'I lost my son's first steps' – Antony lifts lid on pain of Man Utd spell after sealing summer exit

Antony has opened up about the darkest phase of his career at Manchester United, recalling how he was sidelined to train alone at Carrington and even missed his son’s first steps. Yet through it all, faith, family, and belief in destiny kept him focused, helping him rebuild and thrive again at Real Betis.

Antony's difficult spell at Manchester United

When Antony joined United from Ajax in August 2022 for €94m (£82m/$110.7m), expectations were sky-high. But the dream quickly soured. Over two seasons, he managed just 12 goals and five assists in 90 Premier League appearances, struggling to justify his price tag amid criticism and scrutiny. What followed was a period of complete disconnection, both professionally and personally.

In an interview with ESPN Brazil, Antony revealed how he was ostracised from the first team before his eventual move to Real Betis. “I reported back on July 14 and trained separately for more than a month. It was very complicated. For more than 40 days we stayed in hotels. Me and my father were there, waiting. I trained at five in the afternoon while the group trained in the morning,” he said. “I felt there was a lack of respect, even a lack of education. Nobody said good morning or good afternoon. Not even that,” he added.

That sense of isolation, he explained, tested his patience and belief. “It was a moment to test myself, to believe. I knew that something good would happen, even if doubts crossed my mind."

AdvertisementGetty Images SportThe pain of missing his son's first steps

Beyond the football pitch, Antony’s emotional struggle ran deeper. The winger opened up about the personal cost of his time in England – being away from home and missing out on key family moments. “I lost my son’s first steps because I was away. That hurt a lot,” he said, reflecting on what he calls the most painful memory of his United spell.

His family, however, became his anchor. “They reminded me: it’s difficult now, but it was harder in the slums, when you slept on a sofa. That helped me see the good side of things,” he shared, crediting their resilience for helping him stay grounded.

Lessons learned and a renewed mindset

While Antony’s Old Trafford chapter ended in disappointment, he insists it shaped him for the better. “Maybe if I had exploded right away, I might have lost myself later. It was necessary to go through that process. Today I feel like a better man, a better father,” he reflected.

He even revealed a lesser-known detail – that before joining the Red Devils, he was close to signing for Liverpool. “Before closing with United, I was very close to Liverpool. But the path was meant to be what it was,” he said.

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AFPAntony's revival at Real Betis

Antony’s revival story began in Spain. His loan spell at Real Betis during the first half of 2025 reignited the spark that once made him one of Europe’s most exciting young wingers. He scored nine goals and registered five assists in 26 appearances, helping Betis reach the Conference League final.

Impressed by his form, Betis made the move permanent this summer, signing him for around €25m (£21m/$29m) on a deal until 2030, with United retaining a sell-on clause. This season, Antony has already played five matches across competitions.

Lionel Messi is 'divine' but Cristiano Ronaldo 'revolutionised football' – Ex-Juventus star weighs in on GOAT debate and insists Argentina and Portugal icons are 'opposites'

Former Juventus winger and ex-Italy international Federico Bernardeschi chimed in on the Cristiano Ronaldo-Lionel Messi debate. The Bologna player heaped praise on the two icons and explained what makes the duo different from each other. While Messi was called "divine," Ronaldo was hailed as someone who "revolutionized football" and is admired by numerous athletes.

  • Ronaldo & Messi: Epitomes of longevity

    Ronaldo and Messi will go down as perhaps two of the greatest footballers to ever exist. The duo share 13 Ballons d'Or between them, with the Portuguese winning five times and the Argentine lifting the award an unprecedented eight times. They "shared the same stage for 15 years", pushing each other to push their own limits and engraving their names in football history for eternity. 

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    Twilight of their careers away from Europe

    Ronaldo and Messi dominated world football for nearly two decades, before going their respective ways away from Europe. The 40-year-old now plies his trade for Al-Nassr in Saudi Arabia, where he has already plundered over a century of goals. He's eyeing a final flourish with Portugal at next year's World Cup amid his hunger to complete 1,000 career goals. 

