Categories
Sports

Wesley Fofana to Chelsea, Manchester United, Barcelona, ​​Frenkie de Jong contract, Arsenal, Chelsea, record transfer, defender

Barcelona have reportedly threatened legal action over Frenkie de Jong’s contract, after the Spanish giants claimed to have found evidence of criminality on “the parties who signed” the upgraded deal.

According to The Athletic’s David Ornstein, the Catalan club is hoping to either sell the Dutch star or revert the deal back to what it was before to help solve their financial woes.

De Jong has been heavily linked with a transfer to Manchester United, although Chelsea recently emerged as a potential suitor for his services.

Watch the world’s best footballers every week with beIN SPORTS on Kayo. LIVE coverage from Bundesliga, Ligue 1, Serie A, Carabao Cup, EFL & SPFL. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Meanwhile, striker Timo Werner is close to finalizing his death with RB Leipzig after arriving in Germany for his medical.

The 26-year-old rose to footballing stardom during his first stint with the club, and became one of the biggest names on the transfer market before being snatched up by Chelsea two years ago.

While Chelsea may lose Werner, the Blues are heavily linked with another emerging star who they could sign on a world record fee.

Here’s all the news and gossip in the latest edition of our Rumor Mill!

BARCA THREATEN LEGAL ACTION

Barcelona’s financial woes are in dire need of a solution recruit after La Liga rejected their attempt to register new players, including star Robert Lewandowski.

Frenkie de Jong has been linked with two of the biggest clubs in England, with a transfer shaping up as a potential solution to their money drama.

But the de Jong saga at Barcelona has reached a dramatic new twist with the club reportedly threatening legal action over the stars renewed deal.

Barcelona's Dutch midfielder Frenkie De Jong reacts during the 57th Joan Gamper Trophy friendly football match between FC Barcelona and Club Universidad Nacional Pumas at the Camp Nou stadium in Barcelona on August 7, 2022. (Photo by Pau BARRENA / AFP)
Barcelona’s Dutch midfielder Frenkie De Jong reacts during the 57th Joan Gamper Trophy friendly football match between FC Barcelona and Club Universidad Nacional Pumas at the Camp Nou stadium in Barcelona on August 7, 2022. (Photo by Pau BARRENA / AFP)Source: AFP

De Jong signed a two-year contract extension with the club on October 20, 2020, which kept him at the club for longer but reduced his salary in the short-term.

It’s believed the Netherlands international is owed €18 million ($26m AUD) in deferred wages, which the club is hoping to annul.

David Ornstein has reported that the deal presented by the club’s previous board involved alleged “criminality” and provides “grounds for legal action against those involved”.

Previously, Barcelona president Joan Laporta had insisted that he wants de Jong to remain at the club.

“Frenkie’s our player and we want him to stay at Barcelona, ​​he wants to stay too,” Laporta said.

“With him and his teammates, we have a very powerful midfield. He has offers, but we want him to stay.”

RED DEVILS TO SIGN FRENCH MIDFIELDER

Manchester United had identified midfielder Fabian Ruiz as a possible alternative to de Jong and it appears the deal is progressing, as Erik ten Hag looks to complete his fourth signing.

Ten Hag booed after United’s horror loss | 01:18

Guardian revealed an agreement has been reached between Juventus and Manchester United for £15 million ($26 million AUD).

Rabiot has had a decorated playing career so far, having won Ligue 1 with Paris Saint-Germain on five occasions, and he’s also a Serie A winner.

WERNER TO COMPLETE MOVE

Chelsea striker Timo Werner is on the cusp of returning to RB Leipzig, after arriving in Germany for his medical.

Tim Werner.Source: AFP

Werner had an underwhelming spell at the Blues, but is set to return to the club where he really made his name in world football.

The 26-year-old scored 90 goals and had 40 assists in his 156 games for RB Leipzig, before leaving in 2020.

CHELSEA BIG SPEND CONTINUES

Leicester defender Wesley Fofana could be wearing another navy jersey this season, as Chelsea prepare to launch a world record bid this week.

Football Londonunderstand that the Blues will attempt to sign their second center back of the English summer, after announcing Kalidou Koulibaly.

It’s believed that Fofana is pushing for a move away from the Foxes, even though coach Brendan Rodgers has insisted that he’s not for sale. According to the report, Chelsea are preparing a bid that would smash the world record for the highest fee paid for a defender — currently the 87 million euros ($A127m) Manchester United paid for Harry Maguire in 2019.

