Frank’s a big fan: “Fantastic” £65m star has become Spurs’ top January target

Tottenham Hotspur have identified a “fantastic” forward as their top target ahead of the January transfer window, with Thomas Frank personally an admirer.

Spurs keen on strengthening attack in January

Tottenham brought their five-game winless run to an end on Saturday afternoon, with Frank getting one over his former club by securing a 2-0 win against Brentford, and the manager was happy with his side’s performance on the front foot.

The Dane said: “I think it was a very good performance overall. A quite complete performance. Offensively we looked a big threat going forward. We were much more dynamic and producing good chances and good moments. I really like that.”

That said, it is still too early to suggest Spurs have turned a corner, considering just how poor they have looked going forward at times this season, recording an xG of just 0.1 in the home defeat against Chelsea at the beginning of last month.

Some of Frank’s summer additions have also struggled, including Randal Kolo Muani, who received a SofaScore match rating of just 6.1 against Brentford, the lowest of any Tottenham player, and the Frenchman is still searching for his first Premier League goal.

As such, the north Londoners may look to bring in some more attacking firepower in the upcoming transfer window, and a report from TEAMtalk has now revealed that AFC Bournemouth star Antoine Semenyo has been identified as their top target.

Semenyo, who has a £65m release clause in his contract, is being targeted by a whole host of Premier League clubs, with Manchester United and Manchester City also keen, so Spurs may have to fend off interest from elsewhere to get a deal over the line.

At this point, it is unclear who the Ghanaian would prefer to sign for, but national team manager Otto Addo has suggested he needs to take the ‘next step’ in his career soon.

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Spurs are lining up a move for a new centre-forward.

1 ByDominic Lund Dec 7, 2025 "Fantastic" Semenyo lauded by Frank

The Bournemouth star has been catching the eye in the Premier League for quite some time now, with Frank saying last season: “Semenyo can play wherever he wants to play – he’s a fantastic player. I think he’s been the best individual player for Bournemouth this season.”

The 25-year-old then went on to make a flying start to the current campaign, although he hasn’t been at his best of late, having failed to register a goal or an assist in his last six outings in the Premier League.

That said, the former Bristol City man is still on course to record a better combined goal and assist tally than last season, having displayed year-on-year improvement since first becoming a key player in the 2023-24 campaign.

Season

Premier League appearances

Goal contributions

2023-24

33

11

2024-25

37

17

2025-26

14

9

Semenyo has proven that he is now ready to make the move to a bigger club, and Tottenham should trigger the £65m release clause when the January transfer window opens, in light of their attacking woes.

Smith: England's all-out pace may not be ideal Ashes attack

Australia’s stand-in captain says bowlers who nibble the ball around can be tough on the current type of pitches

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff13-Nov-20252:17

How important is the first Ashes Test for England?

Steve Smith has hinted England’s pace battery could be the wrong form of attack for the Ashes, believing nibbling seamers would pose a bigger threat on Australia’s lively pitches.England have arrived for the summer with their quickest bowling line-up this century, with almost the entire cartel able to reach in excess of 145kph/90mph.Spearheaded by Mark Wood and Jofra Archer, the tourists also have Gus Atkinson, Josh Tongue, Brydon Carse as support acts alongside captain Ben Stokes.Related

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It’s a far cry from England’s usual attack in Australia, with the now-retired James Anderson and Stuart Broad long relying on swing and seam.And despite the hype around England’s quicks, Smith believes the tourists’ timing could be off and a more traditional seamer would be tougher to face on current wickets.”Those sort of nibblers can be quite tricky,” Smith, who will captain Australia in Perth, said. “So they might have got things the wrong way around, if that makes sense, in terms of the pace from previous years.”But obviously they’ve got those guys at their disposal now. They probably weren’t fit, ready or old enough a few years back.”Anderson’s Test career was brought to an end in 2024 when he was given a farewell outing against West Indies and Broad retired during the final Test of the 2023 Ashes.Chris Woakes dislocated his shoulder in the final Test against India in early August which ended his Ashes hopes and he has since retired from international cricket.Steven Smith has been in excellent from ahead of the Ashes•Getty ImagesSmith joked this week that Australian wickets were now so green they “have branches hanging off them”.Asked directly if it was easier to face all-out pace than seamers on home decks, Smith indicated that was the case.”If you can do both, that’s a good skill,” Smith said. “But sometimes the slower guys are almost harder to play on those wickets where you have to make the pace.”It’s going to be different. But I think we’ve got plenty of players that play fast bowling well, and it’s going to be a good challenge.”Smith’s comments come after Mitchell Starc warned England that it would not be easy for the quicks to charge in all summer, given the harder surfaces in Australia.Smith will enter the series in form, with scores of 118, 57 and 56 not out in his three Sheffield Shield innings for New South Wales. Fresh off a six-week break in New York ahead of the summer, Smith said almost upon landing back home he would need a few hits to find his rhythm.That form is now undeniable, even if he briefly “lost his hands” while batting for NSW in their 300-run drubbing to Victoria at the SCG.”I felt awful my first 20 runs [on Wednesday],” Smith said. “Lost my hands for a little bit there and then found them back after that, so that was good.”It was more because I was changing bats, trying to figure out which one I like, to be honest. And they all felt a little bit different. I think I’ve settled on one, so it felt good.”But it was nice to just be able to spend some time in the middle, get some rhythm and feel in a good place.”

