Symonds decides against Queensland contract

Andrew Symonds’ domestic future remains unclear after he told Queensland he did not want a new contract

Brydon Coverdale25-Jun-2009Andrew Symonds’ future at domestic level remains uncertain after he told Queensland Cricket he did not want a contract for the 2009-10 season. Symonds has still not decided whether he will be available for the Bulls next summer and if so, whether his involvement will be limited to the short formats.Since losing his Cricket Australia deal and being sent home from the ICC World Twenty20, Symonds has been enjoying life away from cricket, including playing rugby against some retired stars. He plans to speak to Queensland closer to the start of the season to decide on any possible involvement in their 2009-10 campaign.Symonds was one of a string of high-profile absentees from Queensland’s new contract list with the veteran batsman Clinton Perren dropped along with the left-arm fast bowler Scott Brant. Aaron Nye, Michael Johnson, Worrin Williams and Dom O’Brien also did not have their contracts renewed.Other omissions from last year’s list included Ashley Noffke and Shane Watson, who have switched to Western Australia and New South Wales respectively, and the retired Martin Love and Matthew Hayden. That has opened the door for Craig Philipson to return to the squad after being overlooked last summer.Alister McDermott, the fast-bowling son of the former Test player Craig McDermott, has been upgraded from a rookie deal to a full contract, as has the batsman Wade Townsend and the fast bowler Scott Walter. The new rookies include Ben Dunk, Alex Kemp, Chris Lynn and the highly-rated Australia Under-19 player Jason Floros, who has moved from Canberra.Chris Simpson has retained the captaincy despite struggling with the bat last summer and the Bulls are keen for him to take more of a bowling role with his offspin in 2009-10. Queensland won the FR Cup last summer and were runners-up in the Sheffield Shield.Queensland squad Glen Batticciotto, Ryan Broad, Lee Carseldine, Ben Cutting, Daniel Doran, Chris Hartley, Ryan Harris, James Hopes (Cricket Australia contract), Nick Kruger, Ben Laughlin, Alister McDermott, Greg Moller, Craig Philipson, Nathan Reardon, Nathan Rimmington, Chris Simpson (capt), Grant Sullivan, Chris Swan, Wade Townsend, Scott Walter.Rookies Cam Boyce, Ben Dunk, Jason Floros, Alex Kemp, Chris Lynn.