    Messi, meanwhile, has 'completed football' after lifting the only trophy missing from his cabinet in 2022: the World Cup. After leaving Barcelona in 2021, he spent two middling seasons at Paris Saint-Germain, before heading to the MLS with David Beckham's Inter Miami. 

  • Bernardeschi explains the difference between Messi and Ronaldo

    Speaking to , Bernardeschi said: "They're two different worlds. Like Cristiano, Messi is something you struggle to understand as a player. But they're opposites: Messi catches your eye, he does things that seem unreal, he has an aura that doesn't belong in this world. Cristiano has another characteristic: he revolutionized football and sport in general. Messi, like [Diego] Maradona, seems divine. If athletes today pay attention to every detail of their preparation, it's thanks to Cristiano."

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    When do Ronaldo and Messi play next?

    Ronaldo could feature in the AFC Champions League 2 on Wednesday evening against Iraqi side Al-Zawraa, while Messi can next be seen in action against Chicago in the early hours of Wednesday.

Everton star just proved he could be their new Barkley & it's not Grealish

After seeing their team lose 1-0 away at Leeds United on the opening weekend of the Premier League, the worry in the air among Everton supporters would have been whether their side would start their new era at the Hill Dickinson Stadium with another bleak defeat.

They didn’t need to be so anxious after all, as their determined Toffees side put the loss in West Yorkshire to one side and delivered a confident performance in front of their adoring home masses that culminated in a 2-0 victory over Brighton and Hove Albion.

Fabian Hurzeler’s Seagulls aren’t pushovers by any stretch of the imagination, but with the quality of Jack Grealish on full display throughout, Everton must have felt content that their first three points of the long campaign were going to be collected.

Grealish's standout display in numbers

The former Aston Villa attacking midfielder had been put through the wringer at Manchester City, but the enigmatic Englishman thankfully let his football do the talking, donning his new Everton blue on his spectacular home debut.

The vibrant Toffees number 18 put it on a plate for Iliman Ndiaye to score the opener after a well-orchestrated counter-attack deep into the first 45 minutes, while his second assist of the day would see the entertaining 29-year-old lay it off for James Garner to thump home the decisive match-clinching strike.

Away from those goal involvements, Grealish – who was deployed down the left wing by Moyes – would attempt five dribbles when bursting forward into space, with one effort also fired at Bart Verbruggen’s busy goal to try and make the win even more emphatic.

The former Villa hero will hope he only gets better with time, too, having previously notched up a sublime six goals and ten assists at the intimidating level during his final swansong campaign in the West Midlands.

He wasn’t the only new signing to leave a fantastic first impression on the hardened Merseyside faithful, however, with one of his midfield teammates also impressing enough to be seen as a potential new Ross Barkley for David Moyes’ men.

Moyes' next Barkley

The Toffees needed to replace Abdoulaye Doucoure effectively this summer, with a real lack of midfielders at the Scotsman’s disposal who can slot into a number 10 role.

Thankfully, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall seamlessly announced himself to the Everton masses as a worthwhile Doucoure replacement against the Seagulls – after also playing in the role behind the main striker against the Whites – with the creative playmaker possessing the potential to be Moyes’ new Barkley down the line.

While he did regularly line up as a traditional midfield option for Leicester City, it’s clear from his career numbers to date that the 26-year-old excels in a further forward position, having accumulated a healthy 35 goals and 41 assists across 306 games. To add context, Barkley has a heftier 66 goals and 52 assists, albeit from a larger stretch of games at 444 clashes.

Dewsbury-Hall would have been hoping he could add to his glittering numbers on Sunday, but despite his best efforts, getting off the mark at his new side would unfortunately evade him.

Dewsbury-Hall’s performance in numbers

Minutes played

90

Goals

0

Assists

0

Touches

59

Accurate passes

33/37 (89%)

Key passes

3

Big chances created

1

Successful dribbles

1/1

Total duels won

5/10

Stats by Sofascore

Indeed, looking at the table above, Dewsbury-Hall was especially unlucky not to join Grealish in picking up an assist, with only three passes being misplaced across his stylish 90-minute outing.

