Friday 30 October 2015

Golf:Suzann Pettersen one behind leader Sei Young Kim at the Blue Bay LPGA


Norway's Suzann Pettersen stormed into contention at the halfway stage of the Blue Bay LPGA, posting the only sub-70 round on a second day of strong winds and high scores in China.

Pettersen, who was accused of showing a lack of sportsmanship after a putt concession row at the Solheim Cup last month, fired four birdies in a three-under 69 round to sit second on one under, one behind pacesetter Sei Young Kim.

With blustering winds and undulating greens providing a tough test for the field, Pettersen reached the turn in 33 before bouncing back from a dropped shot at the 10th to sink a birdie at the last and continue to progress up the leaderboard.

Kim also made a gain at the par-five 18th, moving in to the outright lead with a level-par 72 on the lengthy Jian Luke Bay Course, as she bids for a third title of the season.

"I like playing in the wind," the world No 11, who had victories in blustery conditions in the Bahamas and Hawaii, said. "I like the windy weather because I'm using a lot of skills and low cut shots."

The 22-year-old is one of only five players heading in to the weekend under par, with Pettersen joint-second alongside Candie Kung and American duo Ryann O'Toole and Austin Ernst.

Overnight leader Lin Xi Yu started her second round brightly with two birdies in the first three holes, but failed to pick up another shot all afternoon as she slipped to a bogey-filled 77 to head in to the weekend level par for the tournament.

World No 3 Stacy Lewis is also two shots adrift, while new world No 1 Lydia Ko endured another tough day as she stuttered to a three-over 75.

Ko lies 10 shots off the pace but may still be able to extend her lead on the LPGA's Race to the Globe title, as world No 2 and nearest challenger Inbee Park withdrew due to a finger injury.

Rugby World Cup 2015:Scott Sio boosts Australia’s scrum strength against All Blacks


It is some time since Australia sweated on the fitness of a prop – the main difference used to be the manner in which they collapsed a scrum – but the return of Scott Sio, a loosehead who prefers to stay on his feet, from the elbow injury that forced him to miss Sunday’s victory over Argentina for the final against New Zealand is timely.

The final is being billed as the battle of the breakdown, in particular Richie McCaw against David Pocock, but the bits and pieces will be significant. Australia’s scrum disintegrated without Sio, admittedly against an Argentina side who for all their new enthusiasm of throwing the ball around have not lost their relish for the muckier aspects of the game, and it is not the area of New Zealand’s greatest strength.

“I wanted to play against Argentina but it would not have been fair on the other players because I was not quite right,” Sio said. “I am good to go now. I watched the 2003 final between Australia and England as a fan, never dreaming I would play in one. We have kept things low key this week and the occasion will not hit us until we get to the ground on Saturday.”

Sio is one of eight Australia survivors from the last meeting between the sides in Auckland 11 weeks ago, a match, controlled by Saturday’s referee Nigel Owens, that New Zealand won 41-13 seven days after they had lost in Sydney in the Rugby Championship title decider, their only defeat by the Wallabies in the past 12 matches between the sides. Thirteen All Blacks remain.

Sio for James Slipper is Australia’s only change from the semi-final. The full-back Israel Folau, who has been troubled by an ankle injury for most of the tournament, keeps his place and Matt Giteau has recovered from the groin strain that forced him off against Argentina early in the second half.

The prospect a year ago of Australia getting out of a group that included England and Wales seemed unlikely before Michael Cheika took over as head coach, never mind getting through to the final. “You do not put a date on things,” he said when asked if he felt the team were ahead of schedule. “The great thing about rugby is humility and I do not feel any pressure. All we can do is prepare the best we can.

“There is excitement back home and we want to make them proud, not for reaching the final but for what we do on Saturday. I had not thought about what it means to be an Australian until I became involved with the team. We are not all camped out by a billabong: we are different people who come together to make lives better. That is a lot of what Australia is about.”

The wing Adam Ashley-Cooper will be making his 29th appearance against New Zealand, equalling David Campese’s record. “It has been an ambition of mine to play in a World Cup final since I first appeared in the tournament in 2007 and was struck by the inspirational atmosphere,” he said. “We got knocked out in the quarter-final by England that year. I am not quite sure now how we approached the game but afterwards I was so depressed that it took me a long time to come to terms with what had happened.

“The prospect of World Cup success has driven me on since then and we have our chance on Saturday. That said, we like to approach every Test match the same, no matter who we are playing and in what, and in that sense it has been no different this week even if we know that there is no bigger game.”

New Zealand unchanged for Rugby World Cup final against Australia


New Zealand have named an unchanged team for Saturday’s Rugby World Cup final against Australia at Twickenham, meaning five All Blacks stalwarts can end their Test careers with glory.

The New Zealand coach Steve Hansen keeps faith with the squad that battled to a 20-18 semi-final victory over South Africa. The captain Richie McCaw can go down as the greatest captain of all time by helping New Zealand become the first team to retain the Webb Ellis Cup.

McCaw will most likely call time on his record-breaking Test career after the weekend, while Dan Carter, Ma’a Nonu, Conrad Smith and Keven Mealamu have already confirmed the World Cup showpiece as their last in All Blacks colours.

New Zealand’s hard-nosed and high-quality quintet will surely end Saturday’s showdown with a combined caps haul of 486 – four will start, with Mealamu among the replacements – and will hope to end the weekend with a second straight World Cup crown.

The wing Nehe Milner-Skudder is the only member of New Zealand’s 23 with a single-figure caps total.

Hansen said: “We came here as contenders for the World Cup, just like everyone else. In our minds we have never been defenders.

“We knew we would have to earn the right to progress through the tournament so being in the final is very satisfying in its own right. The ultimate goal has always been to win it, so we are exactly where we need to be to try and achieve that.”

Hansen could not resist a small dig at Michael Cheika’s Wallabies, suggesting Australia have had to fight harder to reach the tournament’s showpiece.

He said: “Both teams have arrived at the final by different pathways. We’ve had the luxury of building game by game throughout the whole tournament, whilst Australia have had to be at their very best right from day one.

“Mental fortitude and physical endurance, together with skill, execution and sheer desire, will be the key ingredients come Saturday.”

New Zealand team to face Australia in Rugby World Cup final
B Smith; Milner-Skudder, C Smith, Nonu, Savea; Carter, A Smith; Moody, Coles, O Franks, Retallick, Whitelock, Kaino, McCaw (capt), Read.

Replacements Mealamu, Franks, Faumuina, Vito, Cane, Kerr-Barlow, Barrett, Williams.