ONE OR THE OTHER

Barcelona will not sell Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Memphis Depay, as both players continued to be linked with transfers away from the Camp Nou.

Football insider Fabrizio Romano has said that no discussions have been held between Chelsea and Barcelona over Aubameyang, although he is on their “list”.

BARCELONA, SPAIN – AUGUST 07: Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang of FC Barcelona celebrates after scoring his team’s fifth goal during the Joan Gamper Trophy match between FC Barcelona and Pumas UNAM at Spotify Camp Nou on August 07, 2022 in Barcelona, ​​Spain. (Photo by Alex Caparros/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

The former Arsenal captain could be set for a sensational return to England with London rivals Chelsea, although he’s happy in Spain.

Meanwhile, Depay is reportedly negotiating a free agency with Juventus interested in acquiring his services.

BOLOGNA MAKE IT CLEAR

Bologna director Marco di Vaio has made it quite clear that the Italian club want to retain striker Marko Arnautovic, amid rumors of an offer from Manchester United.

The Red Devils reportedly had a bid for the 33-year-old striker rejected.

“Man United on Arnautovic? We’re proud of Man United’s interest for Marko bur we are not planning to sell him,” di Vaio said.

“We want to keep him at Bologna as president said, he’s a key part of our project – there’s not even a price tag.”

.

Categories
Sports

‘Trade me or fire them’: Kevin Durant’s bombshell Brooklyn Nets demand, Kyrie Irving

NBA megastar Kevin Durant has reportedly given Brooklyn Nets owner Joe Tsai a bombshell ultimatum, demanding coach Steve Nash and general manager Sean Marks are fired — or he is traded.

Durant requested a trade in June but any move will require a massive package in return, none of which have eventuated, The New York Post reported.

Stream Over 50 Sports Live & On-Demand with Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

The Athletic reported Durant had a face-to-face meeting with Nets owner Joe Tsai in London over the weekend in which he issued an ultimatum: Trade me or fire them.

According to the report, the Nets have “direct knowledge” concerning why the 12-time All-Star has asked to be moved on a year after he signed a four-year, $198 million extension. Also according to the report, Durant “does not have faith” in the direction of the team.

A source close to the Nets organization indicated Durant is not the only Nets star unhappy with the team’s leadership.

“Kyrie Irving hates these guys,” the source said. “He feels that Nash is terrible and Marks is bad.”

“KD came to the same conclusion,” the source added.

The two-time NBA champion and 2014 MVP’s discontent reportedly stems from the fact the Nets were swept by Boston in the playoffs, after struggling to a 44-38 record last year, despite having the likes of Durant and Irving, while James Harden also played on the side for most of the year.

But the demands have fallen on deaf ears as Tsai tweeted on Tuesday: “Our front office and coaching staff have my support. We will make decisions in the best interest of the Brooklyn Nets.”

Nash, a 48-year-old Canadian and two-time NBA MVP as a guard, got his first coaching job with the Nets in 2020 and has gone 92-62 in two seasons guiding Brooklyn.

Marks, 46, was the first player from New Zealand in the NBA and won two league titles, one as a forward with the San Antonio Spurs in 2005 and the other as an assistant coach with the Spurs in 2014.

He spent most of the next two seasons as the Spurs’ assistant general manager before being hired to oversee the rebuilding Nets.

The Nets have yet to find a trade offer that would prompt them to deal Durant, and according to the report, Tsai and the Nets have made it known they would take “every last asset from a team that trades for Durant.”

In stating the lofty hope for the trade return, perhaps the Nets believe Durant would be less motivated to leave and more likely to report to September’s training camp.

But as the ultimatum becomes publicly known, it is difficult to imagine an avenue toward Durant playing again with the Nets or showing up to pre-season action with a team put together by Marks and coached by Nash — unless Tsai chooses the player over the organization’s leaders.

The Nets are seeking a young All-Star and a collection of draft picks for Durant, but finding equal value for a 33-year-old prodigious talent signed through 2025-26 is challenging.

This story first appeared in the New York Post and was republished with permission.

With AFP

.

Categories
Sports

Golf 2022: Nick Faldo breaks down in live TV commentary farewell, CBS, PGA Tour Wyndham Championship scores, result

Golf legend Nick Faldo was reduced to tears and barely able to speak as he signed off on his 16-year career commentary in an emotional live TV segment.

