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Ederson moves closer to Galatasaray

Ederson moves closer to Galatasaray

Yahoo4 hours ago
Ederson moves closer to Galatasaray
Ederson Moraes, the Brazilian goalkeeper from Manchester City, has already given the green light to Galatasaray. A three-year contract is on the table, along with a massive salary: eight million euros per season.
In Istanbul, fans are already dreaming of seeing him don the yellow and red jersey. But there's still one obstacle. Manchester City won't let go of their starting keeper so easily. Galatasaray's €7 million offer has been rejected. The English side are asking for nearly double that amount—€13 million.
Negotiations are ongoing. With just days to go before the league campaigns resume, everything could speed up. If Galatasaray matches the asking price, this transfer could become one of the summer's most talked-about moves.
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Ohio State's Jeremiah Smith learning how to handle swarms of attention — on and off the field
Ohio State's Jeremiah Smith learning how to handle swarms of attention — on and off the field

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time9 minutes ago

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Ohio State's Jeremiah Smith learning how to handle swarms of attention — on and off the field

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Three kids wearing Ohio State football jerseys stood on top of a brick seat wall during the second practice of fall camp. Buckeyes players stretched in lines more than 100 yards away. 'Where is he?' one of the kids asked. Another tried to zoom in with his phone, but a video recording wouldn't have captured the marvel he was searching for — not from that distance, anyway. Then they spotted him: the 6-foot-3, 226-pound first-team All-American wide receiver from South Florida who goes by the name of Jeremiah Smith, 'JJ' for short. He's a 19-year-old sophomore who could play in the NFL yesterday if he were eligible. As Smith stretched, his dreads hung over his face but not so far that they covered his famous No. 4, which now graces the video game cover of cult-classic-turned-online-arcade-phenomenon "EA Sports College Football." [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Moments later, he lined up to return punts with four other Ohio State players, including true freshman running back Anthony 'Turbo' Rogers, whom Smith dwarfed by 5 inches. After Smith fielded his first punt, he jogged a handful of steps before nonchalantly darting a pass to a Buckeyes staffer as if he was hurling a whistling Nerf football. He then rejoined his punt-return teammates and chatted up a water-bottle-carrying trainer whose hat brim stared only halfway up the number on his jersey. During 'indy,' a period of individual drills performed by position groups, Smith showcased his graceful, almost balletic, change of direction, wrapping around a bag, running an in-cutting route, catching a pass, dropping it and then turning back upfield for a quick out before catching another ball. A bit more than six months earlier, in the national title game, he dashed back to the backfield, where he was practically disguised, and then shot back out to the flat like a pinball, making him a wide-open target for a gentle, spiraling pass before waltzing in for Ohio State's first touchdown in a 34-23 win over Notre Dame. Smith's combination of size and speed has drawn comparisons to that of Julio Jones, the No. 6 overall pick in the 2011 NFL Draft who became a five-time All-Pro with the Atlanta Falcons. While coaching Alabama's receivers from 2007-10, now-Indiana head coach Curt Cignetti got an up-close look at Jones, an All-SEC honoree each of his three seasons with the Crimson Tide. 'Julio was also a great player,' Cignetti said at Big Ten media days last month, comparing the two wideouts. 'Very similar, [Smith's] a little looser, more flexible I think. Maybe a hair faster.' Texas head coach Steve Sarkisian deployed Jones during his NFL prime. 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Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

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