Celtic close to signing Nicolas Kuhn replacement as club desperate to sell

Celtic are in the midst of building for the new campaign and are now closing in on a winger who would provide a much-needed fresh face in the wake of a key departure, according to a report.

Nicolas Kuhn's Celtic exit prompts frantic transfer movement

After 18 successful months in Glasgow, Nicolas Kuhn is joining Como from the Scottish Premiership champions in a deal that will see the Bhoys earn a tidy profit on the former Germany Under-20 international, who was brought in from Rapid Vienna for £3 million.

Fabrizio Romano confirmed the Celtic winger’s departure on social media platform X, stating: “Nicolas Kühn, on his way to Italy as he signs in as new Como player on €19m from Celtic. Agreement done as revealed last week and Kühn on his way with agent Fabian Dingler. Here we go, confirmed.”

Leaving Brendan Rodgers short of options out wide, the Bhoys have reacted by putting in a bid for Rapid Vienna star Isak Jansson, who could follow in Kuhn’s footsteps by leaving the Austrian Bundesliga side for Parkhead.

Their offer is said to be in the £2.5 million range, though an unnamed side have put forward a £3.4 million proposal for the Swede, potentially sparking a bidding war between interested parties.

Attacking reinforcements appear likely to arrive sooner rather than later, with Celtic also focused on deals for Kawasaki Frontale striker Shin Yamada and Napoli’s Giuseppe Ambrosino.

Celtic’s opening five matches of their Scottish Premiership title defence

St Mirren (H)

Celtic Park

Aberdeen (A)

Pittodrie

Livingston (H)

Celtic Park

Rangers (A)

Ibrox

Kilmarnock (A)

Rugby Park

Following an end to last term that felt like a slight grind to a halt, new faces are needed to provide a spark once again and the Bhoys are now close to landing a key target, per recent developments.

Celtic close to signing Royal Antwerp winger Michel-Ange Balikwisha

According to Voetbalkrant, Royal Antwerp winger Michel-Ange Balikwisha is close to joining Celtic and Marc Overmars is keen to push through a deal swiftly so the Belgian Pro League outfit can begin to work on incomings.

Financially, Antwerp are in a position where they need to sell before they can buy, and it appears that the Bhoys are now on the verge of taking the 24-year-old off their hands for a ‘hefty sum’ of money.

Celtic can sign a better ST than Kvistgaarden in "complete" £6.8m star

Celtic could forget all about Mathias Kvistgaarden by signing this striker this summer.

1

By
Dan Emery

Jul 6, 2025

Enjoying a productive campaign, Balikwisha registered four goals and three assists in 18 appearances across 2024/25. However, injuries have limited his scope to make a greater impact over the last couple of years.

Either way, Celtic are now set to land a key reinforcement out wide and one they have targeted for a long time, providing an injection of quality once Kuhn completes his move to Como.

Time is of the essence for the Bhoys ahead of their Champions League playoff tie in August, so fans will be waiting with anticipation hoping an announcement will soon follow.

Southampton plot approach for £10m maestro who may jump at St. Mary's move

Southampton are now plotting a move for a “really exciting” midfielder, who could jump at a move to St. Mary’s this summer, according to a report.

Still looking to build promotion-winning squad

In his first season as Saints manager, Will Still’s aim will undoubtedly be to return to the Premier League at the first opportunity, and Tony Pulis has insisted that nothing but an immediate return to the top flight will be deemed good enough next season.

Pulis said: “He will have the opportunity and the chance to definitely be successful in his first year and success there is promotion, nothing less than promotion.”

As such, Still has set out to build a promotion-winning squad, with Sky Sports reporter Florian Plettenberg revealing the negotiations over a deal for FC Köln striker Damion Downs are now at an advanced stage, as the centre-forward has emerged as a top target for the Championship promotion-hopefuls.

Newly appointed Southampton manager WillStillin the stands

Having a reliable goalscorer is, of course, a major factor in any side’s success, but it is equally important to have players capable of creating chances, and Still’s side have now set their sights on a new midfielder.

That is according to a report from Football League World, which states Southampton are now plotting a move for RB Salzburg maestro Bobby Clark, who joined the Austrian side from Liverpool for a fee of £10m last summer.

Bobby Clark

However, the move to Austria hasn’t panned out how Clark would’ve hoped, having recently been left out of the squad for the Club World Cup, meaning he could jump at the opportunity to move to St. Mary’s this summer.

Speaking about why the midfielder was left out of the squad entirely, RB Salzburg manager Thomas Letsch said: “I decided on other players. I wasn’t satisfied with Bobby’s training week and therefore told him he wasn’t in the squad.”

"Really exciting" Clark could reignite his career at St. Mary's

There may be some concerns over the fact the 20-year-old hasn’t been training well at Salzburg, but there are signs he could reignite his career at St. Mary’s, having previously displayed some promising signs at some of England’s top clubs.

During his time as a Newcastle United youth player, the starlet was lauded by reporter Lee Ryder, who said: “Bobby was Newcastle’s most promising youngster. He is a really exciting player with bags of skill and talent.”

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The Newcastle-born starlet then decided to move to Liverpool, where he went on to put in some impressive performances at youth level, despite never quite making the grade as a first-team player, picking up 11 goal contributions in 37 games for the U21 side.

At this stage of his career, a move to a promotion-chasing Championship side could be ideal for Clark, and his exploits at youth level indicate that he could be a solid signing for Southampton, capable of setting up chances for Downs.

