Ollie Pope holds place in England squad for third Test, despite injured shoulder

Ollie Pope will have scans on right shoulder on Monday, Dan Lawrence remains only spare batter

Matt Roller02-Jul-2023Ollie Pope has been retained in England’s squad for the third men’s Ashes Test at Headingley on Thursday despite sustaining shoulder injuries in both of Australia’s innings at Lord’s.Pope will undergo scans on his right shoulder on Monday after England’s 43-run defeat in the second Test, ESPNcricinfo understands. England are due to travel to Leeds tomorrow and Pope’s status ahead of the third Test will become clearer after his scans.He jarred the shoulder on the first day of the match, leaving the field for the rest of Australia’s first innings, and appeared to worsen it in their second innings after England were told that they would not be permitted to use a substitute fielder.Related

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Dan Lawrence remains the only spare batter in England’s squad and, in the event that Pope is not deemed fit to play in Leeds, he would be expected to replace Pope in a like-for-like switch at No. 3. Ben Foakes, the Surrey wicketkeeper, is again overlooked.England hope that Moeen Ali will be able to play a full part in the third Test after resting his finger and Rehan Ahmed, who was added to the squad for the Lord’s Test as cover, has dropped out of the squad.Matthew Potts, the Durham seamer who played six Tests last year, has also been left out. Chris Woakes and Mark Wood are the other seam-bowling options in the squad, beyond the four fast bowlers who played at Lord’s.England had hoped to pick Wood in the second Test, but selected Josh Tongue in his place when Wood deemed himself unfit for selection. Ben Stokes, England’s captain, suggested Wood would be unleashed in Leeds after an extra week of build-up.Stokes himself bowled a 12-over spell in Australia’s second innings as he continues to manage a chronic left-knee injury. “It’s pretty obvious I’ve been carrying this knee problem for a while,” he said. “I’m picking my moments to bowl.”ESPNcricinfo LtdHe also insisted that England could come back from two-nil down to win the series. “It’s actually very exciting to know that the way in which we are playing our cricket couldn’t be more perfect for the situation we find ourselves in,” Stokes said.”We have to win these three games to get this urn back. We’re a team who are obviously willing to put ourselves out there and do things against the narrative. Now, these three games are a better opportunity than we’ve ever found ourselves in before.”Stokes cited England’s previous series wins under his captaincy as evidence that they could win three games in a row. “We won three-nil against New Zealand. We won three-nil against Pakistan in Pakistan. We’ve won three games in a row twice; all we’re thinking about is winning the series 3-2.”England squad for third Ashes Test: Ben Stokes (captain), Moeen Ali, James Anderson, Jonny Bairstow, Stuart Broad, Harry Brook, Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Dan Lawrence, Ollie Pope, Ollie Robinson, Joe Root, Josh Tongue, Chris Woakes, Mark Wood

Liam Dawson century topples Essex title push on day of undulating drama

Brilliant century in partnership with Vince all but seals title for Surrey, as fielding lapses cost hosts

Andrew Miller22-Sep-2023Less than a week has elapsed since Hampshire were hunting down a teasing target of 267 against Leicestershire at Trent Bridge in the Metro Bank Cup final, and somehow contrived to trip up with victory at their mercy. At Chelmsford, they made amends in thrilling final-over fashion – and in the process all but settled another tussle for silverware, albeit not their own – as Essex’s valiant bid for the County Championship title crumbled in the face of a brilliant Liam Dawson century.Dawson, whose dismissal for 57 at Trent Bridge on Saturday had been the turning point of that tense contest, once again fell short of sealing the deal when, with 20 runs still needed from 23 balls, he crashed Matt Critchley into Nick Browne’s midriff at short cover, to offer Essex the most slender of late lifelines.Hampshire’s tail, however, wasn’t about to let two chases slip in a week – not even when Keith Barker, the man who couldn’t connect for Saturday’s winning hit, ran past a slog for glory with two runs needed. Instead, Ben Brown did the needful with a thump to deep midwicket off Simon Harmer, to seal the contest with five balls remaining, and trigger a wave of euphoria in Surrey’s dressing-room down at The Oval, where they had spent much of the day watching their season’s work flash before their eyes.With no dog in that particular fight, however, Dawson’s own mission for the day had long since been completed: in racking up 119 from 150 balls, his third century of a stellar Championship season, he not only rescued Hampshire from a sickly 32 for 4 with a pivotal fifth-wicket stand of 184 with James Vince, but oversaw a momentum swing at the top of the Championship standings that would have given less resolute characters motion sickness.The tale of the tape was thus: Essex had begun the penultimate round with a deficit of 18 points, and with scant hope of closing the gap given that Surrey were at home to the relegation-bound Northants. And yet, after a clatter of morning wickets at the Kia Oval had condemned Surrey to the follow-on, Essex seemed dead-certs to capitalise on the champions’ missed moment with their seventh win on the bounce, and slash that deficit to a meagre four points.Instead, they were left to rue a fielding display studded with errors, including a huge let-off apiece for each of Hampshire’s main men: Vince on 16, dropped in the deep by Critchley off Harmer, whose three habitually early wickets had left his opponents punch-drunk, and then critically, Dawson on 50, a leaping edge to slip off Critchley himself, where Alastair Cook – a key focus of attention amid reports of his impending retirement – couldn’t recover as the chance clanged off his chest.If the Vince reprieve, at 52 for 4, helped to snap Hampshire’s game-brains back into place, then Dawson’s let-off, 97 runs later, was the moment that Essex’s belief visibly ebbed from their performance. Blow by blow, they were beaten back by two World Cup winners – men who were present in the dressing-room through England’s 2019 triumph, and who know full well, by osmosis as much as through their own clear abilities, how to pace a chase that never threatened to tick over a run a ball. “It’s just a different colour ball,” as Paul Collingwood, England’s assistant Test coach, put it recently when describing the ever-converging methods of the red- and white-ball games.Dan Lawrence made a swashbuckling half-century•Getty Images