Moyes, watching on from the dug-out, will arguably want more from his new recruit moving forward; however, when trying to catch out the opposition goalkeeper with a shot or two, with Dewsbury-Hall still managing to pick up a reasonable five goals for Chelsea, despite his spell at Stamford Bridge being fraught with bumps.

That will come with time, however, as the Toffees’ number 22 grows more confident in his fresh surroundings.

But, his overall energy and application will have pleased the Scotsman nonetheless, with those qualities, and his ability to drive with the ball in central areas evoking memories of a fresh-faced Barkley at Goodison Park.

Dewsbury-Hall’s positive display wouldn’t go unnoticed by the Liverpool Echo, with journalist Chris Beesley gifting the 29-year-old a high 7/10 post-match rating, stating that he brings “fresh scope” to a role once frequently filled by Doucoure.

Dewsbury-Hall

He did accidentally put Everton in a spot of bother during the game when gifting Brighton a penalty, but it was a largely promising display from a midfielder who has had his fair share of doubters in recent years, much like Grealish.

If Moyes can get the very best out of the midfield pairing across a full season, expect the Toffees to pick up more and more assured wins on their own turf.

New Deulofeu: Everton enter race to sign "immense" £30m O'Brien upgrade

Everton are looking to sign a right-back before the summer transfer window slams shut.

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Angus Sinclair

Aug 24, 2025

New Zealand look for 2-0 as 'high-risk' Pakistan's search for rewards continues

New Zealand are unlikely to tinker with their combination yet in what is a five-match series

Srinidhi Ramanujam17-Mar-2025

Kyle Jamieson had three wickets in his first three overs in the first game•Getty Images

Big picture: Second chance for PakistanThe focus will remain on Pakistan’s batting as the action moves from Christchurch to Dunedin in the five-match men’s T20I series. Pakistan’s new captain Salman Agha had asked for “high-risk” cricket, but it did not come off in the first T20I on Sunday. Pakistan, in fact, hit a new low in that game after being bowled out for 91, which New Zealand then comfortably chased down in 10.1 overs.In the absence of Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam, who have been dropped, and Saim Ayub, who is still recovering from an ankle injury, Pakistan handed Hasan Nawaz a debut and opened with Mohammad Haris, who was playing a T20I after almost two years, with Salman slotting in at No. 3. Despite attempts to go big from the get-go, seven of Pakistan’s batters fell for single-digit scores with Khushdil Shah top-scoring with 32 off 30 balls. How will Pakistan go in the second match after the failure in the first?Though New Zealand are missing key players due to their IPL commitments, they landed early punches with the ball in the first match, thanks to Kyle Jamieson and Jacob Duffy, who shared seven wickets between them by the end. Tim Seifert, Finn Allen and Tim Robinson then tore apart Pakistan’s attack.As they build their reserves, New Zealand will also look to continue their domination. And Jimmy Neesham, who hasn’t played for New Zealand since June 2024, might have to wait his turn.Form guideNew Zealand WLWWW
Pakistan LLLLWSalman Agha made a 20-ball 18 from No. 3 in the first game•Getty Images

In the spotlight: Jacob Duffy and Salman AghaIn the five T20Is he has played between last November and this March, Jacob Duffy has picked up 12 wickets at an impressive economy rate of 5.54. In the opening game, he struck with his second ball and ended with figures of 4 for 14 in 3.4 overs. The fast bowler will again be vital to New Zealand’s bowling attack.Salman Agha has played a total of seven T20Is after making his debut in the format last November. After five innings in the middle order, he promoted himself to No. 3 in the first game and made a 20-ball 18. The sample size is small and his strike rate in six innings in T20Is stands at 81.92. But having taken the leadership role in T20Is, Agha will be keen to contribute more and at a healthy pace. Team newsNew Zealand are unlikely to tinker with the winning combination and are likely to go with Kyle Jamieson, Jacob Duffy and Zakary Foulkes in the pace department and Ish Sodhi and captain Michael Bracewell as spinners.New Zealand (probable): 1 Tim Seifert, 2 Finn Allen, 3 Tim Robinson, 4 Mark Chapman, 5 Daryl Mitchell, 6 Mitchell Hay (wk), 7 Michael Bracewell (capt), 8 Zakary Foulkes, 9 Ish Sodhi, 10 Kyle Jamieson, 11 Jacob DuffyPakistan handed a debut to fast bowler Mohammed Ali and asked him to open the bowling with Shaheen Afridi. This meant Haris Rauf didn’t feature in the first game. Ali bowled three overs and conceded 25 runs. Since it’s a five-match series, Pakistan will want to give a few more opportunities to Ali before bringing in the experienced Rauf.Pakistan (probable): 1 Mohammad Haris (wk), 2 Hasan Nawaz, 3 Salman Agha (capt), 4 Irfan Khan, 5 Shadab Khan, 6 Khushdil Shah, 7 Abdul Samad, 8 Jahandad Khan, 9 Shaheen Afridi, 10 Abrar Ahmed, 11 Mohammed AliMohammad Haris’ comeback T20I innings was short-lived•AFP/Getty Images