The six-time major winner is leaving CBS and the Golf Channel and plans to focus on running his Montana farm and other business.

Watch LIVE coverage from The USPGA Tour with Fox Sports on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Faldo, 65, was a blubbering mess as he attempted to give his final address sitting alongside fellow CBS analysts Jim Nantz, Ian Baker-Finch and Frank Nobilo after the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club

“I blew it,” he said, struggling to compose himself. “I was already…”

Faldo wept before finally stringing an emotional sentence together: “So I was on a boat in Ireland… They gave me a call and said, ‘How would you like to sit next to Jim Nantz?’ I literally fell out of the boat. I really did. That was 2006, and here we are, 16 years later.

Australian Baker-Finch and New Zealander Nobilo paid tribute to Faldo before the Englishman uttered an emotional final line.

“I’m a single child and at 65 I found three brothers, thank you,” he said.

Meanwhile South Korean Kim Joo-hyung fired a stunning nine-under par 61 to win the Wyndham Championship, his first US PGA Tour title, and secure his spot in the season-ending playoffs.

Kim’s outstanding effort at Sedgefield Country Club, where the 20-year-old played the first nine holes of the final round in eight-under, capped a remarkable week that opened with his quadruple bogey eight at the first hole on Thursday.

“It’s definitely a week I’ll remember forever,” Kim said after his 20-under total of 260 gave him a five-stroke victory over fellow South Korean Im Sung-jae and American John Huh.

“I can’t believe it — I’m speechless right now,” Kim said, his emotions finally showing after a round in which he looked in supreme control.

“I’ve worked really hard to get to this point,” he said, his voice cracking. “Just walking off that 18th green, just thinking about the behind the scenes work.

“It was a hard day. I didn’t know golf was this stressful,” added the player who goes by the nickname Tom in a nod to his childhood love of Thomas the Tank Engine.

Cameron Percy was the best-placed Australian, finishing tied eighth, nine shots off the lead.

Originally published as Golf legend Nick Faldo reduced to blubbering mess in stirring live TV farewell

.

Categories
Sports

Georgia Godwin rise highlights new way for gymnastics

“Recently I’ve tried to look after Georgia the person before Georgia the gymnast,” she said. “That’s been a huge step in my journey this year, really trying to find me as a person and not have my whole identity as a gymnast, which has been challenging because gymnastics is very tightly knit into my life.”

Such an attitude is nearly revolutionary in a sport where gymnasts have often suppressed their needs while striving for success, stressed by the idea that careers draw to a close with puberty.

All this stands in stark contrast to what the sport has been pummeled for after athlete Athe Netflix documentary that chronicled the rampant abuses within women’s elite gymnastics.

American superstar Simone Biles was among those calling for change.

American superstar Simone Biles was among those calling for change.Credit:Getty Images

athlete A sparked a global outpouring of gymnasts sharing their traumatic experiences, including in Australia, where more than two dozen former national team members took to social media to expose what many allege amounted to abusive treatment.

That sparked an official inquiry by the Australian Human Rights Commission, whose findings exposed the sport’s “win-at-all-costs” culture. Liddick, who is no longer a national coach, was sanctioned by the National Sports Tribunal earlier this year and acknowledged in a letter that she “engaged in unacceptable coaching behaviours, in particular the use of negative language which was belittling, offensive, and humiliating”.

The careers of Godwin and several of her teammates straddle the old way of training elite gymnasts and a more athlete-centric model where gymnasts and their personal coaches have more freedom to decide what’s best that is slowly coming into form in Australia.

The new methods — training hard but smart, taking time off to take care of injuries, and most of all speaking up when they have something to say — provide a blueprint for conduct that many athletes, including Olympic superstar Simone Biles, have now spent years advocating for.

When Godwin’s mental health needed tending to after a bout of post-Olympic blues threatened to halt her progress, she called a meeting of her team and told them point-blank how she had been feeling.

Godwin (left) embraces countrywoman and fellow Birmingham gold medalist Kate McDonald.

