logo
Tom Flanagan happy to remain at Colchester United next season

Tom Flanagan happy to remain at Colchester United next season

Yahoo11-05-2025

TOM Flanagan says he would be happy to remain at Colchester United next season.
The 33-year-old defender was the U's second-highest outfield appearance maker in the 2024-25 campaign, having arrived from Shrewsbury Town last July.
Flanagan, a former Northern Ireland international, is one of a number of players out of contract at Colchester, this summer.
READ MORE: Colchester United duo face summer fitness race
However, with the U's expected to announce their retained list next week, the U's skipper is eager to sign a new deal if offered one and remain at the JobServe Community Stadium for next season.
Flanagan said: 'I came into the season and I wasn't 100 per cent sure that I was going to enjoy it.
'I was motivated to play one more season and I'm certainly motivated to play again.
'Standing in the position I was in at the end of last season, I was really contemplating finishing.
(Image: RICHARD BLAXALL)
'I want to go again if the club will have me and that's not me putting a bit of pressure on them or an advert – they know that, Dan and Nick know that.
'I'm not chasing them for a contract but if they want me, I'm happy to stay.
'We'll go away in the summer and there'll be some people staying and some people leaving.
'Personally, I was pleased with the season and when I look at it overall, I look at it with a smile on my face.
READ MORE: Danny Cowley 'honest' with players amid takeover talks
'I've played in seasons before and you go away and you're glad it's ended and it wasn't one of those – I've really enjoyed the season.'
Flanagan believes Colchester can be proud of their efforts in League Two, this season.
The U's finished tenth in the division and only missed out on a play-off spot, on the final day of the campaign.
'I hadn't been at the club previous to this year but from where the club has been to where we've taken it as a group with the management and everyone behind the scenes, I think we've got a lot to be proud of,' said the former Sunderland and MK Dons centre-back.
(Image: RICHARD BLAXALL)
'Where we've been in the last 12 weeks or so, turning up to the stadium has been brilliant, with the attendances, the flags and banners – the supporters have really have backed us.
'The over-riding feeling is disappointment – we had it in our hands, at one stage.
'We ultimately let it slip by leaving ourselves with a bit too much to do, in the early part of the season.
'When you recruit as many people as we did, that kind of takes a little bit of time but we narrowly missed out.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rayan Cherki to Manchester City: Transfers TLDR
Rayan Cherki to Manchester City: Transfers TLDR

New York Times

time39 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Rayan Cherki to Manchester City: Transfers TLDR

Manchester City have completed the signing of Rayan Cherki from French club Lyon for €36.5million (£30.9m, $41.7m). The 21-year-old France international has signed a five-year contract until 2030. He will be available to play for Pep Guardiola's side at the upcoming Club World Cup in the United States. As part of this summer's transfer coverage at The Athletic, in addition to breaking news, tactical analysis and in-depth reads, our Transfers TLDR series (you can read them all here) will bring you a quick guide to each of the key deals. Cherki has been marked out as a rare talent since an early age. Hailing from Lyon, he joined his hometown club at the age of seven. He trained with Chelsea as a youngster, to the annoyance of Lyon, and last summer was targeted by Fulham and Crystal Palace, but until now has remained a one-club man in terms of senior football. Advertisement Though he has Italian heritage on his father's side and Algerian on his mother's, he opted to play for the country of his birth, making his first two appearances in the Nations League's semi-finals and final last week. Steve Madeley With the ball, Cherki is an extraordinary talent the City fans can look forward to fireworks from. They are also getting somebody who can play in a range of positions and is genuinely two-footed — he has been known to take set pieces with both his left and right. Cherki has worked hard to improve his defending and tactical discipline but that remains the biggest question mark about his game, so City supporters should not expect to see a complete player from the outset. Steve Madeley Cherki will infuse creativity into a City team bidding goodbye to Kevin De Bruyne this summer after 10 mostly glittering years. The Frenchman has a gifted first touch and is an excellent ball-carrier, relying on delicate dabs with either boot and trickery instead of pace to beat defenders. Cherki's technique in controlling the ball is spectacular, as he showed while scoring on his international debut against Spain in the Nations League semi-finals last week. A Goal of the Tournament contender from France debutant Rayan Cherki 🥵#UNLGOTR | @AlipayPlus — UEFA EURO (@UEFAEURO) June 5, 2025 His two-footedness gives City manager Pep Guardiola options, as Cherki has played on both wings and as an attacking midfielder for Lyon. His out-of-possession game does require fine-tuning, though. City's shift to using ball-carriers to generate creativity in recent years means Cherki, in theory, should fit in. A transition period is to be expected, however, as players often perform better in their second season under Guardiola than in the first. Anantaajith Raghuraman Cherki missed no games due to injury this season, playing 44 times for Lyon. He also featured in 67 of their 72 Ligue 1 matches across the 2022-23 and 2023-24 campaigns. He has only suffered one serious injury — a metatarsal (a bone in the foot) fracture in February 2022 that ruled him out for three months. Anantaajith Raghuraman 'Technically, he was an extraordinary player,' Jean Francois Vulliez, a former Lyon academy director and coach told The Athletic in April. 'Everyone knew who he was because he had a way of touching the ball and a way of playing that set him apart as a player. 'He has a deep love of football. He loves the relationship with the ball and he loves one-v-ones. His thing was getting the ball and thinking, 'How can I get past my opponent? How can I get past two opponents, how can I get past three opponents, how can I score a goal?'.' Steve Madeley Cherki has joined City on a five-year contract, ending in June 2030. They have paid Lyon £30.9million (€36.5m/$41.7m) for their youngest-ever competitive goalscorer. A further £5.1m could be due in future add-ons, while Lyon have also secured a sell-on clause that will net them 15 per cent of any profit City make on Cherki in a future transfer. Advertisement The timing of the deal means a mere 1.1 per cent of Cherki's overall fee will go into City's 2024-25 accounts, with the rest spread across five seasons ending with the 2029-30 campaign. Chris Weatherspoon Assuming agent fees of 10 per cent on the transfer, Cherki's signing will add £368,000 in amortisation costs to City's 2024-25 figures. Thereafter, to the end of the 2029-30 season, the fee spent here will be charged at a rate of £6.7million annually in City's books. Cherki's wages are unknown at this stage, but will add a sizeable number on top of the estimated £34million City have spent in transfer and agent fees to bring him to the Etihad Stadium. From Lyon's perspective, their recognition of Cherki's sale is unencumbered by prior dealings. He has been at the club since the age of seven, and French clubs account for agent fees — such as those that might have been incurred when contract extensions were signed — at the time their services are provided, rather than across the length of player contracts (as is the case in, for example, England), so Cherki's book value at his boyhood club is zero. Chris Weatherspoon