Pitch and conditionsThe University Oval in Dunedin has hosted three men’s T20Is so far. The last was played in January 2024, when Finn Allen’s 137 led New Zealand to 224, and they beat Pakistan by 45 runs. It has generally been a batting-friendly surface with teams scoring 9.88 runs an over at this venue in T20Is. Three out of six times, the teams have posted 200-plus totals here. The forecast on match day is for the occasional shower amid cool weather.Stats and triviaTim Seifert, who has played all three T20Is Dunedin has hosted, has an average of 56.50 at the venue. Since the start of 2020, New Zealand have won eight of the 12 T20Is against Pakistan at home. Quotes”[It’s] Definitely my home ground, lived here since I was 18, so good to be home, obviously spent a lot of time away in Pakistan four or five weeks before this series too, so I’ve only had a couple of nights since then, so it’s good to get home, get home to the dog. Looking forward to getting out to what I think is the best ground in the country.”
New Zealand quick Jacob Duffy on playing in Dunedin.

Chapman to miss third ODI against Pakistan as well

New Zealand batter Mark Chapman, who missed the second ODI against Pakistan in Hamilton with a hamstring injury, will sit out of the third and final ODI at the Bay Oval in Mount Maunganui on Saturday as well. Tim Seifert will continue to be his replacement.Chapman had picked up the injury while fielding in the first ODI in Napier. An assessment at training on Friday revealed he had not recovered sufficiently for the final match of New Zealand’s home summer.Before getting injured, Chapman struck a career-best 132 in the ODI series-opener to set up New Zealand’s 73-run win. New Zealand won the second ODI as well, by 84 runs, to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three-match series.Seifert was called up because of his form during the T20I series, which New Zealand won 4-1. He was the leading run-scorer with 249 runs at a strike rate of 207.50 and was named the Player of the Series.However, he has not played an ODI in more than five years. His last 50-over appearance for New Zealand was in 2019, against Sri Lanka in Nelson. In all, he has played just three ODIs.Ben Sears, the quick bowler, had replaced Chapman for the second ODI with Seifert sitting out, and Will Young was left out of the playing XI too, leading to an international debut for 23-year-old Canterbury batter Rhys Mariu, who opened the batting alongside Nick Kelly. New Zealand had lost the services of Tom Latham altogether for the series after he fractured his hand during training prior to the first ODI.

António Oliveira, técnico do Cuiabá, faz visita especial à crianças com câncer

MatériaMais Notícias

Apesar do reconhecidamente apertado calendário do futebol brasileiro, o técnico António Oliveira, do Cuiabá, encontrou tempo nesta semana para fazer uma bonita ação de cunho social ao visitar a ‘Companhia do Sorriso MT’.

A organização em questão, há 13 anos, promove humanização, esperança e acolhimento para crianças em tratamento com câncer no estado do Mato Grosso.

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– É indescritível a sensação de poder ajudar e levar um abraço, beijo e carinho especial para essas crianças tão amadas. Saí de lá uma pessoa melhor e aprendi muito com eles – afirma António além de assumir que se emocionou com o que encontrou na iniciativa.

Além do suporte financeiro com a doação de R$ 10 mil feita pelo comandante do Dourado, o treinador ainda revela a importância de promover mais ações em prol de quem realmente necessita.

