Hang Freddie Freeman’s Swing in the Louvre (or the Hall of Fame)

​Folding your grandmother’s chaise lounge on a breezy day at the beach. Closing an umbrella in the teeth of a windstorm. Madly checking all your pockets when you’ve misplaced your keys. The swing of Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman has no comparison among major league hitters, so you are left to find endeavors in everyday life with such mechanical quirks.

The Freeman swing is no oil painting, unless you had a Jackson Pollock in mind. Freeman starts with his bat off the shoulder and parallel to the ground. His back elbow is raised. As the pitcher winds up, Freeman snaps the bat to attention, upright, as if a predator put on alert by the sudden scent of prey. Then he pulls his hands close to his body and throws the barrel at the ball with what looks like a flick of the wrists. He finishes with two hands high, the wrists having completely turned over, in the manner of someone who has striped a 300-yard drive down the center of the fairway.

This is the swing that has launched 2,329 hits, postseason included, including the one that salted away World Series Game 3 on Monday, a spoiler alert though it came just three batters into the game. Freeman ripped a two-run homer off a shaky Clarke Schmidt to send the Los Angeles Dodgers on their way to a 4–2 victory over the New York Yankees in a game that wasn’t nearly as close as the final score indicated. The Dodgers and Freeman, the presumptive MVP, are one win away from ending the World Series in a rout.

Freeman is on one of the greatest hitting heaters the World Series has ever seen. So hobbled by a sprained ankle a week ago that he did not play in the Dodgers’ NLCS clincher, Freeman joined Hank Bauer (1958) and Barry Bonds (2002) as the only players to homer in the first three games of a World Series. Amazingly, Freeman hit his three World Series homers in a span of just 10 swings.

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Including the 2021 World Series playing for the Braves, Freeman has homered in five straight series games, tying George Springer for the World Series record.

“There are points throughout the course of the season when the swing is actually good,” Freeman said, “but it felt like it was a constant battle all season long with my swing. It kind of happens like that. It seems hard: hit a round ball with a round bat. There’s a lot of different ways to do it. I’m thankful that it’s in a good spot right now when we need it the most. I’m just seeing the ball very well. You know, I'm swinging at the strikes, taking the balls … what you're trying to do every game. And thankfully I've been able to do it.”

​Freeman has had a Hall of Fame career. He is one of only 33 players who have played 2,000 games with an OPS+ of at least 142. Thirty of those players have been on a Hall of Fame ballot and all of them have been voted in except for PED-tainted sluggers Manny Ramirez and Bonds. This World Series is burnishing Freeman’s reputation as one of his generation’s greatest pure hitters. This is his magnum opus. His career postseason OPS is .890, 17th all-time (min. 200 plate appearances) and just ahead of Reggie Jackson.

​Those are the numbers. How Freeman gets it done, line drive after line drive, year after year, is worthy not just of admiration but peer review.

APSTEIN: Walker Buehler Burnishes Big-Game Reputation in Dodgers’ Game 3 Win

​About eight miles south of Yankee Stadium, on the fourth floor of the Museum of Modern Art, hangs an Abstract Impressionism painting by Jackson Pollock titled . Pollock created it by flinging and pouring ropes of paint across a huge canvas stretched over the floor. You can stand back from it and, though there is no discernible pattern or point of focus, see what you will. Order, chance, chaos, rhythm, nature … all of it or some of it. It’s what great art does: It stimulates the mind.

​With Pollock’s work in mind, I asked the Dodgers to stand back and look at , otherwise known as the Freeman Swing, and tell me what they see.

Freeman’s swing inspires awe and admiration from his peers. / Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images

​Walker Buehler: “The swing isn’t fun for me facing him. I felt like he was on time all the time for everything that I threw. And you look at the simplicity of his approach and his setup and it makes a lot of sense why you can hit any pitch anywhere.

“He hit a homer off me in the ‘20 playoffs that I think there’s very few people in the world that can hit the pitch that I threw in for a homer. And it was the hardest ball he's ever hit in the big leagues.

“It was a heater up in. I think he hit it about 118 [mph]. Mookie almost jumped for it. He's a special player, and somehow gets a little bit lost between Mookie and Shohei. You got two elite players and we have a third one who happens to be one of the top 20 baseball players in the world that we don’t talk a ton about. He certainly showed up in the past three games.”

Tommy Edman: “He's probably one of the most consistent hitters I’ve ever seen. I remember, I think it was two years ago when I was with St. Louis, we had a four-game series, and he got out once the whole series. He went like 14-for-15 or something like that. I was like, ‘This guy is the best hitter in baseball right now.’ And obviously it's clicking right now in the World Series on the biggest stage. It's been fun to watch.