Jos Buttler: England must 'earn the right' to worry about net run-rate

England captain says focus is on two must-win games, despite Scotland’s advantage in table

Andrew Miller11-Jun-2024

Jos Buttler knows England are up against it in another World Cup group stage•Getty Images

With their World Cup hopes once again hanging in the balance, Jos Buttler says that England’s only focus is on victory as they prepare for a critical encounter with Oman in Antigua, and that they will worry about the question of net run-rate only when they’ve earned the right to do so.With one point from a possible four so far, England go into their penultimate Group B fixture on Thursday on knowing that progression to the Super Eights is no longer in their hands. An opening-match wash-out against Scotland in Barbados was followed on Saturday by a 36-run loss to Australia, whereupon Scotland went on to thrash Oman with 41 balls to spare to open up a near four-point advantage (+2.1 vs -1.8) in the NRR stakes.England do have another game in hand, with another must-win match against Namibia looming on Saturday. However, their jeopardy is heightened by the fact that Scotland and Australia are due to close out the group stage the following day, by which stage it could be that a narrow defeat for the Scots will still suffice for them to secure their progression.If that did transpire, then it would be an ignominious way for the 2022 world champions to surrender the title, just as was the case in India barely six months ago, when the 2019 50-over champions bombed out at the group stages with three wins from nine. But Buttler – whose role as captain would doubtless come under intense scrutiny, along with that of the head coach Matthew Mott – is determined not to let his thoughts to drift that far ahead for now.”I don’t think it’s s**t or bust quite yet,” Buttler told reporters in Antigua. “I think it’s quite clear what we need to do and how we need to play. First and foremost, we need to win the game against Oman to have any chance going forward into the next one. So we have to earn the right to try and win the game. And if we can get ourselves in a position to affect our net run-rate, obviously that’s what we need to do.”Jos Buttler and Moeen Ali must try to turn England’s World Cup around•ICC via Getty Images

The fact that England are flying blind is a significant complication, however. In order to nudge their NRR up ahead of Scotland’s over their next two games – thereby ensuring they would progress even in the event of the narrowest of Australia wins on Sunday (ie, via a Super Over) – Oman and Namibia need to be defeated by a combined margin of 117 runs or more.England are unlikely to get much assistance or sympathy from their oldest foes, either. On Monday, Australia’s head coach, Andrew McDonald, hinted that he would be tempted to rest some key players if they can secure their Super Eights berth ahead of that Scotland showdown, which could further narrow the perceived gap between the teams. Additionally, NRR in the group stage is not carried over into the next round, which means there would be no disincentive for Australia to stage a 1999-style go-slow to eliminate England, just as Steve Waugh oversaw in an infamous World Cup run-chase against West Indies a quarter of a century ago.Buttler, however, insisted he and his team were not going to be distracted by such permutations in the build-up to the first of their two remaining encounters.”We’ve looked at a few little bits but it’s going to be ever-changing throughout the game,” he said. “I don’t think we need to consume too much energy today and tomorrow saying ‘we need to score ‘x’ amount of runs or win by this much’. I think those kind of things will develop on the day.Related

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“Obviously that’s the situation we find ourselves in, so we have to be aware of that, but not be consumed by that. If we try and do that bit first and forget about trying to win the game and lose, then you’ve got no chance anyway. So I’d rather have some kind of chance going into the last game, and know exactly what we need to.”Even if England could do little about the weather in the Scotland match, their performance against Australia invited criticism on a number of different levels. In particular, their retention of the out-and-out pace of Mark Wood proved questionable on a pitch that favoured slower variations, while their middle-order batting proved deeply ponderous, much as had been the case in their lacklustre 50-over World Cup defence.”In this day and age, it’s not always about pace and statements, it’s about skill,” Buttler admitted. “Sometimes you can have a plan that doesn’t come off, but every time we’re working out the best XI for the game coming up. We’ll consider all the options, train well and pick a team we feel gives us the best chance.”But, he insisted, neither he nor his team was daunted by the challenge awaiting them, nor the growing frustration from England’s fans, who fear a repeat of the story they witnessed in India before Christmas.”I think there’s a lot of realism that we have only had one-and-a-quarter games,” Buttler said. “It’s very easy to say we’re in a tough position, but we haven’t played loads of cricket. We were outplayed by Australia, and had one game rained out. There’s still lots of confidence in the group.”I care more about the team than the media and the outside noise,” he added. “That’s always there, it’s part of international sport. If you get to this level, you have to be able to deal with it, the job you guys do, that’s the job TV does. It’s probably harder to completely ignore it in this day and age, but there’s a level of acceptance. Our focus has to be on what we can do with our performance.”I’ve played the game long enough now to know that it’s very good at building people up and pretty good at criticising when it doesn’t go right, especially in England. I do the same thing when I’m watching a game of football or rugby – ‘how’s he missed that from there?’ ‘How did he miss from one-yard out’, or ‘someone’s dropped the ball over the line’. Simple things like that.”People care. That’s why we’re able to do what we do, because people care and they want to watch. We’re a proud team, we want to perform really well for all the fans. But to be honest, all the focus is on us and how well we can play. If we play as well as we can, we’ll make our fans happy.”

The perfect Bruno replacement: Man Utd looking at deal for £68m sensation

Manchester United have endured the worst Premier League season in their history, finishing in 15th place and registering just 42 points – the lowest tally in such a division.

Ruben Amorim was appointed back in November, but has so far been unable to turnaround their fortunes, losing 17 of his 42 matches since taking the reins.

He’s only had one window to make his own mark on the first-team squad at Old Trafford, with Patrick Dorgu his only major investment to date – costing £30m from Italian side Lecce.

However, the 40-year-old will want to part ways with numerous players already on the books, enabling him to have the freedom and funds to make the changes he desires.

With the transfer window just around the corner, numerous players have already been linked with moves to join the Red Devils, potentially using any funds generated from multiple potential sales.

The latest on United’s hunt for new additions this summer

Over the last couple of weeks, Liam Delap has been United’s number one target for the centre-forward position as the hierarchy look to provide Amorim with the ammunition he needs.

However, it appears as though the manager is set to miss out on a deal for the 22-year-old, after it was confirmed that he prefers a move to fellow English side Chelsea this summer.

