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Bolton close in on Dixon

An exciting update has emerged on Bolton’s transfer business, one regarding Barrow goalkeeper Joel Dixon.

What’s the talk?

Bolton News journalist Marc Iles has claimed that Bolton are closing in on a deal to sign Barrow goalkeeper Joel Dixon. He has said that Dixon is set to sign for Bolton this summer to reunite with his former Barrow boss Ian Evatt, who became the Bolton manager after departing from Barrow last summer.

Dixon is out of contract at the end of the month and Bolton are working to secure a deal for the 27-year-old to join on a free transfer. Barrow are attempting to pin him down to an extension, but Bolton are now the favourites to land his signature as it stands.

Back in September 2020, Barrow boss David Dunn hailed the “excellent” shot-stopper and admitted that he has been improving week-in-week-out. He told The Mail:

“I think Joel has been excellent so far. Against Stevenage, for example, everything about his game was impressive.

“Joel is growing every week, getting more confident and I’ve been really pleased with him.”

Evatt will love it

Evatt will love it if the club can get a deal over the line for Dixon in the coming weeks. As the report mentioned, Evatt worked with the ‘keeper at Barrow and already knows just how good the shot-stopper is.

Dixon will not arrive as an unknown quantity and should not need time to settle in, as he already knows what Evatt wants from his goalkeepers and he knows that the manager will trust him.

The £610-per-week beast played all 46 of Barrow’s League Two matches last season and kept nine clean sheets as they narrowly avoided relegation to the National League. He is a reliable goalkeeper who can perform in the Football League, as he was not dropped for any matches and he managed to stay fit throughout the entire campaign. He also clearly impressed Evatt enough to make the Bolton boss want to add him to his squad to spend a second spell with the shot-stopper.

Matt Gilks was Bolton’s number one as they sealed promotion out of League Two. Gilks kept 16 clean sheets in 35 games for Bolton, but he recently turned 39 and will obviously not be Bolton’s goalkeeper in the long term.

Dixon, meanwhile, turns 28 in December and could still have a decade left in his career, which means he could be the long term replacement for Gilks.

AND in other EFL news, Get it done: Chansiri must seal SWFC swoop for £1.5k-p/w prospect, Moore will love it…

Exclusive: USWNT's Sofia Huerta on World Cup dream, quietening the doubts & finding something to be best at

GOAL sat down with the American fullback to discuss how she redefined her goals to make her World Cup dream a reality

Let Sofia Huerta hype herself up for just one moment – she deserves to, after all. By any measure, Huerta shouldn't be here; she shouldn't be with this team for this tournament for this moment; it feels unfathomable.

A woman who initially opted to play for Mexico couldn't have imagined herself playing for the U.S. women's national team. And a player that once had so many reasons to doubt herself could never have predicted that she'd have so many reasons to believe.

That's what got Huerta to this moment: belief. It's what got her from the wilderness to the World Cup. Seven years ago, she found herself playing for Adelaide United with no real idea of what would come next. On Friday night, she could very well start for the USWNT in Auckland in the first game of their 2023 World Cup.

The path to this point has been anything but a straight line. Huerta isn't like many of her team-mates, many of whom were tipped for success at an early age. For so long she was an outsider. Yet, here she is among the stars with a chance to represent her country at a World Cup.

"I've been in the league [NWSL] for 10 years," she says. "That is an accomplishment, for sure. I just signed a deal with Lotto. That's a big deal! I'm the first player from Idaho to become a female professional soccer player, the first to play for and against Mexico and the U.S. There are so many things! I know I just sounded a little cocky there, but I just think, in general, the mentality is now to focus on what you do have instead of what you don't.

"I think, right now, there are just so many things to be thankful for."

Ahead of the World Cup, the USWNT fullback sat down with GOAL to talk about the things she's thankful for, her winding path to a World Cup and how her one world-class skill got her to where she always dreamt of being.

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    A long journey and nothing to lose

    To understand Huerta, you have to understand her journey.

    "Everyone's journey is very different and unique and amazing in its own way," she says. "My journey, specifically, has not been a straight line."

    A Mexican-American born and raised in Idaho, Huerta's path to USWNT stardom has been anything but normal. In fact, her path to the USWNT ran straight through one of the team's big rivals, Mexico.

    Having represented the U.S. and Mexico as a youth international, Huerta opted to join the latter back in 2012. She played five matches for them at international level, scoring twice, before deciding that her heart really was with the USWNT.

    The problem was that, for a while, the USWNT didn't necessarily love Huerta back. Having earned seven caps with the U.S. after her initial switch, she tumbled down the pecking order after she failed to impress. It was at that time that her mental health began to deteriorate as she developed anxiety that made her lose belief in herself as a player and person.

    That is what Huerta has battled back from. For three years, she found herself out of the USWNT picture and, for three years, she wondered: what's the point? In those moments, she wasn't just battling defenders, but herself.