Vince’s first shot in anger had been a dismissive drive back over Harmer’s head for six, but after his let-off, he shelved the aerial strokeplay and set about taking lumps out of his team’s target with a volley of five stroked fours before tea that took him to an ominous 43 from 30, with 179 still needed in 39. In theory, it was in Essex’s interest for Hampshire to have an incentive, but such was the pair’s poise on the resumption that the requirement seemed to drain away by stealth. The mood around Chelmsford was hardly aided by news of Surrey’s dour dead-batting down at The Oval, and Dawson duly slapped Sam Cook through point to bring up the century stand at almost the precise moment that Northants shook hands on their relegation-inducing draw.With his century in sight, Vince hoisted Cook handsomely over long-on for his second six, only to come unstuck in Critchley’s subsequent over, hacking a skewed drive to Dan Lawrence in the covers. But even that seemed too little too late for Essex, especially when Umesh Yadav’s brilliant sprawling effort at backward square off Dawson, on 97 at the time, was deemed to have been a bump-ball. Two balls later, Dawson crunched Critchley down the ground for his 14th four, and celebrated with a raise of the arms to put the seal on a truly mighty all-round season.In the final analysis, Essex will know, however, that they blew a golden opportunity to take the title to a straight shoot-out. They claimed nine Hampshire wickets in the course of the day’s play, after all, two of which had come in a perfunctory round-up of their first innings, seven hours and several lifetimes earlier in the day.At that early stage of proceedings, with Chelmsford’s replay screen gleefully showing footage of Surrey’s slide towards their follow-on, Essex could smell the unease emanating from south London. Even as he was flicking off Tom Prest’s bails to end an excellent knock on 108 and give Harmer his sixth wicket of the innings, Adam Rossington began sprinting for the pavilion to pad up, in a clear sign of how Essex intended their second innings to pan out.Sure enough, Rossington re-emerged ten minutes later in a gambit for quick runs, but instead served up a tame three-ball duck that rather set the tone for a nondescript first ten overs of the declaration push, a passage that was coloured – perhaps inevitably – by the play within a play.The notion of Cook’s impending retirement had been shot down by Essex in a snotty statement on Thursday afternoon (the tone of which had perhaps been informed by their sudden realisation that the title was back up for grabs). However, that hardly discouraged a knot of photographers from congregating at the foot of the stairs to greet his (final?) emergence from the Chelmsford pavilion.And for 38 deliveries spanning 45 minutes, Cook captured the attention – if not the zeitgeist – in a poignantly out-of-kilter display. Were this officially a valedictory innings, one might suggest it was an apt metaphor for Cook’s raging-against-the-light career, as he fought valiantly against his natural inclinations, seeking to raise the tempo in the T20-prescribed fashion, only to lose his shape, and ultimately his wicket, in the process.Cook thrashed and he yanked and, just once, he connected with a meaty lump through the line off Kyle Abbott as Essex finally reached the boundary from the first ball of the seventh over – a powerplay it had not been. But then, two balls after connecting on a cut that burst through Prest’s hands at point, Cook wound into a cramped pull off Abbas, and under-edged through to the keeper.His departure was another dead-pan vignette: an old cricketer leaving the crease, almost visibly resisting the urge to raise his bat as an uncertain tribute gathered momentum around the ground, before allowing himself just the hint of a grimace as he disappeared into the dressing-room. Whatever it is that remains of his storied career, he’d be giving nothing away just yet.With the prologue done, then, the declaration push could begin in earnest, as a man rather better equipped for such a situation strode out for a Chelmsford farewell that had fewer caveats. Lawrence duly inside-edged his second ball through fine leg for four (it’s how many, not how, as Cook would doubtless agree), but thereafter he batted like a man with a very personal reason to swipe some silverware from under the noses of his future employers.Were it not for Essex’s Championship ambitions, Lawrence might well be up at Trent Bridge right now, preparing for England’s ODI against Ireland on Saturday. Instead he did his international prospects no harm at all in absentia, unfurling a range of preposterous cross-court forehands, including a full-blown helicopter whip for six off Abbott, to inject the impetus that Essex urgently needed. His 45-ball half-century drove the agenda in an 83-run stand in exactly 12 overs with Tom Westley, whose 45 from 49 ended when he launched Abbott to deep cover on the stroke of lunch.Alastair Cook walks up the steps to the dressing room after being dismissed•Getty Images

The lead at that stage was a handy but still skinny 225, so more leverage was required. Enter Paul Walter at No. 4, who clouted Dawson over midwicket for six before being bowled next ball for 13, and Umesh Yadav, who bashed his first two balls over the Tom Pearce Stand for his fifth and sixth sixes of the match, then immediately holed out to long-on in search of a seventh. In between whiles, Critchley and Harmer misfired to deep cover to give Abbott a four-wicket haul, as the contest reset for round four.Meanwhile, down at The Oval, Surrey by now were deep into their go-slow, with Rory Burns and Dom Sibley setting themselves to defend their title advantage at any cost, so Essex seized their chance to hurtle back into contention. Rossington set the standard with a wonderful grab down the leg-side, stretching with his left glove to prise out Tony Albert from Sam Cook’s fourth ball, and then it was over to the inevitable Harmer.The mere act of Harmer stepping up at the River End seemed to spook Fletcha Middleton, whose third-ball sweep was a harbinger of his imminent demise as it ballooned off a top-edge into space at square leg. Three overs later, he connected better – and worse – as Jamie Porter stooped at square leg to cling on, and Harmer made it two in the over when Nick Gubbins closed his face too early and chipped a leading edge to cover for 9.Another harbinger followed, however, in Harmer’s next over. Prest, yet to settle after his first-innings efforts, hacked impetuously down the ground but Walter at long-on couldn’t cling on. This time, however, it didn’t seem to matter; Harmer merely turned at the top of his mark and induced Prest into a flinch off the pads to short leg to leave Hampshire 32 for 4 and floundering.And yet, Dawson’s arrival to join Vince, allied to Essex’s crucial lapses, would turn the afternoon’s expectations upside-down.

Eddie Howe eyes Newcastle reunion with former star after Man City win James Trafford race

Newcastle United are reportedly in talks with Southampton goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale after missing out on Burnley's James Trafford.