Ipswich Town'sLiamDelapreacts

Delap isn’t the only English star touted with a move to Old Trafford this summer, with Crystal Palace’s Eberechi Eze on their radar, according to American outlet ESPN.

Their report claims that the hierarchy have been looking at a potential deal for the 26-year-old attacking midfielder, who’s registered a total of 16 combined goals and assists in the Premier League this season.

It also states that it’s unclear whether the board can afford him unless they sell players currently at the club, with the Palace star currently boasting a £68m release clause in his contract.

Why United’s £68m target could be the perfect Bruno replacement

Over the last couple of days, club captain Bruno Fernandes has been largely touted with a move away from United, with Saudi Arabian clubs circling for his signature this summer.

Bruno Fernandes

The 30-year-old has been the shining light in the squad this season, registering 37 combined goals and assists across all competitions – helping the side reach the Europa League final.

The Portuguese international stated he wanted to stay at Old Trafford despite the defeat, but given the rumoured £700k-per-week contract on the table from Saudi, it would be a huge offer to turn down for the midfielder.

There’s no denying that it would be a huge loss, with it unthinkable where the club would be right now if it wasn’t for his key contributions within the final third.

However, given his age, it may prove to be the final time they can command such a fee for his services, potentially cashing in on him and using the funds to pursue a move for Eze.

Crystal Palace's EberechiEzecelebrates with the trophy after winning the FA Cup

When comparing their respective figures from the recent campaign, the Eagles star has matched or bettered Fernandes in multiple key areas, highlighting his ability to step up to the plate if needed.

Eze, who’s been labelled “sensational” by content creator Ollie Thomas, may have registered slightly fewer combined goals and assists, but has registered more shots on target – showcasing his impressive ability in such an area when having the chance to advance.

Games played

34

36

Goals & assists

16

18

Shots on target per 90

1

0.7

Progressive carries

2.4

2.3

Pass accuracy

76%

76%

% of tackles won

47%

40%

Take-on success

49%

41%

Fouls won

1.8

1.1

He’s also completed the same percentage of passes he’s attempted, whilst also completing more take-ons, thriving in chance creation with the ball at his feet.

The England international has also won more of the tackles he’s entered, handing Amorim the option to utilise him in a deeper-lying role should he need to in 2025/26.

Offloading Bruno would be a huge blow and something which would anger a lot of supporters – especially considering his impressive record at Old Trafford since his arrival back in 2020.

However, Eze would be a superb addition, with his stats showcasing that he’s capable of surpassing the level produced by the 30-year-old with the Red Devils – allowing for a new lease of life after such a dismal season.

Their own Wirtz: Man Utd make move for "incredible" £36m Bruno replacement

Man Utd may need to find a suitable replacement for Bruno Fernandes this summer

2 ByRobbie Walls May 28, 2025

Everton willing to pay £30m to sign "direct" 26 G/A attacker this summer

Everton are ready for a summer of change as they move to a new home and are now looking to fend off competition for a direct forward, according to reports.

Everton prepare for summer upheaval

David Moyes led Everton out for their penultimate fixture at Goodison Park over the weekend in a match where they showed their strengths and weaknesses in a 2-2 draw against Ipswich Town. With only one match left at the famous old ground before the Toffees move to Bramley Moore Dock, there is plenty of anticipation over who could line up at the new stadium in a few months time.

Everton manager David Moyes

Internally, Dominic Calvert-Lewin leads a plethora of influential players who could leave at the end of the season, either on free transfers or when their loan deals expire. Intriguingly, Ipswich Town striker Liam Delap is now a public Everton target and may be the ideal replacement for the Three Lions international.

Moyes has signalled his desire to bring the ex-Manchester City forward to Merseyside, stating: “He would be one who we would certainly have an interest in. We would certainly be interested if he was interested in us. That’s for sure.”

Everton’s lack of striking potency this season

Dominic Calvert-Lewin

Appearances – 23 Goals – 3 Assists – 2

Youssef Chermiti

Appearances – 4 Goals – 0 Assists – 0

Armando Broja

Appearances – 11 Goals – 0 Assists – 0

Beto

Appearances – 31 Goals – 9 Assists – 0

Beto has been the main man in attack this campaign after being drafted in from the wilderness. Six goals in 13 Premier League matches have probably made his place safe, but there is room for added depth through the middle.

Having said that, Everton are now targeting a powerful forward to strengthen their frontline ahead of next season, per recent developments.

Everton in the mix to sign Tim Kleindienst

According to CaughtOffside, Everton are willing to pay a maximum of £30 million to sign Tim Kleindienst following his excellent campaign at Borussia Monchengladbach. Tottenham Hotspur, Wolverhampton Wanderers and West Ham United are also keeping an eye on the German striker, while the same applies for AC Milan, Roma and Bayern Munich from the continent.

A massive Beto upgrade: Everton enter talks to sign "phenomenal" star

Everton are making moves to land a new striker for David Moyes ahead of the summer.

ByEthan Lamb May 1, 2025

Lauded for his “direct” nature by Gerardo Seoane, the 29-year-old has registered 16 goals and ten assists in 32 appearances across all competitions this season. The Germany international has been a constant for Monchengladbach, directing 38 of his 73 shots taken on target in the Bundesliga in a disappointing term for his current employers.

Potentially set for a new challenge, he could feasibly be a replacement should Calvert-Lewin opt to move elsewhere once his contract comes to an end. Financially, The Friedkin Group should be able to shoulder the burden, so now it remains to be seen if Everton can force a deal over the line.

Leading the race: Spurs target dream Son replacement in £100k-p/w "wizard"

This season just keeps going from bad to worse for Tottenham Hotspur.

Despite no longer facing such a severe injury crisis, Ange Postecoglou’s side continue to disappoint the fans, and Thursday night’s dismal Premier League defeat to Chelsea was just another nail in the manager’s coffin.