Marc-Andre ter Stegen is back! Goalkeeper returns to Barcelona squad as seven-month absence ends following dramatic summer feud

Marc-Andre ter Stegen has finally been included in the Barcelona matchday squad for their Champions League clash against Eintracht Frankfurt, marking the end of a nightmare seven-month exile that has been plagued by a serious injury and intense speculation regarding a behind-the-scenes conflict with the club's hierarchy over his long-term future.

Ter Stegen makes his return

The club released their official squad list for this week's encounter in the Champions League. There, amidst the usual names of Robert Lewandowski, Lamine Yamal and the recently impressive Marcus Rashford, was the name of the German shot stopper, declared fit and ready to return to the fold.

It has been a long and winding road back for Ter Stegen, who has not featured for the Catalan giants since May, having had to undergo surgery during the symmer. However, his physical rehabilitation has played out against a backdrop of reported tension, with the summer months dominated by rumours of a rift between the goalkeeper and the club's board.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportThe summer of war between Ter Stegen and Barca

The medical green light was officially communicated by the club this week, but it was Hansi Flick's decision to include him in the squad to face Eintracht Frankfurt that confirmed the goalkeeper's rehabilitation is complete.

However, he remains unlikely to feature for the Catalan club after enduring the most difficult period of Ter Stegen’s decade-long stay in Catalonia. The injury required surgery and a gruelling recovery process, forcing him to watch from the sidelines as Barcelona navigated a turbulent summer transfer window and a blistering start to the new season. 

Ter Stegen’s return brings an end to a saga that threatened to destroy his legacy at the club. The "dramatic feud" of the summer was one of the most explosive storylines of the transfer window. Following his injury, reports emerged that Barcelona intended to use his long-term absence to register Joan Garcia outside of the salary cap limits.

The situation deteriorated rapidly when it was reported that Ter Stegen initially refused to sign the necessary medical paperwork to authorise the move, leading to threats of disciplinary action from the board and the temporary stripping of his captaincy. The standoff was described by local media as "total war," with the club actively trying to force him out and the player digging his heels in, citing his contract and his family's settled life in the area.

While the legal threats eventually subsided, the scars of that conflict remain. His inclusion in the squad on Tuesday is the first step towards normalcy, but the relationship between player and board is understood to be fragile at best.

The rise of Joan Garcia has been the silver lining to the chaos. Since arriving for €25 million from Espanyol, the Catalan keeper has been a revelation. His shot-stopping ability and calmness with the ball at his feet have won over the Culers, many of whom had grown frustrated with Ter Stegen’s perceived decline prior to his injury.

Garcia’s form has justified the club’s aggressive pursuit of him. With four clean sheets in La Liga and a string of "game-winning" saves, he has made the number one shirt his own. For Ter Stegen, the challenge is no longer just about fitness; it is about proving he is still relevant in a team that has learned to live without him.

A crucial European night

Barcelona welcome Eintracht Frankfurt to Camp Nou for a pivotal Champions League tie. The Bundesliga outfit are known for their intensity and their travelling support, famously taking over the stadium in the Europa League in 2022 – a memory that still haunts the Catalan side. Flick’s side are looking to cement their place in the automatic qualification spots for the round of 16.

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Getty Images SportWhat comes next?

Ter Stegen’s immediate future is now the subject of intense speculation. With the World Cup in North America just months away, the German knows he cannot afford to spend the rest of the season on the bench if he wants to be part of Julian Nagelsmann’s plans.

Reports in Germany suggest that a January exit could be on the cards if he fails to dislodge Garcia in the coming weeks. However, for now, he is back in the fold. Whether he is greeted as a returning hero or a relic of the past by the Camp Nou crowd on Tuesday night remains to be seen

Arteta must drop Arsenal star who looks like he belongs in the Emery era

Arsenal’s 18-game unbeaten run is over. In that time, they have defeated their arch-rivals 4-1, defeated one of the most in-form sides in Europe in the shape of Bayern Munich 3-1. They have also been to St James’ Park and to Stamford Bridge without losing.

It’s typical, therefore, that the man who Mikel Arteta succeeded, Unai Emery, brought it to an unsavoury end.