NFL:Joseph Randle out of Dallas Cowboys plans for Seattle clash


Darren McFadden will start in place of Randle for the Cowboys
Running back Joseph Randle will not be part of the Dallas Cowboys squad this weekend as he deals with a personal issue.

The absence comes after reports on Thursday that Randle, who began the year as a starter, was facing a suspension from the NFL under the league's personal conduct policy.

Randle was arrested last year on a shoplifting charge at a Dallas-area shopping mall, while police investigated a domestic disturbance complaint against him earlier this year before declining to pursue charges.

An NFL spokesman said on Thursday he had no information whether the league had issued any reports on Randle, who has rushed for 315 yards on 78 carries so far this season.

Randle is also dealing with a back problem and coach Jason Garrett said Darren McFadden would be handed a start against the Seattle Seahawks in their week eight clash.

McFadden rushed for 152 yards on 29 carries in a defeat against the New York Giants last weekend as the Cowboys dropped to 2-4 after Randle suffered a back problem on his second carry.

Garrett said: "I want to make sure he takes care of that personal situation and gets it behind him.

"We're focused on our football team and we ran the ball very well the other day with Darren, and this provides opportunities for other guys.

"One of the things we believe in is having the next guy up, available and ready. Our players understand that, it's the culture we live in, and the preparation they have to do to take full advantage of their opportunity."

NFL:Tom Brady in red-hot form as New England Patriots dominate Miami Dolphins


Tom Brady continued his dominant season with four touchdown passes as the New England Patriots maintained their 100 per cent start to the season with a 36-7 demolition of the Miami Dolphins.

Patriots quarterback Brady threw for 356 yards and four scores on Thursday night to condemn new Dolphins coach Dan Campbell to a first defeat since he took over from Joe Philbin earlier this month.

Miami (3-4) had looked a much-improved team in their last two games - both victories - but Tennessee and Houston are not in New England's class and the Patriots were in ruthless form for much of the night at Gillette Stadium.

They never looked back after Brady hit Rob Gronkowski over the middle for a 47-yard touchdown with less than five minutes on the clock, although it took a while for a second touchdown to come.

Miami dug in on defense but were unable to drive the ball forward and went 9-0 down when Mike Pouncey snapped the ball before quarterback Ryan Tannehill was ready to give the Patriots two points from a safety.

Stephen Gostkowski hit a 52-yard field goal with 3:29 left in the first half and Brady took the chance of a final drive before the interval to make it 19-0 when he linked up with elusive running-back Dion Lewis for a 16-yard touchdown.

Miami got on the board early in the third quarter when Lamar Miller - held to only 15 yards rushing on nine carries - plunged over for a one-yard touchdown.

Gostkowski made it 22-7 with his second field goal of the night, a momentous one for the kicker who broke Adam Vinatieri's franchise record with his 26th successful field goal in a row.

And there would be two more Brady touchdown passes in the final quarter, both going to favourite wide receiver target Julian Edelman, who scored from 10 and 16 yards.

The Patriots are 7-0 for the second time in franchise history and first time since going 16-0 in 2007 - they have scored at least 28 points in every game and 30 or more in six straight, and Brady has thrown 20 touchdown passes to go with only one interception.

Cricket:Australia include Joe Burns and Usman Khawaja in Test squad


Joe Burns and Usman Khawaja have been recalled to the Australia squad for the first two Tests against New Zealand.

Burns, who has two Test caps, and more experienced Queensland captain Khawaja were preferred to uncapped youngster Cameron Bancroft and Shaun Marsh, who played a bit part in the Ashes defeat in England.

Queensland opener Burns is likely to slot into the retired Chris Rogers' spot at the top of the order, with Khawaja probably batting at four behind captain Steven Smith

The three-match series starts in Brisbane on November 5, with the second Test in Perth eight days later. All three Tests will be televised live by Sky Sports.

Burns, 26, returns to the side after playing the final two Tests against India during Australia's last home summer, while left-hander Khawaja is set to play his first test since August 2013.

"Usman is a very good player of fast bowling and is a fine technician; we feel he will make a really solid contribution towards our batting this series," chief selector Rod Marsh said on Friday.

"Joe thoroughly deserves his chance and was unlucky to miss out on the West Indies and Ashes tours off the back of two decent performances in his last test match for Australia in Sydney.

"He also put in terrific performances during the recent Australia A series in India."

Australia go into the series in transition with Rogers, captain Michael Clarke and all-rounder Shane Watson all having retired.

Mitchell Marsh has taken the all-rounder baton from Watson, while middle order batsman Adam Voges has been retained despite a patchy Ashes series.

Opening batsman and vice captain David Warner is named after recovering from a broken thumb - he scored 77 and 30 on his return to Sheffield Shield action with New South Wales.

The bowling line-up remains unchanged, with lone spinner Nathan Lyon supporting a pace attack led by left-armers Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson.

Josh Hazlewood will vie for the third seamer's spot with veteran Peter Siddle, who impressed in the final Ashes Test at the Kia Oval when he claimed six wickets in Australia's innings victory.

Australia squad: Steven Smith (capt), David Warner, Joe Burns, Josh Hazlewood, Usman Khawaja, Mitchell Johnson, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Marsh, Peter Nevill, Mitchell Starc, Peter Siddle, Adam Voges.

Cricket:Mark Wood ruled out of England's third Test against Pakistan


England seamer Mark Wood has been ruled out of the third Test against Pakistan with an ankle injury.

The 25-year-old, who has picked up six wickets over two games in the series, manages a chronic ankle problem and has been rested for the final match in Sharjah, which starts on Sunday live on Sky Sports. England trail the series 1-0.

England coach Trevor Bayliss suggested on Thursday that the team could go with three spinners in a bid to maximise conditions in Sharjah and ensure a draw from the three-game series in the UAE.

But he admitted the selectors had a decision to make, with the pace attack of James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Wood having bowled well in Abu Dhabi.and Dubai, and Liam Plunkett ready and waiting to come in.

Bayliss said: "Our plan, before seeing the pitch, was that we might go with three spinners.

"I think New Zealand and Pakistan both played three spinners in their series here last year. So that is an option I suppose.

"But the one thing that could go against that is that our pace bowling has been outstanding. As a quartet of pace bowlers, it's been excellent.

We might go with three spinners. I think New Zealand and Pakistan both played three in their series here last year. So that is an option I suppose.

"So, on the one hand, you might want a bit of extra spin but, on the other hand, you're then taking away from your strength in your bowling on this tour. So we've got to sit down and analyse that and make a decision."

Samit Patel would be the likely third-choice spinner, while there could also be a possible change in the batting.

Adil Rashid impressed at times in Dubai and Abu Dhabi and he spent an hour with spin-bowling great Shane Warne as he looks for more consistency in his bowling.