There were dire displays across the pitch from the visitors, with club captain Son Heung-min perhaps being one of the most disappointing of all.

Heung-min Son for Tottenham

The South Korean superstar still has a role to play going forward but can’t be expected to start regularly next season, which might well be the club’s opinion, as reports are linking them to an international who could be a dream replacement.

Tottenham Hotspur transfer news

With how diabolically poor this season has been for Tottenham, Daniel Levy and Co have to go big in the summer and bring in a whole host of first-team quality players, regardless of who is in the dugout.

The good news is that seems to be their plan, as they have been linked with a number of serious stars, with one of the most consistent being to LOSC Lille star Jonathan David, who’s out of contract in the summer and has already amassed a tally of 33 goal involvements in 42 games.

Interestingly, the North Londoners have also been linked with Chelsea’s Noni Madueke, who didn’t start on Thursday night but has enjoyed a relatively impressive season thus far, racking up a haul of eight goals and four assists in 29 appearances, and would certainly add some more dynamism to the Lilywhites’ attack.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

However, the most exciting link of them all is to another Englishman in London, Eberechi Eze.

Yes, according to reports from Spain, Spurs have maintained their interest in the Crystal Palace star, and alongside Manchester United, they are leading the race to secure his services.

However, on top of beating the Red Devils to his signature, Levy and Co will have to stump up at least £60m to get their man.

Eberechi Eze for Crystal Palace

It would be a lot of money to spend on one player, but given Eze’s immense ability, it would undoubtedly be worth it, especially as he could even be the club’s perfect Son replacement.

Why Eze could be a dream Son replacement

So, the first thing to say is that yes, Eze’s most played position is attacking midfield, but he is no stranger to playing off the left, and when you combine his appearances in left midfield and at left wing, it comes out to 80.

Moreover, five of his ten senior England caps have come at left wing and one in left midfield, so while he has spent much of this season in the middle of the park, he’s still a natural out wide, which is vital if he is to replace Son as a regular starter next season.

With that cleared up, then, why would the Palace ace be a good replacement for the South Korean superstar?

Well, the first big bonus is that despite playing for a team outside the traditional ‘big six’, the former Queens Park Rangers’ gem has proven himself to be a reliable scorer and assister of goals.

For example, in just 31 appearances last season, the 26-year-old “wizard,” as dubbed by Declan Rice, scored 11 goals and provided six assists, which came out to an average of a goal involvement every 1.82 games.

Appearances

31

32

Minutes

2285′

2547′

Goals

11

6

Assists

6

9

Goal Involvements per Match

0.54

0.46

Minutes per Goal Involvementw

134.41′

169.8′

This year, the Greenwich-born maestro has scored six goals and provided nine assists in 32 appearances, which comes out to an average of a goal involvement every 2.13 games.

Finally, on top of his impressive level of output, the £100k-per-week dynamo’s underlying numbers also make for pleasant reading.

According to FBref, he sits in the top 3% of Premier League attacking midfielders and wingers for total shots, the top 12% for shot-creating actions, the top 14% for successful take-ons, the top 15% for key passes and more, all per 90.

Ultimately, Son is still a useful player and someone who could play a role in the squad for a few more years, but Spurs need someone more impactful and reliable to start consistently on the wing next season, some like Eze.

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Asia Cup selection: do Gill and Iyer have a chance?

Some spots are taken, but with India having played just five T20Is this year, there could be competition for the remaining positions

Shashank Kishore18-Aug-202515:24

Will Gill get a chance? Can Shreyas make a comeback?

Who will return – Gill and/or Jaiswal?

Abhishek Sharma and Sanju Samson are the incumbent opening batters, having paired up in each of India’s last 12 T20Is.Abhishek was the standout batter in the most recent T20I series India have played, against England in January. He topped the charts with 279 runs at a strike rate of 219.68, including a 54-ball 135 at Wankhede. Not to forget the left-arm spin alternative he provides – he picked up three wickets in five overs in that series.Samson has been a slightly more hit-and-miss. He struggled with injury and inconsistent form in the IPL and against England, where he was repeatedly troubled by Jofra Archer’s hard lengths and high pace. But, prior to that, Samson was sensational against South Africa and Bangladesh, hitting three centuries in five innings.With Abhishek seemingly a shoo-in, unless the selectors opt for continuity, Samson could yet miss out if Shubman Gill or Yashasvi Jaiswal is picked to open.Jaiswal was India’s back-up opener during last year’s T20 World Cup. Gill, India’s Test captain now, was a travelling reserve, but was subsequently named captain in Zimbabwe and vice-captain to Suryakumar Yadav in Sri Lanka.

The compelling case of Shreyas Iyer

With Suryakumar, Hardik Pandya and Axar Patel locked in for the middle order, two – or even three – middle-order spots remain.At No. 3, it could be a close contest between Tilak Varma, the incumbent, and Shreyas Iyer. Tilak, like Abhishek and Samson, was impressive in South Africa with two centuries and 280 runs at a strike rate of 198.48, but his IPL was a modest one: 343 runs in 13 innings at an average of 31.18 and strike rate of 138.30.Shreyas, meanwhile, lit up IPL 2025 for Punjab Kings. His strike rate of 175.07 was only behind that of Chris Gayle (2011) and Suryakumar (2023) among those with 600 or more runs in a season. Shreyas’ spin-hitting, especially, makes him a tantalising prospect.If the two are in contention for No. 3, with Suryakumar at No. 4, India could opt for a middle-order finisher as second keeper, if Samson doesn’t make the cut. In which case, Jitesh Sharma, proven in that role for Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB), could be in the mix.

Varun and Kuldeep | Varun or Kuldeep?