    "I'm a great teammate, a great friend, like there are so many things, and just because I'm not on the national team doesn't mean I'm not successful," she said while reflecting on those darker times. "Changing that narrative a few years back has definitely served me in the best way possible because it has made this time period before the World Cup easier. I've heard players say that if they don't make the roster, will they feel fulfilled in their career? I understand that, but, no matter what, I'm still gonna feel good about my career."

    Huerta, admittedly, is still fighting back against that anxiety with the help of a mental health coach. But it's hard to say she isn't giving it hell, having built herself into one of the 23 best players in the USWNT player pool.

    "It's never been guaranteed for me, and even right now, going into the World Cup, it's not guaranteed. My journey, specifically, definitely has allowed me to appreciate the position I'm in. I'm very thankful that I'm in the conversation, that I've been getting to camps the last couple years and I'm in a position where I can go to work. [Going to] a World Cup, I'll be one of the few who have gone to that first World Cup in their 30s. That kind of describes my journey a little bit.

    "I was playing for the Mexican national team and I was with the U.S. and then I didn't do what I needed to do and then there was a few years in between and then I finally got called in again in a different position. I'm playing a completely different position than I have over the majority of my professional career.

    "It's never been like linear for me. It's always been really winding and with a lot of uncertainty and I think really, just going into this summer, I had just more peace than I think anyone would expect considering my journey. But I think at this point, I have nothing to lose."

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    Dealing with doubts

    During those darker moments, Huerta had to ask herself some tough questions.

    "I think it's human nature," she says. "I definitely always felt like I was enough and had the quality to be on the national team, but that wasn't really aligning with what the reality was. I wasn't getting called in. I wasn't really in the conversation. So then it was like, 'Okay, well, is my perception of myself different than what everyone else's perception of me is?' Of course, doubt creeps in and I think, 'Hey, did I miss out on that opportunity, or we're not gonna get this opportunity again?' That would have come in every once in a while.

    "I think just with all the mental work I've done, that doesn't really serve me. In fact, it just like causes me to have more anxiety and really, ultimately, if I can't really perform at my highest level anyway, I'm never going to get called back."

    For years, the national team was that definition. It is the pinnacle of the game, after all – the highest level a player can play at. Every player dreams of those moments of hearing the national anthem play. It was hearing that anthem, while on the Mexican side of it all, that convinced Huerta to switch over and follow her heart with the USWNT.

    The USWNT always was the goal, but Huerta realized she couldn't make it her everything. Instead, she had to fall in love with the process again and rediscover why she got into this line of work in the first place.

    "When you start getting in your head, you're not having fun anymore," she says. "Really, what are you doing? We all play! Yeah, the money has gotten better, of course, but we all started playing when there was absolutely no money! We played it because we loved it and it was fun and we enjoyed it. It was about getting back to that. So I just thought about how I want to be the best player I can be. I know that when I'm my best, I can be on the national team, so it was just getting back to that.

    "I finally got back to that and, of course, I was noticed by Vlatko and got called up again."

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    Faking it, Making it

    Despite all she's done over the last few years, Huerta very much found herself right in that bubble heading toward the World Cup.

    She felt good about what she'd done, and she had every reason to. Since returning to the USWNT in 2021, she's amassed 22 caps with 16 of them coming in 2022. Featuring that heavily in the year before a World Cup is, generally, a good sign, but World Cup rosters are always nervy, aren't they?

    "Obviously, it's all about your perception," she says. "I think the initial few days when I left camp [in April], we had basically like two-and-a-half months until [Vlatko Andonovski] made the roster. There was a lot of anxiety. It was kind of like 'Okay, did I do everything that I need to do to solidify my spot?' It's almost like these questions that no-one knows the answer to and it was kind of pain-seeking a little bit. As I worked through that, I was like, 'Well, that's not really serving me'. I know what I've done the last couple of years with the national team, and in fact, what I've done in the NWSL.

    "Of course, doubt can creep in and anxiety can creep in but at the end of the day, as we've heard many times, 'just fake it 'til you make it', and so I kind of took that mentality."

    In the end, she was one of five fullbacks named to the U.S. squad and one of 14 first-timers heading to the World Cup. She's one of only five players in the squad that hasn't even played at a youth World Cup. She's the first player from Idaho to ever make the team and only the second, after Sydney Leroux, to make a USWNT squad after switching their international allegiance.

    "I know I'm a good player, but, ultimately, the decision is kind of based on one person or a few coaches' decisions," she says. "If there was another coach, maybe I wouldn't be a guarantee. You never know! All I can do is what I can do, what's in my control, control the controllable. Vlatko is the one that has the hard job here, in my opinion!"

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  • Lotto

    A supreme crosser of the ball

    The big reason Huerta is back with the USWNT? A positional switch that has allowed her to flex her world-class attribute week in, week out.

    For the earlier parts of her career, Huerta was a winger but, in recent years, she's shifted back to right-back. And since that switch, she's become a crossing machine. Huerta is regarded as one of the world's best crossers of the ball. She's a player that can create a goal out of nothing with one swing of her foot.