Godwin (left) embraces countrywoman and fellow Birmingham gold medalist Kate McDonald.Credit:AP

“And they were so helpful!” she marveled, adding that the Australian Institute of Sport’s mental health referral network found someone to help her. “For a long time we’ve internalized everything, and so it’s a bit of a challenge to try and change that, but I do want to see a big change in speaking up about your program and speaking up about how you’re feeling and things like that. I’m trying to show the young ones that it’s OK to be a little bit open and vulnerable. My main goal is to show them that you can enjoy the experience, plus you can do well.”

That has translated to small changes, like having the freedom to wander the Commonwealth athletes village — “to go outside, talk to people, enjoy being there,” Godwin said — and bigger ones, too. When Commonwealth Games beam gold medalist Kate McDonald was looking to change gyms late last year, she did a trial at the gym where she presently trains and was astounded when other athletes literally applauded her skill.

“And as soon as that happened I was like, wow, this is crazy, this environment is so different and I’m already in love with this place,” McDonald, 22, said. “That’s really given me such a good turn in my gymnastics, and I’m just so happy now.”

Godwin is yet to decide whether she will push on to the Paris Olympics in two years.

Godwin is yet to decide whether she will push on to the Paris Olympics in two years.Credit:Getty

Godwin did not begin the sport with big ambitions. She dabbled in tennis and athletics as a child, but she kept returning to gymnastics, attracted by the fun of flying through the air but also by the building-block nature of the sport. But by the time she reached her upper echelons, the Olympics were well in view.

She swallowed the disappointment of missing Glasgow and stuck it out when Australia failed to qualify a team for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. She made it to Tokyo on the strength of her individual performance at the 2019 World Championships, then waited through the pandemic to be able to travel and compete again. She finished 37th all-around in Tokyo.

After an Olympics and Commonwealth glory, what comes next? “There’s no specific competition I want to tick off, but it’s just the experience and the atmosphere that I really want to dive into,” Godwin said.

McDonald, for her part, feels she is just getting started. “I feel like I still have so much time and so much more to give in the sport,” she said. “You can be 25, 26. Georgia’s 24 and she’s still producing amazing results.”

Godwin has yet to decide whether she will go for the 2024 Olympics, or even to return to England for the World Championships in Liverpool in October. She and her teammate Emily Whitehead, also a Tokyo Olympian, have informed Gymnastics Australia that they will reassess their status once they return home.

“We’ve already told GA where we’re at physically and mentally, and they’re starting to listen, which is nice. They’ve really put a hold on it and we’ll let them know,” Godwin said.

At the moment, London and Paris beckon for a long-awaited holiday. The 2024 Olympic host city is of particular interest to Godwin, who enjoyed a small taste of it during a pre-Games training camp.

loading

“The vibe and the atmosphere in Paris was like one big party,” Godwin said.

“So I’m quite excited to go back post competing and actually get involved in the party.”

Blyth Lawrence is a freelance American journalist specializing in gymnastics and Olympic sports.

Categories
Sports

Wallabies’ 2024 gameplan development starts now

A gutsy, come-from-behind Wallabies win in Mendoza on Sunday morning (AEST) was sadly soured by two significant events.

The first was the Achilles injury suffered by Quade Cooper in the 48th minute itself. The second was the almost immediate realization of the major ramifications for game development, specifically leading into the Rugby World Cup next year in France.

A ruptured Achilles tendon is a major injury with full recovery typically outlined in nine-to-12-month terms.

The tendon itself can take around six to ten weeks to heal, according to online resources, but it could be as long as four to six months before a patient is in a position to commence relatively normal activity, like walking or running. Even if this is achieved, the general advice appears to be a that it will likely take another six months or so of rehabilitation treatment before the injury is considered fully recovered.

Obviously – as if this even needs to be said – these timeframes are indicative only, and equally obviously, every patient is different. TheRoarunsurprisingly, is not the best place for medical advice.

Harry Johnson-Holmes suffered a ruptured Achilles almost immediately after arriving in camp from the Australia A squad last month in the midst of the front-row injury crisis, and his training and recovery to restore the strength and conditioning he needs for the front row is going to be a lot different to Cooper’s.

But this point remains: even if Cooper can get the best possible treatment available and strictly adheres to his rehab while maintaining the best fitness and body condition he possibly can going into next year, he’s still going to be a 35-year-old coming off an Achilles rupture.

If Johnson-Holmes is racing the clock, so too is Cooper.

Quade Cooper of the Wallabies

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

Which all amounts to the Wallabies no longer having the option of basing a gameplan around Cooper at flyhalf for the World Cup.