This game will always be Emery’s cup final and that showed on Saturday. The Gunners were far from their best. They looked tired, shaky at the back. A 2-1 loss occurred and after Manchester City won later in the day, the gap at the top of the table was narrowed to just two points.

How Emery got the better of Mikel Arteta

A week ago, Arsenal looked like the runaway leaders in the Premier League. They’ll definitely win the title, some cried. Well, how quickly things can change.

While Arteta’s side are still in the driver’s seat to win it next May, they will need to improve on their last two away games with Chelsea and Villa.

This match was classic Emery. He loves facing his former employers and despite amassing plenty of possession in the Midlands, Arsenal seemed powerless to stop the Villans.

While Arsenal were missing Gabriel Magalhaes and William Saliba due to injury, Villa’s swift transitions, counter-attacking football and their willingness to get runners in behind really made life difficult for Arteta’s side.

Ollie Watkins – who was once the subject of a bid from the Gunners – didn’t score but several times he was able to get in behind. Jurrien Timber, who was playing at centre-back, was made to look rather silly.

Watkins could well have scored the opening goal of the game when he got in behind Timber and Piero Hincapie, turning them inside out before forcing a strong save from David Raya.

The combination play between him and Morgan Rogers, as well as Youri Tielemans, posed a colossal threat. Between them, they made three key passes.

Usually an offensive line would be met with a brick wall in the shape of Saliba and Gabriel but Arsenal’s centre-backs were a shadow of what we’ve come to expect with Arteta’s usual centre-back pairing on the sidelines with injury again.

That said, it was a moment of pinball that led to the winning goal. Arsenal failed to clear their lines and despite throwing several bodies in the way, Emilio Buendia was the calmest man in the Midlands, firing the ball past Raya. Bedlam erupted inside the stadium.

Arsenal's summer signing costs them big time

The defensive line of Arsenal has undoubtedly been the best in the country this season. Before their clash with the Villans, the Gunners had shipped just seven goals in the top-flight. Make that nine now.

Any team in world football would miss players of the calibre of Saliba and Gabriel but the league leaders have found out in recent matches just how tricky life is when both of them are unavailable.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Cristian Mosquera was forced off with injury in the 2-0 win against Brentford in midweek which meant Arteta was forced to select Timber at centre-half at Villa Park. Smaller, not as physical, and keen to go to ground, he was no match for Watkins and Co.

Equally, Hincapie – who could sign permanently in a £45m deal – endured a topsy-turvy afternoon in what was just his fourth start in the Premier League. The Ecuador international is a physical beast but arguably lacks the same level of composure we’ve so often seen from Gabriel and Saliba in recent years.

He is, of course, new to the English game but his performance levels in the last two away fixtures have left something to be desired.

Against Chelsea last week, he and Mosquera looked rather unsettled and nervous. Fair enough, really, particularly when you consider they had only played together as a pairing once before.

Hincapie improved against Brentford and for the most part against Villa, he looked strong. Against a robust offensive unit, he won all three of his aerial duels, made a whopping seven clearances, six recoveries and won 50% of his ground duels.

This was not a bad performance until one mistake cost Arsenal the game. It was a moment you’d typically associate with the later days of Arsene Wenger’s reign, or even the Unai Emery era.

During those years, you’d associate Arsenal’s defenders with lapses in concentration and mistakes. Hincapie wasn’t riddled with errors on Saturday but his blunder deep into injury time cost Arsenal.

In the words of The Athletic’s Aaron Catterson-Reid, he has been “pretty poor since Spurs” and while that may well feel harsh, the inability to clear his lines late on was certainly poor.

Mins played

90

90

Touches

66

68

Pass accuracy

94%

82%

Tackles won

3/3

1/3

Interceptions

2

1

Clearances

3

7

Recoveries

4

6

Duels won

4/8

6/9

GOAL’s Charles Watts handed the defender a 6/10 rating at full-time and called out his lack of awareness at the end. He had a chance to clear his lines, but instead ran the ball out of play. It was from the Villa throw-in that they ultimately scored the winner.

It felt insignificant when it happened but there was a lack of game awareness. It was like something out of the Emery era. Saliba and Gabriel wouldn’t do that. The dogged defence Arteta has created wouldn’t do that. It could subsequently cost him his place in the team against Brugge in midweek.

Perhaps it’s time to see what Riccardo Calafiori can do at centre-half with Myles Lewis-Skelly at left-back?

Fewer touches than Raya & only 7 passes: Arsenal star must be dropped

Arsenal’s title charge got a whole lot trickier after defeat to Aston Villa at Villa Park.

