
West Ham ‘hold talks with Aaron Ramsdale' with Southampton desperate to get £100k-a-week wages off payroll
Read about why West Ham are interested in Ramsdale...
RAM RAID West Ham 'hold talks with Aaron Ramsdale' with Southampton desperate to get £100k-a-week wages off payroll
WEST HAM have opened talks to sign Aaron Ramsdale with Southampton reportedly eager to offload the goalkeeper's wages.
The England international, 27, only joined the Saints from Arsenal last summer.
3
Aaron Ramsdale carries the burden of being relegated with three different clubs
Credit: Rex
3
Hammers manager Graham Potter is a big admirer of Ramsdale
Credit: Getty
3
The former Arsenal man wants to go to the World Cup next year
Credit: Getty
But the club's relegation means he needs a move back to the Premier League to keep his World Cup hopes alive.
Before joining Southampton, Ramsdale spent much of the 2023/24 campaign on the bench at Arsenal after falling out of favour.
His spot was taken by David Raya whom Mikel Arteta preferred not only for his shot-stopping ability but also for his composure and distribution with the ball.
In a bid to secure regular first-team football, Ramsdale moved to Southampton but things haven't gone according to plan and now he's seeking a fresh start.
READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS
BRAVE NEW WORLD Gary Lineker agrees deal with new broadcaster just a week after MOTD exit
According to a report from talkSPORT, West Ham manager Graham Potter is a long-time admirer of the former Bournemouth and Sheffield United shot-stopper.
Potter is open to bringing in Ramsdale to provide competition for Alphonse Areola.
The Hammers are short in the goalkeeping department following the departure of long-serving keeper Lukasz Fabianski.
Talks are still at an early stage with West Ham hoping to negotiate a cut-price deal or possibly arrange a loan with an option to buy.
CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS
Ramsdale is believed to be keen on securing regular game time knowing that's his best route back into the England squad.
This move could also offer him a path back into the limelight following his early success at Arsenal before Raya's arrival.
'Do you want me to swear-' - Graham Potter in meltdown as West Ham boss taunted with X-rated 'the German's right' chants
The Hammers endured a tough campaign under both Julen Lopetegui and Graham Potter, finishing a disappointing 14th in the Premier League.
However, Potter is said to have credit in the bank with many believing he inherited a struggling side and will be judged more fairly on progress next season.

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


Daily Record
29 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Russell Martin makes Rangers vow as new boss delivers clear message to doubters
Martin was paraded inside the Blue Room today after being confirmed as Ibrox boss Russell Martin has vowed to win over his doubters and told Rangers fans: I'm here to win trophies. Martin, 39, was paraded at Ibrox on Thursday morning after penning a three-and-a-half-year deal to take charge. The former Southampton, Swansea and MK Dons boss convinced the club's new owners that he was the man to lead the revival. Rookie Italian coach Davide Ancelotti and former Gers boss Steven Gerrard were also in the frame but Martin was the Chosen One. Martin's long-awaited appointment has split punters who have vented concerns over the ex-Scotland and Rangers defender's credentials. But Martin - who led Southampton to Premier League promotion before being axed in December - has backed himself to make the Light Blues a force again. Asked if he's confident he can get critics onside, he said: "Yeah, I have to be. I have a lot to prove. My whole career has been based on proving people wrong, really. "At every level, I got questioned. There are always some names in football management that are always a bit more exciting than others, of course. "But I feel after five-and-a-half years of being a manager, coach, a leader - I love doing it. "And I'm going to be all in here, bringing my energy, my love for it and passion and hopefully that will reflect on the pitch and people will see that. "At some point, they'll enjoy it and hopefully I'm sure if our team is winning, they'll be happy." Sitting alongside chief executive Patrick Stewart and sporting director Kevin Thelwell, Martin added: "The supporters are the most important people at any football club. They'll be here long before and after any manager or coach. "So I think my job is to give them at team that they identify with and feel proud of. A team that wins and they go to a game knowing what to expect. "A team that's going to give everything, to run as hard as they possibly can. I think that's one thing that gets overlooked about the teams we managed. "They always ran the most out of possession, the most sprint distances, the most high-speed runs. They have to if they want to dominate the ball and be aggressive, so I think it's a given. "It's never a given actually, it's an attribute. You need to work hard and not everyone has that. So we want people that have that to come to the club. "I'm sat next to two people who work extremely hard and have a work ethic that matches my own. I'm excited about all of that. "And to the fans? Listen, I have to win. I don't think I've been the number one choice at any club I've been at. "At MK, from a player to become the manager was a bit of a surprise to supporters. To then go to Swansea, they lost in the play-off final, the budget's been cut and then we turned up from League One. "And then Southampton was the same. They had just been relegated from the Premier League, so I'm sure there were all sorts of names being mentioned with the job, and then I got it. "And by the time I've left every club I've been at, I've felt a real connection with the supporters. I've felt they've been really behind us. "Definitely the playing staff and the staff we've been working