  • Newcastle target new goalkeeper
  • Miss out on Trafford to Man City
  • Howe eyes reunion with old charge
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    According to Sky Sports, Newcastle have turned to former Arsenal stopper Ramsdale after Manchester City pipped them to the signature of Trafford. Moreover, Fabrizio Romano adds that the 27-year-old has said 'yes' to the Magpies, and an official bid has been sent to Southampton.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Newcastle are enduring a difficult summer. Just when it looked like they would secure Trafford's services, City have swooped in and star striker Alexander Isak wants to leave the club, too. If signed, Ramsdale will compete with Nick Pope for the number one spot at Newcastle but the fact that he worked under manager Eddie Howe at Bournemouth may work to his advantage. He may just be a backup, though.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Romano adds that this Newcastle deal is likely to include a 'high' loan fee, with his salary covered, and there is a buy option as well. Southampton, who were relegated to the Championship earlier this year, are 'open' to accepting this but want a higher fee but a switch is 'expected' to happen.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    After recruiting Nottingham Forest winger Anthony Elanga and Malaga wideman Antonito Cordero, Newcastle will hope to make Ramsdale their third signing of the summer. They are also chasing RB Leipzig striker Benjamin Sesko and Brentford forward Yoane Wissa if Isak is sold.

Afridi trumps Klaasen after Babar-Rizwan stand sets up Pakistan

Ghulam struck 63 off just 32 balls towards the end to help post series-sealing total

Danyal Rasool19-Dec-2024

Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam added 115 for the third wicket•Gallo Images/Getty Images

Pakistan turned in their best all-round ODI performance across all three series over the past six weeks, dismantling South Africa by 81 runs and sealing a third straight ODI series win.Shaheen Afridi sizzled with the ball after half-centuries from Mohammad Rizwan, Babar Azam and Kamran Ghulam helped Pakistan amass 329 in the second ODI in Cape Town. South Africa never quite got partnerships going despite a heroic 74-ball 97 from Heinrich Klaasen. Afridi, however, got his mojo back, menacing at the top and lethal with the reverse swinging ball at the death, finishing with four wickets as South Africa were bowled out for 248.South Africa began the chase in much the same way as they started off in the first innings in Paarl – with conviction and purpose. From the moment the returning Temba Bavuma flicked Afridi off his pads for four off the first ball, South Africa were up and running, routinely piercing the thickset infield to find the boundaries they needed to keep the asking rate in check. When Naseem Shah drew a leading edge from the South Africa captain to draw first blood, Tony de Zorzi and Rassie van der Dussen carried on at the same brisk tempo, and South Africa had much the better of the opening powerplay.However, the hosts were beset by the clumps of wickets Pakistan have found a knack of taking to stymie opposition momentum. De Zorzi, van der Dussen and Aiden Markram all fell within 39 runs of each other, immediately placing all the pressure on Klaasen to pull off another Houdini act. Alongside David Miller, he appeared to have set South Africa back on course with a partnership that combined security with aggression, the run-a-ball 72 they added bringing the hosts right back into the contest.But Afridi picked his moment to deliver perhaps his most impressive spell since picking up the injury two years ago that has somewhat stalled his career. With the lights taking full effect and the contest balanced on a tightrope, he found it in himself to bowl closer to the 140kph mark, angling his wrist position to take advantage of the reverse swing that suddenly appeared to be on offer. He fizzed one past Miller, cutting him in half – or so we all thought; Afridi was sure it had kissed the inside edge, and when they went upstairs, the technology bore him out.But it was the dismissal of Marco Jansen that had the greatest technical purity to it. Coming around the wicket, it angled into middle stump before appearing to deviate away, with Jansen’s bat nowhere near it as it crashed into the base of middle and off. He was finding late swing at such pace even the umpire struggled to pick it up, and it required another review to establish Andile Phehlukwayo had been struck on the toe before the ball hit his bat, and that he was indeed plumb in front.Shaheen Afridi produced a three-wicket spell•AFP/Getty Images

All this while, Klaasen had been fighting a lone, and, as became increasingly obvious, losing battle. He was particularly ruthless taking down last game’s hero, Salman Agha, stepping onto the back foot for his trademark hook over cow corner, and using his range efficiently to carve the ball into the off side. If anything, he was guilty of not shielding the strike better as he approached his own hundred, and, in the end, ran out of partners when he whacked Naseem to deep midwicket in a doomed attempt at reaching a hundred he richly deserved.Babar scored his first half-century in 22 innings, combining with his old friend Rizwan in a 115-run third wicket partnership as Pakistan set South Africa an imposing 330 to chase. That number never looked as steep when those two were batting, though, and only ballooned thanks to a blistering late flurry from Ghulam, who bludgeoned 63 off 32 balls. They were helped by South Africa falling away sharply with their lines as well as in the fielding.Bavuma had opted to field first on a picture-perfect day at Newlands, and South Africa made a similarly dreamy start when Marco Jansen knocked over Abdullah Shafique for a second successive duck. But South Africa only truly perked up when Saim Ayub was removed at the tailend of the powerplay, slashing at a wide one off debutant Kwena Maphaka, and finding van der Dussen well placed at deep third.Pakistan’s level of urgency tailed away immediately, with Babar and Rizwan opting for the more classical pacing that comes so naturally to them. Both were trying to work their way back into the runs, and with South Africa happy to strangle the scoring than go after the wickets, it appeared for a while that the game entered a passage of play where each side was getting what they wanted.There were still moments of belligerence, such as when Rizwan smeared Markram over cow corner for six, and Babar milked the spinners for the occasional boundary. But the asking rate steadily hovered between 4.75 and 5.1, and it was evident Pakistan were backloading the innings.Babar had gone past 50 and seemed to be edging towards that elusive hundred, but then he slapped Phehlukwayo straight to Markram at short midwicket, who just about held on after it thudded into his chest. Maphaka got rid of Rizwan with a splendid diving return catch, and South Africa suddenly had the momentum.But Ghulam put paid to any such notions. Alongside Salman, who punished some errant bowling, Ghulam demonstrated his value as a lower-order power hitter, making splendid use of his bottom hand as he smashed five sixes in a whirlwind of a knock. The half-century came up in just 25 deliveries, with both pace and spin taken to task. Irfan Niazi, Shaheen and Haris Rauf were good value for the odd six from the other end, but until he holed out to Maphaka in the final over, and the late charge which saw Pakistan score 128 in the final 12 overs was largely down to Ghulam.That it was possible, though, was because Pakistan had done something which has eluded South Africa all series. They had paced their way through an ODI innings while keeping wickets in hand. Klaasen may well have been just as adept at playing the Ghulam role at the death, but, as he went down on his knees after Pakistan sealed victory, he simply had no one to play it with.

Joseph & Nmecha upgrade: Leeds plot big move for "incredible" £18m striker

Leeds United will be doing plenty of deals in the next couple of months in an attempt to build a squad that can avoid an instant relegation from the Premier League.