ByAngus Sinclair Dec 7, 2025

Warner open to taking on middle-order role for Thunder

Asked about an opening partnership with Sam Konstas, Warner revealed tactical discussions are taking place

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff13-Dec-2025David Warner has revealed he might bat down the order at times in the BBL to give the Sydney Thunder line-up a different option.At every level, Warner has opened for almost his entire career: 382 out of 423 T20 innings. But asked about young Thunder opener Sam Konstas and batting together, Warner said “that’s if I open”.Related

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“That’s more for a match-up and strategic point of view,” Warner said. “We don’t have that left-hander in the middle [order] that we’ve been looking for. It’s a conversation we’re having at the moment.”Warner added that Matt Gilkes could be an option while Nic Maddinson and Blake Nikitaras are other left handers in Thunder’s squad. Last season they had West Indian Sherfane Rutherford although he only made 74 runs in six innings.Warner also called on Konstas to be brave and back himself as he tries to force his way into the Australian team again.A run of low scores at the start of the domestic season cruelled Konstas’ hopes of his first Ashes series. But he scored a Sheffield Shield century and a 50 last week.”The best form of currency is runs and he’s doing that at the moment. When you do get thrown in the limelight, it can be a deer in the headlights,” Warner said. “You can get overwhelmed and sucked into the hype around everything. But he has great support around him that will keep him level-headed.”Warner also said the best practice for Konstas would be in games, adding about his shot selection: “You just have to be brave.”The Thunder captain said it was on the team as well to help Konstas find his way.”You just have to allow him to keep playing his natural game,” he said. He had his taste of Test cricket last year, he probably got a lot of advice, as you do as a youngster. But as a youngster you have to try to take on board what you think is required for you.”You have to stick true to what you believe in and how you go about your game. He might have changed things. For us, it’s about protecting him and making sure he’s enjoying the game.”Thunder aim to go one better after losing last season’s final to Hobart.”The way we played, we didn’t expect to make the final. We were very scrappy, we won a lot of close games,” Warner said. “We didn’t play a complete game … there [which] was a bit of a surprise – but it wasn’t a surprise in terms of the way we’re passionate about our team.”He said their season opener next Tuesday in Hobart against Hurricanes was not about revenge.”I want the guys to look at it as making a statement to the rest of the BBL,” Warner said. “Each season, what’s important is that we rock up with the same attitude and … what can we do better?”

Chelsea women's player ratings vs Roma: Wieke Kaptein and Johanna Rytting Kaneryd impress as Blues blow Italians away in Champions League cruise

Chelsea cruised to an emphatic 6-0 win over Roma in the Champions League on Wednesday. An own goal set the Blues on their way to victory before Johanna Rytting Kaneryd teed up Wieke Kaptein and added a goal of her own to put the hosts in control at the break. Substitutes Sjoeke Nusken and Maika Hamano extended Chelsea's lead in the second half before Lucy Bronze wrapped up the win in some style late on.

Roma started the game in positive fashion, but went behind in unfortunate circumstances when Sandy Baltimore fired in a cross from the left which beat Sam Kerr but not defender Valentina Bergamaschi, who thumped a header past her own goalkeeper with only 13 minutes on the clock.

Chelsea promptly took control and added a second through Kaptein. A well-worked move saw Keira Walsh ping a glorious diagonal ball through to Rytting Kaneryd to head back across goal for Kaptein to drill home for 2-0.

Rytting Kaneryd was involved again just before half-time as Chelsea put the game out of Roma’s reach. Veerle Burman got the Blues going with an incisive pass through to Niamh Charles to run onto and deliver into the box. Kerr saw her shot from close range parried only as far as Rytting Kaneryd, who fired high into the net at the far post.

With Chelsea 3-0 up at the break, manager Sonia Bompastor made three changes by sending on Lexi Potter, Nusken, and Hamano and saw the Blues win a penalty in the opening minutes of the second period. Substitute Nusken won the kick and promptly despatched the penalty to extend Chelsea's lead and make it 4-0.

Yet Chelsea remained hungry for goals and simply kept on attacking. Hamano added Chelsea's fifth after good work from fellow substitute Guro Reiten before Bronze sealed the victory with an outrageous effort in the dying minutes.

GOAL rates Chelsea's players from Stamford Bridge…

Getty Images SportGoalkeeper & Defence

Livia Peng (7/10):

Didn't have much to do in truth, but did put in a crucial challenge to deny Pandini in the first half and made a late block to preserve her clean sheet.

Lucy Bronze (8/10):

Showed her experience up against Pandini and Pilgrim, who got very little out of the right-back. Grabbed Chelsea's sixth of the night with a brilliant effort that may well have been a cross but certainly thrilled the home fans.

Millie Bright (7/10):

Solid at the back and played some dangerous balls forward.

Veerle Burman (8/10):

A really impressive showing. Very strong defensively and played a brilliant pass through to Charles to send Chelsea away for the third goal.

