Socceroos playmaker Daniel Arzani could be set for a move to Hungary
Arzani, who has spent the past two seasons with Melbourne Victory, had recently been linked with a move to Scottish Premiership club Hearts.
However, the 2026 FIFA World Cup hopeful is also now in the sights of at least one Hungarian first division club.
Arzani was part of the 26-man Socceroos squad that sealed World Cup qualification with wins in the past nine days over Japan and Saudi Arabia.
He came off the bench in Australia's 1-0 victory over Japan in Perth, but wasn't in the 23-man match-day squad for the Socceroos' 2-1 win over the Saudis in Jeddah.
Meanwhile, Badolato, who was a teammate of Arzani at the Victory for the latter stages of the 2024-25 A-League season after joining the Melbourne club on loan from Western Sydney Wanderers, could again be on the move.
It's understood a player swap of sorts between Newcastle and Western Sydney could take place that would result in Badolato – who was player of the tournament at this year's AFC Under-20 Asian Cup won by Australia – joining the Jets to play under recently appointed coach, former Socceroos captain Mark Milligan.
'There is nothing signed yet, but he (Badolato) is definitely a player that is being floated around,' Milligan said.
'After the year he had with the Young Socceroos, he's a player that's of interest to us, but there are also a number of other players in that category that we're looking at.'
Milligan would not confirm the expected arrival of Max Burgess, saying the 30-year-old midfielder – who wasn't offered a new contract with Sydney FC after spending four seasons with the Sky Blues – was yet to sign a deal with the Jets.
The Jets announced this week that Japanese winger Kota Mizunuma had signed a new one-year deal with Newcastle.
'It was very important to myself and the club that we have a player of Kota's experience,' Milligan said.
Milligan said that his plans for next season also included Clayton Taylor, despite the 21-year-old winger having twice requested a release from his Jets contract in recent weeks.
'If I don't have an environment where players want to be and players want to get better and continue to grow, the I'm doing something wrong,' Milligan said.
'At the moment, I'm preparing for pre-season with Clayton.'
Meanwhile, former Jets, Wellington Phoenix and Central Coast Mariners left-back James McGarry is hoping to join Brisbane Roar in a bid to kickstart his bid for selection in New Zealand's squad for next year's World Cup.
Negotiations are continuing between McGarry's current club, Scottish outfit Aberdeen, and the Roar, but it's expected the 27-year-old defender – who spent the second half of the 2024-25 season on loan at Greek club Athens Kallithea – will soon be confirmed as a Brisbane player.
Elsewhere, 20-year-old forward Arion Sulemani has left A-League champions Melbourne City to join Perth Glory on a two-year deal.
'The main reason I wanted this move was to get consistent game time,' said Sulemani, who made eight A-League appearances for City – four as a starter – in the club's successful 2024-25 campaign.
Hashtags

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

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Izak Rankine's ban for homophobic slur: What was the AFL supposed to do?
COMMENT In the end the AFL managed to upset everyone. Make no mistake, Izak Rankine would not have gone to bed last night feeling any better about himself after being given a four-game suspension for using a homophobic slur against a Collingwood player last weekend. His personal reputation is in tatters, he may have ruined his club's best chance to win a premiership in three decades and the ban still almost certainly ends his season. Crows fans won't feel any less despondent today knowing Rankine could be available for a grand final if their team loses in week one of the postseason and then wins its way through to the decider. The Adelaide Football Club, tarnished again by one of its star's loose tongues, might have strengthened its relationship with a player critical to its long-term future by risking public scorn to have his back. But the Crows will be hyper-conscious of the damage to their brand corporately and fear a season they waited so long for has been derailed. The other 17 clubs - even those who will benefit from having Rankine removed from the Crows line-up - will know this entire mess could be there's to deal with next. The 25-year-old is the sixth player in the past two seasons to be suspended for a homophobic slur, there's no reason to think he's the last. The LGBT community will have a right to feel abandoned again, knowing a perceived discount was given to someone who used the most offensive language. Even the section of the footy world who believes what's said on the field should stay on the field were inflamed when the AFL revealed it had considered 'compelling medical advice' when deciding to give Rankine four games instead of the expected five. If there's anything that group dislikes more than players missing games for something they said in the heat of battle is players reportedly using the mental health card. And then you have the league itself, which was torn to shreds on Friday night. Collingwood great Tony Shaw branded the AFL 'incompetent', 'amateurish' and 'laughable'. Longtime commentator Gerard Whateley called it a 'disappointing moment from a disappointing administration'. '(AFL CEO Andrew) Dillon and his legal team should have travelled to Adelaide on Tuesday and sat with the Crows administration,' Whateley said on SEN. 'Dillon should have said the penalty is five weeks now let's hear your submissions. 'Dillon should have followed up with the penalty is five weeks now let's hear your appeal. 'And finally Dillon should have said the penalty is five weeks now let's go and front the press conference.' Former Crows player Josh Jenkins called the saga 'embarrassing all round' and Hawthorn legend Jason Dunstall declared on Fox Footy 'they're almost a victim of their own wokeness … they don't want to offend anyone and in doing so they've offended everybody.' In fairness to the league there are no winners in situations like this and for anyone still fuming about the decision there's just one question to ask - what was the AFL supposed to do?

