logo
Man Utd wait on Sancho decision - Sunday's gossip

Man Utd wait on Sancho decision - Sunday's gossip

BBC Newsa day ago
Manchester United wait on Jadon Sancho to decide future, Everton explore Tyler Dibling alternatives, and Galatasaray make opening bid for Ederson.Manchester United are ready to accept Roma's offer of a loan with obligation to buy for England winger Jadon Sancho, but are waiting for the 25-year-old to make a final decision. (Fabrizio Romano), externalEverton are actively looking at alternatives to Tyler Dibling, 19, after having three bids - the last of which was about £37m - rejected by Southampton for the England Under-21s winger. (Liverpool Echo), externalGalatasaray have made an opening bid of about £8.6m for Manchester City and Brazil goalkeeper Ederson, 31. (Fabrizio Romano), externalChelsea will only sign Argentina winger Alejandro Garnacho, 21, from Manchester United and Netherlands midfielder Xavi Simons, 23, from RB Leipzig if they can offload two forwards. (Sky Sports), externalArsenal, Manchester United and Napoli are all interested in Paris St-Germain and South Korea midfielder, Lee Kang-in, 24, who is considering leaving the French club for more game time. (Caught Offside), externalRoma have agreed a deal to sign Aston Villa and Jamaica winger Leon Bailey, 28, in a loan deal worth £1.7m with a £20m option to buy. (La Gazzetta dello Sport), externalNottingham Forest have agreed a deal with Rennes for 23-year-old French striker Arnaud Kalimuendo worth up to £25m. (Telegraph), externalCrystal Palace have approached Leicester City about Bilal El Khannouss, 21, with the Morocco midfielder viewed as a potential replacement for Eberechi Eze. (Athletic - subscription required), externalManchester United will revive their efforts to sign Brighton and Cameroon midfielder Carlos Baleba in 2026 after the Seagulls closed the door on a move this summer. (Fabrizio Romano), externalChelsea have opened talks with Bayern Munich over a proposed sale for France striker Christopher Nkunku, 27. (Mail), externalFenerbahce are set to sign Arsenal and Ukraine full-back Oleksandr Zinchenko, 28. (Sporx - in Turkish), external
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Transfer news LIVE: Newcastle ANNOUNCE Ramsey signing, Chelsea starlet EXCLUSIVE, Spurs ‘learn price for Savinho'
Transfer news LIVE: Newcastle ANNOUNCE Ramsey signing, Chelsea starlet EXCLUSIVE, Spurs ‘learn price for Savinho'

The Sun

time20 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Transfer news LIVE: Newcastle ANNOUNCE Ramsey signing, Chelsea starlet EXCLUSIVE, Spurs ‘learn price for Savinho'

Ox move Former Premier League star Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain looks set to finally get his move away from Besiktas. The Southampton, Arsenal and Liverpool midfielder has been locked in talks with the Turkish club over becoming a free agent for the last month. And finally, it looks as though Oxlade-Chamberlain, 31, who has still been training with Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's team in Istanbul, could be able to leave in the next few days. He left Anfield in 2023 and the contract with Besiktas was due to run until 2026 but he has struggled with form and fitness.

Arsenal star in talks to leave after being left out of squad against Man Utd
Arsenal star in talks to leave after being left out of squad against Man Utd

Metro

timean hour ago

  • Metro

Arsenal star in talks to leave after being left out of squad against Man Utd

Jakub Kiwior is in talks to leave Arsenal and join Portuguese giants Porto before the summer transfer window closes. The Poland international was left out of the Gunners squad that took on Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday. A goal after 13 minutes from Riccardo Calafiori was enough to seal all three points for Mikel Arteta's side in their opening game of the new Premier League season. Kiwior has been repeatedly linked with a move away from north London during the summer with interest from Porto emerging earlier this month. Reports in Portugal suggested Porto had given up on a prospective move after learning of Arsenal's huge £26m asking price. Metro's new weekly football newsletter: In The Mixer. Exclusive analysis, FPL tips and transfer talk sent straight to your inbox every Friday – sign up, it's an open goal. The club have since signed Jan Bednarek in a €7.5m (£6.5m) deal from Southampton but latest reports suggest Porto have not given up on a move and are back in talks with the player. Polish outlet Meczyki claim a deal is being discussed with hope of an agreement being reached next week. Kiwior's preference is to join a club away from the Premier League if Arsenal decide to cash in. More Trending William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhaes are the firm first-choice pairing in north London with Jurrien Timber, Ben White and Riccardo Calafiori all capable of operating at centre-half. While he has been a backup option since joining from Spezia in a deal worth £20m in January 2023, Kiwior proved his worth last season after Arsenal lost Gabriel to a hamstring injury. 'He deserves a lot of credit because he hasn't played too much throughout many months, and suddenly he's been thrown into the most difficult context, at the highest level, playing against the best opponents, when you haven't had the physical rhythm or the confidence to do it, and I think he's been exceptional,' Arteta said. Oleksandr Zinchenko, Reiss Nelson and Fabio Viera were also left out of the squad with Arsenal sanctioning exits for the trio. MORE: Ian Wright names Man Utd star who was 'nowhere near good enough' against Arsenal MORE: Shocking stats behind Viktor Gyokeres debut as Mikel Arteta offers explanation MORE: Xavi Simons makes decision over Chelsea transfer after Manchester City and Bayern Munich talks