    "When I was in college, my coach Jerry Smith told me that one of the keys to being on the national team is being the best at something," she says. "That gets you in and keeps you in the national team: being the best at something. You kind of look at everyone and say, 'Oh, this person does that'. I've always had a pretty good cross. It's obviously going better because I've worked on that craft, but I remember him telling me that I have a world-class cross, keep working on it, and that will be my ticket. And it's pretty funny now because I think he's right!

    "I believe I'm a quality player for sure, but I think one of the main reasons I'm on this team is because I have such a good cross."

    Huerta is right: that's why she's here. And it's what makes her such an interesting option for the USWNT.

    So often, teams sit in deep against the U.S. and, over the last few years, the team has struggled a bit to break teams down. That's where Huerta could come in. There's no real defense for a perfectly-hit cross, after all.

    "That's my favorite part about playing since the position change," she says. "Previously being an attacking player, obviously I have a very attacking mindset. I play defense and that's the priority, of course, but I'm on the national team because I'm an attacking outside back. I'm not necessarily this phenomenal one-on-one defender. I can get forward and I get crosses in the box for my team-mates to score.

    "I really try to focus on what I'm really, really good at. That's always the main key of mine in the game: let me have at least two to four key passes that can create big chances. It's also about getting better at what I get better at, and I'm a defender now so I need to get better in certain areas and I focus on that on the daily as well. It is a balance, but I definitely try to focus on, and what I find important, is just being good at what I'm really good at."

    It remains to be seen how much Huerta will play this summer. She'll be battling star fullback Emily Fox and veteran Kelley O'Hara for a spot on that right-hand side. But, if there comes a time where the U.S. needs someone to create some danger, Andonovski will know where to look.

Just as Sheikh Mansour planned! Winners and losers as Man City finally realise their Champions League destiny as Inter strikers no-show in Istanbul

It wasn't a cakewalk, nor was it particularly pretty, but the Abu Dhabi-backed club have finally conquered Europe thanks to a 1-0 victory in Istanbul

So, the project is now complete. Abu Dhabi's plan to conquer the world of football has finally been accomplished. And Sheikh Mansour even turned up to see 15 years of colossal – and questionable – financial investment yield a first Champions League triumph for Manchester City.

Did they deserve it? That's obviously a loaded question from an ethical perspective. But, from a sporting standpoint, no, on the night, Inter were the better side. City may have had all the ball, but they played nowhere near their best in a fortuitous 1-0 win at the Ataturk Olympic Stadium.

They looked strangely nervous, perhaps overwhelmed by the occasion. They were heavy favourites to win this game; many thought it would be a walkover. But City played with an unusual lack of confidence and precision. Pep Guardiola could be heard screaming, somewhat ironically, at his players to 'Relax!' during the first half.

But City got the job done, thanks to Rodri's well-taken 68th-minute strike, and really that's all that matters from Mansour's perspective. It may have taken longer than it should have given the amount of oil money pumped into the club, but the bottom line is that City have made history. They are treble winners and, in spite of their poor performance against Inter, nobody would dispute the claim that they are the best team on the planet right now based on the 2022-23 season as a whole.

Below, GOAL runs through the winners and losers from the belated coronation of a new world order in Istanbul…

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    WINNER: Pep Guardiola

    The Catalan made his name as a coach by winning the Champions League twice with Barcelona with arguably two of the greatest performances in the competition's history. He has endured 10 frustrating seasons since then, being knocked out on away goals on three occasions, losing the 2021 final and being denied in agonising circumstances by Real Madrid last season.

    But he has finally won the competition for a third time, proving that he is one of the best, if not the best coach in the world. Only Zinedine Zidane and Carlo Ancelotti have won the competition as many times as him. And if he stays at City until the end of his current contract in 2025, he could well match or even beat Ancelotti's record of four triumphs.

    This was perhaps the worst performance from a side of his in the Champions League final, but after all the heartache Guardiola has experienced since last winning it in 2011, getting his hands on the famous trophy once again was all that mattered.

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    LOSER: Inter's strikers

    This game was there for the taking or Inter, but victory was utterly dependent upon them taking their chances. They didn't. Inter had twice as many shots as City (14-7). The xG was 1.81 to 0.94 in their favour – and yet Simone Inzaghi's side failed to even force extra-time.

    They could, of course, have done with the kind of good fortune that City benefitted from midway through the second half, when a poor cross was deflected into Rodri's path by Francesco Acerbi's backside. However, when the Nerazzurri needed a bit of luck, Federico Dimarco's late, looping header bounced off the crossbar – and then his follow-up hit his own team-mate, Romelu Lukaku.

    Ultimately, though, Inter only have themselves to blame. Edin Dzeko was dire, predictably so, and Inzaghi will have to explain why on earth he elected to start a 37-year-old with no pace against City's high line, and left the in-form Lukaku on the bench. The Belgium striker will obviously generate headlines for the close-range header that he really should have buried in the closing stages, but there is simply no denying the fact that Inter became far more threatening as soon as he set foot on the field.