“He does such a good job of keeping his hands inside the ball better than just about anybody. And you go out there and watch his batting practice and he just is hitting everything the other way, low line drives and, not trying to hit bombs and drive the ball out of the ballpark, even though he's done that in the first three games of this World Series.

“But I think it's probably a good lesson to a lot of young players out there is that you don't necessarily need to hit homers in batting practice in order to hit homers in the game.”

Jack Flaherty: “His swing works for him. Everybody's swing is different. That's all that matters. It's much more fun watching him on this side than just trying to get him out. He's one of those guys you look at the numbers and it's like, ‘I don't know, let's hope he hits at someone,’ because he's tough to punch out and it’s tough to get him to chase.”

Teoscar Hernández: “It just hard to describe because that's … that's how Freddie is. Freddie is not a guy that swings and misses a lot. He’s always putting the ball in play. It was a matter of time that he got his swing back. His health is a huge factor. And he's showing it. It was huge for us that he’s feeling better.”

Gavin Lux: “He’s one of the game’s best hitters. He’s going to be a first ballot Hall of Famer for a reason. It’s fun to watch him compete and take at-bats because he just doesn’t give anything away.

“Oh, man, I saw a video of his swing from high school and it hasn’t changed a bit. He’s got a really good bat path. He doesn’t swing and miss much. He doesn’t chase. He’s old school. He takes the ball the other way and he’s stubborn as hell. He’s not going to change. It’s fun to watch him do the same thing every day. He’s the ultimate consistency guy.”

Miguel Rojas: “You watch him work and it’s the same every day. Every swing he wants to hit the ball softly to shortstop starting out and then eventually line drives over the shortstop’s head. He never, ever changes. And what’s so special about him are his hands. His hands are amazing.”

Having canvassed enough patrons, I figured it was time to hear from the artist himself. Freeman on Freeman.

I told Freeman about my conversation the other day with Kirk Gibson, his brother in Dodgers walk-off World Series home runs. Gibson had told me he always admired Freeman, but never could come up with a similar comp to how Freeman swings the bat. I asked Freeman to describe the uniqueness of his swing.

“I don't know,” Freeman said. “I slow it down [on tape] and it looks weird. But, I just … I’ve always just tried to be short to it and inside the baseball. And I played a lot of golf as a kid, and I think that’s why I follow through like I do.

“But I don’t have a way to explain it. It works and I don't really want to figure it out. Because when you try and figure something out, then it may be gone. You have got to let that thing ride.”

Freeman is slashing .333/.385/1.250 during the World Series. / Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

A week ago, Freeman was hitting on one good leg. Because of a badly sprained right ankle, he could not get weight to his front side. The best he could do was flick those wrists without support from his lower half. During the four days between the NLCS and World Series, he did not run at all, staying away from the activity that most aggravated his ankle. In a hitting session last Tuesday with Dodgers coach Robert Van Scoyoc, he developed a key mental cue. Freeman always has taken his stride with his front foot landing closer to the plate than his back foot. But to compensate for his weak ankle, he thought about stepping outward, with the front foot farther. He wasn’t actually stepping that far away, but the mental cue of doing so allowed him to stay on his back side longer. Immediately his practice liners over the shortstop’s head returned in familiar cadence. His ankle felt better and better.

Freeman burned Nestor Cortes in Game 1 and Carlos Rodón in Game 2. He had never faced Schmidt before Game 3. Freeman fell behind, 1-and-2 without taking a swing.

“Well, thankfully he threw all three pitches in those three pitches,” Freeman said. “So he went slider on the first pitch, and then he went cutter up, and then he threw the knuckle curve. So, I saw all three pitches. And you know, I was okay with being down two strikes because I got to see everything he had.”

Schmidt tried to throw a back door cutter. He missed on the other side of the plate, toward Freeman’s hands. Freeman crushed it into the right field seats.

“It changes the whole game,” said Buehler, who had a 2–0 lead before he threw a pitch. “The whole complexion of the game, not just for me for sure but for our team for sure. I think if you look at the numbers in terms of playoff baseball, whoever scores first … I talked kind of about grabbing momentum or keeping momentum and how important that is for playoff baseball. And there's not anything much bigger you can do on the road than hit a big home run for us.”

Like Mickey Mantle and Willie Mays in 1962, when the two best players in baseball went 10-for-53 (.189) in the World Series without an RBI, Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge are 2-for-23 (.087) without an RBI. Instead, in a galaxy of stars, it is the old soul with the old school approach and the Abstract Impressionism swing that has owned the World Series.