And that probably means that the post-RWC – and post Cooper – thinking around the way the Wallabies approach and play the game needs to be identified and employed well ahead of time.

Maybe not this week, because the next game is probably too close, and Argentina is not exactly an easy commute. But certainly in this Rugby Championship the Wallabies have just begun, and certainly over the course of the five-Test Spring Tour in late October and November.

And all the thinking for 2024 would hinge around two key questions that now need answers in August 2022.

How do the Wallabies want to play? And…

Who do are the best options to fit into and drive that approach?

The Roar experts Brett McKay, Harry Jones and Jim Tucker review Australia’s win in Mendoza

With Cooper back in the No.10 for the first time this year, Australia looked very different in attack in Mendoza than they did against England in July, and that would have surprised no-one.

There were noticeably more flat runners, and more inside lines being offered – Jordan Petaia’s for the first try being an obvious example – as Cooper looked for and played toward any chinks he could find in Los Pumas’ defense.

Nic White’s role was to play field position and get Cooper the ball where he needed it and when he wanted it. Hunter Paisami’s role was play support to Cooper and often trigger the next phase of attack when Cooper ran, while Len Ikitau and the back three were the guys running the lines that Cooper needed, from first phase, as an inside option, and obviously to support any tackle busts and line breaks.

On the whole, it went OK. Cooper showed plenty of signs in the first half that he’d not played a great deal of rugby since late May, and that’s not unexpected given the nature of the injury that sidelined him in July.

But he was starting to look more dangerous and the Wallabies attack more threatening when the old sniper in the stands got him eight minutes after halftime.

When Cooper went off, White and to a lesser extent Paisami took more control of the play, with Reece Hodge admirably playing the distributor and linking role in between them. The Aussies simplified their attack, increased their pace as they entered the attacking zone, and guys in space had supporting options around them.

So the Wallabies need to work out if they want to play primarily off 10 or distribute the playmaking across 9, 10 and 12. Then they need to work who the best options are for whichever method they want to deploy.

Indeed, it could be that they want the ability to play both styles, and maybe even use different players accordingly.

If Noah Lolesio is now the man, then the team needs to play within his capabilities and to his strengths. If it’s Ben Donaldson, then he needs to be added to the squad at the first logically and logistically possible opportunity to start gaining experience. Same applies for Tane Edmed or any other young options.

Noah Lolesio kicks the winning goal for the Wallabies

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

James O’Connor may be an option if he’s fit. Hodge did exactly what he was asked of in Mendoza, but would be a questionable long-term option.

But further, the Wallabies now more than ever need to ensure the Super Rugby sides are on the same page. If it’s Lolesio, then Stephen Larkham and the Brumbies need to know what they need to start building into Lolesio’s game in January, so that he’s right for the national team in July and August. If it’s Donaldson or Edmed, then Darren Coleman and the Waratahs could do a lot worse than play to the same attacking structure.

Communication with the states is going to be crucial. Coordinated planning and feedback and tinkering between the national coaches and their Super counterparts will need to be deliberate and careful and regular.

And it’s all achievable, importantly. The Brumbies-Wallabies conduit is well established. With Jason Gilmore taking charge of Australia A this year and employing Dave Rennie’s structures, it won’t be foreign to the Waratahs, either.

If Cooper can recover in time get enough game time into his body, then by all means, take him to France.

But the Wallabies can’t wait and see.

Any success they achieve in France next September needs to come from steps taken and methods employed in the next few months.

And the very real prospect that it may not involve Cooper at all.

Categories
Sports

Cameron Smith, Marc Leishman join LIV Golf Series, report, Cameron Percy, video

Cameron Percy has lifted the lid on Cameron Smith’s intentions, revealing the Open champion is “gone” and will join the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series.

Smith, 28, was irate when he was asked about his future in the moments following his extraordinary one-shot victory at St Andrew’s last month.

“I just won the British Open and you’re asking about that? I think that’s pretty- not that good,” Smith said.

Pressed on the matter, the Australian was coy.

“I don’t know, mate. My team around me worries about all that stuff, I’m here to win golf tournaments,” he said.

Watch LIVE coverage from The USPGA Tour with Fox Sports on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Donald Trump backs LIV Golf Series | 00:46

But Percy, a top-10 finisher at the Wyndham Championship, said his Australian compatriots Smith and Marc Leishman were “gone” and had signed with the financially lucrative LIV Golf Series.