    Lukaku could even have had tap-in had Lautaro Martinez not selfishly – and disgracefully – decided to shoot himself after pouncing on a loose pass-back, rather than trying to square the ball to his onrushing strike partner. It was a horrific error, one which provoked a furious response from Marcelo Brozovic, who was, at the time, also arriving at speed, unmarked, on the edge of the area.

    Unfortunately for Inter, while City legend Sergio Aguero bigged up their forwards' firepower before the game, not one of them turned up with their shooting boots on.

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    WINNER: Ederson

    The Brazilian goalkeeper is valued more for his ability on the ball than his capacity to keep it out, and this season he has often been beaten with the first shot he has faced, if indeed he has had to face any. But here the symbol of modern goalkeeping showed he also knows how to do the basics.

    He threw out his arms to intimidate Martinez and prevent the Argentine from opening the scoring, before he produced two fine reflex saves late in the game. When he walked up to get his medal, he felt a huge amount of appreciation from his team-mates, who clearly felt grateful to him for protecting their slender lead.

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    WINNER: City's double pivot

    Rodri played no part in City's last Champions League final, but he made sure he made his mark on this one. He has a habit of prising open cagey games, firing in the first goal against Bayern Munich in the quarter-final first leg. This was a less spectacular finish, but it underlined his awareness of where the ball is going to drop, and Andre Onana stood no chance. The source of the only goal of the game was somewhat surprising as Rodri had endured a very tough first half, and was far from his usual best.

    So it's a good thing that he had the ever-present and courageous John Stones to give him some support. Stones, who is one of City fans' best-loved players, carried the ball with assurance and also held his own physically, never shying away from a scrap. He is one of the team's longest-serving players and has had his fair share of ups and downs in his long career on the blue side of Manchester. So, winning the treble as one of Guardiola's most important players once more must give him a huge level of satisfaction.

15 fun facts about Darwin Nunez

Everything you need to know about Uruguay hitman Darwin Nunez!

Darwin Nunez is a Uruguayan professional footballer who currently plays as a striker for the English Premier League club Liverpool and the Uruguay national team. He was born on June 24, 1999, in Artigas, Uruguay, and began his football career in the youth academy of his local team, Artigas.

Nunez joined Montevideo-based Uruguayan club Penarol in 2016, when he was 17. He made his professional debut with Penarol in 2018 and rapidly established himself as one of Uruguay's most promising young players.

In the summer of 2019, Nunez signed for the Spanish second-division outfit Almeria, where he had an impressive debut season, scoring 16 goals in 32 appearances across all competitions. He quickly became a fan favourite and played a key role in Almeria's promotion to La Liga.

His move to Almeria arrived at the same time he earned his first call-up to the Uruguayan senior team and he scored inside five minutes of his introduction as a substitute against Peru in October of 2019.

Nunez's exploits in front of goal in the Spanish second-tier caught the attention of Portuguese giants Benfica, who paid a reported €24m fee to secure his services, making him the most expensive signing in the history of the Portuguese league.

After making 85 appearances and netting 48 goals during his fruitful two-year stay at Benfica, he attracted the attention of Premier League heavyweights Liverpool, who beat competition from rivals Manchester United to secure his signature, paying a club-record £85m to prise him away from the Eagles.

He has had a sparkling start to his Liverpool career with a hat-trick in pre-season, followed by a match-winning goal on his competitive debut against Manchester City, but is still settling into life in Merseyside on and off the pitch and has had his share of struggles.

Nevertheless, he will be a huge asset for Liverpool, and is destined to shine brightly in the near future given his high ceiling and undoubted poaching instincts.

What are the 13 things you absolutely need to know about the Liverpool striker?

  • Humble beginnings

    Things haven't always been rosy for Nunez, who is now one of the wealthiest person back in his homeland, as he sought success in Europe earlier in his career.

    The forward's story is one of rags to riches, as he went from obscurity to fame. Nunez was born in one of the most underprivileged neighbourhoods of Uruguay, Artigas, and into a less than fortunate family as his mother was a bottle-hawker while his father was a construction worker.

    His parents regularly struggled to put food on the table. And when they did, it often came with sacrifice, with Nunez once claiming that his mother who went to bed hungry at times to provide for him and his brother.

    Apart from a lack of basic needs, the area where he lived was prone to flooding from the Cuareim river, costing the family significantly as they had to regularly invest in home repairs.

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    The Anfield audition

    Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp has a reputation of signing players off the back of an impressive audition against his side. The likes of Sadio Mane, Takumi Minamino, and even Luis Diaz were all scooped up by the Reds after Klopp watched them live from the dugout.

    Nunez was put through a similar test when Liverpool and Benfica locked horns in the Champions League quarter-final last season. While the Eagles lost the tie 6-4 on aggregate, the 23-year-old passed his audition with flying colours, hitting a goal in either leg.

