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What did you make of Hornets' transfer business?

What did you make of Hornets' transfer business?

BBC News05-02-2025

It's time to talk about Watford's transfer business...Watford signed 28-year-old Norway international goalkeeper Egil Selvik from Italian 'sister club' Udinese for an undisclosed fee, brought in 20-year-old American left-back Caleb Wiley on loan from Chelsea and defender James Abankwah on loan from Udinese.However, they lost midfielder Festy Ebosele after he was recalled from loan by the same Italian club, Ryan Porteous has joined Preston on loan and Ken Sema has been released.With Tom Cleverley seemingly under pressure and a host of injuries to deal with, particularly in attack, will Watford keep pace in the race for the play-off places?We want you to tell us what you think about the Hornets' transfer dealings...Let us know your thoughts here.

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I could have closed gap to Celtic, insists former Rangers boss Philippe Clement
I could have closed gap to Celtic, insists former Rangers boss Philippe Clement

Belfast Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Belfast Telegraph

I could have closed gap to Celtic, insists former Rangers boss Philippe Clement

Clement felt he was working on a long-term project after the board told him to cut the wage bill last summer and develop younger players to fuel future spending. But his reign ended in February after back-to-back home defeats by Queen's Park and St Mirren left them out of the Scottish Cup and 13 points adrift of Celtic in the Premiership. Russell Martin has now been installed as his permanent successor after an interim stint from Barry Ferguson and the financial backdrop has changed following a takeover by an American consortium. 'It's a pity that the story stopped, that the board didn't have the patience or maybe listened too much to some fans,' Clement told BBC Scotland. 'There are other clubs where there is a difficult moment and everybody sticks together because everybody knows the story, how the work is done inside the building, and they continue and they are successful afterwards. 'In three or four windows, we could have closed the gap with a good development of players, but the decision is made and you need to accept it.' Clement pointed out that this time last year he was told the club's spending was not sustainable 'There was not fresh investment in the club, but the money available for the transfers would be the sale of players, so the amount you can get out of that,' he added. 'That was not much at the end, because the squad was with a lot of older players. So people didn't want to pay any more for them. Six players were out of contract, so they left for free.' The Belgian added that the wage bill was cut by 35 per cent in order to rebuild the squad. 'And the idea was, and that was clearly said at the board, that the club needed three, four transfer windows to get at the level of Celtic, because you have to gain money again by bringing young players in, developing them, making them better, selling them and getting money to make the squad better and better in the next two, three years,' he added. Clement believes progress has been made in that sense with the development of the likes of Nico Raskin, Jefte, Hamza Igamane and Clinton Nsiala. 'If they say there's no new investment, I now understand why,' he said. 'Because at the end, some people were already thinking about selling the club and selling their stocks.' Clement claimed Rangers under-achieved domestically but over-achieved in the Europa League and felt some players were not ready for the demands of competing on both fronts. 'I think it's normal in the financial situation the club was, but it's not good enough,' he said. 'But you need patience then to build it or you need to spend money. It's one of the two. Without one of the two, it's an impossible job.' Clement hopes his successor gets that backing. 'I hope that there comes stability, to work in a good way with the players, with the staff, with everybody in the club, to have a consistent story,' he said. 'I think that's a big part that the club has been lacking for years and I hope that the new owners can bring that for the club and for the manager also, for the players.'

Robert Lewandowski QUITS Poland national team and refuses to play again until manager is sacked
Robert Lewandowski QUITS Poland national team and refuses to play again until manager is sacked

Scottish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Robert Lewandowski QUITS Poland national team and refuses to play again until manager is sacked

'LOSS OF TRUST' Robert Lewandowski QUITS Poland national team and refuses to play again until manager is sacked Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) LEGEND Robert Lewandowski has sensationally quit playing for Poland - "until" the manager is sacked. The Barcelona striker issued a statement saying he has "loss trust" in Michał Probierz. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up Lewandowski, 36, has hit 85 goals in 158 internationals. 1 Robert Lewandowski went on social media for his announcement Credit: Getty He posted on social media: "Considering the circumstances and the loss of trust in the coach of the Polish National Team, I decided to resign from playing in the Polish National Team until he is the coach. "I hope that I will be able to play for the best fans in the world." THIS IS A DEVELOPING STORY.. READ MORE FOOTBALL NEWS GAME OVER Iconic Italian club where Pep played goes bankrupt and faces boot from league The Sun is your go to destination for the best football, boxing and MMA news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see us on Facebook at and follow us from our main Twitter account at @TheSunFootball.

