
Agyemang 'has made a name for herself now'
Michelle Agyemang has "made a name for herself now" with her stunning debut goal for England, according to former Arsenal defender Jen Beattie.The 19-year-old scored a stunning volley with her first two touches within seconds of coming on in the Lionesses' defeat by Belgium on Tuesday.Agyemang is on loan at Brighton from parent club Arsenal for the 2024-25 campaign and has made 19 appearances in all competitions for Dario Vidosic's side, scoring three goals.Beattie - who spent time with Agyemang at Arsenal - told BBC Radio 5 Live's Women's Football Weekly podcast: "She is unreal. She was an Academy player when I was at Arsenal and she used to come up to training and was sometimes involved in match squads."I kid you not, she would do that in training. She is an incredible box player, an unbelievable finisher. She doesn't need more than one or two touches exactly what you saw against Belgium."It was a hard loss for England, but I hope she gets her moment because that is unbelievable to come on and take 41 seconds to get your first senior goal. And what a goal. She didn't even celebrate. I get it with the context of the game, but I hope deep down she is absolutely buzzing because I am for her."She has made a name for herself now. There is no better intro to a senior squad than that in an international debut. I was shouting in my living room for that one."Listen to Women's Football Weekly on BBC Sounds

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Daily Mirror
10 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Viktor Gyokeres makes Man Utd U-turn after learning Arsenal transfer decision
Viktor Gyokeres had looked to have ruled out a move to Manchester United after their Champions League failure - putting Arsenal in pole position - but the Sporting Lisbon star may have had a change of heart Victor Gyokeres looks to have changed his tune and is now open to a move to Manchester United - despite them not having Champions League football - which was believed to have been a determining factor. The Swede has long been expected to leave Sporting Lisbon and Arsenal had been seen as his most likely destination if he did head to the Premier League. But now a reunion with Ruben Amorim could be on the cards, reports talkSPORT. No formal talks have been held between those in Manchester and Sporting bosses, but the Red Devils' pursuit of a new striker is well documented. The Portuguese side want around £60million for Gyökeres - which is a £25m reduction on his £85m release clause. Gyokeres has a verbal agreement in place with Sporting allowing him to leave for less after he chose to stay in Lisbon last summer. Arsenal, like United, are in the market for a new frontman after opting against signing a new No 9 for several windows. Mirror Football understands that Arsenal are prioritising Benjamin Sesko, though. Arsenal's sporting director Andrea Berta has been negotiating with representatives of both players and their respective clubs simultaneously as the Gunners seek the best deal. However, the decision among the club's hierarchy is to push forward with their swoop for the RB Leipzig forward, rather than Gyokeres. That would leave the Swede, who scored more than 50 times in all competitions, looking for a new buyer. Several of Europe's top clubs are not looking to add a striker which means, even for a player of his quality, options may be limited. Amorim was the man who signed Gyokeres after he impressed in the Championship with Coventry City, later helping him become one of Europe's most prolific strikers. The United boss has just missed out on Liam Delap, who chose to join Chelsea, leaving him to review other options. Matheus Cunha has already been signed for £62.5m. The 27-year-old has just helped Sporting claim the domestic double and has remained tight-lipped on his future. He said: 'Let us see. It's hard for me to say, because yeah it is football and you never know what's going to happen in the summer. So for me to say anything else than that is impossible.' Gyokeres was asked specifically about the possibility of joining Arsenal and added: 'I don't know, I just focus on this. I've tried to focus on the last games because it's so important and I don't want to think about anything else. So yeah, if anything is true, let's see in the summer.'