Clangers, collapses and riding the gravy train

Andrew Miller’s plays of the day from Lord’s

Andrew Miller at Lord's07-May-2009Spell of the dayGraham Onions didn’t have a wonderful introduction to Test cricket. He was bowled first-ball by a low full-toss, and then dropped short with his maiden delivery to be pulled ruthlessly through midwicket. But then, in his sixth over, everything started to click. Lendl Simmons received a brutal lifter to be caught at slip for Onions’ maiden Test wicket, two balls later Jerome Taylor was strangled down the leg-side, then, to cap a memorable over, Sulieman Benn sliced a third-ball drive to third slip. Still Onions was not finished. He made it four in seven balls when Denesh Ramdin was pinned lbw one delivery, and had his Durham team-mate, Paul Collingwood, clung onto a sharp chance off Lionel Baker he’d have made it five in 12. Ultimately, it was 5 in 27, as Baker succumbed after a defiant cameo. Not a bad first day proper at the office.Innings of the dayRavi Bopara led the way on the first day, but he barely got a look in when play resumed today. Graeme Swann is not a man who lacks confidence in any department, and today he was on remarkable form. In all, he flogged eight of his nine fours on the up and through the off side, including six in the first hour this morning before Bopara had the chance to add to his own overnight tally of 14. Then, to cap his performance, Swann posted his maiden Test half-century by walloping Lionel Baker into the Mound Stand for six. By the time he was left unbeaten on 63, he had surpassed Ashley Giles’ Test-best 59, and restated his growing claims to an Ashes starting berth.Interruption of the dayEngland were motoring in the first hour of the morning, adding 24 handy runs in five overs as West Indies struggled to rediscover their first-day vim. So it came as a total surprise when the umpires wandered across to have a chat with the batsman, and gave them the chance to troop off for bad light. It seemed a senseless break in England’s momentum, reminiscent of Marcus Trescothick and Mark Butcher’s walk-off at Headingley 2003. But then, after a 15-minute hiatus, Swann resumed with three fours in five balls, and that was the end of that analogy.Poor example of the dayFidel Edwards was rightly aggrieved at the close of the first day’s play, having suffered at the hands, quite literally, of his team-mates, who spilled three clear chances in the final session to delay his richly deserved five-wicket haul. When play resumed he would surely have wished to set the fielding example for his errant colleagues to follow. Instead, from the first ball of the day, he went down into the long barrier, and let a gentle push to mid-on roll straight through his legs.Clanger of the dayAs Edwards himself admitted at the close of the first day’s play, it has been a long, long while since he’s bowled on a pitch that rewards his natural pace. That hasn’t, however, stopped him digging it in when the mood suits him, and one brute of a lifter struck James Anderson an ugly blow on the back of his helmet as he averted his gaze and braced for impact. After a lengthy delay and a switch of headgear – his old lid had a ball-shaped chunk taken out of the bottom edge – he groggily resumed and survived with some courage through to lunch.Stat of the dayAt the break, in fact, Anderson was 1 not out from 17 deliveries. Nothing remarkable in that, you might suggest. How wrong you’d be. By nudging the final ball of the session off his hip for a single to square leg, Anderson extended his world-record sequence of 47 innings without ever being dismissed for a duck. He has been unbeaten on 0 on ten occasions, and fallen for 1 seven times. But the dreaded blob remains elusive.Bowling change of the dayWhen England’s turn came to bowl, Broad took one half of the new ball – no surprise there. At the other end, however, Andrew Strauss pulled a complete fast one on the punters, pundits and West Indies players alike. With Swann on a high after his half-century, he was thrown the ball ahead of Anderson and both debutant seamers, Onions and Tim Bresnan, who didn’t get to feature in the first innings at all. Perhaps the decision was influenced by Yuvraj Singh’s over to Kevin Pietersen in Mohali, or KP’s own opening of the bowling in the IPL last month. More likely, it was inspired by Swann’s dominance of West Indies’ openers, Chris Gayle and Devon Smith, who between them accounted for five of his 27 wickets prior to this Test.Double whammy of the dayAnd sure enough, Smith soon succumbed to his nemesis, who has now claimed his wicket on four occasions in Test cricket. With the first ball of his second spell, moments before the tea break, Swann beat the inside-edge with one that zipped through the gate, and then, before West Indies knew what had hit them, he dealt Shivnarine Chanderpaul a knockout blow as well, which a beautiful tweaker that took the edge to slip. By the time their other sheet-anchorman, Brendan Nash, had fallen by the wayside as well, Swann had 3 for 16 in five overs, and the gravy-train had been set in motion. Over to Onions, to slice and dice the lower-order.

More rain checks Pakistan A's progress

Another day of delays and interruptions due to poor weather conditions allowed only 34.2 overs of play on the second day of the first unofficial Test between Sri Lanka A and Pakistan A at the Asgiriya Stadium in Kandy

Sa'adi Thawfeeq02-Jul-2009Sri Lanka A 101 for 4 v Pakistan A
Scorecard

Wet work in Kandy as rain plagues unofficial Test© CricInfo
Another day of delays and interruptions due to poor weather conditions allowed only 34.2 overs of play on the second day of the first unofficial Test between Sri Lanka A and Pakistan A at the Asgiriya Stadium in Kandy.Play did not get underway till 2.15pm, whereupon Sri Lanka A added 51 runs to their overnight 35 for 1, before suffering the all-too-familiar middle-order collapse. Within a matter of 14 minutes and 13 balls Sri Lanka A lost the wickets of Ian Daniel, Michael Vandort and Russel Arnold to slide to 89 for 4.The captain, Jehan Mubarak, was in need of a big innings, and he and Malintha Gajanayake survived the next half-hour against some testing bowling, before the light was offered to the batsmen, soon after Gajanayake had survived a confident lbw shout against Asif.Weather permitting the match is scheduled to resume tomorrow at 10 a.m.