>Olho no Brasileirão! Assine o Prime Video e acompanhe todos os jogos do seu time do coração!

– É muito importante que todas as pessoas possam realizar visitas, ajudar como podem, àqueles que precisam, que passam necessidades ou que têm doenças complicadas. Nós, que temos exposição por estarmos na mídia, podemos divulgar ainda mais esse tipo de ação e, assim, gerarmos mais recursos e visibilidade para essas entidades – conclui.

Voltando ao aspecto profissional, António Oliveira

Weekly wages: West Ham United FC 2025/26 highest-paid players

West Ham United’s current first-team annual payroll sits at £86,060,000, with the average Hammers player picking up just under £3m during the Premier League season.

Here’s a look at what the Irons are paying their players and who their biggest earners are, as per Capology.

Disclaimer – only the club and the players themselves truly know their wages, so take each of these figures as you will.

Rank

Player

Gross pay per week

Gross pay per year

=1

Jarrod Bowen

£150,000

£7,800,000

=1

Lucas Paqueta

£150,000

£7,800,000

3

Alphonse Areola

£120,000

£6,240,000

4

James Ward-Prowse

£115,000

£5,980,000

5

Max Kilman

£100,000

£5,200,000

=6

Tomas Soucek

£90,000

£4,680,000

=6

Niclas Fullkrug

£90,000

£4,680,000

=6

Aaron Wan-Bissaka

£90,000

£4,680,000

9

Jean-Clair Todibo

£80,000

£4,160,000

10

Guido Rodriguez

£75,000

£3,900,000

11

Mathues Fernandes

£60,000

£3,120,000

12

Kyle Walker-Peters

£55,000

£2,860,000

=13

Lukasz Fabianski

£50,000

£2,600,000

=13

Konstantinos Mavropanos

£50,000

£2,600,000

=13

Callum Wilson

£50,000

£2,600,000

=16

Igor

£45,000

£2,340,000

=16

Crysencio Summerville

£45,000

£2,340,000

=18

El Hadji Malick Diouf

£35,000

£1,820,000

=18

Soungoutou Magassa

£35,000

£1,820,000

20

Luis Guilherme

£30,000

£1,560,000

21

Oliver Scales

£20,000

£1,040,000

=22

Wes Foderingham

£15,000

£780,000

=22

Freddie Potts

£15,000

£780,000

=22

Andy Irving

£15,000

£780,000

=22

George Earthy

£15,000

£780,000

Here's a look at the top 10 highest earners at West Ham United currently: 10 Guido Rodriguez £75,000 per week

West Ham were able to make Guido Rodriguez one of their top 10 earners after picking him up on a free transfer in the summer of 2024.

The central midfielder signed a three-year London Stadium deal at the time on £3.9m per season.

9 Jean-Clair Todibo £80,000 per week

Jean-Clair Todibo’s move to West Ham became permanent in 2025 following his loan spell from Nice. The French defender cost the Irons around £36m and is on more than £4m per season.

8 Aaron Wan-Bissaka £90,000 per week

Right-back Aaron Wan-Bissaka signed a seven-year deal when he swapped Manchester United for West Ham in 2024.

The Englishman has been a regular for the Irons and, providing he remains with the club u til 2031, will pick up more than £32m in wages.

7 Niclas Fullkrug £90,000 per week

Centre-forward Niclas Fullkrug was one of the marquee 2024 signings, coming in from Borussia Dortmund after helping them to the Champions League final.

The Germany international is already over the age of 30, though, so the £27m fee West Ham paid for his services appears to be a gamble.

6 Tomas Soucek £90,000 per week

Tomas Soucek is someone you cannot question when it comes to West Ham United. He’s defensively solid and provides that extra attacking threat with his runs into the box and aerial ability from set-pieces.

As a reliable performer, £90,000 per week doesn’t seem extortionate at all in the scheme of things.

5 Max Kilman £100,000 per week

Former West Ham boss Julen Lopetegui worked with Max Kilman at Wolves and sealed a reunion with the centre-back in 2024.

The Englishman was captain at Molineux and is under contract with West Ham until 2031.