Kuldeep Yadav was recovering from injury at the time and missed India’s T20I series against England at the start of the year – the only T20Is India have played in 2025. In his absence, Varun Chakravarthy made a big case for himself by topping the wickets charts, his 14 wickets in five games coming at an economy rate of 7.66.That performance helped Varun make a late entry in India’s ODI squad. He was subsequently part of the Champions Trophy-winning side, in the UAE, where he and Kuldeep played as part of a four-pronged spin attack.If Varun and Kuldeep are to feature together in the XI, it’s likely India will either have to sacrifice batting depth or play just one specialist seamer, with Hardik as the second seam option, like they did at times in the Champions Trophy.

Who joins Bumrah and Arshdeep?

If fit, Jasprit Bumrah and Arshdeep Singh, India’s highest wicket-taker in T20Is, walk into the side. The third seamer’s spot could be a toss-up between Prasidh Krishna, IPL 2025’s purple cap winner, and Harshit Rana, who picked up three wickets on debut against England in January after coming in as a concussion sub for Shivam Dube.

Dube, Parag, Rinku…?

And now the lower-middle order.Nitish Kumar Reddy is recovering from injury and is unlikely to be considered. The others in the fray are Washington Sundar, the only frontline offspinner in contention, Dube, Riyan Parag and Rinku Singh. Among them, Rinku may find it hard to break in if the selectors prefer someone who can chip in with the ball.Dube has been a regular in the T20I squad when fit over the past two years, and was the highest run-getter for Chennai Super Kings (CSK) at IPL 2025. Parag, who missed the South Africa and England series, is back having recovered from a shoulder injury. But he last played nearly a year ago against Bangladesh.Two other left-field alternatives could be Ramandeep Singh, who was drafted in as Reddy’s replacement for the England T20Is, and legspinning allrounder Vipraj Nigam, who was recently part of a camp for targeted players at BCCI’s Centre of Excellence.The two had contrasting IPLs. Nigam, 20, had a breakout maiden season with Delhi Capitals, picking up 11 wickets in 14 matches. He also hit 142 runs at a strike rate of nearly 180. Ramandeep was in the side for the series against South Africa late last year, but didn’t do much, and struggled with the bat for Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR), was dropped, and ended the season with 47 runs at a strike rate of 134.28 from seven innings.

How Jos Buttler made the scoop the cornerstone of his audacious batting

This excerpt from a new book on England’s twin white-ball triumphs explores how the current limited-overs captain’s high-risk, high-reward approach to batting changed his and the team’s game

Tim Wigmore and Matt Roller23-Jun-2023Most sports dressing rooms are hierarchical; junior players naturally defer to senior ones. But when Jos Buttler first broke into the England team in 2011, just before he turned 21, a funny thing happened: the established players turned to the newcomer, wanting to know how he played his scoop.”He did it so easily that the senior players would be asking how he does it, where he puts his hands, how low he gets, how far inside the line of the ball you want to be,” recalls Andy Flower, England’s coach when Buttler debuted. “That was rare. The level of innovation in international cricket accelerated from there.”Related

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Chris Woakes first encountered Buttler in county cricket in 2010, when Buttler was 19. “He was like the wonderkid coming through,” Woakes recalls. “He played the scoop a lot: that was his shot. How he could hit sixes from the crease was another thing I remember quite vividly.”He was very pioneering. I feel like Jos – that instinct and the way he was going to play his own way – was beyond his years. Jos changed the game. He definitely changed the way England play.”To bowl to Buttler with a white ball is, in essence, to accept having one fielder fewer. The reason is his scoop, one of the most outlandish shots in the game.In 2009, when Buttler was 18, England hosted the T20 World Cup. Sri Lanka’s Tillakaratne Dilshan was Player of the Tournament after scoring three half-centuries; one shot he played stuck in Buttler’s mind more than any other. Against Australia at Trent Bridge, Dilshan unveiled what became known as the Dilscoop: facing Shane Watson’s fast-medium bowling, he got down on one knee and flicked the ball over his own head, over the wicketkeeper, and over the boundary for a one-bounce four.International batters had played similar paddle-sweeps before, but Dilshan’s resonated with Buttler. “I saw Dilshan doing it and it just made sense,” he told the in 2018. “There are no fielders there behind the keeper. If you make cricket as simple as you can, it is about hitting the ball where the fielders aren’t.”

“Jos’ instinct and the way he was going to play his own way was beyond his years. He changed the game. He definitely changed the way England play”Chris Woakes