The Whites have already made one new signing to bolster Daniel Farke’s options at the top end of the pitch, as Lukas Nmecha has agreed a deal to join the club on a free transfer from Wolfsburg at the start of next month.

He only scored three goals in 19 appearances in the Bundesliga during the 2024/25 campaign, and has only scored eight league goals in the last three seasons combined.

This does not suggest that Nmecha is likely to be the go-to centre-forward option from the start for the West Yorkshire outfit, but the former Germany international could provide experienced back-up to the other number nines in the squad.

The 26-year-old star will not be the last striker to arrive at Elland Road this summer, though, as reporter Graham Smyth claimed that the club are still looking for another addition in that position.

This could spell bad news for 21-year-old marksman Mateo Joseph’s future in West Yorkshire, amid speculation that he could move on ahead of next season.

Why Mateo Joseph could leave Leeds

The Spain U21 international is reportedly being eyed up by several clubs, as GIVEMESPORT recently claimed that Birmingham, Strasbourg, and Real Betis are all keen on securing his signature.

This suggests that there will be no shortage of suitors for the Whites academy graduate if Farke decides that he will not be a part of his plans for the Premier League season, which will kick off with a clash against Everton on the first Monday Night Football of the campaign.

Joseph has now had a taste of first-team football, with 61 Championship outings and four goals in the last two seasons, and should be wanting to play regular minutes next term to continue his development.

The Spanish youngster only scored three goals in 39 matches for Leeds in the second tier during the 2024/25 campaign, but did put up some promising underlying numbers.

24/25 Championship

Mateo Joseph per 90

Percentile rank vs forwards

Non-penalty xG

0.36

Top 29%

Shots total

2.73

Top 11%

Shots on target

1.05

Top 17%

Non-penalty goals

0.21

Bottom 34%

xAG

0.13

Top 20%

Assists

0.21

Top 6%

Shot-creating actions

2.31

Top 20%

Touches in the opposition’s box

5.25

Top 10%

Stats via FBref

As you can see in the table above, Joseph ranked highly among his positional peers when it came to getting into high-quality shooting positions and creating chances for others, but his finishing let him down.

A loan move away from Leeds to play regularly and hone his skills next term could be the ideal next step for him, whilst Leeds are eyeing up a striker who could be an upgrade on him in the short term.

Leeds plotting move for new striker

According to TEAMtalk, the Championship champions are eyeing up further forward additions after the signing of Nmecha, and Besiktas striker Semih Kilicsoy is one of the players they are plotting a move for.

The Turkish attacker and Fulham centre-forward Rodrigo Muniz are both said to be targets for the West Yorkshire outfit, as they look to improve Farke’s options in the final third.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

TEAMtalk adds that Leeds are moving forward in deals to sign Muniz, Kilicsoy, and USG’s Noah Sadiki, with the Besiktas whiz said to be available for a fee of £18m.

The outlet claims that the Whites have extensively scouted the Turkey U21 international and view him as a versatile star with potential who would come in as a long-term signing for Farke.

If Leeds can get an £18m deal over the line to sign the 19-year-old forward during the summer transfer window then they could have an immediate upgrade on both Nmecha and Joseph for next season.

Why Leeds should sign Semih Kilicsoy

There are many reasons why signing the teenage marksman from Besiktas makes a lot of sense for Leeds, including his age profile. At 19, he has many years left ahead of him to develop and improve as a player, which means that the striker could grow in value over time.

Semih Kilicsoy for Besiktas.

It also means that he may not demand to be the first-choice number nine week-in-week-out in the Premier League straight away, and be happy to be a versatile bench option at first, which would allow the Whites to also sign a more experienced striker, such as Muniz.

Kilicsoy’s performances for Besiktas in the last two seasons also suggest that he would offer more quality in front of goal than both Nmecha and Joseph in the top-flight.

The Turkish attacker, who was once hailed as “incredible” by talent scout Jacek Kulig, scored 15 goals and provided nine assists in the 2023/24 and 2024/25 seasons combined for his club side.

Joseph managed seven goals and four assists for Leeds in all competitions, and Nmecha racked up five goals and zero assists in that same time, which immediately suggests that the teenage star has more to offer the team at the top end of the pitch.

24/25 (per 90)

Kilicsoy (Super Lig)

Joseph (Championship)

Goals

0.21

0.21

xG on target

0.35

0.35

xA

0.13

0.10

Assists

0.14

0.21

Dribbles completed

2.49

0.78

Dribble success rate

57%

42%

Fouls won

2.00

1.29

Stats via FotMob

As you can see in the table above, Kilicsoy offered more quality at the top end of the pitch than Joseph this season, with more goals and xA combined per 90, along with far more success in dribbling past opposition players.

Impressively, the teenage attacker managed 0.59 goals and 0.21 assists per 90 in the Super Lig in the previous campaign, when he managed 11 goals and four assists in the division, whilst Joseph scored one goal in 22 league games for Leeds that term.

Therefore, Kilicsoy could be a very exciting signing for Leeds as a young forward who has shown that he has the potential to make a big impact as both a scorer and a creator of goals, even more so than Joseph and Nmecha have in recent years.

Better than Aaronson: Leeds submit bid to sign £21m Sadiki alternative

Leeds are looking at signing a new midfielder this summer

By
Joe Nuttall

Jun 17, 2025

This is why Leeds must press ahead with a deal to sign the £18m-rated centre-forward before the start of the Premier League season to bolster their attacking options.

Sunderland now looking to re-sign "unbelievable" Bellingham replacement

Sunderland were always going to face challenges venturing up to the Premier League, but the Black Cats will find their journey up to the big time to be even more unnerving now that Jobe Bellingham has left the club.

Bellingham has followed in his esteemed brother’s footsteps and joined German behemoth Borussia Dortmund, leaving Regis Le Bris with a lot of work to do this summer to plug his noticeable gap.

The Wearside underdogs could look to bring in an entertaining EFL star as a replacement for the skilful 19-year-old.

Sunderland eyeing up move for EFL star

As per a new report by the Daily Mail, Sunderland are eyeing up a potential swoop for Leeds United outcast Sam Greenwood to enhance their attacking options.

Whilst he has struggled for large patches of his Elland Road career, Greenwood has shone away from West Yorkshire on loan with Preston North End and Middlesbrough in the Championship, with Sunderland now keen on winning his services.