“Unfortunate, year, they’re gone,” Percy told RSN radio.

The extraordinary revelation comes ahead of this week’s FedEx Cup playoff opener, which is expected to see Smith take to the tee amid a court’s hearing into whether three LIV golfers should be permitted to play after defecting to the rebel league.

Percy said the PGA Tour had known for years that a rebel tour was being formed.

“I had a long conversation with (2013 Masters champion) Adam Scott and he was very interesting talking to about it, just where it is,” he said.

“He said he met with these guys (LIV) in 2017 (and) they were ready (to) do all this. So, the tour has known for a long time that this stuff’s in the works.”

Scott has previously been on the record speaking about LIV Golf, saying in April “the schedule that they’re proposing is very appealing to probably most golfers” and he would “consider” making a move too.

Cameron Percy has revealed his Australian compatriots Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman have signed with LIV Golf Series.  Photo: Getty Images
Cameron Percy has revealed his Australian compatriots Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman have signed with LIV Golf Series. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: AFP

Percy, meanwhile, delivered a not-so-subtle dig at those taking the money and defecting, raising the ethical questions around where the money is coming from.

“The more and more you look into it, some people don’t care, some people have got a conscience and do care,’ he said.

“It really comes down to, you know, ‘they just executed 80 people this week, just chopped their heads off’. They’re not the nicest people in the world.

“Do you just look past that and go, ‘Oh well, I’m rich I don’t really care’. It’s a tough one, it really is.”

Smith, the world No.2, was reportedly offered more than $100 million to join the LIV Golf Series.

Should he indeed accept the offer, he will be the highest ranked player to defect.

MORE COVERAGE

‘S***ting their pants’: LIV Golf texts between Greg Norman and ex-Masters champ revealed

Aussie golf’s ‘special’ $3.4m move earns big boost … but Smith wait goes on amid LIV link

‘I found three brothers’: Golf legend reduced to blubbering mess in stirring live TV farewell

Smith reflects on Open celebrations | 08:18

Former major winner Ian Baker-Finch last month to ignore the offers and create a legacy in the game by staying in the PGA Tour – something currently he would struggle to achieve in LIV Golf, where tournaments are 54 holes and don’t contain the player strength nor history.

“I know that they are talking to him and many others,” Baker-Finch, who won the Claret Jug in 1991, told SEN radio.

“I hope he doesn’t because I think he can leave a great legacy by winning major championships and becoming the best player in the world.

“I don’t think I need the money. I don’t think it is going to be something that he should do.

“He will be a $100m guy or more now. Does he want to win more majors or does he want the money? I am hoping he stays and leaves a great legacy like a Tiger Woods or Rory McIlroy … which he could do. I think Justin Thomas and Rory McIlroy and a lot of those guys that still compete and play well in majors, and want to leave a legacy, they’re the guys I would be following.”

.

Categories
Sports

West Ham fans threaten to boycott London Stadium for charging $13 for pint of beer

West Ham have been slammed for charging AU$13 for a pint of lager.

The Hammers were in action at London Stadium for the first time this season as they fell 2-0 to Manchester City over the weekend.

Football fans arriving at the match were left bemused by the astonishing costs of refreshments, The Sun reports.

Watch the world’s best footballers every week with beIN SPORTS on Kayo. LIVE coverage from Bundesliga, Ligue 1, Serie A, Carabao Cup, EFL & SPFL. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Twitter account Football Away Days warned: “If you’re off to West Ham this season, you’ll need to remortgage your house for a few pints.”

Pints ​​of Amstel, Birra Moretti and Heineken were all priced at £7.60 ($13), while even a half was £3.70 ($6.40) for the former and £3.85 ($6.65) for the latter two.

Even a bottle of Coca-Cola was priced at an astonishing £4.50 ($7.80), with a packet of crisps setting fans back £2.50 ($4.30).

Is this too much for beer?Source: Twitter

Football Away Days’ post gained plenty of traction among irate fans, with one responding: “That tastes like bankruptcy.”

A second blasted: “Absolutely dreadful club.”

While a third smoked: “Ripping off their own fans during a cost of living crisis. Stay classy West Ham.”

Another added: “£4.50 for a bottle of coke!!! S*** the bed! That’s absolutely scandalous! They’re probably buying them in at less than a £1 a bottle.”