“Technique,” Pollock once said, “is just a means of arriving at a statement … It doesn’t matter how the paint is put on, as long as something is said.”

Seventy-four years after Pollock painted , the work still makes a statement. In the same way, 74 years on, people will recall the 2024 World Series for the statement Freeman made, if not how he did it. 

Best since Rice: West Ham lost "the best academy player in Europe" for £0

When it comes to the best player to have represented West Ham United in the modern era, you really are spoilt for choice.

However, if you then limit that to those who are homegrown and have come up through the academy, it’s hard to ignore one man: Declan Rice.

The England international might have broken some hearts with his move to Arsenal, but it’s impossible to deny the fact that he was a superstar for the Hammers, making 245 appearances, wearing the captain’s armband and most crucially of all, playing a significant role in the club’s Conference League triumph.

The Irons are yet to produce another prospect quite as talented as Rice, and while it will come eventually, they’ve already lost a youngster who’s being touted for big, big things.

West Ham's exciting prospects

While it feels like they are unlikely to be as impactful as Rice was, or the youngster they lost a couple of years ago, West Ham still have several exciting prospects emerging from the academy.

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For example, with how poorly the club’s current crop of strikers are doing, it might not be too long before the London Stadium faithful get to see Josh Landers in action.

The Scottish forward joined the Hammers from Hibernian in February of this year and has been on fire ever since.

In just 12 games for the U18s he has scored nine goals, and since moving up to the U21s, the Innerleithen-born poacher has found the back of the net five times.

Another dangerous gem, but one who spends time at left-back or on the left-hand side of midfield is Emeka Adiele.

The 18-year-old, who, according to one analyst, is blessed with “confidence & tenacity,” has already provided seven goal involvements in just eight appearances for the U21s this season.

Finally, someone who could potentially come is a long-term heir to Bowen on the right, Elisha Sowumni.

Appearances

25

Minutes

2081′

Goals

14

Assists

2

Goal Involvements per Match

0.64

Minutes per Goal Involvement

130.06′

The 18-year-old was a force of nature for the youth sides last season, scoring 14 goals and providing two assists in just 25 appearances.

Moreover, while he is considered a right-winger, he has shown an impressive ability to play all over the pitch, which could help him earn some first-team minutes in the coming years.

However, while these three are certainly exciting prospects, they all pale in comparison to someone who left West Ham a couple of years ago.

The incredible prospect West Ham lost for nothing

All teams lose promising prospects; it’s just the way football goes sometimes, but Divine Mukasa does not appear to be any ordinary prospect.

The hugely exciting youngster joined West Ham at just five years old, but in September 2013, he moved to Manchester City for free.

He made his senior debut for Pep Guardiola’s side this season, in a League Cup game against Huddersfield Town, a game in which the teenager registered his first senior goal involvement, an assist for Phil Foden.

However, while it’s certainly an encouraging sign regarding his development to see him already playing in the first team, it’s his unreal form in the junior sides that has turned so many heads, and why he might’ve been the Hammers’ most talented prospect since Rice had he remained in London.

For example, in 41 appearances across various age groups last season, totalling 2807 minutes, the incredible midfielder racked up an outrageous tally of 17 goals and 25 assists.

Appearances

41

Minutes

2807′

Goals

17

Assists

25

Goal Involvements per Match

1.02

Minutes per Goal Involvement

66.83′

In other words, the youngster averaged a 1.02 goal involvement per game, or one every 66.83 minutes all season.

Such an out-of-this-world rate of return goes some way in justifying journalist Nassali Sandrah’s claim that the 18-year-old is “the best academy player in Europe.”

As if that weren’t enough, he has also flown through the international youth teams and currently has three caps for England’s U19s.

Ultimately, West Ham have got their fair share of exciting talents in the academy at the moment, but had they kept hold of Mukasa, he would undoubtedly be the jewel in the crown.

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Jamie Carragher says Liverpool star is the "Thierry Henry" of his position

The highest praise that anyone in the Premier League can receive is a comparison with Thierry Henry. The Arsenal legend is one of, if not the greatest players in the competition’s history. He arrived in North London as a young player who initially found it tough against the physicality of English football. Years later, however, he left as an Invincible icon.

Henry in the Premier League

Record

Appearances

258

Goals

175

Assists

73

Even in the era of Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City and Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool, it’s difficult to place anyone above Henry.

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This Liverpool star could certainly leave a legacy for the ages in the Premier League.

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The former striker is, of course, so often the talk of North London, but what makes him so special is how rival clubs also speak about his greatness.