When it was first popularised, the scoop was the embodiment of new-age ingenuity: a high-risk shot to be played only by the most impudent players. In Buttler’s hands, it has become something else: a pragmatic, high-percentage option, like most batters once considered a leg glance. When he played the scoop in T20 from 2018 until the end of 2022, according to the data analytics company CricViz, Buttler averaged 50.50 and had a strike rate of 239. No one scored more runs with the scoop in this time; indeed, since CricViz began tracking T20 matches in 2006, no batter has scored more runs with the scoop than Buttler. He also uses it to great effect in ODIs: by June 2023, he had scored 131 runs from scoops, and been dismissed just once.In essence, Buttler’s scoop is two things at once: a phenomenal shot in its own right; and, by forcing captains to use a fielder to try and cover it, a way of enhancing the rest of his game by opening up more gaps elsewhere in the field.”Every time you look up, there’s always a gap that you feel he can access,” says Chris Jordan, who has bowled to Buttler in the IPL. “That’s what makes him so difficult to bowl at.”Nathan Leamon is best known for his work as England’s analyst, but he also has one of the least enviable jobs in cricket: planning to dismiss Buttler while working for Kolkata Knight Riders. “Because I’m English, people specifically come to me and say, ‘How are we going to bowl to Jos?'” Leamon reflects. “The only suggestion is to get him out early.”The power of Buttler’s scoop is such that “You feel like you’ve only got eight fielders – and only got four on the boundary – for the whole of his innings,” Leamon explains. “You have to keep fine leg back – and quite fine – otherwise he scoops. And when he scoops, he strikes at 200-plus. Jos almost never gets out to it, and he just scores runs for fun when he plays it. He basically takes one of your fielders off the field. And if the boundary’s short, he’ll play it even when the guy’s back, and just hit it for six over his head.”Buttler has called the scoop his favourite shot – a judgement rooted in the shot’s effectiveness more than its audacity, as he told in 2019: “There’s never a fielder behind the wicketkeeper. Even if you don’t play it, the bowler is factoring in that you might.”Buttler: “If you make cricket as simple as you can, it is about hitting the ball where the fielders aren’t”•PA Photos/Getty ImagesAnd so understanding the scoop is essential to understanding Buttler’s greatness. The scoop is a window into Buttler’s art, a magnificent stroke in its own right – and, such is its effectiveness, a shot that enhances the entire rest of his game.As a fast bowler runs in, Buttler shimmies his left shoulder, making his body as loose and relaxed as possible. When he scoops, his right foot acts as a decoy; he steps outside leg stump before pushing himself back towards the off side. “I’ve worked on making it a smooth movement,” he told Sky Sports in 2018. “That backwards press gets me into a nice rhythm, almost trying to roll underneath the ball.”Buttler watches the ball closely onto the face of his bat, avoiding using his wrists unless facing a slower ball. “I’m trying to let you [the bowler] bounce the ball off my bat. I’m trying to use your pace,” he said. If Buttler uses his wrists to flick the ball up over the keeper, “my timing and everything else has to be perfect. Whereas if I’m just holding the bat there… I’ll use all your pace.”Unlike Dilshan, Buttler stays upright while playing the scoop. Batters play most shots on instinct, but the scoop is premeditated; by staying upright, Buttler can play it to short balls as well as full ones. Really, Buttler doesn’t have one scoop but several: by holding the bat at a different angle, he has also developed a reverse scoop, over third man rather than fine leg.AB de Villiers, the legendary South African batter and Buttler’s childhood hero, was an adroit exponent of the scoop himself. Buttler’s skill playing it, says de Villiers, lies in his control. “He gets in a really good position, and his head is still,” he explains:”He has his eyes parallel to the ground and gets his head out of the way; you never want to get your head in line with the ball knowing that if you miss it, you’re going to get knocked out.”He never tries to over-hit it. It’s just a little flick to help it along, to use the pace of the bowler. He approaches it in a very basic kind of way. Sometimes, he gets a bit lower; sometimes, he stands upright, almost expecting a hard-length delivery. It’s an instinctive shot, and a shot where you almost read the plans of the bowler and the captain, knowing what they’re trying to do.”Buttler’s scoop relies on his hand-eye coordination, nurtured playing racket sports as a boy. He developed the shot through his creative, meticulous practice – he is renowned for his experimentation, using different grips, angles of the bat and moving his feet when training against yorkers.

“There are no fielders there behind the keeper. If you make cricket as simple as you can, it is about hitting the ball where the fielders aren’t”Buttler on his reasoning behind playing the scoop

When facing Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga, with his low, slingy action, Buttler would put his hands lower on the handle to create an angle to attack the ball with the middle of his bat, rather than merely dig it out; he would also change his grip, opening the face to angle wide yorkers past third man. Buttler’s relatively light bat gives him control, enabling him to whip his hands through the ball.Unlike most English batters, Buttler does not play with a high front elbow – once again, highlighting the role of unstructured free play in his development. “I have a very natural, bottom-handed grip,” he told Sky Sports in 2018. “That’s just me being myself… I’ve found a way to accelerate my bat through the ball, and that comes quite naturally with the way I hold my bat.”Whether playing the scoop or more conventional shots, there is a smooth, uncluttered simplicity to Buttler’s approach. “The thing that stands out the most for me with Jos’ batting is the power he creates with a relatively short and compact backlift,” de Villiers observes.”There’s not a lot of twirls, twists and turns in his backlift, but he always finds a way to surprise the fielders and the bowlers with the amount of power that he creates by playing it late under his eyes and letting his forearms and wrists do the rest.”

****

Over 2021 and 2022, Buttler attained new heights of T20 batting. Across the two World Cups, he scored more runs than anyone else, averaging 61.75 with a strike rate of 148. In between times, Buttler hit four centuries in an IPL season, equalling Kohli’s 2016 record.By April 2023, 60 players from the 12 Test-playing nations had made 500 runs in T20 internationals when opening. Of this group, Buttler had the second-best average and the fourth-best strike rate. T20 batters have traditionally been on a continuum between consistent players and destructive ones; Buttler defies this trade-off.Buttler had played 44 T20Is as an opener, averaging 49.20 with a strike-rate of 152 – both significantly higher than when he batted in the middle order. As in his scoop shot, he had found a way to combine an artist’s audacity with an accountant’s reliability.He does not stand out for his record alone; his style is just as distinctive. England were so long the tortoises in white-ball cricket. In Buttler, they have found a hare – a player at the heart of the game’s evolution.Bloomsbury”One of the incredible things about Jos Buttler’s career was that it’s very rare an England player pushes the envelope in any sport,” Ed Smith, England’s national selector from 2018-21, observes. “Think of the leading British sportsman in other sports in the last 20 years. Even when they’ve been exceptional it’s seldom been on the grounds of creativity, originality. In the case of some of England’s white-ball players, Jos being pre-eminent, they were doing things that made the rest of the world think, ‘Wow, let’s do that.'”Brian Lara’s status as one of the greatest batters in history is unquestionable. Yet, after watching the T20 World Cup in 2022, he recognised just how much the art of batting had evolved since his international retirement in 2007.”The game has moved on,” Lara told us. “A lot of people say, ‘This guy from the past is a much better batter.’ You look at the shots that these guys are playing now. It’s incredible what they’re doing. I must say that the game has evolved, has developed, and these guys are crazy, crazy good. If I was to transport myself into the spirit, I feel yes, I would survive, I’d do well, but I’d love to develop a few more shots, the ramp and the reverse-sweep.”Unprompted, Lara picked out one moment that captured the essence of modern batting: Buttler in the 2022 T20 World Cup final, reacting to a brilliant spell from Naseem Shah by scooping – that shot again – a delivery outside off stump over fine leg for six.”You don’t do things like that,” said Lara with a disbelieving smile. Jos Buttler does.White Hot: The Inside Story of England Cricket’s Double World Champions

