
Blackett-Taylor confident he can 'get going' for Derby
Blackett-Taylor failed to establish himself in Paul Warne's side after they were promoted to the Championship last season, and a hamstring injury in January meant he did not feature for John Eustace after he took the helm as head coach with 14 matches remaining.The player describes what he has been through with Derby as "tough not only on my body, but mentally as well".Eustace says Blackett-Taylor has "looked exciting" since returning fully fit for pre-season training.Blackett-Taylor says proving himself to Eustace after starting life under the head coach on the injury list is a "challenge" he relishes."I always knew that once I got back fit, I'd back myself to show the manager what I'm about to try get back into the team," he said."When he came in last year, he knew that I was injured and he came and spoke to me straightaway and told me that he will do everything he can for me and that he would be patient."
Blackett-Taylor has been quick to make an impression now that he is available to play for Eustace.He has scored three goals in as many pre-season friendlies to date, and says he is glad to be "fit and firing" and able to show what he is capable of again."With qualities I have, when I'm playing well, the team plays well," he said."I know that's the kind of role I can have in the team and how important I can be when I'm firing and playing well. That is something I want to do this season."
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Daily Mail
7 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Ben Stokes' absence offers a worrying glimpse into Ashes grilling... England will be hard pressed to beat Australia without talisman meets Superman, writes LAWRENCE BOOTH
No sooner had Ben Stokes been declared unfit for the series finale against India than thoughts turned, in something close to blind panic, to the Ashes. Because if the last few weeks have confirmed anything, it's that England will be hard pressed to beat Australia without him. Bazball would be declared dead even before it had faced its ultimate challenge, and the Australian media – still high-fiving each other after England's churlishness on the final evening in Manchester – would go into overdrive. It hardly bears thinking about. Yet the restructuring of the team for the fifth Test at The Oval provided an unsettling glimpse of the future: with England understandably keen to field four seamers on a green-looking surface, the absence of Stokes has created an imbalance solved only by the dropping of Liam Dawson, the team's lone frontline spinner. Dawson might have been omitted in any case after sending down 62 overs for a single wicket on his return to Test cricket at Old Trafford, an experience that included a very public one-to-one tutorial from Stokes as England walked off at tea on the last day. But what if Stokes breaks down again during the Ashes, leaving an unbearable onus on Shoaib Bashir, the 21-year-old off-spinner who would then form a crucial part of a four-man attack? Again, the scenario is unthinkable. But it's not as if it was unforeseeable. Stokes has bowled 140 overs in this series, 23 more than his previous-heaviest workload, in his debut series in Australia in 2013-14. Throw in 11 overs against Zimbabwe in May, and he has not endured a heavier home summer since 2017, when he played in seven Tests rather than five. All the while, his body has creaked and groaned, becoming a story in its own right, much as Denis Compton's knee did in the 1950s. The kneecap was eventually removed and sent for safekeeping to Lord's, where it lives in a biscuit tin – a curious memory of a more innocent time. Stokes has put himself through the wringer so vigorously, so often, that his list of ailments is a little longer: two operations on his left index finger, surgery on his left knee, hamstring trouble and now a grade-three tear of a right shoulder muscle. That's before any mention of the break he took to look after his mental health in 2021. He has put body and soul on the line for his country, and his body has rebelled once more. Clearly, he knows no other way. Even so, should he have taken things easier? During India's first innings at Lord's, England's bowling coach Tim Southee was sent down to the boundary by the pavilion to suggest Stokes remove himself from the attack after one long spell. In the second, with the game on the line, he followed a burst of nine overs with one of 10: talisman meets Superman. Then, in Manchester, he bowled eight overs in a row on the final morning, and clutched his right arm in pain after every delivery. Inspirational and selfless, certainly. But was he pushing his luck? Later, he outlined his philosophy: 'Pain is just an emotion.' It turns out pain is rather more than that. Stokes being Stokes, he has no regrets. 'When I'm out on the field, I play to win and give everything I possibly can,' he said, attending the pre-match press conference as if he, not stand-in Ollie Pope, were still in charge. 'If I feel there's a moment in a game where I need to put everything I'm feeling aside, I'll do that because it's how much this team means to me, how much playing for England means to me, how much winning means to me. Being a professional sportsman, injuries are part of this game and I can't do anything about that.' Stokes's absence has created room, at long last, for Jacob Bethell, who now has the chance to prove why England were wrong to ignore him for the first four Tests. But it also picked at the scab that periodically troubles this team. When Stokes is missing, 11 players seem inadequate to cover all bases. And if his rehab extends beyond the 10-week upper limit outlined by England, and drifts towards the first Ashes Test at Perth on November 21, that scab could become a full-blown wound – one from which his team may struggle to recover.