Rogers guides Victoria into one-day final

Victoria’s stand-in captain Chris Rogers helped book his team a place in the one-day final by guiding a solid chase of 246 against New South Wales at the MCG

Cricinfo staff13-Feb-2009
Scorecard
Points table
Chris Rogers has been a useful one-day player in county cricket and now he has helped Victoria reach the FR Cup final © Getty Images
Victoria’s stand-in captain Chris Rogers helped book his team a place in the one-day final by guiding a solid chase of 246 against New South Wales at the MCG. Victoria got home with three balls to spare and they will play Queensland in the decider on February 22, a match that will be at the MCG should the Bulls lose their remaining game.Rogers and Rob Quiney gave Victoria a terrific start and put on 77 for the opening wicket before a pair of strikes to Nathan Hauritz pegged back the chase. Quiney departed for 50 and Brad Hodge followed two balls later without scoring, before two wickets to Moises Henriques added to Victoria’s problems.But Rogers, who was preferred to Hodge as the leader with Andrew McDonald a late withdrawal due to a hamstring twinge, kept a cool head and his 74 from 109 deliveries ensured the required rate rarely got far beyond six an over. The loss of Rogers with seven overs to go gave the Blues a spark, but Damien Wright and John Hastings got Victoria home after they needed 17 from the last two overs.Victoria’s bowlers also played key roles in restricting the New South Wales total despite several batsmen making promising starts. Bryce McGain was particularly valuable with 2 for 33 from his ten overs, including the key wicket of the demoted national opener David Warner, who was bowled having raced to 47 from 45 balls.Henriques made a handy contribution of 38 to add to his 2 for 35 two days before his potential Twenty20 international debut and the wicketkeeper Daniel Smith chipped in with a late 36. However, Smith hurt himself while batting and handed the wicketkeeping gloves to Ben Rohrer during Victoria’s innings.New South Wales are in fifth place on the table and could yet finish last, depending on the result of South Australia’s game against Queensland next Wednesday. That match will also determine the venue of the final, with the Bulls to host Victoria if they beat the Redbacks.

Dominant Victoria plan to avoid final slip

Victoria have had no problems this season except in finals and have one game to fix the problem

Peter English12-Mar-2009Match factsMarch 13-17, 2009
Start time 11.00am (local time)
Andrew Symonds needs to step up for Queensland in the five-day final © Getty Images
Big PictureVictoria have had no problems this season except in finals and have one game left to fix the problem. Both the FR Cup and Twenty20 deciders were lost – Queensland stole the one-day trophy by sparking a dramatic collapse – and those misses become a pattern when added to the Pura Cup defeats in 2007-08 and 2005-06.In times of doubt teams look to their big-name players and Victoria have a trio of key batsmen in Chris Rogers, Brad Hodge and David Hussey to guide them over the next five days. They all ran into form during the dress rehearsal for the final, when Victoria lashed 8 for 806 before declaring in the draw against Queensland last week.The decider has produced a flood of runs over the past three years due to the home team needing only a draw to collect the trophy. Victoria, who are desperate to lift the refurbished Sheffield Shield, finished the season on 44, 16 ahead of the Bulls, after going through unbeaten and not giving up a point to any opponent.Queensland, whose bowlers have tried to shut out the horror of last week, are already challenging the hosts not to choke again. The Bulls are saying goodbye to the retiring Martin Love, their leading run-scorer, and are aiming for an end-of-season revival that will give him a sixth Sheffield Shield/Pura Cup success.Season’s form guide (most recent game first)Victoria DDWWWWWDWD
Queensland DWLLLLWWLW
Watch out forBrad Hodge is in form after his epic 261 at the MCG last week, but he is intent on using that as a warm-up for bigger things at the Junction Oval. Hodge is a master of the domestic scene and provides his team with immense confidence and, usually, lots of runs. His Sheffield Shield tally stands at 10,091 for Victoria over 16 years, including 696 this season.The next five days give Andrew Symonds his last chance to prove he should be part of the Ashes squad. Symonds was suspended from the South Africa trip due to his rehabilitation from a series of off-field problems, and he enters the final with a new look after shaving his dreadlocks for charity. Symonds’ results with bat and ball have been ordinary by his high standards – 183 runs at 15.25 and six wickets in the Sheffield Shield – and his contribution in this game, along with that of Shane Watson, will have a huge bearing on whether Queensland can overhaul their rivals.Team newsAll of Victoria’s bowling concerns have eased and they have named a full-strength line-up following the return of Shane Harwood (ankle), Dirk Nannes (side) and Clint McKay (side). Nannes bowled in a club game last weekend while Harwood and McKay passed fitness tests over the last week. Damien Wright also returns to the squad after resting during the demolition of Queensland and Lloyd Mash is the likely 12th man.Victoria 1 Nick Jewell, 2 Chris Rogers, 3 Brad Hodge, 4 David Hussey, 5 Cameron White, 6 Rob Quiney, 7 Matthew Wade, 8 Damien Wright, 9 Clint McKay, 10 Shane Harwood, 11 Dirk Nannes, 12 Lloyd Mash.The situation isn’t as easy for the Bulls, who have ruled out the swing bowler Chris Swan with a lingering groin injury. Queensland’s selectors trimmed the 15-man squad to 13 after training at the Junction Oval on Thursday, calling Ben Cutting into the XI and leaving out Scott Walter. Lee Carseldine is fine after picking up a back complaint while a decision will need to be made whether to risk Nathan Rimmington and Ben Laughlin, who has been called into the national one-day squad, following their lack of penetration at the MCG. The Bulls’ bowling back-up is being tested after season-ending injuries for Ashley Noffke and Ryan Harris.Queensland squad Ryan Broad, Nick Kruger, Martin Love, Shane Watson, Andrew Symonds, Lee Carseldine, James Hopes, Chris Hartley (wk), Chris Simpson (capt), Daniel Doran, Ben Cutting, Nathan Rimmington, Ben Laughlin.Pitch and conditionsThe Junction Oval is the home of the St Kilda club and where the Bushrangers often train. It has a capacity of 8000 and a reputation for a pitch that is full of runs. However, the surface has offered some help for bowlers in club matches and there has been wet weather around in the lead-up to the final. Thunderstorms and isolated showers are predicted over the first four days.Stats and TriviaIn the past three finals the home team has totalled 844, 800 and 900 in one-sided victoriesChris Rogers, the Victoria opener, is second on the season’s run-list with 1048, 155 behind Michael Klinger. Martin Love is Queensland’s best on 697Love, who scored 300 at the Junction Oval in 2003-04, is 13 from 10,000 Sheffield Shield runsThe Bushrangers last won a domestic first-class title when they beat Queensland by 321 runs in 2003-04Victoria’s 8 for 806 declared last weekend was the seventh-highest score in Sheffield Shield history Quotes”The first 15 overs is going to be very important, if we get through that I think we’ll be set.”
“The wicket is going to be flat, but hopefully it might break up later in the game.”