High stakes and a shot at silverware: WTC final will sparkle despite critics
High stakes and a shot at silverware: WTC final will sparkle despite critics

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

High stakes and a shot at silverware: WTC final will sparkle despite critics

It was the pandemic that forced the first World Test Championship final to be staged at the biosecure Rose Bowl in 2021, then commercial snags that led to it being held at the Oval two years later. But having been intended for both, Lord's finally gets its chance this week, the defending champions Australia taking on South Africa for the right to lift the oversized Chupa Chup that is the ICC Test Championship Mace. This will probably prompt eyerolls in some territories, even if June ruled out a fair number of them from acting as hosts. Another argument in favour of Lord's is the ground's history and prestige coupled with London's diversity. Despite England not making the final, likewise India and their jet- set supporters, the first four days in St John's Wood are sold out. Where else in the world could guarantee this turnout for a 'neutral' final? Advertisement We may find out in time, with Jay Shah, the chair of the International Cricket Council, having stated a desire to move the final elsewhere (and almost certainly to India, one can surmise). But for the next five days – six if a reserve day is triggered by weather – it is the self-styled Home of Cricket that serves as the backdrop for what, in theory, is the pinnacle of the sport's most storied format. Related: Bavuma says 'eye-opening' defeat by Australia inspired South Africa Test transformation And in practice? That is where things get complicated. Only last week, Virat Kohli won the Indian Premier League and immediately placed it 'five levels' below anything he had achieved in Test cricket. Given Kohli's status as the most successful captain in India's history and trend-setting galactico, it should follow that the final this week – a match with a cheque worth £2.6m waiting for the victors – is the most important fixture in cricket's overstuffed calendar. Yet for all the joy of New Zealand's underdog triumph in 2021, or Australia two years later, the WTC final is still to receive this kind of billing. Even this time around there is a case to say that the most impressive feat witnessed during the two-year cycle involved a couple teams who did not make it this far. Whether it is Pat Cummins or Temba Bavuma holding the mace aloft at the end of the week, New Zealand ending 12 years of Indian home dominance last November – storming that spin-heavy citadel for a 3-0 sweep – probably surpasses it. Advertisement But then perhaps this is missing the point of the WTC. Individual series wins can still sparkle in isolation and to know the best Test team in the world at any point in time, there are rankings available (rankings that currently have Australia in first ahead of England). Instead, its final is about the jeopardy of a one-off shot at silverware, the agony and the ecstasy of high-stakes cricket, and, perhaps more importantly, the journey that saw nine teams whittled down to two. It is here where the detractors pipe up, citing the imbalance of the fixture list and a points percentage table that needs an enigma machine to decode it. As has been widely pointed out – albeit through no fault of their own – South Africa finished top on a diet of quickfire series and despite facing neither England or Australia. The flaws are obvious, the criticisms valid. But while the 2025-27 edition will have the same system, there are moves afoot to create a more coherent competition. Assuming the red weed of franchise T20 cricket has not strangled the sport entirely – and, somewhat grimly, South Africa have no Test cricket at all in their next home summer – a personal view is that an all-plays-all format with (minimum) three-Test series must come in. And if this means four-day Test cricket for some and a four-year cycle, so be it. The only question here would be working out how to divvy up the points when India and Pakistan inevitably don't play each other. Related: Pat Cummins: 'We want to play hard and fair, and I think we've got it right' Advertisement But whatever shape it takes in future, and however messy or tacked-on it has felt to date, the founding principle of the WTC – to give a wider context to bilateral Test series beyond the established rivalries – can be said to have been achieved already. You only have to rewind to Centurion last December for one such example, South Africa booking their place in the final with a nerve-shredding chase against Pakistan and the marauding Mohammad Abbas. As for the head-to-head that day has produced, it may be that an Australia side with more than twice the number of Test caps in its squad still proves too strong. Both teams boast penetrative attacks capable of inducing a collapse but even with Marnus Labuschagne strong-armed into opening, the Australians look better equipped to withstand one. A day before the toss a flat beige pitch was unveiled, when a low-scoring shootout would possibly better suit the Proteas. Although Bavuma's players have had Stuart Broad in their corner this week, with his full-kit cameo as a coaching consultant proving that one of the sport's best wind-up merchants can still do it in retirement. Having swapped the bails during his Ashes farewell, perhaps Broad's insight will help flip the script at Lord's.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store