Niamh Charles (8/10):

Another player who enjoyed herself against Roma. Had a fine battle with former team-mate Babajide and grabbed an assist for the third.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportMidfield

Catarina Macario (6/10):

Lost a few balls early on but also produced some incisive passes and put in a great cross in for Kerr who somehow managed to miss from close range. One of three changes at half-time with Chelsea already 3-0 up.

Keira Walsh (7/10):

Set up the second goal with a wonderful diagonal ball that opened Roma up. Another player given a breather with the game won at the break.

Wieke Kaptein (8/10):

Fired home Chelsea's second of the night with fine finish and might have scored a second but put an effort just over the bar.

Getty Images SportAttack

Johanna Rytting Kaneryd (8/10):

Teed up Chelsea's second goal in fine style with a header back across goal. Also bagged the third with an emphatic finish from close range.

Sam Kerr (7/10):

Missed a couple of good chances but was heavily involved in everything. Lovely dummy to allow Kaptein to score Chelsea's second. 

Sandy Baltimore (7/10):

Great ball in from the left which Bergamaschi headed home to gift Chelsea the lead. Caused problems down the left throughout the first half before being replaced at the break.

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Subs & Manager

Lexi Potter (7/10):

A really positive showing after coming on in the second half. Could have scored but was denied a first Chelsea goal by goalkeeper Lukasova.

Sjoeke Nusken (8/10):

Came on at the start of the second half and made a real impact. Won a penalty with her first involvement and made no mistake from the spot. Might have had a second but blazed over.

Maika Hamano(7/10):

Finished off Roma with a easy finish after good work from Reiten.

Oriane Jean-François (7/10):

Had a shot blocked with her first touch and put in some good challenges. 

Guro Reiten (7/10):

Replaced Kerr for the final stages and unselfishly set up Hermano for Chelsea's fifth.

Sonia Bompastor (8/10):

A fairly perfect evening for the Chelsea boss, who saw her team completely outclass Roma. Was able to rest players with her team already 3-0 up at the break and saw her substitutes impress in the second half. Will also be pleased to see Kerr get 70 minutes under the belt.

Multiple Contenders Linked to White Sox' Outfielder at MLB Trade Deadline

It's been no secret that White Sox outfielder Luis Robert Jr. is a prime candidate to be traded this summer. With the trade deadline now just weeks away, those talks have reportedly been heating up of late as contenders begin to look to make some roster upgrades.

MLB insider Jon Heyman reported Sunday for the NY Post that as many as eight teams have inquired about Robert, including the likes of the Mets, Royals, Padres, Dodgers and Phillies. Of those five teams, four would be in the playoffs if the season ended today, while the Royals remain hopeful of pushing for the postseason in the second half.

Robert has struggled in 2025, something he's admitted may impact his market at the deadline. It seems that there's still significant interest in the 27-year-old, who's slashing .189/.275/.322 with nine home runs, 34 RBIs and 22 stolen bases. He owns an unsightly OPS+ of 67, though he remains a threat on the base path when he does manage to get on.

Any team trading for him would be banking on his ability to turn things around and rediscover his past form in the batter's box. Robert is just two seasons removed from a 2023 campaign in which he launched 38 home runs and 80 RBIs while making his lone All-Star appearance. While he's looked a far cry from that version of himself in 2025, a change of scenery could be exactly what he needs to lock back in at the plate.

It could also be in the best interest of the White Sox to trade Robert. Chicago has to decide whether to pick up the club option in his contract that would pay him $20 million in 2026, or else let him become a free agent after this season. Trading him would make that decision another team's to figure out.

Shane Bond: 'If you ask any injured player if they're okay to play, they'll say yes'

The former New Zealand fast bowler, and current Rajasthan Royals bowling coach, talks about playing with and after injury

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi30-Mar-2025Ace former fast bowler Shane Bond, who has worked with Jasprit Bumrah at Mumbai Indians in the IPL, and who was no stranger to injury himself during a stop-start career for New Zealand, spoke to us during the Champions Trophy about Bumrah’s troubles with his back, and the challenges of managing bowling workloads effectively.Can you break down the biomechanics of Bumrah’s action and why it is unique?
His run-up’s an interesting one, isn’t it, because he sort of [starts in] fits and starts, but the last five metres, he accelerates through the crease, gains momentum. Obviously, he’s got those levers [long arms]. He has a very short delivery stride, so he gets his front foot down quickly, which means he has to then, all of a sudden, catch up with his arms. So he generates velocity through his arm speed, [and has] got a very strong locked front knee to increase that pace. And then he has an exceptional wrist on the back of it.It’s just one of those ones where the timing of when he releases everything is almost perfect. I look at someone like Hardik Pandya, who’s not a very big guy but he hits the ball enormously hard and a very long way because of the same thing: his kinetic chain, where he just releases all his energy – just the timing’s perfect and he smacks it, and that’s what Boom has.Related

