Luke Hollman bags maiden five-for as Sussex collapse after Tom Haines 156

Sussex lose last six wickets for 12 runs and three more after being made to follow on

ECB Reporters' Network08-Sep-2021An astonishing collapse by Sussex, who lost nine wickets for 97 runs, with their last six crashing down for just 12, allowed Middlesex to glimpse victory in their LV= Insurance County Championship match at Hove. Middlesex legspinner Luke Hollman took a career-best 5 for 65 on a flat pitch on which only six wickets had fallen in the opening seven sessions.Sussex, following on 357 runs behind, then lost Ali Orr, Ben Brown and Sean Hunt and closed on 88 for 3.Sussex started the third day on 103 without loss, chasing a mind-boggling 527 just to avoid the follow-on. A more realistic survival target was to get into the final day with first-innings wickets in hand.Fast bowler Blake Cullen broke through with the first ball of the second over of the day when he found the outside edge of Orr’s bat for keeper John Simpson to take the low catch in front of first slip. But after that Sussex had the better of the opening session and reached lunch on 217 for 1 with Tom Haines unbeaten on 109 – the fifth century of his career and the third of the season – and Brown 76 not out.Brown, anxious to use his feet to counter the spin of Hollman, was stumped ten minutes after the break. But the real Sussex implosion started at 250 when George Garton, possibly a little giddy-headed in his No. 4 position, swiped Hollman to deep midwicket. He looked so disappointed with his shot that he held his position at the crease for some moments before ripping off his gloves.It wasn’t going to get any better for the home side. At 272 the very promising Danial Ibrahim skied Sam Robson to midwicket for just 5. It was only legspinner Robson’s seventh first-class wicket, and came having made his highest score of 253 the day before.Then Middlesex took the new ball and Fynn Hudson-Prentice, who had hit a few pleasing drives, got one that lifted and left him from Tim Murtagh. At 308 Haines played a weary stroke and was caught behind off Murtagh, but not before he had reached 156, his highest first-class score, beating the 155 he made against Lancashire at Old Trafford at the start of the season.Delray Rawlins was bowled for a duck having a heave and Jack Carson, Oli Carter and Henry Crocombe followed almost immediately. Hollman then struck twice more in the second innings before Robson enjoyed another rare success by removing nightwatchman Hunt.Before play Sussex announced the retirement of seamer Stuart Meaker. Meaker, 32, who previously played for Surrey, was capped by England in two ODIs in 2011 and two IT20s in 2012.

Southampton: Jordy Clasie Dutch demand no surprise

What do Southampton do with Jordy Clasie?

The 27-year-old has been a flop at St. Mary’s and they now seem to be having quite the dilemma with trying to offload him permanently.

De Telegraaf (via Sport Witness) reports that AZ, who are keen on signing Clasie this summer, want Southampton to pay part of his salary.

Having had him on their books since 2015, though, you would think that the south coast club would not want to pay any more money given his failure.

Bearing that in mind, a sell to another club may be the best option here. That, however, could prove problematic, with the same report stating Clasie is determined to continue in Dutch football and will not consider anything else.

Frustrating from Southampton’s point of view? Probably. It has severely limited the amount of potential suitors. The Premier League outfit, however, should not be surprised.

As well as the Netherlands being his native country, of course, the Eredivisie is where he has played his best football. You only have to look at his time in England to know that.

Last season, the defensive midfielder averaged 2.6 tackles per game for Feyenoord, which is vastly more than the 1.1 he was making at Southampton back in the 2016/17 campaign.

In Dutch football’s top flight, Clasie has also proven to be way more of a creative force. He made 0.9 key passes per game and averaged 67.6 passes overall. In contrast, at Southampton, his numbers for both those passing areas were 0.3 and 38.9 (as per WhoScored).

Quite clearly, the Eredivisie is where the Netherlands international has been able to express himself best; it is his comfort zone.

Based on that, Southampton should not be surprised that they have been left in a position where they can only send him to one place this summer.

Southampton fans, what are your thoughts on the latest Clasie development? Let us know in the comment section below!

Confident Rangers have to back up words with actions next season

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Midfielder Andy Halliday has told media this week he is more confident ahead of the new Rangers season than ever before, as reported by The Evening Times.

What’s he said?

Rangers are currently preparing for the challenges ahead next season in Portugal, with manager Steven Gerrard assessing his squad and getting it up to speed in a training camp.

The club have been busy this summer adding the necessary talent to the squad and Halliday has been buoyed by the progress he is seeing on and off the pitch.

How much money could you make busking for a week as a freestyle footballer? Find out in the video below…

As quoted by The Evening Times, the 27-year-old said:

“Celtic are still favourites for the title. They won the league again last year and had a bit of a cushion. But I can only speak from a Rangers player’s point of view and say it’s the most confident I’ve been going into a season.

“We improved last year and with the signings we’ve made so far, we’re already improving the squad.

“I also know first hand that we’ve got the right man in the manager’s job and the right backroom staff to make a title challenge.”

Plenty to prove

The noises coming out of Ibrox are certainly positive.