BBC News
17 minutes ago
- BBC News
Yorkshire cycling fans celebrate Women's Tour of Britain start
Cycling fans in Yorkshire have spoken of their excitement as the Women's Tour of Britain got under way in the one of the four-day event began on Thursday at Dalby Forest in the North York Moors National Park, with the race then set to continue into the north-east of England and into Scotland. The start of the Women's Tour has come just over six years after the final edition of the Tour de Yorkshire was held - an event founded in the wake of the 2014 Tour de France, which famously held its opening stages in the county. Attending the opening day, spectator Lynne Gay said she wanted to see "a lot more" races come to Yorkshire in the future. Ms Gay said: "I was born into a cycling family. I've raced myself and I've followed cycling all my life, so we love being here and enjoying the atmosphere."I just wish it had stayed in the area a bit more and maybe gone to Scarborough. "We don't get much cycling in Yorkshire now the Tour de Yorkshire is gone, but I suppose we've got to be grateful we've got this."Meanwhile, Mark, a cyclist from Pickering, North Yorkshire, said: "I think it's so exciting seeing the scale of it."I think it just gets people into cycling. They think, 'I could get out and do that'."It brings excitement to the area." The picturesque North York Moors backdrop to the first stage of the race also proved to be a source of pride for the Maddie Leach said: "It's great. Just to get the exposure out to the young girls and children watching is exciting. "To show the World Tour the roads we train and race on, too. They may not enjoy it, but it's Yorkshire and it's beautiful." Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.


Times
19 minutes ago
- Times
Why have footballers' shin-pads become so incredibly small?
What's the best parallel to draw. A bank card? A prawn cracker? A Nokia 8210? There have been times this season when I've pondered what a referee — or the game's lawmakers, Ifab, for that matter — would do if footballer actually decided to stuff one of the above down their socks instead of the micro shin-pads many are choosing to wear these days. You must have noticed. The trend of players wearing mini shinnies beneath socks rolled down beneath their calves. The outline of a pair no bigger than, as Everton's Dominic Calvert-Lewin once described his, a custard cream. A couple of the alternatives above would probably offer more protection — and, as it turns out, providing they were covered by the player's socks and stayed put throughout, there's nothing much a referee can do about a player's choice of lower-limb protection. Shin-pads have been mandatory since 1990, but there's nothing in Ifab's laws beyond hazy definitions like 'suitable' and 'appropriate' that states what size or material they should be. As the trend for smaller and smaller versions grows, Ifab maintains that it is the responsibility of players, not the referee, to decide what constitutes reasonable protection. Jack Grealish's penchant for low slung socks and children's shin-pads is no secret — a look born during his youth-team days with Aston Villa, when the socks kept shrinking in the wash. He performed well and a superstition took root that has never left him. Grealish is by no means the first maverick to eschew shin-pads, of course, but when England's best centre half and Real Madrid's newest defensive recruit are shunning them it is clear that this is a trend that has moved beyond flair players and fashionistas. The uber-confident Dean Huijsen, who will swap Bournemouth for the Bernabeu in a £50million deal this summer, has spent the season nonchalantly marshalling the south coast club's defence wearing a pair no bigger than a Mars bar. So too Illia Zabarnyi, 22, with whom Huijsen, 20, formed the Premier League's youngest central defensive pairing, but they are by no means alone. Marc Guéhi, Crystal Palace's FA Cup-winning captain, bossed England's defence at last summer's Euros wearing a pair that looked as substantial as a piece of cardboard — and, these days, it wouldn't come as much of a surprise if that's what they were made of. A few years back, the right back, Aleix Vidal, suffered a nasty gash to his right shin while playing for Espanyol against Real Betis, which left him requiring 15 stitches. Turned out his only protection was a floppy piece of material inside his sweaty socks. Some players are now slipping a piece of foam padding down there to comply with regulations. Back in November, Michael Olise went a step further, refusing to wear shin-pads altogether. As the former Crystal Palace winger prepared to come off the bench for Bayern Munich in their Champions League game against Paris Saint-Germain, the fourth official noticed he wasn't wearing any protection at all. After a curt exchange, and begrudgingly slipping a pair down his socks, Olise surreptitiously removed them and tossed them back towards the dugout before running on to the pitch. Now, does any of this really matter? Are micro shin-guards dangerous? Or are shin-pads really as important in the modern game? And have they ever done much to protect you from the most serious injuries anyway? In one sense, none of this is new. Before 1990, players could wear what they