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Does the braced front knee, which bears all the weight, mean his back carries a lot of stress?
Yeah, I suppose. I can think of guys who I played with in New Zealand, [Jacob] Oram, [Kyle] Mills, [Chris] Cairns. They had [front] knees that just collapsed a little bit. And not that they didn’t have back injuries, but patellar tendons [the ligaments that connect the knee cap to the shin bone] were also a cause of concern because the load went through the knee.The force will go up the chain: through the calf, the hamstring, the glutes and the back. And so if you are not strong in those areas, the force will end up in the back at some point. So if you think of any top bowler, at some point in time when you have been bowling for a long time, your hamstrings, your calves, are going to fatigue and that force will get taken somewhere.

“If you go to the gym and want to do ten sets of ten and do that day after day after day after day without resting, you will probably break something. And it’s very similar in bowling”

So when you look at strength and conditioning, what you are trying to do is build the strength through the calf, through the hamstring, through the glutes, the core, so that the abs bear a lot of the force, and the sides. Being able to do that and sustain that for a period of time to take the pressure off the back.Everybody is different in terms of how much they can handle. So a big thing for me when I became a coach was working out how much a certain bowler could take. So I could look at a Tim Southee and a Trent Boult, they could comfortably operate at around 40 to 45 overs in a match, and Neil Wagner could probably handle 60, and Adam Milne was probably 30, so when he started to have back-to-back days, there were issues. That’s what you are trying to work out: what is the real risk area and where is the sort of sweet spot where they can sustain and stay on the park. The longer you play and you build that tolerance, the better it is.You look at the Australian bowlers, they have done a pretty good job. They walked out of that series [against India in Australia], they are all fit, but they still had injuries in other areas. They are all dealing now with niggles, they were out of the Champions Trophy. So they just had other stuff because of the sheer volume of overs they bowled. The top bowlers you talk to, particularly as you get older, they will talk about how they don’t want to stop bowling. They might take a week or two off to refresh and let some of those niggles settle, but they don’t want to take three or four months off because coming back, they have got to rebuild and that’s a big risk period again. They like to keep ticking over all year round.What is a stress fracture and why is it debilitating?
If you go to the gym and you lift weights, you sort of stretch the muscles and then they often say you take a day’s rest and the muscles repair and they grow and they expand, and that’s how you build big muscles. It’s a little bit like that with the bone. So every time you bowl, you cause a little bit of damage in the bone, it breaks up a little bit, and if you give it a rest, it’ll harden. And if you do that over a period of time, that bone in your back will firm up and become quite strong. So the more load you can put through it, especially if it’s gradual, you will actually build strength over a period of time. Now that’s called chronic load.Bond says not ramping up slowly to larger bowling loads – like going from bowling in T20s directly to a long Test series – increases the risk of back injuries•Mumbai IndiansWhen that bone’s breaking down, if you just put too much load on it, bang, bang, bang, it can break [develop tiny cracks], you can go all the way through the bone, or if you bowl day after day after day when that bone’s sort of breaking down and you hammer it, it can break. If you go to the gym and want to do ten sets of ten and do that day after day after day after day without resting, you will probably break something. And it’s very similar in bowling.There’s a lot of research around where the sweet spot is with bowling loads, but the bottom line is, if you look at all the techniques around the world, they are all very different. But you are dealing with super-professional athletes – the Boultys [Trent Boult], the Bumrahs, the Mitchell Johnsons, the Pat Cumminses, the Mitchell Starcs – all their actions are unique, but there seems to be a couple of things that stand out. If you bowl too much for too long… and I have to look at like a Booms – first time he had a stress fracture [2019], he came out of IPL and played Test cricket. So you are bowling 20 overs a week and all of a sudden you bowl 50 overs a week – stress fracture. Trent Boult was the same.So if you go too hard too early or with not enough load behind you, you are likely to break. And generally the top bowlers break when they either come back too quick and the [injury] recurs or they have been playing for a while and then that load just goes ba-boom! And that’s the real challenge [for] coaches when you are transitioning between T20, especially tournaments like the IPL, and then you go to the World Test Championship a month later, where you could be expected to bowl 50 overs, and then you walk into a Test series – danger! And it’s really hard with the scheduling to look after that because you just can’t get that volume of work in the IPL. It’s too hot, the travel schedule’s too busy to be able to bowl probably as much as you want to [to prepare for the Test series].There were times where I was really sore for a number of days, but generally what will happen is, if you have some pain, it will settle down quite quickly, and within two or three days you could feel completely normal. Except, as soon as you bowl a cricket ball, bang, that pain is instantaneous, it’ll come back and it will really hurt. So what Rowan [Dr Rowan Schouten, a Christchurch-based orthopaedic spine surgeon, who has operated on Jofra Archer and others] said to me is: a stress fracture or fracture in the vertebrae of your back is like having a broken arm. Imagine you have got a fractured arm. They put a cast on it to keep it steady, to protect it. You don’t do that with your back. So generally, when you get that stress fracture, you will have [to have] six weeks of doing absolutely nothing.

