on the club’s radar after coming close to joining in the summer, with the Irons planning to ‘reignite’ talks for his signature (ExWHUemployee).

Sticking at centre-back, West Ham could now be back in the hunt for a familiar name — Cruzeiro centre-back Fabricio Bruno.

The 29-year-old made 51 appearances in all competitions for Cruzeiro in the recently-concluded 2025 Brazilian campaign, and his recent form has even earned him a recall to Carlo Ancelotti’s Brazil squad.

Bruno featured in all of Brazil’s last three friendlies against Japan, Senegal and Tunisia, with the towering defender well in contention to be selected for next year’s World Cup.

Belief West Ham have rebid for Fabricio Bruno after near-2024 move

The former Flamengo stalwart was actually on the verge of joining West Ham in 2024.

Fabrizio Romano even gave his famous ‘here we go’ to the transfer and claimed he would be Lopetegui’s first defensive signing, but the transfer ended up collapsing.

Now, as per South American journalist Jorge Nicola, there is every reason to believe West Ham may have rebid for Bruno.

According to his information, a mystery English club has submitted a £13 million offer for the player, and Nicola theorises that the most likely candidate is Nuno’s side given their very advanced talks nearly two years ago.

Bruno’s move to West Ham apparently didn’t happen because of the player’s salary demands, but the Premier League door may now be back open following what has been a stellar 2025 for him.

Former Arsenal and Chelsea defender David Luiz, who was on the books with Bruno at Flamengo, once said he has the ‘quality to play for any team in the world’.

However, given Cruzeiro only signed him in early 2025, they may be reluctant to part ways.

Man Utd have already signed a "beast" who could be their new McTominay

One of the biggest success stories a Manchester United academy graduate has had since leaving the club is, without doubt, Scott McTominay.

The Scotland international has shone for his new club Napoli and played a crucial role in getting his country to the 2026 World Cup.

The 28-year-old has played 50 games for the Italian giants now, scoring 17 goals and assisting seven in that time. He became a club hero by helping guide them to the Scudetto title last season, winning the Serie A MVP award and earning himself a Ballon d’Or nomination in the process.

Ruben Amorim never got the chance to work with him at United, but it would have been fascinating to know how he’d have utilised him.

How Amorim could have used McTominay at Man Utd

It is interesting to note that under Antonio Conte in Naples, McTominay has operated in a few different roles. He’s played as a number ten, a box-crashing number eight and even off the left-hand side.

Well, had Amorim got the chance to coach the Scot, he may have used him as a number ten in his infamous 3-4-2-1 system. The United academy graduate has great instincts in the box and excels at occupying the centre-backs.

If he were to play high up under Amorim, the chances are he’d be spending more time in the box.

Of course, the other area McTominay would naturally fit in Amorim’s system would be as a number eight. In this role, he could still have crashed the box, making late runs to get on the end of crosses from the wing-backs.

Off the ball, his physicality would have been a handful. That is perhaps best showcased by his 1.85 aerial duels won per 90 minutes over the last year, placing him in the top 11% of midfielders across Europe’s big five leagues.

Of course, we’ll never truly know how McTominay would have fitted in under Amorim, but there is a player in the academy who could be seen as the Portuguese manager’s own version.

Amorim’s in-house Scott McTominay

Over the years, United’s esteemed academy, Carrington, has produced some exceptional talent. McTominay is one of the modern examples, and the Red Devils have some brilliant talent coming through still.

In The Pipeline

Football FanCast’s In the Pipeline series aims to uncover the very best youth players in world football.

One of those is Sekou Kone, a man who could be viewed as the second coming of McTominay.

The Malian youth international is seen by football scout Antonio Mango as a player who can be “a beast under Ruben Amorim.”

At 19 years of age, Kone has already been involved in first-team squads thanks to United’s manager, who clearly sees talent in him to give him that opportunity. The midfielder was an unused substitute for three Premier League games last season.

As for his performances in the academy, the five-foot-nine midfielder has shown good versatility and an eye for goal. He’s played 14 games for the Red Devils’ under-21 side, scoring twice and operating as a number ten and in the pivot, just as McTominay has shown for Napoli.

The competition in which Kone truly announced himself was the Under-17 World Cup back in 2023.

He helped steer Mali to third place and was one of the standout players in the competition, creating 10 chances and grabbing two assists.

Kone – U17 World Cup

Stat

Per 90

Tournament total

Key passes

1.6

10

Dribbles completed

2.5

16

Long balls completed

5.5

35

Tackles and interceptions

6.4

41

Aerial duels won

2.5

16

Stats from Sofascore

It will certainly be interesting to see how far down the line we are from Kone’s first-team debut.