Last summer, though, we heard the same kind of confidence coming out of the Rangers dressing room prior to the 2018/19 season, and ultimately they struggled to keep pace with Celtic at the summit of the table.

However, there were positive signs last season that the forthcoming campaign could be a different story altogether, with two Old Firm derby victories at Ibrox giving the supporters reason to believe that they could mount a serious challenge for the SPFL title.

Obviously the players must have belief and ambitions, but at some point they also have to walk the walk and deliver the trophy success that is expected at a club like Rangers.

Fans at Ibrox have not had a major honour to celebrate since 2011, so while improvements have been made over the last 12 months, it must count for something next season or big questions will be asked about the direction the club is heading in.

Scotland's bumpy road to the World Cup

Over the last four years, they have had upheavals and transitions on and off the field, but now they have their best chance of winning their first game in a World Cup

Matthew Bremner16-Feb-2015It is late afternoon at the Hagley Oval in Christchurch, New Zealand. It’s overcast and too cold for January. Scotland are playing Kenya in the Super Sixes of the World Cup Qualifiers in front of a sparse crowd. Yet the number of spectators betrays the significance of the encounter. If the Scots win this game they qualify for the 2015 World Cup; if they lose, not only will they fail to qualify, the resulting, and substantial, cut in funding from the ICC may see Scottish cricket disappear into insignificance.The score is 243 for 7 and Scotland require 18 runs from 12 balls. Rob Taylor and Safyaan Sharif are at the crease. Taylor, the senior of the pair, and the team’s last recognised batsman, has scored 45 runs from his last six innings, and while Sharif can bat, he is primarily a bowler. They have played less than 20 ODIs between them.The first ball of the 48th over is called wide. The spectating Scots muffle their merriment, while the Kenyans amplify their groans. Nehemiah Odhiambo gathers himself nervously at his mark and sets off towards the crease. His next ball is straighter, but it’s in the slot. Taylor rocks back and heaves through the line. The connection is good and the ball is dispatched over long-on. The trajectory provokes overwrought yelps and nervous cheers. Six runs.The rest of the over goes by in a flurry of spurious swipes, scrambles and stumbles. Panting and puffing, Taylor and Sharif deliver a lung-busting 13 runs to the total.

On the gurgle and slurp of Scottish outfields at least, Scotland’s performances were unimpeachable

On comes Thomas Odoyo, a veteran, and the first man from outside a Test-playing nation to score over 1500 runs and take 100 wickets in ODIs. His first ball is a good one, cramping Sharif for room and provoking a false shot. The Kenyan fielders screech and cry in hope; the ball trickles to short fine leg for one run. The next ball is a good one too, but Taylor takes it from outside off stump and whips it through midwicket, and the pair scamper a frantic two runs. Odoyo lollops to the wicket again and muscles the ball into the pitch. It’s too short and Taylor eases on to the back foot and cuts it powerfully through cover.The scattered Kenyan fielders stand in disbelief while a pile-up of hugs and hard, congratulatory Scottish slaps spills on to the outfield. In the changing room after the match, “Oh Flower of Scotland”, the team’s victory song, is sung louder than it has been in years.

****

“In that tournament we were playing for our livelihoods,” Preston Mommsen, the Scotland captain, recalls. “Our contracts really were on the line.”They went on to win the tournament, beating UAE in the final by 41 runs.Yet behind this happy ending, the coruscating new contracts and the glitz and the glamour of World Cup qualification, there is an important back story.Scotland’s journey began in 2011 at the World Cricket League, a tournament for countries without Test status and one of the pathways by which Associate nations can qualify for the World Cup. In this particular version of the competition, the top two teams from its highest division, the WCL Championship, would win the chance to go to Australia and New Zealand.Scotland started their campaign strongly, winning their first four games – two each against the Netherlands and Namibia. Commanding performances from batsman Kyle Coetzer, who scored three fifties in four games, and veteran spinner Majid Haq thrust the side into immediate contention.Scotland’s players celebrate their victory over Kenya which sealed their qualification for the 2015 World Cup•IDI/GettyConfident and in form, the Scots then travelled to Sharjah at the beginning of 2012 to play UAE – a team they were expected to beat. Yet they struggled. Fifteen of the 20 Scottish wickets to fall that series were taken by spinners, and Scotland mustered a miserly 372 cumulative runs. They lost both matches. “Travelling to Sharjah and playing in such alien conditions was difficult but overall we were disappointing,” says Mommsen.Back in Scotland for the summer of 2012, where spin is somewhat nullified by ubiquitous damp and slippery green pitches, the team lined up against Canada. The first game was abandoned due to bad weather. In the second, Calum MacLeod scored a composed 99 not out to guide the team to victory. It put Scotland back on track after their losses to UAE, and for MacLeod it was a knock that demonstrated his talent as a batsman – a role he had never intended play.