wanted under their socks and many preferred wearing nothing at all. Believe it or not, though, shin-pads have been around in football for about 150 years. Sam Weller Widdowson, a cricketer for Nottinghamshire and footballer for Nottingham Forest, is credited for introducing the concept after cutting down a pair of cricket pads and strapping them to his stockings for a game of football in 1874. Unsurprisingly, perhaps, he's said to have copped a bit of stick that day. But they soon caught on and Widdowson — who was also capped once by England and became chairman of Forest — went on to produce and market them with the Nottinghamshire batsman and Notts County co-founder, Richard Daft. The shin-pad's ultimate origin is arguably the greave (from the Old French greve 'shin, shin armour'), which was used to protect the tibia from attack from as far back the Bronze Age. My first shin-pads certainly bore closer resemblance to heavy battle armour than today's microscopic wee things. There are pictures (in my loft) of me playing for junior teams with my skinny legs guarded with contraptions that wouldn't have looked out of place in the film 300. But I was playing left back for Celtic Boys' Club's under-11s, not slashing my way through enemy hordes alongside Gerard Butler's Spartans. That was back in the mid-90s, when giant plastic and foam knee-high protectors, with ankle guards and wrap-around velcro straps at the top and bottom, were very much in vogue. I was still playing in them until I turned professional with Forest in 2002, aged 17. That's when I noticed all my team-mates slipping far more ergonomic, slim-line versions down their socks, while I spent ten minutes wedging each leg into its sheathing. Needless to say, those didn't last much longer. And, if you asked players back then, the primary reason they'd give for shedding those cumbersome things would be the same as today's players: comfort. Players want to feel light and agile on the pitch, even if only in their own minds. When you train all week without wearing any, you can perhaps see why looking down at legs with chunks of plastic (or carbon fibre) strapped to them might have the opposite effect on match day. Yet there's no doubting that the modern-day fashion for socks below the calves has a lot to answer for. Footballers are a funny bunch. Every detail matters; appearance too. And as the game has evolved — with more protection from referees, and tactical developments that mean defenders make far more passes than tackles — so too have priorities for this generation. But what about younger ones? Where Premier League idols walk, wide-eyed children tend to follow, and micro shin-pads have become a familiar sight in the grassroots game. Some clubs have enforced bans. One of them, Penistone Church from Barnsley, made headlines in August when their 15-year-old player, Alfie, suffered a double leg break while wearing a pair measuring 3x9cm. 'They are the most pathetic shin-pads you've ever seen,' Alfie rued afterwards, telling the BBC: 'It's not worth the extra bit of speed to have you knocked out of football for months and months.' Studies have shown that shin-pads offer some measure of protection against tibia fracture, but the force of a challenge alone is rarely the only factor in such traumas. More often than not, the foot is planted, or trapped in an unfortunate position at the point of impact, which often arrives from the side as opposed to head on. I speak from experience, having suffered a compound fracture of my left leg in a tackle during a game in 2009. The only thing my shin-pads did that day was hide the bone piercing out of my skin. Vidal's nasty gash, cited earlier, could easily have been inflicted on an unprotected part of the leg even if he had been wearing a more substantial pair of shin-guards. But young Alfie was right about one thing: there are some truly 'pathetic' examples on show nowadays. Jack Hinshelwood caused a stir last season when one of his micro-pads fell out against Arsenal. When the referee handed it back, it looked like he was sharing a Pringle crisp with the Brighton & Hove Albion defender. The trend has spawned a cottage industry. As well as micro shin-pads by specialised brands, customised versions adorned with pictures of family, sporting triumphs or, in the case of the former Real Madrid and Spain striker Joselu, his beloved dog, are now commonplace in changing rooms. The Manchester City defender, Josko Gvardiol, has been known to rock a small pair of Godfather-themed numbers, with the message, 'Keep your friends close but your enemies closer,' above an image of Marlon Brando's character, Don Corleone. Gvardiol must really like The Godfather. If you're willing to part with £195, your shin-pads can now gather reams of performance data too. XSEED, created by the Italian analytics company Soccerment, collates everything from passing, shooting and expected goals metrics, to distance, speed and geo-location data. All the information is collated on an app on your phone, to be harnessed by coaches or uploaded to scouting platforms. Inter Milan's Federico Dimarco swears by them, even if you have to charge them up every few games. However, unless Ifab steps in, the humble shin-pads' days could be numbered. Widdowson would be turning in his greve.