A further supporter called on fans to boycott, writing: “The only retaliation is to not buy a thing. (Maxwel) Cornet wasn’t worth it if the fans have to pay his wages weekly. Disgusting.”

A recent survey found that Man City was home to the cheapest pint in the Premier League.

According to Top10Casinos, you can pick one up from Etihad Stadium for just £3.40.

Fans smoked last year about the cost of a burger and chips at Arsenal.

The greedy Gunners charged fans $31 for a burger and chips at Emirates Stadium.

Erling Haland of Manchester City. Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Erling Haaland scored twice on his Premier League debut as Manchester City opened their title defense with a 2-0 win at West Ham.

Haaland lived up to the hype since his transfer from Borussia Dortmund to give the reigning champions a perfect start to the season in the searing heat of East London.

West Ham nearly derailed City’s title chances when they led 2-0 at halftime in the penultimate game of last season before Pep Guardiola’s men battled back for the point that ultimately edged out Liverpool at the top of the table.

But they were no match this time as Haaland immediately provided the value of City adding a proven goalscorer to their arsenal.

The Norwegian has been signed as the long-term successor to Sergio Aguero and started his City career just like the club’s all-time record goalscorer with a double on his league debut.

Haaland had missed chances in City’s 3-1 defeat to Liverpool in the Community Shield, but Guardiola’s warning that the goals would soon flow proved to be correct.

City’s patient possession game wore the Hammers down as temperatures in the English capital soared above 30 degrees Celsius on Sunday.

Haaland took responsibility from the penalty spot to open his Premier League account after he had been brought down by Alphonse Areola.

West Ham started the second half with more attacking intent but that simply played into the hands of City’s new weapon as Kevin De Bruyne split open their defense with one pass on the counter-attack for Haaland to gallop clear on goal and slot low past Areola.

– with AFP

This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission

.

Categories
Sports

Kane Cornes slams Port Adelaide boss David Koch’s ‘watch out’ warning amid Ken Hinkley drama

Port Adelaide 300-gamer Kane Cornes has blasted club chairman David Koch after he appeared to say no one’s job is safe after a horror 2022 season.

The team has made the preliminary final in the last two seasons but not been able to get over the hump to a grand final but have slumped to miss the playoffs, sitting 14 points out of the finals with just two matches remaining.

Watch every blockbuster AFL match this weekend Live & Ad-Break Free In-Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

It was a slump few saw coming and sparked fury from certain supporters, who plastered a “sack Hinkley” poster over a sign near the club’s headquarters last week.

Although Hinkley brushed it off, his ears no doubt would have pricked up when Koch appeared to state on radio he was “not afraid to make change”.

“It’s not just about one individual person, it’s the whole program. Turn it around or watch out,” Koch told Fiveaa on Monday.

“Every single person’s role will be assessed at the end of the year, as we do each year.”

But for Cornes, those comments were not good enough, believing Koch had bowed to the pressure from the loudest voices.

“This is a classic example of a chairman kicking with the breeze,” he said on SEN SA Breakfast.

“He had felt the angst from the supporter group, he felt like he needed to make a strong statement to alleviate some of the concerns from the very Port Adelaide supporter group who share their feedback regularly.

“Their desire to sack Ken Hinkley right now, Kochie (Koch) listened to that and he’s said, ‘even though my language has been one way all year, with two games to go I’m going to alleviate some of the concerns from the Port Adelaide supporter group and make a big, strong, sweeping statement about the coaching with two weeks to go’: ‘turn it around or watch out’.

“Turn what around? There are two weeks left in the season. What do you need to know in the next two weeks regarding Ken Hinkley’s ability to coach this club that you haven’t already discovered in the last ten years?

“Either make a call or back him in… ‘turn it around or watch out’, what a ridiculous thing to say.”

Although it appeared to be somewhat supportive of Hinkley’s position, Cornes continued, calling for Koch to make a decision, whether sacking the long-term coach or wholeheartedly committing.

“The thing that David Koch needs to do is make a call, is he your coach or is he not your coach?” Cornes continued.

“And if he’s not your coach, you have to tell him now so that he has the opportunity and you give him the respect to go and find another job.

“There are two vacant coaching jobs right now that Ken Hinkley would absolutely be in the mix for, but he can’t be in the mix for it if he thinks he’s going to be coaching Port Adelaide next year.