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In 2008, MacLeod, a Glaswegian, was a pace bowler signed with Warwickshire. Tearing in at Edgbaston, or his local cricket club at Drumpellier, the then 19-year-old was one of Scotland’s quickest bowlers and one of their most exciting prospects. But cricket can be an insidious game, full of shadowy by-laws and fine margins. In 2009, after an Intercontinental Cup game versus Canada, MacLeod’s action was reported as illegal.”It was pretty horrible time, I didn’t really know what was going to happen to me,” he said in an interview with Cricket Scotland TV.Scotland struggled in the hot conditions of the UAE, in the World T20, and the preparatory ODIs just before the World Cup•ICC/GettyAt Warwickshire, MacLeod worked with Allan Donald for four months to reconstruct his action. Although there was some progress, it was not sufficient for the county to consider extending his contract and he was released at the end of 2010.”At that time I probably wasn’t good enough for first-class cricket as a bowler or as a batter, so they decided let me go,” he said, “I understood their decision.”Back in Scotland, MacLeod didn’t know whether to give up or continuing searching for more opportunities south of the border. Enter Cricket Scotland, which, in contrast to the cautious counties, saw a talent worth saving. MacLeod was awarded a summer contract in 2011 and from there worked his way into the senior side as a batsman.Through a combination of his elastic wrists and a wholesome whack from his hockey days, and the ruthless resolve he learnt during his long remedial process, MacLeod became indispensable to the team. In New Zealand, he scored 401 runs in eight innings at an average of 50 -two centuries to his name. His performances were so impressive that, seven years after his first adventure down south, he was awarded yet another county contract, this time with Durham as a batsman.

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Back on tour again, the players’ away form continued to blight them. On a return trip to Sharjah, this time against a strong Afghanistan team, the side suffered two more defeats. This meant that success in their next two games against Kenya in June and July of 2013 was vital.Back on Scottish soil the team was once again more convincing – winning both their games against the African side. Matthew Machan, a burly left-hander who also plays for Sussex, struck his first ODI hundred in the first of the two encounters; and Coetzer scored a crucial fifty in the second. On the gurgle and slurp of Scottish outfields at least, Scotland’s performances were unimpeachable.Calum MacLeod: from exciting fast bowler to batting mainstay•Cricket ScotlandSo, travelling to Belfast at the back end of 2013, Scotland still had a chance of finishing in the top two. They just needed to beat Ireland in both matches. On a decent wicket at the Civil Service Club in Stormont, Scotland compiled a middling 223 runs from their 50 overs. And although the team bowled well, Ireland were up to the challenge, winning off the last ball in an exciting finish. Scotland were out of World Cup contention – at least for the moment.

****

During the WCL the team was in transition. Some of their key players, those who had overseen Scotland’s domination of Associate cricket in the early 2000s, had retired, and some of their incoming players, although undeniably talented, were perhaps too inexperienced to perform on the international stage. “Back then our team wasn’t really settled, there was a great influx of youth and new players,” says Freddie Coleman, a middle-order batsman who is part of the World Cup squad. “I was handed my cap in this period and I’d probably be the first to admit I wasn’t ready for it.”This transition was made more complicated by the ICC’s change to the eligibility rules, which allowed the selectors to pick players of Scottish parentage. On hearing of these changes, Cricket Scotland wrote to almost every county player in the league, among them Irish captain William Porterfield, to ask if they were of Scottish descent and whether they might consider representing Scotland in the 2015 World Cup. The result was the recruitment of Taylor (Leicestershire), Iain Wardlaw (formerly of Yorkshire), Machan (Sussex), David Murphy (Northants) and Hamish Gardiner (from Brisbane) – all of whom were transplanted directly into the set-up. On paper this strengthened the squad, but in reality, how much did these new players care about playing for Scotland?Though Scotland’s selectors haven’t stopped importing foreign players, the governing authorities have put in place a system that produces higher-quality local ones. Headed by the likes of Craig Wright, now the team’s assistant coach, Cricket Scotland has built a solid and fruitful youth structure. This system has provided a steady stream of players into the senior set-up of late and has demonstrated that there are other ways to sustain Scottish cricket than just diving desperately into the bowels of the county game. Indeed, it is important to highlight that of the likely starting line-up against New Zealand this Tuesday, around eight players will have come through this youth system.

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Next up on the agenda was the World T20 qualifiers in Dubai. Although not part of the World Cup journey, this interim tournament was another occasion to play on the world stage and a chance to loosen the stiffness of this new and unfamiliar squad. All the Scots had to do now was to finish inside the top six teams in the tournament – a goal that was well within their capabilities. However, much to the players’ chagrin, the team returned home having finished in seventh place.