BBC News
7 minutes ago
- BBC News
Panathinaikos 1-1 Rangers (agg 1-3): Have your say
Did you make the trip to Athens or follow the match from home? Either way, we want your views on the game - have your say on Rangers' second-leg display at Panathinaikos here.


BBC News
37 minutes ago
- BBC News
Benjamin Sesko: Is Man Utd, Newcastle and Chelsea target on brink of big move?
"He's good in front of goal. He has a good attitude. He is relentless."You can see why Premier League teams are interested in £70m-rated Leipzig striker Benjamin only being 22, it feels as if the Slovenia international has been linked to English football for years - so could this be the summer he makes the move?Manchester United have made him their top striker target, while Newcastle United want him - if Alexander Isak had been strongly linked to Arsenal for some time before they went for Sporting's Viktor Gyokeres. Plus Chelsea, too (though who isn't...?).Big, strong, quick, good in the air and a fine finisher, Sesko has been compared to Erling Haaland - and not just because they both played for why are so many clubs being linked with him? 'The quality to play in one of Europe's best sides' Sesko is a goalscorer. In fact, nobody in his age range has scored more goals in the past two seasons (more on that later).But last season he became more of an all-rounder, with 9.7% of his touches coming in the opposition box - compared with 17% the season got involved more on both wings and further back into midfield. He was one of the fastest strikers in the Bundesliga at 35.7km/h - and had the best aerial success rate of strikers involved in at least 60 of them.A recruitment specialist working at the highest level recently spoke to BBC Sport reporter Alex Howell about Sesko, who stands at 6ft 5in tall."He's so athletic, he's big, physical and strong," said the anonymous source."I think the physicality of the Premier League won't overawe him. "When you look at some players in Europe, where the tempo is slower, you see them struggle to transition to bigger leagues."The Bundesliga is one of the big three in the world, but when you look at transitioning in big leagues he has the physical capabilities to do it." And what are some other qualities of Sesko, who idolised former Sweden striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic when he was younger?"He is clinical, he can drop in into space," said the recruitment expert."One of his strengths is getting the ball quickly. He can hold it, hold defenders off, he can give it to the winger, he can give it to the 10."He's good in front of goal. He has a good attitude. He is relentless.""You wouldn't expect him to hit the ground running straight away, but in six to 12 months he will be fine and you've got yourself a very good player."Central European football expert Lukas Vrablik added: "I think Sesko has the quality to play in one of Europe's best sides. He can be a big asset. At the same time he's a player who will develop. "He's not the finished product yet. Right now he might not be one of the best strikers in Europe, but he has room for improvement." So how prolific is he? Sesko has spent the past two seasons in Germany with Leipzig, having joined them from sister club Salzburg in was a deal that had been agreed and announced in the summer of 2022 - making him unavailable for any English has scored 39 goals in 87 games in all competitions in those two seasons (plus eight assists), with 27 in 64 in the of those goals have come in the Champions moving to Germany, Sesko is the top goalscorer currently aged under 23 in all competitions, of players who are based in Europe's top five is one above Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham and five clear of Florian Wirtz, who joined Liverpool from Bayer Leverkusen for £100m this summer."Last season, I don't think he was as good as the season before - but that was also influenced by Leipzig not being so good as a team," added Vrablik."There are big expectations for him as a striker. There is big hype around him."Sesko has shown clinical finishing in his time in Germany, six forwards have scored more goals in the Bundesliga in the past two seasons, even though Sesko is 16th for expected goals, 14th on shots and 22nd on touches in the opposition he is lethal from long range too, with 36.8% of his shots - and 23.1% of his goals - coming from outside the box. Both are higher than any Bundesliga striker to score 12 or more goals last season. Where it all started for 'confident' Sesko All of Sesko's senior football so far has come for Red Bull teams