Why recruiting to maximise home advantage is the next stage of T20 development

Shouting at the umpires can only do so much but ground dimensions are firmly on analysts’ radars

Cameron Ponsonby23-Aug-2021Over the last ten years of the Blast (or its predecessor, the FLt20), of the 40 quarter-finals played, exactly 20 have been won by the home side and 20 by the away.That feels weird. Surely, even in a format as short and volatile as T20, there must be some form of advantage to playing at home? Otherwise, what’s all the fuss about in securing a home quarter?In 2005, the international bestseller narrowed down home advantage essentially to how close your fans are to the referee; if they yell at him or her enough, human nature will kick in and they will give you more close decisions than they won’t. Basically, peer pressure and bullying works. Which is nice.But that study related mainly to sports such as American football, soccer, ice hockey, basketball, etc. Sports where playing dimensions and surfaces are standardised and not, as is the case in cricket, sports where pitches can be doctored or where outfields can vary greatly in size and shape.For instance, at Nottinghamshire’s Trent Bridge, the new stand that runs parallel to Bridgford Road cuts across the outfield in a way that means the playing area resembles a circle that someone has snipped an edge off. It creates a very short part of the boundary that, combined with an excellent batting surface, leads to high scoring contests.Related

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On Wednesday, Nottinghamshire will host Hampshire in the second quarter-final. They have lost just one game of T20 cricket at home over the last two years.”We know the dimensions of our ground”, Nottinghamshire captain, Steven Mullaney, says, “and we know how we want to play cricket at Trent Bridge.””Batters come here and they fancy it [the short boundary], but at the same time their bowlers come here and they’re not used to defending it. So I think that is an advantage.”It’s a sentiment that Lancashire’s spin consultant Carl Crowe agrees with.”It’s about adapting,” Crowe says, ahead of his side’s away quarter-final at Somerset. “That’s as a team and as an individual. The best teams and the teams that win the tournament are the best at that. Yes, you’ve got half your games at home but you’ve also got half your games away that are just as important.”Both Mullaney and Crowe express a notion that, rather than home advantage being anything explicitly tangible, it’s just something that lingers over a game. You’d rather play at home because of course you would. You sleep in your own bed, you’re comfortable on arrival, it’s your fans not theirs, the club gets the gate receipts, you know the woman at the gate and you know the bloke at the bar. It’s, well, home.And currently in the Blast, home advantage doesn’t always seem to exist at all. This season was the first group stage since 2017 to see more home wins than away. However, whilst at first appearing like a standout statistic, it doesn’t quite account for the fact that in general good teams are good (so win home and away), and bad teams are bad (so lose home and away). But, it paints a picture similar to a sentiment expressed by Mullaney.”I don’t think [advantage] is the right word”, he says, “Obviously it is a home advantage but I don’t think it’s an advantage as in – it’s not a manipulative advantage – it’s just that you know what to do at your ground.”But, shouldn’t it be a manipulated advantage? It’s your house after all, so why not play to your rules?Recruitment in particular seems to be an open goal where teams could maximise their chances at home. If you play at a small ground, recruit high end boundary hitters. Big outfields? Need people who can run two. Spin-friendly pitches? Need batters who can play against spin.So how much do teams tend to factor in ground dimensions and quirks to their recruitment?”At the moment, not a lot,” Somerset analyst Scott Thomas says. “But that’s definitely my biggest plan for the next three-to-four years.””I just did my Masters dissertation on that kind of stuff using player impact ratings in T20 cricket. I compared and contrasted how valuable overseas players are. How do they impact games of cricket in a positive way and not being worried about stuff like averages or old school traditional measures, but how do they win you games of cricket full-stop.”That’s my winter’s work because the summer is just so busy. Even if that’s trying to change some opinion in the club about how recruitment could be done a bit better, because I think cricket is so far behind in that sense.”There are obvious difficulties facing counties in this regard that aren’t faced by, say, a franchise side, whether that be in the Hundred or the IPL. Counties aren’t exclusively T20 teams and players are often developed as opposed to recruited. But, it is on the radar of analysts, meaning it will be on the radar of the game as a whole before long. And who knows, in five years’ time the statistics next to the home wins column may look very different.In the meantime, if you’re a home fan at one of this week’s quarter-finals, just yell at the ump from a 100 yards away. Worth a go.

How Vladdy Guerrero and the Blue Jays Got Their Groove Back

SEATTLE – Six ground balls do not make a national crisis, unless you happen to be the recently minted franchise player of Canada’s only Major League Baseball team staring at the eighth level of Dante’s version of Hell, which is to say not quite as low as it gets but just about there. In Dante’s nine levels of Hell, the penultimate level is Fraud. In the American League Championship Series, it is a near-must win in Game 3, having lost the first two games at home.

The Toronto Blue Jays were descending fast, marked most absurdly by going 1-for-42 in the third through ninth innings of the opening two games. Almost as troubling was how their bedrock hitting star, Vlad Guerrero Jr., after terrorizing the Yankees in the ALDS, suddenly had devolved into a ground ball out machine. Guerrero was 0-for-7, including six groundouts.

“Vlad can hit anybody’s fastball,” said Blue Jays bench coach Don Mattingly. “Anybody’s. He’s a great hitter with power, not the other way around. But sometimes, like when the crowd is really loud and the moment gets big, you can see by his body language he wants to do so well he gets out front a little bit. That’s when the pull-side grounders happen.”