Hatfield: I don’t think Molumby walks straight in WBA starting XI

Express and Star journalist Luke Hatfield doesn’t believe that Jayson Molumby will walk straight into the West Brom starting XI. 

The Baggies signed Molumby on a season-long loan deal from Brighton and Hove Albion during the summer transfer window.

The 22-year-old has plenty of Championship experience having played 51 times for Millwall and Preston North End combined and has scored one goal and provided two assists in the division.

Molumby played three first team matches for Brighton last season in both the Premier League and the Carabao Cup and Hatfield believes after his move to Albion, he is going to have to work hard for a starting birth in Valerien Ismael’s team.

Hatfield told Transfer Tavern: “He’s another player Ismael would have liked, I think. I don’t think he’ll walk straight into the starting XI, I think he’ll be a player that comes in and really competes with Jake Livermore and Alex Mowatt for them starting spaces in midfield.

“He offers plenty of hard-working abilities, he’s one of those players that might not be the flashiest in the world, but he certainly puts in a shift and that’s exactly what Ismael wants in those midfield roles.

“He doesn’t necessarily need them to produce goals and assists, I think he’s hoping his front three will do that. Molumy is one of those players who will run his socks off for the team and I think the fans will appreciate that as well.”

West Brom have had a brilliant start to life back in the Championship as they have accumulated 13 points from a possible 15 and currently sit second in the league table, only behind Fulham on goal difference.

Valerien Ismael and all connected with West Brom will be hoping to maintain this run of form and be in the promotion picture come May and make an immediate return to the Premier League.

Tomiyasu prefers a move to Tottenham

According to Sky Sports, Bologna defender Takehiro Tomiyasu is ‘said to prefer’ a move to Tottenham Hotspur this summer, with talks having been held.

The Lowdown: Spurs in Tomiyasu talks…

Spurs and managing director Fabio Paratici have been trying to prise the Japan international away from Serie A since the start of last month.

The Lilywhites first submitted a £12.9m (€15m) offer, plus an extra £2.6m (€3m) in add-ons, for the versatile ace, but it was swiftly rejected (Sky Sports). However, The Athletic reported a breakthrough some time afterwards and it was believed that terms were being finalised on a £15m deal plus add-ons.

There had been a lack of real updates after the Olympic Games despite confidence from Alasdair Gold’s sources, with Sky Sports now bringing the latest.