Out-of-form wicketkeeper-batsman Jos Buttler could be left out, with Jonny Bairstow his ready-made replacement behind the stumps, leaving room for the possible return of James Taylor.

Cricket:Aaron Finch and Ryan Carters break opening stand record in abandoned tour match


New Zealand's tour match against a Cricket Australia XI ended in farcical scenes after a record-breaking opening partnership in Sydney.

Aaron Finch (288 not out) and Ryan Carters (209) put on 503 for the first wicket to set a new Australian record but the match was abandoned just after Carters was dismissed, with New Zealand apparently refusing to bat because of the dangerous state of the wicket at the Blacktown International Sports Park.

The stand easily eclipsed the previous Australian record of 456 set by openers Ernie Mayne and Bill Ponsford for Victoria state in 1923-24.

Finch and Carters had been at the crease for 121.1 overs when reserve wicket-keeper Tom Latham became the first New Zealand bowler to celebrate a wicket, Carters edging to BJ Watling behind the stumps.

The wicket brought an early lunch, but New Zealand's batsmen failed to show after the break and Cricket Australia said the official reason was an 'unfit pitch', with the scorecard showing New Zealand declaring both innings.

New Zealand media reported that touring captain Brendon McCullum had refused to have his batsmen play out of safety concerns, with the pitch having developed crater-like impressions at both ends by the close of day one - there was no official comment from captain McCullum or New Zealand Cricket.

"The decision has been agreed between the two teams to abandon the match due to the wicket's deteriorating surface becoming unfit for first class cricket," CA's head of cricket operations Sean Cary said in a statement.

"Preparation of the wicket was compromised by poor weather conditions in Sydney early this week.

"In response, we're working with New Zealand Cricket to provide alternative preparation for the team ahead of next week's first Test."

Tennis:Roger Federer beats Philipp Kohlschreiber to reach the last eight in Basel


Roger Federer is through to the quarter-finals of the ATP 500 Basel but he was given a stern test by Philipp Kohlschreiber.

Top seed Federer, who is seeking a seventh title at his hometown event, eventually prevailed 6-4 4-6 6-4 after a tight match which finished one break of serve in each set.

Federer converted one of his two break point chances in set one but Kohlschreiber hit back in the second set, successfully converting the only break point either player created.

But Federer was back in immaculate form on serve in set three, winning 20 points out of 24 on his own delivery.

And he made the decisive move on the Kohlschreiber serve in the ninth game, breaking for a 5-4 lead when the 32nd-ranked German sent a crosscourt forehand wide.

Federer will now face David Goffin of Belgium in the last eight on Friday.

Donald Young will face his fellow American Jack Sock in the other quarter-final on Federer's side of the draw.

Tennis:Maria Sharapova reaches semi-finals of WTA Finals after ending Flavia Pennetta's career


Maria Sharapova has reached the semi-finals of the WTA Finals after inflicting a career-ending defeat on Flavia Pennetta.

The third-seeded Russian comfortably wrapped up a 7-5 6-1 win to qualify from the Red Group, but this result eliminated US Open champion Pennetta, who has announced she will retire after the tournament.

"I've lost the last couple of times against Flavia. I know what a tough competitor and opponent she is. I just wanted to get a little bit of revenge before she goes out of the game!" Sharapova told wtatennis.com.

"She's had an incredible career and I was so happy she got the grand slam at the US Open. I was smiling for her."

Sharapova's two-set win also meant that Agnieszka Radwanska advanced from the group after ending Simona Halep's qualification hopes earlier in the day.

Fifth seed Radwanska had lost both of her opening matches, but battled through after a 7-6 (7/5) 6-1 victory over world number two Halep, including overturning a 5-1 deficit in the tie-break.

Her progression then relied solely on Sharapova's result, which sent both of them into the next stage.

"That tie-break was something else and I just managed to make some great points at important moments," Radwanska said after her win.

"It's very nice to hear people say my tennis is entertaining so I hope I can keep hearing people say that over and over again."

Chelsea keen to stand by José Mourinho but history shows their sackings work


José Mourinho is working on the reasonable assumption Chelsea have changed. “I know the history of this club,” he had conceded this month. “Every time the results are not good, there was a change of manager. But when I was contacted to come back, I was told: ‘We had so many managers, and we know you are the best.’ So I think it’s time for the club to act in a different way, to mark a position of stability, a position of trust.” Where once the default was to mobilise the lawyers with compensation packages to discuss, and turn to an interim, now the Premier League champions are supposed to be about continuity.

The vote of confidence offered to the management staff after the defeat by Southampton this month suggested that remained the case. Mourinho, who has no intention of resigning, is understood to retain support of influential members of the board, not least the director Marina Granovskaia, who was instrumental in his original reappointment. There is no real appetite for change among the hierarchy given that, only five months ago, the Portuguese had claimed his third Premier League title for the club.

Yet Chelsea find themselves in uncharted territory. For all their improved display in departing the Capital One Cup at Stoke City on Tuesday, Chelsea are 15th in the Premier League with five losses from 10 games. Liverpool visit Stamford Bridge on Saturday in a fixture that will again test the team’s ability to revive their campaign. No side have recovered from a points tally this low at this stage to qualify for the following season’s Champions League. They are a squad flirting with disaster.

And then there is that unnerving history of mid-season upheaval. Retreat into the recent past, not least when Mourinho’s relationship with the owner, Roman Abramovich, fractured back in 2006-07, and the sight of the London club languishing even slightly off the pace would render the manager’s position increasingly untenable. Roberto Di Matteo, André Villas-Boas and Luiz Felipe Scolari were dismissed with their team – albeit sides benefiting from the strong and influential backbone established properly by Mourinho during his first spell in charge – hovering on the fringes of the title race. The current crop are 11 points adrift of the summit.

The scenario is very different these days. This Chelsea side lack the experienced core of previous teams, sides crammed with big characters who responded to managerial upheaval by reimposing some order on ailing campaigns. The manager in the centre of the storm is an established winner at the club he calls home. But if results continue to stagnate this time around, might the hierarchy not be tempted to consider how mid-season change instigated an upturn of sorts on previous occasions?

The scenario The Portuguese had delivered a first league title in half a century, and followed it up with another, and had claimed the FA Cup and League Cup the previous season. Yet tension had been mounting behind the scenes over that third season, his relationship with Abramovich increasingly fractious. There were ructions over the roles afforded to Frank Arnesen as the club’s head of youth development, and Avram Grant as a director of football. The latter’s appointment had initially been opposed by Mourinho. Similar disagreements had flared over transfer policy, with Mourinho having been denied the centre-half he had thought was necessary to maintain a title challenge. He had claimed to be “mellow Mourinho” on the pre-season tour of the United States, but talk of reconciliation with the owner was a facade. The hierarchy were infuriated that Mourinho acted as if he owned the club and, with Chelsea fifth but only two points off the top and six games into the new campaign, he was sacked after a disappointing Champions League draw against Rosenborg.