“Generally, if you have some pain, it will settle down, and within two or three days you could feel completely normal. Except, as soon as you bowl a cricket ball, bang, it’ll come back and it will really hurt”

So no running, just trying to stay as steady as you possibly can to let that heal. In the case of Bumrah, he’s now had that six-weeks period, maybe a little bit more, of rest, but of course then he has to build all that bowling load back up. We call it Level 1, 2, 3 -half a run-up, three quarters of a run-up, full run-up. Working through the intensities, getting up to that top intensity and then building some volume through that top intensity. In an ideal world that’ll take, I don’t know, six to ten weeks, which, obviously when you have got a busy playing schedule it’s very easy to want to rush a player back into the next tour, and that’s the danger. If you go too much too soon, you can have a recurrence of that injury.In Bumrah’s case, as we understand it, it is likely that it was more akin to a stress reaction?
When you get on a scan, it’s called bone edema [a build-up of fluid in the bone marrow]. That gets to a point where it is starting to get painful. And the next step after that is it actually fractures. So the pain’s kicking in and the bone’s on the borderline of cracking. For a stress fracture, you are sort of looking at [minimum] four months before you come back and start bowling. For a stress reaction, they will say six weeks and then you’d be wanting to re-scan, but conservatively eight, maybe. And that’s what that looks like with Booms. I’m sure they’ve re-scanned, that [stress] reaction probably cleared up, there’s no crack anymore, and then they can get on with it.What does surgery for a stress-related back injury involve? Bumrah has had one already, two years ago.
What happens is, they chisel into it and they stimulate the blood growth in the bone and they take some chips off your hip [bone] and they pack it all together with some wire to make it stronger to stimulate growth with a sort of binding around it. With all going well, it will completely re-heal and it should be stronger because you have got some bolts and screws holding all that in place.Kyle [Jamieson] and Jasprit now, I think, are the only couple [of fast bowlers] who have had a re-injury [stress-related]. Matt Henry had the surgery at 21 and he’s been going over ten years. I had another sort of six years when I played post-surgery. Kyle’s was the same. He came out of a T20 programme, went into a Test match, bowled [about] 40 overs, lots of bouncers, re-injured. Booms played five Test matches and bowled a heap of overs [in the Australia series], and the sheer volume just got them in the end.Kyle Jamieson had surgery for a stress fracture of the back in 2023, but suffered yet another one in 2024 that kept him out of the game for a year•Getty ImagesWhen I had my surgery, mate, I couldn’t bend for about four days, so I was completely straight. You imagine trying to go to the toilet when you are completely straight. Every day I just got a little bit more movement back. After six weeks I sort of got my training gear on and I went for a walk. When I saw Cameron Green – he is the last one who’s had back surgery, he had it just before Christmas [2024], and within two days he was up and around walking for 20 minutes. Like, sitting up normally.And by day four he had walked for about 40 minutes. He said it was too much, he got a bit sore, but you are progressing a lot more quickly now. Because I was the first guy to have the procedure done in terms of cricket, I was a little bit envious when I saw Cameron [be mobile so quickly].It is the first time Bumrah has been forced to sit out since his back surgery in 2023, when he was 29. You had back surgery when you were at a similar age and went on to play for a number of years. What is the challenge the first time the injury recurs or you feel discomfort in the same area?
Psychologically, it’s a challenge. I still had times when I played with my back really locked up, my muscles down my back would spasm. I called it a concrete back – I couldn’t move. So I played a couple of Test matches where I felt like I had no movement through my back and it was really sore, but I knew it wasn’t broken. So I had to be careful and I had glucose injections in my back and a long massage to make sure that I was loose.For me it was, yep, I know it’s been fixed, I know I’m okay, but it still doesn’t take away the lingering doubt. Every day I bowled was like, is today the day where it’s going to go pop? And I’m sure Kyle and Jasprit will be the same.I always tell my players, take a week at the front end and that could save you six months at the back end. Spend a little bit longer in your preparation and your build-up because it will give you a better chance to stay on the field. Obviously from a Rajasthan [Royals] standpoint, I don’t really want to see him [Bumrah] (), but I do want to see him back on the field. I do hope they take it conservatively to give him the best chance to come back and come back for the next however long he wants to play.Despite numerous injuries, and after back surgery, and various niggles in other parts of the body, you did not hold back. You told us in 2010, soon after you retired, that you saw the value you brought to New Zealand was that of an “Olympic” bowler. Do you have any advice to Bumrah in that regard?
That’s why I really enjoyed listening to Dale [Steyn, who the recently interviewed, alongside Bond]. What made Dale one of the all-time greats is his ability to lift the gears up – he could operate here () and then all of a sudden, lift his game to a different level (). Booms does that pretty well. In Australia it was just the sheer volume of overs that got him in the end – in those five Test matches his performance was ridiculous, and they leaned on him a lot and I think he might’ve bowled 50 overs in a Test match.