The 19-year-old could operate in a few different roles, and his ability to have an effect in the final third might pique Amorim’s interest.

It is easy to see how he is the second coming of McTominay. A versatile midfielder who can be physically dominant, despite having a smaller frame than the Scot, and someone able to score goals.

He is certainly an exciting prospect for Amorim and United.

Next Carrick: Man Utd want to sign "one of the best CMs in the PL" for £60m

Man United could enhance the quality of their midfield with the signing of another Michael Carrick.

By
Joe Nuttall

Nov 19, 2025

Everton's £90k-p/w "revelation" could become Moyes' new version of Arteta

Everton are building something under David Moyes’ wing – again.

Having shaped the Merseysiders into a force of consistency and resilience over a decade of tireless service, the 63-year-old has been back at the helm throughout 2025, with the summer transfer window packaging exciting new talent into the Hill Dickinson Stadium.

However, with Idrissa Gueye set to leave at the end of his contract next year and Tim Iroegbunam yet to prove he has the minerals for a sustained starting role in Moyes’ system, Moyes may look to strengthen his central fold in 2026.

He does boast one of the most dynamic centre-midfielders in the Premier League, though, with this profile something that proved successful for the Scottish manager all those years ago at Goodison Park.

Moyes' best-ever Everton midfielders

Moyes enforces a principled and organised playing style, and energy and industriousness is at its heart. This was true 20 years ago, and it remains a core element of the make-up now.

But pragmatic though Moyes has been tagged at times, he has always pushed for creativity, an attacking dimension coming from the centre and with the capacity to defend strongly.

Tim Cahill embodied this. Not quite a forward, he scored lots of goals. Not quite a central midfielder, the Australian was combative and aggressive.

No player has ever featured more often in a Moyes side than Leon Osman. Not the flashiest, the versatile Englishman played his entire career on the blue half of Merseyside, save for two early-career loan spells as he was making his way.

Moyes’ Most-used Everton Midfielders

#

Player

Apps

1.

Leon Osman

345

2.

Tim Cahill

278

3.

Mikel Arteta

209

4.

Lee Carsley

194

5.

Marouane Fellaini

173

Data via Transfermarkt

Another of Moyes’ mainstays was Mikel Arteta. Look closely and you may trace elements of Moyes’ influence in the Arsenal manager’s drilled and oiled style, merged with the technical genius of Pep Guardiola to shape the Gunners into bona fide contenders at the highest level.

As a player, the 43-year-old was dynamic and intelligent, adding a dimension otherwise unavailable to the Blues team. He is creative on the ball and tenacious against the run of play, once saying he would “go through a brick wall” for Moyes.

Arteta was arguably Moyes’ most trusted lieutenant, the man who helped make it all tick.

Now, the tactician has refashioned his former favourite in the shape of a new Everton star.

Moyes' new version of Arteta

Like Arteta during his Everton prime, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall is a versatile midfielder.

The opening months of the 2025/26 campaign have shown the 27-year-old to be a talented and effective midfielder, situated in the centre of the park and tasked with connecting play.

Yet he arrived from Chelsea, for a £28m fee, having played second-fiddle in Enzo Maresca’s team. He was part of last term’s Club World Cup and Conference League-winning squads, but featured only 13 times in the Premier League, starting twice.

But moving to Everton was the perfect thing for a man in the prime of his career. His performances since arriving at the Hill Dickinson prove this, and he is showing too that he can be a “revelation” for multiple clubs, having been hailed as such for his efforts at Leicester by former boss Brendan Rodgers.

Averaging 1.9 key passes and winning 5.3 duels per game this term, as per Sofascore, it’s hard to argue against the success of the signing; Dewsbury-Hall may even be one of the Premier League’s most underrated signings.

Arteta’s clever and imaginative passing was a staple of his game. In this, Dewsbury-Hall could emulate him. Data from FBref shows us that the Englishman ranks among the top 8% of midfielders in the Premier League for passes into the penalty area and the top 8% for progressive passes per 90.

Starting all but one of Everton’s Premier League matches thus far, missing out against Crystal Palace due to suspension, the £90k-per-week talent has shown he has the personality and presence to become Moyes’ next Arteta, instrumental in progressing play and steering Everton away from their pragmatic reputation.

The likes of Jack Grealish and Iliman Ndiaye will more often than not take the headlines, but in Dewsbury-Hall, Moyes has recycled a tried and tested playing style, and it’s already beginning to bear dividends.

Everton's "revelation" could become the biggest loser from Grealish's rise

Jack Grealish’s form at Everton could nudge another star out of Moyes’ best team

By
Will Miller

Oct 16, 2025

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