How it panned out Grant, a close ally of the owner, took over and lost his first game at Manchester United, but would only lose one more in his 32 Premier League matches in charge. Furthermore, Chelsea finally overcame their hoodoo against Rafael Benítez’s Liverpool in the Champions League to reach the final, where they lost on penalties to United. Yet, while Grant did enough to earn himself a three-and-a-half-year contract as manager, the sense lingered that strong characters in the dressing room were propelling the team rather than leadership from on high. He was offered his previous role as a director of football in the wake of the loss in Moscow, but refused. He lasted eight months in the job.

Where they finished Second in the Premier League, beaten finalists in the League Cup and the Champions League.

The scenario The World Cup-winning Brazilian had been appointed amid much fanfare during the previous summer’s European Championship but ended up lasting barely seven months in the position. Scolari never really got to grips with club management in the Premier League. Frank Lampard and John Terry requested more intensity in training and others within the squad were far more deeply sceptical about his methods. He may not have been helped by an inability to master the language, and pointed to a lack of investment in the transfer market as a mitigating factor. The final straw was a goalless home draw with Hull City, which left Chelsea with only six wins in 13 matches at Stamford Bridge and, while fourth and still in the FA Cup and Champions League, a distant seven points from the leaders. Yet Terry’s subsequent admission that only “two or three players” shared his own support for the manager seemed telling, suggesting Scolari had lost the faith of the vast majority.

How it panned out Abramovich turned to Guus Hiddink, coaching the Russia national side at the time, as an interim replacement with the Dutchman taking on a dual role for the remainder of the season. His experience and approach served to galvanise the dressing room, with Chelsea losing only once in 23 matches under his stewardship. There was frustration in the Champions League semi-finals against Barcelona, with the second leg now infamous for the performance of the Norwegian referee Tom Henning Ovrebo, but silverware in the FA Cup. The players, relishing life under the Dutchman, clubbed together to buy him a limited edition Rolex watch worth £200,000.

Where they finished Third in the Premier League, FA Cup winners, Champions League semi-finalists.

The scenario The inexperienced Villa-Boas, secured on a three-year contract worth £4.5m a season, had been charged with overhauling the London club having been prised from Porto for £13.3m in compensation in the summer of 2011. In the end, he lasted only 256 days and 40 games. The demand to conduct that revamp while maintaining challenges on all fronts had proved too much for the 34-year-old. Senior players had quickly become disaffected by his methods, the team’s performances too often flat and lacking zest, with the manager bristling at criticism from outside. As results deteriorated on the pitch, the other contenders overtook his team. They were fifth in the Premier League, and 3-1 down from the first leg of a Champions League knockout tie against Napoli where Frank Lampard and Ashley Cole had been dropped, when the axe was wielded after an anaemic 1-0 loss at West Bromwich Albion. The board, along with the owner, were unanimous in their belief that Villas-Boas could not turn the campaign around.

How it panned out The board spoke initially to Rafael Benítez about taking over on an interim basis but when the Spaniard suggested he was seeking a longer-term arrangement, turned instead to Villas-Boas’s assistant, Di Matteo, hoping the close relationship he enjoyed with the senior players might help heal some of the wounds at the club. The move did, indeed, have a restorative effect as that familiar senior core of players, so criticised by the hierarchy for their part in Villas-Boas’ failure, responded. The league form was relatively patchy, with three defeats in 11 games seeing Chelsea finish in their lowest position under Abramovich. But the FA Cup run and, most remarkably, the club’s passage to Munich and their first European Cup more than compensated.

Where they finished Sixth in the Premier League, FA Cup winners, Champions League winners.

The scenario The board had always doubted whether Di Matteo had the right level of experience to take on the position long term. It worried how he would revive them should form slump, and whether he had the tactical and strategic acumen to succeed. The owner eventually offered the Italian a two-year deal largely because it had become clear Pep Guardiola would elude him, while publicly doffing a cap to that achievement in Munich. But their concerns had resurfaced in pre-season, when they had not seen enough evidence of the team shaping up, and even with the loss of the Community Shield and the Uefa Super Cup. Some within the set-up suggested the side’s fine start to the Premier League campaign owed more to individual brilliance than sound teamwork. Then came the blip. Abramovich wanted to sack Di Matteo after another loss at West Bromwich Albion – they had won twice in seven matches at that stage, but were still third in the table – but the manager limped to Turin for a Champions League group game, dropped Fernando Torres, and effectively signed his own suicide note. The 3-0 thrashing by Juventus, a 10th game without a clean sheet, all but ensured the holders’ defence would not extend beyond the group stage. Di Matteo was sacked at 4am upon returning to the training ground, six months after winning London’s first European Cup.

How it panned out Benítez steadied the ship, ensured Chelsea were tighter defensively, and would go on to enjoy some success in the domestic cup competitions while winning the Europa League. Yet the appointment of the former Liverpool manager, whose rivalry with Mourinho a few years previously had been regular and infamous, infuriated the support and an air of disgruntled protest had tainted the entire campaign. A permanent appointment always seemed unlikely, even if Benítez had hoped he might be granted the opportunity for a while, with Mourinho’s return mooted long before the end of the campaign.

Where they finished Third in the Premier League, semi-finalists in FA Cup and League Cup, and Europa League winners.

Eva Carneiro to claim for constructive dismissal against Chelsea


Lawyers acting for the former Chelsea team doctor Eva Carneiro have served notice on the club that she intends to bring a claim for constructive dismissal, having failed as yet to agree a severance package following her departure last month.

Legal papers are understood to have been served on the Premier League champions earlier this week as time in the three-month window permitted for claimants to lodge any complaint ticked down towards its deadline of 8 November. The papers will trigger an employment tribunal unless an out-of-court settlement can be agreed before a hearing takes place. Such tribunals are conducted in public and could be embarrassing for either defendant or claimant, meaning a compromise is usually struck beforehand.

Carneiro and the club’s physio Jon Fearn were publicly criticised by Chelsea’s manager, José Mourinho, for legitimately entering the field of play to treat Eden Hazard in stoppage time at the end of the 2-2 draw with Swansea City on 8 August. The referee, Michael Oliver, had waved the medical staff on to the pitch, with the Belgium international apparently in need of treatment – the medics were obliged to comply – although that meant the hosts played out a period of added time with only nine men on the field after the earlier dismissal of Thibaut Courtois.

