
Swansea extend contracts of Key and Tymon
"They both have an option year in their contracts and we have exercised the option, so they both have two years left with us at the very least," Montague told a fans' forum at the Swansea.com Stadium on Wednesday."We will be having conversations with those guys and their representatives in the coming months because obviously we don't want to be in that situation where those contracts are winding down."
Tymon has made 91 appearances, scoring twice, since joining Swansea from Stoke for about £2m.Key has scored three times in 79 appearances having arrived from Exeter City, with Swansea paying an undisclosed compensation fee for his services which was decided by tribunal.Tymon and Key are currently the first-choice options on either side of Swansea's defence, with academy product Sam Parker providing back-up on the right and no obvious alternative on the left with less than three weeks remaining in the summer transfer window.Montague was also asked about the future of homegrown winger Cameron Congreve, who is back at Swansea this season having impressed on loan at League Two Bromley last term.Congreve, 21, sees his contract expire at the end of this campaign."We have had conversations with Cam's agent and Cam himself about his future," Montague said."That's an active source of discussion at the moment."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
32 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Rodrigo Muniz's last-gasp strike rescues point for Fulham at Brighton
A season opener with rustiness abounding was heading Brighton's way. Then came echoes of last season, when 22 points were conceded from winning positions. Once Matt O'Riley had slotted a penalty after Sander Berge's ill-judged challenge, Fulham had to wait for the 95th minute for a genuine chance. Volleyed wide by an aghast Kenny Tete it would not be the last, Rodrigo Muniz smashing in a Harry Wilson corner to equalise. The ball had been allowed to travel to the second-half sub on the back post. Muniz, one of many strikers linked with Newcastle, and this week linked with Atalanta and Champions League football, chested down to crash home. The delighted away fans implored the Brazilian to stay. 'He's very strong,' said Marco Silva, the Fulham manager. 'Rodrigo created something with the fans that is not easy to do.' For transfer devotees, the other major news had been Carlos Baleba starting in Brighton's midfield; the expectation is he stays, give or take a steeple-high offer Tony Bloom cannot refuse. Within an aggressive midfield battle, Baleba's quality was often a cut above. His defensive work was missed once subbed off in the second half. 'Good against the ball, he needs to be better in possession,' was Fabian Hürzeler's verdict. 'We are very pleased he is a Brighton player, we want to go with him to the next step, he can be very important for us this season.' While the Premier League's upper class lavish huge sums, there was just one new signing in either of these two members of the squeezed middle's starting teams. Maxim De Cuyper, the left-back signed via Brighton's regular Belgian trade route, completed the 90. 'Very mature,' said Hürzeler of the new man. For Fulham where only the reserve goalkeeper, Benjamin Lecomte, was a new face, novelty was offered by Josh King, 18, showing high promise. 'A very good performance,' said Silva. 'He's a top talent player, I didn't have any reservations on picking him.' The teenager showed off impressive ball-carrying chops while both teams were otherwise rushed in attempting to create opportunities. The best chance of the first half came when O'Riley whipped the ball for Kaoru Mitoma to head over, the type of chance a centre-forward like Danny Welbeck, on the bench, might gobble up. Georgino Rutter was playing the role vacated by João Pedro's sale, with O'Riley assuming penalty duties. On the sidelines, Silva kept his usual morose vigil while Hürzeler anxiously split his time between bench and technical area. Hürzeler is 32 but is a young man in a hurry, his summer pursuits including Spanish lessons. 'For sure it feels painful,' he said, happy enough with his team's performance until those fateful final seconds. 'It's really important to take the positives away. We played well and defended good. We should score the second goal and I think the game would be over. That's football.' Silva is in the final year of his Fulham contract with barely concealed irritation at the 'passive', to use his word, lack of arrivals, but was happy enough with the team he fights on with. 'I think it's a fair result,' he said. 'The only difference before we came back again was the penalty.' Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion Brighton broke the deadlock after Rutter was allowed far too much space to surge into the box; Berge was unduly clumsy. O'Riley swept low and left, Bernd Leno offered no answer to a player linked with Juventus. As Brighton increasingly looked to the counter, Silva was in the process of throwing on three changes, including Muniz, when Yankuba Minteh blazed over a chance, created by Mitoma's speed, that might have clinched victory. That hastened Brighton's changes, Baleba off for Diego Gómez. The Paraguayan showed considerable attacking prowess while struggling to meet the defensive detail. James Milner, who hits 40 in January, also arrived, and was unable to stem the Fulham flow. Silva threw on Emile Smith Rowe for King, departing to an ovation. It was Smith Rowe who forced the corner from which his team equalised. As 90 minutes arrived, another sub, Brajan Gruda, blew the latest decent Brighton chance, caught in two minds, a familiar moment they would come to regret.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Baggies loss shows quality of Championship