with wherever we've been, because of the relationships we've formed and maintained at every club we've been at. "And I hope this will be the same, I really do. And I hope people judge us and me in particular on this moment and not when I was a player here a while ago because it's very, very different. "I feel my whole playing career was based on hard work, resilience and trying to find a way myself. I'm even surprised at the playing career I had to play in the Premier League because if you said that when I was 18, I wouldn't have thought that. "But I feel my whole playing career was set up to become a coach and a manager. I always wanted to do that and I'm really grateful that I've ended up playing for as long as I did. "But I've always had a burning desire to do this from an early age and actually, my period here from before, was an incredible learning for me. "It helped me so much in my journey about culture, what to expect, about what's required. Listening to Jimmy Bell and Stevie the physio and listening to them talking about it, it just whetted my appetite even more. "So I learnt a lot when I was here and it's helped me prepare for it now." Tune in to Hotline Live every Sunday to Thursday and have your say on the biggest issues in Scottish football and listen to Record Sport's newest podcast, Game On, every Friday for your sporting fix, all in bitesize chunks.


Daily Record
29 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Heartbreaking Michael Schumacher update as F1 insider opens up
Michael Schumacher is still fighting after suffering a severe brain injury in a skiing accident in December 2013, with the F1 legend continuing to receive round-the-clock care. Formula 1 enthusiasts have been informed that they are likely to never hear from legendary driver Michael Schumacher again after his horrifying ski accident more than a decade ago. The 56-year-old German continues to receive constant care from a dedicated medical team and his devoted wife, Corinna, following a tragic skiing accident in December 2013. Schumacher, who won seven world titles, is arguably the most iconic name and face in F1. However, he has been kept out of the public eye since suffering a severe brain injury after striking his head on a rock in the French Alps. Medical professionals placed him into an induced coma which lasted for 250 days before Schumacher was eventually allowed to return home and continue his treatment. His family have fiercely guarded his privacy, with Schumacher now entirely dependent on caregivers. Updates have been few and far between, but it's been reported that the stricken racer can no longer speak. F1 fans have clung to hope for 11-and-a-half years that they'll catch another glimpse of Schumacher, who remains tied for Drivers' Championships with Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari's current icon. However, in a recent interview, those hopes have been dashed. Craig Scarborough, who has covered the sport for approximately 25 years and interviewed Schumacher multiple times, recently spoke to the Sun and revealed details about his condition, reports the Mirror. "I spoke to someone who is very, very close to him and they just explained we're not going to hear any more from him," Scarborough said. "He's in a comfortable position as far as he can be with his state of health." Devoted fans will be heartened to know that Schumacher, having recently become a grandfather following his daughter Gina's childbirth, is coping as well as possible given the dreadful predicament. However, those who were intimately acquainted with him often choose not to dwell on his present condition. Commenting on the matter, Flavio Briatore, Schumacher's previous team principal at Benetton and current head honcho at Alpine, shared with Corriere della Sera: "If I close my eyes. I see him smiling after a victory. I prefer to remember him like that rather than him just lying on a bed." These reflections are matched by remarks from Schumacher's former spouse, Elisabetta Gregoraci, who disclosed in 2020: "Michael doesn't speak; he communicates with his eyes. Only three people can visit him, and I know who they are." It is widely believed that one of the trio permitted to visit Schumacher outside his immediate family is ex-Ferrari boss Jean Todt, who lamented in 2022: "I can see him but of course, what I miss is what we used to do together. I watch Grands Prix with Michael." Mick Schumacher, Michael's 26 year old progeny, took part in Formula 1 contests for Haas in both 2021 and 2022. Scarborough emphasises that Mick's presence is crucial for Michael's wellbeing and commends the family's decision to uphold their privacy. "I think a lot of people demand stuff from him and I think that's wrong," Scarborough added. "He is himself, and his family have a lot to contend with. Until you've cared for somebody, I don't think anyone realises the emotion and the physical up to our free weekly F1 newsletter, Pit Lane Chronicle, by entering your email address below so that every new edition lands straight in your inbox!"The fact that they have been bold enough to withdraw from public life and not be tempted to do exclusives out there to various people, I think, is noble, and I hope that continues. "I hope they can find happiness in the situation they find themselves in. He was a guy who enjoyed his personal time. "He loved his family. He did lots of lovely things. He clearly liked a drink and he loved a big cigar. But he had lots of time to bring up his son." Corinna, who married Schumacher in 1995, opened up on his condition during a 2021 Netflix documentary. "We're together," she said. "We live together at home. We do therapy. "We're trying to carry on as a family. We do everything we can to make Michael better and to make sure he's comfortable. And to simply make him feel our family, our bond. And no matter what, I will do everything I can. We all will. We're trying to carry on as a family, the way Michael liked it and still does."