The doctor and physio were subsequently dropped from first-team duties. Chelsea have consistently refused to comment publicly on what they consider to be an internal staffing matter but, whereas Fearn remains at the club, Carneiro did not report for work in the period after the incident and formally left last month, with her legal team entering negotiations to stave off any legal action. Mourinho has since been cleared by the Football Association of using discriminatory language towards Carneiro on the touchline, although the doctor released a statement criticising the governing body over its investigation of the incident.

“I was surprised to learn that the FA was allegedly investigating the incident of 8 August via the press,” she said this month. “I was at no stage requested by the FA to make a statement. I wonder whether this might be the only formal investigation in this country where the evidence of the individuals involved in the incident was not considered relevant. Choosing to ignore some of the evidence will surely influence the outcome of the findings.”

Although there is still scope for compromise to be reached, the ramifications of the fallout have added to the sense of chaos at Chelsea over what has been a traumatic season. Mourinho and his team go into Saturday’s potentially pivotal game against Liverpool 15th in the Premier League table after five defeats in 10 matches and with two disciplinary issues hanging over the manager. The Portuguese and his assistant Silvino Louro will be in the dugout at Stamford Bridge, despite being sent to the stands at West Ham last Saturday, with their misconduct charges to be heard by a commission next week at the earliest.

The Chelsea manager is also appealing against a £50,000 fine and suspended one-match stadium ban for suggesting officials were “afraid” to award his side decisions following the defeat by Southampton on 3 October. That appeal over the scale of the punishment was initially expected to be heard this week.

The champions’ Brazil midfielder Ramires signed a new contract through to 2019 on Thursday, in effect serving as a two-year extension, although even that was overshadowed by news that his compatriot Lucas Piazon, a young forward on a season-long loan at Reading, is wanted by police in Toronto in connection with an alleged sexual assault.

A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Piazon and his Brazil Under-22s team-mate Andrey da Silva Ventura after an alleged incident during the Pan-Am Games last summer. Police allege a 21-year-old woman was sexually assaulted by two men who met her at a downtown club on 25 July and then went to her home. It is alleged the woman was sexually assaulted after she fell asleep and the two men fled the scene.

The alleged incident occurred on the same day Brazil won the bronze medal in the tournament, with Piazon, who moved to Chelsea for £5m in 2011 from São Paulo, scoring in a 3-1 win over Panama. Both Chelsea and Reading, for whom Piazon scored at Fulham on Saturday, confirmed they were “aware of the reports” but made no further comment. The forward is understood to have trained as normal with Steve Clarke’s squad on Thursday.

Thursday 29 October 2015

Boxing:Guillermo Rigondeaux stripped of his WBO world title due to inactivity


Guillermo Rigondeaux has been stripped of his WBO super-bantamweight world title having failed to make a defence this year.

The 35-year-old Cuban (15-0-KO10), who is a two-time Olympic gold medallist, still holds the WBA Super title at 122lbs despite not fighting since December 2014's stoppage win over Hisashi Amagasa.

Francisco Valcarcel, president of the WBO, said: "Unfortunately we had to deal today with the topic of Rigondeaux, who over 31 months has only made three fights.

"He has not made any announcement on when he will fight again. We do not know what the reasons are [for his inactivity] and we can not punish 15 other fighters that are in the rankings to protect a champion - regardless of how good he is.

"For boxing purists, Rigondeaux is one of the most extraordinary boxers you can see. But there is a responsibility to those ranked under the WBO. The title is not something that belongs to the champion but to the entire sport and every member of the sanctioning body that is rated has a right to fight for it.

"For us, we feel sorry stripping him as world champion but we must enforce the rules for inactivity. The title has to be declared vacant and in this case the champion has made only three defences in almost three years."

Rigondeaux has been earmarked as a possible future opponent for WBA champion Scott Quigg and IBF champion Carl Frampton.

Boxing:Shane Mosley won't fight Liam Smith due to rematch stipulation


Shane Mosley has withdrawn from negotiations to fight Liam Smith in December.

The American's reluctance to accept an immediate rematch clause is the reason for the potential bout being scuppered, he has claimed.

The 44-year-old, a former three-weight world champion, had seemed in line to be Smith's first challenger since the Liverpool puncher won the WBO super-welterweight title - but talks have abruptly ended.

These guys are scared and they made a bad decision.

"It's all good and I'm passing on the fight," Mosley told World Boxing News.

"They don't want to ink it without an immediate rematch and I don't have time [to] lose focus on training negotiating a deal that won't happen. These guys are scared and they made a bad decision."

Mosley previously insisted that a commitment to fight in early 2016 meant that, should he beat Smith, he could not guarantee an immediate rematch.

But he believes that his star power, garnered through a 18-year career in which he has battled Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao and beaten Oscar De La Hoya twice, means Smith should have been grateful to fight him on December 19.

"No one in the States was even talking about any of these guys until my name was brought up to be on the card," Mosley said.

"The world would have been watching them and it would have opened doors in the US.

"There's no way I should have taken that fight for less than a million and I took it damn near for free, but they blew it over an immediate [rematch]. It's strange."

Boxing:Gavin McDonnell hopes to face Scott Quigg or Carl Frampton for world title in future


Gavin McDonnell believes he will be ready for a world title shot after 'a few more learning fights.'

The 29-year-old from Doncaster defended his European super-bantamweight title with an impressive unanimous points victory over Jeremy Parodi on October 24 and is growing in confidence under new trainer Dave Coldwell.

With world champions Scott Quigg and Carl Frampton in talks to clash early next year, McDonnell has revealed he may find himself as the support act to two of his future targets.

I've only had 16 fights and I'm European champion, so I don't want to rush my career and I want to be ready for when those big fights come.

In an interview reported on World Boxing News, McDonnell said: "For my next fight, I'm looking to get out again in January or maybe February of 2016 - it definitely won't be before Christmas.

"I've only had 16 fights and I'm European champion, so I don't want to rush my career and I want to be ready for when those big fights come.

"It looks like the fight [Quigg-Frampton] might be announced for February and it would be great to get on the undercard. Hopefully, Matchroom can stick me on and it might get a bit of interest going for a future fight.

"I'm not a million miles away, so if I can come in with another improved performance, people won't see me as too far off."

McDonnell says the Quigg-Frampton fight is difficult to call and, while he concedes their career paths are ahead of his own, believes they will cross at some point down the line.

"I've got my goals and I'm always looking for progression," he added. "Obviously, I'm not calling Quigg and Frampton out at the moment, but after a few more learning fights and climbing the rankings, I will then be ready for my shot.