Leeds' Sam Greenwood

Leicester City are also in the race to land the 23-year-old ahead of the Foxes heading back to the second tier, but the Black Cats’ newly obtained Premier League status – on top of the fact Greenwood actually hails from Sunderland – should surely give them a favourable advantage.

Before heading to Leeds, he was actually on the books of the Sunderland and Arsenal academies.

How Greenwood could replace Bellingham

There would be a lot of pressure on Greenwood’s shoulders to come in and fill the void left behind by Bellingham, but it’s clear from his flashes of excellence in the EFL’s elite league that he’s deserving of some more game time in the top-flight, away from being a reserve face at Daniel Farke’s outfit.

After all, much like Bellingham caught the eye with classy displays galore at the Stadium of Light, Greenwood has consistently entertained fans in the EFL when moved out on loan from Leeds.

Amazingly, the 23-year-old even amassed more goals last season in the Championship than Bellingham, with five goals collected come the end of his stay at Deepdale, compared to his now Dortmund counterpart’s four.

Leeds United star Sam Greenwood.

By the end of his loan stint in Lancashire, Greenwood scored seven strikes in total from 45 clashes, with this tally just beating his overall Boro count, which stood at five. Alongside that, he also has six Championship assists next to his name, with a chance for him to shine in the level above perhaps coming soon with Le Bris and Co.

Away from offering the same firepower as Bellingham, the “unbelievable” attacker – as Farke once described him – is also similar to the Bundesliga-bound midfielder in offering lots of versatility, with the ex-Arsenal youth starlet capable of playing in a whole host of positions like Bellingham, away from simply lining up as a number ten.

Greenwood’s G/A career numbers by position

Position played

Games

Goals

Assists

CF

48

20

3

AM

37

9

9

RW

19

9

3

LM

17

4

2

SS

15

9

4

LW

13

2

2

CM

11

1

1

DM

1

0

0

Sourced by Transfermarkt

Greenwood actually boasts more career goals and assists lining up as a centre-forward with the 23-year-old potentially offering Le Bris another striker presence, therefore, away from the Frenchman solely depending on Wilson Isidor.

But, he can also line up as a winger and as a central figure, much like Bellingham, with everything pointing in the direction that this could be a smart move for Sunderland to make to try and patch over their star man’s exit.

Greenwood even has a goal and four assists next to his name when utilised sparingly in the Premier League by the Whites, meaning he could really kick on under Le Bris’ guidance if given plenty of action in the wake of Bellingham’s sad departure.

He'd be better than Tanganga: Sunderland interested in signing £8m defender

Sunderland could now swoop in for this defensive target over solely pursuing a move for Japhet Tanganga.

By
Kelan Sarson

Jun 16, 2025

How many batters have made their first two centuries in the same Test?

And who is the most economical bowler in Tests?

Steven Lynch15-Mar-2022After Jack Hobbs became the oldest to score a Test century, in Australia in 1928-29, he wrote that a famous actress kissed him at a party afterwards. Who was this actress? asked Pushkar Pushp from India

This incident followed Jack Hobbs’ 142 in the fifth Test in Melbourne in March 1929. At 46 years 82 days, Hobbs was the oldest man to score a Test century, a record he is likely to retain for ever.In his 1935 book My Life Story, Hobbs tells the tale of what happened next. “My 142 had a very jolly sequel in the evening of the day it was scored. My diary says: ‘When I walked into the hotel dining-room, the orchestra struck up “See the Conquering Hero Comes”, and followed by playing “For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow”. The guests at the tables rose up and joined in.’ One of those guests was a famous English actress; she came right across the room and gave me a kiss! It was most embarrassing. I will not give her name away.”Hobbs might have been too gallant to spill the beans, but the press was less reticent. The New South Wales paper the Newcastle Sun ran the headline “Jack Hobbs blushed”, and named the lady as Margaret Bannerman (no relation to the old Australian batters Charles and Alec, as far as I can tell!) She was actually Canadian, although she had a long career in London theatre, and also appeared in several silent films. Margaret was born in Toronto in December 1896, so was 32 when she surprised Hobbs; she died in the United States in 1976. For the newspaper story, click here.Imam-ul-Haq just scored his first two centuries in the same Test. How many people have done this? asked Damith Sampath from Sri Lanka

That double of 157 and 111 not out by Imam-ul-Haq for Pakistan against Australia in Rawalpindi recently made him the 12th man to score his first two centuries in the same Test. That includes the two who did it on debut – Lawrence Rowe for West Indies vs New Zealand in Kingston in 1971-72, and Yasir Hameed for Pakistan vs Bangladesh in Karachi in 2003.The first to do this was Australia’s Warren Bardsley, with 136 and 130 against England at The Oval in 1909; the most recent before Imam was Shai Hope, for West Indies vs England at Headingley in 2017.In between, the feat was also achieved by India’s Vijay Hazare (against Australia in Adelaide in 1947-48), Jack Moroney of Australia (vs South Africa in Johannesburg in 1949-50), New Zealand’s Geoff Howarth (vs England in Auckland in 1977-78), Duleep Mendis of Sri Lanka (vs India in Madras in 1982-83), Pakistan’s Wajahatullah Wasti (vs Sri Lanka in Lahore in 1998-99), Phillip Hughes of Australia (vs South Africa in Durban in 2008-09) and the New Zealander Peter Fulton (vs England in Auckland in 2012-13).Imam will be hoping that, unlike Wasti and Hameed – the others to achieve the feat for Pakistan – he manages to reach three figures again in Tests. Of the rest, Moroney, Fulton and Hope (to date) never scored another Test century either.In the first Test at Rawalpindi, Pakistan’s openers put on 252 without being separated. Was this the highest unbroken first-wicket stand in Tests? asked K Lokaraj from India

Abdullah Shafique, who made his own maiden century, and Imam-ul-Haq put on 252 in the second innings of the first Test against Australia in Rawalpindi. That was indeed the highest unbeaten opening stand in Tests – just: Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes added 250 without being separated for West Indies against Australia in Georgetown in 1983-84.The highest unbroken opening partnership in all first-class cricket is 451, by Sanjay Desai and Roger Binny for Karnataka (who declared, and won by an innings) against Kerala in Chikmagalur in 1977-78.Lance Gibbs has a career bowling economy of 1.98, the lowest for bowlers with at least 200 Test wickets•PA PhotosGiven a minimum of 200 wickets, who’s the most economical bowler in Tests? asked Robert Aldridge from England