4 James Ward-Prowse £115,000 per week

James Ward-Prowse was actually sent on loan to Nottingham Forest for the 2024/25 season, however, the Hammers big earner returned in 2025 halfway through his temporary move to the City Ground.

Those at the London Stadium seemingly viewed it as a mistake to send the talented midfielder elsewhere and recalled him to become a part of the Irons squad.

3 Alphonse Areola £120,000 per week

French goalkeeper Alphonse Areola has been on £120,000 per week since his permanent move to West Ham from PSG in 2022.

He has been in and out of the team during his time in London, and his contract expires in 2027.

2 Lucas Paqueta £150,000 per week

West Ham splashed the cash on Lucas Paqueta back in 2022, and despite being linked with a London Stadium exit on multiple occasions, the Brazilian remains an Irons player for the 2025/26 season.

Under contract until 2027, Paqueta collects £7.8m per season with the Hammers.

1 Jarrod Bowen £150,000 per week

You can’t argue that Jarrod Bowen deserves to be at the top of the list with Paqueta after witnessing his performances in previous campaigns.

There are attackers in the Premier League on way more money who have had way less influence, so the club captain earned his new deal to take him to £150,000 per week.

James must go: Chelsea already have a midfield "duel monster" to replace him

Chelsea’s return to the Champions League ended in disappointment as they fell 3-1 away to Bayern Munich in their opening group fixture.

It was the club’s first appearance in the competition since 2023, and the performance suggested Enzo Maresca’s young squad still has much to learn about competing at Europe’s top table.

Chelsea entered the Allianz Arena buoyed by a successful 2024/25 campaign, finishing fourth in the Premier League and lifting the Europa Conference League.

They added the Club World Cup over the summer, dispatching PSG 3-0 in the final, but the match against Bayern proved far more demanding.

With only 117 Champions League appearances across their entire 24-man squad, their inexperience showed in key moments.

Switching off at a throw-in allowed Michael Olise the time to deliver a cross that Trevoh Chalobah turned into his own net, before Moises Caicedo brought down Harry Kane in the box.

Bayern were ruthless, and while Chelsea did show flashes of promise, the experiment of deploying Reece James in midfield again raised questions about whether it is a strategy that can truly succeed at this level.

Reece James' role in Munich

At 25, Reece James is the only survivor from Chelsea’s 2021 Champions League-winning side, and his presence in the squad offers both quality and leadership.

Yet his career has been repeatedly interrupted by injuries – more than 140 matches missed – leaving doubts about whether he can sustain the rhythm of playing twice a week in both domestic and European competition.

Against Bayern, James was positioned in midfield alongside Moises Caicedo, while Malo Gusto filled in at right-back.

The idea was to utilise James’ technical quality and tactical awareness in central areas, but the execution was less convincing. Across 68 minutes on the pitch, James touched the ball just 35 times and attempted 27 passes, completing 22 of them (81%).

He failed to register a single key pass and did not win either of his two ground duels, while also conceding possession too cheaply.

His final rating of 6.1 reflected a subdued display that neither shielded Chelsea’s defence nor offered enough progression going forward.

The wider concern is that James’ strengths as a full-back are being muted in midfield. Where Chelsea need dynamism and ball-winning, the skipper struggled to impose himself.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

It is no surprise that he was replaced by Andrey Santos midway through the second half.

Andrey Santos: A better Fit in midfield

The introduction of Andrey Santos, a 21-year-old Brazilian midfielder, gave Chelsea fresh energy in the second half.

Santos, who returned from a successful loan at Strasbourg, where he played 45 times and contributed 12 goals and five assists, is starting to prove he belongs on this stage.

Analyst Ben Mattinson has described him as a “duel monster” in midfield – a description that speaks to both his physicality and presence.

Santos has already demonstrated qualities that align more closely with Chelsea’s needs in the middle of the pitch: aerial strength, ball progression, composure in possession, and a natural tackling instinct.

These attributes showed during his 32 appearances last season, where he produced 13 goal involvements compared to James’ two in 19 matches.

The statistical comparison underlines why Santos might be the more natural option in midfield.