Cricket Scotland wrote to almost every county player in the league to ask if they were of Scottish descent and whether they might consider representing Scotland in the World Cup

After Scotland failed to qualify for the World Cup, the World T20, and performed inconsistently in the ECB’s 40-over competition for a number of years, the board announced the resignation of coach Peter Steindl in January 2014.Wright and Paul Collingwood, who had been appointed as assistant coaches during the World T20, were pronounced temporary head coaches for the World Cup Qualifiers.Wright’s first action as stand-in coach was to meet all the players one-to-one. “The turnaround between tournaments was so quick that there wasn’t a lot of time for self-pity,” he said. “The atmosphere in the squad was surprisingly good.” After these one-on-ones he and Collingwood got the team together for a big meeting before the tournament. “We didn’t want to hide away from how crucial theses qualifiers were,” said Wright, “so we decided it was best to confront the issue and be completely honest about it.”For Mommsen and for the rest of the squad it was a difficult but beneficial start to the new regime. “We became far more open psychologically about what we had to do than we had previously ever been,” the captain said. “The new coaches wanted us to be free of issues so that we could go out and express ourselves in the middle.”And at the beginning of the tour this new mentality seemed to be paying off. The team won both their warm-up matches and entered the tournament with good momentum. Then disaster struck – they lost to Hong Kong in their first-round match. Now they needed to win six straight games to even have a chance at qualification. Very few gave them a hope.A reasonable degree of success at the World Cup will help spread the game in Scotland•Associated PressIn the team, however, Wright said that things were relatively calm. “When it’s laid out in front of you like that, you know exactly what you have to do,” he says. Michael Leask, the talented Scottish allrounder, agreed: “It was almost easier because we knew our objective; it was up to us. I think as a result of this the boys started clicking and playing well.”The team went on to win seven games in a row, beating Kenya in that tense match in the Super Sixes and securing an emphatic victory against UAE in the final. ODI status until 2018 and a third World Cup was theirs.

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After the successes in New Zealand, Collingwood, so inspirational to the team during his short spell, left to take up a role with England. On April 28, 2014, Grant Bradburn, the former New Zealand Test cricketer, who had been coaching New Zealand A, was chosen as Scotland’s new head coach.Joining the squad in Scotland, Bradburn’s first instinct was to step back and observe the local set-up. “It was important for me not to destroy the existing good work,” he said. His first initiative was to rid the players of the type of diffidence first identified during the T20 qualifiers. For him, no longer is it acceptable for Scottish cricket to see itself only in the context of the Associate game. “To raise our sights above Associate level we must first be the top side in Associate cricket.”He has devised inter-squad games and hasn’t been afraid to chop and change. More practically, his new brand of professionalism involves more intense training. “He wants players put in situations in which they feel uncomfortable, so that they can learn to become comfortable with being uncomfortable,” said Mommsen.

****

It’s cold and wet in Aberdeen, and Scotland are 46 for 3 against England in the side’s first big ODI of 2014.

“He wants players put in situations in which they feel uncomfortable, so that they can learn to become comfortable with being uncomfortable”Preston Mommsen on coach Grant Bradburn

Ravi Bopara wriggles up to the wicket in a series of stutters and tip-toed steps. He jumps, gathers and whips the ball into the pitch. Leask guides the ball from outside off stump to deep backward square-leg for six runs. The boozed-up crowd in the hospitality tent cheers. Next up is spinner James Tredwell. The ball loops languidly towards Leask’s middle stump. With a hulking heave, the Scot thumps the ball behind square for six more. Now the whole crowd is on its feet.Another six over long-on and a streaky four through fine leg follow, and the team finds itself in contention. Two more enormous sixes fly off the young man’s bat and he soaks in the applause and the occasion. Then, perhaps overawed by his own performance, he goes for one six too many and is out caught. He trudges off, for 42 off 16 balls, disconsolate and annoyed but respected by everyone who has watched him.Leask had produced one of the most exciting innings by a Scotsman against a Test-playing country since Gavin Hamilton’s exploits in the 1999 World Cup. Scotland lost the game but the 24-year-old had played the kind of cricket that Bradburn was looking for his squad of young players to do.

****

After the excitement and fanfare of the England game, the rest of 2014 was quiet and frustrating. There were games against Netherlands, a touring New Zealand A side, and three matches against Ireland at the back end of the season. For a squad preparing for one of the most important years in its recent history, four ODIs and a handful of tour matches wasn’t a lot of cricket. And neither were the results particularly inspiring – the team won only three out of its nine completed games.”It was a difficult and frustrating summer,” said Wright, “We didn’t have the guys together at any point because of some of their county commitments, and it can be difficult to perform when you’re not playing together regularly.”The squad finally came together towards the end of 2014 for an acclimatisation tour of Australia and New Zealand. The team put in some very good performances against high-quality opposition, beating both Tasmania and Otago’s first-class teams and coming agonisingly close to defeating a New Zealand XI full of international experience.The tour also saw a change in the captaincy. Bradburn took the decision to relieve Coetzer of his duties so that the 30-year-old could focus on his batting after a challenging year at Northamptonshire. In light of his strong leadership in New Zealand, when Coetzer had been sidelined by a wrist injury, Mommsen was the obvious choice. “Cricket-wise it’s imperative that a captain can command with his performance. Preston will captain on the back of the fact that he has thrived in recent times in this capacity and will lead the team on this tour,” Bradburn said.Craig Wright and Paul Collingwood flank captain Preston Mommsen, holding the World Cup Qualifier trophy•ICCIn the New Year the team embarked on its final preparation tour before the World Cup, when they flew to Dubai to play a triangular series against notable rivals Ireland and Afghanistan. “This tour is to shake off the effects of indoor training and get some match practice under our belts,” Bradburn said before the team set off. Unfortunately, the residual effects of Scotland’s indoor training were still there to see and they performed inconsistently. They lost their first two games to Afghanistan and Ireland, annihilated Afghanistan in their third (Josh Davy producing the best bowling figures by a Scotsman in ODI history) and then had their second game against Ireland abandoned due to inclement weather.In spite of their rustiness the squad was happy with the tour and remained confident about their chances of performing well in the World Cup. “I think we bonded superbly as a unit in Dubai and really enjoyed each other’s successes,” said Michael Leask, “and we are confident and ready to do what no Scottish side has done before.”