Carlos Alcaraz defends French Open title after epic tussle with Jannik Sinner
Carlos Alcaraz defends French Open title after epic tussle with Jannik Sinner

The Herald Scotland

time2 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Carlos Alcaraz defends French Open title after epic tussle with Jannik Sinner

Instead Alcaraz claimed his fifth major crown at exactly the same age as his idol Rafael Nadal did, aged 22 years, one month and three days old. It was his fifth victory from his fifth final, which was the first at one of the slams to be played between two players born this century. It was also the first grand slam final meeting of the two young superstars of men's tennis, the best players on the planet, who have now shared the last six major titles. And it is one that will go down as a cast-iron Roland Garros classic, a final for the ages, a high-quality, heavy-hitting marathon which finished 4-6 6-7 (4) 6-4 7-6 (3) 7-6 (10-2) to the man from Murcia. After receiving the trophy – not from Nadal but from 1999 champion Andre Agassi – Alcaraz said: 'Jannik, it's amazing the level you reach. 'To everyone who came from Murcia to support me, thank you. This trophy is yours also. Carlos Alcaraz hugs Jannik Sinner after winning an epic final (Aurelien Morissard/AP) 'Paris, you have been important support for me since the first practice in the first round, I can't thank you enough. You will always be in my heart.' Italian Sinner, on a 20-match winning streak at the slams, looked certain to add the Paris title to his US and Australian Open crowns when he forged two sets ahead. He had lost his previous four matches against Alcaraz – the most recent in the Rome final last month, his first tournament after serving a three-month doping ban. But the 23-year-old has been almost untouchable in the French capital, dropping serve only three times before the final and saving 19 of the 22 break points he had faced. Some loose hitting from Alcaraz gave Sinner a break in the first game of the third, but perhaps being short of matches after his enforced absence was beginning to tell as last year's winner clawed back the deficit to force a fourth. Spain's Carlos Alcaraz celebrates with the trophy (Thibault Camus/AP) That ended a run of 31 consecutive sets won by Sinner at grand slam tournaments, stretching back to the Australian Open fourth round. With both players now playing at close to their top levels, it was Sinner who made the first move in the fourth set, breaking to love to lead 4-3. Second seed Alcaraz, scrambling to cling on to his title, then somehow saved three championship points on his own serve, before incredibly digging even deeper to break back. In the tie-break Sinner edged two points ahead but then started missing, while Alcaraz fired down back-to-back aces on his way to levelling the match. Sinner had never before won a match lasting longer than four hours – mainly because he has never really had to – but he was guzzling the pickle juice at the changeover to try and find more energy. But Alcaraz, having clinched an early break, served for the set only for Sinner to somehow chase down an outrageous drop shot to level the match again. A 10-point tie-break was needed to separate them, an early-evening shoot-out to decide the champion, and by now Alcaraz had his eye in. A glorious winner, a drop-shot and volley and some wayward shots from Sinner helped him race ahead, and a final, spectacular forehand winner sealed an unbelievable victory. Sinner said: 'First of all, congratulations Carlos. It was an amazing performance from you again. It was an amazing battle. 'It is easier to play than to talk right now. Even though it is very difficult right now, it is okay. It is a big privilege for me to be here and to play here. 'For me, Paris is a really special place. I have achieved many great things here. I'm still happy with this one. It is an amazing trophy. 'I won't sleep very well tonight but it is okay.'

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