The Latest: Tomiyasu prefers Spurs move…

According to the reliable outlet, Tottenham have indeed been in negotiations for Tomiyasu, who is rated at £17m, but have been unable to reach a full agreement so far. As such, Spurs are now looking at Fiorentina centre-back Nikola Milenkovic as an alternative option and more talks are now being held.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/tottenham-latest-gossip/” title=”Tottenham latest gossip!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

Tomiyasu is attracting attention from other Premier League clubs amid this dispute as Wolverhampton Wanderers make an inquiry for his services. However, the player is ‘said to prefer’ a move to N17 over Molineux and seemingly wants to join Nuno Espirito Santo at his new club.

The Verdict: Milenkovic…

We believe that Milenkovic has actually emerged as a better option for Tottenham in terms of ability and price tag.

Journalist Charlie Eccleshare of The Athletic believes that the Serbian could leave Italy for as little as €15m (£12.7m) this summer in a possible ‘straightforward’ deal for Spurs (Twitter). At just 23, he would bring just as much as sell-on value to Spurs as Tomiyasu (22) while costing less.

Saving every penny in this sell-to-buy transfer market is crucial for Tottenham, especially if they want to invest more heavily into targets like Lautaro Martinez and Pau Torres (The Times), so Milenkovic may well be a better option than the Japanese defender.

In other news: Offer pending: Tottenham front race to sign ‘very exciting’ player with ‘gigantic buzz’, find out more here.

Debutant Duminy lives the dream

Test debuts don’t come much more rewarding than the one JP Duminy experienced in Perth

Brydon Coverdale22-Dec-2008
JP Duminy: “It’s something that definitely I will cherish for the rest of my life” © PA Photos
Test debuts don’t come much more rewarding than the one JP Duminy experienced in Perth. He struck the winning runs in the second-highest chase of all time and with the same cover-driven three went to 50 not out, an invaluable innings that helped South Africa forget about their past heartbreaks against Australia. Duminy could have been forgiven for wondering what all the fuss was about.At 24 and having never played an international of any format against Australia, Duminy was free of the memories of South Africa’s previous failures. The significance of the triumph certainly hit home as the squad celebrated that night. Veterans like Jacques Kallis and Mark Boucher have spent more than a decade trying to get one up on these opponents, while many other great names have faded into retirement without tasting that success.”A lot of the guys got text messages from guys that have been here and they sort of understand what this victory means to everyone,” Duminy said. “I think we understand what it means to everyone back home and we’re grateful for it. Hopefully we can pull off another victory.”But if Duminy didn’t know the pain of losing to Australia he at least knew the disappointment of being a teenage fan of South Africa during some of their lowest moments. As a 15-year-old cricket nut, he watched on in horror as Allan Donald was run-out in the semi-final of the World Cup, leaving the match tied and sending Australia into the decider.”I’ve lived through all those days of just near, nearby,” Duminy said. “Definitely the World Cup in ’99 [was the worst], especially with the run-out, I think I watched every ball of that game, so it was a bit painful.”Now Duminy is doing his part to help write a new chapter in South African cricket. The value of his innings at the WACA cannot be underestimated. When he came to the crease at the fall of the fourth wicket they still needed 111 and he was due to be followed by Boucher and then one of world cricket’s less convincing lower orders.He had also managed only one run in the first innings. Talk about pressure. But he was batting with AB de Villiers, a man he had grown up playing with in under-age representative teams, and rarely did Duminy look flustered as he calmly bunted away danger-balls, lofted the spinners with confidence down the ground, and cut with precision. He didn’t look tense. He was.”I just made sure that I didn’t want to portray a sort of nervous, uncomfortable feeling out there,” Duminy said. “I was definitely feeling the pressure but my main objective was just to soak up everything and take it ball by ball. Myself and AB spoke a lot in the middle about just facing it ball by ball.”When Duminy left the field the hugs from his team-mates were tighter than those afforded to de Villiers, whose century earned him the Man-of-the-Match award but whose calmness was less surprising as he was in his 47th Test. The captain Graeme Smith could not have been happier with Duminy’s effort.”It’s incredible,” Smith said after the match. “He’s travelled with us for a period of time now, he’s watched so many Test matches with us over the last year-and-a-half from the sidelines, probably gaining a bit of experience, seeing what it’s all about. He’s played his fair share of one-day games now so he’s had a taste of it.”As I said to him now in terms of the pressure he faced today, he’s not going to get any worse probably ever in his Test career so he played superbly. A guy at this stage of his career, an innings like that can only really do wonders for him as a person.”His opportunity arrived only because Ashwell Prince hurt his thumb and while Prince is no certainty for the Boxing Day Test, Duminy is resigned to losing his spot whenever the more experienced man is ready. His position may vanish but nothing can erase the mark he left on Test cricket in his debut match.