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What are the team’s chances?So far the Scots have played eight games at the World Cup and lost eight – most of them convincing beatings. They are still very inexperienced compared to most of their upcoming opponents. At the time of writing, the New Zealand squad has over 1100 more games of ODI experience than Scotland’s side. Daniel Vettori has played only two games fewer than Scotland’s entire 15-man contingent. Yet contrary to these gloomy statistics, this year is certainly the team’s best chance to achieve its goal.When the two opening batsmen walk to the crease this Tuesday, they will do so as professional cricketers and not as estate agents or policemen. This year Scotland have brought a fully professional side to the World Cup for the first time in their history. It is a young team on the rise that hasn’t peaked, as Wright said of his 2007 side, before the tournament. It is also a team that has played a lot of cricket together and knows its game well; a team that, as Coleman said, “has experienced the lowest lows and the highest highs together”.With the ICC’s announcement that the 2019 World Cup will only feature ten teams, this could be Scotland’s last tournament for a long time. Indeed, a series of good results may be the only way to force the ICC’s hand. But beyond the glitzy parameters of the World Cup, the real and lasting inspiration to the Scots this World Cup should be their opportunity to turn the 60,000 people who play cricket across Scotland into 60,000 more.

JJ Watt issues strong 'let's not mess' warning to Birmingham CEO after call to play Wrexham game in the USA

JJ Watt sent out a strong "let's not mess" warning to Birmingham CEO Barry Cook, who backed the idea of playing the Wrexham game in the USA.

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  • Watt acquired minority stake in Burnley back in 2023
  • Warned against idea of hosting league games in USA
  • Hailed "history" and "tradition" of sport in England
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The NFL star acquired a minority stake in Burnley along with his wife Kealia Watt back in 2023, following in the footsteps of Tom Brady, Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney as an American investor in the English game. He takes a keen interest in the sport and tries to watch the Clarets whenever they are in action, even if he is not a regular at Turf Moor.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Watt must have had one eye on the blockbuster 'Hollywood derby' between Wrexham and Birmingham on Monday night where the Blues emerged 3-1 victors over the Welsh side. After the game, Birmingham CEO Cook was asked if there was any talk of the fixture being played in the USA as both teams boast of a significant following across the Atlantic due to their American ownership.

    “Personally, I think that is a great idea,” Cook said. “But I think the EFL wouldn’t see it that way and I think the history and the tradition of our sport and our league tries to ensure that doesn’t happen. That doesn't stop making it a global game even though you are playing here in Birmingham.”

  • WHAT WATT SAID

    Watt didn't agree with Cook and wrote on X: "The beauty of the English game is the history, the tradition, the passion. These clubs have been around long before any of us arrived and they’ll be around long after all of us are gone. Modernize some aspects that need it, sure. But let’s not mess with what makes it great."

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    WHAT NEXT?

    There has been a consistent push to host Premier League games in the USA and FIFA is considering the idea with seriousness. They have set up a working group to find out the possible implications of such a move as the sport's apex governing body looks to spread the game beyond the traditional boundaries. However, to host a League One or a Championship fixture outside the UK remains far-fetched at the moment.

Plan of attack: Mauricio Pochettino's immediate focus includes house hunting, relationship building

The new coach is officially on the job, and he's not wasting any time as he prepares for his first camp

If you're trying to track down Mauricio Pochettino over the next month, good luck.

The Argentine's time as U.S. men's national team manager is officially underway, and these first few weeks will be a multi-continental whirlwind that will lay the foundation for his tenure. The job is just getting started, and Pochettino won't be wasting any time.

Before the globetrotting starts, though, Pochettino is due for a quick trip to Atlanta. There are important matters to attend to.

"I think next weekend, we're all heading down to Atlanta," U.S. Soccer CEO J.T. Batson said, referencing the site of the federation's new headquarters. "We'll get some barbecue and do some house hunting."

What comes after will be vital, too. Over the next month, Pochettino will lay the foundation for his coaching tenure, one in which U.S. Soccer hope can transform the American game forever.

For now, Pochettino just needs to get things ready for October. In less than a month, he'll take charge of the USMNT for the first time in Austin, Texas when they take on Panama in the first of two friendlies. In that month, he'll have much to accomplish.

By the time players gather in Texas for his first USMNT camp, he'll almost certainly be relieved. That's the light at the end of the tunnel but, before that, he has an enormous amount of logistics to sort.

From strategic meetings to player evaluations to relationship building, Pochettino has a considerable to-do list. So how will Pochettino's first month play out? GOAL takes a look

  • Finding a place to live

    First up, as Batson says, is a bit of personal business. If Pochettino is going to coach in the U.S., he'll need a place to live.