George Dobson feels Wrexham have been fully exposed to the ruthless nature of the Championship having suffered back-to-back defeats in the division at the start of the 2025-26 Parkinson's side were beaten 3-2 by West Bromwich Albion at the Stok Cae Ras to ensure they remain without a point having fallen to a 2-1 loss to Southampton a week after Parkinson criticised the "soft" goals his side conceded against the Baggies, Dobson admitted Wrexham are being emphatically punished for small mistakes in the second tier."It just showed the quality of the level - if you don't take your chances, you do get punished," said the midfielder."It's definitely not a panic stations type situation but we know there's a couple of things we need to be a bit better at. "It's definitely the fine margins of being punished. Any sort of mistake or not doing your job quite right seems to get punished."As they were at Southampton in the season opener, Wrexham were competitive for the majority of the contest with Ryan Mason's while they lost for the second league fixture running, Dobson feels Wrexham can pick up positive results if they improve defensively given their attacking talents."I'm not sure how many shots we had but I feel like we looked like scoring," added Dobson."We've just got to get the solid base back of getting clean sheets and not conceding too many chances and I'm sure the results will turn because the character of the group is so strong."It's a great learning curve for us."


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Sunday's briefing: Man City make fast start and Eberechi Eze nears Palace exit
Manchester City launched their Premier League season with an impressive 4-0 win at Wolves before head coach Pep Guardiola revealed he is ready to reduce the size of his squad. Tottenham, who opened with a 3-0 home win against Burnley, are expected to complete the signing of Crystal Palace playmaker Eberechi Eze and Newcastle boss Eddie Howe has called for a resolution to the Alexander Isak saga. Pep set to offload players after Wolves win Pep Guardiola claimed Manchester City's squad size is 'not healthy' after opening their Premier League campaign with a convincing 4-0 victory at Wolves. Erling Haaland struck twice and new signings Tijjani Reijnders and Rayan Cherki also got on the scoresheet as City began their quest for a seventh title in nine seasons in emphatic fashion at Molineux on Saturday. Yet while goalkeeper James Trafford also made a confident debut and Rayan Ait-Nouri shone against the club he left in the summer, Guardiola's main concern is now offloading players. Guardiola said: '(It's) too much – too many people. In the next two weeks, people will talk with players and agents to find a solution.' Tottenham close on Eze signing Eberechi Eze is understood to be closing in on a move to Tottenham. The PA news agency understands the England international has reached an agreement with current club Crystal Palace that he will not play for them at Chelsea on Sunday. Meanwhile, Thomas Frank toasted the perfect start to life at Tottenham in the Premier League after a 3-0 win over Burnley. 'Perfect start or dream start,' Frank said. 'We all know we need to follow up on it. Today I will just enjoy it and I hope the players, the club and the fans enjoy it because that is important. Howe wants 'clarity' over Isak future Newcastle boss Eddie Howe has called for a resolution to Alexander Isak's future. The Magpies felt the absence of their wantaway striker at Aston Villa as they were held to a 0-0 draw against 10 men. Isak was left out by Howe as the Sweden international tries to force a move away from St James' Park, with Liverpool seeing a bid rejected earlier in the summer. Howe said: 'We would like a resolution. When I say we, I'm talking about myself and I'm sure the ownership, everyone really, the players that we have, because I think we need that clarity this season.' Amorim more confident ahead of new season Ruben Amorim feels 'more confident' about Manchester United's qualities heading into Sunday's Premier League opener against Arsenal. A sense of optimism has returned to Old Trafford, just three months on from their worst top-flight campaign in 51 years being compounded by a damaging defeat in the Europa League final. 'It is hard to know (what we will deliver) because we cannot change everything in four weeks, but we are better,' Amorim said. 'We have new players that we need to understand in the real game what they are capable to do in the moment. But I am really more confident. That is clear. I am more confident in this moment.' What's on today? Manchester United and Arsenal launch their Premier League campaigns at Old Trafford in the 4.30pm kick off and Chelsea take on London rivals Crystal Palace at Stamford Bridge (2pm) in their opening match. Brentford's new head coach Keith Andrews takes charge of his first match at Nottingham Forest (2pm). There are also two Championship fixtures. Relegated pair Ipswich and Southampton face off at Portman Road (12pm) and Hull play Oxford at home (3pm).