    He even slotted a hat-trick of goals past Alisson at Anfield, even if two were ultimately chalked off due to offside. The youngster certainly proved he knew how to find the back of net, and fast forward to the summer window, Nunez was unveiled as new Liverpool signing for a club-record £85m.

    The German head coach later admitted that he "fell in love" with the striker last term. If you perform well against Klopp's Reds, you may well find yourself at Anfield sooner rather than later.

  • Was Linked to Brighton & Southampton

    After only one season in Spain, the young forward had several admirers during the summer transfer window of 2021, especially from the Premier League. Both Brighton and Southampton were reportedly interested in signing the Uruguayan striker, with the latter even making a bid.

    Meanwhile, there was also rumours of interest from European giants such as RB Leipzig and Napoli. However, Benfica ultimately won the race for his signature, securing his services for a club-record fee.

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    A mix of Edinson Cavani & Luis Suarez?

    Nunez is regarded one of the talented strikers in this upcoming generation. He has it all: speed, technique, acceleration, strength, perseverance, and of course, finishing.

    Standing at 6'2' but with a burst of pace and defensive tenacity, the forward does share some physical resemblance to the legendary Urguay striker Edinson Cavani.

    However, Leonardo Ramos, who coached Nunez at Penarol in Uruguay, believes he shares characteristics with both 'El Matador' and another famous La Celeste striker, Luis Suarez, and can be a hybrid of both.

    Ramos told Stats Perform: "I think he has two parts, it's half-and-half.

    "He has the power that Suarez had to go for everything, to go to the clash, to be a fighter with the rival. And he also has the part of Cavani, of being a much more athletic player, more physical, more intelligent.

    "I think it's a union of those two things that are important."

PSG player ratings: History makers Lionel Messi & Kylian Mbappe inspire season's best display vs Marseille

Kylian Mbappe and Lionel Messi starred in the absence of Neymar, leading Paris Saint-Germain to a 3-0 win over Ligue 1 rivals Marseille.

PSG broke the deadlock after 25 minutes, as Mbappe ran in behind and met Lionel Messi's pass with a driven finish. He returned the favour 10 minutes later, threading a cross through a defender's legs for an easy tap in for Messi.

The duo only continued to dazzle, with Messi finding Mbappe again with a delicate chip — which the French international swept into the bottom corner on the volley.

Marseille had their moments, but PSG defended dutifully and kept a valuable clean sheet, while extending their Ligue 1 lead to eight points.

GOAL rates PSG's players from Stade Velodrome…

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    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Gianluigi Donnarumma (7/10):

    Made a couple of neat saves, kept a clean sheet. A good day.

    Nordi Mukiele (7/10):

    The more conservative of the wing-backs. Didn't do much wrong defensively.

    Sergio Ramos (7/10):

    Dominant in the air and tidy on the ball. Not the centre-back he once was, but Ramos can still perform at this level.

    Marquinhos (8/10):

    Threw himself in front of shots, made some key blocks. Crucial in keeping a clean sheet as the game wound down.

    Presnel Kimpembe (5/10):

    Substituted early after sustaining another leg injury. It's been a spell of rotten luck for the France international.

    Nuno Mendes (7/10)

    Recovered well to prevent Tavares from scoring. Made some excellent forward runs.

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  • Midfield

    Vitinha (7/10):

    Better defensively, and more convincing driving forward. Only lost the ball once, which was crucial against an aggressive Marseille midfield.

    Marco Verratti (8/10):

    Active off the ball, reliable on it. Makes this team so much better.

    Fabian Ruiz (7/10):

    Made the most tackles in the match, got forward often, and found Messi and Mbappe with regularity.

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    Attack

    Lionel Messi (9/10):

    Assisted the first and third, scored the second. Still massive in big moments. Scored his 700th club goal. The best ever.

    Kylian Mbappe (9/10):

    Scored the opener with a lovely diagonal run and finish. Assisted the second with a nutmeg pass. Buried the third with a controlled volley. Now PSG's joint all-time top scorer with 200 goals. Magic.

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    Subs & Manager

    Danilo Pereira (6/10):

    Brought on early to replace the injured Kimpembe and slotted into the right side of a back three. At times uncomfortable, but positionally solid.

    Warren Zaire-Emery (6/10):

    Entrusted with a shift at right-wing-back and did well.

    Juan Bernat (6/10):

    Extra legs for a tiring Nuno Mendes.

    Christophe Galtier (8/10):

    Started with his preferred three centre-back formation. Got his midfield configuration right, and let his stars do their thing. Eight points clear atop Ligue 1 after a rocky spell.

Leicester City interested in Nuno Mendes

Leicester City have been linked with a move for Sporting Lisbon left-back Nuno Mendes as the upcoming transfer window approaches.

What’s the story?

According to Sky Sports, the Foxes are interested in acquiring the teenager’s services over the summer as Brendan Rodgers looks to address his left-back conundrum.