“Conversely, if he is your guy and you’ve contracted him for next year, which they have, back him in now. There’s nothing to be learned in the next two weeks that you don’t already know and you haven’t already discovered in the last 10 weeks.

“It was a stupid thing to say, it sent the media into a spin and it now has everyone questioning if Ken Hinkley will be there next year.”

Hinkley has coached Port Adelaide since 2013 and twice won AFLCA coach of the year but the Power have not made a grand final since 2007.

Hinkley is the second longest-serving coach behind only Mark Williams, the club’s sole AFL premiership winner.

Hinkley’s contract runs until the end of 2023.

Despite the comments, he told Fox Footy’s AFL 360 he knew where he stood as Port Adelaide coach.

“David (Koch) himself has said that he expects me to be coaching Port Adelaide in 2023, as I do and that’s what I am preparing for,” he said.

“I think I’ve been given enough assurances (he’ll see out his deal) through the season, not that I needed them to be fair.

“We all get there’s a finish line for everyone at some point.

“But as I sit here tonight, I’m more than confident that that won’t be at the end of 2022.”

Read related topics:Adelaide

.

Categories
Sports

Nemani Nadolo returns to NSW Waratahs

Speaking in Argentina, where he is on tour with the Wallabies, Gordon said Nadolo’s unique threats would be a valuable addition.

“He is obviously a real threat with the ball and I have seen some of the stuff he has done for Leicester, he has been exceptional,” Gordon said.

Nemani Nadolo, who was formerly known as Ratu Nasiganiyavi, at Waratahs training in 2008.

Nemani Nadolo, who was formerly known as Ratu Nasiganiyavi, at Waratahs training in 2008.Credit:Ben Rushton

“He is really dangerous one on-ne and he will be a great inclusion to our back line. I am really excited to see him with the group.

“We have formed some great competition (in the back three). We have obviously lost Alex Newsome, who was the spine of our back line, but we pick up a guy with international experience and who can probably cover a few positions if he needs to be. And you are seeing guys like Dylan Pietsch and Mark Nawaqanitawase really stepping up… so it’s pleasing to see our depth in the back line is really starting to develop.”

loading

Nadolo had a further year left on his Tigers contract but negotiated a release to come back to Australia. He is set to play the first few months of the English Premiership season with Leicester before joining NSW for pre-season in December.

He retired from international rugby before the 2019 World Cup but Coleman said the Fiji-born, Queensland-raised winger was aiming to use Super Rugby as a launch pad for a bid at making a comeback and going to the 2023 Rugby World Cup.

Coleman has also brought Kurtley Beale and Tolu Latu back to the Waratahs.

Watch every match of The Rugby Championship on the Home of Rugby, Stan Sport. Continue this weekend with South Africa v All Blacks (Sunday 12.30am AEST) and Argentina v Wallabies (Sunday 4.45am AEST). All matches streaming ad-free, live and on demand on Stan Sport.

Categories
Sports

Matthew Lloyd’s top seven old-school current day AFL players

Essendon great Matthew Lloyd has named his top seven old-school current day players.

Lloyd said the list was off the back of Brayden Maynard’s performance against Melbourne on Friday night, where the tough 25-year-old set the tone for Collingwood’s win.

lloyd told sports day: “Off the back of Maynard’s game, (I’ve named my top seven) old-fashioned footballer (types) who you loved to see in other eras, in the 80s, 90s, 2000s (etc.).”

Check out his top seven below:

7. James Sicily (Hawthorn)

“I think that I’d love to see him fighting and scrapping in another era.”

6. Jeremy Cameron (Geelong)

“I think with this guy, you can see the glint in the eye sometimes.

“I think he could play in any era and he’s tough, he’s underrated for his toughness.”

5. Mitch Robinson (Brisbane)

“The way Mitch plays, I would love to have seen him in the 90s.”

4. Cam Zurhaar (North Melbourne)

“Cam Zurhaar, I could see him and his build (fitting in with an old-fashioned style).”

3. Joel Selwood (Geelong)

2. Jack Viney (Melbourne)

1. Brayden Maynard (Collingwood)

“What he did at the start of the game and the end of the game (on Friday night), he plays on the edge.

“He rarely gets suspended… I like the way he went to Ed Langdon. Did it well, did it smartly and put a bit of fear into him.”





.