BBC News
34 minutes ago
- BBC News
Cheika using 'instinct' to unite title-hunting Tigers
Golf clubs and smashed mirrors, dog tags and Tigers flags. Michael Cheika has used elaborate, and sometimes wacky, tactics to spur his teams on - but the message has always been simple."I just think people think about things too much," the Leicester Tigers head coach told BBC Sport about the method behind his famous use of imagery to motivate players."And often when you think about things, it stops you from doing it."It was before a Super Rugby final that Cheika presented his New South Wales Waratahs players with personally engraved drivers. His message then was to "have a big swing at it".Then when at the helm of the Australia national team, he issued players with dog tags before the 2015 World Cup to unify them as a battalion. It was in that same tournament that he used a sledgehammer to smash a mirror, external in the changing room before the final to show what he physically demanded of his is a tale behind every bit of the story is at Leicester Tigers as they prepare for Saturday's Premiership semi-final against Sale Sharks, he will not tell."That is something for us," said the relaxed Australian with a broad grin, while leaning on a pitchside railing at Mattioli Woods Welford Road in a pair of retro sliders he picked up in the 1980s."All that stuff is designed to get the team aligned and around certain themes we want to push. And we try do that all year."You just go with instincts on those things. There is no science behind that stuff. You try read the room as best you can. That golf club thing was a last-day decision, it wasn't like it was planned."They might start off like fun or jokes or whatever, but then they can turn into something that is serious or something that is meaningful because they symbolise something. "Those moments we share together as a team, across all teams that I have been involved in, are really important. They are the things that hold you together when you are a man down or you are under the pump." Against Bristol Bear at Ashton Gate in April, a match of must-win proportions for a Tigers side that were outside the play-off spots at the time, Cheika came along with one of his less obscure delivered his team talk with a giant Tigers flag on a pole before they faced a Bristol side that had thumped them months earlier – planting their own flag, if you will, at Welford captain Julian Montoya described Cheika as "one of the best coaches in the world" for the masterful way he man manages his details of how the Australian inspires his players is left in the sanctity of the changing what if that message is beamed live on television? "Maybe we want you to see it. The camera is there," the hooker was also skipper of the Argentina side that Cheika guided to the World Cup semi-finals in said it has been an "amazing" experience to play for the 58-year-old for club and country – and in two different languages."He tried to speak Spanish a lot with Argentina and he did pretty well, but now he is full English so he can express himself even better," Montoya added."He is very passionate, and that's what I like and what I've seen in him here."For me, he is Michael and was the same with me at Argentina. But with the international team, everyone is from Argentina and here at the club there is different nationalities and different cultures."He has been here only for one year and it is very difficult to try know the culture of the team, the organisation, and everything in that time, but I think he has done a brilliant job that's not done yet." Cheika made it clear that he moved to Leicester this season with the sole aim of winning the Premiership meeting with Sale – a side they have shared 142 points with across two league games already this season – will be his home ground he will not be the only one looking to leave with a shot of glory in their sights. Decorated club legends Ben Youngs and Dan Cole, as well as former England full-back Mike Brown, are retiring at the end of the season, while captain Montoya and two-time World Cup-winning South Africa fly-half Handre Pollard are leaving in the summer."Finishing has nothing to do with it," Cheika said. "Being part of a team means what happens to the team is for everybody and not for any one individual. I certainly don't feel like that."When you are in a team, playing in a comp like this, and you are the leader as a coach, your ambition and hunger is to get to the top. The only interest for me is for this team to be successful."