"It should make for a great fight between the two of them and they both have good power. I always change my mind as to who I think will win. I used to think Frampton, but now - after their last performances - Quigg might be in a better position."

Boxing:Tony Thompson has sights set on Deontay Wilder and Wladimir Klitschko


Tony Thompson wants to set up a third fight with Wladimir Klitschko by first defeating Deontay Wilder.

The 44-year-old is ambitiously plotting the demise of WBC heavyweight champion Wilder before trying to avenge two previous defeats to Klitschko.

Thompson (40-5-KO27) is due to face Malik Scott on Friday night but wants to win Wilder's title as bait to lure in Klitschko for a third time, despite two knockout defeats in 2008 and 2012.

My plan is to knockout Deontay Wilder, take his belt, and use it as enticement to fight Klitschko for a third fight.

Tony Thompson
"My plan is to knockout Deontay Wilder, take his belt, and use it as enticement to fight Klitschko for a third fight," Thompson said to Fighthype.

"I'm still not satisfied with the outcomes. Deontay Wilder is America's champion, but he's not the heavyweight champion of the world.

"Wladimir is the heavyweight champion of the world."

The IBF, WBA and WBO heavyweight champion from Ukraine must first deal with Tyson Fury on November 28, live on Sky Sports Box Office, before Thompson's plan can come together.

As well as twice losing to Klitschko, the 'Tiger' has also shared a ring with his first target Wilder.

He concedes a height disadvantage, but reveals he used the up-and-coming knockout artist from Alabama as a training partner for his bouts with Klitschko.

"That's who I'm chasing through Deontay," he said.

"Deontay is like three inches taller than me. We sparred for the Klitschko fight."

Messi will never leave Barca but Neymar might,says Laporta



The former Barca president is convinced the Argentine international will remain at Camp Nou until retirement but is unsure about Neymar's long-term future

Lionel Messi will never leave Barcelona, according to former president Joan Laporta, who believes Manchester United target Neymar might be sold.

Messi - sidelined with a knee injury - has been linked with a move to the Premier League after a tax case in Spain.

Team-mate Neymar has also been linked with a move to Old Trafford, and when asked about the pair's future, Laporta raised concern that the Brazilian may have to leave in order to balance the books.

"Messi will never leave Barca. It is part of our emblem and our heart," Laporta said.

"I received many proposals when I was president. Notably Inter, who wanted to pay his release clause but I always refused.

"For Neymar, it's different. The economic situation of the club is not good, but the current president, to balance the books must sell players or assets. And the best solution is to sell a great player.

"There is talk of a proposal for Man United. But all that, it is because of the mismanagement of the current leadership."

Tennis:Marin Cilic defeated Teymuraz Gabashvili at ATP 500 Basel


Marin Cilic strolled into the quarter-finals of the ATP 500 Basel with a one-sided win over Teymuraz Gabashvili.

The former US Open winner recorded a swift 6-3 6-1 win to set up a last-eight clash against Rafael Nadal in Switzerland.

Seventh seed Cilic needed just an hour and 15 minutes to eliminate Gabashvili, hitting seven aces and 21 winners along the way.

Ozil is great but Fabregas was the best,says Aaron Ramsey


The Welshman praised his team-mate but still feels his ex-midfield colleague was the finest he has played with at the Gunners

Arsenal midfielder Aaron Ramsey has voiced his admiration for Mesut Ozil's fine performances this season, but says he is not at Cesc Fabregas' level yet.

Ozil has already set up seven goals in nine Premier League appearances this campaign while scoring once himself, and Ramsey is in awe of his team-mate's abilities and vision.

Nevertheless, Ramsey has made it clear Ozil is not the best player he has played with at Arsenal since joining the club from Cardiff City in 2008, saving that honour for current Chelsea man Fabregas.

"He has a great eye for a ball – he has many assists – and his weight of pass is fantastic as well," Ramsey told the official UEFA website.

"He finds those little pockets of space very well and links up the play."

"Cesc Fabregas is the best player I have played with at Arsenal. He played in the same position as me and to have him to look up to when I first came here," the Wales international added.

"He was playing every week, assisting, scoring. He was just a very accomplished midfielder, so probably him [was best]."

Ramsey also had words of praise for Arsenal youngster Alex Iwobi and has backed the 19-year-old to shine.

"Alex Iwobi is one to look out for, I think. He is very gifted and has great feet, so I am sure he will be one to look out for in the future," he concluded.

The teenager made his senior debut in the Gunners' 3-0 League Cup loss to Sheffield Wednesday on Tuesday.

Ronaldo wants to return to England,says Jose Semedo.


The pair, who were both at Sporting Lisbon, have holidayed together on occasion, leaving Premier League fans hopeful his quotes have merit

Real Madrid attacker Cristiano Ronaldo may be in line for a return to the Premier League, according to personal friend and Sheffield Wednesday midfielder Jose Semedo.

The 30-year-old was interviewed in the wake of Wednesday's 3-0 thumping of Arsenal, and revealed that “deep down” he feels the former Manchester United man will be back before he retires.

"He is very happy at Real Madrid,” Semedo told talkSPORT. "But he loves English football, he loves English people and, deep down, I think he will come back to England.

"He doesn't want to finish his career without coming back. He said he wishes Real Madrid were based in England, but that's not possible so I believe he will end his career in England."

Ronaldo made 292 appearances in all competitions for Manchester United during his six-year stay in England, before moving to Spain for a then-record £80 million (€94 million) in June 2009.

Tennis:Nick Kyrgios' season is over after he pulled out of the Paris Masters


Nick Kyrgios' 2015 season is over after being forced to withdraw from the Paris Masters due to injury.

An issue with his arm has prevented Kyrgios from taking part in the ATP 1000 tournament in the French capital.

The news ends a turbulent season for the young Australian who hit headlines for muttering an insult to Stan Wawrinka that yielded a fine.

That sledging during the Montreal Masters came during the same summer in which Kyrgios clashed with umpires at Wimbledon - yet he will also look back on the year with fond memories.

The 20-year-old from Canberra improved his world ranking from 52nd to 30th and enjoyed victories over Wawrinka and Roger Federer.

Henry backs Sanchez to fire Arsenal to Premier League glory


The Gunners legend believes the Chilean and Mesut Ozil's recent performances bode well for the club to end their wait for the title

Arsenal's record goalscorer Thierry Henry believes Alexis Sanchez could guide Arsene Wenger's men to the Premier League title this term if he stays fit.

Sanchez  endured a sluggish start to the season after helping his country in the Copa America, but Sanchez burst into life with a hat-trick against Leicester City in September.

The Chile international then scored twice to help see off Manchester United at the Emirates Stadium, playing a vital part in the Gunners going joint-top of the table ahead of a trip to Swansea City this weekend.