Grealish never conformed as Guardiola's ‘obedient little schoolboy' but glorious third act beckons
Grealish never conformed as Guardiola's ‘obedient little schoolboy' but glorious third act beckons

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Grealish never conformed as Guardiola's ‘obedient little schoolboy' but glorious third act beckons

A figure toils alone at Bodymoor Heath. The light fades, but against the setting sun his silhouette is distinctive: the floppy hair, the hunched gait, the vast calves. Jack Grealish is working, honing and polishing, inventing, striving at the limits of technical excellence. He has inspired Aston Villa to achieve promotion. He has helped them to avoid relegation, establish themselves as a Premier League side. He is enormously popular. Even opposing fans admire his ability, warm to the sense he is still in some way the impish kid in the playground, revelling in his ability, having fun. That summer at the European Championship he had become a cause célèbre, the figure behind whom the clamour for Gareth Southgate to release the handbrake rallied, the poster boy for the sort of pundit who wished England would just believe in talent. Grealish wanted more. He was a Villa fan, loved the club, but he wanted to test himself at the very highest level, to compete for the league title, to play in the later stages of the Champions League. He did not want to be just the cheeky kid with the jinking feet; he had professional ambition. At which there came a flash of light, a puff of smoke, and there appeared on the heath a cadaverous, dark-haired figure – Mephistopheles, or perhaps an agent. Grealish could have all these things, the figure said, he could lift trophies, even win a treble, if only he signed a six-year contract with Manchester City. As Grealish reached for the pen, the figure murmured, almost under his breath, that there would be a cost. But by then the deal was done. Which is how we have come, four years later, to this week, and Grealish, the first £100m signing by a British club, being loaned to Everton. He has won three league titles, a Champions League and an FA Cup; the cadaverous figure has fulfilled his part of the bargain. Yet there lurks a sense that Grealish's move four summers ago has not quite worked out, that though much has been won, much too was lost. Perhaps David Moyes, a common line of thought runs, can help the lost boy rediscover his sense of joy. Looked at coldly, Grealish's career has mapped an almost perfect arc. A kid shows talent, joins his local club, prospers, leaves them for a giant, wins trophies, has one outstanding season, and then, as he approaches 30, he drops down again joining another of England's slumbering giants. How else should a career look? You would probably want that third phase to start two or three years later but that aside, this is pretty much the model. Had he stayed at Villa, there would have been corners of the internet mocking him for his lack of ambition and lack of medals, as happened with Harry Kane before he left Tottenham for Bayern. But Grealish has become entwined with a broader discussion, the doubts about the effectiveness of Pep Guardiola's methods – which itself is a broad spectrum, ranging from kneejerk hostility from instinctive nostalgists who believe simple is always good, to considered analysis that wonders whether an obsessive focus on position and possession can make a side predictable now that the world has become familiar with the basic Guardiola methods. Foremost among that second category is Guardiola himself, a manager who has maintained a state of almost perpetual evolution. That is one of the reasons he signed Grealish: to add imagination and improvisation, just as, a year later, he would sign Erling Haaland, another player who did not obviously fit his system, who might generate the friction that would generate the sparks of creativity. Or at least it appears that was the plan. Haaland resisted, refused his manager's demands to drop deep, to convert himself into a gigantic creative midfielder. Grealish did not. Whatever Guardiola originally intended for him, he soon began to craft Grealish to his philosophy. Amid the celebrations at the end of the 2021-22 season, as City came from 2-0 down to beat Aston Villa and win the title, Grealish, whose candid nature is part of his charm, spoke of how inhibited he at times felt by Guardiola's demands; his dribbles per game had dropped by 40%. The system had, perhaps inevitably, changed him more than he had changed the system. The following season was Grealish's best at City. He won the treble. He scored five goals in the league and set up another seven. Guardiola trusted him in the biggest games; he started every knockout game in the Champions League. Teammates nicknamed him the Rest Station because you could give him the ball and take a couple of seconds breather, knowing he was not going to give it away. His dribbles per game rose by 7%. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion Grealish adapted. He became a Guardiola player. But the next season he started only 10 Premier League games. The one after that, last season, he started seven. Dribbles per game dropped by 56%. When City were chasing a goal in the FA Cup final against Crystal Palace, Guardiola preferred to turn to Claudio Echeverri, a 19-year-old Argentinian who had never played for the club. And with that it was over. Injuries have not helped, but neither has his lifestyle – and Guardiola implied a link after Grealish had a recurrence of a groin injury in February last year. Very few modern footballers have been pictured quite so often in the company of alcohol. That is not to say Grealish has led a life of hedonism, or even of a footballer of 30 years ago, but neither is he one of the 'obedient little schoolboys' – to use Zlatan Ibrahimovic's term – favoured by Guardiola. Whether that is how he has always lived or whether he lost some hunger after winning the treble, only Grealish can know. Perhaps he could tolerate the restrictions only so long. But he is still young. If he can remain injury-free, there could be a glorious third act to his career, perhaps even a trophy at a club that would really appreciate it. And if he could rediscover that sense of joy while doing so, if he can make the Faustian deal a temporary contract, what a career that would be, beginning and ending as a popular schoolyard player, with a curious trophy‑winning interlude in the middle.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store