Some 80 bowlers have now reached the milestone of 200 Test wickets – and of those, only one went for less then two an over: the great West Indian offspinner Lance Gibbs, who conceded 1.98 per six balls during his 79-Test career. Next come Richie Benaud and Derek Underwood, with 2.10. The top five are all spinners: the leading seamer, in sixth place with 2.21 an over, is England’s Alec Bedser, just ahead of the West Indian pair of Garry Sobers (2.22) and Curtly Ambrose (2.30). The versatile Sobers mixed seam with spin during his career.The leading current bowler is India’s Ravindra Jadeja, whose economy rate of 2.42 an over puts him 12th at the moment.Ravindra Jadeja scored 175 then took nine wickets against Sri Lanka recently. Has anyone bettered this in a Test match? asked Ankur Jamil from India

Three men have scored a century and taken ten or more wickets in the same Test. The first to do it was Ian Botham, with 114 and 13 for 106 for England against India in Bombay (now Mumbai) in 1979-80. He was followed by Imran Khan, with 117 and 11 for 180 for Pakistan vs India in Faisalabad in 1982-83, and Shakib Al Hasan, with 137 and 10 for 124 for Bangladesh against Zimbabwe in Khulna in 2014-15.Before Jadeja did it recently against Sri Lanka in Mohali, three others had paired a century with nine wickets in the same Test. Jimmy Sinclair made 106 (South Africa’s first Test century) and took 9 for 89 against England in Cape Town in 1898-99; Richie Benaud paired 100 with 9 for 154 for Australia against South Africa in Johannesburg in 1957-58; and Jadeja’s India team-mate R Ashwin scored 103 and took 9 for 190 against West Indies in Mumbai in 2011-12. Of these, Jadeja’s 175 not out is the highest score involved.Shiva Jayaraman of ESPNcricinfo’s stats team helped with some of this week’s answers.Use our feedback form, or the Ask Steven Facebook page to ask your stats and trivia questions

Ben Duckett: 'There's no better time to play Test cricket than under Stokes and McCullum'

Notts batter has rediscovered freedom of youth as he prepares for Test return after six-year absence

Vithushan Ehantharajah28-Nov-2022Ahead of an expected first Test engagement in six years, Ben Duckett has openly talked about the fact that as recently as 12 months ago he thought he would never play the format again. Which, all told, is pretty odd.Go back a year and England were hardly setting world cricket alight, in the midst of run of 11 defeats and just four wins in 20 matches between the start of 2021 and the beginning of the 2022 summer. There were question marks over several in the XI, specifically those occupying Duckett’s preferred position up top. And though he was hardly in electric form for Nottinghamshire – three first-class centuries and a healthy average of 42.2 across the 2020 and 2021 seasons combined – you’d think an engaging talent at a big county, with four caps already to his name, was surely never going to drift completely off the radar.”I guess at times you have no idea where you are in the pecking order,” Duckett tells ESPNcricinfo. “I wasn’t really in the mix, I wasn’t really ever spoken about. I went to Trent Bridge [from Northamptonshire, in 2018] and wasn’t scoring buckets of runs. I was feeling good but we were producing green seamers. I wasn’t knocking the door down.”Related

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Stokes puts prep over precedent as England ease towards Pakistan challenge

He didn’t question his ability to get back into the fray. The 2022 season is a testament to that: 1012 runs at an average of 72.28 with three centuries among eight scores above fifty as the dynamo propelling Nottinghamshire to the Division Two title. And most of all, doing so at a strike rate of 76.09.That last figure is perhaps the most important of all when it comes to what his head coach Brendon McCullum and captain Ben Stokes want from anyone who comes into this set-up. Not only is he in the squad for three upcoming Tests against Pakistan, but he is in line to partner Zak Crawley at the top of the order in the opening match in Rawalpindi.As much as Duckett is in step with the new regime, he acknowledges perhaps he was out of step with the old. So much so that while there is a sense of making up for lost time, the delay of this second coming is regarded as a blessing.”I’ll be honest, at times over the last six years, I haven’t wanted to be involved,” Duckett says. “From the outside, it’s looked tough.” Tough not just on the team, as previous results show, but individuals, too.”I certainly think looking at this format, for example, especially with top order batsmen, it was a bit of a conveyor belt at times: how many openers we went through. I think now, the way this group of players is, I think everyone trusts each other. [Alex] Lees played 10 Tests, ‘Creepy’ [Crawley] deserves time. You’re going to have series where you struggle.”You’re not going to come in as an opener and go hundred, hundred. The more that happens with this group, the more backing they get, the better they’re going to get. That’s the important thing. You have to allow them time to believe in themselves because they believe in themselves. There’s no better time to play Test cricket than right now, under Stokesy, under McCullum.”

“The thought of scoring a Test hundred is as top as it gets. A few years ago I was saying I could tell my grandchildren I played Test cricket. I want to be able to tell them I scored a Test hundred”