Hell apparently hath no fury like the best hitting team in baseball and its $500 million slugger getting shut down at home. The Blue Jays got back into the series with a 13–4 bombardment of the Mariners Wednesday. All Guerrero did was become just the second player in postseason history to get on base in all five plate appearances while racking up three extra-base hits and nine total bases with his team trailing in the series. The other was Babe Ruth in Game 4 of the 1926 World Series with the Yankees trailing St. Louis, two games to one. 

Blue Jays make ’em fly—fast

Game 3 was seismic. Toronto walloped Seattle pitches with percussive loudness never seen in the postseason, at least in this decade of recording how hard baseballs get hit. The Jays smashed 11 hits at 100 mph or more, breaking the record of 10 by the 2018 Red Sox and 2020 Dodgers.

Guerrero accounted for four of those hits at more than 102 mph, joining Kerry Carpenter (2025 ALDS Game 5) as the only players to smash four hits so hard in a postseason game. The tally of Guerrero’s night of whistling baseballs throughout T-Mobile Park read like someone fiddling with the FM radio dial looking for a decent tune: 102.8 (single), 104.9 (double), 106.4 (home run), 108.0 (double).

It was a whiplash of a turnaround in this series. It was not, however, any surprise to David Popkins, the Toronto hitting coach who, after getting dumped by the Twins last October, helped transform the Blue Jays from 19th in batting average last year to first this year, as well as from 23rd in runs to fourth.

“I felt good about today,” Popkins said about the Game 3 matchup. “The guys have been resilient all year. Our back was against the wall and that’s when this team plays really well. I always like to compare hitting to fighting. And when guys get a little paralyzed in the ring, sometimes the only thing to do is put your head down and start throwing some haymakers.”

Toronto takes control of the zone

The inside story of how the Jays and Vlad turned it around begins with how Mariners pitchers, who take pride in throwing strikes and controlling counts, shoved with impunity against Toronto in Games 1 and 2. Seattle flooded the strike zone with 57% of their pitches, well above the MLB average of 50.7%. Popkins knew the attack rate would remain high in Game 3 with Seattle starting George Kirby, a fastball-pumping sharpshooter who broke the record for the best strikeout-to-walk rate through a pitcher’s first four seasons that had stood for .

Popkins took inventory of those first two games and came up with a plan to counterpunch. It would mean being even more aggressive on the offensive side than the Mariners had been on the pitching side.

“We talked about trying to scare them out of the zone,” Popkins said. 

All 18 hits for Toronto came three or fewer pitches into an at-bat, an amazing display of dictating a game. Mission accomplished.

“Yeah,” Popkins said. “They’ve been attacking us in the zone, trying to induce weak contact. So, they want to fill it up. … The counter to that is to punish 'em when they do that. So that was the goal tonight. 

“We were just ready to do damage on something. We knew they were going to fill it up. They do a good job attacking the zone and they were getting really comfortable with filling it up on the halves [of the plate] and not nibbling. We had to make sure that they are a little more careful next time and attack one of the edges and it’ll get us into better counts in the future.

 “But yeah, we were just looking to put things in play early and today we were looking to do some damage on something.”

Guerrero’s secret adjustment

Guerrero needed to make his own adjustment. Guerrero has the flattest swing in the game. He comes at the baseball with an attack angle of just 1°. The major league average is 10°, right in the middle of the ideal window espoused by Ted Williams (between 5° and 15°).  In ALCS Games 1 and 2 it was down to -6° for his seven outs. He was swinging down on the baseball. Baseball’s second-best hitter against fastballs in the zone (.370; only Aaron Judge was better) went 0-for-4 against 14 heaters in the zone in the first two games.

Moreover, Guerrero’s contact point on his outs was five inches deeper than his regular season average, mostly because the Mariners were getting him out on pitches away. Here are the pitch locations for his seven outs:

MLB

Before Game 3, Popkins and Guerrero had to find a way to get the ball off the ground. I asked Popkins if Guerrero made an adjustment.

“Yeah, yeah,” Popkins said. “He made an adjustment, not necessarily with his swing at all. His swing was the same, just kind of some of the stuff he was exposing to himself before the game to give him a little bit … you know, [make it] a little bit easier for him to elevate the ball. And he was able to do that.”

“So, it was a swing adjustment?” I asked him.

“No, it wasn’t,” Popkins said. “It .. you know … the swing is adjusted by that, but he wasn’t thinking about his swing there. It was more so just what he was exposed to before the game. I’ll keep that private. But yeah, it was a good adjustment that he made and it worked today.”

Guerrero’s four hits all came on pitches middle/down and in the zone (two fastballs and two curveballs).

“It feels great, obviously,” Guerrero said about his night, “but for me, it’s just about winning. I’m very happy that we won the game. I never think about myself. I think about the whole thing, and we just win the game, and I’m very happy for it.”

Seattle still searching for penultimate ALCS win

The Mariners, especially after Julio Rodriguez sent the place into a frenzy with a two-run first inning homer, missed an opportunity to get within one game of their first pennant for the first time in franchise history. They have played five ALCS games in franchise history while two wins from the World Series. They have lost them all.

Seattle still leads the series, two games to one, but the ALCS has a whole new look with Guerrero untethered from that two-game groundball festival that caused such national angst. Back in 1992, before World Series Game 2, with the Blue Jays one game down to the Braves, a Marine Corps color guard accidently displayed the Canadian flag upside down, an international symbol of distress. After much uproar and bruised national pride, the Blue Jays restored order by winning that night with a ninth-inning rally. They took the series in six games.

Guerrero’s ground balls may have been an international sign of distress in baseball protocol. But at least for one night, the crisis has passed. And Treachery, the ninth level of Hell, has been averted.

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