"I've said it so many times, but he's vital for Arsenal," Henry told Sky Sports of Sanchez. "If he's fit I think Arsenal have a chance of winning the Premier League.

"If he stays injury-free and shows the desire and the commitment that he has for Arsenal in the way he plays then Arsenal have every chance of winning the title, but you need to keep that guy fit.

"He is that 'extra' type of guy that, when you're in trouble, he'll make sure you win the game. I don't want to copy a show on another channel, but he is the 'X-factor'."

Henry was equally full of praise for Mesut Ozil, who has contributed two goals and seven assists in all competitions this season.

"For me, he has finally started to deliver on a consistent basis," Henry added.

"We all know his quality; he is a World Cup winner; his touch is second to none; he has vision; he shares… everything is there.

"The only thing you can say, in all fairness, is that before he wasn't doing it on a consistent basis. Now, he looks like he's doing it every game so you have to give him credit.

Chelsea can still win Premier League title,says Cesc Fabregas


The Spaniard has claimed his side can still defend their crown, irrespective of their dismal start to the season

Cesc Fabregas remains confident Chelsea can still successfully defend their Premier League title ahead of Liverpool's visit on Saturday.

The reigning champions have endured a dismal start to the season, and sit 15th in the table with just 11 points from 10 games.

Jose Mourinho's men trail joint leaders Manchester City and Arsenal 11 points, yet Fabregas is refusing to throw in the towel just yet and is targeting a response against Jurgen Klopp's men.

"I'm sure we can still win the league," the Spain midfielder told Match of the Day magazine.

"We just have to get our confidence back, win a few games on the trot and from there we'll see what happens.

"In the Premier League anyone can lose points to anyone."

ATP Swiss Indoors Basel 2015:Thursday at the tennis

Roger Federer is on Sky Sports on Thursday
Roger Federer continues his ATP 500 Basel campaign on Thursday afternoon against Philipp Kohlschreiber, live on Sky Sports.

The Swiss great furthers his defence of the tournament that he won last year a day after top contender Rafael Nadal successfully maintained his pursuit of the title.

You can watch the ATP 500 Basel on Thursday from 1pm, live on Sky Sports 3 HD.

Federer will be top of the bill as he heads towards a seventh championship in his homeland.

His second-round opponent, Germany's Kohlschreiber, could be forgiven for fearing his latest test. In 10 previous meetings, the imperious Federer has won every time.

Marin Cilic, an outsider for the Basel crown as the seventh seed, kicks off the afternoon's play.

The 2014 US Open winner will meet Teymuraz Gabashvili - the Russian who owns a shock win over Andy Murray this season - with the winner set to face Nadal.

John Isner, the sixth seed, faces Jack Sock in a heavy-hitting all-American contest before fifth seed Richard Gasquet takes on Dominic Thiem.

Big-serving duo Kevin Anderson and Ivo Karlovic end Thursday by playing Donald Young and Dusan Lajovic, respectively.

F1:What's still to fight for in 2015


2016 has to start here for Nico Rosberg
In the words of Sir Patrick Head, his former boss at Williams, Nico Rosberg faces a long winter.
The title has been lost and so, judging by his petulant cap-throwing response to Lewis Hamilton's US GP victory, has Nico's poise. In Mexico, Brazil and Abu Dhabi, Rosberg faces three reputationally-defining races which will determine just how bleak a winter awaits.

Either Rosberg bounces back immediately and proves he can beat Hamilton or he risks lurching into a number two role at Mercedes that could possess the rancid whiff of permanency if a continued Ferrari resurgence in 2016 forces Mercedes to favour one of their two drivers.

Rosberg didn't merely look dejected on Sunday in Austin, he looked lost. In her latest diary entry, Rachel Brookes notes that Rosberg's 'body language has been different all year'. Many believe Rosberg hasn't been the same since Hamilton turned the public relations tables on him at Spa 14 months ago.

"It's the worst thing to be my team-mate," said Hamilton midweek in a boast deftly disguised as a statement of sympathy. Talk is already stirring of Rosberg requiring a change of scenery.The knowing looks and head shakes of Niki Lauda and Toto Wolff following Rosberg's unforced error last Sunday may become as symbolic as Hamilton's over-the-shoulder look back at his broken-down McLaren in Singapore in 2012. Mercedes are bound to already being keeping tabs on Max Verstappen and Rosberg, having proved his worth a year ago, suddenly finds himself bereft of a rebuttal. If Rosberg cannot slow down the Hamilton juggernaut over the next three races - as much for his own self-confidence as anything else - then cap-spats will be the least of his concerns.

'Don't compare Lewis to F1 greats'
The F1 Midweek Report guests debate Hamilton's title and plans to overhaul F1's engines
As it currently stands, Rosberg trails Sebastian Vettel in the Drivers' Championship, a damning indictment of his performances this year given that the Mercedes W06 has consistently been a second per lap quicker than Ferrari - or at least it has been in Hamilton's hands.

Rosberg's speed hasn't gone entirely missing, as illustrated by his recent run of three successive pole positions. But the fact that, armed with the fastest car on the grid, he has only won three races - and his Monaco victory was nothing more than an aberration - is indefensible. His attempt at a 2016 fightback starts here. If it doesn't, with a long winter to dwell on his Annus horribilis, there may be no turning back.

Hamilton still has records to chase
The world championship has been retained but the world champion's hunger has not been sated. Not a bit of it. "This is just the beginning," he told reporters on the night of his coronation. For a driver who professes not to pay too much attention to records and his standing therein, question Hamilton closely and he will invariably know precisely where he fits into F1's most prestigious lists.

Immediately on the horizon will be claiming his 50th F1 pole position, a half century which only Michael Schumacher and Ayrton Senna have previously completed. Nor does Hamilton need to be a keen student of F1 history to realise the importance of maximising every opportunity: at the end of his equally-dominant championship season in 2013, Sebastian Vettel rounded off the campaign with nine successive victories - greed which was just as well given that Sebastian would have to wait another 18 months for his next.

Most wins in a single season

Driver Season Wins
Michael Schumacher 2004 13
Sebastian Vettel 2013 13
Michael Schumacher 2002 11
Sebastian Vettel 2011 11
Lewis Hamilton 2014 11
Lewis Hamilton 2015* season ongoing 10
It would be too much to argue that the final three races of 2015 are important to Hamilton's reputation or, even accepting the truism that how a driver ends a season can't often define how he starts the next, that it will be important for 2016. But as discussed above, he'll want to keep Rosberg down and subservient. Nor is it in his nature to ease off. Hamilton's flat-out determination to win the title at the first opportunity last week was instructive for what it revealed about Hamilton as a competitive animal. "Of course I could have gone on to other races but for me, I'm kind of like 'now!'" Hamilton remarked. "It was so close that I could smell it."