Former Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has been among those to speak so highly about Henry over the years, once telling reporters: “He’s the kind of player that you need forever, especially in the Premier League where he was more than any other place.

“He was okay in Barcelona and the (France) national team, but the real Thierry Henry, the player that we are all going to miss forever, is the one that made unbelievable seasons and incredible history in the Premier League.”

There have been plenty of players to receive comparisons with the former Gunner, too. Liverpool’s record signing Alexander Isak is often likened to the Frenchman in style, but it remains to be seen whether the Swede can match his legacy when all is said and done.

That said, it’s not Isak that Liverpool legend Jamie Carragher decided to compare with the Arsenal legend. Instead, he named another player who he believes is the Henry of his position.

Carragher: Van Dijk is the "Henry of centre-backs"

Speaking on CBS’ coverage of the Champions League following Liverpool’s late victory against Atletico Madrid, Carragher claimed that Virgil van Dijk is the “Henry of centre-backs” in what is the highest praise that he could offer the Dutchman. Fresh from a winning goal against Atletico, it’s clear to see why the Reds skipper has been compared to a player of Henry’s class.

With two Premier League titles, a Champions League medal and everything in between, it’s hard to argue with Carragher’s statement. Van Dijk is imperious and is arguably ageing like fine wine at the heart of Arne Slot’s backline.

For all of Liverpool’s impressive spending in the summer, their best deal may well have been their captain’s new contract. Renewing alongside Mohamed Salah, Van Dijk set the tone of what was to come and may now reap the rewards for doing so. One more league title would of course take the Dutchman one above Henry.

Arsenal lost a homegrown Madueke for £0, now he's "one of the world's best"

The mood around Arsenal at the moment is a positive one.

They’ve won three of four games in the Premier League, won their first Champions League game of the season and have only conceded one goal in all five matches.

Moreover, while they are still likely to get called negative and boring by some in the media, the Gunners are playing some nice football.

Champions League

Bilbao

2-0 W

Premier League

Forest

3-0 W

Premier League

Liverpool

1-0 L

Premier League

Leeds

5-0 W

Premier League

Man Utd

1-0 W

One of the reasons has been the impressive form of Noni Madueke, who is proving plenty of his doubters wrong so far.

However, while the former Chelsea star is looking like a great signing, Arsenal already had a homegrown version of him years ago, and now that player is one of the best in the world.

Madueke's start to life at Arsenal

It wouldn’t be unfair to say that Madueke’s first few games at Arsenal weren’t overly impressive, as while he offered some threat against Liverpool and did well enough off the left against Leeds, he didn’t blow anyone away.

However, since coming back from a successful international break in which he forced an own goal against Andorra and opened his own account against Serbia, he’s looked near enough unplayable.

For example, while he didn’t register a goal involvement against Forest, the 23-year-old dynamo was a constant threat down the right-hand side, taking 65 touches, completing five dribbles, playing five key passes, creating one big chance and registering an impressive expected assists figure of 0.71.

However, even without the data, it was clear that the Englishman was doing some things right by the eye-test, and the way in which the crowd would react excitedly whenever he was on the ball in a dangerous area.

It was much of the same against Bilbao, as he was once again a constant and direct threat on the right-hand side.

In fact, he should have really racked up an assist, as after driving into the box in the first half, he delivered a brilliant pass to Eberechi Eze’s feet, only for him to take too long to shoot and lose the ball.

Overall, Madueke is really starting to show supporters and pundits alike just why Arteta wanted to sign him.

However, there is another winger on the continent who was once in Arsenal’s academy, someone who could have been their homegrown version of the former Chelsea ace.

Arsenal's former homegrown Madueke

Like any other big club, Arsenal have let their fair share of future stars go as youngsters, from Harry Kane to the recently re-signed Eze.

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However, perhaps one of the very worst instances of this for the Gunners is Michael Olise.

Before spending time in the academies of Chelsea, Manchester City and Reading, the young Frenchman spent a short period in Hale End.

The small saving grace here, then, is the fact that a couple of other ‘big six’ sides passed up on the incredible talent, but given his outrageous performances for Crystal Palace and now Bayern Munich, it must still frustrate the Gunners’ hierarchy that they didn’t keep him on the books.

Since moving to Germany for £50m last summer, the 23-year-old has been on fire.

Appearances

61

Minutes

4382′

Goals

24

Assists

25

Goal Involvements per Match

0.80

Minutes per Goal Involvements

89.42′

In 61 appearances, totalling 4382 minutes, the ten-capped game-changer has scored 24 goals and provided 25 assists.