A first taste of the new order came when Duckett was called up for the final match of the South Africa series at the end of the summer after Jonny Bairstow’s golfing accident. Over the last fortnight, he has been able to bed in a little more with the camp in Abu Dhabi, which was more bonhomie than back-breaking. He can’t get enough of it.”Just batting in the nets, you don’t get a ‘well done’ or a ‘great shot’ when you play a straight drive down the ground now – it’s when you get the reverse sweep out or you slog-sweep the offie over midwicket. It’s that real enjoyment, showing intent, which is how I play red-ball cricket. I want to score quickly, I want to score at a rate where I’m putting bowlers under pressure and putting the team in a good position.”Aged 28, he is perhaps as ready as he’ll ever be. Wiser than when he first got the nod, at 22, under Trevor Bayliss and Joe Root, more mature than the 23-year-old dropped after pouring a drink over James Anderson during the 2017-18 Ashes winter.Of course, there have been technical tweaks along the way, as is usually the case during this period of a cricketer’s life cycle, especially a batter. However, most of those have now been jettisoned because they did not come from a clear state of mind, or body.Heading into the 2018 summer, he underwent an operation in February on the ring finger of his left hand which had taken a blow at the end of the 2017 season. The initial prognosis was of 12 weeks out but Duckett came back early for Northamptonshire, his county at the time, against Middlesex.”I was nowhere near ready,” he says. “I look back and think ‘why did I come back four weeks early from my hand operation?’ I mean, I know why: it was the first game of the summer, I was trying to get back into the England team, it was Lord’s and I just wanted to play.”Duckett looks set to open with Zak Crawley in Pakistan•ECB ImagesThe knock-on effect was quite severe. While playing through the pain – “there are pictures of me that summer where I’m playing a forward defence and my hand is off the bat” – his grip on the handle changed. Not noticeably at first, but enough to impact his red- and white-ball game. The latter was most affected, particularly given how bottom-hand dominant he is with the sweeps, reverses and flays on both sides of the wicket.In first-class cricket, however, he was actually ticking along nicely. He averaged 56.28 in the Bob Willis Trophy during the 2020 Covid summer, and found himself leaving a lot outside off stump and “crabbing” a lot through leg. So much so that Paul Franks, Nottinghamshire’s assistant head coach, kept calling him Graeme Smith. And for a moment, Duckett thought, “maybe this is how I play Test cricket again?”Thankfully, he recognised he was veering from his natural game – and thus, dulling his instincts. With no franchise commitments in the winter of 2020-21, he set about some intense remedial work at Trent Bridge to rediscover the original hold he had on the bat. It worked.”Mate, I wouldn’t even be able to tell you the different ways over the last few years,” he replies when asked to chart the degradation of his grip. “The easiest way to put it was how I held a bat for 20 years – after the operation, because I came back four weeks early, I had to find a way to hold the bat just to cope.”I said to Peter Moores and Ant Botha that I want to play around with my grip. I reckon two weeks just focusing on hitting, I found it again. The next stage was making it feel natural again and I think now it does – I pick up the bat and it feels good and I can play the shots I used to play.”Pakistan’s T20 side got a taste of those shots in the T20 series a month or so ago, when Duckett struck 233 runs across seven matches – at 46.60 and a strike rate of 159.58 – all from No. 4. And the Test side will likely get a sight of most, if not all, of them over the following weeks.There’s a temptation, for chronology’s sake, to regard all this as the evolution of Duckett, when really this is more of a reawakening of the old Duckett. A regression to a cricketing norm that is really no regression at all. Especially in this more-relaxed, encouraging environment.Duckett says he has gone back to “see ball, hit ball” with his batting•Alex Davidson/Getty Images”I felt like you can’t do that in Test cricket – play shots and go after the bowlers like I did,” he says. “That’s the way it seemed for a while. It’s the purest game, you’ve got to go and bat all day. If you’re an opener or number three, you’ve got to leave the ball well.”I think it’s only really this summer where I went, ‘nah’. I was facing – I don’t want to say average spinners – but whoever it was, I was facing spin and I thought, ‘I don’t know why I’m blocking him here, why am I not smacking him into the stands?'”That’s what I did very well as a youngster, I used to just take them on. And almost play like I played in the T20 series [in Pakistan], sweep both ways and say ‘you’re going to have to stop bowling and get the seamer back on’. I went through a period of time where I felt like that wasn’t the way to play in that format. And this year I just went, you know what, I’m just going to go back to see ball, hit ball again.”He says if he goes 0 and 8 in his first two innings, he won’t then clutch at the next chance. McCullum and Stokes already have a track record of backing those in possession, which is perhaps why Duckett is open about a milestone on his mind. Having registered a half-century in Bangladesh back in 2016, he is desperate for a full one.”The thought of scoring a Test hundred, for me, is as top as it gets. There’s nothing better than that for me. A few years ago I was saying I could tell my grandchildren I played Test cricket. I want to be able to tell them I scored a Test hundred. Now I’ve got an opportunity to do that.”

Stats – Conway in Gavaskar's vicinity

Boult’s No. 300, Latham and Fleming’s exclusive club and more

Sampath Bandarupalli10-Jan-20222 – Number of 250-plus scores by Tom Latham in Tests. He joins Stephen Fleming as the only two New Zealand batters with multiple 250-plus Test scores. Latham’s 252 at the Hagley Oval is now the ninth-highest individual score for New Zealand in Tests.1 – Only one opener has more 250-plus scores in Tests than Latham – Virender Sehwag (four). Sanath Jayasuriya, Graeme Smith, Chris Gayle, Alastair Cook and David Warner – all have two 250-plus scores in this format as openers.3 – Three individuals have racked up scores more than Latham’s 252 against Bangladesh. Kumar Sangakkara is the only triple centurion against Bangladesh, with the 319 he scored in Chattogram in 2014. Ramnaresh Sarwan scored an unbeaten 261 in Kingston in 2004, while Marlon Samuels made 260 in Khulna in 2012.ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – Latham’s 252 is the highest individual score for a New Zealand skipper while opening the batting in Test cricket, eclipsing Graham Dowling’s 239 against India in 1968. It is the fifth-highest score by a New Zealand captain in Tests. Latham is also one of six captains with 250-plus Test scores as an opener.12 – All of Latham’s 12 Test tons have come as an opener. These are the joint-most Test hundreds by a New Zealand opener alongside John Wright. Latham’s 12 hundreds are also the joint-fourth most by New Zealander.Most Test hundreds for New Zealand•ESPNcricinfo Ltd1 – Devon Conway became the first player in Test cricket with fifty-plus scores in the first innings of his first five Tests. Six batters before Conway had at least one fifty-plus score in their first five Tests, among which Bert Sutcliffe was the only New Zealander.623 – Runs Conway has racked up in Tests so far. Only two others – Sunil Gavaskar (831) and George Headley (714) – have made more runs in their first five Tests.363 Runs aggregated by New Zealand before the fall of the second wicket, the third-most by them in a Test innings. New Zealand lost their second wicket at 482 against West Indies in 1972 in Georgetown and 382 runs against India in Mohali in 2003.301 – The number of wickets Trent Boult has in Tests currently. He is the fourth New Zealander to take 300-plus Test wickets. Boult is also one of the seven left-arm bowlers and the fifth left-arm pacer with 300 Test wickets.19 – Runs by Bangladesh’s top five batters, the joint-fewest runs they have scored in a Test innings. Bangladesh’s top five aggregated 19 runs in the first innings of the 2001 Dhaka Test against Zimbabwe.