    The coach and U.S. Soccer leadership will be on the case, sorting out his living arrangements. The barbecue Batson mentioned – some Argentinian asado, perhaps? – will be nice, but conducting the home search is a priority.

    Atlanta will be Pochettino's home base. U.S. Soccer is in the process of relocating from Chicago down to Atlanta, with their new base being headlined by a new state-of-the-art training center. The Arthur M. Blank U.S. Soccer National Training Center will officially open in 2026, giving U.S. Soccer a new center of operations.

    "I think the idea is to live here in the USA. That is the idea," Pochettino said. "But of course, for different reasons, I will be between Europe and the USA."

    While based stateside, there will surely be trips to England, France, Germany and Italy on the agenda in the very near future.

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    Building relationships

    The most important thing Pochettino will do over the next month is build relationships. He's the newcomer, and he'll need to introduce himself to everyone from the ground up.

    "Not only is he a great coach, but he's what I call a connector of people," said U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker, who previously worked with the coach at Southampton. "He's somebody that can build outstanding relationships, not just with the players who are starting but the players who are not in the team, the staff across the club, somebody that might work in the ticket office or somebody that might work within the administration team.

    "I remember him coming to everybody's office and he would pretty much physically hug everybody in the club. He created this unbelievable spirit, and that's something that hasn't left him."

    Pochettino need to bring that to the forefront as he introduces himself to team leaders. Christian Pulisic took aim at the USMNT's players in the wake of back-to-back disappointing performances in recent friendlies, saying that the team lacked a winning mentality. Matt Turner said the Argentine need to "steady the ship" – one that has been way too wobbly in 2024.

    Over the next few weeks, Pochettino will need to sit down with players and implement ground rules, introducing them to the concepts and expectations they'll face when they do arrive for camp.

    It remains to be seen when and where Pochettino will pop up in Europe over the next few months, but he's already met with leadership in the U.S. A spokesperson confirmed to GOAL that Pochettino met with MLS commissioner Don Garber, LAFC's co-managing owner Larry Berg, Philadelphia Union chairman and principal owner Jay Sugarman and vice chairman and alternate governor Richard Leibovitch, in New York on Friday. And he left all in the room impressed with his plans for the national team.

    "I think we need to create links with the organization and the team," Pochettino said. "I think I'm required to be there with the players, with the staff, with the coaching staff, working around the world, not only here with MLS.

    "That is the plan: to try to build a very good relationship with all the clubs. Clubs, they need to feel our support. Players need to feel that we care for them. It's not OK if, after one month, you go and then you don't feel that relationship. I feel it's important to create a better relationship with the players. They need to feel that."

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    Assembling a staff

    Pochettino's staff is already largely assembled. He's set to be joined by longtime assistants Jesus Perez and Miguel D'Agostino, as well as goalkeeper coach Toni Jimenez. He's worked with each of them for years.

    "If there's one thing I know in my life, I think it's that I have to have people that have the qualifications and then people that challenge me," Pochettino said. "We work because I think the personalities and the quality that they have fit for me as a coach. We've created a very good relationship. Maybe we can say that we are friends, but in between, we are professionals and always are going to be.

    "People say you need to always bring people from outside, but I think that it's priceless to have people that work with you and every day want to challenge you and want to improve and be better. I think, for me, that is the most important thing."

    A spokesman told GOALthat Pochettino will head to Chicago later this month to meet with the current USMNT staff, which was fronted by interim coach Mikey Varas during the September window. The new coach could also expand his staff in the future to include someone with more familiarity with American soccer.

    "We are flexible, and we are always hoping to add people because we know that football is changing," Pochettino said. "We need people, qualified people, working next to us to provide us with information to be better, to help the players to perform."

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    Making the family happy

    There is another aspect of this worth considering: the off-field portion. By making the decision to take over the USMNT, Pochettino wasn't just dictating life for him or his trusted assistants.

    Pochettino's sons are both grown. Sebastiano Pochettino was recently Chelsea's fitness coach and sports scientist. Maurizio Pochettino is a professional player, having most recently featured for Primera Federación club Gimnastic in Spain. Pochettino's wife Karina is also ready to begin this new chapter (and presumably so is his Rhodesian Ridgeback named Sansa, who even has her own Instagram page).

    The coach offered a phrase he learned back in England – "over the moon" – to describe his family's reaction. Everyone in the Pochettino family seemingly is excited about the opportunity.

    "I am happy," he said. "I am motivated and showing passion. My family has seen me in the last few weeks or months with the fire in my eyes. That is the most important thing: how you feel. I feel so, so happy, because I see my family are also so excited for this challenge. They are part of it because they support me."

Tottenham considering £21m signing after rave review from Paratici contacts

Tottenham are considering a potential £21 million signing this summer, following a rave review from some of Fabio Paratici's personal contacts.

Postecoglou eyeing new centre-back for Spurs

Despite bringing in Radu Dragusin to the tune of £25 million in January, it remains the case that Spurs and manager Ange Postecoglou are keen to add another new centre-back to their ranks this summer.