That breaks down to an outrageously impressive average of a goal involvement every 1.24 games, or every 89.42 minutes, and more than justifies Oliver Glasner’s claim that he’s “one of the best talents in the world.”

Now, while he is clearly a more dangerous player than Madueke at the moment, there are some similarities between the pair, notably their ability to carry the ball into dangerous areas.

For example, FBref ranks the Bayern star in the top 4% of attacking midfielders and wingers in Europe’s top five leagues for carries into the final third and the top 8% for overall carries.

In comparison, the Gunners’ new star sits in the top 1% for progressive carries and carries into the penalty area.

Even then, we can be fairly certain that Arsenal would rather have Olise in their team, and had they kept hold of him all those years ago, perhaps they would’ve had their own world-class homegrown Madueke.

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هيثم فاروق: المغرب يصنع التاريخ.. ومواجهة الأرجنتين قد تكون الأهم في تاريخ هذا الجيل

تحدث هيثم فاروق، نجم منتخب مصر السابق، على مواجهة المغرب والأرجنتين في نهائي بطولة كأس العالم للشباب.

ويلتقي منتخب المغرب، نظيره الأرجنتين في نهائي كأس العالم للشباب تحت 20 عامًا المقامة في تشيلي.

طالع.. ليكيب: المغرب أضاع حلم فرنسا في كأس العالم للشباب.. ويجب الندم

وقال فاروق، عبر بي إن سبورتس: ” أنت لن تصل إلى نهائي كأس العالم في كل بطولة، فهذه المرة الأولى التي يحدث فيها ذلك”.

وتابع: “قد تكون هذه أهم مباراة لهذا الجيل أنتم قادرون على كتابة أسمائكم بحروف من ذهب ودخول التاريخ بلا أدنى شك”.

وواصل: “المغرب الآن متقدمة عربيًا وإفريقيًا، وهذا ليس وليد اللحظة، وليست خطة سنة أو اثنتين، بل نتيجة سنوات طويلة”.

وأتم: “الدليل أنك تحصد النتائج في الفترة الأخيرة فأنا أرى أن هذا الجيل مُعد إعدادًا جيدًا للفريق”.

Their new Isak: Newcastle pushing really hard to sign "sensational" £60m CF

The latest chapter in Eddie Howe’s Newcastle United journey got off to a frustrating start as the Magpies drew at Aston Villa to kick off the new Premier League season.

But a point at Villa Park is hardly a poor result, and there was much to like about the visitors’ performance, even with Anthony Gordon moonlighting as a centre-forward in the palpable absence of Alexander Isak, who is AWOL as he awaits a potential move to Merseyside before the end of the month.

The away end sang derisory chants aimed toward the skiving Isak at the end of the goalless draw, and there’s a collective sense of understanding across English football as the Magpies watch their talisman be reduced to just another footballer.

But the club is always bigger than the player, and that’s not so much a truism as a timely reminder. Given the Sweden international’s decision to have excommunicated himself from the St. James’ Park first team, it might be worth selling him this summer after all.

Why Newcastle should sell Alexander Isak

Earlier in August, Liverpool saw an offer worth £110m plus add-ons rejected by Newcastle, who were somewhat affronted by what they perceived as a lowball bid.

Perhaps PIF were just in their grievances, having made it known all summer that the 25-year-old, who has just shy of three years remaining on his contract, can only leave if their valuation, stretching as high as £150m, is set.

Liverpool would have known that their offer would have been rejected; it’s all part of the game. And United must now accelerate their focus on signing two new strikers, as confirmed is the plan by correspondent Craig Hope, before time runs out, and Howe is left with a blinding problem beyond the movements of the market.

Newcastle United manager EddieHowebefore the match

The manager’s expertly-woven system at Newcastle is built on the key tenets of togetherness, cohesion and tenacity. The Toon outfight and outthink their opponents routinely, and the proof is in the pudding.

Isak is at odds with this overarching principle, and he must be sold. Newcastle need a number nine who wants to fight for the badge.

Newcastle holding talks for new striker

According to TEAMtalk, Newcastle are accelerating their bid for Brentford striker Yoane Wissa, though PIF are reluctant to meet the Bees’ hefty £60m price tag.

The 28-year-old Wissa has made it clear that he wishes to sign for Newcastle this month, having engaged in discussions with the Tynesiders across recent weeks. However, talks have also been held with further suitors like Tottenham Hotspur.

It’s worth noting that with Callum Wilson having left Newcastle at the end of his contract, this move is viewed in a separate light to that of Isak, with Wissa not a direct replacement as such.