The report added that Leicester are eyeing up moves for Atalanta’s Robin Gosens and Southampton’s Ryan Bertrand to replace the departing Christian Fuchs.

Rodgers needs him

With Fuchs calling time on his six-year stay at the King Power Stadium and the highly-rated James Justin set for an extended stay on the treatment table, bringing in some competition for sole left-back Luke Thomas must be one of Rodgers’ top priorities.

Despite being just 18 years old, Mendes has attracted the attention of some of the continent’s biggest clubs this season after a string of impressive performances. The youngster started 29 Liga NOS games for Sporting in 2020/21 as the capital club won their first top-flight title in 19 years, earning a magnificent 7.24 WhoScored rating for his exploits.

While the purchase of Gosens or Bertrand would also be a sensible and logical option for the Midlands outfit, neither seems as exciting as Mendes.

His potential is astronomical, and Leicester’s ability to buy young talent for relatively cheap prices before developing them and selling them on for huge profits makes the Portugal under-21 international an ideal transfer target.

Rodgers undoubtedly needs a left-back this summer, and Mendes is surely at the top of his wish list. Sporting president Frederico Varandas couldn’t hide his admiration for the academy graduate last year, claiming that Mendes has a big future in the senior Portuguese national team, for whom he has already won three caps.

“Nuno Mendes is dazzling. I have no doubt that he will be the future left-back of the (Portuguese) national team,” he said [via Leicester Mercury].

Although his arrival would ultimately leave Leicester with two teenage prodigies as their only natural left-sided defenders, the potential positives outweigh the risks which would be attached to his arrival.

It’s not often that Rodgers has splashed huge sums of money on individual players during his time at the King Power, but breaking the bank for the £22.5m-rated Mendes (Transfermarkt) is certainly a gamble worth taking.

Securing his signature would be a masterclass from the Foxes’ director of football Jon Rudkin, given the level of competition for the precocious Portuguese prospect.

In other news… Huge LCFC transfer update emerges over “superb” £70k-p/w dynamo, fans will be buzzing 

Lucky 13 for Arsenal! Women's Super League winners and losers as the Gunners make history and Spurs score eight

Arsenal set a new WSL record with victory over West Ham on what was a good weekend for north London as Tottenham went goal crazy against Brighton.

It took Tottenham six games to score eight goals in the Women's Super League last season. On Sunday, they scored eight in a single match. Have they got the firepower this year to be a force?

That incredible win over Brighton was the headline result from a huge weekend in England's top flight, with the biggest story concerning the red side of north London, with Arsenal setting a new record for successive wins in the league as they beat West Ham to record their 13th victory in a row.

Elsewhere, an early season six-pointer between the division's two bottom sides, Reading and Leicester, provided the drama, with the Royals scoring twice at the death to turn the game around and clinch their first points of the campaign.

With plenty to digest across the WSL, here are GOAL's winners and losers from the latest round of fixtures…

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    WINNER: UWCL representatives

    It was a difficult weekend for Europe's top clubs as many struggled in their domestic fixtures after Women's Champions League action in midweek.

    Lyon, eight-time champions on the continent, needed a stoppage-time winner to beat a Fleury side that were down to 10 from the 25th minute.

    Bayern Munich didn't break the deadlock against newly-promoted Meppen until the 71st minute, while two former champions, Barcelona and Wolfsburg, were under pressure until the final whistle in narrow one-goal wins over Levante and Werder Bremen, respectively.

    It was the same in England, where Chelsea were pegged back at 1-1 against Aston Villa, while a sloppy bit of defensive play saw Arsenal fall behind at home to West Ham. That goal also denied them an 11th clean sheet in succession that would have extended their WSL record.

    However, both went on to record 3-1 wins that were eventually comfortable.

    How these two handle their post-UWCL games may well decide the title race this season, but neither were caught out this time despite early scares. Their performances weren't perfect, but it was the results that were important here.

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    LOSER: Leicester

    As the clock ticked into the 90th minute on Sunday, Leicester were 1-0 up away at Reading, the only other team in the WSL without a point yet this season. After scoring against the run of play in the first half, it looked like they were going to hang on for an absolutely massive three points.

    But it all changed incredibly quickly. Rachel Rowe swung in a corner and it was defended in inexplicable fashion given the circumstances, flying into the back of the net to level things up.

    Two minutes later, Rowe produced something even more spectacular, dancing past several Leicester challenges before unleashing a powerful strike from range that sailed into the bottom corner. It sent the Royals into raptures and secured all three points in sensational style.

    It was a big defeat for the Foxes given the opposition – and an even bigger one given how it happened. Now, they need to pick themselves up and go again, which won't be easy, and not only in terms of morale. Leicester must host high-flying Arsenal next week…

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    WINNER: Tottenham

    Tottenham scored eight goals on Sunday. Eight goals – a number that accounts for a third of the league goals they scored all of last season.

    It was a fantastic performance against Brighton, with a clean sheet adding to head coach Rehanne Skinner's delight.