Sarwan and Ramdin clinch thriller

Denesh Ramdin and Ramnaresh Sarwan kept their cool in a tense finish to hand West Indies a 1-0 series lead after a rain-hit game in Christchurch

Cricinfo staff03-Jan-2009
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Ramnaresh Sarwan shepherded the chase with a calm half-century © Getty Images
Denesh Ramdin and Ramnaresh Sarwan kept their cool in a tense finish to hand West Indies a 1-0 series lead after a rain-hit game in Christchurch. New Zealand were favourites when the West Indies needed forty off the last four overs, but Ramdin knocked off 21 runs off his next ten balls to put the visitors on course for a win in the match shortened to 28 overs a side.The equation had boiled down to four runs off the last over, after offspinner Jeetan Patel leaked 14 off the penultimate one. Tim Southee, who had sent down an outstanding final over in the tied Twenty20 game in Auckland, was again given the responsibility of bowling the final six deliveries. He gave away only two of the first three balls, but a couple of scampered singles finally broke New Zealand hearts.While it was Ramdin who applied the final touches, it was Sarwan who kept West Indies in the game, anchoring the innings with a calm half-century. Captain Chris Gayle had biffed a 31-ball 36, but two deliveries after launching Daniel Vettori over midwicket for six, he was bowled by a quicker one, leaving Sarwan to shepherd the chase.The wickets kept tumbling at the other end but Sarwan refused to panic. He collected the singles, punished the loose balls, and didn’t buckle under the pressure exerted by a tight spell of bowling from Vettori and Jacob Oram. New Zealand had seemed in control for much of the chase until the final onslaught from Sarwan and Ramdin.West Indies may be pleased with the win but one cause for concern was that there was little contribution from the younger batsmen in the side. In the absence of Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who missed the game with a hand injury, the team look too reliant on their two senior batsmen, Gayle and Sarwan.By contrast, New Zealand posted a competitive 152 despite the failure of Brendon McCullum and Ross Taylor, with four batsmen reaching 25. After opting to field, the visitors got the dangerous McCullum early before rain came down in the seventh over just as Jesse Ryder was beginning to cut loose. Play was held up for four hours.Ryder and Jamie How kept the runs flowing on resumption before Ryder holed out to deep cover off Nikita Miller in the 12th over.New Zealand struggled to regain momentum after that dismissal; they were unable to score more than five off any of the next ten overs. The pressure created by Miller and Jerome Taylor led to the dismissal of several New Zealand batsmen and the hosts slid to 97 for 5 in 22 overs.Oram pulled them out of the rut, taking 17 off a Gayle over, and Grant Elliott’s big-hitting towards the end boosted New Zealand beyond 150. However, with Elliott not having bowled in both matches of the series, the hosts must work out whether they need a specialist batsman at No. 7.

Celtic: Josip Juranovic keen on Hoops move

Legia Warsaw right-back Josip Juranovic is keen on a move to Celtic Park, according to Sky Sports.

The Lowdown: Right-back issues in the market

Celtic have made seven signings this summer, however, they are yet to add to their right-back ranks.

Anthony Ralston has been the man used in that position by Ange Postecoglou, scoring twice in his first five games of the season.

It appeared as if Royal Antwerp’s Aurelio Buta would be the right-back to arrive in Glasgow, with a £3m deal reportedly agreed at the end of July.

However, a move is yet to go through, with Everton now in the race for the Portuguese defender.

The Latest: Juranovic update

Sky Sports shared an on-air transfer claim regarding Celtic and Juranovic towards the end of July.

They have now provided an update on a potential move, claiming the title-winning full-back is keen to join the Hoops.

The report claims that Juranovic is expected to be Celtic’s next target after Buta and would be available for around £2.5m.

The Verdict: Sign

Even though Ralston has begun the campaign in strong style, a new right-back is needed to bolster Postecoglou’s options in that area.

Juranovic is a Croatia international who has over 200 games of senior experience at just 25 years of age, a level of experience far beyond Ralston.

He can also play as a right-midfielder and appears to be at the top of his game with a career high Transfermarkt valuation of £2.25m, so a £2.5m move could be a shrewd piece of business by the Hoops.

In other news: Celtic submit offer to sign 6 ft 3 powerhouse for Ange, claims journalist. 

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