Why Newcastle want Yoane Wissa

Wissa has been at Brentford for four years, joining from Lorient in an £8.5m deal. Steady, clinical progress has seen him establish himself as the club’s record scorer in the Premier League.

1

Yoane Wissa

45

2

Bryan Mbeumo

42

3

Ivan Toney

36

4

Kevin Schade

13

5

Christian Norgaard

11

Last season alone, he scored 19 times in the league for Thomas Frank’s side, and, aged 28, feels the time is right to earn a big move to a club competing within the European theatre.

Though Isak has a far wider breadth of quality within his locker, Wissa would take his place as Newcastle’s frontman and provide Howe’s side with a prolific outlet from which they can channel their creativity.

And given that the two forwards share a certain unsavoury similarity in the way in which they are looking to force their way through to a new home, might this prove to be Howe’s version of Isak?

Wissa maintained an impressive level in front of goal last term, and while he’s not an overly creative player, the Congolese international did average 0.8 key passes per Premier League game last season, via Sofascore, and contributed with four assists.

Isak vs Wissa 2024-25 stats (timeless)

While Howe would need to continue to quest for a younger and more mobile striker to complement Wissa and replace Isak, the Bees star is a proven goalscorer in the English top flight and he could make all the difference in challenging for a place in the top four (or five) once again while competing in the Champions League, aiming to wade deep into Europe’s elite club competition.

Moreover, Wissa’s experience could contrast nicely against the more unproven youth of another striker looking to make their way into Howe’s plans, thus creating a kind of balance at number nine between two players desperate to succeed at the club.

Hailed for his “sensational” goalscoring qualities by Sky Sports’ Mark McAdam, Wissa is not Isak, but then he knows that, and Howe does too, and signing a player more limited in the scope of their attacking arsenal might actually mark a sure-fire route toward continuity of slick, effective attacking play.

Ultimately, Howe and his transfer team will be fully aware that Wissa would not bring the same calibre of technical ability as Isak has done over the past three years.

Certainly, the French-born forward lacks Isak’s zippy athleticism and his potential to become something even greater over the coming years.

Yoane Wissa celebrates for Brentford.

But he is a proven Premier League striker, having scored 19 goals last season and having showcased his link-up ability through an intuitive on-pitch relationship with Bryan Mbeumo over the past few years.

It’s crucial that Newcastle ensure they keep chugging onward after a frustrating transfer window, and by signing a striker who can maintain prolific levels of a similar degree to Isak, they might just achieve that.

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Connolly, Beardman keep Scorchers' finals hope alive

Before he departs for his first Test tour, Cooper Connolly stepped up under pressure as Perth Scorchers’ unlikely bid for finals remained alive after a tense victory over Adelaide Strikers.The finals hopes of both teams were remarkably revived after Melbourne Renegades’ improbable victory earlier over Brisbane Heat. Scorchers needed to chase 162 in 18 overs to leapfrog Renegades and they did it relatively easy at the end with Connolly slamming consecutive sixes to finish the job in the 17th over.In front of 41, 878 at Optus Stadium, Connolly rose to the occasion once again and finished unbeaten with 39 from 21 balls to end Strikers – and Renegades – season.But Melbourne Stars can leapfrog Scorchers and claim fourth spot if they beat Hobart Hurricanes in the BBL season-finale at the MCG on Sunday.

Connolly guides Scorchers over the line

Finn Allen has been boom or bust this BBL season. He was Scorchers’ x-factor and the fans hoped he could replicate Jake Fraser-McGurk’s earlier fireworks.After a couple of early boundaries, it was an anti-climax with Allen hitting to midwicket before Aaron Hardie and Sam Fanning combined to get Scorchers back on track.Hardie has been out of form with a top-score of 34 this season, but looked in a determined mood and started with a boundary. He stroked another down the ground and whacked a short delivery into the crowd.But the match turned in the eighth over when Fanning was run out after a horrible mix up before Hardie moments later was stumped after failing to connect a flighted delivery from legspinner Lloyd Pope.Connolly, however, was composed as he kept Scorchers on pace. The nerve-jangling chase had shades of the classic BBL 12 final and, fittingly, he stepped up under pressure again.He slammed consecutive sixes off D’Arcy Short to guide Scorchers to a memorable victory that has, for now, kept their season alive.

Strikers lack penetration

Strikers needed to win by at least 15 runs to keep their finals hopes alive. But they were always up against it and will rue a couple of pivotal moments. Connolly, on 6, was adjudged lbw to Pope, but it was overturned after ball-tracking had it pitching outside the line.Turner was dropped on 9 by Brendan Doggett, who ran in from long off only to grass a regulation catch.Needing wickets, D’Arcy Short was given the ball when the power surge was taken in the 13th over. It was a gamble by captain Matt Short and it looked to backfire when Turner slammed a six down the ground but fell two balls later attempting to repeat the dose.But Strikers’ lack of firepower with the ball was evident as their season came to an end.