Tottenham now eyeing move to sign "intelligent" £50m+ Hojbjerg replacement

He’s a player in demand.

By
Tom Cunningham

Apr 29, 2024

As we've seen time and time again this season, injuries can seriously weaken Postecoglou's starting eleven, and the latest victims of this have been star left-back Destiny Udogie, centre-back Ben Davies and Timo Werner – who will all miss the remainder of 2023/2024.

Earlier this season, both Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero were also unavailable for large parts due to either injury or suspension, with Spurs often struggling to deal with their absences.

Tottenham manager Ange Postecoglou.

If the Lilywhites are to continue their growth under Postecoglou, strength in depth on par with England's elite is absolutely necessary, and the Tottenham boss is on record stating that he wishes to bring in another centre-half this summer.

“If you’re saying, ‘Is it an area we can strengthen?’, yes it’s an area we will probably look at”, said Postecoglou on signing another centre-back.

“With all these things, it’s about trying to strengthen the group as much as anything else. If you think about when I first arrived, we had maybe six or seven centre-backs at the club. So it’s not just numbers. It’s more about the ability of those players to play the football we want and to fit in to what we’re trying to build here.

“I think it is an area of the park we will look to strengthen, but I think we’ll look to strengthen all areas of the park come the end of the season. That is planning that’s already underway, and other people are in charge of it at the moment.”

Of the centre-backs linked, there are many, with Bournemouth's Lloyd Kelly and Fulham's Tosin Adarabioyo standing out as the potential bargain options on a free deal. Spurs won't wish to spend huge money on another central defender, considering they already have van de Ven, Romero and Dragusin at their disposal.

Tottenham considering Calafiori move after rave review from Paratici contacts

According to Football Insider and journalist Wayne Veysey, an astute option for Spurs could also be Bologna defender Riccardo Calafiori.

Bologna defender Riccardo Calafiori

The Italian, who's been called an "aerial monster" by football analyst Ben Mattinson, has been in fine form under Thiago Motta this season and reports suggest he could be available for around £21 million.

FI and Veysey claim Tottenham are considering a summer move for Calafiori, with Fabio Paratici's contacts in Italy left impressed by his excellent displays across this campaign.

Riccardo Calafiori's best Serie A games for Bologna

Match Rating (via WhoScored)

Bologna 3-0 Salernitana

8.09

Empoli 1-0 Bologna

7.76

Bologna 1-0 Lazio

7.65

Roma 3-1 Bologna

7.55

Bologna 4-0 Lecce

7.49

The 21-year-old has made 27 Serie A appearances for Bologna over 23/24, registering four assists in that time, and another enticing draw for Postecoglou is that he's also capable of playing as a left-back – meaning he can fill in across multiple areas.

Premier League bound? Kingsley Coman decides to quit Bayern Munich amid interest from Man City, Arsenal & Barcelona

Kingsley Coman has reportedly decided to leave Bayern Munich amid transfer links with Arsenal, Barcelona and Manchester City.

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  • Coman linked with Man City and Barcelona
  • Winger decides to leave Bayern Munich
  • Arsenal also credited with interest
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    reports that after Coman and many of the club's big earners were invited to leave Bayern, the France international has decided not to stay at the club. He is expected to leave the Bundesliga outfit before the transfer window shuts on August 30.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Coman has been at Bayern for seven years but his days at the club appear to be numbered, following a trophy-laden spell with the Bavarians. The report adds that Premier League sides are interested in recruiting the 28-year-old, with City, the Gunners, Barcelona and Al-Ahli said to be keeping tabs on him.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Coman still has three years left on his Bayern contract, so he is unlikely to leave for a cut-price deal. A loan may be more achievable but it remains to be seen what will happen next for the ex-Juventus man – who has made 296 appearances and scored 64 goals for Bayern to date.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    If Coman, who has made two appearances and scored one goal for Bayern this season, does not get his transfer move, he could feature for Vincent Kompany's side against Freiburg on September 1.

West Ham eyeing up “world-class” Ruben Amorim alternative

The pillars of change are shifting down in east London, with David Moyes' tenuous grip on the managerial seat at West Ham United weakened further after a desperate 5-2 defeat against Crystal Palace in the Premier League.

Having lost, valiantly, to Bayer Leverkusen in the Europa League quarter-finals last week, a reaction was needed in the top flight to forge a path toward continental qualification, but, eighth in the standings and two points off Manchester United in seventh – who have two games in hand – it's looking unlikely that the Hammers will paint the purple patch needed.

West Ham manager David Moyes.

Sporting Director Tim Steidten appears to have had enough, and while the London Stadium owes much to Moyes and the gains made under his leadership, moves have been made to identify a successor, with the Scotsman out of contract in the summer.

West Ham eyeing Ruben Amorim alternatives

Some exciting news arrived on Monday, with The Athletic's David Ornstein confirming that Sporting manager Ruben Amorim is West Ham's top target and is no longer the frontrunner for the Liverpool job, but Steidten has mapped out a list of alternatives.

According to The Guardian, former Germany and Bayern Munich boss Hansi Flick is under consideration.