مواعيد مباريات اليوم الأحد 26-11-2025 والقنوات الناقلة.. كلاسيكو ريال مدريد وبرشلونة ومهمة إفريقية لـ بيراميدز والمصري

يشهد اليوم الأحد الموافق 26-11-2025، العديد من المواجهات القوية والمثيرة على المستويين المحلي والقاري، حيث تتجه أنظار عشاق كرة القدم إلى عدد من المباريات الحاسمة في دوري أبطال إفريقيا وكأس الكونفدرالية، إلى جانب قمم نارية في الدوريات الأوروبية الكبرى.

يشهد اليوم الأحد 26 نوفمبر 2025 العديد من المواجهات الكروية القوية والمثيرة على المستويين المحلي والعالمي، حيث تتجه أنظار عشاق كرة القدم إلى الملاعب العربية والإفريقية والأوروبية لمتابعة قمم نارية في مختلف البطولات.

في الملاعب المصرية، تتواصل منافسات الدوري المحلي بإقامة ثلاث مباريات مهمة أبرزها لقاء فاركو ضد الإسماعيلي في الإسكندرية، بينما يخوض طلائع الجيش مواجهة متكافئة أمام زد إف سي في إطار سعي الفريقين لتحسين موقعهما بجدول الترتيب.

أما على الصعيد الإفريقي، يخوض بيراميدز اختبارًا قويًا أمام التأمين الإثيوبي في دوري أبطال إفريقيا، في حين يدخل المصري البورسعيدي مواجهة حاسمة أمام الاتحاد الليبي ضمن منافسات كأس الكونفدرالية الإفريقية، في سعي ممثلي الكرة المصرية لبلوغ الأدوار المتقدمة القارية.

وفي أوروبا، تسرق موقعة مانشستر سيتي وأستون فيلا الأضواء ضمن مباريات الدوري الإنجليزي الممتاز، حيث يبحث السيتيزنز عن استعادة صدارة الترتيب، بينما يأمل أستون فيلا في تحقيق مفاجأة أمام حامل اللقب، كما ينتظر عشاق الكرة العالمية كلاسيكو الأرض بين ريال مدريد وبرشلونة في الدوري الإسباني، في مواجهة تُعد الأبرز هذا الأسبوع.

أما في إيطاليا وفرنسا وألمانيا، فيتواصل الصراع بين الأندية الكبيرة، إذ يلتقي يوفنتوس ولاتسيو في قمة الكالتشيو، بينما يصطدم ليون بستراسبورج في الدوري الفرنسي، وتقام مواجهة قوية في البوندسليجا بين باير ليفركوزن وفرايبورج. مواعيد مباريات اليوم الأحد 26-11-2025 والقنوات الناقلةمواعيد مباريات الدوري المصري اليوم

كهرباء الإسماعيلية ضد سيراميكا كليوباترا، الساعة 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة ON Time Sport 1.

فاركو ضد الإسماعيلي، الساعة 8:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة ON Time Sport 1.

طلائع الجيش ضد زد، الساعة 8:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة ON Time Sport 2. مواعيد مباريات دوري أبطال إفريقيا اليوم

سيمبا ضد نادي نسينجيزيني، الساعة 4:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

ماميلودي صنداونز ضد ريمو ستارز، الساعة 4:30 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

التأمين الإثيوبي ضد بيراميدز، الساعة 6:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة ON Time Sport 2.

الترجي الرياضي ضد نادي رحيمو، الساعة 7:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

ستاد مالي ضد إف سي نواذيبو، الساعة 7:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

أهلي طرابلس ضد نهضة بركان، الساعة 9:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

مولودية الجزائر ضد نادي كولومب، الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية. مواعيد مباريات الكونفدرالية اليوم

كايزر تشيفز ضد نادي سيمبا، الساعة 4:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

ستيلينبوش ضد نادي 15 أغسطس، الساعة 4:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

أوتوهو أويو ضد فيروفياريو دي مابوتو، الساعة 5:30 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

دجوليبا ضد القوات المسلحة، الساعة 7:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

النجم الساحلي ضد نيروبي يونايتد، الساعة 8:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة ON Time Sport 2.

المصري ضد الاتحاد الليبي، الساعة 9:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

طالع أيضًا | سلوت يُعنف لاعبي ليفربول بعد الخسارة الرابعة: ما حدث أمام برينتفورد هو الأسوأ مواعيد مباريات الدوري الإنجليزي اليوم

أرسنال ضد كريستال بالاس، الساعة 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 2 HD.

بورنموث ضد نوتنجهام فورست، الساعة 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 5 HD.

أستون فيلا ضد مانشستر سيتي، الساعة 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 3 HD.

ولفرهامبتون ضد بيرنلي، الساعة 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 4 HD.

إيفرتون ضد توتنهام هوتسبر، الساعة 7:30 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 2 HD. مواعيد مباريات الدوري الإسباني اليوم

مايوركا ضد ليفانتي، الساعة 4:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 8 HD.

ريال مدريد ضد برشلونة، الساعة 6:15 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 1 HD.

أوساسونا ضد سيلتا فيجو، الساعة 8:30 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 3 HD.

رايو فاييكانو ضد ألافيس، الساعة 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر قناة beIN Sports 3 HD. مواعيد مباريات الدوري الإيطالي اليوم

تورينو ضد جنوى، الساعة 2:30 ظهرًا بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر Starz Play App.

هيلاس فيرونا ضد كالياري، الساعة 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر Starz Play App.

ساسولو ضد روما، الساعة 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر Starz Play App.

فيورنتينا ضد بولونيا، الساعة 8:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر Starz Play App.

لاتسيو ضد يوفنتوس، الساعة 10:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر Starz Play App. مواعيد مباريات الدوري الفرنسي اليوم

ليل ضد ميتز، الساعة 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر beIN Sports 6 HD.

أنجيه ضد لوريان، الساعة 7:15 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر beIN Sports 6 HD.

أوكسير ضد لوهافر، الساعة 7:15 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر beIN Sports 5 HD.

رين ضد نيس، الساعة 7:15 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر beIN Sports 4 HD.

ليون ضد ستراسبورج، الساعة 10:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر beIN Sports 4 HD. مواعيد مباريات الدوري الألماني اليوم

باير ليفركوزن ضد فرايبورج، الساعة 5:30 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر منصة “شاهد”.

شتوتجارت ضد ماينز، الساعة 7:30 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، وتُذاع عبر منصة “شاهد”.

ويُمكنكم متابعة أحداث مباريات اليوم لحظة بلحظة من مركز المباريات من هنــــا

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