Beardman steps up in his second BBL match

After a disastrous defeat to Thunder in Sydney, where they were routed for 97, Scorchers’ season looked done. They looked ashen-faced returning home amid rumblings that numerous veterans were on the outer and set to leave the club at season’s end.Mahli Beardman starred with three wickets•CA/Getty Images

Their final home game, with a bumper crowd tipped for weeks, appeared likely to be a dead-rubber. But, remarkably, four results went their way and Scorchers were still alive.After Scorchers elected to bowl, spearheads Lance Morris and Jason Behrendorff – who have gone off the boil in recent games – were pumped up but perhaps overeager.Normally so reliable in the powerplay, they sprayed the new ball and were rattled by the ultra-aggressiveness of Matt Short and Alex Carey.But Scorchers were able to take regular wickets as Connolly, in his last match before he departs for the Sri Lanka tour, dismissed Short for 40 with a fuller and quicker delivery.It was 19-year-old Mahli Beardman who stole the show in his second BBL game. He has been preferred over experienced quicks Andrew Tye and Matt Kelly, as Scorchers start transitioning their list, and he justified the faith with three wickets.Beardman made a name for himself at last year’s Under-19 World Cup with rapid bowling and he showcased his innate fire with speeds hitting 140 kph.He claimed his first BBL wicket after knocking over the leg stump of Alex Ross, whose attempted ramp went horribly wrong. Beardman then bowled a sizzling short delivery first ball to Harry Manenti before dismissing him shortly after. He added the wicket of D’Arcy Short to cap Scorchers’ comeback.In good signs for the Australian national team, Hardie – who is in the Champions Trophy squad – bowled for the first time this BBL. He finished with 0 for 14 off two overs.Hardie had not bowled since taking a three-wicket haul against Pakistan in a T20I in November as he ramps up his bowling loads. He had played as a specialist batter having recovered from a nagging quad injury.Liam Scott’s brisk fifty lifted Adelaide Strikers to 161•Getty Images

Scott has breakout as Strikers go extra hard

With Renegades having lifted their net run rate, Strikers decided to go all out attack in good batting conditions. Alex Carey, promoted to open, went for broke and decided to hit hard. It was an effective strategy as he started his flurry by whacking Behrendorff down the ground for six before enjoying the extra pace of Morris.He raced to 22 off 6 before being late on a rampant Morris delivery and hitting straight to third man. Short continued to put the foot on the gas as Strikers pummelled 56 in the powerplay, with Morris conceding 37 of the runs.But the risky approach proved the downfall for numerous batters as Strikers were pegged back in the middle overs. It was left to 24-year-old Liam Scott to lift Strikers in the second half of the innings and he rose to the occasion with a maiden BBL half-century.He continued Morris’ hapless night with a couple of mighty blows into the crowd before his 43-ball 67 ended in the 17th over.

McSweeney's lone hand pushes his Australia credentials but Queensland dominant

Jimmy Peirson struck a sparkling century as the home side cantered to their target

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff25-Oct-2024Queensland stormed to their first One-Day Cup win of the season by nine wickets despite a masterclass century by South Australia captain Nathan McSweeney.Left-arm paceman Liam Guthrie set up the victory at Allan Border Field as the visitors were bowled out for 218 with McSweeney, who is a contender for the Test squad to face India, playing a lone hand with 137 off 131 balls.Related