The 59-year-old has been out of work since being dismissed by Die Mannschaft in 2023, though boasts a wealth of high-level experience and an attractive playing style to boot.

Why Hansi Flick would be perfect for West Ham

Flick first rose to prominence when serving as Joachim Löw's assistant as his nation triumphed at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, then moved to Bayern Munich as Niko Kovac's understudy and took the leading position in the dugout when the former Croatia star was dismissed in November 2019.

In that maiden term – not even a full season – at the helm, Flick led Die Roten to a stunning continental treble, winning the Champions League, Bundesliga and DFB Pokal. An erudite footballing mind with a far-seeing tactical disposition, Flick, at his best, is up there with the greatest the game has to offer.

Hansi Flick: Major Managerial Honours

Trophy

Team

Times won

FIFA World Cup

Germany assistant

1x (2014)

German Bundesliga

Bayern Munich

2x (19/20), (20/21)

Champions League

Bayern Munich

1x (19/20)

DFB Pokal

Bayern Munich

1x (19/20)

UEFA Super Cup

Bayern Munich

1x (20/21)

DFL-Supercup

Bayern Munich

1x (20/21)

Sourced via Transfermarkt

One of the most discernible differences when Flick replaced Kovac at the Allianz Arena was a ramping-up of aggression, with goal machine Robert Lewandowski saying: "His tactical and footballing knowledge are at a high level."

He galvanised and wrapped the team into a uniform vision, a singular goal, in short time sparking a change that saw a return to enterprising and fluid attacking football.

It's for this reason that Flick would be the perfect man to lead a new chapter at West Ham. He would arrive at an outfit with a proven record but that nonetheless has fallen by the wayside, and his vision could signal a prosperous change, rooting his philosophy into the London Stadium and swiftly winning the club, wall-to-wall, over.

Moyes has done much for West Ham but his tactics have long been perceived as negative and this has sundered the fanbase into a bleak schism. Success breeds longing, naturally, and the Irons now have a taste of gold.

Amorim, while young and bold and compelling, is more of an unknown commodity and would demand radical shifting in style and system, brandishing a three-at-the-back line-up and completely rewriting the way West Ham play.

Hansi Flick

Flick, conversely, operates with a 4-2-3-1 set-up – as, would you look at that, does Moyes, albeit with contrasting emphases – though is reliant on similar ball-focused build-up, with those in the rearguard equipped with top-class distribution ability.

Moreover, the German has been described as "world-class" by reporter Stefan Bienkowski, a sentiment echoed by the masses when he was at the summit of his career with Bayern.

While Amorim is the frontrunner, it has been stressed that Liverpool remain on stand-by despite distancing themselves from the Liga Portugal table-topper.

Should West Ham opt against moving for one of the most coveted rising stars in the managerial stratosphere, Flick, not quite the grizzled veteran but wizened and substantiated at the top of the game, would be worth the venture – now that there is a first-rate alternative.

West Ham eyeing an amazing Amorim alternative who’s perfect for Bowen

This manager has reportedly rejected AC Milan as he targets a move to east London.

By
Angus Sinclair

Apr 23, 2024

Vinicius Junior reveals what he really thinks about Kylian Mbappe's playing style as he dismisses claims Real Madrid will be 'unstoppable' after bringing in ex-PSG star

Vinicius Junior has hailed the playing style and ability of Kylian Mbappe but insists Real Madrid will not be 'unstoppable' because of his signing.

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  • Vinicius Jr speaks on Mbappe relationship
  • Maintains Real face a "really hard" season
  • Mbappe and Vini hoping to dovetail
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Vinicius Junior, who has rejected a hugely lucrative move to Saudi Arabia, has expressed his excitement at playing with Mbappe after the World Cup winner was lured to the club on a free transfer following his exit from Paris Saint-Germain. The pair have yet to truly align, with Real drawing one and winning one of their opening two La Liga games, although Vinicius has expressed his hope that the superstar will start hitting the back of the net with regularity, and has hailed his style.

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    While there are hopes that Real will be able to conquer all-comers this season, given the sheer weight of attacking talent – they now boast Vinicius and Mbappe as well as Jude Bellingham, Rodrygo, and Endrick – Vinicius is not sure that they will be able to simply sweep teams aside as they aim to retain both La Liga and the Champions League.

  • WHAT VINICIUS JR. SAID

    Vinicius told CNN: “I love Mbappe’s style, I love how he plays, and the truth is that I’m very excited about what we can do during the season. He’s coming in after having scored so many goals, after winning so many titles. He’s arriving at the club he always dreamed to be in and where every player always dreamed to play for: Real Madrid. God willing, Mbappé will be able to score as many goals for us as he did in his previous team, as he does in the national team, and that he can do even more together with us.”

    The Brazilian added: "The team is very good and has been that way for a long time now. Now with the arrival of Mbappé, everyone says the team can become unstoppable, but for now, we have to perform the best training sessions and try to understand each other as quickly as possible.”

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Mbappe and Vinicius will next link up when Los Blancos play Las Palmas on Thursday. Their opponents have yet to win a game this season and Real will hope to put them to the sword.

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