Andrey Santos – 2024/25

Matches Played

32

Goals

10

Assists

3

Progressive Carries

29

Progressive Passes

149

Source: FBRef

He averaged 3.47 tackles per 90, far outweighing James’ 0.85, and also registered more blocks (1.45 vs. 1.19).

Going forward, Santos was more efficient, with a 34.8% shot-on-target rate compared to James’ 27.3%. He also averaged twice as many shots on target per 90 (0.50 vs. 0.25).

In terms of progression, James does carry an edge in passing distance (370.8 metres per 90 vs. Santos’ 247.9) and averaged slightly more progressive passes (5.42 vs. 4.70).

However, Santos offered greater balance by combining forward passing with ball-carrying, recording 0.91 progressive carries per 90 compared to James’ 0.59.

Andrey Santos

His creativity was also marginally superior, averaging 1.77 shot-creating actions per 90 compared to James’ 1.52.

These numbers suggest Santos is not just a destroyer, but a midfielder capable of impacting both phases of play – regaining possession and driving Chelsea into attacking positions.

At just 21 and already capped four times by Brazil, his trajectory looks aligned with Chelsea’s long-term project.

Chelsea’s young squad will inevitably face teething problems in Europe, as the defeat in Munich showed.

Errors at the back cost them dearly, but the midfield balance was another decisive factor.

James, while a superb player when fit, may not be the answer in the middle. His injury history suggests that continuing the experiment risks undermining Chelsea’s progression.

Andrey Santos, by contrast, brings the blend of steel and skill that European nights demand.

His tackling, ball progression, and composure under pressure offer a profile Chelsea have been missing since N’Golo Kanté’s departure.

Deploying Santos in his natural role could allow James to return to right-back, where his qualities are maximised, and help Chelsea find the balance they lacked against Bayern.

Maresca must drop Chelsea dud who was as bad as Chalobah vs Bayern

Chelsea lost to Bayern Munich in their first Champions League game of the season.

1 ByJack Salveson Holmes Sep 18, 2025

Prasidh the new leader on IPL 2025 Purple Cap table after Saturday double-header

Purple Cap leaderboardAfter being No. 1 from the second day of the tournament, Noor Ahmad has finally been toppled. That mantle is now with Prasidh Krishna, the GT fast bowler, whose 4 for 41 in the win over DC has put him two wickets clear at the top of the pile. Noor is in second place, and Josh Hazlewood, who was No. 2 on Friday night with the same number of wickets – 12 – is in fourth place, with DC’s Kuldeep Yadav in third, his 1 for 30 taking him to 12 wickets as well.The positions on the table have to do with the other numbers: ESPNcricinfo distinguishes based on bowling average, while IPL ranks bowlers based on economy rate, which has Kuldeep at No. 2, followed by Noor and Hazlewood.There’s no question about Prasidh being No. 1, though. After a wicketless outing in his season-opener, against Punjab Kings (PBKS), where he went for 41 runs, he has picked up at least a wicket in each game, and has one three-for and now a four-for.Shardul Thakur of LSG took 1 for 34 last night, and that has put him on 12 wickets as well, and a spot at No. 5 on the table.Below the top five, on 11 wickets, are R Sai Kishore and Mohammed Siraj of GT, Hardik Pandya, the MI captain, Noor’s team-mate Khaleel Ahmed, and.That table is becoming fun.10:24

Boucher: Buttler’s takedown of Starc sealed it for GT

Orange Cap leaderboard

As is the other table. After days of Nicholas Pooran-B Sai Sudharsan-Mitchell Marsh at the top, we finally have change: Jos Buttler and Yashasvi Jaiswal are making waves.The top two are where they were. It’s still LSG’s Pooran, despite another failure, followed by Sai Sudharsan, who scored a 21-ball 36 in GT’s win, but Marsh is now down to fifth. Buttler, courtesy his 97 not out off 54 balls against DC, and Jaiswal, who scored 74 in 52 balls against LSG – his third consecutive half-century – are at three and four.Those four are also the only ones to cross the 300-run mark in the IPL at this stage. Marsh is just one run away, though, with 299 against his name.Aiden Markram has now slotted in at No. 5, a few big hits behind Marsh, after his 66 against RR, with KL Rahul (DC), Suryakumar Yadav (Mumbai Indians – MI) and Shreyas Iyer (PBKS) the others to have crossed 250.Highest batting strike ratesBest bowling economy ratesMost sixesBest bowling figures in a match