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The Bulls chased down the total with ease in the 33rd over to secure a bonus point with wicketkeeper Jimmy Peirson middling an array of pulls, cuts and drives in a blistering unbeaten 100 off 98 balls.”Personally I am in a great spot with my technique and how I am going about my business and it was so nice to get a win,” Peirson told AAP. “I missed out on selection for the first couple of one-dayers and had real grit between my teeth to do the job today. It was so great to get it done.”Usman Khawaja played a key role early before Test hopeful Matt Renshaw found confidence and form with a whirlwind unbeaten 72 off 52 balls,.Earlier Guthrie bowled the dangerous Jake Fraser-McGurk with an inswinger and his three quick wickets in six pinpoint overs put the hosts on top.At the other end, Tom Straker got rid of the in-form Alex Carey and brought McSweeney to the crease at 9 for 2.South Australia were 29 for 4 in the 12th over and on the rack. McSweeney had initial support from Thomas Kelly in a 90-run stand for the fifth wicket.After that, wickets tumbled as McSweeney unfurled an assortment of sweetly timed cover drives both over and through the infield as the skipper made it appear as though he was batting on a different pitch to his teammates.”One of the finest knocks we have seen in one-day cricket,” former Australia coach and batter Darren Lehmann said in commentary.Lehmann is pushing for either McSweeney or NSW opener Sam Konstas to partner Khawaja at the top of the order in the Test series against India.McSweeney will captain the Australia A side against India next week in Mackay. Peirson will join the side for the second game in Melbourne.He is behind Alex Carey and Josh Inglis in the Australian pecking order and is close to national honours.”George [Bailey] has been very clear that is how they see things at the moment,” Peirson said. “Alex has been doing the Test job, Ingo is behind him nipping at his heels and I am behind Ingo. It is a healthy place to be. I am very clear about where I stand. You are always pushing to get yourself closer to play Test cricket.”Any game for Australia A is a massive honour and there is no doubt runs on the board get you talked about. I am glad to link up with Buddha [McSweeney] again, a good Queensland boy.”

Revealed: Arsenal's stance on Leandro Trossard exit with Turkish transfer window still open amid Besiktas links

Arsenal have revealed their stance on selling Leandro Trossard amid strong links with Besiktas. The Belgian midfielder joined the Gunners in 2023 from Brighton and last month, he signed a new contract extension that will keep him at the Emirates Stadium until the summer of 2027. Trossard had earlier attracted interest from Fenerbahce when Jose Mourinho was still in charge of the club.

Arsenal's stance on Trossard revealedBesiktas keen on signing the BelgianTrossard signed new contract in AugustFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

According to , the Gunners are not planning to part ways with Trossard, despite his links to Turkish Super Lig giants Besiktas. The Turkish transfer window is still open, and players can join the Super Lig clubs from across Europe. 

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There have been speculations about Trossard's future at Arsenal throughout the summer, following the club's signings of Viktor Gyokeres and Noni Madueke during the transfer window. The Belgian, however, reaffirmed his commitment to the Premier League giants by signing a new contract extension last month, which will keep him at the club until the summer of 2027.

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After signing the dotted lines, the Belgium international had garnered praise from manager Mikel Arteta as the Spanish coach claimed that the player "deserved recognition". 

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL?

Arsenal, who lost their last Premier League game against champions Liverpool at Anfield, will hope to bounce back after the international break as they host Nottingham Forest on September 13. 

لاعب الزمالك الأسبق: زيزو لم يكن أمينًا وتسبب في أزمة لـ الأهلي

علق وليد صلاح عبد اللطيف لاعب الزمالك الأسبق، على الإصابة التي تعرض لها أحمد سيد زيزو لاعب الأهلي خلال مباراة فريقه أمس أمام إنبي ضمن لقاءات الدوري المصري.

وتعادل الأهلي مع إنبي، بهدف لمثله، في إطار مواجهات الجولة السادسة من عمر مسابقة بطولة الدوري المصري على ملعب استاد المقاولون العرب.

وقال وليد صلاح الدين في تصريحات تلفزيونية عبر قناة أون سبورت: “الجهاز الطبي كان له دور كبير جدًا في هذا الأمر، لأنه إذا وجد أن لاعبا يشعر بألم فعليه أن يُجري اختبارًا له خلال عملية الإحماء”.

طالع | شوبير يكشف تفاصيل حضور الخطيب مران الأهلي.. وموقف إصابة إمام عاشور وزيزو

وأردف: “وبالنسبة للاعب، فلا بد أن يؤمن نفسه، إذا شعر أنه يستطيع اللعب يُخطر الجهاز الطبي، لكن إذا كان هناك قلق فمن الطبيعي أن تُخطر الطبيب أيضًا، والمفترض الجهاز الطبي يمنعه، حتى لو كان اللاعب يريد أن يلعب”.

وواصل: “أي لاعب طبيعي يريد أن يلعب، لكن هناك فرق بين إنك تستمر في الملعب أو بعد 10 دقائق تطلب تغييرك”.

وأشار: “أعتقد أنه لم تكن هناك أمانة قوية من زيزو، هو كان يريد أن يلعب، والجميع يعلم الضغوط على لاعبي الأهلي، وبالتالي كان يريد المشاركة”.

وأتم: “لكن في نفس الوقت تسبب في خسارة الفريق لتغيير، ولم يكن صادقا مع الجهاز الطبي، بدليل أنه بد دقائق قليلة خرج، وبالتالي فإن مسؤولية ما حدث مشتركة بين اللاعب والجهاز الطبي”.

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