    Spurs have always been a defensively astute side, with the questions surrounding their attacking output in terms of who is going to score the goals but also in who is going to create the chances.

    This season, it looks like things are clicking. Ashleigh Neville appears unstoppable going forward, scoring twice this past weekend and producing two assists – one of those a sublime backheel to send Drew Spence through on goal.

    Spence, signed from Chelsea this summer, has been brilliant, too, playing in a more attacking role and currently sitting just one goal off her best-ever total in an WSL season – with just five games played.

    With forwards Jessica Naz and new arrival Nikola Karczewska also recording their first strikes of the campaign on Sunday, Spurs look primed to become a really dangerous attacking force in the league.

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    LOSER: Brighton

    The other side of that 8-0 story on Sunday was a biggest ever defeat in the WSL for a Brighton team that have won plenty of plaudits since promotion to the top flight back in 2019.

    They've been Chelsea's bogey team and made great progress off the pitch, securing some super signings over the years as a result. Things don't look so rosy at the moment, though.

    Brighton lost two huge players this past summer, with young defender Maya Le Tissier joining Manchester United, while Inessa Kaagman, their top goal-scorer last term, returned to the Netherlands. They brought in some interesting replacements but it hasn't come together yet.

    Right now, they look like a relegation candidate. Only Leicester are keeping them off of the foot of the table and if they are dragged into a battle for survival, this huge hit to their goal difference won't help their chances in a race regularly decided by the finest of margins.

Ten games, nine wins! Inside Arsenal's record-breaking Premier League start

The Gunners have opened up a four-point gap at the top of the table, with an unlikely title challenge now a real possibility

Ten games, nine wins, 27 points. Arsenal have enjoyed their best-ever start to a Premier League season.

Never before have the Gunners amassed this many points at this stage of a campaign. Even Arsene Wenger’s great sides couldn’t manage it.

Mikel Arteta’s team are now four points clear at the top of the table following Sunday’s 1-0 victory over Leeds United at Elland Road, coupled with Manchester City's loss at Liverpool later the same day.

So how have Arsenal done it? What are the reasons behind their record-breaking start? GOAL takes a look…

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    Jesus' arrival

    It’s impossible to downplay the impact Gabriel Jesus has had on Arsenal. His arrival from Manchester City in the summer has completely transformed the way Mikel Arteta’s side attack.

    It was clear last season that a new focal point was needed to spearhead the forward line. With Alexandre Lacazette in the centre, Arsenal lacked any sort of mobility or penalty-box threat. That left the Gunners almost totally reliant on Bukayo Saka and Emile Smith Rowe to get their goals.

    But that has changed completely with Jesus in the side. The Brazilian has scored five goals in 10 Premier league games, more than Lacazette managed in the whole of last season, while he also has three assists.

    But Jesus’ impact has not just been about goal contributions. His work rate and pressing ability sets the tone from the front. He is a constant handful for defences with his movement.

    He has also brought a winning mentality to a young squad and has taken on a key leadership role along with captain Martin Odegaard and Granit Xhaka.

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    The vibrancy of youth

    Arsenal have the second-youngest side in the Premier League this season, behind Southampton, and it is that youth has been a key driving force behind the Gunners’ success in the opening 10 games.

    Bukayo Saka’s match winner at Leeds on Sunday was the 24th league goal Arsenal have scored this season, with nine of those having been scored by players aged 21 or under. 

    It was also Arsenal’s 55th goal scored by a player 21 or under during Mikel Arteta’s time in charge; that’s 23 more than any other side during his tenure.

    Having such a young team may have its drawbacks when you get to the business end of the season, as was evident towards the end of the 2021-22 campaign when Arsenal couldn’t manage to get themselves over the line in the race for the top four.

    But for now, that youthful energy is playing a huge part in the Gunners’ superb start to the new season.

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    Arteta's leadership

    The manager deserves a lot of credit for Arsenal’s start. He’s made a number of big calls and so far they are paying off.

    The decision to name Martin Odegaard captain has worked well, as has unwavering backing of Granit Xhaka – who is now looking like a totally new player under the Spaniard.

    Defensively, Arteta had to work out how to fit certain players into his system. He opted to pair William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhaes at centre-back and shift Ben White out to right-back instead of the reliable Takehiro Tomiyasu.

    Many questioned whether White could perform that role, but so far he has been one of the stars of Arsenal’s season.

    Arteta’s decision to start Tomiyasu at left-back in the win against Liverpool was another inspired piece of thinking. It was a call that looked questionable, with Kieran Tierney sitting on the bench, but the right footed Tomiyasu marked Mohamed Salah out of the game, so much so that the Egyptian star was hauled off with 20 minutes remaining.

    Like his team, Arteta is still relatively young and inexperienced. He’s learning on the job, but so far this season, the majority of the decisions have proved to be correct ones.

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  • A perfect pre-season

    This was a massive thing for Arsenal. Arteta was able to have a proper pre-season with his squad for the first time since he was appointed and he took full advantage.