in Europe, having left home aged 16 for played two seasons for Salzburg's feeder club - Liefering - in Austria's second tier, scoring 22 goals in 44 21 goals of those came in 2020-21, having only netted once the season from there he played for Salzburg, bagging 29 goals in 79 games in two full seasons. He won the league both seasons, plus the Austrian Cup, scoring in the final win over journalist Miran Zore said in 2024: "We kind of expected his success but no-one knew he was so special, except his agent, Elvis Basanovic, who tried to convince people about his potential. "He used to send messages to scouts and directors, saying, 'this is the next goal machine'."When he was struggling in Salzburg at the start, people were asking his agent, 'where's this goal machine'. Now, everyone is laughing about it." In 2022, Sesko himself was quoted as saying: "My team-mates at the club tell me that Haaland and I are very similar, especially in terms of speed. Most of them even tell me that I'm better than him."Manchester City striker Haaland (who left Salzburg before Sesko's debut) netted the same amount of goals for the Austrian club as Sesko - but the Norwegian only needed 27 matches, 34% of the amount Sesko maybe his team-mates were just being so, that comment alone would suggest some degree of self-assurance."I hear from people in Slovenia who worked with him that he's a really hard-working guy - and really confident," said Vrablik. "He has a healthy confidence, which is really important for a striker."For his country, Sesko has scored 16 goals in 41 games and featured for them at Euro 2024. Only three players have ever scored more for the former Yugoslav in 2024, former Slovenia international Miran Pavlin said: "He has to focus on playing well and the transfer will come - if not this year, then in one or two years. "He has the potential to be one of the top 10 strikers in the world, for sure." Man Utd lead the chase - but where will he actually go? There is no certainty that Sesko will leave they have failed to qualify for Europe this season and have started a summer rebuild under new boss Ole Sport was told Sesko has an informal agreement with his club that he can leave if an elite team offer about £ Sesko joined Leipzig from sister club Salzburg in 2023 he had a release clause of £55m - but last summer he signed a new long-term suggest that also has a release clause, which has begs the question of who could afford him? The answer is: not many teams bar Premier League sides or Saudi clubs."He's well positioned to make a difference at a top club. It's just a matter of time until he moves," said Vrablik. "But maybe not this summer."I think the price paid a part [on why he hasn't moved yet]. There are not many clubs who can afford him right now, which is a problem if he wants to move on."I wouldn't be surprised to see him stay at Leipzig another season. It might be good for his development if he can repeat the season from before Euro 2024."It depends on the market, maybe some departure would bring this effect. I expected him to end up at Arsenal." Arsenal were interested in Sesko before signing Sporting striker Viktor Gyokeres, in a deal worth up to £64m (73m euros ) - so still big money, but slightly United had put Sesko and Aston Villa's England striker Ollie Watkins at the top of their list, but are now focusing on the Slovenian and have spoken to have already spent £130m on forwards Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo this summer, but still have money to Hojlund is United's other Newcastle also want Sesko - if their own star striker Isak was not part of their pre-season tour to Asia and BBC Sport was told he is looking at his are said to be interested in Isak but a move would certainly cost in excess of £100m. That fee would, in turn, leave Newcastle able to afford Wilson left St James' Park on a free transfer this summer, meaning 21-year-old William Osula would be their only senior striker if Isak did Manchester United, a move to the Magpies would enable Sesko to play in the Champions League next would Chelsea - who have also been the Blues have already signed strikers Liam Delap and Joao Pedro for a combined £90m this summer, so would need to offload Nicolas Jackson and perhaps of Europe's elite teams - including Bayern Munich, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Juventus and AC Milan - have also been reportedly keen in the past those links have gone it be the same for those Premier League clubs currently in the mix for his signature - or is this finally the summer Sesko makes his move?