بعد مشادات الكلاسيكو.. تشابي ألونسو يتجاهل غضب فينيسيوس ويدافع عن تصرفات لاعبيه ضد يامال

ظهر تشابي ألونسو مدرب ريال مدريد، في مؤتمر صحفي عقب انتصار فريقه في الكلاسيكو أمام برشلونة، وسئل عن أبرز أحداث المواجهة، بما في ذلك غضب فينيسيوس جونيور، والجدل مع لامين يامال.

وتغلب ريال مدريد على برشلونة بهدفين لهدف، ليوسع الفارق مع غريمه إلى 5 نقاط، وشهدت المواجهة غضب من جانب فينيسيوس جونيور أثناء استبداله.

كما وقعت مشادات في نهاية اللقاء بين لاعبي الفريقين، وسخر داني كارفاخال وفينيسيوس من لامين يامال لاعب برشلونة، بسبب تصريحاته المثيرة للجدل قبل المباراة حيث قال (يسرقون ويشتكون).

ونشرت صحيفة “آس” الإسبانية تصريحات تشابي، وبشأن غضب فينيسيوس أثناء الاستبدال، علّق: “لا أريد أن أفقد تركيزي عن الأمور المهمة، فهذه أشياء سنتحدث عنها لاحقًا، ضمن المباراة الكبيرة التي قدمناها”.

وأضاف: “فينيسيوس أيضًا ساهم كثيرًا، إنه فوز مهم، مستحق، وربما أقل من حجم أدائنا الحقيقي، فقد كانت لدينا فرص، منها ركلة الجزاء، هذا يمنحنا الإحساس بأننا فريق تنافسي في المباريات الكبرى”.

وإذا سبق ودرب لاعبًا بشخصية قوية مثل فينيسيوس، قال: “في الفريق شخصيات مختلفة، الآن سنستمتع بالفوز، وفي الوقت المناسب سنتحدث عن ذلك داخل غرفة الملابس”.

وعن الجدل مع لامين يامال، أوضح: “كان الفريق متحمسًا للغاية، كنا نتحدث مُسبقًا عن أهمية المباراة، ليس فقط من أجل النقاط الثلاث، بل لكل ما قد تتضمنه، أنا سعيد باللاعبين قبل كل شيء؛ كانوا بحاجة إلى هذا الشعور بالقدرة على الفوز بمباراة كبيرة”.

وعن مشهد كارفاخال وهو يتحدث مع لامين قائلاً إنه يتكلم كثيرًا، أشار تشابي: “كانت لحظة توتر بسبب نتيجة المباراة القريبة جدًا، أتيحت لنا فرص للتسجيل، تعاملت مع الموقف بتوتر اللحظة، لكن لا يجب تضخيم الأمر، هذه كرة قدم، وهذه المواقف حدثت كثيرًا في الكلاسيكيات السابقة، وماذا في ذلك؟ (يبتسم) السبت لدينا مباراة أخرى”.

تشواميني قال إنه يحب الأجواء التنافسية والتصريحات التي سبقت اللقاء من لامين يامال، وسُئل تشابي هل ما حدث في النهاية كان رد فعل على ذلك، وأجاب ألونسو: “كان ذلك جزءًا من توتر اللحظة، هذه المناوشات والمشادات حدثت كثيرًا في الكلاسيكو عبر السنوات، أمر طبيعي يعكس حماس اللاعبين، لا داعي للخوف من هذا النوع من التنافس الصحي، وقد رأيته أمامي”.

وسُئل تشابي ألونسو عمّا إذا كان قد وضع خطة خاصة لإيقاف لامين يامال، فأختتم تصريحاته قائلاً: “حاولنا الدفاع جيدًا كفريق واحد، دون أي اعتبارات خاصة، لم نعانِ من فرص كثيرة ضدنا”.