    New signings Gabriel Jesus and Oleksandr Zinchenko were bedded in early, as was William Saliba – who was finally integrated into the squad after three loan spells away for the club.

    The pre-season tour to the United States was a major success, with Arsenal winning both games – including beating Chelsea 4-0 in Orlando.

    Jesus was an instant hit and the team spirit was clearly strong, something that was highlighted by everyone who went away on the tour.

    Arsenal ended pre-season by beating Sevilla 6-0 to win the Emirates Cup. That meant they had won every single one of their summer friendlies.

    Arteta’s side looked ready to hit the ground running in the Premier League, which they duly did.

From Ronaldo to Lampard – Stars who signed for top English clubs in their late thirties!

Cristiano Ronaldo returned to Manchester United in 2021 after 12 years at the age of 36…

Manchester United welcomed 36-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo in the summer of 2021 with open arms as the superstar footballer returned to Old Trafford after 12 years.

While it is not a common practice for top Premier League clubs to sign older stars, players like Cristiano Ronaldo are an exception to that practice as they are assets for their teams at any point in their careers.

In 2020, Chelsea had signed veteran Brazilian defender Thiago Silva after his contract ended with PSG. Silva too proved to be an asset as he played a pivotal role in the Blues backline that won the Champions League in the 2020/21 campaign.

In the past, players like Didier Drogba, Laurent Blanc and Henrik Larsson have signed for top English sides in their mid-thirties.

Here are 10 players who have joined Premier League clubs after turning 35.

It has to be noted that signing goalkeepers above 35 are a common practice for clubs hence they have not been considered in this list.

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    Cristiano Ronaldo

    Club: Manchester United

    Age: 36

    Year: 2021

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    Didier Drogba

    Club: Chelsea

    Age: 36

    Year: 2014

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    Thiago Silva

    Club: Chelsea

    Age: 36

    Year: 2020

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    Frank Lampard

    Club: Manchester City

    Age: 37

    Year: 2014

Yves Bissouma: West Ham’s Rice successor?

West Ham United are said to be one of the teams keen on signing Yves Bissouma ahead of the summer transfer window…

What’s the word?

That’s according to the Daily Star, who have claimed that the Irons have made inquiries to Brighton and Hove Albion over the potential of signing their star midfielder.

However, it is thought that Premier League rivals Arsenal are leading the race to secure his signature, whilst Everon and Spurs are also mooted with interest.

The 24-year-old has two years still to run on his Seagulls contract and is thought to be valued at around £30m.

Dream Rice replacement

A new central midfielder likely won’t be top of David Moyes’ priorities given that he so desperately needs attacking options, in particular an alternative to the injury-prone Michail Antonio, but things could quickly change.

The Hammers are on the verge of achieving something extraordinary in qualifying for the Champions League but even despite that, Declan Rice’s future continues to be shrouded in mystery.

According to the Mirror, Manchester United are eyeing him up as a potential replacement for Paul Pogba at Old Trafford, whilst Moyes did reveal that he would consider any huge bids that come forward for his talismanic midfielder.

Bissouma would be an ideal successor, should West Ham lose out on the 22-year-old, who has been hailed as the “future captain” of the club. Rice would evidently leave some pretty big boots to fill but the Mali international has been a rare bright spark in Brighton’s poor campaign.

In terms of reading the game and possessing the ability to thwart the opposition, the former Lille man stacks up well to Moyes’ current options, averaging more tackles per game (2.8) than Rice (1.9) and Tomas Soucek (1.9).

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Whilst in terms of interceptions, Bissouma (1.7 per game) is ahead of the Czech midfielder (1.6) and only just behind Rice (two). He also offers a little more going forward than the England international too.

As per WhoScored, the Seagulls powerhouse likes to drift forward with the ball, averaging 1.5 dribbles (vs Rice’s 0.9) and also likes to have a pop at goal, just like Soucek (1.6), having averaged 1.2 attempts per game this term.

Bissouma’s ex-teammate at the Amex Stadium, Dale Stephens, waxed lyrical about his ability to local reporters in 2019. He said: “He’s got the ability of perhaps a winger playing in central midfield with the way he can go past players. His feet are incredible and I’m sure he’s going to get better and better. He’s got everything you need to be a top player.”

Whilst his former manager Chris Hughton, now in charge of Nottingham Forest, dubbed him a “wonderful talent” to The Argus (via Goal). Gary Lineker lauded him as an “exceptional footballer” and Sky Sports’ Jamie Carragher believes teams will be queueing up to bid for him this summer.

The praise is endless.

With a similar playing style to Yaya Toure, there are certainly comparisons to be had with Rice and if Moyes were to lose such a big talent, then GSB should look no further than Bissouma as the man to replace him.

If they do choose to sell Rice this summer, GSB must look to beat Arsenal to Bissouma’s signature and provide Moyes with a suitable successor.

AND in other news, 5 key passes, 4 shots: West Ham’s £18m-rated “team player” fired Moyes a huge message…

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