“You are not going to avoid an injury, you are just trying to avoid the really bad ones, and I’m hoping Bumrah can avoid another one of these”

And I suppose the lesson is, you can’t have him bowl that many overs again in a Test match. Forty-five might be the top, and we can’t risk it because he’s too valuable. And I’m sure they have got all those things considered around the bowling loads and they would have reflected on why he’s had that injury. He’s a professional, Boomsy, he does everything right. All you are trying to do is prevent that… you are not going to avoid an injury, you are just trying to avoid the really bad ones, and I’m hoping he can avoid another one of these.India play five Tests in England back to back in a matter of one and a half months later this year. While it’s for the bowler himself to take the call, what would be your advice?
See I would always go, no it’s not [the bowler’s call]. Because my experience with any player is, they will tell you that they are okay and that’s always the risk. If you give any player the option, it’s like, nah, I’m good to go. And I have seen players who want to play and they are injured and they will tell you they want to play and actually they have played probably sub-par, they are not really ready. That’s the coach’s role, to say, look, this is the plan for you. And it’s easy to have that plan when you are winning. When you are losing, it becomes, oh, are we going to throw that [away]?While he can’t remodel his action, would you ask someone like Bumrah to change something about his bowling?
I don’t think so. He had the [2023] surgery, but he played all that [Australia] Test series, performed unbelievably. At the end of the day, he just bowled too much over a one-month period. And it hasn’t cracked, he hasn’t got a fracture, he is on the borderline of a fracture. But what India would have learned is, if you then look at a five-Test match series in England and they do the same thing, they are probably going to get the same result. So you can’t do that. You need a squad of bowlers where you can sort of pick and choose.Because if you lose him, you have got T20 World Cups, you’ve got 50-overs World Cups and he’s an important member across all formats, IPL, all that sort of stuff.

New-Look Yankees Bullpen Blows Lead in First Game Since Trade Deadline

New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman excited the club's fanbase by importing seven players at the trade deadline, including three high-leverage relief pitchers to aid a bullpen that's been among the league's worst over the course of the last month.

Two of those relief pitchers, Jake Bird and David Bednar, made their debuts for the Yankees during Friday's game against the Miami Marlins. Let's just say it didn't exactly go according to plan.

Bird entered the game with a 9-4 lead and promptly loaded the bases with a pair of singles and a walk. Then, Bird missed badly with a sinker out over the middle of the plate to Marlings power-hitting outfielder Kyle Stowers, who belted it for a grand slam to make it a 9-8 ballgame. The Yankees then turned to Bednar, who they hoped would quickly put an end to the inning and preserve the club's lead.

Instead, Bednar surrendered the game-tying home run and a go-ahead RBI single. Fortunately, the Yankees tied the game in the top of the eighth inning and Bednar settled in for a scoreless frame in the bottom half.

The Yankees scratched a pair of runs across in the top of the ninth and handed the ball to another new reliever in Camilo Doval, hoping the trade deadline pickup could shut the door on a victory. But the nightmarish night for the Yankees continued, as Doval allowed two baserunners on after getting the first out of the inning. Then, the Yankees righthander allowed a single to right field, which rolled under right fielder Jose Caballero's glove, allowing the tying runs to score.

The Marlins then won the game on an unplayable slow roller between Doval and catcher Austin Wells.

Marlins Minor Leaguer Makes Willie Mays-Style Catch in Second Professional Game

Cam Cannarella made his professional debut this week with the Miami Marlins Advanced A club the Beloit Sky Carp. Cannarella doubled twice in his first game with Beloit, but it was what he did in the field during his second game that made him go viral.

Beloit was playing the South Bend Cubs on Thursday when Rafael Morel, the brother of Tampa Bay Rays' utility player Christopher Morel, hit a fly ball to deep centerfield. Cannarella turned and ran towards the wall, making a Willie Mays-style over-the-head catch look way too easy for the second out of the inning.

If you're wondering why Cannarella didn't make a big deal about this catch, well, it's because he's done it before.

During the 2024 Super Regional round of the NCAA Tournament he made a game-saving over-the-head catch in extra innings that also drew Willie Mays comparisons.

It's been quite a summer for Cannarella, who played his final college game on June 1st against the University of Kentucky. Miami took him with the No. 43 pick in the draft a month ago and he just signed his contract on July 28th.

Now he's hitting doubles and making spectacular catches in the minor leagues.

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