This is a driver who doesn't know how to ease up or play it safe. Already the first driver in F1 history to win ten or more races in successive years, expect no let up from Hamilton over the next month - and nor should there be.

Alonso has points to prove against Button
"Rating a driver is much more than the titles," observed Fernando Alonso during his recent eulogy of Lewis Hamilton.

One measurement which the Spaniard might have in mind is a driver's record vis a vis his team-mate, a barometer which happens to shine an especially flattering light on Alonso.

Never once has Alonso ever finished a F1 season - and he's competed in 14 of them - with a points deficit to his team-mate. He's drawn a couple - his first, when scoring a point in the Minardi was impossible and, rather more famously, when he drew on points with then-rookie Hamilton - but his record doesn't contain a single defeat.

Except, as it stand with three races to go, this season, because Fernando currently trails Jenson Button by five points.

In the grand scheme of this year's championship, it's not much; Hamilton currently has 76 to spare at the summit. But Alonso is a driver obsessed by numbers and he will regard overhauling Button as a matter of honour. Given that he reputedly earns twice as much as Button even after the Englishman recently secured himself a hefty pay-rise, and has been particularly outspoken in his criticism of Honda, overtaking Button is also the least he could do to keep up his end of the bargain.

Who'll be top dog at each team?
The Drivers' Championship might be over, but a number of fights to be the number one driver within a team is still very much alive up and down the grid both on Saturdays and Sundays.

With three races remaining, the Williams drivers can barely be separated with Valtteri Bottas and Felipe Massa tied on eight qualifying wins a piece. The Finn is fractionally ahead in the Drivers' Championship, with a two-point advantage over the Brazilian.

At McLaren the qualifying battle is still alive with Fernando Alonso leading Jenson Button 7-6 in the 13 sessions both have contested. On a Sunday, Button has finished ahead of Alonso nine times to five and that has translated into a five-point lead in the standings.

The battle of the rookies at Toro Rosso looks set to go to the wire having ebbed and flowed all season. Carlos Sainz currently leads the qualifying battle 8-6, but Max Verstappen has a 27-point advantage in the Drivers' Championship.

Who's where in 2016?
The driver line-ups and provisional schedule for next season
Sauber's Felipe Nasr has out-raced his team-mate 10-5 this year, scoring 18 more points, but he and Marcus Ericsson are tied on eight wins apiece in their qualifying head-to-head.

And at the back of the grid, Will Stevens currently enjoys a 2-1 advantage over Manor team-mate Alexander Rossi in qualifying, with two races remaining in that battle. Rossi has already won the race fight, boasting a 3-0 scoreline - although at the US GP, Stevens was punted out of the race by the American.

Against Roberto Merhi, Stevens has won the qualifying battle which currently stands at 8-3. The British driver could tie the race fight at six apiece if he beats Merhi when the pair go head-to-head once more at the season finale in Abu Dhabi.

Pogba could move to Barcelona, but he’ll cost €100m,says Mino Raiola.


The French playmaker has again been linked with a move to the Spanish champions, this time by his agent, who says Pogba would cost over £70 million

Paul Pogba’s agent sees no reason why the midfielder couldn’t join Barcelona next summer but admits Juventus would demand a huge fee.

Mino Raiola, who oversees the contract negotiations of the France international, reopened speculation that Pogba could be on his way to La Liga in the future but has ruled out a potential January transfer switch.

Speaking to Radio Montecarlo, the 47-year-old representative believes a move is being considered by Luis Enrique.

“Why not?”, he said, before ruling out a New Year move.

“The signings of the big players are not made in January. Juventus’ value of Pogba? He is priced at €100 million [around £72m] .”

Pogba would become Barcelona’s second-most expensive player in the club’s history - should the move go ahead - following Luis Suarez’s reported fee of £75m following his transfer from Liverpool in 2014.

Latest Transfer Gossips:Pedro wants Barcelona return

Pedro wants Barcelona return

Chelsea winger Pedro has told friends he regrets moving to Stamford Bridge and would be open to moving back to former club Barcelona.
Source: Fichajes.net
Thursday, October 29, 2015 00:07

Barcelona to offer Neymar £500k-a-week

Barcelona are set to make Neymar the third-highest paid footballer in the world after offering the Manchester United target a new deal worth £500,000-a-week.
Source: The Sun
Thursday, October 29, 2015 00:04

Arsenal duo to miss Bayern Munich clash

Theo Walcott and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain are both due to be out for three weeks with injuries picked up against Sheffield Wednesday, meaning they will miss Arsena's trip to Bayern Munich.
Source: Various
Thursday, October 29, 2015 00:03

Calhanoglu to cost at least £29m

Bayern Leverkusen will refuse to sell Hakan Calhanoglu for less than £29m. Arsenal and Manchester United have both been linked with the midfielder but will have to spend big to land the midfielder.
Source: talkSPORT
Wednesday, October 28, 2015 16:25

Hazard not a priority for Real Madrid & Barcelona

Eden Hazard is not a priority for Real Madrid and Barcelona who are both interested in the Belgium international but are not willing to break the bank for the Chelsea star.
Source: Daily Mail
Wednesday, October 28, 2015 13:48

Manchester City keen on Banega

Manchester City are keen to sign Ever Banega from Sevilla. Manuel Pellegrini was impressed by the 27-year-old during City's clash with the Uefa Cup holders in the Champions League.
Source: The Sun
Wednesday, October 28, 2015 13:44

Neymar to PSG?

Neymar has emerged as an alternative to replace Zlatan Ibrahimovic at PSG next summer. Cristiano Ronaldo is the first choice but the French side could turn to the Bara star instead.
Source: L'Equipe
Wednesday, October 28, 2015 12:37

Ibra to join Beckham in Miami

Zlatan Ibrahimovic is very interested in David Beckham's new Miami MLS franchise and could be the marquee signing of the Florida side. He is out of contract at the end of the season with PSG.
Source: L'Equipe
Wednesday, October 28, 2015 07:12

Boateng very close to AC Milan contract

Schalke's Kevin-Prince Boateng could re-join AC Milan, particularly in light of the news Jeremy Menez is to miss four months due to injury. Suso and Keisuke Honda could be pushed out as a result.
Source: Tuttosport
Wednesday, October 28, 2015 06:57

Pato could move to West Ham

Alexandre Pato could be set for a surprise move to West Ham with Corinthians keen to offload the Brazilian.
Source: Daily Mail
Wednesday, October 28, 2015 00:13