ABC News
5 hours ago
- ABC News
Alex Johnston edges closer to all-time tryscoring record with 210th career score in Souths win over Dragons
Alex Johnston needs three tries in one game to break the NRL's try-scoring record before the end of the season after edging closer to the history books in South Sydney's 40-0 thrashing of St George Illawarra. The left winger had one try in Souths' penultimate game of a forgettable year, touching down from a very suspect Tallis Duncan pass in front of 7,213 fans on Thursday night. It was the Souths' smallest crowd at Stadium Australia since Round 1, 2020 — not including games that had COVID-19 restrictions. Johnston's 210th career try came in the final minutes before half-time and leaves the veteran only two four-pointers shy of equalling Ken Irvine's mark that has stood since 1973. With Souths on the bye next week, the stage is set for Johnston to take a shot at history against bitter rivals the Sydney Roosters in the last round of the regular season. The win finished as Souths' biggest of the year, and also their biggest over the Dragons either as a joint venture or as their predecessor club, St George. Johnston could've come even closer to rarefied air amid the carnage, The winger tore past Hayden Buchanan and Corey Allan on a line break down the left side in the first half but passed inside to Jye Gray for the Rabbitohs' second try. After the break, Duncan had Johnston unmarked on his left but did not need the veteran as he crashed past Buchanan for a four-score lead. From there, it was Johnston's teammates inflicting the pain, with right winger Tyrone Munro putting the icing on the cake by stepping around Clint Gutherson en route to an 85-metre try in the final minutes. The victory guarantees Souths cannot finish last on the ladder, after last week's win had all but confirmed Wayne Bennett would avoid the first wooden spoon of his premiership career. The Dragons had already been relying on a miracle to play finals but are now mathematically out of contention, left to rue errors and an inability to create opportunities against Souths. AAP

News.com.au
7 hours ago
- News.com.au
Nikita Tszyu raises eyebrows with bizarre birthing story after Aussie stops Lulzim Ismaili in one round
Nikita Tszyu's return fight was highly anticipated, but in the end, his bizarre and graphic post-fight speech lasted longer and made more headlines than the bout itself. On Wednesday night, Tszyu scored a one-sided first-round stoppage win over Lulzim Ismaili, who was dropped in the first before refusing to get off his stool to start the second. Watch the biggest Aussie sports & the best from overseas LIVE on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. After travelling from Germany, Ismaili was completely outclassed and overpowered by the man known as 'The Butcher'. Ismaili was dropped with a huge left hand in the opening round, and moments after it looked as if he would be stopped as he turned his back and tried to protect himself before escaping back to the ropes A patient Tszyu then went hard to the body, breaking Ismaili's rib with the last punch of the first round. And from the moment he sat on the stool, everyone in the arena knew he wasn't going to get back up. But any fan who immediately felt they had been short-changed in entertainment due to the short bout was soon mistaken as Tszyu went on a wild rant, starting with a truly bizarre baby birthing story and ending with revealing he missed his rival Michael Zerafa's fight because he was going to the bathroom. Tszyu raised plenty of eyebrows last week when he revealed his wife's placenta in capsule form, and breast milk was part of his pre-fight diet. And when asked if he had a message for his baby Curiosity – who is named after a NASA Mars rover – Tszyu revealed his walkout song choice was actually a nod to her. Walking out initially to The Undertaker's theme, and then Thunderstruck by ACDC, that may seem like a weird dedication on the surface, but Tszyu revealed the ACDC song was actually the first thing the baby heard. 'Thunderstruck is the song she came out to as we were having her,' Tszyu revealed post-fight. But it soon got even weirder. 'As we were having a C-section, I had the nurse play it,' Tszyu continued, before explaining how that was why he walked out with his eyes closed. 'I was thinking about Curiosity,' he said. 'Seeing her naked body being pulled out of my wife.' You can watch his full post-fight interview in the player at the top of the page. Unsurprisingly, announcer Ben Damon was keen to move on from that conversation as he asked Tszyu about his troublesome hand and return to the ring before asking about his rival Zerafa. When asked about what he thought of Zerafa's performance on Wednesday night, after the journeyman demolished American Mikey Dahlman in the co-main, Tszyu said he didn't see it. 'I went for a piss during Zerafa's fight to be honest,' Tszyu said on Main Event. 'I came back and f**k, it was over.' However, a match-up between the pair is becoming increasingly likely, with Zerafa calling out both Tim and Nikita Tszyu for years. 'It's a very dangerous fight. There are a lot of question marks with me with my experience, he's very experienced,' Tszyu continued. 'But you've got to test yourself. There's no way to improve without beating someone who's better than you.'